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                  <text>Tornadoes advance
in Sectional play

Letters to editor
Page2

Family

Page 3

Yoi.32,No.20
Copytltlhtod 1913

•

•

at y

e

enttne
1 Sect io.n . 12 Poge~
20 Ce n h
A Mult imedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 11, 1983

Meigs'
newest
landfill
opens
Friday
.-.,

lONI!I1·2·1·4

By KATIE CROW

the Gove rno r' s Safety Prognu11 for nss tsJa nrr for
s igns.

Sentinel staff

Meigs County 's ne w landfill will open F riday
morning at 8 a.m . a ~ rdlng to an announcement
made Tuesday by the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners.
The landfill Is located on township road 207 in
Salisbury Township, just off the SR 7 Bypass near
Howell Hlll Cemetery and wlll be supervised a nd
operated by Ralph Va nCooney .
The old landflll will be closed Thursday evening.
Ted Warner, superintendent of 1he coun!)' highway
garage, told the commissioners tha t the gua rdra il at
· the landflllls nearing completion.
A letter was received from Dona ld E . Day, Divlson
of Land Pollution Control, sta tlng"The landfill
ronstruction appears to be In satisfac tory compliance
with the approved plans" . Day furthe r recommended
the county's application lor an opera ting license. with
appropriate fee subm I!ta l, be approved by the Meigs
County Board of Health and tha t a l!ll.l license be

I

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15-oz. • regular
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or extra dry.
"Fl. or

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M ev 14, 1983

011 of.Qiav!&gt;

4-oz." size l&lt;r
tlon for soft.
smoother skin. ·

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May 14. 1983

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Issued."

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In regular and
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May 1~. 1913

~14 , 191J

NEW LANDFU.L TO OPEN-Ralph VanCooney,
supervisor and operator olthe new landfill Is shown as
he operated a buDdazer on the road at the new COWity

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in 16-oz. • size.

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Riebel chosen counJy superintendent

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tntentK~n rs to nave 11o11ry ldller·
ti aed ttem ~ stock on w ahetvas 11 an
lkf\ltrltsed 111m IS not IVI~Ible IOf put'·

Ou'. hrm

chau due to 0111 ~ unfore.. en reaton,
• K mart wrlltasue a Ra.n cn.ck on rtouell

101 the merchaodlse

~one

item or reuon·

abkt l.!imtly qUI'IInlity) to be purchaYC:I a! hi
I RIIIt puc e •henevar a~o~a tlable Of wrl Mil
~ a c~r~ Qj.jlhfy rtem at a tompa ·
rable reductiOn rn p!"t«

We've
Gotlt ...
We've
Gotlt
Good!

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.c :wr--fr:
The Saving Place"

Available At Your Local K mart® Store

remalnlng lost revenue.
Celeste's proposal for a 4 percent tax on certa in
services that businesses provide to other businesses
- legal, accounting, security, advertising - had .
come under heavy lobbying.
Small-business owners In part lcular complained It
was unfair and discriminatory. They said large (
companies that had In-house departments to provide \
such services and didn't contract Independently for
them would escape the levy.
Sources said the decision to kill the tax was made
last week and that discussions since then have
focused on What steps should be taken to replace the
revenue In Celeste' s $27 billion budget.
Supponers of the tax both within the administration
and the Legislature said It likely would have survived
If it had been part of the earlier bill that Imposed a 00
percent lnrome tax surcharge.
But legislators couldn't swallow a second new tax,
opposed to Increases In existing corporate taxes , In
such a short time.
"The timing was all wrong on this," one source
said.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Shying away from ·
Imposing a second new tax In less than four months,
Democrats In the General Assembly have decided to
ditch Gov. Richard Celeste's proposed 4 percent
business services tax.
Sources close to legislative leaders today said top
lawmakers Instead were drafting an alternative
package to offset the loss of $258 mllllon In revenue the
excise tax would have generated.
The revised proposal would be anchored around a 1
percent tax on corporate profits that would be In
addition to the corporate franchise tax, the sources
said. It Is expected to produce about $135 mUllan. ·
Sources said that Is a finn part of the package.
Other components, stlll subject to change,
Included:
~KJJIIng Celeste's proposal to replace the existing
12.5 percent proper1y tax rollback with a new
formula, a move saving the state $44 million .
-Eliminating a proposed business tax break that
would have cost S42 million to put Into effect.
House leaders were trying to come up with final
parts of the package today that would offset the

Ll"!ll4

Soft Sen..'"
Extra moist or
extra protection. 15-oz. •

landflll Tuesday, The land!IU wW open lor business
Friday momlng at 8 a.m. The old landiW wUI be
closed Thursday night.

Commissioner Rich J onf's ask rd thai Hotx.&gt;rts
dlrect lf&gt;tters to l'ongr£'Ssma n Mil ler a nc\ Stalf'
Senator. Oa klE'~' Co llins rrqu rst ing n 1!0s a net
regulations be changrd on USI' of 1h&lt;' new r;,·r et'nt gas
tax.
J ones said that in no wa.v will th i!" tax be- of any
benefit to sm all roun tirs . He a lso addr'&lt;l I hal lht• lax
would be of benefit to r ountir-s whrt·r· i n t!'r st o~ t r •
highways are located.
It was not('(! that only nrw roa d in Ml'igs Coun1 ~·
~\'Oul d qua lify unde r thf' jJrogra m . . lonf'" s~lid. " It is
r idiculou s to think that lhf' tax b going lo l1f'lp sm; Jll

count les."
Also ffil-t'l ing with the L'O mmissio m ·rs \\'i !S tilt'

n .('V .

Richard Rothmic h, pastor of E nt c r:pirsP. ll oc·k
Springs a nd F la twoods ll nllrd MPihodi' t Churches .
.The R!'v. Hothmlch infmmrd commiss iorwrs tllc
churc hes would likP to esta blish a clothi ng bank in
Meigs · County noting thf'n' is .l c lothi ng h&lt;lllk in
ChPShire .
Rothmich askrrl for thP

u~

nf n ronnt nt thP olri

counhousc In C'hestr1 ·. He wa s in forn tr'fl th'll thP
grange had been promist...'t ll hC' n xm1. ll ow t '\'t'r. it was
notf'd that if lhf' grang(' ci()(&gt;S not !&lt;!kt • lth• mom Ill!.'
room w ould tx:&gt; g1v£&gt;n to thf' chu n· h f! lr a (' it!! bin g lJank
Manning RouAh relXJrl t'&lt;l 11 n •sidt'll t h:t d ca lh'fi !urn
t'€'JXH1ing that pn county ro;t d R:l, tnu ·ks \\'t 'H' h;tuliltg
loads of logs ovC'r br idgc·s and !ht· ('~til t• r wa~
intercst('CI to know if lhC' briclgt's \\ ' t Tl' s:1fi' . Hn ht ·rb
sa id If lht." brldgf's &lt;l t'f' no t m n r k Pfi1i lf'~· \-'&gt; 't \ll ld \)(• s; ll r'

for a lega l loa d.

Democrats ditch controversial business tax

LlmH3

Prell®Shampoo
11-oz: liquid or
5-oz. • • tube
concentrate .

Phil Roberts, county enginee r , m&lt;etlng with
commissioners said a grade r from South East
Equipment Co., wUI be demonstrated at the new
landfill Thursday m o mtng.
Roberts also reported he met with Bob First of the
SoU and Water Conservation Distric t who informrd
Roberts th&amp;l a fed eral program Is availa ble fo r
erosion cont rol. Seeding can be used by the county ,
but the new landfill does noi qual ify. Robcn s noted
because of Its new ronstructlon .
Roberts also noted a representa tive of the J M
Company advised Roberts to make a contact through

Mouthwolh
32-oz. • bottle
mouthwash.
Amber or green.

Sole Price

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But otqer backe r s of the tax pointed out tha t
legislators m ay only be trading on!' set of proble ms
for another. They said the change may quie t
oppos lt ion from small business but bring on the wrath
of larger companies tha t would be hit by the tax on
corpora te profits.
An overriding goal of both Celeste a nd mnj orlty
Democratic leaders In the Genera l Assembly Is to
draft a final pac kage that mainta ins th~ shar e o f thr
tax burden at c urrent leve ls. Individua ls now
shoulder about 68 percent of the load and m'l)Ora 1ions
32 percent.
The House Fina nce Commltt&lt;e prepared to mr't' l
today to formally remove the e xcise tax from lh&lt;'
budget bill and begin working on othPr c hanges in the

taxat ion 5('{' 1\0n .

No meetings lx.'!WI'('Tl &lt;'d1·stl', HuusP SJJ4\I kPI
Vernal R iffe .Jr ., D Nf'w Boston. ;1r1d ~·nat1· 11t t"·,id r·nt
Harry M rshcl , D ·Y[)u ng,;; fow n. \~" t'l'l' I'XJ&gt;t'\ ' h 'd \()da.v
Democrat S ront ml lilt' II !IU ~ ' ti'..! :n. ,II HI all
mf'm ber s o f thf• Hr put·Jllt·: nl calwu~ had plnlgt·d

oppos ition to thr• r•,, ris!' tax .
In the Se-nate,

w h rn ~ l.X'rll()(Ta l .s lla \'(•

nnly ;1 11· Iii

majority, Se-n. Tmn F r jt•s, D D;1y ton. h;HI :-.aid ht•
wouldn ' t votf' fo r lhi ' huclgvt If \h(' h u s i nPs~ sr' IY it 't•s
tax rf'ma lnrd part of _thr packagt•.
Cd rs te had coni in u~&lt;l to lobby hard In I&gt; ·hall of I lit· I
~n·rnt levy duri ng public appf'i lra nc' l '" la.o. , t \.vt't' k.
But at thf' sam (' t imf' hf' haLl I'XP! T'S~'t.l d willingrh'ss

to com prom lsl '. lh(' sour&lt;'I'S sairl.

as

I

John D . Riebel, Sr. , of near
Pomeroy, has been named the new
Meigs County Superintendent of
Schools.
The Meigs County Board of
Education meeting Tuesday night
named Rlebel,afonneradmlnistraIDr, to tJie post. He wUI replace
Robert ·Bowen, long-time county
superintendent, who Is retlrtng Aug.
1. Riebel was gtven a three-year
contract In the county post etfectlve
Aug. ! .
A native of Meigs County, Reibel
graduated from Chester High

School In 1956.
Receiving his
bachelor's and master's degree at
Ohio University, Heibel was a
teacher and coach at the Albany
High School 1900-62; assistant
executive head at Albany High
School, 1962-64, and was principal of
Albany High 1964-66. In 1962, he was
named superintendent of the Eastern Local School District serving In
that post until 1978. Since his
resignation from Eastern, Riebel
has been working for the Ohio
Department of Education In the bus
driver educa tiona! program . He

resides on Route 7 near Pome roy
with Ills wife, Glenna, and children,
John and Pam.
At last night's meeting the county
board Issued a bus driver's certificate to Ella . Mae Southern and
approved te&gt;&lt;tbooks In music,
health, spelling and writing for
grades K through eight and science
texts for seventh and eighth
graders.
AU board members, Harold
Lohse, Virgil King , Oris Smith , Bob
Burdette and Harold Roush were
present for last night's session .

Director app.oints five to 648 board
The state mental health dtrECtor
accepted two recommendations
and Ignored four others In appointIng five new mernhi!rs to the
Gallta.Jackson-Metgs 648 board.
Pamela Hyde, newly-appointed
head. of the Ohio Department of
Mental Health, picked three
members from Gallla County, lllld
one each from Jackson and Meigs
counties.
JohnKoebel,a!;Urrentmemberoi
the 648 board, was not reappointed
despite a recommendation by the
648board.
Artonii!y Warren Sheets, Dr .
Edward Berldch and Douglas Llzon
were cbo!len from Gallla County.
Sheets Is the only Gallla County
appointment reconunended by the

board

.

Jackson County .
Cremeens was recommended by
the648 board, but Willlams was not.
With the recent appointments,
Gallla County will have six
members on the board, Meigs will
have five and Jackson County,Wlll
have four.
'
The new members will be seated

Julyl.
The new appotptees may affect
how the 15-member board responds
to recomrrtendatlons made by the
Community Services RevieW
Oroup.
In a 32-page report released In
January, the state-formed review
group caUed for sweeping changes
at the board, Including the reslgnationofltsexecuttvedlrector,Maxlne

Plummer.

Hyde cholie James J . Cremeens;
Theboardvoted6to5Jan.24toask
an employee of Ewing l'uneral · for Plummer's resignation, but she
Horne, ·from M.;gs County .and Immediately retuaed.
.
Vtctorlia Wllllams, a teacber, trom
Most current board members

said they do not know how the new
appointees wlll affect the board' s
decisions concerning the report.
But In her suit fUed Feb. 141n U.S.
District Court, Plummer charges
some local and state offlclals are
trying to "lllegally stack the board"
with new members who will support
firing her.
Plummer has also fUed a motion
seeking a prelbnlnary lnlunctlon to
Pll!Vertl t~648 board or others from
USing the review group report
groundslorsuspendlngorremovlng
her untn the suit Is settled.
In a related matter, Hyde has
appointed two assistants to help

as

process Information concemlns the
review group's report.
Accordlrig to ot11clals at the 648

board, Lee · Troy and Vlrglnla
English will report to the director
concelnlng what actions the 648
boardi has taken .retatlve to (he
report.

cu:AlUNG 'DIE WAY- Work .-.ned M~
bebDIIWier Medical C..ter on clearing !lpiiCe for
lbe propoeed U.S. 311 byJIIM project, ''We'D do juat
nne If
llee!M away.'' lllkl Ralph Brohard, a
1Ejil emtattve ol Holloway ConltJUCtlon, Wixom,

tile...-

~t

Mich., the finn doing the clearln~ work. i\ llollowny
bulldozer Is seen pushing away fallen tn.' fs near the
Cheule Sy!!tem tnll'jls along Ohio 100. Brohard salci
wood clearilcl' for the site Is uvllll.able for oUiyone

aeedlnglt.

.,..

�..
Wednesday, t&amp;Jy 11, 19~

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomero) , Ohio

\ DEVO'rED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

\

l1~

l!m~

r"T"'\.,., " _ ,_,

r"T""'E!:! c::~.~

'q:lv
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhllshcr

PAT WHITEHEAO

BOB HOEFLICH

AAr;r.IRtanl Puhllsher/Controller

nenPral Manager

OALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New!! Editor
A MEMBER of The A.MOCiated P~. lnJand DaUy Prew A.'t'IOClatlon and the
Amerh2n New!iipaper t•ubll,.he~ A~latlon .

LETI'ERS OF OPINION an! weli;omed. They shoold hf' le1tH than :JOO w~ IOf'IK.
t\lllette"' lln': 11uhject tu edltlnR and must be- ~tlgned with nlllllf!, addreuJ and tel.ephone
number. No un.odgnl'd lett.en; wUI he puhll&lt;ibtod. UUen should he In s:ood ta.'Jte, lldd.resNinA' w.~. not pet'ljOnaiJtle&lt;i.

Guerrilla warfare
on the House floor

.

The Eastern thlnclads defeated
Kyger Creek and North (:;aUla on
the Kyger Creek cinders Tuesday.
Final results were: Eastern 53 ~,
North Gallia 51%, and Kyger Creek
51. The final outcome was decided
by the last event, the mile relay won
by Eastern.
Leading the way lor Eastern
were the Jones brothers, Mark and
Mike. Mark Jones captured the
high hurdles (18.8) and placed
second In the low hurdles (45 .8).
Mike Jones placed second In the
hlgh hUrdles, second In the mUe and
two mile run .
North GaUia was led by Eric
Penick , winner of the long jump
(20-1 ~ l. the 220 yard dash (23.9l.
and llnlshed second In the 100 meie r
dash ti2.Ql.
Other winners for the Pirates
were Matt Kemper. shot put
(47·1~ ) . Bob Adkins !tie In high

Who's a COmbatant?tL._____W_ill_ia_m_F_.B_uc_k_ley___Jr.
The emphasis placed by the
bishops on distinguishing combat·
ant from non·combatant targets Is
on the. one hand . not ·surprising,
though of course we remember that
during a couple of mUlenla the
distinction was not widely observed. In those days the routine
. massive weapon was the siege.
Sieges were calculated to starve out
entire municipalities, and often did.
During the Seeond World War both
sides wen! In tor massive bombing
of population centers, so to speak In
the spirit of the siege. This practice,
on refiectlon, In the post·war years
troubled the conscience of the West,
and by the time Kurt Vonnegut told
us In "Slaughterhouse Five" how
wicked we had been, we were
already penitent. But In the rush to
distinguish between mUltary and
c!vUlan. we are In fact falling to
dtscrimlnate, rather than succeed·
!ng In doing so.
Let us consider two Russians.

They are twin brothers, Dmitri and tlty one bomb for Nlldt;~'s Urals
Valerian. On reaching the age of 18, operation. And then there Is a
they are drafted, but Valerian falls Iarmer, without whose produce
his physical, - he has, a heart none ol the above would survive a
murmw- and a year later, Dmitri week. Is he not Indispensable to the
Is manning a rnlssUe sUo whUe collective war effort?
Valerian Is working In a factory
All this would appear obvious.
that makes mlsstles . Is Dmitri But If one studies the rhetllrlc of
alone, or also Valerian, a fit moral those . who Insist that whereas
target for retaliatory miUt;~ry counterforce objectives (mllitary)
actlon?
· may be morally acceptable but
Those who are less than abso- never countervalueobjeetlves (clv·
lutely !ntlexlble will acknowlroge Ulan centers), one finds that
that Valet1an's factory Is morally culpabU!ty has crept Into our
sought out by our bombs In the reckol)lng. It is true that Dmitri,
hideous event ol war. Well, then,
insofar as he has his trigger finger
what about their cousin Nlldta, who on the mlsslle, Is' the proximate
works as a miner In the Urals,
agent of Its flt1ng. But a prebringing forth that fine steel needed emptive weapon aimed at Dmitri ts
to encase those explosives? In a conscientiously aimed only at him
war that lasts more than a single viewed as the mechanical agent ol
volley - certainly In any war that
the missile's launch, not as a
was fought through the use ol malefactor. Why? Because he is not
tactical rather than nuclear wea·
to be thought of as hlmself a felon.
pons. the protection of ourselves
He ts simply doing what he Is told,
against the aggressors would jus·

--------------...,.-.·

---

ELSALVADOR

'NICARAGUA

even as his brother Valerian Is
doing wbat he Is told to do In tl)e
factory.
The guUt of. course les In those
who ordered Dmitri to fire. ~I 1s
to say, It lies with a few men
clustered about the Kremlin. "'{e
should admit Into the vocabulary d
warfare a new term. Call It
"counterau!hortty. "· U God would
give us for C!uj!stmas a weapon that
sin~.2!Jt fol'·-lnstant destruction
only those who have Instructed
other to unle!1$h War, we Would
have In hand a weapon whose
moral pedigree WM Ul)questioned.
There is, however, a strategic
d!lllculty here, namely thai we do
not know who In the Soviet Union
would tell Dmitri to knock It off, If
authority were suddenly to disappear. One might hope that Inertia
would take over, and tbat lnstlnc·
lively men would tuni their swords
Into plowshares. But we cannot
know that this would bappen. And In
any event, the scale at which a
nuclear war would be conducted
renders highly abstract rumlnatlons of this order.
But the bishops' emphasis, seek· .
lng to distinguish military from
clvU!an, Is Itself a venture In
abstraction. Those ol us who have
for years patted out our opposition
to the doctrine ol mutual Assured
Destruction have done so only In
part bec~use of an ethical distaste
tor. mass killing, which at the
current stage of technological
developl)lent would follow on any
nuclear exercise. It is the corollary
that we object to - lhe refusal to
.pursue programs designed to protect ourselves from rnlssUes aimed
our Wav.
. ...
.
The beginning of liberated
thought on the matter Is a
recognition of Dmitt1 the soldier,
and Nlkita the miner, as morally
Indistinguishable. And If tbat seal·
folding collapses. the derivative
arguments about ethical distinctions het.ween countertorce and .
countervalue go with it.

Facts left behind________________k_ck_A_nd_e_No_n

No tow on Sunday

j _

·The Daily 5entinej-Pog&amp;-3

Eastern wins .three-way meet

Hou se Democrats were euphoric alter gains In congressiona l elections,
confidently looking forward to muse ling through their own agenda at the
expense of the Republican minority.
· Democrats picked up a net total of 26 seats. House GOP Leader Robert
H. Michel of !Illnois barely won re-election and Speaker Thomas P. O'NelU
Jr., D·Mass. - who lost two years of legisla tive battles to President
Reagan - was portrayed as not getting mad, just even.
The onee-glum Republicans, though, find themselves holding their own
- no longer winning battles as they did for the past two years, but still
having success In pushing Democrats Into altering their plans.
House GOP Whip Trent Lott, R-Mlss .. says Republicans were able to
"nudge toward a compromise" wllh Democrats on most issues.
However. Democrats, like Majority Leader Jim Wright of Texas, say
they are the victims of "guerrilla warfare" on the House aoor. ·
Lott said that by the beginning nf the 98th Congress, Democrats had
"become a little arrogant, which tends to backfire."
The only strong signs of Democratic dominance In the House thls year
have come on several procedural battles at the beginning of the session and
In Ihe quick action on a budget resolution that passed on a virtual party·Une
vote In March.
A $165 bUIIon landmark package to rescue the faltering Social Seeurity
systJ&gt;m had bipartisan support before the House even began work on It and
party differences were not a factor.
The only other slgnlflcanl piece of legislation to pass Congress this year
has been a compromise $4.6 billion emergency relief package of public
works jobs, and food and shelter for those hardest hit by the reeesslon.
That, too, had bipart isan suppon .
Other Initiatives pushed by lhe Democratic leadership have faced
rougher going. A nuclear freeze resolu tion Reagan opposed had been
WASmNGTON - A lew days
under consideration since before Eas!J&gt;r and was passed last week only
ago,
I reported that nine members
alter being watered down In the face of dozens of GOP amendments.
Meanwhile, the call by Democratic leaders for a broad package of and former members of Congress,
Including Sen. Ted Kennedy, D·
recession relief legislation has given way to a piecemeal approach that is
Mass.. had been Identified In
: making only halting progress.
· A $760 million plan for loans to unemployed people facing mortgage testimony before a federal grand
jury and the House Ethics Commit·
foreclosures bogged down for weeks amid Republican opposition that
tee as persons who "may be using
forced Democrats to seek changes In the measure.
controlled
substances purchased"
A $2 billion farm credit bJU passed the House last week, bul only after the
Capllol
HUI cocaine ring.
through
a
threat of Republican delaying tactics forced major changes.
The
stoty
produced
a mad rush to
A $5 biUion m easure for public service jobs grants to state and local
defend
Kennedy.
Joe
Califano,
who
government to put about 500,00! jobless people to work this year on a
the
House
Investigation,
Is
running
. variety of projects has staUed at the committee level.
broke hls customary silence about
his c losed·door findings. Nowhere
In his flies , he said, could he find any
Pvlde nce agalnsl the senator.
I am happy to tell Califano, since
he m ay have been too busy to check
the voluminous !lies personally,
where he can lind the testimony
against Kennedy. Look up Delee·
live Michael Hubbard's sworn
statemenls before an Ethics Com·
mlttee session on Nov. :ll, 1982.
the problem. I ended up with the
This past Sunday my wife and I
As the undercover copy who
went to church In Middleport. After
patrol getting me a WTeckerserv!ce
broke
the Capitol HIU narcotics
ehurch we drove to the McCoy- In GaU!polls. He carne right to the
ring.
Hubbard
was asked to report
post and picked me up and took me
Moore Funeral home In Vinton. On
the
results
of
his
Investigation. He
to my car and towed us to a service
lhe way back we drove towards
med
nine
members
of Congress
na
slatlon In Pomeroy.
GaUipoils, where my car's balljolnl
who
had
been
Implicated
tn the
The man was very nice and even
broke causing us to skid Into a dllch.
offered to take me and my wife
I wen! to the Stale Highway
home which was clear out to
Patrol post to call a wrecker from
Darwin. Alii have to say.lt's pretty
Meigs County. The trooper was
bad when you can't get a wrecker
.very nice and tried alii he wrecker
that Is supposed to be on call 24
-services In Meigs County but
"The Rising Tide of Mediocrity
hours a day from Middleport, my thre(ltens our very future as a
couldn't get anyoone lo tow my car
bsck to Pomeroy. My complaint Is
hometown untU about two years nation." Thus sayeth lhe recent
ago when we moved to Darwin. I report by the National Commission
!bat one 24 hour wrecker serv ice In
hope the person I am referring to . on Excellence In Education.
Middleport refused to come, whUe
the others dldn'l answer. I had the
gels !he message. - Carl E .
Here are a few slat!st!cs they
Nelson, Rt. 1, Shade, Ohio.
:money for the tow bUI; so that Is not
uncovered. There are 23 million

Letters to editor

~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

cocaine scandal by three or more
Inform ants. Kennedy was oneol the
nine.
The Justice Department, picking
up the cue from Califano, an·
nounced that Its flies also contained
nothing that would Implicate
Kennedy. I can assist the Justice
Department, too, since Its rue
clerks seem to have overlooked the
relevant grand jury transcripts.
Check Hubbard's secret testimony
before the grand jury on Jan. 12,
1983.
He repeated under oath the same
Information he had given the House
E thics Committee. ·u Justice has
been unable to gel the sworn
corroboration It would like, It's
because the reluctant prosecutors
tu med the suspected ringleaders
loose and they skipped the country.
they have been extradited at least
from Australia. but It 's uncertain
whether they'U ever testify.
Meanwhile, Califano and his
cohorts at the Justice Department,
In their haste to defend Kennedy,
singled him ou1 from the eight other
accused members of Congress.
This might leave the Impression

that a stronger case can be made cripts In the ABSCAM case. But the
against them.
deeper I dug Into the details, the
So allow me to defend aU nine. All more convinced I became that the
have denied any guUt; none have government had used shameful
even been Indicted; aU are Innocent tactics. So 1 moved from praising to
until a jury convicts the m. Some of criticizing the ABSCAM
them, particularly Rep. Cbarles .invi'Stlgatlon.
WUson, D-Tex., and ex-Rep. Lionel
The Washingion Post, which has
Van Deerlln, D·Callf., have made published the cocaine aUegatlons
convincing statements of their against some of the accused
Innocence. Sources close to congressmen, killed my column
Kennedy also swear to me that thls naming Kennedy. the newspaper's
is a bum rap .
ombudsman. Robet1 J . McCoskey,
Then why did I publish the names Invited me to defend wbat I had
of the accused? Actually, I withheld wntten. Then he produced a lull
the names for more than a year. column, justifying the Post 's action
But some or the names began 10 and Ignoring my detailed defense.
appear In the public prints. I
McCloskey gave the Impression
decided, perhaps unwisely, that that my column was based solely on
selective leaks were unfair and that the testimony of former Congress·
the time bad come to publish all the man Robert Doman, who, In fact,
names. I cited the grand jury dld back up Hubbard's testimony
testimony and printed the details.
and divulged ljle same names to the
I was also the first to publish Ethlcs Committee. McCloskey was
grand jury testimony In the Waterso inattentive to my explanations
gate case. and I came under lhat he got Dornan's name wrong
withering lire for 'doing so. In
and Called him Michael. FlnaUy, If
retrospect, I think It helped to break the Post Insists on attributing the
the case and was a- public service. allegations to me, It might alsd
I was also the first to publish attnbute the denials to me. For the
excerpts from the sealed trans· disputed column. carried both.

Presidential test~----~----------~------

A'rt Buchwald

"Amencan parents aren't doing States?'Isn't It a question of national
bigger thre;lt than El Salvador." :
their Job."
secunty and survival•"
"If I did that, Congress would
"It could mean tbat. It also could
"I've advocated tax breaks for take away my tax cut lor this year.
mean the country Is not spending
parents who want to send their kids Are you seriously asking me to
enough on education to meet the
to pt1vate schools."
choose between the education or our
Soviet threat. Now, Mr. President,
"That Isn't the right answer. Mr. children and a 10 perCent tax cut?"
here Is another chart. It Indicates
President. You have to consider the
" Mr. PTesldent, your homework
functionally IU!terate adults In the
that I( we keep turning oul I""Ple
lillteracy homb In this country with assignment .was to read the report
country, and 1'l percent of all
not equipped In the sciences, · the same seriousness you consider of the National Commission on
l7·year-olds cannot read, write or
commerce, or technology, we wUI
the threat from Central America. "
Ex&lt;;eUence In Education last night.
comprehend. The average teacher· soon be overtaken by our competl·
"You don't expeet m e to appear
Apparently you watched television
In America makes $17 ,OOJ a year
tors throughout the world. As the
before a joint session or Congress Instead ."
and must moonlight to stay out ol
just because Americans can't read
nation 's leader, what should you do
"It's not my fault . I didn't know I
the poorHouse. There are severe
about It?"
and write?"
During National Nursing Home about ours.
was
going to have a test today."
shortages or !nstruclors In math,
" Work lor a constitutional
"It could eventually become a
Week, nursing homes throughout
While nursing home staffs proscience and foreign languages. Half ·amendment to bring back prayers
1
·
America wUI honor !heir elderly
vide care with skUI and kindness,
of those now teaching these subresidents as a very special link to visits from lamUy, trlends, and
jects are not qualified to do so.
our heritage.
volunteers add Immeasurably to
Pfl:!sidenl Reagan, In . his radio
answer. Would you consider raising
As the 19&amp;'1 theme declares, the lives of -elderly residents.
address, blames the U.S. govern·
teachers' salanes and getting more
"Memones Are Made to Be
In observing this week, I .urge
rnent's role In the past 20 years lor
qualified instructors to make sure
Shared." From .o ur older citizens
each of you to 'reach out to share
the country's educational prob- our students are equipped to deal
learn about the roots of our
time and compassion with the men
lems. If parents would just get
wtth the tasks that Ue ahead?"
' !amlUes and .. communities. We
and women who live In nursing
Involved In their chUdren's learning
"Are you crazy? I need every
share valued memories, and
homes In your communities. We all' process, and we turned our educa- dollar I can get for defense. Bigger
through sharing our seniors refresh
will be richer lor the effort we
tion back to the l.o cal epmmun!tles
budgets for education are not the
.,
lhelr lives. and we gain precious
make. -Dorothy Carter, Actlvltles
all would be · weU again, the answer."
flew understanding and Insights
biv., Pomeroy Health Care Center.
president said. He was adamant
"But where are you going to get
that the goVernment not Increase the people to buUd your weapons
Its actlvlties In educalon for any and learn how to use them If they
~ason.
are Illiterate?"
If anyone needs remedial educa"I don't knoW the answer to that
'
tion light now, It's the president of one. Go on to tbe next question."·
the United States.
"Do you know wbat It costs the
never attended ~ high school track
Co!tgratulations are In order to
"All
right,
Mr.
President.
Here
Is
country
In unemployment, welfare,
coaeltes Gordon Fisher lind Bob meet, I strongly urge you to do so.
a
graph.
The
red
line
shows
where
and
crime
hecauoe Americans
Ashl~, plus au those who helped . I think you wW lind It to be a very
the
Soviets
are
In
education,
and
the
can't
read
and
write?"
·
them, on the success of the nrst
competitive sport and enjoyable to
"blue
line
shows
where
we·
are.
Note
"I dldn 't know I was supposed to
watch. .
lnv114tlonal track meet held at
the blue Une Is antng down every . study that."
Melp High School, also to the
I thoroughly enjoyed the meet
"Don't you think It's your duty as
Booswrs on their food stand. ,
and hope to attend rnany more..... year and the red line Is anlng up.
What does ·that mean lor 'the president to be I,'IIIICerlied abOut the
Dick Rupe.
To you local sports tans who have
"So what If we only can spend a few hundred
· ·•
nation?"
quality of education In the United
on the prom, we'll halllt fun anyway!" ,. ·

Reach out and share

8

tn.~~~~~~~~lntbat'sthecorrect

erry s World

we

..'

Enjoys track meet

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jump), Scoll Foreman the low
hurdles (44.5) .
Kyger Creek was paced by John
Ranegar. winner In mUe (4: 45) and
two mile 110:44) . Mark Rippey, 100
meter dash (11.8) , second In 220and
440, Brent Love In 440 (58.41 . and J .
D. Bradbuty discus (12().10). second
In shot put (41 ·3 \2 ).
back ll&lt;sulls
Final srorf': East('rn i.1Yz. Nor th Ga ltl a
Kyge r C'ref'k 51.

~l lfl.

Event.••
Hlp Jump
Morgan tKCl. Adkl ns 1NG 1. tk•, 5'0";
Gadd is 1El: Cowderv lEI
Lonl Jwnp

tNGI : M ayo INCl.

~·· INC I: Fon:&gt;man
Rippey (KCI ll ,R:100Pt&gt;nlck
lNG I: Jones lEI; Williamson l NG I

Mile
Ranegar t K CI ·t 4 5 1PR 1: M. Jon('!i I E);
Holliday ! NG1 : Max on l EI.

MO R.
NGHS 49.1: EHS.
Ml Dw;tl
l.AWr I KCI ~.4 : R ippey ~ J&lt; Cl : Cowdf&gt;ry

tEl: Begley (El .

!r,IO l.H .
lo"'ol"(&gt;man 1 NG l 44 .4: M. J onPS 1E 1,
1KCl: M . Jones t El.

8lilO Run
RIC(' 1El2: 18: Ho!Nday tNGt. Brandl lEi:
Lov\S 1NG\ .
1!211 Di\.VI
PC'n lrk 1'JG1: Rlpp£oy 1KC1 : Rict" I F:) :
A.dki ns 1NC 1

Pen ick f!';G) :l&gt;-H 4 : Cowdl'ry 1E1; Rl("('

IE l: Hall 11\'GI .
Shntl"'ut
Kem pPr tNGI 47-l: Br adbur;.· 1KO ; G,1 u l

(E); Holllnw&gt;head 1NG l.
Dtseus
Bradburv I K C1 120-10: McCu ir&lt;• I KC);

K emper 1Nc 1: Foreman i NG 1.

Mor ~::an

Ra nt~ar

Two MUt&gt; Run
11\Cl. M. Jones

t

E 1; Dlddl('

· 1NGJ : Cow r1r r.· 1E1.
Mllc Rei~
E HS &lt;1 : O'l : KOI.S: NG HS.

No IXllr- va ult.
Kl' II S ' nf')(l m('('! " Ma y l2 vs. MriRS and
Eastf'r n.

""'-'o !\-Ilk Rclay
·
KCHS 9:37 / Morgan. Roush. Ra n('f.!n.r.
Younp: l ; E HS: NGH S.
,------------110 M .H .H .
Ma rk Jont'!'i (E1 18.8; Mlke Jo n(.'S tEl : Hall

· Marauderettes defeat
Jackson crew, 11-7

..

.
'
1983 MARAUDERE'I'TE'&gt; - Shown above are JocU Harrison, Cbtdy Crooks, Krls Snowden, and
,. the members of the I9S3 Meigs MariUideretie solthall Carol Smith. Second row, a.s.~lstant coach 'nm
·' · learn, currently tied for first place In the SEOAL and Grueser, Paula Horton, Natalle Lambert. Barb
winners of 13 of 14 games this year. 'lbey Include, first Gn~eser, Jenny Meadows. Juyce Slewart, and head
·· row, from the left, Anette Johnson, Robin Buffington, .coach Rick Ash. Absent was Beth Gloeckner.

.. ·

ROCK SPRINGS - In tuning up
With !he win, Meigs keeps pace
for lonlghl's big sectional · finals . with Logan a lOp the SEGAL
against South Point. the Meigs slandlngs with a 7·1 sla te. l'liiPigs is
Marauderette softball tea m de- 13-1 overall. !hey have a big
feated Jackson 11·7 here Tuesday.
showdown with Logan ncx1 Wed nesday that could d&lt;?Cide I he league
champlnshlp ..Jackson is :1-9 overall
and 1·8 In league play.
Hitting safely for Coach Rick

;san Antonio Spurs rip Lakers, 122-113
, INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)- The
San Antonio Spurs went quickly, and
quietly, In last year's National
13asketbaU Association Western
Conierence championship series.
:fhat won't be the case this year.
George Gervin scored 22 of his
game high 32 points In the second
halt and Artis Gtlmore and Mike
Mitchell came through with powerful performances Tuesday night as
ihe Spurs whipped .the defending
NBA champion Los Angeles !..akers

i22·113.

'

. The Spurs, who were beaten by
the !..akers In four straight games In
the Western Conference final a year
ago, are even with Los Angeles 1-11n
the current best·of·seven series.
· And what's more. the Spurs have
taken the home-court advantage

away from the !.akers. Three of the
remaining live games of I he series,
if thai many are required, will be
played In San Antonio.
The third and fourth games of the
series
be played Friday night
and Sunday afternoon, respectively,
In San Antonio.
Gerv!n was sensationa l In the
second half despite picking up hiS
fourth foul alter just 3: 27 ofthe third
quarter. It seemed to Inspire him as
he scored 16 points in the period ,
making au seven of his field goal
attempts and adding a pair of tree
throws.

will

Gervln also had to contend with
foul pmblems throughoul the series
opener on Sunday . which the La kers
won 119·107.

G!lmore, limited to seven points
and six reboundS while playing only
32 minutes In the opener, was a
different player In the second game.
Free of the foul dlf!lcult ies tha 1
plagued him throughouut the first
game, the 7-fool -2 San Antonio
center scored 27 points, grabbed 20
rebounds and blocked five shol s
Tuesday night.
Mitchell a lso had 27 point s and
pulled down 16 rebounds as the ·
Spurs omrebounded the Lakers
53-47. Another key player for San
Antonio was guard Johnny Moore.
who had 16 points and 15 assisls.
Kareem AbduJ.Jabbar, who had
30 points and eight rebounds In the
opener, was limlled to 19 poinls a nd
four rehound~ Tuesday night. The

Tendon injury forces postponement
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)- An
inflamed tendon In Marvelous
~atvtn Hagler's left knee has
caused postponement of Friday 's
!ichectuled title fight between the
f!1lddleweight champion and chalIenger Wutord Scypion. But the
Controversy over the length of the
bOut continues.
·•· Fight promoter Bob Arum held a
'n ews conference late Tuesday night
tplellofHagler's Injury, but said the
timing of the announcement had
ryothlng to do with arguments over
whether the fight should be 12
roimds or 15.
The World Boxing CouncU has a
I2·round limit on litle!lghls, and the
World Boxing Association aiso
wants the shorter contest . Hagler Is
champion of both organizations, but
he signed for a 15-rounder and will
fight the exira rounds. said his
trainer, Pat PetroneIIi.
• The WBC has said that if the fight
Is scheduled for 15 rotmds, it would

continue lo recognize Hagler as
champion if he won. But It would
declare the crown vacant lfScyplon
won.
That stand. combined with the
postponement, had Scyplon very
upset.
"It's a double standard," Bob
Jones, Scyplon's manager, said
alter Arum announced the fight
would be rescheduled for either May
26 or May 27. "If Hagler wins he's
still the champion, but if our boxer
wins. he's not the champion.
Jones said Scypion will exercise
his right to have an Independent
physicianexam!neHagler'slnjured
knee . Jones said the challenger

doesn'l "wan1 10 fight Marvin
Hagler if he's no1100 percenl .
Arum said he learned of Hagler's
injury early Tuesday morning and
new to Hagler's Provincetown.
Mass .. training camp 10 watch the
champion spar and work out.

7-2 Los Angeles center had just six
points and one rebound In the second
half .
The !.akers were led by Earvin
"Magic" Johnson .and Norm Nixon,
who scored 28 points apiece.
Johnson had a leam·leadlng 12
rebounds while Nixon hadllassisl s.
The Spurs led ail the way after
scoring lOstra!ght points to go ahead
12-2. However. the Lakers gol as
close as one po!nl on 1hreeocralions
In the second half.
The final tlmewasat 103-102when
Bob McAdoo of Los Angeles scored
on a dunk wilh 6:12 remaining. The
Spurs then outscored the Lakers 12-4
over a span of 4: 20 to go ahead
115-106 with 1:52 remaining. They
led by at least six poinls the t'est of
the way.
The San Anlonlo victory snapped
an ll·game playofl winning slreak
by !he Lakers al the Forum.
"We really came out tonlghl,"
said San Antonio Coach Stan
Alheck . "I was concerned again
wilh .Jce !Gervln) In early foul
trouble. I think he really caught his
rhythm . Mitchell go! us off loa greal
slart . and Al1is pJayed a lol bclter. "

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

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Cindy Crooks, Nal a lio Lambcrl .
Jodi Harrison. and Pa ula Horton.
each wllh a single.
Lambcrl pitched fo r I he winn ers.
fannin g seven and wa lk ing 10.
Barnes tocdlhe mouQd tor J ackson
and walked 10 while falling to !an a
batt er.
This aftern oon' s ga me begins at
4: 30 and Is a 1 Meigs. Winner
ad va nced to dlslrlct p)ay.\.'!eigs'
opponent s. Soul h Point defeated
Belpre 1.1·3 Mond ay in Sl'&lt;'tional
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By inning.:
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Tornadoes
advance in
sectional
•

GALLIPOLIS - The Southern
Tornadoes pounded out 'l2 base hlts
enroute to a 2().8 victory over the
Southwestern Highlanders here
' ;t'uesday night In the Southeast
Sectional Tournament at Gallipolis.
. The defendlhg champions of the
Southeast Seetional · will defend
their title Th~rsday against Han·
iian Trace. which upset Kyger
Creek on Monday.
Leadlllg hitters for the winners
with tour hits each were Tony RlfOe
with three singles and a double, Rob
Cunningham · an~ Brian Allen four
•
singles.
Paul Harris had two doubles and
a single, Tony Deem two doubles.
Zane Beegle a double and single,
and Wade Connolly, Charlie Wolfe,
John Porter and Jim Hupp ea~h
singles.
Tony. Rltrie pitched the first five
Innings to pick up the ·victory whDe
John Porter linlshed up the game In
relief. RIUie is now 3-0 with the
victory.
..
For the· Highlanders Randy
' out three long
Laytori smashed
doubles, and 11 single; whlle Trey
Daniels and Steve Pelfrey each had
two singles. David Nida and Rick
Burleson each had a slrigle.
The Tornadoes' rrolrd Is now a
tine U-4 going Into thel!nalsagalnst
Hannan Trace, a 2·1 'victory over
Kyger.
Llnescore:

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Page

The Daily Sentinel

4

By .A"!"""'••ooPI'eSS

Braves top Expos; Cubs edge Dodgers
By Associated Press
Atlanta's Craig McMurtry went
62-3 Innings without being tagged for
a hit. Montreal's Scott Sanderson
wasn't so lucky.
McMurtry, a rooklerlght·hlinder,
had Atlanta fans thinklng no-hitter
,before yielding Gary Carter's
two-out double In the seventh inning
.aq the Braves beat the Expos4-21n a
fight-Interrupted game Tuesday
night.
· "The hit was no big deal." sa ld
McMurtry, now 4-1. " I made a bad
pitch to Caner. I made a mistake
pitch and he hit It."
·
Carter's doubleoff the center-field
wall barely eluded Brett Butler's
grasp. McMurtry, who pitched out
of fir st-inning trouble ca used by a
walk and anerrorandthenretlred20
straight batters before Carter's hit ,
left the game in the eighth after
surrendering two runs on three
more hits.
In other Nationa l League games,
Philadelphia downed Cincinnati 3-l ,
San Diego topped Pittsburgh 4-1,
Chicago edged Los Angeles 3-2, St.
Lou is crunched San Francisco 84
and Hous ton nipped NewYork5-4 1n
11 innings .

Atlanta's ballpark, known as a
paradise for slugfests, was thescene
of a real brawl In the sixth inning
when Cia udell Washington charged
to the mound after a brushback
pitch from Sanderson. Television
replays appeared to indicate Wa·
shlngton landed a punch before
being pulled away as both benches
emptied.
Washington, who had homered In
the first Inning, was ejected while
Sanderson stayed In the game.
"I got him, I just didn't get him
enough, " Washington said. "The
ball was behind my head. I delayed
slightly because l didn't want
&lt;catcher) Cartertocutmeoffbefore
I could get to him."
" I wanted to get to him,"
Washington said.
Last week, In a game In Montreal,
Washington spiked Sanderson during a play at first base. Sanderson
received six stitches and missed his
next start.
"Maybe Cia udell thought that had
something to do with this," Sanderson slad, ''bull realized that was an
accident ."

Perez triumphant
in Cincy ret1:1m
CINCINNATI (API - Tony
Pere2, a Cincinnati favorite. helped
Steve Carlton to feel at home In
Riverfront Stadium for a change.
Per&amp;, stUIIqved for his role llhthe
Reds' c hampionships of the 1970s,
delighted the R iverfront Stadium
crowd with a two-run triple Tueday
night to help Carlton get a rare 3-1,
victory hi Cincinnati. .
. Carlton notched his 290th career
victory a nd 3,500th career strikeout
in the same game, a lso drawing a
prolonged ovation from the crowd of
26,9.'!4- 18,694 of whom· paid.
All hough Pere' has had many
glorious moment s in Cincinnati.
Car lton was only 5-12 here, before
notching his fifth victory of the
season Tuesday.
Per&amp; was par1 of those Reds
teams t ha t gave Carlton fit s last
decade. Playing In Riverfront for
the first time since he was with
Montreal in 1979, Pe= received a
minute-long standing ovation when
he came to bat In the first Inning.
"They tove me, a nd I love them ,"
Perez said of the fans . "What can I
say? r don't have the words to
express how.I feel.
" I had tot of butterfl ies because
of the fans. I think tha t picked me up
a litt le bit . I didn 't want to make an
out my first time up."
Per&amp; didn't disappoint , drilling a
two-run triple over outfielder Eddie
Milner's head In right-center field .

a

Carlton, 5-2, took over from there, .
holding the Reds to five hits In his
second complete game. He, too, got
a game-stopping ovation In the
third, wnen he whiffed Reds' starter
Ted Power, 1·1, to become only the
third pitcher In history to achieve
3,500 strikeouts.
' Carlton ·struck out seven and now
·has 3,5o4 car~r strikeouts, trailing
only Houston's Nolan Ryan at 3,521
strikeouts and Walter Johnson a t
3,500.
The Reds scored their run wlthou t
benefit of a hit In the slxth. Gary
Redus drew one of Carlton's three
walks, stole second and third, and
scored on Dave Concepcion's
ground out.
Only one othe r Cincinna ti player
reached second base - Johnny
Bench, who doubled to start the
Reds' ninth . The Reds heightened
the threat when Dan Driessen
walked with one out.
Corrales then went to the mound
with a suggestion for pitching to Ron
Oester, who had twoofthe Reds ' five
hits.
"I told him to throw him a
breaklng ball , to get him to hit Into a
double play," Corrales recalled.
That's exactly what Carlton did ,
ending the game.
"He Is one of the best pitchers I've
ever seen," Perez said. "It 's fun to
play behind him . I love tt. I don't
think I've ever seen a guy as
consistent as he Is."

Austin maintains
Mister Bee lead
By Tim Davl•

"I'm never surprised when someone charges the mound," the pitcher
said. "It's over, and no damage Is
done.lt was just baseball."
Astro8 5, Met&amp; 4
DeMy Walling's bases-loaded
single with one out In the bottom ol
the lith Inning was the di!ference.
Mets reliever Nell Allen, struggling
with problems on the field and off,
took the loss and fell to ().4.
Phil Garner tripled In two runs
during Houston's four-run eighth as
theAstrosovercamea4-0NewYork
lead for the second straight night.
Huble Brooks delivered two
run-o;corlng singles for the Mets.

: T~xas,

Cubll S. Dodpn 2 , .
Rellever Mike Proly, sununone.J.

.: ..'Indians

when starter Paul Moskau ran Into
first -Inning trouble, pitched ' 5.2-3
strong Innings and Lee Smith
• flnfshed up With three perfect ·
Innings as Chlcilgo brolce the
DQdgers' slx-gamewinntngstreak.
Los Angeles scored twice In the
first on run·scortngsingles by Dusty
Baker and Greg Brock before Proly
carne ln. He allowed two hits In his
stint and then Smlthcameonforhls
fourth save.
Larry Bowa's run-scoring single
In 'the fifth Inning snapped a 2·2 tte.
Canllnals 8, Giants 4
Darrell Porter dr1lled a three-run
homer In the first lnnlngandaddeda
two-run blast in the sixth asSt. Loulll
ended the Giants' six-game victory
string.
Tommy Herr, playing his 337th
game In the majors, smacked a
two-run sbot for his first career
homer as the Cardinals snapped
their four-game losing streak.
Reliever John Stuper escaped from
bas€5-loaded janns In the fl!th and
seventh Innings to get the win.
Johnnie LeMaster and Jeff Leonard homered for San Francisco.

Padn!J 4, Pfrales I
Andy Hawkins threw a threehitter to cool off the hot-hitting
Pirates, who had banged out 18 hits
In a 14-lnnlngvlctory overSanD~o
the night before.
·
Hawkins raised his record to 2·1
with his second complete game of
the season.
Steve Garvey's single snapped a
1-1 tie In the seventh Inning and
Terry Kennedy followed with a
two-run double, upping h is NLIeadlng RBI total to 28.

,»'ulnph

~

..

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~

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ADVUTISED ITlM POli CY

fad•

lti
16
· . Mllwauio:Pr&gt;

14

ll
l2
12

Toron1o

14

1.2

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1:1

. ~16

J•f.!

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1.1

15 . .4ti4

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11

14

W»&gt;T DIVIiiON
17
~
Tl')la.~
15 1-1
Kmt.\as City
l.l 12

Culllornla

..'i!.l .571
. ~'Ill

.wJ

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18
21
1\M:!Id~'~ GillJW'M
Del roll 4, Oakland :J
Ck""eiMd 4. Kansu Cltv I

.oQJ

SL,oi

:\44

7~

Otcago

12
l2
11

MJ!lnrosw.

Si·ank&gt;

5:Nl

FO&lt;Jmo\LL
Nlliloi!MI FoMhiiii iA!III'JI'
Nr.w F.!'iGLAND PA'ffi.Jm'S-..CiiWJf'd

Mike Bass, plact'kldtC'f", to a multiyear

ront rn('!. Sll:nf.'d DAlRias Land , f.unnJn~t
back. Tom Mut, wlli' n.'U'I\'cr, DwJ!
HIM'ard." otl'mslv{' lineman. and Ed Reynolds. llnt'backer. to f'l'toor ~~ controcts.
NEW YORK .JETS.-SIIa!E'd John Walk·

BIIIIIITilff' n . Sl:&gt;att .. • 'l .

dl'fmstvf' tadcle.
P!'rTSR U RGH

Pf',

Coll lornla 6, Boll ! on !i
f{'Xas t NI.'W Yor k 2
M llwaukr"e .&amp;, Mln!V.'!IOI'!l 1
Wl'dnf'MIIQ''"

S1'EELERS-SI ~f'd
Ro~Js(lo.'{'lt

Stra~ h trr,

dcfmsl\le&gt; bit('k
Sl~f'd Ru ss JUjJI('r, IIReb&amp;cker , Pt&gt;tl•
Roslflild. dl'fmslvf' f'!ld. and Rus..~ lira·
ham. offensive llnmlM. to free o~ 'fll
ro nt r.Jrls.

n..,..,....

MlniK'SOta !Williams 2·31 at Mllwaukw
tM{'(,:IUI"l' 0-Sl
OoklruJd 1!\lorrt~ :1.2 1 a1 Dt'troll !Wilcox
1·41 . tnl
Ka n~o; Cit y t(;urn ~ ·'lt 111 Cl!'\•f'IMtl
1Sutcllfff' .J.lf. tn l
SE•allll' &lt;f"t•rry 'l·l l ar l'lllltlmonJ 1Fiana
kill\ ')OJ. tnt
Gallfornla 1Klson .1-11 ill Bet&lt;; too fl'IJdor
1·11, tn l
TflUIS i l lorll'Y' 'UII :1·21 a l New York

OOUJ!'.GR
AJIE I.PHI-Nam«&lt; May 1\nn McCoy,

FOOLING AROUND - Phlladelphla PhUI!es' flrsl baseman Tony
P erez ( rlghl) pinches Clnctnruiu Reds' player Dapny ·Driessen alter
Driessen reached 11rst on a second Inning hH In their National League
game In Cincinnati Tuesday nlghi. P erm:, a fonner Red mlll&lt;lq hllllr8l
appearance In Clnctnnalt since 1979, drove In the winning ruM In the
flrsl · Inning with a triple. Phlladelpbla won the game 3-2. (AP
.Laserphoto).

Spanky McFarland, b e tter
known as "Spanky" of the old "Our
Gang" Series will make a return
appearance next month at the Dave
Diles Appalachia Golf Tournament. The event wUI be held June2.1
a t the Riverside Golf Club in
Mason.
A dinner wlll be held the evening
be[ore a t Royal · Oak Park In

ti-r, mo'l' s assL~ ta n l baskctball coach .

he;;d ffiill'h of mco 's aJ'IlJ

WCITil.'fl ' ~

$0.'l."t'r.

at CJ('V(Iund. ~ n1

.

NBA results

NATION!\1. LEAGUfo~
F;MTPIVIUUN
I. PM. GB
Phll!tdo' lphlu
lfi
!I
Oil~nln •al
H
11
St. Louis
JJ
1~
. ~1
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I'IIISbur)':h
\0
I~
.-IX! 6
(lllcHS!"n
9
~~
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Nl'\1.' York
wtJST IJ[VJ\IUN
In; !\nJI('I&lt;'S
:.n
II .rn ,\rhmta
:.!ll
R
114
!'!
f1nrlnnati
I~
111 46'1 71Jj
San 01~
).1
)II
-Mi'l 71,1
S.1n Franc\I'('U
JJ
IIi
Hooslon
H
Ill
4.11 )l. r.l

,.,

Balkdttall o\.'f'IO(~auon
OONFEKEN(J.: l'lN,o\lli

NILIIol\lll

filfft of Seven!

..

WE RESUYI: THI: RICHT TO LIMIT QUANTITII:S . NONE

.•

TO DEALERS .

Sunc&amp;a,v, MMYM

Pt1ll :~&lt;k'lphlil 111. Ml1wauks' lfl!t.
\\'~1111•

&lt;rr

May II

MJIII•aukN&gt; at f't!lladl'lphla. I nl

" 'H\'JEKN OONFERIJ'II(E
I..(Jiol An,vldl \'Ill , lilvt i\ntank
ISrrieM llr.d J.ll
SUftllay, May"
(_.a; , A"J,'t' lf's 11!1. ~ Antoni:! 1(11
'1\ll'I'IIIIQ. Ma.l' 10
San Antmlo 12!. l.ao Anlo:('l£'1; 11.1
t'rtdM,V, M~ 13
l.Alt' AnJ!I•Ifos a t Slln Aotonlo. 1111

'

l'hlludrlphlll :1. Clnrlnnull I
1\tl:mta 'I t Montl'l'ul 'l
ll01r~ron ~. Nrow York 4. 11 il1ntnw;
San Dl~ 4, Plll sbui'J!:h I
C.llk'IIRO J, l.ctP! An~IC'I 2
Sl , l.oub 8, San l&lt;,rant'lscQ 4
Wedntw:t~·· GlUllC'R
Montmd il£a :.!· h at Arbmta INirt.ro

-

Miracle Whi'p
Salad Dressing

$13,575 refunded·

for

MAY BASKET

after no contest

1

36759 ROCK SPRINGS RD.

Monday, May 9, Kick-off for National Nursi111 Home Week
Speaker, Kermit Walton-2:00 p.m.
Refreshments
Tuesday, May 10. Entertainment
J
Meigs High School Chorolears
Bingo 2:00P.M. to 3:00P.M.
, Refreshments .
W~dnesday, May 11, Entertainment~Taylors, 2:00P.M.
·
Cheese and Relish Tray
·
Thursday, May 12, OPEN HOUSE
Entertainment~Dark Hollow Band, 7:00P.M.
Picnic in Court Yard · · .
Friday. May 1~, Entertainment-Taylors, 2:00 P.li.
.
Refreshll!ents
·
· Pub.llt' is lnlrited to ottend oil event~~
)

Miracle

Springdale

. Whip

2% Milk

· Sata rJ Oress•ng

$ '58

Box

Ctn.

PRIC«:S
EFFECTIVE THRU MAY 14. 1983
-

CHEESE FRANKS ........ f.~G; SI.89
SUPERIOR BIG RED
BOLOGNA ...................~~-. 89¢
HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD .............~:. SI.59
CHEESE .... ~~~..Sl:79
! ·LB. KRAFT PARKAY

'

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES ,
SPRITE ,

New Green

Diet Coke
or Coca Cola

' '

STRAWBERRIES •••••••••••••••••••• !P~. 79c
12 OZ. COUNTRY TIME

.

LEMONADE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••~~~ 79¢

•'
•'

8

'

46 OZ. DOLE

PINEAPPLE JUIC-E.. ..P!:~ SI.29
VEG. BEEF SOUP .....~~~ 2/97¢

/,·Go l.

. . . Ctn.

NO . 10 MEDIUM SIZE

GENIUNE

Vidalia

32 OZ. KFRAFT MIRACLE WHIP

SALAD DRESSING ... A~~ SI.89

'••

15V• OZ. DEL MONTE

e

15 OZ. ASSORTED

LUCK'S BEANS .... ~~~.s2J$l.19
4 ROLL PACK CHARMIN

TOILET TISSUE ........ ~~~; s1.29
6 OZ. STUFFING

'

·STOVE TOP • • •-•••·............... lll!'a.o.x. \ ~
'

2.8 OZ.. TOPPING
.

DREAM WHIP ••••••••••

\

PLUS
DEPOSIT

1

oz.

PINEAPPLE Tl D-BITS ....~~~ ·sg¢

38

Polar Pak
$J19
Ice Cream ...
Fresh
·Pineapples .,.. .... . Each

l0 1/2 OZ. CAMPBELL'S

17

Kroger
Orange Juice

0

.. "Ctnr .

3 PAl&lt; ... $2 . 37

QUARTERS

Blue

32-oz.
Btl.

Pkg• .

Lettuce ..... ~~-. 79~

.. .. -~~; 29C

'79c
B~nnet 2,,. SJ
Margarme . ..... .·
Cost Cutter
3
3
C
.White Bread

KROGER
GLADLY
WELCOMES
YOUR FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

'•

Head

MARGARI NE~~~:89¢

Heinz
Ketchup

FROZEN

OR

KRAFT 12 OZ. 16 SUCE
• AMER. PROCESSED With 15' Off

88

49 -oz .

Gal.

r~~=====================~i ARGO PEAS ........... ~~.~
. 2/89¢
lSV2 OZ. WHITNEY'S
~~~~u:~::z~:~Ju~em~~~
NATIONAL NURSING HOME WEEK
PINK SALMON ........ F~.~ .s1.99
EVENTS AT
POMEROY HEALTH· CARE CENTER

Tide Laundry
Detergent

KRAFT

Jar

co~istent."

.HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

c

32-oz.

........

THE WATERMELON PATCH

fr=::;;;=;;;;;;;;;;:;:;::;:;::;:;::;;:::;i

-Roll
Pkg.

KRAFT

Pomeroy. Deadline for entering the
fifth a nnual tourname nt Is May 31.
Others who have agreed to
participate Include three PGA golf
professionals, BUI U;r,elac, Ray
McGuire and Doug Robbins.
E ntry blanks are available a t
Riverside and the Jaymar Golf
Club In Pomeroy.

C·

.Phone 742-2100
ECKRIOI 1-LB. REG.

F.ASTERN OONF'EREN('E

1·3\
148 five strokes off the lead. Cooke
i\ consis tent Sa lly Austin fired a
Phlllldl•lptl.la clll'rlrw .l l l nl ClnrlnMII
77
giving
her
a
146
two-day
fired
a
NHL results
t&amp;llol·:.ll . !nl
second round 721n Tuesday's Miste r
l'if"A' York tSI'it•~· r 1·:.11 &lt;'I 1-louslon
total
leaV
Ing
her
only
three
shots
l3e!' Class ic giving her a 148tota land
l'l' ltUonal Hodu-, l.elll{ll('
1Srott tHit. 1n1
!1n~· ~arnt&gt;s srl'oPdl.lk&gt;d
. n four stroke lead ln the three d ay . back from Austin entering today's
!,'TANLEl' C:t.JP FINAl .
lllun.-r'• (~IUTM,.
fl nal round.
EdmorS&lt;tn V!i. Nt&gt;w fork bl.ndl • n~
event.
Phlhd&gt;lphla at C'hlcllt:O
iNt-w l'wk ~ IW'k&gt;A 1-41
Lynn
Stlmer,
of
Jacksonvllle,
l..ai An~~ at S4n Ol('jt'O
"I can't say that mucli about my
1\le!tdl\f, May 10
NN-' York al Plttsbun.h, 1n 1
Fla .. recorded a 69Tuesday moving
f\1 . \' . lslani.k&gt;no :1. Edmonton 0
game, except that I've. been
San ~"'ran('lM"O ut Ctn('l nmH I. 1n 1
her within three strokes of Austin·
Montn•ul ut St. l.uuls. 1n•
consistent In the first twodays" , sa id
N.''· l ~lundc.rs 111 Etinonlon. rnl
Atlltnl il &lt;II llooNinn, I n,
after an opening round of 78. Stiffe r
Austin after taking the lead from
recOJ'ded ' five birdies In her big
Monday's co-leaders Kathy WilliI'Ound Tuesday .
. ams a nd Lynn Cooke.
Barbara P~ndergast, of Tampa, le~~~~~~~:;e::~~~~~:!:;;i::;i,;i;;;;;:;;i~;::;c::;;::;c;;:;~
Williams a nd Cooke had opening
Fla.,
stayed with Austin after she
rounds of69, but had some trouble in
equaled her opening round of 73
yesterday's round. Willia ms turne&lt;j
yesterday. That leaves Pendergast
In a 79 giving he r a two-day total a t
COUNTED CROSS STITCH
only three shots back of Austin a t 146
along with Cooke.
500 Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, OH.
...
, .Along with Stlfner, two othe r
ladles have second round totals at
Come In And register
147. Mary E. Murphy shot a 75 and
Kay Kennedy !Ired a 73 moving
tllem within four strokes of the lead.
FolloWtDg her round Austin said,
NEW BOOKS, FRAMES, ACCESSORIES
"! played ahout the same as
Call 992-7582
yesterday, nothing· real great, but

COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP) -A race
Raeford, N.C., has two and a hall
was decla red no contest for the first
It's
Austin, 28, trom
years
experie nce on Ihe WPGT and
time In the 24-year history of Scioto ·
Downs harness track Tuesday night
aft er a tractor caused the horses to
at the July qllallfler last year. "I' m
scatter.
The trock refunded the $13,575 ready to move on,'I've been out here
wagered on the race .
long enough.. .r'm looking forward
Publicity Director Phil Plkelny to this August," she said. This year's
LPGAQuallfyingSchoolwillbeheld
sa id the u·actor, which drags . a
device to smooth the track between A~:\;~ !~u~;:i ~~:·of the
races. was mistakenly 'driven onto
tlle track while the slxth race stU! 1\ollsterBeeClasstcwasscheduled to
begin this morning at 10 a.m.
was b1 progress.
The pacers had to go wide as they
approached the home streteh to
avoid an accident. Plkelny said all of
the horses missed the tractor a nd
ther e were no injuries.
GOOd Show Time, driven by
" SYRACUSE. 011 ..
Charles R udduck. won the featured
PHONE 992·577&amp;
race, turning the mile In 2: 021·5.
NOW OPEN FOR SPRI!IG SEASON
The winner returned $14.:!&gt;, $3.40
Complete line of wceta1J1t end beddilll
and $3.60, while Eastbound paid
pllnts. loll• [llallts lnd hql111
$2.SO and $2.80 for coming in second.
baskets.
Also a 11rJ1 llltclioo ·o1
Amy Rose returned $3.60 to sllow.
shrubbery
and dtillnf fruH trwes. '
The ntnth·race trlfecta combtna·
OPIN DMY 9 to i
lion of ll-10.5 paid $24,65130. ,
suNDAY lto 5
A crowd of 2,865wagered$Z19,1'!0.

·4

· J912 . 1N GAlliPOLIS AND POMtROY STORES.

--

(l"hlllllldpNa leldft ~HI)

""

'l'ut":'odt~,y 'A Gl&amp;lllftol

White Cloud
Bathroom Tissue

DEPARTMENT
STORE

M1S..'iOUR! BAP'Tt'rr-Named AI T'r'O';I ,

Bo5ton at Mllwauk.N&gt;, 1n1
!;Chtoduled

. 300 SHEETS PER ROLL

COPYRIGHT !912 · THE KIOGEII CO . tlEMS AND PR IC U
GOOD SUI'tOAY MAY I , THROUG H SATU II D,t,Y MAY t ..

RUTLAND

LOUL"ilANA STATE-Namf'd Te11: Win·

Oakland at DMrolt
...:wn~

••

·"·

Spanky, to make return appeq.rance

hf'tld baskf'lball COH('h.
JOHN JAY - Annoon«&gt;d lhr rrslgnaUon
of Or. Rlb&gt;rt A. Fox , ma1's hl'ad basl«!l
bull roach.

Toronto IStiC'b h- :.! t at Chlcaau !Hoyt ~
41, IRl
n..n..ill,J''!II fJIUnUII

On(}·

••• ••

Ewo•r'h'"'il yo" b.,, a• l(r.:.'il o r '' 9"a·a~tood loo fO"'
•o•ol •o••• lort •O" ••to•dl•u o l mO"ulo r•vr•• II ~Ov
or o not •ot.,!,od lfroq • r ,.. ,(1 ••plo c• 1 o,., •t• m wilh
oh• '""'•,brand o• o ro mpo robl • b"""~ o • ro l.,nd yo"'
P" •c hoto P "&lt; O

wnrnrn 's

1fiuldry 3-21 . 1n1

T oronto

..

h('Q(I, 00/td COEK'h.

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1.4

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N!Wiolal BMIISbll ~lllloft
(; HICAGO BUUS-Flred Paul Wt"St·

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IIASKETIW.L

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odwa&lt;tioed
•equ l••d
•aod :J , D•a •lebl• !Or 1ol• "' •oct. It rot • • Soor~ •• • •pi
at •P•" I orallr no••d "' '" '' od 11 ..,. do "' "out~ an
ad • ••'•••d •!o m .... ,.oil a llo r ••• your chore • ot a
ro Mpo•otll• ''•"' whon owo iloblo r•flo c•int .... . o ....
• • a .i ncho c ~ "i·~ ... ru ont ill•
pur1h a oo ttl• tld .. •n•••ll "•'" o• th• adwo ni. oll pric o
.... ,~o~ ; ,
dor• Only
"on do • co .. pa~ will
ouoplod p•• l! om pun "o•od

f9 TAl SATISFACTION GUARANUE

abk&gt;d ltst. o\C'IIva ted Bil l Travers. Pilcher.
Natlon!afl...t!ape
~ SAN OIEX".O PADR£S-..Called up Mark
Thui"'TJJnd, pltctv:.T, from Las · vegas of
the PaCiCit' Coast U!af~U£' .

y,
1\.2
\ Y,

....... ,,

•• •h•••

"

CALfFORN lA ANGElS-Placed Brlan
Down1Jl1t ou tfkol~r. on ltv&gt; l~a)' db·

Tlgers4, A's3
Alan Trammell and Lou Wbltaker
hit RBI doubles In the second Inning
to back the combined six·hlt
pitching of Dave Rucker and
Aurelio Lopez.

.....

BA.~EBALL

F..AST OIVIUON
W L Pet. GO

Innings l,lut gave up a tw(}()Ut single
In the seventh to Ben Ogilvie: Don
Money, whose batting average had
dipped to .152, doubled to score
Ogilvie and, after an intey~tlonal
walk to Charlie Moore, Ganlnel'
rapped his two-run triple. Mllwau·
k~ starter Moose Haas allowed
four hits In seven Innings .

•

.....,. ..

.......,., .......

f'nM

AMDliCAN LEAGUE

loaded In the fourth inning and Dan
Ford followed with a home run,
giving BaltimOre a 7.0 lead. The
Orlol~ also scored five times In the
eighth as Ford collected his third
RBI with a single and Gary
Roenlcke had a two-run single to go
with an earlier sacrlflce Qy. Winner
Dennis Martinez scattered 13 hits.
'Brewers4, Twins I
Jim Gantner slammed a two-run
!Jiple to cap a tie-breaking three-run
seventh Inning. Loser Brad Havens
allowed only two hits through 62·3

~

Transactions

By Tht AMoclll&amp;ed

Frank 'I)Inana and BUI ·Travers
are still alive and kicking. Ev.e n
better, tlle two veteran left·handers
are still pitching.
Tanana. trying to overcome three
consecutive losing records. lnelud·
. tng 4-10 with Boston In 1981 and 7-18
with Texas last year, stifled New
York on one hit In 41·3 Innings of
scoreless ~lief and Wllll credited
with the victory as the Rangers
defeated the Yankees 4-2 Tuesday
night.

MeanwhUe, Travers, who had
suPPort the five-hit pitching of Len
pitched a total of 92-3 Innings for
Barker al)d Neal Heatory·. Barker
California since he signed a free
allowed four hits In etghi Innings.
agent contJPct following his 191ll
Cleveland stranded seven runners
season with Milwaukee, took the
In the first four Innings berore
mound for the first time since May5, · Franco laced a two-out, bases·
1981, following two shoulder opera·
loaded double In the fifth against
!Ions. He went five tnnlng:;, allowing
Vida Blue. Franco also singled
seven hits and (lve runs -only three
twice, stole three bas€5 and walked
earned - as the Angels nipped the
In the eighth and scored the Indians'
Boston Red Sox 6-5.
fourth run on Alan Bannister's
Indians 4, Royals I
single.
Julio Franco coUected three hits,
Orioles 13, Mamers 2
Including a three-run double. to
AI Bumbry tripled with the bas€5

•'...

Scoreboard ...
Majors

The. Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middlep011, Ohio

Wednetday, May '11, 198"3

Middlepolt, Ohio

I'Oii16111f

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Broccoli

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Boneless Boston
Roll Roast ... ..
Semi-Boneless
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lb .

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U.S.D.A . GRADE A

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Holly Farms .. ·"-s
Chicken Breast _
_,_r

c

ggc
lb.

~~~~~c_~~.S~L!l:C~IE~~D)
·~FREE
I.NTO ONE
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TAKE HOME PKG .

Whole Fresh
Pork Loin

28
WHEAT , ONION OR

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79c

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White Pita...
Pocket Bread

�Wednetday, Nay 11, 1983

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
-;
11 I
~~~" I

~

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,.

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WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Eastern At·
hietlc Boosters wUl meet Wed·
tlesday at 8 p.m. at the high
school.

tv

Family Medicine

What everyone should
know of blood pressure

Church of Christ
banquet scheduled

Kendra Smith
Ter ry and Becky Smit h, Rllcine,
a rf' announcing the birth of thei r
third child, a daughter. Kendra
Ly nn, Feb. 24 at the Ho17.c r Medical
Ce nter. She weighed seven pounds.
six ounces. Mat ernal g-rndparents
arP PhyUls Harris Baker·, Rllcine.
and th e paternal g-ra ndparents are
Delbert a nd Ruth Smit h, Rllclne.
Pat ernal gyeat-wandparf'nt s are
Curtis ;md Bertha Johnson, Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith have two sons.
.lf'rcmy Alan . fi ve. and .Jonathan
CiydP, 18 months.

McKnight
birthday

Churc h of Christ , mother·
daughter
" Mother' s Footsteps" was the
theme of the annual motherdaughter banquet Thursday night at
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
A program of trtbutes and
recognition highlighted the banquet
with Charldlne Alkire extending the
welcome.
Giving a "Prayer for Mother"
was Betty Spencer with Trudy
Andrews leading In a hymn wl(h
Elizabeth Duffy at the plano.
Scripture was read by Suzan
Thoma. and there was a skit,
" Reflections of Three Generations"
by Anna Davidson. Eileen Bowers,
Jan et Venoy, and Brenda Bailey.
J oan King, Mrs. Venoy, and
Sherrie Might gave a special tribute
in song, and Mrs. AUdre handled the
presentation of flowers to the

GRADUATION MEMORIES

C. }. McK11i[!.ht
C. .1. McKnlght, .son of Mr. and
Mn. Keith McKnight or Fairmont.
W. Va., celebrated his second
birthday recently with a Smurf
party . He is the grandson ofthe Rev.
and Mrs. Charles Norris and the
great -grandson of Mrs. Lucille
Norris, Racine.

SHRIMP
$139

Church
homecoming
The Noami Baptist Churct&lt; of
Pomeroy wUI have its annual
homecoming on Sunday. SeiVI·
ces wBI begin wlth Sunday school
at 9: 30 a.m. wlth Oscar Qualls,
superintendent; and a sermon at
11 a.m. by the pastor. the Rev.
Samue!Jackson. Therewillbe
a dinner at noon and at 2:30p.m.
the Rev. Wlliam King of Portsmouth will have the sermon with
music by "Voices United ."

I'

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Chicken~.............L~

¢
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WIE!ners .................
SUPERIOR FRANKIE

12 OZ. PKG.

FRESH PORK BUTT

StE!ak!Roetst .......L!-.

Mother's Day guests at the home
of Mrs. Shennan (Dorothy ) Roberts
of Pomeroy were Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Fillinger and son, Freddy, Daylon ,
Mr. and Mrs. Herman ~bet1s,
Jaye and Joey Roberts, Pomeroy;
Darrell Roberts of Hender son. W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Burton,
rJiddlepol'1, Donna Robbins. Mid·
d!eport. Mrs. Roberts also received
a telephone call from her son, M.
Sgt. Shennan I. Roberts of Okla·
homa City, Okla.

Office Hours by Appointment Only

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

SKILLS YOU CAN LEARN
THIS SUMMER AT
GAWPOIJS BUSINESS COUEGE

POMEROY - Low Cost Decorat·
l!li \Vork,shop, . sponsored by the
Meigs County Cooperative Extension SeiVIce. will be 10 a .m. to 2:30
p.m. at St. Paul's Lutheran Church
1n Pomeroy. Registration fee. Is $3.
Participants are requested to bring
1 :
a family-size salad for the salad
. ·. potluck lunch. In addition to table

B

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Learn the complete skills of·
Word Processing Systems!
In three weeks

Learn typing and term paper formats!

Computers
For Kids:

Secretarial
Refresher:

BEGINNERS in two -ks
For kids arades thret-five
BEGINNERS in four web
For kids arades six-ti&amp;ht

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PLASTIC GALLON$

\·: Story hour changed

Mac. &amp;Cheese ..

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Sti&gt;I'Y hour at the Middleport
Pubilc Library has been changed to
10:30 a.m. each Friday. Librarian
Ruth Powers announced today.
Nancy Manley will seiVe. as s)ory
teller and there will be crafts, films
:· aitd music Included In the oneihour

t'

I

~

'

Henry Reibel. Pomeroy, Is a
·, p!ltient at Holzer Medical Center.
·: His room number ·ts 421-·B. cards
·. would be appreciated.

....

Toilet ·Tis~ue!!2~::~·.
·····couPON·······••

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; CRISCO SHORTENING :

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Butter

·$199

• Flavored

•

Limit One Per Customer
Good Oniy At Powell's
Offer Uilires May 14, 1983

··~a.a.a

LEMONADE
GIANT
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CHARM~

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murni" secretary!

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In fiYe weeks
Transitionll skill buildi" for the

In eiMn weets
l.eem the IIICtSSiry skills needed to
lpply for wow Real Estate license!

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ADMISSIONS OFFICE: 446-4367
'I

Sa U~Cl~E! ...................
.
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.$ 49
Grou-nd Chuck .. ~~ ...
WILSON'S SAVORY
S·liced Betcon...... ~8~

Mother's Day guests

GALLI POLIS BUSINESS COLL~GE

DAIRY VAu.EY
\

· .Meigs Countlans, 00 years of
age or over; are being Issued
special Invitations to attend the
observance of Senior Citizens
Day Thesday by the Meigs
eounty Council on Aging.
- . Currently the center has a list
of about 50 persons who are over
90, and three over 100 years of
age. They wlll be recognized at
the obseiVance Tuesday. Since
addresses are incomplete, personal contacts wil will not be
made with each Individual.
Theme Is "Senior Citizens,
Weavers of Life's Tapestry."
There will be dinner at noon with
reseiVatlons to be In by Thursday. A representative from the
Ohio Commission on Aging will
be present as will the Director of
the Area Agency on Aging.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Real Estate:

ADOLPH'S

1LB. OR
12 OZ. LINK

Senior Citizens Day

'

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK .

29
Ground Beef..... .t!~ ..
BALLARD'S
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$ 49

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

College-Prep
Typing:
Graduation is an
imponam event in her
life and you want to tell her
so. Let Speidel say it for youon an !dent.
Speid~I ·Idents From $7.95 Available at

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MAY 14, 1983

Happenings

JOHN A. .WADE, M.D., INC.

~pW!d

\

Limit Quanitie!.

POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club, Wednesday, early
evening work session on the
Meigs County Infirmary beauti·
flcatlon project.

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

mothers
recognized.
In theFields,
group II
r;;;~~~~~::;::;::;::;::;::;::;~::;::;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
were
Mrs.
Might, Barbara
LaDonna Clark, and Trudy
Andrews.
Five generations acknowledged
included Helen Miller. Eileen Bowers, Shirley Bumgardner, Terri
Davis, and Bt1dgett Davis. Mrs.
-Clark registered the guests.
Marge Purtell was the speaker
and she used the banquet theme for
her commentary on the mother's
rolf' of guidance In the rearing of
childre n. Frances Eskew had the
bened iction.
Ot hers · attending were Kate
Jarrell, Debbie Alkire, Mary E.
Jones. Noam i Ohlinger, Ellzabeth
Ohlinger, Jodif' Wells, Rosalie King,
Ruth and Mindy Young, . Kathryn
and Lindsey Smith, Cindy and
11mddeus Bumgardner. Peggy
Brlckles. Barbara Fields, Mary
Pavldson, Pa uline Kennedy, Anna,
Elizabeth ' IU~r. Jane Wise, Olive
Sml!h, Sharon Bailey, Shlela COzart, Peggy, Kim a nd Heather
Erw in , Dorothy Ritchie. Puanne
Fields, Mary Fields .
Mrs. Venoy used sUver, gold and
black patent slippers and hats wlth
flower arrangements to decorate

POMEROY, 0.

We .Reserve The Right To

CHESTER - Past Councilors
Club, Chester Council 323,
Daughters America, Wednes·
day, 8 p.m. home of Marcia
Keller with Opal Hollon. cohostess.
·

Riffle Thornton
to wed Sunday

Pomeroy PTO

298 SEOOND ST.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m . Work will be
In master mason degree .
Members are asked to attend.
Refreshments will be seiVed.

Mee#ngs in MeiRs County--------

Smith birth

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Amateur Gardeners will
meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Waiter Crooks.
Mrs. Daniel Thomas .Is cohostess.

Is also lmown as "the silent killer"
By Edwanl Schreck, D.O.
because
most people wlth It have no
A!llllstanl Profellsoi'
.
symptoms.
Even after people have
of Famly Medldne
Identified
as hypertensive,
been
Ohio University College
only
part
of
the
problem
Is solved,
of O!tteqNithlc Medicine
for
only
25perce~~t
of
the
people
who
QUESTION: I
a poster
are
Identified
as
hypertensive
announcing High Blood Pressure
Month. Why have a special month? receive adequate therapy.
QUESTION: I've been feeUng
ANSWER: The
~
nervous
and having headaches. Is
daring National
this
a
sign
of high blood pressure?
High Blood Pres·
ANSWER:
Such symptoms are
sure month In
not usually associated wlth high
May Is to alert
blood
pressure. Even though the
people to the
condition
Is known as hypertension,
problem of high
It Is not characterized by nervousblood pressure ~-'
l '
and to encourage them to have their ness or tenseness. As I mentioned
blood pressures taken at their before, usually there are no obvious
doctors' offices or at numerous symptoms. You can feel good or
screening cllnlcs that wUI be In you can feel bad. But the way you
operation this month and through· feel doesn't necessarily tell If you
have high blood pressure. The only
out the year.
to tell for sure Is to have your
way
A recent study done by the
pressure taken.
blood
National Institute of Health for the
National High Blood Pressure
Edl.Jcatlon Program found that lO
years ago relatively few Americans
The Daily Sentinel
WOMEN'S - These four charier members of the Women's
knew much about high blood
AuxWary of Veterans Memorial Hospital were on hand Tuesday
(USPS 145-1110)
pressure, but now almost 75 percent
A Divl&amp;lon ol MWUmedla, Inc.
afternoon for special l'll&lt;!Ognltlon given In otx.ervance of National
of the populatk:m identifies high
Hospital Week. Members of the charter group received corsages.
Publist\ed every afternoon, Monday
blood pressure as a serious condiIncluded are, kant, Ito r, Loubie Bearhs, Jest~!! Molclen; back, Ito r,
through Frtday, IU Court Street. by the
tion. Becau.se of lnfonnatlo11 pro- - Ohio Val1ey Publishing Company - MulKathryn Meager, auxtilary president who made the presentations;
llmedla, Inc ., P omeroy, Ohio 45793, 992grams like National High Blood
Jean Will and Freda Henderson.
2156. Second class postage paid at PoPressure Month, most people now
meroy, Ohio.
know that high blood pressure
Member: The Associated Press, In Increases the risk of heart attack,
la nd Dally Press Assoclaton and the
American Newspaper Publishers As·
stroke · and · kidney failure. About
socla tlon, National A.;tvertlsln~ Repre ·
this same percent of the population,
se ntatlve, Branham Newspaper Sales.
733 Third Avenue, New York, New
75 percent, are also aware that the
Yor k 10017.
condition can be controUed wlth
medications.
POSTMASTER: Send address to The
Dally Se ntinel , 111 Co ur t Sl., Pomeroy ,
the table In carrylng out the theme.
ChrLstlan AthletlcAssoclationspoke
QUESTION: How common 1s
Ohio 45169.
All oftheguestswereglven corsages
to the group on the goals of that high blood pressure?
SUBSCRIPTION, RATES
pinons made by Mrs. Venoy.
organization.
ANSWER: AboutlOpercentofall
83· Carrier or Motor Route
Americans have high blood presOne Y.l eek .......... ........ ...... .. .... ... $1.00
On"' Month ... ...... ............... .. ...... 14.40
sure, or hypertension. But Only
Onl" Year ... .. .... ................ ... .. $52.80
'
about 50 percent of these pattents
SINGLE COP\'
Awards to the sixth grade safety
PRICES
will ever be truly Identified as
Dally ........... ..... ..... .... .... .. .. . 20 Cent s
patrol members were presented by
hypertensive. High blood pressure
Becky Triplett, advisor, at Monday
Subscr ibers nof desiring to pay the car.
rler may remit In advance direct to
night's meeting of the Pomeroy
The open church wedding of
The Dally Se nllnel on 3, 6 or 12 month
Elementary School PlD at the Tracy
Lynn RlffleandJeffThornton r - - - - - - - - - - - - l basts. Credit will be given carrier each
month .
school.
wUI be an event of Sunday, at 2: 30
ALL
CAKE
Plans were discussed for field
No su bscrlplions by mall permitted in
p.m. at the Racine First BaptLst
DECORATING Tl PS
to wns where home carrier sf&gt;rvlce Is
day, May 24, and tt _was noted that Church.
available .
help Is needed on the school
50% OFF THIS WEEK
The bride-elect Is the daughter of
operetta, scheduled for May 26. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Riffle, Racine,
MAI L SUBSC RIPTI ONS
IMide Ohio
Fund raising projects were also
and the groom Is the son of Bernard
13 Weeks ...... ... ......... .. ....... ...... $U.04
discussed.
26 Weeks .. .. .. .. .... .... ................. $27.30
Thornton, Seattle, Wash., and Mrs.
52 Week;s ... .. ........ ..... ........ .... ... $51.48
Principal Robert Morris took the Florence Thornton, Letart.
Oulldde Ohio
room count wlth the sixth grade
PH. 992--6342
13 Weeks .. ............................... $15.21
26 Weeks .. ...... .. .... ..... .............. $29.64
winning the attendance prize. The
317 N. 2nd
Middleport
52 Weeks ..... .. .. .... ................... $56.21
Rev. Robert MUter of the Laurel
CUI'! Free Methodist Church had
devotions. Officers' reports were
given. Sandy IannareUI of the .

saw

EMPLOYEES - These six employees of Veterans Memorial
Hospital were honored with five year service pins at ceremonies held at
the hospital Tuesday afternoon In otx.ervancc of National Hospital
Week. They Include front, I to r, Lots CleUand, Linda Patterson Janice
Evans; .back, I tot, &amp;;ott Lqcas, .h&lt;i!ipltal administrator who m'ade the
preSentations; Beth Dawson, PhyUis May : and lsabeUe Coucli. AU
except Mrs. Couch are members of the nursing stall and Mrs. Couch Is
with home health service. Winifred Marcinko wDI be presented a
15-year pin later and Martin Woodard, a retiree, will receive a gold
watch kom the hospllrll In recognition of 19 y~ars of_servke.

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter !Kl, Royal Arch Masons
and Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and Select Masters will meet ·
Wednesday at 7 p.m. Work will
be In the Royal Master. degree.

}J

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Sentinei- Page-7

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Wednesday, May 11, 1983
·I'Qgl

f

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The Daily

Pvmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

QT. SIZE

$279
,_
·

MAXWB.L HOUSE

EVAP. MILK

COFFEE
3 LB. CAN

$669 .

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only Powell's
Otfer Expires
14, 1983

••

FLAVORITE

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13.5 oz.
TALL
CANS

3/$1

Limit1hree Per Customer
· Good Only At Powell's
Otfer Expires May 14. 1983

.

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-

Pag1

,

8-The Daily Sentinel

P:h610" '

. ·Part of the tax bill being
.. processed by the ~neral Assembly
,will do !'way with the Intangible
·. Tax. This tax Is derived from
,personal property, such as stocks,
bonds, and notes. It Is collected
. locally and distributed locally and is
. used to support your library. There
.. seems · to be little hope that the
' legislators are golng to let us keep
the tax .
They have proposed a 6.3 percenl
1&gt;1 the Ohio Income tax be set aside
· lor library funding. The distribution
of these funds would be based on the
amount ol Intangible tax a county
-•had been receiving. Thls would
:·merely replace Inadequate dollars
for those Ubrarles In the low per
·capita counties, such as ours.
The Ohio Library Association and
''The Ohio Library Trustees A•socla. tion have recommended the cur' tent provisions In the bill relating to
~ library funding be deleted, and that
an amendment be placed in the bill
'Creatlng a committee to study
support for public libraries, and
.that the committee report back to
·. the legi s l at ur e with Its

..

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._

•

11, 1983

Middleport, Ohio

recommendations.
A deferral would enable a Study
Committee to work with data based
on collections under the new tax
rates and exemptions . The group
could do an "In-depth" study of
library finance and support and
design a protection plan that must
be a part of any funding plan . A
delay of one year would not hurt the
State Budget that much.
An elton is underway to change
the Ohio Constitution ln a way that
would repeal the recent tax In·
creases and restrict the Imposition
of future taxes. If this amendment
were !IPProved In the November
election and the Intangibles tax If
already repealed, we would have a
library with little or no funding.
Please write or call Your State
Representatives and ask them to
support the library's position on this
Issue. The House Finance Committee will probably vote next week on
the Budget BUI and any amendments. The bUI will probably be
voted upon by the full House within
a couple days after It comes out of
committee. It Is Sub H.B. 291.

Bruce Stone

A bridal shower honoring Kim·
berly Birchfield was glven recently
at the Rutland United Methodist
Chuf'Ch. Hostesses were Margaret
Edwards, Joan Stewart, and Beth
Birchfield.
Games were. played with prizes
going to Crystal Dailey. Marlorie
Davis, and Reva Snowden. Peggy
Searles and Edith Williamson won
the door prizes.
Refreshments were served to .the
·guests, Marte Birchlleld, Charlotte
Wlll!ord, Bernice Wlll!ord, Goldie'
Lightfoot, Sharon Stewart, VIrginia
Michaels, panna Nelson, . Donna
I.;athey, Joan May, Edith Williamson, Margle- D~vls. Reva Snowden,
Marcia Dennison, Carol and Amy

Sisson, Maryln Wllcol!, Edna Dav(S,

Tammy Black, Vlrgtnla Wyatt,
Donna WUllarnson.
Jeanetlf' Davis, Judy Hart, Iva
~pbell, Beulah Grate, Vicki
Ferrell and · Heather, Beatrice
Smith, Peggy Searles, Freda Searles1 Donna Fry, Tammy Uttle,
VIcki DeQoaJ'd, Allee Jacobs, Connie Smith, Linda Boyles, Brenda
Bolin, Merle Jolmson.
Others presenting gifts to the
b~lect were L!lly Robinson,
~te Cremeans, Edna Mae Swick,
Juanita Lambert, Myrvllle, Teresa,
Kelly and Karla Brown, iva Sisson,
Kathy Stewart, Marcia Elliott, Ann
Webster, Mrs. C. 0. Chapman,
Doris Thomas, Janet Wlllamson,

Business senriceS

Sherrie Wlliatnson, . Shirley :Sim:
mons, Margl BishOp, Marie Blshlp,
,Janice Debord, Eva McKinney,
Nina Wyatt. Marla Grimes., VIcki
Boyles, Pat Rickman, Sharon
Black, Sharon and Sonya Wise,
VIcki Kennedy, Auwey Haley,
Margaret Weber, Donna Jenkens.
Elaine Spires, Lola Harrison,
Teresa HOUdashelt, Barbara Van
Meter, Judy Miller, Ruth ErleWine,
Twlla Hysell, Rose P~tterson. Katy
Fink, Ropln George, Fern Stansbury, Adeline Snowden, Clara and
AprU EUis, Marg31'1't Parsons, Joan
and Jane Wise, Janet Bolin,
Marjorie Rice, Janet Morris, PoUy
Bowland and Gladys, f!earl Lltile,
aild Mildred Jeffers.

MIUER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring
need•; furnace• re- ·
pair Mrvic1 1nd lnatallatton:
.i
RNidentill
l
It Commercial
I

Color workshop
·scheduled in Pomeroy

Force.
Kloes wUI now serve at Eglin Air
Force Base, Florida, with the3214th
Organizational Maintenance
Squadron.
The airman's husband, Air Force
Master Sgt. Karl R. Kloes, ls the son
of Karl w, Kloes of Syracuse and
Mildred C. Johnson of Middleport.
She Is a 1970 graduale of Greendale
Hlgh School, Wisconsin.

Badgley, son of Ella J . Lowman of
Hartford, W. Va., has completed
basic training at Fort Knox, Ky.
During the tralnlng, students
rE:('elved Instruction In drill and
ceremonies, weapOns, map readIng, tactics, military courtesy,
military justice, first aid, and Army
history and traditions.
.
He Is a.1982 graduate of Wahama·
Hlgh School, Mason, W. Va.
·

gardening habits of their parents
and grandparents following the
sllde presentation.
For roD can members named a
mediclnal plant. Ali Invitation was
read to the fifth annual-herbs day to
be held In Newark, May :n. The
activities wUI c_a rry the theme "A
DaywlthMamaandPapaStahi."It
will feature the Rev. Carmine A.
Stahl of Hollston, the executive
director of the Houston Audubon
Society and his wife, Mary Lou,
authm:. of "Mama Stahl's Hard
Times Cookbook." Reservations
are to be sent by May 17 to Kathy

Smith, · 162 West Locust Streei,
Newark, 4.ll55. The leeof$l8covers
workshop materials, tours and the
herbal luncheon.
Names of prospective members
were presented.
'
Refreshments were served lor·
lowing grace by Mrs. Hal Johnson
from a table centered with an
arrangement ol pink dOgwood;
flanked with pink tapers In crystal .
holders. Potted plants were given to
each one there Including a guest;'
Mrs. Kathryn Miler. Hosteses were
Mrs. WUiam Morris and Mrs. M. L.
French.

3 "~.,

......... _

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... ,

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............

7 ...... . _ , _ .........'&lt;.1
1!1- S ...

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sot•
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"'""•M&lt;o

141-·''"'"'""

ISS.h-

. 11 - o. I\I&amp;Ciflo. .11M•o.c•-IIIW., ..dloOo

during the George C. Marshall Award cereinontes at
Lexington, Va. (U.S. Anny Photo).,

-A rea man receives ROTC award
By assembling these students
from all over · the nation, the
Marshall Foundation gives nation
wi d e recognition to their
accomplishments.
The conference Included seminars on national security Issues and
featured dlstlnguished leaders of
the Army, both past and present
Participants ·also ·learned the role
Marshall played In the hlslory.ofthe
nation . .
A 1971 graduateo!Wahama Hlgh
School, Fowler has also received
the Army Commendatlonal Medal,
two awards of the Good Conduct
Medal and a Dlsllnii'Jished Military
Student Award.

Sanborn Society installs officers

.

\

'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.

AuthoriJed John DHr,
New Holllnd, Bush
Farm Equipmeot
Deller
Farm Equipm1nt
Ports &amp; Service

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

-··-v·

""""-"a"
..l&lt;l"'-"'
'
!loJCI . TV&amp;A .....
!lol-""'111-•
14 - M~ ,....,.._..,,.

-

lili-IJ.oilclo"tlw""''..
!loll-l'oh lao IM

71- ...... a Motun
71-.r..,...... !Oa Men-•

!loJ M01oicOIIn. ..,...,..,,.

11 ....... ....._.
JIC•-•t-

lil·' ' "'"av...,o-o
111 hoSloOo•l•odo

,- ··-Iii '·

41 """•o lqo lhnl
42 MaWoH...,eeto.-Aono
l ) f.,..,o h,.lhnt
4 ....................... 11.... .
l!lo fuon- ltuomo

••s-'"'"..,,
•1w .... .,,.,...,.,

-~

t l homfaOIDmOIII

-......_

IJ W.,IU1Diot¥
l!ll..... lloo:•

........ ,.... ...
14 ltov&amp;llrO&lt;n

~

,,.,l ....

SUCCESSFUL
BUSINESS
IS A CINCH
IF YOU USE
THE INCH!
.

... " . _.
Ito

1!2 mo

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
.
Classlfieds and
Savelll

PIJBUC NOTICE
No11ce 1S hereby gtiJen th at on
Satu
rd ay.
198
3. be
ar
-1
O·OO
a.mMay
a oub14th.
ltc sale
·Will
held at 105 Un•on Avenue
Pom~rov. Ohto. to sell for c ~ s h
1he follovvtng Collatera l
1979 Butck - 2 Dr Cpe Mfr ·s
Sertal
No
4J4 7A9H7 5506 - Model Regal
The Farmers Bank and Sav!ngs Compt~nv. Pomeroy. Oh1o.
reserves the r1ght io b1d at th1s
sal e. and to w•lhdraw the above
vehtd e pr 1or to sale Fu rther.
th ~ Farmer s Ban k and Sav1ngs
Company reserves the nght to
re1ect any or all b1ds submmed
Funher. veh• cles are sold 1n
the cond11t0n They are m 11'111th no
expressed or 'mplied warranties g•ven

presentation by Sally Landers, also
. of the Salvation Army.
Mrs. Werner presided at the
meeting with Sarah Owen dedicat- 1518. t t. 13. 3tc
Ing the love gift offering, usjng
Real Estate General
"God's Women, the Motlier and
Grandmother of Timothy" In her
service.
·
·
Reports on actMtles of the circles
during the past year were given by
Mrs. Demoskey and Mrs. Slaven.
The annual · report of funds was
glven by Texanna Well, treasurer,
and Miss Hall had the annual white
!i08 E. MAl N
cross report. It was decided that
POMEROY.
Ott.
annual .reports will be glven by the
PH. 992-2259
· circle chairmen at each Sanborn
Open
....., lllru Slturdlr.
meeting.
A dessert smorgasbord was
Alilloltt~~~Mt
lflttly [. Clilnl, Jr.
served following the meeting. A
. 811-192-&amp;ltl
pink dogwood arrangement made
Donia r..... • · •
by Mrs, Fowl~r was used on the taJtln
11111111,
-ble and Mrs. Mca.ung gave grace.
Jo Hill.
915-3335

r-.. "'

I ~ddress

in each
space below. Each tn1 titial or group of figures
I counts as a word . Count

~II

Ill ...... I~'" !'
M•..,..

!ij

Il l

1 41
1 4'1
141

II ~

~•wH• '"'I

19!&gt;
IH

1~• -

19 ,

I

-·
• .1 00

14110
t /Ofl

t.t._,_, 4

)Announcement
JForRent

11"11•••

s .. ""''"'""''~'~

-~~,... ~nnl

10
11

3

n

'
5.

n

II

11 .
18
19
30

"
13

)'/

14 .

33

15

)4

16.

J5 .

10
1/HIGIL B. SR . !(AllOR'

11o (. . 1nd !-of.

Phone
1-(614) -992-3325

NEW LISTNG - Clean and in
illOd repair. Nice ~ atre in
vieW of Rt 7.· Four roonis,
modern bat~ LC. water, gas
and equipped k~chen for a
qu~k sale ol $20,000.

IY, BATHS - 6 rooms, lui
basement..
gas lurnac~ carpet. ,
f'-f-.;..~----------------11
·
- • ·
in&amp; 2 porches, and large lot
Quicl! ~ll Above flood
$32,500.

AUCTION

THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY-7:00P.M.
At
of Depot &amp; Main

comer

Rutland, OH.

S&amp;KAUCTION

SHERMAN TIWS: Owner
ROONEY HOWERY: Auctioneer
Tenns of Sale: Cash or Check with Positive 1.0.
. I

CENTRAL REALTY
IIOIIILE HOllE - 'Mth l•ge lidd-on buildin&amp; asphalt driveway.
loclled on quiet street out of hi(!h water irl Racine The living room
is exira I•~ There is a cement walk and 1•1!1! cowred porch, also
a metal storage buildin&amp; Yoo can be in this one in two Weeks lor
on~ $16,!m
SACRIFICE -QUICK SAlE - 2 bedrooms. bath. ivlrg roorr( &amp;
8111-in kitchen on fim floor. Basement has 3rd bedroom, laundry
..,. &amp; extra room. Concrete floor with shed Ill the end of drille.
Conventionalalld'FmHA finanCing pteible. Asking $27,500. Make
your IA!er, owtlel's loss can be your gain. Located in Racine.

LIVE our- Fresh air and nice
country view. 2:19 acres.
12x60 mobile home and cel~r
wrth shop over. Asking
$13,500
.
'
EDGE OF TOWN - larl!llievel
lot on Rt. 3~ City water, chain
link fence. l¥1u&lt;pped krtchen,
furnace, 3 1bedrooms and
carpelin&amp; $~000
A·FRAIIE - ()( 2 level acres.
3 yrs. old, 3 bedrooms, 2 batlls,
gas furnate, equipped k~chen,
insulated and all utilrties lor
$39,000.

COUNTY

C ~ II : 949· 2263

"c

Or 99_2 ,.279]_10... ,

Frldoy, 8 o.m.-4 a.m. Crib &amp; 45820 pr coli 1814]. 3117·
0102 by May 23. An E.O.
Emp.
TWO family yard ulo, 2609

play pen, clothes, all

•I•••·

Jefteraon Ave. Thurtdly.
8-4 •. children• clothing
porch swing .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

6241 .

LOST: Lorge female beogle.
Baily Ru!'l Rd arell . 614992-3866 or cont11ct Roger

i

I

1
I

I

61 4-4&gt;16 -4622.

7

mo

AUTOMATIC ·

1

TRANSMISSION CO.

"lessons

1

EXCAVATING .

Pomwoy, Oft

2711. lllin

'filtin
c••ter
'Club epair

-Water
- Sewer
-G•s Lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

J.t'·"•

ONLY 131.95

Yard Sale

4-21·1

mo

CATALOG MERCHANT
Pomeroy,OH .
Gna &amp; Patty Gibbs-O!mers
PH. 992 -2178 " '"'

_:------------+-------------------+------------------1
"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

GHEEN'S

ln:!:r~l'~?m:~ial.

Remodelin&amp;.
•lnsurence Work
•Custom Pole Bides.
&amp; Gtrt&amp;es
•Roolina Work
oAiumiiUII &amp; Vinyl Sidinp

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Residential, Interior and
Eaterior.
Painting
Sandblaoting
Waterbl .. ting
Parking Lot Stripping

Yeart Experience

All Makes
•Woohoro •Diohwuhoro
Rang••
• Rot r1geratoro
•Dryoro •Froozoro
PARTS ond SERVICE
4 11

Spray Painting

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992.7583
or 992·2282

Texture Coatings ·
F~~ lnlllitd-FIIt EstilmiiH
CAU 6 t 4-949-2686
4-19 2

rna

Garage Sale: 2 mil" from

H.M.C. Rt. 160, May 12 .

lewn mower cart. furniture ,
rhubarb, tools .

9 ~ 6.

OHIO

CONTRACTING

VALLEY

=~~mtoE

ALUMINUM ROOFING

•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
':;LwiAilfE(S'R.TDIIE
,,
GAS and
~~=~~.LINES
•I
RECIAIATIOII

ALL LENGtHS IN STOCK

ADDITIONAL 5% DISCOUNT IN APRIL - CASH &amp; CARRY

POMEROY LANDMARK
&amp;14-992-2181

. FREE ESTIMATES

~

"$12

INSTALLED
KITCHEN CARPET

STARTIN~ AT

lAST BID

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
•Bulldo- It ·Back-:

ON GRASS
9 Ft. G1 w Calplt

·1111.'5.95

NOW

Cln ...,.. and , .

'*' 111o
edd bollnd rOd out,.
carw. We

F01RD

H_ILL
992-2196
Mldcllep&lt;l!rt, Ohio

We'll be your

•Baa.nentl
•FooterS

. .,..... We . . ...,.
BaTint&amp;

PAT

Get all the estimates

you want, then call us.

hoeSerke

i1idii1Uil lnd hee-

tlr

Roofing &amp; Siding

I

BEST &amp;LAST BID
Free E$timates
Work Guaranteed
Ph . 742 -2328
Ask for

ot.andlcllping
•Driveways
•F•nn Pondl
PH. 742-2407

Or742-206B

J, l).tfc

YARD

99

3 Announcements

&amp;

CHAIN LINK FINCING NEEDS

: ,. ,.&lt;: .
·.:

.

il
I

SWEEPER ond o-lng ma·
chino ropolr, porto, and

.
~~··· .

aulllll....

:\ (."\

Pick

up and

delivery, D•vla Vecuum

Cleaner, ""' ·holf "milo up
G•a•r•
creek Rd. can
441· 284,

'
.
"PINONG PIOYIOIS PIIIVACY l'lUS
PIOTICTION fOI CHIUIII. . &amp; PITS"

CARDIN~L

"

'

'

FOR ALL YOUR

...

.'.' ........ .. . .
-.. ...............

. 4-1:1·\ mo.

S8.99

RUB&amp;ER BACK
.. CASH I CARRV$4. 99

'

or 949-~! 16·0

-

95 PER YARD

~

Oi1monds. gold bands. ctau
rings. silver coi ns. 10-14
karat scrap jewarly. Tawney
Jewertars, 2nd . Ave ., Galli -

potio, 446-1616.

614-446-0176 .

Solid used bricks. red or
yellow . Call 446 -3310.

Yard Sale May 12, 13, 9 to 6,

BEDS-IRON. BRASS . old

Children and womena clo thing encludlng large si.tes .
macrame-some home inte rior and lots more .

furnilure. gold. silver dol lars, wood ice boxes, 1tone
jan. antiques. etc .. Complete households. Write :
M .D . Miller, Rt. 4 . Pomeroy,

Urge Yard Sale 671 Jay
Drive., Gallipolis . Fri. May
13th, 9 -6. Swing set. red wood .furniture. and more .

Gotd, silver. sterling. je ·
welry . rings , old c oins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Barber

166 Gorlleld Ext., Gallipollo

Oh. Or 992-7760.

4

CONSTRUCTION

PH. (304) 882-2276 . 4-1S-I ...
•

•

. Olv•way

Reoonoblo . 614-992-8022.

Can do painting, interior and
e)l;terior. roofing. electrical
work , any odd job . Insured .
References . 304 - 458 -

1669 .

a

General Heullng and Trash
removal Service. Reliable
and dependable. Call 448 3169 between 9 .end 1!1 .
lawn Mowing no yard to bfg
or small . "Relleble and dependable . Far e1tlmate call
446 -3169 between 9 end 6 .
Lemley Drilling. Water wet Ia,
shallow gas, and core dril-

ling. Coli 6t4-388-8543,
Vinton, Oh .

Mowen. chain sews repaired, lawn ~ garden lr•ctora are speciality. Nelson •

Sono. Coli 614-286-1543

located 1/J mi . South of
Roller Dam at Eureka.
Concrete work. driveways.
sldewalkl, patios . Brick &amp;:
block. 8tc. Free estlmatea .

Coli 448-4393 or 6t4-2661787.
Experienced penon to pein1
houses, bern1 , roofing ,
other odd joba. Call 446-

........ .
•.........

Wanted to buy . New, u1ed &amp;.
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete house·

4 Family Garage Sale 2 miles
from 141 an Neighborhood

"

holdo. Call Doby A. Mortln 21
Rd . Mev 12. 13. &amp; 14. 614-992-6370 .

Carpet. sewing machine,
quilt pieces. lots of clothing,
much much more.

11 H 1 W t d
_____•_P
____a_n_e_____
Wll do baby 1itting in m"t/
home anytime. fenced in
back yard &amp; references
available . Call 814 - 388-

9766.

E.~eparienced gymnastics
teacher needed for summer
Friday May 13 . 9 a.m . till 71 and po11lbly year round
Greg and Janet Eblin resi - program. Mu1t have gymandence. C A. 22 at Laurel atlcl teaching experience or
Cliff . Rain cancel1 ..
4 · 6 year,s comp~tltlv~ e•pe·
rlence . Apply lmm8diilltaly at
Chao. McCiolno. S.R. t24. Galllpoll• Ptrtta end Recreation Dept.. 6ft Second
maQ wheels. books, c;lo- Ave., Gallipolis, Oh •&amp;631 ,
oh .items,
Appliance•
thlng, l)'liac.
lounge,. 446 -1789.
dishes . Rein cancels . May
Account exceutive, local
12-u . 900-600
area. advertising experience
Yard Sale. May 13-14 . Long or 11111 preferred, direct
commls1lon . Call 814 -387St . Ruttond .

a

Sat. below Tuppers

Business
Opportunity

INOTtCEI
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB -

2 Family Fri.- Sat . on Shoest -

Fri.

of elderty.

Shop , Middleport . 992 0910 or 448-7604.
3478 .

Yard Sale K &amp;. K Park.
Eastern Ave ., Friday 13th,

~~~~~~~~~U~==Ph=·==74=2~~l~l~~~4~~rr~~~~~~~'~"~'"~ Racine.
We

' STARTING AT

·
A TON

P·H.· 99· .:. • 22
- 80-

20 Yurt bpiriencl
TOM HoSKINS

RADIATOR
SERVICE

ALL
INSTALLED
WITH PAD

$3QOO

% acre lot flat in the 446
area . Call 446 -0963 .

10AM to 8PM , Rt . 7, 2 mile
S. of Rt . 218. Chlldrena
clpthaa, plants &amp;. ·much
more.

Bill Cro11 Rllidence. In
Racine. Ohio . Friday May
13-9 a.m. to4 p.m . Womans
dreues. top1. felns all sizes.
Curtains . Mtnl clothing.

coAL

AND HOllE MAINTENANCE
'Roofinl of Ill types
Rosidentiol &amp; Commorcizl
:Remodetinl
'Storm Windo•s &amp; Ooors

9176.

Pay cuh for Used Mobile
Home or Travel Trailer . Cell

White, TV, pens, dishea.
clothing all sizes.

STRIP

ROOFING

Approx . 2 acres in 446
phone area . Call 614 - 246 -

Yord Sole Moy 13.14 &amp; 16.

18it of tamps. 1 twin bed-

J&amp;F

poi d. Cell 446 -7300.

mice clothing. chrome
crager, wheel• &amp; misc .
itema. Old At . 160 at
Evergreen.

ring Ridge Rd . Lowery or ~-----------~-----------~========~~=========+;;-~;;IN~'E~R~U~N~ gan.
chlld 'o record ptovor.

64 Misc. Merchandise

I have room and board.

Buying Gold , Silver , PlatiInsurance
num . Gold and Sitver pricea 13
are the highest in two years . ----- - - - - - - - - - - - check our prices on gold &amp;
silver. scrap jewelry . ~uying SANDY ANO BEAVER lnO~d coins, scrap rings &amp;.
sUren·ce Co . has · oHered
silverware . Daily quotes services for fire ln1urance
available. Als o coins 8. coin coverage in Gallia County
supplies lor ule . Spring for almo•t a century. Farm,
Valley Trading Co .. Spring home end personal property
Valley Plaza. 446 -8025 or coverages are availabte to
446 -8026 .
meet individual needs. Contact Rav W8demey_er, agent .
We pay cash fOT late model Phone 388-8249 .
·
clean used cars .
Frenchtown Car Co .
Are yoU paying to. much for
Bill Gena Johnson
your hospital -health lniu446 -0069
rance . Call Carroll
Snowden . 446 -4290 .
L &amp; L Scrap Metata. Now
buying alum . cans &amp; glass .
Scrap metals . Top prices 1
Wanted to Do

9-6.

985-3561

portunity Employer.

446-3t59 or 256 -1967 in Will take care
304-676-4092 .

12,13,14 &amp; 16 .

Searsr

992 -2104, 8;30 o.m.- 5
p.m. Sot.·Wod. Equal Op·

· the evenings.

Yard Sale Rt. 6154 acron
from Bidwell Porter school .
Clothes . all siuts . May

FREE
EXTIMATES
"Chain Link Fence
"Carpetin&amp; 'Paintina

Ph. 992-2174

pd

ll ·ll ·llc

............. .............................. •9.96
10FT.... ............. .. ..................... '12.20
12FT............. ..... .......... ...... ...... '14.46
. 14 ·FT ~ · ........ ;.: ..... , ......... ........ , ... ·. '.1
16 FT ................. ... .. ...... ...... .... .. '1
18FT........... ............. ................ '20.90
20FT, ......... ..................... ....... .. '22.96

tura and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain.

Inside Yard Sale May
13.14', 16, 16. Men. women.
children clothn , books ,
misc. 2 miles off Rt . 7 on
664. SH signs .

[ Sear~

Pomeroy, Oh .

~2~!!~U~!!~i~e

15

Ches.ter. Olt • ·18·1 mo

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

ROUSH

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
.
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St ,
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

SALE 20% OFF
JOHN TEAFORD

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old furni·

under. At my home Buloville
Rd. 3 mitos from Rt. 160,
next houte p11t Layne's
Furn. Mro. Horman Skaggo.

miac ..

part time statui. No IICplrience nece11ary . Contac1 :
Brenda Jack.son at 814-

Complete Auctioneer Ser- End of your baby sitting
vice. Also do aPpraiula. problem• by calling Tiny
Licen1ed &amp;. b!¥1ded to sell. Tech et 614 -992 -3824. Colt
Households. farm furnish - now for low opening prices.
ings &amp;.- Real estate. Over 26
yeart a•p8tlence in buying&amp;. Will do baby sitting In my
selling new, used &amp;. antique · home . Racine area . Any age .
furniture . 614-992 -8370 . . 614 -949-2779 .

3 Family Yard Sale Friday,
May 13th, 9-6. Furniture,

RADIATOR SERVICE

&amp; Scottie Smith
All Makes and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Awilable

·

Pin1

From ht Smtllest Heeter
Core to the Llr&amp;est Radiator.
•
Radiator Speeieist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. hperlence

Dewayne William•

,
\l

· Situations
Want ad

WV .

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hertford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigmenu of new end
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 276 -3069 .

Yard Salellfl mile1 out 141 .
May 12. Clothes. jeans,
diahes. toys, tupperwere.
plcturee. hou1ehold goods,

~-

Ram

COMPlETE

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 986-4269

~
....
l ....

P.G.A.

4-11 I mo ·pd

S&amp;W TV

1_____
t-

'Brand Names:
Square lwo
MacGrecor
Wils.on
Dunlop

-Trencher

TRANSMISSION FILTER
AND FLUID CHANGE

....,
'··

{c lubs shOrtened lof
rounl ptopts)

.:..oo.-rs
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo-Boy
OPEN 91D 5 MON. tltru SAT.
All rypea of Auto Rtpoir,
Brokos. Tunt-Ups, etc.
SPECiAL

·r

THE KOUNTRY KLUB

PULLINS

12

Auct. Lonnie N01l. Call Registered nurse wented for
I. V. Therapy team. C11ual
6t4-367-7101 .

mi•c. Rt . 688 in Rodney.

I

J I.

a FT .

Houle, Pt. Pleaaant

9

4 '17 1

Vending Company n11ding
ho1te11 for Meson County)
area . Age 26 or older. Call
for appointment. Mon. thru
Wed. 4 p.m. to 6 p.m .

~uction every Tue1dav

=============,=·=
.. =·~============,.=-~========~ 613.FamilY
Garage Sele
May
14. Clothing
oil slzoo.

SERVICE

15 .
16.

B.
9

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

THE

4 21

1d

7.

NEW LISTING- 7 room oozy
home near lhe Post Office, 1~
bath, carpetin&amp; panelin&amp; Iron~
porch &amp; p-age on level kit
As~ng $25,000
·

end white male to• hounds .
Cell collect at 614 -843-

items offered one dollar and

II

1

6

NEW LISTING - Handy 4
room ~ame w~h bath, c~
water &amp; gas. lot: 55'x 132'
room lor a mobile home in
Middleport ()tty $9,500.

104 3rd.

6304.

1- 7 -5634
Mason, W. Va.
C. L. Kitchen

"Free Estimates"

APPLIANCE

• -~

a. raCM•l~

fh•'t" ....,.....,.u..

Lo•l·MT. Alto area . 2 red

304 7 3

&gt;Wanted
) For Sale

~~~t~\1

.. ~&gt;~. ......

.... ,_,.. o.,............. .

Lost and Found

tool-: . Please call ~04 - 676 -

POOLS

All Work Guaranteed

AND

• ~

Upt&lt;&gt; ll&gt;_,..
u,ooli&gt;W"'oh

6

2 Family Gorogo Sale Wed .
&amp; Thurs. SAM to ?PM . Lots
of children'• clothoo. mon

-----J-.--1---1----1--1
edit or rei ectr·_:o_:'_'+----1f----1----l---!

"""

~

cot1992-3702.

Around
'Fri.e ndly Servie

give price. The Sentinel ·rotS

-....
!1... C"""'"'
JH p,.,, .. .,~
c,..,,.,,~ .

Free to good home puppiea,
omoll breed. 3 moleoand 11.

•Fiberglass
•Stainless Steel
Pt:tONE:

reserves the right to

'I'll

'"

FOUR fomlly,

Send reaumt. ref . to Frank
Brown. Dir. ()allco Ind. Inc.,
P.O. Box 14, Cheahire, Ohio

night. Krodel Park Club

downspouts, gutter clelning and ..inti~. stonn
· ........._
doors and w;n......,.

742-2328

Wn•d~

c ... ~..

f---------------- _

30~0 .

•Vinyl Liner

IN

phOne number if used.
You'll get better results ----+-_:..,1-=~--.:...:...l-~i
if vou describe fully,

'-"-""'

l• ·t..,.loth
M._,.,.
Mutlo"''

good homo. Coll4411-3760.

All types of roof work. new
or ....ir, gutters and

1 Print one word

...
J&amp;J

1• "'"''"•
1 .. lholi•-'...
JM G"''""[)l"
10 ,, ..... D"l
)1'1 WoiM I

1J.21Hk

ROOFING

NO SET UP CHARGE

I .

A,_C...,.&amp; I o
. . .......,.,.,

Engiiah Springer Sp~~niel to

BACKHOE
SERVICE

'Lowest Rates

1 Phone _ _ _ __;_ __,_
,..- -

LAFF-A-DAY

CALL US TO BUY 01 SELL
NANCY JASPERS - A!o!111CIATE
. PIIOIIE: 143-5175
. Or 99H7Sl To ltM A 11ts1111

II
-1
I
II
II

anv ad . Your ad will be put in the proper ·ro 15
classification it vou ' ll ___.,L__t:..:....:.:.L-.;.;.:.L.--1
These cash rates
check 1he proper box
include discount
below .

.......ftc ..

~·ll mo

10·6-ttc

I

M ...

..,,..

3,ACIIES - Racine, owner will help finance.

Rlcint, Oft
111· 614 ..,3-5191

l
I Name·-----------1

a..ooc-ow

.

8 .

P&amp;s BUILDINGS

Wrjte. your own ad and -order by ma i l with this
coupon . Cancel vou"r ad by .phOne when '{ ou ~et I
results. Money not refundable.
J

1/w

qo r:"''"''

Colt 4411-2205.

------------~-----t-------------------t==================~==================~::::::::::::::::::;J _R_o_u_•h_.______________
LOST-brown Kennedy tool
r----------------------~I
box
. Contain as carpet layers
Al TROMM'S
H. L. Writesel
PERSONALIZED

-C-114

That's rlghtl When you use a column
inch or mora in newspaper advertising,
be it dislay or classified, you reach
thousands of potential buyers that are
eager to receive yaur money-saving
message.
The Daily Sentinel
Public Notice

lnsulatd Doc Houses

4-ll -1

"·b·

'Sidin&amp;
'Root;n,
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
"Remodelina
20 Ynrs Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 843-5425

Si~st!r~~~\:~· Up

/,.//,.,, i11 1-! I •·lo•toloo"''" ,. • • · ltff" -~' " '

a...... " - .

liJ ... '"""'"""'

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41

,,_.....,
''"-"""""'"-"

lllouwn.,.
14-1_,...,
.............. _

o•r

Fr. kittens, long hilred .

montha · ald . 814 -992 -

Kitchen"" IntiS
Roof·
ina-- Sidin1- Concrete
Patios - Sidtwllh New Construction - Rt·
modelin• - Custom Pole
Berns.
CHARLES SAYRE
·
AND SON
Roofin&amp; &amp; Siding Co.
Route 1
Lona Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

SIDING

WORKSHOP SPECIALIST~

Sot. Moy14, 9:00to 11146

Smotl mlaed bi'Md mole
dog. 9 month• old. 1114- 8
9.92-3577.

No Sunday Calls

EUGENE LONG
SUP ER I0R VINYL

Need more take home PAY?

Salt AVON . Coli 448-33111.

Training and supervi81CH't of
MR · DO . edults in 1helt..-.d
worttshop. 12· mo. poalt~n.

StrMt, Ma1on. thursday •

949-2860.

Pomeroy,

-l ·l ·lk

SHOE
REPAIR
113 W. 2nd St.
Pomeroy, OH .
Open 9:00 to 6:00
Mon .- Sat.
Closed Thuro.

c lassify,

f:lnuiJi• ••l 1"'1-!'"' • ' "

Ill

UTILITY BUILDINGS

111 Court St.. Pomeroy. Ollio 4S7'9

11 , . _ '"'''""'
Jlto...,..,.W.
·
13 v.,oSHitO
74 .... .,.,..._

olochioai(Pr.. htimaiMI
V. C; YOUNG
992-6215 or
4

Help

H.S. grod. whh oxp. In flold.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garar;es"
Ca II for frM sidi nc estilllltes, 949-2801 or

~and

11

Yard Sale

Second ~ve . Gellipolla.

· BISSELL
SIDING CO.

4Ai£cels~

7

Garage Sale Beby and other
clothing Items, bedroom auita. other furniture, ptus
much more. One dey anty

SIDING

:

-'lsa Transmissi!&gt;n
PH. 992-5 682
ar 992-7121

Glv•w•y

VInyl &amp; Aluminum

............
..•
........
end.,...,_.....

POLE BULDINGS
Sizes start from 12'x16'

PHONE 992-2156

21 IIH1111&amp;1o WuoO&lt;I

·· I

.

GARAGE

ALL STEEL

1 name and address or

__

a

I C•od ul l....,hlu•&lt;l•nodw....:•l
llfl-....,
~~~~·~oo:~w•nc;•l

some

SALES &amp; SERVICE

4

r::::~:i~~:::::;fr::::~~=:~==~~tr==~=-=~::::=:===ttr~~~~~~~~:;~;:::~::::~~:;iil~S~h~o~p~h~o~r:d~p~u1p~p~l~eo~.~31---~--~---------&amp;

-, .,.,

-

-J; :c a

Installation of officers highlighted necessity for support of the officers
the Monday night meeting of the B.
by all women In the society. It was
H. Sanboflt Missionary Society of concluded with a commentary on
.. •the Middleport First Baptist 'lite work of the society ln a Ia bar of
·· Church.
love In the co'mmunlty and
,. , Install~ by Mary Ann McClung worldwide.
aslsted by Cathy Riggs were
The Women's Conference was
• Alwllda Werner, president; Sarah announced for JuneS-lOa! Granville
Fowler, vice president oflnterpreta- With the theme "Share the Joy."
. lion; Freda Hood, recording secreRegistration cards are available
tary; Dorothy Anthony, treasurer;
from Mrs. Werner.
Rhoda Hall, vice president of
A report was given by Mrs.
. missions; Satah Owen, vice presi- Werner on the fellowshp tea held In
dent of Christian service; Beulah AprU attended by women from
White. vice president of leadership several churches lnclli(Jlng Pomedevelopment; and Miss Hall, key
roy Baptist and Trlnlty, Heath
woman to Chureh Women United of Methodist, Mt. . Moriah Baptist,
Meigs County. Installed · as chair- Middleport, -and the Salvation
men of circles were Mrs. Fowler,
Army, Pomeroy.
, Dorcas; and Lillian Demoskey,
Speaker was Major Glenna RumElecta. ·.
,
mei,(Ret.) who reported on her
Mrs. McClung used ''The Reluc- recent trip to Indla,.where she was
'tant Angel" for the Installation
stationed. as a missionary
program which emphasized the years ago. She was assisted In her

YOUNG'S

l ·7·tft

Or Wrile D1illy Sentinel Ctassitisd Dtft

chosen for this award and feel
certa in I'll live up to the obligations
It entails," said Fowler, upon
receiving congratulations from
Army Chief of Staff designate Gen .
John A. Wickham Jr.
ln addition to attending the
award conference In Lexlngton,
Va .. April 12-15. each cadet was
presented wllh an.award certificate
and an authorized three-volume
biography of Gen. Marshall. Mar"hall Is best remembered for his
leadership as Army Chief of Staff In
World War II and lor his spOnsorship of the EuroP.,an Recovery Act
!Marshall Plan) while Secretary of
State from 1947 to 1949.

Roger Hysell
tioc

call 742-31 95

---Middleport Garden Club meets:.......-___:'·

The Daily Sentinel

, LEXINGTON, Va. - Jeffrey T.
.FowlerolWesl Columbia. W.Va. , Is
this year's 19&amp;1 George C. Marshall
.f\ward winner from Marshall
University, Huntington, W. Va.
Cadet Fowler. 29, son of Mr. and
· Mrs. 0 . D. Fowler, Route I, West
~ Columbia, Is one of :JOO Anny ROTC
cadets nationwide to win the
'prestigious a war(!. Presented annujlliy In the outstanding cadet of
Army Rare delechments at colleges and unlversllles throughout
the United States, litis award Is the
highest honor any Army ROTC
cadet can receive.
' "I leel fortunat e to have been

BOGGS

Concert features - - - I n the country's service--In applied science through the
Badgtey
former resident Kloes
Community College of the Air
MASON - Pvt. Derek M.
POMEROY - Airman Mary G.

Bruce Stone, known by local Kloes, daughter of Carl V. Barnes
residents as Bruce Stalnaker, wUI of Germantown, Wis. , has gradube at the Pomeroy United Methoated from the U.S. Air Force
dist Church lor the morning aircraft maintenance training
worship service on May 15 at 10: 30 course at Sheppard Air Force Base,
a.m.
Texas.
A former night club entertalner
Graduates of the course were
for 18 years, he has performed In trained In aircraft maintenance,
many areas of the United States. repair and service, and earned
About four years ago he made a credits toward an associate degree
commitment to Jesus Christ and to
singing Christian music. Since that
time, he has continued to glve
gospel concerts all over the country
Slides of gardening methods used
What does the color of your colors. At the workshop, partici- but the place of his performances by Mrs. Rutp Stout were shown by
clothing do for you? Do you always pants will learn about color and be have changed from night clubs to Mrs. Fred Kessinger at the Monday
. buy the same colors for yourself? able to lry a variety of color churches and other locations.
Pomeroy United Met hodist night meeting of the Middleport
Have you ever put on a garme nt
samples on to determine their best
Garden Club at the Middleport
that causes your face and skin to colors. Participants will be able to.· Church and their pastor, Jim PreSbyterian Church. ;
lose color or to add color like a . take home a booklei of Ideas with, Corbitt, lnv1tes everyone to join
Mrs. Kessinger presented th~ ·
Sunburn?
colors for use as they choose with them for thls service.
methods
ol gardening used by Mrs.
Admission Is free, but a free wllt
Learn more about color and you clothing or fabrics. Participants
Stout
Instead
of using the tradlat the "Color Workshop" on should not wear makeup to the offering wUI be taken.
tional practice of tilling the son, she
meeting.
. Thursday, May 19, 7: 30p.m., at St.
merely drops her seed on top of the
Pa~l's Lutheran Church In PomePre:reglstralion Is required for
ground and covers with a mulch. It
roy. The meellng is spo nsored by · this meeting. To pre-register. call
was noted that this eltnintnates the
the Meigs Cou nty Cooperallve the Meigs County Extension Office
necessity lor pulling weeds, hoeing,
Extension Service. The cost of the al 992-6696 by May 16.
and watering.
pro~am Is $5.
For more Information, contact
A discussion on memories of the
Whether you make your own Dale Stoll at the Meigs County
clothes or buy your clothing, you Extension Office, Box 32, Pomeroy,
· need to be aware of your best Ohio.

RECEIVES - ROTC Cllllet .leHrey T. Fowler ol
West Columbia receives congratulations from Gen.
John A. Wickham Jr., Anny Chlel ol Staff d""lgnatc,

The

I

Bridal shower given for Birchfield

Taxes and the library
_·bill in the legislature
By Ruth Powers

.

-~-

7690 .

LISHING CO . recommends
that you do busln811 with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail unill you have lnvettlgated the offering .
Earn 1700-11600 monthly
commiuions It multilevel
bonu1. Work from home
full-part time . Naw weight
loas program help1 people
eaaily shed unwtnted
pou,ds. $89 inventory investment required. No experinc;e neede-:t . Loc~lsuf)46r~~';1&amp;~'8.in~ · you.. . C.a lt

22 Money to toan
HOME LOANS 12% flxod
rate . leader Mortgage, 77 E.
State, Athens, Ohio . 1-114-

&amp;92 -3051. or 1-800-341-

8664 in Ohio .

Ptolno on Succo11 Rd. Child- Brush hogging at the airport,
ron• &amp; edult clothing. dish mu1t have own' equipment.
wora a. mloc.
Call 446-7889 betwaen 9 &amp; 23
e.
8 fomlly . Fri. 13.

Professional
Services

Walker' I. Racine. Oh .

Someone to live In whh
elderly couple. Room, board
TWO family yard ••le . 1 milt • wagn . Preferably aome·
out Jericho Rd . Pt. Pleatant. one that . can drive 1 car.

Clothing . ond mloc. rldoy 6t4-949:24D5 or 614-992-

9-3.

Watch tor signs. If

roln-concoled.

224; .

1-----------------CLERICAL. Now occoptlng

128 South Park, Point Pltai- applications for a full time
Nnt . Wedne1dey;, Thura- officii manager · physician
doy, Fridoy. 11 :00.
..al1tant for a doctors office

tRiploy oroo]. Opening In
YARD So_lo, Thuro~oy, 9-&amp;. July 1983. Quotlfled poroon
2200'Woohlngton Avo.
will hove oxcou.-t typing &amp;
ohorthond okltlo, axperlenco
YARD sale. good clothing, In lnsuronco billing &amp; be
tMns. btby"gdll, Mtna XL, willing to drive to Chai'lnton
one or two daya 1 week.
bird cage, maternity clothe•j hporloncod In X- Roy tochIota more. Turn top of nlquoo holpiUI. Job to poy
HtrtfCMd Hill. flrlt houH on 18,1100. per year with pos•iHill. Thurodoy &amp; Fridoy, 10 ble bonu1 &amp; other inctna.m.
tlvos. Only tholt wlih the
above quallficetion• need
3311 Franklin Avo. may apply. Submit application or
11.12. aodoproodo.- cur- rnume to pereonhlll oHict

TlrH, 10 sped blcycto. lorgo

IUNOLED n_..,.poro to tains, poperbllcllo, l..no, JockOC&gt;n B•noral Hospkol.
ohorltablo !&gt;rgonlutlon. men• work dothei chlldrena Ripley, W.V. N!&gt; totephono
cl!&gt;thH.
COJIII pfeooo.
.
104-171-1131.

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Broad range Of bookkaelng
and tex urvice1 available1o
suit your buaineu needa.

Corol Neol

~48 - 38112

PIANO TUNING 16 off pluo
diacounts to ten lor cltlaene·
church11 -schools. Call Ill
Ward Wa~d 'l Keyboard,

446 -4372.

.

Will open &amp;cloon owlmmtl;t
pooto. Coli 448-4888 ott.,
5:00PM.
PIANO TUNINB·LA"!E IJA.
Nl ELS . Rollo bit oorvlot~

alnce 1911. Auoclete of
Brunicardl Mutlc Co. PhOne

814-742-29111 .

PERMANENT htlr remo~al
Pro ftsslonal Electrol._,111

Clinic. A.M.A. IPPF!&gt;Yod. Dr .
referrals. MoruS.y, ·WednM•

day, Fridoy, by oppolntmiont.
304-875-115118.
. .

�lo-The

Sentinel

Ohio

They'll Do ItEvery Time

bd_r. . home in Addiio n

small lot. n~ly remodeled,
new electric plumbing . etc.
Furnence &amp;: wood bu"rner,
fully insullated, exc. cond .•

Mid $20' s. Coil 614-692 ·
4369 .
Racine 2 % acre mini-farm,

remodeled 3 to 4 bedroom 2
ltory.
ho1,1 se ,

aluminum
c ity

Apartment
for Rent

61

sided

water - gas-

sewer, basement. $1 2 car
gar_ege. Across from South·
ern HS . 614 -379-2424 or

614· 949 -2B54 .

by Larry Wright

House~Qid Good•

dleport. Newly remodeled
home with fir eplaco, possi ble woodburner, close to
scl1ools and shopping. Call

USED MOBILE HOME .
576-2711 .
34x8 tr'8iler with 24x12
addition. city water &amp; well.
Crab Creek Rd . f7BOO.
304-676· 1323 or 304-6782372 .

614-992·6941 .
House by owner, 3 bdr .. 1 1h

baths.

Crown

City.

Cell

614 -266 -634B .

2 bdr. 12.Jt60 mobile home
2112 mi. trOm Ho•pital on old

Rt. 160 at Evergreen. Ac·
capt c~lldren &amp;. pelt. Call
448-0167.

hou~e,

3 bdr.trailer apace.
centralAddiaon.
air, and
one
Ohio. Coli 614-446-0175 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992-7479 .

J:~~~~~~~~ii

2 8R, 12x80trollerforrent, 51 Household Goods
2\&lt;1. mi. out 180 11 Ever· 1 - - - - - - -- - green . Ph . 446-0167. ··
- - - - - - - -· lcSWAIN
comb ., 2 bath, laundry
14Jl70 all electric 2 - 2 bedrooms Mobllei Home in AUCTION 8o FIJRNITURE
room , double garage, fruit
Racine. 814-387-0288.
82 Olive St ., Gallipolis. 8
trees. nat. wood siding. rural bedroom, air, stereo, family
room,
washer-dryer,
un.
place wood living room suite
wllter. 2 acres or 30 acres.
10
x
65.
2
bd.room
mobile
penning, sun deck, porch
with 6 inch flat arrhs $399,
Call 614 -379 -2196 .
awning, new draperies, itx· home in Racine area. 814· bunk bedi (:omplete with
992-5858.
bunklea •199, 2 piece an·
3 bedroom home at 123 cHI Ient condition . 304-67626B5
or
304-676·
7658
.
tron living room eulte1 8199 .
Garfield Ave., full finished
2 bedroOm mobile home. antron recliners .,99, ottlar
basement, 2 fireplaces . air
Approxim~~tety 0 mil• from
recliners 180. maple dinette
con d. new carpet, 2Y2 bath,,
Middle'port or Pomeroy. leta 11'79, love. teats t70 ,
. aill thi• on a 2 · ~t:re lot that 1
614"992; 6858.
.· ..
hlda·o ' bit d •260, box
funs from S R Rt: 7 to the ,.
epringa ·a. manreaa twin or
river. Priced below replace · 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 bedroonl f~rnlshed , 1
ment cqst . Owner will cOn- J ~-------'--­ child. no pet1, *160. p•r full *100 set regular-firm
8120, maple dinatt• chairs ,
sider 'financing with low
monlhc 304-8B2·2488.
•3~.. wash slondo U4.
down payment . C~tll 446 - 6 -20 Acres woods. overlooking Ohio River, city 4 bedroom mobile tiQine. 1 maple r9ckers 889, 7 piece
1646.
schools . 446 -3554 or · 1 · child -accepted, nQ drunks, chrome dine,te sei $14f;J, IS
Lo-vely_, .6 roo_~s . Do1.ible 6 1 3 - 4 2 3 · 8- 9. 2 8 .- dope or PJ~ti . .John Sheets. piece··j~il!.ette sat 8_1t9~ 'uaed
· bedroQm suites, . refirgera·
gar&amp;ge, beautifully lands- Owner / Agent".
3Yl miles south of Middle- tors, ranges, cheat. dresaen ,
caped area lot . Atop Rose 1- - --=------"-port, At. 7. 614-367-0811. wringer washers, TV's,
Hill. Porn . 40'&amp;. 614-986- 1 acre lot 6 mi. from Holzer
4267 .
hospital. Just off Rt. 160 TWO mobile homH for rent dryeres, &amp; shoe•. Call 446·
out Floyd-Clark Rd . 700 h . on Rt. 2 obout 6 mlnuteo 3-:1:5:9 _·_·_ _ _ _ __:__
6 room &amp; bath, large garden, Call 446 -0390 .
from town. Coil after 8 . GOOD USED APPLIANCES
100x100 lot . Spaceheatera .
304-875 -6277.
- wethers. dryera. rafrigera·
614 - 9 92 · 6 2 4 2 . Land 36 acre• at Rodney on W .T.
contract.
Wa1son Rd . OWner flnanc- UNFURNISHEQ trailer for tors. ranges. Skoggo Ap·
.ing av&amp;llable . Call446· 8221 rent in Henderson, 200 per plianc,a. Upper River Rd .,
For sale by ~wner-4 bed - after 6 weekday•.
month. Gerbaae. water a lot baa ide Stone Creat Motel .
room, 1% stiry aluminum
44
poid. Phone304-675-2049. _
aiding house . Appro•. 2% 10.8 acres on Bulavllle Ad.
1 _6_·_7_3_9_8_.- - -- LAYNE' S FURNITURE
acres level ground. Large in Gallipolis Townahip , Two bedroom mobile home.
kitchen, dining room, forced 837,000 . Call 614 -446- kitchen furnished, 1 amall Sofa, chair, rocker, otto~ tabl_e1, le•tra heavy
air heat . Separate large 4670 after &amp;PM .
c!tild accepted, e1s0 plua m•n.
by Frontlarl. 1886. Sola,
garage . 2 miles from Southutilities, referencils re · ch•lr and loveseat, 8276 .
am High School . Shown by One IQt 40x130 . Call 675- quirad, 304-875-1076.
SQfes and chain priced from
oppolntmont only . 923,500. 4391 or 448-4038 .
1286. to 1896. Tobloo. 146
614-949 -2023 or614-949·
bedroom furniahttd •nd Up to 8126 . Hide-aLot1 3 to 6 ac.-el. Flat. rural TWO
2777 .
trailer
with
porch.
on
30th.
·
water. Green Elementary. St. bohlnd Village Pizzo. beda; l 440 . and up to
a526., Rocllnero, 1175. to
3 bedroom brick home on Coli 614-379 -2196 .
U75 . month pluo utilltleo, *360 ., Lamps from 828 . to
large lo1 . 1 112 baths, full
t200
.
·
damage
depoolt.
baument, 2 car garage. 1 .4 acre lot in BradburY 304-875-8208 ook for •76 . 5 pc: dinettes from
t99 ., to e436. 7 pc., 11B9 . .
College Rd ., Syracuse . Seen good location. trailer hook Valerie.
~nd up. Wood table with six
by appointment . 614-992 . up all utilities, septic tank,
1425. lo 1745. Desk
614-992· 2602 .
5133 .
Two bedfoom mobile honie, cholro
•1
10
up
to 8226. Hutches.
kitchen fum. 1 small child
Two bedrooms. alum. sid- 1 .4 aero lot in Bradbury. accepted, *180. plus utili· •660. and up, mepla or pine
ing, attached garage, half Good location . Trailer hook ti81 . Reference• required . flnlah. Bunk bod complete
with manreteet, $260 . and
basement. covered patio, 2 up . All utilities. SEPTIC 304-675-1075.
up to 1395. Baby beds,
acres on paved road , Five TANK . CALL 614 -992 ·
$110. Mattr8111S or box
Points. $48 ,000 . 614 -992 · 2602 .
sprlnga, full ·or twin, 8!58.,
6273 .
1 ~--:-=------ 44
Apartment
HUNTERS dream, 109
firm, •ea. and 878 . Queen
for Ren1
BY owner, 3 bedroom, 2 wooded acres near Ar·
Bl!lts, 8196. 4 dr. chests,
1torv brick, 1211 Main S1 .. buckle. $29,000 .00. Phone 2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart- a42. 6 dr. cheolo, 164. Bed
price reductld . 304-676 - 304-676 -1838.
!romeo, 420.ond $26 ., 10
menta $200 per mo. or If gun
· Gun ceblheta, 8360 .,
2381 .
1-:------- - Income
It •10,000 or leu dinette
2 acres pertially cleared. city HUD aveilable.
chairs 820. and 126.
A-One Real
For sale by owner: Newly water. asking $6.000. 304· Estat11. Carol Yeager, Real· Gat or electric rerlges, 1326
re modeled 6 rooms and bftth 676 -2205 .
up to 1376. Bebymetresses.
tor. Coil 304-675-5104 .
In Pt. Pleasant, near schools 1 ------~--­
t25 &amp; 135, bed frames e20 ,
and stores. Double lot with 2 3.14 acrtes, corner Greer &amp; 8 Small furnished house in t25, &amp; a3o. klngfrome e5o .
f8nced yard $27.600. 8 114 Milo Rd. , Black top. 304· city. adults only. Call 448· Good selection of' bedroom
percent assumable lonn with 676-1198.
suites. cedar chests,
033B.
rockera, metal cebinets.
soma down payment . Good 1-;:;::=;:::::;::;====
used mobile 'home mav be !·
Furni1hed effiency apt .. in swivel rockers,
considered for part ial down 36
Real Estate
Rio Grande. utilitlas paid. Used Furniture -- bookcase ,
ranges. chairs, end tables ,
paymant. Ca ll 304-675 ·
Wanted
Coli
446·0157 .
1618 altar 4 ;00 for; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
wethers, dryera, refrigeraappointment .
1JACKSON ESTATES ' Equal tors and TV's, 3 miles out
Buying houtes and apart- Housing Opponunlty' has Bulavllle Rd . Open 9am to
BY owner: For sale or ren1 ments. Need propertiet with one bedroom apartments
6pm, Mon . thru Fri.; 9am to
with option to buy. 3 bed· favorable price and term&amp;. rent nonlng 11 1157 per 6pm, Sot.
room ranch with full size Box 1109 Golllpollo, Oh . month and two bedroom 446-0322
basement, bath &amp; % on
apartments rent a~arting at
Leon-Baden . Phone 304- 1- ' - - -- - - - - - 8193 por month. ·Coli 446 - COUNTY APPLIANCES.
458 -1666 alter 5 ;00 p.m.
INC . Good used appliance•.
2746 or leave m-..saga.
washer, dryers. refrig., TV
2 bdr. ba1ement apt., lower sets. 827% 3rd . Ave., Galli 32 Mobile Homes
St . Rt. 7, 1186 month .. 3 polis . Call 448 -1899.
for Sale
41 Houses fqr Rent bdr. apt St. Rt. 141 with
bueman' ; *2150 month. Kenmore heavy duty washer
like new, ~lao W~irl pool
Coli 448-4940 after 6PM .
TRI - STATE MOBILE
washer. Whirlpool dryer,
. HOMES . USED · CARS.
Modern 3 bdr. ranch, gar· TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS . age, carpet, Rodney area. 2 bdr: apertment overlook· Frigidaire dryer. All gueran·
the pork. Portlolly fur- toed 30 dayo. Coll614· 266·
' CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
Oepo1it &amp; references re..
,, I 71, dep., water 1207 .
nlan
. 446-7572 .
quired . $286 par mo . Black·
448·0021 or
burD.Roolty. Coii44.S -0008 .
1983 - Nlcchi sewing maCLEAN USED MOBILE
chine
free arm model . with
HOMES KESSEL' S QUAL·
Modern 3 bdr. l'llnch atyle,
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES , breezeway. double garage, Furnlahed apt. *186, weter several ttlfteront iig zeg
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS , carpet, unfurnl1hed. College pd., 2 bdr., 131 .\&lt;14th Ave., p•tterns, cost new over
RT 35. PHONE 448·7274.
Rd., Syrocuoe, Oh. DopooH Golllpollo. Coli 448-441 6 ll 300 repoaseaaed model
only 3 mo11. old, like new
8t reference requked. *286 oltor 7PM.
con d. payoff balance owad
2 lots &amp; 1 nlobile home per mo. CoW446-1478.
Furnished gerage •pt., 3 195. Coli 614·38&amp;·B918.
· 1 2'x 60 , 2 IMidroom.. with
rurill water, gas heat. Has
3 bed. house on Rt. liS, tV:! rm1. • bllth plua washer a. Out of town call collect. Free
some furniture , price baths, gerage, $32!5 mo', dryer, clean, no pets, •duhs delivery to your home.
$12.600. Or 4 loll &amp; mobile Call Wlsemen Reel Estata. only. Oop. roq. Coil 446- F · 1 Ll h
or sa •· g t green
Coli 446-3643 .
1519 .
614 ,800. Coll446-1240.
aofa and loveaHt.
1969· El Car 2 bdr., mostly 3 bdr. farm houae, 2 mi. out Apt . for rent . Helf double-2 Charlene Hoeflich, 814 ·
of Rio Grande, 119.5 mo . bd.room Apt. Adults pre- 992· 5292 after 5 p.m.'
. furnl•hed . carpeted, appHances. good cond., re- plu1 depoait. No lntlde peta. !erred.
2749 . No poto. 614-992Cell814-246-5190.
ducod to t2,000. Cell 61 4 ·
. 388-8549 .
Unlurnlohed 2 bedroom 1 bed room Apt. 1196. mo .
1 9'71 Winnebago motor hou••· In town. not auitablt Including utllltloo. Equal
home (big one), very good. lor children or peto, 1126 h9uslng opPortunity. Con·
·Call 440·7077.
per mo .• water paid. •eo teet Vlllege Menor Apts.
81 4-992· 7787 .
depoolt. Coli 448-3444.
'"1971 14x70 . Poerlooo MH,
W·tilt out, EC: cellt. air, 4 room• •.blith orl Bul•ville- Apertmentl . 304 -175 ·
6548 .
'
wqodburnar, total electric, Porter Rd. Coll448-4732 .
-~-,.--~~
new carp throughoUt; un·
Nice 2 bedroom t.w)ute -fOr APARTMENTS. mobile
der'plnnlng, Outbl.ill~il"g .
111 ,100. Coli &lt;&amp;48-0212 or rent. Eea~ern Diatrlct. I 150. homel. houaea. Pt. Pte•ent
&amp;14-241·1408 .
Pl.uo dopooll . 814-949· ond , Golllpollo . 814-448 2801 ,
8221 .
18.7 2 14xl5 Mobile Homo.
3 badroomo. gu hell. por· 2 bedroom. on · new point, UNFU'RPiiiS!IED oportn\enl
!IailY · lurnlolted. underpin· tome CII'Piting. Oapo1H re. for rent, 2 bedroom.
nlng. back ·p orch, exc._cond.· qulrad. 814·992· 3080..
· 1210.00 Coil Alllomollvo
Suf'ply, 8 · 8 , 304· 878 ·
Phone 114·882-2181 ba·
.
twHn .9," • I uk for Tim. MODERN 3 bedroom. lam' 22 8, 871-8763.
Aller I Phone 304 -882- ily room, nHr echool1 • hoopltol. Rof...,ce • dep- ONE badroom oportmonlo
3182 .
oolt required. Coli 304-876- for . the elderly. All utllltloo
pold. Tonor\lo poy 30 per,
1974 Holly Pork Mobile 4338 .
cant of their odjullod In·
Home, total eleCtric, pntlv
furnl•hed. carpeted. 2 bed· 3 bedroom. •ll .electric hou 1e como Jn lhlo HUD ouboldlzod
room. · lnt·e rcom 1y1tem, In ldeol neighborhood with · oponmenl building. Twin
ctnlrol olr, porch. underpl"· ell convenienc• of city, 1 Rlvort To-. ph9ne 304·
\ling; In oxc. cbnd. Coli mlloo north ol Point Ploo· . 871·111171!. Equol opportun·
·
814-949-27118 .
.
oont. 1321. 304-878-3777, lty houolng.
1977· 14x70. 3 bedroom•. 2
full baths, $10,000. 304675-2949.

3 bdr. home. FR . sto\le
firepla ce in LR . fully
equipped kitchen , dining

-=-=-:---=--:-----

1-:

1------:_____

--------- o

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

ENTEo~

()

e

Marcum Roofing • Spout·
lng. 30· y.. r.• e~eperlence ,
opeelollzlng In bulh up roof.
carr 814· 388-9867.

!\Iliac. Merchandise

G.E. wooho! &amp; dryer, pop up
camper, 2 Volkawagons,
304-871-8999.

66 Building Supplies

Autos for Sale

1 9BO Buick. Rivero loll of
exlreo . Coll614·367 · 7486.
1972 . Opal Monlo UOO.
Call 448· 1809.
1977 Chevy Monzo, 4 cylinder. 4
new red
can 1 .
19n Dodge Colt. Stationwagon · autom.-tlc. e1.200.
81 4-992· 71 80.

Cede~

wardrobe. antique
tr_unk , 3 tier glass table 8t
concrete picnic table with
benches . Call 614 · 266176B.

Build your own Early Americen home. 2 or 3 bdr.,
82,996 . Coil 1·614-886·
7311 . See our model.

Water well drill!ng rig . Cell
814-388-8543 .

1981 Plymouth Horizon.
aut . front wheel drive. exC .
cond . 304-468·1638.

198B DODGE Polaro 500,
56 Pets for Sale
38000 original miles, gar- - ' - - - - - - - - - · age kept. excellent condi·
lion, 304-876-1714.
·HILLCRE$T KE·NNEL ·
Boarding ill breodo. AK C 19!12-Exp: Fbrd. po. pb, air;
Reg. Dob•rmans pups afd oun roof. $4,600. 304-876·
4848 .

2 .hives of bee1, 8 supers &amp;.
complete line of equipment,
8250 . Call 446-0212 .

Rough l"fmber 'tor sale 126 ·
pieces, 2'' thick by 1 0 ' ' wide
by 16' ft . long, pre'saure g:~~~~7 ~~~d ~arvico.
treated. Call 446-8348 Or
992· 3382 .
ORAGONWYND .CATTERY
· .KENNEL AKC Chow pup·
1978 ·p op - up St-8rcrah pies, _CFA Hlrnll.layen. PerCamper · a. 11477 Cadillac . si-an and: Slameae ,kiHenl.
Cell446·1552 .
Cell 446-3844 ohar 4PM.

7

Fireplace insert. twin blowers. automatic thermostat.
still in factory· cartori.
8550 .00 . Ph . 61 4 -266 ·
1216 .

Cockatiel •nd cage, 7
montho. old, 175. Coli 81 4·
387-0482.

White's metal detectors, 3
guns. Honda generator. Call
446-064B .
Cheap ,c .rpe1 . If you have
rental property or rent,.don't
mind sligh11y irregUlar
carpet, you can s&amp;ve money .
Prices atart $2.99 sq . yd .,
992-6173. 10·5 .

Llrge Gibson Refrldgeretor .
.100. 843· 5345 .
Flowers for Mother&amp; Day .
North 2nd . St. Middleport .
Open 9-8. Cliff'o Place.
HARLEY Davidson gaa goH
cart, good c;ondition, gar•ge
kept, 1600. call 304· 273·
2106 .

Trucks for Sale

67

89 Chevy y, ton PU.. 8 cyl., 3
opeod. Coll448-4328 .

Musical
lnstru"'ents

I---K-u_tt_o_r_3_·_p_t_II-I~-,.-4-0-"·

4ft. bruah hog. Good cood .
Plate · gla11. large pieces .
614-367-0611 .

72

1 978 Chev. cuatom ten
deluxe. 1h T, auto trane. 360
engine, PS. P!l. good cond .
Call alter 3, 675 -6384.

Homemade pies made to
order. Will doliver. Call446·
2127.

Wood potato crates or stor·
&amp;ge cr8t11. Bushel size. Can
be stacked . $3 .00 each .
614-9B5-3327.

1 B cu. h. frHzer . 304-875124B.

3 yr. old AKC REg . female
Doberman, g•ntle dltp. ,
$200 . Call 448-1809. .

CABLE Grand piano, walftut
finl1h. excellent condition,
83,000. 304-876-7822.

Repossessed sign! Nothing
downl Take over paymttntt
45B .OO monthly . 4'x8 '
flashing arrow sign . New
bulbs, letters. Hale Sign1.
Cell FREE 1 -B00 -628 ·
7446 , anytime .

1977 Ford 150. See at
Bordman Furn. 9 -6 p.m.
304-875-2406 ore : 10 p .m.
304-875-28&amp;3.

49 -80". 72" ·88". King
Kutter rotary mower~ 40"
4·6·6· 7ft. 3 pt. or pull type.
8N, 4000, 6000 Fordl, Ferg
30. MF 36 dll. 160 ges, JD
LA w·culitvators, JD 620·
620-4230 , Boleno lawn
tractor• B-12·, 4 HP. 600
new and uaed tool• on lot.
Jim's Ferm _E quipment Centor, Rt. 35 W., Golllpollo,
Ohio. Call 448-9777 or
4.4 8-24B4.
NEW • Used Horvanore
Structures. AutOmated 11veatock feeding~computer
feeders . Call collect 614585-2280. John L. Botto.
HAY bolor, Now Hollond,
273 hey liner, price 81800.
304-468-1919.

cabin chaslil. a-c. tilt ateerlng, pb. pa, new paint, 188 at
People• Bank or cell efter 6
p .m . 304-87&amp;-8288 .

70 Ford truck , 1hort wide
bed. will sell camplete or
porto. 304-876-124B.
1974 CHEVY truck with
topper, 1660. 30&lt;&amp;-8762040.

73

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1971 Ford 65 poolenger,
school bus new motor, new
brake•~ exc. cond., •1.600
or baa! offer. Call 814-268·
148B.
74

Motorcycles

62 Wanted to Buy

1980 Honda CR 80 dirt bike,
axel. cond., 1450. Coli
1114·2411· 5882.

Need to Ieese tobacco poundage. Will poy 36 cont. Call
448-3592 or 448-9n7.

19B1 Honda 7!50 cUstom.
faring end crash bar.
3100 milao. 12,000. Call
814- 992-7483.
Ft.~ll

1981 YAMAHA 860
mexim, shaft drive. new tire,
. 2 helmets excel.l ent condl·
lion. 11800. 30&lt;l·8B2 ·
Jersey milk cow, *800 flrm. 3331.
Call 81 4·256 · 1468:

63

Livestock

Rogll!ered While loco cow 76
Boats and
with flrol h'elfer 8 wk. old
Motors fr;&gt;r Sale
Refrigerator 860 . OE alec coil, • 1 ,ooo. Coll814 ·388· ' _ _ _...:__ _ _ __
.
. .
sto.ve, 'nee«tJ repair •~o . 2 . 8701 . .
m•tchlng ·bralded rugs $60 .
Cebln Cruiser boet, Cornett
304-875-6B29.
&amp; treiler, 150 Chryller en·
gina. aiHping erea. Call
Lowrey __ Geni Magic Cord
1114-268-1202.
O_rgen 1 Yz years old. Alking
1500. 304-876-3238.
. Registered ThQrOughbred
more 1960. 304-886-3881 . 1 97!1 Sleek Croft jet boot &amp;
treller. low houra . axe.
BUCK Stove, pipe &amp; ell
cond., 16.000. Call 448hookups, 304·875-6809 .
0913.
6HP TILLER , slightly uaed,
'1.1 price. Phone 304 ,8761936.
18
Camping
quote,
WANT Meaon,
to loooo
Putnem,
iob.cco
CaEqulpr,~ent
bal!. Call Morgan Woodlawn
Form. Pliny, 304 -1175·
2275. 304·.623·6843,
19 88 cam'per covered
-von. 23 .h., •2."00. Call
oflllr a, 814· 387· 7B78 ..
:

71

0

• 0 '

:

;

• ;

.: •

' ••

'"

Autoa for Sale

79 Motor• ~omea
It Cempan

19BO T Bird. good cond.,
ucrlflce 11 14,300. Col · 1878 .Trovoltroller oolf con·
talnad. alaepa 4, exc. cond.,
814-3117· 0467.
13.7110 or moko off•. Coli
1980 Chevetto " opel: Irani, 114-211-8218 . ..
lliorp. 12,71111. John'• Attro
Solao. 441·!17112.

NO MATTER WHO

WINS, WE'RE STI~L
A TEAM ... RIGHT?

Hou11 paint!ng,'lawnmower
r•peir, very · reaa~nebh~.
- " ' guaronteed. Call 4468688.
·.
Painting interior &amp; exterior,
wallpe~r hanging. li'l1ured,
Fnie eatimatH. 614·949-

~----

e

Hi. Pre11ure Cleaning. Alum·
inum 1idlng, mo~le homes,
wood, brick, aendstone
building and h_omes. Also.
heevy equipmMtt. fully in-'
aurad. Free estimat81. 614-y
949-2886.

BORN LOSER

'tWIJI.tA R?5T' 1W.OI
TH' 6VL..Lf:nN ~~

t~ ~A L.I7TOF400

ACHII.P OF 'JtXlR AbE MtelUT
~10

RON 'S Tele\tieion Service. :
Specializing in Zeni1h and ,
Motor:ola, Ouazilr, and r
house calla. Call 676-2398 ~
or 446-2454 .
'

CC»,W.~T.

F ·• K Tr~

Trimming, atump ,
removal. Coll675 -1331.

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing. lnclucU"g
,hot tar appNcation. car~efl ­
ter. electrician. m1aon. Call
304-875- 2088 or 875 ·
4660.

ANNIE

Water Wells . COnuftercial
and Domestic. Test holn.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-89.5-3802.
G8t your carpet ·in· ship
shape ..Weter removil. F,_E~
ESTIMATES, · FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER ·81 4-446-2107.

a

E &amp; R Tree Service, fu lly
insured , free estimates .
Phona 614-357-0836, call
after 5 .
Painting interior or exterior.
free animateo. Call 876·
5344 or 446-9326.

ALLEYOOP
I DUNNO /&gt;BOUT
'(1-1' REST OF YOU

PBJP\.E, BUT rM
'MAD!

SOME FO~KS OUT·
S IDE T'SEE 'rOU, PEt ..

ME, TOO! WE CAN 1T
LIVE WITH THIS KINDA
Tll-11 BURDEN ON
OUR BACKS I

AND THEY' RE

BEI&gt;RING GIFTS!

I

m

I

~ ~6;7;6:::·:::6:::18; 6=..= :::;:;::::===
82

8 :00 8 Cll CIJ 0 CIJ tlD
CD
Newt
(]) MOVIE: ' WI Waltz'
Cl) nc Tac Dough
(]) Ploy Your BHI Golf
'Trouble Shots.'
(!) Now./Sporto/WMU&gt;er
(JJ liD Studio 5oo
• Chortle' 1 Anglls
8 :30 0 I])(!) NBC Newa
Cl) MOVIE: 'The Weapon'
(]) Flohln' Hole
(I) • ClZ ABC Nowo
(I) (lD CBS Newo
(I) Dr. Who
liD Over Eaoy
7:00 D (I) PM Megozlno
(]) ESPN'o Hoioo Racing
Wkly.
(I) Enterulnmenl Tonlghl
(1) Chertle' a Angola
U ()) Tic Tac Dough
(I) liD MacNaii-Lahrer
Report
· (it Newo
Gl ~ PttOPie'o Court
Star Trek
7 :30 II rn Ue Detector
I]) Consumer Repone
Products that you can buy
every Qay are exam•ned .
(]) ESPN SporloCenter
(JJ Cl (JJ Family Feud
(I) Bualneao Ropon
(lD You Aoked For II
I1D Compttrer Programme
01 ClZ Entenaln-nt
Tonight
8 :00 II (X) crl Real People Tonight's program features
visits to the Alamo , the
world' s largest country music club and the town of
Why. AZ. 1Ril90 min .)
(X) MOVIE: ' Fon Apache,
the Bronx'
.
(X) I\IIOVIE: 'Breaking the
Sound Barrier'
(])!Spy , ,
(]) Aulo Aaciing '83: Off
Road Racing ltom Pomona. CA
(I) lit ll2l Fall Guy Colt and
Howie recruit . stuntmen to
e;l(ecute a daring rescue . (AI
12 hrs)
(I) ..tlD
MOVIE:
'Walership Down' Part 2
(I) ® In Concert al the
Met 'Placido Domingo,
Sherrill Milnes &amp;. James Lev-.
ine . · Tenor PlacidQ Domingo . baritone Sherrill Milnes
and Director James Levine
prese nt a special operatic
concert . (2 hrs.)
fJ) MOVIE : ' Some Uke II
Hoi'
8 :30 ([J MOVIE: 'High Noon'
9 :00 Cll 700 Club
U (I)® MOVIE: 'Murder
Is Easy'
9 :30 II I]) m Foell ol Ule Jo's
promotion · at a gas station
strains her friendship with
her co-worker. ~R) !Closed
Captione.dl
(]) PKA Full Contact
Karate
10:00 II Cll
Quincy Ouincv be·
comes involved in a young
man ' s st rugg le to rega1n the
use of his arms. l60 min.)
Cll MOVIE: 'Aboence of
Malice' ·
Cll MOV.IE : 'Who Ia Killing
tho
Greal Chela
of
Europe?'
.
CIJ 01 ll2l Love, Sex ... 6
Marriage? Mario Thomas
and Charles Grodm s tar 1n
this co medy about love , sex
and marriage. (60 min .)
!Closed Captloned l
(]) Non -Fiction Televiaion
Spacial 'The Cancer War .·
The institutions that control
cancer research in the Un-

Plumbing
Heating

8t

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. fourth and Pine
Phone 448-388B or 446 ·
4477
JIM'S PLUMBING 8o HEAT·
lNG . Fomerly Dewitt's
Plumbing . Call 614-3670678.

Ited States sre examined.

83

160 min .)
(fi) Newawatch
fi)INN News
10:15 ([J TBS Evening Newo
10:30 CIJ Ster Time
® Conotllutlon
fJ) In Search ol ....
1 1 :00 . . I]) CIJ 0 CIJ ® • ll2l
Newa
(]) ESPN SportoCenlor
ffi Newo/Spone/Weether
()) Dave Allen at Large
Benny Hill Show
1 1 :30 D I]) crl Tonlght Show
Johnn{s guest is George
Burns . (60 mm.)
CIJ Anolher Life
(I) Cllllno
(I) Soap
CJ (I) Hart to Han Tne
Harts set out to crack a
counterfeiti ng nng. (R) (60
min.)
(I) PBS Late Night
® :All In the Fomnv
• ~ Nlghtllni .
• f'IQneymoonera
1 2:00 (X) MOVIE: 'Mioolng·
Cll MOVIE : 'Smokey and
the Bandit'
(I) Bum• 6 Allen
(]) ESPN Boxing Special
()) MOVIE: 'Boll of Badmen·
(I) Nightllne
® MOVIE: 'KIIIor Fon:e'
•
Mary Hortmlln, Mary
Henmen
12:30 D I]) 11) lato Night with
DIIYid Letlorinon David's
guests are Steve Wright and
Mary Steenburgen.
160

Excavating

DOZER WORK By Ted
Henna, ponds , ditches.
bllaements, ate. Cell 446·
4907 . Corter &amp; Evans
Tranaportetlon .
Lonnie 8ogg1 F;xcavating.
Dozer. beckhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour or job. Call
446-7903 .

e

·Lonnie Bogga Excavating.
Dozer. beckhoe, dumptruck.
Work by hour or jqb. Cell
448-7903 .'

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

DEPENDABLE' WASHER ·
DRYER REPAIR . Guaran teed work. Call anytime
814-268-8820 or 814-258·
1207.
.
SEWING Mechina repairs,
nrvk:e. Authorized Singer
Saltls a. Service Sharpen
Scl•sors .. Febric Shop,
PomorQv. 992 -2284.

BARNEY

SHERIFF !! HOW
DO '{00 EXPECT ME
TO SLEEP ON

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR ;
SERVICE.cal_l City Furniture '
304-875-280B or 448·
Oti31 .
.

86

SHERIFF!! .

THAT THING?

General Hauling

min.)

()) Jack Benny S'MOVIE: 'The 111.20
en Hour Dream'
• ClZ ABC News One on
Ono
• Twilight Zone
1 :00 ()) I Monied . - ,
()) ABC Newo One on One

8 ())

JONES BOYS WATER SEA · .:
VICE. CoH 81 ~ - 367 · 7471 '
or 814. 367·0691 .
Need •om •• hlng , heuled _.:
eway or 1omething move_dt .,.
l!llo'll, do ~ - Coil 446-3159 ·
. between 9 en~ 6 .
.JIMS WATER . SERVICE .
ca111.1m Lon lor . 304-675· .
739 .

•

PEANUTS

1:30

D

ClZ ...e... . .

Ill

NBC

New.

Overnight

THE RESEARCH THEV'RE
DOIN6 TJ.IES£ liAYS ON
FINDIH6 OLD SUNKEN
SHIPS IS AMAZIN6

SOME PEOPLE THINK

TIIERE MAY EVEN BE

5UHKEN SHIPS FROM THE
WAA OF 1812 RIGHT
AROUNO HERE ...

Cll MOVIE: 'Mcvt...•

I SUPPOSE ONE
THE~ IS A5 60QD
AS ANOTHER

()) My Uttli Margie
(!) Newo/Sign Off
[lZ CNN lleodll. . Newa
1 :4&amp; ()) MOVIE: ·~
Of Sedlo'
2 :00 Cll Grllllt Pl-uro Hunt II,
Discover the pleaaure:a you
cart buy when money ia no
object:
'

I t)

J · ll

WHAi iHE.IF: I&lt;JE16H~,:;:_
EXCHAN6ED FOR A
LITTLE S UCSAR: .

2:30

. '.

()) Life of Riley .
,
. (]) ESPN SponaCenter

'' .
....

Now arrange the o rcted leners to
fonn lhe surprise answer ts sug gested-by the sbove car'"r 1

Mswer. A

r xxr xxJ"t x xx :r
(Answers tomorrow)

Yestefday 's l Jumbles : POUC H TWEAK DI MITY ANGINA
Answer : What happe ned to his get-up-and-go ?IT GOT UP &amp; WENT
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Centrtl St•tiOn. N"' 'f~ . N.V. 1016-3. Include YOUf tW~me. 1ddress end l ip code

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

East could duck
NORTH
+62
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• 9 63

0-11 ·11

+KJ1087
EAST
• J 10 9 8 5
+713
WEST

., J 9
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SOUTH .
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no-trump with his good club
su1t and that South's rebid to
three was optimistic in spite
of his 17 high-card points .
Then he shows how South
wins the spade, leads th'e
nine of clubs at trick two
and makes hls ga me easily if
East wins the . first club, but
will fall al least one tric k
short if East ducks.
It is a typical hand for
intermedia le p~ptls. .
If we wanted to make a
real column hand out of it.
we would m ove East 's ace of

clubs over to West and move
+94
the five of s pades over to
East.
Vulnerable: Neither
West would not play the
Dealer: South
club ace on the first club,
Wes1
Norlb East
Soulb
and we would have East
l NT
duck with his doubleton
Pass 2 NT Pass
3 NT
queen.
Pass
P ass
Pass
South would lead anoth er
club. West would duck for a
second time. If South pl ayed
dummy 's king, lhat unguard·
Opening lead : +J
ed queen would drop. and
declarer would make at
leasl te n tricks, but any
declarer with out x -ray
By Oswald Jacoby
vision would play dummy's
and Jameo Jacoby
jac k and wind up with j ust
. The bridg e teacher one club trick plus a s hght
explains that North might · headache.
(NF.WSPA.PER F.N'T'F.HPRISE ASSN.}
well have jumped to three

6iHMVJtr
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
31 Conception
I Burton in 38 Finnish la ke
"The - " 39 Colombian
5 Part
city

to

of speech
9 Roman
author

Pitcher
U Scrutinized

10 Fatty acid

DOWN

1.Z Boundary

1 Noooe
2 Face shape

13 Garbo's
" CamiUe"

Yesterday's Answer
11
Unde
r
27 Exciting
co-star .
3 Noted bop
glass
item
event (sf. 1
singer
15 Buil
ding
4 Niuerian
14
Do
penance
31
Certain
section
~
16 Mend
33 Famous
II Late
city
19
ExpWlge
baseball mgr.
Blocker
5 Devotee
I Ardor
20 Indited
34 Recompensed
.
17 ~: Gwnea 7 King 1Sp. )
21 Ancient ci ty 36 Animal's
22 Fi~n role
throat
Cornerstone
8
Blues
singing
18
Z5
Beak
part
37
rr osting
Inscription
unrnortal

ZO WiU-o' ·the'
%1 North
of HoUywood
%3 - mirabile
Z4 Nut
25 Myron
of comedy

b--+--+- f--

21 Clwnsy

crafts
21 Snapback

Z8 "Secondhand

"

!.,.,.-+-+-+-

29 RUS8ian

city
30Wee
bird
31 " A Boy
Named - ''
3% Terrible
tyke
35 Erunity

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
ill

A X Y D L 8 A A X R
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A i1
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, ·etc. •ing lc letl ers,
apootrophes , the length and formati on of the wordo are ·a u
hints. Each day I he ~ode letters are different. -·
(JRYPTOQUOTI!S

e

()) llatltelor Folher
®CBS Nfwo Nlgltt-ch

I'

TUFIR

a

______
Roofing.
shingles~ spouting
and olumlnuin· aiding work.
lnaured. Free Estimatea.
61.4 . 949-2686 .

Painting, Interior 8i exterior,
.bruah or epray •.commercial,
1 972 Chevy hoovy du!y 2 reaidentiel, mobile homes,
ton truck. 22 ft . flat bed . aflor 6, 304-875-112B,
Good running cond. 614· L.M. Johnson.
992-7789.
Call 304 -675-1293 for
77 . FORD Ranger. euto· black top paving estimates
matlc tren1miuion, PS, PB. for your drive·way or parktoo many 1xtras-to mention. ing-lot. Also Buying &amp; selling
•3800 . firm. 304-875· heavy equipment.
2663.
Roofing and Gutters. Reaso78 Chevrolet ton truck. nabla rates. Insured. 304-

rJ D

EVENING

0

.
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64
71

IL-:,:PL~U.!..!.,IT?,..d-...,......,

5/11/s:T

PAINTING • ln,trlor ond
exlerlor. plumbing, roofing,
•&lt;nne remodeling. ·20 yro.
exp. ·Call 814 · 388~ 9862 .

0

-lour

J . . -,
" ' HCI\IIqUirt. to lorm
11M
ordinary-·

Unocrornlllo

WEDNESDAY

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured cellinp commer.
clol end . roeldentiol, frolt
-lmoln. can 614·268·
1182.
.

~====::=====L::========:.J

i

·Home

ll

ftl}~ruliD
_ 'i}
. ~ THATICRA-.EDWORDQAMI!
~ \!!1 ~~·
by Henri AA19id and Bob Lee

Television
Viewing

DONE

WE

The Daily Sentinel Page

Middleport, Ohio

AN'Y'TH I.NG, MUCH..JUST SIMPLE
BREAK ING AND

lmp~ve!YMints

For 1ale metal culven 6 inch
thru 60 Inch in atock. State
approved 18 gauge 12 inch
85.36 per h .. 24 inch
610.10 per h . 38 Inch
815.50 per h . Also plonlc
culven in 11ock. 6 inch thru
18 inch, B lnci) 61 .80 per h .,
12 inch $3.60 per h . Ron
Evans Enterpri1es, 4 mi.
South of Jeckson on ST. RT.
93. 614-286-5930.

OAK TABLES on sale thio
month . Prefinished light o.r
dark. Wood World, 2606
Grand Central Ave ., Vienna,
W .Va . A dealer in Min Wax
Finishing Supplies.
Simplicity riding mower, 8
horae power. electric stert,
30 in. cut. 5 speed. 2VJ years
old, good condition. $700.
614-992·3301
' 614 -992·
2689.

J: CAL.LEO SAMA BLACK-AND-WH IT E UNIT

81

6 prom dresses sizes 7 -13,
like new . Worn only once.
Coli 448 -9769 .&lt;&gt;&lt; 448 3594.

46 Space for Rent

Pomerof

IS ON THE WAY.

'f-11

HOUSE FOR SALE in Mid·

n, 1983

DICK TRACY

Rolrlgoratoro 1110 ond up,'
waoltero 6 dryer• 1110 and
'
ONE bedroom apartment. up. All guoran,eed, good
402V. 24th. St. Pt. Plouent. ' cond. Coll4411-8181 .
phono, 1 ·81 4 ·992-5868 . ...
.64 Mi1c. Merc~andlu
Unfurnilihed 3 bedroom cen tral air. wati!Jir paid. •260.
month. 304-875-5294.
1 coff 'ee t•· ble
1 bedroom apanment. 304· 471,(:2x181hx16 'h: in. and 1
and table 26x 18\&lt;lx20\&lt;l
676 -2482.
with light welriut finiah t. 30,
32x53· 174 pioceo brown
underpinning for • mobile
46 Furnished Rooms home
uaed jult 1 yeat came
off a 14x70 mobile home.
For rent Sleeping Roome long piecea meaaure 3a".
and light houae keeping short pioceo 21 " and 10
rooma. Park Central Hotel. lnchea acro11. enterloCk In I
Cell 446-0766.
metal frame, wood grain
finish. Coil after 5PM. 448 Sleeping room 8126, utilties 3065.
paid, single male. Share
bath, 919 Second Ave. KnauH Cpal a. Firewood
Galllpolio. Call 446-4418 Price• reduced May-July.
ahor7PM .
Pick or delivered. We' honor
HEAP Vou&lt;;hers. Call 614·
256-6245 .

4 bdr .. 2 full batho, finished
b4'1ement, 2 car garage·.
AppointmOr)t only. 203 Kl·
neon Or., o ·a llipolis. 446 ·
1223 ..
3

44

Way

. 1983

MVA

MGFMV

PAH

DGA

XN

ZGAA

ZCFHY
M C

BVAH

OFGNFA

XM. ZGDHS UX H
Y.
G ,C C N A L A U M
Ye.terdlly'1 Cryploquote: ClllLDISHNESS IS A HEAVY
BURDEN ')'O CAIUlY TIIROUGH ADULT LIFE. - DR .. AR·

NOLO HUTSCHNECKER

�•

Mayors' Court
1bree defendants forfeited bonds
In the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
They wer,; Glen L. Rice, Point
Pleaant, W. Va., and Harley Boring.
Albany, $450each posted on charges
of driving while Intoxicated, and
Annie R. Cundiff, Middleport, $&amp;1,
permitting an unlicensed driver to
operate a motor vehicle.
Fined In the court were Robert
White, Racine, $&amp;1 and costs,
disorderly manner; James QuU!en.
Middleport, $00 and costs, no
motorcycle muffler; Klmale Hy ·
sell, Rutland, $425 and costs and 10
days In jail, driving while !ntoxi·
cated; Belinda S. Ross, Middleport,
$425 and costs, three days In jail,
driving while Intoxicated, and $25
and costs, no motorcycle endorse·
ment; Gregry Cundlff, .Middleport ,
$00 and costs, disorderly manner;
Dennis Blackburn, Middleport, $425
and costs, three days in jail, driving
while Intoxicated; $Z\ and costs, no
operator's license; $100 and costs.
destruction of property, and $100
and costs, destruction of village
property.

Local briefs

Area deaths

Inside today's Sentinel

Medication record card program off

In Pomeroy, six defendants
forfeited bonds and seven were fined
In the court of Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Pasu Loharjun,
Athens, $73, speeding and failure to
appear; Herbert Ervin, Racine, $45,
speeding; Samuel Anderson, Jr.,
William Van Meter, Sr., W!IUam
Van Meter, Jr., no addresses
recorded, $63 each on charges of
consuming an alcoholic beverage In
.a motor vehicle; Greg Meier,
Columbus, $44, speeding.

The Meigs County Health Department today announced the
cancellation of Its medication record card program which was
scheduled to be held tomorrow (Thursday) at the large conference
room of the Meigs Senior Citizens Center from 11 a.m . to 2 p.m.

Veterans Memorial information
Admitted .. Harold Triplett, Pomeroy; Wilbur Hanning, Middleport; Katherine Downing, Middleport; Andrew Manning, Racine.
Dlscharged··Eison Spencer, Earl Denny, Sr., Anna Ailey, Frank
Reynolds, Ruth 'i'!Jl!s, Judy McNichols, Bernice Molden.

Emergency squads have three runs .
Fined were Lewis Lawhorn,
Wtlllarn Armstrong, no addresses
recorded, $63 and costs, each, open
flask; Heinz Coats, Pomeroy, $63
and costs, disorderly manner; Otis
Core, Pomeroy, $43 and costs,
defective exhaust; William R.
Thoma, Jr., Pomeroy, $313, destruc·
tton of property, and $113 and costs,
public intoxication; timothy Justice, Pomeroy, $311 and costs,
assault upon a minor; Denver Bush,
Pomeroy, $63 and costs, disorderly
conduct.

Three calls were answered by local units Tuesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service rePc&gt;rts. At 9; 14 a.m., the
Tuppers Plains Unit took . Bob Ellis,. Route 7, to Camden-Clark
Hospital; Syracuseat2: 12p.m. took Andrew Manning from Third and
Cherry Sts., to Veterans Memorial Hospital and Middleport at 4:24
p.m. took Katherine Downing, Second Ave, to Veterans Memorial.

Farewell dinner for Layh's Friday
A farewell potluck dinner honoring Chris and Carol Layh who have
resigned their admln!stratlve positions at tbe Carleton School wlll be
held at 6: ll p.m. Friday at the school. The pubUc Is invited to attend.
Those needing further Information are to cail 992-6683.

Spring sports banquet set Monday

Firefighter agreement
halts work stoppage

..
.CINCINNATI tAP) - A threa·
tened 7 a.m . strike by Cincinnati
firefighters was called off by union
president Forrest Buckley today
after an all-night bargaining session
with city negotlatiors.
Buckley talked to union members
on the city 's fire communications
system shortly before .the 7 a.m.
walkout was to begin · and urged
them to stay on the job and to ratify a
tentatlve ·contract agreement later
today.
Mayor Thomas Brush said the
compromise agreement would give
flref!ghterE a 7.4 percent pay
Increase and that the settlement
covered 18 months, retroactive to
last December. Negotiations Mon·
day had focused on a city proposal
that would give firefighters a 5.5
percent raise this year and the same
In 1984. ButBuckleysaldfiref!ghters
wanted more money up front.
The tentative settlement was
announced shortly after 5 a.m ..
following about four hours of talks
between Buckley and City Manager
Sylvester Murray.
City Council was called Into an
emergency session about 5:30a.m.

"

Wednesday, May 11, 1983

Pai netat' Middleport, Ohio

12-lhe Daily Sentinel

Page

The Meigs High School spring sports banquet will be held Monday at
6: ll p.m. at the high school. Parents of athletes are to take two food
dishes or salad, vege~les or dessert.

· Junior high banquet Thursday

and gave the city's approval to the
proposal. Buckley went to the Eden
Park fire tower about 6:30 a.m. to
make the announcement to union
members.
Buckley scheduled a morning
ratlflcatlt&gt;n meeting for union
members In the Cincinnati convention center.
Buckley said details of the
agreement would be presented to
the public and to his union later
today and that members would vote
on ra tification. The settlement was
believed to have been a compromise
that Included an 18-rrmnth contract,
rather than the two-year agreement
the city had sought.
·
Murray said the c!ty'sofferofa5.5
percent raise, retroactive to !)e.
cember, and another 5.5 percent In
January would amount to $16
million. The firefighters demanded
7 percent the second year.
''They said earlier they'd settle for
$1.5 mlll!on," Murray complained.
"A strike by firemen Is one of the
most Insidious because of the
difficulty the public has sustaining
it," said MayorThomasBrush. " ... a
firefighter's strike has the making of
calamity."

The Meigs Junior High School all sports banquet wlll be held at 6: 30
p.m. tomorrow (Thursday) at the Meigs High School. Parents of
athletes are to take two food disheS of salad, vegeUJble or dessert.

HEAP deadline Sunday
Energy assistance program applications must be submitted to
Gallla·Melgs Corrun~nlty Action Agency by Sunday: the age11cy said
today.
.
. .
.
'
.
Letha Proffitt , Home Energy Assistance Program director for
CAA, said area rel;ldents needing assistance with utility shutoHs
must apply by Sunday to receive help. Appljcations will not be
accepted after that date.
'
Applicants must present total housejjold income verification for
the past 12 -niontlis, a shutoff notice or recent fuel bUrand social
security numbers of all household members,
Interested Individuals may apply at the following locations: Meigs
County courthouse, 992-5605; the old Thaler Ford building, Second
Avenue, GaUipolts, 444Hl611; and the Cheshire office, 367-,7311 or
992-4i629.

·Hospital plans CT scanner
Construction of an addition to house O'Bienel;s Memoria l
Hospital's computerized tomography (CT) scanner wlll be aided
with proceeds of the Athens facility's lffil fund drive.
The goal of the drive Is $00,(XX), according to fund drive
co-chairmen Edward Robe and Verda Jones. Money raised will help
delray the approximate $&amp;)0,(XX) cost of the new addition, currently
·
under construction.

Rabies clinic scheduled.•• Page 6 .

Sylvia May Linthicum

William L. Fosler ·

Sylvia May Linthicum, 56, Athens
died unexpectedly Tuesday evening
at Doctor's Hospital, Nelsonville.
She was born In Meigs County the
daughter of the late Henry and Ethel
Boyles Linthicum
She Is survived by one brother,
Harley Linthicum , Tuppers Plains;
three sisters, May Rick, VanCover,
Wash.; Hazel Shea, Akron, and
Frances Grimm, Frost, Ohio.
Funeral services wUl be held at
the White Funeral Home In Cool·
ville, Friday atll a.m. with the Rev.
Guy White officiating. Burial will be
in Troy Baptist Cemetery, Frost.
Frtends may call at the funeral
home after 6 p.m. Thursday.

William Lewis Foster, Jr., 00,
Mlle Hut Road, Racine, died
Monday at Pleasant Valley Hospital
in Point Pleasant following a
lingering illness.
'He was born Sept. 19, 1932 In
Parkersburg, W. Va., a son of the
late WUllam Lewis Foster and Doris
Wells Foster, who resides In
Parkersburg. He was a truck
driver.
Surviving In addition to his .
mother Is his wife, Ayrln Lovelace
Foster, and three sons, Eric Lee
Foster, serving In the,U. S. Navy at
Lebanon; WUliam Lewis Foster,
III, Gaillpo!!s, and Terry Ray
Foster, at home, and several aunts.
There will be no visitation or
ful)eral services. Mr. Foster
quested that his body be donated to
the Marshall University College of
Medicine for med!c3I research and
education. Arrangements were bY
the Ewing -.. Funeral Home,
Pomeroy .

Two die in
mine accident
HOLDEN. W.Va. (AP) - Offt.
clals say a "massive" roof collapse
was responsiblefonhedeathsoftwo
·· miners worklng more than half a
mile inside a Logah County coal
director, said it took rescuers hours
to recover the bodies of the victims,
and that for a time officials thought
that one of the miners might still be
alive.
Assistant state mines director
Albert Jordan today identified the
'ictlms as Denver Smith, 40, of
Baisden, and Marty Maynor, 27, of
Gilbert.
The accident ocrurte&lt;faboutll : 30
a.m. Tuesday at KaraCoa!Co.' sNo.
1 mine at Holden , officials said. The
body of 1he first miner was
recovered short ly after 2 p.m. , they
said, but the second wasn't un·
earthed for another two hours.

~~----~----------~---------'

..-,..'·
•r

HUNTINGTON - It was quit or be tired, said Marshall University
President Robert Hayes, wbo finally chose to exit on his own.
After weeks of rumors and behind-the-scenes wrangling on the
Board of Regents, Hayes ·decided Wednesday that the campaign
against him by some regents had resulted In a "no-win situation, for
me and the university."
·
At no time, Hayes said, had the board or any of Its members
outlined their grievances against him. The only publicly expressed
complailit about Hayes In recent weeks came from regent Russell
lsaaes, wlw cailed last month tor an audit of the Marshall athletic
department because It faces a $aD,ml deficit.
However, sources close to the board said opposition to Hayes had
been ·growing for several years among regents who felt he was
bucking their authority. .
.
.The board. 'a pparently pia!lned to · fire Hayes · at a meeting
scheduled fQr today, but In a press conference following Hayes'
announcement, regents president P&lt;!ul G!llner declined to say why
the regents wanted Hayes out. He conflmied that the board never
outlined Its grievances to the president.
Hayes, wlw has headed the state's second·largest university for
tjle past eight years, said his ·reslg!JatJon would take effecj Aug. 15.
However, he said he' would relinquish day·to-day control of the school
Frtd3y by beginning a vacation.
He said he plans to return In August to resume teaching as a
professor In Marshall's education department.

...

~

Congratulate
Graduates!
It's an important ,
milestone in their

lives-send special

wishes for success
.with aHallmark card.
' ,
..

DOWNING~CHILDS
AND

MULLEN INSURANCE

In one Instance, Agent Otho A.
Ezeil Jr . sent $1,595 to American
National University In Phoenix,
Ariz., and explained he was too
"backlogged" duetoavacatlontodo
research for a degree, according to
an affidavit in federal court In
Phoenix.
The school awarded Ezell a
master's degree In business admln·
L•Iratlon and a transcript showing
he had taken 10 courses for 30
credits, receiving ail Bs, the
affidavit said.
A call to the school Tuesday
reached an answering service,
where a woman said school officials
would be unavailable for comment
untU later today .
Pence said graduates of phony
colleges Include a high-ranking
Washington otflclal, a National
Foot ball League player, employees
of the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration, and state,

End marriages
Wealher forecast
Partly cloudy tonight. Low near
50. Winds southeasterly 10 mph or
less. Partly cloudy Thursday. High
.
Extended Ohio Forecast

near~.

Frldi\Vthrou&amp;h SwacJa.v:
Fair on Friday. Scattered show--&gt;-~-nns """"'....,
"-~........
ers and th..w....,,_,
FalronSundiQ'.JII&amp;hslnlhell)ld·70s
lo themkJ.80tiFTiday, themid-Wolo

An action for dissolution of
marriage was filed In Meigs County
Common Fleas Court and a dlvoree
was granted.
Filing for dis
. solution of marrt•ae
....
were Thomas Frederick Harman,
Reedsville, andKarenSueHarman,
Reedsville.
Albert R. Keeton was granted a
divorce !rom Estber L. Keeton on
charges of gross negleci of duty and

Ohio benefit cuts will be deep
© 1963 Hallmark Cards, Inc.

CLEVELAND - Ohio residents who expect to lq6e 13 weeks of
unemployment benefits should brace themselves for cuts of up to 27
weeks, oftlcllils say.
· Last week, It was reported that the number of unemployed In Ohio
was 673,ml or 13 percent In Aprll, down !rom 13.2 pereent In March.
The regulations cut 13 weeks of extended benefits for everyone, and
other federal extenslo!! .b enefits will expire or already have expired,
br!nglng the total cut to ''Zl weeks, said Roberta Steinbacher,
administrator of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
Jobless residents can count on just 38 weeks of unemployment
benefits, down from 65 weeks before the cutback, offlctals said.
The formula for deterrillnlng when the 13 weeks of aid Is dropped Is
tied to the percentage of Ohio resklents getting state-paid
unemployment benefits, otflctals said. Wben that figure falls below 6
percent, the 13 weeks ofbelleflts end. As the recession continues and
more jobless people exhaust regular benefits, the. figure naturally
drops, otfiCtaJs say.

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

local and federal employees.
None of the bogus degree-holders
was Identified.
Pence said one person has already
been convicted In the three-year
Invest!gallon, and evidence Is being
presented tograndjurtes!nArlzona,
Arkansas, Ohio, New York, Florida,
California, South Carolina, and
North Carolina.
"Hundreds of people in every
profession" received the pbony
certlflcates, Pence said. The FBI
has notified some employers 'who
had given jobs to maU-ord~r
graduates and many employees
have already lost lhe!r jobs, he
added.
Five FBI agents received a total
of 23 defirees and paid more than
$25,(XX) for the phony certificates,
Pence said. They Included degrees
for medical doctors, psychiatrists,
masters of business administration
apd masters of criminal justice.
Prices ranged from $l,rm for a
bachelor's degree to $5,001 for a
Ph.D. Some "universities" under
Investigation h&lt;&gt;1 only post otfice
boxes or answering services, he
said, and nonehadclassroomspace.

Students gu~ed by police
PARIS Riot pollee tear-gassed hundreds of students
demonstrating outside the Cannes FUm FE!$tlval and broke up
protests In other cities where students also rebelled against the
·
government's proposed educational revisions.
In Cannes, tear gas created a chaotic reception Wednesday night
for people In formal evening dress who arrived to see a film by
Japanese director Nagisa Oshima, and witnesses said many fled the
acrid fumes along with the protesters. However, several guests .
made their way through the smoke to the entrance to present their
Invitations, the witnesses said.

Ohio lottery winners
CLEVElAND- The winning number drawn Wednesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game, "The Number." was 116.
In the "Pick 4" game, played five times a Week, the winning
·
number was 5Tri.

r-----------..,--1
COUNTY
APPLIANCE INC.

w11 hero. 0 ryeq, Refrigeretoro. Rengeo, TV oeto.
677 Third Ave .

the~ riex~tre;;me;;cru;;e;lty;·;· -----~;;;;;;;;;4~4~6~·1;6;9;9;;~;;;~~

the mkJ..
SaturdiQ'
and
In
~:
Lows
In the ll&amp;i
FrldiQ',
ihe
mld-408 to the mkl-lilhSaturday and
bt the 401! SundiQ'.

Lottery winner
CJ.$VELAND (AP) The
wlnnblg number drown Tuesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
gllflle, "The Number," was &lt;I(M.
In t)le "Pick 4" game, played five
week, the winning number

ANN'S

.CAKE .DECORATING
Route 7 . ,

Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains

667-6485

APPEARING TONIGHT
THROUGH SATURDAY
FOR YOUR DINING
AND DANCING PLEASURE

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: ·Ohio foreeast

MICKEY WILSON

FROM 7-11 EACH
EVENING

WEATIIER FORECAST - The NMioaal Wea&amp;her Service
foreeuta band ol flun1es exteadlll&amp; Iron) Orepn lhroa&amp;h lhe Dak&lt;Ku
lor Friday. Sbowen are predlded for an uea ran&amp;IDifrom I..Gull!ana
lo the Canadian border. (AP Lluoerplluto).

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Hayes quits Mar8hall post

FBI probes bogus college degrees
CHARLOTTE, N. C (AP) Seizing records from Arizona to
Florida, FBI agents said they
capped a three-year undercover'
probe of diploma m!Us In eights tales
that sold phony sheepskins to
" hundreds of people In every
·
profession."
Operation "D!pscam" could lead
to Indictments agalnst38mall-order
colleges that provided fake degrees
for people now practicing In fields
ranging from psychotherapy to
cancer treatment, agents said at a
news conference here Tuesday.
"We have people with Ph.D.s In
psychotherapy who are treating
patients and don't have the slightest
quall!lcatlons," said Robert L.
Pence, the FBI agent In charge in
North Carolina.
"This Is a problem that seems to
be affecting the natlon'seducatlonal
system and Is turning out phony
graduates In every profession
Imaginable," he said.

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Meigs girls eliminated•.. Page 4

re-

mine.

Bart Lay, deputy state mines

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Area deaths ...... ............... ............. , .................... .......... Page 2
ClaMIIIed ads .... ............... ......... , ........................ Pages 1~1-11·12
Cornics-'J'V' ••..••••••••••.••••••••• ••• •• ••••••• •••••• ~ .... ......,............Pqe 18
Society ....... ......................................................... Pages ~1-8--9
Spons ..................................................................... Pages S4.

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Mostly cloody tonight with a ~ percent ~hance of showers. Low
near 58. Winds IOUtheasterly Ill SOUtherly 10 mph or ~. Friday,
scme sunshine with 50 percent chance of showers and
thuildersiDnns. ~ ~

' Extended forecast
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TOP .AWARD WINNERS- These are the top award winners at lhe
IUIDual vocal department banquet of the Meigs High School Tul!lday
night. C. Ed Harldesli, left, made the presenlallons to left to rtght, Rlto

Rhodes, a. $1,000 music scholar!lhlp; Julie Spencer, Sl,OOO music
scholan~hlp, and Jeff Carson, trophy lor being selet:led the best overal!
music student Of the high school havlng heen named to the honor by all

vocal sludents of the four high school gradl!i. The ..,holarshlps are
provided by lhe Louise Mohrhw1 Scholar!lhlp Fund. Miss Rhodes wUI
study Instrumental musical Marshall University and Mi'isSpent-er wU!
study voctu music at Ohio University . AU •enlors of the ·vO&lt;'.al
depiU'Imeni received pins and flowers durin·~t the banquet lrom the
vocal. department boosters. SlL•le Soulsby tUJd Pal Thon)l\ were the
parent co-chairpersons lor the btUlquc'l. (.1\ddltlonal photOS on P11ge 8).

Business tax ,b attle not over
bill, wa• changed by the committee
By ROBERT E. MDJ,ER
to shift more taxes to manufactur·
As8oclaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A ers and other big businesses which
pay corporate franchise taxes.
modified version of Gov. Richard
A proposal to place a 4 percent
Celeste's tax package Is headed for a
excise tax on business serviCes was
House vote, and businesses targeted
for higheJ: taxes plan to lobby scrapped after lobbyists for !awy·
against It as It advances to the ers, accountant s, engineers. a nd
others campaigned against It .
Senate.
In Its place. the committee voted
The Democrat-controlled House
Finance Corrun!ttee, voting along to Increase by I percent the Income
party lines, adopted the measure brackets In the COillOrate tranehlse
17·9 Wednesday. The vote cleared tax and dump a section of the bill
way for approval by the full House- reducing the business tax on
considered a formality- on Friday. tangible JX'rsonal property from 3.'i
Democrats control the House to 25 percent.
Manufacturers wasted not lm(' In
62-37 under Speaker Vernal G. R!tfe
Jr., 0-New Boston, one of the main . serving notice tha t they Intend to
architects of the rewrttten bill with a mount a campaign to head oft the
reputation for not bringing to the higher franchise taxes In the Senate.
Douglas Trail, vice president of
Ooor any policy measure which
Ohio Manufacturers' Assocla·
the
lacks votes to pass.
Celeste's tax package, a vital part lion, said the boost in Industrial a nd
of his $27 billion, two-year budget other business taxes would cause

Ohio to lose plants and jobs to other
states.
U the bill in Its present form Is
enacted, he said, he Is afraid any
new jooo which would be cre ated
"would be created in other states. "
Minority Republicans on the
Finance Committee said thal tlle bill
will dama g r
Industrial
development.
Rep . Thomas W. Johnson, R-Ncw
Concord , ranklng GOP member of
the panel. said legis lators and lhP
governor campaigned on pmmiSl's
to Ct'f'ate new jooo. "This flies In til&lt;'
face of that." Johnson said.
F inane&lt;' Chairman William E.
Hir tg. D-New Philadelphia, sa id the
tax chanws were necessary to
maintain a fair balance between
Individual and corporate taxpayers.
The bill accommodates the request of tho gov"rnor that busl·

nesses pay :1~ JX't'Cent ofOhlo's taxes
while lh&lt;' ol he r 6H pet-cent Is
alloc·ated to Individuals. he sa id.
Hinlg said thl' pmposal provides
sign ificant Increases to education;
funds programs for the needy; and
•~&gt;duel'S appropriations for somp
agenci(&gt;S.
Celeste brushed aside a quesllon
on whet her he had su[fered a defeat
with tho dele tion or tlie business
. .'\('IVIC&lt;'S lax .

He said, In effect, that he thought
his proposal was fair , but that he
ll'Cogn!zes that th&lt;' lA.'!{Islature will
"work Its wLo;dom" on how to
gen&lt;'ra te taxes. Th" Important thing
L' that the taxpayer balance Is being
retain&lt;'&lt;!, the governor said.
In order to maintain the 68-32
Individua l-corporate tax load ratio,
sevpral other parts of the bill had to
be changed. Hinlg sa id.

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Reagan pledge satisfies some critics
of current nuclear arms control talks
By TIM .AHERN
A.880claled Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -A pledge
by President Reagan to make a
"comprehensive" review of U.S.
' nuclear arms control proposals has
satlsfled some congressional critics
of the MX missile as Congress nears
crucial votes on the giant new
nuclear· tipped weapon.
After Reagan's promise was
announced In the House Appropr!a·
lions defense subcommittee Wed·
nesday, the panel voted9·3topemilt
the Pentagon to spend money
appropriated six months ago.
A slmllar result was expected
today in :he Senate Appropriations
Committee, which sched41ed a vote
this afternoon on whether to tree the
$500 ml!llon for research, development and flight testing of the new
mtssne.·
Reagan was ."very pleased" by
the House panel's vote, deputy
White House press secretary Larry
Speakes said
Speakes predicted theSenatevote
would be "much more difficult."

But thai forecast was disputed by
committee sources who declined to
be Identified.
Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-On~ ..
chairman of the appropr!a tlons
panel, planned to try to halt freeing
the money "but he doesn't have the
votes. They just aren't there," said
one source.
Reagan outllned his promise In a
letter to Rep. Norman Dicks,
D-Wa•h., an MX critic.
Dicks termed the letter "a good
faith Initial effort toward a comprehensive and stable arms control
policy" and then voted for freeing
the MX money In the House
subcommittee.
Another critic, Rep. Albert Gore
Jr., D·Tenn., said the letter "made II
crystal clear to us" that the U.S.
proposal at the Strategic Arms
Reduction Talks (START) wUI be
changed.
U the votes by.._,J{.e House
subcommittee and Senate panel are
upheld bY the full House and Senate,
the Pentagon could build and test.the

MX.

Still to come are votes on whether
to approve the recommendations of

a White House commission tha t 100
MX weapons be put Into Minuteman
silos near Cheyenne. Wyo., and a
small , sing le-warhead missile be
developed.
Wednesday's vote was the second
recent win for the MX. Last week,
the House Armed Services refused
to cut MX money from the pmposed
1984 budget.
The White House commission.
headed by former national securlty
adviser Brent Scowcron, also
proposed a " new direction" In arms
control efforts aimed at limiting
nuclear warheads rather than
mlssiles.s promised to review the
U.S. proposal at the START talk.~
that resume next month·ln Geneva
"with the Intention of developing
such modlflcatlonsasarenecessary
to renect the Commission' s
approach."
The START Ullks Involve long·
range nuclear weapons and are
separate from another set of
U.S.-Sovtet negotiations aimed at
limiting nuclear weapons In
Europe.
Reagan also pledged to

"promptly undertake a major effort
to bring the proposal of a small ,
single-warhead ICBM to fruition on
a high p1ior!ty basis" and said he
"saw merit " In proposa ls to create a
!X'rmanent, bipartisan advts01y
commission on arms control.
Congress has turned down two
previous Reagan administration
attempts to buDd and base the
missile the Pentagon says Is needed
to replace America's aglng land·
based missile force. The I;(XXJ
Minuteman weapons are the heart
of that arsenal, and the Pentagon
says they are vulnerable to a first
strike by Inc reasingly accurate
Soviet weapons.
Reagan, meantime, met for a
second day with a group of
congressmen to lty to win their
support for the MX.
The president sa ld he supports the
concept of a nuclear "build-down"
which calls for deStroying two
warheads for each new one that Is
built.
But, he cautioned. "It Isn' t a'
simple as It sounds, In order to · .
:
achieve equality."

Residents lose. first round mining .b out
ATIIENS, Ohio (AP) A
week to order a temporary halt to
citizens' group has lostltsfirstbattle·· longwall mining operations at
against a rew mining technique that
Southern Ohlo Coal Co.'s Meigs
groop members say Is responsible
Mine No. 2. COAL mernbers had
tor damage to sane homes and sought the order, saymg the
. watel' ·suPI)lles In Ohio's coal
company no longer bas a pi!rmlt to .
country.
mine at Meigs ~e No. 2. ·
But lnembers of Citizens Organ·
tz.ed Aaa!nst Lortgwall.lng plan to
l..OJWWall rhlnlng, used for years
continue their efforts to stop the In Europe, was recently Introduced
lnlnlni technique when the state In the United Slates as a rnore
. Reclamation Board !'I Review eftlclart ~ ._rer . means· of
,bean arguments Oil it~ month.
'I1Ie review board retia!Jed last

~~UM!~

process. a machine cuts a 500-foot·
wide path throUgh a coal seam and
allows the earth to collapse behind lt.
COAL members say the sudden
s!nklng of the earth above the mines
has caused property damage and
dEll;troyed some water S!IPPIIE!$.
In Friday's decision, the review
board apparently agreed with

arguments II)' .Soo.thern Ohio Coal
attorney Michael MWer, who said
any temporary sbltdown ot long·
wall operationS Wl,lUid force the

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closing of Its three-mine CompleJO ::
andput1,900peopleoutofwork. ThO ·;
company recently recalled 1,401 ·:
miners atter an extended layo!f. · . ·
Jay Wamsley, attorneyforCOAL( ·:
said at Issue Is whether Southern · :
Ohio has a legal permit to mine tll!d : •
whether the longwall meth&lt;id : :
·
threatens property owners.
· Southern Ohio has acknowledge(j \
some property damage as a result of : ~
longwail mining and .has offered · :
compensation to some residents.. · : •

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