<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14051" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14051?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T20:25:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45151">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/c55f9347c44c2ec87ac0d4c966407a8e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1dfd5776697334e38186b9c2df5ea078</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="43932">
                  <text>Finance committee recommends tax increase
COLUMBUS, Qj11o (AP) - Ohlo's second tax lncreue Ill less than five months has been linked to
IOITII! big state budget cuts and rec:ommeuded for •
puuae by tbe Senate Flnapce Committee.
Tile vote shortly before mli!nJebt waa 7-3 with caly
one Democrat j~ siJ majority RePublicans In
suppOrt.
~leaders said tbe pac~ would~ put
to a 1loor vote Ill tbe Senate today and forwarded to
tbe HOUle, controlled by Democrats, for Its

.COIISideraUon.
Senate Finance Chairman Stanley J . Arotdf, R·
Clnc!Dnati, and other supporters sa.ld tbe omnibus
proposal and a round Of spelldlng cuts In the ftacal
year start1Jii July 1 would erase a $1 billion budget
deficit proJected for the state by tbe end Of tbe blet1·

nlum on JWJe Jl, 1983.
A series of committee amendments to the bill made
substantlal changes from tbe version which first was
IIIIIIOUIICed by tbe Republicans last

wee~

. Sale Ends
Sat., Apri13

Tile ljlll retains a temporary Increase In tbe state
IDcome tax as propoeed ln. tbe ortglnal bill. But It
makes tbe boost blaer and anticipates ,. yteld or
$A87.5 miWon Ill Its one year Of collection rather than
tbe 1391 mllllci1IUIIOIIICI!d earlier.
Instead Of raising tbe tax on lower Income brackets
by .JD &lt;11 percent, that lncreue now WOIIld be .125 &lt;11
percent. In the upper bracket~, tbe booat would be
.735 InStead of the :ro Of 1 J)eroent proposed earner.

As tor tbe spending cuts mandated by the bW, state
agenctes would be recluced by 7 percent In the 19821983 fiscal Yl!ar, Instead Of 6 percent aa provtded Ill ihe
orlglnal bW.

Tile revlsecl version, as dld the original, exempts
Pl'lrn!uY and secondary education from the 7 percent
cut but lmpolles a slaah Of 3.5 percent In school operat·
lng subsidies.
Also In education, the rewritten bW restores most ol

the categotical programs which would have been con·

pereeot.
~ by Aronoff's committee were provisions
which would have dented Ohioans the opportUnity to
defer some ot their state as well as federal taxes by
Investing In all savers and Individual retirement
accounts.
Aronoff said the deletion cost the budget-balancing
. pac~ about PI million but In view Of the size ot the
budget problem ''we thought tbla was just excess
~.''

Democrats wltbheicl thelf support In committee
because the 7 percent state agency cuts wW applY to
welfare benefits, after canceWna lllereases In Ald to
Depetadent Children and gl!neral poor relief scheduled to take effect next' July 1.
Denying the previously-approved boosts of 5 per·

•

at y

e

The Saving Place®

solldated or ellmlnated by the earlier bW. However, It
Imposes on them a 15 percent cut.
The new bW also retains aid to disadvantaged pupU
and gifted pupU programs but cuts their funding by 9

cent In ADC and 10 percent In pneral rellel, plus the 7
percent cut, wW put welfare benefits back to 1!rl9
levels, sald Sell. Marlgene Valiquette, D-Toledo.
Oilier committee cha.nps restored to education.
subsidies a PI million outlay to COIII!r costs ot state
school loans In future months, and relnatated a provl· ·
slon that Increases sales tax credits tor vendors to
help defray their COlts of collecting that tax for the
state.
Further, the bW removes an eXIsting requirement
for the state to balance Its budaet by the end ot the.
fiscal year July 1, and says lruitead that It must be·
balanced by Pee. 31, 1982. That gtves the state a:
chance to spread the solutiOn to Its ftacal problem·
over a longer pertod, Aronoff said.
The bW also has language under which the 7 percent budget cut wW Increase to 8percent Jan.1 unless .
revenues have been up to estimates used to draft the:
bill.

•

enttne
U C."t'
A Multimedia Inc. Ne::p~~,...

2 Section&amp;, 12 flagot

Voi.3D,No.245
,Copyrlthtod 1912

Pomoroy-:-Middloport, Ohio, Wodnosclay, March 31, 1982

Columbia mission
said spectacular
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
- Home safely after a spectacular
"toboggan" rtde from space, ~tro­
nauts Jack R. Loosma and C. Gordon Fullerton begin a week ot
debrtetlng today, recounting for experts their etaht days at adVenture
aboard the shuttle Columbia.
Columbia landed with a thump
Tuesday at the White Sands Mlsstle
Range In New Mexico after stsylng
In orbit an extra day to walt out a
sandstorm that scrubbed a tanding
theday~~•
It was the third test flight for Columbia, Its toughest and longest.
The spacecraft faces but one more
test mission before It starts flying
cargo for pllj "')g customers.

'LIMir.4 )Melttlt fr . .

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

•.,.l••mem: U"'ltftl

9 96
•

.

0urReg.
13.97

94.88

Radial-tuned, Shock•

Dllc/Drum lrake Special

"Our Best" shoCks In sizes
for many U.S. cars. Save.

For mony U.S. cars. Light
trucks and Imports higher.

39.88~~8

36-month Auto llaiMfy
For many cars and light
trucks. Maintenance-free.

4.88

1hl.• Mlnule•

Spray-on silicone.
Hard Shell Finish•
protection. Shop
and save nowl

59
. •97 78.88
0ur·

1.58ea.
malt-

AM/FM With Tape Player

K

8-track or cassette. Fits
light trucks.

In sizes to fit manY' U.S.
and foreign cars. Savel

011 Fllt.n

'RO&lt;

NO Hard
Rubbing
OrBUfllnO

ailll answering

engineering ques-

tions about the performance at
Columbia.
There was no question about how
the two spacemen felt. Said
Lousma from space: "This Is
really a beautiful flying machine."
Astronauts, space center
workers and.friends stw!ID a light
rain Tuesday night to welcome the
returning spacemen at Ellington
Air Force Base near the Johnson
Space Center.
Lousms thanked the crowd, par·
ticularly for their prayers. "I've al·
from end to end, part1cutarly the ways said a few prayers are worth
a lot ot training," he added. ·
tobogan down from u~talrs-"
F.ullerton's speech was short.
In avercomlnrl all Its problems, .
"My
job was to lower the landing
· be sald, "Columbia demonstrated a
gear.
Jack's waa to land and make
maturity that was really
unexpected. II
•
~
the speeches."
Nel&amp;hbon decorated the yards at
Tile spacecraft la!xled at 9: ~
both
astronauts' borneiJ with ~
. !l·itl· lyfST TueldaY•. COillP~!In&amp;_a af welcome.
In nearby Frlenda·
jOurney d. nioi'e than 3.3 mWion
wood,
where
Lousma
lives, slre!!ts
rn111:S and 129 orbits of the Earth. lt
~
llnf!d
with
fla~
and more
dlopped from space and aped
signa.
IICI'CIIwe&amp;tern Mexico and the UniThe third lllght of Columbia
ted States before diving IOWard a
reached
several Important mUes·
safe touchdown on a dry 1akebed
tones
for
Amertca's space transamid New Mexico's mounialns.
Except for sl&gt;me missing t11es on portation system. ' The shuttle's
Its skin ani! a few scars and eight days aloft was almoat twice
scratches, Columbia wu In good as long as the earlier two flights
shape. Teehnlelansquleklyclralned combined.
Columbia's first commerctal
surplus •fuel and chemicals and
payload Is planned for late this year
towed the stubby-winged craft to a
- a couple of communications sa·
service area beside the desert run·
way. In about elgh~ days, the space- teWtes- but the craft and Its sister
craft wW be lifted atop a jumbo Jet ships, now being assembled, have a
backlog at customers waiting to
and flown tri the Kennedy Space
launch
cargo. .
hour fcir road deputies, dlspa!Ches . Center for refitting. A fourth flight
and Investigators ·and 35 cents an
hour for cooks and secietarles.
Commlaaloners Indicated today
they wW review at once the salsry
The Meigs CoWlty Health Depart• Health is requesting thai persons
structure ot other county empleyes
rilent receives a great many . wanting this testing dooe for health
reasons, to obtain a written requeOII
and wl!l revtew funds to try toeome requests to test homes and mobile
up with the necessary money to homes for formaldehyde poiliO!ling. • from their physiclallll.
This request along with the name,
This testing carmot be done by the
provide comparable tncrea.ses tor
address,
phone nwnber, and direcall county employes. Other em· local health depa!Vnent because it
tions
to
the
homeowner's property
requires special equipment and
ployell were 81ven IDcreaaes at tbe
should
be
broll!lht
to the Meigs Coun·
Ume that the aherltf's department trained persormeL
Bettled a strike In 1!111, but were not
However, the Ohio Department of ty Health Department which will
lllven Increases tbla year.
Health will provide lhi,ol service oo a . forward the infonnation and make
arrangements to have the ·ohio
request basill.
Tile bealth and welfare benefits
Because of the high demand for Department of Sealth do the actual
provided for In the new contract
this service the Ohio Department of teslins.
with the'employes at the llherlff provide for dental; optical, preserlptiOII and life IDsurance benefits.
Meetlni ID rep1ar selllon Tuesclay, the conu1lissloaers opened
bids tor bituminous inall!rlals for

c='::~.~~=

Our5.97

c. wax

Is planned In June.
For Lousma and Fullerton, the
adventure Is over and It's time for
tbe paperwork. Tile astronauts will
spend bpurs over the next seven
days spealdng Into tape recorders

'KM
Cord
OUr Reg. 41.97- A78x13

29.97
PIUl F.E.T. 1.59 Each

• "'ur...,. 4 Ply

•

• 7 Mull-llped TreGd llbl
• Modem-atyted Whn.wall
All nrea Plus F.E.T.

Mounting Included -·No Trade-In Required

.---___,~

FORT IRWIN, c8uf. -A paratrooper whole pelvis

a!rty=..~.~

!llllDt waa reached.

It provldel:
(1) Ef!ectiW! Aprlll, sherlff'a departmellt employes will ra'elw
he&amp;lth and we1tare coveraae at a
COlt to the cowtty of 1U cents per
hour per employe. No other Irion&amp;:
t1ry compenslon will be provided

there and five were at oilier hospitals.

Davis resigns Columbus post
COLUMBUS, Oblo - The superintendent at Columbus schooil,
JOIIeJlh Davts, said Tuesday he waa resigning from the poeteffeetlve
July 31.
Davia, !15, IW beaded tbl! nation's 14th Jar&amp;elt school district s1noe
Auguall!l'IV and~ t.ll an educator for 32.,y.ean.
.
',.
He was In charp of the school system dUI'Ini desegt esallm and
more recently was lnvolved·ln the closing of more than a dolr.en city·
schools.

cluriDa 1982.

Ohioan killed in helicopter crash
FORT STEWART, Ga.- An Army sergeant from CeUna, Oblo,
wl' k1lled and two other men erttleally Injured when a U.S. Army
helicopter crashed on a training mission near here Tuesday, Army
offlclall sald.
Sgt. Ricky D. Zlzelman was killed aboard the helicopter, which

was on a mission fromFortCampbeU,Ky., whenlterashedneartbla
southeast Georgia post, Fort Stewart spokesman Dean Wohlaemuth
said.

HospltaUzed In erttieal condition were Sgt. Dale Williams, who
suffered a fractured pelvis; and a warrant officer who suffered head
lnjurtes, base spokesman Gene Sexton said Tuesday night.

State will provide assistance

the county hllbwaY department
and tbele were tabled tor funller
studv. Bids were •receiVed from
Ashland Petroleum Co., A.lhland,
Ky., Mar·Zane, Inc., Zanesville,

and

A.lphalt

Materials

Co.,

Marietta• .

Aaii epte bids were received
from ftfld Ohio Valley ~ted.
Marietta and DaVIa Co. -11 Jseklon
8.5 percent depending upon · and tbele were tabled for funller
atudy.
Cll'slfk\ltlon.
Appllclltlonll t o - .. depolltoWeiLl stated: "We feel the new
1111 eement reached Ia an equitable rles tor the active public fundi d.
Melp County were receiVed from
Olli! tor both sides. We are'bappy to
Celrtral Tnllt Co., NA. Mlddlepcrt;
be able to reach IUChan &amp;llleetlletlt
The Farmers BaDJt and Savlnp
betore the W•h*"'ay rnldulght
deoc!Hne and avert a work stopplp Co., Pomaor. BaDJtOneotPomeroy; Tile Racine Home-National
IUCb .. tbe Cllll! that took place In
Bank, and the DllmoDd Savlup
April, 1981. We a~tetbeeoopo
and Loan. Ponoaoy. AD app!Jc•
eratiOII d. all pu1les Involved In
t1on11 were tabled tor fllrtber ltUdy
reacillllr IIIII tettlement".
by
· tile boaJ"d and the county
Tile Jan. 1, 1983 pay IDcreuel .
treuurer.
·
wW mean an addltlonal41i.IJI!Idl an
(2) Effective Jan. 1, 1983, alllherttr'a depllrtmellt employes wW reCeive a waae lncn!ue averagtnc

..

Dea.dline near for FHA assistance
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio ~ Farmers suUerlnl losses from adverse
weather In 1981 have untU AprU l9 to ftle an application for Farmers
Home AdmlniBtration assistance, the FMhA says.
FMhA state Cllrector John W. Brown said Tuesday the loans are
made to eligtble farmers to enable them to return to normal
operatlons.
The deadline applies for farmers In the following Ohio counties:
AUen, Athens, Auglalze, Brown, Clark, Clinton, Delaware, Fairfield,
Fayette, Franldln, Gallla, Guernsey, Henry, Hocking, Jackson,
Knox, Lawrence, Llcklni, Logan, Madison, Marlon, Meigs, Montaomery, Morgan, Paulding, Perry, Preble, Scioto, Shelby, Union, VJn.
ton, Warren and Washington.

T_ypewriter weapon in m!!-rder
CLEVELAND- A realtor apparentlybestendead with a typewriter was found In her blood-stained office, pollee said.
The body of Leanna C. Copeland, 65, waa found lying face-up near
her desk lit the Copeland Realty Co. office In tbe city's Collinwood
section on Tuesday, pollee said. There apparently had been a atruggle because blood waa splattered on the walla and the office was
ransacked.
Pollee described the assault as unusually vicious. The body was
found at 10: Jl p.m. after s man who lived upstairs !rom the office
reported bearing noises.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - Tile winning number dlawn Tuesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally eame ''The Number" was 191.
In the lletJllweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 0681. : ·
The lottery reported earnlnp of ~.074 on Its daUy game. The
earnlnp came 011 s&amp;les ot ~7,409.50, whUe holders Of winning ·
tiCkets are entitled to share S3110,335.00, lottery officials said,

Weather forecast
Clear tonight. Lows around tO. Sunny Thursday. Highs 65- '10.
Chance at near zero percent tonight and Thunday. Winds we~terly
around 10 mph tonliht.

Eae•H O¥o Forecast

'

Fire levels mobile ho~ at Danville
Tile mobile home d.

was broken In

a huge airborne mWtary exercise thst left four dead and 7llnJured
says a gust d. wiDd hit him about 00 feet above the California desert,
snarling the straps of his parachute.
"I hit the ground, rolled abouttbreetlmes and started to pass out,"
said Army Spec. f DanlleMaynard,24, otNewYorkClty,oneOf2,300
soldiers who took part Tuesday In the first exercise ot units ot the
Rapid Deployment Foree from all tour mWtsry services.
Three of the Injured paratroopers were reported In crttieal condition with head lnJurtes at Lorna LIDda University Medical Center, 60
mUes from the jump site. Three other soldiers were hospitalized

C'o mmiSsion
ratifies new
sheriffs pact
tOday ratlfteatlon of a new two-year
contract between the Meigs County
· Shertff's Department and Local
1J81, county sherlft's employes,
which wW run from AprU 1, 1982
through March 31, 1984.
The present COD~ of the aht
rift's employes would hav~ expired
at rnldnliht tonJabt. Neaotlatloos
tor-the new contract which has been
lll'd.llctally approved by all puiSes
and will be omctally slgDed 011Apt11
6 tOok place between the sherlf! and
hll employe!! with thecommllllon·
en lllttiDi In on tbe negotiations'.
In IJIJI01IIIcilli tbe lettlement.
Commission President Het1ry
Weill sald after approximately IIlli
aeekl o1 111110t1at1ons, the ~

Thank You For Shopping AtK marf

Four paratroopers die in exercise

1'oa1 cardlllo and all d. -Ill ·coa~enta were

deaboyed by lire about lO p.m. Tt.....;y. Tile Jtutllnd Fire Department~ a call to die laclt!ce crl
llaall4,111 Route Ill_..
Danville. Calll8 d. tbe blue wu 1111t diC u I ~
·

a.

'

lbt a II' 8 tla:r:
Pua, dolldJ ~-a-ce crl.,.en and tllwldenlorlmW.
....,. V.ttbk tit ' I . . . a
crl ~en, IIIIIDIJ, _..
llleM&amp;,B ll.r.- ....... andB 1811Diow . . t.olow . . 1Awa
BLI .., Ia tilt ... 111111'1 ~ ui!Wm:da71D the ... &lt;'Aioler
s-181 wlllliJIPIIa ... - . . to low ....
Fltda)'

+·-

�March 31

·C ommentary·

_Named to SVACdi-eam team

,.,. 2-The Dally Sentinel
l'amltoy

Ohio

Mhhlleplrt, Ohio

Wldne•dC11f, March 31, 1912

Wahama defeats MeigS'
Meigs opened up a 2~ lead In the
very first frame on a triple by
Brooks, a pair of walks to Boyer
and Kovalchik and a single by Way·
land. Wahama retaUated In their
halt of the tnnJng with Powell's
three run homer following singles
by Darren Gilland and George
Zuspan.
In the second frame, Meigs regained the lead with two more tal·
lies on a bases loaded single by
Roger Kovalchik. Waham~ answered In their haU of the tnnng with
five runs on just two hits. The big
blow In the Inning was Davis' blast
Into the left centerfield bleachers.
Meigs closed the gap to within
one In the third with three more
runs on three bases on balls and two
hits. Stewart and Boyer had the
RBI singles for the Marauders In
the Inning.

II)' Gaey Clllrk

Galbraith's missionL--___

The Daily Sentinel
lllf ',... rt~n .,. l
1'11'11Wr11~ , fHiiu
llf.ttlotiM
nt:YCrTf'll 1'11 TIU: JNTio:Rfo:.'iT OF THf". Mt:I(;S.r•tASON AKI':A

ROBERT L. WINGETT
l'ubUHik•r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
A1111iMLIDl hbllllhrr/( 'tHilrttllt'r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nrw 11 t:dltur
AIIIHN ' ill~ Prt&gt;K!l,
Nt'WIIINIPII., P•blltd..·n~ AM~MM 'illth~n.

A Mfo:MHt:K uf TIW

ln1Mnd Dally Prt'tlll AIIHtM'illlMIII and tbt•

___________

Anwriu•

l.fo:TTJo:tut Of OPINION llrt' ••·h·um1'fl . TIM·y Mhl~&amp;~kl br k"MMf tNI11 . . wonb I..,;. All
it•t"""" 11rr •ubjn·l lit niiUnl( 11nd mu141 br llil(ltt'CI wllb 11111114", lddrr1111 1nd lt•lcpiMmr
Mlmht.,. Nt~UIIi,r;rwd Wltrn vrfll tw puhllt~ht"tt . l.r.llrniiiMIUW b.· I•IC••.t bllllr . llddr~Hinl(

........._

iMIIIH'!I,IMIIP"MIIINIItit"!l.

; ~

-. .

___.

Enter Mexico

The fonner American Embassy residence in Managua says it all.
Like a proc0118ul's palace, it sprawls gleaming white across a hillside
dominating the city's western outskirts.
Jl llU seen only occasional use in recent years, primarily as a guest h~
for Important visitors from Washington. The ~~f!~bassador moved to more
modest quarten1 after the Sandinista revolution, .'" ~eepm~ With . the
generally lower American profile that has been mamtamed locally ~mce
that event.
But the residence represents an aspect of the past that is essential to an
undel'lllandlng of the present tunnoil not only in Nicaragua but throughout
central America, a.nd of why dealing with it is proving 80 difficult for the
United States. ,
.
.
,· . ·
Perhape the brightest spot in the whole dismal picture is that the Unrted
'· ·Stales, If 11 chooses, does not have to deal with It alone. Mexico, as you must
·by now have heard, has come fo':"ard with an offer of .its good offices. . ·
The details of that offer - mediation of assorted differences Wlth El
Salvador's rebels and CUba as well as Nicaragua's Sandinlstas, includi~g
the latter's ominOWI military buildup - may be of less importance at th..,
. pi&gt;lnt than the fact that it has been made. And by whom.
.
· · For one thin~, it is a sign that while the Umted States may still be
: dmrunant It is no lon~er the only power in the region. Mexico not only has an
· Interest 1~ developments but is in a position to do somethin~ about it. And in
doing so, it is not hampered by a record of intervention on behalf of
repression.
_
For another, let it be recalled that Mexico's own security has been cfloo
as one of the primary reasons for Washin~ton's to~h stance in Central
· America. The expressed fear is that if the smaller countries succwnb to the
· rebel left, the biggest regional domino of all could also fall.
Notably absent in this scenario has been evidence of fear on the part of
the Mexicans themselves. Instead, they have consistently opposed U. S.
Initiatives aimed at containing the leftist threat, possibly because they view
the practical eHect as bein~ the exact opposite - magnification of the
threat.
· The days when stern words from the proconsul could bring a
recalcitrant Latin regime to heel are long gone. As the Mexicans, who have
·so often been on the receiving end, well know.
· There has been a hint of doubletalk In Washin~ton's response to the
Mexicans bu't at least it has not been a cleiHul "no." Possibly, according
to repo~ from some Informed sources, merely to avoid offending the
Mexicans. Or possibly, accordin~ to others, in expectation that the effort will
fail and as a consequence the Mexicans will have to wise up to the true
nature of the threat to regional security, vindicatln~ Washin~ton's hard·
liners.

Mr. Reagan's ambassador to
France came last week to New York
to deliver a speech to the Council on
Foreign Relati0118 in New York and
to its counterpart in Chicago, same
speech, which is OK inailmuch as the
theme he addressed did not ~
sole8ce overnight, nor is It likelY. to
do so a decade hence. The theme is
simply stated, but intricately
argued. It is that the United States
must resist any temptation, however
beguiling, to pull our forces out of
Europe. "EvenlfwehatedEurope,"
Galbraith said, "it would be stupid
to do so. The problem is that there
are non-stupid pe~&gt;ple who want us to
pull out of Europe, and the imperative is to persuade them that
from any point of view, it doesn't
make sense."
Evan Galbraith is by profession a
banker, ·a graduate of the Harvard
School of Law, and a man whose
refreshing impact is already
re~istered on the French diplomatic
community. Sen. Claillorne Pell,
who as a member of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
closely questioned Presid~nt
Rea~an's nominee, looking for
weaknesses (.Galbraith) was a
~oliticai appointment), finally
capitulated, reading gracefully into
the record a statement that although
he conventionally gives a standard
speech deploring political appointments, in this case he chose not
to do so, having satisfied himself of
the special qualifications of
Galbraith to act as our ambassador
to France.
Why' Well, that is not particularly
relevant to the thesis, bot the am·
bassador lived 10 years in France,
knows the French and their
lan~uage, headed up the Goldwater
for President committee in Europe
in 1964 and combined a jeweler's eye
ror relevant geopolitical questions.
- with a kind of candid pro-Western,
pro-capitalist chann that has not
e!lcaped the attention of President

.

.

Letters to editor
Not shot in Meigs
In a recent radio broadcast Paul
J:larney asked the question, "Why
&lt; r'has the man who shot President
::: '· Rea~an not been tried and sen·
·•
tenced?"
Answer - President Rea~an was
not shot In Meigs County.
Asa A. Hoskins.
..

Are you read~??
. God has ~iven me faith and a
roessaMe to tell those people who are
wlllin~ to believe. I became a
··Christian as a youn~ teena~er. While
servin~ my country I was severely
wounded and trapped in a dama~ed
blinker all alone with several enemy
soldiers located just outside of the
bunker.
Realizin~ my life was in ~real
cian~er, I prayed to God, makin~ a
conunibnenl - if He would let me
live, I would serve Him in the future.
What did I mean by servin~ Him?
1 meant I would become a stron~er
. Chrltilian. I foiled to become a
: stronger Christian, instead I became
· • weaker Christian, to a point that I
·stl)pped Iovin~ and trustin~ a II
)le)lple. When this happened I found
life hard to cope with.
· On January 3, 1981, I made a New
Year's resolution, to love and lrust
: everyone. All I did so, I felt much
~ !tetter. That night just pnor to
· falling asleep, God's spiritual power
.entered my body.
I was so excited about my ex·
.perlence, that I told my mother and
told her what had happened. She
asked if I prayed to God for the ex·
perience. I told her of my re!lolution.
She told me she had sensed that I
was troubled and she had prayed for
me, and perhaps God had answered
her prayer.
God put me thrOilj(h a mental
breakdown, where I did a lot of
unliBual things, but the last unusual
thing that happened, was when I
took a shower. God made it feel like I
was submerged under water,
-lleclluse of the approximately 20
yean1 I had been a Chrilltlan I Willi
never bllptiled. .
God wu making it apparent that

i

.J

HI! w8nls all Christians to be har&gt;tized after becornin~ Chnstians.
As my mental breakdown ended
my disposition chan~l'tl. Many sinful
thin~s I had once loved, smnc of
which I didn't know to be sinful, I
had no rnure desire tu keep. God also
gave rnt! a

reli~ious messa~~~
~iven

me let no man

takeaway .
God's mcssa~e is this: No person
on earth will know if they arc ~nin~
to heaven, only God will know for
sure. The faith we have when we die
is how we will be selected. So It is iro- .
portsnl that we try to live our lives
as stron~ Christians every day, for
we never know when we will die.
Faith is measured by sin. The
more we sin, the less faith we have. I
believe God took me frnrn a weak
Christian, and made me into a
slron~ Christian. I would like to
share with you how God has dircctl'll
me to live my life.
Probably the most important
quality is to love and trust everyone,
and to hold no grud~es;
Not to lie, cheat, steal, or fail to
pay debts as they are due;
Not to work on Sunday, only if it is
mandatory to do so;
Not to ~amble at all ;
Not to read or watch dirty books,
rmt~Hzines,

and m'ovies;

Not to drink all'ohol, smoke
marijuana, or take dru~s.
Not to let your temper ~et nut of
control;
Not to use profanity;
Not to be jealous of others;
Not to have sex without the benefit
of marria~e. and not to jud~e others.
To become a Christian is a simple
procedure, getting on your knees
and praying to God, saying exactly
this, "Dear God, forgive me of my
sins for I have sinned, I accept your
. Son, Jesus Christ as my life-time
Saviour." All you have done so, you
are a Christian for the rest of your .
life. Make up your mind to be baptized as soon as you can. Becoming a
Christian could mean you have to
change yoar lifestyle, since God
wants strong Christians only.
Thanks to God I am ready for tJtat
Judllement Day. The qUestion Is, are
you? - (Name withheld upon
request).

within what they deem sensible
military perimeters.
But in between are what one might
call the Mansfieldites. Sen. Mike ·
Mansfield, aij majority leader,
argued strongly for the withdrawal
of American troops. His argwnents
were hardly eccentric. Indeed, as
recently as one year ago, Harold
Macmillan, on television in
America, said: "Why should be
United States provide military
protection for Europe, given that
Europe is larger, more heavily
populated and richer than the United
States?" To which the only answer
is: Morally, there is no reason at all
why the United Stales should bear
the burden bearable by the party of
the first part.
It is Mr. Galbraith's point that the

United States' presence in Eurpe
serves not European purpclOIO!!I exclwrlvely (Europe's Interests it 00.
viously serves)\ but also thotie of the
United States.
Without Europe, the isolation of
the United States, which is finding it
difiicull enou~h to control events in
Central America, would be resoluie.
We·would be left with an economic
ag~lomeration in Eurasia capable of
making its way against our will with
or without the threat of nuclear confrontation. The notion that our pride,
or our pocketbook, would stand to
~ain from such an exchange is
preoposterowr. The menace is that
there are ~ood people who do not
recognize this, which is why
Galbraith's message needs to be
iterated, and reiterated.

triumph over the Meigs Marauders
whlle Coach Barbara Butcher's
girls softball \ellnl rallied past
Eastern by a 14-12 margin.
In the \laYs' 'action Wabama used
the long ball In downing the visiting
Marauders g.7 In a five Inning con·
test uuit was shortened due to
darkness.
Seniors Jim Powell and Nathan

KENT WOLFE
SVACMVP

TIM,DILL
Eaatern Senior

MIKE BISSELL

Eaateru Se.toi'

Davis both delivered round
lrlppen early In the game to power
the White Fatcoas lo their Initial
wtn of the 1982 season. Powell
stroked a three n111 homer In the
first lnnjng and Davis blasted a two
n111 shot In the second.

HUI.M~

·~·~ ·
I

-~~(' ~ \

~~

--

l

with Le11ther

Sheath.
For ooch knlfo. lroroil ....,, 132.501 ·
11nd 2 pick• bottqm. from Union
W01km1n ltrgl 1111 Chlwing TGltlcco

whh chtck or ....,, ordtr lor It 8.95 ·
Totlttco Ca., Inc.,
P.O. Boa 788. Gollpolil, OH 4S53t .

'ID: S~antn·Dilon

·- _jft,."
JAYREES
Southern SenJor

RICHARD WOLFE
Southern Senlor

ROBERT BROWN
Southern !;enlor

Eagles ·win, Bobcats beaten

Plan would use savings
NEW YORK (AP) - Won1ed by
the thrift Industry's anemic !lnan·
clal condition, which he fears could
undermine the economy and contl·
dence In the entire banking system,
Harry Keefe. has come up with a
plan.
It Is a plan, he says, that might
avert savings bank mergers, panic
among savers, the spread of hous·
log's depression, and social chaos.
It would seek to do so by channel·
lnll savlnp to the thrifts, making
mort11alles available, · putt1n11
builders and appliance suppUers
back to work, and compromising
youths' anger by making homeboy·
lng possible.
His proposal wouldn't cost the
Treasury anything additional.
The brokerage hOuse of Keefe,
Bruyette &amp; Woods Inc., of which he
Is founder and chairman, special·

__::_W.:::ill=iam::..:.:....:...F·:.....=B:..::uc..:.:..:k;.;;.:.ter"-..:J:...;..;..r.

pitchers on the mound In Davis,
Norm Laudennllt and Donnie Van· .
Meter. Davis eme!J!!d with the vic·;
tory whlle VanMeter notched the·
save. Stewart, the first of two Meigs :
hurlers, was tagged with the ;
defeat.
Meigs hitters were Brooks a lrl·:
pie, and Boyer, Kovalchik, Way·:
land and Burdette all with singles. •
Wahama hitters were Powell with :
·a hOme run and two singles, George:
Zuspan two singles, Darren GWand:
two singles, Nate Davis a home run·.
and Brad Layne a single.
·
Both teams resume action on:
Thursday, AprU 1 when they visit;
Southern with both games slated to·
begin at 4:30 p.m. The lxlys team:
will also play on Friday when they:
entertain visiting Spencer In a 4: :J&gt;:
p.m. game.

(Tfl\ ;Q•U"~- ~o.-. .,.~l!nl ~~OIIt·'lfU'C:....,....

izes In stocks of major commercial
banks, analyzing far more than any

other securities finn.
He Is cloeely associated with
commercial banking, . "big bank·
lni" as opposed to the thrift iridustry, which handles savlllgs and

morli&amp;I!1!S·

Under Keefe's plan, savers could
channel s:I,!XXI a year tax·free Into a
"Homebuyer Account," modeled
on an Individual Rettrement Ar.·
count except that the the money
would be uaed for a house Instead.
"It would be a unique InStrument
to suppliers of morlllage money,"
said Keefe. It could not be offered
by money market funds, whose
hl!lh high lnteresi rates have sl·
phOned money from the thrifts.
In Keefe's view, this woUld give
the thrifts a now of money to work
with and enable them to make

and

has made rt quite clear to me, for
what He has

Mltterand, who hall been quoted as
saying that he would prefer In Paris
110me011e who thinks aloog the linea
ol President Reagan over someone
who does so only as a matter of
professional fidelity.
Anyway, Galbraith, in New York,
began by chilling his audience. He
did so by reciting .a scenario. It had
to do with wh&amp;t was likely to happen
in the event that American lrOI!Jl!l
withdraw from Europe. Well, who is
suggesting that they withdraw? An
odd, and di.lordered ideological
coalition. Always, ol course, the
capitulationists, who withdraw at
any possibility of military confrontation. At the opposite end are
some conservatives who are
isolationist In inclination and .rejoice
at . any thought of withdrawin~

Both spring sport teams at W aliama Hlah School posted victories
In their respective seuon openers
Tuesday nlgbt against teams from
nelghborlni Metp County.
Coach Gordon SpenCer's White
Falcon baseball nine recorded a 9-7

fo~

Eastern's Eagles plated three
runs in the bottom or the second in·
ning, then added two more in the sixth to defeat the Alexander Spartans,
1&gt;-3, Tuesday in a non-league
baseball contest. It is the second
~trai~;:ht victory for the Eagles in
just two games.

mortgages

morlllages. It would permit people · $l,!XXI for four years at 9 percent, a
rate arbltrarUy chosen by Keefe for
to buy homes. It would save housIng and related Industries from col· · Wustratlon, they would have
$20,!XXI, based on quarterly com·
lapse - a collapse he fears might
pounding (many baliks compound
spread Uke cancer.
dally), and might be able to qualify
HBAs could be offered only by
for a house worth $1ll,!XXI or even
lenders with a certain percentage
of assets In housing, perhapsJOpermore.
Some of the nation's 14,!XXI comcent. Interest charges could be admercial banks, many only Ughtly
ministered, maybe pegged to 75
Involved In home mortgages, probpercent of one-year Treasury BUls.
ably won't like his Idea, but others
Such securities early this week
might approve. In effect, between
had a bond equivalent yield of a bit
more than 14 percent, a rate that
6,!XXI and 7,WI commercial banks
are part of the lhrl1t system, with ro
would make the cost of money to
percent to 50 percent of assets In
the thrifts roughly 10.75 percent.
Since they need a 2 percent to 2.5
morlllages. They would stand to
percent spread to make home loans
11aln deposits and business.
profitably, the mo!'fgage rate
Operators of money market mul·
ual funds and cash management
would be around 13 percent, or
plans, who don 'I Invest directly In
close to 5 percentage points lower
home mor111ages, also might be disthan now, said Keefe.
turbed, bll\.., Keefe feels they
If a couple saved S2,CXXJ each or
shouldn't be.

Who controls fuels ?.___ _.,.---__.__ _Ro_b_er_t_w._al_te_rs
WASHINGTON !NEAl - Who locating, producing and marketing the industry euphemistically calls
owns almost 25 percent of the those two products are reor~anizing "horizontal diversification" is innaton's recoverable coal reserves and reshaping themselves as diver· deed a cause for serious concern.
The Tennessee Valley Authority,
an(l is responsible for more than 20 sified "energy.companie!l."
A coherent rationale for public in a 1979 report on its antitrust inpercent of the country's annual coal
·concern about that development is vestigation of the enerjly industry,
production?
provided by no less an authority said:
Who holds almost half of the
"The top four !Inns in the Midwest
domestic uranium reserves that are than the Exxon Corp., the world's
indispensable In the production of lar~est and most widely diversified (coal) market now control 56 per·
ruel · 'for the nuclear-powered oil company, in its quarterly cent of production while llje four
generation of electricity?
magazine "Exxon U.S.A." :
bi~gest flnns in the Northern Great
"The
big
oil
companies
are
too
Plains control 53 percent of producWho dominates the development
of a host of emerging energy big. They have too much economic lion and the top four !inns in the
technologies, ranging from solar and political . power. They are Southwest control60 percent,
"These important re~ional coal
and geothennal P&lt;&gt;wer production to somehow linked into a structure that
coal gasification and liquefaction?
is in some way anti-eompetltive. markets - and ott.er domestic
The answer to each of those They cannot be trusted to develop markets to a lesser extent- are not
only dangerously concentrated but
questions is the same: the the new energy resourcell.
"The oil companies seek to are also dominated by companies
multinational l:oF))OI'ations, most of
them headquartered In the United eliminate inter-fuel competition and with other ener~y interests.
"Of the 13 companies that hold
States, that comprise the world's will peg the prices ol new eriergy
petrolewn indwrlry.
resources directly to the price of oil. places at the top ollhose three m08t
Recent years have produced a The nation cannot aHord to let the oil concentrated markets, five are
disturbing pattern of oil-company companies control all fonns of owned in .whole or in part by the
natlon'slar~e energy companies ...
dominance - if not control - and energy."
Of course, Exxon dries not endorse
"The same is true of the uraniwn
the development and production of
vlriually all fuels that supposedly those views, which are dismissed as · market. It is highly concentrated
compete with oil and gas as a source "the f.amllla.r .Jameot ..., ' :the:· ll(l!j'a !hrqi••l:eLI!t.::Jiine'-of the
professional divestiture advocates." nation's largest oil companies, eight
of energy.
All the world's recoverable reser- But respected · Individuals and ol whom also have major coal inVe!! il. oil and gss l~~e~:orably decline,
reputable organizations have leresis."
'the flnns that once speci8lized In

mrssron staff report issued four
years ago expressed a "genuine
cause_ for concern with the increasinl( involyement of larl(e
pelrolewn and natural-~as companies in both the coal and uraniwn
industries."
·
Included arnonl( the 15 !inns
holding the nation's largest coal
reserves are no fewer than 11 companie!l wholly or partially owned by
major oil companies - includinl(
Exxon, Mobil, Gul£, Shell, Arco,
Phillips and Conoco.
The petrolewn industry's iofluence in uraniwn 1nininl( and
mill in!( is even more profound. KerrMcGee alone holds 21 percent of all
domestic uranium reserves, while
Gulf is in second place with 11.6 per·
cent. Conoco hall 3.6 percent, Getty
has 2.9 percent. Exxon has 2.5 percent and Phillips has 1.8 percent
Those six finn• account for more
than 43 percent of aiHnown reser·
ves.
Notwith:ltandin~ the industry's
protestati0118, the dan~ers lire
readily apparent - deterrence of
competition, lack of Innovation, ex·
cesslve profits and collusion.

For Alexander Tim Barnhouse
had two sin~les, Keith Jordan a
double, Terry Henthorne a single,
and Dan Peyton a sin~le.
In the top of the first inning the
Spartans ~ot two runs. off starting
pitcher Jerry Larkins. Mter just a
third of an inning Jeff Jones came on
in relief to retire the side in a great
effort, however, Alexander led 2.0.
Eastern failed to produce a score
in its first attempt, while Jones
again sat the Spartans down in or·
der. In the bottom or the second
frame Eastern's bats came to life.
Smith staried it all with a sharp
single, Nick Leonard reached on a
walk, and a run scoreu.• when Deron
Larryreached
Cowdery
laiderror.
down a per·
on an
Jewell
feet sacrifice bunt, then John
Beaver smacked an RBI single.
Ro~ie Gaul than came up and
quickly lined a sharp single into center scoring one run and almost
nailed at the plate for the third out.
Jones went three and a third innin~s for the Eagles to pick up the
win, fanning five, walkin~ just one,
and ~iving up two hits.
In the fifth, hard-throwing southpaw Chris Allen carne on in relief for
the save. He fanned five and !(ave up
just two hits in the last inning.
With two out iq the last frame, Jor·
dan doubled and Henthorne singled
for another Spartan run. Allen went
·. on to fan the last batter for the win,
f&gt;-3.

Gaul had a perfect night at the
plate with a sin~le, two walks and a
sacrifice. Beaver also had two walks
and a double, and Smith a three hi\
night.
The Eastern reserves claimed a 7·
3 win over Meigs with Mike Collins '
gelling the ~~&gt;in and Jim Newell the
save. Eastern plays at Kyger Creek
tonight in an SV AC game.
unescore:
Alexander
Eastern

200 0001 1- 3 $ 4
030 000 x- S 8 4

AGENCY

.us N. 2nd Ale.
Middleport, Ott.

PH.M2-U.2
!

OHt&lt; void wh111 prohll~ld by lew,
tiled or otlrlrwilt rllllittld.

Rotoilor; YIIO! 111 I!Uihorizld to ocl
11 ... ,...., lor !ldlmplia!l of tlril
caupGJI.
w11 roinlbu111
plue 7e handing for this Ul)ion

you toe

w.

CUIIOIIIII PIYI eny IIIII Ill.
Cllh valul! 11201. Meillo:
Sconon·Oillon Co .. Inc .. P.O. Boo

Woill1!1111 L•ll' Size cl!owint

tollecco coupon.

805, Gelfi!lolil,• OH 45631.

$31 JACKSON PIC.E ·JU.35 WEST
PhoN 4411-4U4

STUTIIG IIIIIAY

c;_,I-Ponll
c;...,. Z-Sooro lind a1 Htto
:1-A Utllo So•

IAitOAIN

~tMr•rJ

ON SliT A StM

AU. SlATS JWT 11.10

EVEWY~II.IO

SPRING CLEARANCE SALE.,.
''"'

•'

ON

NEW1982

1Y

DIAGO NAL

•,

YOUR CHOICE - 4 BEAUTIFUL STYLES
00
Each Only 5

599

I

Unescore:
Federal Hockin•" 706 203 0-18 9 2

!wl, Bennett !5) and
Tab ler
T~K~y~g~e~r
~Cr~ee~k~~:003:1:0_1
~1:_5:6:4JJ~~~~~~~~~~~J
Green, Koker (5)-.

another, however, a runner was

DOWNING-CHILDS·
INSURANCE
..

..

Federal Hocking scored seven
runs in the first and six in the third
enroute to a lopsided 18-5 victory
over Kyger Creek Tuesday night in a
non-league encounter at Cheshire.
The loss left the Bobcats of Coache!l
Clarence Barber and Jake Bapsl
with a J-3'record.
KC lost a doubleheader to Nelsonville-Yorli last Saturday and won iis
league opener Monday, against
Southern.
Russell led the Lancers with five
hits in five trips. B. Bennett had two
safeties.
Getlln~t one hit each for the Bobcats were Keith Clark, Anthony Kit·
chen, Ron Martin, Steve Porter and
David Martin.
The Lancer hurlers, Tabler a'nd
Bennett combined for £our walks
and five strikeouts. Kyger Creek
starter Porter and his reliever,
Adkins issued 14 walks while getting
four strikeouts.
Weather pennilting, KC hosts
Eastern tonil(ht.

Eastern had :eight timely hits led
by Bob Smith ·who banged two
sin~les· and a towering double. Chris
Allen. had a single and long double,
Johnny Beaver • double, Rogie Gaul
a sin~tle, two walks, and a sacrifice;
anl:l Mark Holter a sin~le.

DOONESBURY

'

Porter (L), Adkins 131 and Martin,
Batteries: Larkins, Jones first Polcyri !4).
IWPJ, Allen 5th and Leonard. !OK, 4 ~::,:.:..;..:.;__ _ _ _ _ _-c_~j
BB.
(LP) Lee, Peyton 5th, and Jordan,
4K,4BB.

AVE

on a pack of ...

NOW!

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!

BERMUDA STEAK
TRANSITIONAL
The HALl • N2314E
WOOd and simulated wocid

Adolph's ~airy Valley

products In Antique Oak color
finish. Casters.

PH. "2-2556
570 W. M1in

"locllld 11 lhl End ot lht

THE FEAllJRES,
PERFORMANCE
AND
REUABIUTY
YOU WANT IN
"BIG-SCREEN"
TV .
SAVEslOOOO

CLASSIC
The MARTORELL • N2318P
WOOd and slmulaled w()qd
produclo in P&amp;aln

finish. Caarers. ·

• TRI-FOCUS PICTURE TUBE

tor exceplloniillha-.

''"''""· DH.

• TRIPLE·PLUS CHASSIS

Pomnr·M- 8rir1Jt."

for

oulllendlng reliability.

• ELECTRONIC TUNING

tor direct, poeiiiYe luning.

o

o

CHROMATIC ONE·BUTTON
TUNING 1 - i Y cofttiOII
plclufe lor uue aolon.

Eleclronla Power Sentoy

'lot'- Regu!Mof Syatem

,•GARDEN.TOOLS
•GARDEN SEED
•ONION SETS
•FERTILIZER
'
•LIME '.
2

• One-Knob t2 VHF ond 6 UHF
Chlnnei a.tector

COLONIAL AMERICAN

• Picture Conllol
• Aulornolla Fln..tunlng Control
• llumllllled Chlnnet Numberl

The SARGENT • N2311M
WOOd and simulated wood
products in Maple
finish. CUiers.

The HOMER • N2320PN
Wood and slmulaled wood
produclo in Knony Pine

finish. Caster..

CHOOSE ZENITH QUALITY FOR GREATER VALUEr:
FREE DELIVERY • 5 YEAR WARRANTY ON PICTURE TUBE
•90 DAY FREE SERVICE•

PLUPiek lr~ UA~IitAtDS:

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

MASON, W.VA.

- MIDDLEPORT: OHIO

,.

�-

1'rioeuUDt~

Bowlin&amp; tape
MaJ'&lt;'tii, Jtl!

Team
RoMch'lli Gun Shop

Mardi 7, liiZ

StladiiiiJ

Team
Ruyj.! Crown

Pt..
50

PtlWl'il'liSuperValu

41

RDMch'IIGunShop

41

G. undJ. Auto P11rt.:f

44
42

JHYJflllr Co~d Co.

FriendlyTavem
34
HlKh :H!ries men - Larry ~ n 589· flHy
R08ch SM; Blll Carsw~ll 565.
'
HJI(h ~mt men - Larry I&gt;u,.(an z:;e . &amp; y
R.oach239 ; JohnTyree217 .
'
Hi,(h llt!ri~ wulntm - Marlent! Wll»oo ~ ; 84!1ty wtUtllltch $09; B.:cky Kloes 502 . ...
Hf~h .wme women - Pat Carson ·1.00 · &amp;tty
Whlthlt.eh 199: Mt!llXty SnuUer 1~.
'

110
99
Ill

Ill
71
65

Hlf!h ind. ~arne - Jean Norton 188· Jw-w La 1n-

bo:rt 173,171.

•

High 100. th~f-gam~ - JWle Lam~rt 511 ·

Car~le Mci..H ul(hlin 466 ; Pcbble!l Hall452,
'
Huth turn ~me - No. 5831 ; G. &amp; J. Auto PHr·

1.1781 ; C. &amp; D. Pennzuil 786.

Hl ~h ~.11m thr~ l(&lt;l.rTit!S -

Pennto!l2m. 2249.

No. 5 2290; C. &amp; D.

PU.
~

Toltr'I JruiUnl nce Cu.
Fralcm~l Order of EaKICI

52
46

T~OfTheSta i n
42
Smilh'• B&lt;ldy SMp
Jll
H. and R. Firet1tune
34
Te1un high awr~1 - Fr1tcnwl Order of EB~tle»
Z703; Smith's Body Shop ~75 : Toler'¥ lrwurance
Co. 21017.
Hi~t~:h ind . :seriu - John SilMon 600: Larry
Du~n 575; J ohnTy~5fl6.

Tl!urn hiKh game - F raternal Order of Eagle.!!
924 ; Smilh Body Shop 923; Fraternal Order of
EaKI.,II08.
High Ind. ~me - l.arry Dugan and Charlie
V111nMeler 231 ; John Tyree Z2ti: John Si.!l.!ion 218.

Early SunDy Mb:ed
Bewllal Leapt!
Mirth 4,1ttZ

Pu.

Tum
G. &amp; J . AUto P11"U
Nu. 5
Two's ComJ)ltny
Max'11 Inc.
Slrnrn~&gt;na OIW!, Catlilluc
ttndCh.:v.
C. &amp; D. PenQZoll

Stllndlnga
Team

Pi¥.

Raadl'aGWlShup
Pow~ll's Super

54

~

Valu

Royal Crown

SO

G. &amp; J . Auto PtuU
Frit!ndly TIIIVI!m

f8

Ja~r CoeiCO .

~

40
HiKh :~erie~ men - Bill Carswe ll ::a· l.o~~rry
Dugan :W3; Randy Snider 50&amp;.
'
High game men - Bill Carswell 204; Larry
DIIJ!•n 203; Bob HHggy 201.
HJ~h ~,rid womtm - Betty WhJUatch 500;
Bt!tty Smlth 471 ; Maail'll! ~an 470.
High Marne womtn - Maxine Dugan 19'1 ; Bt!Uy
Whltbtlch Ill ; Brtt~ Smith 175.

Trf.Couaty Bolllngl.A!aiC\If
Mllrth !1, JINIZ
Team
ROBCh'sGun Shop
Toler'¥ IMuranct! Cu.

PU.
64

64
50

,Fraternal Order oiEa1de:s
Srnlth'" BOOy Shop

50

TopOfTht!SlairM
00
H. and R. Flret~tone
34
Team hl)(h ~rl!!:s - RUHch's Gun Shop 2630·
Fratern11J Ortlt!r Of E11~l~m 2561; Toler's 1,;

surance Cu. 2~ .
Hl!!h inti. ~ies - Larry Dugan 500; Danny

WIJI593 ; RMymond Rw:U:h 500.
Team hil(h !(arne - Fratt!rnal Order of E.t~Kle!l
911; R0t1ch'11 GunShop liM, MO.
Hi~t~:h Ind. Mime - J ohn Tyre :=t· Rol(er RoUHh
Zl2; Danny

wm•.

'

Farly Saadly
Mixtd Bow liD&lt; Ltacue
MIU'Ch !1. 111%

Sb1Ddlq1
Team

Pb.

Roach's Gun Shop
Powt'l l's s uper Vlllu
G . and J . AlJ IOPllr l !l
Royal Crown .
Hlym.,r CoAl Co.
F=ri!M iy Tlt\/Crn

6U
3A
3~

5A

4s

A2
Hi{&lt;ll1 ~ries m~n - ~eymond Ro., cll 566 : Lt'l rrv
O ug11n SJ9; Cnarue VanMete r ~20 .
High game men - R11vmond Roach 210, 19~ ;
Le rry Ouq11n 190.
Hlgn ser ies women - Befly Whi tlatch S48 ;
Bettr S., MA II ine D. 509 ; Debbie Men!. II!V 502 .
High q"me wom en - Betty Whitla tch 21l :
Mttxlne oug11n 700; Belly Sm itn 1111 .

Former Tornado
member of frosh
team at Marietta
MARIETTA - Marietta

Coll~ge

freshman Dale Teaford was a member of this year'.s Pioneer basketball
team which finished the season with
a 1~15 record, including a 5-8 mark
in the tough Ohio Athletic Conference. Teaford played forward for
the Pioneel'8. Phil Roach, head
coach of Marietta, had this to say
about him: "Dale fought injuries all
season, but we remain excited about
his potential at Marietta College_ He
is a great competitor."
He is a 1981 graduate of Southern
High School, and is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Teaford, Racine.

like Mike Witt, Bruce KlsoD, Ge(tt
By HAL BOCK
Zahn, Andy Hassler, am Travers
AP SporiB Wrtter
Attorney Tony LaRussa, who and Mickey Mahler must produce
manages the Chlcag!l' White Sox for the Angels to make a nan at the
title.
when he Isn't busy with writs and
Oakland II a study In contrasiJI·
torts, otters some expert testimony
The A's have baleball'a !M!at out•
about the 1982 baseball season.
" We will win the West," satd La· field In Rickey Henderson, Tony ArRussa. " White Sox tans can make masandDwayneMurphy. TheydO
not bave baseball's best lntleld, a
plahs to attend the championship
revolvlrig door operation wlih ·peosertes at Comiskey Park this fall."
Now that Would be a switch. The ple like Davey Lopes, MICkey
Klutts, Wayne Gross, Dave
last time there was postseason
McKay, Fred Stanley and Rob Plcbaseball In Chicago was :ur;!l, when
clolo an available.
LaRU$88 was 15 yeal'll old.
The starting pitching rotation Is
But the Sox's manager Ukes his
solid with Mike Norris, Matt
team'~ chances, especially after
Keough, Steve McKatty and Rick
two major winter trades which dellLangford. The bullpen, bowever,ls
vered a pair of big bats - outtlelder
Steve Kemp and lint haseman- almost Invisible, which may explain why Oakland has so f!UIIIY
outtlelder Tom Paclorek.
To win the West, though; the complete games.
Besides Lopes, newcomers In·
White Sox wW have to overcome an
AU Star-packed California lineup . elude Joe Rudl, returning lor an
and the razzmatazz of Blllyba.ll as :Oakland encore, and Dan Meyer,
orchestrated by Manager Billy ·whO could share first base wlth.Jbn
Spencer.
Martin In Qakland. Texas and KanIf the A's stay close, Martin wW
sas City should be In the thlck of the
lind
a way for them to win their
scramble with Minnesota .a nd Seatshare
of games and remain In the
tle bringing up the rear.
Kemp and Pactorek join a 011- West chase all the way.
Kansas City knows how to win.
cago lineup that InCludes Greg LuThe
Royals have !lnlslled lint In
zlnskl, Carlton Fisk, Harold Baines
1the West often enough to know the
and Ron LeFlore. Blll Almon and
formula and Manager Dick
Tony Bernazard. proved a capable
Howser has the horses wtth vetesecond bale-shortstop team last
rans like George Brett, W)llle Wilyear and Jbn MorriSon Is the third
baseman wlth 'Mike Squires help- son, Amos Otis, Hal McRae, Frank
White, Wlllle Aikens and U.L.
Ing Paclorek at lint.
LaRussa has 5ome talented Washington.
young pitchers headed by Brttt
Dennis Leonard, Larry Gura and
Bums, Steve Trout, Dennis Lamp
and Richard Dotson. Lamarr Hoyt,
Paul Spllttorft give Howser capaJerry Koosman and Lynn McGlo- ble starting pitching and the
bullpen belongs to Dan ,
then are In the bullpen.
The Angels are loaded with a 11- Qul.senberry.
neup of name players that borders
It's a stroilg cast that promises to
on awesome. Rod Cai'eW, Bobby keep the Royals In the thick of the
Grtch, Rick Burleson and Doug De- division race.
Cinces form the lntleld. Fred Lynn,
Texashasadecent tartlngpltchReggie Jackson, Don Baylor are lng rotation with
ank Tanana,
available outtlelders along with Rick Honeycutt,
Mecjlch and
rookie flash Tom Brunansky. Ertan Charlie Hough. D
y Darwin and
Downing, Ed Ott and Bob Boone Steve Comer! he
the bullpen
corps.
.
are solid catchers.
The Calltomla pitching, though,
Tanana w one of three key acIs questionable. The aces are Ken qulsltlons for the Rangers In the offForsch and Don Aase. But people season. The others were lint

Yankees acquire disgrunted Alexander
By The AMocla&amp;ecl PreM
George Stelnbreruter "Invited"
the .New York Yankees to spring
tmlnlng nearly two months ago. On
Tuesday, he welcomed Doyle Alexander back Into the fold. That left a
few of his new- and well-tannedteanunates shaking their heads In
dismay.
Alexander, you see, hasn't been
to spring training since last year.
He sat out this year's, holding out
lor a better contract from the San
Francisco Giants. He and the National League club couldn't agree
on an extension of his six-year contract, which expired at the end of
the 1982 season.
So the 31-year-old right-hander, a
Yankee during the second half of
the 1976 season and their World SerIes opening pitcher that year, was
dealt back to them In exchange lor
two minor leaguers, pitcher Andy
McGa!tlgan and lnflelderout:!lelder Ted WUborn.
Alexander's new contract with
the Yankees reportedly Is worth
$2.2 mllllon over lour years.

Saturday sign-up

.~

Sign-up day will again be held this
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p .m. at
Middleport villal(e hall for those interested in playing tee ball, pee wee ,
minor, litllr or pony leagues, and
girls' pee wee softball, junior and
senior soltooll.
·
Registration Ice is $7 and youth
must be reKistered lo play . Ad~itional .information may be obtained from Susie Stewart, 992-3326,
or Bob Melton.

Alexander wasn't the only Giants
pitcher changing unlfonns: San
Francisco also traded former Cy
Young Award winner VIda Blue
and anotherlett-hander, Bob Tufts,
to the Kansas aty Royals In exchange for pitchers Rente Martin,
Atlee Hammaker and Craig Cham·
berlaln and a player to named
later. Martin Is the only one lis·
sured of making !be Glant.ll' roster.
It Tuesday's game was any lndl·
cation, Alexander wW be a welcome addition to the Yankees'
rotation. Dave Righetti, their star·
ter against the Doc)gers, allowed
five runsln51-31nnlngs. The Yanks,
however, came out on top, beating
Los Angeles 9-7.
The Giants' pitching stair, likewise, wasn't aU that bnpresslve
Tuesday. Rich Gale, Jbn Barr and
Gary Lavelle were tagged lor 15
hits by Seattle, three by newcomer
AI Cowens, as the Martners won 7-6.
Cowens doubled In the ninth and
scored the winning run on Bud Bulllng's slngie.
Jlm .Palmer, once the ace of the
Baltlmmre stair, was battered by .
PhUadelphla for 12 hits and lour
ruDI,I In six Innings as the Phlllles
downed the Ortoles 6-3.
St.Louis received bad news when
third baseman Ken Oberk!eU suffered a fractured thumb diving lor
Lee Lacy's double down the 111\e
during Pittsburgh's 7-1 vtctory, ,
Oberk!ell wW miss about a month.
Jason Thompson drove In three:
runs for the Pirates.
George Foster hit a two-run homer and Craig Swim pltcooHtve.'
shutout Innings In the .New York

Mets' 4-2 victory over Detroit. Ferguson Jenkins scattered tlve hits
and siruck out five batters In six
Innings as the Chicago Cubs shut
out California 8-0.
Ruppert Jones' lour singles and
one double and three runs scored
paced San Diego's S.3 romp over
Oakland, Bake McBride's two-run
triple and Von Hayes' two-run single highlighted Cleveland's 7-5 trt-

In the finals of the Meigs Elemen- . Powell defeated Bradbury Hood, 38-tary basketball tournament, the
20, with Po.wen scoring IS points,
fourth and filth grade level, Bradand Cleland eight. For Bradbury
bury Baker defeated Portland, 32-28.
Hood, Gibba had 16 points. ChamOn the Bradbury Baker team,
pions in the oturnanienllor the fourBaker scored 32 points. for Portland
th and fifth was the Bradbury Baker
McMillan had 22 points.
team, with Eastern I being chamIn the consolation game, Pomeroy
pions of the sixth grade tournament.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAr
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
OHice Houri by Appointment Only

,)

,.

~L

East race .
and
Faedo.
The pitching Is more !amlllar
with Pete Redfern, AI Wllllams,
Brad Havens, Roger ErtckSon and
Darrell Jackson as starters and
Iloui Corbett and Bobby CasUllo In
!be bullpen.
Rene Lachemann starts his first
tull Se&amp;S0!1 as manager of the Ma·
rtners and promises a new )ook In
Seattle. Like the Twins, the Mariners will go with youngsters, breaking' In new people to go with
veterans like Jbn Esslan, Riehle
Zlsk, Julio Cruz, Bruce Bochte and
Lenny Randle. The rookies Include
lint baseman Jim Maler, Infielders Dave Edler and Paul Serna
and outfielders Dave Henderson
and AI Chambers.
Jim Beattie, FlOyd Bannister and
Glenn Abbott are the Mariners' top
pitchers with Shane Rawley one of
the league's top rellevers.
- - Prediction: Chicago, Callfomla, Oakland, Kansas City,

one

.

WE HAVE A NEW TELEPHONE NUMBER SERVING MEIGS COUNTY STARTING WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 1982.

There wi~l be a drawing EVERY DAY! Just put
your name and phone number on your
register . tape. The one drawn will win that
amount.

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

A.Dlrilloa al Multlmedlo, lac.

LEGAL NOTICE

Published every afternoon, Monday lhi"OUMh
Friday, 111 Court·Street, by the OhJo Valley

The Public Ututues eommlaalon of Ohio hu set
for public heartn8 Case
No. 81-303-EL-.EFC Subfile A, to review the rue!
procurement practices
and policies of Columbus
a. Southern Ohio Electric
Company, the operation
or Ita electric Fuel Component and related matters. ThJ8 hearing Ia
scheduled to begin at
9 :30 a .m. on AprU 6,
1982 at the otfloea or the
Public UtUitles Commla·
slon, 376 South High
Street, Columbus, Ohio
-43216.

Pomeroy, Qttio 4$769, 992·2156. Second class

Publishing

Com~J&amp;ny

THURS., FRI. &amp;
SAT., APRIL 1,
2 &amp;3 .
FREE CUP
OF R.C.
HOTDOGS 15t

SIOR£ HOURS:
IIDII.·Sil I •10 pm

SulldaJ 11•10 pm

Engle and Gary Ward and a cast of r::'l1:exa=s=,=Minneso==:::ta:':Se=attl=e·==::;
fresh new facetllneludfnCilrst baseman Kent Hrbek.- catcher Tim
The Daily Scnlincl
Laudner and lnftelders Gary Gaettt
1uSPs ui-ilii

291 5mlND sr.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES. IN EFFECT THROUGH APRIL 3' 1982 .

. I

• Multimedia, Inc .,

postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

SAUCE - IDe EXTRA EACH

••••••••••••••••
•.•••.• ··couPON·····
••
• ••
••
•
•••:
••
CORONET
:•
•••
••••
:~ TOILET i:
•

Member: The Associated Press, Inland Daily Pre~~&amp; AssociaUoo and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association, NaUonal
Advertlslnl( Representative, Branham
Newspeper Sales, 733 Third Avenue, New
York, New Yorkl0017.

!i
.:

POSTMASTER : Send address to The Daily
Sentinel. Ill Cou rt St. , Pomeroy, Ohio45769.

•.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

.:8ROLL
: i PACK

One week . .. . . .. . . . . . .... . ........ $1.00
OneMonth ......... , ... ........ .... JHO
One Year .. ,, .... , .. ...... ,,.,,,., $52.80
PRICES

Daily .............. .. .... . ..... !SCents

Ground Beef.....~ ~

MA1LSVBSCRIPTION8

Ohklaad We1t Vlr1CiniM
3 Monlh .......... ....... .... ..... 11~:15
Six month ......... .. ............. $20.80
I Y~llr . .. ........ .. . ....... ......

••••••••••••••••

8

No !lubtcriptions by mall pennitted in towns
where home carrier aervice is av.11ilable.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COIOIISBION OF OHIO
By: David I(_ Polk,
Secretary.

••••••••••••••••
•• • 'COUPON'
•
• ••••
••
•••••
•
•••

:i•••

FRESH
::•• GLAZED
:i• DONUTS

CHUNK

~9. 00

RateNOIIWide Ohio
~~~ Wnt VlrgiW.
3 Month ...... ... ................. $13.00 '
&amp;Month •........... .. ............ 123 ..((1
1Year .. .. , ... . .. .... , ........... 144 ..20·

Bologna .............~.
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

Ame~ican Sliced

s lb. Bag White

Pkg.

~·-q

GRAPEFRUIT •..

CHEESE • • • • $1.29

lib. Bag Winesap or Rome

1.19

1

69 ••,_I
::
•:

Spare Ribs .......~~

..:~

CRISPY SERVE

Bacon ••••••••••••••••••

r~~~~~!!!!!!

I

I

I

ARMOUR STAR

,-•••••••••••••••II!
'

•

Roll .

• • • • • •
•

4 Roll Generic

THINK OF 'EM AS•••

TOILET TI'SSUE.

• • •

. 32 01 •• Smuckers Whole

SWEET PICKlES

Turkey Wieners::.

• Good Only at Powell's : •
•otter Expires Aprll3, 1982 •

••••••••••••••• 1
••••••••••••••••
·····couPON···
• ••••
••••• • • •
•
••
•
••
::
FLAVORITE ••~:·
••
.••••
••
••

.
:i.. SUGAR

. . .... ..79~
·J ar

•

U. S. N_o. 1 RUSSET

lEAN w/BACON .SOUP

Yea, CRC, one of the wholly

46 oz. Dole

owned subsidiaries of
Anheulei'-Bulch, will Pay You
Calh On The Spot For Empty
Aluminum Cans of Ally Kind.

·.PINEAPPLE JUICE

24) Of atumtnum cane you NCyC!e.
Ws on eosv W&lt;Zf to eom eldro money for your
club, fOVOrlte chorlly or \'OUISell.
Turn what cOUld be haiti IntO OCIIh and clean
up while you're cleaning upl

Point Distributing
Company

Camp Conlav Road
Point Pleasant, W. 'VIrginia
304-675-4519

Mondav a lhulldaV

8:00 AM-11:00 AM 4:00 fiM.6:00 PM

2/73e

• •

STAR KIST TUNA

2% Milk ....~:~.=~

• • • • •

24 oz.

_,

• • • • • •

$}.29

Del Monte

CATSUP ••

Btl .
I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

16 oz. Crisco

OIL SHORTENING

Btl.

• • • • • • •

49 oz. Detervent

GAIN SOAP POWER . •·• .so: •
"

ag~

$ 79 :i
••
••

BROUGHTON'S

Zesta Crackers~ 5
Diet
•

.
16 OZ. BOTTL£S

Pop.~ ....

24 OZ. CTN.

Cottage Cheese.

'

FAYGO

.

()()

BORDEN'S ELSIE

Ice Cream ..~...~~-~-

•:

·

•

-

~:
:.

..
•••
$}39~!
••
••
•
••
••
•

5-LB.
BAG

•
••
e•Limit One Per Customer: •

e: Good Only at Powell's • •
• Offer Expires April3, 1982•

•

BROUGHTON'S

Can

Can

.
10 LB. BAG

6111 oz.

tor.-ypoundlabout

·=
•••

Potatoes •••••••••••••••

·n.79 ·

10112 oz. campbells

NOT
TRASH!

Earn 200

•

. Pk'!l

• • • • • •

'

••
:•
••e "Limit One Per Custom e..:•••

Jumbo Summit

PAPE' TOWELS

..i!

CHEtR

••
.:

age

I

••

~iDETERGENf:~
••
•••
•••••
:: 840Z. $289 ::
e: BOX
:•

1-LB. PKG.

TOMATOES . • • • . •t_b_69'

BANQUET TV DINNERS

DOZEN ::
LIMIT 1 DOZ.
;•

••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••• ..
•·:
· PON •• •••••••
•••
•• •• •• coo
••

APPLES . . . . . . • . . 89'

11 01.

::••
!:••

mit One Per Customer •
• • Good Only at Powell's •
eOffer Expires ApriiJ, 1982•

6x' Size Fresh

THIS IS A
TOLL FREE • 24 HOUR·

~=

•••

:i $}49 i:

$

. COUNTRY STYLE · .

8 oz.

::

•
• Goad Only at Powell's •
•offer Expires April 3, 1982 •

Subsc:ribei'H not desirln!J to pay the carrier
1nay remit in advance direct to Thf Dally
Seutinel on a 3, fl or 12 month hl:l.!lis. Credit
will be ftiiven carrier each month.

Interested parties
will be given an opportunity to be heard . Further lnrqrmatlon may be
obtained by contectln8
the Commlaalon .

..

:•
Limit One Per Customer •

SINGLE COPY

"II

..
$}49 :...

TISSUE ~:

..

By C11rritr Dr Motor Rou&amp;t

LB.
BARBECUE
LOAF
• • • • • •
Eckrich
PEPPER
LOAF • . • • • • •L!l· s2.a9
Big Red
CASING BOLOGNA • • • • • LB. age
Homemade
• • • • ~B. S}.39
HAM SALAD

NOTICE TO

WIN YOUR GROCERIESIII

r.en

baseman Lamar Johnlon and second baseman Doug Flynn.
With Flynn at aecond, Texas recently dealt Veteran Bump Wllls. •
Allo on the block II AI OUver, who
' - been
ct th!!·g~'s best hit-'
terl tor a kill time. ·
Buddy Bell, Mickey JUven. and
Jim SuJidberg are key il)eD In Manaaer Don ztnuner'a everyday 11neup. Leon Roberts, John Grubb,
Billy Sample and Pat Putnam will
get their sl)are of playing time, as
well.
· Minnesota moves Into a brand
new domed stadluril In downtOWll
Minneapolis, bilt !be Twins coWd
be In for a long year unless lhelr
YllUJI8 players come tlu"ougb.
Manager Bllly GIU'dner wants to
build a speed and deleiUie oriented
club around young veterans like
Butch Wynegar, Roy Smalley and
John Castlno, whO Is recovering
from back surgery. They'll be
joined by young oultlelders Dave

umph over Mllwaukee, Greg
Luzlnskl had two singles, an RBI
and a run scored. as the White Sox
beat Boston 3-1, and George Bell's
two-out, two-run single In the ninth
catapulted Toi'Onto past a spilt
Montreal squad. 3-2.
Jesus Vega, a reserve first baleman, hit three solo homers and an
RBI-slngle In Minnesota's 6-2 victory over Texas.

Bradbury Baker wins lower grade tourney

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

Wedne1day, March 31 , 1982

_

White Sox·given nod in

Local bowling
&amp;wlillr Lea~t~&lt;

·'

_ Pomeroy fMidlepart, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Early'SuDdly Mbe4

~

49

•••••••••••••••• •
••••••••••••••••
•••. ""COUPON
••
•••••
••••-

•:

••
•:
•:

..

VA NITY FAIR

••
::•
••

2-PLY

e:

JUMBO ROU

:•••

:•

••
::•••

PAPER
:~ TOWELS H
••
•
::

!i..•••• -2/$}00 ..•••~=
.

29 ................ :
'

• :Limit One Per Customer:•
• • Good Only at Powell's ••
• Offer Expires April3, 1982 •

�W~ne dmy-,

Service notes

Social Calendar
WEDNESDAY
ARTCRAFT bee, Enterprise
United Methodis.t Church social
room Wednesday, 7:38 p,m. sponsored by the church choir. There
will be a free craft instruction
session with a bander~ display.

f

WilDWOOD Garden Club, 7:30·
p.m. Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Doris Grueser with Ml'li.
Kathryn Miller, co-hosess . .

f

)

.....

\

A SPECIAL meeting of
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal Arch
Masons, will be held Wednesday
evening. The mark 1Tl851er and
the past master degrees wiD be
conferred.

-

STYLE - Kermit Walton, right, was muter of
ceremonies for the annual spring style revue and wiDe
aad cheese taatlllg party of the Melga Uall of the
American Cancer Society held Sunday at the Meigs
Inn. Models from the left are Ferman Moore, Maida
Mora, JeneUe Haptons.tall, and Patty .Circle. Other

models lneluded Paul Reed, Brenda Hill Broce Reed
Laurie _Province, John Musser, Barb ~tthews, Vicki
Aull and Tonya Davis. Storeo providing outfits were
EIJJerlelda, New York Clotblng House, TWo's Company, Babr Clothiers, Dan's Boot Shop and Jaymar
GoUClub.
•·

LONG BOTIOM CommWlity
A&gt;;sociation wiD hold a pie social
Wednesday beginning at 7 p.m. at
the_ ~g Bottom Commllility
Bwlding. All those attending are
'-----------.....,

totakeapie.

11HURSDAY
MEIGS Association lor Retarded Citizens, 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Corrununity School.
EVANGEUNE Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star, Middleport, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
the Masonic Temple. Officers to
wear chapter dresses. Initiatory
work will be exemplified.
BIG BEND Girl Scout Neighborhood, Leaders Meeting, 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs Inn.

FRIDAY
J A Y MAR Men 's Go If
Association will meet at the club
~ou.se Friday at 6:30 p.m. Offleers will be elected and a
tJ!scll.!illion, held on the Tuesday
mght league. All club members
and non-members interested in
league playing are asked to at.
tend.

THERE WILL be an Easter
bazaar Friday and Saturday at
Krogers from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. by
the Willing Workers Missionary
Society of the Syracuse Church of
God.
SALISBURY Township
Trustees will · meet in regular
session Friday evening at 7 p.m.
. at the home of the clerk, Wanda
Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road.

.

'

IN CHARGE- Joan Anderson, center, presideD! of Meigs Vnll of

the American .Cancer Society Is pictured with Ralph Werry and Pal
Ingels, volunteers, who co-chaired the uDit'l anilualsprlng style rewe
and cheese and wine tasting party aHhe Melgslon Sunday.
.

THE WALT DISNEY Movie
"Rascal, " will be shown Friday
at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Elementary School. The movie is sponso red by the PTA and the admission is $1 donation. Refreshments will be sold.

~SICAL

- The mUBlcal entertainment for Meigs Cancer
Society • annual style rewe and cheese and wine tasting event was
provided by Armand Turley, at the organ, and a vocal group, the Noteabies, from the Jell, Sharon Hawley, Unda Mayer and Jayne Hoeflich
The event was held at the Meigs Jon.
•

Meigs County and area births and birthdays
Gardner .
Mr. ' and

Mrs. Michael H.
Gardner, Plymouth, Mass., an·
nounce the birth o! their first chlld.
.
a son, Ross Michael, March 9. Mrs.
Ganiner Is the tonner MeUssa Da·
vts.PatemalgrandparentsareMr.
and Mrs. carl Gardner o! Middleport. Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Davis, Ternpie Terrace, Fla.

Doerfer
Arthur (Bill) and Peggy Doerfer
are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Miranda Sue, on March 22
at the Pleasant Valley Hospital. She
weighed ,seven pounds, seven ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Doerfer have
another daughter, Angela. Paternal
grandparents are Mary and Clovis
Doerfer, Sr., West Colwnbia, W. Va.
and the maternal grandmother is
Mrs. Wanda Himes, Fostoria.
Great-grandparents are Guy and
[Arena Hill, New Haven, W. Va.;
Edna Doerfer, West Colwnbia; W.
Va., and Elizabeth Wehrle, Pun!Jl
Gorda,Fla.

Staying overrilght for a slumber
garty ; ere Kathy Thomas, Leslie
Harr, eth E~mg, Kenda Kloos,
esther Wooils, and Laurie
Wayland.
Se .
.
d ndmg cards and gilts were Mr.
~ Mrs: Joe Wolfe and Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Woods,· grandparents,
r. and Mrs. Jeff Schloss and sons,
~~rk and Mike, Viola Rumlield,
ary Buck, Sherry and Tony Roush,
all ~ocal: Mr. and Mrs. Bud Herrick,
California; great-grandparents, and
~arlfoldF
, Carol, Beth and Darin
o e, ort Myers, Fla.
.;,r

were enjoyed by the group.
Gifts and cards were presented to
the honored guest. Cake, ice cream
and soft drinks wereaerved.
Attend'mg beSl"des.he r parents and
grandmother were Jack and Vicky
Gillilan,MargieReevesandBrandi
and Robbie, Mark and Donna
Gillilan Lorre Osborne Julie Riffle
Janene'Neutzllng, Tiff~ny Gardner:
Diane Roush and Michael Joyce
Cleland and Ann, Lora, Alonna
Wayne Cleland and Ann Cleland. '
Sending gifts were Betty Roush
and Nichola Pickens.
Staying for a slumber party were
Brandl Reeves, Lorre Osborne, Tiffany Gardner, Julie Riffle, and
Janelle Neutzling.

Reeves

,

.THERE WILL BE A HOMEBAKED good sale Friday from 10
a.m. to I p.m. at the former War-

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES·
Rt. 7, Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains
C.U66Hq5

COUNT ON KROGER
SOOPER
COST
CUnER
SAVE 10 TO 40% WITH SOOPER COST CUnERS*

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
Each ol t~ edv«t..S •llf'M 11 r~red to be
r~ 1vlflible !Of .... tn NCh Krogllf SIOfl . tJ«:eDI IS
~ "'*Cf tn N ld ft """ CIO M'l OUI crt 1'1 ~
fttm , ""' Vf"' otfer 'f'OU your cho-u of t compll'ltM lttm .
wtw'l tvt~ . rtf)lcl•ng the sam. uv•ngt. or a ratnchlctr.

·THERE WILL be a soup supper
at the ;!alem Center Elementary
School Saturday from 4 to 7 p.m.
The menu will include · chili,
vegeb!ble, bean soup, and bot
dol'(s. The cost is $l.li0 per person.
Tickets are on sale now and will
also be sold at the door. \

r-------------1

*F9R SOME COST CUnEI$ NO OTHER.BRANDS
. ARE STOCKED
KIOGII WHCJLI Ott
JllliiD

=~~~dl~~~NM I~ ldvtnllld •~ 1111he

PICTURES of the Holy Land
will Ill) shown by Rev. 0. G.
McKinney Saturday at 7:30p.m.
at the l')ease Settlement Church.
The public is invited,
·

er.nlltrry

~-•••

~· ·· · ·

AL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
Everythtng yO\.t buy 11 l(rCJ9e' 11 guo~rantlled 101' yOUr to"l

:::~. . .·:.~~

CO"ItGHT 1912 · JHI KIOGII CO. RIMS AND PltCIS
- 0000 SUNDAY MAICH 21 THIOUGH SATUIOA'W A.PIIl
J , 19QIN
·

,,...,

POMEROY AND GALLIPOLIS STORES

WI IIIIIVI THI ltOHt TO LIMn QUAHfiTIIS. NONI
SOLD TO DIAUII .

AIPIIillll ~~~··

~

. TOP OF THE STAIRS
Fitness &amp; Beauty Studio
"Over Dollar General Store
in Pomeroy"
PH. 9'12-6720

2

Cost citter" ·01.
Honer ...... ,.,

44 c
ggc

Slltrt=r ·~;:: $}19
,.,,..
""
II·••· sse

49c
,.,..... . 35c

,.,.

12·01 .

42
age
69c
.

lb.

U.S .D.A. CHOICE FRESH
AMERICAN

Lamb Loin Chops ..

.,.....S12i
(tnr .

COlT CU1Tll "0ZIN

Oran11

n.
"" /•

'to~··

I
•
I

• ·7·LI, AVG. WHOlE

.......

.

1

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

ALL CHILDREN'S BACK AND
WHITE PATENTS

WISCONSIN

99c

EXTRA FANCY WASHINGTON STATE
I :II SIZE ~ED OR GOLDEN

FROZEN

Jeno's
$109
12·01.
Pizzas .. .. ... .. ... Pk 11 .

.
s
·Safeguard Soap ....2!::.· 1
$

.

Kroger
White Bread

•,

MOr 01

.

2

79

$ ll

C

15 ·

·

3

.•

G'~;;~;;'·a~i;go~;~~
. SliCIDOIIIYTHHilCE ,
DOMESTIC NATUIAl

lb .

'

Swiss Cheese....... lb .

FRISI4 lAKED COCONUT , LEMON
.01 CHOCOLATE

S199
s329

·

Meringue Pie .... ... '·~;:h$3 49 ·

3

•·Ct.

N11xt to E lberlelds In Pomeroy

88

~USHT

fiEIH

'
.
.
2
SJ
......... ... .... "'•··

Chapman Shoes

lb.

19
$1 ·

59c

C

0 Cedar:Broom .... Each

-.

,

Salad Tomatoes ... lb .
3 S1
Cucumbers .. .. .. ... .. For

.

o·c;oAI

Rln~s pt:

••••••••••••••••••

Delicious Apples .. Each
59
Winesap
Apples
...
~~:·
S1
.
.
Fre•h Broccoli.,.... Bunch 79c

Shampoo .. ... ... .. .. .IS•o1.
1111. .·

Anita

*':.:::! .r~·=tf•,::: .~~:,},""

~~!~:es .... .. .z~~~~ 289

Diet Pepsi
or .Pepsi Cola

HIAD I SHOULDI~S

BECAUSE IT'S BEITER.

12
DF

Californ·
·Strawberries

.

MOUNTAIN DEW,

IIIGI-01 WHITE

WHY?

liMIT 3 IOXIS WITH COIPOII

$199

28

Pkgt.

FOR EASTER 10% OFF

1

LIMIT ONE COU,ON ,EI FAMily

~::k':, Breast.

.S. GOV'l INS'II:flii
flESH GROUND

Boneless Top
$249
Round Roast .. . lb .
Kahn's Wieners ... ~~~: S1 79
S129
f r1e
• d Clams .. ....... S·o
Pk 11 .
i;i;'r;i~'hE'Fmets .. ~i.o;: 29

1•01.

$399

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FROZEN

~

·
79
_ leS ... .. ... :. .2
P0t P

Brand
Sandwich Steaks

•·7·U. 1\VG .

U.S. GOV'T GRADED C!!OICE.
IEEF

o

FIOZIN 100'1. lllF
WAFER StiCID

~

Pork St'eaks ... ..... .

FIOlEN MORTON

79c

~-~...~ ~wikee

lb .

.

12·01 .
Cuu .

Juice

$299

Smoked Picnics .... lb.

79c

...,...
.. S1 09

.

age

Lv1.

SATURDAY and SUNDAY, APRIL 3 &amp; 4

.FREE REFRESHMENTS
DOOR PRIZES WU BE AWARDED

11·01 .
Dtl .

·~::·

KROGER IUTTERCIUST

CltJss

Warceaterlllh
16•n .
ltl.
S.uce .

OllliCID

KIOGEI FROZEN

SPRING OPEN HOUSE

I

"10011

KIQG(":' WMOU

CoHage Cheese ... 2c~::·
S129
•
16·01.
0 range JUICe .... .. ·. Ctnr.
2
20-01 •S1 09
Bread...............

Gillilan

Stt

lnst.t ·
CaH11 .. ... ·-1-o.•• ·

C•r~

Wldta

$11

KIOGII DICAffltN4TI'

c••

KROGER

R. JOHNS, LTD.

20·01 .

linin ....... ...

16·01 .

·Country Club •;, ·Gal.$13 9
Ice Cream ...... . c'"'·
·

WOOds

LILIES • MUM~ • HYACINTHS
TULIPS • AZALEAS • HANGING BASKETS
•FOLIAGE•

~alsln

KIOGU

Sl

12:00-5:00

KIOGII CIIIIAL

I

.Chicken
Drumsticks .....

'l;r· S1 09

...... . ...·····.

Ill , ... ..

Examinatklns _by Apl
PH. 992-6545

'THIS

~:'... .

_. .
..__...__

MIS. ,AUL'S FROZEN

Elone Lee Gillilan was honored
with a party given by her parents
George and Linda Gillilan, Friday
mght m observance of her eighth bir·
thday.
A space theme was carried out
.with a novelty spaceman cake
decorated by her aWl!, Vicky
Gillilan. The party was highlighted
by a simulated trip throllgh space
wtth Mary Gillilan in the role of pilot
of the spaceship. Games and prizes

$11·

C:.st Cutter

,. ,. . .2oc

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A . INS,ECTED
GRADE A

.""•·. . 39c

JIIGGII SHAVII

WHOLE . FRESH IOSTON•II'TT
SliCED INTO

VISION EXAMINATIONS
CONTACT LENSES
CHILDREN'
. S VISION

1"5

·:::

C:.st Cutter
Mustard . '~::

COU CUTTIIIIGULAI
' 01 MINIATUII

443-C Locust St., Middleport

t:weD.

·~:: 51P9

"o

lflembers. We make it
possible for you to enjoy a
year ' round tan in one of
our sun Tan Centers.

Doctor of Optometry
THURS.
PRI.

.. c. ..

WHAT IS THE
SUNBURST AMERICAN
CLUB?
It Is an
exciting
safe"
concept in
indoor Mnning.

JAMES L SCHMOLL, O.D.
~~~·

~~"

''•GI.

r.n::,.•..
KIOGII

..tlafKhOr1 regarctleU ot mtnutacturer II v9U are not,.ut••·
tied . ~~;,098' 'Mit r~ ..,our 1tMn 'M'Ch tM ume bflnd Of a
c
rat* bflnd 0t r.tui'Wl
r rcha• 1ce

-.

, •KIGII CIIIAL

c••

.... IJ" "'f·• ,.! f

·

.

'

THE UNllOE FAMILY of
Crown City will sing at Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church, Middleport, Saturday at '7:30 p.m.
The public is invited.

onlY !

:
·

FO · EVERYDAY
LOWP ICES

SA11JRDAY

e

Gary M. Russell, $00 of Leiter R.
keel was laid on oct. II , 197~ ana it
and Lora A. Rusaell of Muon, W.
was laWlched March 1$,1980.
A&gt;; a "plankowner" or the Vinson, Va., has been promoted In the U. S.
he will go through months of in- Air Force to the ran1t of staff
telll!ive training as the carri~r sergeant.
Russell is a computer operatOr. at
becomes part of the Atlantic Fleet.
SCoU
Air Force Bue, ID., with the
A 1966 graduate of Kyger Creek
1500th
COmputer Services Squadron.
High School, Cheshire, and a 1974
Hla
wife,
C&amp;role,la the daURhter o!
graduate of the University of
Louisville, Louisville, Ky ., with a Olarles Kuhl of Route 3, Pomeroy.
He Ia a 19'73 graduate of Wahama
bachelor o! arts degree, Harrison
High
School, Mason.
joined the Navy in September 1967.

.

.

GRACE EPISCOPAL Church
Women will hold a rummage sale
at the parish house on Friday and
Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Woods
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Woods en·
tertained recently with a party
honoring their daughter, Melissa, on
her birthday.
Refreshments of cake, made by
Mrs. Roger Stewart, ice cream,
chips and pop w.ere served to
Rosalyn Stewart, Shannon and
Brett, Brenda Neigler, Scott
Neigler, Heather Woods, Lesley
carr, Beth Ewing, Kenda Kloes,
Laurie Wayland, Ronnie Bachtel,
David ROW!h, Todd Powell, Scott
Barton, Chuckle Smith, Keith Mat·
lox, Julie Baity, Wendi Kloes, Matt
Schloss, Tammy Wright, Joseph An·
thony Wilson, Dennis Harris, Shan·
non and Linda Sue Stewart, Amy
Blake, and Kathy Thomas.

-

'THE ANNUAL inspection of
Shade River Lodge 4$3, F&amp;AM,
will be held Friday evening at
7:30 p.m., lite Spencer, master,
announces, Refreshments wiD 1be
served.

A

Paul H. and Leah B. Harrison of
Route 4 Gallipolis is serving abollrd
the Navy's newest nuclear-powered
aircraft carrier. He Is aviation supply support officer or the uss carl
Vinson, home~ in Norfolk, Val.
Commissioned March 13, l!IC!, at
Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry
Dock Company, it was finished one
month ahead of schedule and CO$t
~ million less than the estimated
$1.7 billion budgeted for the ship. Its

Wagqner, son of Juanita Wagoner of those forces.
The 1,1110 Marines 'and Sallors forStaff Sgt. Samuel J. Welc-h, ·son of 46 Central Ave., Gallipolis, recently ming the nucleus of the 34th MAU
departed lor an extensive six-month
Samuel L. and Thelma M. Welch of deployment to the Western Pacific.
are embarked · aboard . sl!lps
llZI Second Ave., Gallipolis, has
He is a member of Marine specially designed to u-.nspor1 comarrived for dutY, at FQI't Bragg, N.C.
Medium Helicopter Squadrcin 162, . bat personnel.
Welch, a supply sergeant, was 34th marir.e Amphibious Unit ' All are scheduled to Jiarticipate in
previously assigned in Hellbronn, . (MAUl, Marine Corps Air Station, various training exercises and make
West Germany.
port visits to several Mediterranean
New )Uver, Jacksonville, N•.C.
He is a 1969 graduate of Dinwiddie
The 34th MAU is tasked with cities.
County High School, McKenney, Va.
providing quid{ reaction assault forNavy Lt. Paul D. Harrison, son of
ces,
and the air supp&lt;a't required for
Marine GUMery Sgt. John S.

ner Insurance building, W. Main
St., under the ~ponsorship of the
SalvaUon Anny Home League
Ladies. Proceeds will help on the
Ealrter missions program of the
league. There will be homemade
bread, rolls, cup cakes, pies, caridies, cookies for sale and there
will also be a small amount of
very good clothing for sale
reasonably.
·

The Daily Sentlllll Page 7

Pvmlrvy Middleport, Ohio

Ma!ch 31, 1982

I

Ham

88

�.

l'u;•

8-1M Daily StntiMI

Ponlli'Oy-Midd!eport, Ohio

-Composite--Index df
Leading
Economic
Indicators

GOP senators say economy
worse than Reagan admits
budget In ~t weeki, althoiJih
White HoUle Chief ol. Staff James
A. Baker m has begun a series ot
private rneetlngB with House Democrats on a possible bipartisan
compromise.
,
House Republlcans were added
to the group Tuesday, and Baker
later met sep&amp;r!ltely with top Se-

economy. Sen. ,Robert. Kasten, R·
Wis., was the lone dlsaenter, urging
A-'tled ..._ Wrt&amp;er
his Republican colleagues not to
WASIUNGTON (AP) The
begin their work by rejecttng Rea'Republican -controlled Senate
gan'sown.
Budget Committee, repudiating
But the committee adopted a
President Reagan'soptJmlsUc lorecast for the economy, says the coun- · forecast that said the economy will
rebound more slowly from recestry laces tougher times than the
sion this year and show less growth
admJnlstration wants to admit and
In the following two years than the
much bigger budget dellclts. ·
White
House predicts. The panel
.At the same time, the cOmmittee
also assumes that lntlatlon, unem·
began Its work on a 1!183 spending
ployment and 1Dterest rates will
plan Tuesday with a bipartisan dJa.
generally be higher than the pres!·
play ot Impatience over Reagan's
dent forecasts.
refusal to compromise on his proIt said the 8Ct1Jal detlclta will
posed budget.
climb
from $121.8 bllUon In ftscal
"It's abtolutely ilrgent we move
1!183
to
$136.4
bWion In 1985- even It
and move with dispatch," said Sen.
Pete V. Domenlct, R-N.M., the Congress enac11 au t11e spending
cuts the president Is proposing. In
·committee chairman. He favors a
series ot steps to reduce bUdget de- contrast, Reagan says the deftdts
will be $96.4 billion In 1983, decllnlng
tielII, Including higher taxes, less
to $71.2 bWion In 1985.
spelldlne on defense and Umlts on
Despite tile break with Reagan,
coat or Uvlng lncreaaes tor Social
Domenld said the vote could reSecurity.
.
present the first step In producing a
"Thla Isn't a game ot budget
"credible" plan to reduCe budget
chicken. Thta Ia a very serious busl·
detlclta.
~." uld Sen. Ernest HoWngs, 0In addition to Domentcl and Hol·
S.C., ran!dng Democrat on the
panel and author of another alter- lings, there are five or six other
committee members who have
nattve to Reagan's budget.
· "The president needs to get on dtafted alternatives to Reagan's
line," echoed Sen. J. ~n John- budget. All are based on tile less
optimistic economic forecast.
ston, 0-La.
Members ot both poUtical parties
The committee, which Is exare
concerned that the large dellepected to complete Its redrafting ot
Its
In
Reagan's plan will keep InterReagan's budget after a two-week
est
rates
high and choke ott
Euler recess, began the job Tueseconomic
recOvery
later this year.
day by voting 13-1 to reject the presReagan
has
shown
Utile lncUnaIdent's optimistic forecast for the
~on to make conCessions In his

11J DAVID I!BPO

Wednftday. March 31, 1982

Six men on trial
for racketeering

Economic Activity
1967o:100

CLEVELAND (AP) - Six

already tried lor the murder ot
rackets figure Daniel J. "Danny"
Greene and the bribing ot an FBI
clerk wW starid trial on racketeer·
lng charges .In a federal case

142·

138·

against organized crime.
Sec!ll'lty will be heavY for the
criminal trial, tentatively set to
begin Thursday In u.s. District
Court. The case Is expected to take
eight or nine weeks.
Jury selection was to have
started March 22 but was delayed

nate Republlcans and twO Democrats, llolllngs and Sen. Rusaen B.
Long, 0-La.. '
.
HolllngB saki afterwards

that

Baker Indicated he was making .
progress In his talks with House
Democrats.
·
But House Speaker Thomas P.
O'NetU Jr., O-Masa., said he has not

' '
!

I

by pre-trial motions and appeals.
Judge wuuam K. Thomas 1s
waiting tor a ruling from the 6th
U.S. Clrcult Court ot Appeals on
motions by twO defendants who

'

I

I

seen any sign Reagan Is shlttlng his
views on the budget. O'Neill hai not
met with Baker, but talks regularly
with the Democrats w)lo have Reps. James Jones ot Oklahoma,
Dan Rcetenkowskl ol. Illinois
Richard Bolling ot Missouri.

•

1911

I

•82

and --=:.... . . .
Source : Commerce Dept.

oiher ottlc1als, who asked not to
he Identified by name, said Baker
and the congresslonal participants
In the talks have not swapped spedtlc proposals to change Reagan's
budget. But Baker was said to lndl·
cate wiUingness to discuss spendIng less on defense than the
administration budget caUs for and

an

INDEX FALLS- The govern-

ment'• Index tl Lead!Dg loa K&amp;uge of future
eeoaomic activity, fell 0.3 percent
In February, the Commeree

dleatars,

Depllrtmettt annoulll!ed Tuet~day.
( AP Laaerpholo).

In Increasing taxes.
At the same time, otfldals said
he apparently Is adamant against
any changes In the three-year per·
sonal Income tax cut that Congress
approved a year ago at the pres!·

IsSued In tile Meigs County Probate
Court to Robert Keith Chapman, 39,
and Frances Lorene Luikart, both

dent's urging,

ot Middleport.

Mlll'l'iage licent~e
A

men

marriage ucense

been

has

area.
have been

bribery charges.
Liberatore Is In prison alter being
convle~ of the bribery charges.
Clarcla, Clstemlno and Carabbla
are serving lall terms following
convletlonaln the Jlaylng. ~
. . Llcavoll, whom prosecutors allege II&gt; '.!he underworld boss In
Cleveland, was 81-'Qultt.ed ot both
the Greene killing and the bribing
ot FBI clerk Geraldine'&amp;blnowltz.
Calandra also was acquitted 1n both

Nam•------------------

PHONE 992·2156

1 Cttrd of Thanks (petid in ndvr~n c e)
2 C~trd ot Thanks (paid in ildvnnce) ·

3 Announcements

21 Business Opportun ity
11 Money to Loan
23 Professionr.l Sc rv•ccs

4 Gi'V'CCIWC\V

5 H•PPY Ads
6 Loat and Fou nd
1 Yard Sate (paid'" cld\lanrl' }
B·Pubt ic Sa le
&amp; Auction
9·Wantcd to Buv

----=
...................
.. .........==c...
_,

Jt Homes tor Sale
32 Mobile t-iomes for Sillfl
JJ Farms for Si! IC
34 Business Buildinqs
35 L ots &amp; AcrcRQe
J6 Rf'etl EstAte W~ntrr1

• •

"

r '

' '• '

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

r

II
I
I
I
I
I
I

SJ Antiques 54·Misc . MerchandiS('
55-Building Supplies
S6 Pets tor Sal e
57·Muscial instruments
SA Fruits&amp; Vegetables
.59· For Sa le or Trade

Gallia County
Arc., CodeOt4

446-Gallipolis
367-Cheshire
388-Vinton
24s-Rio Grande
2S6-Guyan Dist .
64l-Arabia Dist.
319- Walnut

I

81 Home ·tmprovements
82 Plumbt,nQ &amp; Heating

&lt;II Houses for Rent
42 Mobile Homes for Renl
43 F..rms for Rent
.44 Apartment tor Rent
45 Furnished Room s
46 Space for rent
47 ·Wanted to Rent
o4R EQuip1.1ent lor Rent
49 For L ease

18 Wanted To do

PUblic Notice

Public Notice

VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT,
Mf. IGS COUNTY
J or The Fis.cfll Yc.r~r
fJ nded December
31, 1981
CASH
~
RF.CONCIUATION
Subtotals
Depository Balrtnces
Central Trust
. · Compen~
s 63,4UR7
Provident Bi'lnk
Cin(innAti
10,40'1, 42
Fir!"ot Ni'ltioni"ll B,l nk
""'
· Cincinnati
2,412 .7t

OvN (UnciC'r} Ex p.
Disbu rsements S 1.618.75
Ottwr Fin;,ncinfJ Sourcf' !;

lnvr~tmr.n1s :

Treasury Bond11 and
Notes
1R.S.304 . 17
Certificates ot
Deposit
471.970 .00
OTher tnVf'Stmrnts
( rncludinQ
70 .53
Savinqs l
Total11
Totrt l Depository
Bal;mccs
76,260 .01
·TotAl Invest
monts
658,344 .70
Tntf'l Trf!asury
B&lt;"lrmcc
734.604 .71
Less : Outstrmdinq
Checks and
· Warrants, Dec. 31.
19R1
71,745 .13
Totrtl BrtiAnccs. Dec .
31 . 1981
712 ,859 .58
1Cilsh !"net Investments
In H~tnds of
rrustf!cs)
198,120 .36
Fund cash

Bal•mces
Tole I
593;542 .02
Tol•l
119.317 .56
GrMd Tolal
712,859.58
.COMBINED STATEMENT
OF UCEIPTS,
DISBUR5EMF. NTS,
AND CHANGES IN
BALANCES GOVERNMENTAL
FUNDS
Gc.nera! f:und
Rr.vcnuc Receipts :
Property TAXCS
39,899 .08
Other Local
Ta•es
22,683 .50
State Levibd Shared
Ta•cs, E Ic.
9,842 .04
Cht"r~es for
7,707 .16
Services
Fee~. Licenses,
Permits
2,402 .66
Interest
Earnings
.49,310.45
Fines and
Forfclls
55,841 .20
All Other
Revenur
3,195.39
Totfti Revenue
..:Receipts
190,881.A8
. E•penditure
Oisbur ·
seoments :
,
security of Persons and
Pr-rly
8-4,669.47
Public Health and
.. Welfaro
4,249.58
General Govern ment
50.W.61
Tot..f E•P· Olsburso·
·
ments
1:19,262.73
Total Revenue Receipts
~

Public Notice

•

.

83· E xcavaJing
84·Eiecrical &amp; RefriQeriltion
85-GenerA I Hauling
86 M .H. Repilir
81 UphoiSiery

61 Filrm Equipment
61-Wtlnlf'd to buy
63 Livestock
64 Hay &amp; Grain
65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

1.

2.
3.
4.
5.

23.
24.
25.
26. _

6.
1.

Public Notice

Public Notice

I rnnsfcrs

48.217.5()

Opr. r~tinq Tr~n sfers -

In
5,307.64
Opcrrttinq Transf ers
Out
63,912 .11
Net lr]l:omc
(or Loss)
(10,391 .97)
Residual Equity / Fund
· Br~lanccs
J-'n. 1
67,669 .00
Residual Equity / Fund
Balances Occr mbcr
31
57,277 .03
Total
,..roprietary
OpcrrttinQ Revenues:
Chi\rqcs for
services
20• . 159.75
Olher Operetino
Revenues
18.586.42
Total Opr.ratinq
Revenues
222.74ti . l1
OperRtin~=J Expenses:
Person11t
Services
73,387 .01
18,026 .19
Fringr. Benef its
Ulililics
12.712 .56
Other Opcrat inq
E•penses
77 ,831.14
lotl\f Operitling
Expenses
181,956.90
o'l"J~t~~~nco'!'e 40 •789 _27
Nonoperating Revenues

Up to 15 Word s .. .One dew

insertion

...... .$4.00

up to 15 Words ... Six day

insertion

..... $7 .00

27.
28. _ _ _ _ __:
29. _ _ _ __ _

II.

30.
31.
32.
33. _ _ _ __

12.
13.
14. _ _ _ _ __
16.

IEx~nses ):

lntnrest Revcnuf'

~ri:~e~~~~:nd

Only)
7, 115.72
Other Nonopcri'ltinq
Revenue
JQJ.SI

To~~~~~a.grratinq
CE&gt;pcnscs)
7.• 23 .23
Income BetoreOpcrAtinq
Transfers
48,212 .50
Operating TransfersIn
5,307 .64
Opera tin~ Transfers. 63,912 .11
Out
.
Netlncome
(or Loss)
(10,391 .97) ..
Residual Eq'uity/ Fund
Billi'lnces January
1
67,669.00
Residual Equity/ Fund
Balances
57 277 OJ
J n I
a ·
'
·
f:lduc.}~~ Fund
Nonexpend. Tr:
Opera,lng Revenues :
Chargestor
Services
1.270.00
Interest (Trust Funds
Only_)
3.59
Total Operating·
Revenues
1.273.59
Operatin~ Income
Cor Los.)
1.273.59
Income Belore
Oporoling
Transfers
1,273.59
Net 1nco me
CorLoss)
1,273.59

R~~?~~~;.quity/Fund

Jan . 1
60,764.94
Residual Equity/Fund
Balances
Dec . 31
62,0&lt;1(1.53
(3) 31 . He

•

INSTALLED
With Pad
Storting AI

FINANCIAL
REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For Fiscal Year
Ending December
ll, 1981
Sa lem Township
Meigs County
2'239 Legion Rd.,
langsville, Ohio
March 2S, 1982
t certily the following
reporttobecorrect.
Bonnie scou
Township Cler-k
T11 N 0
/
6 e ·3091·
· 5 uMMAR\!~ t'.
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND
E)( PENDITUR ES
Balance
. Jan. 1, 1911
General Fund
$23,318 .26
Motor Vehicle
License Tax
Fund
7,947 .'19
Gasoline Tax
Fund
10•.687.87
Total
48,635.09
Total Receipts
~ g;v:,yg~
39,123 20
License Tax
Fund
11,828.39
Gi'!SOiine Til•
Refund
39,751 . 13
Federal Revenue
.
Sh8rin~ Fund
·12,837 .00
Total
·
109.303. 19
"Transfers In"
Gasoline Tax
Fund
15.798.96
Total Total Receo'plt•S.798.96

General Fund
B"tance. Jan . 1, •
1981
23,328 .26
Receipts
General Property
Tax - Real Estate
and Trail er
CGross)
18,004.39
Tant;~ible Personal
Property Tax
!Grossi
13,385 .98
Estate Ta x
(Gross)
772 .28
Local Government
and State Income
Ta•
5,479 .•0
Cigr~rette License
Fees and F incs
37 . ~9
!Grossi
Fees, Zoning,
Cemetery, etc .
100.00
Other
1.343.76
39,123.20
Total Receipts
Total Beqinninq
Balance Plus
Receipts
62,451.46
Expenditures.
Total Expenditures.
- Admin . ·
36,880.45
- Town Halls,
Memor ial Buildings
and Grounds
3,291.02
- Fire Protection!
3, 158.79
-- Cemeteries
2,5of0 .52
Grand Total Exp. General Fund 45,870.78
BAlance, Dec. 31,
1981
16,033 .34
Tqlal Exp. Plus Bal. ,
Dec .'31,1981
61,90~ . 12
MOtor vehicle
License Tax
Fund
Balance , Jan . 1.
7,947 .90
1981
.
Receipts
Motor Vehicle
License Tax
11,828.39
Total Receipts
11.828.39

1981
8,882.90
Total E•p. Plus Bal ..
Dec. 31 , 1981
25,683.'13
Road and Bridge
· Fund
Balance, Jan. 1,
1981
10.687.87
Receipts
General Property .
Ta• - Real Eslate
and Trailer
(Gross)
23,952 .17
Transfers
15,798.96
Total RKeipts
J9,751.13
Total Seginntnp
Balance Plus
Recei~IS
50,439 oo
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
--~isc .
588.56
- ~ainl .
28,1A8.92
Grand Total Exp.Road and Br i d~e
Fund
28,137.All
Billance, Dec . 31.
1981
' 21 , 728.12
Total E xp. Plus Bal .,
Occ . 31 , 1981
50,465.60
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
Receipts
Grttnts -Federal
12.837.00
Total Receipts
12,837.00
F. •penditures ·
Maint. and
. Oper-ation
Bfitance, Dec. 31,
1981
12,837 .00
Inter-Fund
Transfers
Reconciliation
Frnm General
Fund
198.96
From Gcncr~l
Fund
15.ooo:oo
Total Exp.
Tr;,nsfers
15.798.96
To Road and Bridoc
Fund
798 .96
To Road and BridQc
Fund
· 15.000.00
Total Rcc .
Trilnsfers
15.798.96

Totacl •sH a•L•NIHC2.'4.09
~

~

~

t:

RiCE I PTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND

_

Totai · B~ginnin~

Balance Plus
Roceipls
19.7765.29
E)(penditures
Total E•penditures
- Maint. .
9,651.90
Grand Total Exp.i""'
Motor Vehicle
License Tax
Fund
9,651.90
Balance. Dec . 31 ,
1981
10,124.39
Total Exp._PIUS Bal ..
20,976.29
Dec . 31, 1981
GasoHne Ta~e
f:und
Balance, Jan. 1,
1981
6,671.06
Recotr,ts
18,600 . ~7
Gasol neT.. .
Total Receipts
18.600.47
Total Beginning
Balance PIUS
Re&lt;:efpts
25,271.53
E•penditures
Total E•P- -Misc.
· 12.074.69
~Main! .
4,726.34
Gi11nd Total E•p.Goaollne To•
Fund
16,801 .03
Balance. Dec . 31,

CAN

--

13)

r

3 I,

lie

Notic~
- ---·-Public
- -·---~-

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF WILLIAM C.
JOHNSON, DECEASED
Case No. 2:101J
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
In tho! Moigs County
Probate Court, Case No.
23013, Janealle Johnson,
Route 2. Pomeroy, Ohio
~5769
was
appointed
E•ocutrl• of tne estate 01
William
C. ·Johnson,
deceased. late of Roule 2,
Pomeroy, Ohio ol576'1"
John C. Dicon,
Aclil&gt;!l JUd!ll&gt;
(3) 17, 24, 31 , 3tc

.

.,

RIOINGMOWER

RE!I•AIITS

BRAKES -TUNE·UPS

AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN.
PH._9ft.354J ortt2-231t

Ph. 614 ·143·2591

_

C&amp;M

TRENCHING

MARCH

CONSTRUCTION
"

Dozer &amp; backhoe 5er-·
·vice, water, sewer-,
ponds,
foundations,
re~ 1 ·'T1ation .

m:

.. • l

!.~o : r r w

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes -

eK·

tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
. Custom Pole Bldgs.
e Rooflnt work
14 Years E)(perlence
1

•

FREEA suo · detail bru•h,
with tho! purchase of a
. paint kit.
J+l mo. pd.

Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
or 992· 2282
3_17 _1 mo.

~====~=~~~JF~~~~~~~;~1·
SAVE
MAKE YOUR OWN
EASTER CANDY
"Learn How f:ree 11
One Simple Claso
•Summer Coatings
•A complete line of
Molds candy
Supplies
•Wilton Ceko
Decorating Supplies

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

a.

Something Special
103 Wuhfnglon St.
R11ven1wood, W.Va.
PH . 304-273-3141

I I~:R:..:•:E~~~w~-~O~on~e~re~l~1 ·~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SKATE·A·WAY
VIRGIL B. SR .
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
H 614
l ·992-3325
"" LISTING 9
room home in Mid·
dleport that needs some
fixing . Has 2 bath•.
natural gas ~ . A . fur·
nace, 3 or Ill bedrooms,
nlc~ kitchen, carpeting .
Short fog to lhe stores. 1
Asking $19,500.
COUNTRY
3
bedroom nice home .
Carpeting. large eat-in
kltcnen,
bath.
full
basement, forced air
furnace, and Iaroe lot.
Will sell on lime or take
trade.
IARGAIN 2 or 3
bedroom one floor plan .
Bath, coal or wood fur nace and 3 lots. Want
just S9,000.
CAR WASH - A won·
derful Of&gt;porlunlty for a
business minded per·
Roqufres llnto time
to care for . can you beat
$15.000.
NEW LISTING
Redoeorated 2 bedroom
home In ~lddleport with
bath, natural gas forced
air furnace, large kit chen wllh lots of wood
cabinets. Utility room
and garage on lovel lot.
Only $16,500.
MIDDLEPORT- ~.ery
nice 3 bedroom home in
excellent cOndition. Hot
water heal, formal
dining, nice CMpellriiJ,
full basoment, garage
and fenced yard.

. -

son:

HI 11/\111(1
If,·, Hltfii.UII '",

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Oh. -

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

Play Milllon
Dollar Skating
stop

~~·i=r:r card

Wed., Frl.,4 S.AJ.
7:30 to 10:00
• 30
S un • 2 : 00 t o ..
:
Available for
f&gt;r.lyat!lf?~rjj~~ ..

" Beautiful, Custom
Buill Garages"
Coli for free olding
eulmates, 949·21101 or
949·2160.
No Sunday Calls

P_~. 98S·39.~_or

985·9996

3-ll ·tfc

·r---------·-·-·
CHERRY TREE
MINIATURE
GOLF COURSE
Ravenswood, W.Va.
NOW Open W.. ktndl
1104 P.M.
Weather Permitting

at, IIIII

Wlw

[1,.,..., IS.

PA.TIAND IIRVI(i
AL.LMAtcU

-

.w..Mrt

1
'

·~-

eDIII'IWetMu

'

' fr•

llf1to I 11114 - -

LOC:Itecl ICrOII from
the Shopping Pl~ta 1 I
WashingtonMotel.
29

· ~=·l:m:o:.~~~
'-----------4
~~·~·=··~w~·~'"'::'':":":'::='=···=":':j~=:::::::J:

IJGGS
SALES

r

&amp; SERVICE

U.5. Rl. 50 Eost
Gurs•llle, Dlllo
Aulllorlzod Jolln Deer,
New Holland, Bulh·HOI •
l'erm Equlpmont
Doaler
,.

F•rm·EqufPmerif •.
Plrts &amp; Service

•' 1-3-tfc

3885.

9_

Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fOr·
niture and Ant iques of all
k inds, call l&lt;ennelh Swain,
see
. or kids.
call, 446·3159 and 256· 1967 In the
ths 501
old.Burdette
good petStfor
·
. event nos.
75
lOH ·6lll .
CASH PAID for clean, late
model used c&amp;rs. Sml1h
6
Lost and Found
Buick -Pontiac. Gallipolis,
LOST Black
tan coon Ohio. Call446·2282.
dog, mllle, approx. 7 yr .
old, red nylon collar. Lost
Buying
Gold ,
Silver,
on Rt. 554 oro.u nd Kvger . If
Platinum, Old coins, scrap
found call 367·74-12 or &gt;146· rings &amp; silverware . Dal·l.y
8089.
quote!. av.ftilable. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies ' for
Spr i ng
Valle.y
FOUND·6' blade hunting sole .
Trading , Spring Valley
knife In case . Identify. Call
Plaza . 446·8025 or 4.46·8026 .
256·1379.

-=:.

V.'t.'YOONG Ill
,,_.,, sor fn·7J14
Pemoroy, Ohio

•30-ttc

a.

head Beagle body . Black ,
LOST &amp;smell
dog
Air Dale
white
brown.
Named
Joe.
Call 367·7734.
FOUND Sm . female
Beagle pup. In Rt. 160 area .
Call 2&gt;15· 1642.
YordSale

1

1:14,000

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown car co .
Bill Gene Johnson,
446·0069.

Wanted timber. We cut,
paying good prices. Call
446·0706.
Antique oak furnltuf-e,
round tables, bookcases,
desks, dressers, chests. ice
bo•es, etc . Caii446·37S9.

.

ROSENBERG RECYCW·
NG Opening Fri. April 2.
307 Upper ·River Rd, ,
GallipOlis . Blue building
across from Silver Bridge
Piau . Open Mon., Wed., '
•
Fri. 10 to 4. Sat . 10 to 3; •
Specializing In aluminum:
cans, alum inum sl.dino:·
sheets &amp; cast alum., copper;·
wire, brass, radiators. auto; •
batteries 1OM cards.
••

a.

Yard Sale Several families
clothing chlldrens size 2 to
adult, jeans, tops, dresses,
men's shirts . Home Interior, glassware, nic nacs,
&amp; m!sc. 2 story
green
house on Rt. 7, In Cheshire
across from J ' s Mini Mart.
9:00. to 5 :00 . Thurs., Fri. &amp;
Is In tile Sat.

----~ :·

E_arly Antique country fur-:: ....
nrture. cupboards, all kinds ' .....
of
chests ,
d~sks : : .-:
stoneware, etc. Cell 367··
0138 .
·,

.

BEDS· I RON, BRASS, old'
furniture, gold, silver:;
dOIIt~rs. wOOd Ice boxes~· .
stone 1ars , antiQues, e.C..r •
Complete
households.
'::
Wrlle : M .D . Miller, Rt.''4; Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992·7760.

doorwoy."

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

_,

3

~

Announcements

Fishing License on sale.
Come and see our new ship·

a.

Reels,
Lures . Spr ing
menl
1982 Flslng
Rods.
ValleyofTrading
co ., Spring
Valley Plua, 446·8025 .
Turkey Hunters we ha'e
mouth calls, slate box
cells, came gear &amp; decoys
In stock . Spring Valley
Trading co.• Spring Valley
Plaza , ~46- 8025 .
Di's Craft Supply , Spring
valley Plaza, 446 ·2134.
FREE
Eoster
candy
making cla•s. 7:00 Thurs.
March 18
25 . No
registration necessary .
Chocolate 11 .60 lb.

a.

For bulk delivery of
gasoline. heating oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
992·2181,Pomeroy , Oh.
Racine Fire Oepl. sponsors
a Gun Shool, Sat. nights
6:30p.m ., Bashan . Factory
choke 12 gauge shotgun .
Easter candy -learn to
make your own hollow or
solid chocolate Bunnys.
Filled eoster eggs and
much more . Free candy
making demonstrations.
Carousel Confocllonery,
MiddlepOrt. Call for dele
new
stand-up cookbook. Free
dotalls. Weist Publishing
Company, s. Main St.
Oept.S . P.O.
Box
16~ ,
Englewood , Ohio. 4.5322.

Craft
Bazaar ,
West
VIrginia Training School
Library, 2300 L.fncoln
Avenue, March 29·April 3,
10 A~ to 1 PM. Proceedo go
toward buying n&amp;W bool&lt;s
and 1i bra ry supplies.
Ill

ANY

Porch Sole 247 Neigh·
borhood Rd. Monday April
Slhru April9.

~.

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
4.46·029. ..

Gl veaw•y
PERSON who hll

anything
to give
away and
dOet
not Offer
or attempt
to
offer any other thing for
ule may place an ad In thlo
column. Thf!re will be no
chargo to the advertfsor.

31-45.

jrj~:l

a.

a.

PUPPIES,
male, 1h
Beagle, '" Red Bone. &gt;146·

SERVICE

good home, approx 7 mon·

April 2·3. Crafts, TV game,
antique hayfork, household
Items, cnilds clothing 14·8).
Alt l zers
near
South western .

~=========-~========~J and
lime. 992·6l42.
we need dealers, for

eOrytrs
• 04 ,,..,. 1,

a.

Yard Sale old Rt. 160 at
Evergreen . Fri .
Sal.
Weather permitting.

.L..-------'3-'
·3-·I_m_;;;o.- ' I "Glenda-...-

POMEROY,
QH 10
PH.
992 · 2063
STOP and look at our
tine selection o' plaster ,
ind ceramics.
-banks
-planters ··
1
- s atues
-paint
-mirrors
-5pray
-plaques
-brushes .'

Chester,

a.

TWO female, black
white, half Beagle, 30H95·

·A· DAY

hr'l Beauty Salon
169 N. 2nd
Middleport
C.ll 992-2725

Llcen1ed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949-2291
or 949-2417
3·3-lfn

~

LAFF

PERM SALE
Mon., March I
thru
Wed., Moren Jl
Reg. $2D
Now sf1:5o
.Reg. S25
NOW 122.50
Reg. SJO
Now $21.50
S35 Wave Lenlh
For Longer Hair
NowS29.50

EXCAVATING
AIID

3·29-tfc

c~a\J;.~'I-lh

.

REESE~f
SERVICE ~

PH. 992·7201

.

w 1, 6tc

o•~~:~~~~~tn

Open ~on. ·Sat. 9·5

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Ucensea • aonded

' 992·22~9

1395

3: 3, 10, 17, 24,31

~~~in~~~~~

p_.,, 011.

POMEROY,O.

NEW LISTING- MID·
DLEPORT
A
beautiful
3
bedroom
TURfl=· f=LITE 7 HP
modular home, 2 baths,
REAR ENGiNE
garden tub, WBFP, central air, electric heat,
rear screened porch,
Public Notfco
built-in range, double
.
ovens .
Excellent
LEGAL NOTICE
Nancv L. . Pope, whose
location with nice lot .
l ast known address is 170
$45,000.
Laurel Street, Middleport,
PRICE REDUCED! On
Ohio 45760 and the
th1s 2·3 bedroom home
Unknown Spouse, Heir!,
In Syracuse . New car·
Devisees ,
Legatees,
petlng, storms, In·
Executors,
Ad sulation . Gas heat,
ministrators, Succes!.Ors or
Assigns of Nancy L . Pope.
remodeled bath . Plus
11 any, have been or~ered
low Interest assumable
to aRpear or plead by May
loan I Just $25.000.
20. 1982 to a complaint filed . POMEROY A 2
in Civil Action No. C2·82 ·59 1
bedroom home, forced
in the Uniled Slates
air gas heit, carpet,
District court for the
patio,
garoe
in
Southern District of Ohio,
Eastern Division, United
basement. Large double
Stales of America, Plain·
lot." price rMiuced to
tiff, v. Nancy L Pope, el. ' $20,1100.
al., Defendants, praying
TRAILER
OR
for foreclosure ot a mortBU
I
L.DI
NG
LOTS
gage deed re&lt;:orded In
RACINE Several I
Volume 124, Page 151 of the
acre
tots .
Utilities.
mortgage records of Meigs
available. Asking $6,500 .
Counly, Ohio, which mor·.
an acre for lots with
tgaoe deed is a lien on the
following described real
road frontage.
property situated In the
A GRACIOUS HOME IN
City of MiddlePOrt, CountY'•
POMEROY
4'
of Meigs, and State of Ohio,
bedrooms, hardwood
and described as follows :
floors, gas forced air
S ltuated In l..I&gt;Wer
h&lt;!at. fireplace, front sit·
Pomeroy ,
now
in ling porch . A good price.
corporated In the Village of
Middleport. Village Of Mid·
$29,900.
dleport, Salisbury TownNEW L.ISTING IN
•hip, ~eigs County, Ohio :
SYRACUSE- Nice cor·
Being all of Lot NO. 441 and
ner lot with Jlh story
being a part of the same
frame home that has 3
real estate conveyed by
bedrooms, family room,
James R. fads toJa'm es H .
utility room, workshOfJ
Allen bY deeci recorded in
deed Book 197, Page 65,
&amp; garage . Lots of
Doecl Records of Meigs
flowers, shrubs &amp; trees.
Present loan can be
ADDRESS :
assumed. $35,000.
760 L.aurel Street, ~id·
dleoort, Ohio -45760
REALTORS
Failure to respond to the
Henry E. Clel.nd, Jr.,
complaint will fesult In an
GRI
"Hlf1
Entry
of
Default,
Jun Trussefl t4HMO
·JudiJmenl end Decree In
Feltectosure. 1110 of tho! ·
Dottle TUI'MI' fn·Mn
mortgaged pr-rty and
Ollie.'
fn·22J9
.exllnguTshmtnt Of all ln·torestslnuld'll!'•rl'(.
Johri D . Holschuh
Unllad States
Dtstrlct Ju~

.

Utility Buildings

•backhoe
• excavating
*septic systems
• water. sewer
&amp;gas lines
•dump truck
~ il'!'tSti.ne

. 1~50.

11 HP TRACTOR

WITH MOWER

.(Formerly Bare Metal)
· 211 w . Main, Pomeroy

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

l. ioilair1W

'495

INT. IHP

Sizes •tart I rom 30•24"

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING

POMEROY
LANDMARK
USED MOWERS
614-tt2·2~~ .

GARAGE

R ' k&amp;B'IIC
oc
I
ogar
Owners

CANDLEUGHT INN
PH. 992-9913
Rt. 1 Cheshire, Oh.
St. !11.7
OPEN 1 DAYS
A WEE I&lt;
Open Mon.-Sat.
12:00 p.m. to 2: 30a .m .
Sun. 12 a.m.-12 p.m.
Carryout Beer
AVIIII.Ie
Boncls,Every Fri. &amp;
Sit. Night ·
THIS FRI . &amp; SAT.
MARSHALL
TENNANT BAND
Coming Nul
Lone Wolle Band
Then Tranzit
Happy H011r
Mon.-Thurs.
4:00 to6:00 p.m .
Mon.- K ag Night
Tues.-Ladlao Night
Wado.-Gent. ljfght
·Thun.-Pool Tourn .
3-24-IIC

ROLL END

Sq. Yd.
CooiHI....rj

IN GOOO SHAPE

BUILDINGS

C=====C=====~~~
DABBLE SHOP

·.

~

S499

DR' EAM' Sl.
New Construction
•
a~d ·Remodell"n".

For a II your wiring.
needs;
furnaces ·
repair service and
ins.t a Ita tion.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742·3195
H · tfc

W£HAYEA '·
LAIICE
SEL£CTIOII Of

CARPET
starting At

1

HELnou

.

..
s&lt;i

Five year ol~ male Collie.
Owner mov ing , children ' s L .E . Neal Auctioneer
v ic e
Est ate -Farm ·
pet. Call 446-7286.
Hou .. hold·M isc. We sell ill
Licensed bonded Ohi o
Black
&amp;
wh i t e
half wva . 367·7101 .
Chihuahua. half Terrier
-·
female. pup, house broken.
Auction every Fri. nl ghl of
CaiiA-46·465'1 or 446·7619.
the . Her tford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
Ml•ed breed female pup,
everv week .
Call 446·3144 work, or 388· merchandise
Conslgments of new and
9811 home.
used merchandise always
wel c ome .
R i c har.d
F~male Springer Spaniel·
Reynolds Auctioneer . 215·
3069.
.
full blooded. m -m1.

- 2-~-tf-c-Jll MALE, part Irish Setter,
L _ _ _ _ _ _...:,2·.:26:.·.;:tf~c~~---------~-

. BUILD YOUR'

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Average -4 wvrds per l ine)

Public Notice

and Balances
General Fund
62 ,451.46
Motor Vehicle
LFicednseTa•
un
119,776.29
Gasoline Tax
Fund
5(),439 .00
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
12,837.00
Total
170,775 .28
Expenditures
General Fund
&gt;15,870.78
Motor Vehicle
License TaK
Fund
9,651 .?0
Gasoline TaK
Fund
28.737 .-48
Total
101,061.19
' "Transfers OUt"
General Fund
15,798.96
Total
15,798.96
Balance
• Dec. 31,1"1
General Fund
16,580.61
Motor Vehicle
Llcen.. Tax
Fund
10.124.:19
Gasoline T a•
Fund
21 ,701 .52
F~!~~:'j:v,:'~ue !!,837.00

8·2Q-tfc

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

3~·-----35. - - - - - -

Rubberback

$}29~q.

Public Notice

,&lt;'

_ _ __

8.
9.
10.

CARPET

Public Notlco

7

_

. .... 53 .0U

in~r110n ..

NOTORS INC.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992·2174

Slzesfrom4oo6andall
wood buildings 24&gt;36.
Insulated Dog Houses

SL Ill. 124

22.

We have· a full ·
warehouse of good
selections and ex·
tra good prices on
our carpeting.

675-Pt . Pleasant
4SI-leon
·576-Applf Grove
773-Mason
882-New Haven
895-Lelart
9J7- Buflalo

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2263
949·2160

SMITH NELSOM • )

~========~t;==~';·~3-~1~7-~1~~;~t~~;;;;~6~·1;5~-t~fc~f~~~~~~3;-5;·;1~m~o~.j

20.
21.

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel .
1.11 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Up to 15 Words ... rhree day

j

Rrvr. nue R ~Cf'lpts :
Ac tiv1tics
1.334.58
I ntorr.st
Basic Utility
E;uninqs
15,933 .96
Srrv ices
12,9'24 .56
( US('S / ·
1 otal Rr.v enuc
Transport;~
Opcr,1t1n&lt;1 Trttn sfers
Receipts
15,933 .96
tlon
68.702 .37
In
7.A7.4. 11
Dt'bt Scrvicf' :
General Govern·
OncrM1nq Tr;"lnstrr s
Bond Princ1pal Rf'tirf'
mcnl
55,107.16
Oul
J9.R75. 13
mcnt
.
t5,000.00 Capite I Ouii•Y
601,061.08
Othf'r F1nanri nq
tntcrc st &lt;1nct Fisc al
Debt Service :
Sour ces
191 .60
31.893.75 Bond Principal
Chilrc.leS
Total Oth0r Finetnc.nq
Tot ill Exp. Di sburse
Rf!tiremcnt
10.000.00
5ources (Uses l
mrnts
(J0,959 .79i Interest and Fiscal
(36.809.42)
Other Finanr 1nq Sources
Charges
39,093.75
~X C f' SS OIR r'C. iiOcl
. ( Us~ s l
Total E )(p. Disburse
Qthf~ r Sources Ovr.r
Opr. ritlinq Trrmstr-rs
, mcn1s
900, 116.70
( Unrtf'r) D1sbursc . •1nd
48,930 .00 Totill Reve nu ~
1n
Other Usrs ·
14,809 .33
Tol(ll Othr.r
Receipt s Over (Under)
Fund Cit sh Bf11 ilncc
F 1nanc ino Snurcr s
E »&lt;P. Disburse
January 1
I h '254 . 12
(Uses)
.48,930.00
mcnl•
(33,530.23)
Fund (&lt;iSh Ba!i\OCC
E xr r.s.s 01 R Cl.. . rmd
Other F inancinq Sources
DecembN 31
'26,063 .45
Other Sourcrs Ovr.r
(U ses) :
Spvcioll Revenue
I under) Oi s bur ~f' . and
.Opcratinq Transfers Ftlndli
OHler Usc'i
17,970.11
In
99,846.04
Rl'venue Rf"!cc ipts:
Fund Cash Billrmcc
Operatinq T ri'lnst crs Property Taxes
39.791.70
JilnUMY I ,
180, 150.15
Oul
41 ,2&lt;1 .57
Stfttc Levied ShMed
Fund Ca 'i h Bali! nCr
(.!her Flnrlnc inq
TAxes, Etc.
34,573 .00
DcccmhC'r 31
198, t70 .36
Sources
2~ . 60
tntr.rqovcrnmcnf"l
Co1pital Project
Total Other
Grrtnt/
Funds
Financing Sources
Contrilcls
551. 386 .75
Revenu e Receipts :
CU..,s)
58,873.07
ChMQCS for
I ntcrcst
E)Ccess ot Rcc . ;md
Services
16,670.25
EuninQ"s
9,400.58
Other Sources Over
All Othr.r
Tot at ReVenue
(Under) Disburse . and
7.948.25
Revenue
Receipts
9,400.58
Other Uses
25 . 3~2 . 114
Tota l Rcvcnu&lt;'
Tot ill Revenue
rund Cash Balance
Rec eipts.
650.370.-45
Receipts Over (Under)
January I
568,199. 18
Expenditur e
Di sbur
E)Cp. D isburse·
Fund Cash BAlance
s"ments :
mcnls
9.400.58
December 31
593,542.02
security ot Persons
Other F inancinq Sources
COMBINE'D
ilnd Property
12,954.56 I Uses )
STATEMENT OF
Public HeAlth and
Operat inq Transfers -·
REVENUES, EXPENSES,
Wcllarc
18.99
In
·
12,000.00
• AND CHANGES IN
Leisure Time
Total Other FinAncinq
. EQU ITY / FUND
Activilies.
1,334.58
Sources (U ses) 12;000.00
BALANCES
Basic Utility
Excess of Rec . and
ALL
PROPRIETARY
Services
12. 92.4 .56
Other Sources Over
FUND TYPES AND
Transporta
(Under) Disbusc . and
SIM~LAR
tion
68,702 .37
21.400.58
Olher Uses
FIDUCIARY
FUNDS
General Govern
Fund Cash Balance
Proprietary Fund
menl
4,164.08
January 1
130,969.24
Type
Capil61Outlay
601,061 .08 Fund Cash Balrtnce
Enterprise
Debt Service :
152,369.82 Operating Reve-nues :
December 31
Bond Principal Retire
Total Governmental
Charge!. (or
men!
S.OOO.OO
Funds
Services
204,159.15
Interest ilnd Fiscill
Revenue Receipts ;
Other Operatung
Chart;~cs
7,100.00 Property Ta•es
~.691.28
Revenues
· 18,586.1112
Totrtl E)Cp. Disburse·
Local Ta)(eS 22.68:1 .50 Total Operating
menls
713,960.22 Other
State Levied Shared
222.146.17
Revenues
Tot~ l Revenue
T••es. Etc. .
44,415.04 Operating Expenses :
Receipts. Over (Under)
tntergovern me-nta 1
Pe..,..,nal Services 73.387.01
E xp. Disburse ·
Grant/
·
Fringe Benefits
18,026.19
163,589.77)
monts
Contracts
551 ,386.75 Utilities
12,712.56
Other FlnancinQ Sources Charges
tor
Other Operating
(Uses)
Services
2_.,377 .41
E•pensos
77,831.14
Opcr~tinq Transfers Fees, Licenses,
Total Operating
In
36.041.93
Permits
2.402.66
Expen,.s
181,956.90
O~rilfinq Transfers Interest
Operating Income
Out
1.366.44
Earnings
74.6~4 . 99
(Or LOSs I
40,789.27
Other FinancinQ
Fines and
Nonoperating Revenues
Sources
17 .00
Forlells
55.841 .20 (Expenses):
loti'! I Other.Financ inq
All Other
Interest Revenue
Sources 1Uses) 34,752 .49
Revenue
ll,1d.6_.
(Proprietary and
E •cess ol Rec . and
· Total R&amp;venue
A~ency Funds
Other Sources Over
Receipts
866.586 . ~7
Only)
7. 115.72
1Under) Disburse. and
E~penditure
Disbur - Other Nonoperating
Olh&lt;!r uses
128,137.28) sements ~
307 .51
Revenue
.1
Fund Calli Balanc~
Se&lt;:urlly of PerSOns ·
Total Nonoperating
January I
245.825.67
and Propl!rl'(
97,624.03
Revenues
.Fund ,Cash Balance
Public Health and
7,423.23
CE•pcnses)
De&lt;:ember 31
216,988 .39
Income Before
Welfare
. ~.268 , 57
Deltt S.rvlco
Lelsufe Time
1 Operating
Funds

.

18. _ _ _ _ __
19, _ _ _ _ __

Mason Co., wv
Area Code 304

Meigs County
Area CO&lt;te,l4
992-Middleport
Pomeroy
91s-Chester
:J43- Portland
247- Lelart Falls
949-Racine
742-Rutland
667- Coolville

t

17.

following telephone exchanges . ..

Set IEBS
11 Help wantcn
17 Situation Wc1nled
13 lnsLiranct'
14 Business Train•nq
IS· Schools Instruction
16 Radio, TV &amp; CB Rcpitir
17 Miscellaneous

C )Wanted
I ) For Sale
I ) Announcement
I ) For Rent

oo' '"

71 Autos for Sate
n Trucks tor Sale
73 vans&amp;4WD
74·Mot.o rcyc les
75 .B oals &amp; Motors
76· Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
77 ·Auto Repair
78 Camping Equipment

· Ph. 949·2160 or 949:2322
7·5-tfc

All l'(pos of (OOI work,
new or rejNir gutter and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

• Radiator SpKiallst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. E•porJence . · 1

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011

HOSKINS

. .._.,-..

Classified pages cover the
Sl · Houset'lotd GOOds
52·CB . TV &amp; ~•dio Equipment

custom kitchens and
appll•nces,
custom
bathrooms, remodelinli,
plumbing, electric. all!!
helllll!J .

'H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

MAIN STREET

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

Mere ..andlse

f IRIR£111

RADIATOR
SERVICE
F-rom tl'te smallest
He•rer Core to the
Largest Radiator.

Phan•------------------- t;:========::!=========~~=~;:::;;;.~=;tr~::::::::::::::::::::=::j
;FOWLER CONSTRUCTJON .
.All STEEL
'\

115. - - - - - -

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio4S769

"'

TOM

Addren----------------

1

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

'

.

.

-'""

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

1

And Home MalnU,nar1ce J
• Roofing of oil types
• Siding
• Remodeling
e 'f:ree estimates
• 20 Y rs. experience

crlnies.

The government Is bringing the
!llel! to trial oil charges they con·
want to be dtopped from the case.. spired to commit the crlnles alid
The six defendants are being thus engaged In rae~.
pl'OIIeCIIted under the Racketeer·
To prove conspiracy, proseculng, lntluence and Corrupt Organitors must prove that each defend·
zation act.
·
ant committed at least two ot the
Charged with racketeering are five acts with which they are
James T. LlcavoU, Anthony Libera· charged. _
the government alleges
tore, Pasquale J. Clsternlno, Ro- "a pattern of racketeering activity,
nald D. Carabbla, John P. Including murder, conspiracy to
Calandra and Kenneth Clarda.
m~ and bribery." .
Thomas Land, who was Indicted
Among those expected to testlty
with the others In 1979, pleaded are Aladena (Jimmy the Weasel)
guDty to lesser charges and will Fratlanno, who turned government
testlty.
Informer and revealed Mafia seThe case stem:; from the 19'77 crets 1n a recent book.
deatha ot Greene and Teamsters
Thomas Is considering a motion
leader John Nardi and In the brib- by the government to Introduce tesIng ot an FBI clerk for secret rues.
timony from Fratlanno that Lica·
Greene was kWed 1n October 19'77
voll, Calalidra and Liberatore were
when a bomb ltJdden In his car ex- members of the Cleveland tainlly
ploded. Investigators beUeve his ot La Cosa Nostra, the Mafia.
death resulted from a struggle 191'

The Daily Sentinel

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

Write your own id 'ond order- by-·mell with this
coupOn. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
rHults. Money not refundable.

1

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

a.

.

control of rackets 1D the

All six defendants
tried In state court 1D tile Greene
slaying and In federal court on tile

Business -Senices

Curb-Inflation
Pay Cash
for
.
Classlflecls a lid
Savel I-I

I
I
I
I
I

•

Large V ard Sale Moved
here recently from oavton
many good clean items
used and new rugs, bedspreads, pictures, 18 fl. lad·
der, glassware, small appliances, clothing, First
l ime In this area . 12 till
7P~ . April 2.3. 13J State
St., Gallipolis. Phone ~46 8398.
Large Yard Sale Moved
here recently from Dayton
many good clean Items
used and new rugs, bedspreads. plcturn, 18ft. led·
der, glassware, small ap·
pllances, clothing, . First
time In this area . 12 1111
7P~ . April 2.3. 133 State
St .• Gallipolis. Phone &gt;146·
8398.

Gold , silver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;; '"
currency . Ed Burkett Bar,
ber Shop, Middleport. 992•
3476.
•
OLD FURNITU~_E, beds; •
Iron, brass, or wood. t&lt; If•
chen cubbards of all types(
Tables, round or SQUllre.
Wood Ice boxes . Old deska
and bookcases, Will buy
complete household. Gold;
silver, old money, pocke'
watches, chains, rings, and
etc. Indian .Artifacts ol all •·
types. Also buying baaebal
cords. Osby Martin 992•
6l70.
•
Would like lo buy small
gasoline boat motor. Cal
675·5103.
DRESS
blue
Army
uniform. Jacket size .c2;
pants 36 or 38 . 304-675·6055 . •

sel, tables. dishes &amp; misc.
Fre .
Sal. 2 miles out Rt.
141.

a.

PORCH
SALE;
Thurs.Aprll
1.
Baby
clothes, maternity clothes,
toys. new plant stand,
childs bean bag chair and
toot stool, household Items
etc . Roger Karr residence
near Chester . Follow signs.
RU~~AGE SALE-BAKE
SALE . Enterprise Church,
Route 33, 112 mite north of
Pomeroy
corp .
sign .
Friday, Saturday, April
2.3 . 9 to 4 . . so per bag on
Saturday .

Porch Sale 505 2nd . St.
April I and 2.
Jeans, stereo equip., sports
and camping . Charlie
Drake. 984·3108 .
~••on .

3 lomlly Garage Sale 102
9th St., Pt . Pleasant. Wed .
3/ 3110 Sat. 4/3 . 8 :00AM·?

II

Hel Wanted

Would like man to pour and
finish con crete floor . Call
388·9909 .
Get out and live! Meet In·
terestlng peopl and make
good SSS w ith Avon . Call
446·3358 .
PRIVATE Duty Nurses for
male 27 years old at Scenic
Hllls Care Center . ·one
R.N . 7·3 Shift ; one LPN 3·11
shill. Send resume to
Phyllis Mulholand, Sttir
Rt ., Rodcl lfl , Ohio 45670 or
phone 61 ~ - 669 · 4755 .

- - -·-

WOMAN lo make home
with elderly couple. Light
housework and salary . 319·
2609 or 379·2139.
Hostess and waitress application being accepted,
apply in person . Bob Evans
Sleak House .

E x perienc ed
woman
Spring Vall~y areo lo
baby!lt 20 mo.- old , four
PORCH sole, April 2, 10·3, days a week . Call44ti· 7117 :
April 3, 9·12, 810 Main 51 .,
- -~------~
beside Episcopal Church .
GET VALUABLE training
Lots of chlldrens clolhes.
as a young busines! per'On

---

YARD sale, 9·4, April 1·3,
2~15
Lincoln, Chlldrens
clothing, Easter dresses,
boyssult .

and earn good money plu!
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route c&amp;rrler. Phone
us right away and oet on
the eligibility llsl at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

GIGANTIC yard sale,
behind G &amp; 8 Station. 304
Wilson St. Henderson.
Full or part time RN for 1
ThurSday &amp; Friday from to 3 shift. Full or pari t ime
10: 00· ? something for RN or LPN for II to 1 Sh ift . ,
ever one.
Call Nancy VanMeter ,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen 2913 Spruce St. ThurSday, ter . 992-6606.
Frldey,9-~ . Infant- ~. ladles
..............
clothing, mlsc.ltems, cam· Need someone to cut gra!s
Plll!l equipment.
one; a week . Call992·323-4 .

..

TWO young mole cats, both
neutered. to good homes, I
Puttllc Sale
one Is yellow tiger, one Is _ _...J&amp;~A:!!u~ct!!lon!!!!._ __
black and whi te. Call &gt;146· Rick
Pearson,
Ex ·
9&gt;179 .
perfenced AUCTIONEER .
Ellates, antlquH, farm,
2 dOllS. female, a .... pup. hOUsehold. Licensed Ohio·
M.a le Shepherd 1!. Collie WV. Buylri!J antlquH. 304·
113·5185, 113·9185.
mix. Call &gt;146·8636 after' 5.

•

-....................
...... . ..

5 Family Yard Sale d inette

4 Family Garage Sale 1
mile out Mill Creek Rd.
Friday &amp; Sat. 9-5. Lown
mower. tires, cur,alns.
clothes. Rain or shine .

.•

- ---

------

WORKS,HOP supervisor- ·
Bus driver, High SchOOl
Diploma plus 2 yf~rs,
college. Reg istered Nurse.'
Contact o av ld Eakle, c·o
Green Acr'et Regional Cen·
ter, P.O. Bo• 115, Lesage,
West VIrgin i a 25537 Phone
304-762·2522 . E .O.E.

..

�Ohio
l_l _ _ Help W•nted

They'll Do It Every Time

-~

Human Service PoSition :
The Gallla·Jackson-Melgs
Mental Health Board is
looking tor an individual
wh o can work on a month·
to-month contract basis to
seek out, find and license
extramural care homes Jn
Gall la, Jac kson and Meigs
·counties.
Mlmlmum
requirments : B.A. or B.S.
in a human service field
with an emphasis In
Psychology or Social Work ~
Please apply by submlltino
a r~sume to the GalllaJackson· Melgs
Mental
Health Board, P .O.- Box
5U, Gallipolis Ohio, -'5631 .
The Gallia· Jackson· Melgs
Mental Health Board is an
equal Opportunity Em·
plover.

tor Rent
2 Bedroom, Iaroe living
room w ith expando room,
beautiful furnished# 4 to 7
p.m. cal1446· 1409.
Trailer with air cond., 2
bdr .• ideal for couple. 1 mi.
from ct. house. Call 446·
2991 eve.

2 bdr . trailer furnished,
adults only, Brown Trailer
Park, 992·3324.

71'--·-Mi

1lllfN~trtlll$
TAI&lt;ES a 'flfltiS AS /.DIM!

In Pomeroy, nice 5-room
home ;
stove
and
refrigerator
provided .
Available April 2. Adults
only. no pets. $185 . per
month pius utilities and
security deposit. 992 ·5292.

M~ llleSI!,.rtJ. IMSIA

HSP 2 -· A11P l III'IHT TO
Pllt' TRAC~ OH SO. LOSr
AUMONV CJIECKS ·•··

ASSISTAN T
CHIEF
TECHNOLOGIST·LABORAT
ORY . Jackson General
Hospital , Ripley W.VA. is
now Interviewing for an
assistant
c hief
Technologist
lor
Labor a tory
. to
Jobworkwill
'require
abili'ty
in
all areas of the lab,
Scheduling, and train ing
assl!t in writing procedure
manuel,
maintaining
quality control records,
malntance of equipment inc.ludlng minimal and repair
and calabratlon. And some
week -end work . Qualified
person will have 2 yel!rs of
supervising experience In
Med ica l Labotatory, have
a B.S. degree In Medical
Technology, and be ASCP
r e gistered .
Excellent
benefits and salary. Interested person may call
personnel department at 1·
304-372-2731 Monday tllru
Fr iday , for more in formation . Equal em ployment opportunity M -F H.
1nsurance

13

SANDY AND BEAVER In ~
surance Co. has offered
ser'Vices for fire insurance
coverage In Gallia County
for a I most a century.
Farm, home and personal

property

coverages

Schools Instruction

Karate the Ultimate in self
defence all private lessons.
Men, women, &amp; children.
Instruction thru black belt.
Also available Karate
uniforms puching and
kick ing bags, and protective equipment. Jerry
Lowery
&amp;
Associates
Karate Studio. 143
Burlington Rd., Jackson,
Oh . Call286·3074.

18

wanted to Do

Housec leaning . Call

44

~=:::;~;;:;:;:;:~:::-r:;::::;;;::=;;:::;;:::::::=-1
I.
31

Homes for Sale

"-----'-"="'--'!&lt;!..:="--

1972 Concord Mobile Home,
12x65. Call 446-7015 after
5 :30p.m .·
Beautiful brick &amp; f r ame, 3
bedroom home w/scenic
view,
wood - burning
fireplace, formal dining,
central air w/heat pump.
Lanscaped, 1 acre lot
w / fenced in back yard,
$45,900 . 11% financing,
small down payment. Call
446·3766.

8 rm. &amp; bath on 30 acres
more or less . .500 ft . from
Vinton Bridge, going West
on 325 . For sale or lrade for
smaller place c oser to
town. No phone.
SMALL FARM FOR SA LE
A nice 4 bedroom home
with 8 acres of pasture garden space, barn, nice out
buildings. Located one mile
from State Rt. 7. Call 256·

J2

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

Deluxe 14X70 Holly Park,
excellent cond., 3 bd.room
fully furnished . 2 porch's,
unCjlerpinnlng, out building,
with or without land. Close
to Mine no. 1. 7-42-3008
anytime .
USED MOBILE

HOME .

576 ~ 2711 .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured. Call
30076·2711 .
For sa le 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trailers, furnished , with
air. Caii304·773-S651 .

1981 ALL ELECTRIC 12'
WIDE.
2
BEDROOM
mobile home setting on lot,
ready to move into. $8995.
1~ down, BANK FINAN·
CING AVAILABLE. 304 ~
576·2711 .

6663 .
WIDE, 3 bedroom
mobile home, $8995 . All
State Modular Homes, 304·

U'

are

available to meet In·
dlvldual needs. Contact
Foster Lewis, agent. Phone
379·3318.

15

TWO bedroom, un furnished . One bedroom ef·
liciency . 304 · 675 ~ 2722.

NEW INCOME LIMITS. If
you earn between $9000 to
$15,000 a year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobile homel
lor as little as $135 a month .
No down payment. Call992·
7034.

1973 GRANDVILLE , 14x70,
3 bedroom mobile home .
MUst be moved. phone' 304·
882·2820.

2 bd.room In HarriSonville .
$8,000. May consider land
contract. 614-928·.U17.

1979 14x65 Norris, 2
bedroom, assume loan, setvp on rented lot. Must sell .

516·2111 .

Caii773-S260 ~

2 story, almost lf2acre. 4
bd., 2 living room, kitchen,
dlningroom , bath-small
basement, 2 large carports.
Side porch, front porch
wood burner. 949·2403-9 to
4. 949·2460 evenings.

1981 WINDSOR mobile
home,
14x70,
stereo,
microwave, delu)(e bath,
air conditioner and many
other extras. call 304·882·

3529.
-~

367-

0427 .
Limestone for driveways,
will spread . Call379· 2642.
Expert lawn mowing service, dependable, low rate,
free estimates . Call 245-

HOUSE, Meadowbrook Ad ·
di tion, 3 bedroom , family
room with trieplace, cen tral air, basement, 304-6751542 ~

THREE bedroom home. 5
acres, 9 miles from fawn .
Phone after 6:·00 p.m . 304·
675·7198 .

Jl

Farms for Sale

Farm 76 acres. Good
house, barn, work shop,
small chicken house. 1 mile
west of Langsville on Sr.
124. 742·2860 after 4 p.m .

Rentals

5017.
Special made weddings &amp;
anniversary cakes, at
reasonable prices . Call 3888482.
The Silk Hause (custom
silk flowers) . Complete
bridal line, weddings, and
all occas ions . Call367-7566.

Babysitting In my home.
References available. Call
446·0930.

e•-

Domestic house work ,
cellent references. Phone
446·6670 .

custom garden plowing,
Gallipolis area . Call 446·
2300.

OWNER out of state &amp;
must sell this older sty le all
brick 3 bedroom home, 1'h
baths, full basement,
double car garage. E•tra
half acre lot . Quick
Possession. Call -evenings
304·675·3431 . Day-675·3030.
1F you can alford $405. per
month total payment, taxes
and insurance Included,
this ranch with 3 bedrooms,
2 baths &amp; family room on v,
acre, can be yours for
small down payment. Call
30.4·4.58-1582, Mason Coun·
fY .
SIX rooms, 2 story brick,
1211 Main St.. custom built
by Everett Lutton, 304- 675 ~
2381.

l2

21

Business
Opportunity

Cigarette
Vending
Business. Call304 · 71~ • 5651.
22

Mane to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
your home . 30 year fixed
rate. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . State St ..
Athens. Oh . 592· 3051.

23

Professional
Services

P ia no
Tun i ng
&amp;
Repalr .Call Bill Ward for
appointment.
Ward's
Keyboard, 446·4372.

C &amp; L Bookkeeping. Income tax returns tor individuals &amp; businesses.
Carol Neal446·3862

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI -STATE MOBILE
HOMES . Gallipolis. Price
reduced, used mobile
homes. CALL 446·7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35, PHONE 446 ~ 3868 .
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan cing available. Phone 446·
1294.
1970 mobile home Elcona
with expando. Large lot in
Mercervil le , Call 446-0827
after 5.

41

Houses for Rent

House, J bdr. in Rodney
Village II . $200 mo . Cal l
446·4416 after 7PM.
Homes for Rent, Lease or
Land Contract in town, or
country .
Call
Strout
Really, 446·0008.

5 rms . &amp; bath, located 110
4th. Ave. Gallipolis, nice
garden space . Call446·3870.

Beautiful doublewide with
pickett fence si tuated on 3
1/2 fenced secluded acrea .
Drilled well with wood
heat .
Immediate
possession . $215 monthly
plus depos it . Ca ll388·9322 .

s

rm house in Gallipolis.
Call446·3945 alter 5.
4 bedroom, central air and
heat, city water, fireplace,
unfurni!hed except kitchen. $300 month plus
utilities. Reference and
deposit
reQuired .
In
Racine. 949·2293.

GOoo·
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges .
Skaggs Ap·
pliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446·7398.

ssoo.

Bear LTD bow with quiver

2 bd. room apt. in Middleport ,
unfurnished ,
utilities included,, air cond itioning. $175 month ~ 992·
5545 between 7am . to 3pm.

Apartments. 675-5548.
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes ,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221 or 614·245·9484.
For rent small furnished
apt ., unfurnished apt.
References. Call675 ~ 1365.
Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt .,
Park Central Hote l.
46

Space lor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479.
Office space, homes and
apartments for rent. Call
Clealand Realty . 992"2259 .
Off ice space available in
Middleport
Business
distri c t . Air conditioned,
ut ilities Included $175 mon·
th. 992·5545 7 am. to 3pm .

PASTURE lor rent, 304·
615-5110
"·' ...... . . .
....·-·. . ...............
~

51

Household Goods

&amp; other acces sories, SlOO.
Call446 ~ 79~5.

Hideaway bed, other fur niture items. Caii446·J224.

76

71

ir

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

....

DOTSONS Tree Service, 15
years experience, we can
remove any tree anywhere,
reasonable, free estimates,
insured, 304·576·2897 .

...,.. -·....
..-..... ..... ...
~

31

Homes lor Sale

FOUR rooms &amp; bath, In
Mason, 4th. St. close to
school. 304-773·5261.
By owner·claae to school.
pharmacies &amp; nospltals.
Caii67H-468.

14x70 Freedom all electric,
set up w/underplnnlng, 3 F_or Rent Unfurnished 3 or
bedroom , 2 full bath, 4 bedroom. 2618 Madison
washer &amp; dryer. Call 446-' Ave. Pt. Pleasant, wva .
Lorge garden &amp; yard. Pay
0940 or 446·7377 evenings.
own utilities. $225 per mo.,
$100 deposit, 1 year lease,
1973 12x6S trailer with 1973 references. 304-863·5995. No
12x27 add on troller. 3 bdr., collect calls.
2 luli bath, 1 fireplace.
washer &amp; dryer.. dish
washer, new carpetrng, un· 42
Mobile Homes
derplnnlno. $12,000. Call _ __ _,lo&lt;!r.!R,t,_,n,_t_ __
367-0108 .
' 2 mobile homes lor rent. 2
bdr. each, fully furnished,
12 X 60 trailer, excellent air cond .• adults only . Call
446·4110.
condition. Call 446·1552.
Furnished, air conditioned,
underpinning, set up on lot· Trailer tor rent corne&gt;r of
In Middleport .
Chatham &amp; Burlier Ave.,
Gallipolis. Call 446·0756 ,or
446·4225.
1975 Memory; 12x60, un·
derplnnlng and 2 porches. 2 bed. mobile home. Dep &amp;
742·2156.
ref. req. Call256·1922.

Autos lor Sate ·

1972 Plymouth Flury3.
good trans car, $500 or best
Offer. Call446·0911 .
73 Camero. See
Black. Bidwell. Oh .

FOUR prom dresses, size
9· 10 thur 13· 14, phone 304·
675-2045.
SICKLE bar, 42" w ide, for
Grave ly tractor, $200.00 .
Ree l type mower for
Gravley, 36" w ide $150.00 1
bedroom suite $300. 304·675·
4210.

SAM
Somervi lie's
Warehouse, New Era, 7
m iles East . Ravenswood
Independence Rd. Rt.
Open Afternoons on
weekends. -Will be c losed
for repairs APrll 17 thru
May 1. Surplus rental·
Denim-Army clothing.
Building Supplies

TAL.I&lt;fN6

TELL. HER

•
•
VIewmg_
:3/31/82

Auto Parts

der. 50,000 original miles.
A-1. $1000. 992·3798 alter 5.

8:00 • (J) ( I ) . ()) ® •

Auto Repair

())

STUCCO PLASTERING
1977 Cutlass Supreme textured ceilings com Salon. Ps .. pb ., p.w .• mercial and residential.
reclining buckets, T-top. free estimates . Call 256velour interior. Like new. 1182.
$3600 ~ 992·6362.
PAINTING · interior and
79 Mustang. $3400 . 742·2451 . exterior. plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
HARTS Used ~ Cars, New 20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652 ..
Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less expensive cars In Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
stock.
Spouting . 30 years experience, spec ializing in
GOVERNMENT
SUR · built up roof. Cal1388·9857 .
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS many sold CAPTAIN STEEMER Car~
through local sales under pet Clean ing featured by
$300.00. Call 1-714·569-0241. Hoffelt Brosthers Custom
Ext. 1855 for your directory Carpets. Free estimates.
on how to purchase.
Ca ll446· 2107 ~

- -- -- - - - ---

MUSTANG,
1970, 351
Cleveland engine, S250Q.
304·675·4114.
72

Truck's far sa.-e--

1977 Ford pickup, good
cond. 6 cvl. Call446 ~ 4554 .
1977 Ford 6 cyl .• 3 spd,
trans., with topper, new
tires. V G cond .• $2,195. Call
446-4554, no answer 4464141.
1972 International tractor
w / sleeper, single axle.
good cond., 250 Cummings
engine. Call 379-2;120 after

5.

73

Vano &amp; 4 W. D.

1976 Dodge van good cond ..
PS, PB. carpet on Inside,
two big seats, two bucket
seat in front, air cond .•
John Deere 4010 A-1 con- good church bus or hunting
dition . 985·3537 or 985· 4131 van. S2,000 . Call379· 2712.
alter 6.
1916 Ford Bronco, In good
310 Case Dozer-Diese l. shape. 3.000. Call446·0899 .
Good cond. 992-5170.
- -- - - - - - - - 74 CJS jeep, A-1 condition,
For sale : 2 used rear Tra -: - 304-V8, 2 tops. $2000.00, 304·
tor tires-size 18.4X34 good- 615·6726 .
- - - -· - -- ·---years. 949·2574.
- ------Motorcycles
- - ---- 74
63
Livestock
All used bikes reduced at
Re. Polled Hereford bull. Betz Honda, check with us
before you pay to much .
Approx. 1,800 lt&gt;s. Call
Call 446·2240.
9303.
.

8:30

64

H•y &amp;,Groin

Groul')d ear corn, $5.00 per
100. Call675·3308.

Hay lor sale. 949-2283 .
MIXED hay, 304·882· 2079,

Building m.ateriaJs bloCk,
brick, sewer pipes, windows. lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande. 0 .
Call245·5121.

... .., ,. , .

,., " ' "

~·· ·~ ' " '

1974 PINTO Runabout,
gold, good work car . 446·
3159.
1969 VW Beetle runs good,
bodY excellent. new clutch,
$625. Call 446·2235 or 245·

5406.

1977 Chevy Chevette 45,000
actual miles. Coli 446·9219
between 4 &amp; 8.
1973 VW Beetle. Call 446·
. 0827 alter 5.

Honda 750 CB custom . Call
388·8711 or 388-8673.

For Sale : 1980 XR 80 Hon·
da . Good condition. $450,
992·5971.
1977 HONDA 350 XL, 2400
miles, dirt &amp; street, $500.
30-4·882·2012.
:KAWASAKI 175, good condition. call :104-675-3639 al·
ter-4.
1977 XL 175 Honda, 30H75·
1981 HARLEY DaVidson,

304·~75·4824 .

1'173 AMC Hornet, air
cond., S300.00. Call256·1591.

1981 HARLEY
:104-675·4824.

r

Davidson,

7:30

I

.• T1E CORKUI'T RULERS OF ~CIEIH

-OISASTER5 ME UNFORTUHA1'ELY HEWj,

1\~

5Tri6ED 8/.l)()()y &lt;tii/IIE610

'HE'RE Al!fAYS HAPPY

H.EEP THE PUeUC'&amp; 1'11110 OFF

SHO~ ~THING

'HHAT WAS RERU.Y IW'PENIH&amp;

AS

UP~

GASOUNE ALLEY

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675 ~ 1331.

two
dollars
.

1had

,.....,~~-,4,~

hid i;en dollars

My, ain'i;
Clovia, maL!
our qrubbi'ii I see LPl.l ~
minute?
liUle ands
been busLjl Jll't---,r-

under 11erel
H's gone!

1n

Water wells. Commerc ia l
and Domestic. Test holes .
Pumps Sales and Service .
30-4-895 -3802.
MFANWNI~

... WE /flftW'T

Sti6&lt;M6 .••

TAKE 81LL AND
TUTU'S COMPANY
Wr,TH U9.

a2 ___Pi.7mbin9---

l'D LII&lt;E TO SEE TME
LOOK ON MY I!IROTH~~'9 .
MACE WHEN liE GETS

--~

Hea!!I!V_ __ _
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446 ~ 4477

TWIS!'

WHAT ARE WE.
GOING TO p0

84

Excavating

Electrical

--~Re_!!~!_ratio~

__ _

SEWING Mach ine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992· 2274.
JACKS REFRI GERATIO·
N A ir condition service,
Commercial, i ndustria l.
Phone 882· 2079 .

A80c.JT ~ -··
LET HIM ST'FAL
THE PLACE OUT

FRO\\ UNPER USP

BARNEY

OH !! THEM PIES

LOOK PLUMB TASTY!!
I'D JUST LOVE TO ·
EAT ONE
RIGHT NOW

General Hauling- -

JONES BOY5 WATER
SERVICE . Call 367· 7471 or
361-0591.
JIMS Water Service . Call
Jim Lanier. 304-675-7397 .

II__ _ Upholstery
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave .• Gallipolis.
446·7833 or 446· 1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
· 1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant , 304675·41$4.

BUT OC DOC
PRITCHART'5
GOT ME OFF
SWEETS
A SPELL ,

e ())

()) Dlok Covet! Third of 5
p1rt1. Sclentllt-outhor Jonothon Miller It the guilt.
11:30
(I) CD . Tonight 8llow
Johnny 11 jolnod by Jo1n
Rivero. (110 min.)
(I) Another Ule
()) Soxlng'a · Beet: Jack
Jciltn1011 Vlowe.. toke o
look ot Jock Johnoon, the
11,.1 bl1ck to bocome tho
world hllvywoight chomp.
()) MOVIE: 'The Hlrdlr

e

F

()) MOVIE: 'Deelheport'
C.llllonad AIC N 1)1 MOVIE: 'Mr. Mulfo'
(JJ Nlghdlne
1 2:00 (I) Burne • Allen
(J) Nlehlllne
()) PIS Lilli Night
•9Loveloe!Airlend of
Gopner'e MlkH him i job
offer. 1 woolthy widow
tlkft up t'llldonce oboold
1hlp ond 1 moglclon 1nd
hll 111lllant become lnYOIYed. LRI (80 min.)

e

PEANUTS

THE SUN 15 PF:ET"TY
13RI61-1T TOVAY, LUCV..

12:30

NORTH

.AQ8751
·~

+Qu

EAST ,

WEST
• 10 8 74
10863

.Kus

tH2
.AQD72

tl062

+85

+10 s
SOUTH

+KQ6
.J4
.KJ

+AKH74
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
WOII

Soal~

1.

Pau
Pau

Pau
Pass

Pau

Opening lead :

I+

SNT

•6

aaeinlt that IJOIIlble card
combination. Maybe Eaat
would bold the kina of
diamonds.
West ducked and South
quickly ran off tbe rest of ·
tbe trlckl for a top score toend all top scores.

t11sM•~•IIf
by THOMAS JOSIPH

ACR088

DOWN

1 VIC!Iant

1 Menu tenn

zCompaf'e!l

• Flah hook
10 Newton-John
: 11 Culture rnedlwn
IZ Do; fare (slang)
14 French soul

3 NICht before

4 Uproar
5 Zodiac algn
• 4 qlll.

15 Three, pal!ano! 7 Spry
It F . - Bailey
8 Fnud

,
Ynlenlay 1 Aalwer
1 Liberated
10 Creighton U. 21 Veneratlng •:l2 Cacophony
site
n Purgation ~Annoyed
13 Buic
!I Big deal ; 35 DllllliOn or
belle!
so
president
. 18 Make
what?
37 Feminine
it law
IZ wda .)
sufllll
ChaUenged 31 Grazing
tO Before

1'1 Wbellltone
•19 "Deaire -

the Elms"
Zl Seapc!r1
in Yemen
ft Black or Red
Z3 Puzzle
cheese

zo

Z4 Dullard

Z5 Ensnare

land

ZB Lifer, e.g .
tributary

32 Dynamite
Ingredient
' 34 Por1. lady
35 For (Sp.)

:II What a
veronica!
Operated
31 Hands down
(alang)
UUWJUea
CUIIomer
43 Goller's

concem
44 Irani's
ancestor

45 Ruahlllte
plant

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

AXYDLBAAXa
LONGFELLOW

One letter tlmply 1t1ndt lor another. In this tample A Ia
used for the three L'a, X for the two O'a, et(. Slncle letters.
· 1poetrophes, the lencth 1nd forma lion of tile wordl are all
hlnll. Each day the code lettora 1re dltrorent.

CaYPTOQtlOTES
SRHU

' PIM

SRDD

PFWT

joined by Tom Brokew 1nd
(10 min.)
(I) holt lanny . , _
(!) MOVII: ' Rellloklng .
Ad-o....... of !1118 Fr_..
()) Love loet A lrtond ol
Oopller'e mokel him 1 lo~
offer.

RMWJPt1 . - DJBA

(I) Cll Lilli Nillht with
David Lat•nwn Devld 11

U Poaseaed

31FulcUt

e

lluth ~-

INBORN
tired floh-

r---------------------------------------------

rHIIf~

3 · 31

1

+Hs

brldr

CD NIWI/Iporta/WIIIIl«

, ELECTRICIAN, lice nsed&amp;
cert ified , all types 01
wiring, low rates, guaranteed work , 304·895·3826 .
IS

!AI A I!BfY ~Xt'L/JS!VE

r (I 1 I I J

Here Is a hand from the
1938 Life Muter pairs. The
best we can · say about
South 's blddlllll Ia that he
believed that if you played a
hand at tbrte no-trump you
were likely to Jlel a too.
M1ybe a well-d-rved top,
maybe a totally undeaerved
one, but a top In any event.
He wasn't at all happy
with the heart lead. He
seemed sure to be on his way
(1.1 the lou of at 1. .11 five .
heartl and the ace of apades.
· Nevertheless, South faced
the potential dlauter with a
h..d unbowed. No one could
tell from hil manner thet he
waa in a hopeleu contract
and io and behold fortune
favored the brtve.
East won the lint trick
with his ace ol heartl. Then
he returned the aeven spQt In
line with the well-known
practice of retuminl the
orlllnel fourth belt.
!lOuth &amp;layed bla jack. He
bad no o er cet'll tl.l play.
Now West went Into one of
thOle 10111 IOUI--rcbln&amp;
huddl• that
playen
have been calllh Iii since
the 111ne waa Invented .
Finally, West decide!! that
his partner'• holdlna bed
been A·7·Z end ~that South's
heart boldina had been Q-J·
H . A duck waa ~J!CIIcated

e ())

here!

LOCKSMITH
Servi oe.
Residential , automotive .
Emergency service. Call
882·2079 .

Geme: At Muncie C1ntr1l
ond Anderoon High pr•
plr,e lor tho Big Game, thl1
aegment ex1minu wh1t
long·ltandlng
rivalries
mean to 1 town obattatd
With h!gh IChOOI IPOrtl.
(80 min.) [Ciooed Clptloned]
·
1 :30 • (J) (I) Love, Sidney Sid·
noy wentl to edopt Petti .
()) Lin of the Wild
® Bekll"e Dozen
Mike'•
parent•
are
thocked when they moot
Terry for th1 fint time.
10:00 • (I) CIJ Qulnoy Qulncy'l
credibility 11 qutttionad In
1 murder cue. (110 min.)
(j) MOVIE: 'Dirty Trlok1'
(I) Til Ev11nlng N._
()) e (JZ Chll"fl, •• 8011111
from • Speolaf Choryl Lldd
11 joined by Corol Bumott
ond Rick Sprfnafleld In thlo
epecl•l hour of mualc 1nd
comedy. (80 min.) [Cioted
Coptioned]
IJI Sllonnon Norm
Whlto'o paroonel problem•
CIUII trouble for Sh1nnon.
(110 min.)
()) Non-Fiotlon Telovlllon
'Hopi' (80 min.)
(I))Newa
10:30 (I) Sing out Amalioo
(I)) Hllohoook
, 1:00. (J) ()). ()) ® . (121
NIW8
(J) Noellvlfle RFD
(I) All In the Fomlly

II

By Osweld Jacoby
ud Ala SoDIII

CD Rill P_.. To-

(1)(1])
MiddletoWn 'The Big
QLOUnda.

e-.

South gets to the top

e

GET YClUR HOPES

Now IITtlngt tho circled litters to
lonn tho IUrpotil
II lug·
guild by tho above canoon.

BRIDGE

e

W

J

Yestoldly'• l Jumbles: AWARD OUNCE 'GOPHER
Anowar: Might provide oome real fo•
THE OCEAN BED

()) C.noar: HutM'n 8lda
(J)
,IDI Oreatllt
Amertoen Hero Relph b•
comtt entenglod with en
, elderly men . holding a
SWAT teem II boy. (60
min.)
• ()) ® Herbie, tha Love
Bug Jim ond Suten"t woddlng pll.n l era Intentionoily endongerod. (SD min.)
liJ (I)) Melody of li City:
New Orlllnl Now Orleans
It 111n through Its mutlc
11 five jazz cOnc:iepta ' tra
uted to vltulliZI both COM·
~omporory
ond hlttorlc
N- Orloont: trodltlonol
jozz. Dlxlolend . contemporlry rock/jiZZ lnd QOIPII.
(80 min .)
1:00 •(I) CD Foots cil Ule Blair
hu • dot1 with 1 delln· ·
&lt;l!'lnt.
(1)700 Club
()) .IDI The Foil Ouy Colt
1nd Howle go undercover
In prl1on. (AI (110 min .)
•
()) ®
WKRP In
Clnolnnetl Venu1 end Andy
tell Momma Cart1on the
truth obout tholr bock-

MAYBS, BUT 00N'T

r

WHAI
HOI!JOE5
I!L.L.JNe.

(MIWIIIIOMOrrowi

~Ia I
(!) MOVIE: 'Final Conlllor

10 "TIIEIIt COI.llmtY-

IHGPIRIH6 AS YOUR.
RE5CUE OF THAT SOY-

1

Prlnlenawer"-="[

night'• show f11turaa 1
kltllng cpntott, • vltlt to 1
gey rodeo ond 1 103-yaer.
old gambler. (110 min.)
(I) NIIIOnll Olographlo

ANNIE

)

l

B:OO •

I know

3645.
ltlt DOdge Omni 024, many
options. Call256·6862.

1UeiJ ~al 'I.~~.
I ca!DeD 10 NOJf:, M/
ReTIFE~~T !W:K iO ~.
I AM. ft;5.

.

RON ' S Television Service.
Speci.alizing in Zen ith and
Motorola , Quazar, a nd
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446·24.54.

1977 Suzuki GS 550 frame
mounted faring, header
pipe, custom seat, ex.
cond .• $1,095. Call446·0961 .

1977 Harley Davidson sportster, like new and 1979 CJ ·
7 Jeep, V-8, 23,000 miles.
Call 446·2445. ~

iU811 IIJA'&gt; '21 1J: Pf?a.\1'5ro
M~SaJ: I._WOULD ~~AT
~ /lfO ~ LIFe ...

Special Marc h an·d April
only. Gene's Deep Steam
Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd.
Free estimate . 992 -6309

Gallipolis Diversif ied Con Co. Custom do:zer &amp;
khoe work . Special
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates . 446·4440.

1981 Honda custom 900, llk·e
new 2,000 miles. Call 367·
0215.

BORN LOSER

Carpenter
work ,
remodeling, &amp; roofing . Call
367 -0194 .

83

·

"

(J

tBRICKE±

e ())

Bell Contracting General
plumbing serv ice. home
remodeling &amp; repairs . Free
estimates. Call446·4002.

1977 Harley D,avison Elec~
troglide, 17,000 mi ., all the
extras. $3500 firm . 446·8234.

2· Honda mopeds, ex.
cond ., $300 each. Call alter
5, 446·4316.

,
7:00

(I)) Over Eaoy
• (J) (I) NBC N._
(I) tiO.OOO Pyremld
()) Gomer Pyle
()) Mull!* lllow
.())(JDCI8N._
())Dr. Who
(I)) Ulla .. YOga and You
eiDIABcN....
• (J) P.M. M11ulne
(I) llble Baffle
(I) C.rol Burnett ond
Frlande
()) En-lnmant Tonight
Cil Heppy oaya
Tlo Tao Dough
()) (I)) MaoNaMehrer
Report
®Newa
iD! Muppet 111(J) You Aoked ·For It
(I) Another Ule
()) MONEY Mattwa Tox
11vlng1, vecttlons lor lilt
end home Improvements
oro 1 lew oubjtcll In thlt
IJ!IClli.
(I) lanlold ond Son
()) • ()) Family Favd
(I) LAverne lnd Shirley
([) Bueln- Report
® Rklhald Simmon•
(I)) Prollill In Amarloen Art
il}
Entertainment
Ton~ht
·

1

I .I I

()) 3-2·1, Conu.cn

IIUT THEY OIOWr
tiAV!: t:IUNj;, T HeY
OION'T WANT TO

PAINTING, interior &amp; exterior. 304-675· 1128. L.M
Johnson.

RINGLES' S SERVICE ex·
perienced mason. roofer,
c arpenter , electric ia n,
ge neral repair s a nd
remodeling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675-4560.

'Smuggler'o

()) Andy Olifffth
())AIC NIW8

French City
Pain ting
residential &amp; commerci al,
interior. exterior. paper
hanging ,
&amp;
te xtur ed
ceilings . Call 367-778.4 or
367·7160 .

Wanted to do : remodling,
interior and exterior painting , plumbing , and
roofing . Free estimates.
985-4121 .

MOVIE:

Cove•

Motor Home
&amp; Campers

Home
1mprovements

rx J

(JZ

HeM

CAPTAIN EASY

SCAMP Travel Trailer and
new 5th wheel. A ll
fiberglass, light weight.
Factory direct. Call toll
tree 1 · 800 ~ 346 · 4962 for tree
color brochure . SAVE BIG
BUCKS!

81

CUJIE

EVEN INO

Slide-In camper with gas
turnance, GE refrigerator,
toilet. 30 g 0 1. water tank ,
sleeps 6. Cal1245·5415.

1960 Chevy . 3 speed. 6 cylin ·

---

THREE year old mare,
weighs 700 lbs. Due to foal
in June, 304·675-6626.

79

I tI

WEDNESDAY

&amp; Accessories

Roger

1978 Chevy 3/4 p ick 4P· 350
1·12' John Deere wheel engine. good cond., $2,400 .
disc. 1-set of John Deere 4 Call after 5, 446·4316.
bottom 16' semi mount
plows, 1-Hillsboro tri -axle
1979 &amp; 1978 GMC pickups
goose-neck 28' trailer . Call with
CB' s. Call 1·304·882·
614-256· 6534.
2237.

STARKS Tree &amp; Lawn Ser·
vice, all types trimming &amp;
removal. insured, 304-5762010.
FI· RST
and second
morgages, land contracts,
and receivables purchased.
614·446·4113.

71

M Farmall , 3 bottom plow,
good shape. 93 sell
propelled combine needs
work. Call614·643·0297.

6390 .

AN6ELTOP1

1

TWO pc. living room suite,
love seat, 13'h •ll orange
carpet, goOd carpet, good
cond i tion, $350.00 all. 30-4-

FIAT-Allis modt!l 545, rub·
ber tire end loader, 2 yard
bucket, completely over
hauled w ith new engine, eM CP.IIent condition, Blaine
King, Ripley WV 304·372 ·

11

DICK TRACY

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Professional cust om
paint work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Ce.n ter, 446·1968.

Excelsior Oil Co .• 636 E .
Main St., Pomeroy , Ohio.
9'12·2205.

895 ~ 3388.

·- Bootlaiiil- -: Motors for Sale

Windshield broken? Call
Southern Glass. Insurance
claims welcome, free
mobile service ava ilable.
Ca11446· 1011 .

John deere 4 row corn planter. $450. John Deere 14 T 63 Ford F -600 dump truck .
hay baler. $500. Call 256· $1,200. Call458 ~ 1875.
,-------~ 6205.
76 THUNDERBIRD, ex wanted·MF 35 tractor or cellent condtition, 304-675·
similar with live power. 3008. ask lor Neva.
Call256·1379.

AC -DC welder with cable
etc. 250 amp' s, $350. Call
446·3839 alter SPM:

7-s-

Ohio

For Sale· 12 II. fiber g lass
bOat, with swivel seats.
Live well, 16 tt ., tri -haul
boat, 25 HP :~eaking motor ,
all good cond. 1968 Chevy
Impala, body good cond ..
oo cart, fiber glass body .
Call alter 6PM or all day
weekends 458·1598.

--·'

2566 .

by Larry Wright

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St:.
Gallipolis. New sofa beds
$250, used sofa beds Sll)j),
recliners $80, bunk beds
$100, bunkie mi!,ltresses
$40, maple rockers $49,
maple dinett sets from $125
to $175, bedroom suites
$150, 3 pc. living room
suites $19'1, 2 pc, living
room suites $l40, love seats
$70, owl lamps 125. ringer
washers $75,
dryers.
severa l
r efrigerators,
ut i l i ty
cabinets.
mechanic' s tOols, beds,
silver stone, TV ,s, wood·
burners. stero's and lots
more. Open lOam to 5pm,
446· 3159.

Sofa,
chair,FURNITURE
rocker, at- ~
LAYNE'S
toman, 3 tables,
SOfa,
ch ai r and loveseat, $275.
Pets .t or Sale
2 bedroom unfurn ished Sofas and chairs priced 56
apartment in Crown City . trom $285. to $195. Tables. DRAGONWYND
CAT·
Call256·6520.
$38 and up to $109. Hi~e - a ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
beds,$340 .. queen s ize. $380. Chow puppies, C FA
Recliners, $175. to $295 ., Himalayan, Persian aod
APARTMENTS :
Lamps
from $18. to $65. 5 Siamese kittens. New
bedroom, rent starts at
$152 per mo. &amp; 2 bedroom pc . dinettes from $79., to Siamese kittens. Call 446starts at $188 per. mo. $385. 7 pc ., $189 . and up. 38« after 4 p.m .
Special rates for Senior Wood table with 4 chairs,
$219 up to $-495. Desk 1110.
Citizens. Call446·2745.
Hutches, $300. and $375 ., HILLCREST KENNEL ·
maple or pirie f i nish~ Boarding all breeds, c lean
2 &amp; 3 bedroom apartments Bedroom suites - Bassett. indoor-outdoor facilities.
for lease or sell 2 bedroom Cherry, $195.
Bunk bed Also AKC Reo. Doberhouse, 3 bedr oom house A c complete with mattresses, mans . Call446·7795 .
and pool. HUD Program ~ $250. and up to $350. CapCall 304-675·5104 or 675- tain's beds, $275. complete . BRIARPATCH KENNELS
7284.
Baby beds. $99 . Mattresses Boarding and grooming.
or box springs, full or twin. AKC
Gordon setters.
Nlc eapartment unfurn., $58 .• firm , $68. and $78 . English Cocker Spaniels.
ground floor in town . Quiet Queen sets, $195. 4 dr. Call388·9790.
neighborhoOd, 4 rms. &amp; chests, $42 . Bed frames,
bath, all carpeted, has $20.and $25., 10 gun ~ Gun POODLE GROOMING .
range &amp; refrigerator. Call cabinets, $350 ., dinette Call Judy Taylor at 367·
Earl Tope at 446· 0690 chairs $20. and $25. Gas or 7220.
business hours and .4-46-0161 electric ranoes. $295. Orthopedic super firm, $95,
evenings and Sun.
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35, Gentle horse, broke but not
frames $20, $25. 1!. $30. finished . Phone 388-9991 or
FURNISHED apartment, bed
Used Furniture bookcase, 388·8623 .
centrally located . Adults., 5 pc . dinett set, 3 Living
ref . and deposit required. room suite. Ranges and
For Sale·$100. 6 month old
446·0444alter 2 p. m .
TV 's. 3 miles out Bulavllle AKC registered Bassett
Rd . Open 9am to 7pm, Mon. Hound puppy . House broke
3 bedroom
thru Fri., 9am to spm, Sat.
and good with children.
over store
446·0322
Call 992·3005 or 992·6161 .
160 &amp;
He's so ugly he's cute .
$225.00
Kenmore 6 cycle washer
deposit.
$90 and Norge washer &amp; AKC Registered Dober·
446-3888 .
Frigidaire guaranteed. man, black &amp; rust, female,
Call256· 1207.
8 months. ears cropped, all
3 rms. 1!. bath. good
shots. house broken, exlocation, carpeted, utilities
cellent w ith children, 304paid, furnished, $195 . dep. 54
Misc. Merchlndlce
458· 1513 .
&amp; ref. req. Call 446 ~ 7482
mornings.
For Sale Beautiful floor
model console !tero, AM 1st floor furnished et ~ FM 8-track &amp; record
• • , , . .. , I '
I 'I"
l l ·'
...
ficiency apt. 729 2nd Ave ., player. $300.00. Call 379·
Gallipolis. Adults only, 2314.
&amp; bhtest•e•
shower . Ca ll446·0957.
Plastic Septic Tanks. State
1p,m,_,e"'n"t3 bedroom unfurnished and county approved . 1,000 6..1_..cF!::a~r'-!m!!.!:E"'q"'u2
apartment. 992·5434 or 992 ~ gal. tank, price $340 . Olher sizes in stock, haul In your New &amp; Used Troy built
5914 or 304·882·2566.
pickup truck . Call 614-286- tillers. Sulk garden seed.
5930, Jackson, ·oh; RON Swisher Implement, Inc .,
1 bedroom furnished apt. EVANS ENTERPRiSES
Gallipolis. Call446·0475.
992- 5434 ~ 992-5914 or 30A-882-

2 bedroom house for rent.
Completely furnished , with
air cond ., all utilities paid.
$350. month plus deposit in
Racine. 949·2801.
Pomeroy . 2 bedroom.
newly . painted and carpeted . Adults preferred. No
pets . References and
deposit required . 992 ·3054 . .

KIT 'N' CARLYlE"'

Household Goods

Apartm ent for rent. Call
446·0390.

45
3 bedroom house in city,
$150 dep. and $250 rent. Call
446·0367.

Apartment
for Rent

51

Mardt 31,

1982

SRZTRM

TRH

DRKU

SRZ

TRH

W T U HZ U B ~V R U D A

Yett.nlay't Cryploqgole: YOU SHOUlD
WORlD SO AS IT MAY HANG ABOUT YOU

GARMENT.-LORDHAW'AX

IH

IH

IJVE
LIKE

THE

IN
A LOOSE '

�•

•

Page

12_:_The Daily Sentinel

Area Deaths

·

l

meMemth~;...ofChtheurchLa.wrence C~~_apel

Dwight E. Hoback
Dwight Emer1011 Hoback, 70,
Belpre, died Monday at St. Joseph
Hospital In Parkersburg.
He wu preceded In death by hiB
father, Dennis Hoback. Mr. H~
back was a retired machine operator and was a member of the
MasoniC Lodge.
He Is survived by his mother,
Ethel Hoback, Racine; two sons,
David, Marlon, and Gary of Charlotte, N. C.; two daughters, Marj~
rle Poston, Athens, and Phyllis J.
Combs, Richmond, Ky.; two brothers, Charles, Syracuse, and Bill of
Racine; two sisters, Audrey Bolchyn, Detroit, Mich., and Lucme
Butke, Jacksonville, Fla., elght
grandchildren and one greatgrandson~

Services will be held at 3 p.m.
Frtday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. Bernard F. Thrash
officiating. Burial will be In the
Browning Cemetery at Portland.
Frtends may call at the funeral
home after 6 this evening.

"""''
Surviving are her husband,
Rexel P. Boggs; two sons, Berl and
Robert D., both of CoolvWe; an uncle, Draper Davis, CoolvUie; a nephew, Bruce Davis, North Largo,
Fla.. seven grandchildren and
seven great-grandchildren. Besides her parents, sl1e was preceded In death by a brother, Guy E.
Davis, and a great-granddaughter,
Kimberly Calaway.
Seivtces wtU be held at 2 p.m.
Frtday at the White Funeral Home
ln Coolville with the Rev. Guy
White officiating. Burial wtU be 111
Coolville Cemetery. Friends may
call at the fllneral hOme anytlll'!!!
alter 4 p.m.1bunday.

Emest RU88e0

Ernest RuaseU, 97, VInton, died
at 8:10p.m. Monday In Holzer Medleal Center, haYing been serioUsly
ill Born
for theMay
put two
weeks.In Meigs
11, 1884,
County, 1011 of the late William and
Amanda Scott RliSSeU, he was retired from the timber business and
the city of Gallipolis, where he was
sexton of Mound HW and Pine
Street cemeteries. He had made his

Nina B. Russell

home In VInton for tbe-lastl9years.
He was a1ao preceded In death by
his first wife, Bertha RuaseU, In
1929, and by hiB second wife, Ruby
George RusseU, In 1963.
Surviving are eight sons, Noel of
Buckeye Lake, Novel of Albany,
Noble of VInton, Norwood of Carroll, Neral (Dick) of Columbus, WUllam and Paul, both of Gallipolis,

Miss Nina B. Russell, 83, wellknown Middleport resident, died
Monday at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Miss Russell was born Sept. 21,
1898 at Bradbury, a daughter of the
late Mr. and Mrs. Hugh p. RusseU.
She was a member of the Middleport Church of Christ for a number
of years and had served In a secret- and Vernon of Hllllard; seven
arial post with the Columbus and daughters, Mrs. Lewis (Uedo)
Southern Ohio Electric Co. !or 33 McGiothlln and Mrs. Paul (Leron)
Grate, both of Marion, Mrs. Elza
years before her retirement.
Surviving are cousins including (Annabel) Jefferies of Bradenton,
Joe and Betty Laing, wauace and Fla., Mrs. Bob (Leah) Jetteries of
Colette Laing, and Evelyn Laing, Toledo, Mrs. Robert (Lura) Gee of
all of Cleveland; Jessa Mae an4 Jackson, Mrs. PhUUp (Ruby) EdCarl Brannon, Flo and WUIIam miston of VInton and Mrs. Harold
55
Grueser, and Clyda Allelisworth; (Bertha) Stover of Gallipolis;
grandchildren
,
·
89
great
all of Middleport; Edythe and Bob
Jay, Columbus; Susan RawUngs, grandchildren and 24 great-greatMarysville, and Gertrude Miller, · grandchildren.
Also preceding hlm In death were
Pomeroy.
two
daughters, three brothers and
Services w1U be held at 10 a.m.
three
sisters.
saturday at the Rawlings-CoatsFuneral services will be held at 1
BlOWer Funeral Home ln Middleport with Mr. Robert Melton p.m. Friday In the VInton Baptist
officiating. Burial will be In Middle- Church, with the Rev. A.B. Maloy
Burial will be lit VInton
port Hlli Cemetery. Friends may officiating.
Memorial Park. Frtends may 'c.all
caU at the funeral home from 2 to 4 at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
and from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
· Home, VInton, froml-5and7-9p.m.

Th:~Y
John A. Wyatt
John A. Wyatt, 67, retired Pomeroy electrician. died Tuesday at hiB
home at 1689 Uncoln Heights, following a lingering Illness.
Mr. Wyatt was a son of the late
Elza Carl and Edna Mae Hardy
Wyatt. He was a1ao preceded In
death by a brother, Elza Carl
Wyatt, Jr.
A retired electrician, Mr. Wyatt
was a member of the IBEW Local
972, Marletta, for 39 years. He retired 1n August,
He waA a
member of Pomeroy MasoniC
Lodge 164, NelsonvUie BPOE
(Elks) Lodge 543, and the Loyal
Order of Moose 1399, Athens;---Surviving are hiB wife, Dorothy
J. Wyatt; two sisters, Mary Louise
Burton, C.ampbellavllie, Ky., and
Jeanie PhUUps, Englewood, fla.
Servlces will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. James Keesee
officiating. Burial will be In Maplewood Cemetery, Glouster. Masonic· rttes will be held at 7: 30 this
evening at the funeral home where
friends may call at anytime after 6
this evening.

1_,_

Ora Boggs

will lle In state In the

church one
hour prtor to the
.
rvlc
se
e.

Ann P. GaUo

Ann P. Gallo, 54, of 3363 Brendan
Drive, Columbus, former Mlddleport resident, died Saturday at
Grant Hospital.
She was preceded In death by her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Christian
Seyfried; and a brother, MannerlngSey!rled. Survtvlngareherhusband, Joseph P., her
mother-In-law, Mrs. 0. P. GaUo,
brothers and sisters-In-law, Law1011 and Susan Seyfried, Panama
City, Fla.; Kenneth and Margaret
Seyfried, Columbus; Paul and
Mary Gallo, Bo and Carol GaUo,
Robert and Tina GaUo, au of Columbus~ sisters and brothers-Inlaw, VIrginia and Harold Hubbard,
Middleport; CoJIIIIance and WUllam Marthes, San Antonio, Texas;
Norma and Frank Antenucci, Rita
nd Rod McEachen, Cincinnati.
Funeral mass will be held Wednesday4 : ~p. m . attheSt.Brendan

CathoUc Church, 4475 DubUn Road.
Frlends are asked to contribute to
the St. Jude's Fund for the children.
Arrangements have been handled
by Schoedlnger State Street
Chapel. Interment IS private.

Ora Boggs, 72, Route 2, Coolville,
died Tuesday at the O'Bleness Hos·
pltal In Athens foUowlng an extended"IUness.
She was born at Johnstown, W.
va., on March 31, 1903," a daughter
of the late John W. and LUlie Davia,
and had been a resident of the Coolville area all of her Ufe. She was a .

W.dna d.., Milich 31, 1912 '

Polneroy-Micld!eport, Ohio

Cases dimissed

Due ID lack of prosecution, three
cases have been dismissed In the
Meigs County Co!pJllon Pleas
Court. They Include t:lott!e Sizemore againSt Ronnie Lee Sizemore; ,Becky Davidson against .
Timothy Davidson and Calvin .
Hawk versus Mary Hawk.

Meigs County happenings.•
Emergency squads rrey eogar from the Middleport
kept busy Tp--..lay
ElementarySchooltoHolzerMedl· ·
~
cal Center; Mlcldleport at 8:19a.m.
~

Local units answered elght emergency runs Tuesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reports.
•
~ at 2:31 p.m. took Jet-

Area death
Richard Tattenon
Col. Rk:han! R. Tatteraon (Ret.),
:mo "Maxwell Roacl, Point Plellsant, wu dead on am'val at Pleaaant Valley Hospital a! 7: a; p.m.
Tuesday.
•
Born May 9, 192.1, ln !ialrmont, he
··•as the 110!: of lhe !ate l3erile Marie

' nd WIUJam Harry Tatterson.
!le graduated from Falnnont
1:ast Hlgh School and attended
•",est V'-'ft'•
",..._ Unlvers1 ty .....,
...,,ore enlisting In the U.S. Army. He was
cornmlsaloned a Second Lieutenant
In 00 and took part In live campaigns In the European Theater
during worid war n.
After the war, Coi.Tatterson received hiB B.S. Degree In Agrteulture from WVU.
Upon
graduation, he and hiB wife,
Jeanne" who survives, moved to
PolntPleasantwhereheaccepteda
Job with the Mason County Board of
Education. He later worked for
seven years as an Instructor In a
veteran oriented on-the-Job tratning program and was formerly Mason County Agrtculture Agent.
In 1955, he accepted a fuU-tlme
position with the West VIrginia Nationa! Guard as shop superintend·
ent of Point Pleasant's combined
support maintenance shop. He
later became the state malntenance ottlcer and served ln that posltlon until 1975 when he was
promoted to plaits, operating and
tralnlngottlcerfortheStateofWest
VIrginia. He retired 1n May 1979
alter 36 years of mUltary service.
Coi.Tatterson was an active
member of the Presbyterian
Church In Point Pleasant, commlssloner of the Point Pleasant HousIng Authority and vice chairman of
the American SoU Conservation
Service (ASCS) . He was a member
of Mlnturtt Lodge No. 19, Free Masonary, 32mi degree Scottish Rite
Mason, Ben! Kedem Temple, Charleston, Bent Kedem Legion of H~
nor, president of .the Pat Wllion
Shrine Club and a member of Clan
No. 4, HlUbllly Degree.
In addition to his wife, he Is survlved by four children, IJnda
Perna, Cherry HIU, N.J., BU1 of
Point Pleasant, Donna NeviUe,
Point Pleasant, and Jim of Hun\ington; three brothers, John of Bridgeport, Lyle of Spain and Tom of
Cherry Hill, N.J.; and seven
grandchildren.
Funeral services wtU be conducted at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Presbyterian Church, Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Malcolm Mclvers m officiating. Burial wtU foUow
ln Kirkland Memorial Gard&lt;!ns.
Frlends may call ;lt CrowHusseU Funeral Home In Point
Pleasant after 2 p.m. Thursday.
The body wtU be taken to the church
one hour prior to services.

Third to Veterans Memorial. and at
8:42p.m . took Ba!:bara SJnlth from
Park St., to Veterans Memorial;
Rutland at 1:11 p.m. took Harvey
Hobbs, Star Hollow Road to Holzer
Medical Center, and at 6:38 p.m .
~ Rally McLean from hiB home
to Veterans Memorial. Syracuse at
11:58 took Florence Potts from
Route 124 to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy at 11: rrr a.m took Don
Combs from Texas Road to Veterans Memorial and at 10:45 p.m
~ . Edgar Thomaa, Ny.e Ave., to
Holzer Medlcal Center.

Veterans Memorial
Admltted--ShareU Stone, Pomeroy; Bonnie Ransom, Racine; Kathryn LaJ,lbert, Rutland: PellllV
Crane, Pomeroy; Inez Randolph,
Pomeroy; Lizzie Andrews, West
Columbia; Barbara Smith,
Middleport.
Discharged--Barbara Talbott,
Rose Lee, Edgar Taylor.

To end marriages _
Charging gross neglect of duly
and extreme cruelty, Bernice Searles, Route 1, Middleport, has filed
suit for divorce from Ralph Searles, Rutland, 1n the Meigs Counly
Common Pleas Court. The plaintiff

Given final approval
Final approval was given today
for the opening of "Sex's", at 824 E .
Main St., Pomeroy.
Mayor Clarence Andrews signed
the license for the openlpg of the
business being opened by T . L.
Goett. The business which will feature a bar, games and pool tables
will be open !rom 12 noon each day
until 1 a.m. Monday through Frt·
day, and until midnight on Saturdays. The establishment wtU be
closed on Sundays.

new

Hot. water power
Mn.FORD, Utah (AP) - Residents here are using electrl~lty produced from geothermal weUs.
Phillips Petroleum provides
steam and hot water from underground wells to Utah Power and
Light, which now (lefterates electricity In an expertmental unit.
The utlllty Is constructing a
20,®kllowatt power plant near
the geothermal wells, sclieduled ror
operation ln 1984. That will provide
energy for 20,000 people.

BAKER
FURNITURE

~\!d~.~T~
RADIO
AUCTION
To be held April 2, 1982 at
8:45 p.m . Listen to
WMPO 'Radio for the
·
Details.

8.95 S.S. SHIRTS • • . • • • •
510.95 LS. SHIRTS •••••
• •
511.95 REG. SIZE PANTS
• ••
..
512.95 EX. SIZE PANTS
•
I

I

I

•

• • •

•

• • •

•

• • •

e

I

I

I

•

s4.50
ss.so
s6.00
S6.50

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

nlght In the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarenc!! AndreWB- ·
Fined were Charles Diehl. 163
and costs, littering; and David
Triplett, Syracuse, S263 and . .
costs, leaving the scene ct an
accident.
Forfeiting bonds were Roy
Buchanan, Reedsville. S363 011 '
charges oi driving while Intoxicated, and 163 on no operators
lloen.se; Randall Arnold, Ml·
nersvllle, $53, speeding; Ray-

. monel Michael, MiddlepOrt, $44,
lpel!(llna; Robert Collins, Dex·
ter, Route 2, Pomeroy, $46, ;
speeding; Bobby Werry, Mid·
dleport, $44, speeding; Donald
Lambert, Pomeroy, $l'i, speed- ,·
tng; Brenda Black, Letart, W.
Va. $44, speeding; Troy

Co--u·on

Marriage license

The correct birth date of John
Francis Dixon, 58, Stewart, who
died Monday, was Feb. 20, :i924.

A marriage Ucense has been·
Issued ln the Meigs County Probate
Court to Michael Eugene Van Meter, 24, and Theresa GayeStarr, 18, .

•• ""'

ONE
STOP
SHOPPING

Starcher, Pomeroy, $47, ,
. speeding.
Others forfeiting bonds were ·
EU Ebersbach, Pomeroy, 188.
open flask, and $113, controlled
substance; Nancy PulUn.s, no
addresS. 188. open flask; KeYin
Lee. no address, 188. open flask;
Jack Stone, no address, 1188,
open flask; and Tom Walters,
Middleport, 1188. open flask.

ONE
STOP
SHOPPING ·

,.

CAKES

(Internal Medicine and Pediatrics)
P. JAMES NAVALKOWSKY, M.D.
(lnt~l

Medicine)
'

announce the merpr of their practices to

,_PRI

WS TAX TIME AGAIN!
MAKE COPIES OF YOUR
IMPORTANT DOCUMENTS

1

MEDICAL ASSOCIATES
With offices in

•

XEROX
COPIER

PRICES IN EFFECT
March 31st Thru
APril 11th

..

Point Pleasant and Mason
No. 7 South Second Street

WE RESERVE

THE RIGHT ..

TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
NOT RESPONSIBL:E
Fc;IR PRINTING E RROR.S

AVAILABLE

Mason, W. V.

All Stores But Wellston, 0.

Phone 773·5531 or 773-5532

-

The Profeulonal Building
.2513 ·Jitbon Awe.

Pcint Pl1111nt, W. V.
Phone 675·5511 or 675-61•3

Offices hours by appointment

SHOES FOR EASTER

i

Hush

Pupglf.l"

1

C8SU81S ~'' '"'·

FOR AU .OCCMIOiiS

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
Ph. 992-6342

t1~~~~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~

~ment to Point Plaunt Reclllter. Oalnpolls O.Uy Tribune. ~ SenHael, Jatklon JOUI'nll Herald,
'·

....

..

..:.

FOR E~STER SUNDAY, APRIL 11th

~ •

MAKE YOUR GREETINGS
AS HEARTWARMING
AS SPRING •

.. FLOWERS DO IT!"
SPRING BLOSSOMS FOR
SOMEONE YOU LOVE.
ell LIES eML!MS e.IIZALEAS eCORSAGES
eCUT FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS
ePERMANENT MEMORIAL FLOWERS

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP.

TUCSON

Classic designs offer the discriminating
gen11eman one of today's best investments in elegant casual footwear.
Luxurious detailing and fashion mate·
rials put them into a class of their own
Relaxing comfort combined with a~
easy-goihg prjce make the bottom line
diVIdend ... value.

.·HARTLEY SHOES

'

"The Way America Sends Love."
Phone: 992·2039
106 Butternut Ave.
or 992·5721
Pomeroy, Oh.
We accept all major credit cards, and we wire flowers
everywhere.

STOlE IIOURS:
IIDnd.,-TllMn., Sit. 9-5

fr*J9-I

POMEROY, 01110
112-5272

.

..

•

I

•

t

I I

•

• '

• •

• • •

WelliiM SentrY.

n.e WtUat.on Telearam

'

Ali STORES
OPlN 7'DAYS

"THE EVERYTHING STORES"

101 Sixth Avenue
Huntington. W.Va.

'
t

n..

FRUTH PHARMACY

OUR BUSINESS
BE~INS WITH
FILLING YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS

-

MEN'S.WORK UNIFORMS

5

Three defendants forfeited
bonds and five others were flneO
In the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hdfman Tuesday nlght.
Forfeiting were David M. Lucas, Wilkesville, $3'75, posted on
a charge of driving wblle Intoxicated; JamesGriii!!M11, Rutland,
$3'75, reckless operation, and•
Shirley Carpenter, Racine, $00,
failure to yield the right of way.
Fined were Robert W. Couch,
Pomeroy' $250 and costs and
three days In Jail, driving wblle
Intoxicated, and $100 and colits,
possession of mariJuana; Roger
HOiiChar, West Colurnbua, $1.50
and costs, le!lvlng the IICelle of
an accident, and SlliO and costs,
driving while under sU8peiiSion;
Nelson Mon1son. Middleport,
$50 and cost's, disorderly
manner; 10 days In Jail, reslst:ng
an-est,. and $25 and costs, vlolatiO!I of a Jail rule; James Morrison, MlddlepOrt, $00 and COlts,
disorderly manner, 10 days In
Jail, resisting arrest, and Bailey
Jo Dugan, Rutland, $100 and
costs, (ssulng menaci!U! threats.
Two persons were fined and 14
others forfeited bonds Tuesday

seeks custody of one minor child. r------'---'-...------bo-th_ot_Ru_tland
__
. - - - - -·
In the same court under the
states' reciprocal
agreement,
Paula J. Yonker has filed action for
. IAKSHY A. C"HIIIER, M.D.
support against John S. Thontas.

SALE

Men's work pants and matching shirts in long
or short sleeves. Regular and extra sizes Your choice 112 Price.

Betsy Armon~t. North ·

Village mayors end
several- traffic cases

.
'

2501 Jackson Av111ue
. Point Pleaunt, W.Va.
.
. : ' ' .·. . .

.

364 Jackllln Pike
Gallipolis, 0 .

A WEEKI
120 W. 21!4 St.
Ohio
.,

FREE.'.PARKING

W~llston,

.

.

..

.....

'

, .,.,

.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="126">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2701">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43934">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43933">
              <text>March 31, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="266">
      <name>boggs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="299">
      <name>davis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7306">
      <name>gallo</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1958">
      <name>hoback</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="553">
      <name>seyfried</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2411">
      <name>tatterson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="218">
      <name>wyatt</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
