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                  <text>P!:la•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel

nit~;ogen

Proper Nitrogen Use On
Conventional .Corn - Preplant
Versus Sldedress Nitrogen - If
a field Is Improperly drained,
s,!dedressed nlirogen Is 1)10re
efficient than preplan!, accord·
lng to Jay Johnson, 'E xtension
agtonomlst at The Ohio State
University. A hazard In sided ·
resslng Is that If It turns
excessively dry, all the sided·
ressed nitrogen may not become..
available to the crop. Also with a
sldedress program, the nitrogen
sources that can be applied are
somewhat limited. Another limItation Is that the amount of time
for sldedresslng Is fairly short.
Preplan! nitrogen can be
partially protected from nitrogen losses with the use of
nltrlflcatton Inhibitors when
applying the nutrient In the
ammonium form . Use of nltrlfl ·
cation Inhibitors has provf'd
relatively successful with anhy·
drous ammonia, moderately
successful with urea and least
successful' with 28 percent nitro·
gen ·products.
·
·
All preplan! nitrogen should
not be eliminated II the decision
Is made to ~lded ress. Ja y
recommends adding from W to
50 pounds of nitrogen per acr e.. .
preplan! to help the young corn
plants develop good root sys ·
terns. This nitrogen can be
added either through the plan ·
ter, In the herbicide spray. or In

dlammonlum or monoammonlum phosphate broadca st
preplan!.
Plant Corn On Time- Larry
Shepherd, Extension 1\grono·
mist at The Ohio State Unlver·
slty ha s accumulated 15 years of
d a t ~ . Corn planted before Ma y
10 averaged . )70 to 100 bushels
per acre. Yields dropped to
about 138 bushels by the 1th of
June and by the second week of
June averaged only 91 bushels

per acre.
All these plantings reelved the
sa me high fertlli7.er rates, the
same god hybrid, a seed drop or
abou t 29,00) per acre. exeellenl
weed control and excellent
Insect controL
The best tlme to plant Is the
last 15 days In April In the
southern half of the stat e. There
are some things Shepherd recommends · to anyone planllng
earlier than normaL "It's lmpor-

I

WIU!am Walter Lee, li4, formerly
of Middleport, died Saturday al the
Camd en -C l ark Hosp ll al In
Parkersburg.
Surviving are two daughlcrs,
Phyllis and Linda ; a son. Gary: two
sisters, M ary Lee and E: ll""n
Landaker, Pomeroy; fourbrolh&lt;'rs,
Walter, Pomeroy ; Harry, Grov&lt;'·
port; Harold, Columbus, and
George, Pensacola, Fla .,and six
grandchildren.
Servic&lt;'s will be held al 2 p.m .

By LOUISE COOK
· the coupons ~e redeemed. It says
variety of rpasons for the use of
A""'daled.......,.Wrller
the average face value of the
couponsbytpefoodlndustry.Butit
The rate of Increase In super· manufacturers' coupons last year
also found that mlsredemptlon and
market prlces has eased, but the was 21.7 cents, making the relraudaddtothecostofcouponsand
Coupon Industry continues to grow deemed coupons worth $12 bll!lon.
lessen their effectiveness.
as mll!Jons of Americans regularly
The most popular place for
The study showed that coupons
snip and save.
.
manufacturers' coupons, accord·
not only help manufacturers IntraFigures compiled by A .C. Nielsen lng to Nielsen, Is the Sunday
duce new products and bulld loyalty
Co. Indicate manufacturks dlstrt~ newspaper·, on~thlrd
·
of
the
oent"'
·
'
~
~ . •Or
establis bed brands, they also
uted 119.5 billion coupohs In 1982, up off otters Last year were found In . make It easler for the companies to
make sure that a discount 1s
17 percent from 1981. That com- Inserts In the Sunday paper.
paredwltha13percentgrowthlrom
A study by the Economic Reactua!Jypassedontotheconsumer.
1900 to19B1.
search Service of the U .S. Depart·
Otherwise, the USDA researchers
Nielsen estimates 4.5 percent of ment of Agriculture showed a
said, a retailer may choose not to
lower the prjce on an Item that the

properly

tant to select tall , large plant
types because, when planting
extremely early, the plant s are
smaller and a large plant Is
needed to maintain adequate
leaf area . The hybrids should
have excellenl seedling vigor.
Also, control planting length at
about one to one and ·one-hall
Inches for frost protection to
keep the growing point under the
surface of the soU unt il the corn
is m ore tha n a f oot high, " he
Get Rid of Moles Now - Gel
rid of grubs (moles' food supply)
or use mole traps.
Now that the so il Is beginning

l

have been hibernating should
sta rt mov ing up to feed on grass

roots.
Grou nd mole acllvlty could be
a sign al thai grubs are In the

area since grubwonns, eart hworms a nd various other soil
Insects oncsilute their main
source of food .
Grubs thai are In the suB now
will feed unlll early May and
then will change 10 the pupa
stage. Ad ults should emerge In
May and June, m ate and lay

eggs for the summer genera tlon. Summer damage generally shows up In .July. and
August.
When we think about grubworm control , we should keep i n
mind tha t there are two periods
when the larvae are feeding.
That Is about mid -April and
agalnjn mid-July to November.
· (V!osl grub-proofing Insect!·
cldes are shorl lasti ng . which
means they mu st be applied
when the grubs are up In that top
Inch of rool m ne feeding., The
i ri seet lclde· musl penel rate
thatch and soli and come In
co nt act with the grubs before It
loses Its killing power. Tha i l5
especiall y true with lnsccllcldes
likP Dlazlnon, Ethoprop, Flendlo·
crab, Dy lox and Proxol. Mate·
ria ls like Oftanol persist season
long and lhcreforc. lhcre Is more
tim&lt;' to gel lhe j ob done.
You wtll have a better chance
of kliling grubs with the shorter
Jasllng mater ia ls if you will cut a
nap of grass on three sides . reel
It back and examine I he soli for
grubs. Apply tht' m aterial and
water It In when you f .1d grubs
up In that lop Inch of soil.

Registration set
Soul hern Local School District
kindergarten regis tra tion is schedule from 8: 15 a. m . to 11 a.m . and
from 1 p.m . to 2: 45p. m . F r iday In
the kindergarten room, nex llo the
Southern Junior High School.
Parents are to lake their child's
birth cert lficate, record of lmmuni·
?.al lons and proof of .recent skin
tesung. Children m~ s l be five years
• old by ~pL J!l. for ent r:-Jnce Into
kindergarten.
·
As required IJy law, children
entering school musl have the DPI'
series and booster. polio scrles and
booster. Rubella vaccine and a
r ecent skin tes t.
'llrere w!U he no regu lar kinder·
garl en classes on Friday. It ls not
necessary for new .-nrolles to
accompany their parents on regis·
trat ionday.

Building dt•stroyed
An outbuilding at Jeffers Exca vating near Pomeroy and som e

I

Wednesday at the Kimt•s Funer al
Home, 51h St. , ParkPrsburg.
Friends may ca ll al th&lt;' funC'r al
home anytime after-:! p.m. Tuesday,

destmyed
by flrrstored
Saturday
small equipment
Insideafterwere
noon. Pomer oy firemen responded
lo lhe call bul the building was
enguUed in names when they
arrived. F iremen had no estimate
of damage or information as to
whether lhe building and eonlenl s

E igHt calls were answered by
local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
Sunday at 11: 34 a.m., the Pomeroy and Rutland units went to
Township Roa 3for Phillip Byrd and
Mark Walsh who were Injured In an
auto accident. They wer e taken to
O'Bieness Hospital In Athens. At
12: 21) p.m. the Syracuse unit wenI to
Snowball HiU for George Freeland
who was taken on Holzer Medical
Center.
Saturday ca lls Included Syracuse
al 9: 52 a.m . took BiU Hawley to
Veterans Memorial; Racine at
10:24 a.m. took Eva Shaffer, Mile
Hill, to Veterans Memorial; Middle'port at 5:23p.m. took Cindy Smith,
Hysell St., to Pleasant Valley
Hospital; Rutland at 7:5.1 p.m . took
BUJ Cremeans, Happy Hollow
Road, to Veterans M emorial and
Middleport at 11 : 12 p.m. took
Sher ry Fergvson, Fourth St. , 10
Veterans MemoriaL

Meets Tuesday

manufacturer has put on sale.
The Econcxnic Research Service
said It had not been able to verlf}{ an ·
estimate of coupon fraud.

The Salisbury PTO wlf mPCt
1\resday at 7: :ll p.m . at the school.
The fifth and sixth graders will
present a band conC&lt;'rtand n&lt;w
officers
be elected and Installed.

A suit for parJftlon ol rnlne!'al
lights lll)der real estate In Leoonan
Township has been !lied by James
W. Suttle and Greta M. Suttle, Long
Bottom, and George Coll!ris, treasurer., In the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.

19 inch Supreme
Push Manual Restart
without catcher
• Simple lwo step blade control-both eng me and blade stop
• Handl e moun ted Q'\ anual restart cord makes slartrng a
coml ortab le arm action
• Man ual slarter has a longer and 33% wider recoil spring
and modular construc11on to"answer the increased slarting
requ ~re men t s from blade co nt rol
• 4-HP rated engine de s1g ned to las l 50% longer lhan
mos t engmes
• Vented bowl carburelor g1ves excellent fu el effictency and
a1ds slar11ng. espec ially when I he engine ts hot
• H1 gh -perlormance blad e lilt s grass for eve n mowing . and
1nc rea ses a1r flow to improve bagging

ELBERFELDS

Racine Village Council wlll m eet
In recessed session at thevll!age haU
at 7 this evening.
.
.

Cleanup week Is b!'lngobserved in
Pomeroy , Mayor Clarence An·
drew s announces.
Village wor kers will pick up I rash
and other Item s which res idenls
wish to dispose of. The trash is lobe
at curb with small items in bags.
Workers were picking up the first
ward today; Tuf'sday, they will pick
up In the second ward; Wednesday,
I he third war and Thursday, the
fourth ward .

sauea on
our reduced cost
auto loans!

Point Pleasant

el These craftsman•
Don't stall enym~ with 4,0 reserve power
Push·type M'f'1governors to virtually
have mechan u . Deluxe Eager· I
ollmtnate stath~~d state illnitlon to
en&amp;lnes w~h so
and mechanical
eliminate tune-ups,
compression rete.ase to eliSe

our lOwer rates make
now auraattlmeto aoDIVI

·CUT $60

We realize that when "newcar fever" strikes. it strikes hard . We at The Farmers
Bank want to help you cure that fever. Therefore, we are offering our lowest
rates tn years olll .9%* financing on any new car loan. All you havelodo Is
make your best deaf, then bring your purcha se order to one of our qualified
Ioa n off1cers.

Rur-..111-

tnc:l- .......... -hoo

Rnr·blalnc R'ICIWtn c~.~t
CioN IC t/Ml, 111\CH,
•hnlbl rrom • lther

YOU MAKE Til E D EAL AND LET OUR EXPERTS TAKE CARl' OF
Til E ~T
.

"Customer

AND

CO~

subject

GREGG &amp; PATrY GIBBS
HOURS;

POMEROY. OH .
Mon .. Tues .. Wod., Fri. 9:3Q lo ~
Thurs . 9:30 to 12'
Sat.9:30 to Z

-------~

to loan

approval.

Farmers
Bank

AUTHORIZED CATALOG MER.CHANT
108 W. MAIN ST.
PH. (Ohio) 992-2178
{W. Va.) 773·9571

•

enttne
3 S.ctiont, 20 Pages
20 C.nta
A Muhi r:, edia Inc . .N•wspaper

Forty-one people protest tipple's reopening
A delegation of area residents
presented a petition to the Pomeroy
Village Council Monciay night
protesting the reopening of the coal
tipple on East Main Street.
The petition contained the names
of 41 residents of the East Main
Street·Nye Avenue area. Submit·
ted with the petitions were two
doctors' statements indicating that
coal dust woold be detrimental to
the health of their patients living In
that area.
Eight residents from the area
across from the tipple were present
at the meet ing and Several spoke In
opposition to Its rebullding and use.
They charged that It would cause
dirt and noise poilu tlon, as well as
create health problems and de-

crease property values of the
community.
They requested Council pass an
ordinance prohibiting a tipple
operation in the village. Several
members questioned whether
• has that authority.
Council
Jean Will, a member of the
delegat,lon, referred to a study
which w as done In the early 60' s
when a coal company wanted to
purchase the tipple. That report,
she said, Indicates Council does
have that authority . She was asked
to provide Council with a copy.
She also asked why Council would
consider letting the tipple on East
Main be reopened when a request
sometime ago from a company
wanting to Install one near the

Pomeroy- Mason Bridge was
rej ected.
Paul Simon, who owns the tipple
and adjacent land, at,lended the
meeting. He said he watits to lease
or sell the land to Ember Coal Co ..
Dark Diamond Coal, and Coal
Power. Pal O'Brien, attorney for
one of the coal companies interested
In the putting the tipple into
operation, was also al the meet ing.
Both Slmon and O'Brien emphas·
!zed thai there wUI not be the noise
level nor the din and dust which the
area experienced when the tipple
oper ated years ago.
" The EPA (Envlronme~ta l Protection Agency) ju st won't let
companies do that anymore,"
Simon explained.

the tippll' would r esult In more j obs
Both Slmon and O'Brien told I he
for. miners, truck drivers ant'! ot her
audience the entire tipple would be
workers needed at the site.
put under cover, the area all
blacktopped . and thai the 'coal
Council deferred action on the
would he unloaded down shool s
mailer pending recelpl of lhc
engineering sludy from O'Brien
under a constant spray of water.
and lhe results of the older study
They also said that all coal would
WUJ discussed .
be crushed and washed all he mine
Meanwhile, a final reading was
site before being brought to the
given to an ordinance authorizing
lipple by the four or five slngle-a,le
the inspection of old buildings. The
1rucks l o be involved in 1he
ordinan&lt;·P provides for a buildln~:
operation. The trucks, O'Brien
Inspector to lnvf'St!gatc complainl s
reported. would m ake a left hand
of unsafe. insecure and struc turally
tum off East M ain and lhen back
defecl ive build~tgs and to iss uP
into the tipple shoo!. He furth er
emphasized thai the operallon
on::JPrs to n'Pa ir or remove surh
buildings.
would beon a daytime schedule and
thai there would be no night i
Fa ilure of the owner to comply
unloading, as one resident feared .
would result In a fine for the owner
Simon and O'Brien said opening
and an order au thot•!zlng the v illage

lo have the str1lcture repaired or
removed with the tota l cosl to be
pl aced on the tax duplicate as a Uen
against the prcmlsls.
Council also approved a $12.M
ronlrac t wllh CarmU Johnson to
maintain Ute Beech Grove Cem etery. The contrarl provides that
Johnson will work on a probation·
ary basis for three months a! $1.M.
All labor and materials arc to b!'
provided by the ront rae tor. who has
lhc responsibility to mow and trtm,
cu I and remove smaII t rl'es, fill and
plan! gra ss Sl'l'd. kN'p drainage
dilches open. ra ke the !paves, and to
keep a ch&lt;'&lt;'k on monuments lor
vanda lism .
Council by unanimous vote en. (Con thtu&lt;&gt;d on page 12)

·. ·Chancey. re-employed as football

I

iiii!

YIEWS BOMB 'DAMAGE - U.S. Spedal Envoy, Phillip Habib
(C), Is surrounded by U.S. Marines and security guards Tuesday as he
surveys thi, damage done to the American Embassy when a huge bomb
went off Monday afternoon. Rubble hangs off the building In the
background. Habib made a short SUillrlse vlsll lo the sight. ~ AP
Wirephoto)

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff
Numerous certified and non·
certified contracts were awarded
M onday night when the Meigs Local
School District Board of Education
rtet in a lengthy session.
·, There were a few controversies
Involved In the awarding of supplem ental contracts, pat11cularly for
football and lnstrumenlal music.
The board went into secret
session the firsI tlmeon I he Issuance
of one-year leacher conlracts. The
board accepted a list of employees
for the contracts with the exception
of Marllyn Goodnite, band director.
However . later In the meeting M s.
Goodnlte was named band director
fer the next year at a 4·1 vote with
Richard Vaughan, board member.
casting the dlssenling vole. A
m otion not to reemploy Char les
Chancey as fool ball coach wcnl
down and a second mot ion 10
r eemploy Chancey 10 lhe posl
passed3-2withVaughanandRobert
Snowden casting the dissenting
votes and board members, Laj]-Y -·
Powell, Arland K ing and R'OOert
Barton supporting Chancey's recm ployment as head foolball coach.
The board accepted the res lgna·
lions of Richard CoiPman, aulo
mechanlcs inst ruc tor who is ,:etlr·
lng: Kim · Jones. vocal music

teacher In the elert'lenl ary sc hools
who Is leav ing the area; JolmArnolt
as direc tor of elementary lntram ur als; James MUJer and Fent on
Taylor as junior class advisors, and
E lla Mae Southern as custodian of
the Meigs High School. All of the
restgnatrons are effecllvc as of lhe
end of the year excepl Arnott and
Southern which are· effecl ivP at
once.
'llre board voted unanimously to
eliminate a mine mainlenance
pmgram as a vocational offering
and to suspend the teaching
contract of John Bond a; mine
· maintenancP insl ructor at the clo&amp;•
of the cun'l'nt school year . The
elimination of the program was
brought aboul by lac k of enmlimenl
and I he finan cial cosl s lnvoiV&lt;'d, II
was reported .
Five year contracts
Teacher s granl l&gt;d fl vp-year m n
tra cts were .Joan Corder, Deborah
Davis. Jo Ann Hays, Barbara
Logan, Carla Saelens; Carolyn
Smith. Jesse VaU. Gat')' Walker ,
and Paula Whitt . Teachers given
three-year co ntracl s were Slephanle Ash. M elanic Cantrell.
RcbPcca Cotterill , GorrJon FlshPr .
Ed Har·kiess and Elcnnil a King.
Given one-year· cont racts wt•r-c•
Pal r lc Ahmad. Darlene Armtt ,
Roben Ashi&lt;'Y. Sheil a Ell'van, Lynn

coac~

Bookman .- Rusty Bookman , [)e.
borah Cant er, Suzy Carpenter.
.Judllh Carter. Sue Cunningham ,
Tobie Dav l,, Greg Drummer. Mary
Durst. Donna French, Connie
Gilkey, Mary Grim. LanyG rinll'S,
Mary Haggerty, Karen Lloyd,
Marsha Radabaugh, DebraSebe rl ,
Rlllt Simmons, Theresa York and
Linda Zarnoch.
Teachers given one yea r &lt;'011·
t rac ts pending C&lt;'r1lflea llon arc
Richard F ett y. Girre&lt;• Knotl er . Kay
Pruflltt. Barbara Hosted. Tim
Saunder s, Julia Vaughan and D!ll
WU Uamson.
Non-ce r1 tfled &lt;'mployes given
continu ing cont racls Include Gary
King, David Chas&lt;'. Leta Hall.
Charles Wi lliam son. Shirl ey
Priddy, Ma ry Hawkins. E:va Jloward , l.lnda Stoba rl. A mollon to
approv£' I he runtlnuing eo nt r at'! nf
Hober1 Moorr. a r•ustodlan , was
tabled.
Non·crrtlfll'&lt;l employes
given lwo-year conl racl s Include
Hunald Wood , Lila Jones, AudtT'.V
Wood , E ugpnc Hawkins. Paul
Kauff, Paul McDaniPI, .Jr., Phil ip
Ohl~tg cr, Vera Holiday and Martha
1\ lng. DmTPII.Icnklns was hlrr&lt;l as
a custodian and .James Bach wa s
added lo I he subs! llutt• IC'adwr lisI.
Ella MaP Southl'rn was hlrpd as a
sul,;titutc busdrlvrr .
111&lt;' board vutc&lt;l 5·0 lo dlmlnalc

thl' position ot l'iernen!dtJ' baskcl Ira !! intramurals dlr0etor and to
consider spon,.,rshlp of an elcmen·
tary Intramural bas kclball pmgram by I ht' MP!gs 1\t hl011c
Boosl crsAssoclation.
Professional lcav&lt;' was granted
.Joy Benllcy, .John W. BlaPttnar,
Rita Simmons. S.rlmt Morrison,
Pam Crow . Susann&lt;' Wcavpr and
Linda 7.a rnoch. ThP resigna tion of
Krnda Williams as junior high
school gkls basketball coach wa s
aceep!Cd and Lisa Allen was
accepted as Mt'igs High student .
In accordance wllh new state
laws. an anti-hazing policy was
appmvr.:l . Tlu' boardal w appruve&lt;l
a trip lo Washington. n.c .. and
(~' f tysburg by the Pomeroy Safety
Pa l rol M ay 1!~ 22 and RPix'cca ·
Triplet t and Darlcnt• Arnott we r~'
given i~lurPs~ Jona t lravt' 10 accom .
pany the patiu l
Given suppit'mt'nf al cunt racts
wllha 5·1lvoiPW&lt;'rP (;orrlon FlshPr,
prlnllng for st•huols; l·:d Bart els,
hmd lcach&lt;•r al S.tllsbUJy; M arjoriP !''&lt;'fly. hmd tt•acht•r at Hut land;
ll PttN·ca ·n ·tplrtt. Pomcmy Safety
Palm i adv isor: Ea rl You ng, pari
l imP assl.stanl high schoo l principal ; F: IPanor IJiaPtt nar. lihrarlan:
Martha Vpnnarl and .lohn fux lovlan . &gt;.' Uil lancc; .Jea hnle Tay lor.
tl'ont lnu1od on pal(&lt;' 121 ·

Cincinna ti Gas and E lecl rlc Co.
said It would be several days IX&gt;!or&lt;'
any customers arecut off beca use It .
didn 't start giving l!J.day warn ings
of shutoff unt II April II .
Cleveland Elecl ric !llumlnatlng
Co. told service personnel to "use ·
extreme• discretion In shultlng o ff
serv ice." Columbia Gas told Its
workers to makf' C'very pffm1 to
contact homeowners before closing
gas va lves .
Columbia Gas spokesman D&lt;r?n
Rook.s said an average of more than .
600 customers cro'!'ded the com·
pany' s main office In Columbus
dully this monlh to try to arran gr&gt;

paymenls so ~"" S&lt;'J'VIce wouldn 'l
lx• shu I off.
He said the compa ny's l~ olher
offices around the sta t&lt;• also
rpportf'd heavy I raffle from customers trying to s('tflf' accounts.
Hooks sa id service wa s shul off lo
about 40 Columbia custom ers
F'rlday, "ancl we arC' busy aga in
today."
"But bccau"' II is cold. we are
attr mpt ing lo conl &lt;lf'l residents
before actually cutting them ofllo
f'!l vc them anol her opportunity to
make payment arrangement s and
flt·st payment s or compll'te pay.
!Continued on page 121

Death toll climbs
to 39, including 16 Cold weather works in customers' favor
American citizens

Revivnl planned

Sears

at y

~~---~;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;~~~~~~~;~

wer e insured.

Rt. 62 North

•

Page 12

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April 19, 1983

MECHANIC ST.
WAREHOUSE
POMERY,OH.
PH.992-3671

Cleanup week set

50 attend no-till
farming event ...

Be~d

Page 8

Page4

Voi.32 ,No .2
Copyrighted 1983

As time goes by, you'll knew why.

Beat of the

snow cancels game

Partition suit filed ·

""II

Sldo-dlocha'IOoccopts opt'""'! -hoo

.SWHS tops Eagles;

'

UNDER THE DCW\E

operation

•

e

Meets tonight

STARTING lHIS WEEK AT

~~~~:1"naretamfull

I

erans Memorial Emergency runs

urday Admlsslons..Gerald
Is, Rutland; "Fern Srnlth,
Pomeroy; Eva Shaffer, Racine;
Hattie Ar'!nes, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges.. JamesRlf·
fl e, William Weaver, Phillip Donovan, ZeUa Taylor, Leota Cooper,
Esther Roach. Sa lly Scanlan,
Jeanette Taylor. ·
Sund ay A dmiss ion s-- Ralp h
Frank, Pomeroy; .John Norman,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges.. Robert Did·
die, Harold Smith, Robert Woods,
Homer Graham . Ola Smith, Thom as McK ay, Jr., Claude Eblin,
Gladys Cuckler, Margaret Julian.

to warm up , grubwor m s that

Revival services al the Rutland
Freewill Bapllst Church wUI begin
tonight with services at7 p.m. each
evening. Paul Taylor will be the
evangelist.

-

Meigs County happenings

says.

Area death

Willinm W. Let• ·

'

Shoppers help eoupon _industry growth

County Agent's Corner

Use

Monday, April 18, 1913

Your Community Owned Bank

----

By A!liOClated Press
Unseasonably rold weather Mon·
day night worked to the advantagP
of thou sands of Ohioans who are far
behind In utUltybl llpayment sasgas
and eleclrlc companies began
ending service to delinquent cuslomers this week.
·
Forecasts of temperatures in the
20s prompted some electric companies to delay pulling the plug on
delinquents for at leasl one day.
Some gas companies ordered
serviCe worker s to use extreme
ca ution in terminating service.
A state-mandated moratortumon
shutoffs during tpe winter com -

By EARLEEN F. TATRO
fiery blast and 20 other s were
Associated.......,. Writer
missing and presumed dead . ·
BEIRUT, Lebanon (API
In aU, according to Dillon, abou l
Rescue squads today searched
130 people were al the embassy
throogh &amp;haltered concrete and
when the bomb went' off, the worsl
mangled furniture of the U .S.
attack on a U.S. facility In Lebanon.
Em bassy for more v ictims of the
The top half of a man's body , clad
terrorist bombing that officials say
In a tan suit, had hung from the
killed up to 16 Americans.
sandwiched fifth floor aUday, head
Potlcesald thepowerful explosion
and arms dang! ing and drlpplng
Monday killed at least 39people and
blood. Rescuers altempted to ex·
wounded 121l others, Including 22
tract the body but It still hung there
Americans. Col. James M . Mead,
Monday night.
commander of the U.S. Martne
On the streets below In west •
contingent in Beirut, said today the
Beirut' s mostly Moslem Eln Mrels·
dead Included seven Americans.
seh neighborhood, :;ro Marines
with nine other s m iss ing and
stood guard, cordoning off the area
presumed dead.
strewn with fire-blackened metal,
U.S. An]bassador Robert Dillon
The Gallla-Jackson·Melgs 648
shattered glass, mud and blood .
said II was "very unlikely" any
hoard
d ecided Monday lo abolish
"I can't walt to get out of here,"
more survivors would be found In
nearly
four of Its fuU-tlme staff
said one leatherneck, who declined
the ruins, where authorities . expositions
and discussed cutting Its
to be Identified. " Every night we
pected to find another 20 or so bodies Jleargunflre. Youdon'tknowwholt
operations budget between 14and3B
today .
percent.
Is or what they're doing or what It
Near the several tons of rubble
. Board members also mMe their
means."
that crashed ltom the building, a
recornrilendatlons as to w)lo sta te
The 1,:.n:t Marines ln Lebanon are
u.s. flag . flew on a flagpole part of the multinational force offlcta!!l ' should choose to fill five
undamaged by the blast.
vacancies on the board.
which also Includes French, Italian
"The embassy Marines put It up
Nine) staff positionS exist at the
and Brltls.h soldiers. The Lebanese
at sunrise," Mead said.
board, :etght ol which are currently
guvernment requested the Ioree
Witnesses and pollee sa ld a
last
to help It regain control of filled. ()ne employee Is a hall·tlme
pickup truck jammed with _ a,n
bo\tS4!keeper. As a result ol Mon·
the capital, racked by years of
estimated 500 pounds ol explosives
day's
decision, the board will keep
Mos!em-Chrtstlan feuding, Syrian
sped Into the circular driveway of
four
luU-tlme
staff, a ll-hour·a·
Intervention In 1976
last June's
the seaside embassy and blew up
week
cleriCal
worker
and a half·
Israeli invasion to smash Pdlestl·
Monday at 1 p.m . all&gt; 1Uncht1n\e
time
housekeeper.
nian guerrilla bases.
siroUers passed. The bbl,s.t shat·
Staff was cut to comply with a
· Thebackindends oftheembassy
tered themalnsectlon'sseven-story
recommendation made by a state
bulldlng, built In three sections
facade. hurling bddles Into the
fomilitg arc, remained structurally · review group which last winter
Mediterranean and devutatlng the
Investigated operations at the 648
Intact afler the blast, though the
ground floor's visa wing.
board and the Community Mental·
explosion s,hattered all windows and
Mead told reporters that 10'
.
blackened some spots with !Ire. The Health Center.
The
review
group
recommended
Lebanese employees at the em·
entire tront section of the embassy ·
bassy were confirmed kllled In the
the
board
keep
three
staff positions.
was wrecked.

648 hoard reduces staff, discusses budget cuts

tau

and

M~mb.r FDIC

blned with long -standing ui Ui ty
rules and a Home Energy Assist·
ance Program to kee'p gas and
elec·t rlclty flowing to customers
even though some were as much as
$2,00J behind on utility bills.
'Jlre moratorium, ordt&gt;red last
November by then-Gov. James A .
Rhodes. ended March 31 . Other
rul es for shuloffs pushed lhc
effective cutoff date to Monday.
The weather forecast prompt&lt;'&lt;i
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elec l rlc Co. toglveone m oredayofgracc
for customers to pay up or make a
good -faith effort to arrange pay.
men I of overdue bills.

The full hoard voted In January to
keep four or fewer staff members.
But the board 's personnel commi t·
tee said In March that five staff
members will be needed lo opet ate
the mental health board.
The four tulH!rne positions approved Monday were executive
director, planner·evaluatot. fiscal
offlcer-adm lnlstratlve officer and
administrative secr etary.
The board voted lo ask Its
attorney, W. Joseph Strapp, to
advise It of the proper procedure for
abolishing employee jobs.
Board chairman Jolur Rice said
he does not know how long the
abollstunent process will take, but
noted the buard set July 1 as Its
deadline to cut staff.
While asking for a reduction of
staff, the state review group also
said the buard should cut Its
operations budget.
~
Dan Schwendeman, board ad·
mlnlstrator, said members could

cut the fisc a I year 1984 budgeI
between 14 and 3B percent.
How much the budget. Is cut
depends mostly on what salaries
· and !rlnge benefits are given
employees, acco rd lng lo
Schwendeman.
He estlmated the cut will be closer
lo JB'percent because of the board's
decision to abolish positions. He
noted the aboUshments wUI save
about$73,!roa year In sa laries.
U cut 3B percent , Schwendeman
said the board's operations budget
for flscaf year 1984, which begins
July L would be $253,852.
The 648 board will also have les~
money In 1984 to spend for mental
health·services, he said.
.
He projected the l:loatd will
receive $2,3l9,:m In public money
next fiscal year, which Is $426,4:ll
Jess than this year.
The smaller budget will mean
"potential service cuts" for mental
health clients In the trl-county

region,
accor din g
lo
Schwendeman. I
11re boar·d Is currently discussing
which programs should have fund·
lng priority nex l yea r , he said.
The proposed budget will be sent
10 the Ohio Department of Mental
Health lor approval as part of the
lioard' sl:omprrhenslvecommunlty
plan. II mu st be submitted by May
31 .
'
Meanwhlle•._tlie board recommended to the sta te five of 21
persons who have subml.tted appll·
cations for vacancle!. on the 648 ..board. They also recommended
Jake Koebel , Gallla County
mem ber of the board. be
reappointed.
State m ental h,ealth officials will
choose the new members.
Nine persons applied from Gallla
County, two applied !rom Meigs
County and 10 are seeking appoint·
ments from Jackson County.·
(Conllnued on page 12)

,,

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:CommentarY

Page 2-The Daily Senti..!
Ptwt •roy Middleport, Ohio
TUMda~
f

Ill Courl Slrt't' l
Pumtoru\', Oh iu

&amp;14-Hi- 2151
IJi':VnnmTfiTHF.:INTt:RF•.'nOI-' THF MEir.S-MASON 1\HF: i\

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pub!i.~ht&gt;r

I'AT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

l'uhl is hrrf{ ·un\rotllt·r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

A Mt:!\.11\f-:U n( Tht· A ~~· " · i:ilo·.t l'n·~~. Inland l&gt;'c1ih f ' r• ·~!&gt; "' " "'" · i:.~liun aod lht"
Ass,fialiom.
·

Amt&gt;rio · an"fo · v. ~ JhiJM;"r l 'ubi L~ h• · rs

IJ-:TI' f-:R S ~W III'INJ~)~ ~rt' \u•lo•nm l'd . Tht'y s hou ld ht · l r~ ~ tha.n 300 v.ortls lutl l( . All
kilns lHI' suhJt' t'l lu l'filtmlo( and must tw siJI(Dt'd with llllmt'. :~ddress and tdrph 111 w
~umlwr . Nu unsll(n~d lt-Uo·rs
I " S Ut·~ . IIIIIJM' f!lo!JnU)Illt' S,

v•ill ht• ptlhltdwd. 1--t'llt'ni ~ h•~t~ld tw ifl J.(nnd

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Lookfug at the SOUth _____J_ame_sJ_._Kz_'lpa_t_ric_k

The Daily Sentinel

" "~ • ~ W 111

April 19, 1983

ltl .~lt'.

addrt&gt;stiiUC

The consumer: a .vital
force in the economy

GREENVILLE, S.C.- This was
the topic for the evening's leeture at
Furman University: " A Southerner Looks at the ,South ." It
seemed an easy assignment. I am a
Southerner, born, bred and brought
up in the South, and my ereden!lals
are all In order_ On examlnauon,
the topic proved tougber than It
looked .
We speak casually ot "the South,
but " the South Is lltUe more than a
statistical device. We can define the
south geographically. We can view
It historically In the context al the
War of Southern Independence. We
can think of It politically and
racially, and we can talk of the
south as a state of mind.
But [he sell-evident truth is that
the South ls composed of many
Souths. Historically there a,lways
were at least two South- the South
of the black people and the South of
the white people. For generations
they lived at once together and
apart. The rural South of Georgia
and Tennessee, culturally spea~
lng, Is removed by light-years fro~
the urban· South of Houston and
Atlanta. 'IJ)ese days It 's not easy to
generalize about the South.

What's all this ta lk about consumers falling to hold up their end of the
economic bargain - that they're reslralntng their greed, Ignoring
Incentives and pinching pennies Instead of spending?
In a mass-consumption society such as the United States, the consum er
Is a natural focus of study. The consumer Is the vital force, bigger than
government and Industry combined .
And so they are studied in all their complexity.
Are the stud ies overlooking the si mple answers? It would seem, lor
WASHINGTON - For years,
example, that consumers might be sltitng on their wallets because they
American
presidents have assured
have so little to spend, nothwilhslandlng statistics that show that money
the
world
that the United Stales
sufficient for recovery ties In the consumer sector.
would never launch a nuclear first
But the statistics are less clear on the distribution of that money.
strike against the Soviet Union. The
Is It concentrated In the )tands of older people, who are less Inclined [han
chilling
truth
Is that for m ost of the
j . .
,._
younger people.to spend tnrtr assets? Are tl!e younger people, with their
.tlm!!:those
assurances-were
gl:ven,
lowec lncbmes and .blgger e_xponses, liiihtl.ng just to stay ahead or'bllls? _
strategic
planners
have
had
There Is psychology. Anybody who experienced the recent lnflatlon,
an
option.
just
such
recession and unemployment Isn't likely to forget so soon. They cannot
Now the first -strike option -with
afford to do so; such episodes arc too costly to them.
all
Its horrifying consequences - Is
It seems obvious that spending is also restrained by high Interest rates.
being
reconsidered at the top levels
No. Interest rat&lt;•s in general have not fallen to affordable levels, even If
of
government.
The MX commissome people think mortgngc rates havP. Many people who examine their
sion's
report,
recommending
a
monthly crPdll card numbers still find rates of 19.5 percent on their
red
uced
deployment
of
the
controbalances.
versial missile, Is an Important first
Moreover. many areas still haven'! emerged from the recession.
step
In the bandonment of a
Millions of Americans are still without work.
first
-strike
option.
.such factors are terrible restra ints on spending, you will agree.
Reagan
administration Is
The
You may agree also that those ca ught up In the economic m ess aren't
still
deeply
committed
to the MX.
Inclined to llsten to rhetoric - not after hearlng every president since
The
reason
tor
this
determination,
Dwight D. Eisenhower proclaim Imminent victory over Inflation.
despite the political heat It con·
It seems logical also to assume that consumers are a bit disheartened to
tlnues to generate, was made clear
hear all the talk In Washington about repea ling the third-year tax cut.
- at a closed briefing before the
scheduled for July I.
Senate Armed Service Committee:
It takes no complex study to reveal that many consumers will reach the
U.S. strategic planners believe the
conclusion that U they're not going to get a tax cut then they'll have that
MX
Is the best deterrent to a
much tess money to spend.
nuclear
llrst strike by the Soviets.
And cet1alnly, confidence of l'Onsumers cannot be enhanced by the
I
developing talk about eventua lly taxing consumption. Until that matter
becomes clearer, how can consumers be confident that the tide has turned
In their favor ?
And while Washington debates taxes. there Is another little tax matter
that might be further hampering consumption.
The 50th anniversary of an event
There Is, that Is, a processing backlog In the matter of tax refunds.
should be dear to the hearts
which
Through March 25, refunds were down $'l.6 billion from the same period a
of
us
old
booze helsters passed April
year ago. You need not study that situation to determine the Impact.
7 almost unnoticed. No one I knew
was raising a bottleofBudwelseror
a glass of Schlitz In memory of the
day In 1933when beer came back . II
was almost sacri legious!

Fifty, 60 or 100 years ago the task
by the laws of racial segregation.
of self-exmtnatlon would have been
Utile remains of the old ties that
easter. We had many common
bound. Mlsslsslppl and North Cadenominators then. The South of
rolina still ·are statistically 'runil,
the C9nfederacy could claim one
bill the rest of the Soulb has gone
sad dlstlnctlon: Ours was the only
urban. The one-P'\riY South !ell
region of the United States to have
apart In 1948. Owing largely to tbe
known that most un-Amerlcan of
Voting Rights Act of1965, the black
experlences. We had known defeat.
vote that once was Ignored Is now
Moreover, we had known defeat In
assiduously wooed. In . a lew
a shameful- and Inglorious cause.
quarters, memories of the ConfeStripped of romanticism, the war
deracy stlll are lovingly cherished,
that was launched at Fort Sum~r
but the flags fade. When we speak
was a war to preserve that most
of "Yankees," we speaY. of the
odious al Institutions, human slavbaseball team.
ery; and that bitter Indigestible
Yet some of the old state of mind
truth lay In the belly of the South · Is stlll here. As Southerners, we still
like a stone.
tend to bevel the hard edges of
The sacrifices ollhat war and the
reallty. The Spanish moss of South
hardships of Reconstruction conCarollns provides a metaphor. The
tributed mlgh'tlly to an economic
moss obscures, softens and conand social entity that truly defined
ceals. The gift (If II Is a gill) of
"the" South. There · were other
self-Illusion, whleh once enabled us
things . Except for a few defections
to see segregation through the
to Hoover In 1928, we were the songs of Stephen Foster, -Is still
one-party South. We were owr·
engral ned In the Southern
whelmtngty rural; ours was the character.
cotton, tobacco and sugar cane
Statistically speaking, we are
South. We were the poorest of
still the poorest, the least educated
regions. Slavery had ended, but for
and the most religious of all
90 years alter Appomattox our regions. The homogenizing propublic Institutions were governed
cesses al the 20th centw-y have
1

brought us the same six-pack
suburbs and the same glassy
- towers that one finds In Cleveland
or Phoenix, but Southern accents
persist and Southern menus still
offer to the old &lt;!!shes. Segregation
by law has ended, the racesstlllllve
at once together and apart.

It Is pleasant to believe !bat the
old Southern graces remain, and It .
may be so. Manners still eount. For
the most part our poUUelans speak
the"parliamentary speech. We talk
longer on the telephone than others
do. The place of life Is slower here.
Even In !be poorest neighborhoods,
we plant gardens or flowers to .
soften the clapboard walls. For
good or Ul, we maintain a 19thcentury view of the role of women.
Ten of the 15states that rejected the
Equal Rights Amendment were
Southern stales. !-have lived 62
years In the South and have seen
tremendous change.

There still is at least "a" Soulh,
but we're pretly much back ln the
Union now_

Jack Anderson
Defuse MX fears ----------------------------------------

u.s,

A transcript of the secret session
threa tened. In other words, the
reveals that In 1974, when advanced'
commission has partially stripped
the' Pentagon of Its first-strike
development of the MX missile was
begun, "It was estimated that the
option.
Soviets could destroy all but nl of
Even so, there are still anti-MX
our . (Intercontinental ballistic mls- . voices In th~ Pentagon that can be
·sue) silos by the year 1985.': But the - heard oniy · In : their top-~rel
transcript . noies -that - by . 1979 the
memoranda.- of .complaint . . theSe
Intelligence community esti mated
dissenting memos and other secret
that " the Soviets could destroy all
Pentagon and lntelllgence reports
have been reviewed by my assobut 200 of our silos by the year 1980,
an advance of the threat by five
elates Ron M cRae and Dale Van
years." So the Pentagon pushed
Atta.
with Increasing alarm for the MX
One memo dated last March 3,
missile.
noting the changes In U.S. nuclear
Nnw the nonpartisan presidential
policy, warns: "The MX might not
be the weapon most suited to such
commission has supported the
proposed revisions In targeting
Pentagon. But there's a significant
difference. With the nJ MX
doctrine." One concern was the
fears the MX would arouse In the
mlsslles originally, proposed, each
carrying 10 warheads, the United
Kremlin. A Secret report prepared
States would have the ca pability to
by the Arms Control and Dlsarmament Agency warned :
destroy the Soviets' land-based
"If MX were deployed In subslan·
missiles In their silos. With only half
that number, 'as the commission
tlal numbers, and the USSR
has proposed, the Soviet missile
continued to maintain a non-mobile
array wqutd not be as seriously
ICBM force of the 1approxlma te

present) size, the U.S. wo~)d have
acquired - through both MX and
Minuteman tnnprovements - an
apparent"capablllty to detmy much
of the Soviet ICBM force In a first
strike, just as the Soviet Union
(develops) one .threatening · the .
Mlnutpman force:" · :·· ·
__ ·
There are new arguments
against the 'f lrst·strlke option. besides the standard one that any use
of nuclear weapons by either side
would lead to disaster. One Is
Israel's success In Lebanon against
Soviet weapons, which suggests
- that the United States ar.d Its allies
can defend tbemselves with conventional weapons. Another Is the
anti-nuclear movement. As the
March 3 memo noted: "European
fears ... can only Increase as long as
the U.S. Is perceived to be bulldlng
weapons with a flrsl ·s trlke
capability."
Now the prestigious MX commission has taken a small step to
remove the fear of a U.S. first
strike.

A golden anniversary___________L_~_e_u_w_i~_e_u

Letter to editor
Bike-hike information
llte annual Hike-Bike fm· the
retn rded ciii7P ns wilt he held May 7
beJ:[nnlng at 10 a.m . at the
Pomeroy junior high school. Ttwre
the blk&lt;' riders will go I hmugh
downtown Pomcmy to the bridge.
Riders will go under the bridge onto
Middleport. then turn l!'ft at the
" T" onto Third St. and from there
to Co. Rd . .J toRt. 7 be fm·e the first
rest stop .
'llten fmrn Co. r-td . :1. to r-tt. 7
north to Co. Rd . ~&gt;. at the caution
light , riders wilt turn let onto Co.
Rd . 5 to the Bradbury school. Stop
for Check No. I. Time : ll : :to a.m.,
~ hour stop.
Prom Bradbury the riders wilt
continue on Co. Rd . 5 to T-17l
heading for Rt . 121. Stop for
mtns. to group up.
Alter stopping, riders will lak
Rt. 124 west and go through
Rutland to New Lima Rd. going to
Fort Meigs and stopping fot· lunch.
Time: 12:30 or I p.m. Check point
No . .2 - I hour stop.
Start ing after lunch ri ders will
take Co. Rd. 3 to Harrisonville
Grade School for a rest stop. Time: 2:15. Check point No. 3.
· Prom the school riders will take
Rt. 143 toRt. 7, as the riders get on
R.t.. 7 they will go to the strip of mad
.bn the four-lane that Is not being
used for traffic. All bike riders will
~oup up there for a rest stop.
Time: 4:00.
· Alter lhls stop, riders will lake
the road to the hospital hilt and

1'

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'

continue down to Mulberry Ave.,
lumtng right on Butternut Ave. to
Second St. In Pomeroy . From
Second St. to Sycamore St . to Main
St. and go back to the Pomeroy
.Junior High School.
Without the help of the following
people, the Hike-Bike would not be
held: Meigs REACT Team, M eigs
Co_ Sheriff Dept., Pomeroy, Mlddlepoti, Rutland Pollee Depts.,
Ohio State Patrol, and any olf.&lt;Juty
offlet&gt;rs.
From time to time, trafllc will be
halted for the bike riders to ·gN
from one section of highway to
· another. We will try not to stop
traffic no more than necessary, but

cars and trucks cannot continue
running when bikes are on the road.
We thank you very much for
s ping.
In Han·lsonvllle there wlll be two
Oagmen at junction 143, 684 and Co.
Rd . .J as 'the bike riders leave the
school, and you are going to
Pomeroy the flagmen will let you
know that there are bikes on Rt.
143. If you are In a hurry to get to
Pom~y, you may take Co. Rd . 3 to
Rutland, then to Pomeroy.
In ease of a hard rain and we
need to stop !be hlke-blke, you may
listen to W.M.P.O., your pollee
scanner, or C. B. Channel 9 and we
will let you koow as to where you
may come and pick up-the riders.
Betty Biggs, President
Guy D. Hysell,
Coordlna tor

Today in history
Today Is Tuesday, Aprlll9, the trnlh day otl983. There are 256days lett
In the year: &gt;
- -~
Today's highlight ln history:
On ApM119, 1775, the American Revolution began w1th fighting 8f8lnst
Brtttsh forces at Lexington and Concord, Mass.
On thl.s date;
In 1783, Congress announced the end or the Revolutionary War.
., In 1824, the English poet, Lord Byron , died In Greece during !he flghtror
Greek lndependence.

t

·-

To be real truthful, 1 almost
didn't remember It myself untU
reminded by a briefmenilononTV.
In fact, I can remember very little
about that m emorable day when
beer came back . I do remember
traveling through Marietta . the
evening of Aprll7, 1933 and seeing a
sign on a restaurant window
written with while shoe polish or
Bon Ami or something else while
which proclaimed they had the first
beer In Washington County. Naturally, never having tasted any legal
beer, I stopped and tried a few
schooners. I remember I was not
much Impressed as my taste buds
had become attuned to home brew
and I missed the heady aroma and
flavor of yeast, hops, malt and any
of the olher Ingredients which
caused home brew to ffil the empty
gap caused by the 18th Amendnent.
Compared to home brew, the new
beer served In Ohio In 1933 was
Insipid stuff!

capper and a few dollars put you In
business. lJnless you got too
popular and your yard was filled
with cars day by day, the taw was
usually very lenient and Inclined to
look the other way . If you became
too prosperous there was always
the hungry constable who might
want to horn In on yo ur prosperity
but that was a chance you had to
take during the depression to feed
your family .
With the return of lega l beer the
home brew art gradually lost Its
luster. Those first l ew weeks were
spent by restaurants which servPd
food In get)lng their places of
business fixed to qualify for the
state license. Those restaurants
which had formerly been saloons
before they wete put out of business
by the 18th Amendment had the
jump on their competitors. Some
had continued to serve near beer
and had only to change kegs to be
back In !be saloon business. Ed
Franz, wbo opera ted a form er
saloon on the upper block In
Pomemy, had served near beer all
during prohlblllon. For a dime you

could have a ground meat sandwich and a glass of near beer. I
wouldn't mind having one now to
see If they taste as good as they dld
then. A nickel sandwich now would
be much smaller than a postage
stamp.
Another place In Pomeroy that
had to rnake little change was
Gloeckner's. Before Prohlblilon
Peter Gloeckner and his son,
Charlie, had operated a saloon.
Vihlle the country was legally dry
they had continued to oper ate their

business ·as a restaurant and
maintained their form er popularity
on the strength of thei r delicious
food cooked l&gt;y Willie Durst and
served by walters Muncie and
Fugate, who were such a contrast
to the female waitresses that
served the other eating places, that
they were frequently written up In
city papers. I remember especially
the premium Chesapeake Bay
oysters shipped to Gloeckner's by
the keg regularly vla the Hocking
Valley R. R. which then had dally
service Into Pomeroy and operated
from a depot on which Is now the

upper parking lot. Oysters at
Gloeckner's were a special treat tot
which people would travel miles to
enjoy. The business Is still operatIng In the same location under the
management of third generation,
Joe.
You could always recognize a
former saloon by the elaborate
back bar. Such a bar was the
trademark of the White House at
Kerrs R•m. It had been operated by
Harry Hicks and during !be lOyear
dry spell had managed to keep
open. It was a family business with
the Hicks family living upstairs so
during the depression IU.il .little
overhead. When beer came back
the Hicks famUy was ready with
their historic backbardomtnatlng a
long room. It was a favorite
watering place for folk who llved
up-river and could drop off the
Racine-Hobson street car lor a blt
of r efreshment before catching
another car to Poij'leroy or
Middleport.
It seems Impossible that 50 years
have passed since tbose "good old
days!"

You almost have to be a senior
ctitzen now to remember the home
brew days. But to us children of
Prohibition and the Great Depres·
slon, the borne brew days were
very real Indeed. Almost every
family who entertained or were not
troubled by religious scruples was
their own brewer. They competed
for the strongest, !be tastiest and
clearest brew . Men e"c_!langed,
recipes lor borne brew oftener than
their wives swapped cake recipes.
Home brew making became a
nallonal lad open to anyone who
had a stone jar and a bottle capper.
To open a bottle of brew which
emitted. only blue smoke was a
trtumph but oftener than not It
I08JT!fd out all over the place . I
have seen two bottles of home brew
produce enough loam to !lll a
washtub. When the loam settled,
you poured It out of the tub and
drailk It anyway. Can't let the
bottles ot good brew go to waste!

Of course, there were those who
were victims of the Great Depresslon ' who made &amp;"living on home
brew. A 20-gallon stone jar, a boffi!,

"Why, Heavens to Betsy! Where'd he come from?!" ·
\

I

.•. ~Tu~n-dt..,a.;..y,_A,;,Lpn_.l_1_9;..,,;.;19.;;83,;;__ _ _ _ _ _ _...,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Ptw_n_tet...;ro;.:.y.....;.;Midd.;;.';;.;;;,;le;:;;port;;,;,;;.,.;;Oh;,;;i~o----------------The--Da-i.:,ly_Sen_li..,ne;..I-...;.;Pa4~g:;,•..;•,;.3

·Meyer wins. third .fastest Boston Marathon
BOSTON iAPl -On a cool day when Greg Ml']et
sped to a Boston Maratbon victory In the third-fastest
time tor the 87-year-old race, Joan Benoit stole som&lt;'
of his thunder by obliterating the women's world
record.
'
·
" Joanie is one of the best athletes In the world. not
just among women," saiq Meyer. "It 's ttnne people
recognized that. "
Benoit set a blistering pace Mohday to flnish In two
hours, 22 minutes. 42 seconds, shaving nearly three
minutes off the women's best of2: 25:29. She led most
of the way and won by almost seven minutes.

·I

Today's

.,

Sports World

--

By WW Grtmoley
liP Corret~poadent
Boxing's " Gentle Giant"- is he
real or is he, Uke the fabricated King
Kong atop the Emplre State
Building. an inflated beast destined
for a puncture and another fall?
All you can do is listen and take
your choice.
The resurrection of Gerry Cooney, the "Great White Hope" ofl982,
began Monday in the plush Terrace
R.oom In New York's Plaza Hotel .
Cooney's co-manager, Dennis
Rappapori, likened it tothesequelof
a movie. " When Gerry lost to Larry
Holmes last yeru· it was Rocky!," he
said; referring to Sylvester Stattone's celluloid ring saga. "Now we
are golng lnto Rocky II. Just as
Rocky did, Gerry will redeem his
defeat this second IInne around.
"It' ll be like the Joe Louis-Max
Schmeling llghts In the30s. Schmeling stopped Joe but Louis came
ba,ck -to destroy the Gerrnan In the
return fight.'' - · • -·--- ·
The analogy is Interesting if a bit
transposed. Holmes is the black
undefeated champion of the world.
CoonE'y is the middle-class Long
Island suburban ite seeking to
become the first white heavyweight
champion since Sweden's Ingemar
Johannson's brief reign 22 years
'
ago.
Young, strong, with supposedly
lethal power in both hands, Cooney
was built Into a media phenomenon
In scoring 25 stra ight \1ctorles. 22by
knockout , over a collect ion of
· untried and over-the-hill heavyweight s. On this record. heearned a
shot at Hotnnes ln Las Vegas last
June, dividing the purse at$8m illion
each.
Holmes hammered the 6-foot-7
Her cules Into subm ission In 2: 52 of
the 13th round.
The bubble burst wit h a resound-

meeting Philip "Bazooka" Brown.
a· relailvely obscure heavyweight
who has a 21-().2 record In his
three-year pro career .
Looking lean and fit at 227pounds.
Cooney marched into the Plaza with

r. .

Wellesley, Mass., and Benoit, a Portland, Maine,
native Uvlng In Watertown. Mass., didn't disappoint
the foreca.Sters who had Installed them as 'heavy
favorites ln a field of 6.515 official entrants, lncludlng
5,814 men and 701 women.
"!felt It a lot this week, " Meyersaldofthepressure
of being the favorite. "I think I handled It well. 1won
so It must not have hurt me."
Meyer has won four of his seven marathons. He
also has been victorious tn his last five races at
varying distances.
- Ron Tabb. of Eugene, Ore .. finished second In
2:09:32. followed by Benjl Durden, of Stone Mountain.
Ga .. In 2: 09: 57. Ed Mendoza, of Flagstaff. Ariz .. In
2:10:06. and Christopher Bunyan. of Carbondale, Ill.,
tn 2: 10:54.
Bill Rodgers, seeking his fifth Boston Marathon win
in 10 tries; had a cold last week and finished the
- - ---::2::,:
6-mile, 385-y ard race 1.n lOth place tn 2: 11: 58.
'1-was thinklne--JI!aybe this wlll be my last
marathon so 1 should try to finish," Rodgers said.
"I'm already thinking about the next one."
He missed qualifying fort he World Track and Field
Championships in Helsinki. Finland. Aug . 7-14. The
a cordon of a dozen black bellers
top thrl'(' finis hers Monday qualified, but Meyer said
from Long ISland.
he would concentrate on the !().kilometer race and
"! didn't come back for just
dictn'tptantoparticipate inthemarathontnHetsmld.
another payday," he announced . "I
Defending champion Alberto Salazar didn't
found out that I loved boxing. I had to
compete. HP finished fifth Aprll 9 In ihe Rotlettlam
fight agatn.l wa nt to be champion ...

"I don't think It's bit me yet . It will probably hit me
tomorrow when _I can't get out of bed," said Benoit.
wbo won tile 1979 Boston Marathon ln 2:35: 15.
Meyer"s ollly other Boston Marathon was In 1981,
when he led from the 16th mile to the 19th mlle before
lading to an 11th-place fuitsh.
" I took the lead just about where I lost It two years
ago," said Meyer. whose winning time was 2:09 :00.
"In 1981. J think I• made some mistakes and let the
cou~-,e destroy me. We planned for this race."
.Meyer, a Grand Rapids. Mich .. native now llvl.ng In

----·~-

Marathon. Salazar holds lheworldrecordo!2 ; ~;13
and the Boston mark or 2: ffi: 51.
Monday's race was run under nearly Ideal weather
conditions - cool with a tallwtnd.
Abraha Aregha led early, but Durden spurted In
~nt at around the eighth mile and heidi! until Meyer
made his move l;&gt;etween the 19th and 20th miles.
About two miles later, Meyer figured his lead was big
enough and his legs strong ·enough to carry htnn to
victory. ·
But Meyer,
had plenty left at the end, and said
he could have made one last surge If he needed It.
Benoit stru1ed extremely fast and didn' t know lfsbe
had much energy remaining. It became obvious
early that she wouldn't need it.
" The l!).mile split of 51:38 scared me a little bit,"
said the 25-yeru·-otd women' s distance running coach
at Boston University . " Peop le kept saying, 'Lady,
· you better watch it. ... But I always felt In control.' "
The prevUous women 's best was by Allison !We of
New Zealand in the New York Citty Marathon In
October 1~81 and was tied Sunday in the London
Marathon by Grete Waltz of Notway.
Roe, tlw '1981 Boston Marathon women's winner,
su!fered IL&gt;g cramps and dropped out after about 17
mlles . .lacqucttnc Gareau of Canad a. lh!' 1980wtnner,
was second In 2: 29 :27 . Ma ry Shea was timed In
2:33: 22. Kru·en Dunn in 2:3:1:34. and Sue King In
2:.13:51 lo J'OUntl out thr top five.

n.

-··-·________. . . . _______ .-.. . . "'.--·. . . -------·
'

~---

I

i
~

I
I

'

ing roar.
The deflated, brooding Cooney
went lnto an tnnmediate shell. He
refused Int erviews. He disappeared
from public view . He quit training
and ga ined some 25 pounds. He
refused to get In touch with his
trainer. Victor Valle. He had only
infrequent telephone contact with
his co-managers, Rappaport and
Mike Jones.
Speculation was that he would
never fight again. What peQple had
pictured
an awesome r ing ta lent
was reassessed as a bear of a man
with a marshmallow heart.
Then, Monday's press conference
was called to announce that the
26-year-otd pride of Huntington. N .
Y. , was t-etumtng to the ring,

-.

1 'lfl l?f:::) sptnt
• ; ., 1

'r

refre:,tm ,e 1

as

Commission
hacks decision
'

LEXINGTON, Ky. (API ---;- A
decision to uphold Marfa's victory
In the Jim Beam Spiral Stakes
raises serious questions about a rule
that limits entrtes In thoroughbr'ed
races based on tlfettnne earnings,
says a lawyer.
·
The Kentucky Racing Commission voted 4-1 Monday to uphold
Marfa's eight·length victory In the
Snl.IXXJ.added race, although he
· had won $955less than Asked to Run,
which was excluded from the
12·horse field March 26.
Marfa's previous earn l.ngs.
$28,050, had erroneously been
reported as $.11,050 by the Dally
Racing Form. whose figures were
used by Latonia Race Course
o!flclals In setting the Spiral field.
Asked to Run, owned by Golden
Chance Farm, had won $29,00i.
Payment of the $151.515 winner's
share of the Spiral purse. had been
withheld pending theoutcomeolthe
appeal. But !bat amount had
tentailvely been credited to both
Marfa and runner-up Noble Home.
"There's nothing we can do tor
Asked to Run, bu~ I thiilk (Monday's
commissiOn hearlng) showed glarIng errors, " said Golden Chance
Farm attorney Richard Vlmont.
Asked to Run was "denied the
right to compete" In the Spiral
because no advance certification or
earnings was required, Vtnnont .
.said.
·
Golden Chance otrlclals w01,1kl
probably decide ~lthln a Week
whether to take the case to court, he

.saki.

'lr &gt;)o

~L!Gff!s
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your H~alth.

70os

�-' '

!!'age 4 The Daily Sentinel

L

i'l!meroy Middleport, Ohio

WAITING ON DAUER - CLeveland Indians first on a double hy Rick Dempsey, but was thrown out
cakher Ron lla'iSey gels set to tag out Rich Dauer of by rlghtflelder Bake McBride, to second baseman
the Balllrnore Orioles who Is trying to slide around the Manny Trillo , to Hassey. Baltimore won the game H .
bag during action In the sevt'Dih Inning of their game · ( AP Laserphoto)
In Baltimore Monday night. Dauer tried to score from

Eaglettes hold on for 12-ll victory
By SCOTT D. \~OLFE
PATRIOT - The Eastern Eaglettes plowed through to a snowcovered 12-11 victory over the
Southweste rn Highla nders here
Monday in girls ' SVAC softball
action . Eastern Is now .~-2 ove rall
and 2-l Inside the league.
Angle Spencer went the entire
distance for the winners striking
out 3, while walking 11.
The sophomore hurler worked
out of a tight situation in the bottom
of 111 ~ seventh to. preserve the win
for tlie Eagles with two Highland·
PI'S left stra ntled on base. Phillips
s uffered the loss for SWHS allowing
10 hils, six wa lks and striking out
four EHS batte rs .
Coach Pam Doughltt' s Eagles

took a 3-0 lead In the fi rs t frame on
doubles to Kelly Whitlatch, Lea
i\nn Ga ul , a Melissa Thomas
single. and an erro r. SWHS came
'ba ck with a single run ln the fi rs t for
a :l-1 score.

Afte r p scoreless fra me by E HS
In the second . SWHS came up with
a nother sing le run to pull closer at
3·2. Eastern plated thre&lt;' more runs
In the thh·d on a Ga ul single, Thoma_
walk, a nd Dent triple , the seore ·
now 6-2. With the aid oft hrec&gt;,yalks
a Qd two-errors ·E:HS ~ad-a pig -four
run four th Inning to lead-JO.i;,· .
EHS added two more In the fifth
to lead 12-6, llut the hosts came
()ack with four of their own in the
bOll om half of the frame to lighten
I he score 12- 10. In tha t frame Nlda

a nd Miller delive red the big blows
For Southwestern, whlle three other
Highlanders reached via errors.
Southwestern threatened in the
final frame, but could plate just OQe
run , leaving two l'llnners _qn the

double. Linda Thoma a single and
double. and Klm Dent a triple.
For So u t hw es te rn Mill e r
slammed three singles, Nlda two
sj~gl~ , Hoo';.er. a single; Tobert a
· slngle ·arid Nlda two singles. ·. ·. ··
Llnescore :
r:asiPrn
:Mu l:.Il o-n 10 5
~uthester n
11.1 140 1-11 R 3
Ba tt(.•r!es : AngiC' Sp«&gt;ncc&gt;r
Thuma .
,
. Phillips I LP J and M cNool.

(WPl

•three mini -series the past three
sea,ons . because !'hey had the
Eas te rn Conference's bf&gt;st record .
"A mini -series Is a rough time
because tf you blow one (game)
you 're struggling," said Boston
guard Quinn Buckner. "What we
really have to do Is play great
defense."
Despite the problems thr Hawks
present Ins ide. the Cclt ics dom i·
na ted !he m during the regu la r
seao;;on. winning five of six games.

However·. Boston Coach Bill F'ltch
doubt s his players wil l be
overconfident .

"The success we had against
them m eans nothing, " he said. "The
last thing you wa nt to think abou t is
tha t you just have to show up. We
know a lit Ue better."
Both tmms hav!' brr n pla ylng
well of tate. The Ce ltics have won
eight of the ir lastll regular-season
games. Atlu nta a lso fini s hed
stmngly to beat out the Wa shington

Hurler suspended
NEW YORK !API - Right handed pitcher Roger Erickson.
who was sent down to the minor-s

last Wednsesday, has been suspended by the New York Yankees
for failure to report to It s Class AM
affiliate In Columbus, the Ya nkt'&lt;'S
sa ld Monday .
Originally , Erickson was given72
hours to report to the Clippers, but

'

that deadllnP was ex tended for an
ex tra day. E rickson still did not
reported by Monda)' a ncr was
suspcndro without pHy.
Erickson, acquired from tIre
Minnesota Twins last season. made
two appcaranrrs this season. giving
up two runs and five hits ln four
Innings. a nd his record was 0-1 .

~

fi nd

Bu llets lor the Eastern Conference' s final playoff berth.
"I am proud of this team," said
Hawks Coach Kevin Loughery . "To
go 18-10 down the stretch Is a real
treat , considering the lnjurtes we
have had and the personnel changes
we have made. Only the uninformed
could say we don't deserve to be in
the playoffs."
Though the Suns have the
hom e-court adva ntage, Coach John
MacLeod says he knows Ihey " have
to play high-quality basketball " to
beat Denve r. "Our guys realize
wha t kind of team they have."
· During the regular season,
Denver beat the Suns In four of their
live meetings- a nd the game the
Nuggets lost was one In which
center Da n Issei was una ble to play.
He's back in good health now.
" W~' rc going to he ready," says
the Suns' Mau rice Lucas. "We've
!Jeen playing well and not to
continue playing well would sur·
prise us au ."
The Suns !inishw with six
straight victories a nd took12ofthelr
lasll3 .
The second game is scheduled for
Thu1'Sday night In Denver. The
t htrd, If needed, will be back ln
PhO!'nix on Sunday.

MERCERVILLE - The old
saying, "April showers. brtng M'!y
fii!W.erS"
_o_n e :step . too flir
.Monda~ evening as " April srtow
showers" cancelled the baseball
contest between Southern and
Hannan Trace with the score 1·1 in
the top of the fourth.
At that time, Southern had

went

tlng just two
errors. by eommlt·
offensive
performance
Charlie Wolfe was the wtnnlng

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF
ELECTIONS
MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING
.
P.O. BoK 488, Pomeroy, Ohio 46789
Phone 992-2897
Regular Hour1: 8 :30 to 4:30 Monday thru Friday
ADDITIONAL H.OURS..FOR REGISTRATION:
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lYz
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M~IGMI'II:!II

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Kllnsa.s City ll.ronan:t Hl at DP.troll

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W~ 'I GIIIOOI

USFL results

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U'*H ~ Foodt'!ill Le. .e
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Phlllldt-lphia li. Oakland 1
Su.nd.y's Gwnm
Denver 9. Blrmlnsham 1
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NPW J~· 2l Washln«~ on 22
Ehston oW. ArtzoM 1.1
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&amp;ston at Phlladclt*dB

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Tampa Bay at Washlngtoo
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Fl

IS

Expert

•••

: COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
A
·spokesman for the National Foot:ball League says an Investigation of
Baltimore Colts quarterback Art
Schlichter's gambllnglscontlnulng,
·but would not Indicate when the
.probe would be finished.
, The spokes-m an, who asked not to
' be identified, said Monday, "We
have no timetable."
Speaking by telephone, the spokesman would not say whether NFL
securtty officials have talked with
Schlichter, a Colts' reserve who bet
$389,00Jwtth boolanakers ln the first
three months of 1983.
Schllchter, a former Ohio State
star, helped the FBiln the arrests at
four Baltimore area men, who are
under Indictment and scheduled to
stand trtal June Gin federal court ln
Colwnbus.
The Colts drafted Schllchter In the
flrst round of the 1982 coUege draft,
but the former Most Valuable
Player In the Big Ten Conference
!alled to fulfill his potential, ·serving
as Baltimore's No. 3 quarterback
last season .
If there 1s to be any punltlve action
against Schlichter, the Colts would
like an NFL rullng before the 1983
draft beginning TUesday, Aprtl 26.
The franchise has the No. 1selection
i ln this year's draft.
;. Baltimore officials have hinted
~they would like to trade Schlichter If
: possible and draft quarterback
Elway of Stanford.
••• John
The Colts, however, are not
discussing the Schlichter case.
1 "We're In a holding pattern on this.
~That's all I can say," team
:,pokesman Walt Gulkowskl said
!via telephone.

The Racine Fire Department
stage a full card of
••:professionalwfllwrestling
'at 8 p.m.
;saturday at the Southern Junlor
;:HighSchool.
.
: There will be slx matches
~eluding a male-woman tag team
~match and theAII American Junlor
;Heavyweight title w1ll be on the Une
•when Madman Manson meets
::zoltan, the Great. Also on the card
fwtllb e Buddy Donovan, Dr. B. B.
:Coleman, The Bull Moore, Ertc
King and others. Advance tickets
on sale by auxlllary members
'and cost S4 for adults and S2 for
ochUdren. Tickets wtll be $1 .higher
:'e.t the door Saturday night.

Yes No

Super Sale
Prkes on

Famous 721
Steel-Belied

Rodialsl
Whitewoll

IALI

f.E.T.

duced for Amerlco'5

P'17S/70fU3

tss.ts

cor ownen.
Do uble belted with

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P17517SA 1c
P1B517SA 14

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rodlolsalreody pro- -::':::':'''::':-:-:-:":::-lC::':-~::-

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

steel c:ord ln

Flrettone\ famous
" 7 over 2 p lus 1"
·construdlon. ·

P205170RI4
P20S/75R14
P215!751tl4
· P225/HI: 14
P2051751t15
P21SI75R IS
P225/7Sit 15
P235!7$.R15

I

The amount you've written in 117 is the amount you .
could borrow anytime you need it from City Loan and
Savings. With that kind of money at your disJXlSCl], you're
a lot richer than you may have thought.
· Contact us t&lt;XIayto learn more about our reduced
homeowner loan rates.

ends Aprll30.

t:J C\ CITY Lq«\N &amp;. SAVINGS
\::1 r::J aControl Data Company
.
•

'

60.ts

n .ts

17.tS

••• . ,

J:J.ts

u .ts

J1.9S

J3.ts
19.91

•

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2.13
:1 .24
2.34

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808

POMEROY: 125 E.~· St., 992·2171

I

I

utlwr i\'a tiunal

l ..f'aguc IC\'Hl1last yc•ar. but arf'offw
an 8-4 start t his Vf'ar. h.nirdy cnrltP

to tht•

Ht~l

in a traddor pitl'h&lt;•r !\ill

nnw ley and minor IL•agltl' DUI flPlcli 'l'
Anthony Y\'nlkcr.
Knict•ly had a s lnw rn.Jk l~ · sf'ason
last year . batt ing . I X.~ In l:tl pla rr·
aprx-arances . li t' has mactf• ont'
start wilh thP HPd:-o this Sl';t son.
going 0-for-:1 Sunrlil)' during i\ tl"'
Hammaker's two-llith· r fo r th(' San

Fran c isco C l an1~ .

'

Plan fishing ilerby J
•

2.49
:l .r!l7
2.44
2.59
2.74

Sole ...

'---.:::::.:~~·!:.·_J

CLASSIFIEDS

: A blueg111 fishing derby wUle held
)leginnlng at 7 a.m. Saturday at the
;Rutland American Legion Farm.
pmtestants pily $1 per pole and .
prizes wlll be awarded for ·the
biggest, smallest and most bluegW
caught.

'•

$}375

''

'

E. Meln

Ph .992·2094
fnlnt End Alignment Most

. Brake S..ice

Pomerqy, dli,

•·

can

•'

•

CLEAN UP

,

ALIGNMENT
On Most Cars

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

GAUJPOUS.JSe S&lt;oxtd A... 448.1973

P\'l'l)'

•

CASH ONLY

"

•

Astms and

3 DAYS (in 3 papers)
3 LINES (15 words)
·3 DOU.ARS (cash only)

!are

1.90

All prlcet plv' 1011. No lroz; i1Mded.

WEDO
BRAKE
WORK

"Somt• of I1Ls dmls just didn 't
work oUI ... l\ nlt'f'i,V said "'J'h(•
reason I fwl thC'rc ' s so much
pressu !'P t hl'IT' is bt•&lt;·aust• Rost•n 's
tryin g to sa\'l' hls jub.· ·
The Rt"'fls fin islltxi \\"Ot 'SC' than the

SPRING CLEANING SPECIAL

~Auxillary

.0 million 721

the rlub's fall from r hanlpionship
fonn in thC' National L raj.,YUC' W f's t.

he's k('('ping: th(' l&gt;&gt;~l l down

again.
The Nrw York Yank~s lanky

left -hande r, blasted in hi s first two
start s this vra r when hC' tri ed Ia be
too ciPvC' r ~vith thr ball. j ust tl•ared
bark and tiu't'w it Monda)· night
against Toront o' s battt•rs. The
rPsult : a two-hit :\ II Vit'tot:&gt; 0\'l'l' the
f\ luP .1 a ~· s .
l&lt;l."f'WhPrl' in ttw Anwr\can
LP: l ~th' it was Ball imurt' ·1. · C' lf'Vl...

la nd 1: Minnrsma B. Scatt lr 5:
Milwaukt..'('

.

. I'

\

SPECIAL
FOR MONTH
OF APRil
.
.
'

'

fOr oreater·savings

l ·l..

Bo~ to n

U,

and

Oakland ~\

C tliftwnld 1
\.uidry . who strurk nut four

ba! h•r s and c!idn' t walk on.v , gavf' Up
a g;lll lf'·Opc'll lng single to for nl£'r
YanJ.:N• tr .1 mmatl' ~ave Coll ins,
rt'tin'CI 1:-. cunsf'('Uti\'(' b.:ll tf'rs. was
nil'ktd for an inflf•ld hit IJ~ ' B uck
Mar t illl'i' npf'nlng ttw sixth innin g.
tht'll st' t dm\·n T oront o' s fi nal L2
t )l;olf-s -l, lndl:uts I
I )f's !~natt'( \ Il l !I PI' . lin~ nw ~·pr's

fiflh -inn ing ll·adoff hontt' run
snapp&lt;'&lt;i a 1 I tie :mel pii&gt;I•·IIC'd lhr
Orioll'Spas t ('le\'t•la n&lt;l

lfS TIME FOR SPRING CLEANING. CLEAN OUT YOUR CLOSETS. ATIICS, GARAGES, AND ETC.
SEE WHATYOU.HAVEEXTRA'THAT iS GOING UNUSED. THEN PLACE AN AD IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS. SELL IT AND SEE ALL THE EXTRA MONEY YOU CAN MAKE ON UNUSED ITEMS .
EXAMPLE- OLD COATS, PORCH SWINGS FURNITURE. APP(IANCES.

:

()ver

Knicely 1hinks Rosf•n dt'Sl'n·cs

the biggest shan • of t hr bl3mr fo r

bf•(·a u ~f'

t

:Wrestling oord
tslated 'Saturday

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

J ohn ! McMullen and hcpassC's it on.
He makes the team fed it."
The Astros stl'liMied last yea r.
a nd art&gt; off to a 2-10 start Ihis season.
They'll host the Hills in a thiY'&lt;'
game series t.2ginning t oda~' .

acquired him from Cleveland last
Sr•ptPmbPr.
Meatw:hile. Hon Guidry Is up

•
contmues

••

DO

pressure from (l:xJard Ch1:1irman

Denny wa lked one a nd stnrck out
thn&gt;t' in. evening his. rt:.'(_'()J-d at 1-1. lt
was hi!&lt;i first For P hil adelphin . which

month .

~-;~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;.

DO
DO

'

Schmidt each home red for the
Phillie'S, backing the eight-hit pitc h·
ing of John Denny.
The Ph lilies trailed 2-0 In the thlrd
when Ma tthew s led off with a solo
shot off Paul Moska u. After Joe
Morgan walked, Schmidt homered
for the fourth timet his season to put
PhiQy ahead :n

Gambling_
probe ·

~

I'll be soon coming
your ·way with the
NEWS. I'm proba
the only kind of
bug you won't be
swatting this
spring. Watch for
me in the NEWS.

••

Joel Youngblood.
Tom ·Ntedentuer, who faCEd only
one batter in the eigh th. got the
victory , a nd Dave Stewart worked
out of a one-out , two-on jam in the
ninth to earn his third save.
Phllllt:s R, Cull&lt;l2
Gary Matthews and Mike

Knicely feels trade
best thing for 'him

tSandenon 2.(1}
Plnii:JUI'J[h rT\InneU O. H at New York

Sunda,)i, """' M
Oakland 111 Blnnlngllam

:m

-SUBSCRIPTION .RATES

G~

IYIIurda)'' Aprl !3

2
9.1826
WENT DIVmiON
l..o6 An~tt"ll
9
~
m Atlama
8
J
'h

·

.....,..,GirMII

..111

.167 ' 7

Los Arllt('les at Mlctllgan, 1n1
Om~ at A.rtwna, tnl

W L Prt. GB

Pln.V ..rgll

733 Third Avenue. New York, New
York 10017.

10
lll

(

.t62 ' 3~,;

Los 1\ngek's 18. Tampa Ba y IJ

I!J\ST DIVJ;ION

St. Loul!i

.1
2

.667

at Toronto

IGott GUI, tnl

~

•
7

Clnctnnau at Hnmon. rnl
Atlanta at San Dlegn . t n 'l
Los Afl&amp;'C'Ies at San Francisco. t n )

Only games !;CheduJed

4

•.
6

By ..........""'l'reM
Angeles · wtnnlng rim scored ln the
Flannery was only one of top of the ninth inning on Ken
nlne San Diego Padres with an R.J3l ·Landreaux'sground ball . It was his
on the night, but his contrtbution 11th RBI of the new season .
may have been just a little bit
Tralllng 3-0, San Francisco tied
bigger .
the score ln the eighth off Bun
Flannery slngled, tripled, scored Hooton on Mill May's two-run
twice and drove ln a run as his homer and a pinch RBI sll)gle by
contrtbulions ln a 15-hit attack that
helPeO San Diego bury the Atlanta
Braves 10.3 Monday night.
ln addition, he played another
flawless game at third base ln place
of Luis Salazar, who had made two
errors before being replaced by
Manager Dick WUllams.
CINCINNATI (AP I Alan
With his two hits, Flannery upped Knicely was afraid things were
his average to .375. Gene Richards going from bad to worse when the
was the only Padre wtth more than Houston Astros traded him to the
one RBI Monday night, drtvlng In a Cincinnati Reels this spring.
pair with a single ln the second
Now he's glad lor the switch.
lnnlng. Steve Garvey hit a solo
"The first day ln T3(llpa (at the
homer.
Reds' training camp), I couldn't
ln the only other games played, believe how easy going It was,'' said
Los Angeles. edged San Francisco Knicely, a catcher and outfielder. " I
4-3 and Philadelphia clobbered the figured with _the season Cincinnati
Chicago Cubs 8-3.
had , it would be a little roughe r than
. Every Padre that got into the Houston Is. But It was a totally
lineup against Atlanta - wtth the different a tmosphere.
exception of San Diego's three
"It was loosey-goosey. Every!&gt;
pitchers - had at least one RBI ody here has a good t lme. At least
against four Atlanta pitchers.
here. I! you make a mistake. you
Right-hander Eric Show , 2-0, don't have to worry what (Astro
worked the first 51-Jlnningslor San General Manager All Rosen might
Diego for the victory.
say In the papers the next day or say
It was the flrst win of the year for In the clubhouse ."
the Padres over the Braves, who
Knicely's memories of UteAstms
swept a four-game series over San aren't very pleasant. He c riticized
Diego ln Atlanta last w~k. Rookie Rosen for puttin g too much presright-hander Craig McMunry, 1-1. sure on the clu b, and rom pared hint
lasted only two Innings for the to New .York YankeeownerGrorgr
Braves.
Steinbrenner .
Dodgers 4, Giants 3
"Af Rosen is another Stein·
·.Giants relief ace Greg Minton
brenner."
Knicely said. " He fcf'ls
walked the bases full, and Los

nm

Sl . Louis Ill Mont"'lll
PlttsWrgh at New 'lortl, tnl
Chicago at Phlltldelphla. t n l

New 'lork J, Toronto 0
• Mlrult'SCU 8, Seanlt' 5
Oakla,nd :i. Cillltornla 3

(USPSI4$-MQ)
A Dl"¥lslon of Multimedia, lac .

~5769 .

•

T"'"

. The Daily_Sentinel .

Ohio

6

6
5
5
5

!Yz
57.t172
4 t i .txl2
WtliT DIVEJON
Oakl~d
9
4 .tm
7
4 .li.l'i 1
l&lt;4ns.u City
5
• .556 2
caJJb'ru,
7 ~ 6
. 5.E
2
Chkago
5
~
.5W 2~
Ml"""""'
5
7 .417 3~
Seattk'
5
9 . ~7 4~

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

RICH.

·'

a....t.ru!

Layton (WP) and Daniels.

'

EAST DIVI!ION
WLPd.GB

Mltwaukt&gt;e

107 lx-9 5 I

OUT

JUNE 7th, 1983
PRIMARY ELECTION

Also, if you in.ove you must notify the county of·
flee. Or if you are in doubt as to whether you are properly registered, Ph&lt;!,ne the board .

m-4

TAKE THIS TEST
2. Has your home increased in value?
3. Have you paid off ;my part of your
original mortgage?

Baltlm:re

Ba.ttelies: Collins, Larkins (LP), Holter

Ryan Oliver, a nd Jay Bostick wtth
thr~ singles each.
othijrs In the. &gt;htt pa raile . were
Charlie Wolfe wtfh a double and
slrtgle, Scott Wickline wtth two
singles. and Dartn Roosh, Dan
Wolfe and Rlcha·rd Wolfe eac h with
line singles .
Randy Matlack led the young
Lancers wtth three singles, while
Cary Null had a trtple. Ivan
Walker, Phil Singer a nd Randy
Pyle each had a sing le.

pitcher, after coming on In relief of
starter Jay Bostick In the second
Inning. Together the duo struck out
seven and walked eight.
Leading the 19-hlt bombshelllng
was Brian Allen, David Ebersbach,

AMD&amp;ICAN lEAGUE

and Cowery.

For Eastern Ray Maxson tripled,
Carpenter doubled, Troy Guthrie
singled., Dave Gaul sing led, Jerry
Larkins singled, and Tom Everett
..
ripped a double.
ln a s now-shortened five inning

Defensively the youngTornadoes
kept in stride with their sparkling

I. Do you own your own home?

IF YOU ARE
VISIT THE
BOARD'S OFFICE IN PERSON - OR PHONE THE
BOARD OF ELECTIONS - OR MAIL THE BOARD A
CARD.

111

SWHS

Leading the winners with two
s ingles was Haislop, while David
Nlda, Randy Layton, Gary Baker
each singled.
.

errors.

ly'111e~p,...

,.._.IQ''I GalnM

Eastern

In the bottom of the fourth as did
Eastern In the top of the fifth for the
9-4 final.

.

Majors

Uaes&lt;ore

runners on !lrst and thlrd after
Tony Rllfle singled and Paul Harris
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
reached on an error. A persistent
Jnsld~ Ohio
blizzard · like condlttOn refused to
13 Weeks ........... .. .... .... .. ... ... $14.04
26 Weeks ............................... S27.:rl
subside as a snow-covered field
F.H. Res .
1..X1 110 0- 6 7 8
52 Weeks ...... ...
.. ...... $51.-&amp;8
Southern Res.
1012 019 x-26 19 8
became too treacherous for further
Outside Ohio
Batteries: Glen Harrts ( LPI . Ritc hie- Hays
13 Weeks ..
play.
... .. ..... $15.21
1st, a nd Ron Russell. Gle-nn Harr~. Jay
26 Weeks ..
........ . $29.64
A frosty Hilton Wolfe, Jr. of Bostick, Charlie Wolfe 2nd. IWPI and DaMn
52 Weeks .... ....... .
. ........... $56.21
Roush .
Southern said, "ln 14 years of
coaching about everything that r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - l _ : _ ___________-'could happen has happened, but
I've never had a gone snowed out
before!"
'
Southern next plays In the
Eastern-Southern, father-son rl·.
valry at Eastern on Wednesday.
Meanwhile, Southern's Tornadoettes dropped Hannan Trace,
10-2 In a game called after five
Innings due to the treacherous
conditions left by a snow squall.
Meanwhile. Southern's reserves
evened their record at 1·1 here
Saturday by blasting the Federal
Hocking reserves 2~ on a rapid·
fire 19 hit attack. Southern had 10
walks and F .H . committed 10

IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE

MAY
9th
NOT REGISTERED:

The wall caved In for Eastern ln
the third Inning as SWHS plated
seven runs on two hits, two Eagle
terrors, and six walks . After two
early Inning hits by Layton and
Halslop Eastern pitching couldn't
buy a. strtke, walking home three
batters ~tween two costly errors.
Three Eastern pitchers took their
turn on the mound with veteran
Mark Holter finally working out of
the Inning.
Southwestern scored a single run

.

MIDDLEPORT AND
POMEROY VILLAGE VOTfRS

YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY

as

The

Ohio

-_ San Diego buries Atlan~a; Guidry whips Toronto

affair, Randy Layton gave· up six ,
hits, walked six, and fanned tlve
enroute to picking up his second
wtn of the season. Eastern pitching
glive up · ten walks, six· hits and
struck out five.
Larkins suffered the loss ln
one-third 1ruitbg of .work ln relief at
starter Mike 'c ollins who went two .
and a third Innings. Holter came on
ln rellel to f1nlsh the game.
Eastern comrnltted four ei'rors,
resulting Iii five unearned runs,
while Coach Jack James' Hjgh·'
landers were near perfect with just
one mlscue.
SWHS plays at Jackson tonight,
whlle Eastern Is Idle untO Its highly
touted. match-up wtth Southern on
Wednesday at EHS.

Snow cancels game.
Tomadoettes tn·umph

base paths as the game en~.
Eastern hitters were Whitlatch
two do~bles, Gaul two singles and a

NBA's mini-series hegins tonight
By The Associated Press
The Boston Ceitlcs hope to cut
som e "trees" down lo slze tonlghl in
the opening of their National
Basketball Association playoff
mini-series with the Atlanta Hawks .
"Atlanta is a tough team for us to
play because they have such a big
front line," says Boston' s Kevin
McHale. "But I feel as good about
playing them as I do anybody. fn a
mini-series It ·s not so much who we
play, it' s how we play ."
Tree Rollins, the Hawks '~7- foot
cen ter, will be one of the players the
Celtlcs have to deal with In the
Eastern Conference contest a t
Boston, one of two playoff games
tonlght. Phoenix ~lay s host to
Denver In a fl rst-mund game In the
Western Conference.
Firs!·ruund ac1lon contlnu&lt;'S
Wednesday night with New York
visit ing New . J ersey in !'aste rn
action and Portland playing a t
Sean le In the West.
The Celt ics avoided lhe best-of-

1983

Southwe~tem dumps Ea8tem
Maxson's slam would easily have
been a home run, but as nullified by
mls!;lng third base, the score.2·1.
Jonlor hurler Mike Collins retired the side quickly ln the second
EHS again went to work, loading
the bases with just one OIJt.
With opportunity knocking and
one run already ln Layton struck
out !he: next batter and ended the
Inning on a long fly out.

/

r

Tunday.Ap11 19,1983

By SC01T WOLFE
.,
PATRIOT - In a game twicedelayed by mld·Aprtl snow show·
ers, Southwestern's Highlanders
outlasted Eastern's Eagles, 9-4,
behind another fine outing by burly
righthander Randy Layton here
Monday evening In SVAC baseball
action.
Enroute to the win the Highland
ers ,braved sub-freezing tempera·
tures, gusty wtnds, and blizzard·
like conditions to defeat Eastern lor
the second time ln two weeks.
SWHS Is now 2·5, while Eastern
rests at 0.2·1.
In the 11rst Inning Eastern
warmed up the base paths, but
froze In their tracks wtth only one
run crossing the plate on a lead off
walk to Larry Cowdery and line
single by Troy Guthrte.
Followtng a strikeout, Jay Car·
penter launched a towertng shot to
deep center field that seemingly
cleared the bases, but as called
back due to a ground rule, thus a 1.0
Eagle lead.
Layton buckled dqWII to retire the
side, before his club went to the
plate to knot the score 1-1. Daniels
walked, Nida singled, and Layton ·
lofted a sacrtflce fly to deep oenter
for an RBI.
EHS threatened again In the
second with a Tom Everett leadof(
walk, and a booming trtple to left
center field by Ray Maxson.

•

�The Daily Sentinel-Page

..

The··: oaily Sentinel

By The Bend

•

)-.

T~y,April

....

Get Your

YOU CAN. WIN

•

)

19,1983

FREE
BINGO

-··•

CARDS
From These
Merchants!!

Organizations meet throughout Meigs
Salem Center PTG
POMEROY--Off!cers for the 198384 school year were elected at the
APril meeting of the Salem Center

PTO.

iary, held at the home of Mrs.
Lucllle Saunders.

The summer conventi9n was

Bunny J(uhl and Edna Slusher

hosted a luncheon meeting of the

veterans.

E lected were Lue Shenefield.
p~ident ; Paula Haynes. vice
president ; Teri York, secretary;
Ka:ren Clark, treasurer; and Vera
Holliday , corresponding secretary.
During the meeting members,
vi~ted the new library-media
center , saw the new carpeting, and
ai5o thr three Discovery Machines
r~en tly purchased by the PTO.
The group voted to change the
meeting date to the first Monday of
Pach month effective with the next
school year and also added an
amendment to the by-laws regard -

Unit chairmen were asked to turn
in their activity reports by May 1.
Plans were made to host a party for
the veterans at the Athens Mental
Heath Center. It was noted that May
'll Is the deadline for units to make
goaL
Mrs. Lula Hampton reported
from the American Legion bulletin
on national legislation noting that
the American Legion supports the
president's request tor both economic and military aid tor E l
Sa lvador, and also favors the
funding of a new training bill for

inlivo1ing members.

Lewis Manley Auxiliary
POMEROY-- A bulletin from
M rs. Thora Gatwood, Eighth Dlstric;1 president. was read by Mrs.
Margar('t Bowles, president, at th('
r~nt meeting of the Lewl• Manley
Unit 2!i3, America n Legion Auxll-

·I·~

.

.

veterans.
Three applications tor member·
shtp were revtewed . Mrs. Hampton,
Mrs. WUI Winston, Mrs. Annette
Johnson were named to the nomi nating committee and will report at
thr next meeting to be held at the
home of Mrs. Hampton.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Saunders.

: !'OM leROY - Shade Vall1•y
Cou ncil uf Floral /\J1 s Tuesday,
7• p.m . at home 91 M rs. Alice

·nwmpson. Members to take
ar r anging m ntcrlats ror work -~ hop . 1\. lso plant s for lde ntifca ·

tjon con test.

---

; POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
BPta Sigma Ph i Sororit y, will meet Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .
at the. Meigs Inn . Kathy Cuml~gs and ,Debbie Betzlng will
h8ve cultural program; Brenda
lllll and .!ill Llzon will serve
C hapt~r .

1rrrcshments. New officers arP

10 be elec ted .

POMEROY - The Jaymar
(;oil Course Ladles Association
)"i ll meet at 9 a. m . Tuesday.
New officers will be elected and
!hP members will play If the
Wr&gt;a!her ~rm ll s. All womPn arr
ln vitrd .

POMf':ROY - Thl' Meigs
Lr•·al District Vocal Music
'Roostf'rs wlll mC!'t a t 6 this
€vP nin g in 1h0 voca I music room
of 1111' high school.
MIDDLEPORT -

C:roup 2.
MidriiPport First U nited Presbyt,•rl&lt;m Chur('h, TuPsduy, at th£&gt;
clmrch . Martha AndPrson ami
t;: tit.abct h J1urkPII. hos tcss('S;
f;~ y lt r- Wall ac e. dl'vot lonal
ll·tul1·r .
MIIJ!li. I'I-:Ol t'l' - Mlddl&lt;•
j) Jrt. l,.odgP .11\l F . and A.M ..
TuPsdu .v . 7 p.m. Masonic Trmplf'. Wcrk In Fr•llowernfl de~r&lt;'&lt;' .
R••fr PshmPnt s .
· POM !-:ROY .- Epsilon Chaptl'r. Alpha J)(•Jt a Kappa, 1\tcs-

Happy Harvesters Class at Trinity
Church Thursday.
The opening prayer was given by
Caryl Cook with Georgia Watson
. reading "Be Near Me Lord," and
"A Candle I s But a Simple Thing."
Officer s' reports were given.
Members reported on Ruth Massar,
now residing in Columbus, Eva
Dessauer and Genevieve Meinhart
who have been ill, and welc9med
Wilma Terrell . The illness of Mrs.
Ralph Zundel was noted.
Several members attended the
fellowship ·tea at the Middleport
Ba!Jtist Ch~rch . A rummage sale
was set for June. Noted was the
blrthday of Ella Smith and the 62nd
anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Cook. Sympathy was extended to
Mrs. Stanley Bass.
Game prizes went to Mrs.
Meinhart, Edith Lanning, Mrs.
Dessauer. and Georgia Watson.
The May4meetingwlll be 11: .10at
the churc h, with members to take a
favorite sa lad. Mrs. Meinhart had
several humorous poems with the
Lord's Prayer closing the meeting.

Per Week

PLAINS - A
sJom p&lt;'r pull contr·st will be held.
~ltunta ~' at thf' 1\1ppC'rs Plains
Jl'in' S ta tion with t·egistration at
!i p.m. T rop hies will bc awatlled
;111Ll n •fres hrn ents will br
ava ilabl&lt;'.
; POM IO: ROY A " Happy
Ba .ys '' d;1ncr wi ll be staged from
~); l l.IIL to midnight Friday at the
iVl&lt;'igs ll igh School In con juncllun wltllttlf' SC'n lor play . A llv~
l.h1nd , " 1\mpricarr M·uslc EX:pn·ss" wi ll prov ide music. The
13. KI\.0 . Club Is spbnsortng the
&lt;:''('nt . Admission Is $.'1 a [lf'rson .

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INSTALLED-Anita Smith, front, second from left,
was ln'i!alled as the new District 8 American Legion
Junior AuxUiary president, by Thora Gatwood,
District 8 Senior Auxiliary preildent, at Satunlay's
district L'Onference held in Pomeroy. Pictured with
them are front l eH, Loretta Tiemeyer displaying the

attendance trophy won bythePomeroyunll,andVeda
Davis, displaying the best all-aroond trophy woo by
the Juniors ol Unit 39. othtlr omcers recognized we.,e
Catherine Welsh, Eighth District veteransalfalrsand
rehabilitation chalnnan,lelt, and Mary Martin, stale
hospital representative.

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NEWSPAPER

Haggy, and Megan Clark, Pomeroy
Unit 39, were recognized and
presented with Susan B. Anthony
sllwr dollars by Jessica Hamilton
and.Palma Wlies. :: · ·"" ·'·' .
.
.Sherry Fox ·preside.J - at the-.
meetin·g with Robin Catnnbell
~
giving the weleome, and Sherry
Johnson, the response. There were
greetings· fro.m Clarence Andrews,
mayor of Polneroy , M rs . Gatwood .
GeraldRought,commander of Post

39.

Oorothy Jenkins was the confer- , ,
ence pianist. Erica McClintock ; ·
served as conference secretary and
Pam - Hagg:y
the invocation.
. Foliq~\l)g_ the pledge of all€1!lance . • ,
ai1d tfie·natlonal anthem, there was
a silent tribute to the honored
dead
.
and thepreambleoftheConstltutlon
of the American Legion Auxiliary ..
led by Amber Hankla..
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A reception honoring Miss Fox .• .
was conducted foUowing the , ..::
conference.
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-ll2 .E. .Mai.n
-· . St.
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New Color Card Each Week

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Reedsville UMW

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.t,..J

'\-,

Card Will
LOok Like
This...

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THURSDAY

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Pomeroy, OH.

fman , Debbie Frost, Amber Wells,
Penny Aelker, Sarah Pullins. Lisa
Hoffman. She rrt Smith, Sarah
Harris. Rhonda Gibbs. Heather
Farley, Carrie Connolly, Julie
Riffle, Lorre Osborne, Nichola
Pickens. Janell e Neutzling, Alvena

- - - - - - - - T H I S IS HOW IT WORKS------PICK UP FREE BINGO CARDS: Eo;~ week

·-

Van Meter, and Tiffany Gardn,er.
Adults assisting were Jane Har·
rls, Barbara Hoffman, Texanna Well, Janet Koffman. Susan Jet!,
Ta mmy Capehart, Patty Pickens, Lila Van Meter, and Carolyn •:
Smith.
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·lin a

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A f:rrrilCr\ jnh io; bigJ.&gt;c r rhan jusr plant in,~-: s&lt;.cl'&gt; and
Our agt·r-..-y knuws thai - wr:'rc in bu.&lt;:int..~S. roo.

watt'hi n,~-:

rht-m gmw.

Frna lly, 1h: c;oklcn Hnrvcsr Pol it.)' i5 bad«.'t:t by Glmirwmm ll nsur'JI)('(''~
rt' pt rtcttion fnr pnHTipt .;c:rvia: t~ nd fuir claims scnkon'K'nt. We w:~ m tu 5C'l' you
OOck in blrsinc..'SS tts soon as [&gt;~:risible - t~hcr all. we hrlpt.' tr1 ·inSflrt.· ynu fur many
),_&gt;::~r.&gt;

rn rome.

c~eck eo ch day's ISSUC ol

CHECK EACH ISSUE Of THE PAPER: Anew l)!me will st.~ eo;~
Mooday and be rnmpleted th e loltowrng Saturday Be sure to
THE OAil Y SENTIN EL. TIt Court St ..

merchants' stores. To ~ el1~r~e lo wm, you must pay BlnQO ccuds
ot tt1e ccrrect color lor that week 's ga me. The color ot the cards let
each week's Rame wrll be announced each ,Y.!eek on thrs page

- - - - - - - R U L E S OF THE G
AME-------•
NO OBLIGATION OR PURCHASE NECESSARY: There • no
obfiption or purchase necessary. Acopy of the paper ISavariable
few playing the ga~ at tt1e office d this newspaper - also at the
flUbtic itrary - also a Bill!.'&gt; card and 01 copes ot The 0.1ty
Semi IXII1taillillg the iJn&amp;O numbers may be obtl111ed by
mailing your Fequest to this ne~paper (please ptint your name

DIFFERENT COtOREO CARDS EACii WEEK: f~e color ot the
cards change each wee k. To be a wmner, yoll must play Brngo
cards of tt1e correct cobr to1that week. MutrlatOO or aKE!fed cards
wrll nci be honored

All14 NUMBERS ON ACARD MUST BE MATCHED TO WIN .

and Jddress clearly). You may Pay as many cards as you wiSh they are ~ee. Gel add Ilona I cards - ..-. at alime- eac~ day ol
the weeil - ll1lll\ the rrerchants ltsted ladulll onl~ .

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CHANCE DffiRMINES NUMBERS: Bm~ number! 10&lt; eo;~
wek's game are di3Wfl stnc,ttv at raOOom at the oftiCt ollhls
rewspaper Some durjcation ot Brngo numbers may aprear 10
the merct1ailts arts - or elsewhere lf1 the paDef. Thts du~atw
ooes r~~t affect the game or the total numbers drawn. AI numbers,
f{J" ecr::h week's game wrll appear soneplace rn !he I»~

Employees of thrs newspaper and member1 ol therr famrltes are
rot ellglble to W10 any of the prm. Newspaper Brn!J)ISI program
copynghted af'(! re9stered by MarkeOOg Reseatch ~ele1.

Pltnneapolts. Mrnne51Jta

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ADOLPH'S.
DAIRY VALLEY
570 W. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH 45769. because some ol the numbers may appear
rn each day ·s rs..'iue_AH numt:Ers n~ed to complete each week's
game wjl have ap~ared by each Frtda.,'s rssue. A new set ci
brneo numbers wrll t.! publiShed tn each week's game_A ne¥~
color of bingo cards wtll ~ avarlablc e&lt;JCh week at the 51)J11ScHing

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Winners share tt1 e $50 00 eo uatly II there are no wrnn ers an~
week. the $50.00 wee ~y pnze wrl be added to tile lollowmg
IVeek's pnze lund

IF YOU AR£ AWINN£A: It you have a "Mnmng Bmgo card. on
wh1ch all 24 numbers have been matcllOO wrth the total of the
numbers publ~hed dunf1lhe week rn The Darty Sentllel. pnnl
you r name . address, pOOne numbef oothe back ol yOU! cauf and
marl kl' (The envelope contarnflg you1 card must be reCeived~
500 pm Tuesdoy ~me IJ\kJ"ng weeki 01 bmg ~""'card ID tr.
oHK:f of The Oa~v Sen~nel by 500 p.m Tuesday of the tol\owmg
week.

Sentinel every day. Bingo Bugs with numbers will
appear in the sponsor's ads every day and a new
game·starts each Monday.

.

&lt; tllh'I•·P I, t

weekly prrte ol

\ohown below}. Or:C&lt;!siooally, number; '"the · ~n~ Bug" may be
toond osewhere in tl-. pape&lt;. Check t~e ctossrtied ad secton lm
addrtional numbe"- IF YOU CAN MATCH (JUSTCIRCLE OR~ · fHE
MATCHING NUMBERSJ.
AU 24 NUMBERS Ofj ONE OF YOUR BINGO CARDS Willi THE
TOTAL OF NUMBERS PUBLISHED IN All THE ISSUES Of THE
DAILY SENTINEl EACH YOU - YOU HAVE A"BING0'1 AND
YOU ARE AWINNER .

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·.~ho t • • 11! -1 I l l'

s han~ il

Ttrbe a potential winner you must read The Daily

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Af LEAST $50.00 WEEK LVII Wmners w111

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. eorhc lalk 10 ll"i.,

only please\.

$50 00 rn "Bmgo Bucks" - they spc11d the 5ame as ca)ll with
any of the sponsonng merch~ nts ~ sled II there rsonly one wrnner.
he Yf1ns all !1 the $50.00 II there rs morP. thiln one wrnner, all

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Th!C's whr 'f't' offrr The Grkk:n Han,_'Sr Polk.)· fru m Contirrmal
lnsumnrc . vHr ht'lp you survr,vc in rhi5tou~h work!. It in.'itlll'.'i yr~t.Ji m1~ against
d~maJ...'CS c ru!ild by hail, ti~hmin,{{ arxl firt•. l_t cvt'fl insures chcm In n·ansir tj1
rhcir fir'ir pb~"e of SfVPJ,I,'t'.
'

ladut~

pick up your Free bingo Gards trom the SfXjnsanng merchants
listed. Rules o1 the game allow the merchanl'i to gwe you only one
card for each store visit. You may, however. make as many vrsrts
as you wish each day ollhe wee&lt; THE t.'ORE CAROS YOU PlAY
THE BrnER YOUR CHANCES ARE TO WIN.
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HOW TO PLAY: Jlled lhe ads 1n [AI}j DAY'S ISsueol THEOAll Y
SENTINEL The ods ol lhe merchants listed w1ll contarn one 01
more "Newspaper 8ir1go" number rn the "BmRO Bug'' symbol

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" t ~L'\1 )'&lt;'tir. a htril smrm flat«.'fl(.d my rorrwo cmp. I would h,IVc tx&gt;cn ow uf ·
businc.-s.'l..thr., year, hu1 I ~u rvivc.'-1 - rhanks ur my l~ 1kk:n H ~rrvt.~l Pull:y." .

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Pomeroy,
OH.
·. ·- : ...

In Middleport. OH.

RECOGNIZED-Veda Davis, leader of the American Legion Junior
Auxlllary of Drew Well;ter Post 39, Pomeroy, lor 17 yelll'!l was given
special recognition at Satunlay'sdlstrlct conference. Loretta Tiemeyer,
leH, on behalf of the Auxlliary , presentkd Mrs. Davis with a chann.

·:

BIWWNIE DAY • Brownie _Day Wllll obierved sewing, making slt·UJIOII!I and 1\'hlppbtg rope ends lo
recently by Chestm;)'roop J06'l, and IJM; girls worked ; make jump I'Op('BitlRere the girls pcwoe belore an
on a rnnumber of Jl'ojects btcludiJII ceramiCs, yam Easler Egg Tree ai"UUe Scout Hall they decorated.

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"ON THI T"

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Cub Pack 245

For Game
No. 1, April 25-29

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'111e Salisbu ry PrO wll meet
·nwsctay at 7::.1 p .m . at the
s'ho&lt;ll.
The flflh and sixth
·gtaders wW present a band
concertand new officers will be
elected and Installed .

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SUPER VALU
Pomeroy, QH.
2nd St.
----------------GINZA

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Brownie Day observed in Chester

Syracu:re PTO

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POWELL~S

BLUE,

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698 E. Main St.

This Week's
Card Is

A Winning

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BURGER
CHEF

*It's FUN *It's FREE
*There's ANew Game On A

WEDNESDA\

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SWISHER-LOHSE
PHAR-MACY

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Junior Auxiliary installation conducted ~:

Riverview PTO

Pomeroy, OH.

352 E. Main St.,

r

' ltAC!Nl-: - T he PTO of the
l'/oircinc I·:tPmenta ry School will
iJgJcJ a toul auction Sa turday at
7:30 p.m . at the Southem.Iunlor
J1tgh School wit h Dan Smith as
t{\lc tlon('CI'. Tools of every kind
\till he ava ilable and refreshments wil l tx• sold.

·, A camporee lor May 7 was
planned a I a recent meeting ol .
tlle Cub Scout Pack 245 at the
American· Legion F¥"1 on the

FRANCIS
FLORIST

By Playing

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Middleport, OH.

N. 2!1 Ave.

Happenings
• TUPI'I-:11S

MARKV
GROCERY!

in Bingo Bucks

The conference of the Eighth
District Junior American Legion
An ai:ts and craft display of Conference Saturday in Pomeroy
s tudcms work at the_ Riverview was highlighted by. the election and
' d;J,Y, - 7.:.10 p:m . at · f&gt;icigs -lnq.
- School was !he ~l ghirght. _of the .. Ins! alia lion ·of Anita. Sn'll!h ; ;is
evenmg·at ·a recent PTO m~tmg , ·. district resldeni and the presentaPaui Sti-a uss, hcrablist , ·to
All students
. o1t rop
P hi cs an'd .awar ds .
SJX•a k .
· had
· work
.,. on display lion
an d pan Ictpal ton nu 00 ns wer'('
Smith was installed to tile top
award('d. Offic('rs Installed for the position in the district by Thora
POMEROY - Sp&lt;'Ciat m&lt;'&lt;'t 1?&amp;3-84 sch~l yea~ were Mary Gat wood. Lithopolis, the Eighth
ing, Pomeroy Chapl&lt;'l' 00. Roya l
!\,.ewell.. pr-·es tdcnt
. Nancy
Dls1nc
. t Sentor
, _,,,uXI.1rary
.. pres iden t _
A r~ h Masons: 7 p.m. ton ight.
. Be&gt;
DillBuckley,
' tce pr cs tdent,
tty
, secreRetiring president is ShPrry Fox of
Work in mark master and past
tary: and Angw Morns. trcasurw .
M 'ddl
rt
mastf'r degn•f's .
Mrs. Baum 's Sf'(:ond grade won
~ede~ ·.
!zed ! h 17
the award for the highest perc('na aviS , rcco~ ~r 7r
tage of parent s present. Grace
years as leader o the JUn ors,
Weber r eporied on recent school
accepted on behalf of the unit, the
trophy for the bcst all-around
event s as well as buying projt'Ctsfor
·
the school. A discussion was
program in the district as well as
POMEROY- American Red
conducted on additional improv&lt;'one l?r attendance at the dtstrict
Cross Bloodmobile, Wednesday,
ment
s
to
the
playground.
Success
meet
mg. She wa_s. also presented a
1:30 to5: 30p.m. at Meigs County
rePorted
from
the
charm
in rccogn rtron of her years of
result
s
were
Senior Cltt1..ens Center. Mut-.
operet
ta
held
at
thr
school.
as
well
serv
tce
by Loretta Tiemeryer,
berry Heights, Pomeroy. Walk- ·
as
th~
rf'CCnt
book
fair.
presrdent
,
on behall of the
in donors welcome.
Auxiliary.
Winners in the contests were
POMEROY - Third WPdnrsPalma
Wiles. Pomeroy Unit ~9 . age
The Reed sv ille UMW met at lh&lt;'
day Homl'makOI's Club JO a.m .
group
three
to sLx-years, coloring
hom&lt;' of Mrs. Sue Reed with Mrs.
Wednesday. Date Stoll wiM
book;
Sherry
.Johnson, Racine Unit
Mary Acors a s~ i sta nl hostess
prl'sent the topic, "Better Than
!i02.
age
nine
to 12. coloring book,
MPCI lng opPn('d with Lord' s Praye r
Store Bough t "; pot luck dinner
narrat
ive
·
on
junior activities.
in unison a nd scripture r('ading
a t noon.
conference
cov('r
in her age group.
Psalms 125 by Mrs. Sue Douglas.
and
prayer
book:
Robin Campbell,
Mrs. Sa ndy Cowdery Jed the
Pomeroy
Unil
39,
history: Anita
program " Tn.1st in God and Always
Smith. Unit 39. narrative on fund
B(' Thankful." Mrs. VIolet Satter·
rq ising for Eluwa School. Unit
field presented rf'Corded hymns.
award'
received by Pomeroy
POMEROY - Sp&lt;'Cial meet Devotions closed with prayer by
in&gt;:luded
senior
·nar rative by Mrs.
ing, Pomeroy Chapter 00. Royal
Mrs. Vivian Humphrey. Business
Ill
in
foreign rei at ions,
Davis.
Class
Arch Masons. Thu rsday, 7: 30
s.e•ssion conductrd by pr0sldcnt
C)ass
II.
and
handwork,
p.m . with work In the most
Mrs. flolly Reed . Sixt y shut -in calls
Poppy
Day
royalty.
Angela
cxcellrnt master dC'grec .
were made and cards wer r signPd
Carleton.
Tabi
tha
..
Wilford
and
for sevrra l friend s. A whih_, PIPHillary
Harris.
Racine
Unit
602;
POMEROY - Magnoll&lt;t Club ., phant salf' was planned for nPxt
Laney Hankla , Jennifer Cross Kim
Thursday. 7:.'«lp.m . at the homp
m('Ctlng.
of Mrs. Myi'Dn Mlll('r
Games werC' playf'Ci with Mrs.
Verna Rost• awarded lhP prizl' . T hl•
·POMEROY Midcllrp011
group sang " happy blt1 hday" to
Child Consr rvat lo n . LC.ague.
Mrs. · Aeor~ and h£'r dau g ht Pr
Brownie Day wa s observed by
Thursd&lt;t y, 7: .' 10 p.m . hom&lt;' of
presentf'd a birthday ca ke to her.
the Chester Brownies of Troop JotiT
Sus ie Soulsby . Cla rice Kennedy
Hrf t'&lt;'Shmcnts wei'!' SNved to thrs('
at thP srout hall I'('Cently.
to ha ve . de vo ti o n s; n l?w
g ursts a nd mcm!Jtlrs . Mr.s. Ma r\'
C:irl s worked on a 'va riety of
mf'mbC'rs to tx&gt; voiC'·d on ,
Bise. Mrs. Virginia Walton. Mrs.
projects including cera mics. yarn
nomi natin g co mml l tl'C IO
Erika Boring, Mrs. Nola Young,
sewing, making slt -upons. whipreport .
Mary Ann Acors, Angle and Andy
ping rope ends to make Individual
Reed, Mrs . Oarbara Masters. Mrs.
jump ropes, demonstrating how to
Verna Hose, Mrs. Sue Douglas.
tie square knots and beginning knot
Mrs. Pat Marlin. Mrs. Sa ndy
boards.
Cowdery. Mrs. Violet Sancrfl eld.
They made Easter baskets had
Ba iley Road Road. fkgistration
Mrs.
Mamie Buckley, Mrs. Dolly
an egg hunt. and d&lt;'cm·a ted an egg
can be completed atthesltewith
RN."d. Mars. Marlene Putman,
tree tor· display at lhe entra nce to
the fee of S2to be paid prior to I
M
rs. Vivia n Humphrey and Mrs.
the hall. The day's outdoor actlvJ.
p.m . that day. Those at lending
Lillian Pickens. Mrs. Mar·lln· reties Included practicing rope jumparc to take a sack lunch.
ceived the &lt;1 oor pri ze. Mrs.
Ing skills and a sing-a-long conCowdery and Mrs. Sa tterileld will
cluded the activities.
have the May meeting.
Stephanie - Hot-

Calendar

TUESDAY

Happy Harvesters

. announC€d for June 9 at Lithopolis.
A communication was read from
Mrs. Pat Courtney regarding the
need for recreational equipment for

7

If You're Not A Daily
Sentinel Subscriber,
tlip This Coupon And
Subscribe NOW!

Pomeroy, OH.

K&amp;C
JE-WELERS
212 E. Main St

Pomeroy, OH.

LANDMARK
OF POMEROY
540 E. Main ·st.

Pomeroy, OH.

Ir-----~---·----------,
9RjNG OR MAIL THIS COUPON
I
I
TO: THE DAILY SENTINEL/ORCULATION DEPT.
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I
II
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Pomeroy, ''OH. 45769
·1

:::~!~=":~"":7~''7~,,~7'7· . . . . . . 1I .
City ............... ; ... ................. ......... .... ,.. .... ..... .. ....... ........... ..........

Zip Code ................. ................... ........ ~ .... .......... . .................... .. .. ...
Phone Number ......... ...:.. .... ............ ·.... ·...... ·... ···.... ·.... ··.. ··........ ·...

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�I.

Ohio

l'clmeroy-Middleport,

Bear of the Bend

REHEARSE - Ralph Malph, lelt, played by Clinton Turner Is a
moh gangster In thl• "Happy Days" scene with HUda, played 'by
Stephanie llouchins, center, and Cyntiua, played by JuDe Spencer. The
musical produdlun is under the direction ol Cella McCoy and Kim
,Jones and will he presented at Rp.m. Friday at the Meigs Wgh School.

ol the bigger events to be
staged at the Rutland Civic ~nter
- and II has been
a · pcpular place
lor happeningsIs a gospel
concert.
The co ncert
will featu re
Sonny Sites and
The Marksman
Quartet of Huntington, W. Va ., wtth Chuck
Lawrence of WEMM-FM, also of
Huntington, serving as master of
·ceremonies. In addition, there wtll
be the local talent of the Sunrise
Trio, Chester and the Harmony
Quartet of Racine.
Advance tickets are$3 for adults;
children under 12, $2.50 and chlld·
ren under ·6 will be admitted free.
All tickets at the door will be $3.50.
Advance tickets can be secured at
the Rutland Furniture Stnre, Rutland Bottled Gas office, Rutland
Department Store, MOler's Grocery and Evelyn's Grocery, all In
Rutland; Betsy Ro'&gt;'l Thrift Store,
Quality Print SHp, Middleport
Book Store and the VIllage Pharmacy, all In M lddlepcrt, and at the
New York Clothing House and the
Chateau Beauty Salon, Pomeroy.
The concert Is scheduled for 8 p.m.
on Saturday, May 7.

Organizations meet throughout Meigs
Heath UMW

Mrs. Clatworthy , Mrs. Grace
French and Mrs. Joan Robinson .

"Parenting - n Commi t ment"
was the themf' orJ1he recent
meeting of the . U~ItO&lt;I 'N!elhodlsl
W'orrie n' of H ea tti ··· chureh.
Mlddlep6r1.
Mrs. Na n MMrP gavP d(&gt;votlons
using as hf'r tupit'. " The Many
Kinds of P"rr•nls" wllh Mrs. Belly
Full ' and Mrs Donna ByN sing ing
"Happy is the llomr Where God
Is." ScrlpturC' was taken from John
and Ruth and Mrs. Moore had a
closing pn.l yf'r.
Mrs Pultz, prog ra m lC'ader, used

"Many Kinds of

Pt~rr nt s"

as her

them e with several members
reading rh oughrs on parenting.
These were given by Mrs. Clara
Criswell on an adult caring for her
mother; Mrs. VIcki Houchins,
pcrrraylng rh.-:" mother of three
foster children faced with the
continuous threal of relinquishing
them lo anot her; .re"n Ann Bradbury pcrlraylng an older child
taking care of brothers and sisters
after lhe mother's death, Twlla
Childs lalklng about children for
adoption and Mrs. Byer, the
lmporlanl decision of adopllng
teenagers.

A d!scusslt.m

w;.~s

con-

ducted on the various phases of
parenrtng.
Mrs. Fullz concluded with a
reading from Respon,.~ aooul the
single parent family, and encouraged members ro ex rend a helping
hand to any single parents In the
church . P r ayer closed th e
program
Mrs Emma I&lt; C)alworthy presided at the !JlllC11 ng and lnlro·
duCcdhci' gu&lt;!iil . Mrs. Moore gave a
repcrl on the dinner for the
Wayland fam ily and plans were
discussed tor the mother-daughter
banquet next month .
Refresnmenr s were served by

Racine Auxiliary
:F'imil .rals'lng projects:were discussed a t a. recent m eeting o't the
Racine Firemen's lluxtllary al the
firehouse. Beulah Autherson pr&lt;&gt;slded at the meeting which opened
with the pledge to the nag and the
Lord'sPrayer. AgnesBoggessgave
the treasurer's repcrt . II was noted
that all kinds of knives arc for sa le
by the group. Mae Cleland won the
door prize and refreshments were
served by Jean Johnson to those
named and Thelma Walton , Irene
Roush, Sandy · Patterson, Ruth
Shain.

, Rock Springs Grange
The charter was draped In
memory of Beulah Ewing at the
Thursday night meeting ofl he Rock
Springs Grange at the hall.
A contrtbutlon was made ro the
heart fund In memory of Mrs.
Ewing. Lucille Leifheit, past master, conferred the Hrsl degree and
gave the obllgtlon of the second
degree for two candidates. Linda
and Frank Broderick.
II w as noted that I he sluffed toy
and needlework conies! Is due Aug.

31
The baking contest was judged by
Pam Holcomb wtlh I he winner s on
omnge bread being Barbara Fry,
first; Beuna Crueser. second; Opal
Gn•escr, lhlrd.
Members repc11cd Ul were Herbert Dixon and Mary Shaeffer.
Plans were made for an open
·m eeting on Thursday evening In
conjunction with membership week
which Is being observed over the
slale.
Refreshments were served by

Roy and Pat Holter.

Syraruse PTO
'

.

•

Purchase of sever alllems for the
school Including 24 new folding
metal chairs was approved at the
recen I meeting of the Symcuse PI'O
held at the school.
The unll also agreed to purchase
lie-down bases for the ball Held. Cost
estimates will be obtained for a new
trophy case for the school.
Officers elected for the 19&amp;1-84
school · year were Roger Allen,
president; Beverly Allen, v ice
president; Debbie Triplett, secr &lt;&gt;tary; Barbara ljearhs, treasurer.·
The fourth grade students presented a fiutophone concert under
the direction of John Van Reelh,
lnstrumentallnshuclor.
Sandra Baer, fourth grade
teacher, arranged a display of art .
work done by the students, grades
four through six.
Room counr was won by Mrs.
Baer' s fourth grade class. Becky
Anderson advised that new den
mothers for the cub scouts wU! be
needed next year. and thai a man Is
needed to lead the webelos.

TOPS OH 1456
Nancy Vane&lt;', Joann Fetty,
Beulah Collier and Linda Bailey
were the top loser s at the past two
meetings of TOPS OH 1456, Rutland. Bonnie Evans was the
monthly queen and as ' reward
those m embers who lost over the
Easter holiday were paid a quarter
per each pcund lost. The club
m eetings every Tuesday al6p.m.at
the Rutland Civic Center.

Births and birthdays _around the area
Hawkins birth
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Hawkins,
Mlddlepcrr. 81'e announcing the
birth of a son, Michael Eugene, at
Holzer Medlcal Center, Aprtl 5. The
Infant weighed eight pcunds, six
ounces and·was 2llnches long. Mr.
and Mrs. Hawkins have a daughter.
Cynthnla.
Paterna I grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. E ugene Hawkins, Mlddl&lt;&gt;pcrt, and the maternal grandparentsare Mr. and Mrs. Cecil DeLong,
Portland. Mrs. Francis Hawkins,
Pomeroy, Is the paternal great·
grandmother; and the rna ternal
great-grandmother Is Mrs. Vergle
Allen, East Llverpccl.

Tammy Ervtn and served with lee
cream and chips. Others attending
were h~r grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Ervin. Sr .. and Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Wilson, aunts and
uncles, Sieve and Rhonda Dalley,
Shawn and Heather , Sharon Hubbard and Chad, Roger and Beverly
WUI!ord, Buddy and Sally Ervin. B.
J . and Sara, Herbie and Patricia
Ervin and Josh, Tammy Ervin,
Cheryl Wilson, Chuck and Marge
BurTis, Lori Powell, lvaunna Powell, Keith Little and Jessie Little . .
Others presenting gifts were Kathrrlne Hunt and Armlntha Holler and
Anlla .

• p..C~
~· ...
c,O,,..
v"'

j

(primarily geriatrics)

row, I to r, fo~lll:hl year old category, Heather Davis, first; Davie
Alan Park, second, Dawn Shuler, third; back, I to r, nlne-12 years,
Donlta Manuel, llrsl; VIrginia Underwood, second, and David Smltb,_
third.

tact · Dtrector
ersonnel. Pleasa
lley Hospital,

Nursing Care Unit

ve, Point Pleasan
25550

1 1 lrtuot..,

AUTHORIZED
fACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT
WE

-

.,..................
'''"'''~"'" "'"
. ,...,,
~

u ................. "'l

U .. M_
11 otuloo n o • C l "~""

.....

......

..

APPEARING - Bruce (Sial·
naker) Stone, fonnerly of Melg!i
County, wiU be appearing In
concert at the Racine United
Methodist Church at 7 p.m.
Thursday. Stone will be singing
original compositions as weD as
old favorite hymns. He 1.8 now a
resl_jlent ol Port Charlotte, F1a.
~re
,. Is no ;admlslon charge
ThUrsday but a love offering will
be taken.

C.J. Hams, son of Mr. and Mrs:
Jeff Harris, recently celebrated his
fifth b~· thday with a party at his
home In Portland .
Attending were his sister,
Hillery, maternal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl P. Cross,

Racbte;

patemaJt grandparents,

Public Notice

of wh1 ch •s to mvesngate and

-.

resolve factual and leget que$·
tJon s concern.ng

&lt;l~rtain

tele-

the

4 11 I mG

New Homes _ Extensive

charge to . the advertiser.

Remodel in&amp;.
•Insurance
.P
p WorkBid
...
ustom ole
gs .
&amp; Garages
•Roofrng Work
&lt;Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Yeart Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992 •7583

Mole block. short haired
dog, approx . 6 moo . old . c o11
446-0212 .
Long haired small cat, black

448-!f832 .

4347 .

.

~ EUGEN~

phord . Call614-245 -5486 .

LONG

Collie-free to a good hom e
Male 1 year old . 614 -742 -

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

2475 .

'Siding
'Roofing
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodeling

614-742 -2178

Call 843-5425
).tl ~ mo pll

in

262 . Bidwell.

.

3 bdr home m Add1son
s mall lot . nowly remodeled . 1
new electn c plumbmg. etc
Furnance &amp; woodb urner ,

Need Country- Western tid ·
die &amp; bess pi aver and fomale
vocalist plays stnng in stru ·
mont Call 304 · 675 .7967
after Ej

lutly msulated , exc

4359 .

In Middl ep ort , newly ramo deled homo w tth hreplaco.
poss•ble woodbumer. close
t o sc ho ols nnd shopp tng

NECESSARY to se ll Av on
W e'll show you how Good

elder

TWO month old black" pup·

12

male .

1

3 bed 1oom. 1 1 • bnth . gar age. full bn so numt. low
d ~Wn puy menh nssumablu
f1xe~ loan, q111 01 netghbor . 0
hoo ct , onfl milo fr om hospt
t ill
Call 446 · 11 52 nfter

614 388

4 V2 o ld puppy 1h pit bull , v.
german shephard . Good
watch.dog 614 -992 -3376
1

Cal! 614 -992 -6941

SALES :NO EXPERIENC E

9045 Of 614 -992 3690
M ature l ady to l1v o m w1th

w om a n

304 6 75

4 00 PM

1197 a fter 6 p rn

Situation s
Wanted

female.

....,_

11 ...... ~ ......- .
ll ... _ ..
....
,,~

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

'

•

Oh•o. J.7~ SoU1h H1gh St 1ee'L
Columbus: Ohto 4321 5. Atten~
1•
hon: Mary Ann Orhnsk1

I

THE PUBLIC UTIUTIES COM':
MISSION OF OHIO
'•
Mary

Secreuuv

AIJ11I' I 9

A nn

The unn11r11 report l"o r•n 99 0
tnr thl' K1hbiP Fou 1uJJi ton
ilf'r nard F Fuh t. l tuSI••f' 1S
available for l)tltrltc lfl'H1f'r!ton
Cl l B8rt1iJrct V Fu lt; L.tN Olfu , ,
I I 1 11~ W Se( Or HI Strf'P!

Industrial. Commercial.
Resrdential. Interior and
Exterior.
Painting

4 bndroom hrt c lr! •n•1ch 8 ' J
ac re s w1th h11ck yctrd swnn
111111{1
po ol
Approx
31,

Pomeroy Oh•u 45769 clu11nq
rr'qutcrr tlitSIIll 5 , ho w s lc11 .1
PCfi Q, t o l 180 d.1v'1 sub s•&gt;quP•II

Mortarblasting
Parking Lot Stripping

17 18

J C)

Sandblasting
Spray Painting
Texture Coatmgs

Riverside WJ Inc.

lost blAc k puppy m vicinity
At 87, Leon , with rod col lar

.

· ~~

\. \

\;,'}·'~

(c lub s shortened for ·

people)
"Brand Names:

,

ytliiAI

11
-~

MacGregor

Garage sa le -Apnl 2·1 . and

·,

22 . M any good •Hun s 2
miles fr om 5 p o lll1S n1
Wildw ood -Estates Bob and
Kathy Davis
6 14 -99 .2 ·

";Lj

W1 lson

' ·

PGA

Ram
Ping

6512

S&amp;W TV

YOUNG'S

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

AND

YARD sale. C hurc h ot God .
At
2 n ea r Jenc ho Rd
Monday S. Tuesday , Wed ·
nesday 1 10:00 to 7 Cnn
coltod 1f rain

8

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Oewayne Williems
&amp; Scottie Smith

• Dryers •Freezers

All Makes and Models
Antenna lnstallalt on
House Calls and Shop

PARTS and SERVICE

Service Available
3 IB I mo M

- ConcNte wortc
- Plumbing and

electriCal work

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992 -6215 Of 992 -73t4
Pomeroy . Ohio

ilc

!llliW''iiii'';,;:'d
EXECUTIVE ESTATE
Lovely two story brick home
situated on 3Y, acres in Pomeroy with a breath-taking.view
of the Ohio River. Th is home features 3 spacious bod·
rooms, with the master bedroom having a walk-out patio .
plenty of room to entertam in the formal living room and
dining room, also 2 full and 2 half baths.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

The modern kitchen has disposal. dishwasher. trash
comp. an~ more! Adjacent to the krtchen is a cozy bleak·
fast room. Full basement and plenty otatticstorage in the
house and also in the 3 car garage. This large estate has a
REDUCED PRICE! lmmodiate possession. Call for an appointment.
Cheryl Lemley. Assoc .
Phone 742·3171
Velma Nicinsky. Assoc .
Phone742-3092

"BeautifuL Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding es·
timates, 949-2801 or
949·2860.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

608 E: MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259 ·
OHIO BONO ISSUE MONEY WILL BE AVAilABLE SHORTLY. CALL
FOR APPOINTMENT AND INFORMATION ON ANY OF OUR OYER
100 PROPERTIES.

We can r&amp;pair and recore radiators and hea·
tar cores. We can also
acid boil and rod out ra·
diators. We al•o repair
Gas Tanka.

PAT HILL FORD

•Bulldozer &amp; Back·
hoe Sar'vice
•Basements
•Footers
•Landscaping
•Driveways
•Farm Ponds

PH. 742-2407
Dr 742· 2068

4·13·1 mo

basement. two car garage, Jireplace. Large lot. mce lronl porch Wllh
vrew ol the r~er Now only $20.000.

MIDDLEPORT - Large ~t thai goes !rom street to ~reel - wrlh a
In stnry 3 bedroom home. Has niCe hardv.ood lloor~ and
carpebn&amp;' full basement. one garage apartment and possJJ:jy
another. $51,900

"

'

SECWDED AND QUIET. But In Town - New s1d1ng and eaves
~ves a nice appearance to th~ I 1\ stoi\1 home with 3 bedroom~
lormal dining room and a lree standmg fireplace tn the ivrng room.
Ma!&lt;e us an offer. $22,500.
COULD BE A 'SMALL DAIRY FARM. - 89.5 acres.. with
a)lfiroxrmately 40 til~ble acres. and 40 111 pasture. Some limber
lal1d. Severai!J)rxl outblidi~s and minerals go Wllh the property.

House needs sane wor~ $48,000.
RENTAL IIMSTM£NT - Duplex 1n Midd~ $350 a month
8JOSS rental iocome. Could be conver12&lt;1 rnlo a pnVale horne.

'·'

$19,000.

·-

OfFICE HOURS 9 to 5 Dlily - EVf!1ilil hour1 by appointment
REALTORS

.

Htnoy l Cllllnd. Jr., GRI ................................. 992-6191
M TIUSIIII .................................................. 949-2660
Dollie TUIMI ................................................. =2·5692
Jo Hill ........................................: ...... ............ gJ~~~
Olllco ............................... ......................... ,..

Sizes hom 6'x6' Up
to 24'xl6'
lnsulatd Dog Houses

Buying Gold . Silver , Ptat1
num Gold and Silv er prices
are the highest in two year s ,
c heck ou r prices on gold &amp;
SII\18J, !SCrap JOWelry Buyin g
Old coins. scrap ring s &amp;
silverware
O&amp;lly quotes
available . Also coins &amp; coi,

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh .
Ph. 6t4-84l-1191

10 6rh:

t o r s&amp;lo . Sprinu
Vaii(Jy Trading Co , Sprmg
Valley Plaza , 446· 8025 o r

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
FREE
EXTIMATES

'Chain link Fence
'Carpetinc 'Paintin&amp;
----,

.Sear~

CATALOG MERCHANT
Pomeroy.OH .
Grog &amp; Patty Gibbs-Owners
PH . 992· 2178 J

1'"' ·

NEW LISTING - POMEROY - N1ce 3 bedroom home wah lui

POMEROY - 1'h story frame home wrth 7 rooms. 4 bedroom~
basement front and side porches. and lor low uiJilty bills ~ heals
with ~ 'or wood furnace P.skrng $26.000

MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL

SJOQO

LAST BID
Roofing &amp; Siding
Get all the estimates
you want, then call us.
We'll be your

BEST &amp; LAST BID
ATON

Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed

PH. 992·2280

Ph . 742 -2328
Ask for AI.

21Htc

4 ll·l mo

446 -8026 .

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYST£MS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER. GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING.
CONCRETE WORK
BOIIDED &amp; WOAII GUARANTIED
PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992 -7201
""'

B1ll Gene John !Inn

446 -0069
NIGHT CRAWLERS &amp; RED
WORMS

From ha Smallest Heater
Core to the llraut Radiator .
Radiator Spaclaist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Ex,trltnca

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. Inc.
Pomo~ay, Oh.
Ph. 992·217~
H&amp;.tfc

BOGGS
SALES &amp;SERVICE
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John

Deer.

New Holllnd. 8usb Hoi
Farm Equipment
Dllltr
Farm Equipment
"., Parts &amp; Service

l / , ,,

-.•

Su p , unto' i!Hgu H IHHf!tl . 2
nu lt•s from Southt!lll HtHh
School S ho wn b¥ UJ)POir\1
•n tlltl o nly 523 .500 6 1 4
949 20ll3 Ot 61 4 949

SA NDY AND BEAVER !11
suronce Co
has o Ho rmt
serv1ces for ftr~ J insurance
coveraga 111 Gnllla Cou ntv
fo r alm ost n C(HHury Ftwn
home nnrt po rso nat propvrtv
coverAges Ate ltvlulnbto to
meet ind•vidw'll needs Co n
hu.;t Eunono Hoi!Qy. agmn
Phonn 388 -8690
·

2777
rc
3 bn.ch oom h o use . ' 1 s t o n o
h o nl w 1t h yollow VInyl s td
"'!l 1 nu ltJ from Roadsvtllu .
1

L &amp; L Scr11p Metals. Now

buying alum . cans &amp; glass
Non ferrous metals . Top
prlce11 paid Call 44 6 -7300

8EOS -IRON. BRASS , old

3 Announcements

furniture , gold, silve r dol
Iars. wood 1ce boxes. a ton e
j1r s, tr'ntiques . etc . Com-

SWEEPE~ and sew1ng ma chine
repair , perts. and
aupplie1.
Pick up and

plete hou1eh oids . Write :
M.D. Miller, Rt. 4 , Pomeroy.

delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Oeorgei Creek Rd

Oh . Or 992 -7760.

ll CrA

fi'Ollntt

.$ 10000

S15 .000

cns tt or

lnnd Co
t111 ct wrtil S:l , OOO Lfow n &amp;
hulan cu n\ 5150 II)Oitth 11 1
10 pe t llt10t!Jst 6 14 423 ·

Are y o u pnymg t o 111~1 c h f o r
hos p1tnt holtlth 111su
rnn co
Cal l Ca ~ru ll

your

595/ illlVIIIlHt

Snowden . 446 4 :?90

-----

hucl ~lltJd hom S.i 1, 000 tn
s 17.000 Tilts 4 5 lwdr oom
IS W&lt;-HIIIl{l fil S! for yn11 At

18 Wnnted t o Do

lhl '&gt;

nffurd

riiCH VUII Cfl ll

IO

yuur own do cornt m u
W1111 n ltnl o otf or t thi s homo \

do
G mnHul Haul 11111 11nd Trnslt
rl!mOvo! SO I VICII HnhnbltJ
and clepenclabln C;t ll 446

r. nn h11 mad o mto n duple ..

AIIJ ,my O luo ) 698 8891

3 1 59 b ntween 9 nnd 5

M o htltt h tHH O. saln 0 1 runt In
lawn M o wtnn no yttrd t o h lfl . qoodshupo , 20 l R . 1 d ul d
tu:r.o ptml . no put s . chunks nr
01 sruntt Ro l•n btunnrtduf)en
dahlo
For flSII tntlt fl c:ntt dop" Srot,,, t 1 room bnck , 3
446 · 3 159 betwu"n 9 n nd 5 IJnths 6 rourn , 2 hnths. 2
llHliJ1ln homn lots . 2' 1 nr.ro s .

Dnlltll\1

6 !illllnl o; Mwwni:IJ h nchoom
2 Lwdronm rental 2

Wnt o •

~pua~1' 1

drtllmg
Call 6 14 388
8543 . VIIIIOII , Oh

acrus 3', mt! ns South Mtd
cllnp ort n 1 I J o hn Shoets,

W rtnl In m ow tnw ns K. d o
y111d wo rk C nll 446 7080

4

6 14.\610611
builr oo m ,

IJa ~J\tii Wll

tl lnct rt c

all

\/IHIIljO

llilllll

E~~.po r10n co d

._lf illl fJ

more mlu11n ntu•11 cnll o14 6

wnHI1•w .., 302 l1h S t Nn w
tl avPn
WV
30 11 H8 2

typ1o;t wnntlrl!l
In dn t yptrlg tn lwr hdmu F or

S,,

S tonm

r:lfHin

00

cnr

Sm •th 's

IIIJW

1hl'llll!l Sft S Jr

2!) 37

34 27
m ot m

32 Molnle Homus

As ltl lu HI

fm SAiu

Statton , V11w S l , Gall1po lt s
By nppomlnumt only Cn ll
446 -9333

IRI S lAT!
M O OI\1
HOMl: S
U S! 0
C AR S
!HUCKS
GI\LLIPOL1S
CH£CK OUil
PIII C I S
CA ll 44 6 7S72

Housocl lllllllll fJ dOII! l oiC r ( l l d
rnu
to your nooJd s C .t!l

446 7536

Gardons plnw!Hf with larct• t
tOI Ottll fJI sut m chw:~ dnnp Ct FA N US(O MOBil F
R11nt1y to p!nnl A1111lttr fi 1 &lt;1
110M! S KI:SSfl 'S OU AI
992 2490
lTV MORII E HO M E S AlFS .
4 Ml W!=S T. G AlliP O li S
AOOF IN G ·Cornontrv . ll)OS
R f 35 P HONE 446 7214
anAb lo rnt os. fren trs t 1
mntas Cal 304 773 5876
1 'l' t&gt;Hir, I 11ettr wtth 1 2x60
h ome . tn rqe 1n
pnn l ttnd lounlla t• nn
h !tiiSil
Cttl! 304 696

m ohdu
Hro~rnd

fnr

4'12 1

21

Business
Opportunity

THE OHI O VALlEY P UB
liSHING CO ro commO IHi s
thAt you r1 n biiSIIlft!I S Wl lh
~HtOple you know Rnd NOT
to SIJnd mon(ly lhrounh thu
moi l unlil you htliJO ln\lost•
gAted tho otfering

prices

Corn planter &amp; 1 row corn
picker Coli 446 ·7732

22 M oney to Loan
HOME lOAN S 1 2 % f•Kod
ro to loador M ortgage , 77 E

Sta te. Athons . 01110 1 6 14
592 · 3051 , or 1 BOO 3 41
6554 in Ohio

-----------23 Professional
Servic es
C&amp;l Bookkeeping

14Jt7Q llllyVHtW fOIHI 11 lm: l
' n e. J hdr S/ 4 00 12 .. 60
L•burly !JI!rJd cond , S3 900
I c .. u 446 0175

I
1

1970 Sr:h11ht 14Jt70 2
bdrm . 2 b11ths l;trlllffll Air ,
q OO d CCHHI ()11 10111111 lOt.
lU IIll Goodyrl .tr Pt nnt . IH\su
m n h!1' lnron
rrunch City
Bt ok"""ll Su rv11q1 , 446
9340
Pnc r1p to &lt;&gt;ttl! 1974 Kirk
wood 1 2,1(60. HOOd co nd .,
$6 900 , Cntt 6 14 379 ·
l617

-

----

-----

'J lots &amp; u rn vbllu homo
12 ,.60 , 2 bod room Wi th
rura't watm . uns hoa t Hns
50 11111 lurnrt u r e . pric u
$ 1 2 .500 Or 4 lots &amp; mobit n

$14 ,800 Cull 446 1240
1976 No v" Tri Sltn mobilu
horn11 12 ... 65. nil utec t nc ,
unfurn• shod, $5 000 Cult

614 256 1736

Tax Return s &amp; bookkA opm g
for Indi viduals &amp; busin ttsstls
Shon forms S5 .00

long forms $20 .00 and up
446 -3862

Call

Carol Neal

446 ·0294 .
Roduco solo e. fut with
Goboae· Toblelo &amp; E-vop
'water pillo' . Gillingham
Drug .

Nice home and 6 to 20 acres

Rock Sunday 7 to 11 PM .

Easy acceta, woods prefe~ ­
rablty . Mid priced $20 to
140 Thouund . 992 · 6177 .

Ro~rt

~·

682 -7448 .

Ir~=======~~j~======~~~~ day
Square
every
SaturfromDance
9 to 1AM
. Country
COMPLaE
RADIATOR SERVICE

highest

paid . Lake Jackaon Batu &amp;
Tackle, Oak Hill. Call 614

1' • slu 1y ;IIU111 UHI/Il

~~~ ~~~~~~ h lllJ~P 2' ~ lTCICS l(lV(-)!
\IIOWHI lltiQO k1tch nn dtn
11111 10 (11!1 tor&lt;:ud ou hn iH

INOTI CE!

We pay cosh for la1o modol
clean used can
Fren cht o wn Car Co

Middleport - Cheshire &amp;rflla .

Pickett's. Eaat Dlr·

win. St . Rt . 881 .

W11:kin1 Products for tete .
111·· 7•2•2068.

11

Beginning Karett Cl111
etlrtlng Thursday, Apr. 21 ,
7 p .m . at Carleton Sc;hool,
John St., Syracu1e, Oh . Fof
morw Information call 814 -

992·11•21
68911 .

Help Wanted

Your plano -have some mi ·
leage on it7 Time to tu ne
up -Lan

Umpires needed for tum mar
programs. Need people for
A. S .A. Men's League, youth
program• 6-1 !S ye1r1 old,
Salary U -te par game
depe,nding on league . Adults
and college students en·
cour1gerl to apply. Fill out

or 1114· 992·

1·3·11&lt;.

application at City Manager' s Offlc;e . Gallipolis Munlc -

Orllnsk 1•1

,.~.

Wanted To Buy

supplies

'

Fm ~mto by nwnt:u 4 bed

Insurance

Lom tov

WANTE 0 TO BUY Old htrrH
ture and Anttques of u ll
kmds. ca ll Kenneth Swntn
446 -3159 o r 266 -1967 rn
the ev enings

UTILITY BUILDINGS

1 13 lie

l II lie

9

Sizes start from l2'xl6'

992-2196
Middlaporl, Ohio

. No Sunday Calls

MEIGS
EXCAVATING

Real Estate General

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULOINGS

RADIATOR
SERVICE

SIDING

Shown bv nppo1111
llHHI I only
C11ll 304 273
5 1 6 5 all or 5 p rn

wolls, shntl ow uns a nd c: uro

Au c tfon o\lory Fri mgtu 111
tho Hart ford Cotnrnunltv
Cen t Ar Trucklo!Hh o f nftw
merchandise tiVtHy wouk
Consigments of now and
used morchand•se alway ~
welcome Ri c hflrd RAvnold !'i
Au ctio ne er . 275 · 3069

( Free Estimates)

II 16

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Au c tion every Tue s dny
nigh t , Commun•ty BuiJding ,
Hondorson . Con~igners wei
come Auct . lonm e Ncnt
Call 6 14 · 367 -7101

- Addom and relllOdeling
~ Roofing and gvtter woril

Chester. Ohto
Ph. 985-4269

13

----·-

111

W VA

1 (.

Square Two

Dunlop

, ..- Yard Sille

Yard Sale Centennry Town
hou se Rt , 141 . Friday 22
Tools , flowers , d•s hn s ,
quilts . toans , garden plow

.. ,

"CU.T OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

Ga lltpolts , Oh to t 1n mo

~ ~tic

7

·

446-9800

Makes

304 -895 -3383 Of 304
372 -4520 .

12 20t!c.

'Club Repa1r

Lost and Found

lost -Blac k Labrlid o r , Dan vtlle area Wedne sday n•ght
Red and white collar Ro ward . 614 -742 2139

Route 1
Long Bottom. OH . 45743
985 -4193 or 992 ·3067

SALE 20% OFF
JOHN TEAFORO
Chester, Oh 4j l8 I mr)

Fully Insured- Fret Estim1ates

6

CHARlES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co. ,

'lessorts
' Fitting Cente1

m1l us from Ravun swnnd
R1 vurviow N ursmg Cnro
Ho m e N o w open t or 111nbu
lnt o ry p nt10nl5 24 hour
ca r e
R oorn . ho&lt;trd &amp;
lAundry 30 4 ·773 5882

ltl\JIIl

THE KROUNTRY KLUB

RYDER TRUO&lt;
RENTAL &amp; ONE-WAY
Local and o~, . low rates.
lop maintained !rucks. R1ghl
s.i1es. rrght equrpmenl. Hand
trucks. furmlure pads, NaliO!li&lt;lde Road Sen~rce ..MovIng tips and msurance.

•Refrigerators

'.

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

By

PAINTING INC.

Half Beagle pupp\1 . 6 Wooks
old , loves kids 304 -882 ·
3460 anytim e

.

-

~-

'

Ranges

'
,.

u,.,.,,_ .. , n
Otto•..,-u,.,.,,_,,
.... ...., __·

Courtroom 4A. at 9.30 a.m.
Further mformanon may be
obt amid by contacting The
Publ1c Ut11tlees Comffitss•ori of

::

All

•·
•·"

;:.1 .,..,-:

sworn or uns"lorn test•mony or
comments at th e p ubJ1c hear Ing beg1nmng on May 19
1983. at the. off1ces of t~
Commss•on, 375 South Htgh
Street, Columbus. Oh10. 1n

£

J 24 ltc

•Washers •Oilhwashera

,,•

Public Notice

PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121

985-3561

of

Public N·o tice

Also Transmission

GHEEN'S. ·

Pomeroy. Ohio 46769

Maxson participated In basebaO
two years, Is In the senior play, and
has been a lltt!P league basebaU
coach In the summer. Outside
school, he has been acllvelt
Involved with the Boy Scouts for six

_,.

REPAIR~_;

New L1ma Rd .. Rutla nd , Oh .
PH 742·2225

•

PUBLIC NOTICE

1J

AUTO &amp; TRUCX

ther is larg e dog . Have been
wormed . 304 -675 5023

Kitchen Cab1nets - .Roofing - Siding- Concrete
Pattos - Sidewalks New ConstructiOn - Re·
modeling - Custom Pole
Barns .

co nd .,

M1d S20 's Call 614 592

Help Wanted wattress 3
n1ghts a W6ek apply •n
person 1 · 5 PM at Skyline
Lanes

Norwegum Elkhound pup ·
pies 614 -2 47-2605

Cal

614 379 24H Of 614 ·
949 ·2854

Oh

446 - ~ 1 50

Call

Oh

or 614

Racine, 2 112 acre mini farm .
remodeled . 3 4 bdr .. 2 story
alum . s1ded home . City
water . gas . sewer. basenlent &amp; 2 car ga rage. Across
fr o m Southern HS
CaU

mensurate with e•perienc e.
elltcellent benefit package
availeble , inc ludin g retire
ment . diS8bJh1y . l1fe &amp; health
insurance. Plea se send re sume or con ta c t Gary Bra nd
for further iri'format1on . At

aarnmgst

Grande ,

245· 9517 for appointment
Roa!onabty priced.

RN - DON Scenic Hill$ is
cunently looking fora Oii-ec ·
tor of Nuning. Salary com-

45614 . Call

Ri o

614-245 -5274

- - -- - - - -'-

To good home· S month old
Registered lrlsh Setter

20 Years Experrence
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

By owner 3 bedroom hom o

Eem ·e~ttra money sellmg

Box

Senlinei-Po~9

31 Homes for Sale

Help Wanted

Avon . Call 446 -3358

2

Pole &amp; bracket for baskball
backboard now !ftanding
Want removed . Call 446-

or 992-2282 111\0k

IJ(l

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

The Taxidermy Shop

Pl!blic -No tiel!

REAL ESTATE BROKER
Office Phone 992-6739
216 Mulbe"v Ave .

•

UIIo~&amp;Qta&lt;~

. POMEROY·

George S. Hobstetter, Jr.

ot

~· · ···- "' ''"""

!ale of embedded
Gi,JSiomer premises equipment.
Mv person may prese r!('
10

Or

4 192mo!l

~

LEGAL NOTICE
phone company tanH prOVI·
83-439· TP·Co1
SIQn s. pu rpa r!mg to d1scla1m or
Not1ce •s herel:!ly g1ven that lir1JJ1 telephoM compary~ hab•l - '
the Pubhc;: UUl1t1es CommiSSIOn it'{ and to d•scleum or l1m1t
of Oh•o has opened e proceed- 1mplled warrant•es, wh1ch are
•ng. docketed as Case No. proposed •n telephone com B3 ·439 ·TP-COI , the pufpose pany tanff appi!C8ttOn! telo!JIInQ'

949-2263
992·279\ 10 ,.,

Coli:

CALL 6t4-949-2686

"' ..................... .

Public Notice

"free Est1mates''

For More Information Call

I! I mD

71c

spirll. dependability, and recom ...
mendatlon from a teacher or-'
director.
Maxsan Is the son of R. E :.
Maxson, Reedsville, and Flossie,;
Dill, of Long Bottom. Hlsgrandpar~
ents are Mary Ellen M ason ot
Wellsvllle and M abel Maxson o~..
Berea. W. Va .andGoldle Dili ,Lon!l'
Bottom, Ohio.
-'·
In addition to Ray's achievement"
and Involvement In stlldenl government, he Is active In other school
and civic organizations wtthln the
community. He has been thrl
varsity manager for the boY$
basketball and football teams for

•e ....,.,h""""'

~

14)12 1] 14 ·1

To~uo

I-

All Work Guaranteed

-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
- Lo-Bo,
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
- Gas lines
- Septi c Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH . 992·2478

On All Fi1h.

10 jli,hl te &lt;~tl on o l ti n&lt;; f!ll l•CP

A~tDI

l ll•...

or repair, gutters and
downspouts. gutter clean·
ing and painting, storm
doors and windows.

- Oozers

5 To 6 Week Service

PF

,.'

Momone birth

41( _ ................
4 1 l 1r1 \NH

·-~ ....... ,.,Do

CJ, Hams

41 hrn•~*'ll """"''
41 ........,, ,...,,
41ww_,,.,.,.,,..,.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

HAVE YOUR TROPHY
MOUNTED

113 W. 2nd St
Pomeroy, OH .
Open 9 :00 to 5 :00
Mon .- Sat .
· Closed Thurs .

ALSO WORK ON

_

Local man USAA selection

41 lill obolo """'"'"' "•no

1 3 lft11110"" f

who hia

ROUSH
olf•••n~••h•••htngfornt•
may place an ad in thl•
CONSTRUCTION · column . Thoro will be no

P•os .

REPAIR

101
_ 0
~ .:. · 'lANDMARK
~
614·992·2181

.

"·ldi

All types of rOllf work. new

SHOE

All OTHER APPLIANCES

Chapplear

The United States Achievement
Academy has announced that Ray
A. Maxson of Rt. I, Long Bottom.
has been named a 1983 United
States National Award winner In
Student CouncU.
Maxson, who attends Eastern
Local , was nominated for this
National Award by Scott Wolfe, a
counselor at the school. He wtll
appear In the United States
Achievement Academy Official
Yearbook, publlshed nationally.
· The Academy selects USAA
winners upcn the exclusive recommendatlons of teachers, coaches,
counselors or other school spcnsors

4·15 I mo

St. Rt . 124. Pomeroy. OH .

Mr. and Mrs. Earl'?. Cross
Racine announce the birth of &gt;\':
Navy Seaman Recrull Robert C ..
granddaughter, Christine Den~
Chappelear, son of Bruce W. and
Mamone, daughter of Frank an~
Patti E. Hoffman of 34281 WIDow
Denise Mamone, Colwnbus. Th~
Circle Road, Pomeroy, has com - · baby was born on M arch 15
0
pleted recruit training at the Naval
weighed nine pounds and was ~
Training Center, Great Lakes, lll.
inches long. Mr. and Mrs. Mamon&amp;
During the elght·Wl'f!k training
have a daughter, Lort, and a son! ·
cycle, trainees studied general
John .
:
military subjects designed to pr&lt;&gt;Pater-nal grandparents are JilT(
pare them for further academic
and Rose Mamone, Strongsville •
and on·the-job training In one of the
a nd
the paternal great 1
Navy's 85 baste occupational fields.
grandmother is Mary Mamone/,
Included In theli' studies were
Cl eve l a nd . Mat e rnal great:·
I
seamanship, close order drill,
grandmother Is Lena Holter.,
Naval history and firs t ald.
Racine.

31 ~ .... .. ""·-·

"''"'"&lt;!

SPEC IAL

TRANSMISSION FILTER
AND FLUID CHANG£
ONLY r31.95 · '"·"'

54 Misc. Merchandise

Swann

U ,.... tou oo Wo•o..,

41 +&lt;-.. •••• ......

OPEN 9 to 5 MON. thru SAT.
All Tjpes of Auto Rtpllf,
Brakes, Tune-Ups, etc.

FISHERMEN!

Airman AnnettJ· D. Starling,
daughter of Emery H. and Delphine Starling of 1402 Kanawha St ..
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va., has gradu·
a ted from the· U.S. Air Force
admintstrative specialist course at
Keesler Air Force Base. Miss.
Graduates of the Six-week course
learned how to prepare Air Foree
correspcndence and reports, · and
earned credits toward an associate
degree In applied science through
th~ Community College of the Air
Force.
Starling will now serve atKadena Air Base, Okinawa, ;Japan,
with the 18th Supply Squadron.
She Is a 1978 graduate of Pl.
Pleasant High School.

~,

..

PERSON

11

Daily

mother part Cockapoo . fll ·

PHONE"992-2156 :

--

ANY

•

' Mr.are
andannouncing
Mrs. Tom Ball,
Miners- ============:ye:a::::rs=.= = = = = = = = = : :'t::..,
the birth
of a r-;--==============·=
ville,
daughter, Sarah Elizabeth, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital March 31.
She weighed eight pounds. ninP
ounces, and was 21 Inches long.
Or Wntf Oa•lly Stnl•ntl Classified Dtalt
I II C01111 St . Pomf!Oy, Ofuo C~761)
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Ball, Pomeroy; Mrs. Joan
Graham, Beverly, and Neal Graham, Key West, Fla . Great;
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
I Coo&lt;l &lt;II T~o~ lo lp.,.ll on o&lt;l. . nto l
l I """""'' OllfiC&gt;ot~~'
~~ " ""'-oldGoo&lt;to
/I
lot Joto
~
•
~
Mo.......,
1~"''' ' " "'hon&lt;PI
J1 M"""• ' a l o..,
Alan Ball, Pomeroy; Mrs. Eva
~ t Cl lY &amp; llttho l QoH.,....r•l
1I
ltltiOio
J ..... ._ ....
J J Po o .. .,..,~ • • ,......,.,
1
1
VttnA
IWO
t a .......... ,
/., 1/,.u 111 1: l o l• •toltrou o , t• lonll tJt'•
5) "'"'"'". .
Schreiber, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
!&gt; I hl otc- hi .. ~ ...""""
74 hl a tOi c•clto ,
~ H&lt;01&gt;po "'d•
a"'"'"
•
"'~'"''
J
I
u...,,
..
,.,
lolo
........
.,.lhlo
Mary Graham, Waterford.
' ' ""~"" 'm'"~
7 6 . ........ 1... Ace. ... , .. .
a-n .. c-.. ~
....... c ........
hi .. _ ............ ••
w ..,, "' u .. """ '
J1 M o~ ~. HIHI1n 1&lt;10 s••
1 , ........., ...
Atu CO&gt;do II 4 '
•' r'"'''
.. .,..,'•'~
hMAtoo CIIdolt•
l l r.,..,, •a• •, , c ......... , ..........,
51 '""" ·~~- ...... .
Joa.,_.,,,_ •..,

II ...IIIW..,IH

;;;,.:;-

ROOFING

l 7·Tic

·

Navy Signalman 3rd Class Mark
A. Swann, son of Gwenda Ferguson
of 208 Buttrnut Ave. ; Pomeroy,
recently participated In exercise
"Valiant Flex 83" off the coast of
Okinawa.
He ls a crew m ember aboard the
amphibious command ship USS
Blue Ridge operating from Yokos·
uka, Japan .

Polrleroy, Ott.

·~ rCY
• , -I'D-_,...,

H. L. Writesel

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces re· ·
pair service and in·
,stallation .
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742·3195

In the Service /

Starling .

-......

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

qualified
part-lime
Registered Nurses
for the

WINNERS - Theile are the winners of the annual Easter coloring
con1e1rt by The Dally Sentinel and Big Bend merchants. Flr!it pJaOO
winners received $15, second $10 and third $5. The wtnnel'S are: froM

crt terla for selectloq are a student's
academic performance, Interest
and aptitude, leadership quailtles,
respcnslblllty, enthusiasm, motlva!Jon to learn and Improve, citizenship, attitude and cooperative

..

Giveaway

Puppies part labador Re ·
triever &amp; part Germ&amp;n She·

is currently seeking

:~td ~:/,~ ~~s;~~d::~!~~ec~~~ ~~~h ~~~~~c::dnr:a'n~ ~~~~a~~~

""'"

PH. (304} 882-2276

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL

I sn't II amazing how your
imagalllaUon runs wild as you get a
little older. Just for exa mple, I
could have sworn I saw snow falling
Sund ay and Monday. Dwlghr
Spencer recorded 22 degrees Monday morning at his home and spent
the night trying to keep his
greenhouse plant s from freezing. II
really Isn't happening Is II? I know
- you're smiling ...

" "

218 W. lain

CARrnNAL CONSTRUCTION

Volunteer parents are being
sought for helping wtth prom night
activities at M eigs High School on
May 14.
Recently. a group of Interes ted
parents decided to stage a buffeHor
juniors, seniors and their guests
before the prom begtnnlng at 6: 30
p.m. and running until lOp m . They
also decided on a plzla pany with
lights and music suitable for
dancmg In the cafeteria following
the prom . Thi s event Is scheduled
from midnight to 3 a.m . There will
be movies in the vocal music room·
at the same hour.
Donations and volunteer help are
needed. If you can be of help
contact Mrs. Jeanie Taylor at
school or Sharon Wise at 992-6224.
Traditionally junior parenls are
expected to assume most of the
responslbllllles fOr prom night
activit ies but help from parents of
seniors ls more than welcome.
A meellng of parents to finalize
plans wlll be held at 7: 30 p.m.
Thursday In the high schootllbrary.

BaII birth

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION CO•
r~
·

" FENCING PROVIDES PRIVACY PLUS
PR~TECTI9N FOR CHILDREN &amp; PETS " ·

: · 11

Coming up this weekend at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds wlll be a
horse and tack sale on. Saturday,
beginning at 5 p.m ., and on Suqday
at 2 p.m., a horse show staged by
the Ohio Valley Horse Show
Asso(,t_a to.n. :
The 'sale is open· for all breeds of
animals and Ron t onley will be In
charge. On Ule horse show, an 80
percent payback will oper ate for
winners .

'""l "•
ti'Oonol&lt;l oo

Stacey Rene&lt;' Wilson celebra led
her first birthday at the home of her
parents, Ronald and' Teresa
WUson.
A Strawberry Shortcake cake
was baked by 1)tacey's aunt,

CHAIN LINK FENCING NEEDS-

Mr and Mrs. Vernal Black.wood
joined some ~ other residents for
an AAA trip to WashlngtGn, D.C ..
April 6-11, for t he annual cherry
blossom festival.
.. ·
The weather was nothing special
- about !Ike here - and you know
how that was. The Blackwoods saw
only a part of the big parade held In
conjunction with the festival due to
the rains which prevailed. However, they loved the trip and the
tour of the White House, J .F.K.
Center, Mt. Vernon, the Kennedy
grave site, the Tomb of the
Unknowrl Soldier, and the Smith·
sonlan complex. They were quite
Impressed by the' appearance of
Jim Brady, Injured In the assa.Ssi·
nat ion attempt on President Reagan . Brady appeared In the festival
parade. Incidentally, the trip was
made by Amtrak.

p .... , , ..

'Stacy Wil:ron.

FOR ALL YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY ·

-~-

Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Harris,
P ort land ; maternal great grandmother. Lena Holler, Ra·
cine; Ms. Diana Cross, Gahanna,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Noeris. Kendra
and Kyle, Racine, Mrs. Denise
Mamone, Worthington, Ms. Della •
Cross, Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack TUrner, Ravenswood. W.Va .
Sending gtfts were Mr. and Mrs
John Cleek. Portland. and Earl
Cleek, Zanesville.

4

10 give away and
I~r=========:::::!:==========iT;::========:;-r;:=========;l•nVthing
.
does not offer or attempt to

The Pomeroy High Scrool graduating class of 1983 ts planning a
reunion thls year and there are
some hall dozen class members
that can't be located.
They are Mrs. J. Stephenson,
Sophia Blazewtcz, George Brlckles, Mrs. Russell Gibbs, Juanita
Warner and Miss Jesse Lambert.!!
you know the address or those listed
please can Rose Sisson at the New
York Clothing House In the daytime
or at her home, 992-2431 In the
evening.

.

The

Business 'senices

Gospel sing scheduled
One

Ohio

lpo1 8ulldlng, 518 Second
A••· Galllpolla •• aoon '~'

.p011ibla.

'

Daniela . ... Rutland.

742·2951

12x6B Vmdale mobile home
w ith 6 ft expando living
roo~ . wood burner . Situ·
a ted o n 2 plus acre including
remo doled 1. room school
building &amp; storsge s hed .
N ice garden 11pot
Some
arna ll fruit tr9e a. 614 -992 ·

7164 otter 6 ·or 6.14-992 6035 .'
1972 14•66 mobile h(\nle.

Lovely, 6 rooms . Double
gar,ge, b•autlfully lands
caped 1re1 lot, Atop Rose

Hill, Porn. 40'a.' 614-985·
·4267.
-'-----~ · to -

3 bedrooms. gas heat. very
clean . 614-992 · 2165 from
8 a .m . to 6 p .m . snd ask 1or
Tim. After 5 p.m carl 882·

3592 .

.

USEQ MOBILE
676 -Z711 .

HOME .

�....

. ...
.

.

.

...

10-The Daily

32 Mobile Homes
for Sele

..

-'

'·Ohio

___

,.......

They 'II Do It Every Time

64 .Misc.

MOBILE home . whh 2_4 •12
llddldon. well, 'h acre on
Crob CrHk Rood. *6 .-800 .
304-875-1323. 304-678·
2372.

1 coffee table
47Vu1 8 YJ x16"'h in . and 1
end table 25•18'1o•20 'h
whh light w•lnut finish •30,
32•63- 174 placaa· brown
underpinning for a mobile
home used just 1 year came
off • 14x70 mobile homti.
long piecea ·m .. aufa 32".
ahort piece• 21 .. and. 10
inches acrou. en.tarlock in a
metal fram4. wood grain
flniah . Call after 6PM , 446-

79 Dllobile home, 2 bed ·
room, unfurnished, 'h acre

with chainllnk fence . county
water. located in Ohio.
116,600 . Call after 6 p.m .
304· 678.2792.

33 Farms for Sale
- ' - - - - -- - - lc 176 acres . good tirnber and
water. No dwelling . Numerout building site~ . 3'h mihtl

from Ravenswood . Call
304· 273-5165 otter 6 p.m .

3086.
Firewood oplit llo cut to
lenght. Pick.or delivered . We
honor HEA-P VOuchers . Call
61 4-266·6246 .

'IOIIR ANNrVERSARY
IS NEXT TUURSVAY··•
I'FIDPERT'f TAX ON
TUE 15TH- -ANt&gt;·-·

Lots 8o Acreage

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

by Larry Wright

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

SURPLUS Army clqthlng.
{rental turplua clothing; tow
11 16. dozen), 14 oz. denim
pant• 110. Sam Some·
rville'l, ~ew · Era, Eaet Raventwood , Junction lndependanca Ad-Route. 21.
open only Frldary, Saturday,
Sunday 1 :00-7 :00 p .m.
( 0 • 1 e r t . w o 0 d 11 n d
camouflage!.

Building material•
block. brick, Hwer pipe1.
window•. lintel•. etc .
Cl1ude Winters. Rio Grande.

,..!__

fJ

I

~;

lt&lt;f--lf

I==·===·======

.J ::.._

81

...::&gt;---___

~

-:::.&lt;.:.___

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~~~·:~··--~~. , ~··-:·~~.·~--~·.,·~·~~-=r.~==;:=:;=:;:;:~

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for

______

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tA

..

:w~!~"~t:
;M!f.

. p

:';:&gt;

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'
'

.
.
: menu 1200 ptt mo. or If
Income lo 110,oog.,. ~- COUNTRY .MOBILE !lome
HUD ovolloblt. A· nt ••I ·Pallo, Routt 33, North of
1
E11tot11. Ctral
Yt~or.
Rool04 175
01 p om•oy. Lt I'll lot • · Coli
~ 104
I L99_2_·_
74_7_9_._ _ _ _---"'

~'!Ji. ~;~&amp;' ·

-t

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Blue flowtrod ooft and
brawn flaa-OOdrod. oholr . li

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~~~~~~~~~~:
~"
·
•ond. con ll::£~~~~:~~~~~~~~~::::t:!!J
1 tllor iPM.
/if(
AA
~~·if

1:00

N-

Cll ESPN' t Sportaforum
(JJ Andy Grlffilh

•

·· a:30

•

CAPTAIN EASY
THAT'!&gt; THI:·PRE,IPEIIIT OF THE
?TATI;1-... ANP J.P. M&lt;KEE!

u•rr~o

Ul71 Oldo. Doltl, •500.
Ctii448 ·08U.
1978 Terry TroVitl Troller .
1.:;;
!l~;::;-;:::::-=7=:- 25 ' 2 d 0 frld
t b
I1
·
d
d rv:~·- o r 0ro
g., o.c ., u
1
101
1I' v•"
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1onno goo con .
aho
c-~
'•••
&lt; l_....:__clto_:_
. .:.J.04.:.._:"'.:a.::2:.r

· ,:
·.:~.:~.:.08::..

Home
Improvements

__:_____---:---

PAINTING
inlarior and
exterior. plumbing , roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yrs .
e:~~p . Call614-388 -9652. •
Marcum Roofing It Spouting . 30 years experienc~,
spacializing .in built up roQ,f ,
Call 614-388-9857 .
•

7 :15
7 :30

BORN LOSER

.vw nu: ~E'7 ..,

Lr:;T's HAVE A ~!:!(AT
10NS!i.&lt;$ ... UM-HM ...

MM •.. FINf;: ...

Painting intertor &amp; exterio!.
wallpaper hanging. Insured,
Free eatimates . 614-94, .
2688 .
:
Roofing. shingles. spoutill'Q
and aluminum aiding wort. .
Insured . Free Estimate; .
614-949 -2686 .
•
Hi Pressure Cleaning . Atuni inum aiding , mobile homes.
wood, brick, sandstone
building and homes. Also
heavy equipment . · Fully in sured, Free estimates. 614 949· 2686 .

ANNIE

. ADOUBLE-PRON(iED LOCH
ON JHIG BLUEPRINT CABINET. ..
CHILO'G PLAY FOR A

I'IELL SHOOLDN'T
\'jE BE IIBLE T'

RELAX AFTER
WORHIN'
.HARP?

RON :s T.ele\llilon Seryi~e..
s·p,O iall-~lricf in . Zef&amp;ith, •"~
Motofola ,: QI,Jazar . and
house calls. Call 678- 2398
or 446.-2454 .

.B:QO

F &amp;. K Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 675-1 331 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE .. pe·
rienced roofing, Including
hot tar application. carpen ter, electrician, mason . Call
304 -675 -2088 or 6764660 .
Water Wells. Commercial
and Domeatic. Te1t holeJ.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304 -895 -3802 .
•
Get your carpet in ship
shape. Water removal, FRt;:E
ESTIMATES, FURNITU~E
CLEANING . CAPTA~N
STEAMER 614 -446-2107 .

I lHINK 'TOLl PEOPLE
SHOULD P"-SG SOME
LAWS T'BUI~P UP
MOO'S DEFENSE"SI

Sterk 's Tree Work , Lena•caping, backhoe work, frte
services with mowing . Go
. anywhere. 304-676-2010 .
Painting interior or exterior,
free estimate•. Cell 676 5344 or 446 -9326.
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND "HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446 -38B8 or 4484477
JIM 'S PLUMBING llo HEATING . Fome rly Dewitt ' s
Plumbing. Call 614 -3670676 .

WINNIE

DOZER WORK By Toid
Hanna , ponds. dit c he.s ,
baaementa, etc. CaW 4464901 . Carter &amp;t E\lafla
Transportation .
·

CARE TO
TALK ABOUT

WHAT'S THE MATTER,
PANNY? YOU LOOK
ALL SHOOK UP.

IT? I'M A
VERY&amp;OOD
LISTENER .

NOT NOW•..
MARIE ... I... I. ..
NEED TIME TO

-.. THINK.

1515 NO MERE
COINCI DE"NCE.
MY DESIGN 15 IN
PRODUCTION ••.

ANP I PIPtV'I
KNOW
ANYTHING
A~OUTIT/

Lonnie Boggs Excavating .
Dozer , backhoe . dump truck . Work by hour or job .
Call 446-7903.
;
Electrical
8o Refrigeration

DEPENDABLE WASHER DAVE~ REPAIR . , Guaren ·
teed work. Call anytime
614 -266 -8620 or 614 266-1207 .
SEWING Machine repairs.,
18rvice . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Sen,ice Sharpen
Scluou . F11bric Shop ,
Pomeroy . 992 ·2284 .

,BARNEY

LOOKJ AT THEM

RABBIT TRACKS!!
HE SHORE 15 A
BIG -UN

I THINK
I'LL FOLLER
HIM

ED"S APPliANCE REPAIR
SERVIOE call Cfty Furniture
304 - 675 -2 608 or 448 ·
0631 .
.,•
I

85

General Hau!i~

JONES BOYS WATER SEll VICE. Coli 814-367 -7411
or 614 -367-0691 .
Need something "haul:ed
away or 1omethlng moved ?
Wo"ll do it. Call· 446 -3159
between 9 and 5 .
;
JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim Ltnler, 304 - 6_7~ 7~97 .
•

87

' PEANUTS

141 , MV NAME 15 LINUS ...
I TAKE IT YOU'VE COME
HERE TO LEAAN ~OW 10
GIVE UP ltOUR BLANKET

DON'T PAv ANV
ATT€N110N TO flER •..
SHE'S JUST MV SISTER

I

DIDN'T

COME ~ERE TO

FALL INTO NO PIT !

!

I

'
Upholitery

f

I

"

TRISTATE
:
UPHOLSTERY SHOP •
1 1 83 Soc. Avo .• Gollipoli4.
448· 7833 "' 448-1833 . . •
!l,tOWREYS Upllolotory Rt.
1 Bo• 1 24. Pt . Pleuont.
304·876· 41114 .
l

Cll 01 (}}Happy Days Fonzie pledge• his love to Ash·
I'!J. IRI ·[Ciosa. d Caption ad]
Ill Cl) (JD Gun Shy Aunell
and Amo• f11ce off to de cide the fate of a mail order
bride .
I]) [Jl Nova "The Fragile
Mounta in ."
8:30 Cll OI(J} Lovern olio Shirley
Laverne believes the man
she's be·en dating ia out to
kill her. (R) [Closed Captioned]
(Ill Now Wo'r• Cookln" A
former Qirlfr iend jeopordizel the parOles of a trio of
8JC·COnS.
9 :00 U CII ctJ Remington Stoelo
Laura and Remington become involved in a mu rde r
afterfinding a corpse in Remington 's apartment. (R)
(80 min.!
Cll MOYIE: "Excallbur"
QJ 700 Club
Cll TBS Evanlng Nowo
CIJ CII(J}Th-·a Company
The financial future of
Jack 's Bistro il threatened.
IRI [Closed Captioned]
Ill Cll (j) MOVIE: 'Tho
Miracle of Kothy Mllltr"
(JJ American Pleyhouae
'Medal of Honor Rag .' A
black Vietnam veteran
finds out he cannot IUP·
port hio family . (A) (90 min.)
(Cio18d Captioned}
[!) Greet Aellwey Journeyl
9 :30 Cll Cll (}} 9 to 6 Doraloe
end Violet help Judy etand
up to her e x-husband . (R)
1 0:00 II Cll (J) SL Eltowhoro A
c rezv woman tries to maul
one of the nurtee end Dr .
Craig asks Or . Westphal!
why people can't stand
him . (60 min .)
Cll MOYIE: 'Hardcora'
Cll To Bo Announood
Cl) Major Loaguo Boeobell:
Atltnto ot San Diogo
Cll Cll (}} Hart to Htrt The
Harts witness a ·m urder. (A)
(60 min.! [Cloud Captioned]
(Jl) Nowowotoh •
10:30 QJ Stor Tlml
I]) Firing Line
[Jl lnolde Wuhing1on
Mark Shielda hosts this
behind-the-acenel look at
the natio n's capital.
Ill In Sallroh of....
1 1:00 • (J) (I) • ([) llll Ol (}}
News
Cll ESPN SportoCap1tr
(J) Nowo/Sporti/WNthtr
Ill Bon.!!)' Hill Show
1 1 :30 e Cll CZJ Tonlght Show
Cll G,..1 PINou,.. Hunt II
Diecover the pieasurtl vou
can buy when money is no
' objoot.
Cil Ano1her Lifo
Cll lonny Hill Sh9W
D Cll Qulnoy Quincy .,..
amin11 the remain• of a
17th century prlool. (AI (60
min,)
I]) PI&amp; L-.11 Nigh!
llll All In the Fomlly
• l1J Nfthtllno
e ·Honoymoonerl
1 t:41 (J) 30 It o Otngoraut Ago.
Cynlhle
·
12:00 (]) Bumo • Allen
ciJ UIFL Fooibtll; . Lot
Anlleloo at Tempo loy
([)Niehtllno ·
illl MOVIE: 'luok tnd 1M ·

PIMOhlr'

II

MAC5EiH

WONC'E~El:' WHEN HE
ENCOIJNTE~C' IHE

iH~ef WE1~:515TE~.

(YAWMIDj

[l K

I

•' .

~: [I

arrange lht clrded leltoro 1o
lorm 11\o IU'!"'M - . U lUggoaled by lhl oboYo

canuon.

I I X)wAs( XI I X1
(AnowertiOmOrTOw) .

Yoslerday·sl Jumbles JUMPY MUSIC AMAZON EMBALM
AniW8r : Wh•t the insuran ce company paid him when
he bumped h is head - A LUMP SU M
Jumble Boot; No. 20. containing 110 puul... ls IYIUible tor St.DS poaipllld
from Jumb6e, r:JotNI new.p~~p8f, Bo• 34, Nonrood , N.J . 07143. lndudt 'fOUl"
name, addrna, zlo coda and make ctt.cks D.IYible to News
1.

BRIDGE.
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Master v. pupil

NOR Til
• 9 52
• J 52
• Jfi l

th e quem uf ~pa t..les aga inst

a three no-trum p contract.

+ 10 6:. :1
WEST

EAST

+76

t QJIOR 3
., K .1
tA- R5 :
·+ Q 4 ;

., 9 8 76 4

.· H14
+J 9 1

SOl/Til
+A K 4
., AQ itl

tK&lt;JI0 3
+A K 8
Vulnerable: North-South
Dea le r South
West

North

f:nst

Pa ~s

Pass

l'nss

South
3 NT

Ope ning lr;od +Q

·r

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

and

nnally

threw

Sun-mer in with a spade,
Sumner took his three
s pades. but had to ~ive
dec larer the last two tn cks
with th e A-Q of hea rts
( NI!~ W S I 'A I' ~; n F.NTfo~ UI'RIS t-;

a mon~

uniqu e

IS.

South wa s one of Sumner 's
advan~cd [lupils who used.
Sumn&lt;' r"s caching against
him. ·
The pupil w.on t he first
s ~ n dr and led ba~ k a -low
dramond. Sumner ' ducked,
but won the diamon d contin-uation and cleared the spade
su1t by leadin g lhr ja ck.
Declarer won and cashed
hi.s la-s t two di a m onds .
Surmwr lutd to disca rd on
the lasl diamond . A spade
discard would a llow South to
play ace and anoth e r hearl
to set up a heart as his ninth
trkk . Sumner kne w tha t his
pupol had 25 o r 26 high card
putnts for th e three notrump call, whi ch le ft /'ust a
c·h a nce th ai E:ast migh hold
the club ja ck. So Sumner
dropped " luw c:lub . Now
decl ar er took his A· K of

clubs

Sumner Cotzim 's r egular
contribution lo th e A BT A
quarterly , "For Ht.!avcn's
Sak e,"

brtdKt' t· ulum ns SumnPr
:1iw;1v -: mak es hunsc lf the
vic11in of br i lli ant play or
d('fense .
Si tling We st , he opened

4· 19-8 3

min.)

E &amp; R Tree Service . tu0y
insu;red , free e1timetee.
Phone 614-367-0636. call
after 6 .
·

Excavating

Chorlle"o A-It
(I)(J) NBC N (l) MOYIE: 'KI-·
Cll Thlo Week In 1ho NBA
&lt;IJ Gomer Pyle
(J) .liJl ABC Nowo
Cllilll CBS Nowa
([)Dr. Who
(J]) Over Elay
.
II Cll P.M. Mtgozlne
Cll ESPN SportsCenler
([) Carol Suman
Cl) En1ertllnmen1 Tonlghl
(J) Chorllo"o Angtlt
D ([) Tic Too Dough
([) (J])
MocNtl~~•hrer
Report
llll Ntwo
li2l Pooplt"o Court
8 Horoolf the Elf
Cll NBA Tonight
1J (I) Lit Dlltoctor
Cll NBA Boakolboll: 1983
Opening Round Playoff
O.me The time for the
1983 Opaning Round Ployoff Game was undetermined at presa· time . If
1hown at 7:30pm EST . it
will run until lO:OOpm EST,
followed by a TBA lrom
10:00.1 1:00pm EST. If
shown ot 10:00 pm EST, it
will run until 12:30am EST.
Programming
following
the game r if shown at th is
t ime. is undetermined
Cll Bob Newhart Show
CllD Cll Family Feud
ill Buointll Report
(J) You Aakod For It
(Jl) G,..ot Chtfo of tho
World
II)
(1%1
Entertainment
Tonight
.
GI ·Malor Looguo Baotball:
Pittsburgh at N•w York
Mota
IJ(I) (J) .A:_TtamJ acemao
. marries, the daughter of a
mUrdered ma·gnate . (60
min .)
Cll Philip Merlowt. Prlvoto
Eye ·smart Alaok Kill ." Marlowe invest igates the mysteriQus death of a movie
star.
Cll MOYIE: ·conlo Annie
and Little Brltchea'
QJ I Spy
Cll Critl From the Doap.
Part I First of 2 parts . Captain Jacques Coutteau and
t-tia e:rew explore the geological and archeological
history. of the Labrador
whaling community . (60

r

tJ

I

m

estimates
. Call 614-2561182.

84

.

e

THE/Cii"S CIII'TIIIN EMY! ·

•

83

.

Cll Ntwa/Sporta/Woo!Mr
Cll (J]) S-2·1. Contact

STUCCO PLASTERING textured
commercial
and ceilings
residential
, free

82

etll([)eCJJ!llleliJl
(1) Tic T110 Dough

n"

1----------

'ir~

EVENING

.7:00

i~~~~~~~=~:~~~-:
....__-

BUILD YOUR OWN HOME

0 . Cali814-248 -5121 .
6 rooms and bath, , 2 , 996 _

1

.4/19182

For Hle-19 ft . TraveiMaeter
lrtvol trtlltr. 814· 74J·
2932 after &amp;.p.m.
·...

••••lltU

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

i:l.."a :::

Viewing

,..

1971 Fleetwlng travel
trailer. 17 ft .. 81.400. Call
4"46-9369. "

816••rt
.60 inpar
lt. .Aloo
plulic
..
1 - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - - - - - - l.c,uhl
Olocl&lt;
6 inch
tl!ru 66 Pets for Sale
," 1Ji~:·i~~cj,~-8inch•1 . 80parft.. , 1 - - - - - - - -6 · 20 Acres wooda, overlooking Ohio River, city
-6- - - - - - A
- - - f 12 ·
13 .60 per 11 . Ron HILLCREST KENNEL • 61 Farm Equ1pment
.
I 71
Autos for Sale
-4
Apartment
schools . 446 -3664 d r 1 · 44
Space for ent
Evant EnterpriHs,
4 mi.
- -- - - -- - - -'
South of Jackaon on ST. RT. Boarding all breeds. AKC
6 13 - 423 - 8928 .
for Rent
Small office •pace for rent. 1 9_3_._8_1_4_._1_
Owner / Agent .
e_e_
- 6_9_3_o_.___ Reg. Doberman• pupa afd Farmall cub tractor cuhiva - 79 Monte Carlo exc . cond.
Doberman Stud Service . tors, belly mower 81 ,826 , Call446-3711 .·
· · ·
614 992 1•
·
· Cedar wardrobe, antique Cell 446·7796 .
Int. in1ulage chopper 8676 .
l 35 acres at Rodney on W .T. 3 rm. ond 4 rm . unfurnished ~~·J;~d Realty .
Watton Ad . Owner finan c - apartments. Utilities paid,
trunk, 3 tier gla11 tableS.
Call446 -4157.
1i68 Mustang 60,000 mi.,
Ing available . Call446 -8221 no pets , no children . Cell OFFICE space available. Will concrete picnic t1ble with
DRAGONWYNO CAnERY
1 owner, new paint. radial
446-3437 .
AKC 1Chow pup
after 6 weekdays.
remode I f or right tennent . banchao. Call 814 -258 - - 1KENNEL.
CFA Hi
P - Mo'chonlcal tobacco trans- tires. 8 cyl. Call 614 -3B8Saddlebrook Inn, Pt . Plea- _1_ 7_8_8_._ _ _ __ _ _ _ pea,
meayen , er- planter. Plantad'Y2acregave 8828 .
. he d ap t . Nnt. 304-676-6278 .
1
sian
will ooll for '500 .
1 acre lot 6 mi. from Holzer F.1rat IIoor furrne
· and SlameM kittens . •800
•
hospital. Just off Rt . 160 ·utilities paid. deposit &amp; laue 1
Water well drilling rig. Call Call 446 -3844 after 4PM .
Allo. Belsaw planer 12"
1977 Monte Carlo 29,000
oul Floyd -Clark Rd . 700ft . required . Adults, no petl . I·
·
- 3_e_B_·_B6_4_3_._~-brand new 1till in carton . actual miles. exc . cond. Call
1 _6_1_4_
Call at 631 Fourth Ave.. 49
for Lease
1·
Siamese kittens. Call 614 · Tung-groove attachments. 446 -3291Call 446 -0390.
Galiipolis .
Spring Special Lawn mower 388·8253.
8760. Firm on all. See at
For sale lot 1n Northup.
&amp;: rotoclller tune up. oil
Awmlll north of Racine, Forem4ns Used Cars. For
change. new spark plug. Cocker Spaniel male puppy, 4769mill nort8 Carmel Rd .. less ex6ensive can . On S .R.
127"•1 20', &amp;4.200 . Call 2 bdr. apartment perk front
"6 wko. old Thurodey, $80 . Rt . 1 , Rac1ne,
·
Dh .
view , Part furn .. weter paid, Wanted to lease Tobacco .dl.u ot 0 r rep 1ace b rea-r
446-6254 .
124 in Langoville , Oh . 614poundage.
Will
pay
30
cents
$176 mo ., Call 446 -3919 or
pointt, service air cleaner, Cell after 5 . 614-266 -1 361 .
742-2734.
a pound . Call 614-268- sharpen mower blade, l&amp;f·
446 -0021 .
6606 after 6 .
tey check t13.96 pluatax. 1 ·4 year old gelding chan36 Real Estate
86 MUSTANG. good condiFurniihed
apt
.
*226.
utili
·
Free pick S. delivery in nut with dark mane and tail .
tion, 304-576-2306 .
Wanted
lies pd ., 1 bdr., adults. Call l=====l!ijlliiihiiiiljj= Gallipolis-Eureka area . Nel- 1 -appy Filly, vary gentle. 4
yaaro
old.
814-986
-3891
.
446 -4416 after 7PM .
I~ son &amp; Sons Sef'\fice Center,
1973 LTD. 4 door. V-8.
Eureka, Oh . Call 614-2668 -trach stereo It radio. good
61 Household Goods
Buying houses !Ind. apa.rt· · 1 bedroom · apartment for 1 _ _:'- - - - - - - - - 1643 .
co ndition , tinted glen,
1"
ment•. Need propert•et wtth rent . Call 446 ~ 0390 ,
&amp;1200. 304 ·468-1754 .
NEW
&amp;. Used Harvestore
favorable price and term•. - - - - - - - - - New 1983 yVhite Mwing
Structures.
Automated
liBox 1 tQ9 GeJiipoli~s . . Oh . Sma'l furn ~shed hol!,l8 in
machine free arm model
SWAIN
vastqck fee~ing-compUter . 1977 Trans Am, black,
46631" : " :
'
-Musical ,
city. adults onl.y . Call 446- .li&lt;l:ICTION·. llo '. FIJRNITURE with bUilt-in .OirOIQh oiich, ii7 .
t..det•. , (:aU 1:9lla~t 8111- T- t~p. ~S ; PB .-" AC~· ~uto· ·
0336 . .
.
' .
62 Olive St.: G8111polis. King zig zag patterns, malies
Instruments
matic, AM -FM :. 8 tree~.
686; 2280.. John L. Bani .
coal &amp; wood heaters with button holea, monograma . .1---------~
49 ,000 miles. &amp;4,000. 304Furn . upstairs, 3 rooms &amp; fan t469, 1et bo~e spring &amp; much · more . We are over: _;
SEVEN ft. aide mower for 882 ·312B.
bath, washer -dryer. clean , manrass t100. firm *120. stocked with this model. we 12 string guitar Honda with 35 F·e rgu19n, hydraulic conno P.B II, ref . req . Call 446 - 10fa-lov8seat Be chair t199 , muat decreue our inven - cua. 1176. Coli 614-245 - trol, good condition 304- CJ's 79 Jeep, low mileage.
41 Houses for Rent 1619 .
love seats 870 . n·aw coal &amp; tory, Factory 20 yr. guar,a~ ­ 6392 .
304-675-6904 .
BB2-3104.
wood heaters 11 low 11 tee . ~eg . price over *300.
Furnished 3 rm. apertment $399 with blowers. used your coat only •eo. Cell Lowery Organ. Debut
1973 Plymouth Duater.
Condominiwn 2 bdr.. 2 with priva.te bath at 846 coal 81 wood heatera. new 614-386-8918 out of tow, model, Mejic Genie, walnut 62 Wanted to Buy
alent 6 engine . at , ps . like
bathl . completely fur · Second Ave .. Gallipolis . dinet Htl $100 &amp; up, cell collect. Free delivery to flnlah, 2 years old , exc.
new. Keystone wheels, runs
ni•hed , ocean front , dllily Ref. prafered . Call 446· re1rigarators. ranges, bunk your home .
cond. e1.300 . 81 4 -986 ·
good, looks good . 304-675maid service. 24 hr. security 2216 .
bedo complate *199 , bun- ..:..._______ _ _ _ 4180 oftor 5 p.m.
3731, 6 to 9 p.m .
Wan"ted to buy tobacco
guard. has·2 pools &amp; tenni• - - - - - - - ' - - - - kiesmattrallest40,cheste, Dynamark riding lawn 1- ----...:._____
couru. The Myrtle Beach Garage apt . furniahed , 1 dre11ers, TV't. Call 446- mower, 11 HP, 1Y.ryr old .. K Electric Guitar, $100 .00 poundage. Call 814-266 Retort. Mynle Beach, SC . bdr .. 822-6, utilitiea paid, 3169 .
6663 .
f860 . Coli otter&amp;. 614 - Call304-876-6123 .
72 Trucks for Sale
Call days 814 -367-0480 or 29% Neil Ave., Oallipolia .
288· 8808 .
1
eve. 614 - 448 · 3~26 .
Call446 -4416 oflar 7PM .GDOD USED APPLIANCES 1- - - - - - - - - GUITAR . Waahburn, excel- 8N Ford tractor . Call 61471 Peter Silt air ride good
- wethers, dryen, refrlgera - Bleck vinyl recliner 6 mos . lent condition. like new. 992· 3980 between 3 llo 6 .
shape, $6,000. leav&amp;phone
4 bdr. home in Cheshire, ga1 1 bdr. furn . 6 mos . leaae. tors. range1 . Skaggs Ap· old 880 . Weight bench with
heat. t196 mo . Call Wise- 860 dep ., utilities paid, no pliancea, Upper River Rd ., 110 lb . of weightl $80 . Call 1200. 304-876·6966 . •
6 baby goats, 3 does, 2 number for call back . 614men Agency, 446 -3843.
bucks, can be registered. 2 446-7077.
children, no peta, 8176 mo . beside Stone Crest Motel. 614-266 -6216 .
registered
milking goats .
Call 446-3687 altar 5 .
446.7398 .
1- - - - - - - -59 For Sale or Trade
2 % ton lnternationel cilb
2 bdr. hou~e, stove &amp;t
304-468-1826 .
Johne Deere 214 riding
over.long wheel base. cab &amp;
refrigerator. carpeted, un - Two bedroom apartr:nent Rt .
LAYIIIE"S FURNITURE
mower plus snow blade &amp;
chassie . 82 .500. new paint.
furnished . Good location . 218 at Mercerville. Quiet Sofa. chair. rocker, otto- chain. 82,400. Call 448·
1976 Buick Elaclra 2 dr., 63
good cond . Call 61 4 -379·
Call 446-3949 .
Livestock
ar4.a. nice iawn, e226 per man , 3 tables, (extra heavy 4298 .
PS
,
PD.
AC
,
AM
-FM
otero
2617.
Frontier),
*686
.
Sofa,
by
mo . urifurnlshed. Call 446Seven r0()m farmhouse near 1167 doyo, 614-367-7218 chair and loveseat, $276 . Good used s ~ v roofing tin, 8 81 ,860 or -trade for cattle,
Gallipolis. Garden. build - after 6PM .
Sofas and chairs priced from It llo 12 It lengtho. Call fajm Cqlt~46n~ of equal 11th Annual Bentley Pig 71 Ford pickup, and a 74
Pinto ststionwagon. Call
ings. county road. rural
•286. to 1895 . Tobl10. t46 388-9684 altar 6PM .
~· uo. a
- 637 ·
Sale. April 27th. 7 :30 PM . 514.- 256-6863 .
watar. •236 . Call615 -658 - NOW LEASING "Now .du- end up to 8126 . Hide-a ·
"Fayett Co. Fairgrounds. We 3730.
beds.8440 . and up to small riding lawn mower, 1 I ~ shington C .H., Ohio. Selling
ple~t apts . 2 bedroom, 1 floor
plan, air cond.. anached e526., R'aclinen. t176 . to yr: old. mint cond .. e400. I ~ "160 head of Durocs B. 1976 Datsun pickup,
&amp;1495, 304-676-2159 .
2 bedroom hou~&amp; . Large garage. rafrig .. range &amp;
&amp;360., Lampo from 128. to Call814-268 -1379.
I Ll llipph
Hamp-Duroc1 croll breeda
l!v..ing room, kitchen Be bath . dishw&amp;~her. all deluxe. 2 1h
t76. 6 pc . dinettes from
•nd Regiatered Ouroc guilts.
Furnished . Overlooking mi . Rt. 688. 8300 .00 mo . 199., to 0435 . 7 pc .. •1B9 . . Antique Oak Reproduction 81 Farm Equipment
Roger Benllay, 3112 Roads 73
Vans &amp; 4 W . O .
Ohio River. Adulta only . 446 -3046 day, 446-2602 and up . Wood table with alx furniture. full line in atock,
Rd .. Sabina. Oh 46619 . Cell
Brown ' s Trailer Park . 614 - eves.
chalro 1426 . to &amp;746 . Dnk also Antiquea . Paul Conkel• Bush hog in good shape 613 -684-2398 .
71 Winnebago motor home ,
992 -3324 .
t110' up to t226 . Hulchao. Antiquea, Tuppers Pla~nl .
$326 &amp; older model Interna executive bargain. 87.600 .
Furnished Apt., 3 rooms , $660 . and up, maple or pine
4
veer
old
Holstein
milk
cow
2 bedroom. all new paint. 1176. utili1iea pd. Adults. flniah . Bunk bed complete For sale-Night crawlers and tional tractor {needs work) 8nd calf, 1 week old. 304- leave phone number at
11.200.
Call
446
-0855
some c arpeting . Deppsit re- 701 4th Ave., Gallipoti1 , with mettreuea, 8260. and mlnnow1 . 8ettys Carry Out
614-446·7077 .
882 -2403 .
quire&lt;!. 814 -992-309!t, r'· • ahere bath . 448 -4416 after up to &amp;395 . Baby bado, 3'12 mi. South of Middleport day• &amp; 446 -4267 even.
1974 Dodge Ram Charger
· 7 p.m .
$110 . Mattreeses or box on Rt. 7 . Open 7 days a
New 2 row Ford corn Herd Reduction - Reg .. 218 engine. 69 .000 mi ..
3 bedroom house for rent in
springs. full or twin, 168., week . 614 -992 -2989.
Roc
..
Gr
.•
TDGGEI\f8URG
plantar . Coli 614 -379 M81on . 304-773 -6440 .
Apt. for rent . Half double -2 firm , $68 . and 178. Queen
Dairy Goat1, milkers , bucks. rusty body, 81 .400 or best
bd .room Apt . Adult1 pre - sets, 8196 . 4 dr . che1t1, REPOSSESSED Signl No · 2488 .
wethen - reaaonably priced, offer. Cell 614·246-6892 .
ferred . No peto. 614 ·992 - &amp;42 . 6 dr . chnto. '64 . Bod thing down I Take over payreduced for 4 -H'ers, FFA,
42 Mobile Homes
2749 .
fram10, t20.ond 126 .. 10 ments $68 .00 monthly. NEW EQUIPMENT 2· pt. etc. 304-895 -3328 . Alto 1972 Dodge Van . 318 . ·3
tllloro
40"
to
88
'
,
3
pt.
speed. Runs good . $350.
gun · Gun cablnett, •360 .. 4'•8' flashing arrow elgn.
·tor Rent
King Kuner rotary fre1h eggs. Bauera , longhol- Cell 614 -992 -2478 .
1 bad ; oom Apt. 8196 . mo . dinette cheira $20 . end 126. New bulbi. letters. Hale aeeders.
low
Rd
.
,
letart
,
WV
4 ', 6 ', 6 ' llo T lift llo
including utilitlea . Equal Gaa or electric ranges, *326 Signo. Call FREE 1 -800- mowaro
pull, 3 pt . diiC 6'12 &amp; 61f2 , 25263 .1960 Jeep - runs good,
up
co
e376
.
Baby
me
·
626-7446 , anytime.
2 bedrooms, eir cond .. fur - housing opportunity . Con ·
potetoa plows. boom poles,
$700. 614-247-4292 or
nl•hed and unturniahed , tact Village Manor Apts . troa.oo1 . 126 llo 136. bod
rear blades 6 ' 6: 7 ', plowa 1
614-949-2029 .
fromoo no. 126. llo .30. Self defroating refrigerator &amp; 2 bonom, cuttivatora 1 It 64 Hay 8o Grain
beautiful Riverview in K11 - _6_1_4_-9_9_2_-_77
_B
_ 7_·_ _ __
king frame e&amp;O . GObd 11lec· *100 . Automotlo washer llo 2 row, poat hole dlggera,
nauga . Foater ' s Mobile 1
3 and 4 room furnished apts. tion of bedr..o.orn auitaa, dryer I 160. Maytag heawy
1975 Dodge Powerwegon,
Hom10 . Call 446-1602.
614 -992 -6434 or 614 - cedar chests, rocken. metal duty auto . washer *1 00. woven wlre-20 rod rolla
3,4 ton , club cab. good
176 . USEO EQUIPMENT Good mixed hay . First &amp;
Hoover portable 11 0 dryer plowa-1 ,2.3,4, llo 5 bottom, second cutting . t1 .60 per condition . $2.000 . 3041 bdr . furn . apt ., 6 mo . lease 992 · 591 4 or 304 -882 - cabinets. awivel rockera.
Uaed Furnl1ure .. bookcase, •85 . 614-742-2362 .
675-2377.
required plus $60 dep .. 2566 .
hay rake. manure apreaders. bela . 614-992 -8036 .
chaira,
end
tsblea,
ranges.
•176 par mo ., no children ,
hey bindea. wheal diac 8 &amp;
no pats. Call 446-3687 after 3 bedroom apt . in Pomeroy- washers, dryers, refrigera- American Farm &amp; Ranch 10, rotary mowen . TRAC· Baled hay for sale. Never 77 FORO 250 4-wheel$225
.
month.
Utllltlao
pold
.
and
TV's.
3
miltl
out
drive, excellent condition. 6
tors
Steel Buildings. Commer6.
Bulevllle Rd . Open 9am to cial llo Form 40"&gt;80"•16" TORS MF 136 goo. MF 136 wet. I 1 .26 par bolo. 614- cyl. 4 speed. &amp;3 ,800. 304Cleland Realty- 61 4-992 ·
6pm, Mon . thru Fri .. 9am to vertical well 112LL-20wl). dol. , MF 150 goo, MF 36 992 -2314.
BB2-2619 .
1974 Trailer near Tycoon 2269 .
g01. MF 36 dol .. Ford 4000
6pm.
Sat
.
color
roof
and
walla.
one
Lake. 2 bdr . all electric,
gas. Ford 5000 dsl.. JD LA
446 ·0322
JEEP 19BO CJ6 . 4 apood.
20 'x14' doubll tUde door. W•CUII .. JD 60. JD CD30
8160, dep. required . Call Apartmen'u . 304 -676 ·
66 Seed 8o Fertilizer
554B.
new top. good condition.
one walk· ln door, four wei- dol. INDUSTRIAL Ford 636
814 -388·9763 . .
COUNTY APPLIANCES , lites, delivery price backhoe, Coeo 880C bock$4300 . Consider trade.
INC . Good used a pplla ncaa , $8.872 .00 . R . D . PAR 14x60 3 Bedroom , APARTMENTS , mobile
hot. Caoe 1160B dozer. WANT to lease tobacco 304-273·3674. 8 :30-6 :00.
1190.00 . 14•66 2 Bed · homes, hou1e1 . Pt. Pleaaant waaher, dryers. refrlg,, TV SONS. 119 W. Vo . Avo. Many other ltema . J!m's quota. Maaon, Putnam. Caroom, • 176.00. Addieon. and Gdipollo. 614-446 - setl . 627 1A 3rd. Ave., Oatil - Ripley. WV 26271. (304) Farm Equipment, Rt . 36 bell . Call Morgan Woodh11wn 74
B221 .
polio . Coli 446-1899.
Motorcycles
372·8991 .
Oh. U6·0116 .
WoOl. Gollipollo. Oh Call Form. Pliny. 304 -876 448
-9777
or
448-2484
.
2275, 304-623 -5843 .
UNFURNISHED apartment
Whirlpool auto washer r•al Vegetable plan1s &amp; potatoea
Camper Trailer Iota for
for
rent
,
2
bedroom
,
nice
gU~rant•ed
•126
.
GE
for
ule.
Garnaa
Greensummer. eecluded wooded
1980 Yamaha YZ -80 dirt
refrigerator White 1 8 cu.ft. house, letart, WV Box 82 .
area . Overlooking Ohio $210 .60 Call Automotive
bike. axel. cond ., $426 . Call
plowa
good
cond.
Cail446
Cub
tractor
cultivators
river. Vic Brown. Mlnan- Supply. 8 -6 . 304 -676- liko new 1160. call 448 - 304·896·3400 .
614-246-6892 .
4286 .
8181
.
22.1
B.
675-6763
.
villo, Oh . Cell 614· 992·
3324.
1971 Yamoho 660 IWin 4
EARLY American Harculon M.F. 1085 whh cab and 71
Autos
Sale
ONE bedroom •Partmenta Color floor model TV *160, oofa
~------- lc 11o chair. t •0 o .oo. 304- d lo 2883 h
18
4
36
1
-~-------stroke. fair cond ., 8660 .
ln good condition. Inquire at
ua ·
ourt,
. ·
2 bedrooms In Recine. 814 - for the elderly. All utllltiaa
Co11614 -245 -6892 .
578-2797 .
tires . New Idea corn picker
Tenintl
pay
30
perpaid
.
,
387·0288 .
421
Cyprau
Ct.,
Pt.
PIN·
oupor
ohollar
pull
typo . 2-30 1976 Buick Electro 2 dr ..
cent of their adjusted insant, WV-.
BALDWIN lnterluce organ . in . rows. &amp; kill brother~ PS, PB, AC. AM-FM atero 1 9B1 Hondo 760K black.
2 bedroom furnished mobile co me in thi1 HUD eubsidlzed
6 pc. kitchen dinnette, 2· with rhythml , cauatte or•Yily beds with wagona. •1.8150 or trade for cattle , completely dressed in black.
apartment
building
.
TWin
home. Adutu only. Paid
sof~t, 1 chair, dining room player. learning tapaa. song John Bean meterflow pump farm equipment of equal 4600 miles , 2 black helmets
· utllltlet, dapoeit and referen- Rivera Tower, phone. 304- lute with
large · mlldium, 2 Honda
876-8679
.
Equal
.
o
pportun
8 cheln. corner aheetl . Barbie camper. pool model 600. Ellleon rolling value. c 1n446·4&amp;37 .
ce• required . No pets. 614 jackets large-medium . All
1
ity housing .
cabinet. Cell448-1441 .
~~: :V~"t:; !;,!~, ~~~~~~·~ ~~~~~tol;ad~. r:;z~ ~x~ =~ l -7-3_0_1_d_o_9_8_4_6_.-0-00_m_I-..-P-S, 12.200. 814-985 -4180 al992·3847.
White
Whirlpool
elec.
range,
UHd. 1 natural_ gas floor Andrew Croae, R•clne. e14- PB. tilt whul. air, crulee. 4 tiJ 6 p.m.
EFFICIENCY apartment, 1
TWO bedroom troller. kil·
lduh,
utilhies
paid,
private,
u oad only low month a. l.;;r;;ur;;n;;a;;ct;;.;;3;;0;;4;;-;;8;;7;;5;;
-3;;0;;9;;9;;.=.t2:4:7:·:28:8:2:.=:;:;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;~ dr..
HT. call 448· 741 4 1981 MX 100. good condi' chan furnished. couple•
brand now. Call 81"4-258 - ~
bel-on 3 llo9 PM .
304-875-2083.
, only, •180.00 month, refer·
tion, 304 -675 -2289.
1711 altar &amp;PM.
•..:..._..
' tncoo. 304·676· 1078 .
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with M•'or Hoople 1977 Dodge Colt AT vinyl
TWO end tablal: •40 .. 2
..,
top. newly painted. exoel TWO bedroom trailer, ramo- 46 Furnished Rooms
76
Boats and
t bl 1
*40 GMI 1
~
•t~
~..,.
.
_.
.
r..ic~~~~~~
.101 ...
lant ga1 mHeage. Excellent
. deled. ooma ulilltlao pol d.
Motors
for Sale
c~r
•.:.':'P:2o
.•
·s5o
b~1!~!
;!iOIJR
TRI
SfiN
·~l
..
_
T
·~·:;,&lt;~
condition
.
Call
814-388
'
For rent Sleeping Roome
6
Call Mr. Rhoides at 304·
IBO.
Coii3.QII-882
·
2&amp;49
.
(i'Ei.Li~~
~L
.;·
,9
_8
_0_9_
.
_
_
_
_
__
_
and
light
houeo
keeping
· 875-8080. 8 ·8 p.m.
~'"'"" -,.,,. :;;;-,·-;.·:::
;:?' v_;-fiJ
71 ~~ ~;.
1_
rooms. Plrk Central Hotel.
FIRST clou refrigerator. •••• ~::-.:...
IPL••~.. .,·'
1,.,"
1982 EXP. Excellent cond . Boot dock •1 oo, Toledo
c;a11 448-0758 .
t980 Mobile Homo. 2 bod ·
o _ovor poymonll . 448 · food scalea •1 00 . Call 446collontcondltlon,I200.
Mo1.'-~
,qF
T~IO
~
._,-:.
"1llf.
.
J
.....
,~."~f1(f~li~
!!k
room · 12x45. exc . cond .
pit hutch llo butfot. Uoo .
;;;;.. , RE
1/ ' :':'!; , 111 &lt;f. '"~:A:;,,
v80
4 731 or come to Pony ~eg
Furnished apt. •dults. No
furnished with undllrpen·
Ptto. 304-878-1 4U.
nln~. 304·876 ·3889 or
304-&amp;75-8986.
I"F-l'R. lfAA~ 1'f'y 1f~ 1 \ svc.~~~
~ ·HuN~\~ For Sole or Trade: 1977 to see .
304-878-&amp;888 .
Camero. 30&amp; engl"•· auto., 1 UO 16ft. Boylinor with 50
s,ven piece dinetw ..t.
.... ,...
Fu"rnlahed apt. adults. No
a.c. , new tlrea, 34,000 mi. HP Mtrcury m·o tor ·~
••tro loaf, Sharp mlcrawtvl
'(1 · ·
~
~
2 bedroom hou1e trellar. Ptto. 304·878· 1483.
Call 379-2728.
Tenne11ee trailer, 111 acce•oven
with
nand.
Sowing
,,\
/1
r•Aohfo~d · Uplond Rood .
machine
and
cabinat.
304~
,..,
'----~
oorloo Included . Call 448tt50. month pluo utllltloo .
For Sole 01 Ttado: 1979 8385 oflor 6 .
871· 73!13 ilftor 8 p.m.
(
o1
48 Space for I'Jent
304-878 ·4088 .
Comoro' 81,000 mi. Now
i../~
tl,.o, 305 onglnt. outo. Ctll 3 HP Johnson motor, 10ft.
379·2728 .
aluminum boat. 304 -578Prlvocy-Baoutlful
groundo.
1
,64
Misc.
Merchlndisa
.44 Apartment
2t9~ .
Rt.
36
near
Spring
Volloy
;
'
for Rent
"79 Chevy Suburlliln, ••c.
Pluo. HO mo, lncludoo city Now &amp; Uaod Troy Built
' \ ......
cond., V-8·, auto. tnm·a.• air
Wlllr. Referencea a depoeit Tlllart . Swlaher• lmple t ~
cond. 44e-3837 after 6 78
Camping
requlrod. Call 448-8307 or mtnt, Sl. At. 7. North of
'I"" ~)v
"' "
j
p.m .
Equipment
2 bdr. Rogency Inc. Aptrt- 448,4144 . ·
Gallipolis. Co11448-047B.
!!1!!\...l'-

'WHA'T

Camping
Equipment

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

56 Building Supplies

See our models, 1-614BS 8 ·731 1

78

The

Teleusion

April19, 1983

1971 CONTINENTAL 18"1).
c•mping trailer, flrat ctn1
1hape. Mlf contained . 301·
773-6128 .
.

I========·=
· ::

4

For sale met.l culvert 61nch
thru 80 inch in ltock. State
approved 16 gouge 12 inch
•&amp;
24 inch
e10.36
.10 per
per ft..
ft . 38 inch

Misc . MerchlndiM

Boy 1cout uniform, ab:e 12.
304·875·2342 .
.

6 prom drei:Ms size• 7 -13.
like new. Worn only once.
~~~ _ 4~6 - 9769 or 446-.

100 acre farm . 1 room
· houH &amp; bath, all mineral
: rights. tobacco base. 6,4742 -2542 .

36

64

Merchandise

DICK TRACY

•I

•

Ohio - r

TU. L1f Apil19, 1983

ASSN I

~-'61:d'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Mulber ry
cloth
5 Fa ct ory
10 Algerian
cily
!I Account
13 - majesty
14 Wild ass
IS Joiner
17 Johru&gt;y 18 Philippine
peasant
19 Sam in
"Quinl y "
20 Taro root
21 Benvenuti

23 Asian river

13 Glacial
ridges

llOWN
I flenlltl s1g n
2 Sports
· scltin u
3 Getting old
4 City of

Yesterday 's Ans wer

Mana!:lseh

23 "-

5 Rt ~ ht now !
6 Slow I mus. l
7 Brazilian
tree

24
25

8 Mediocre
I sl. I
9 ~· oot lever
12 Rehearsal
16 Elder I Pr.l
22 followe r
i suffix I

24 Mountain
c r est
26 Anthem
27 Cyrano's
feature
26 Fre nc h t;·,ll ob--+-

32 Greek

Cassius

:!6

211
30

hath ... "
E:nmity
Down from
the Cas;trs
Lorrc
film r ole
"Silas - "
Stringed
instrument

meeting
pla ce
33 Cltrreras
or

Gedda
36 Actress
~'uc h

38 Man's
ni ck ·
name

+---+-

(abbr . l

29 Devilkin
30 Large
container
31 Skimmer
34 Disfeature
35 Period '
in history
37 Accord

39 Sacred
imll~ e

40 Figure
of speech
41 Roman
fiddler
42 Fragrant

wood
4 19

DAILY CRYPTOqUOTE -

Herets

how

to work it :

A X V D L 8 A; A X R

Ia

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply atanda lor · another . In thio sam1&gt;le I\"' II
UIOd lor the three L's, X for the two 0"! , etc. Si ngle letlers,
opoolropheo, the length and !ormation of the ' · ords are all
hlnto. Each day the code letters are diRerent .
CRYPTOQUOTES

VJOPWLO,
NWF

ENA

EW

MTWXHLI\1.
PA

THCNE

NA

VUGKHJ C,

EW

E:VDB

BJWFK
NVK

VPWGE

NHUKADR .
PVGLDAVH~A
Yestenllly'a Cryptoquote: THE WORST PEATUitE OF. ANEW
BABY IS ITS MO'l'HER'S SINGING. - KJN HUBBARD

�/

Page

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel
Rain~

The Forecast For 7 a.m. EST

•

Weclnesday, April 20

S hower s •

varsity football coach, 3 votes. two
!Continued from page 1)
passing; Lany Grimes, assistant
junior class sponsor; Cella McCoy,
vB.rslty football, 4 votes. I passing;
drama; Girree Knotter, yearbQOk;
Fenton Taylor, assistant varsity
.Gordon F1sh, girls head track
football, 3 votes, 2 passing.
roach; Gloria Alexander, girls'
Gordon Fisher was named at·
reserve basketball; Ron Logan,
hlellc director, 4-1, SDQWden casting
girls vv.rslty ~ketball; Karen and
the dissenting vote.
Gary Walker,"coach and assistant
The contracts ot Rick Ash, girls
coach of girls' wlleyball; Bob
softball: Wallace Hatfield, girls
Ashley, golf; ' Larry Grimes, head
reserve softball and Marla Grimes,
wrestnng; Greg Drurruner, assist·
junior high cheerleader · advisor,
ant baseball; Tim Saunders, head
were oot renewed beCause ot Sll!te
baseball; Jesse Vall. junior high
laws requlrlng·that the posltloi!S be
track; Bob Ashley, boys head trek;
filled wlt~wrtifled personn~i.
-Ro.n Drexler, boys selienth gtade
ThecontractofAvice Bailey, t6od
· basketball: Rusty Bookman. boys
se!Vlce supervisor, was not re-·
eighth grade basketball: Tim
newed H. with Powell casting the
Saunders, boys ninth grade basket·
supporting vote.
ball: Mlck Childs, boys reserve
In secret session, the board
basketball: Greg Drummer, boys
discussed personnel and finances
varsity basketball: Rusty Book·
man, seventh and eighth grade and heard grievances of two bus
drivers, Esther Blake and Norman
football: John Amott, seventh and
Wood. All board members. Supt.
eighth grade football, 3-2 vote:
Dan Morris, James Carpenter,
Fenton Taylor, reserve football 3
assistant superintendent, and Jane
votes, two board members.
Wagner, treasurer, were present
Snowden and Vaughan passing;
for the meeting.
Lany Grimes, reserve football;
Mike Barr, assistant varsity toot· . - - - - - - ' - - - - - - ball, 3 votes, Snowden and Vaughan
passing; Don Dixon, assistant

W"oill l• ' . ,• .

N ,! 11(J I Iol l

N OAA . IJ '. ( l• ·l t1

.,r

f

" '"

, ry ••

Fronts : Co ld ..-.

WEATHER FORECAST - Tioe National Weather Service
forecasts snow flurries and snow for \\'edne:'iday from the lower Great
Lakes to the Northeast. Rain is forecast !rom southern California to
Nevada and Arizona. Sunny weather l'i fureca.liJt for most of the country.
Colder weather is expected throughout most ol the East. (AP
Laserphoto Map)

Ohio forecast
Partly cloudy today. High 40-4:i. Winds nonhwcstcrl y 10-20 mph.
Mostly elear tonighl. Low ncar 2:i. Winds northweste rly arou nd 10
mph . Mostly sunny WednPSda y Hi gh nPar 00.

Extended forecast
Extended Ohio Forecast- Thursday. through Saturday: Fair on
Thursday and Friday and a chance of ra in Saturday. Hig hs in the:iOs
Thursday a nd in the mid-50s to the low 60s Friday and Saturday.
Lows ln the 30s Thursday and Friday and in the upper 30s and low40s
Saturday .

r---Local briefs:--Cleanup activities continue
Cleanup week in Pome roy" continues with frec"'lmsh pickup by
employees. Wednesday _pickUp wi ll _taka place in-the tl)lrd wal'tl. Thu rsday the fou r1h ward. a nd on Friday. worke~s will pick.
up tras h missed in earlie r collect ions. Resident s who have been
missed are asked to ca ll village hall .

vlll~ge

Marriage dissolved
Tioe marriage .of Susan M. Ba il ey and Keith Bailey has been
dissolved by deeree fil ed in the Ml'igs Count y Common Pleas Cour1 .
Mrs. Bailey had her name n•slorPd to Wright.

Club to meet Wednesday
The Mlddlepor1 Literary C"lub will meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the ho!"e of Mrs. Ilen P hilson. Mrs. He len Hayes will give the book
review.

Annol;lnce practice session
A practiCe for the officers uf Eva ngeline Chaptt•r 172. Order of the
J;:astern Star. has bem set fur 7 p .m . W&lt;'cincsda y at the Middleport
·Masonic Temple .

Cold weather..
(Continued from pa_gc 1)
ments," Rooks said. ·
Rooks sa id that as of Ap ril 1.
158,000 of Columbia's more than 1
million customer s were 60 days or
more behind in paymPnl s, owing a
total o f a bout $37 mlillon.
He said that Is more than tw icc t h~
number of delinquent accounts that
Columbia had a t the same tinw iast
year a nd repn•senl s 1:18 jX'rcent
more money owed. 'l'h&lt;' utili ty
pperates In 56 Ohio counties .
One of those In arrrao·s was Ellen

Area death
Raymond L. Johnson

Raymond L. .Johnson. fill, Rou tc 2,
Rac ine, a former res ident of
Huntington. W. Va .. died Monday at
Cabeii-Hunt ington Hospita l in
Huntington .
He was bom July 111,1!l02in Cabell
County, W. Va .. and was a retired
employee oft he Woo:lmPre Memorial Park Cemetery in Huntington.
He was a veteran of World Wa o· I
havlngseiVed in the U.S. Army.
He Is survived bytwodaughtgers.
&amp;&gt;Idle Milliron , Rac ine, a nd Nancy
Judd; Huntington; a son. Glenn .
Milton. W. Va.: a sister. Mat)"
E loise Wilcox , Jacksonville. Fa .. 16
grandchildren a nd seven great ·
grandchildren. He was preceded in
death by his wife. Mao1ha.
Services wUI be held a t I p.m .
Thursday al the Chapma n Mm1U·
ary, 2851 Third Ave., Huntington,
and burial will be In the Woodmere
Memorial Park. Friend" may ca ll
at the funera l home from 2 to9p.m .
Wednesday.

.

Chancey rehired ...

Snow f"::·.;]

.

!Weets tonight

• A special meeting of Middleport

Brisbon of Cotumt&gt;us, who owes the
gas company $1 ,127, mostly arcum·
uic\lf'(l du ring the winter. Offi cials of
the federal Home E nergy Assist·

anct' Program said severa l gas
customers in Columbus have bUts
nt'aring $~. t01 .

'

T hrrf' ca lls Wf'ff' answered by

loc·a l units Monday and Tuesday
morning, thP Meigs Counly Emergf• n c~' Mt-'dical Se-rvice rC'ports.
i\1 4:31 a .m. Tuesday. the ·
l'omNoy Uni t took Anne tte Boyd.
Village Green Apartment s. to
Vdcrans M~mor l a l Hospll.a l. On
Monday a t 111:42 a. m ., thP Pomeroy
Unit took Charlotte Ea kins !rom
Minersv ille to Holzer Medical
C'mlcr and at 6: 14p.m ., Middleport
took Marie Caruthers from Mill St ..
to Holzer Medica l Center.

Marriage licenst&gt;s
Ronald Duane Roberts, 22. Rou te
1, Portland, and Carol Lee &amp;&gt;iiers,
17, Houle l. .P ooiland .
Ala n Ke ith Partlow. 19, Pomeroy,
a nd Mary Ann Mitchem. 16.
Pomeroy. have applied for marr iage licenses in Meigs County
ProbateCour1 .

CHECKS DEP111 Checking depth · of seed following
demonstration of the Buftalo 110-{111 com planter which wavailable for
rent from the Melg5 SWCD to MeigS County Iannen.

50 attend no-till field day .

28 w hich relate to pricing practices
of Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio.
Councllrnan Bill Youngsaldthe bills Wyllls HUI by-pass and a turn .~t the
. wHI - lltnlt thQ gas comP&amp;fly's ;·: tQp was diso\lssed !i'Wa$ the _~eed .
practice of ·a utom atically paSSing ~ for;tll:e hose ~~ -be use!! by the street
onto consu·rners the cost of "high" . department in cleaning s treets . .
priced gas purchases. He e mphasCouncil a lso d iscussed employee
lzed tha t endorsement of the two
insurance, the increased cost of
bills strengthens the post ion of the
Blue Cross. and the need . for
securing other cost .e stimates for
Consumers' Counsel.
it was decided to hold a special
similar Insurance coverage from
meeting 7 p.m. Monday to discuss
other agencies. The clerk, Ellen
the Pomeroy park developme nt
Rought , was authorl7..ed 10 secure
with a representa tive of the
figu res from other companies.
Department of Natural Resources .
Patrolman Steve Hartenbac h
The $19,00) grant from that de part ·
reported he Issued 454 parking
m ent requires ma lching local
runds . Officials a re considering
de veloping four lots on Brick Streel,
whlch would require draining,
filling and seeding.
Councilman Bruce Reed asked
whether the $19,00) in matc hing
funds could be better spent in
renovation plans for downtown .
Council passed a resolution to
borrow $20,000 from the Farmers
Bank and S;lVings Co. for the
payment on the newJiretruck which
n May.
wtil be ready for deilve~
It was reported there is
tentiai
renter for several room on the
second noor of village hall. On the
recommend a lion of Kim Shie lds,
village consultant. Council hired
Jerry Emmerick to conduc t a
feasibility study detailed enough to
a llow bidding to derive accurate
cost of per square foot rental
charge. Emmer ick is not to be pa id
over UXJ.
George Miller wss given a
contract to install lighting at the
outs ide, in the ha lls a nd in the
a uditorium oft he new vlllage ha ll at
a cost of not to exceed $700. The cost

tickets from April! through April 18
and noted the need for some new
meter poles to be installed.
Attending were Mayor Clarence
Andrews, Council members, Betty
Baronlck, Larry We hrung, Bruce
. Reed. Harold Brown, BUI Young
and John Anderson, a nd Clerk E llen

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Prices In EHect

TESTS SET.

Thursday,· April 21
9:00 A.M. Til
12:00 Noon

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April 19th

thru
May 1st

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MEIGS INN, Pomeroy, Ohio

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Anyone who has !rouble hearing is welcom e to have a hearo ng tesl ustng
modern electronic eQuipment to determine if hisloss isone which may be
helped . Some of the causes of hearing loss will be explained and diagrams
of how the ear works will be shown.
·
We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Batteries And Supplies For All Makes For ~le .

Under The Dome
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oval or rectanglllar mata, perfect lor photo a or art a
and cl'llftl. wood photo lr11mea in pecan or pacific
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horizontal dlaplaf.

.

4 Roll Pack

Values To

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PutnAm Post

Admltted·-Kelth . Aeiker, Pomeroy: Edward Dlli, Pomeroy.
Dlscharged-'Leland Clonc h, Donald Dav1dson, Edith Teaford.
Hazel Proffitt , Tammy Bable .

279

STOP
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Veterans Memorial

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ONE

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r~Ro
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came
from
for auditorium
Jell
HIUmy whollghllng
me l with
council
to
further discuss community productions in the a uditorium .
Approval was given to use $150 to
purchase equipme nt for the Meigs ·
Boxing Club, Inc. ·
A por1lon of the approximately
$100,000 left over from the Kerrs
Run Housing and Urban Development. grant will be used for
connecting several homes In that
area to the new water line. The
action was recommended by Reed
WUI of the water department .
Walle r G rueset met with Council

Cleans, · renews lustre, hides
· scratches and scuffs on wood
paneling and woodwork.

CY

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Reg. 29.95

. The .Ladles Auxlllary of the
Rutland Fire Department will meei
!!1 7: ;j) p.m. on Wednesday at the
meeting toom. All member-s are
tirsed to attend.

'

'

ONE -.
STOP

648 board...

(Continued from page 1)
The board ranked their top two
c hoices from each county. In order
of ranking the members chose:
Koebel and Warren . F. Sheets.
GalllaCounty: MaryF.Sklnnerand
James J. Cremeens, Me igs County:
and Gary P . Bungart and Marshall
L. McGhee, Jackson County.
State officials can choose to
to discuss the condition of River- . ignore the ranklngs a nd appoint
view Drive. Generalconditionoflhe
other applicants, Rice said.
street was discussed and $500 was
When the - appOintments are
approp-r iated for ·repairs. The
made, the board will have a run

!Continued from page 1 ) .
dorsed House Blll 4 and Senate Bill

PANEL MAG.IC

Meets Wednesday

'

Forty-one ... _______

s·
. P. RING CLEANING SPECIAL

Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, wlll be he ld a t 7
this evening at tbetemple. Work will
~ in the fellowcraft degree.
~treshments wtll be served follow·
Jrg .t he mreting.

Sprayer calibration was demon·
strated and discussion was held on
th e Importanc e of p roper
calibration:
Alan Holte r explained problems
and adva ntageS he has found In
using no-till age ot&gt;erations on their
farm .
Lunch was served by the Meigs
SWCD Ladies Auxiliary following
the program .
For Information on renting the
Moore Uni-drtll no-til l seeder or the
Buffalo no-1111 corn planter contact
the Meigs.SWCD at 992-6647.

About 50 people attended· the
No-till Field Day sponsored by the
Meigs Soli and Wa ter Conservation
District tSWCD) · a nd the Soli
Conservation Service a nd the
Meigs County Cooperative Exten·
sion Service a t the Roy Holter
family farm Sa turday.
items discussed Included soU
drainage, soil loss calculations,
erosion control a nd chemicals used
lor no-ttll and minimum tillage
practices. The Buffalo no-lUI corn
pla nter and the Moore Unl-drill
no-tlli seeder for pasture a nd
ha yla nd were demon stra ted .

. ·•

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