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Page

10-The C. ily Sentinel

Mondcly, May 9, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I Oth simulated
disaster set
this Thursday
This year marks the lOth anniversary of the simulated disaster
series conducted by Holzer Medical
Center In Gallipolis, Ohio, Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant,
West Virginia and Veterans Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy, Ohio and
the Mid Ohio Valley Industrial
Emergency Planning Council ( MOVIEPC) . In observance of National
Hospital Week May 8-14, these
three hospitals have once again
joined forces to partlclpa te In a
trilateral disaster drill , testing the
emergency preparedness of each
lactuty.
Thursday, May 12, at 2 p.m. a
mock earthquake wUI strike the
tri-county area, the epicenter being
located near the General James M.
Gavin Plant In Cheshire with shoek

waves reaching as far west as

Individuals residing at GDC wW be
evacuated due to a supposed
chemical spUI near the Mill Creek
Bridge.
In West Virginia, there wUI be an
explosion and lire at Stauffer
Chemical Company, a fire and
possible explosion at the City Ice
and Fuel Co. In the propane bulk
storage plant, and people trapped tn
a fallen building at the old Industrial
school across from Lakin State
Hospital. The victims from these
three sites will be transported to
Pl~asant V&lt;!-lley Hospital In Point
· Pleasant.
'
The State Emergency Medical
Services Medevac, If possible, wUI
be used to transport simulated
disaster victims from Pleasant
V-alley Hospital to the burn unit at
Cabell Huntington Hospital In
Huntington.
The likelihood of an earthquakeIn the Immediate trl-county area is
remote. While many area residents
have felt tremors In years past,
these are the result of earthq uakes
whose epicenters were located
generally In Western Kentucky or
Northeastern Pennsylvania. The
earth's crust In this region Is
considered by today's geologists
sufficien tly solid so that earthquakes strQng enough to cause
heavy· damage are extremely
unlikely.

Huntington, south to Charleston,
east to Parkersburg and north to
Chillicothe.
'
In the Immediate trl-county area,
the simulated damage wUI be
extensive. There will be earthquake
Injuries In lour separate locations In
Meigs County that wUI be transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy , a nd a group of
people attending a function at the
Gallla County Fairgrounds wUI be
caught by the earthquake and
transported to Holzer Medical
Center.
Also to be brought to Holzer wUI
Planning and coordinating lor the
be at least 15 " Injured" stall
members from t)ie GaUipolls De-, f'!lass exercise ,lakes nearly two
velopmental Center tGDC) where months and Involv es lit erally
the simulated earthquake will hundreds of people from the three
cause extensive damage. Also, all county area.

Area deaths
GuyW. Lee
Guy W. Lee. 93, Route 2, Pomeroy,
died Sunday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. Lee was born Dec. 4, 18ffi a t

Mrs. Frieda C. Fields, 90, Syracuse. died Sunday at Veterans

Page4

Page4

e.,
Voi .32,No.19

Meigs County happenings
Cyclist charged
following accident
A motorcycle, driven by Belinda
Ross, traveling south on South
Second St., Middleport, turned onto
MUI Street and attempted to turn
onto South Third when she lost
control striking a car parked at the
VUiage Manor Parking Lot owned
by Milford Hysell.
Middleport Policeman reported
Ross was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Middleport Emergency Squad with facial
and leg Injuries. E:ddle McClure.- a
passanger on I be bike, was taken to
Veterans by HyselL
. Ross was · char~ with DWI and
no motorcycle endorsement.
The accident occurred early
Sunday morning.

ELBERFELDS

Veterans Memorial

CAR SEATS
ANOTHER NEW SHIPMENTf
r

eOur new automobile
child restrant systems
meet all Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards.
.

•We have rear-facing
(for newboms) and
standard upright .mo. dels (for toddlers up
to 40 lbs.).

Meets Thursday
The Southern Band Boosters wUl
meet Thursday, May i2; at7: :llp.m.
In the band room.

S~ial

The Meigs Athletic Boosters wUl
meet Tuesday, May 10 at 7:30p.m.
at the high schooL

Contrary to a report In the Sunday
TIJ)'les-Sentlnel, Middleport and
Pomeroy VIllages are the only areas
of Meigs County In which there will
be elections on June 7. The Meigs
County Board of Elections Is

election hours

maln;a~lng s~lreglsai
m:"rs t~ay' ~
a.m. 0 p.m.
er vo ers 0
Pomeroy and Middleport lor the
June 7 elections. Today is the
deadline for voters of the two

1

PRICED FROM

S4400 sgsoo
TO

FREE

PARKING

'""'""

f~c~o~mm~u~n~lt~les~t~o~~eg~is~te~r;f~or~th~ose~~~;;;;;~~~~§~~~~~§~~~~§~~~~

sauaa on
our reduced cost
I•

For the protection of the marina area, council also
dlsC\Issed the possibility of providing free land rent to
an Individual who would want to place a mobile home
at the marina and serve as an overseer ot the site,
protecting the area from misuse and vandalism.
Mayor Hoffman Indicated that sewer and water
Unes should be extended to the marina. Councilman
Dewey Horton also suggested the development of
property In the upper end of the town Into recreational
facilities.
Council approv!'d the report of Mayor Hoffman
showing receipts of $8936 In fines and fees lor the
month of April. Mayor Hoffman announced that a
hearing on the rate Increase request of General

The state highway patrol cited a
16-year-old Pomeroy youth In a
one -car accident Monday
afternoon.
Brian C. Jacobs, Hysell Run
Road, was not Injured in the
accident, the patrol said.
Jacobs was westbound on County
Rd. 22, nine-tenths of a mile west of
Ohio 7, at 3: ~ p.m. when he
reportedly lost control on a curve,
went off the right sldeoftheroad and
struck a fence and a tree, causing
slight damage to the car.
The patrol ticketed Jacobs tor
exees~IVe speed.
Paul L. Norris, 48, Rt. 1,
Chesterhill, escaped injury,when his
vehlele drove off the right side of
Ohio143at8:30a.m. Monday.
Norris was two-tenths of a mile
north of Ohio 684 when the accident ·
occurred. His auto was moderately
damagE;'(~.

A ·vehicle driven by Arthur
Mangon, 23, Reedsvllle, struck and
killed a deer on 7 In Salisbury
Townsjllp at 9 p.m. Monday,
according to the patrol.

Weather forecast
Clear tonight. Low~. Winds
variable and nearly calm. Sunny
on Wednesday. High near 75.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Thursda.y through Salurtla.y:
Fair 'Thursday and Frlda.y and
a chance of showers Saturtla.y,
Hlgtw In the '7tB 'lllursday, tbe
mld-OOs to the mld-'ln. Friday
and the 00s Salunla_v. Lows in the
mld-4(fi to mld-ii(B.

Meigs gets job training funds
LAKE HOPE - Commlsslcners
from seven area counties met
Monday night to discuss a $3.2
milllon federal program to train
area workers.
The Job Training PartnershlpAct
was passed by the U.S. Congress In
1982 to replace the former Comprehensive Employment and Training
Act.
Commissioners met Monday to
torm a Private Industry Council
which wUI administer the federal
grant, Gallla commissioner Paul
Niday said.

YOU MAKE TilE DEAL AND LET OUR EXPERTS TAKE CARE OF
. ..
TilE REST
*Cusromer subjecr to loan approval.

1,08 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OH,

PHONE;
(Ohio)

(W. Va.) n3·9577

HOURS:

Mon.-Tues .•Wtd;·fri. 9:30 to 5
!burs. 9:30 to 12
•
to 2

.

U.S. attention now on Syria

.

Authonzed Catalog Merchants
. Gregg &amp;Patty Gibbs

.

ASHLAND, Ohio (AP) - Prestspendlpg and higher taxes."
dent Reagan says U.S. Rep. John
When he said his administration
Ashbrook fought for conservative
had cut Inflation from double-digit
causes and that many of Ashbrook's
levels. It came out , "&lt;)oudgle,
Ideals finally were embraced. but
dubba-dlt."
that the conservative strugg le must
He Issued a warning to tawmakcontlnue.
ers who want to eliminate the
Reagan stopped In Ashland Mon third -year Income lax cu ts won by
day enroute to Washington alter a
the administration . "lfthcytry rodo
long weekend In the West. He spoke
anything about that third tax cut. I
at a fund-raiser for Ashland
sleep with a veto pen under my
College's planned John M. Ashpillow," he said.
Reagan called on Congn."Ss to act
brook Center for ..etlbllc At!alrs, a
program designed to expose stu soon on the MX mtsslleprogram. "II
dents to conservative policies In
Congress rt'jects thl'se proposais, It
JAYCEE OF YEAR - Bob First, center, has
president, left, and BW Childs, right, guest speaker at
economics and politics.
will havcdealta blow toournatlonal
been selected as Meip' Jaycee of the Year. He Is Satunlay's annual Jaycee banquet. See more photos
Reagan called for opposition to
secut1ty that no foreign power would
shown with Brian Conde, newly elected Jaycee on page 10.
Increased government spending on
ever have been able to accomplish,"
social pr-ograms and said delays In
he sa id.
the MX missile program threaten
'11ckets to the dinner cost $:.nJper
national security. .
couple. Those who paid $l,IXXJ got to
The pi'&lt;;'Sltlent said Ashbrook, who
attend a pre-dinner cocktail party
died In 1982, had reminded the nation · with the president and Mrs. Reagan .
that it was drlfltlng too far from Its
A college spokesman sald$250,000
Secretary of State George P. depends on Syria and the PLO.
TEL AVIV, Jsrael tAP) -Syria
traditional
values.
worth
of tickets were sold, and that
Shamir also signaled that Israel
has replaced Israel as the focus of Shultz, before ending his two-week
Ashbrook, a Republican, was
the college would have $180,1XXJ tor
expects warmer relations wllh
American efforts to get foreign peace shuttle In the Middle East.
organlze""nd an Initial m ember of
the Ashbrook center alter expenses.
Washington .
forces out of Lebanon, and Israel made final stops In Israel and
Reagan lauded Ashbrook as an
"We are In a period ot considera- the Reagan for President Commit hopes one result will be Improved Lebanon to report on Syrtan
tee in 1976 and again In 19&amp;1.
e loquent spcaker who won the
President Hafez Assad's cool reac- ble Improvement of relations berelations with the United States.
Reagan said he and other
t'espect o~hls liberal opponents. He
tween us and the United States,"
Israel's approval of a withdrawal tion to the accord he worked out to
said II would be wrong to "excluShamlr said. "The agreements conservatives mourn the loss of
agreement Friday takes Prime obtain Israeli withdrawal.
Ashbrook , but were gratified that he
slvely ldehtlfy John Ashbrook's
Despite Syrian objections. Shultz
Minister Menachem Begin's goundoubtedly contributed to this."
lived
"to
see
his
political
principles
political principles with one man ,
vernment off the hook In regard to said the Israel-Lebanon pact would
'
Shultz has Indicated the United victorious and his public career
one party or onP political
U.S. pressure to remove Its 25,000 not be renegotiated. He called the
States soon wut end It s embargo on vindicated."
movem ent. "
pact "a great thing" a nd said Israel
troops, part of the force which
shipping F -16 warplanes to Israel.
Reagan said government spendAshbrook, 5.1, was In Ihemlddleot
would be patient In allowing time to
Invaded on June 6.
The
Israelis
complained
that
while
lng
to
cure
social
Ills
only
led
to
his
lllh term In Congress and
win
agree.ment
on
a
Syrian
pullout
The United States has accepted
the
Soviet
Union
replaced
all
of
Inflation
from
Lebanon.
and
high
unemployment.
preparing
to nm for the Republican
Israel's pos_Ition that It does not have
Israeli
Foreign
Minister
Yltzhak
Syt1a's
losses
In
the
Lebanon
war.
"The
great
soc
ial
spending
nomination
for U.S. Senate when he
to withdraw Its troops until Syria
Shamir
pledged
that
Israel
wlll
the
UnltedStateswasdenylng
Israel
schemes failed for the vast majority
died. fi e won votes from Democrats
and the Palestine Liberation OrganImplement the agreement "as soon
the top-quality fighter bombers.
Ization do likewise.
·
and Republlcansalike ln0hio'sl7th
of poor Americans," Reagan said.
as possible" and said the timing
"The poverty programs failed
District, gathering as much as 70
The 75 F -16s were schedu led for
precisely because they grew wll.h·
percent of the votes In some
delivery tn 1985, solhPembargohas
out regard tor the burden they and
elections.
no Immediat e Impact on Israel's
other social programs were lmposAshbrook's widow, Jean, who
military capability. Butlhe political
lng on !he overall economy."
served . the remaining six terms ot
overtones rankled the Israelis.
his congressional term, said her
Reagan said his budget cuts were
The United States regarded creating economic Improvements ,
family Is pleased that a "living
Israel's early goals In negotiations such as lowered Inflation and
memorial to preserve and perpetuas unrealistic and opposed Israel's lncreased auto sales.
ate the conservative principles and
Insistence on having a peace treaty
In order to continue the progress,
values championed by John Ash- .
with Lebanon and keeping some Reagan said, the country must
brook will find Its beginnings hereon
troops there. · In the end, Israel
"resist the well-Intentioned statism
the campus of Ashland College."
agreed to considerably less.
· or those who urge eypn more

We realize that when "new car fever" strikes, it strikes hard. We at The Farmers
Bank want to helf you cure that lever. Therefore, we are offering our lowest
rates m years of 1.9%* fmancmg on any new car loan. All you have to dots
make your best deal, then bring your purchase order to one of our qualified
loan officers.

Farmers
Bank

-

represe~tat1ve

now aareattlmeto 811111111

Fo

· Councilman .Carl Horky reporled that he has been
In touch with Solicitor Bernard Fultz advising that a
title search on a couple of properties has been
suggested lor the Hudson St. area and that Fultz wlll
advise council on the matter.
A dralnal&lt;e problem was dlscils.sed at the
Intersection of Broadway and 1 Logan Sts. Mayor
Hoffman said an engineer of Brown and Associates Is
working out a plan to handle the problem. Council
discussed the need lor a new tractor but finances are
not available at this time. It was reported that a
trailer In the town is not property underpinned.
Councilman Allen Lee King commended the town for
the cleanup work done In the area of the old depot.

.

our lOWer r•• 111111e

#4301

20 C.nh

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Telephone Co. of Ohio wUI be beld on July 28 at the
Wilkesville Elementary SChool.
Mayor Hoffman suggested also that the village
work towards the establishment ot an Industrial park
so.mewhere In Mel~ County and Indicated that he
will contact Kim Shields, vU!age consultant, abou I
such a project. It was suggested that the Hobson area
be annexed to the village and that area be used as the
location of an Industrial park. HoWever, councilman
Jack Satterfield commented that the annexation of
Hob;on Is up to residents of that section who must sign
a petition requesting annexation. No actiOn has been
forthcoming from residents there towards the
'
development of a petition, he said.

,

TRADE-IN

NOW ONLY

l S.Ction1 , 14 Poges

Reagan lauds
deceased Ohio
.

WITH

.,

entine

Patrol
.
c1tes
youth

Ruby A. Holliday

CUT $20

at y
'

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff
Positive steps towards expanding the recreational
facUlties of the marina near Railroad St., were taken
Monday night when Middleport VIllage Council met
In regular session.
Council diScussed the possibilities of establishing
additional ball diamonds at tbe site. Mayor Fred
Hoffman suggested a plan be laid out that Included
diamonds as well as other facilities. He was
authorized to present the layout to the U. S. Corps of
Engineers. The Corps has a program through which It
pays one-half of the costs Involved In such
recreational projects.

INFANTS

Saturday Admissions-- Ricky ·
Murphy, Tuppers Plains; Christine
Sheets, Pomeroy; Evelyn Manuel,
Racine. .
Saturday DJliCharges--Mlchael
lmtxxlen,
Ann Alley, Hazel Proffitt.
I .
Sultday Admissions-Frank Reynolds, Mason, W. Va.; Gladys
Cuckler, Pomeroy; Holly Green,
Pomeroy; Barbara Smith,
Middleport.
Sunday Discharges--Connie Manley, Ricky Murphy, Tanglla
Laudermilt.

Meet Tuesday

•

Steps taken to expand recreational facilities

MOCK DISASTER PlANNED- As part of the N..-al Hospital

Week observance, a mock earthquake ha8 been set lor 2 p.m. 'Thursday

Mary
HeJ ·was
Middleport,
for Included
Belinda RDss,
Darwin,Chaney
a son ofLee.
the late
J. anda Memorial Hospital.
un ay runs
12:15taken
a.m., elections.
member of the Bearwallow Church
A retired c lerk at the former
from a motorcycle accident ·to
of Christ, Harrlsonvllle Masonic Williams Five and Ten Cent Store In
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 1: 03
Lodge a nd Hemlock Grange 2049.
Pomeroy, Mrs. Fields was born Jan.
a.m., Pomeroy, Kevin Potts, SeSurvtvln g are his wile, Mabel 7· 1B93 1n Meigs County, a daughter
cond St .. to Veterans Memorial;
p omeroy, 2:33 a.m. , Gladys
Hines Lee; a daughter and son-In- of the later Sam and Ol!te Williams
Iaw,MauritaandRDE.MU!er,near Clark. ·She was a member of the
CucklerfromPomeroyHealthCare
Pomeroy; a daughter and son-In · Asbury Unlt('d Methodist Church.
Center to Veterans Memorial;
Tu ppers PI a 1ns, 11 : ""
Jaw, J ean and G arry M. E c ka rd , Besides her parents, she was
., a.m .. Mary
preceded
In
death
by
her
husband,
Bl
1
C
d
Clark Hospif
d
I
arme.
I
n
d
.;
our
gra
n
sons,
gman,
o
am
enC
Garry Guy Eckard, New York, N. Everette Fields.
tal; Middleport, 3:42p.m., Barbara
Y.: David Carl Eckard, CrawfordsSurviving are a niece, Mrs .
Smith to Veterans Memorial;
Beulah
Calkins,
Columbus·
two
Tu
vllle, rnd .; J ohn Lee Eckard,
·
ppers PI ains, 4:04 p.m., W. W.
Danville, Ky .; James Bernard great -nieces, Mary Graham, PatasBarton to Camden-Clark; RuUand.
5: 28 p.m., van WU',o rd . Larkin
·
s st.,
Eckn ard , CarmP I, Ind .; a gran d. kala, and Marjorie Manuel. Symdaughter, Nancy Jean Miller, .cuse, and two great-grea t-nieces,
to Veterans Memorial .
Huntington, W. Va .; a sister-In-law, JanlceL!sleandJeannleAilen,both
Saturday runs Include 8:00p.m.
Edna Lee, Pomeroy , and severa l of Symcuse.
Pomeroy. Sherry Holtz from
nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at lO a.m.
Burger Chef to Veterans Memorial;
g:.up.m.,
·~
Mlddl eport, HenryDayls,
Precedl ng him In d cat h bes ld es Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
his parents were a sister, Ada Home with the Rev . Stanley
to Holzer Medical Center from
Helwig, and two brothers. Ray and Merrifield officiating. Burial will be
Route 554, a nd 9:14p.m . Symcuse,
Glenn Lee.
In Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
Jean Kloes from her home In
, Services will be held at I p.m. maycall atthefuneralhomeuntll9
Minersville, to Holzer Medical
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral r-t-hts_ev_e_n~tn-g_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_Ce.:.:n.:.:te.:.:r.:_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___j
Home with the Rev. Wayman
Hinson offic iating. Burial wUI be In
Burlingham Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home !rom 2
to4and7 to9pm. Tuesday .

Mrs. Ruby Anderson Halliday: 90,
well-known HarriSonville area resident, died Saturday evening at her
home on the Harrisonvtlle-Rulland
Road following a lingering Illness.
Born at Dexter on March 2, 1893,
Mrs. Halliday was a daughter of the
late Charles Finley and Orinda
Brown Anderson. She was · a
member of the Harrlsonvtne Presbyterian Church and was a 76 year
member of HarrtsonvUie Grange
1734. She belonged to OhloStateand
National Granges. Mrs. Halliday
was a Ule member of tbe Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society and was a 65 year charter
member of the Meigs County FarllJ
Bureau. She belonged to the Meigs
County Pomona Grange, the Star
Garden Club and Harrtsonllle
Chapter 255, Order ot Eastern Star.
Surviving are a daughter, Paullne
Atkins, Harrisonville-Rutland
Road; a grandQaughter, Mrs.
Robert (Sharon) Jewell, Rutland; a
great-granddaughter, Cheryl Lynn
Jewell, Rutland, and several nieces,
nephews and cousins.
·Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband,
Frank Halliday; an Infant son, three
brothers and a sister-In-law.
Fuqeral services will be held at 2
p.m . Tuesday at the Harrisonville
Presl)yterlan Church with the Rev.
Etn~t Stricklin and the Rev.
Wa~d.e Johnson officiating. Burial
wllli)J' In MIIE!!i Cemetery. Frlehds
may ca)! .• at the Ewing Funeral
Home !l'om 1 to 9 this eVening.

Chimney safety

Pomeroy-_Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May I 0, 1983

Copyrithted 1983

Ten calls were answered by local
units over the weekend, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Servlces reports.
s d

Frieda C. Fields

Southern tops Eagles .

fage5

Squads kept busy

Eastern Star services will be held at
8 this evening at the funeral home.

Meigs gals advance

Member FDIC

SHOWS THE WAY - fl'lwldJ Pr tl left
Frucafl MlllenDd, left, . . _ &amp;be "111 to
Set bu7 o-p . . ............. ofllle a,..... Ta 1 11)' lifter .... Ill
I o-p lbaJia ..
II Put. lor the 1 I •uftlle II I 1_1 eNI meeCIDjpif

u.s. . .

Your. Com~·lunity Owhed Bank
,&gt;.,

II

..

,,

'

Acconllng to the federal law,
PIC's shall be J1'Sponslble for
providing "guidance and oversight" ot the actMtes under the
training act "In partnership with
local government."
Under the ntw act, 29 councils wUl
ll!! lonned ln. Ohio to 1IU!IIage the
grilnts In specttled service delivery

from private Indu stry and 18
members from educational agen cies. labor, minority groups, economic development organizations
and community organizations.
Meigs County will have one
representative on the board from
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services and two members !rom
private Industry.
The commissioners must' choose
the members by June 1.
According to figures by the state,
Meigs County IS expected to l'l'Celve
$336,374 of the $3.2 million grant for
this area.
Niday said Gallia County is
expEicted lo receive $379,988 ot the
$3,2 mUUon grant for this service .

area . Other countieS In the area are
Lawrence, Pen;', Hocking, Vinton
and Athens. 'The total population tor
the ()qN I •tim for Economic Coopen&amp;Jon Md
this area Is 240,907.
De\ekpoikill. U.S. offlclall1 readed rill eantm to
The nf.W job training act Is
F'Pmcll Pt-1' • MIUernnd'a propoul fer a ' area.
. deSigned to help persons who do not
c olllet4!11Kie on nfonnlnllhe World,OIOII,etary syMem.
. . The 29-member PIC for thls ha_v e marketable employment
{AP Wirephoto).
region wUI consist of 19 members skills, Niday said.

The JTPA will provide skills
training and will not make job
placements as the CETA program
did, accord ing to Niday.
The PIC council will decide what
employment areas to . provide
training .
"That Is why there Is private
Industry on the council - to tell them
where people are most needed "
Niday said .
'
He said the council could decide to
administer the federal grant themselves, or contract with another
group, such as a Community ACtion
Agency, to do the work.
The southestem Ohio PIC 1s
projected to receive $8J,QXJ to
spend on administration, Meigs
County will receive • $!!0,456 tor
administration or the gr!'nt. ·G allta
County will receive $56,998,
By law, this Is not more than Ill
percent of the grant amount.
Niday said be expects vocatiOnal
schools and colleges In each of the
seven counties will receive ·contracts to provide training,

•..

\

'

•

�I

•I

Commentary

~

2-:-'lhe Daily Sentinel
~~"=f ltti dd'ep a;· Ohio
T~o.dsy, lhly 10, I~

How many years?
WASillNGI'ON -

Ill Court Stret!t
Pomeroy, Ohio

DE VOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

tllb

~~ ~._-.-,~c::l·o=e
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
f'uhllsh1 •r

P!I.T WHITEHEAD
,\sslstunl

BOB HOEFLICH

Puhllsh~r / Co ntroll e r

Genera l Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, ,JR.
News EdllGr
A MEM8F.R of

nit'

1\~;.-.ociawd P~. Inland Dall)' PN!HH A'iMclatk&gt;n and the

James J. Kilpatrick

Howard University were bt court an1 has a right to dlscrlmlnate
the other dlly, defendbtg the · against whites; Howard is not
predominantly black ll!stltutlon required to follow a "eolor·bllnd"
from a charge ol racial dlscrlmlna. Nle because ot the "legally recogtlon. The charge came !rom a white nlzed unique status c1 blacll:
woman, an assistant prolessor ol. colleges." While the p!Jllntiff's
French, whO had been awarded evidence might hj!ve been suf11.
$25,300 on her complaint that she ctent to prove discrimination
had been tlred because of her race against a black teacher bt a white
and replaced by a black Instructor lnstltutlon, thereversewasnottrue.
with lesser quallflcatlons. Howard
And the mabt reason for this, said
asked that the judgrl)ent be set Howard's brlel, is that because ot
aside.
past dlscrlnnlnatlon agl\in5t b!Jlcks
The university had denied the bt
education, "for years to
charge, but only more or less.
be more whites

demlc ~· ·

81

1n the same week that Howard
was arguq b' Inequality, other
news was dl!velopllrg. Willlam
Bradford Reynolds, helld of the

Justice Department's clvll rights
division, made aspeech 111 which he
termed racial quola.l "morally
wrong'' and aaJd the .d epartment no
looSer would defend them. 1be
depluotrnent asked a federal appeals court to set aside a recent
order · of a .lower court requiring
Deiruit's peUce department to
make one-to«Je promotions, black

.\Jl1('r1tan 1\'cwspal)('r Publishers A."'AAtiation.
IU'C welcomed. They Mould be Je..itl U.IUI 300 words &amp;one.
s uhjc&lt;:t tn editing and must be signed with name, itddreH8 and telephone
,numllf'r. No Ull!il.(l'l«&lt;letters wiD be publi'&gt;hed. Leite"' ~ould he In good taste, addre&amp;-

I.E'ITER.Iioi OF OPINION

AJJ

Ieite~ UN'

!iilng k'luc!-1, not

pa-!I!OnaliU~ .

In other important
legislative action
Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., calling himself a "very, very old" lootball
player, tried the other day to set the House straight on the difference
between football and soccer.
It was as the House was discussirig a resolution to support efforts to have
the United States host socecr's 1986 World Cup.
Kemp, the former Buffalo BUls quarterback, took issue with the name of
the internatlonll l soccer association that oversees the World Cup
competition - the Federation lnternatlonale de Football Assocl&lt;ltion.
"They should change their name and stop confusing aU of those young
boys ;md .maybe some young girls who think of football as football . .. .'·'he
said.
"F'ootball Is football ; soccer is soccer. Soccer does not have a
quarterback; only footba ll has a quarterback," Kemp said.
_Kemp was told ,by coU&lt;?gues that, ln other parts of the world, soccer was
often referred to as "football.''
Kemp said he didn't care. "I think It is important that for all of those
young people out there, who some day hope to play real football, where you
throw il and kick It and run with It POd put !lin your hPOds, a distinction
s hould bf&gt; made tha t football Is democratic, capitalism, whereas soccer is a
E uropePO socialist. .. .''
·
Severa l colleagues challenged Kemp to elaborate on hls contention that
soccer was socialistic while. football was democratic . "It's a challenging
Intellectua l concept," said Rep. Gerry E. Studds, D-N.Y.
"I am going to have to revise and extend my remarks (In the
Congressional Record)," Kemp sald."l do not think I want to leave this on
the Record.
But whatever Kemp's editing plans, his remarks were prtnted the next
day In the Record for a ll to read.
Kemp isn't the only member of Congress to talk about his athletic
· abilities. The other day, Sen. 8Mry Goldwater, R·Arlz., put out a press
release announcing he'd just been awarded a gold medallion from the
IntcrmtioMI Swimming Hall of Fame In Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
·
S..ld the release: "Goldwater joins a longllneofdistlnguishedstatesmen
who were swimmers, Including Plato, Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar,
Charlemagne , Benjamin Franklin . ..."
"As a swimming author, he joins Ernest Hemingway and Lord Byron,
whO, llke Goldwater, were competitive swimmers," It added.

Berry's World

..

i~

Jtistory

Today is '1\Jesday, May lO,'thelJothday ofl!Rl There are235days lelt In
the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On May 10. 1940, BritiSh Prime Minister Neville Chamberlabt resigned,
and Winston ChurchlllfOtmed a new govermnent.
On this da t ~:
In 1497. Italian navigator Amerigo Vespueel sailed on hls lirst voyage to
the New World.
· In 1869, a gold spike was driven at Ogden. Utah. marking the completion
of the first transcontinental railroad.
In 1871, the treaty of Frankfurt ended the Franco-Prusslan War, with
Ais3ce-Lorralne being ceded to Gennany.
In 1941, Nazi o!flelal Rudolf Hess landed by pj!rachute in Scotland In a
prtvate effort to make peace during World War II.
Ten years ago : Fonner Attorney General John Mitchell and former
Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans were btdlcted bt New York. Both
faced charges stenunbtg from a secret S:n&gt;,OOO contribution to President
Richard Nixon's 1972 re-election campj!lgn.
Five years ago: Foilowbtg a day of mourning for lfS 13,00! war dead,
Israel began celebrations marking lts 30th annlvers$y as a nation.
One year ago: Britain reported that one of Its warships had opened !Ire
on a large Argentine vessel near the Falkland Islands.
Today's birthdays: Dancer·actor Fred Astalre is 84 years old. Fonner
tennis star Pancho Gonzales Is 55.
·
Thought tor today: "HwnUlty Is the solid foundation of all the virtues." ·
- Confucius, Chinese philosopher (551 B.C..-479 B.C.) .

..

lieutenant. The Justice Department

«JJIteiuls that such a quota system

"b.lpel'mlsslbly lntrlnges on the
equal protection rtghts ill non-black
pqllce sergeants,:: and obviously It
~
·
~ more re!Jlted incident: In
CharlottesvUie, black students
demonstrated to protest the relalively StnaJI number ol btack
students and teachers on the
lllstorlcgroundsoltheUnlversltyof
. Vlrgfnla. The university has 977
lllack undergraduates, about 9
percent ol the 11,104 total.
Isn't It about tlrne,l am mlnded to
ask, that our courts, our public
btstltutions and our statutes be shed
c1 this whole busbtess of racial
quotas and affirmative action? In
the years lrnniedlately following
the Supreme Court's d,eclslon in
Bro":" vs. Board ol El)ucatlon,
doub\less a case could be made for
the draconian measures subsequently bnposed to wipe out
state-sanctioned segregation "root
and branch." But the brown
decision was almost :rJ years ago.
For how many "years to come"
must these unfair and artificial
devices be continued?
I have lived tn VIrginia for 40
years; I know the university, and I
know that the decent and honorable
man in charge of its affairs have
tried earnestly to attract more
qualllied black students. It Is a
fru~tratlng task. Once graduated
from high school, young people
cannot be compelled tp enrolled at.a
particular college; !hey are
to
choose, and If they choose not
attend the university - for wha·
lever reason - that Is thelr'cholce.
No state barriers ' sand bt their .
way.
We have reached a point where
"equal protection at the laws" has
become, agabt, a mockery.

free

"Walt a minute ... these could ~ Soviet arms h~~ded ior Nl~aragua ...
then again, they could be American arms headed for Nicaragua, too."

Bomb plans known
WASffiNGTON - U.S. intelligence agencies received wambtgs
a month bt advance that Iranianbacked teiTOrists planned to bomb
the American Embassy bt Beirut.
Yet nothing was done to beef up
security at the building where 17
Americans were killed.
ThiS shocking adrntss!on ls eon·
tained ln the super-secret National
Intell1gence Dally, a document that
Is circulB.ted to !ewer than 100
hlgh·level U.S. officials. An autopsy
ol the Beirut bombbtg appeared In .
the April 20 edition -two days after
the tragedy, and one day after the
Islamic Jihad Organization
claimed responslb111ty lor the blast.
Though the report Itself is
classified above top-secret, It was
reviewed by my associate Dale Van
Alta. Here's the appalllng story:

Jack Anderson

The National Security Agency's
code breakers _ had intercepted

and CIA had prior warning ol tbe

The admlaslon that both the NSA

some alanning communications in
the Middle East. These gave a clerubtdlcatlon that a pro-Iranian ShUte
Moslem group, fanatically loyal to
the Ayatollah Khomebti, was planrrtng to bomb the Beirut Embassy.
At the same time, the CIA which lost seven people bt the
bombbtg - had gathered "humin!," or human bttelligence,
which warned that the same group
had plans to bomb the embassy.
Accordbtg to the bttelllgence
report, preparations for the bomb
attack were supervised by a high
official bt the Iranian Foreign
Ministry, whO also gave final
approval. It was assumed that
Khomelnl also knew ol the plan and
approved It.

bombbtg was hedged with suggestions that the Intelligence Information could not be verified, and bt at
least one case came from an
untested SOIIl't'e. ·
But this alftll has a hollow ring.
Not only had the Islamlc Jihad
shown itself to be a teiTOrist group
that shOuld be taken sertously, but
the CIA had been keepbtg track ot
the Jihad and other Khomelnlbacked groups for a year or!more.
For example:
- · The Islamic Jihad claimed
"credit" lor a car-bomb explosion
-the same kind of attack as that of
AprU 18- which killed 12 persons at
the French Embassy In Beirut a
year ago.
- It also took responsibility lor

Moonlight 1on teachers

Today

..

Counsertl..l-argued-. _lDSie_ad_tha_t_How
_____
than
__bl_la_c_ka_wl_th_adv
___1Ced
__ac_a_·_and--:-w-:hi:-:te:--,-::to-:::the:-::-:r::ank':'::'"':c1-;-:po::1;:Ice:-

Lawyers for

When educational scores
plummet In the United States
everyone tends to blaze the school
teachers . But thJs Is too easy. The
average salary for a teacher, after
lour years of college and taking
special courses, is $17,00! a year.
Because many school teachers
have to moonlight at Pnother Job to
stay alive, they're not getting
enough sleep to be sharp bt the
classroom.
I became aware of this when .1
took my nephew to dinner the other
night.
"Look," he said. "There's my
English teacher."
" Where? " I asked.
"The mPO eombtg over bt the
walter's unlfonn ."
"He's your English teacher?"
·" Sure. HJ, Mr. Peterson."
"Hello, Michael," Peterson said
to my nephew. "What brings you
here on a school night?"
" My uncle is taking me out lor
my birthday. Aow dld I do on my
English test today?" Michael

"That's correct. He's a busboy think you're wastbtg the taxpayer's
here, but as soon as he gets hJs . money. But If you tell themyou'rea
master's degree bt biophysics, I'm walter they feel you're doing
·
sure he'll become a walter. The something worthwhile.''
"You teachers have a tough life,"
maMger of this restaurant has had
·
very good luck with the teaching I sald.
· staff of Warren Hardbtg High
"It cOUld he worse. Most of the
School. As an alumnus, he trtes to staff at Herbert Hoover High School
hlre as many ol us as he can. Mlss work the nlgbt shift at National
Bellows, your math teacher, is the Airport for Federal Express. They
hat cheek girl, Pnd Mr. Fallows, ol never get any tips."
the Phys. Ed. department, is the
We gave our order, and after
bouncer bt the bar,"
Peterson left I said to Michael, ~·Is
"Is It degradbtg to work as a he a good teacher?"
walter at night and a school teacher
"Better than most. You know
in the daytime?" I asked Peterson. John Hllnrallan, the kid I play
"Oh, I don't ever tell anyone I football with\' Well, he and hls
moonlight bt the daytime u a parents discovered hJ.'I French
school teacher. U you let people teacher, Mr. Dubois; was working
know you're a teacher they tend to In a gas stat1011. Dubois forgot to put

grenade and machlnegun attacks
on American and ltllllan troops of
the multbtatlonal peace-keeping
force bt Beirut last March. The toll: ·
One ltaiiPn kllled and five Americans Wounded. And It claimed to
have taken shots at members of the
French peare-keepbtg force a few
days before the U.S. Embassy
blast.
- The Jihad ls an olfshoot of the
mabtstrellm Shiite paramilitary
organization, Amal. The orlgtnal
leader, MuM al Sadre, was a
Khomelnl disciple who dlsappepred
on a 1978 irtp to Ubya. The Jihad is
closely associated with an est!·
mated 1,000 Iranian revolutionary
guards who have proclaimed an
"Islamlc-Khomelnlst state" lit
8aalbek bt Northeastern Lebanon.

Art Buchwald
the gas cap back on their tank, and
John's pj!rents were so angry wben
they got horne, they called the
prtncipPI of the school POd demanded DuboiS be tlred, because
they said they didn't want their son
to be mught French by someone
who didn't even know how to pump
gas."
"Was Dubois fired?"
"No, because fortunately the
principal had done the same thing
at the gas station he was working at
the night before."
We lbtlslled our dinner POd asked
Peterson If he.could call us a cab.
He told us It would be no problem.
"I'll call Mrs. Thompson, Michael's
homeroom teacher. She hasn't had
a fare au night long."

•

··~

New

Players Kings.
Regular and Menthol

asked ~~

I haven 'I been able to mru-k It yet.
We had a blg party ollobbytsts.from
the Amt&gt;rlcan Banker's Association
and they've kept me runnbtg. What
would you l1ke to order?"
Michael studied ihe menu POd
said, "What gives with the Oysters
Rockefeller?"
"Nothing gives with the Oysters
Rockefeller, Michael. Oysters
Rockefeller cannot give. You must
uk, 'How are the Oysters
Rockefeller?"
" Well, how are they?"
"I would recommend them."
"OJcay, I'll take a shot at them."
"You can't shoot Oysters ROckefel.!er. You can only eat tllern. " ·
"Col'lltl'·&lt;-. Mr. Pete,._, Don't
ruin my ~y. "
·
"I'm sony, Michael, I fCJI'(!Ot my
place. AI a walter I sbouldn;t
correct" you."

._,

..-·•
...
"

~·

••

12

·

...
,. ..

~'

I

·----------------------~--~ -. ~--

Warning : The Surgeon General Ha s Determined
That Cigarette S.uroking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

...

"Hey, Mr. Peterson. Is that Mr.
A!tredo, our Science teacher, bt the
white Jacll:et carrying an lhoee dirty
dishes?..
.

•

The. Daily Sentinel Page 3

...--------------------------------------~------------------------­

llliP

0

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Midd)eport, Ohio

• j

by Fl C111e1hod.

�Page

4

Pornerv'
.
I

The Doily Sentinel

Tuesday, 1/Gy 10, 1983

Midd.___.
lrVJ'I"ft I, Ohio

Tuerday, ~ 10, 1983

·Marauderettes advance with 6-5 victory
By KED'H WISECUP
VINCENT - The Meigs Marauderene softball team advanced to the
Class AA sectional finals Monday night by defeating Warren L(lcal, 6-5,
thus snapping a 16 game winning streak by the Lady Warriors. Meigs, now
12-1, wUl play South Point Wednesday at Meigs beginning at 4: :ll p.m.
Natalie Lambert drove in Paula Horton who had walked with the
winning run in top of the seventh with a booming double to leftfield.
Warren, 16-2, narrowed the ga p to 6-5 and had the tying run on first
when Lambert fanned the final Wa rrior.
Coach Rick Ash's crew opened the scoring ln the nrst when Horton
singled and came home on Lambert 's single.

Majors

two.

En route to the win, Beegle mixed

a tantalizing curve and blazing fast
ball with pinpoint control, keeping
Southern's hopes alive for another
SVAC title, while also keeping the
Eagles completely off stride.

Allen who -In turn was knocked In by
John Porter's long double.
In the third, Tony Rlffle doubled
and scored on Beegle's double.
In the fifth, Eastern scored as
Ray Maxson was hit by a pitch,
stole second, went to third on an
error, and scored on Larry
Cowdery's Infield single.
·Southern's other score came In
the sixth, as Jlm Hupp was hit by a
pitch, forced on a fielder's chOice by
Brlan Allen whq scored on John
Porter's tremendous triple.

.umtiCON LI'Alll!E
&amp;\In' DIVI!ION
W- L..Pd-...GB
16IO .m ~
12 !66 1~
llaJt """"
T"""'o
u. 11 .5.111 2
MIJwaukee
13 12 .DI 211,

"""'"

I-1 u
ll 14
lO U
WOSTDM!JON

"""""""'

New York .

""""'

*over .''

San Antonio Coach Stan Albeck,
: whose club beat the Lakers lour

times In five meetings during the
past regular seao;on, said he' ll try
somet hlng new for the second
playoff game.
·'We are golng to look at the films
and devise some strategy and
hopefully it wUl work," said Albeck.
"I think It will. We are not
disUiusloned. I remain optimistic
and so does the team . You wlUseea
better team ... ''
While the matchupat center Is the
focal point for the playoff series, the
. Lakers received some excellent
play in other areas. Guard ' Norm
NIXon popped in 30 points for LOs
Angeles, and the Lakers also got a
morale booster when Bob McAdoo
was able to play 22 minutes.
It was the first appearance for the

reserve forward-center since he
dislocated a toe on his right foot In
practice Feb. 16. The Lakers had
been thin In the frontcourt since
McAdoo was hurt and rookie
forward James Worthy went out
with a broken leg.
McAdoo was a key player in the
Lakers' drive to the NBA title last
year- incudlng a 4-0 playoff sweep

of. San Antonio. Io his return to action
Sunday, he scored four points and
had six rebounds.
"Bob was rusty, but he did some
big things on defense and the
boards," sald Laker Coach Pat
FUiey. "He's going to get better as
the series goes on. Just having him
on the bench was an Inspiration."

after his crash a t Atomic SJlf'l'dway
last faiL
· .. Rod Eva ns of Cha r leslon . who
nl'arly escaped injury 1n a fiery
crash last week, t'l'turned to pick up
feature win ln the late model
divis ion .
: Bob Keith roared to a victory In
l.hc Street Stock divis ion ahead of
local driving aces Roger Adkins,
Scnny Hickel, and Phil Davis. Last
'\!et&gt;k Adkins made his season debut

vie

13
13

-"'
.stg

I

"
11

.SI9

1\i

12
12

"17

....
.4.1-1
.:M

3

OOland
(Rlrler-

califom!a

Riley believes the Lakers' playoff
experience Is a plus for them In the
series against the Spurs.
"The one edge we have Is that we
are the defending champion," he
said. "We have guys who have been ·
there. They know how to play In
these games."

the 440 Relay during the Meigs Invitational ·Track meet Saturday.
Meigs gals took this event and the meet,

For Mlller Hardy had four
. TUPPERS PLAINS- The Eastsingles, Bray 'two singles and a
ern Eaglettes advanced ln sectional
softball tournament play here double, Cook three singles, Kelly a
req!ntly with a stunning 15-10 single, and Kincaid a single.
Eastern suffered a disastrous
trlumph over Miller.
second
Inning struggling through
Lori FUtchle was the winning
pitcher with six walks, three strike the frame with a shaky defensive
performance that let in seven runs.
outs, and gave up 12 hits.. Kelly
In the t&gt;ottom of that frame.
. su!fered the loss with relief help
from Perry In thE' fourth.
'
however , Eastern came back to
They combined for six walks, one lead S-7. Eastern plays at Crooksville on Tuesday at 4 p.m.
DETROIT (A,P) - Larry Hem- Mllner and Dann. Bllardello both strike out, and gave up nine hits.
Eastern ls now 6-9 whUe Crooks.dOn' s bases·IOBded trlphitttggereda singled, tnoved upon a wild pitch by
Eastern hi.tters- were Melissa
ville
Is 9"3. The winner ·or that
five-run Detroit first inning and the Detroit starter Jercy Ujdur. Johnny Thomas with a double and single, ·
contest
will play the winner of the
Tigers held on for a 5-3 exhlbltlon Bench'sgrounderdrove in Milner to \honda Riebel a double and single,
Trimble-Federal
Hocking game for
Linda Thomas three singles. 'Angie
victory over the Cincinnati Reds give the Reds a brief 1.o lead.
the
sectional
championship.
Monday night.
With one out ln the Reds' !hind, Spencer a single, and Beth BerkhiLou Whitaker started the Tiger Dwayne Walker doubled to the right mer a single.
rally with a shot off the hlp of Reds field corner and scored on Bllardel- River Downs results
starter Charlie Puleo. Whitaker lo' s homer into the upper left field
stole second, then Puleo walked seats.
CINCINNAT I (API - Pete's
Howard Jolmson and Kirk Gibson to
The Tigers' lone hlt after the big First won a narrow, half-length
set the stage !or Herndon' s triple to first Inning was a bloop single by· victory in t)te featured race at River
deep center field.
Tom Brookens In the seventh.
Downs, to pay $10.80, $5.80 and $3.
Puleo walked Johnny Grubb and
The exhlbitlon was the second and
Royal Shake was second in the
LynnJonesslngledtoleft,drlvingln concluding game of an annual Monday race to return · $9.20 and
Herndon, wlth Grubb stopping at home-and-home series which the $5.40, while Prince Wildfine paid $3
second. He moved to third on Rlck · twomajorleagueclubshaveplayed to show.
Big Bad Buck combined 1-8 in the
Leach's long fiy ball and sci&gt;red on a for nearly two decades. The
dally double with Magic Dust for
two-out single by Alan Trammell to proceeds go to support sandlot
baseball In the Detroit and Clncln- $28.40. The trllecta combination of
conclude the Tiger scoring.
In the Cincinnati first, Eddie nat! areas.
3-8-1 paid $378.30.

Herndon's hit paces Tiger win

Our interest rate on home equity loans
just took a turn for the better.

C£' nt ~

not df'S II'\n,Q; 10 pay lhN' It l'·

-

No subscrlpll ons hy mall P''r ml t1Pd In
tow ns whl'n ~ homt• c arrier S&lt;'I'VlC'l' Is
a va llnbiP .

lmddt• Ohio

...... ... .. S14 .1H

.... sn:10
.... s;,u~

13.24% ~~AG&lt;

Ohlu

1.1 Wet•ks ........... .
16 Wt•t•ks .
~2 Wrf'ks .

. $1f•.21
. $'19.64
.. .. $.')6 .21

Thars a lower rate than we've
been able to offer in some time.
But hurry. This rate is only gocx::l
thru IV1ay 31.

MEMBER'S
EMERGENCY
SERVICE
(New Listing)

COLE'S
r

S~HIO

667-3109

NIGHT
667-3097

The Automobile Club of Southeastern Ohio
Pilcher House. 10 E. union St., Attlens, OH.

..

Darryl Grant. defens lv~ tackle. Joe Jacoby and Todd Hallstrom, offenslvt&gt; tack·
1...
Mark Murphy, fr('e sa ft&gt;ty, Charles
Mann,
defensive end, and Marcus Gjtberl. run-

TAMPA

BAY

BANDrTs-Signed

Ander50n, rurming back , to a thret!-y-ear

contract.

EAST DIVtiiON
Phll"""phla

15

g

-~

Montreal

It

10

.583

1

COLLEGE

QUEENS COLLEGE-Named
na ld
Lizak head basketball coach.

Do-

un.m:~

St. Louis
Pittsburgh

10 14
8 17
A 19
WHIT DfVE,ION

New York

O.k..,

.r07

5

.l!l
.296

1~
8~

-~­

LOll Angek!s

21

7

AUantll

19

8

.1&lt;14

I~

Clrlclnnatl
San Franctsw
San Diego

14

l5
15
16
18

483

7'11 .

"'

...

8

.419

91h

1J

13
13

HCJJslon

·~

Mo.dll)''• GIUIII'II

Montre&amp;l 5, Atlanta 3

Chicago. W: Rice. Boston. 25: Ward. Min-

Hoo'too 6, New York i

Pttt.&lt;blrgh 5, San OletQ l 14 innings
Ltii M~ 4, cillcagc) 3 ·

Sail Fr&amp;nCbro S, St. l.ouis f
Only games sc.-beduJed

1\ae~Jdq's Garnes

PhlladelphlEI (Ruthv«l l -ll at Ctndnnatl
~ Power 1-01. !nl Montreal .-(~~rsoo. J.ll at Atlanta
·tMcMur'trY -3.1), fnl
New York (Lynch l-1 1 at Houston
1-4 ). (rll

Pittsburgh 11\mnell 0-l l at San otego
(HawkinS 1-1) , tnt
Otlcago (Moskau 1·21 at lai Angl'lf'!l

rWelch I-21. In I
Sl. Louis rMartln I-OJ at Sail Franclscu
rMcGatftgan 2-21. (n J
Wedlll~s

Games

Montreal at Atlanta

Philadelphia at ClnclnnatL lnl
New York at Houston, rn1
Only games

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATI'ING I~ at bats ): Csrt'W, C&amp;ll!ornla, .4'71; Brett Kansas City, .+19: Thornton, Oeveland. -~ ElcniQUN, C8Utomla ,
.m, ~. Bo&gt;iton, .367.
RUNS : Ca.stlno, Minnesota, 24: Brett,
Kansas City, 22:- Dc:Mrnlng. C&amp;IL!or nla, a!:
E .Mun-ay, Ba ltlrmre, XI ; Vwnt, MU ·
wauki'C, 'II.
RBI: Brett. Kansas Ctty, :lEI; Kittle,

liChR!u~

nesota, ~ Thornton, OI!Veland, 23.
Hrt'S: Carew. California. 48;_, Castlnl;l,
MlnnesoCa, :II; Boggs, Boston, J!i: Yount ,
Milwaukee, 36: 4 an&gt; 000 wtth l5.

OOUBLCi: llrt'tl. Kansas City . 12: Ber·
· naz.ard, 'Chicago, ll: Hrbeit. Minnesota,
11; S.Ht'flde-son, Sealtle, 1\l; 6 an&gt; ~ tled

wll h 8.
'
·
~
TRIPlES: G.WUsan, Oe!rott .. ~: Eyans,
Boston, J; Grttlln, Toronto, J: Hernkln,

Detrott, 3: Tabler , C'lcvt'tand, 3; WlnDetd,
NI!'W York. l
!lOME RUNS: DeCinces. California, 9;
Bret t, Kansas cuy. 8: L)'M, California,
7; Wtnnetd N- York, 7: Barl'lfold, Toronto, 6; Castlno, Minnesota, 6; FUce,
Boston. 6; Upshaw, Toronto. 6; Yount.
MllwaukErfo, 6.
S'IUlEN BA.~ : J .Cruz, Seattle, 21 :
W.Wtl'!OO, Kansas City. 14; GaretH. 1'&lt;:1'

ronto.

11:

M.Davts.

Oaklar1d.

10:

R.Hender!IOfl, Oakland, 9: R.Law, Chicago, 9.

Stanley whips Angels
By KEN RAPPOPORT

AP Sports Writer
A week's rest didn't hurt Bob
Stanley ... nor did lt help the Callfor·
nlaAngels.
"I felt pretty .strong," said
Stanley, who pitched for the first
time In slx days to lead the Boston
Red Sox to an S-2 victory Mond~y
night over the Angels. "I've learned
a little about when you feel too
strong. You throw nlce and smooth...don't try to throW too hard."
Boston's relief ace entered the
game In the third Inning with a 4-2
lead, the .bases loaded and one out
and completely shut down the
Angels, allowing only two hits the
restoftheway.
The performance lowered Stan·
ley's earned run average to 1.11. In
his last 212-3 Innings, covering nine
games, Stanley has allowed just one
unearned run and 14 hits.
The victory was the sixth In seven
games for Boston, the American
League East leader.
"Stanley came In and just shut the
door on us," said Manager John
McNamara of California, the AL
West leader which had won three of
Its previous four games. "I' m not
surprised to see where the Red Sox
areln the standings. Theylookllkea

very good ballclub. "
Reid Nichols led Boston's 12-hit
anack with four hits, including a
two-run homer and two doubles.
Nichols keyed a three-run rally In
the second and a four-rim uprising In
the third.
In other ALactlon,lt wasSeattle6,
Baltimore 4 and Toronto 6, Chicago
1.
Mariners 6, Orioles 4
Jamie Allen drove in three runs
and AI Cowens scored twice and
stole three bases as Seattle defeated
Baltimore. Allen hit a solo homer In
the first inning and rapped a two-run
single In the second following a walk
to Jim Maler and a double by Julio
Cruz.
Blue Jays 6, White Sox 1
Cliff Johnson snapped an 0-for-18
slump with a home run which
triggered a six-run sixth Inning,
leading Toronto and Luis Leal over
Chicago. Leal, 2-3, checked the
White Sox on three hits, struck out
six and walked two.
Five of the runs In the sixth Inning
were unearned as a result of two
errors by shortstop Jerry. Dybzlnskl, spoUlng left-bander Britt
Burns' season debut after coming
o!f the disabled list because of a
shoulder injury.

ONLY

~~

a Control Data Company

'SYIACUS(, 011.
PIIOIIE 992-!177&amp;
NOW OP£N FOR SPIII!Il SEASOII ·
Colnplltt l!nl of • • • 11!41 ~ ' .

I;AI.LIPOLIS: 358 Second Ave.. 4C6-1973
POMEROY: 125E. MainS! 992-2171

"12.25% plus ll points Rote mov be toNer ex highef based upon specific terms of the toon.
RolessU:ljectto annual dectecise aincreesaot 1%. No application fee:&gt; Appt-&lt;NOis in 2 toll days.

·. .

-Expos top.Braves;
Giants remain hot

1it
i.lNOIR

pllntl, . . _ .,._ llld .....
bllltlll. Also I IIIII I I tbl of

*tMIIr ......... fnliltiMJ,
OI'IN DMY 9 tD I ,
5UNDI'y 1 "' s

Norman sald Lesley also haS
developed a split-finger fastball
which is bener than his changeup.
Lesley's antics on the field have
tnfurlated the opposition, most
r&amp;:ently ,Chicago White Sox Man·
ager Tony LaRussa In a spring
game.
"It doesn't bother me," said
Lesley, who admits to having been a
bully as a youngster.
Harris, who appeared In 34games
last season, was with Clnctnruitl
when the season began bU\."'85 sent
to Indianapolis on April ,q Without
maklnganappearanceforlheReds.
He was 14 with an 8.84 earned run
averageforlndlanapolls.
The roster changes came on the
heels of a 4-1&gt; road trip lhaf londed
Sunday.

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

· single as the GIants defeated St.
Louis relief ace Bruce Sutter. The
AP Sports Writer
Cardinals,
who have lost four to a
Steve Rogers has won 138 games
row,
scored
three runs in the top of
In 9~ major le&lt;~gt~e seasons and 13'7
on
an RBI double by
the
ninth
of them came somewhere other
Darrell Porter and a two- run single
531 JACKSON P1KE · RT.35 WEST
than Atlanta.
Phone «8-4524
by Rafael Santana to take a 4-31ead.
The suMy South Isn't Rogers'
BARGAIN AIATIHffS SAT &amp; SUN
But Sutter walked pinch hitter
favorite place despite Monday
ALl SEATS $2.00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESQ4\I 11.00
Milt May and, when Johnnie
night's six-hitter as the Montreal
Expos defeated the Atlanta Braves LeMaster bunt&lt;:&lt;! , pinch runner
MAY 6 thru 12
5-3. It was hls lOth victory ln his last Max Venable beat Sutter's throw to
FRIDAY thru THURSDAY I
second. Evans then hlt a ground· 11 decisions against the Braves, but
ru Je double that bounced over the
hls first triumph ever ln Atlanta,
fence
in left-center to tie the score.
where he had been 0-6.
Chill
Davis,
whodroveln twoearller
. "Steve's not a hot-weather
single and trlple, was
runs,
with
a
pitcher," said catcher Gary Carter,
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (API
walked
intentionally
and Jack Clark
who homer&lt;:&lt;! In support of his
George Gaulding of Fullerton.
struck out before Bergman dell- Calif .. says IJe has boUght Beulah
batterymate. "It was warm (upper
.
·
verE!(i his game-winning single.
60s), but not lJllelt usually Is here. lt
Park r11ce !rack, the Columbus
Pli'ales 5, Padres 3
didn't drain him." ·
Citizen-Journal reported tOday.
Jason Thompson cracked a
In other National League games,
Gaulding owns 20 percent of FUver
two-run double with Downs ln Cincinnati and has been
tie-breaking
Los Angeles and San Francisco
stretched their winning· streaks to two out In the 14th Inning to cap tbe negotiating with Rober-t y _· Plenst
first five-hit performance of hls
six games wlth ninth-lnningherolciS,
for Beulah for some 'Iinne, the
the Dodgers nipping the Chicago career as the Pirates ended a
newspaper said.
Cubs 4-3 and theGiantsqgwnlng the five-game losing streak. With two
The newspaper said Dienst would
St. Louts Cardinals :&gt;4. Elsewhere, out in the 14th, Johnny Ray doubled
not comment about the sa le.
the Pittsburgh Pirates outlast&lt;:&lt;! the off loser Mike Couchee for his fourth
hit. After Richie Hebner was
San Diego Padres 5-3 In 13 Innings
Intentionally walked, Gary Lucas,
and the Houston Astrosdefeated the
the fifth San Diego pitcher, came on
New York Mets 64. Cincinnati a nd
was. greeted by Thompson's
and
Philadelphia were not scheduled.
tie-breaking
double.
Rogers not only pitched a
The
Pirates
took a 3-2 lead In the
complete-game victory to snap his
seventh
when
LeeMazzllli
belted his
Atlanta Jinx- "I would have hated
third
home
run
of
the
season
but San
.to retire without one," he quippedDiego·
s
Steve
Ga
rvPy
tied
It
ln the
but also delivered a run-scoring
eighth
with
a
shot
over
the
center
single to cap a two- run second Inning
field fence, his sixth.
against loser Rick Camp.
. Astros6, Mets4
Carter belted his fUth home run In
Alan
Ashby triggered Houston's
the eighth. The Expos scored ln the
fifth when Tim Raines walked, stole fiv e-run fifth -Inning rally from a 4-0
RAVENSWOOD, W. VA .
second and came home on the thind deficit wlth h.ls third homerun of the
of Warren Cromartie's ftve hits. season and Frank LaCorte pitched
WE ARE NOW ACCEPTING
Carter homered in' the eighth and · four innings of one-hit re lief.
APPUCATIONS FOR ENROLL·
singles by Raines and Cromartie Ashby's home run accounted for the
plus an error gave the Expos a run In first run off loser Rick Ownbey and
MENT IN THE
Phll Garner, whose two-run double
the ninth.
tied the score, scored the go-a head
Dodgers 4, Cubs 3
run
from second base when Mets
Blll Russell scored from !hind
first
baseman Danny Heep forgot
base as Ken Landreaux beat out an
about
him and argued a call with
Infield hit with two out In the ninth
umpine
Terry Tala on Jose Cruz's
Inning as the Dodgers won for the
tw&lt;H&gt;ut
Infield
hit.
19th time In the last 24 games.
Omar
Moreno
singled home the
Earlier. Landreaux cracked his
Astros'
second
run
of the inning and
fifth home run of the season and
!nan
Insurance
run in
drove
rookie Greg Brock hlt Ws sixth, a
two-run shot. Dave Stewart, 3-0, the with a single.
CALL
third Los Angeles pitcher, earned
the viCtory by working two scoreless
innings.
Giants 5, Cardinals 4
Darrell Evans tied the game with
a run-scoringdouble In the bottom of
the ninth and pinch hitter Dave r---~~~~~_:___-:
r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::~
Bergman won It with a bases-loaded
By HERSCHEL N1SSENSON

J

L

Buys Beulah track

1

HUMPTY DUMPTY

NURSERY SCHOOL

FALL TERM

CLASSES FOR
3 &amp; 4 YEAR OLDS

MARSHA CARMICHAEL

___

(304) 273-3455

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP J
Clipper Almahurst came from sixth
place early to post a 4\t, -length
victory Monday night In the
featured race at Scioto Downs.
Driven by Carroll Smith, the
winner turned the mile ln 2:041-5 to
pay $4.20, $3.40 and $2.20. Smolder-.
lng Pride finished second to return · ' '
$3.60 and $2.20, while Darby's
Dancer palo $2.60to show. ·
In ' the second-race trllecta, the
combination of J().G.2 paid $1,533.
Acrowdof2,575wagered$:M7,993.

75¢

....

. HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

CITY LO\N &amp;. SAVINGS

TUPPERS PLAINS

DAY

REDSKINs-S igned

Ann examined

·STRAWBERRY
SHORTCAKE

MAIL SUBSCHIPT I (JN!-;

Out~ld('

year oont racts.
SEATILE SEAHAWKS-Signed
Doo
Dow, oftenslve tackle . to a series of oneyear oontracts.
WASHINGTON

JOE PRICE

RAFAEL LANDESTOY
Now a Dodger

RIO GRANDE_ Andrea Riggs, competed ln the -high jump, long
a sophomore high jumper at ruo jump, 400-meter relay, sprint med·
Grande College, has qualUied for ley, 100-meter dash, and 200-meter
the NAJA National Track and Field dash . ·
Championships In Charleston, w.
The secr!!(arial science major is
Va. May 26-18.
the d;~ughter ol Dr. and Mrs. Keith
Riggs qualified for the nationals FUggs.
in' the high jump with a height ol :&gt;4. f"'jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;;;;;;;;~
'1'hat mark Is a Rio Grande College
and Greater Ohio Athletic Confer·
D-E-L~I-C-1-0-U-S
ence record.
The Pomeroy native ls a graduate of Meigs High School where she
set school records !or the high
jump, 400- meter dash, and 1mmeter dash. She also holds records
In the high jump at the Rio Grande .
NOW AVAILABLE .
Rotary Relays. Minford Invlta·
tiona!, and the Southeast Ohio
Athletic League Championships.
With
She was also a highly touted
ss~
Whipped Cream
baSketball player In high school 1
At Rio . Grande, Riggs has

r lr r mav rf'lll ll l n adv a ncf' dll-('1' 1 to
Thr D11llr !-;(•nllnf'l on :1 . 6 ot· 1:! month
lla l'( ls . C rf'dl t will bf.• ~l v t•n c arrh_•r tXH' h

:.111 Wr•(•ks ........... .
!'12 W f't'k .~ ..

Rkh

nls Winston, linebacker .
ST . LOU IS C.-\ RDINALS-Stgnt'd
Mark
Dud a. df'ff'(L!itve tacklr. to a series of one-

' Gary

Toronto at ChiCago, (n)
NATIONAL LFAGUE

(Knepper

FALCON S-SI ~td

Riggs qualifies for NAJA action

f'UP\'

rnunth

Callllrnla at Baston, !ftl
Texas at New York. 1n1

w_...1-Pct......GB

Eaglettes oust Miller

ATLANTA

tracts.
United S*Mes Football Le..,re
NEW
JERSEY
GENERALS-Signed
Joe Robinson. orten.slve tackle.

Kansas City at Cleveland. In I
Seattle a1 Baltimore, (n)

HANDS OFF - Paula Swisher hands the baton to Linda stewart In

I'OOTB.u.L
N&amp;ltorl&amp;l Football Leap~

ning back, to a seri es ol o ne-year C'On-

Oakland at Detroit, tn )

!f:,2 .Rtl

S t~bs(• rllwr s

Bllston

M1!1rleSOOI at Milwaukee

. .... $1.00
. $•1 ~0

... tn

at

~a.diQ''I Game~~

Zane Beegle (WP), Jtm Hupp; Mark
Holger (LP).

KA'I'Jo::S
c,,rrh•r or Motnr n.. utt•

nan ~

IHII

Baltlrnort&gt;

Texas (Darwin 1-3) at N_. ·York !Raw ley ._1) , (n)
Minnescta !Havens 3-2 1 at Mltwaukl&gt;t&gt;
(Haas 0-{)J, ( n)

I'Riffo;S

: TOLEDO. Ohio tAP! - The
ii;oiedo Mud Hens had thE&gt; only two
runs of the !(arne after a bench·
cicaring dispute ln the bottom of the
eighth lnningMonda_y night to take a
2-0 International League baseball
victory over the Columbus Clippers.

Dl&gt;lrnn

IO}eda 0-ll. (n1

St J R~( ' Itii"''IO N

SIN(~Lt~

ITt-aven

dianapolis.

"""'

I!

I).J )

dPZ, lnftfidrr , on 1~ restricted liSt and
rt'C alled Marty Blr~ t, JeCOnd baseman,
from Paw11ack.H ol tlw lnterna·
t~ld .
League.
,
NaUtMI Lupe
CLNCINNATI REDS-Sut Ben
Hayes,
n:'lll't' pit~ her tolndlanapotiJ olthe A.mer·
Jean Assoctanon and recalled Greg
Harris
and Brad ~ l ey. plt~hen , from In-

Dill-

fBltw 0-11 ott Ck.-veland

!Barker 3-JJ, tn)
Seattle (NUI1E!l
ID.Martlrw:2 2-5 1. (nl

P0ST MAS1TH : ~·nd addrP~ s to Tht•
St•ntlrwl. 11 1 C!lm·t St.. PohlNn.&gt;'.
( l hlo -1 ~•7 W .

y,~ ar

r n)

City

Amerlt-l.efii'H
BOSTON, ,! l£0 SOX-PIIt't'dJUlkl V•l·

on and David Frye, linebackers, and Kevin GrUfllh, det'enstve end
NEW ORLEANS SA.Jf\'Ts-Sl&amp;I'Jt-d

at

o-21

(Langfon:t

().{1 ),

Kansas

Oall~·

Onf'

,.,

CINCINNATI (AP) -Bra&lt;l"The
Animal" Lesley, the stomping,
snorting, yelling relief pitcher Is
back with theCinclnnatlReds wltha
new act - a bener fastball.
The Reds, who cut Lesley !rom
their major-league roster durlng
sprtng' training, have recalled the
6-foot -6, 221l-pound right -bander
from their Class AM farm team at
Indianapolis.
Cincinnati also recalled pitcher
Greg Harris. Both players are to be
with the team for tonight's game
with the Philadelphia Phlllles.
Lesley, the popular relief pitcher
who appeared In 28 games for the
Reds last season, had a 1-0 record
wlth three saves and a 0.66 earned
run average In eight relief appearances for Indianapolis this season.
"I'm happy to be back," said
Lesley,whohadaceusedtheRedsof
maklng a mistake when they cut
him loose In the spring.
Lesle~
whose fastball was
clocked at better than 90 mph last
season, appeared to have lost his
speed durlng spring training, according to Manager Russ Nixon, but
apparently has regained hls
velocity.
"Sure l was disappointed. Nixon
Sjlld · only, 'Well, you prove me
wrong.' I think I have," Lesley sald.
Minor league pitching coach Fred

Me....,.'ISt&lt;oril ~~~~­
IIME!W.l.

~'1'1

TDMdQ's Gut'lftl

As~ot'l 1.11f'f1 Pn•s ~. In·
l;tnd Da lly PrPss Ass od.ato n &lt;md lht•
1\mNka n NrwsJlltpt'r Publl.&lt;ohers A .~ ·
sor lu l lon . Nullon a l i\dvf'ftlsln~ Rf'prr·
sr nwllw , Branham Nf'ws paiX' r Sa If's,
7.'\:1 Third Avrnuf' . NPw York . Nf'w
\ ' nrk l11\lt 7

Clippers beaten

I'fl

Toronto 6, Chkago 1

Mr mtx•r: Thr

n~·

11

Onb' games scheduil'd

tlmrdl u, Jm·., fl omf'roy, Uhlo 4~76!1, !¥.1t~ 151i . S( •l'Oml (')ass posing:&lt;' pa ld ur Pomf'rn.v. Ohln

Otll' WL'f'k ............
Om• Mo nth .

.sn -

12

II :JJ
MOftdaJ'Il G.._
St&gt;anle 6, Baltiloore 4
lb.ton 8. Caltft:rrta 2

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

was making his first nppeara ncc

3~

~

Oakllllld '

l6

"""""""

:Wolfe takes second at Skyline -;:=======================Th=ec=row=d=of3=.286=be=t$420==.915=.=======~
STEWART- Bernie Steimer of a success with a big victory In the
: Crooksvllle motored his 1980 Ca- l,ate Model feature.
: maro Into the lead on the 1hlrd lap,
Marc French of Middleport won a
· then Jed to the finish to pick up the trophy for his fifth place finish in the
: Super late model victory at Skyline Street Stock Main despite los ing his
::speedway here Sa tunday evening.
ring and pinion In the final stages.
·: A dry-slick racing surface made
This week local racers return to
: racing conditions treacherous, how- Darrell Willy's Skyline Speedway
; ever, the pace remained quick as for another action packed evening
; Racine driver Scott Wolfe chased of racing as racing begins at 8 p.m.
· Steimer across the line.
Satunday.
· · Placing third was Gene• Adkins of 1
:Racine, Stew Arme nt rout , and
anot her Racine driver Hilton Wolfe.
The Daily Sentinel
Veteran hot shoes Bob Adams Jr.,
tliSP!ii 14S-980J
: Dave Robinson, and .Jim Adams
!\ lllvl!dott of Multim edia., lnt· .
: were sidelined early in the evening
Publl stwd &lt;•vrrv nflf't'noon . Momla~·
· :wtth mechanical difficulties.
thr·uugh f ' rl day. ·Ill Court Stn•pl . b,~t lhf'
· · Wolfe In his OW11 198:1 Flreblrd
Ohio Valli'Y Puhlbhln~ Co mpany · Mul·

:zan

u

ChJ"'"

Eastern .......... .................... ... (0) 1}-1 0 0
Southern ........ ................... .. ....... 21 0--1 x
Batteries:

'

.
INGLEWOOD, Ca lif. (API- The
· first round of the battle of the big
• men clearly belonged to Kareem
·Abdui-Jabbar
· But 7-foot -2 center Artis Gilmore
,and the San Antonio Spurs get
anot her chance tonight when they
: face Abdui -Jabbar and the Los
· Angeles Lakers ln the second game
: of the National Basketball Assocla. ·tlop Western Conference finals .
. The defending NBA champion
"Lakers jumped out to 1-0edge In the
. ·best-of-seven series with a 119-107
; victory Sunday at th&lt;; Forum , as
-: Abdui-Jabbar, also 7-2, 1&lt;:&lt;1 the way
: with :JOpoints and eight rebounds.
· Gilmore scored just seven point s
· and had six rebounds when he fou led
· :out with 5: lR remaining in the
· _contest.
. Among those who believe Gil, more will fare better in the future.
: liowever, Is Abdui -Jabbar.
: : "Artlswas infoultroubleandthey
·:Couldn't affonl lo go inside to him
·.when they wE&gt;re·playing catch -up,"
;the Laker center said. "13ullt was
only one game, and I'm sure he wUI
· be heard !rom before this ser ies ls

.sl9
481
.U7

Caltttma
Karuao; City

Tex.,

Tony Rlf!le added a single to his
double and Beegle added a single to
his double. Paul Harris also had two
singles for Southern.
Troy Guthrie had the Eagles'
other two hits, both singles In a good
effort. Beegle struck out the slde In
the first, third and fourth Innings,
and the final six batters ol the game
In an amazing effort.

::Kareem Adbui-Jabbar first battle winner.

Cincinnati .recalls
4sley, Harris

·Tran11actions

~atilt&gt;

Overshadowed by Beegle' s performance was the pitching of
Eastern senior Mark Holter who
also pitched a fine ball game for
Eastern.
Holter held the Tornadoes at bay
most of the game, but the fact that
the Eagles scored just one run
made It difficult ~r Holter tp pull off
the victory.
The Tornadoes jumped Into a 2-0
lead In the second inning when Tony
Deem singled and stole second,
then was singled home by Brian

The Doily Sentinel-Pope 5

Middleport, Ohio

Scoreboard ...

-

Meigs made it 4-1 in the' second Inning when Beth Gloeckner collected
her first of three hits, Robin Bul!lngton reached on an error and Barb
Grue8er, Jennie Meadows, and Krts Snowden each had RBI singles.
After Warren Local had tied the game at 4-4, GlOeckner singled home
·
Snowden who had tripled.
Other Meigs' hits were a second single by Meadows and a single by
Jody Har,rtson whO made several fine plays at second baSe.
Lambert fanned five and issued eight free passes whlle allowing Hve
hits. Baiok walked three and did not record a strtkeout.
Meigs plays at home tonight against Jackson.

Beegle handcuffs Eastern's Eagles, 4-l
By SCO'IT WOLFE
RACINE - For the second time
ln less than a week the Southern
Tornadoes rolled past Eastern's
Eagles 4-1 behind the three-hit
.. pitching of Zane Beegle who struck
ou I 18 Eagle batsmen and walked

Pomeroy

-SALES

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SERVICE
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· • Welgt. L - Than 4 lba.
as a personal ward processor, telephone auto-dialer, ado
• Dlrec:t-conn.ct Modem Cltble
dress book and appointment calendar. Access electronic
mall ,' information networks, and your office computer
(28-1410, $18.15) lncludea .
One Free Hour on Compuserve'" ,through the built·in communications program and
modem.
·. ·
and Dow JoMa N-.IAetrleval'"
CompuS.rveiTM

Comptjserve. Inc. Dow Jones NewiiReulevaiiTM Dow Jones &amp; Co., Inc.

Adolph's Dairy Valley
PH. 992-2556

Pomeroy, OH.

570 W. Main

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I.;

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�Tuesday, flcJy 10, 1983

PonterOy-Middleport, Ohio

1------------ ----------~
.

curb Inflation
·

Busin
. ess.senices

'

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Tuesday, May 10, 1983
·Page

Now is time for chimney safety

A. WINNER - Unda Montgomery' s recipe for "Tasty Meat Loaf"

was a winner in the Farm WHe News magazine's microwave cooking
contest. It was one of 120 In the national contest selected for publication
In· Microwave Magic n.

Wildwood Garden Club meets
Handmade corsages using dried
materials were displayed by
members at the-recen·t·meeling of
the Wildwood Carden Club at the
Forest Run Methodist Church.
A report wa~ given on the Meigs
County Garden Clubs Association
spring meeting at Trinity Chnurch
In Pomeroy and !t was noted that
Bernice Carpenter Is the new county
contact chairman . Also noted was
the spring regional meet ing Sa turday at Rio Gra nde.
Trees ordered by the members
from the OhloAssocla tionofGarden
Clul:ls were distributed. Marcia
Arnold and Jane Harris presented
the program uslngslldes on the most
popular planted roses and perennials, garden designs and color
schemes. Included on the program
was Information on lnsect!c!des.
fertilizers, techniques for present .
lng rust and mildew.
A nominating committee was
named and w!U announce new
officers to be voted on at the June

meet ing. Tentative plans for a
celebration of the 45th anniversary
were made. Participation In cleanup week was discussed with the
club members taking an afternoon
to clean a long the Forest Run Road
and Minersville HilL
It was noted that a dwarf peach
tree had been purchased for the
Carleton School.
Carrie Grueser reported that she
had received test roses from
Jackson and PerkJns to plant and
care for to check their suitability for
growth In this area . She received a
certificate for her cooperation In the
test project.
A spring arrangement was displayed by . Evelyn Hollon using
narcissu s, boxwood and corkscrew
willow. Another featured the use of
grape hyacinth and purple violets.
A white elephant sa le was
conducted. Refreshments were
served by the hosteses, Freace
Fisher and Hilda Yeauger.

Calendar
TIIESDAY
CHESTER - Chester tow"sh!p trustees will meet Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the town hall !n
Ch01ster.
SYRACUSE - SyracuSI' PTO
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. The
flr9l grade class Is In charge of
the ·program.
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Sorprlty wut meet Tuesday at
7:3(1 p.m. at the Meigs Inn . l&lt;ayc
Walker and Debbil' Hauber wl!l
haw the cultural report and
Ba~b Mathews w!ll be In charge
of refreshments . New officers
will be lnstailed.
~MEROY - {'a tty Lee and
Ze~a Nisley, alcohol specialists,

wllj conduct a program on
de!f1Cting and dealing with the
teeftage alcohol a nd drug proble%at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
M s Multi-Purpose Bu!ldlng.
Mu berry. Heights, Pomeroy;
pu Jlc Is Invited.
f!OMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Bo&lt;it'ters will meet Tuesday at
7: 3Q p.m. at the hlp;h school.
.

RACINE- Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, wilt meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. Work w!ll be In the EA
degree.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Eastern At·
hletlc Boosters will meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the high
school.
PO,MEROY
Pome roy
Chapter 80. Royal Arch Masons
and Bosworth Counc1146, Royal
and Select MastPrs will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. Work will
be In the Royal Master degree.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Amateur Gardeners will
meet Wednesday a t Sp.m. at the
home of Mrs. Wa lter Crooks.
Mrs. Daniel Thomas Is cohostess. ·

Jon o: Jacobs, Deputy Health
Commissioner of Meigs County
Heallh Department, In cooperation
with the Accident Prevention and
Product Safety Unit of the Ohio
Department of Health has issued a
special safety alert concerning
chimneys used for woodburnlng
stoves and fireplaces. The Consumer Product Safety Commission is
aware of house fires associated
with both masonry and metal
factory-built chimneys. This safety
alert Is particularly aimed at
cohsumerswho have metal factorybuilt chimneys attached to their
stoves.
An estimated 2,000 house fires
each year are associated with
stoves. The Meigs County Health
.Department warns customers to be
aware of the potential fire hazard
assoc!a ted with these chimneys.
Now thaI the na lion is reaching
the end of the 1982-19&amp;1 heating
season, the commission strongly
urges consumers, !f they have a
stove or fireplace connected to a
metal chimney, to check for any
damage that may have occ urred !n
the past few months. Now Is the
time to Identify any damage and
have it repaired.
Most fires In metal factory-bu!!t
chimneys occur because of Improper Instal lation, use, Qr ma!nte. nance. The . col1)ni!ss!ob staff is
aware of the following causes of
fires:

Plans for Inspection, May 31, were
made durtng last week's meeting of
the Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
There will be a dinner for the
officers at5: 15p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
Earlier In the 'a fternooit Joyce
Ma lone, deputy grand matron, will
meet with the secretary and
treasurer to Inspect the books. A
practice was announced for May 30
lor all officers with a hall cleaning
!lf'SSion to follow. For the Inspection
all members are being asked to take
a dessert.
Ruby Vaugan and Thelma Dill
wlll attend a meeting to Jearn how to
make cancer dressings. Mrs.
Vaughan was the sunsh!nepageand
took the collection which wlll go to
cancer research .
Pam Massie, worthy matron, and
Jim Soulsby, worthy patron, pres ided at the meeting when he was
presented a 25 year pin by his wife,
Susie, and Betty Whetstine received
hers from E lla Smith. Qualifying for
a 25 year pin but not present was
Carolyn Teaford.
Members were renninded of the
Council dinner to be served on May
14 at 6:30 p.m.
The charter was draped for
Beulah Ewing, and It was voted to
send a contribution to the Heart
Foundation !n memory of Robert
Brown.
The cheer committee reported
that cards had been sent to Georgia
Watson, Gertrude Mitchell and Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Karr, recently

tness ·film to be shown
MEROY - "Ta~l' the
e," an 18-minutl! color nlm
ueed tncooperat!on with the
·!dent's CouncU on Physl,~al
ess and Sports, will be
m a I the next In a series of
m lings being held to provide
Ins hts about health.
orma To!Tell• R.N., supervl·

~evival (lt

sor of nurses of the Meigs County
Department of Health, will be In
charge of the meeting to be held
from 11 a .m. to 12 noon In the·
east-west dining room of Veterans Memorial Hospital. The
series held monthly began In
February.

the Church 9f Go9

Iva! servfeeS will begin at

Oiureh ot God, - ~ted on
te 1t4.at ~t. W esday
~IUIII Satllr(ijy at 7 p. . each
'••

f!Venlng. 'lbe Rev, Eddie Boyer
Is the ev~(lst. There will be
•peclal music each evening and
!he publlq Is Invited.
·
l,

Put A STIHI:. To
Work For You
t&amp;f-'11\STIHL FS.SOe

a

HEAD ONLY

$·15995

STIH£.

THE WORLD'• LAifOEIT 8/fLLINO CHAIN .AW

price,

room•..

II
1
1

•

Name

Ispace
Print one word in each
below. Each

(I )An
/Wanted
nouncemenf

11

I I For Rent

IH

1.

19,
10

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I s.
I 6
1 7.
I H.
I
I 9.
10

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IS

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NOTICE TO
MOTOR VEHICLE
DEALERS

1

alou d for th e follow•·n g veh• cle
Ea ch btd to meet the condtl!ons
nnd spect!.carr ons as tallows

1 One 1983 model dump
lrud w rth Peabody Galr on o r
eourvaten t dump body 1 20·· x
84 x 30 " head and '1ai1Qa to
Bed to be of 8 gua ge steel o r
lleavrflr . 1 /~ " steel Hoar a nli
nterlaced underst ru cture W rth
Manual ~ ha ndle) c ont rol5 rn

M ud ttaps . front und
behrnd rear wheels
6 Whee t bas e84 "c abr oa ~IP
or sur! ablf' for boclv 110 I not
lpm nted) Omaha Or ange cllnno

bOdy!

7 24~00 GWJ C1 r heavr Pr
A 9 uuO ths I heam fr o nt

5 speed

366 cu rn c V 8 g &lt;:~ s
e n qrn e or I&lt;Hger
12 Step fuel tan k. nqht
moun ted mrnr rnum ca pacr t','
50 gall o ns
1 3 d.OOO lbS m rnrmum
fr ont sprrng c apacrtv
1 1 000 lbs rear sprrnq
CJp acrty
15 Au&gt;:rlrary 4.000 tb s
rnultr -leaf rear sprrng s
16 Combrnatron fr on t and
rear drrectrornal lrghts
1 7 Tratfr c h azard SWit Ch
18 Ba ck-up lrght s
19 Dual etectrrc horns
20 Heater and d efros te r
2 1 Two speed wrndshr Pid
wrper s and washers
22 Pow Rr SIP.f'rrnq
11

23 10 00 ·&gt;20 12plvlront

IH es. h rghway trea d. T r r n~s

24

1000

)I

20 12 ply

183 1

trrRs . o n and off roarl lreild
25 One addri10nal T nrtr an d
rrng
26 Cash spoke wheel s
27 Heavy dutv clutch
28 Heavy du ty br ake boos·
ter, Wi th
rea1 brakes
29 Heavy dutv bumper and
front tow hooks
30 L H and A H Re -Tr ac 6ll
16 sta rnless steel mrrr o rs

r

31
du ty

77 Amp banery . heavy

32
60 Am o o r larger
al tern ator
33 Cab gra bhandles. L - A
34 Vrkrng 1 -Bar dnver' s seat
wtth compan1on 2 man
35 Heavy duty factory rern forced frame
36 Color Omaha Orange

A ltlf'ftO w't'tt Cit" ~Oft

GAWPOUS, OHO

'~

I
I
I
1

'

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER .
SERVICE

i
I
I
II

- Acldons and .. modeUng
- Roof;ng and 9" 110' won.

Al TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

' Lowest Rates
Around
'Friendly Servie

NO SET UP CHARGE

ROUSH
CONSTRUC T10N

IS

vorded:

tees may accept the lowest b1d .
or select the best btd for the
rntendftd purpose. and reserve
the n ght to accept or reJect any
-or all btds and / or any part

AuctiOn

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Auction avery Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week
· Consigments of new 8nd
used merchan di se always
welcome . Ric hard Reynol ds
Auctioneer . 275 -3069 .

Oewavne William s
&amp; Sconie Smith

All Makes and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Available
~ 27lmo pll

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS
Sizes start from 12'•16'

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

UTILITY BUILDINGS

St. Rt . 124, Pomeroy, OH .

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
· to 24'x36'
lnsulatd Dog Houses

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

742-23.28
4 _11. 11c

10&amp;-!lc

-Cone..,. wo.t.
- Plumbing and
electrical wori&lt;
(F ree

•Remodel ing
20 Years Experience

Eslimotes )

ture and Antique s of ttll
kinds , c all Kenneth Swain ,
446 -3 1 69 or 256 -1 967 in
th e even ings.

Buy;ng Gold , Silva•. Plati
num . Gold and SBvor p•ices

' 4J
Lnrrq Bn11nrll4oOhrn

151 10. 17 '24 3h

LEGAL NOTICE
SUMMER YOUTH
EMPLOYMENT
PROGRAM

- Ooz~rs

- Backhoes

- Oump Truc ks
- lo-8oy
- Trencher

lhf' Ohro f:lweau n f [rn:•l r-: v
men ! Servl('r·s Otl" P n t M.t n
puwer DPvPioprnpn t fO M D r·.
&lt;lnnouncrnt'l tht• F•Scdl Vf'dl
1983 TrtiP '" Sr rllllllf' r y ,.,rJ I'I

- Water

- Sewer
- Ga s Lines
- Septi c Systems

EmplOy tnN• t Pr01r&lt;1m (SYI_f--l!
Thr ouqh t~1f' Corn ~ lrrt•t•n•,•v•'

LARG£ o• SMAll JOBS
PH . 992-2478

[rnp lnyrrN• I ,ln•J lr .:Hnrr1 q Ar 1
f( E Ill] thP Dt'l•ol'lrnr&gt;r· t
I

1hr 1)\JipO,&gt;" o f II

ca llv rlr S&lt;1t1vJn'J QNf vn.r t lr 1An:r,
wm k P;o, pf'n r·ncr• •r•rluu(}llrtl'''
rf rf'5 to, vor:rltrnn 11 r· · nnr ,Jtr on
1

1

~~~~;rr~~~~ r~ r:ct ~1~ ;,:t;;ntrrlrn~&gt; /,;~~~~
ArlrlrlrnnJI rr~ l rPI'I·,)(II ) Ill 'I 1&gt;1
o htarrw:i Ir on' Cl,r·:-;tJor Wtr111
II fiO Dt,h l• r1 Rc· Jd l.P~urn l 11r.
Oh•n 4 3) "'
ibl I 0 lt r

Vinyl &amp; Alum inum

SIDING

&gt;? lmo

4 II I mo

GHEEN ' S
PAINTING INC.
Industrial , Commercial,
Residential. Interior and
E•terior.

to thank all my
fri end s, neighbors . nurses,
Senio r Ci ti zens and Sunday
sc hool c lan fo r tho love ly
cards and letters I received
whilo I w asin tho hospital
an d during my illness . They
wer e
ve r y mu c h
appreciated .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

Parking Lot Stripping
Spray P ainting
Texture Coatings
Fully Insured - free Estiimates

Pomeroy, Oh .

SWEEPER and sewr n g ma chine repmr , pArts. and
supplies
Pick up and
deliv e ry , Davis Va c uum
Cle8ner. one hal f mile up
Georges Creek Ad
Ca ll

Painting
Sandblasting

1146-0294

Wat orbl astin g

- - --------I
NO

4

~ -----------f-----------f------------j

ROOFING
AND HOME MAINTENANCE
"Roof ing of all type s
Re siden tial &amp; Commtlfcial
'Remode ling

·storm W~n dows &amp; Doors
fREE ESTIMATES
20 Ye..s E•perience
TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2834
0 , 949-2 T60

Bart

Giveaway
-

1-

VALLEY

on

·1 19?nn nrl

r~&lt;!

OHIO

Tresspaning

Grimm or Bill McCoy Farms.

CALL 614-949 -2686

J'h . 992-2174

MEIGS
EXCAVATING

LAST BI D

•Bulldozer &amp; Back:
hoe Service

Roofing &amp; Siding

m o . old part Cocker
Spaniel p uppy Call 446 ·

you want . then call us .
We'll be your

•Basements
•Footers

2094.

TWELVE w eek old puppy ,

BEST &amp; LAST BID

•Landscaping
•Driveways
•Farm Ponds
PH. 742-2407
'
Or 742-2068

4·1J.lmo

AN Y PERSON who h As
anythin g to gi'ole oway and
does not offer o r anomp tt o
offer l'!l ny other thing for sale
may pie ce an ad in th is
column . Thertl will be no
charge to the advertiser .

5

Get all the estimates

304-675 -5203.

Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed
Ph .742 -2328
Ask for AI .

6

Last a nd Found

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding es,
timates, 949,2801 or

" CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE "

FOR All YOUR YARD &amp; PROPERTY
CHAIN LINK FENCING NEEDS

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

c.o~t-~&gt;-""

949-2860.
No Sunday Call s

J.l l Itt

Rea l Estate General

~~

985,3561
" FENCING PROVIDES PRIVACY PLUS
PROTECTION FOR CHILDREN &amp; PETS"

All Makes
•Washers •Dishwal!ihers
Rangel
•Refrigerators

CARDINAL CONSTRUCTION

•Dryers •Freezen

PARTS ond SERVICE

PH . (304) 882-2276 _4151 mo

~~ · li t

MINE RUN

MAIN
POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-2259
Open Monday thru Saturday.
Eveninas by Appointment.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI- 992-6191
Dottie Turner, 992-5692
J..o Trussell, 949-2660
Jo Hill, 98~3335

675-4673 .

2 Family Garage Sole Wed .
&amp; Thurs. SAM t o 7P M . Lots
of c hildren's cloth es. most
item s offered one doll8r and
under.' At m,y hom o Bulavillo
Ad, 3 miles 1rom Rt . 16?,
next ho usu past Layne •
Furn . Mra . Herman Skaggs.

. STRIP
COAL

$3000

A TON

PH. 992-2280

rc~

THE KOUNTRY KLUB
·lessons '
'flllin&amp; Center # '

~:1

§.e&lt;!J~

'·· \~

·club Repair

\FREE
EXTIMATES
'Chain link Fence
"Carpet ina 'Paintlna

(clubs

JOIIAI

I., Sears).
CATALOG MERCHANT
Pomeroy,OH.
Grea &amp; Patty Gibbs-Ownen
8

shorterred l or

people)

1 -··

J,
. ~" ·

' Brand Names:
Squar e Two
1
WMa1cGracor
•
I son
t
Dunlop
P.G
.A.
Rom
p·
'"1 SALE 20 % OFF
JOHN TEAFORD

Chesler. Oh. 4181

t 3. 14, Cloth ing all slua.

mi sc . R t . 688 in Rodn ey .

Garage Sale 2 miles lrom
H.M .C . Rt 160. May 12.
lawn mower cart . furnitu re ,

•hube,rb, toots .
In side

Y11rd

Sale

May

13, 14.16.16. Men , women.
ch i ldren c lo1he s. books ,

mlac. 2 mit.. of1 Rt. 7 on
554. See signa.
Garege Sate. Mev 6 thru 12
Except Sun. 1.2 miles obova
mo

Eaatern , H.S. Rigg s Crest

~::::::::::::::':':':"'::~:::::P:H:·:99:2:·:2:1:7::':':1·t':':_~::::::::::::::::::~ -1Menor.
64 Misc. Merchandise L
-1-.,- 2-.-1-3-. -2-38_ C_o_n-do_•_S
_t-.,
ALUMINUM ROOFING
ALL LENGTHS IN STOCK
8FT ........................... .. ............ ... '9. 95 ~ ·
10 FT . .......... ..... , .... .. .....,. ........... ' 1 2 .20 ,
12 FT ............. .. .. .. ....... ... ........... '1 4 .45
14FT. .. ............... ............. .' ........ i16.70
16FT.... ·.... .. .. ............................ ' 18.90
18FT... ......... ... ... ... .. .... .... ...... ... ' 20.90
20 FT . ........... . :....... ...... ........... .. '22.95
ADDITIONAl&amp;% DISCOUNT IN APRIL -· CAS H &amp; CARRY

~

-·

POMEROY LANDMARK
614,992 , 21 B1

PERSONALIZED

POOLS
•Vinyl Liner
•Fiberglass
•Stainless Steel

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
1
Roofilll &amp;Sidifll Co.

PHONE:
1-304·773-5634

ROutt I •
Lona Bottom, .DH. 45743
915-4193 or 992·30&amp;7

Maaon, W. Vo.

C. L. Kitchen
. ...v.t

Kitchen Cobi.nets - Roof·
ina - Sid in&amp; - Concrete
1 Potios - Sidewolks ' New Construction - Re·
Custom Pole
1 modtlin&amp; : Borns.

rpo.

•

.

INOUe

Pomeroy . Behind Landmark .
9 -4 each dey. Variety of
Item•.

3 day fire &amp; smoke 111le . May

9,10.11 . 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Antiquae.

ture.

clothing.

furn i-

appliances &amp; miac.

Items. All must go . Home of

Alma Miller, 668 S. 3rd
Ave..

Middlapon .

Acrou

from Mlddlepon School.

Bill

Croil A11ldence. In

Emp .

12

Situations
Wanted

I have room and board .
ResOnable . 614 -992 -602·2 .

End of your baby sitt ing
problems by ca lling Tiny
Te ch at 614 · 992 -3824 . Call
now fo r low ope ning prices .
Will d o b aby sitt ing in my
home. Raci ne area . Any age .

614 -949-2779 .

Can do paint ing . in teri or ll'ld
eKterior. roo fing . electriclllf
work , any odd job. Insured .
Ref orences 304 · 458 -

1569 .

Wilt take ca re of eld er ly .

304 -675 -4092 .
13

I nsurance

SANDY ANO SEAVER In surance Co . ha s offered
sorvic·es for fir e insurance
coverage in Galli&amp; Cou nty
fo r alm ost a c entury . Farfll,
home 8nd perso nal property
co verages are avnrlable to
n1eet in dilo'idual needs . Con ·
ta ct RHy Wud em eyer, auent

Phone 388 -8249 .

Ate y o u pay ing t o muc h t o r
your ho spi tal -health in su ·
ran c e
Call C ar r o ll
Snowdon , 446 4 29 0 .

Otmeral Hltulinu a.nrl Tr_ush
remolo'el Sorv ico . Reliable
an d dep endable Ca lf 446 3 159 betwuun 9 nnd 5 .

available. Also co;ns 8o coin
supplies fo• .. te. Sprin~
Volley T•ad;ng Co., Spring
~:~a~ it:za 446 -ao25 o•

0

Wu pay cash for lattJ modo!
clean us ed cars .
Frencht own CBr Co .
Bill Gene John son

446 -006 9

l,.a wn M owing .no yard to b1g
or small Reliablo and d6POI1 ·
dttbfe
For oSt imat e cal f
446 ·3 1 59 botw flnn 9 nnd 5
LAml ny Dn ll inf! . WilttH wolls ,
shnl low !l AS , an d co ro drrf

ling

L 8. L Scrap Metal s N ow
bu yin g alum c Ans &amp; Qla ss
Sc rap m at8 ls Top pri ctts

pa;d . Ca ll 446 -7300.

Approx. 2 acres tn 446
phone tuRA . Call 614 .245

9175.
r; , ac re lot flat in tint 446
AreA . C all 446 -0963
Diamond ~ . gol d b~tnds , c lnss
rmgs , silver coins , 10 14
karat scrAp jewflfly TAwntly
Jewerl er s. 2n d . Av o . Gallt
polis. 446 . 161 5 .

Pay cash f or Used M nbtlfl
Hom e or lr lllo'OI Tr atl ur CAll

Oh . Ot 992 -7760

Gold . silver . stor liny . tn
welry , ring s. o ld cor ns &amp;
c urren c y Ed Burkott Bnrbor
Sho p , Middl e port
992

3476 .

----~-

Wantod 10 buy N ew . uso d &amp;
tmtiqu o f11rmture Will bu y 1
pioca or com plete hou so
holdtl . Calf O s by A M ort rn

614-992-6370 .

WANTED to buy . 1 Y1" or 2 "
Schedule 40 pipo . 11ow or
used . 30 4 -676 · 3077

ServiGIE

61 4 388 8 5 4 3 .

Mowm s. chctr n snws r oPlttrtJd . lawn &amp; flil Hhm lriH:t OJ:&gt; tHo spoc w lr !y Nol son &amp;
Sons Cn ll 614 25 6 15 43
lo t:fll~ d
•, n11
Sou th o f
Roll m D t llll nt Eu ruh11
Concr oi A w o rk , drivoways ,
si d uwnl .. s . put1us Bm :k &amp;
blo c k . ol e Frun nstrrwttt• s
Cnll446 4 393 or 61 4 256
178 7

~litoarmi!!r

21

--

·- -~

Bu sine ss

Opportunity
----

BEDS -IR O N. BRA SS . old
l urniture . gold , silve r dol lars . w ood ic e b oxes . st o no
jan . an tiques. etc , Com ·
plet u hou soho lds . Wri t11:
M .D . Mitior, At 4 . Po nwr oy,

IJRotoymvnF

Call

Vtnt o n , Oh

614 -446 -0175

-

INOTI €Ef

TH E OH IO VALLEY·

PUB LISHING CO roco rnm on ds
th ll t you do b usrno ss Wi th
jltWp iH you k n ow. fUHl N O T
to sond mo n oy thr n u ~Jh rh u
m n tl unt1l you twvo mv os ti
{JII !Od th o o ff orr n s1

EMil $70 0 · $ 1500 mont hl y
C0 11Hrl rSSIOilS S, multr l ovFJI
bo nu s W ork fr o m ho m o
tul l· pltrl timn Nuw woioht
los!'l pr o ornm llftlps poo ,JIH '
et~si l y
Sh Od unW!It1t l:l d
pounds S6 9 invent o ry tn
vestment nHJuirud No ox pornt co nooded Locnl supor .
visor tr Ai n s you
Cn fl
446 19 88

22 Money to Loa n
HOME LO AN S 12 % fi lled

u11u LA~tdor M o rt g n ~to. 77 E'.

Stato . Athnru . O hi o 1 -61 4 .

11

Help Want ed

59 2-3051. or 1 B00-341 6554 in Ohi o .

-~~------·

Wi t do baby sitting in my
homo anytime, lon ce d in
ba c k yard &amp; ref erences
avai lable. Ca ll 614 - 388 ·

23

Noed moro take homo PAY ?

Bro ad ranu o o f bookknein g
and ta &gt;: sorvi ces avl! ileble to
s u it yo ur bu siness nuods .
Cnro l N eol
446 -3862

9765

Yard Sale

7

6 Family Garage Sale May

REAL Y

608 E.

,

45620 o• ca ll (614) 3670102 by May 23'. An E.O.

Old co ins .. scr'ap
s &amp;
Silverware
Daily ring
quotes

~~------------+---------------4----------------l -5_
24_1_.___________

REWAR D for positive proof
of what happened to three
week old boy pony colt th nt
disap p eared fr om Ber t
Grimm Fa rm , Re dmond
Ridge . Bill M cCoy , 30 4 -

Training and supervision of
MA -00 adults in sheltered
workshop . 12 mo . position.
H .S . grad . with &amp;xp . in field
Send resume . ref . to Frank
Brown, Dir. Gallco Ind. Inc .,
P.O. Sox 14. Cheshire. Ohio

1 B Wanted to Do

Lost - MT . Alt o area . 2 JOd
and white male to,., ho unds .
Cal l co llec t tit 6 1 4 -843 ·

4 1,1mu

Help Wanted.

8rethe hig hestintwoyoa t s,
check our prices on go ld &amp;
sil ver , scrap jewelry . BuyinQ

C ard 'o f Thanks

I w ish

Or 992- 279] 10 .,,

COMPLETE
RADIATOR SERVICE
From he Smallest ·Heater
Core to the Largest Redia to r.
Rad iator Speciaist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. E•perience

.\ ]IJimol)d

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

1

3 Ann o un ceme nt s

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

SYE P rs to r· ov•(fr rcPn:'"''

All cypes ofroof Work, new
or repair, gutters and
downspouts, gutter cleaning and painting, storm
. doors and windows.

I~----------t-==========-t==========;-1 - -- - - - - - - -

Public Notice

Lab or
ht1 ....
t~!l•lr,rtr·!
S!J 09~ 90R f o· lh•' SYI P rr\ llr•
56 r:o11n ly Ro1lcml r" ul Sro~tn

1\o~

Call : 949-2 263

FREE ESTIMATES
Ca ll 843-5425

II 26 tlc

Ada fk;sell ( l!'r k

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old furni -

) 74 ttr

All Work Guaranteed
"F ree Esti mate s"

In Home Area

992-621 5 o• 992-7314
Pomatoy, Ohio

Tnvvn 'ih r
Trr,S!PP.

EUGENE LONG
SUPE.RIOR VINYL
SIDING

Complete Auctioneer Service . Also do appraisals .
Licansed &amp; b'onded to sell
Households . farm furnish ·
ingi &amp;. Real es t ate . Over 26
years experiunce in buying &amp;
selling new , used &amp; antique
furnit ure. 614 -992 -6370 .

'. 9

Also ,Transminion
PH . 992, 5682
or 992-7 121

R;tcine. Oh .
Ph. 6iH43:SI9t

Tuesday

614-367-7101 .

Chester. Ohio
Ph . 985-4269

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

evefy

night, Krode l Park Club
House. Pt . Pleasant WV
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Call

AND

lllltl r

37 One AM / FM Rad&lt;o

38 The lron t of the envelo pe
enclosmg t h e . b1d must be
marked. "Dump Truck 81d .
Propos al No 1 ..
1. B tdder to furntsh th err own
brd forms. llsitng btd pnce as an
hne •t ern spec rfrcatrons sheet.
as advert1sed.
2 OehvE:!fY mu st be made by
the successful brdder. • 120
days af1er brds are awarded. or

S&amp;W TV

N~w Homes - Extensive
Remodeling.
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bld•s.
&amp; Gar~gas
•
•Roofing Work
tAluminum&amp;VinytSidinfiS
15 Yeo" Expe•ience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282

IN THE COUNTY

"Si ding
'Rooftng
"Gutter &amp; Down Spouts

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Af'Qr(Jn

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

128South Park. Point Ptealoont . Wednesday:, Thu"day. f•idoy . 11,too.
Lo rge 4·1emo·1v vor d •• te 2
mites out Jericho Road , Pt.
Pl. Tuesday th.u F•iday, 8-5

I :=::::::=~===~t=======~======~-~;=========j---.:---;:----..,-~
·1/

ju

Ol•v~'

svnc rompsh
lrans mrssron drrec t rn frft h

CARROU NORRIS CHRYSLER'

OPEN 9 to 5 MON. thru SAT.
Al l Types of Auto Repair.
BrakeSsP
. TEunCe- u;sL. etc.
1
TRANSMISSION" filTER
AND fli!ID CHANGE
ONLY'31 .95 1_14 .nc

t!1ernof

In ac.co rd rmce wt tr Sec t•on
307 86 o f the Oht o Revtscd
Code. sea led btds v'Jtll bo
'P.Ce tved bv Ihe OliV e lown s ht p
lr usl ees . Long Bott om Oht o.
45743. on or before June 1.
1983. the btds wtll be open ed
June 1. 198 3 7 30 PM Fue
Sl&lt;.l tton. Aeedsvtlle. and read

10

to

1I

Public Notic e

Public Notice

~~

.

\

.,,
'IH
19

Pomero1 OH

~
- . ·.

I
1
I
I

9 18.500 lbs 2 speed r ear

· • UseE~ est. mpg !Of comparison.
YOur mileage mov vary depending on
speea. weather and trip length Hlah·
way mileage probably leu.
• • Base sllclcf:t! price Includes Oeatlno·
fion ch arges. Title and !axes extra.

278 W Main

1--------------·---------··

'!xl e

deiOII&gt; _ _ _,llfMay31, 1913.

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION CO.

1
1

10

•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING.
CONCRETE WORK
BOIIOED &amp; WORtt GUARANTEED
PHONE Jill CLIFFORD
992-7201
lH1t
'

-- ~ !

n

1

Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Enuipment
"
D••ler
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
'·'·"'

r;::========Jr=========t'~===~===~==rt;::=======;l

1

-

·~t~~h~~~Sand

lt311c

I

'J (

3. The Olive Townshrp Tru s·

••u

~-

I ·
-]/
I ''·
·
JJ
I 15
J.o
..
)s
1 16
I
Mail This Coupon with Remotta nc e
1
The Daily Sentine l
~
111 Court St.
Pomeroy'
Oh. 45769
.
I

btd

.,... Auto 'n11

I

•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE

992-2T 96
Middleport . Ohio

I
I
I

;·;

- ·
- · - _ .
_ _ _
•

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING
•DOZER

We can repair and reCOAl radiatorw and hea·
---+--1-1"...:..;••-1-'--+-V--1' tor coras. We can also
To os
S40C
7.01
:
acid boil and rod out ra/diators. We also repair
ro·1s . ! s1 . oo~ot.oo
GasTanks.
roll
s9.oojs16.oo~t9.00 PAT HILL fORD

I JF or Sate

I1
I

SHOE
REPAIR

_li_cction
__s_a_le______
I~~==·~G~a~fl~ip~o~I~IS~.~O~ho~o~'~'~'~'~""~~::::::::::::::~~-~t;::::::::::::~'=':''=~~-~~================~-~-8-----P--u_b
&amp; Au

•
Word d!yl•-' -- da6vs d! 0 si

These cash rates
&lt;nc lude discount

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces re,·
pair service and in,
stallation.
Residential ·&amp; C ommercta
· 1
Cali 742, 3195_, _,,.
3

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Jxle

t Financing Is available to Qualified buyers through
participating deol91'1 a nd lenders. Dealer contr1bU11on
may Of'fect CUS10mer price. See participating dealers for

446-9800

in·

5

llmllect warranties on new
American-buill cars cover the
engine I power train and outer body
rust-f~rough tor 5 19Qrs Of 50,000
miles, whlch.ever comes first. Adectuctlble may
be required. See c...aler tor details.

R.IVerS!'de VW IrtC.

1
I

1I Phone------------

4 CCJb ltght s. 4 co rner lrqht s
rmd 6 re~lect ors

'

1
1

lilrger telescopr c hors r
3 J/4 cab protec tor wrl h 4

needs!'

1

Address

wrng s

fa

top maintJoned trucks. Ri&amp;ht
silts. ri&amp;ht equipment. ~nd 1
trucks, furniture pads, Nationwide Road o,•.1·ce. Mov-·
..,.
ing tips and insu!llnce.

11

TWOfomilyyordsole. 1mile WORKSHOP SPECIALIST I-

!

·

I li t;at or group of li gures
I coun ts as a word . Cou nt
I name an~ address or
I phone number il used .
I You' ll gel better resu lts
I ;~iv~o~rig:sf~~ese~~:~~~
I reserves the right to
I classify, edit or re1ect
1 ~8i a~;, Yo,u;:d ;;~~~~
1
classificatton if you' ll
I check the proper box
I be low.
I

-·

Yard Sale

r-;:==;;:;:~===:;r;:========::;~r:::::~:;;::~~:::::;;liTir=~;;;;~~~=~1 out
Jerichoend
Rd . Pt.
Pleasant
Clothing
miac.
riday.
lQ'
MilLER
•lt
BOGGS
9-3. Wotch for signs If
RY;;·r~uoc
ELECTRIC
· ~~
SALES &amp; SERVICE ;~;~;:~;::;;~··ho~.~":::.e~
I
RENTAl &amp; ONE-WAY
SERVICE
~u~s~1it~ mJ
~~c:.~rj_ 1~hapel Church on
I local and one-..y: tow fllies,

I
1
I
1 Write your own ad and order by ma d with this I
coupon Cancel vour ad by phone when you ~et I
I results Money not refundable

I

-----'-7

III

Classifieds and
Save I I I

? Fr o nt Mounted 16 ton o r

Plus, quality backed tor
5 years or 50,000 miles.

¥!.~~

!

cab

· Plymouth Reliant K. America's highest mileoge
6-passenger front-wheel-drive cor.
.

Chances are your home is
worth more than you real·
ize .. .and would cost far
more to replace. pe'rhaps
50% to 60%, than JUSt a
few years ago.
Has your home Insurance
keptpace with the steady
rrse on constructoon costs?
We 'll De happy to help you
find out. If's part of our
service as an independent
Insurance agency '!'PI•
senting State Auto.
Give us a cart. You 'll find
· we're friinds you can
depend on.

1

Proposal No. 1 !Single Axle
Dump TNck, 1983 Model)

''M

I

.

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

Relcsil K4-dr. cOmes with
9.8%:---ftnanclngt or '300 cosh.

Happenings
'
tratlv.e posltlnos at the Carleton
School. The supper at the school
Is open to the public.

Correction

Now,

'

OMEROY - There will be a
uck supper Friday at 6 p.m.
orlng Chrts a nd Caro) Layh,
are lca vtng their admlnls-

Improper chimney Installation repairs should be made before the_
Several OUt-&lt;&gt;1-toWJi relatiVes at-.
causing Ignition of nearby wood "chimney Is used again.
tended the funeral services Friday
framing or structural ~mage
The commission advises consufor Otho W. Karr. Those coming
caused by creosote burning In !he mers to be sure that the chimney
Included Raymond (BW) Karr and
chimney; (creosote Is a tar-like Installation and chimney Intercon- his wife, Pearl, Belvidere, Ill.; Mrs.
substance that fonns In chimneys nections were don!' correctly In Amelia Karr Koolstra, Ashton, ill.;
from burning wood); chimney accordance with the recommenda, Wllllam Weeks, Rochelle, ill.; Mark
corrosion resulting In exposing tlons of the manufacturer and local and Freda Karr Jones, Grove City;
wood framing to excessive temper- building codes and have the Jack Buck, Grove City: Mrs. Hulda
atureS and buckling and collapsing chimney checked by a competent Turk, Columbus Roland and Shirley
of Inner Uners o! chimneys. (This ' chimney sweep at least once a
Grimm Karr, daughters, Diane and
can result from ' too hot a fire, year; more frequently if the Sandi, OwensiJoro, Ky.; Mrs.
especially In high-efficiency stoves chimney receives heavy-use:
-Sharon Karr Musser and Allshia
and in fireplace Inserts.)
· On January 19, 1983, !he commisand Dusty, Lancaster; and Dale and
Masonry chimneys can also sion approved a federal safety rule Paula Morris and Eric, Bidwell.
present a fire hazard when the that will require the manufacturers
Inner tile liner and the surrounding of wood and coal burning stoves and
brick or block structure cracks and free-standing fireplaces to provide
separates. This condition may be a label with Information on the safe
brought on by the Ignition a! Installation, operation, and maintemince o! their products.
creosote. Hot flue gases then can
The outdoor wedding of Kr1s
Consumers who have had fire Snowden to E4 Bob Chappelear will
escape through these cracks and
Incidents with their metal chlnn- take place on May 21 at 2: ~p . m. at
Ignite ·nearby combustibles.
neys and who wish to provide this Roush's Landing In Racine. The
The commission stresses that
Information to the commission Incorrect date of May 2 appeared In
even when heating appliances are
properly Installed, co nsumers should call the commlslon's toll- Sunday's Times-Sentinel announcefree hotline at 800-638-CPSC.
should frequently check the chimment of the approaching marriage.
neys for deposits of creosote, soot,
or other obstructions, or signs of
physical damage. This should be
done as often as twice per month as
deposits of creosote build up
rapidly. If the consumer suspects a
problem or has experienCed a
chimney fire, qual!f!ed chimney
cleaners, or "chimney ,sweeps,"
should be contacted Immediately to
conduct complete safety Inspection of the chimney. Any necessary
High power and low weight- the STIHL
FS·50E Trimmer/Edger fs perfect fdr the
homeowner! With easy-starti_ng electro_nlc
i!Jnltlon, Goe~ a'!most al)ywhere with
gasoline-powered versatility. Try
one today.
married. Mock Initiatory work was
WITH ROTO-CUT
exemplified with Dale Snnith and
Pauline Hysell as the pro-tem
candidates.
·
The program included a poem for
Mother's Day byCaryiCook, a song
by Soulsby, and a red rose for each
member presented by the worthy
matron.
606 E. Main
Ph . 992-2094
Pomeroy, Ohio
Helen Wolf, absent lor some time,
Front End Alignment Most Cars
was welcomed back to her post as
Brake .Servi'ce
pianist by Mrs. Massie. Refreshments were served In the dining
room by Mrs. Smith, Sylvia Midkiff
and Mrs. Hysell.

For Home
Insurance

MIDDLEPORT - Middlepor t Lodge J63 F&amp;AM will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m . Work w!ll be
!n mas te r m ason degree.
Members are asked to attend .
RPfrrshmenls will be served .

Svpper honoring Carleton school couple

Attend services

I

~
Pay
Cash f.o r

1

I

Groups meet in Meigs
PomeroyOES

~

1I

The Daily Sentinei- Poge-7

Sell AVON . Coli 446 -3358 .
Lifeguard ·summer e mploy m en t . Contact Gal fia Co .
Local School s . Adol ai dlt
Saunders. porsonn61 dire c·

tor. 446 -79 F -

Profe ss ional
Services
C&amp; L B oo kk A11ping

PIANO TUNING S6 o fl p1u&amp; .
discounts to son io r c it lwn s chu rch es -sc hool s. C &lt;tll Bill
W ord Wnrd ' s Keyboard .

446 -4372 .

POST ION AVAILABL E
Clerk ' a A uiatant full - timetempo rary position . A 'p ply
Gallla Co unt y Health Department, WIC Prog ram,
412 Seco nd Ava .. Gallipo lis.
Ohio . E qu a l Opportunity
Employer .

EKparionced gvmnaatica
teacher needed for su mm er
and po ss ibly year round
progrBm . Mu st have gyman ·
sties teach i ng eJtperience or
4 -6 ' yoara co mpetitive expe rience . Apply im mediately at
Gallipolis Parks and Recrea tion Dept,, 61 8 Second

Ave ., Geltipolis, Oh 46831,
446.17B9.

TWO openings for 55 yeen
or older eppllce na . Must be 1
reJident of State of WV and
me'et Department of labor
incOme guidelines. Araaa
needed era clerical . van
driven &amp; o utreach workers.
Temporary for 7 weuks.
$3.36 per hour, 30 hours per
week . Apply et P1 . Pleasant
Job Service .
Vending Company needing
ho1tl11 for Mason County

Racine, Ohio. Friday May •re•. Age 26 or older . Call
13-9 e .m. to4p.m. Womens for appointment. Mon. thru
dreseea. top a, jean1 allslzea. Wed. 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
614-446-4822.
Curuina. Men• clo1hlng.

Will open &amp; cleAn s wimming
poo ls. Coli 446 "4895 aft er

5 OOPM

PIAN O TUNING -LAN E DA NI E lS . R e l i abl u so rvic8
since 1965 . A sso ciato o f
Brunic ardi Mu sic Co . Ph o ne

614-742 -295 1.

PERMANENT h nir romovnl
Prohtssional El ec tr o lysi s
Clinic . A .M .A . approved . Or.
referrels . M o nday. WedneK·
day . Frlday , by appointment .

304-675-5568 .

Rval lcntce
31 Homes to; Sale
3 bdr. home in Addis on
small lot , neWly remo deled.
new e lec tric plumbing, etc .
Furnance &amp; w oo d burner.
fully insullated, exo . cond .,

Mid $20's. Cal f 614-5924369.

•'

•

'•

:•

-·

�,.,

I
10, 1983
31 Homes for Sale

Ohio

,

They'll Do It Every Time

basement, 2 car garag'!.
Appointment only. 203 K•·

·or ..

For rent Sleeping Roomt
end tight hou 1e keeping
rooms . Park Cent!al Hotel.

Gallipolis. 446 •

1223.

Cell 446-0766 .

Racine 2 V, ac re mini -farm ,
remodeled 3 10 4 bedroom 2
story. _ aluminum sided
house . cit'y wate r - gas sewe r, basement. &amp; 2 car
garage. Across from South-

SIHping room 1125, utiltia
paid, single male . Share
bath, 919 Second Ave.
Gallipolis . Call 446-4416
after 7PM

HS 614 -379 -242 4 or
614-949 -2B54 .

Furnished apt. adults. No

ern

Pots. 304 -676 -1453.

Duple,l( 2 story frame house,

in Middlepon . Good investment or home. mid SJO's.

Ca ll 446 -1788 .

-,~...,

Furnished apt . ndulu ·. N o

..

Peto. 304-675- 1453.

A.R'THtJ!t 'IAsewt,

3 bedroom, 1332 sq . ft . .
under const ruction , Ivy Dale
Subdivision . KCK cont ra c-

tors, In c . Call 614 -367 0S31 or 446 -1759.

ST..

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park . Route 33 , Nort h of
Pomeroy. Large lots . Call

992 -7479 .

~- I N6a) yoo.
I Ht&gt;.Y6A~

STUCCO

;Ki\1"eN ~ Yw.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

House by owne r , 3 bd r., 1 %

bat h s.

Crown

City .

Call

614 - 256 -6348 .

lovely.

6

rooms . Double

ga r age. beautifu ll y lan ds caped area lot . A top Rose
Hill . Pam . 40 ' s. 614 -985 -

4257 .

34118 trai ler with 24M 12
addition . citv water &amp; well.
Crab Creek Ad . &amp;7800.

6 room &amp; bat h , large garden,
1 OOx 100 lot . Space heaters.
614 - 992 - 52 4 2 . l a nd
co'ntra ct .
For salo by ownar - 4 bed room, 1 'h stiry alu minum
siding ho u se . Approx . 2 Yz
acres level ground. ~ srge
kitchen , din"ing room , fo rc!}d
· ai; hea t
SoJ.)arato l argO
gnrago . 2 mi les fr om South ern High Sch oo l. Shown by
ap poin t mont only . $23 . 500 .
614 -949 -2023 or 6 14 -949 -

2777

ho·m e in Rac ine area . 614 -

1977 1'li'~e70, 3 bedrooms. 2
full lJaths, $ 10 .000. 30 4 -

2 bedroom mobile homo.

35 Lot s &amp; Acreage
5-20 A cres woods. over looking Ohio River, city
schools. 446 -35 54 or 1 -

5 1 3 - 423 - 8928
Owrwr / Agen1.
1 acre lot 6 mi from Holzer
hospi tal. Just off At . 160
out Fl oyd -C lark Ad . 70 0 tt.
CAll 44'6 -0 390 .
35 acres at Rodney on W .T.
Wat son Rd . Owner finan c·
ing available. 'call 446-8 22 1
after 6 waekday s.

_1_o__8 -.-,-_,e s--o7
n_8_u_l_•_
v~
ill-e~
Ad:
i n Go lll no li s Tow n s hip ,

S37,000 . Ca ll 6 14 -446 -

4570 aft or 5 PM .

One lot 4 0x. 130 . Call 676 4391 or 446 -40 38.
1 4 acre lot in Bradbury
good location. trailer hook
up all utilities, septic tank,

5133 .

1 .4 aero lot in Bradbury .
Good location . Trail er hook
up . All ut ilities. SE PTIC

6273 .
BY owner, 3 bedrou m , 2
sto ry bric k. 1211 M nin Sl.,
pri ce reduc ed . 304 -675 -

23B 1.
For !iale by o w ner : Newly
r a~10del e d 6 rooms und bath
in Pt . Pleasant. near schoo ls
and storos. Double lot with
fen ced ya rd $27 .600 . a•;~
percent ossumnb leloan W!th
som e down paym en t . Good
u sed m obile homo may be
considered for portutl ct own
pevm enl. Ca ll 304 -675 16 18 after 4 .00 t o r
appointment .

TRI - STATE

6 14-992 -2602 .

TANK .
2602.

C All

HUNTER S dream, 109
wooded acres noor Ar buckl e. S29,000 .00 . Phone

30 4 -675 -183B.

675 -2205 .
36

Re a l Estate
Wanted

Buying houses nnd apart ments. Need proportios with
favorable price Hnd torms.
Bo" 11 09 Gallipo li s. Oh .
4 563 1

Houses for R e nt

HOM ES . U SED - CA R S .

ClEA N U SED MOBILE
HOM ES KESSEL 'S QUAL ITY MOB ILE HOM E SAL ES.
4 Ml WES T. G ALLI POLIS .

AT JS . PHONE 446 7274
2 lo t s &amp; n mobilo h ome
1 2~ 60 , 2 bud ruorn , wit h
ru ra l water. gas he at . Hns
some fu rnit ur e. pd ctt
5 1 2, 500 . Or 41ot s&amp; m obile
51 4 .800 . Call446 -1 240.
1969 El Ca r 2 bdr .. mostly
turni!lh ect , CA rpet od . ep plian cos, goo d co nd .. ro d uco{! to S 2.000 . Cull 614 -

388 -8549
2 bd r. mobllo hom o

CAll

6 14-256 -6224
Schultl mobile home , 2
bu-droum, large kit che;n. u~ ­
pando livingro o m . new
carpet. reallv ni ce . Call·

6 14 -379 -2 727
1 97 1 Winnebago mot o r
home {big o ne l. VfHY gaud .

CBII 446 -7077 .
1975 14 1170 Poerl on MH ,
w -tilt out , EC. cont . air.
woodburner, total elec tr ic,
new carp throughout , underpin ning , Oll tb uildi n g .
$ 11 , 500 . Col i 446 -0212 or

614 -245 -5406 .
1'972 14 x 66 M obile Home.
~-·~3 bedrooms, gus hea t. p~r ·
ti•lly furn ished, underpinning , back por ch. exc . co n d.

Phone 614 -992-2155 bo·
tWeen 9 &amp; 5 uk tor Tim
Afte! 5 Phone 304 -88 2 -

3692 .
1974 Ho llv Park Mobile
Home. total electric . partly
furn ished , carpeted. 2 bed ·
r oom , int ercom syste m ,
central air. porch, underpinning . In 8,ot C. cond . Call

61 4 -9 49 -275 9 .
USED MOBIL E HOM E .
576-27 11 .
14 x70 ' ell electric 2 Hdroom, elr, 1tareo. family
room , wtlher -dryer. un .
penning, tun deck, porch
awninu, new dr•perie•. ••·
geli.,_r condition . 304 -676·

aeei5 or 304·675 ·7858 .

4 bedroom mobile home. 1
child accepted. no drunks,
dop e or pats . J o hn !i,heets.
3 16 miles south of Middle-

port, At. 7 . 614 -367-0611 .
TWO mobile homes for rent
on At . 2 about 5 m i'lu t es
H om 1own. Call after 6 .

.

304 - 67~ - 6277

UNFURNISHED tra iler for
rent in Henderso n, 200 per
month . Garbage . water &amp; lol
paid. Phone 304 -6_75 -2049..

Two bedroom mobile homo.
kitc hen furni shed. 1 small
child accepted, S180 plus
ut i lities. re fer en ces r e quired. 30 4 -675 · 1076 .
TWo bedroom turnishod
t ra iler with porc h , on 30th
St . behind Village Pizza .
$275 . m o nth plu s utilities .
9200 . damage deposit

3 04 - 675 -6206

ask

for

Two bttdroom mobile homo.
kitchen furn . 1 small child
accepted, 61BO . plu s utili ·
ties. References required .

304-675 -1076.
44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr . Reg ency Inc . Apart ments 6200 per mo. or if
inco m e is &amp;10,000 or less
HUO available. A -One Real
EstatM, Carol Yesger, Real -

tor . Call 304 -675 -5104 .

41

446 -7572

2 bedroom furnished. 1
child, no pet s. S150 . per
month. 304 -882-2466 .

2 acres partially closred , city
water, 11sking $6, 000. 304 -

M OBILE

T RU C K S . GA LLI POLIS .
CHECK OUR PR ICES . CALl

Approximately 5 miles from
Middleport or ~ o meroy .

Valeri e.

614 -992 -,

"'" cal1

32 M obi le Homes
for Sa le

992 -5858

614 -992 -5858.

3 bedroom bri ck hom o on
large lot. 1 'h b~th s. f ull
basement . 2 car g,ou aga.
Coll ege Ad ., Syrncuse. Sean
by appointment . 614 -992 Two bedrooms. alum . sid ing . attached garage. holf
basomont , co v ered p atio, 2
acres on pav ed road. Five
Points. S4B. OOO . 6 14-992 -

10 " 66, 2 bd .room mobil'e

30 4-675 -1323 or 304 -5762372 .

675 -29 49
For Sa le by Own er-76 acras.
almost sel f -sufficumt . 3 -4
bedroom home. wood host .
you ng lru 1t t rAfl S, large
garden, pond, barn, work shop. chicken hou so. Plenty
of woods. pas ture. open
fiolds . Mi neral rights. Eusily
occossiblo 1 mile west of
longsvi11e on S R 124 . Call
742 -2860 after 6 :30 p .m .

2 bedroom.s MDbile Home in
Ra cine . 614 -367-0288 .

Modurn 3 bdr. ran ch . garHfJe . carpnt , Rodney sroa .
Deposit &amp; references re' tuirod S285 per mo . Black burn Rualty C oll446 ·0 008 .
M o dern 3 bdr . ranch stvlu,
brount w ay, doubl e garage.
r::atpo t. unfurnis hed . College
fl d., SyrAcuso, Oh Deposit
&amp; ref erence required . $286
per rno . CHII446 - 147B .
3 bod . house on Rt . 35, 1 %
bath!J, ga rage, $326 m o.
Call Wise man Roal Estate .

Cal l 446 -3643
Nice 2 bedroo m house fo r
ren t Eastern District . 8 150 .
plus doposil. 6 14 -9 49 -

2801
Nice 3 budroom, bath. brick
homo. cont rol air . and c:lose
in to shopping cen ter of
~omo roy ,
Oh . Rental is
9250 . pe r month . Call for n~
appoint m en t. Hobste tter
Realty, Cheryl Lemley, 614 742 -317 1 or Velma Nic·
insky, 6 14 -742 -3092 .
2 bedroo m . nil new paint.
some carpeting. Depo sit re-

quired . 614 -992 -309 0 .
MOD ERN 3 bedroom, fam ily room . near schools &amp;
hospital. Referen ce &amp; dep ·
osit required . Call 304 -675 -

4338 .

Small fur ni shed house in
cit y, adults only . CBII 446 -

0338 .

Furnished 3 rm . apartment
with private bath at 845
Second Av e., Gallipolis .
Ref . prefered . Cell 446 ·

221 5 .

Furnished &amp; unfurnished, 2
b~Jdrooms , air co nd., beauti·
ful river viaw in Kanauga .
Foster ' s Trailer Perk.
2 bdr. 1 2~~t60 mobile home
2'h mi. fr om Hospital on old
Rt. 160 at Evergreen . Ac cept children &amp; pet s. Call

446 -0157 .

3159 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
. washers, dryers. refrigera tors. range s. Skaggs Ap pliance s. Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone· Cres t M otel.

446 -739B .
lAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa . c hair, ro cker, otto man . 3 tabl es, (e xtr8 heavy
by Frontier), $686 . Sofa ,
cha ir and loveseat . $275 .
Sofas and chairs priced from
S285 . to $B96 . Tables , $46
and up to S126 . Hide~ a ­
beds . S440 . And up to
5525 ., Recliners, $176 . to
$350 .. Lamp_
s from 828 . to
&amp;75 . 5 pc. dinettes from

S99 .• IO $435 . 7 pc., $189 .
and up . Wood table wit h si11
chairs $425 . to $745 . Oesk
$110 up t o $226 . Hutches.
$650 . ond up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresseS'; $250 . and
up to $395 . BRby beds ,
s 11 0 . Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $68 .,
firm . S6B . and $78 . Queen
sets, 8 195. 4 dr. chests.
$42 . 6 dr. chests. $64 . Bed
frame s, S20 .and $25 ., 10
gun - Gun cabinets. $360 .,
din ette c hairs S20 . and S26 .
Gu or electric ranges , 8326
up to 8375 . Baby matresses.
$26 &amp; &amp;35 . bed frAmes 120,
S26, &amp; $30, kingframo $60 .
Good selection of bedroom
s ui tes , coder c hests ,
rockers , metal ca b i nets .
sw ivel rockers .
Used Fu rniture -- bookcase ,
ranges, c hain!!, end tables .
was her s. dryers, refrigera tors and TV 's. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to
6pm , Mon . thru Fri. , 9am t o
5pm. Sat.

446 -03 22

Furnished effiency apt ., in
Rio Grande, utiliti es paid .

CO UNTY APPliAN CES.

Ca ll 446 -0157 .

INC . G oo d used applian ces.
weshet, dryers. refrig ., TV
sets . 6 27'12 3rd . Ave .. Gallipolis . Call 446- 1699.

JACKSON ESTATES ' Equal
Housing Opponunlty ' has
one bedroom apartments
rent st arti ng at $157 per
month and two bedroo m
apnrtments rent starting at'
S1 9 3 per month. Call 446 27 45 or leave message.

Kenmore heavy duty washer
like new, also Whirlp oo l
washer. Whirlpool dryer.
Frigidaire dryer. All guaran tood 30 day s. Call614 ·256 -

1207.

2 bdr. basement apt ., lower
St . At . 7 , S 185 mo nth .. 3
bdr. apt St . Rt . 141 with
basement , $260 month .
Ca ll 446 -4940 after 6P M .

$96 . C&amp;ll 614-386 -B918
Out o f town call collect . Free
delivery to your home.

446 -39 19 .
Furnished apt . 6185 , water
pd ., 2 bdr., 131 'h 4thAve .,
Gallipolis. Call 446 -4416
after 7PM .

For sale -Light green velvet
sofe and loveseat. $125 .
Ch arlene Hoefli c h. 614·
992 -5292 after 5 p .m

54 Misc . Merchandis·e

1tB2.
PAINTING • interior end
exterior, plumbing, roofing,
eome remodeling . 20 vn.

exp. Cell 614·3BB-9652.

Refrigerator 550 . GE elec
stove, needs repair S20 . 2
matching braided rugs S60 .

1 bedroom Apt . $ 196 . mo.
including Utilitie s. Equal
housing oppo rtunity . Con ·
t.!ICt VIllage Mano r Apts.

304-676-5B29 .

614-992 -77B7 .

Lowrey Geni Magic Cord
'Jrgan 1 Y2 years old . Asking

304 - 675 -

8600. 30 4-675 -3238 .

Ohio . Coli 614-446-0175.

1977 Ford Pinto. Power
steeri ng, vinvl roof. 4 speed .
am -fm -atoroBtrack . Body in
exc . cond . 843 · 6318 .

Ruild your own Early Ameri cen home. 2 or 3 bdr .,

1981 Plvmouth Hori1on,
aut . front ,wheel drive. exc .

0 . Call614-245-6121 .

1-614-BB6-

7311 . See our model.

Ca11446- 2166 .

Call 446 -3B44 alt&amp;r 4PM .

CABLE Grand piano. walnut
finish . excellent condition.

S3,000. 304-676 -7B22 .

61

446 -0548.

Antiquo Oak Reproduction
furnitur e. full line in stock,
also Antiques. ~aut Conkels
Ant iques . Tuppers Plain s.
Simplicity riding m owor. B
horse power. electri::: start,
30 in . cut, 5 speed, 2 % years
old. good condition . S700.

614 -992 -3301 '
2689 .

614-992 -

Repossesse d signl Nothing
downl Take over payments
$68 . 00 monthly . 4'x8'
flashing arrow sign . New
~ulbs , letters. Hale Sign s.

C&amp;ll

FREE

30 , MF35dsl . 150gas.JD
LA w -c ulitvators. JO 520 620 -4230 . Bolens lawn
tractors B- 12 - 14 HP , 500
new and used tools on lot.
Jim ' s Farm Equipment Cen·
tar, Rt . 36 W ., Gallipolis.
Ohio. Call 446 -9777 or
NEW &amp; Used Harvestore
Struct ures. Automated livestock f eed ing -computer
feeders . Call collect 614.
6B6-22 60 . John L. Bens.

1 -800 - 626 -

Wood potato crates or stor age crateJ . Bushel sizo. Ce n
be stacked . S3 .00 eac h .

HAY bal er . New Holland,
273 hay liner, price 91800 .

614-9B5-3327 .
Bar with 2 bar stools. S100 .

614 -992 -5876 .
4ft . brush hog . Good con d .
Plate glasl. large piec es .

614 -367-0611 .
large Gibson Refridgera tor .

$100 . B4 3-5345 .

or

614 - 992 -

Dewitt's

614-367-

63

1979 Sleek Craft jet bo.11t &amp;
trailer . low hours , e11c .

2275 . 304-623 -6843 .

cond., $5,000. Call 446 0963 .

&amp;

Slltrorlix 1011 C, 3 pc.
moon rak er 4 , cb 44 rotor.

Auto Parts
AccesSOfies

Various parts for

ONE room , Westinghouse
iir co nditioner, used very
little, cell 304 · 676~ 7874
after 4 p .m . to 6 p .m .

Autos for Sale

1980 T Bird. good co nd .,
sacrifice at $4. 300. Call

PRESIDENT Madison CB
and antenna . $276 . 304 -

614-367-0467 .

675 -1648 .

1980 Chevette 4 •pd . trans.
sharp, $2,795 . John ' s Auto

Sal•s. 446 -4782 .

7B

Camping
Equipment

1977 Chevy Monzo. 4 cylinder, 4 lpeed. new red

paint job . .11 , 800 . Coli 1·
614 -446-7386 .
1975 Duotor. Nedi body

2 BR. 121160 trailer for rent.
2"11 mi .· out 160 at Ever·

1 bedroom.ipartment . -3 0•·

work

groen . Ph . 446 ·0157 .

676 · 24B:i.

condl11on . f26Q . After 6
p.m . 614·992-6214.

good

running

WORK

9 :30

19 6B camper , covered
wagon, 23 ft ., $2 ,400 . Call

IRI160 min I
(J) MOVIE :

By "Ted

1 ONLY WANT YOU TO
lELL ME" THE TRU TH,
VEI&lt;'.A, NOTHING ELSE.

Electrical

DEPENDABLE WASHER DRYER REPAIR . Guarananytime

614 -256 -6620 or614-2661207.
SEWIN.G Machine repairs.
service. Authorized Singer
S.11les &amp; Servic8 Sharpen
Sciuors . Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy. 992 -2284 .

BARNEY

79

Moiors Homes
&amp; Campers

1976 Travel trailer aelf con tained, 11leepa 4 . exc. cond ..
$3,760 or make oHer. Call

614-266-6218 .

SERVICE call City Furniture

85

or

446 -

General Haulin"

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Coli 814 -367 -7471
or 614 -367-0591 .

cond. Csll 614-258-6574

PEANUTS

SERVICE .

·Call Jim Lanier, 304 -676 -

7397 .

KOUNTRY Air recreational
vehlcle. 26 ft .• full bot~· tub

AecoRDIH6 TO WOODSTOCK'S

l -::::;;--7:"-;--;--:---87
Upholstery

RESEMCH, A n!IRD

&amp; lho~er. carpeted through
out, back bedroom, 20 ft.
porch awning. window awn· ,
TRISTATE
in g. excellent condition, Set
UPI!OLSTERY SHOP
up •t Krodel Camping, Pt.
1163 Sec. ·Ave .. Galllpoh•. , :
Plaaunt, or call at office.

..

448-7833 or 448· 1833.

VESSEl. S~K TO ll!E
80TIOM OF IN WATJ;R DI5H •••

304· 882·2995.

f3.2DO,
'

· .

Se•

(])

Gymnastlco:

USGF

Single Elimination Cham -

pionahlp
(I) 0 ~ Hart to Hart Tho
Harts discover a health club
operalor lacing h1s nutritiOnal drinks with dangerous
drugs. 160 m•n.f JCiosod
Captioned ]
(fil Newswarch
I!I!IINN News
10:30 (J) HBO Magazine
(]) Star Time
(I) TBS Evening Newt
(fil Inside Washington
M ark Shields hos ts this
behind:-tho -scenes took at
the nation ' s capital.
• In Saarch of ....
11 :00 • CII (J) 0 Cll ® al ~
Newo
(J) MOVIE: "Pursuit of
D .O. Cooper'
CD ESPN SportaCentar
Cl)lllewa/Sporto/Woather
(f) Dave Allen ., Lorge
(fil Crlolo to Criala
Ill Bonny Hill Show
11 :30 0 (J) Cil Tonight Show
Johnny' s guests are Roy
Scheider, louise Mandrell
and Bill Maher. 160 min .)
(]) Another Ufe
I]) Catllna

CJ) Quincy Quincy's ef-

SEEA~

MERMAIDS
DOWN TllERE,
LET ME

OR MAYBE EVE~
A MER8EA6LE!

IRI160 min.l
(]) PBS We Night
I)D AQ In tho Fomlly
~ Nlghtllne

a

8 Honeymooners

12:00 (})MOVIE: 'Gate of Holl'
Cil Bums • AHan
CD UBFL F - 1: Blr·
minghllm at Naw Jersey
r ' I]) MOVIE: 'Dalla'
(I) l\llghtllne
®MOVIE: 'Tha Uttle Girt
Who Uvea Down the lone'

8 Mary tt.nm.n, Mary
liartmaoi
12:30 8 CJ) (!) Ute Night .wfth
~ Dovid'o
guea11 ere Johnny Winter
·ind author Dr. Wilson Bryan
Key . /60 min.)

.DtMd

City. Call 614 -211-8270 ., ; .

In no enawer call 441-1288. ·

• j

'IF YOU

KNOW

1972 Starcrafttr•vettraller, ·
21 ft. uH contained, •l•p• Sanla ' a Uphol1t1ry Shop, '
6 , new bl!ttery, new awning. Rt. 7 , 4 mi . above Crown :

excellantco~dltlon .

Vulnera ble: Neither
Dealer: South
West

North

Pass
Pass

••

6 NT

So uth
2 NT

4+

PllSS

I-' ass

Pass

Pass

second spade.
Now South cas hes his
black winners to com e down
to a seven·ca rd ending. lf

either defender held eight
red -cards, that player would
have been squeezed, bu.t no

red card appears.
South plays out

Openi ng lead •10

three

r ounds of hea rt s, and then
B~

Oswald Jae&lt;&gt;b~
aad James Jacoby
A bridge-teaching hand
usually brings up ~m e potnt
or points on bidding. Thus
with today's hand the teacher will explam tha t South

was using a range of 21-23
points to open two no-trum p

stops to count the hand . West
disca rded on the th ird club
and lhe third heart while
East disca rded on lhe third
spade. l-Ienee West's distribution is known to have been

5-2+2 . South plays lii s acequeen·sc ven

of

di am onds

and finesses dummy's 10
with certainty of success.
!NEWSI'A I'ER t-:NTI&lt;: RP IUSE ASSN.)

~a1-~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Soviet lake

5 Passe

DOWN
I Fish

2 Bucolic

10 Au naturel

3 Maxim

11 Fore-

4 Bulgarian
mone l&lt;~ ry

shadowed
13 Object
of worship
IS Slow the
pace
16 Varnish
ingredient
17 An Italian

cheese
t8 Hoist
20 Tad
21 Chemical
suffix
22 Give up
23 Having
tresses
Heavy
with ca rgo
27 J ewis h
month

unit
5 Contribute
6 Altar
ves tment
7 Egyptian
dei ty

Yesterday's Answer

23 " -

8 Empowert!d

9 Cheapen

12 MufOc
14 African
antelope

Sans--Gene"
24 Unyielding
2!i Role in
Verdi's
·· ~'alstaff"

19 Swerve
22 Colombian
city

30 Beques t
· recipient
Jl Conswncr
advocate
32 Old woman
33 Loafs
38 Annoy

26 E mbankment 39 Ritual
26 Whalebone
response

·ze

28 - esprit

29 Aykroyd
30Famous
Italia n name
34 Soul (Fr. I
3!i Bullring
cry
36 Noun suffix
. 37 Stage
lwninary
40 Menu term
II Sandy
tract

(Brit.)
1% Occupied

t3 Mining
finds

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'•

fons to halt the spreld of
Bubonic Plag!JG are ham·
pered by e Medic,ne Man.

between 9 and 6 .

WATER

+KQ 2 ,

South looks at II easy
· trickS, The iwelfth must .
Corne in a red suit . He whiS
the spade in dummy and
leads a club to his king . West
takes his ace a nd plays a

(])Soap

Need something hauled
away or something moved?

JIMS

'Tho

Wolves '

a

We 'll do it. Call 446 -3169

L•rge truck camper, sleeps
6 , 1elf contained, good

0 (J) Cil St . Eloewhere D•
Morrison fighl s to prevent
possible f ;;~ t a l surgery and
Or. Westfall Hies l o deal
w1th a kidney patient's Wi fe .

--

missing.

t AQ 7

MOVIE : ' Help

(J) Screening Room
I]) Ill ~ 9 to 5 Violo1 ,

10:00

445 -7903 .

304 -675- 280B
0831 .

+K J 7

Men

Ooralee and Judy tak e kar ate lessons .

Lonnie Boggs Excavating.
Dozer, backhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour or job. Call

Call

+ 96543

• A Q5 I

Remington

Wanted: Male'
(]) American Playhouse
' The Fifth o f July .' A group
of family members and old
college friends have a reunion. (2 hrs .) [Closed Capti Oned)
(jJ) Oiemonds in the Sky

1- - - - -- - - - --

wo.rk.

CII Cil

0 (]) ®

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR

after 3 :30.

742-2734 .

but

D•tsun

260 Z or 280 Z. 614-992·
6179 or 614 -992-6006.

after 5, 614-367· 7B78.

Foramens Uaed Cars. For
leaa expensive cera. On S.R.
124 in langtville, Oh. 614·

How man4 qrandchild
Is it six il And two qreat
qrand~ids ... if you
Rover!

Hann.11 . ponds . ditches.
basements. etc C.11ll 4484907 . Carter 8t Evans
Transportation .

teed

71

D

S· !O

\
-·--'- ·---

no-trump and gt':en up -any
idea of seven. W1th a m i ni ~
mum combined holding of 34
points. two aces could not be

SOUTH

II)
~
Throe' •
O'Ompany JaneT and Tern
j ra w Jack into a scheme
that leaves Furley w 1th no
rent money [Closed Cap110nedJ

&amp; Refrigeration
76

• J 9.5 .

CiJ

Excavating

B4

seeks the mur.derer.of a bigtime lawyer .

(]) 700 Club

614 -992 -7483 .

614-256-1202.

• 54

• J 10 6 2
t63

Laverne's fathe r ru ns for ci ty
councilman . [Closed Captioned}

~ ids!

lNG . Fomerly

Cabin Cruiser boat. Cornett
&amp; trailer, 150 Chrylser en gine, sleeping area. Call

'Us .
+AB

grand slam. but with his 4-33-3 distribution he should
probably have )ust bid six

EAST

(J) Philip Marlowe, Private .
Eye 'NE!vBd.a Gas .· Ma rlow ~;~'

Don' t Wear Plaid'

We've
raised
three

clubs to ask for aces. He is
thinking abo ut a possible

WEST
+10966 3

IAII60 min I
(J) MOVIE : ' Dead

Phone 446 -3B88 or 446 4477

DOZER

+

!1-10-83

• K73
t K lO 6 2
J 10 7

Steele An ag1ng 'B' mov1e
queen mvolves Laura and
Remington in a murder plot

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Plumbing .
0676.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

six brothers overpowers the
A· T eam , lea ving them o ut
into the wilderness . (60
min .)

CI) O ~ Laverna&amp;Shirley

8 :30

9 :00

to be alive!

1981 Honda 750 custom .
Full -faring and crash bar.
3500 miles. $2,000 . Call

75

+ AQ2

Force'

304 - 676 · 1293 for

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

B3

NORTH

O CJlCil A Team A band of

and that the modern tendency is to use that range rather
tha n 22-24 .
With 13 high -card points
North us~s a Gerber four

160 min.)J Cios&amp;d Captionodl
@)
MOVIE : "Magnum

Cor. Fourth and Pine

65 "Seed &amp; Fertilizer

6 HP , $60 . CB

E &amp; R Tree Service . fully
insured , free estimates .

Cell

Entenainment

([) (j]) Nova ' Tracking the
Super1rains ' Ton ight 's pr ogram looks at California ' s
need for high speed trams
and why th1's panicular one
IS not American made . (R)

ESTIMATES, FURNIT!JRE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 614· 446-21 07. '

Sprinq,Phi.jllis!
Mail.es 40u qlad

BEMOAN

Answer: Psychiatri sts do n' t have to worry as long as
th is happens - OTHERS DO

Distribution counts

(]) · ® MOVIE:
"Woterohlp Down' Pert 1

675-5165 .•

MISUSE

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Ill

Get your carpet in ship
shape. Water removal. FREE

BACK HERE!

OLDER

BRIDGE

ger is rol! nited with an exgirl,riend.
!A)
[Closed
Captioned].

I DIDN'T MEAN IT THAT WA.Y,
YOU HAMMERHEAD! COME

I

Jumbles: PHOTO

Jumbh 11oo1t No. 20, containing 110 puolea, It available fOf' $1 .95 poslpt~ld
hom Jumble, do lhls newsp.per, Bo,; 3-4 , NDfWood, N.J. 07648. 1ncludtl V'OUI'
n11m1, add~••· z1 code and m•k• checks 11yable to News
a.

(]) I Spy
I]) 0 ~ Happy Doya ~o­

304-B95-3B02 .

B2

Yesterday·s

(I) MOVIE: "Venom '

Wai'er Wells_
. Commercial
and DomeStic. Test ho18s .
Pumps Sale1 and Service .

JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·

WANT to lease tobacco
quota. Mason, Put!'l.!lm, Ca bell . Call Morgan Woo dlawn
Fum . Pliny , 304 - 675 -

... MAYBE J CAN ReP/1/!f
HIM! GOT 10. qET TO
JHriT MINE !.1
.

PROGRAMMED INTO HIM'

814 -742 -2231 .

Thoroughbred

FJ00'5 OO!fff IT! THE 5CilEfH&lt;;
iiONE 8L41(1i.' "' AHD Al.L T~E
OiHA ON 'OPERA nON ·

5/.INI":!GIIOT' HAS. BEEN

675 -

446 -3692 or 446-9777.

Regi st.11red

RIDING lawn mower, Huffy.

fJOO.' 1 OI?OER YCI'J
HOTIV ffSTROY
'(()I.IRSELF,~'

1 980 Honda CR 80 dirt bike.
excl. cond.. $460 . Call

304-675-374B .

304-676 -5056 .

8:00

Roofing and Gu«ers. Rellonablo rates . Insured . 304·

1978 Harley Davidson alec-·
tra glide . Call 446 -2166 .

(Ans..,ers tomorrow)

Tonight

after 5 , 304-675·1128 ,
LM . Johnson.

614 - 245-5B92 .

en .

1D

RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon

Answer here: IT [

® You Aokod For It
(fil Groot Chela of the
Wortd

ANNIE

WHAT HAPPENED
TO H I'S GETLIP -AN/:7- 50?"

IGANNIA I

a

F K Trae Trimming. stump
removal. Call876-1331.

Cell

5 · 10

Montreal at Atlanta
(I)
CJ) Family Feud
(I) Bu1inesa Report

or 446· 2464.

304-876- 20BB or
4560.

rxxJ

Game

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Ouazar, end
house calls. Cell 576 -2398

rienced roofing, iricl~dl_ng
hot tar applica.tion, carpe·nter, electrician , mason. Cell

I WAKTE I

(I) Major league B11oball:

949-2686 .

a.

"~"-:-...!::""'- ..

s..

7 :16
7 :30

Hi Pressure Cleaning. Alum·
inum aiding, mobile homn,
wood. brick. sandttone
building and home.. A1so
heavy equipment. Fully in·
sured. Free ostimat81. 614-

Motorcycles

74

1972 Yamaha 650 . low boy
hay wagon, 2 horse motor.

mare $950 . 304-895 -36B1 ,

LOSER

614-949· 26B6 .

black top paving eatimates
for your drive-way or park·
ing lot . Also Buying&amp; ••Uing
heavy equipment.

Need to lease tobecco poun dage. Will pav 36 cent. Call

Livestock

BORN

Painting, iOterlor &amp; exterior,
bruth or spray, commercial.
residential. mobile home..

1971 Ford 65 passenger,
school bus new motor. new
brakes, exc. cond .. 81 , 600
or best offer . Call 614 -266 1468 .
'

62 Wante!l to Buy

NICE work mare, weight
approx . 750 lbs . Phone

ELECTRIC rang e w ith Oll ·
haust fan . 2 years old, te ll
between 8 &amp; 9 :30 a.m ..

Roofing, shingles, spouting
and aluminum siding work.
Insured. Free E1timatea .

Painting interior or exterior.
tree estimates. Call 675 -

&amp; 4 W.O .

992 - 6179
5006 .

Fred Elklno.

..

Vans

Coli 614 -2 56 -146B .

826 . 304 -676 -52B7 .

wallpaper hanging . Insured,
Free estimates. 614· 949·
2686 .

5344 or 446 -9326.
73

304-468 -1919.

Jersey milk cow , $600 firm .

Flo w ors for Mothers Day,
North 2nd. St . Middleport.
Open 9 -8 . Cliff ' s Place.

7 :00

Phone 614-367-0636, coli
after 5 .

parts 304-676-124B .

1961 'Harley Davis Pen head .
lots of chrome. Excellent
condition . $3 ,000 . 614 ·

1974 Pontiac 2-D -H. 6 cyl. ;

1rol air. wtttr paid. t260,
month . 304· 876·6294.

03800 . firm . 304 -676 2!!63 .

48 "- 60"' · 72 "-B8 "", King
Kutter rotory mowers 40"
4 -5 -6 -7 ft . 3 pt . or pull type.
8N , 4000. 6000 Fords , Ferg

one barrel, A T. PS , $150 .
Rio Grande Estates. Apt. 12,

Unfurnished 3 bedroom ~en-

Call after 3, 676 -63B4 .

70 Ford truck. short wide
bad , will sell camplete or

King Kutter 3 - p till en 40 " ·

extru . Coli 614 -367-74B5 .

ONE bedroom apartment,'
402 112 24th . St. Pt. Pleasant,

1978 Chev. custom ten
delUxe . Y2 T, auto trans, 360
engine, PS , ~B. goOd corid.

446 -24B4 .

7446 , anytime .

C UI ,

Trucks for Sale

78 Chevrolet ton truck.
ca bin chassis, e-c. tilt steering , pb . ps, new paint, tee at
~eoples Bank or call after 5

Farm Equipment

1980 Buick Rivera Iota of

ity housing.

72

p .m . 3Q_4-676-62B6 .

614-38B-B634 anytime .

675 -6679 . Equal opportun·

I ~;:;=:::;=::;:~:::::;:;:::;=

77 FORD Ranger. auto matic transmission. PS . PB.
too many extras to mention.

Musical
Instruments

1972 Chevv hard top, motor
&amp; trans in good thape. Call

ON E bedroom IP•rtmetltl
for the elderly , All utilities
paid . Tenantl pay 30 per ce nt of their sdju1ted In ·.
come in this HUD subsidized
apartmtnt building. Twin
Rivers lower, phone 304-

18 cu. ft . freezer . 304-675-

UKC r8gistered purple rib bon american Pit Bull terrier
puppies . 614-992-6572 .

5560 .00 . Ph . 614 -266 1216 .
White' s metal detectors. 3
guns . Honcfe generator . Call

4846.

124B .

992 -3382 .

Fireplace insert, twin blo w ers, automatic thermo atnt .
still in factorv carton .

1982 Exp. Ford. ps, pb, air,
sun roof, $4,600. 304 -676 ·

304-675-2406 or B-10 p.m .
304-876-2B53 .

Rough lumber for sale 125 AKC Shih Tzu puppies, 4
piec e~ . .2 " thick by 1 0 " wyide
males, 2 females , $125 .00
by 1'6 ' h . lon·g, pressure · eacli 304·a76··6B56 .
·
treated . Call 446 -B34B or

Call 446 -1552 .

~04 - 675 - 1714 .

1977 Ford 160. See at
Bordman Furn . 9 -5 p .m .

DRAGONWYND CATTERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow pup-

446-7077 .

Supply , B- 6 . 304- 676 22 18, 676 -6753 .

tion.

Call 446-7796 .

57

cond . 304-46B-1536.
38000 original miles, gar·
age kept, ucellent condi -

Reg . Oobermena pups afd
Doberman Stud Service.

1976 pop - up Stn rcraft
camper &amp; _ , 977 Cadillac .

Autos for Sale

1968 DODGE Polara 600,

Pets for Sale

1971 cab over, Peterbilt , air
ride . verygood , 16.000. Call

- = - - - - - - -· lc -

'

Building materials
block, brick . sewer pipes,
w i ndows-, lintels , etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

Aluminum 8ft. tru ck t opper.

$250 . C&amp;ll 446-02 12.

e

---------~Painting interior 8r. eJtterior,

71

pies. CFA Himalayan, ~er ­
!iian and Siamese kittens.

2 hives of bees, 8 suPers &amp;
complete line of equipment,

~&lt;:OPECKl

Call 814-3BB-9B67.

55 Building Supplies

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds . AKC

PM .

FLIPPING A

II:~IAN

C USTOM OF

6688 .

Water well drilling rig . Call
intellivi sion V i deo Game
with 13 cartridges. voice
module, storage lid, S360 .
Call 446 -9472 before 2 :30

llli!'L L FLIP A COIN.

OLD

8 :30

repairguaranteed.
, very rea1onable
~1!====·~·:••:"'::":':·':":•:••:..,:::;:=======::::::::~ work
Cell 446·,

56

'-----------'-----------1

APARTMENTS , m o bil &amp; r"
---::-::--:--:-::~~--:~

phone, 1 -814-992 · 685B .
3 bdr. l'louae, central air, .11nd
one trailer apace. Addison,

--

Call 446 ·0475 .
614-3B8 -8543 .

VOU M6At.l, THe

Marcum Roofing
Spoul·
lng . 30 veara experience.
specializing in built up roof.

--~--

$2.995 . Call
New &amp; Used Troy Built
Tillers. $wishers Implement .
St . A1 . 7 , North of Gallipolis.

WMY PO'-I ' T WE DE _CIDEo BVAN OLP-T IMEo ,
AM&amp;I!ICAN CU5TOM ~

a.

$575 , 304 -676 -2700 .

2749 .

6648 .

1768.

24"

Apt.. for rent . Half double-2
bd .room Aptt Adults prefftrred . N o p ts . 614 -992 -

Apartm e nts .

Cedar wardrobe, an1ique
trunk, 3 tier glass table &amp;:
co ncrete picnic table with
benche s. C.11ll 614- 266 ·

ESPN'o Spomfotum
Andy Orlflith
N.wi/Spom/Weathor
(fil SIUdlo See
8 Che~le' o Angola
8 (I) Cil NBC NoW11
(I) MOVIE: ' Gate of Hell'
Cil MOVIE: 'Journey to the
Center of Time'
(]) Thlo Wnk In the NBA
(I) Gomor Pyle
(I)
~ ABC News
Ill (]) llD CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
(fil Ovar Eoay
B (I) PM Magazine
(]) ESPN Spomeontor
(I) Cerol Bumett
(I) EnterUIInmont Tonigh1
(!) Che~ie'o Angelo
Ill (]) Tic Tac Dough
(I)
(jj) MacNoii· Lehrer
Report
®N-•
II ()J Poople"o Court
8
r Trek
(]) NBA Tonight
0 (J) Ue Detector
(]) NBA Basketball: 1983
Conference Final Playoff

I

UP013
rx

(])
(])
(!)
(I)

textured Ceilings commer·
cial and rHidentlal . tree
eatlmetu. Call &amp;14 -268·

House painting, lawn mower

$6
.36
Inch
$10
.10 per
per ftft.•. 24
36 inch
816 .50 per ft . Also ple1tic
culvert in stock . 6 inch thru
18 inch . 8 inch 81 .80 per ft ..
12 inch 13.60 per ft . Ron
Evan• Enterprltes. 4 mi.
South of Jackson on ST. RT .
93. 614 -2 86 -6 930 .

198 3 Nicc hi sew ing ma- HARLEY Davidson gas golf
chine tree arm model with cart , good condition. garage
several different lig zag kept , $600 . call 304 -273pntterns. cost new over 2106
$300 repo ssessed model I ---------- - -- only 3 mos, old. like new 5.000 BTU air co nditioner ,
cond . payoff balance owed S40 . 40 Channel car CB.

2 bdr . apartment overlook ing the park. Partially fur nit hed. S175 , dep ., water
paid . Call 446 · 00 2 1 or

3 bedroom . all elec tric house homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
.and G.11llipolis . 614 · 446 ·
in ideal neighborhoo d with
8221 .
all co nveniences of city . 6
miles north of Point Plea sant, $325, 30 4-675 -3777 . UNFURNISHED apartment
for rent , 2 bedro o m .
$2 10.00 Call AutomotiVe

42 M o bile Homes
for R e nt

62 Olive St., Gallipolis. 6
piece wood living room suite
with 6 inch flat arms $399 ,
bunk beds complete with
bunkies $199 , 2 piece an tron liVing ro o m suites $199,
antron recliners $99 , other
recliner.!l sao. maple dinette
setl &amp;179 , lov e sea ts $70 ,
h i de - a - bed $260. box
springs &amp; mattress twin or
full S 100 set regular-firm
$120 , maple dinette chairs
$35 , wa sh stands $34 ,
mapl ~ rockers $59 , 7 piece
chromo dinette set 8149 . 5
piece dinette set SB9 , used
bedroom suites. refirgera tora. ranges . chest. dressers,
wringer wuhan , TV 's,
dryeres, &amp; shoes . Call 446 -

Dlvtde'
CJ) Tic TK Dough

PLASTER lNG ·

446 -

approved 16 gauge 12 inch

I

• (I) (J) . . (]) llD • ()J '
Noww
(I) MOVIE: ' Continental

8 :00

Let's go out and disco!

one letter to eactl square, to fonn
four ordlnaoy wonlo.

EVENING
B1

For sale metal cul vert 6 il)ch
thru 60 inch in stock . State

Unscromt&gt;l&lt;l tnoae four Jumbles,

5/10/83

5 prom dresses sizes 7 - 13,
like new. Worn onlv once.

or

ID'il

1tl1~rul
Jjl THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAllE
a;:J 1,!:11 ~~ $
byHonrl~andBobloe

Television
~ Viewing
TUESDAY

Mf!. WAI~,at.\C

Firewood
May-July.
We honor
Call 814 -

Cell 448-9769
3694 .

The

MliliL.DAJ 16 e'llt&gt;E:I-lC€D
~ 0'/FR. T"l-1€ INS1~M!:NI
A?S19."'"At-lT.

256-8245 .

MAOFOF&lt;u,
PENNA.

Ohio

1971 Kayot m_obile home,
21 ft .• ulf con..lned, aleepa
llx. Call 814·266· 1931 .

3065 .
Knauff Coal &amp;.
Prices reduced
Pick or delivered.
HEAP Vouchers.

46 Space for Rent

2&amp;4 CON6~ess

1 coffee t ·a ble
47 Vu18 Y.tx16 Y.r in . 1nd 1
end table 26x18 Ya:x20 Y2
with light walnut fini1h *30,
32x63 - 174 p ieces brown
underpinning for e mobile
home u1ed iutt 1 year ceme
off a 14x70 mobile home,
long piecet meuure 32 ".
short piece• 21 ' • and 10
inches across. enterlock in a
metl!l framt~ . wood grain
finish . Cell after 5PM. 448-

1983

79 Motors Homes
8o Campera

by Larry Wright

46

4 bdr .. 2 full baths. finished
neon

Sentinel

,,

how to work

It:

AXVDLBAAXR

Ia

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands ror another .. In t his _sample A i1

used for the three L's, X ! or the two 0 s. t•tc. S1ngle letters,
apo1trophe1, the length and form ati on or t he word• are all
hiDta. Each dliy th e ~ode lellers ar~ different .
,,

CRYPTOQUOTES

UYEWF"EBY;&gt;:TBB
GIHFTZ

P F I WK

KR

p

E B

KYH RIVY

UP1-IHL

WE QT . -

YTPCL

FH.

P HZRWF

·Y I K B U Y Z T U X T H

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE MEASURE OF A MAf:I'S I:JF.E
IS NOT THE IENGTII OF IT BUT THE WElL-SPENDING OF
IT.- PLUTAR&lt;;H

•·

�Sentinel

lG-The

must dev~lop own
1
·.set of ethics says Pierpoint
By KEVIN KEUY
OVPstaff
ATilENS- A reporter must use
·his own set of ethics in releasing ·
InformatiOn harmful to national
security, says veteran CBS News
Correspondent Robert Pierpoint.
Pierpoint, keynote . address
s~er to international communi·
cations week activities at Ohio
University, said Monday night that
trying to attain those ethics provides
no easy answers.
"We must make personal, moral
decisions, and take the risks. That Is
our privelege," he said.
Pierpoint's speech to students and
faculty touched upon the conferenre' s theme this year, "Ethics in the
Information Age."
Pierpoint said· that the news
media Is the one professional field
apparently operating without a set
of ethical standards, hotlngthat libel
cases are now nearly Impossible to
win.

While this was the original
lntention of the First Amendment to provde freedom of speech for all
- Pierpoint said the tlistorlc
American right presents today's
news media with a problem.
"It prevents us from setting up

enforceable, ethical standards," he
said. "A newspaper can pul;llish the
most dishonest, uneth!caldrlveland
nothing can be dc&gt;ne abOut lt."

It such a disaster? (Fidel) Castro
knew about It because he had his
agl?llts in MlamJ who were just as
good as the New York Tlrtles .a nd
~."

Pierpoint, CBS' chlefWhlte House
correspondent from 1957 to 19fllwho
presently reports national secul1ty
events for the networi&lt;, said ethical
problems arise in reporting not
covered in the textbooks or In his
own employer's b;x&gt;k of reporting
guidelines.
'
iCo nsequently, the reporter
Is lett
to make his or her own decision on
what !J\formation is good for the
public. In his Washington experiences, Pierpoint said there have been
several occasions when he and the
network have withheld Information.
Anexamplewas in 1960whenCBS
and the New York Times investJgatedrumorsofmUitarytralnlng, to
find CIA training for a scheduled
invasion of Cuba. Both the network
and the newspaper agreed to hold
the information untU it happened
one year later.
"And then we know what happened," Pierpoint said, speaking of
the Ul-fat.ed Bay of Pigs operation.
"It was one of the biggest embar~assments we ever faced. Why was

'

But If the network and the
newspaper had published the story
before and jt the operation failed,
"whodoyoothlnkwouldhavegutten
the blame?" Pierpoint asked.
Pierpoint also mentioned he
withheld information on the private
lives of public otrlclals - ranging
from John F. Kennedy's reported
extramarital affatrs to an unnamed
president so "falling down drunk he
simply couldn't get across the
airport tarmac."
"We didn't tell you about these
things, we were acting as censors,"
he said. "But I stUI believe It's my
dutymt to tell you everything abOut
the private lives of public figures. I
didn't WI!JittobetheRonaBarrettof
CBS News."
But If the o!ficlal's action affects
his job conduct, Pierpoint said he
would report it.
"Trying to say what the ethics of
journalism are provides no easy
answer," he said. "But I believe the
challenges and risks are worth
taking."

NEW JAYCEE OFllCEJIS - New offlcen of
the Melp County Jaycees are, left to right, Brian

Ceade, pft!llldelll; Mlck Rowen, vice prefJideat; Dick
Owen, fltl!le director; Sieve Siory, treasurer, and Bob
Flnrt, secr'l\tary.

I

I
We've ~ol ft And
we•ve ~ol n ~oocl!

Open Dally And Sunday

Sale Wed. Tl'IN sat.
.·

Showdown near on budget
receipts of businesses.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A meeting to discuss alternatives to
However, Meshel said a gross
the tax, which would yield $255
showdown was near in the House
tax is difficult to enforce.
receipts
FlnanceComm!tteetodayonthetax . million In the 1983-1985 budget.
However, the governor has indi- "It's very difficult to administer
provisions of Gov. Richard Celeste's
because all businesses do not
ca
ted that If there_is a substitute,.he
two-year budget bill. •
lnoorporate,'
' tM · senator Said,
wants
it
to
be
some
other
kind
of
One section - levying a 4 pereent
meaning
that
the state would not
business
tax
to
achieve
a
fair
excise tax on the providers of
·
have
a
way
to
track
evaders of such
Individual
and
balance
between
business services such as lawyers,
a
tax.
corporate
taxes
..
-·englnef!rs, surv_eyors, consultants.
The Finance Committee, after
accountants and others~ remained
lncll~iduals. had theli: perSonal
considering
an anticipated long list
under fire.
income tax boosted by 90 percent
of
amendments,
was expected to
Mlnol1ty Republicans and some under a budget bail-out bill enacted
vote
today
or
this
evening on the
Democrats in the House said they
by the Legislature March 1.
total
budget
package,
clearing the
would like to see the tax removed as
Senate President Harry Meshel,
way
for
a
House
fioor
vote.
the committee considers today the
D- Youngstown, who has been sitting
Leaders said earner they exmembers' amendments to the $Z7
In on the cloSed-door meetings, said
pected
the document to be reprinted
billion budget.
Monday that If there Is a switch, he
and
brought
to a vote Thursday, but
Celeste and the top leaders of the
would prefer a boost in the corporate
there
were
signals
Monday that the
House and Senate have been
franchise tax or a levy Ol) the gross
vote may be delayed until Friday.

PICnic Plate•

Sturdy dispos-

BOARD MEMBERS - New bou'd ol dlrecton
memhers ol Melp County Jaycee are, left to ~ht,

able plates In .
plastic foam.

Bruce Reed, Chuck Hannahs, Jay HW, and Mitch
Meadows. Absent was Dan Dodson.

Coupon Qood Yhru
MOy l4, 191~

Nelson, Alabama dominate grammys

BUENA PARK, Calif. (AP) The best new female vocalist executive director of the Country
Mellow Willie Nelson and upbeat
award went to Miss Brooks, from Music Association, earned the Jtrn
Dallas. She credited her w1n to Reeves Memorial Award for her
Alabama - fresh from Grammy
tl1uml?hs - continued to dominate
"Faking Love," a duet wlth T.G. activities on behalf of country music
the country music scene bY winning
Sheppard that went to the top of the In the last year.
morally justified," Linda Watkins, said the state was preparing to
CLEVELAND (AP)- As many
two
awards
each
at
the
18th
annual
country
charts.
The Nashv11le-based CMA, which
as 70,(nJOhlo residents could lose 13 of the Cleveland Council of Unem- 1 make an announcement this week. Academy of Country Music
FrlzzellandMissWestwonasbest is now in Its 25th year, hands out Its
weeks of extended unemployment
played Workers, said Monday.
Richard Fiore, state director of Awards.
vocal duo for the second straight awards In October.
benefits because of a federal
William Papler, director of re- unemployment compensation, said
Also honored at the Knott's Berry
year.
lonnula, says a group for unem - search and statistics for the Ohio the 13-week cutoff w!ll take effect at Farm awards ceremony Monday
The motion picture of the year
ployed workers.
Bureau of Employment Services, the end of this week.
night were Sylvia, Ronnie Milsap,
award went to "The Best LitUe
"There is no way this cut can be
"I don't know what people are David Frizzell and Shelly West, Whorehouse in Texas."
going to do," Flore said. He said he Merle Haggard, Karen Brooks, and
The Academy saluted several
couldn't estimate how many would Michael Murphey.
veterans. Guitarist Chet Atkins was
be affected by the federal law.
Nelson's "Alwayson MyMind," a given the Pioneer Award for his
A federal formula calls !or cutting gentle ballad dating back to the lifelong contributions to country
off the extended unemployment early 19'/0s, was named single of the music, and Jo Walker-Meador,
Emergency runs ,
, Plan inspection
benefits when the jobless rateeases: year, and the album of the same 'I~;;;;;;;--:~-:;;-_:_
The cutoff f6llows the report last name won top LP honors.
1
Three calls were anslered by
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
week that the number of Ohio's
"AlwaysonMyMind" had earned
local units Monday, the Meigs Eastern Star, will hold Its annual
unemployeddroppedto673,cro,or13 two songwr1tlng awards and a
County Emergency Medical Ser- inspection at 7::JI p.m. Thursday
percent,
in AprU. The rate was 13.2 country male performing award for
vice reports. At 6: 43 a.m ., the with Joyce Malone, deputy grand
perrent
in
March, after hitting a Nelson at the Grammy awards In
Midclleport Unit took Mae Weber matron, in charge. Dinner will be
Because tough
peak of 14.5 percent In December.
February.
!rom Stonewood Apal1ments to served at 6:15p.m.
Papler said the government's
Nelson, who rarely appears In
customers come in all sizes.'M
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
formula
for
determining
when
person
at
awards
shows,
not
only
Pomeroly at 8:46 a.m. took Gloria Meels Thursday
states qualified for the J.;l weeks of accepted his cowboy hat-shaped
Starcher from Krogers to Veterans
extended benefits Is based on the trophies but took the stage to
Memorial and at 12:42 p.m.,
Rock Spril)gs Grange wlll meet
number of people receiving bene!- perform "Why Should I Have to
Syracuse, took Brian Klein from Thursday, May 12. at Sp.m.
Its,
rather than total Choose."atunefromhlsnewalbum
Welshtown Hill to Ve terans
unemployment.
of duets with Waylon Jennings.
Memor1al.
Only Michigan and Pennsylvania
The ever-casual entertainer, unhave
higher
unemployment
rates
shaven
and clad in denims, gave
Marriage license
Correction
than Ohio.
quiet thanks on camera to ' 'all the
A motorcycle, driven by Belinda
Records show that thousands of · people who met me on the highway
· A marl1age license was Issued In
Ross, struck a car parked at VIllage
unemployed
people already are playlngmuslc."
Manor early Sunday morning but Meigs County Probate Court to
without
compensation,
as they have
Randy Owen of Alabama, which
the car was not owned by Milford Timothy Michael Whitlatch, 18, RD.
Initial
26
weeks
of
won
entertainer of the year and best
exhausted
the
Reedsville, and Jacqueline Kay
lbsell as reported.
benefits,
the
13-week
extension
and
vocal
group awards, credited the.
Milford Hysell, a Middleport Brannon, 18, RD. ReedsvUie.
another 12 weeks of supplemental group's fans for its success.
Policeman, witnessed the accident
benefits.
Milsap, somethlngofadark-horse
and transported Eddie McClure, a
However, many others wUI not be winner in the best male vocalist
passenger on the bike, to Veterans Court actions filed
Immediately cut off because they category, was not on hand to pick up
Memorial Hospital.
·
can reapply for the 12-week federal tlis first award from the academy, a
A suit in the amount of $7,893.99 supplemental compensation pro- Los Angeles-based group with 2,400
was
flled In Meigs County Common
Revival set
gram, officials said.
voting members.
Spring is here
Pleas Court by Catherine Louise
Also absent was Haggaro, whose
in colorful pants
A. revival is In progress at the Roush, New Haven, against Robert
"Are the Good Times Really Over"
with elas1ic
M!ddlepo11 Independent Holiness Douglas Roush, Pomeroy, for
was named song of the year - his
waist.
Ruffles.
Church, Pearl St .. at 7:.30 p.m. alimony payments due.
15th award from the country music
And
a
sasH
tied
Allee Jane Chase, Pomeroy, and
1\lglhly. The Rey. Ronald Baughey,
academy.
belt.
And
she'll
David Lewis Chase, Middleport,
Adrian, Michigan lli the evenaglist.
Sylvia, who had a big hit this year
love multi color
Heather A. Shamblin
There wUl be special singing each flied for dissolution of marl1age.
with a song called "Nobody,"
heans with ruf·
evening. Pastor Is the Rev. O'Dell
fles and lace .
Heather A. Shamblin, 18, Lancas- bubbled enthusiastically over her
Manley. The public is Invited to
B61h pant and
ter, a senior at Bloom-Carroll High first Academy of Country Music
blouse are
attend.
Saturday parade
SchOol and a member of Brookwood Award In four tries.
machine
• Murphey was named best new
Pr!!sbyterian Church, Columbus,
washable poly/
Thursday flleeting
The Syracuse-Minersville Base- died Monday night at her reilidence. male.vocalist, an ironic award for a
cotlonforeasy
ballAssoclatlon wlllsponsora "Kids
Surviving are her parents, Terry singer well-known to many for tlis
care.
PrecePtor Chapter of Beta Sigma
DayParade"Saturdaybeglnningat · and Janet · McCully Shamblin, 1975 hit "WUdf!re."
Phi Sorority will meet at 7:45p.m.
1p.m.
formerly of the Cheshire-Addison
SIZES 4·6X
Veterans Memorial
· ThurSday at the Riverboat Room of
The parade will tonn at Larry's area.
Admitted--Mrs. Mildred Barnett,
the DiamOnd Savings and Loan.
Market and travel up the back
Also surviving are a brother,
Pomeroy;
Bernice Molden, Pomestreets to the ballfield at 1the Terrence, a cadet at West Point
roy;
Nancy
Reltrn!re, Porileroy;
Municipal Park.
Two holes-in-ones
Academy; maternal grandparents,
Mae
Weber,
Mlddleport; William
Prizes will beawardedforlhebest Mr. and Mrs. Homer McCully of
Clonch,
Middleport;
Ruth Tlllis,
TWO persons got a hole-In-one at
decorated bikes. Categories are Columbus; paternal grandparents,
prettiest, most original and best Mr. and Mrs. Robert WUson of Rutland; Charles Karr, Racine;
RJverslde Golf CourSe In Mason.
Bertha Dlehl. Pomeroy; JuUa
Tom Karr, Pomeroy, got a
baseball theme.
Columbus; paternal greatManley, Middleport; Elson
jlole-in-oneon May1, atholenwnber
grandmothers, Mrs. Edith ShambSpencer, Racine.
12 using a seven Iron. Tile shot was · lnvestigiate thefts
lin of Cheshire and Mrs. Rose
Dl.scharged--RDbert Van Meter,
witnessed by Ray Karr, Bobbie
· McDa~. OIMlddleport.
Herman.
Warner, Dallas Brlckles.
Pomeroy Pollee are investigating.
Karr and Klm Amsbary.
Funeral 5E1rvlces will be held at
•• bn Sunday, May 8, Bobble Karr two thefts over the weekend.
2: ao p.m. Thursday ln Dwayne R.
'·
A hydrallc fioor jack valued at Spj:!nce Funeral Home, Canal Win, lot a hole-In-one on hole nwnber
1bw' using a five Iron. The shl)t was $liO was stolen from the Landmark chester, with Rev. Wayne Weiss
witnessed by Brenda Inman. U she Service Station onE. Maln St., 111\d a offlclat!ng, Burial will be in Lithopo.had gotten the hole-In-one on tank of gasoline and .gas cap were lis Cemetery, Friends may call at
Monday, during tournament play, stolen from the parked 'vehicle of the funeral home !rom 2-4 and 7-9
lllewould haveW&lt;Jna motorcycle.
James Eisenstein on Osborn St.
p.m. WednEsday. ·

Reg . 1.56

$1 Pkg

Some residents could lose benefits

Meigs County happenings

____..:._-;::-=------

I Area death I

,,

Limit J

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