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                  <text>Braves, Dodgers win
Phillies dump Reds

Blood pressure
climes set;
Family Medicin~

Young flOOd victim
pulled from river

PageJ

Pages6-8

Page14

•

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at y
· Voi.32,N6. t4
Copyrightod t983

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3 ..~3

FROM OVP AND AP reports
Despite heavy rains, no major hlghways In Meigs
. County were closed today due to hlgh water, however,
two state routes In the southern part of Gallla County
were reported flooded this morning by the Ohio
Highway Patrol's Gallipolis post.
A patrol spokesman sald the covered areas are Ohio
141 from Ohio 233 to the Lawrence County line, and
Ohlo 218 between phlo 553 and Lawrence County.
The Gallla County engineer's office reR&lt;Jrted one
county road was closed due to flooding today Symmes Creek In Perry Township.
Meanwhl)!!, 2.419 Inches of rain that has soaked the
area since Friday continued to cause low-level
flooding. High water caused classes in the Symmes
Valley School District, Lawrence County, to be
cancelled today.

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14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 4, 1983

20 Cents

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River to crest at Pomeroy below flood stage

·s 20F. pour

~

enttne

3 For , 3

Til Ill' Rlllll )I' It

School will resume when the water recedes, a
district spokesman said'thls morning .
The Ohio River In Pomeroy Is expected to crest
Thursday at 3 a.m. at 42.5 feet, flood stage is 45.6 feet.
The Gallipolis Locks and Dam reported the Ohio
River had risen to 39.4 feet this morning and was rising
at two-tenths of a foot per hou r. Adam spokesman said
a prediction on a possible crest stage would not be
available until this afternoon.
The spokesman said the dam's rollers were put out.
Meanwhile, Ohio's rain-swollen rivers neared crest
stage today at Several locations, and the NationAl
Weather Service said the state was due a break after
five days of rain and storms.
High water was responsible for road closings
Tuesday in several Ohio counties -Including Athens,
Pike, Coshocton a nd Warren . No evacuations due to
reo;Jrtf&gt;d Tuesday nlght. •

The weather service estimated that some rivers.
including the Great Miami and the Little Mia mi, had
already crested Tuesday night. Other rivers near or
above flood stage were to crest by tonight.
The Scioto River was to crest at 5 p.m . today at
Chillicothe a nd at 6 p.m. at Piketon . The river was
expected to crest 2 feet below flood stage at Chllllcoth&lt;'
and 6 feet above flood stage In Piketon.
The weather service said the Ohio River would crest
at at 7 p.m . at Cincinnati, 21eet below flood stage.
The river had risen to 48.8 fe&lt;&gt;t Tuesday evening, a nd
the weather service said rains upstrea m would
~_o_ntinue to make It rise. Cincinna ti has had moretha n5
inches of rain since Thursday.
Craig Pendleton. Warren Cou nty engineer. said thr
Little Miami River had flooded four county roads.
"I credit Caesar's Creek Reservoir with sav ing usa
lot more trouble," he said. "We could have expected a

lot of flooding up a nd dow n th&lt;• Little Miami without the
flood control reservoir. I would think an'a s likr South
Lebanon would be undt"r water by now ."
In nor1heast Ohio. a ma n and his fatltrr spt'nt :ut
hours adrift on stormy Lakf' Erit.• tx:&gt;fon' thPy WPrf'
found at about 5: 30 p.m. Tu csda~· in their 17-foot
motorboat, o!IIC'Ials said.
Terrance Wardrop. SJ. of Conn(•aut. and hi s fathf&gt;r,
Thomas, 76, of Eastport, Pa .,

WP I'('

rou nd bv

i:l

Cleveland-based cutt er ll1 mll£'5 north of · the
Ohio-Pennsylvania llnr. the Coast Guard report rd .
The men lert Comteaut at about 10: :lO a .m. Monday
on a fishing trip and ran int o trou blra fl r r t hrw ind ble w
away their gasolinf&gt; can, acco rdin~ to I hPC'oast t ~ u ard .
Thf' wf'ather scorv icf' sa lq s lo w clraring wou ld bl•gi n
ac ros..., thP stale today, with gPnPral\y dr~' Wl' athf'r to

prevail across th&lt;' state unt il Su nday.

Chances nil for federal help

J!lusZ
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By The A""""lated Press
The c hances are slim that the
federa l government will help tornado victims In W&lt;;&gt;ston. one ·of the
areas hardest hit by stor ms that
pummeled Ohio this week, a state
. dlsaster·servlces official says
Gov. Richard Celeste on Tuesday
s~rveyed the d a mage caused by at
least st'ven tornadoes that touched
down Monday, a nd his press
secretary said Celeste would probably determine today whethertosf'ek
a federal disaster decla ration for
Weston, In northwestern Ohio.
Such a deClaration Is necessary It
thea rea Is to ge t federal help tgclean
up a nd rebuUd.
Monday's storms caused four
deaths, 'l7 Injuries and millions of
dollars In damage In e ight cou niles
- from Ross Count y In the south to
Cuyahoga County In the north .
Hardest hit we retwotrallerparks in
. Weston and the Cleveland suburb of
Broadview Heights.
Davida 'Matthews, spokeswoman
for the Ohio Disaster Sforv lcPs

~

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"

- .......
The Saving Place"'

Kmart•
Sole Price

Less Factory
~ebote

A~ency,

said Weston would be more
Departme nt wer·c sent to Wt&gt;s ton to
likely to receive .government h('lp
help process claims .
Ihan Broadview H ei~:h ts bet·ause It
Th(' Disas ter S!'rv icc-s Agmcy
is a farming community with
estimated the dolla r loss in Weston
llmiiPd resources. But she sa id · a t $1.1 million . M~ . Mat hew ssairlt h&lt;&gt;
about 70 percent of Weston holu ll included fiVl' private homrs tha 1
mrownNS affected by the 0torm . wrre rlCstroyf'd or ~l! s l al n f'd m&lt;\j n r
ha ve private lnsura nC'f' .
damage; :l.&lt;; mobllt· homes dr •s troycd 01·· \-vit h major dam;tgL': ::!~l
"So In a way, that lc-ssens thP
mobile hom~ with minor ditrnagf':
chan c&lt;'S (of a dls astPr declara a nd s ix busin P~St's darnagl'&lt;l .
tion\ ," Ms. Matthews said.
Stu"' sa irl $~l.llMid; 1rnagt• w;1s donf'
Celeste promised tornado victims
10 lh&lt;' tO\II.:n' s w at r r 11 1.\ r.Umrn t p lant
at Weston a nd Broadview Heights
and $]0,((N) w a s nN'(If"CC for rlt •:l nlng
that the state wou ld help thrm
up debris.
obta in quick Insurance settle ment s.
Ms . Malthfws s. IIU tht• statP
"Ou r first move will bt&gt;loexjX'dltt&gt; Transport at lon I &gt;tp&lt;ll' l nw nt woulrl
Insurance applications. That will
pmv idt• t'l[Uiprrwnl to h(' \p n•movp
help people who lost their hom&lt;&gt;S and
debris.
jl('r·sonal belongings. and we will do
In Broadvil •\\' Ht~ l g ht ~ . May O! '
everything we can tocxpcclltr thost•
William llilllt · ,•..,limal til ! liP d ~ 1rn ·
claims ," Celeste said during his
ag~· at $1.;, Jll·i ll iun to .$'2 million .
mor ning visit to Wes ton. "The brst
D isastr•r officials in C'u y&lt;llloga
thing w&lt;• · a n do Is help out th&lt;' d ty In
County snld 'l2 honH•s w£' 1'1' dl'S·
any way wr ca n.''
troyrd tlr su::.&gt; t;1iru•d rn;1jor d;trnagr'
and th nt ;u hornPs
da magr.

Pa ul Costello . the governor's
press sPcretary, sa id two r(•pre!wn
tatlvcs from !hr state lnsura nrr

~ ust ~d m'l"i

minur

Devrick re~ elected mayor
By'nmOavL•
MASON 1OVP I
Unofficial
res ults of Tuesday's election her&lt;'
showed inc um ben t Mayor Cecil
Devrlck was re-elected mayor with
228wrltc•in ballots. accordlngtoclty
clerk Jane Chapma n. A specia l
council meet lng will be h&lt;•ld later
this WP{'k to certify Tuesday' s votP.
Also re-e lected In the election was
Lois Test as city r&lt;'COrdcr with w66
vo t&lt;'S .

I

I

I
MASON ELECI'ION HELD - Robert Roach,
~ clerk, seated, gets ready to place a baUot'
f~ imldentHied Mason voter Into the ballot box

during Tuesday's vWage

E iected as cou nell mPm bers were
Donald VanMeter (121i), John
Sisson 11081 , Sherman Ford 1911.
Richard Ohlinger 1881 and Agnes
Roush (851.
Some 312 voters turned out for
yesterday's election which was the
largest turnout of voters In the past

elrctcd Mayor.
DPvrlek sa id this m o rnin g hf'was

No ont' fllr~l for oftkr In 1Il ls ywr' s

plmscd with thr tu r nout .
Tuesday's r l r~· tt o n was the first
time In the town's 127 yrars tha t thr
ballot was blank.
" I'm looking fo rwa rd to lhr nrx t
two y('an;", · stated Devrtck, att.-r
say ing he wou ld acct&gt;pt the job as a
write-In ca ndldat ~ II no one else
would. "To me, yrsterday 's larg&lt;'
voter tu rnout Is an Indicat ion that
the p&lt;'Ople herr In Mason havr
shown a n upward turn for the brst
Int eres t of thr town . With the proplr
· knowing 1hat the town could losr all
sta te a nd federal funds. they showed
where their bestln1f•r£'Sts were. sa id

m unicipal f'lf•ction. anti llt.•\Ti&lt;:k
wn~ lnfor m C'd hy Sf&gt;\TP!a ry of Sl a h •
!\ . .Janu•:oo Ma1whin las t Wt'l. •k !ha l

6.88

Our Reg. 9 .97

9 7~g.-Our

Reg. i.47

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Feed your trees and shrubs the easy way.

• ,.., wt.

-2.67

lu.,_r K·ero" RoM And Flower Care
Feeds. protects nowers systemically. 21b. •
'rwtw!.

.

Involved.
She also contends that longwall
mining WUI take Jess manpower;

President Joe Clark announced a
tentative activities schedu le for Big
Bend Regatta.
AparadewiU be held on Saturday
(June 25) leaving Middleport atlO
a.m. a nd traveling up river to
Pomeroy.
Entertainment will be held on the
stage on the upper parking lot,
concession stands will be held on the
upper parking lot andacarnlvalwUI
be located .behind the junior high
buDding.
Heritage Sunday w~l be held at
the Meigs · County Museum on
Butternut Ave. on Sunday. There
will be an antique car exhibit a nd a
motorcycle show with locations or
each to be announced.
Barbara Chapman has asked a
sorority group to sponsor a ''cute kid
contest", and the judging or the
queens wUI be held on the stage
following the parade.
AJ,'ea firemen will stage various ·
events behind the Polll!lroy Fire

would

l o~t'

its dtar!Pr.

Ma snn has a population nt' \,rl:\1
and C'lt y officia l..,; t-tn • n·~ ponslh\t&gt; for
1hP town '..,; fnu r tXJiil'i 'Off lcrr s. srw r 1

and water d ivis ion a nd a $711,1HI
budgP I.
[.as ! Wf'i'k. l k v rick sa id hi' has
I'PCPivrd pln..1nP ('ails about 1hC'
rathPr unw;ual C'lf'l'tlon as far away

as Honolulu, 1-law'dll, and flr·ltish
Columbia. Canada.

I

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Davis photo.

therefore putting men out of work.
Longwall mining Is done by a huge
machine that cuts a 500 foot wide
swath In a seam of coal and then lets
the roof fall ~lnd it as the machine
moves foiWard .

unlf'Ss 20 VOl t'S Wf't"f' i 'il SI , !h! ' ('jf~'

Seated at the rlght

are clerks, Doris R&lt;&gt;berts IUid Myra Hallhlll. - Ttm

Chamber discusses longwalling
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel staff
Betty Wells. president or Citizens
Qrganlzed Against Longwalllng
(COAL), Informed the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce Tuesday
the group Is asking that an
envlromental study be made by
Southern Ohio Coal Co. before
longwall mining Is resumed.
Wells said there has been consld·
l'rable damage to bomes and barns,
and several streams and ponds are
drying .up due to the longwall
process.
The chamber earlier endorsed
tongwall mining due to economic
condltlons. Just recently 1,4oo
miners were called back to work at
Southern Ohio Coal Mines.
Wells said COAL has no objection
to conventional mining, but does
oppose lo~all mining. She con·
tends longwall mining will step up
productiOn, thetefore, mining oper..
atlons In the county will not last as
many years as first Intended.
She also said the EPA will not
blterfer with the mining operation
· u long' as there Is no pollution

I H'Vrlrk . I t hl n k t hr' puhl l&lt;'i t \' that wr•
got, not only nationall.v , hut intt•rmt ·
tiona lly pla y an lmpor L tnl pari. "

fpw yra rs. at·cordln ~ 10 lhP newly

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Station and on Sunday they will sell
barbecued chicken.
The queens wU I sponsor a car
wash Saturday, May 7, a t the new
Sears Store In Midd leport, Ron Ash
reported.
Clark pointed out entertainment
is needed a nd severa l stage s pots
are open on Friday and Saturday.
Anyone hlterested In performing
during Regatta are to contact Clark
or Paul Simon.
To be featured on thestagewUI be
Tex Harrison and the Valley Boys
and a rock group.
Fred Crow announced that John
Rice Is studying the possibility of
have a "best dressed" animal
contest to be held · possibly on
Saturday evening from 4 p.m . to 6
p.m . .4-H members will be asked to
participate.
The annual frog jump will be held
on Satarday evening at Meigs
Stadium In Pomeroy.
Clark a lso announced that Carol
Cundiff, Secretary has resigned her
position due tO health problems. The
chamber wlll 'not flll the poslt1on at
the present ttme.
Thechamberwlllmeetagatn next
Tuesday at noon at Mel~ Inn.

WINNERS - Three Melp County high I1Chool
sealon, sealed left to rtpt. Sharon Griffin, Mark
Rl~, bodJ of Eu&amp;em lllch. and Slephanle Houchlna.
Melp IIJ&amp;h, are UN! w1nnen of an eMay coitlelt
lltapd by the l!ou'd of Realton of Southelllllem Ohio
In Melp County. Topic of .the eMaya was "Home
' OWnenhlp for a S&amp;runrer l)emocracy." AA winners
the three receive $21 ~avlnp tiCCOUIIis at the Dla·

mond SavtnpiUld Loan. The second row In Jhu piC·
lure, I to r, Includes Gert Walton , local manrogcr of
. Diamond Savlnp and Loan; Dottle Turner, chrolr·
man of the obllervanoe of private own~rshtp week by
the realtorll; Carolyn Tripp, Eastem High Instructor
of that rlchool's winner, and Cella McCoy, Instructor
of the Melp Hlsb winner.

·•
--·~--~--

I

�'Commentmy

PHD..ADELPHIA (AP) _ Any
pltcherwhoreadsthelatestwordsof
MlkeSchmldtbastosbudder.
The Philadelphia PhlUles third
baseman has hit In 13 of the last 14
games, 21 tor 50 (.42:1). lB runs
scored and lB RBI. Overall. he's

Ill Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

llrb
ttm~

'
,..,...._,~-......~c~~~=~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhllsher

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

As~IMo.nl

General Maaacer

Puhlisher/ (:ontro ller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The A.•'IROda.led Pn~, Inland DaUy PrAM A.WM:ia.Hon and Ule
Anw!rh•n New~paper Puhll.oohe~ A'WK:Iatlon.

a-c.

LETJ'ER8 OF OPIMON lln' w@loomL'CI . They !ih9Uld be leM than 3M wtWd8
,g letie"' 11ft' Hhjed to edJting and mH!4 he s.lped with name, addmW ~ Wlepblue
..mher. No ui\Siped letter.~ wtU be published. Letters Mould be tn I{OOd ta8te, . . _ .
8lnl Wiues, not per!IODalllle".

Federal budget has
•
•
rmpact on campatgn
strategies of 1984

WASHINGTON- The National
Comrnlss!on of Excellmce In Education labored mlghtUy to bring
forth last week's report on "the rls·
lng tlde of medloclity In our public
schools." It labored mlghtUy and 1t
brought forth, alas, one more rew·
litlng of reports and recommendations we have heard for the past :Jl
years.
The whole business In profoundly
discouraging. To glance at a shelf
of books on Arnelican education Is
to bl! reminded that the more things .
stay the same, the more things stay
the same. Have a look:
Albert Lynd ripped Into
"Quackery In the Public Schools"
In 1950. Arthur E . Bester wrote
"Educational Wastelands" In 1953.
Mortimer Sml.th analyzed "The
Dlmlnl.shed Mind" In 1!1;4; his subtitle, Incidentally, was "A study of
planned medtoclity In our public
schools." Bestor returned to the attack with "The Restoration of

Learning" In 1955. James D.
Koerner put forward a program for
"Reform In Education'' In 1962.
That same year saw Hyman Rick·
over's blistering comparisOn of
''Swiss Schools and Ours." In 1963
Koerner was back with "The Mlseducatlon of Amelican Teachers."
Chalies E. Sllberman wrote ''Crtsls
In the classroom" In 1970. Paul Copperrnan gave us ''The Literacy
Hoax" In 1978. Richard Mitchell's
pclennlcal work "The Graves of Ac·
ademe" appeared In 1!*11. Throughout thls peliod, Russell Kirk was
thundering away In National
Review.
They all said the ilame things,
and they all made basically the
same recommendations. ~said
the quallty of education In our public schools Is shamefully low. They
put the blame on the teachers' colleges, on the parsimony of the taxpayers, on the whims of stat,e
legislatures, on the edicts of ·the

courl$, on the apostles of permissiveness. They rued the decllne of
homework and memorization.
They lamented the departure of
courses in Latin and In modem for·
elgn languages. They made invidious comparisons "between
Amerlcl!ll and European education. Having made aU these findIngs, the crttlcs recommended
almn5t exactly what this Ia ~t
commlss[on recommended last

week.
These recommendations are
sound. They have been sound for
the past 30 years. Of course we
ought to get back to basic~. Of
course we should end the folly that
sees most of our schools In opera·
lion forohly six months of the year .
Of course we should pay higher salaries to our teachers, and of course
such salaries should be, as the commission urged, "professionally
competitive, market-senltlve and
performance-based."

•

As the Republican Senate struggles to settle on a new federal budget It Is
drawing some of the lines that will shape the 1984 election campaign - a
pclnt of particular concern to 18 of the 54 GOP senators. They're up lor
re-election next year.
The budget now up for Senate action, with final terms · subject to
negotiations with the Democratic House, will be In effect untO five weeks
before Election Day 1984.
It will determine how big a budget dcflcil campaigning Republicans,
presumably Including President Reagan , wUI have to defend next year.
The options are blg and bigger, in ttie $:W billion range.
The only way around that would be to Impose a tax Increase going Into
the campaign sea•on, and the only major one avallable would Involve
undoing the 10 percent Income tax cut due on July l.lt Is the thtrd phase of
President Reagan's blg lax cui package, and he has said ne' U veto any
allempt to repeal or curtail Lt.
·
.
The House wants $JJ billion In new revenues to reduce the deficit gap.
The Senate Budget Committee, controlled by R.epubllcan~. had gone along
. :·with the Idea, but tha(was a tactic to get the dispUted' budget to the floor.
· nol a signal of GOP intent.
.
;
Instead, Senate Republlcans worked out an agreement that would spare
; taxpayers any significant increases In 1984, curtail the defense spending
· . increase Reagan wants, and add as much as $11 billion to domestic
: . outlays.
,
• Sen. Pete V. Domcnlcl of New Mexico, chairman of the Budget
Commlt.tee, said that was a compromiSe a majority of the Republican
majority ought to be able to accept.
·
The White House still wants a defense budget closer te the 10 percent
Increase Reagan proposed, and more stringent curbs on domestic
spending.
But ll Is probably going to take some Democratic votes to get a budget
through the Senate, and whatever emerges there wlll have to be
acceptable to the House, too.
There are other compllcatlons. among them the fact that the
administration wlll have to get Congress to holst the national debt ceiling
.again no later than the end of May, and the tentative plan of House
-])emocratlc leaders to call up a lax btu next month and debate their case
: 11galnst upper bracket tax cuts.
All of that comes as Republicans prepare for what could be a tough
campaign to extend their lease on the Senate, where they have been In
command since Reagan was elected. Their prospects are closely tied to
the economic recovery. although the comeback Is not going to spare them
Democratic heat over an unemployment rate likely toll!) In the 9percent
range during the election year.
Republlcan National Chairman Frank Fahrenkopf says Senate
elections will be a major challenge next year "because we are more
exposed than the Democrats are." There are 19 currently Republican
seats at stake, 14 Democratic.

Berry's World

Why hasn't anything been done
about aU theseyearsofslmllarflnd·
lngs and recommendations? The
c~use. at bottOm, Is that the Amelican people simply don't give a
damn about their publlc schools. If
the Arnertcan people truly cared
about the quality of public educa·
-lion, they long ago would have rebelled against the dominance of the
teachers' colleges; they would
have voted the taxes to pay d~nt
~es to well.quautled teachers;
· they would have taken a lively ln·
teres! In textbooks that would chal·
lenge their children.
' The people have done none of
these things. School board l!1ld legislatures have surrendered to the
teachers' unions on the matter of
merit pay. The voters repeatedly
have rejected even tiny tax Increases to provide for better salar;
tes. The textbook publlshlhg
!lOuses, catering to their notions of
educational chic, have provided
mostly pablum. Beset bY leglsla·
live demands for drtver education,
sex education, drug education and
courses In "personal development," the secondary schools have
become "homogenlzed, diluted and
diffused to the pclnt that they no
longer have a central purpose."
. To. be sure, one finds occasional
bright spcts. In such clUes as Louisville, Ky .. and Jacksonville, Fla.,
educational excellence has been vi·
gorously pursued. Many school sys·
terns benefit from devoted and
blilllant teachers who stick :to the
basics despite the distractions
around them. The vandalism that
was so pervasive'live years ago appears to be dlmlnlshlng. Tests of
achievement recently have shown
·a small but encouraging
Improvement.
I hate to be IJ!!SSlmlstlc, but can·
dar compels a sad prediction: Afer
·a flurry · of edltori.a l commenda·uans, . a last week's reporet w111·
gather dust. Here and there a few
school boards and city councils Will
have he courage to do what they
know should be done, but without a
tidal wave of support from parents
and the general public, nothing
much will happen. As a people we
are unwllllng to make the sacrtflces
required for excellenCe In educa·
tlon. To say that Is a pity, but pity
'Us, 'tis true.

WASHINGTON - The U.S. Postal Service has mounted a sneak
attack on your legal light to have
mall delivered to your home.
Without consulting Congress, the
Postal Rate Commission or - least
of all - the public, the post office
poohbahs In Washington liave been
quietly promoting and lnstaUlng
"clusterboxes' - eight or more In·
dlvldual mailboxes grouped together at convenient neighborhood
locations.
The convenience, of course, Is all
the Postal Service's side. Customers. Including the elderly and the
handicapped, can no Ionge pickup
their mall at the front door or the
curb, but must trudge out In snow,
rain, heat or gloom of night to the
communal clusterbox, which may
be a block away.
Obviously, the clusterbox caper
Is saving the Postal money. But the
way the authorities are going about

Most of you who read this have
never used the old McGuffey
Reader In school but' you have
heard your parents or grandpar·
en til make nostalgic reference to lt.
It may surprise you to team that
McGuffey Is on the comeback tratl .
And about time, too!
"Gimmie a call in a couple of flours, THEN let 's
Last week the national news on
decide if we 're gonna play or not. "
television carried a story about the
return of McGuffey Readers to the
IChools of Blistol, Va. Other schools
m•st be using them as well tor It
wa! reported that 1.50,001 were sold
last year. Mrs. Evelyn Murray,
who has charge of the reading proToday Is Wednesday, May 4, the 124th day of1983. There are 241 days left
gram
In Brlslpl, was on the proIn the year.
gram
and
had this to say about the
Today's highlight In history:
adoption
of
the Readers as a teach·
On May 4, 1970, National Guard troops tired on a crcHid of anti-war
lng
supplement.
"It's amazing to
demonstrators at Kent State University In Ohio, killing four students.
see
the
change
In
the puptls' attl·
On this date:
tude.
The
chlldren
seem
to be want·
In 16~. Dutch explorer Peter Mlnult landed on Manhattan Island. He
Ing something like this. They take
later bought It from the Indians for $24 worth of trinkets.
the books home. 'they have a
- In 1814, Napoleon Bonaparte went Into exile on the Island of Elba.
McGuffey Day and look forward to
· 1n ~. the United States took possession of the Panama Canal zone.
And, In 1942, the World War II Battle of the Coral Sea began In the . it. None of this would be possible If
the children did not like the books."
Pacltlc.
~ I started school in the mid
Ten years ago: Gen. Alexander Halg was named an asslslllnt to
President Richard Nixon, who was rebuilding a White House staf'f teens, the McGuffey ~aders had
already been abandoned for the
' · devastated bY the Watergate scandal. ·
Five years ago: It was disclosed that Arab on Interests had bid for three New Educational Reader. They
were sWI tieing used in Athens
Manhattan hOtels owned by the bankrupt ·Penn Central Railroad.
county
as late as 1916 but the educa·
One year ago: A mlssUe !rom an Argentine Jet fighter set the,Brttlsh
tiona!
trend
was toward the more
destroyer She!fleld afire In the South Atlantic, with the Blitlsh reporting 00
moden!
system.
By the time my
, crewmen dead.
.
.
sc)1ool
days
were
over,
McGuffey's
:: ... Today's birthdays: Actress Audrey Hepburn Is 54 years old. Opera star
books had become only IIOitalglc
'' Roberta Peters Is 53.
Thought for today: "War Is cruelty, and you caiUlOt refllle it." - WUUam memory. But not for me! My aunt
was a school teacher and had a
• Tecumseh Shennan, U.S. general (18:»1891).

in history

a

'

WHEN IT RAINS - Cincinnati Reds' pitcher

Frank Pastore heads for the dugout after being pulled
from Tuesday night's game vs.cthe PhlUles In Philadelphia. Pastore gave up nine hits In two and one-

some outrages examplesofthe way
the Postaf Service's strongann
handed - or underhanded. Here's
how the postal Pearl Harbor strategy has been .Implemented
around the .country:
works:
-In Dickinson, N.D., clusterbox
By law, all new homeowners are
entitled to choose either curbside customers were given a snow job In
service or the clusterbox plan. But the form of congratulatory notice:
In new developments, they are "Your Postal Servic Is upgrading
the mall delivery In your area ...
rarely given this choice.
(which) Is privileged to be one of
Under postal regulations, new
the
first In the upper Midwest to
housing developments aren't ellgl·
receive
this service."
ble for mall service untll at least
-Postmasters
In East St. Louts,
half the lots are "Improved" - an
ambiguous term that can mean an· Ill., were e&gt;&lt;horted: " NOW ...
ythlng from ground being broken to you're asked to go out and SELL
actual occupancy of the completed . clusterboxes .. That's light ...
SELL!! Very seldom will a custohouse.
But the requirement Is waived If mer come Into your 'store' to buy a
clusterbox. Furthermore, you are
developers agree to Install clusterboxes throughout the development . asked to do It now! "
-New Jersey postmasters were
To ensure that the first home buyurged
to get developers' coopera·
ers can have mall delivery, the deUon
for
clusterboxes with this revelopers usually agree.
vealing
explanation: "The
My associates Donald Goldberg
posslblllty
for
Individual customer
and Indy Badhwar have uncovered

It can best be described as high-

complete set of McGuffey Readers.
I studied my New Educational
Reader out oi a sense of duty; I
read McGuffey for pleasure. It Is
that same pleasure I think the pupIls In Bristol are experiencing today. The lessons In McGuffey were
designed to promote honesty, Industry and a more responsible and
humane behaviOr by the . pupil.
Most lessons had a moral and
e-entiy urged the youthtul student
lloWard better things. But the main
purpose of the readlni lessons was
to teach thE! pupil to tead and to
understand . The McGuffey Reader
had twice the vocabulary of today's
standard teKt book and taught the
pupil&amp; to learn to read and under·
stand what they were reading but
by Increasing their vocabulary to
express their thoughts In writing .
The first McGuffey Reader was
printed by a anclnnatl firm In 1836
and hetween that time and 1920 a
total of 122 mllilon copies had been
distributed. It replaced the New
England Primer whose main purpose seemed to be to scare the wits
out of the Juvenlle schOlars. It was
designed to preach a sermon to the
pupils. Teaching them to read was
secondary to teachl~~~t them to fear
God. WUIIam Holmes McGuffey ben1KJ11y taught that Instead of lm·
pending damnation there was the
satisfactions olldndnesses. JoYs of
work aDd play, and the lure of Jearn.

in."

Lowell Wingett
ing. Is It any wonder that the
McGuffey Readers endured for al·
mn5t a century In the United States
schools and "may be revived again?
William Holmes McGuffey, ac·
cording to a brief biography In En·
cyclopaedia Britannica, was bam .
In western Pennsylvania In lrol.
His parents moved to a rural region.
near Youngstown, Ohio when he
was two year.&gt; of age. He was lar·
gely self educated and was teachIng In Oblo subscription school at
.the age of 13. His Drst reader was
publlshect In 1836 and he continued
publishing perlodk;ally unlll his final volume, The Sixth Reader, was
published In 1844. Meanwhile, he
continued his advancement In the
educational field and In 1839 was
named president of Ohio Unlver·
Slty at Athens, a position he held for
four years. He Is credited with
planting the famous McGuffey
Elms which now grace the campus
atO.U .
In recent year.&gt; It has been painfully apparent that there Is something missing In the schools today.
Students are gtaduatlng from high
schools all over the country without
the ability to read the dally papers
or anYthlni else. Reading Is the cor·
nerstone of aU education and unless
a pupil Is taught properly In elementarY school, he or she Is ham·
pered the rest ol t11etr lives. I had
heard alannlng reports of the high
rate of !allure among high school

.-------------1

-When the resident sot Greece,
N.Y., a Rochester suburb, voted to
restrict clusterboxes to groups of
four Instead of eight, regional pas·
tal officials In Philadelphia slapped
them down with the "surpemacy
clause" of the Constitution, and told
the Impertinent cltl2ens that "the
type and location of mall boxes Is
controlled solely by the Postal
Service."

graduates taking college entrance
exams or of athletes who are graduated with a college degree who are
basically Uuterate. But It was not
until a few years ago that I came
face to face with facts . I will admit I
was Habher·gasted!
My wife and I were shopping In a
Chiefland grocery when she
stopped to talk with an acquaintance while I stood Idly by. The lady
was having trouble deciding on a
gift for her niece who was gradual·
lng !rom.htgh schooL My wife sug·
gested a nice book. The lady said,
"Oh, no, a book wouldn't do. She
can't read. "Do you mean she Is
graduating from high school and
can't even read a book?" I ~ald.She
said "Well, she can read some of
the short words but can't make out
the long ones. A book wouldn't do as
a gift." She seemed as unconcerned
as If graduating an Illiterate was a
common occurrence. I found out
later It was and Is! GOvernor Bob
Graham Is trying to raise the qualIty of education in Flolida. Students
now must pass exams In both their .
junior and senior years to be ellgi·
ble to graduate and receive a diploma. But so much damage has
been done by neglecting proper elementary reading skllls that It may
take years to correct the mistakes
of the past.
Florida should discover McGuffey!

LEVOLOR

breakdowns, committing a pair of
second-inning errors that gave

r;::::::::::::=====:;-1
1

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PiP! '! ;( .. •

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Q

Four mile
marathon

slated May 28
The new Meigs Fellowship of
Christian Athletes will stage Its
first ann ua l lour mtle marathon
run at 11 a.m. on Saturday, May 28,
at Meigs High School.
The age groups for runners are
five years old to 16 and 17 and up.
Trophies wlll be awarded to the
,fir st place winners, male and female In each age group. Also the
. ·youngest male and female and the
.oldest male and female partlcl·
pants will receive trophies.
, Each runner Is required to have a
minimum of two sponsors with donations being given to the Meigs
Fellowship of Christian Athletes.
All persons are welcome to run.
There Is a $3 registration fee and
deadline for reglsteling Is May 14.
Registration and spolljior sheets
may be secured by telephoning the
high school 992-2158 'o r by contact·
lng Fenton Taylor or Jon Perrin.

DEALERS
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Across from the

, . ,... ~1 Willi

ASIC FOR IIR.IWJIH HARRifovH

on an RBI single by DeJesus, and
two more In the seventh on solo
home runs by Morgan 12) and
Schmidt (7) to make It 13-6.
.
The winning pitcher (1 1-3
innings) was reliever Sid Morige •
(3-0). Por11 Altamirano earned his
first save. Frank Pastore, theRe!IS'
was the loser .

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getting
himgot
In atoo.
many situations
where he's
two-strike,
no-bali
count.
But Mike, what happens alter
that?
"OK," said Schmidt, "let's say for
interview purposes that I'm swinging good .
"But in my own mind I have to do
some more things well ."
The game produced 20 runs and 31
hits. Bo Dlaz had three hits,
including a three-run homer. Weak
hitting Ivan DeJesus collected lour
singles, raising his average 51 pclnts
!rom .179 to .230.
Pete Rose had three hits and two
walks and now Is hitting .m.
The blg Inning was the Phlllles' ·
third in which they snapped a 1-1 tie
with nine runs. their biggest Inning

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Houston five runs (four unearned) . every year. There are a lot of good
By Associated Press
When the Chicago Cubs traded for Phil Garner, who led of and was safe shortstops who hlt .240and .250.. .I'm
third baseman Ron Cey, they were when third baseman Huble Brooks In my seventh year ~ a professional
counting on his bat. What they didn't threw away his grounder, homered and I've never hlt o\'er .260. I know
that's what I have to .work on to be a
count on was that he'd bring his later In the ga me.
starter:·
But
It
was
hls
fielding
which
was
glove along, too.
Braves 5, Expos 2
·Cey had one of those nights on hls te8mmates' minds.
Dick
Grapenthln
replaced startOmar Moreno's two- run single
Tuesday in San Francisco's Can·
hlgblliht.ed Houstb!l' s live- run llurst jng_Momreal pitch"'r ScottS;ande(
: dl~t!Ck - Park, committiog . two
· son. spiked by Claudell Washin gton
errors to help the Giants beat the that chased luckless Craig Swan.
on a close play a t first base In the first
Dodgers 5, Pltates 4
Cubs:;..!.
Ken Lan~aux and Greg Brock Inning, and was breezing along untO
Elsewhere in the National League
It was Houston 7, New York 4; Los drove In two runs _apiece to help the fourth. Then Rafael Ramirez
and Washington singledand,oneout
Angeles5,'t&gt;lttsburgh4; SanDiego4, Alejandro Pena record hls founh
St. Louis 3; , Philadelphia 13, victory of the season In only his later, Bob Hom er hit his sixth homer
of the season.
Cincinnati 7, and Atlanta 5, Mont · second big-league start.
"He was t,r ylng to get ahead on the
Landfeaux's grounder gave LA a
real2.
count
and threw me a fas tball right
Cey was Initially charged with first-Inning run against Jim Bibby,
down
the middle of !he plate," said
three errors- two in the sixth inning making his first start following
Homer
. "I didn't know what type of
when he dropped Johnnie LeMas· shoulder surgery that sidelined him
pitches
he threw. so in that situation,
ter· s lou! pop (LeMaster later ali last year, then Brock hit a
I'm
ou
t
there looking for a fastball ."
walked) a nd then let Joel Youngbtwo-run double in the fifth. Lan ·
lood's grounder go through his legs . dreaux homered off reliever Lee
lor two runs, and one in the seventh Tunnell. when J eff Leonard's hot shot got
Padres 4, Cardinals 3
Shortstop Mario Ramirez,
past him .
Afterward. one of the errors was brought up from the minors because
removed a nd Leonard was credited of his glove, helped out with his bal.
with a hlt - but it still left Cey with hitting a two-run single for the
eight errors in the Cubs' 22 games Padres' winning margin . San Diego
this year. Compounding that Is his pitcher Dave Dravecky singled
.200batting average, 61polntsbelow home what proved to be the
the 10-year average he brought to game-winning run.
"A lot of people say I'm not a
the Cubs frOm Los Angeles In an
RIVIERA BLINDS BY
hitter," said· Ramirez, subbing for
off-season trade.
the Injured Garry Templeton. "But
Astros 7, Mets 4
The Mets, too, had some fielding you don't have to be a .300 hitter
VERTICAl BliNDS

complaints about centralization Is
removed If the centralized delivery
mode Is In place when the first a&lt;;cu·
pants of a new develoment move

Foolnote: Assistant Postmaster
General Eugene Hagburg Insisted
that clusterboxes do not constitute
a reduction In service, and prom·
!sed that steps would be taken to
ensure that customers actually retain their legal right to choice of
service.

third Innings of the rain soaked game. National
League umpire David Da vldson and Reds' catcher
Alex Trevino appear at_ right. The PhliHes won the
game 13-7. (AP Laserphoto).

Errors help Giants top Cubs

Attack on mail delivery.t..__·____Ia_ck_A_n_de_rso_n

McGuffy corneback

~ ·Today

338

Schmidt 'had three hits, including
hitting
. . home run of the season
•
his seventh
and a double with four RBI In a 13-7
Phlllles' victory Tuesday night over
the Cincinnati Reds.
It was almost tunny to hear
Schmidt tnstst he wasn't swtnglng
aU that well. He likened himself to a
golfer.
"It 's tll&lt;ehltttngagolfba!tagrunst
the trees and havlngtheballlandon
the green and putting for birdies,"
Schmldtsald.
His point was that pitchers are

slncetheygotnineagalnstMontreal
lastAugust.
Thecarnagewentllkethls:
Rose singled. Gary Matthews
singled, movlngRooetosecond. Joe
Morganwalkedloatllngtbebases.
Schmldt slngledhomeRooe.Tony
Perez delivered a sacrifice Dy, and
Dlaz slammed a three-run homer .
Garry Maddox then singled .
DeJesus singled Maddox to third .
Starting pitcher Marty Bystrom
singled, scoring Maddox . Rose
walked loading the bases for the
thtrctttmeintheinning .
Matthews hit a sacrifice fly. and
Schmidt doubled across two more to
makelno.t.
TheR.edsdldn'tqult. They pecked
away at Bystrom, who came off the
dlsabledllsttoworkthegame.They
sllcedlt to10-6a!ter 5 ~1nnlngs.

Sentinel-Page

13~ 7

Phils rip Patore, Reds

About the schoola_______J_ame_sJ_._K,--:-"lpa_t_ric_k
The Daily Sentinel

The Daily

Midd!.port, Ohio

PDg• 2-n. Daily s.nm.t
~ Middleport, Ohio
Wedr111 ~"Y• May 4, 1983 .

\

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�Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LaRussa riles another opposing manager

Scoreboard ...
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Playoff resuhs
NlldonaJ B-"lkethd 1\-.iatktn
CO~'H:RENCE S&amp;\IIF1NAU
/Belli rJI S...Vm )
~TERN OO~'FER.Do' CE

1'ue!iday, Ma,- S
In; An~ II'S ll6. Ponland 1M. Los An
~eta; wtns .o;ertc:s ~ - 1
K'e. .ftld'U', May f
[X&gt;n vpr at San 1\nlonlo

(;()NFEKF.NCE

flNA.U~

1;/

,_,

~Jfj.'o

~o&lt;l 2

Lakersdump
Trail Blazers

ConJ-Fir1u
Be.- ol &amp;!Yen
C:AMPRF.LL CO~ CF.
I ~HMhl'lt'rlew'-GI
ChicatO at Edmontoo. ThtHY.lay , M&lt;~y
5. II ni'Celi'illry
Edmonton at Chicago, Sur.:lay, M &lt;~ y K
If necessary

m , ,.,

I0, 11 nl"C('!l8Sa r)'
PRINlE OF W~ CONJ'ERENct;
(NY Wanllers lead ltt"rir.5 3-1I
NY Is landers a t Eloliiton, Thursday, May
5. If nro'S!&gt;ary
Bosron at NY ls tancrrs, !itturday, May
7. If ~"~~"'ssary
N Y lsl&lt;Urdfon; ar BoMan. T\14&gt;sday. M rw
W, If IIWf'Sl&lt;ill)'.

LOUISVlLLE, Ky, IAP I - Like
everyone else in the Louisville area,
trainer Roger La urin is looking for a
break In the rainy w0ather which
hils soaked Churchill Downs in
recent days,
His colt, Flamingo Stakes winner
Current Hope, isoneofth eexpecled
20 starter!; for the l09ih Kentucky
Derby to be run Sarurday,
Current Hope hasn't been to the
races since winning the April 2
FJamlngo by a neck over Churnr(llng, and Laurin Is n't happy with
the coil 's workouts because oft he off
track,
"''d feel a lot better If the s un
would come oul," said Laurin, the
soh of Luc ien Laurin , who trained
Derby winners Rlva Ridge and
Secretariat ,' 'We're sor t of commJt,
ted to running him, The only way I
would sera tc h tills horse Saturday Is
I(! thought there was a posslblllty he
would hurt himself on an ott track,"
, The forecast called for c learing
later In the week,
: Current Hope has run only on fast
tracks In winning two of e ight races
as a 2,year-old and posting three
wins ·a~d a second ln five starts this

Goa/diggers defeat

Komet.o; in playoffo;
TOLEDO, Ohio iAPl - Claude
Noel opened scoring 26 seconds into
tile game Tuesday night a nd the
Toledo Goaldiggers went on to a 4-2
victory over tht• Fort Wayne
Komets to win their bes t '()(-seven
Ihlcrnal io n a! Hockey League
Turner Cup semifinal series four
games to one,
The Goaldlggers, who ar~ Ihe
de fending cup champions and have
won the lliL regufar,season crown
. tor two straight years, wlll meet the
Mllwaukre Admira ls In the first
game or the best'()f-seven championship round Friday night a t
Toledo,
Mike LaBianca and Gordie MacFarlane a dded tlrst ,period goals lor
Toledo and Dirk Gra ham scored a n
empty-net goal for tile victors with
36 seconds to play,
Scoring lor Fort Wayne were Ron

year,
He is a come-from-behind colt,
much Uke his sire, Little Current ,
wtia won tlie 1974 Preiikness and
Belmont Stakes, In the wlld 1974
Perby wan by Cannon ade. Little
,Current made up 19Jengths to finish
fifth ,
"He's very cautious on a n off
track, " said the 47-year"'ld Laurin,
who has he ld a trainer's license
s ince he was 17. "He's not just going
to extend himselt
"But he's competed against good
horses in his career and fared well,
but he'snot coming into the Derby as
well as he came into the Flamingo,' '
Current Hope Is Laurin's first
Derby starter, He has been to
Churchill Downs once before, saddling Miss Cavendish, who ftnlshed .
second in the 1964 Kentucky Oaks,
Alexis Soltis, a Panamanian who
Is regarded as one of the best
apprentices to comeout of Florida in
many years, rides Current Hope, He
became a journeyman jockey In late
March,
"He's th e most accomplished bug
1apprentice) I've seen." the tra!J\er
said, Asked If that Included Steve
Cauthen, Laurin replied, "He's a lot
s tronger,"
Laurin called the Derby field well
balan ced with both speed horses a nd
those who come off the pace,
He called Sunny Halo's Arkansas
Derby victory "fairly spectactular,
He's got to be one of the toughest
ones In the group,"

1

r---------...,-----f

MemhPr: T he Associated Press, Inland Da lly Press Assoclaton and thE'
Amt&gt;rlca n News paper Publishers As sociation. National Advertising ReprE'·
senta tlve, Branham Newspaper Sales.
733 Third Ave nue, Naw York, New

s·~ · ~ ol 0~10 De~rrmenl 01 ·~~~I InC!

Ctrtrlocatt ol Com~~'nctlne ~ll{le&lt;StQn~ . S~pl!'lll'llt~dent mln s ~rtnCt ol t~e Sl41f ufOhr&gt; hP.r·

.;no II M"DIII!d
tpprtJPrtille bu ~ness ol

tn5UiiiOCe 11, F tn •n c~o~l coMt l l!l ~ osstnon ll r rl.l
il nnyJI~Itttmtnl k1 hlyo t~ee n II IOii(JW IM Ofctmber )1 198 1 Mmt!
t'a m tts 138059795400 l!ibl!tbes S31J J202tl500 Sc11p!us
559 477 f )ll 00 11COI'!Ie S156.2G3 891 00 Eol'tfldrtur~s $1 7I 102
~500 Net mtts S614717~00, C i!lllll $800000000 IN WIT

" 108 m
'
thp Portland Trail' Blazers 111]"

York 10017.

POSTMASTER : Send address to The
Dally Sen!lnel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

lhlve'Mreunlosubscubtdm~l\lme,nd c•u~m,
tn~~~·J 1nd dare Roberr L R.rcbSt!~t a!ln\Uflnc~ ol Ohro (Seall02)

the only NBA p Iayotf game schev-

r--------:-----

Sttlt o ll lltnm~ hilstmnptte!J \lo ll~ r~ 1111 ~ cltnr ; State ~pphca~le to 11
cuun~ 111~ ~uoenl ~till to tranSKitn lhB ltillt rl.l

Angeles Coach Pat Riley called the
grune Of his life 8S the Lakers topped

d led Tuesday night
U
•
The "foot 2 1\J 1vM oo.0..m '&gt;1

They play close tQ four-hour games
Red!ioJ&lt;3, J\'sl
WUlle Aikens.
now. so I guess he's out t11ere a lot.
Dwight Evans drJlled a thJ'ee.run
Indians 3, Twins 1
" So Tony said io me, 'You've homer In the lhlrd Inning and that
Andre Thornton hit his fourth
alreadybeatus10inai'OW; can'tyou
was all Boston needed as Dennis home run of the se8$0n In support of
let us win one? ' WeB, I hope we beat Eckersley and Bob ·Stanley com- Bert Blyleven's four- hit, 10them 50 more, You can'tgooutand
blned on a six-hitter, Evans, whohlt strtkeout performance over eight
saythatklndofthlng,Ican'tbelleve two homers in a ' 4-2 victory in innings,
what that man said, He's a lawyer, Oakland on Aprll24, lined his fourth
"Tile 'doctor !Qld me I would have
He knows the slats, With his great of the seasoo Into the screen in days when my ann felt good and ,
knowledge, lfhesayswebeatthem
left«"nter ~singles by Glenn (jays that it. won't," said Blyleven,
lOinarow,lguessi'vegottobelleve Ho!fmanandJerryRemyotfroolde who Is coming back from elbow
him,"
. BW Krueger. Stanley has a victory surgery, ''He said It would take two
Objection! It was only nine in a
and flve saves In Boston's last six · years tor my ann to heal comtl1umphs.
row - six last year and three this
pletely, Thls year, I have to tell
season,
&amp;yals5, Yankees2
myself to throw seven or eight good
In other American League
Hal McRae ,_went 3-for-3 and innings and let th.e relievers tlnlsh,
games, the Baltimore Orioles beat Frank Whlll! blasted a tie-breaking I've always been the type of person
the Callfomla Angels 4·2, the Boston solo homerun for Kansas City, while who wants to finish what I start, but
RL'd Sox defeated the Oakland A's Paul SpUttortf scattered eight hits the doctor said take to It easy ,"
3-1, · the Kansas City Royals through six innings._ After White's
Rangers 7, Blue Jays 2
trimmed the New York Yankees:&gt;-2. first homerunoftheseason with one
Larry Parrish drove in three runs
the Cleveland Indians downed the out In tiie third lnnlng, loser Doyle with a double and a two-run homer,
Minnesota Twins 3-1, the Texas Alexander walked Otis and gave JtrnSundberg also hila two-run shot
Rangers whipped the Toronto Blue waytoDaJeMurray.McRaeslngled and Pete O'Brien had 'a solo homer
Jays 7-2 and the Detroit Tigers and Otis scored when first baseman tor Texas,
nipped the Seattle Mariners 2-1in1f Don Baylor dropped the relay on a
Innings,
double play attempt. McRae singled
Orloles 4, Angels 2
in the fifth and scored on a double by
Cal R!pken Jr, rapped a tie- ,--------------1
breaking eighth-inning home run ott
Geoff Zahn follOwing a leadoff walk
to Dan Ford, making a winner of
unbeaten Mike Flanagan, who
!USPS 11"'111141)
scattered seven hits for his fourth
.4. Dlvlslon of M•lllmedla, In c.
triumph, The loss was Zahn'sninth
Publi shed evt'ry afternoon, M onday
in 10 career decisions against
through f'rlda y, lll Court Street. by the
Baltimore, while Flanagan had won
Ohio Valley P\Jbllshlng Company · Mul ·
Umedla. Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohlo45769 , 992·
only one previous decision against
2156. Second clas5 postage paid at PoCallfornia,
meroy. Ohio.

eby crrtol·e~ th;,t DITUMtNOUSCA!IUUTYCORP o!Roo tsl•n~.

Guard Nonn Nixon had what Los

Derby hopeful hopes
for break in weather

'

The Daily Sentinel

INGLEWOOD, Calif (API -The
smallest member ofthe Los Angeles
Lakers took a little pressure off the
biggest one ,
And that was a major factor as the
defending National Basketball As,
soclatlon champions took their first
step toward repea tlng that title.

Chicago at Edmonton. Tue!dily. Mny

-l'lt

Mo't);T UO' fUON
Ki! n s;t ~ Cl rv
l ';ll tlr orrua
Oakl; unJ

TM!as !Hor.eycutt 3-ll at Toronto !Leal
0-J\ , ! n t
( allfornltl

FASTERN CONF'E.RF.NCE
Phlladelpfala vs. MUwau~w.t•
SU!Ida.Y , Mal' &amp;
National Hockey l.elfl\lf&gt;

Okogo

Hnuswn a l Allant.t. 1111

Only

W~IQ'' SGamt'll

l&amp;eHt ol Se\•t"ff)

111 1

Thur.;duy '.~ GIUIM_,.;

Sl J ..ouis

Karw.s City S. NE'W York 2
Df&gt;troit 2. Scanlr 1. 1l lnninlt't

'I'tlunday'!l (;arne
{.' ll"&lt;t'lllnd at MlnncsofOI
Only RaTll£&gt; SCht'dul«&lt;

Sr.n O i o W~ l. S1 l.roul' :1

Ki"''C!i IWf'idl 1 2o.

AP Sporis Wriler
The next time Chicago White Sox
Manager Tony LaRussa, a practlc·
ing lawyer during the ott-season,
tries a c~ in court, he'd better hope
• rival Managers Ralph Houk of the
, Boston RL'd Sox and Harvey Kuenn
of the Mllwaukee Brewers aren't on
the jury,
LaRussa, who had a flap with
Houk during spring practice when
the RL'd Sox were unable to take
pregame batting practice, got
Kuenn' all rUed up Tuesday night
during the sixth Inning of the White
Sox' 7-6 victory,
Kuenn went out to the mound
during the White Sox ' four-run
outbuN;t to object to a calL LaRussa,
however. felt Kuenn was stalling to
give re liever Jamie Easterly more
time to warm up in the bullpen ,
"LaRussa came out because he
was worried that I was taking too
much time," Kuenn said, "I said, 'U
I go out as many limes as you did,
we'd be playing five-hour games:

Baltlrrlor'l' 4. Calilocria 2
Boston 3. Oakland I
('t11ca~to 1. M11waukti'f' G
C'lE-.'E'land l , Mllli1l"'U.a 1

By 1bt A.!iliOdlllld l"'r'fti8

ll oo .~loo

By HERSCHEL NISSENSON

~·G­
Texas 7, Tmmto
2

Majors

Wednesday, MI:Jy 4, 1983

NfSSWHfREOr
~~~to be ~tl&lt;&gt; e&lt;l 11 CcMumbus. OhiO.

lord )I
sr.r. or Oh111 Drpllllllt nl olrnsurance. CerttltWe ot Clmpltlntt-

nl h i,.

- - . t~~~ .r,~u ~~~ ~ lht ullderS~~ned. &amp;ll)trtntt:ndtnlol)mur•nceoltllp$Wte olll1oo, ~-

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

f~~:.C:~'11~~ ~~r~t~~!:lc~~~~!f!~~~~~::~l~~~~~~~~:llrc~:

Career-hJgh 36 po[ntg in a decisiVe
first half as the LakefS eliJninated
the Tra il Blazers 4-1 in their

By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week .... .... ........ ..... ... ........ Sl.OO

10 rtlnd IS &lt;JUIIJOrlltd dullnl! f~t currtn! YW ~ lra nu( t rn lh1~ \ lilt &gt;Is
111 f tndnCtll con011ron ~ sMrrwl bT rts
Mnu1rsr~remen r to hal'f! bttn 1s lo!lo wson Dettmber 3 1~ 1981 ·,l,dmtl·
II!(] ~SSftl S1 98Z6.Gf'JOO. lra trltlres S 5. 091l~700 ~~I u s. Sl 1 ·

One Month ... .... ..

~ poroor r&amp;le bultn l!:\ 1 altn\urance

best-of-seven NBA Western Confer- m-4:&gt;600 Income s t.l&amp;6•?t oo. Ei~n!lllur!l U.6u .4: J oo "''
a~stll 114 73 ~4~00. t.lp!lil $1.50000000 IN_WIINf SS WHE
ence SemlfinaJ playoff series.
11[01 I ~ ~ ~·• ~W·u~lo ~ub~Cflbed m~ na]11e tod t:h iSI!d m1 lfll to tlr.
•
olhol'd al Coll.mbu ~ OhrD lhts day •nd d' te Rotlert I III!ChfOid Jr
The l:..akerS, WhO are attempting
Suo! ~~ lnlul•ll(• ~I (Jiuo (Sflr I!Ill
re nt L'"•o Dep~!lfllenl ot Insuran ce. Ce 111hc at~ of Com pll•~c~­
to become the first NBA team to win lh t'it~u tl(jefSI~i.eil
~IX'III'I Ielll!tnt ol lnsuunc~ oil he St'aleql 0!\'ll 11~1
,
k
ba k
j • ~ t.:·f
Jn
e~1 Wlll1t1 th.11 IIUT OF O~AHA INS CO of Dmtlll, Stile ot Ne
bac -to-- • c champ OOStl ps ·s ce ~fdSk~ hU c'onlphl'{l w.th ·~~ ~~-·or IIIII Stilt ~pphuble_l~ ~ i nd !'
th (' BoSOn
"-Illes. did Jt 1n 1967.68 -:tub~s.ne51Dft1
r Mr~ted du rr nt tile c'urtent If !I to llanitcr,~ t~·~ st-' 1~ th ilppropullf
t '--t'
'1 1UtlnCf 0n !to.! mulua!pljn ltS fll'lar\ttii COM~IIJl&lt;HhOWn

renil.l in advanCe dlrOc t to
T he Dally Se ntln~l on 3. 6 or 12 mopth
b~s ls .· Crealt wtll be glv(&gt;n carrlei' each
m o nth .

J,n m nt~t asset1. 11 ~2H53, 10HIO. l.•~bolllot~. 11.1 2741~.39300.
SIJ1oj~o. SJ9~ 911 711 00. tm:orrl!, $1 ..49~. 735.011 00, lo:peMttul es
Sl 43~ JSB341 00 IN WIFNfSS MifR(Of I hnr hl'reunto 1ub

"'

No subsnlpllons by mall J)€'rmllt('d in
t ow ns whPrP hom(' ca rrier sPrvlce is
avallabll•.

~'y":1 7.~tR~:~1 t1aur:~~~~~~.10 ~~,U~??n~~r:n"c~~o~llli~~

the Western Conference title.
The best -Of-seven fin a] series WlJJ

4 ~~\m ~~ Qn

10

Otpar~rnl ollnl~li~Ct Certllou!t ol CDmp~nu-

MAIL SUBSC RIPTIONS
Inside Ohio
13 Week s ..........
... $14 .04
26 Wee ks .. .......
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52 Weeks ....... .......... ............ $51.48
Out~ld e Ohio
13 Weeks ..
.. ... .......... SlS.21
26 Wee ks ..
. ............. $29.64
52 Week!l ........... ... ................. $56.21

lh~ u~dt•ltt:J~Eil, Suttrm lfnrl~nt olln\Oiincp ol tne _SII!t of 01110 her
cb, ct ttdr~~ tn•r UNITED OF OMAHA UFii: INSURANCE CO ol
Oman a St~IP Ol ~''1.1. bas comp~ed "' tlh lhela.. so!lt-.1Slil~iPP~·
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l!ale tiS dPO!Op!tl!l~ bU!Ifll!~~ OI&lt;A! Uiirce Its Ftn~ntli l CmlriiOI'I IS

begin at the Forum e ither Sunday

afternoon Of fleX t Tuesday night ,
Denver Is at San Antonio tonight

Mrn•ntt~ n~tts. SJ 9J2~37Joo. t.oatJotorl!!l. st.779.544
190 00. Sur pi~ \ J IH 339 )81 00 I!'I(Ome, S52l ,658.681 00. 1apefldt
tur~.
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000 ()0 IN WITNESS l'ot!fREOf I haoi!&gt; h~r~unlo 1 u ~ntled mv 111me
andcMedrnne;oltobr&gt; ~UuedatColurMus O~tO lhtS d~pndd41f
\ ho•n b;

for the fifth game of their series,
which the Spurs lead 3-l.In the East,
whtch saw Philadelp hJ a beat New
York and Milwaukee sweep Boston
In four games each, the 76ers and
Bucks will play the opener or the
conference finals in Philadelphia
Sunday ,
While Nixon was making 17 of his
25 field goal attempts, veteran Los
Angeles center Kareem Abdul,
Jabbaf contributed 21 points and 11
rebounds, The 7-2 supersta r aver,
aged 3.13 points in the first four
games of the series,
Actually, Nixon missed his tlrst
field goal a tte mpt But the six-year
NBA veteran made his next 10 as
Los Angeles s tormed to a 6642
halftime lead,
The Lakers led nearly all the way,
They outscored the Blazers 30-7 to
tum a 44 tie Into a 34-11 adva ntage
after 8: 16 of play, and Portla nd
wasn't closer than the fina l margin
of eight points thereafter,

Subsc rl~r.s not desiring to pay th'e caf·

rrer ·ma y

b, lfl•nnullfatem~ni iO hi~'( befn U IOIID W! on llecembi!r ]\ I ~81

a nd 1"""69 next face f he Winner Of
~ •
th n San Antonio-Denver serieS (Of

t98J

•I~ ~nnuar

stalemenl to h~ve

~n

.. ........ $4.40

One Year ...... ... ...................... $52.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dal ly .
.. ........ .... ...... 20 Cents

u lol~•n on Drcrmll'1 31

Rotlr!&lt;l L llatcnrom )I Su~t otln;uli m ot Ohl(l JSeal 8!1!11

4, 1913

Ohio

·Reeves says Elway must earn starting position
I

,

BJ'l'lle 4-"'«' Preu

, Deliver Coach 9,Bn Reeves can't
guarantee that Jolm Elway will be
the Bronoos starting quarterback,
although Ills strong arm will allow
the team to add some plays It has't
been able to use before,
ReeYes said Steve DeBerg, last
year' s\tartlng quarterback for the
Broncos. remains No. 1. and added,
"It wW beuptoJolm to.take the job

,_ ,_Denver's 191!4 No, 1 draft pjck, went

,
t !nrmer Ohio state Jtar. II CWTelltly ,
H
BOO Woolt, errmann s aaen · unclermvest¥ttlonbytheleaguetor
said in Boston he had been told by __..,,M andhlstuturelntheNF1..
C()lts Generlll M~ Ernie ~~~
·
~rsl thitt they "areJhaPPY with Is ''Piaylngior(ColtsCoach) Frank
Mark and be Is going to be given Ku.sh could be a frightening expeevery assurance of fighting for a
.
pia
_,. accustomed
Ilion
..
r1ence
for
a
yer
"'"
starting pos
,
lot o1 ........8 .. HeiTmann said
3~....
H
will be batWng Mike • to a
errmann
"I've never played tor a coach Uke
thai at III1Y level, so
have to walt
the Colts, However. Schlichter. the and see how 1 adjust.

to Baltimore in excha11ge Elway,
this year's first National Football
League draft choice, Elway had
threalelled to play baseball in the
New York Yani«?e organization If
the Colts had not traded him,
"!thought! hadn' t gotten much or
a chance to play in Denver, and by
going to Baltimore, I could move
rigllt In and start," Hemnann said,

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~;:~:;;;;;;;;;;-;fl
1
to~ :i;.!.:n~~~~";'~ I
TAKE MOM TO DINNER FOR

away:•
1

.

changelheteam'soffensealthough
tile Denver coach conceded that
"we probably will put in certain
passes we wouldn't use with other
qiUII'te!'backs, The sideline routes,
torll!stance, require a quarterback
with a strong ann, Jolm ·s ann is so
strong we'll probably be able to use
more of those plays,''
Meanwhile. Mark Herrman, the
other quarterback involved in
Monday's trade that sent Elway to
Denver, said Tuesday that his
acqulsltlon by the Baltimore Colts
may be a boost to his career, But
offensive tackle Chris Hinton of
Northwestern, also sent to Baltimore. does not share Herrmann's
enthus(jjsm.
Herrmann and Hinton. along with

Lendl advances
NEW YORI{'(API -Top-seeded
Ivan Lend! of C:rechoslovakla
crushed South AfriCa's Brent Pirow
1),1 6-0 in the $500,00l Mercedes
•
Tournament of Champions,
Also advancing into the third
round were fifth-seeded Vltas Gerulaltls, No.9 Johan Krlek, No.lO
Tomas Slnld of CZechoslovakia ,
No.l2 Mark Dickson and No, 16
Jimmy Arias,
Krlek eliminated Nick Saviano
64, &amp;-2; Arias defeated Mlchlel
Schapersofthe Netherlands 64,64;
Smld ousted Australia's John Alexander 6-2, 64; Gerulaitls stopped
Craig Wlttus 6-2. 7,.,, and Dickson
advanced wltll Zoltan Kuharszky of
Swlt1-erland retired , with a pulled
stom11ch mil:;cle willie leading !i-~.
4-5:
.
In otber matches. Peter Bastiansen of Denmark upset No, 7 Brian
, ''Teicher &amp;-2, 3-6, 6-1; Jaime Fillol of
Chile downed Pablo Arraya of Peru
6-2, :&gt;-7, 6-3,

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TRY OUR DAILY
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KEYBOARDIST
'

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FROM 7-11 EACH
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MASON, W. VA.

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e
~

Office Hours by Appointment Only

COUPON

e

~
•

3 OZ, JAR

Daytime 48's

--

STORE COUPON

,,

---

-----TraditJQnll SwiYel Rocker

Dttrlerl. Arty Olttlf·~ il lrtudulent.

I

v-.t

COUPON

:

9 -UVES ASST. CAT FOOD

6%

eon-.o.,......................., 3booo. J.,•sso•a

ttwM=aia~Oood~onJQ.IINIXHUOGIEI

0 ·;

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g

:

CAN

Umlt One Per Custorn._:_Good Only At Pow.ll'a

Offer Expln~~ Mey 7. 1983

•••••••••••••••••••••

AUQult 31 , 19113

-~·

,,

1n_1~ Nylon

DEALER: FOt prompt ~llencllhitCOf.lpon tlJ Klmbtrt~la~ Corp,, Box 2. Chnion. lo..,.a ~2 73.4 , For
teCh couPon YOU ICCePf u OUr9ftt. ,.. wil JMii -;ou IICt vth.HI ptua 7tlwldling ch•rve IIWO'VIded you and
yourCUIIon'ltlrl...,.comptilcl wittt tr11 . term~ Of lhllr OOUAQn. My other UM conttltuta fraud ln VOtCn ahow.·
!na purcNitJ oleuftic~Mt IIOdt to oowotr •It &lt;:OupOM IIUbmitted must tMt •~n upon reQuttt Yoid where
prohibited orr.tnc-.c~ . 'tOur~ tnust PI)' My Mt.. an ioYO~ , Otfei' QOOd onlv In tilt M Unltecl
StitRsndtormitftlry,.....,w.. wtthAP0/FP08ddt I 1 .QIIIhvalue 1/20thot 14. ®ReQilltNdlrar;te.
merkofKifrlbrlftt ClttttCorp,, NMftM.wt&amp;411MCIII83KCC .
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6/$ 2GU ,;,. . ~ ~
Umit One Per Customer- Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires MO¥ 7 . 1983

on one Convenience Pack or on three
regular size boxes
Kleenex• Huggies• diapers.

JUST ARRIVED-NEW BOOKS. KITS AND ACCESSORIES

:

oz.

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Offer Expires May 7, 1983

Pomeroy, Ohio

MAY BASKET

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COUNTED CROSS STITCH

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IIION,·FAI. 5:00-8:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 10:00.4:00 P.M.

$299
99

298 SECOND ST.
to limit Quantities, POMEROY, OHIO,

we ResolVe the

M.OTHER'S D"'Y
"

~omets

,, COLUMBUS, Ohio (API
~wrens Luck, driven by Jeff
Richardson, won the e ighth race
irature Tuesday at Scioto Downs to
pay $4.40, $2Jil and $2,20,
•, ~nd-placeCoeZRightbrought
1;,;11) 'and $2AO, while AvaUabillty
gald $3 to show.
·
•• The nlnlh.mt'e trlfecta of 2-1(),1
. paid $1.219,20,
,-• Acrowdof2,942wagered$266,969.

r:?

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r-.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;-1

500 lincoln Hill

· ,·

ro~f~~=~~~!::a=~~

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) -675-1244
Burton
in second
the third
period,
The I
r~~~~~~~~~;:~~~~~;;~~~~~~~;:~
Leef
in the
period
and Jim
ou !shot Toledo 31,25,

~cioto DOwns results

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.·10 p.m.
Sunday 10 a.m.-10 p.m.

•

1

,I

I ..

•

\

�•

Ohio

Meigs County . organizations meet, p"an

Hypertension can-occur anytime
Two

Will be

tree

blOOd pressure plJnlcs

lnlestlol)al atstu!bances such .a s
gastritis and dlarrllea. The extend
of the symptoms dependS on the
height of the pressuie.and on the
length of time It haS been present ,
she explained.
·
Diet modification, anti·

held at the Meigs County

Health Department as apart of the
obsa"vanceof~yasHypertenslon

hypertensive dnlp, or dluretlel.,
(water pUis) may be I*E6CI Ibid u
treatmel!t (JlllyperiA!IIalbf. ·
For lbo6e not haviDC a ~
eiUillllnatlon ln1the pall ~. Mn.
Tomis recommended seeing a
pltyslelan.

Control Month.
Nanna . Ann ToiTeS, R. N.
announcEd that the tree blood
pressures wW be taken at the
department on Wednesday, Mayll, r.;;;;;;;~!!!!!i!i!iiiiiiiiiiiii!!!~~~~~~~~!ii! ~iii
and Monday, May 16, from 9 to 11
a .m. and 1 to 3 p.m .
TOITeS ~lalned that hyperten~
slon or the el~atkm of blood
pressure above normal Is a sym(r
tom which accompanies many
heart related , clrculatol')l and
kidney diseases. Itmayoccuratany
age but It Is found most freqqently In .
people aver 40 years of age, she
explained.
High blood pressure may l:i!
caused temporarUy by emotional
disturbances or by excessive smok·
lng, Torres reported. HOWever, she
said, about 8,'; to 90 percent of
patients belong to the group known
as essential hypertension, lor which
the cause Is unknown.
Many persons with hypertension
have no symptoms and the condJ.
tlon Is discovered In the course of a
routine physical examination.
Among the symptoms which are
STORE HOURS
frequentlyobservedwhentheblooo
Mon.-lliu·rs.-Sat. 9-5
POMEROY, OHIO
pressure Is rising are headache,
Fn'day 9-B
Ph.992-5272

20%0F~

I

-

1-'

.

ALL WOMEN'S
SHOES·IHRU M
DAY, MAY 8th

..

1/

PROCLAMATION- Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews, left . and Rutland Mayor John MWer sign a
proclamation declaring Sunday, May 7, "lUke-Bike
lor Retarded Citizens Day" and au area residents are
urged to particlpal&lt;! In the 25 mile ~vent being sponsored by the Meigs Association lor Retar~ed Citizens.

The mayOI'!i cited the work of the aasoclatlooln community adlvlties to help area mentally retarded
children and adulla achieve their greatest possible
potential. They pOint out that one oul of every 10
families In Meigs County is affected by mental
retardation.

HARTLEY SHOES

Your Library

memory, shortness of bre~th, pain
dizziness, Impaired vision, ·falling
aver the heart, stroke and gastr&lt;&gt;

Cameras available now at Library
By Ruth l'uwers
There are ple nty of good r easons
for going to the library- great nov·
cis, valuable reference books. records, film s, and Polaroid instant
cameras that can be borrowed free
of charge.
What are cameras doing in the
public library? As of now, they 're

part of our clrQulating collection.
Like the books, magazines and records, they' re here for the public to
use and enjoy.
The Meigs County Library Is par·
tlclpating In "Check This Out," a
program providing free Instant ca·
meras to public libraries throughout the UnitedStates. The cameras

r~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~

Mental Health campaign

Mr. Fr~nk Sarver and sons,
John and Ed, of HatflelQ, Ind .,
spent a few days with Mr . and
Mrs . Howard Thoma ....
John and Ed Sarver of Hatfield,
Ind . spent two nights with their
great -grandmother, Iva Johnson.
Mr. Fra nk Sarver, John and Ed
of Hatfield, Ind., visited with Mr.
and Mrs. David Barr and family
ql Rutland.

R'EMEMBER MOM
ON HER DAY
SUN., MAY 8th
WITH A GIFT ·FROM:

Dorothy M. Sayre, Bellrlnger
. drive chairperson for Letart. Falls ~
announced· thai three workers wl'll
go house-to-house during May, col·
lectlng for mental hea lth .
"Open the Dor to H el~." is lh1•
!heme for this year's ea mpalgn,
Sayre said. :·Many people who are
:having trouble coping with their
:problems don't know where to get
:help, or are afraid to ask. Our cam :palgn this year alms a I 'openlngthc
door' for all those In need of help."

Sacred Heart

GUmores have performed profes·
slonally for the past ~era! years
several youth activities planned · and at the Grange meeting pres·
for May and June were reported on
ented a variety of music using
at the Monday night meeting of the
dulCimers, banjos, autoharps, and
Sacred Heart Church Council.
jews harps. MusiC was also pre.:!ames Diehl, viCe president,
ented by the choir of the Rock
conducted the meeting during
Springs Church.
which time It was noted that the ·
Door prizes were won by Louise
youth of Sacred Heart will hOSt the
Radford, Homer Radford, Shirley
Rev. Mark Flynn and youth of his
Sisson, Judy Marshall, and Roy
parish In Portland , Saturday.
Holter with stuffed ·toys being
Following the Saturday night mass,
. CAKE CONTEST WINNERS- Brian Burkhamer, ~Luke
awarded to Dorothy and Michael
a reception will be held for them In
. Pickens, pictured left to right, woo lhe cake conkS a1 Southem Hlgh
Llefheit.
the church recreation halL Patty
' Scl&gt;ool. AU ollhe cakes were made from "scratch" as a part of the
Ethel Grueser presented a proDuffy, chairman of the reception,
• Singles Uvlng class.
.
..
gram on " Fraternity," discussing
noted that Erie Gryska, Maria
fellowship, friendShip, faith, fun,
Aver ion and Kim Morrow will assist
food and the future along with ·
her with the reception.
comments on the founders of the
Youth chairman, Leonard Gwlas·
grange.
dow sky, announced that May 22 has
Readings Included "I Am the
tentatively been set for a group of
Grange,"byLottleLeonard; '!Fear
filth and sixth graders to be taken on
and Faith," by Barbara Fry;
A cake contest was concluded as
chocolate icing decorated with coa tour of Blennerhasset Island .
"Faith,"
by Helen Blackston;
.a part of the singles living class In
conut and flowers.
The summer youth gathering ol
"Golden
Chain
of Friendship, by
the Home Economics department
Other participants In the contest
the Southern Region of the Diocese
Nancy
Morris;
"Texas Relaxer,"
of the Southern High School.
were Todd Mugrage, Dave Cundiff
..washington, Morgan. Athens.
by
Nancy
and
Sally
Radford; and a
~ Pam Holcomb, Instructor, had
and Rex Mahlman with a yellow
Meigs, Gallla and Lawrence
humorou
s
skit
,
by
Beuna
Grueser,
:charge of the contest which · was
cake with chocolate Icing; Paul
Counties-· will be at the Hocking
Lottie Leonard, and WUliam
·judged by Jim Adams, principal , Ours, Elsie Roach, Carrie Young,
Technical College on June 4, 1::ll to
Radford . .
:Grace Griffin, Pam Boso and Den· Pat Pauley, -and P . J . HUI with a
9: :ll p.m. On the program wiU be
nle Hill. AU ol the cakes and Icings Hershey layer cake and chocolate
crown mixers, speaker, liturgy,
:were made from "scratch" by the Icing, decorated with flowers, coco- youth witnessing. a supper, and
·students with the judging being on nut and chocolate horse replicas;
May 20 and 21 was designated
dance to conclude the activities.
: appearance, Icing, Oavor, texture, ·Missy Wolfe, Missy CummingS,
Poppy
Days In Middleport w hen the
Senior CitiZens Sunday will be
; and mol!;tness.
Rusty Cummins, and Tyrone Bri·
Legion Auxlllar)' of
American
observed at the church on May 15
The winners were Brian Burkha· nager with a chocolate chip cake
Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 met rewith refreshments to be served
mer, Rob Cunningham, and Luke and cream cheese Icing.
cently
at
the
hall.
folowlng the 10 a .m . Mass.
Pickens with their white cake with
Members were asked to meet at
Fred Morrow. chairman of the
the
hall on the m orning or both day s
environmental committee. diS·
their location assilinto
receive
cussed doing the things that are on
ments.
Delegates
and alternates
the priority list.
elected
for
the
District
8 summer
The Rev . F ather Anthony Glan·
namore thanked those who have convention to be held a t Lithopolis
served for the past two years on the on June 9 were Katie Lewis: Becky
church council. Members whose Tyree and Gerry Parsons, dele. Artists and craftspeople from
Program at the Ohio Arts CouncU
terms wiU expire In June are Mike gates; and Peggy Caton. Erma
.throug!lout the region are Invited to and panel member of the National
,submit their work to be juried for
Endowment of the Arts; and Hal
Sheets. Jame s Diehl, Mark HendriCks, and Etta Will, a lterGrueser, Barbara Smith, Diana nates. Registration will begin at
the sixth annual Barn Raisin' arts Stevens, designer, and president of
Bartels, Ann Blackwood. a nd Rose noon . A new district president wil be
·and crafts festival at the Dairy the Ohio Designer Crafts men
elected .
Bani Southeastern Ohlo Cultural Enterprise.
Sisson.
Plans were m ade for serving a
Awards wUI be given for Best of
' Arts Center In Athens.
Day dinner to the legton
Memorial
The two day festival will be Sept.
Show, by Court Street Collection,
members partlcipatand
auxiliary
17 and 18 and wUI feature the dis· Atbeits; Award of Excellence; and
Mary
and
lng
in
services
at the cerneterles and
Appalacian
music
by
Best Display.
play, demonstration and sale of su·
In the village.
Roger Gilmore and a display of
perlor arts . and crafts. Last year's
Persons Interested in submitting
antique tools, old grange pictures
Barbara Hudson was WPicomed
attellQance the Barn Raisin' ex· prpposals for food concessions at
and quilts ·highlighted the Rock _.. as a new member.
.ceeded 4,5!)0.
the : festival . may ob.ta!n appllca~.
Springs Grange' s Observance of
.-May 15 ws announ&lt;Jed as the dar~ ·
Deadline lor e'ntry of 'slides ·Is tions lrom the Dairy Barn.. ')'lils
National
Grange
Week.
Thuriiday
·
for
the Buckeye Glrls'·State tl!a ~ ~ 1
June 30. Slides will be jurled by Wil· event is produced by the Dairy
night.
p.m.
at Gallipolis. All delegates and
llam Hunt , ceramic artist and edl· Barn Southeastern Ohlo Cultural
Counlians,
the
alternates
have been contacted and
Native
Meigs
.tor of Ceramics Monthly Art.s Center and supported by the

~ Single

living can be easy
as baking cake for men

00

Legion Auxiliary

.Dariy Barn competition
:announced for fall

Personals

are from the Sun series and feature
buut-ln electronic flash and one but·
ton operation. Sponsored by the
Customer Service Division of Pola·
rold Corporation, the program Is
being offered In cooperation with
the American Library Association.

The Daily Sentinel-:l'oge 7

Polrl41ioy Middleport, Ohio

1911

Rock Springs

BASKETS~, Foliage &amp;.B!ooming

.

requested to attend.
· A report was given on the recent
party at theArcadlaNurslngHome.
Assltlng with the party for the 45
patients were Mrs. Parsons, Mrs.
WW, Mrs. Hendricks, Nettle Hayes.
Ethel Hawk, Mrs. Caton, Sonia
Parsons, Jean Gibnore, Trlsh
Tobias, Mrs. Tyree, and Grace
Welsh.

Amateur Gardeners
Mrs. Bernice Carpenter was the
guest arranger at the recent
meeting of the Middleport Amateur

Gardeners will have charge of .
prizes for thetwoMelgsCountyFalr
flower shOws.
The open meeting of the Rutland
Garden Club was noted along with
the spring regional meeting at
Rhodes Center, Rio Grande Col·
lege, Saturday. ·
Mrs. Jean Moore won the
traveling prize. It was reported that
the nominating committee wtU
report at the May meeting. For roU
call members named their !lrst
blooming plant this spring.

Gardeners at the home of Mrs. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
WUIIam Slater.
I
. A member of the Bend 0' the
River Garden Club , Mrs. Carpenter
made several arrangements ranging from the traditional to the
modern in design . Several used
's pring nowers , including yeUowand
white daffodils with driftwood,
along with bittersweet. yew, and
some colored wood crafted flowers.
Erma Smith reported on the
Meigs County Garden Clubs Associ·
aton m eeting on AprU 1, which she
and Marjorie Fetty attended . lt was
noted that the
Amateur

ANN'S
CAKE DECORATINQ
Route 7
Old VFWHall
Tuppers Plains

667-6485

.

FLOOR
COVERING
SALE

Easy To Install

IMPERIAL
ACCOTONE
VINYL

Easy To Maintain

at

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POTTED FLOWERS -

00

'Magazine; Vonnie Sanford, coordl·

.. FLOOR
COVERING.

fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

Ohio Arts Council.

~:;~o;f;th;e;Arl;;l;m;s;ln;;;;;;;.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .p;;;~

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Pendant ·and Earrings
To Mother.. ... with love.

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
CHUCKWAGON

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ECKRIOt
JUMBO BOLOGNA ........ ~~-. s1.79
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HAM SALAD ............... ~~-. 1.59
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WITH FRIES...S1.34

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Illustrations enlarged
to show detail.

LIMIT 1 CASE PER FAMILY

" At The End of the Pomet·o y-Moson Bridge "
POMEROY OH
PH 992-2556

SEE OUR MANY SPECIALS

One 12/0ne·Quart Case
or Valvoline Motor Oil $11.88
Buyer's Check 1M
from Valvoline
-3.00
One 12/0ne-Quart Case $8.88

AT

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MARGARINE ... 21s1.19

INGELS FURN. &amp; JEWELRY

OHIO COLBY

106 N. Second Ave.

LONGHORN
CHEESE ...... ... LB. Sl.97

Middleport, Ohio

HOFFMAN 'S SUPER SHARP

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SEE OUR WIDE
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s1ges _
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"THfllf ,. ON*

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POMEROY
119 W. 2nd

1704 Eastern Ave. 992:2139

liASON .
Route 33
773-5511

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675-2731

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17 OZ. DEL MONTE
GREEN LIMA BEANS ~~~~2/S1.49
200 CT. WHITE PUFFS
FACIAL TISSUES
2 BOXES $1.69
5 oz. ARMOUR
VIENNA SAUSAGE -~~~~ .. 2/S1J9
6\lz OZ.
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16 OZ. IDAHOAN
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CANDY BAR~ ...... ;... ~~~. 2/49¢
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Axle Set

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CHEESE ......LB. S2.99

3 Lb. New
Green Onions ~~~- 95¢

CARPET

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12"x 12" PLAIN WHITE
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18~ Per Sq. Ft. ·
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�' ·-

Wednesday, INJy 4, 1983

Pametoy-Midclleport, Ohio

: • fl'age-8-lhe Daily Sentinel

Family Medicine

. Calendar

,-,

POMEROY - Unity Singers,
Coolvlile, wlll be at the Vanderhoof Baptist Church at 7 pm.
Wednesday to bring message In
song; public invited .
POMEROY - Special meeting, ~uthern Local Board of Education , will be 7 p.m . this
evening In high school cafeteria.
POMEROY - Evangeline
Chapter. OES Practice will be 7
p.m. Wednesday.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Eva ngeline
Chapter. Order of the Eastern
Star. will be 7: 3iJ p.m . Thursday at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. There wlll be inltia. lion lor candidates. Members
are to take articles lor auction
with proceeds to go Into cancer
research .
HYSELL RUN- The regular
Miss ionary meeting of Hysell
Run Holiness Church will be
Thu rsday at 7:.3/J p.m . Speaker
will be the Rev . Okey Cart. The
public is Invited to attend.

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
AssiMant Prolesaor
of Family Medldne
Ohio University College
01 ~c Medicine
QUESTION: All the recent news
about Dr. Barney Clark has sei me
to wondering-how many
parts can be repla~d ~11
devices now?
ANSWER:
Barney Clark
lived with a mechanical heart for
over three
months and his ·
experience drew public attention
not just to the heart but other
artificial parts used to replace
worn-out or damaged parts of the
body. The idea of using an artificial
(prosthetic! device to replace or
supplement a falling part of the
body Is not new . Varlous types of
replacement surgery have been
used for over 3iJ years. For
instance,' orthopedic surgeons now
routinely perform partial or even
total replacement of joints with
special metal or plastic parts. Also,
the use of artificial legs made of

wood or plastic bas become common. In 1973, hawever, artttlclal
legs and anns were designed that
function very much like a natural
am\ or leg. Whlle they are not quite
like the "bionic man," these
artificial appendages allow a person to Uve a much more normal life.
In total, about three-million artlll'
ctalpattso!aUklndsareusedlnthe
United States each year.
QUESTION: I have a trlefld who
bas to drive about 00 miles two or
three times a week to have dialysis
'~ kidney 1a11ure ~
wr
uum a dlseliSeAre artificial kidneys ava!l,able?

would greatly lJ:.nproVe the lifestyle
of those needing regular dialysis .
QUESTION: A hospital In our
area has just begun doing total hlp
replacements. In bone and joint
surgery, what other parts can he
replaced?
ANSWER: Tile total replacement o! a detroyed joint often
allowsapersontohaveuseo!ajolnt
that was totally useless before. This
can be a fantastic Improvement lor
the person. Some o!theotherjolnts
that can be replaced are the elbow,
shoulder
lmee • flnger, ankJe, 1oes
•
and wrist

POMEROY - There will be a
special meeting or the Shade
Rl ver Lodge ~53. F &amp;AM, Chester, 7: 3iJ p.m. Saiurday; work
will be in the master mason degree. Refreshments will be
served.
BEDFORD- Bedford Township Trustees meeting will be 6
p.m . Saturday a t clerk 's home.

Happenings

burn vlctln1s?

ANSWER: While It ts true that
artificial skin has been developed to
help bum victims, there Is also
much rese;u-ch&gt; going on In using
natural skin cells to replace skin. In
tJ$ procedure skin ts actually
taken from another person and,
after helng properly matched, Is
used to cover a bum area. Also,
some of the patient's own cells of .
skin can be taken to a laboratory
and grown and multiplied so that it
can be used to cover his own burn

w.

I

(Editor's note: AJIIKiugh he
cannot answer letters personally,
Dr. Schreck will discuss questions
of general Interest In the column.
Please address correspondence to:
Ed Schreck, D.O., C!llJei;e of
~teopathlc Medicine, Ohio University, Athens, OH 45701.) .

Washers.

Dryers.

of

M arkPtlng

a nd

Bar-b-que
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Ora nge Township Vo lunt eer
Fir!' De partment , Tuppers
Plains, will have a chicken barbecu e at Orange Township Fire
Department qmirters Sunday
begi nning a t 11 a.m. Price for a
dinner whic h Includes one-half
chicken, baked bea ns, cole slaw,
bread and beverage w ill be $2.

Tool auction
BASHAN - Tool Auction Saturday. 7 p.m . a t BashanFire Department In Bashan under
department sponsorship; refreshments will be ava ilable.

Yard sale
POMEROY - A yard sale
schedu led for May 5, 6 a nd 7 by
the American Legion AuxUlary
of Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy, has been cancelled. The
j!vent will be held at a later date.

Cooker
Fryer

f•clu51111 Clock ,
Cllllfllflg

Grange
POMEROY - The annual Inspection of the Meigs County
Pomona Grange wHI be held
when the group meets at the
Rock Sprtngs ·Grange Hall al 8
Friday evening. National
Grange sewtng conte81s will be
judged . Hemloc k G range
members will he hosts .

Oe~nptnh-butto n

,

.

First grade- Jill Blake, Beth Buskirk, T(&gt;r·
lea Cogar . Tony Davis, Mega n Evans, J e n·
niter Fink, Malt hew Gatrill, Emily Heighton.

-

ADVERTISED ITEM POliC Y

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Roast

USDA

TOTAL SATISFACTION CUARANT£E

~249

Hibachi

Grill
15-oneh drame·

Ladies
Gloves

ol wolch:lblc $yht1IM. 1292·

28

IN GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY STORES.

WE RESERVE THE RICI·H TO LIMIT QUAN TITIES . NONE
SOlO TO DEAlERS .

U .S. Gov ·r GRADED CHOICE
. 17.0-190-LB . A VG .

$1 _ 3~ 9

'

CHOICE

Forequarter
of Beef.

$2488
Cooler
Chest
L.argtt12.4'1'rlnchell; wldlh Wll-in•
tre!; hfliVh115'/.-lncMI. {~7-5A 1)

U .S. GOV 'T GR ... DED CHOICE .
BEEF CHUCK

lb

.

spte
~~~~~t~~

I

Boneless
Cubed St.eak

WEIGHT

$·2·--··. 28

s2··· a-e

lb .

lb .

c~

Pick Of
The Chix

PHONE 949-2525

Country Club
Ice Milk

IN THE PIECE KROGER

All Meat
Bologna

lb.

Springdale
2% Milk .... .. ..

-Gal.
Ctn.

ALL WOMEN'S DRESS
SHOES, CASUAL SHOES
AND PURSES

... lb .

lb .

lb .

ggc
ggc

Viva Designer
Paper Towels

J159

Single
Roll

Ctn.

c(/.1:

OFF

Tide
Detergent

-

CHAPMAN SHOES
Next To Elberfelds In Pomeroy

..-.;__ ~-~ y

... Box

NEW IO EAS
COM E TO IJF'E

8

hite Pita
Pocket Bread

CAP AND GOWN SPECIAL

-~

2-5x7

KROGER
GLADLY
WELCOMES
YOUR FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

38

Kroger
Saltines

mothcti
Potte d Mums .... ... ... ...
SELECTED VARIETIES OF

6-lnch
Pol

. Large Showplants ... ;~,ch .
10

$599

$1299

l -Ib .
Boxes

\

4-WALLETS
· ONLY$}500

,.

NEW SPRING CROP . FLORIDA

6

Yellow
Sweet Corn

Plus Tu

DUE TO THE VARIETY OF COLORS WORN AT VARIOUS AREA
SCHOOLS PLEASE BRING YOUR•OWN CAP AND GOWN.

LIMITED TIME OFFER!!
CALL NOW FOR BEST APPOINTMENT TIMES

Genuine Idaho
Potato Sale

15·· $

LEAk

-lb.
Bag

· PHOIOGRAPIIY
SPRING VALLEY~ AZA-GAWPOUS ·

.

*with attached coupon

·1 ·

~

$
: ~·~
·· ~ '

•
.~' &lt;• 4 H:*&gt;:, ~ l . ~ - {~" ·.,,t

BEAUTIFUL. FlOWERING FOil WRAPPED

9-oz.
Pkg.

zu.·. if•

TIL
lOpm

flowers and plants

SENIORS

.'~ J .. ..

OPEN

Pak

WHEAT . ONION OR

t:

'&gt; "~ ' · ''· ' ·Jil : ~ r~--

..t..Sunday Hourst

Diet ·Rite
or RC Cola
WHERt~

~ i . ll '•'

~New Summer'f

RC 100 ,

.Jl99

.

90 SHEETS PER ROLL

-Ji(Li'

Vac Pack
Kroger Coffee

Boneless
Rib Eye Steak

,., .s·4~ ae

.$188

.

U .S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE

Boneless
Chuck Roast

Genuine
Ground •Chuck

U.S.D .A . GRADE A HOLLY FARMS .

STAR SUPPLY

U . S. GOV'T GRADED CHO ICE
BEEF

US . GOV'T INSPECTED
FRESH GROUND

U .S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE

Boneless
Boston Roll

1/2

~NDAYI

•

BEEF .

w•

191l.

GOTT

ts"'=~

•

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

Ecch ol •h ..e ad••rl ind il•m• ;, ••qu ir•d !tl b•
••adilr avollnb l• fa• ani• '" •och lt oog•• ita •., ••up I
at l peci fically no t•d in th i1 ad II
do run ou r of on
od••rtind it•m w• will otl•• ¥ou rc1.1• choic• ot 0
t omporabl• •t•m wl'l• n •~o i tob l • r•llecli"ll 'h• •om•
!o-. in91 or o r oi n~h•ck wh ich wdl •nl ltl• you 1c
p~oc h o•• '"' • ad.,.• rtil•d it•"' at 11'1 • od ~•• ' • • e d p ro u
... ,th in 10 day1 , Only one .. ,dor Hrupcn Wdl b•
acc•pt•d p•• lt•m p1.1rthoud

COPYRIGHT 1913 · THE ICROGEII CO . ITEM.S AND PRICES
_1;;000 SUNDA.'t' MAY 1. THROUGH SATUIIOAV . MAY 7

, ,5·%-0ff

CLOSED

ron were:

U•

h••rth ing you bu~ cr l( r09•' i• 91.1oront••d lor your
totot •atitlcl(tlo n •ltto rdle u o l mon uloct"••• II ¥0U
or• not 1al i11i•d l( rog•• will ••ploc• '(I"' item wit~
tl'l• ICme br and o• o ro mpcoobl• b•ond 11• ••lund , ou r
purcho•• p dc •

( 428·1~51

VALUABLE COUPON'

F

Matthew Falls, Brtan Hoffman, Teresa May ,
Grant Reynolds, Angie Julian, Tessie Brad·
shaw, Matt Cradxk. Heather Franckowiak,
M argaret George, Tracey Grueser, Scott
Hudson. Bobby JOhnson, Kyla Sellers. Kyle
Simpson, J . R. Roush, Jason Stewart.
Third grade - Dodte Cleland, Shark1

·. -5·. g·A
ChOlCe
•• .

New quc k hei!l • ~art capac:1ty

' 1267·369)

773-5352

F- -~ P......

The flfth sUe wef'ks grading pt&gt;r\od honor roll
of the Middleport Elementary School bas
beef\ announced. Mak.lng a grade r1 " B" or
a lxwe In all their subjects to be' named to the

677 Third Ave.

~

Va.

(:lothing Day
CHESHIRE - The Gal llaMelg s Co mmunit y Ac tion
Agency will hold Its free c lothing
day for low-Income persons Friday from 9 a. m. until noon. Thl'
agency's clothing bank is loca ted in the old high school buildIng In Cheshire.

Four1h grack&gt; - Eric Heck, Stacey Sha nk .
Amanda Roush, Tim Hall, Jason · Wright,
Kim Ew.i.ng, ShanE' PhiUips, Shawn Ups·
comb, Sean Walton. Mikl&gt; Van Me ter. Jenni
Werry, Chris N{'e('(&gt;.
Filt h gradt&gt; - Greta Rtttle, Bracy Kom .
Cary Betzlng, J ennifer Newman. SOOUy Tri·
ple1t . Na ncy Baker. Hank Clela nd . Becky

Refrigera-

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT

f 2()0A,

Seoo..t grade - Abby make, P . J . Chadwell,• Unda Chapman, Terri Currence.
Wendy Clark. Jay Cremeans. Chuck C'lm·
ntngham. Sherry JohnSOn. Penny Lewis.
Adam Uttle, Lee Luckeydoo, Jennifer Peck,

McE:Lroy, M issy Neutzltng, Rachel Roush.

Page-9·

.

with
knife Sh!lrpener

Offer Good
Tuesday thru Friday

Malden.

D.H. lntennedlate- Wendy Carsey.

4

Can
Opener

ALL PERMS

Chrissy Tay}Or, Kevin Whobrey, Micah

L.D. - Euge-11(' Aleshlre, Scon WOObrey.

I)Qily Sentinel

Cooper, Starey Ducan, Tara Gerlach. Kim
Stephanie Sayre, Jared Stewart.
Hanning. Darln Logan. Amy Searls. Robby
Seco..t grade - NlcOOiell&lt;Eglo, John 0..·
W~att. Tricla Ba.er, Frank Blake. Ryan CoUey. Roberta Caldwell, Va.lerif' Connolly. Jenwan. Heather oa..-enport. Angie Goody.
nifer Cross. Wendt Harmon . Tamara
Nikke Meier, Usa Poulin, Mary Jkoth Stein . · Hayman, Kimberly Jenkins.
Third grad£! - JeffrE'y Allen, Jason Arnott.
Chrissy Weaver, Jennifer Ek.llch.
F alU"th grade - Georf Cogar, Teresa
Michea Sentz. Amber Cumings, Carlton
Deem, l.Qrle Falb. Susan. Houchl~ . Amy
Drumme(, Starey Fry, Marcy Hill, Mk-helle
McCoy. Kerr\(• Mullen .
Might , Missy Nelson , Joseph Smith, Ken Van
M~;~. t(f. Oarcld Wolfe. Erk:a Elias. Tracy El·
Founh ~rrad~ - J a miE' Anderson, Andy
lis , Van Klein. Jamey Little, Shelly Pull\ns,
Baer, JeMy Lisle , Cheryl Pal)(', Joe-tta Plz·
zlno. Michael Russe ll , Robyn Stout, Andrea
Jason Smith, Catlna Wolfe.
Thciss.
The fifth slx wt'C!ks grading peliod hono1·
Fifth w-ade - S~Uy Arnold. Kevl.n Bur·
roll of th&lt;&gt; Syracuse E lementary School has .
gess, Tricla M lchaf'l . J on Van Mf&gt;t er, Greg
~n announced. Making a gradE&gt; or " B" or
Beegle.
abo\•(' In all lhE'Ir subjects to bP named to th&lt;'
SL"&lt;th !irl'tldc - Todd U sk&gt;, Cindy Neutzllng,
roll were:
Krtst('n Pal)(', Sara h Philson, Chris Stout,
First gt'flde - Aan;m Drummer. Andt1:'w
F.~Wn \Vl'&lt;IVer. Bt'l'ky Wtnebrp nner, Jason
F ie lds, Chris Guinther. Jodi Hobbs, David
J uslls . Michaf\1 McKelvey, Amber Ohlln_g('r,

McDade. Jessica MJtchen, Oa~UeScot , Cora
See, Angte Seldenable, Mandy Slaven,

MISSY WOOds.
.
D.H . Primary - Mary Morton.

tors. Rangee. TV a:ets.

Phone survey

Research for the cPnter, will be
to evaluate public opinion about
mental Illness and the provision
of mental hea lth services In the
area so that the Mental Hea lth
CPnt er can best address the
neros and concerns of the people
In the communit y.

Kandt Bachtel, Jennifer Bamhan,
Dennis Boyd. Serena Boyd, Kevin Lai'JlMrt,
Melissa Maynard, LynettE' Neece, Tammy
Quef&gt;n. Elsie ijuffiqgton.
ThiJ:d gradP _ - Mindy Foulkrod, Keith
Smith. Jeremy 'Heck. Rhotu:la A.n4erMn , Ju·
He Buck. Terry Whitt". Melinda Dalley. Barb!(' Anderso n, Josh Bartels. Stephanie
Haggy , John Harrtson, Tammy Kleln. Joey

Werry, JeM')I White, T;;u-a Wolfe.
Sixth grade- Lesle)'"""Carr, Jeff McElroy,
Monlca T\ifn("(", Angel Odom, Laurie Wa.y·
land. ~nnt Jeffers, Leah Doklge. Scott Bar·
ton, Todd Pm\~ll. ~th Ewing. Nicole Bunch.

COUNTY
APPLIANCE INC.

• •...

WITH COUPON

GA LLIPOLIS - The GalllaJ ackson- Me lgs Co mmunity
Mental Hea lth Center wUI conduct a te lephone survey Ihjs
week •o ra ndomly selected residents of the trl-county area .
ThP purpose of I he survey. according to Orman Hall, Coordi -

Aikin,~.

ilr1dgl!t Jacks, EUsha Meodow&gt;. Leslie
Qualls, A..nrl RUne. Mart Stewart , Toby
Sw~l12 . .\ngiEo While. Ryan C&lt;inde, Amity
Dixon. Ertn ' Hilrjler, T&lt;'rry Klng. Todd

?Parson. Chris AJ.k1re. ·Joey Roush. Tommy

artlflctai~-,...~Q~U~ffiS~·I~I~O~N~:~~~i~t~tru~e~tha~t~~ar~~~-------------------_j~::::::::4:6:-1:6:9:9::::::~

SPECIAL
CAROL'S
COIFFURES
Mason,

Katrtna Turtlfr. Vicki Warner. Ch.rlstln Buz-

l.ard, Kelly Doidge, Stephanie Pri~. DebOie

T'bf- t1tth slx weeks grading period honor
roll ot the Pomeroy Elemenllu)· SchOOl has
been &amp;nnounced.. MaklD.g a gradt&gt; or " B'' or
abqvt&gt; ln all their subjects to be riamed to the
i'oll were:
Flrst grade -TrQflton Cleland, Tracy' Fife,
Deanna Boothe, Jos11ua Heck. Cassk&gt; Nea.~~e,
Stephan Taylor, Ellen Watson . Brad Ander sm, Daniclle Cl'ow. J. P. Davis. Andrpa Dil lard, Jeremy Grtmm. Stephanlf- See. Jagon
Carpenter, Emmanuel CUndiff, Ronald Diles.
Jell Tracy.
Second grade - Leann Cl.lnditf, &amp;&gt;th
R.Qu.sh. Rusty Triplett, Jam ie Btggs, A.nna
C hap rrta~. Denis e Hyse ll , Chr ls to pht&gt;r
Knight, Bobble MitcheU. Kelly Satterfie ld,

-

Golf league ..
· Women who are interested in
play ing in the evening golf
league at the Jaymar Golf Club
are invited to attend a meeting
at 6: 3iJ p.m . on Thursday. Those
Interested in playing but unable
to attend the meeting are asked
to telephone Bernadette Anderson, 992-2261 or Carol Cmw,
992-613/J.

artificial skin can be u~ to help

ANSWER: While
ney implants are not yet an option,
medical researchers have designed
a_portable, wearable kidney dialysis u'nlt that Is now being tested. A
kidney dialysis unit functions as an
artificial kidney In ~leanslng the
blood of waste or toxic substances
in the bloodstream. It Is estimated
that there are about 63,001 Americans who need dialysis on a regular
basis In the United States. The test
model I mentioned has actually
beell used on camping trips. It is
easy to see that such portable units

MOTHER'S DAY
BEDFORD - A meeting of
the Bedford Township Trustees
has been set for 6 p.m. Saturday
at the clerk's home.

.

T~

Pon...-oy Middleport. Ohio

Honor Roll

_Replacing lxxly ·parts n.ow becoming more common

WEDNESDAY

nator

W•dnaa:'rey, May 4, 1.983

88
·-.

�Page

10--lhe Da · Sentinel

~Middleport,

Ohio

•

Heart ailment claims Meigs
Congressional Medal win~er
Edward A . Bennett, 63, a Middleport native, who won a Congres·
slonal Medal of Honor for bravery In
World War II , died at a hospital In
Paradise, Calif., as the result of a
heart aliment.
In February, 1945, Pfc Bennett
single handedly cleaned out a
German strong point by wielding a
knUe, a rifle, a r ifle butt and a pistol
and for that acl he was awarded the
Congressional Medal of Honor later
In !945. He later was promoted to the
ranlf of major . The medal was
presented by the late President
Harry Truman In the rose garden of
the White House.
On Sept. 28, 1945, Mr. Bennett
returned to Middleport where he
was honored with a col01iul parade.
H e was given the key to his home
town by t hen Mayor C. 0 . Fisher and
a life membership In l"eeneyBennett Post 128. Middleport 's
America n Legion organization. He
was presented other gifts from the
comm unity.
A graduat e of Middleport High
School, Mr. Bennett resided In
Magalia, Ca lif., following the war.
He returned to Middleport last May
where he participated In a celebra·
tlon honoring General James Har·
tiriger. Through the years, Mr.
Bennell h ad been In touch with a
close fr iend. Middleport business·
man, Lion&lt;'! Boggs.
Mr. Bennelt Is surv ived by his
wife, Thelma; four daughters,
Elaine, Esther. Barbara and Mary
Louise; two brothers, Herman of
Columbus, and Howard of Fort
Lauderdale, F'la., and five sister s,
Ethel Kimes, Thelma Stobart,
Frances Hixson and A nna Brown,
all of Columbus, and Barbara
Cllpner, F'or l Lauderdale.
Members of the family were reared
In Middleport and attended Middleport schools
Recently, members of l"eeneyBcnnett Post have been worklng on
a plan to honor both M r . Bennett and
the la te James Stewart, both
Middleport natives who won the
Congressional Medal of Honor.
Services for Mr. Bennelt w ill be
held al l p.m Monday at the Chapel
of the Pines In Paradise, Ca lif., and
burial will be In the San Bruno
National Cemetery In Ca lifornia

Emergency runs
Local unll s answered five calls on
Tuesday, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Serv ice reports. At
6:3S a. m ., the Pomeroy Unll took
Hattie Sellers from L incoln Heights
to Pleasant Vaik'Y Hospllal and
Middleport at 7:29a.m. took Cindy
Smllh , H ysell St., to thai sam e
hospita l; Pomeroy at 7: 58a.m . took
Gladys Moore, Wrig ht St., to
Veterans M emorial Hospll al ; Mid·
dleport at10:48a m . tookOthoKarr
from Leading Creek Road to
Veterans Memori al and at 8: 16
p.m., Middleport took Maggio
.Jull•n from Nort h l"ourth Ave., to
Veterans Memorial.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted -- Bill Shephard, Pome·
roy ; Gladys Moore, Pomeroy: Judy
McNickle, Hacine: Sa ndra Luckeydoo, ··Middleport: Hazel Weimer,
Racine: Anna Alley, Racine.
Dlschqrged .. Incz Stivers, Benjamin Upton, Bridgett Bing, Hazel
Shain.

Appointed dt•puty
Timothy R Grump! was appointed deputy sheriff according to
an entry In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.

Elect officers
More than 50 members of the
Southeastern Ohio Angus Assocla ·
tlon recentlyelecled Vlnion resident
Dick Neal as association president ..
Richard Wilson of Bidwell, was
chosen vice prcsldenl; Dale Estepp
of South Webster was named
secretary; and Curtis Bait haser of
Langsville was elected lrcasurer.
The group discussed plans for the
fall sale, slaied for Oct. 17 In
Gallipolis, and a possible lonnat
change prov iding for a 1984 spr~tg
sale. June 19was thcdaleset fort he
assoclallon's summer picnic, with
deta ils to follow later.
Extendc'tl Ohio Fore&lt;Jast
Friday thrOugh Sunday:
Wwmlnl trend through the
period. Fair Friday and Saturday.
Chance otshowersSunday. IDghs In
mld-508 to mld-118 Frtday,lnthe60s
Salunlay and bt the upper 60s to low
'lOll Sunday. Lows In ftlld.SOS to low
4011 Friday and Salunlay mombip
and 1,n the 408 Sunday momlns-

w

The Daily Sentinel

PHO~E
0&lt;

SHOP LOCALLY
COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!
s,., ehopplncln your home .,.. you 1ne on
111, the wear and tear on your car and avoid
the hiZirdl of hl1hway and f r - • r
traveling. It pay1 to shop where you llvel

The Daily Sentinel
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUcTION
THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY-7:00P.M.
At corner of Depot &amp; Main
Rutland, OH.

S&amp;K AUCTION
SHERMAN TILLIS: Owner
RODNEY HOWERY: Auctioneer
Terms Df Sale: Cash or Check with Positive 1.0.

Not ice •s hereb-.,1 g•ven that
pursuanl to call of tiS Orrectors.
a

speCtal

meetng

of

.the

shareholders of Bank One of
Pomeroy N A wrll b€ held at
Court and Second

SL II. 124.

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION

••

PH . (304) 882-2-2 76

•,

We wanted so much to
keep you.
We watchet YoU' day by

hearts.

We saw l1JIIllil'd a.y.
We IDVI y.· ..if:
Sadly miSS«t "'your daLI(Ih-

SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Gara1es"
Call for frH sidinlestimates, 949-2801 or
. 949-2860.

ot.andKaping

PH. 742-2407
Or 742·2068

No Sunday Colla

4-13·1 mo.

Real Estate General

l · JJ .tfc

S&amp;W TV

Kilehtn Cabinets - Roolinl - Sidinc - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks Now Construction - Romodolin&amp; - Custom Polo
Barns.

AND

141 13 20 27 i5)4 4tc

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

Dewayne Williams

a.. Scottie Smith

Misc. Merchandi se

ALL LENGTHS IN STOCK

PRESENTED-Edward A. Bennett, 63, formerly of Middleport, Is
pictured In Washington In 1945 when he wa• presented the Congressional
Medal of Honor by the late President Harry 'l'ruman In recOb'llltlon of
..hravcry In GCfJTll\lly during World W.ar II.

ADDITIONAL 6% DISCOUNT IN APRIL - CASH 8t CARRY

Otho W. Karr
Otho W. Karr, 81. Rt 1, Middleport , died Tuesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Karrwas born Dec. ll. 190lln
Middleport the son ofthelate .Joseph
J. and Caroline Becker KarT. He
was also preceded In death by hi s
wife, Ruth NeutzUng Karr and four
brothers.
He was a m ember of lhe
Mi~dleport Church of Christ. a
retired farm er. wa s employed as a
carpenter at Kiser Aluminum and
worked with the ground crew for
Co lumbus and Sout hern Ohi o Elect ric Co.
He Is surv ived by one daughter
and son-in-law, Joan H. and Robert
Morris, Pomeroy; two sons and
daughters-In-law. Roland 0 . and
Shirley Karr, Owensbou r gh, K y.,
and Donald Rand Delma Karr. Rt.
1, Middleport : nine gra ndchlldrm
and six great grandrhtlclrrn; one
brother Raymond (BIII i KarT ,
Betvadcar, Ill. ; t hrC'f' sistrrs. Amelia Koaistra. Ashton. IlL : FrPda
.Jones. Grove Cit y, ,lnd Bertha Cot&lt;&gt;.
Lakr worrh. Fla.
Funt.'l .t l s(~ rvi ccs will be hrld
l"riday al 2 p.m . at the Rawlings·
Coats-Blower Funeral Home with
Mr. Hon M oyer officiating. B uri al
w ill be In Bec&gt;eh Grove Cemete1y.
l"r iends ma y rail at the funcm l
home T hursday from 2 to 4 anc17to9.

Addit· A. Pullins
Mrs. Adelle AlirP Pul lins. HIO.
Route :1. Pom eroy, died T uesday at
the Pomeroy Hf'allll Care Cent er.
A housewlh'. Mrs Pullins was
born March 4, 1897 In Chester
T ownship, a daughter of the lat e
George and Mary Pooler Wolfe. She
was also prceeded In death by her
husband, Raymond Adair Pullins.
an Infant daughter, a gr anddaughter, three brothers and a slslcr. She

ALL CARPET ON SALE.
ALL CARPET

Hazel E. Shain

MU I

$1295

RU

QOSEOUT ON GRASS CARPET
9 Ft. Grass Carpet

Reg. 15.99

99

~~

LAND FURNITURE

74 2 WI

flU lLA NO

CPniC'I'.
Mrs. Shain wa s lx:&gt;rn .July Hi, l917
in Jackson County, W. Va., a
daughtPr of the late Charles and
Alm a ll r inzman SnydPI . Shr was

CENTRAL REALTY

a son.

Gro rgP Shain . and a brother. Fred

MOBILE HOME - w~h large add-on bulding, aspha~ dnveway
LOC&lt;!Ied on qu~t slreet out of high water tn Ractne The living room
1s eKtra large There IS a cement walk and large covered porch. also
a metal storage bu1idmg You can be '" th1s one 1n two weeks tor
only $16.900

SnydPr ·

Surviving are six sons , Charles,
Pomeroy; Danny. Hacl ne; Ralph,
Lake Wales, !"Ia., a nd Sam, Harry
and Pa ul Shain , all of Racine; four
dau~hters . Susan Hayes, Norma
Clark and Ruth Johnson. all of
Columbus. anrl Ka thy Murphy.
S&lt;•neca F ulls, N. Y .. five sisters,
Jane Teaford. Syracuse; Goldie
Holman. Vlrglnla Rowe. Evelyn
Manurl , Lucille Lmvson. all of
Racine: a brother. Harry Snyder,
De laware: 12 grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Friday al the Ewing l"uneral Home
with the Rev . James Salterfleld.
officiating. Burial will be In the
Letart F'alls Cemete1y. Friends
may call at Ihe funeral home after 7
p.m . Wednesday.

NEW LISTING - 3 or 4 bedrooms posstbleon this one. Tratlerwtlh
large add-on on nearly an acre lol Includes storage buldmg lot
can have second trailer as extra mcome. Askmg $12.000.
SACRIFICE - QUICK SALE - 2 bedrooms. bath.livmg room. &amp;
eat -1n ~!chen on first Uoor Basement has 3rd bedtoom. ~undry
area &amp; eKIJa room C011crete lloor w1th shed at the end of diNe
Convenbonal and fmHA l1naming poss1bfe Ask1ng $27.500 Make
your ofler, owners loss can be your gam.
3 BEDROOM BRICKHOME :... WB FP. hardwood lklors. I \\
baths, needs very l•ttie to make th~ home a "Doll House". As~ng
$25.000
3 ACRES - Racme, owner wll help f1nance.
RENTALS:
letart-$220 plus depos1t
Racine-$150 plus deposit.
flus rther occas~nal rentals

Cial'&lt;'ncc Andrews T uesday night.
They were Denver P. McFee,
Parkersbur·g. $49 posted on
speeding charges; Michael Nance,
Syracuse, $43, assured clear
distance: Harle Ann Mays.
Davisville. W Va ., $46, sp€edlng,
and Allen Lowery, Pomeroy, $4i.o
sp€ed lng.

1·3·tk

mooo

NEW &amp; 2 ACRES - You ca n
save several lhou sand by
fimshtng thiS 3 bedroom brd
ranch. l 'h baihs, garage and
nearly level. On~ $38.000.
IN THE COUNTRY -On hard
mad 7 room home. 2 baths.
ovet 2 acres for $30,000.
ONE STORY - 2 bedroom
home near the crty park. Baih
&amp; gas heat large lev~ lot ner
store~ Askmg $24.000
BRADBURY - Vrew or Rt. 7
from thiS 147 acres. little one
Hoor 5 room i'oo!~ Wood·
bumer Hue and cel~r Bath &amp;
rural water. Only $1 UXIO.

•Vinyl Liner
•Fiberglass
•Stainless Steel

992-3876.

Housing
Headquarters

*.HANGING BASKETS .
*BEDDING PLANTS

Or

and

949-2263
992-279 \, 0_,,

GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.
lndustrral, Commerctal,
Residential, Interior and
hterior.

[SearsI
FREE

EXTIMATES

Painting

'Chain link Fence
'Carpetinl 'Paintin&amp;

Gallipolis, Ohto 1 "1 .,

Sandblas1ing

'flttinl epair
Center '-·~
,~
·club
" '
(clltbs shortened lor
JGU"' peopM)
·a,.nd
Names:
Square Two
..

!,.~'rr.;:

i1

lacGrtJOr

/

'

Wilson
i
Dunlop
P.G.A.
Ram
P1n1
SALE 20% OFF
JOHN TEAFORD
CheSter, Db. • 11 1 m~

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS. RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING~ ·
CONCRETE WORK
BOND£0 &amp; wotlf( GU.WNTUC
PHONE JIM CLIFFORD

992-7201

llH'

FOURTH Annual Ant1que
Steam &amp; Gasol1ne Engine
Show, Saturday. May 7 B.
Sunday, May 8 . Mason
County Farm Museum . Rt .
62. 4 miles from Pt. Plea sant. Free admission, free
entertainment, country
kitchen, muzzle loading rifle
shoot, Saturday , church
Sunday.

4

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who hos
anything to give away and
does not offer or •ttempt to
offer any other thing for sale
may place en ad in thi1
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser
Puppies 6 wks . old . Call

446-3897.
Long haired male black cat,
8 wks . old, litter trained . Call

614·246 -6054 after 6.
.1 male Dalma.tion·. ~og ..
gentle &amp; affectionate . Call

,614 -388 -.8463 or after 6
call 614-388-9756 .
4 mo . old pup , children's
lost Interest . Obeys some
commands, haute broken
Puppies . Half German
Shepard. half Collie . Will
make beautiful dog . 614·

981i-3981 .

ROOFING
AND HOME MAINTENANCE
' Rootina of all typos
Aes1d1ntial &amp; Commerc111
•Remodel in&amp;
•storm Windows &amp; Doors
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Years Experience
TOM HOSKINS

Found center hub cap for
Chewrolet In W VA . 614 ·
992-2478 days 8 to 4
3 puppies. part beagle &amp; part
terrier . 2 female , 1 male

2 pups .

a months - old .

end

german

she·

pherd, 304-676-5431

4101mopll

Parking Lot Stripping
Spray Painting
Texture Coatings

CATALOG MERCHANT
Pomoroy,OH.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

F~~ lnsul!d-f~te

Gna &amp; Plfty Gibbs-Owners
PH.

New Homes - Extensive
Remodeling.
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
•Roofing Work
-Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sldin&amp;S
1 S Years Expt~rience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583
or 992-2282

992-2178

fstiimalfs

CAll 6 I 4-949-2686

J.l8!1&lt;

" CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
All Makes
•Washer• •Oishw••hers
Reng11
•Refrigerator•
•Dryere •Freerere

PARTS and SERVICE
4 ~t1c

4 19 2 mo d

----------+---~------1-----------i

COMPlETE

RADIATOR SElMa
From he Sinallost Hoater
Coro to tht Larcut Radia- 1

tor.

.

Radiator Speeiaist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Exporlence

1\ ll ·tiC

'Lowest Rates
Around
'Friendly Servie
NO SET UP CHARGE
IN THE COUNTY
742-2328

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

YOUNG'S

PomeNy,

CARPENTER
SERVICE

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

Oh.

Ph. 992·2174

4·21 11c

2·2&amp;tlt

LAST BID
Roofi nit &amp; Siding
Get all the estimates
you want, then call us .
We'll be your
BEST &amp; LAST BID
Free Estimates

Work Guaranteed
Ph.742-2328
Ask for AI.

4 13 I mo

2 pan Irish Saner puppies. 1

2 male pups . German
Shepherd . mixed . 304 -675 ·

9716 .
6

Lost and Found

2 beagle dogs . 1 male . 1
female . lost in Bailey Run
area . If found call614 - 992 ·

3886

w ....

Yard S•la lower Rt 7 ,
below Clipper Mill Box 103.
Mon ., Tue., S. Wad . Wnght
R11idence.

Yord Sole 1103 llo 1 !Oii
Teodora Ave ., Gallipolis .

EUGENE LONG

RADIATOR

SERVICE

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

tlodriarl ......
(free Estlmalesl

V. C. YOUNG Ill

We cen Njllir and ,._
core 111di11011 end '-·

•-w.c.n.uo
lldd bolllnd lOCI out ,..

"Stdine
'Roollnc
"llutttr &amp; Down Spouts
'Rtmodtlinl '
20 Ynrs Experience
· In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

992-6215 •• 99:1-7:) 1
Pomeroy,

dltrtOn. We IIIIo repttlr
O..Tenkl.

PAT HILl FORD
"2-2196

STRIP
COAL

'

YARD SALE, 36 Grope ,
Wed .• Thurl .. Fri . Furniture.
clothing, household goods.
bik... little ot everything .

4 FAMILY Yard Solo. Moy
4 · 6 , 9 till&amp; . Watch for sign I ,

to 24'xH'

~

01'01 9 ttl 5·a

DOl Kouns

......

114:4P-5111

~~~

lin SAT,

T,... or~· a.,.Ir.

....... T-u.o. otc.

, .'
I

I

.

Reeldentlll

AIID FIIID CHII.l

• Commtf'clll

O•lY 131.15

HI-ll&lt;

Yard Sale 4 Family New
items everyday. Mon 2nd.·

Sat . 7th . Milas out 776 .

Yard Solo May 5 &amp; 6 . 10 til
6 . 11h mi . put HMC out Rt.
160 . Furniture. bookt,
clothes, dinner bell. toys &amp;

misc.
Garage Sale 1069 2nd .
Ave ., Gallipolis . Thurt . 8t
Fri , 5 &amp; 6 . Bad li nens, elec.
Singer sewing machine..
clean clothing all sizes .
drapes. mise
Garage Sale Thurs . Frid &amp;
Sat . Five miles from town
right at Cl1pper Mills .
Knivet. 49 Ford truck , Avon ,
handmade quilts &amp;. craft.
glassware . clothes, tires ,
toys, proch glider, paper·
back books. old wardrobe:
Full Gospel Lighthoute
Church . Big Yard Sale et
Bob Conkle res idence on
Jesse Creek Rd !rain can ·
celedl Thurday &amp; Fri . 9 -3 .
Garage Sale Friday &amp;
Saturday . 317 Hilda Dr ,
Gallipolis . Kids clothes.
toys .
3 Fam i ly Garage Sale 7
miles out 141 . Friday, May
6. 6 -8PM . Saturday, May 7,

9-5 .
Giant Garage Sale! 11
Families . May 6 8t 7. FrL &amp;
Sat .. 9AM to 6PM . down Rt.
7 to Clipper Mills turn right
at stop sign, follOw signs 10
Shoestrin9 Ridge . Baby .
chifdren. teen, adult clo·
thing , ~ho es. tOysl Car
rad ios, ~andmade cra fu l
Crew ' s quarters bunk beds
with chest, dressers, book ·
case. New &amp; used tools! 76
Dodge Aspen - SE 8 cyl.,
bicycle. jewerly . At ·Dennis.
446-2B47 , rain or shine
Yard Sale May 6, 410
Hedgewood Or. 9 til 7 Girls
bicycle. lawn chAifll, small
juntor clothes &amp; 1h sizes.
quilt , misc . 2'8" - 6 ' 8"
closet door .

1- - - - - - - - - -

Run"ifnage Sale &amp; Hot Dog
Sale Sa1. May 7th, starling
at 9 .00 at the Vinton Town
Hall to raise money for the
Satin Doll s.
Garage Sale 924 First Ave .,
9 :00 - 6 : 00 . Thurs . &amp; Fri.
Baby items . maternity
clothes, 1 0 - speed bicycle ,
childrens clothing, lamps ,
m tsce llanoous household
articles.
Yard Sale Centenary Friday
May 6 . Assortment o f
womens. chi ldrens clothes.
drapes . air co nd itioners.
bed .
Gigantic Garage Sale Ram
or Shine Friday &amp; Sat (5 &amp;
6). from 9 to 6 . Madi so n
Ave . behind Pizza Hut ..
Yard Sale Ra in or shine ,
Addison Townhouse . Fri·
Sat. 9 -7

12 family garage sale . Dale
Hart home on Yellowbush
Rd . , Racine . Clothes.
dia~u. furni.ture . beds ·
preads &amp; cu rtams , and other
items . May 7 from 9 -4.
Rutland yard sale May 4 &amp; 6 .
Happy Hollow Rd . 3rdhouae
on hill over bridge. Clothes,
bedspreads, .chest , bed .
much more .
Huge garage sale Wed.·
Thru Sat . Fir It r i ght in
Syracuu on College Rd .
Rain or shine . Sherry Harris.

Syroouae. Moy li llo 6. 9 till

. C.lt 742-31911

,..

O.rege Sat.. May 6 thru 12.
Except Sun. 1 .2 miles above
E••tarn H.S . Riggi Crest
Manor.

3 family, May li 8o 8 . 9-4
Long St.. Rutland. 814·
742· 2204. Follow aigna.
Y~rd Sale S•t. May

Beech

AM .

7. 466

St., Middleport, 10

1- - - - - - - - - -

LARGE 4 family porch sate,
6milesoutJe"ysRunRo•d
It Apple Grove , Friday &amp;
Ssturday, 9 -7
YARD sale, Wednesday ,
May 4 , Thuradav May 5. 47
Burdette Addition, 9 · 4 . lot
of mlfchandise.
YARD sale. 'A mila out
Jericho Road, May 6 &amp; 6. 9
1 m .· 1 3 Famfltt•- .fo llow
signa .
YARD sale, 174 M id way
Or , New Haven, Thursday,
Friday 8t Saturday . Clothes.
furniture , antiques Bt misc .

9:00-1
CARPORT
shine, 608
Henderson .
Friday. May

sale, rain or
Holloway St .,
8 :30 to 4 :00 .
6.

YARD sale, Thursday &amp;

Fridoy. 9 -1 202 H1gh St .
Baby clothes to adutu .
furniture , books &amp; misc .
THREE family garage sale.
Friday &amp; Saturday, Fairview
Rd .. Camp Conley . Child ·
rena &amp; adult1 clothing ,
miscellaneous .

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

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Tuesday
night , Krodel Park Club
House , Pt. Pleasant WV
Auct . Lonnie Neal . Call
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center . Tru ck loads of new
m,ftr c h~tndiJe ew,ery '(to'Bek
Conslgmenh of new and
us'ed marchand••• alwayl
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auct •oneer . 276 -3069 .
Complete Auctioneer Ser·
vice . Also do appraisals .
licensed &amp; bonded to 1ell
Households. ferm furnish ·
ing1 &amp; Real ••tate . Over 26
yean experience In buying &amp;
selfing new, use d &amp; antique
furniture 61 4· 992 -6370 .

11

'

446 -3159 or 258 -I 967 in
the evenings
Buying Gold, Silver, Plati num Gold and~ Silver prices
are the highest In two years.
check ou r pricea on gold &amp;
ailver, scrap jewelry . Buying
Old coin•. scrap rings &amp;
Stlwe rware . Daily quotes
available. Also coins &amp; coi n
supplies for tale . Spring
Valley Tra dmg Co .. Spring
Valley Pleu . 446 -B026 or

446 -8026
We pay cash for late model
clean uai'KI cars.
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson

446 -0069
l &amp; L Scrap Metal s. Now
buying alum . cans &amp; glall.
Scrap metals . Top prices

pold . Coll 446 -7300 , ·
Children• swing. set , good

~~~-dJB~-~~~~~abl e .

Circle Ave . Acro11 from

Clothing, bike, antiquet.

lprJng Volley Plaza. Wod. &amp;

uwln_g mochln.. achoot

Thun. 9 to 6 .

deaks . antique bottles.
much more.

_

4 FAMILY ·V.rd aolo. f1 .
218 - ono - fourth
mllo.Wed. -Frl .. 8: 30-1:00 .

1-------- -

Dinette nt, wh. .lbarrow,
NWing mechine. chelt of
Nice o,lothel, children •
drawers. stroller, bike,
1dult, woodbUrner, ch1ln · sinks, lugpge, much more.
MW. furniture, houteWtree. Thun. • Fri. 133 Butternut
curtaln1. A1ln c1ncels.
Ave .. Pomeroy.

Buckoyo Community Servl·
ces. Provide a home, friend·
ship and guidance for a
pereon with mental retarda ·
tlon and eern 1 1alary, plus
benefita and room and board
rate . No degree required . We
will tr~~in you to help another
person grow •nd develop.
For further Information ,
contact Sylvia Dey at
446-7109 between 7 and
8PM or write P 0 . Box 245,

Gallipolia. Oh

41i8~1 .

Equol

Own your own Jean ·
Sportawear, Infant-Preteen
or ladies App arel Store .
Offering ell nationally
~nown brands such as
Jordache. Chic . Lee, Levi,
Vanderbilt, Calvin Klein.
Wrangler over 200 other

brenda. 87,900 to $24,500
includes beginning· inven·
tory , atrhre for one to
Fashion Center . trelng,
fixtures , grand opening
promotions. Call Mr . Kos -

tocky tli01!327-8031 .

22

Mpney to Loan

Opponunity Employer.
Electronics repairman
needed to work in retail
11ore. mu11 have experience
&amp; tool s We prowide good
location, cu1tomer. lde•l
oppokunl~ for an ASiilt·
ant. Send resume to P.O .
Box 342, Gallipolis . Oh

HOME LOANS I 2% fixed
rate. leader Mortgage. 77 E .
State, Athens, Ohio . 1-614li92 -301i1 . or 1-800-341 ·
6664 in Oh1o.

23

Professional

41i631 .

Services

Lifeguard - summer employ·
mant . Contact Gallle Co .
Locel Schools Adelatde
Saunders, personnel dirac·

tor. 448 -7917 .
POSTION AVAILABLE
Clerk ' s Assistant full - time·
temporary position . Apply
Gallia County He.t~jlth Department, WIC Pr o gram .
412 Second Ave ., Gallipolis. Ohio . Equal Opportunity
Employer.

C&amp; l Bo()kkeeping
Broad range of bookkeeing
and tax services available 10
suit your bus1ness needs
Carol Neal
446-3862

PIANO TUNING $1i off plus
discounts to senior citize nschurches· lchools . Call Bill
Ward Ward 's Keyboard .

446 -4372
Will open &amp; clean swimmmg
pools . Calf 446 -4896 after

6'00PM

AN's &amp;. LPN 's Scenic Hills
Nursing Center. all sh1fts full
B. part time. Cal1446· 7150 .

PIANO TUNING -LANE

12

6t4 -742 ·2951

Situations
Wanted

Would like to do baby sttttng
In my home . Racin e area .

Any oge . 61 4-949 · 2779
1- - - -- - -- -,lc -

Will babysit In your home or
mine . References . 614 ·
Experienced painter will do
exterior or interior, very
reasonable . Free Estimates .

DANIELS . Reliable serv ice
since 1965 . Associate of
Brunicardi Music Co . Phone
PERMANENT hair removal
Profeu1 o nal Electrolvsis
Clinic . A . M .A . approved .
Or referr&amp;ls'. Monday .
Wedne sday. Frtday , by
appointment 30 4 · 675 -·

li568 .

l!lvallnacw
31

Homes for Sala

304-676 -1242 .
1 3 • Insurance
SANDY ANO B EA VER
lnsuran cft CQ . has o ffered
services for fire fnsuran c~
co verage in Galha County
tor almost a century Farm ,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet indlwidual needs .
Contact Ray Wedemeye r.
agent Phone 38B -8249

Lemley Drilling Water
wells , shaflow gat , and coro
drilling . Call 614 - 388
B643, Vinton , Oh
Mowers , chain saw• re ·
pair e d . lawn &amp; garden
tra c tors are speciality .
Nelson &amp; Son• Call 614 ·
266 · 1643 located % m1.
South o f Roller Dam at
Eureka
Mother will babysit in h er
home on Edgemont Or .,
Gallipolis By week o r dey

Colt 446· 731i4
Concrete work . driweways,
sidew&amp;lkt , patios . Brick &amp;
block . etc Free ettiinates
Call 446 -4393 or 614 -266·

1-'-

7 87
_ _ _·- - - - - - -

Will babysit in my home. Call

614 -387 -0531i .

Call : - - - - - - - - - - , TYPING at home, or terTI ·
BE OS -IRON , BRASS . old pontry ofice tHI in. by
furniture . gold . 1ilver e.11perienced secretary .
dollars . wood ice boxes , Reasoneble rates . 30 4 -676 ·
stone J•rs, antiques, etc .,
Complete households .
Write : M .D . Miller. Rt . 4 .
Pomeroy , Oh
Or 992 ·

7760 .
Gold . 11lver. sterling .
jewelry . rings . old col nl &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Barber

Shop , Middleport . 992 ·
3476 .
Wanted to buy . New , used B.
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete households Call 01by A . Martin

814-992 -6370
BUYING paporbocko 8o
comics . Call 304 - 875 ·
8239 ...k for Cheater.

Wll do b•by slUing in my
home •nytlme. fenced in
b•ck yard &amp; reference•

Canter St .. Muon. W.V.

Full-time employment in
vour own home •• a Home
Service• Worku with

By owner 3 bedroom hoffie
in Rio Grnndu. Oh . Call

614 - 246 -5274

or 614

246 ·9517 for appointment ·
ReAs ona bly pnced . Kathryn
.Jones, Bok 63 , R io. Grande,

Oh .
4 11dr , 2 lull baths. f lntshed
ba seme nt , 2 car garage .
App oi ntm en t only . 203
Kineon Or .. GAllipolis .

446 -t 223
Modern home, 1 1 rm . &amp; 2
bath. on 2 acre lot. At . 326 .
5 m i. S . of Rio Grande. Call

full basement. low down

furniture and Ant iques of all
kinds. call Kenneth Swain ,

Help Wantad

avollobio . Colt 814-388 ·
9711 .

Community Servis.tt Coord I·
netor Societ Service posi·
tlon . for a 140 unit
epenment compleK. Quellfi·
cations Bachelore degrM in
eoci•l work, •xperience in
euistlng indlviduels with
problem 1olvlng lituatlont.

Apply •t GMHA 840 8ucktl4go· Rd .. Bidwell, Oh
41114 on or boforo May f1,
1113. An oquol Opportunity
mployer .

••

Need more t•ke home PAY1

Soil AVON. Cotl4411-335a.

lawn M o wing no yard to big
or s mall ·Reliable and
dependable For utimate
ca ll 446 · 3169 between 9
and 6 .

WANTED TO BUY Old

ml.c .

1- -- '' - - - - - - Moy li -11·7 at 9 a.m. 13 w.

Business
Opportunity

3 bdr home in Addison
small lot. newly remodeled.
new elec tri c plumb•ng. et c
Furnanc8 &amp; w ood burner.
fully insulla ted. e.11c . co nd .,
Mid $20 ' s Call 614 · 692 ·

11

Ruatlc Hill. Syrocuao . May

21

Are you paymg to much tor
your hospilal· h&amp;alth msu ·
ran ee . Call Cerroll
Snowden , 446 -4290 .
New Auction on Route 62 . 1- - - - - - - - - Arbuckle . The old P A .
Sayre'• Furniture Store. 18 Wanted to Do
every Friday n ig ht , 7 .00 .
Bring your own chair .
Au c tionee r Cot . 8111
General Hauling and Trash
Ohlinger
remowel Serv1ce . Rel utble
and dependable Cl'lll 446 ·
3159 between 9 and 6
9
Wanted To Buy

a. 6. Tuppers Plains'Arbaugh

6 . Wooden stands, bicycle,
ttleotric moton. clothing,
much more.

Help Went~d

614-367 -7101

toya. mite.

1---------4 FAMILY Yard Solo, Moy li

11

949 -2639 .

Addition Clothing . Avon,

GARAGE SALE: 503-508

SPECIAL

TIMIIIISIOI flllll

Rt . 7 , Tues . 1 · 7 , Wad .~ .
Thur., Fri. 9 to 7 .

Building. 665 Buhl Monon
Rd .. Fri. llo Sat .. 8-li, Adult
ond children'• clothoa. baby

For 111 your wiring, ,
needa; furnatcee r•·
pair a.vloe and In·
atelladan •

Yard Sale

CLAY TOWNHOUSE on old 1- - - - - - - - - -

2511·11001 or 21i8· 1224.

bed, books, crafts, misc .

7

TWO fltmlly yard sale. 1 mile
.out Jericho Rd. Pt. Ple.. ant .
Clothing and misc. rlday
9-3 . Watch far sig n• . If
rain-canceled .
YARD SALE. Moy 6 -6. On 1 --~---..,--­
Eno-Vinton Road, off 664 . Carport salethru Friday, 9to
Car, motorcycle and misc .
6 . Rain or shine. Gallipolit
Ferry. Watch for 1ign1.

PH. 992-2280

SERVICE

. IIZH ITo• 6'116' Up

neon Drive, May 4 -5-6, Jim
BeE 1m bottle• . tables .
ch1lr1, ber and stools,
copper kettle, mi1c. items.

Yard sale on College Rd . in

ltomo. \1411·7641 .

UTILITY BUILDINGS

GARAGE SALE. 114 KJ.

S3()00 A TON

I·IHk:

12'x~6'

GARAGE SALE: Fri .. May II,
9 to 4. 31i0 Dobby Drlvo.
Met•rnity clothea, baby
clothet, car ae'at, gaa grill
and miac.

R•y Waugh, Hamilton Rd ..

SALE. MAY 4·7 ,
-~------------1-----------------+---------------i GARAGE
9 till 8, 234 Jockaon Plko.
Loti of booka. clocks .
AUTOMATIC·
McCoy pots, Avon collec ALL STEEL &amp;
MILLER
tion. flowers, misc . clothing
TRANSMISSION
CO.
and othora, 448·8380.
POLE BULDINGS
ELECTRIC
"-"'· 011.

IIIII lllrt ITIIIII

mower.a. clothea. miiC .

4p.m . Tabla, chairs, coffee.
SEVERAL Family
Rum· · end tables. Stroller, child·
mage Sale , Galll1 M1nor ren, adUlt clothing, Dilhll,

Middloport, Ohio

Call 8-43-54255·2-lmo.

.'

MINE RUN

YARO SALE Off 141 on
Lincoln Pika. 2nd trailer.
Thura . llo Fri .. lith &amp; lith.
Pans 1nd dl1he1, toots. lawn

lost 2 W8ilker coon hounds - - - - - - - - - ·lc on 9 Mite. 304 -675-3133
Vard &amp; Sake Sale. May 6 &amp;
6. 9 -6 . St . Pauls Un lre d
Methodist Ch . At the
7
Yard Sale
residen ce of Carl Barnhill at
Tupperplaint .
Rummage Sate sponsored
by Hannan Trace Athle tic Rummage sale . Episcopal
Boostert Club at the Old Church Parish Houae .
Quarter State Station . Pomeroy, Oh . Moy 6· 7. 10
Mercerville, Oh on Rt 218
a.m . to 4 p .m
Friday &amp; Saturday, May 6th
&amp; 7th, 9 to 7
New Church Yard Sale. May 5 &amp;
Merchandi1e.
6 . 10-3 . Bob Conkle resi ·
dance. Jeui e Creek Rd .•
Garage Sale 1 'h mi. past Chethire, Oh . Follow 1ign1
Holzer on Rt. 1 60 . May 4th o ff At . 7 &amp; Rt .. tii6 4 Rain
llo lith , 9 -5. Hill's llo Neal's.
cancels .

Thura .&amp; May
lith.
Antlquoa&amp;,
'!'ent
clothing,
-----------1~---------+----------j boys
misc . item1.

- Addons and 1tmodtling

Yard Sale

614 -949 -2124 .
beagle

Ph . 742-2834
or 949-2160

985-3561

W11terblasting

[Sears[

'-cllt,llt.

.

eutters

Call:

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

t

THE KOUNTRY KLUB
•Lessons

fishing
day . All
fi1h andderby
gamelakeforkids
fisherman are wel co me to
attend and join club.

male, 1 female . 304· 675 ·

l•ulatd

Four defendants forfeited bonds ·
bt the court of Pomeroy Mayor

11 I mo

The Meiga Co. Fish and
Game club will heve membership fishing derby Sat.
May 7th . Starting at 8 a.m.
until 2 p .m . Starting place at
Coolville landing on Hockmg
River. There will be a 15.00
entry fee for each person . All
fish will be .. ved and placed

-------'-----i----------+----------i 2099 .

446-9800

*TOMATO PLANTS
*CABBAGE PLANTS
*PU'PER PLANTS

repair,

4·21 I mo

HAS THE GIFT YOU WANT TO GIVE
FOR MOTHER'S DAY

The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
\VIII hold Its first blood pressure
clinic May 7, from 9 a.m . until noon
at the Kroger Store and In front of
New York Clothing House.

~

VALLEY

All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

C. L. Kitchen

STOBART'S GREENHOUSE

Clinic scheduled

w.

113
2nd st:
Pomeroy, OH.
Open 9:00 to 6:00
Mon.- Sat.
CloHd Thurs .

ROOFING
All types ot root m. new
ing and painting, stonn
dllOili and windows.

Mason, W. Va.

Riverside VW Inc.

ConCtetl 'NOitl
-umbing and

SHOE
REPAIR

OHIO

01

1-'3 04-773-5634

•.,....
RYDER TRUCK
RENTAL &amp; ONE·WAY
Local and one-way, low rates.
top matn!Jined trucks. Ai&amp;ltt
sizes . right eqwpment. Hand
trucks. furmture pads Nattonwide Road Setvice.'Mov- ·
ing tips and insurance.

and-·

delivery , Davis Vocuum

.We are trying to keep the
cemetery at Letart Falls In its
, pre..nt condition. but must
depend on those interested
to help . Sand to Clarence
Norris , 23262 Hill Rd .,
Racine, your lot care money.

H. L. Writesel

downspouts, gutter clean-

PHONE:

1Q

-Aoaling

41Jlmopd

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

Service
'Iii==::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::;
~

RACINE - 8 room mce older
home. Has coal !Ioker furnace,
carpehng n1ce garage ~&gt;~th
shop and ~rge garden spot
Askint $35,000.

Announcements

----------+---------..,f-----------i Colt 614-245·5688

Business

NEW LISTING - 25 Acres of
nice ~ytng ~nd near Runand
on 2 good country roads. Ideal I' I
for small farm. Otiy $12.500.

BESIDE SELLING YOUR
PROPERTIES, OUR SERVICES
AR£ APPRAISALS. MORTGAGE INSURANCE AND TERMITE INSPECTIONS. CALL

CALL US TO BUY OR SEll
NANCY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 843· 5175
Or 9~2- 2751 To leaw A llessaae.

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

Open Monday lhru Saturday.
Evtnings by Appointment.
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
GRI-992-6191
Dottie Turner. 992·5692
Jean Trussell, 949-2660
Jo Hill, 985-3335

NEW LISTING - Duple• ol 3
bedroom unils. You own one
and ~~too other help pay tor
all. In town for $27.000.

-Gas Lines
- Soptlc Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH . 992-2478

Dealer

608 E. MAIN '
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2259

H 614 l · 992 -3325

iust

Real Estate General

- s-r ..

Farm Equipment..

Phone

POMEROY BARGAIN - You
can now buy th•s 6 room home
~&gt;~lh bath and all utilitieS for

-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo·Boy ·
- Trencher
-Water

- Authorize.d John Dear•.
fllw Holland, Bush H011

VIRGIL B. SR .
21o f 1nd St .

NEW LISTING Nicely
remodeled 3 bedroom home
with 1\? bath~ large l~1ngand
a real woodburner. Insula led
and central heat Just$29,500

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Dozlrs

U.S. AT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILlE. OHIO

Real Estate General

DR IV f. A Lll 11 F S A VF A L 0 T

Mayors terminal~ court cases
Thrf'&lt;' defendant s forfeited bonds
of $450 each, pos ted on cha rges of
driving w hile Intoxicated, In the
court of Middleport Mayo•· !"red
Hoffman Tuesday night.
They were Russell Rollins. N0wark: Rick H . Hesson, New Haven,
and Jack Fibre, Charleston, W. Va .
Fined In the courl were Terry S.
McCune, Rutland, $25 and cos ts·. no
operator's license; John Miller,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, driving
while under suspension; Carl H.
Lee, Pomeroy, $SO and costs,
reckless opet·atlon; Bill Reeves,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, allowing a
dog to run loose: Don Hood,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs each on two
charges of disorderly manner, and
Tina Butcher, Middleport, $50 and
costs, hit ~klp.

BACK

CASH &amp; CARRY $4.99

Mrs. Hazel E. Shain. 6.1. Vine St. ,
Haclne. died ear ly Wednesday
morning at t he Holzer Medica l

death by

BOGGS

HOBSTmER
REALTY.

STARTING AT

INSTALLED
PER YARD
WITH PAD
INSTALLED
FREE
KITCHEN CARPET
STARTING AT $8.99

12 21).1k

SALES &amp; SERVICE

SPRING CARPET SALE

7

.

!!~i~:~.~.~.~~:~;~~~
Pick up end

4-15·1 mo

. The Daily Sentinel--Page

•

.. ..

supplies .

----------+-,..--------'---l-----------1

Real Estate General

215 Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy: Ohio 45769

was a member of t he Mt. Hermon
Church
Surviving are a daughter and
son-in-law, Dorot hy and Ken Cha·
ney. Dar win: sons and daughtersIn-law, Raymond and HarTle!
Pu llins, Baltimore and Donald and
A nna Pull ins. Col\&gt;mbu s; a sister.
Dora Rei!, Grov~ City, and a half
sister, NC'IIIeRichardson, Lake City,
Fla. Also surviving are 10 grand·
children and 12great-grandehldren.
l"unrral services will be held at
10:30 a.m . 1"1iday at the E wing
l"unera I Home with I he Rev: Robert
Sanders officiating Burial will be In
MI. Hermon Cemetery l"riends
m ay call al l he funera l home from~
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.mn . Thursday

also prel'cded In

NICE HOME !Or lease in Pome·
roy, close to shopping center 3
bedrooms, central atr, bnck.
Call Cheryl Lemley, 742·3171.
for an appointmenL

614-992 -2181

Area deaths

Route I
lone Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

4 22 l mopd
•, I

POMEROY LANDMARK

...

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

All Makos and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Available

ALUMINUM ROOFING
8 FT ... ......................................... '9.95
10FT........................................ '12.20
12 FT ........................................ ' 14.45
14 FT ............................. ..... .. .... ' 1 6.70
16 FT ............................. ........... ' 1 8.90
18 FT ............... .. ..... .................. ' 20.90
20 FT ................. ....................... '22.95

'

. .. .. .

~=========~i.:=========t=========:Jin

Ph. 986-4289

54

3

B~SS~~L

oOriwweys
•Fenn Ponds

tors, ~ Ours, Fran Roush;
Son, Paul tars; Grandson. Jason Paullloush.

.

~==;~~~~==~~~=====~~~~~~~~~=~~~:iCieanar,
446-0294 .
MEI,GS
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

.a.':!":ce
-Footeot

Until atlaiif\dh,breekif'l

.

Georges one
Creek
Rdmile
. Call
half
up

.~.£~A[I~k:

day,

.

Soltero.

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

•

lhmorie$ Uep 100 -

Tho' you loft us lhlll I'll$

c.ouC..···

Also Traflamission

Secret tears so often flow.

1 983 a1 7-30 PM for !he

~'\p.G'\

PoMroy. OH.

4

I wiah to thank the Tuppen
Plain a Emergency Squad ,
my famity, &amp; friends for the
cerd1, flowers, vish:s and Dr.
Modle and entire staff at
Camden Clark Hospl~al for
the wonderful care while I
was a pati•nt there. Thanks
so much, Mrs . George

CHAIN LINK FENCING NEEDS

"FENONG PROVIDIS PRIVACY PLUS
PROTECTION 1'011 CHilDIIEN &amp; PITS"

us.

purpose of constdenng and
determtntng by vote whether an
agreement to merg e the satd

.

. "' .

1 Card of Thanks

FOR All YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

wllo pmed -r lily I.
1981.
Days of sadness still come

near us,

pank and Bank One of Sou·
thcastern Ohto. Nattonal Asso·
Ctallon. localed m the City o l
Athe ns State of Oh •o under
!he prOYt Stons ol the laws of the
Un1ted States shall be ratlfted
and conftrr.1ed. subtect to the
approval of the CompHo ller of
the Currency Wa shtng ton .
0 C and for the purpose of
voltng 11pon i'l ny othe r matters
mclden1at to the proposed
merger of thfl t"VV ba nks A
copy of the afo resa1d aqreemen t execu ted by a matontyof
the d1rectors of each of the two
b anks
prov1 dlnQ fo r the
merger 15 on ftl e at the bank
and may be 1nspec ted durrng
bus1ness hours
Paul A Barnefl
Pres, dent

~~II

In Lovit'lllemcxy of our fatlttr PAUL HERMON OURS

-

Po meroy. Ohto on May-

.

... . . . .

, I

In Memoriam

to

, Ohio

. Business senice8
·~1fAifAm-'

2

BANK ONE OF
POMEROY, N.A.
SHAREHOLDERS'
.MEETING

•• ,.,., 41 1983

992-2156

•«• t10ift1 Sto- ClosllfiN Doot.
Ill Cot~ St.. P..-roy. Ollto 4515!

Public: Notice

I

·w,
I

• Nay 4, 1913

4531 .

iiii~iii~6

i

21

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
LISHING CO. recommend•
that vou do buslne11 with
people you lmow. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investl·
gated the offering .
Earn 1700· 11500 monthly
commiesions &amp; multilevel
bonus . Work from home
full- part time . New weight
lou program helps people
easily 1hed unwanted
pounds . 189 inventory
Investment required . No
experlnce needed . local
1upervl1o·r trelns you . Call

614 -379 ·2683

43 59
3 bdr ., 2 full baths, central
&amp;If . fireplace . largo lot. c lose
to town Ca ll 44 6 -2699

3 bedroom 1% bath. garage.
paymenh. auumehle fi xed
loan , quiot neig h bor h oo d ,
one mile from hospital. Call

446 -1152 aftor 4 '00PM .
By Owner. 3 bedroom home
in R io Grande , Oh Ca ll

6t4 -245 -li274 o• 614 246 · 9517 tor appointment .
Rea aonably pncod Kathryn
Jones. Box 63 . Rtu GrEin de,

Oh
HOU SE FOR SALE in Mid ·
dhtport Newly remodeled
homo w it h tfr optaco. possi bl e woodburner . c l ose t o
schools and !Shopping Cell

61 4 -992 ·6941 .
lovely . 6 r oom~ . Double
garage. beautifully lan dscaped area lot Atop Rose

Hill. Porn 40's. 6 I 4-986 42 67
House in Syrac use. Oh . 3
bedrooms. With cerport on
one third acre lot Roducod
IO

$24.500 304 · 752 -8488

afler 5 p.m .

8 room hou se. 21ot ~. double
gar&amp; ge, good l oca t ion 680
S Second, Middfopor1 . Call

614 -992 -2602 .

For Sale by Owner -76 acres,
almost self -suf ti cient . 3 -4
bedroom home. wood heat .
youOg fru it trees . l arge
garden, pond , bern. work ·
shop, chi cken hou ae . Plenty
of woods . pasture . o p en
fields Mineral righ ts Easily
acceuible. 1 milo w est of
Langsville on SA 124. Call

742 -2860 after 6:30p .m

8 room &amp; bath, large garden,
100.11100 lol . Space heat·

on . 614 -992 -6242 . Land
con tract.
For tale by owner -4 bed·
room . 1 112 stiry aluminum
aiding hou se. Approx . 2 1/1
acns level ground . Large
kitchen. dining room . forced
elr heat . Separate large
garage. 2 miles from South·
ern High· School. Shown by
appointment only .

448· 1988.

123 ,600 . 814-949 ·2023 or
61 4 ·949·2777

Own Your Own Je•n ·
Sportawear; lnf•nt· PretHn
or L•dlel App1rel Star .
Otfering ell n•tlonally
known br~nds 1uoh as
Jord•che, Chic, Lae, Levi,

3 bedroom. brick. laru"B lot,
1'h betl1s, full baument , 2
car garage . College Rd .
Syrecuse. By eppt . 614 ·

Vondorbllt. C•Jvln Klein.

992-6133 .

Wrangler. Ship 'N Shore,
lzod. Ocean Peciflc end over

2 bedroom house In Harrl·
1onville. Rem·odefed inside.

200 other brenda. •7 ,900 to
t14 ,900 lnctudoa Begin-

4417 .

nino Inventory; round trip

tlckot for 2 to tho Foohlon
Center: in store treinlng;
fbctur" and grand opening
promotlone. C•tl Mr. H•rtley

at Pr..,lgo Foohlon 1·800127-11443 .

.

"'

..

U.&amp;OO. Phone 614· 928 ·
Sm•ll hou-.e, eight acne.
outbulldlnge! mlr;terel rights.

,.oaonoblo. 304-898-3818 .
HOME , Golllpolla Forry, •,
304· 871i-1837.
'

•

�12. The

51 Household Goods

They'll Do It Ev.ery Time

· 32 · Mobile Homes
for Sale

HOeOI&gt;V SEeAOS
1t:l !&lt;MOW HOW
'10 TtllfH rr

T R I · S T A T·E M 0 8 I L E
HOMES . USED - CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446-7672 .

White · W a·Ill n g house
clotheS dry• , gold, good
cond .. "00. Call814- 25.~
t989.

OJ'F--·

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olive St., Golllpolia. 8
plect: wood l_iVing room suit;
with 8 Inch !lot ormo $399,
bunk beda complete with
bunlciet • 199 , 2 p iece

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS .
RT 36. PHONE 446 · 7274 .

entron li'Jingroom suites
1199, antron ·r eclinersl99,
other recliners 180, maple
dinette sets 1179. 1ove Hata

2 lots &amp; a mobile_homa
12x80, 2 bedroom , with

rurel water. gas heat . H..
some furniture , price
•12,600 . Or 41ou &amp; mobile

'70. hide·o.·bed t250. bo•
sprlnga &amp; mi ttre11 twin or
full 11 00 lit regular-firm

$14.800. Coll448- t240 .

1120. maple dinette chaira
Trailer &amp; lot on Raccoon
Creek . Small down pay·
ment. auomabe loan. 8182
par . mo . Call 614 · 266 ·

$38, wuh otonda 134,
maple rocker• 1&amp;9~ 7 piece

1448 • .., • ••.

7~0

· P. l?ti881NS,
1969 El Car 2 bdr ., mostly

MIHHEAPI;&gt;I..IS,
MINN .

furnished , carpe,t ed, ap ·
pllancas , good co nd .,
$2,200 . Coli 614- 388 8549 .

Houses for Rent

41

Owner willing to lease
puuant location, including

MODERN 3 bedroom ,
family room. near schools &amp;
h os pital. Referen c eS.
deposit requ ir ed . Call

Coll446 -9786 . s ,3o . 3,30 .
Ewenings. 614-367-7160 .

1972 14x66 MObile Home.

3 bedrooms . gas heat .
partially furnished . underpinning, back porch, uc .
cond . Phone 614-992 2156 between 9 It 5 Blk for
Tim. After 5 Phon• 304882 -3692 .

$176 per mo ., no children,
no pet1 . Ca11446-3667 after
6.

2 bdr. 12x80 mobile home
2 '12 mi. from Hoapltal on old

t 97"8 t 4x70 3 br Liberty

Forry . 304·-676 -6366 .

1979 Sterling mobile home
14x70, 2 br, central air,
underpinned. cream color,
oxc. cond . 304-676-6639.

All electric home. aveilabla
on Ohio Street, reasonably
priced . Call after 6 p . m .
304-676-671 t .

33 Farms for Sale

APARTMENTS , mobilol - - - - - - - - - -

and Gallipolla . 614-446B221 .
UNFURNISHED apartment

for rent. 2 bedroom,
*210.00 Call Automoti
Supply ,

8 -6 .

304-675 -

2218, '6 76-6763 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

ONE bedroom apartments
for the elderly . All utilities
pai'd . Tenants pay 30 per·
cent of their adjusted
income in this HUD subsid·
ized apartment bu lldlng .
Twin Rivan Tower, phone

Furnished a. unfurnished. 2
bedrooms. air cond .. beauti·
ful river view in Kanauga .
Foster' s Trailer Park. ·

19BO MOBILE homo , 2

mobile home in axe . cond.
ori hirgalot, 2 ·outbUildlnu.a.
good 'ldcaiio-11 in Gallipolil

1·

64 Misc. Merchandise

·roqulrad plua 860 dop ..

bedroom, 1 2x45 , excellent
condition, furnished with
underpenning . 304-676-

304-n3-5045.

Apartment
for Rent

5548 .

1 bdr. 1urn. apt., 8 mo . leesa

814-388 -9766 ahor 8PM .

bedroom 2 -bath, all alec..
partially furnished t14, 600 .

304 - 675 - 6879 . Equal

3 bedroom trailer

opportunity houeing.
ONE bedroom apartment.
402112 24th. St. Pt. Plea·
sant. phone. 1 -614-992·
6868 .

Unfurnished 3 bedroom
central air , water paid .

At . 160 ·at Evergreen .
Accept children It petl. Call

$260 . month. 304 -8765294 .

448 -0167.
- - - - - - - - · -lc2 bedrooms Mobile Home in
Roci~o . 614-367·02B8. !.

·a

room furniehed apartment . clean nlca:yard, gas
·a nd w8te'i' paid . AdUlts .
Phone 304·87_6-2861 .

10 ,. 86, 2 Pd ~ room mobile
home in Rll!cine area .
814-992 -5.8 68 .

46

TWO mobile homes for rent
on Rt . 2 about 6 minutes
from town . Call.after 6.
304-676-8277.

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light ho_!JSB keeping
rooms. Perk Central Hotel.

UNFURNISHED troller for

446-2699.

FARM for sale. 30 acres.
Broad Run Road , cell

304 - 875 -

Two bedroom mobile home.
kitchen furnished , 1 small
child accepted. $180 plus
utilities , references re -

t_
....

F'urnished apt . sdulta . No

2 bedroom trailer , $160
month and utilities, 304·

Peto. 304-875 -1483.

676-4088.

46 Space for Rant

43 Farms for Ren1

''"BEAUTY
.

ohop. phono 304~ 76-7641 evenings .

I

•.'

:-\36 Lots &amp; Acreage

"'-!'

~-20

Acres woods, over: Jooking Ohio River. city
•..achooh . 446 - 3664 or
:. 1 - 6t3 - 423 - 8928 .
:-~.Owner /

Agent.

' 1 acre lot 6 mi. from Holzer
hospital . Just off At . 160
out Floyd -Clerk Rd. 700 h .
~ Call

448-0390.

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

35 acres at Rodney on W.T.
:watson Rd . Owner flnanc -

'- ing available. Call448 -8221

• '!.:;after 6 weekdays.

992-7479 .

Small office apace in
Pomeroy . Cleland Realty,
614-992-2269 .

THE former Moore 's Store
Garage on 3rd . Street, Pt.
Pleaeant . Equipped with
holet, tire changing equipment. wheel balancing
machine and more. For mora
info rmation contact Wayne

2 bdr . Regency Inc . Apartments $200 per mo . ·or if
income is $10.000 or len
HUD available . A-One Real
Estates. Carol Veeg'8r ,

Kincaid. 304-675 -2450.

304 -675 -

4 7 Wanted to Rent

First floor furinshed apt .
utilities paid , dapo1it &amp;. lease
required . Adults, J10 pats .
Call at 631 Fourth Ave . .
Gallipolis .

WANT TO RENT : Pasture.
Ph . 448 -2109.

1 bedroom apartment for
ront . Call 446 -0390.

61 Household Goods

a.

window• # llntele , etc .
Clauct. Winters. Rio Grande,
0 . Call 814·245·81 2L

Improvement•

'

DRAGONWYND CATTEfiY
· KENNEL , AKC Chow
puppies, CFA Hlmelay.-n ,

STUCCO PLASTERING •

Parelan and 8larrieM kit·

textured ceilinG• co~mer ­
clal and ruidantlel. free

Effiencey apartment, prl·
vate bath, 513 Third Ave ..
Gallipolis . $136 . Includes
elect 81 water . Call 446-

ootlmotoo . Cell 814-288·

1182.

2 ' yr . old. Reg . Cocker
Sponlal to homo fenced In
proporty with children. Coli
448-9330 olttr 4.

62· Wanted to Buy

s..tpoint Slam8Mkitt8ns. 2

WANTED TO RENT: Paoture. Ph. 448-2109.

1981 Plymouth Horizon .
eut. fr~t wheel drive, exc .

63

19118 DODGE Polar• 500,
38000 orjglnel mlleo ,

f8male . Full

blooded . t60. tech . No
checka . Coli 814- 9922807.
AKC Shih Tzu pupplu. 4
moloo, 2 ftmtleo. t125 .00
toch. 304-871-8888.

Call 446-9472 before 2,30
PM .

FOR SALE : Reglsterftd

Furnished effiencv ept .. In
Rio Grande , utilities paid .

SIAMESE klttono. 13&amp; .
304-878-886t.

72

~ Registered Angus Yearling

i 979

68

Fruit
&amp; llegeta blaa

Bullr. GOEBEL ANGUS
FARM" . Coolville . Oh .
t -814-887-3838 .

Good riding horse. cell after
6 , 876- t 308.

Plant• for sale. Mo1tveg•t•·
ble plants now ready. SwHt
pot1toe1 • pepp8ralater .
Coll6:30 o.m. to B o.m. or 8

to 10 p.m . except Wad .
evening oftor 8 :30 . Good
plonta &amp; full count. Will bo
Mlllng in Pom•roy sorting
Frldty May 8 . No Sunday
tales. DwiQht Spencer, W.
Shado ·Rd .•

Sale or Trade
FOR SALE' Rtg .. Ouortor-

horsa titud colt, 14 mO.
red roan

Dairy goats . Alpine• . La
Manacha1, Toggs, gud•s
ond pure breda. 304-8781920.

Hay &amp; Grain

64

Ear Corn for sale . 1.200
bushels. 16 acre• of corn
ground for rent at BrOad
Run. 304-882-2862 .
--:-:-:--------lc-

1 00 or more bale• of hey .
Norman Grues8r ,
M'lnatsvillil .
·

66 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

I

:;t:'
41
::;

.....

Houses for Rent

.

r,~ . Mod•rn 3 bdr . ranch ,
\

gar.. g• . cerp•t . Rodney
area. Deposit &amp;. references
required . ~285 per mo .
Blackburn Realty . Call

i
t

~

,.

448-0008 .

,,

.. •~eo

mo. Coli 614-246-

. 9i70 .

61

Farm Equipment

plll!lnning , bookeeplng,
flnanc1il. plenning . T. M.
Ari - Sarvicea , Inc . Call

814-448-0898 or 3041979 20-c Moaooy Forgu- . 875 -8140 .

son end loedar. plow, dlac, - - - - - - - - - -WANT to l•••e tobacco
quote . Mason , Putnam.
Cabell. Call Morgen Wood·
lawn Farm, Pliny, 304· 67666 Case Vee, wide front 8nd 2276, 304-623-6843.
with 2-14 plowt. utility
cultivator. tlneo. buah hog.
garden blade. $10.600 . Coli
448-2971 .

For Sale John Deere corner
plenters 2 and 4 row, 8 row
300 gal. tenk boom sprayer,
Ford cultivator, Ford rotary
hotl 2 &amp; 4 row. B-10- t41t.
wheel dloc. pull dloc. pull

plows. u1ed blade, Stock land scoop, fertillrer spr•ad ~
ar•. 10 ft . culitpackert .
wheat drills . Cub Cad•t
tractor with mower deck,
TO 20 Ferguson erector,
treller for garden trator, ·
haying equipment, front and
loader for 8N Ford tractor.
other 11tld roodlng oqulpment. Howe 'o Form Machin -

ery,
Rt . 124
&amp;. .Mayhew
Rd -.
Jackson
. Oh
614-286

........... .. .. . .···-··
... ..
· · · ·· ~ ·

Autos for Sale

71

1982 Honda Prelude ellentlally new. 9.400 mi. .

electric eun roof. 15 epeed.
AM - FM tope . etc . Coli
448 -7417 .

197416ft. trihau1Chrysler
boet &amp;. trailer with 1976 90
H P Chrysler motor wllh
power lift. Soma extras,
13,000 for all . Coli 614387-0831.
1979 Ford Grondo olr. PB.
PS. auto, vinyl top . 13 ,300.
Coli 446-8582 .

Call446-2t66 .

1-----------aerles 180 hours. excellent '72 BUICK Electra 4 OR .
1979 Ford tractor 2.~00

conditon, live pow~tr . Call

Hardtop, Mlch•lin tires,

448-0810 onvtlme.

Cllmato Control AC. 1600.
Ph. 448-2991 .

New Holland 488 Hoyblno.
liko now . 8t4-949 -2069 .

NEW &amp; Used Harvestore
Structures . Automated
live1tock fe•ding·computer
fHders. Call collect 814 ·

1986 CHEVELLE SS 398 . 2
dr HT. PS , PB . Ph . 256 ..
6838 .
t975 FORD ELITE . Good
cond.. f1 .095 . Ph. 246 6027 ohor 6.

1974 Pontiac Catililia, nice
cer. utlity trpiler. new . Call

62 Wanted to Buy

crullt, t4800. 814-9923710.
-

··-~----------

_:: 2 bailroam. all new paint,

~~~ som .. carOeting . Depoelt

~: ptuo

dopoolt . 814 - 949 -

•

304·46B · 1042.

I

2 bedroom houN, 1acr•. on
'\' K•n•whl Alv8r , At . 82
i; SOUlh ; 304 - 871 · 7&amp;.~1

v:evenlngl.

chuals , new paint. good
cond .. 12.700. Call 814379-211t 7.

c.n 814-388-9B67 .

Painting interior" exterior,
wallpaper hangh)SII- Insured,

FrH eotimot~ . 814-94928811.
Roofing. ahlng,

e

opouting

and elumlnum ... ~ ng work.
lntured. fr•e f timatea.

'

e

HI Pres1ure C leaning.
Aluminum stding, mObile
homes, wocn.# brick. Andatone buildinb end homea.
Alao hoovy equipment . Fully

insured. Free estimates .
1980 CHEVROLET DUMP
TRUCK. PH . 38B-9308.

ANNIE

1114-949-2686.

1972 Ford Y2 ton pickup,
new W. Va .' Inspection

RON ' S T•l•vision Service.
Specializing in Zenith •nd
Motorola. Quazar, and

otickar. 1880. 304-8764893.

houoo colla. Call 676-2398
or 446-2464.

1988 Chevy Y2 ton tr'uck.
good cond ition, 1971 Ford

F a. K Tree TrimJ111ng, stump
removal. Call 676~ 1331.

Sedan• Coverage of the
NASCAR Internat io nal Sedan s is presented from

truck. 304-8B2 -3146 .
RINGLE ' S SERVICE oxpe·

.1 988 lnternetional dUmp
truck with 1 '000 s•.l. w.te'r
tonk , 304-773 -8383 .

rlen.c ed rooflng, ,including
hot tli' aP:PIIcatio-n. earp•nt•r. aleQ~rici.-n. mason . Call

1.977'F.ord f . t 60 .- 4 wd

304 -876 -2088 or . 8754680 . .

good

cond .

78 F160 Yz ton pick
Excellent condition . tot1oo..l
complete, carpeting,
bed. Chocolat• brown with
orenge &amp; gold atripes. PS,
PB, AM -FM tape player, air
conditioning. running
board. oharpl $3800 .00 .
Cal 304-676-6664.

73

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1976 CJ -6 Jeep, 6 cyl .,
hardtop, •2.000 . Call
448-8602 o1tor 7PM .
1981 block CJ-5 Jeep,

em - fm ndlo , carpeted .
1974 gold Super bug VW .
et .000 . Coli 614 -742 2308.
79 FORD F250.

4 - w~ool­

drive. power steering .
power brakes. air condition ~
ing, AM · FM, 4 speed,
u . 8o.o .. 304 -875 - 1646

efter B.

Weter Wells . Commercial
and DomestiC , Test holee .
Pumps Sales an,d Service .
304-898-3802.

.- - - - - - - - - ,.Get your cirpet in ship
shape. Water removal, FREE

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

ALLEY OOP

ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 814-448-21·07.

E I R Tree Service. fully
insured , free ettimates .
Phone 814-387-0836. coli
alter 5.

Painting interior or exterior,
fraa estimates . Call 6756344 or 448 -9326 .

Painting, interior &amp;. exterior,
brush or epray. commercial,
residential , mobile, homes,
after 8. 304 - 676 - t 128 .

L.M. Johnson .

GASOLINE ALLEY

Could you
out andqlve
'---~ us a push?

Ruuall'a Tree Trimming,
304-773-6228 .

82

PlumbinU
&amp; Heating

1979 JEEP CJ6 83 . 000.
304-876- 1837.

They ain't
insiqht! We
ditched em'

Tha's nice, bt-~t
it look li ~e we
t' qo bdck r

We done drop t h'juq

be~ck C~t th' masher!
I

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3B88 or 4464477

1982 Honda 450 custom,
2 , 000 mi. , axe . cond . .
$1,260. Coli 446 -2360.
1980 Hondo CR 80 dirt
bike, oxcl. cond .• $460. Call
814-246-1892.
1978 Hondo Civic •3oo.
1976 RM - 126 Suzuki ,
1300. Coli 614-388-8509.
1979 Honda 860. Call
446-8863.

1978 Harley Davidson
electro glide . Call 4482186 .

1981 Honde CB 900 cuttom . New rear tire. ex c .
cond . 8.660 mlloa. 82,500 .
814-985-4288 ofttr 7 p.m .

t3 ,000 . Coli
2861 .

304 -876-

HARLEY Dovldoon 71
Sportoter 900 . rebuilt.

JIM ' S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·

lNG . Fomerly Dewitt's
Plumbing . Coli 6t4-3670676.

83

WINNIE

Excavating

NOT AT ALL, MI SS WINKLE.
SHE INVITED ME TO HER
APARTMENT AND 1 LE FT

DOZER WORK By Tod

Hanna , ponds . dltchee .
basem•nu. etc . Call 4464907 . Carter &amp; Evans
Transportation.

SKETCHES .. . BUT
WAS ALL.

Lonnie Boggs Excavating .
Dozer . backhoe, dump truck . Work by hour or job.
Coli 448 -7903 .

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

DEPENDABLE WASHER DRYER REPAIR . Guaran-

teed work . Cell anytim11

SEWI~G Machine repairs,
aervlcil . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Sel11ors. Fabric Shop ,

Pomeroy . 992 -2284 .

11800.00 firm . 304-BB2 ·
3242 or 304-1175-8180 .

ED 'S APPLIANCE REPAIR

Boats end
Motora for Sale

BARNEY

6t4 -266 - 8620 or 614 288-1207.

e•cellent condition,

76

SERVICE call City Furniture
304 -875 -2808 or 446 063t .

Nonh Wilkesboro, NC.
(JJ • ~ Fait" Guy
CD .fleol People T ()night" s
Pr.ogram features pQOI players who use their noses to
play instead of cue sticks, s
man who makes food out of
garbage and a look at missing ch,ldren . (60 min .)
Ill ([) ® Zarro and Son
Zarro and Commandante
Pico take on The Bucher of
Barcelona .
()) everest North Wall
Robert Redford hosts this
look at the first AmericanChinese Mount Everest e•·
pedition. (60 min .)
(!)) Oclyasoy
8 MOVIE' ' Kid Golohod'
B;30 il!l ()) Ill Squtlfe Pegs
Patty represent s
Wee mawee on a local quiz show
IRI
9 :00 (I) 700 Club
(JJ 0 ~ Bettie o1 the
Network Stars
CD Facto of Ulo Blair and Jo
discover that they both dislik e graduation but realize
they are leaving Eastland for
the last time . (60 min .)
il!l ())Ill MOVI"E : 'Shadow
Riders'
(]) (!)) Non-Fiction Telovi·
slon Special 'C hild ren of
Darknes s.' Tonight ' s pro·
gram profi les several severely emot ionallY' di s1Urbed
children and a look at their
institutional ca re . (60 min.)
9 :30 (J) PKA Full Contact
K111rate from Atlantic City.
NJ
1 0 :00 0 Cil CD Quincy Guiney
tries to d01ormine if a city
councilman 's son IS guilty o f
murder. (60 min )
(]) MOVIE : 'Julia'
([) TBS Evening News
(J) Superviews
® Nowswatch
I!IJINN News
10;t6 (1J MOVIE : ' A Unle Se• '
10:30 (]) Star Time
(ll) Constitution
@llln Soorch o1 ....
11 :oo II Cil ()) i1!1 Cll Ill Ill In
News
C!J ESPN SportoCenter
(I) Woman Watch ..
CD Nowo/Sporta/Woather
()) Dove Allen at Largo
Ill Benny Hill Show
t1 :30 II C1l CD Tonight Show
(]) Another Ute
(I) Catllna
())Soap
il!l ()) Hart to Hort A gamo
of croquet leads the Hans
in to 1:1 case of murder . (R) (60
mln.l
()) PBS Lote Night
(jQ All In ·the Family
0 ~ Nightllne
• Honeymooners
1 1 ;48 (]) MOVIE: 'Evllopeak'
12:00 (]) MOVIE ; ' Goodbye.
Emmanuelle'
(]) Bumo &amp; Allen
C!l Wo~d Chemplonohip
Tennla Final: Champion ship Match from Delles.

TX

86

(I)
())
())
•

General Hauling

1980 15ft. 8oylintr.wlth 50

HP Mercury •ngln•, all
ecce11ori8S InclUded . Call
4411 ·8385 olttr 6 .

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apll. 614 992-1434. 614 - 9~2 - 6914
or 304-882 -2588.

HOUSEBOAT. t1 . 000 .

without motor, with motor
11 ,400 .

304 -17~·t044 .

JONES BOYS WATER
SER.VICE . ·Coli 814 -367747t or 6t4 -367-0691 .

Need something hauled
eway or something moved7

76

2 bedroom furnished Apt.
t teO . month . You ·pay

a.

Auto Parts
Acceaoriaa

z.

210 Z or 210
11 4 -tt2lt79 or 114·112·1001.

1 bedroom apt .• furnished In
Racine. By we•k or month .

-rd.

for •••• r•er opoll 0 r lor
Pontloe
will fit ony
pro 1113 modtl 126 .
304-178-3711.

814- 423 -8287 or 949 . 2121 .
.

'

.

PEANUTS

MS WATER SERVICE .
Lenior. 304-678-

THERE'S A WOMAN WHO
LIVES Uf' IN THE NEXT

BLOCK WHO /&gt;J.WA'(5 AA5
TOAST FOR BREAKFAST

V1ri0u1 pert1 for Datsun

utllltlu . t60 . dtpoolt .
814-949-2B78.

9 end 5 .

87

Upholllery

..

TRIST ..TE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 Sec. Avo .. Oollipau 1 :
441-7833 or 4411-1833 . ,

EACI-I M~NIN6, SIIE TOSSES
OUT A FEW ~liMSS FOR
THE BIRDS .. IF VOIJ 60T LIP
EARLY, VOU COULP BE
THE FIRST ONE THERE

NO, I DON'T THINK I .
COULD TALK HER INTO
6RIN61N6 11-IEM DOWN ~ERE

D (]) CD Ltne

Night with
David Letterman
Cil Jack Benny Show
II ([) MOVIE: 'Tho Kid
from left Field'
.
• (!! ABC Newo Profile
TwiMght Zone
1 :00 Clll Mlll'rled Joan
()) ABC Newo Profile
N•w•
1 :30 •
(I)
NBC
Newa
Overnight
I]) HBO Rock: Shon!lll
e - In Concert Sheena
performs her rbig) hitl v ideo~
taped at Hollywood's Palaeo

e

e ·Cl!

Theatre .

·

([) My Little Mllfllle

CD Nevn/Sian Off

,.
'

MOVIE : 'Atuckl'
Nlghtllno
MOVIE ; 'Cooley High'
Mory Hortman . Mary

Hartman

12;30

Wo'll do it . Coli 448 -3t69
~tween

'" 2801 .

:=' Three room haute with bith
on State Route 87, Phone

2Y:t T lntlrnetionil Ceb over.
long wheel bue , cob &amp;

t 9Bt HONDA 900 cuatom.

1 bed room Apt. 1196. mo.
including utilities . Equal
houelng opportunity. Con ·
teet Vlllag• Manor A.ph .

Nlc•· ·2 bedroom hous• for
rent. !1.t8rn Di1trlct. •160.

ing , 30 years experience.
specializing In buih up roof.

.

showroom condition,

1- - - - - - - - - -

2 bedroom furniJhed ilpt. In

()) ESPN 's Horse Racing
Wldy.
(JJ Malor Leogue Baool&gt;ell :
Atlanta at Montreal
()) Entertainment Tonight
Ill Ch•~lo' • Angels
Ill ()) Tic Toe Dough
()) (!)) MocNeii · Lehror
Report
(j) Nowa
g (!! People' • Court
Star Trek
7:30 II (I) Ut Detector
()) ESI'N SpottsCenter
()) Ill ()) family Feud
()) Buslnen Report
® You Aaked For It
(ll) Computer Programme
Ill (!! Entertainment
Tonight
B'OO D
(]) Major League
Beool&gt;ell; Cincinnati ot
Phllidelphla
(])
MOVIE;
'VIctor/
VIctoria'
(l) MOVIE : 'Sunday in
New York'
(I) I Spy
(J) Auto Roclftll '83:
NASCAR
lntemetlonol

Lots of chrome . E•callent

Apt. for rent. Half double-2
bd .room Apt . Adults ~re ­

Middleport f178 . plua
utllltloa. Ooya 614-9928848·, Evoillngo 814-949·
2218'.

oxp. Coli 614-388-9882 .

814-949-261!6-

condition . $3 ,000 . 814992 -8179 or 111 .4 -9926006 .

Aou1ing Opponunitv ' hal
one bedroom apartments
rent starting at • 167 per
month and two bedroom
apartments rent starting 11
•193/er month . Call
448 · 746 or leave
message.

roqulrod. tl14 -992'-3090.

PAINTING- 1,-.t•riof and
exterior. plUmbing, roofing.
so·me remodeling. 20 yra .

1981 Harley Dovlo Ponhud .

814-992-7787.
6 RM HOUSE. Bulavllla .' Ph .
-- 448-3437.

Coli 814 -379-

12.800. 304-773-6284.
FARM ADVISORY SERVICES Grain &amp; livestock
marketing. toll testing. crop

ferred. No peta. 814-992 2749 .

, . 4 b(lr. hOuse, 2 batha, good
,. 1ocatlon, 2 mi. from Holzer
"""' Med. C•nter. D8p. r8quir•d.

DOdge: 1A. T Power
Wagon, good c·ond . ,

4 - speed,

JACKSON ESTATES 'Equal

I

Trucks for Sale

03,800.
2817.

Eaaton In Concert Sheena
performs her big hits videotaped at HollyWood's Palace
Theatre .

Marcum Roofing &amp; SIIC!Yt •,

condition, 304-678-1714.

Breading ogo. 448-2109.

4222 botwoon 9 &amp; 6.

i

cond . 304-1838.

Polled Hereford Bulls .

6944.

12 stables now available for
boarding horses . Also fire
wood by cord or ton .

Autoa for Sale

'

Aluminum 8ft. truck topper.
Antique Oak Reproduction
furniture, full Una in atock,
also Antiqu11 . Paul Conklls
Antlqvea , Tuppers 'Piilns.

71

gareg• tupt . excellent

448-13119 aftor 5 .

1

'\

Livestock

3 row Allis Chalmert no till
corn planter, exc . cohd . 4 ' 198 t VW Robbit , 38.000,
row John DHr8 494 A corn am-fm. air, cruise. $6600.
plent•r. good cond . 10ft. Aloo 1979 Olda Cutlou
tronoport dloc. 273 -4218 .
Supreme, em - fm, air,

2216 .

r Buying houses and apan : menta. Ne•dpropertleswlth
, _ fa&gt;Jorable price and terme .
'
8QK 1109 Gallipolis . Oh .

lntellivision Video Game
with 13 cartridges. voice
module, storage lid, $350.

(!) 1\iews/Sporti/WMther
Cll (!)) Studio See
8 Clitorlle' o Angelo
8 :30 8 (]) CD NBC News
(I) MOVIE: 'Pride of the
Bluegrno'
(J) Fl•hln' Hole
(JJ Gomer Pyle
Cll g ~ ABC News
II ()) Cll CBS Newo
())Dr. Who
(!)) Over Eoay
7 :00 '8 (]) PM l\llegazlne
(]) HBO Rock: Shenno

Doberman Stud Service .

3

Unocromble " - lour Jumbles,

lour Ollllnary -

I CADYE
() I
c_:a~

to lorm

=

-

b

-•

• (I) ()) • ()) (j) • (!!
Newa
(I)
MOVIE :
•Amber

()) Andy Griffith

Coli -Me-77llli. '

male .

000- to"""' .......

by.HenrtAmoldondllobloo

w_.·

HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boarding oil brtedo. AKC
Rtg . Pobermono pupo old

347t.

prefared . Call 446 -

Caii446-0t 57 .

1988 4 -cyl . metoltop, CJ -6

Jeep : 440 John Deere
Dozer. 3 pt. tobacco setter.

. 8:00

Homes
Campara

ftflliNtiD~ ~THAT~WORDGAIII!

~ ~ ~~ ·

(I) Tic ,TIC Pough
()) Pl8y Y011r Be" Golf
'The Scoring Shots.'

troller. Coli 814-245 -6347 .

Call 446-4017 .

5/4/83

66 · Peta for Sale

9 N Ford tractor. 304 -B96 -

Se co nd Avo .. Gollipolla.

46631 .

BuUdlng m-ritla
block. brick. oower plpoo.

Cedar wardrobe , antique

Club. Call 614 -246-6347.

WEDNESDAY

firm 304 -876· 8340 after :
8 ~00 p.m.

EVENING

93 . 614-288 -8930 .
'

7 ft . treated picnic tables .
Rio Ridge Runners 4 - H

.

'trailer. co~ered. t300.00

~vans ~nterprlses. 4 mi.
South of Jackson on ST. RT.

Water wall drilling rig . Cell
814-388-8&amp;43 .

·Television
Viewing

b.;a:

66 Building Suppllea

685-2280. John L. Botto.

446 -0338 .

Real Estate
Wanted
'\
~- --~----------------

$10 . 10 par ft. 36 inch
$16.60 per ft . Aloo ple•tlc
culvert in ltock . 6 inch thru
t 81riell. 81nch • ·1 .80 I!Or1t.,
12 Inch $3.60. per ft-. ·Fioh

Part a
a.AcCNSoriea

76

.The

Ohio

TOPPER for ohort
pickup, poneled. Jnaulotod, : .
fiSO.OO. Coleman •· utility .

kopt. f800. coli 304-2732105 . .

For tale metal cUlvert 6 inch
thru 60 inch In stock. Stat•
approv•d 18 gauge 12 Inch
$6 . 36 per ft . , 24 Inch

614 -742 -2720 .

Small furnished house In
city , adults orily . C'all

Ref.

Coli 446-9789 or 448 3694.
.

Ph . 614-266 -6769 .

" 1 . 4 aere lot in Bradbury 1 ---~-----­
good, location, trailer hook Furnished 3 rm. apartment
up all .utlllties, septic tank, with private bath at B46
" ' 614 -992 -2602 .

6 prom dra1111 I i l i i 7 · 13.
like new. Worn only once .

Gold carpet 17ft 4 ln. by 14
Park , Route 33, North of ft . &amp;ln ., like new. $126 .
Pomeroy . Large Iota. Call Nuerae uniforms 8,10 ,12 .

Apartment
for Rent

Realtor . Coli
6104.

HEAP Vouchoro. Coli 814288-8248.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo

304-675 -6110 .

44

Knauff Coal &amp; firewood
Pricet r•duced Mey -J uly .
Pick or delivered. We honor

Poto . 304-676-1463.

PASTURE. Gallipolis Ferry.

Business
Buildings

HARLEY Doviclton ga golf
cart, go.od condition·. p r •

448-3066 .

tles paid. single male. Shere 1788 .
bat h. 919 Second Ave .
G.t~llipolis . Call448 -4416
New &amp; Uaed Troy Built
.lifter 7PM .
Tillers . Swlshars Imple ment, St . Rt . 7. North of
Furnished apt . adulta . No Galllpolio. Coli 446-0476.

304-882-2407

-34

1 coffee table
47 Yt x18Y::J:x16Y2 in . and 1
end table 21h18 VJ x20lh
with light walnut finiah •30,
32x63· 174 plecat brown
underpinning for a mobile
home uae(l just 1 Yt~~ar came
off a 14x70 mobile home,
long places meaeura 32",
short pie'cea 21 · · and 1 0
lnch11 acro11. ent•rlock in a
metal frame. wood grain
flnlth . Call after 6PM .

Call 446-0766 .
trunk , 3 tier gl111 tobla &amp;
----~.-------~ ·1 concrete picnic tabla with
Sleoplng room t1 25 . util· btnchu. Coli 614-266 -

rent in Henderson, 200 per
month. Garbaga , water &amp; lot
paid . Phone
2049 .

Furnished Rooms

quired, 304-876 -1078.

142. acres . close to rio
Grande. good house, barns,
some lim81tona S. coal. Call

•

Apartments . 304 - 675 - 1::=::::=======

Mobile Homes
for Rent

USED MOBILE HOME.
576 -2711 .

1981 Fleetwood t4x70 3 -

446-3169.

homes, housea. Pt. Ple11ant

v~ mile off
Rt . 7 on Bulaville Addison
Rd . Addison, Oh . Nice '12
acre lot, $200 per mo. Call

3889 or 676 -66B6 .

44

304-876-4338 .

1977 Windsor 14.w:70, 3
bdr. , wich utility building,
axe. cond ., $13 ,900 . Call
be1oro 3PM . 446-7513 .
2 bdr. mobile home . Call
614-256 -6224 .

chrome dinette Ht 1149 &amp;
piece dinene Mt 189, uS:.d
bedroom auitet. refirgere·
tors , range• . chest,
dre11ers, wringer waahers
TV's, dryeres. • shoea. Cali

by !.wry Wright

64 Miac. Merchandi..

tona. Coli 448-3844 oltor
4PM .

1975 Holly Park mobile
home. 14x70 with central
air, new drapes. new carpet.
paatura on SA 654, Bidwell.

1983

Ohio

Sentinel

II

tMIRVEN

] ()

.

WHAI THE WH!!ei..MA~
OF THe. 6ETAWAY

t

tPICTES

CA ~WA-5.
~

arrange the

cir~

letters to

tonn the surprlae answer. u euggollod by tho above CIIIOOn .

ArMr: A "K

I I I )" KI I I XXJ
(Anowon tomorrow)

Jumbles · MOUSE

I Answer-

Yesterday 's

BATON

PURPLE

SUGARY

There's th at one fea t ure about his new car
th at's guaranteed to last a lll et lme Tf1E PAYMENTS

Jumble Boot No. t9, containing 1t0 puules. Is avall1bltl0r 11.95 pottpakl

lrom Jumble, CIO thll MWipJptr, 80J. 34 , NDfWood, N.J. 07&amp;18. Include your

name, •ddra••· lip code and maka checks pay1ble to N1wspaptfboet1.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Dummy handling
described

NORTH

fi·OUS

too

+J

• 52
YI OR52
• 9 72
Q 10 9 7

+

SOU Til
+Q i0964 .

Y AQ
U 5
+ 8 5 43

2'".

Pass

hut merely

dummy's queen

Vulner able: Both
Dealer : West
West

~ensa tional ,

how a good player handles
the dummy .
West opened the king ol
diamonds and shifted to the
jack o f cl ubs. Buzzie drew
trumps with tw o leads and
led a diamond to knock out
West's ace . West had nothing
better to do than to lead
a n o ther
diamond
to

EAST

'JK J974
• AKJI 3

yesterday 's

some 50 year s ago.
It doesn't show anything

+AKH
• 63
• Q 10 6
+A K 6 2

WEST
• 7J

in

a r ticle so we a re gmng to
give a hand played by Buzz

N.. rth East
Double Pass

South

2•
Pa ss

4+ .

••

·Pass
Pass

Now came th e key play.
Buzz did not ta ke the quick
discard of the ·heart queen.
Instead he let a club go
He was sure th at West
held tlic heart kirii ·He was

a lso sure that West was
short

in clubs . West had

made two vulnerable bids .

Opening !cad:

eK

By Oswald Jacoby
and Jam e~ Jacoby
Herbert (Buzz) Sehcl trl is
another old tim e Regrn cy
Club bridge pl ayer . Buzzie is

s till

very

mu c h

a li v{'

although at the age of 75 he
doesn 't gel l o play too much
bridge.
He scnl the ha nd pla ye d
by Cos l as Plat s i s w e

with a m inimum number ol
hlgh ca rds and ha d shown up
with tw o spad ~s .
.
Next Bu zz took dummy's
second top club and noted
wi th !Ieasure thai West ·
show e out . Now he played
t he ace and quee n of hea rts.
West look his kin g, but
was thr ough with tri ck
laking. He had to lead a red
card . Buz7. ruffed in dummy
and di scarded his last club
to complete the swap of two
club losers for one heart

loser .
(NEWSPA.Pto: H to~NT F.RPR I SE ASSN.)

t!l""• VJr r

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACR.OSS
I Type size
5 Japanese

:M Falher
of Regan

37 Arthurian

measure

8 Object

damsel

38 Part

of worship

9 Connrse
informally

of Hibernia

39 Favorite
40 Queen

- 's lace

13 Swing
around
14 Unwilling
15 Biddy
II - du Diable

17 slandstill
18 Russian
republic
ZO Pendleton

21 Snake
22 Theatrical
bit
23 More
spotless
Z4 Taking no
chances
25 Irish
island

Yesterday's Answer
10 Karloff film
Z3 Line
DOWN
II "Funny Face"
of floats
I Nonsense '
2 Not working
film star
%4 Desolate
12 '"Shampoo"
Zl Stinger
3 Langella
role
. star
Z8 Paladin
4 Beverage
16 Ovid 's
portrayer
5 Ladderhighway
lZ Work lor
like
19 Arab land
33 Corner
6 Float
Zl Of daybreak
:15 Tilt
7 United
Z2 Wilhered
31 Meadow

group

26Lena Z'I Actress,
Patricia

26 Make no
(admit)
29 lnde,ed! in

Erin
30Mining
find
ll Asian
. holiday

l4 Family of
outlaws

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - He're'a how to work it :
Is

AllYDLBAAXR
LON'GFELLOW

One Jetter simply stands for anather. In this sample A ~~
used for the three L's, X fo r the two O's. etc . Sln1le letters ,
apostrophes, the length and formotlon of the word s are all
hints. Each Hay the code letters are dlllerenl.

CRYPTOQVOTBS
FJSMRLG

BORT

LOR

MF

BRHH

VRJVHR

DPEMF .LWPLRF,

PTK

EJNRWTRK
JURG
LOR

LOR

DPEM •

FLWPLRF JURG LOR HPB . - FJHJT
Yesterday's Cryptequole: I"" IS BETI'ER TO DES!':RVE
Wl'mOUT RECEIVING, mAN TO RECEIVE wmiOUT
DESERVING.- R08ERT INGERSOLL
. .

...

~

�•

•
Poge-14-The Daily Sentinel •

Wecl.,...y, May 4, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•

Job market depressing·despite economic-revival signs
By The Asso!:lated Press
Despite signs of a broad U.S.
ecopomlc revival. the job market is
likely to remain relatively depressed in the months ahead, a
private economist predicts.
Kenneth Goldstein, an economist
;at the Conference Board in New

:.F lood victim"s
:body located
CLEVES. Ohio lAP) -The body
·Of 7-year-old Bobby Anderson of
Elizabethtown, who was swept
-away Sunday morning by a fl as h
;;flood on the Great Miami River, was
-recovered by rescue workers
. ,:I'Uesday.
,. Cleves Fire Department Lt . Greg
: Yost said the submerged body was
~caught under a fen ce about 30 feet
;from where the boy disappea!'ed~ The boy and three companions
~had been fishing and we re walking
away from the river on a narrow

'road when they were surprised by a
:sudden rush of water from the rising
. river.
: · Authorities said the ot her boys
:grabbed Bobby but that the force of
' the water pulled the youth out of his
·coat and sweatshirt .
' The body was identified at the
:scene by the boy's parents. Charles
:and Debbie Anderson .
•. The recovery operation had to be
~suspended several times by rising
water.

· -Radford, Douglas
:will oversee project
Bill Radford and Gerald Douglas
were named to a committee to
oversee the construction of a new

stage at the Rock Springs Falr:grounds when Ihe Meigs County
Fair Board met Monday night.
• The new stage will be for various
entertainment features and will be
constructed ·between · the secretary' s·otfice and the grange hall on
the hill.
The board also pu rchased small
limestone to be applied to the race
track and Roger Spencer was
named to head that activities. A
$200 contribution was voted to the
1-H Club Congress program for
-· Meigs County young people.
Leonard Jewell of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, met with
the board to discuss the post's annual project of handling parking at
the fair In August. II was agreed
that members of the Meigs Athletic
Boosters will assist the post
members In the proj ect this year.
VIrgil Windon, Gerald Douglas and
Benny Siawter were na med ro a
board committee which will work
with the organizations handling
parking.
Dan Smith. board member, discussed the tractor and truck pu lling
contests and one more truck class

was added and premiums were approved. William B. Downie, president. was In charge of the meeting.

Funds received
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson's office announced the May distribution of $52,848,184 In Aid to
Dependent Children ro 618,:MI9 recipients In Ohio's88counties. Meigs
County received $174,726 for 2,142
rec ipients.

York, based his forec3$tTuesday In
part on the l'I'Search group's latest
Index of h")p-wanted advertising.
The board, whose ' w&lt;&gt;r)&lt; is
sponsored by private business, said
Irs Index was unchanged In March.
The index measures the volume of
classified advertising in 51 major
l' .S. newspapers. and is considered

a reliable barometer of employment trends.
·
"After an early recoVery In
depressed labor market conditions,
new hiring efforts have obviously
slac~ened , suggesting that progress
In bringing unemployment down Is
very llkely to be uncomfortably slow
for the next several months and

1,:n!.011Ueeday alter losing nearly
22 points the day before. Last week
the average hit record highs three
times as It broke throogh the 1.nl
markfortheflrsttlmeever.
-A Dun&amp;Bradstreetsurveysald
business executives are more

possibly longer," Goldstein said.
The unemployment rate has
declined from 10.8 pereent last
December to 10.3 percent of the
clvUian labor foree ln. March. The
Aprll1lgure Is due out Friday.
In othereconomlcdevelopments:

quarterthanearllerthlsyear.Dun&amp;
Bradstreet said Its IndeX of profit
optlmlsn\ jumped 17 points In the
February swvey, to 46. It was the
hlghestlevelslncetbethlrdquarter
of1981.
-The Agriculture Department

;~~~bp=tlmls~~t~IC•a~bol:.,ut~the:;::p~ros~pec=ts=fo;:r_~sal::d~a~stronger::
profit In the 1.'111Tent business could mean ·~~eco:;,no~m=y~thls~:;~
meat

'

-

rJJJ

!Ufl t her ', /)1 ~]'.

.Cut Flowe,.
•Corsages
•Hanging Plants

Mother's Day
Sale

LLOYD

•Potted Muma
.CombiMtion Pots

•Silk Arrarigementa

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"'Thr• ll"n:v A nwrinr
Sf'llll.~ f.UI 'f'. ~

Ph, 992-2039- 992· 5721.
106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio_
W•

acc;tpt
1nd

111
we

ry'lejor

wire

credit

flowen

Page 10.

enttne

at y

e

Mother's 'Day Sale

"FIBERCRAFr' is an eKclusive outdoor furnrture fabric
developed by LLOYD and proven through many years of
successful use. It has an "air-cooloo' weave tltat remains
pleasantly cooL ..even when exposed to the sun for long
periods. The fabric is easy to clean wrth warm soap and
' water. The fabric also has a natural "give" because of
steel wire retnforctng in each hor~onal strand.

Two major announcements of interest

:eg. Sll.OO ................ Sale $8.79
Reg. $14.00 ............... Sale $11.19
Reg, $19.00 .............. Sale $15.19
eg. $27.00 .............. Sale $21.59

(!

coach.
Ord graduated from Rio Grande College al\d
received his Master's Degree and postgraduate work

at Ohio University,
The boartl wiD set his salary later.
Ord had been under consideration to leave the
Southern post tor the county superintendency
currently held bY theretlrlngBobBowen. According to
·board clerk, Deimle l{Ul, Ord withdrew his name-from
consideration ea!'Uer this week. Wedliesday'scontract
renewal Cll!OO as a sillptise to Ord according lo HW.
In another disclosure this morning, head basketb3U

Day

- Sale

SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR

SUMMER HANDBAGS
Shoulder Bags, Outch Bags, and Beach Bags. Vinyls, Leathers, Gunnysac: Cloth
and Eyelet lace Bags
-

Reg $10.00 -·-- _ __ ___ Sale $8.49
Reg. $12.50 .............. Sale $10.59
Reg. $16.00 ... ........... Sale $13.59
Reg. $23.00 .......... ..... Sale $19.59
Reg. $32.00 .............. Sale $27.19

Reg. $5.00 ......... ..................... ....... _................................ Sale, $3.99
Reg. $9.50 ......... .................... _.. __ . _........................ ...... ..Sale 1$7.59
Reg. $12.00 ...... ..................... ......................................... Sale $9.59
Reg. '$16.50 ......................................... _.................... _.. _Sale $13.19

Motlwr'., Day
Sale

CHAIR
SALE

25o/o
Off

Mother:• Day
Sale

Mother:, Day
Sale

Wrangler

ANGEL
TREAD

Sportswear

SLIPPERS

Tie waist jogging shorts, zrp front
shorts, I piece rompers, dress slacks
denim 1eans. tops, casual blouses. put-'
lover knit tops, hatter tops, dressy
blouses and jackets.
Junior sizes S thru XL and 5 to 15.

Balleri na and Scuff styles in terry
cloth . Assorted colors. Sizes S thru

XL

.

SPECIAL

Reg. $8.00 ................... Sale $6.39
Reg. $11.00 .. ...... ........ Sale $8.79
Reg. $17.00 .... .. ........ Sate $13.59
Reg. $21.00 ......... ...... Sale $16.79

$399
Mother'_, Day
Sale

Mother:, Day
Sal&lt;'

Mother's Day sale pnces on our new
spring and summer lines of 1unior
dresses. Sundresses. knit sh irt dresses,
jacket dresses, mini-skirt sets., 2 pc_
tops and skirts, knit dresses and
romper&amp;

Reg. $22.00 ............... Sale $17.59
Reg. $27.00 .............. Sale $21.59
Reg. $32.00 ............... Sate $25.59
Reg. $42.00 .......... :... Sale $33.59
Mother:• Day
Sale

Short and long sl~!fve styles, stripes
and soltd colors. Casual and dressy
styles_ Sizes 8 to 44. Reg $7.00 to
$3300,
. .

. SALE PRICED

&amp; COTY

SKIRT
SALE

FRAGRANCE
SALE
Give Mom her favorite cologne or
perfume.
·
REVLON: Sophia, Cha~te, Jontue.
Moon Drops, Intimate and Scoundrel.
COTY Musk, Emeraude, Muguet
Smitty, LeSport Nuance, L:Origan and
L'Atmanl

20°/o Off

coach Carl Wolte made It official- he will remain at
Southern. It has been rumored In recent weeks that
Wolfe would be leaving So!&lt;thern totakeacoachlngjob
with a bigger scho(ll, namely Chllllcothe .or New
Philadelphia. Wolfe told The Dally Sentinel he had
withdrawn his name from consideration at both
- schools and wiD remalnatSouthernasheadbasketball
coach and athletic director.
Wolfe, along with Kyger Creek's Keith Carter are
the two oldest basketball coaches in the SVAC in terms
of service. Both wWenter their 11th seasons.
His teams have complied an overall 18!&gt;-43 record
Including seven straight SVAC titles, seven sectional
crowns, three district titles, two regional champion·
ships, and a state runner·UP title.
Wolfe said, ''The Chillicothe opportunity was great,
they have a super set-up there, however, I guess I've
waited too long. At th1s stageol my career It Is hard on
me and the family to move. My home Is here, so we'll be
better off to stay,''.
In other business Wednesday night , the board
purchased a 71 paassenger school bus.

Phil Roberts, county engineer, claim.
Blue Shield and Brogan Warner
and Ted Wa!'Oer, superintendent
Commlssloners In May of 1982 Insurance Co. to discuss health
Informed Meigs County Commls· paid a claim on 10 sheep that were insuranCe for county employes.
stoners Wednesday that Southeast killed bY ct.ogs_ Two other sheep at
The two companies submitted
Equipment Co., will demonstrate a
the time were lnjuredandlaterdled. bids last week. Commissioners
grader next week bY ditching and The board Indicated It wasobUgated tabled the matter and requested
hauling stone on the road at the new to pay for the other two animals that additional lnfc;mnatlon. A final
colmty landtw.
dledlnMay.
decision wW be made at the nex t
"Ai55iei1s' illso Informed the board
meeting of the commlssoners.
be has met with a representative ol - The same resident had another
The board authorized David
the J.M company in order to get claim laat.Ndvember, but since the . KoblE'I\tz. president to sign all
. prices on road signs.
resident kn~ the owner of the dog necessary papers on behalf of the
who killed the animal, the board county lor P"'(lclpation in the new
They also discussed work on the stated it was a problem between the Jobs Tr~lnlng Program.
road and drainage problems at the
owneroftheanlmalandtheownerol
Attending were Koblentz, RJthe
dog.
chard
Jones and Manning Roush,
landfill.
Paul Gerard, lnvestlga tor for the
Also meeting with the board were commissioners and Marth a
prosecutor, concerning an animal representatives ol Blue Cross and Chambers.

(l

•
-·

'

•

..f~l

•

¥

•

~\' ~
--

EXCEU£NT RATING - The Meigs County:
garage of !the Ohio State lllghwny Department
-received an exceUent rating fottowlng the annnnl
spring inspection of mowing l'qulpment Wednesday.
A team of supervisory p&lt;lr.;onnel and maintenance
men spent the mornin g chec king 10 plc'Ct.S of hU'gc
and small equipment which will tw used In mowing
along the highw ays and In thr park.• In the munty.

The)' also rev iewed the stomgc of snow llnd Ice

equipment. Alter tlw• tnsp"·thm, the tt•run nd•L"''II
Bermu-d Gllkey, the M(•lgs County

superintendent, uiHml the
sory inspcdlon tewn

WI~~

l~gh

m LUntemut ct~

rating. ·n,., ~upervl­

t:ompoSt•d h)' ,John llowlcr,

maintenance fteld englnN·r, Colurnhus olllc'c•: ,John
Moening, dl14trict cqulpnwnt SUJK'rlntc ndcnt, Ma-

rietta: Larry Coler, dlstrld upcrationJ; engint.-er,
Mnrletta . 'nwy u.rt' shown with lk•rnnrd GIJkey, the
Meigs Cm1nty matntt•n aUH't' SUileriult•ndt·nf .

Ohio governor moves to shore up business tax proposal
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Faced
with rising opposition, Gov. Richard
Celeste has moved to shore up
whatever support he can find for his
proposed 4 percent business servi-

ces tax.
On Wednesday:
-The governor held a prtvate
session with about 15 representatives oftrade associations which had
lobbied against the tax, continuing
to eX\)resS strong support lor it.
-Tax Commissioner Joanne
Limbach went before reporters to
defend the levy as a fair plan needed
to finance tax relief and said It does
not create a burden lor businesses.
-The Ohio Education Assocla-

tlon endorsed the excise tax and
acq~sed
corporatiOns of being
unwilling "to accept their role In
revitalization ol the state's fiscal
health ."
House Assistant Minority Leader
Waldo Bennet! Rose, R-Ltma, said
Republicans were not alone In their
opposition to the tax. He said
Democrats on the House Finance
Committee also objected to It _
"They are looking to be saved and
we're trying to give them some
assistance," Rose said.
Sen. Tom Fries, D-Dayton, who6e
vote could be lmportapt In the
' Senate, whlchDemocratscontrolbY
a slim 17-16 margin, said he would

not support the budget bill If the tax
on business services was Included.
;,1 wW not vote for a blll that Is
camoufiaglng a direct charge to the
consumer. If we're going to tax
people, we should tell them up front
where It's coming from and who Is
going to pay, " he said.
At issue Is a section of Celeste's
proposed twe&gt;-year state budget
which would Impose a 4 percent tax
effective Aug. 1 on services which
businesses purchase. It would cover
automatic data processing, compu·
ter, consulting, advertising, engineering, security, buUdlng maintenance and janitorial setvlces.
The tax Is expected to yield $258

mllllon. Paul Costello, Celestp's _
press secretary, sa ld " 1he govemor
stands tully and strongly lx'hl ncl "
the excise lax.
Don Wilson. president of the Ohio
Education Association, said it was a
fair levy that should he lmposcxl.
"We see the exc ise tax as not being
a burden on small business: we see
the excise tax as a fair share for 1he
·s etvlce corporations which havr'
low Investment yet high Income,"
Wllson said.
Tax Commissioner .Joanne Limbach said testimony against the
measure Included misleading Information. "This administra tion's busIness tax proposals do not create a

burdPn for Ohio business. 'i'h('V

inst(•ad crealf' a tax (•nv ironrnc·r~t

which ' is fair and PQ uilablc for
huslnC'SS£" and Individua l r ax t~W
rrs alike," she sa id.
Reps. Tom .Johnson, H-NPw
Concord. and Hober1 Cu ruln, H
Dayton, outlined a GOP a lt crnntlvr

which would rPpiaCf.' the ta x wit h
million In spending cuI s.
One pari of their plan - a $:ill
million reduction in wo rklarl' fun d
ing - drC'\v fire from a collm g-uc',
Rep . Michael Fox. R-Hamllton .
Fox , a c-hief archi tect of thr·

$21~i

workfart' program,

~a id

th L1 pru

posed reduction was "111 -co nr~·l vrYI.
ill-tinned and Ill-advised ."

~kanwhilf'. ;1

coa lition trying to

plan• two ant i tax llilllot isstws
tJcrorC' votc•rs in Novf'rni:M•r has
lllt'('(l a Ntn1h Canton man to direct
it s daily opera lion:-;.
Ohioans to Stop J::xct•ssivf' Taxu -

tlon appohll"ilton:licll , Braucher,
SP&lt;Tf'tar y -tn•nsu iY't' of thP Alpha
( ·onst ll.J c:t lon Co .. ( ';mton , as PXPC'U t !VT' dlrr·dor of I ht· dr lvt ·.
'llmmas Zutx•r. t'oalition spokes man. saicl Brauch !'!' " fu lly under-

stands tllC·desr n rerlvf'rffec:tl hal thr&gt;
pt•rc'f'nt st&lt;.~f(' lnconw !; 1x hikt• and
new huslnpss laxt•s bPing
eonsldf..'IT'&lt; i will havp on our st&lt;:t iP' s
~tO

tfll '

Imubi('{i &lt;&gt;eonomy."

Meigs, Gallia projects on ODNR priority list

Scooter Skirts in stripes and solrd colors. Denim skirts. Summer skirts tn
prints., stripes and plain colors. Misses
sizes 8 to 18.
·

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP lltaff
ATHENS - Major reclamation work on strip mine areas In GaUia
County and to the Leading Creek section of Meigs County are on a list of
projects the Ohio Department oiNatural Resources' reclamation division
to hoping to get funded.
One of the Gallla project$ also P"'(ly answers a landslide problem that
has existed lor years In Green Township.
The projects, covering areas throughout southeastern Ohio, were
oulllned to citizens and offiCials bY reclannatlon representatives
Wednesday night at Athens County's extension service office as one of four
publiC heatlngs being conducted throughout the state.
The project with -the highest local price tag Is labelled Uttle Leading
Creek IT, estimated to cost $15 m!Won to clean up approximately 200 acres
through Scipio and Rutland townships.
Mitchell Farley, the environmental scientist a5slgned to the project. sa ld
the area has experienced a "tremendous amount" of coal refuse which
may affect the creek. li has also been ~ponslble lor fiooding , he added .
"We've been there since 1978, I expect we'll be there for another 10
years," Farley commented.
The state's pt\J~Mialls to check sedimentation from mined areas; and
officials also hope to eventually clean the creek's headwaters.
Farley said another $25,!ro Is on the request llst to finance a design study
to eliminate biuTen land and create proper mine drainage ne¥ Rutland.
The state Is also aeeklng $l2 rnUUon for construction and ~.!ro for
desp Work m approximately 170 acres of laJ1d near Little Kyger Creek In

Reg. $13.00 ............... Sale SI0.39
Reg. $17.00 .. _......... Sale $13.59
Rea. $23.00 .............. Sale Sl8.39
Reg. $27.00 .............. Sale $21.59

Mother'• Day
Sale

lADIES'
DRESSES
Jacket dresses, jacket/skirt suits, two
piece sets. party dresses, crystal
pleated stYles and sundresses.
Pet~e. Misses and HaW Sizes.
$'

.... $23.00 ............... Sale $18.39
Rei. '$29.00 .... ;.......... Sale $23.19
.... $36.00 ,.............. Sale $28.79
.... $44.00 ............... SIIe $35.19
... $58.00 ............... Slit $46.39

00~7H

Commissioners will pay two claims

Mother'.&lt; Day
Sale

This special sale includes our entire
stock of long gowns and robes, waltz
length gowns and robes. baby dolls,
pajamas, nitesh irts, dusters and shifts_
Sizes: Petite lhru XXL and Tall Sizes.

Wall-Away Recliners. Swrvel Rockers,
Rocker / Recliners, Occasional Cha11s
and Wood Rockers. Beautiful yet durable covers.

to residents

ol the Southern Local School District were made
public this morning,
In a brlel session Wednesday night, the Southern
Local Board of Education awarded Bob Ord,
superintendent a five-year contract.
Ord has setved In thatcapacltyforthe past 12 years.
Prior to that, he was head basketball for one year after
moving to Southern from Eastern High School where
he was employed as principal and resetve basketball

New Spring Colors_Bettoo Styles and
Elastic Waist Styles

Reg. S82.00 lo·Back Chair ....... ________ Sale $69.00
Reg. $93.00 High· Back Chair ............. Sale$79.00
Reg. $162.00 lounKer .................... Sale $137.00
Reg_$176.00 Two Seat Glider ......... Sale
Reg_$245.00 Canopy Swing .. .......... Sale

Mother ·.~

stay at Southern

SLACK
SALE

FURNITURE

OU'ftJNE PltOoJIIlCl'S - ~eral -lnlae reciMallllell·projede
I nq I .., lbe OIIID Dei F lfild of NManl '
P
W . . F 15 Uo 1*1 T ... " I o Ill A*
W I ·'
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a.,lll II MliiJI C ') ~ el file IIIPirfl'klild .. Cj Ill tiDiler
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•

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·Ord, Wolfe will

MISSES
OPEN STOCK

SUMMER

lADIES'
BLOUSES

•Azaleas

_
P ap:1· I :)'

THREE BIG DAYS OF SAVINGS MAY 5TH, 6TH AND 7TH

JUNIOR
DRESSES

.Motn." uitb flott'l 'rt

Page3

............................ ' .....................

Property tran.~fers

lflild mint flm)oring

.

REVLON

.t lnmdJ,

What's cooking?

Bench gets 2,000th
hit off Carleton

)

-The Dow Jones average of1
lnduslrtal
111

Motl11•r's D"'·
Sail'

S11r ''Tb"nJ..,

'

.....'.. !11otherS Da~ ..........

Make Her
Heart Blossom.

Give Flowers
For Mother's Day
Sunday, May 8

.

--------

•

'

Chelhlre ToWnship.
Sedimentation and heavy erosion from abandoned strip mines are
threatening Little Kyger Road and !hi! nearbY creek, according to -Pat

Green, the l!llV!ronmental scientist studylna ~he project.
ReclamatiOn II also !leeldni $:rl,!ro tor design work on an eroding
lllr1prnlne COW!I1I!g apptwdrnately 113 acres as a continuation of Its work
011 Uttle Kyaer.
At the clolle r1 the hour-long hearing, otrlctals said they would try to get

fu nding for a ll projects outlined In their second ann ual work plan hom the
federa l office of su r1ace mining.
"We may not get all the funding." explained Tom 'l'ugend of th~ ODNI'\ 's
aba ndoned mine land sta ff. "There arc some Indications WMshlngton will
not fund fu lly, but we're hoping to get the money. Th&lt;'y rnav nave' to driPte
one project. bu t we should definitely know by August."
Two property owners and some township trustees flloiJl Callia Coun ty
wal ked away trom the hearing partly satisfied with rea\amallon 's efforts
to seek funding to clear up 400 feet of ~ lands lldo t~a l has closed
Northup-Y ellowtown Road (Green Township Rd. 39 ) tct the past two
years.
The slide also threatens the property owned lJy brother!! Alden and Lee
Wedemeyer.
The Wedemcyers, accompanied by Green Townshl~ Trustee Merrtll
Johnson and Harrison Townsh ip Trustees Albert Saupcters and Shelly
Stone, asked Green and Dave Buchanan of the abandoned mi ne land staff
why only 400 feet Is being proposed for work when the slide has closed 1 y,
mUes of the road .
Buchanan said reclamation's main priority Is to rmpen tHe road, and
later seek funding to eventually clear up the remainder of the problem.
"We have to do ~t's necessai-y to open the side of the road, and we'll
tater request addtttiial fUnding to complete the work." Buchanan said.
"We don't expecf'Jhe area to be reclaimed, we want the hillside ilnd the
road slablllzed," ,1M Wedemeyer commented . "You'll have to do that
before It's ever cdlol\'ltted."
Some other projects In the area on reclamation's lis t Include:
- Mine shaft seal In Wilkesville Township, VInton County. Reclamation
Is asking $2,(00 lor design and $10,!ro tor construction.
-Rose tipple, Blootnfleld Township, Jackson County_ Considered a
hazard, an Wegaldumpslte and a contrlbutorto sedimentation; requestlng
$Zi,OOO for destgn and $1!10,1XXl for construction.
•
' .
-Vinton County Rd. 28. Reclamation Is seeking $10,1XXllonlesign and
$~.(XX) lor constroctlon· on a ~trip mine spilling onto the road.
'
(Continued on p&amp;ge 16)
•.

"

t

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