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                  <text>Page 14-The 'Daily Sentinel

Miss Lahoma Frances Epperly.
66, died Monday at St. Francis
Hospital in Miami, W. Va.
Local survivors include three half
sisters, Janet Duffy, Pomeroy;
Virginia Phalin, Pomeroy, and Belly Miller. Gallipolis.
Services were held at 2 p.m. today
at the Ewing Funeral Horne with the
Rev. Father Anthony Giannarnore

officiating. Burial was in· the Letart
Falls Cemetery.

Zuelelia Smith
Mrs. Zuelelia Smith, well known
Pomeroy resident, died Tuesday at
her residence at 32 West Main St..
Pomeroy.
Arrangements are being corn.
pleted at the Ewing Funeral Home.

Candidates will visit mines
Rich Trumka International
Executive board member District 4
Pa. United Mine Workers of
America Presidential Candidate and
Cecil Roberts. Vice President
District 17 W. Va . Ca ndidate for Vice
President, will be making several
appearances at local Mine sites in
the Southern Ohio area of District 6
on May 4 and 5.
Trumka and Roberts are running
on the " WHY NOT THE BEST"
ticket along with John Banovic,
President of District 12 Illinois. Candidate for Secretary-Treasurer. All
three men are third generation coal

miners. Trwnka, born July 24, 1949,
1s a lifelong resident of Nemacolin,
Pa. He ~raduated from Penn State
University in 1971 with a B.S. degree
in accounting and economics.
He abo graduated from Villanova

in 1974 with a Juris Doctor of Law
degree w1th em phasis on Labor
Law . He has cx tens1ve underground
mining exJllirience and served in
many ca pacities with the Union .

Robert.';ofwas
born
in 1946
resident
Ca bin
Creek.
W.and
Va. isHea
served with the 196 Light Infantry

Raccoon

Mine

Loca l

1957

in

Wilkesville.

Six residents were either fin~d $25
and costs or forfeited bonds of $38 in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night on
charges of violating a village ordinance requiring that dogs be confined or on leash.
The group included Carl Hughes,
Danny Griffith. Hoy Nitz. Dennis
Harris, Hattie Sellers and Kathy
Logan. All reside in the Lincoln
Heights section of the town. officials
said.
Emphasis on speeding offenders
in the community was again evident
in Tuesday night's court with some
13 defendants forfeiting bonds

posted on the charge. The group in- · Pomeroy, $63. failure to register
cludes Edwin Ash, Minersville, $45;
motor vehicle.
Beverly Pooler, Chesterhill, $49;
Mikeal Mullens, Athens, $53; David
Spencer, Point Pleasant, $45;
George Casto, Henderson, W. Va.,
Four defendants forfeited bonds
$46; David Donohue, Racine, $50; J. and seven others were fined in the
Timothy Cook, Proctorville, $49;
court of Middleport Mayor Fred HofDon Ball, Letart, W. Va., $48;
fman Tuesday night.
Patricia Warner, Pomeroy, $48 ;
Forfeiting were Amedee L.
Timothy Michael. Pomeroy. $46;
Lefebre, Pomeroy, $375 posted on a
Roger Manuel, Racine, $44; Philip charge of driving while intoxicated;
Bullington, Rutland, $49; Michael Delbert Fridley. Middleport, $375,
reckless operation; William H.
Kelly, Middleport, $47.
Others forfeiting bonds were Nelson, Pomeroy, $40, and James
Homer Smith, Pomeroy, $63, disor- D. Hudson. Middleport, $44, both on
derly manner, and Ralph Calver~ charges of speeding.

Pssst. Have 1got news to
malfe you Lose!
11 S "1 0 Sl CAl 1 I SPt CIAl l V 10 YOU "N O VQUA lol lRR QR
Wtll H YOUR ft00Y liAS UH SIGtll t Y Wl tG tll ' '"'"' tlM~N

IH I S(CRf i /Y !til O()()YWHAI'"' CAEI.Il' IHA I WILl
lNA8ll YOU 10 IAKl ON A N[W [XCII lNG liFE STYLE
SHAPI. AND SHED TH()Sf UNW.t.NI£0 INCHE S WHILE
f tRI.IINCi AND TONING SAGGING MU SCLE TISSU f. NO
P1llS - NJSH01 S !HI SI.Cflll IS OUT • THOUSANDS
&gt;iAVI A'll S ilO 10 THl l H~CHVlNESSOf BODY
WfW'',.CHIMf' tl I 1111 Sl&lt;Jl I flliMIN BfTWU:.N YOU
AND BQOY WRAP ',. CRt.MI AND lNJOY INCH[ S-OH
WAY 10 IHI GAlA! SHAPf UP
~OUCT Of
!~SIS I ON

ARUNCi lOti LA90RAlOflt£S l 10

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.. ·---- .......

---

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Fined were Michael A. Bolin, Middleport, $250 and .costs and three
days in jail, dnvmg while 111toxicated; Richard A. Herman, Mtddleport, $250 and costs, three days m
jail driving while intoxicated; Mark
Ty;ee Larry Neff, both of Middleport, both $50 and costs, loitering
on the street; Ronnie Diles, Middlei&gt;ort, $100and costs, assault; Jimmy Morrison, Middleport, $100 and
costs, disorderly conduct; Roger
Butcher Pomeroy, $5 and court
costs f~r failing to pay parking
meter tickets, and $25 costs and old
fined which were not paid earlier.

Voi.30,No.266
Copyrighted 1982

0111.:

FITNESS AND BEAUTY STUDIOS
PH. H2-.720

WOMEN'S

UNIFORMS

CLEVELAND - Geraldo Rivera, defending a broadcast of the
news program "20-20," says the a llegations of a woman suing lor
libel detract from the program's exposure of judicial corruption.
"In this room, that program has been portrayed as me versus
Sandra Boddie," Rivera said Wednesday In federal court. "That
does a grave disservice to the program."
Rivera said the program, entitled "Injustice For All," revealed
pubUc corruption tn Akron that was Important for people to know
about.
The program focused on an Investigation of former Summit
County Probate Judge James V. Barbuto, who was charged with
exchanging sex for judicial favors and lntlm!dating potential witnesses against h!m.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Rail backers win critical test
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Backers of a multibllUon dollar high speed
rall passenger system are focusing on the November election after
winning a critical test In the Senate.
The Senate approved 20-10 Wednesday a House-passed resolution
placing the rail proposal before voters In the form of a proposed
constitutional a mendment.
The measure would raise the state's 5 percent sales tax by 1
percent to finance the $8 b!llion system on a pay-as-you-go basts.
Backers of the plan sold It as a way to create thousands of jobs.

and

Banovic w"s burn in Mt. Olive,
IllinOIS, in 1929. He is a resident of
Litchfield, Ill. He has 28 yea rs of serVice as a em~ I miner, both un·
dcrground iJild surface. He served in

the Sixth Infantry, Berlin, and has
held man y pusit10ns within the
U.M.W.A.
The candidates will be stwnping
for voles on the Southern Ohio tour
betwee n shill changes at Crown City
Mining \,()('al Umon 2\!iO Crown City.
Ohio. Peabody Coal Sunnyhill Mme
Local Union 1340 New Lexington.
Ohio and all three :&gt;outhern Ohio
Coal Company Mines, No. I Mine
l.ucal\890 at l.&lt;ingsville. No. 2 Mine
Local 1886 1n Rockpomt and No . 3

Congress looks at non-ratified pact
WASHINGTON - Responding to a surge of anti-nuclear sentiment, Congress Is taktng another look at the never-ratified treaty
between the Urdted States and the Soviet Union to Um!t strategic
bombers and Intercontinental ballistic mlsslles.
Several senators are pushing resolutions to bring the 1979 treaty to
a vote, or at least to endorse Its key provisions. Two House members
are trying to force President Reagan's endorsement of the treaty he
has condemned as "fatally flawed."
The administration hasn't relented fults opposition, however.

Emergency runs

Hijackers want $500,000, prisoners

The Rutland Emergency Squad
answered two calls early WednesdC:Iy

morning ,

the

TEGUCIGALPA. Honduras - Leftists hijacked a domesttc airliner Wednesday with 4B people aboard, Including 15 Americans.
They said they would klli one of the Americans - a banana company
executive- urdess they were given $500,!XXJ. fuel and the freedom of
~ "political prisoners."
The hijackers freed 16 of their hostages. Authorities said the plane
was refueled, but a government otl!clal said Honduras has no political prisoners and the other demands were "absurd." The government said none of the 20 alleged prisoners mentioned was being held.
O!flcla!s said they would provide lee. aspirin and oxygen to the
plane as the hijackers requested.

Me igs

Emergency Medical Service reports .
At 12:47 a.m., lht.:: unit w~.::nt to
Main St. for Christine Cleland who
was tak en to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 3:20 a.m., the unit
went to Meigs Mine 2 for David McComas who was taken to O'Bleness
Hospital in Athens .
On Tuesday at 9:24 p.m ., the
Pomeroy Unit treated Virginia
Rnwe at her home on Lincoln
Heights and the Rutland Unit at 6:37
p.m. treated Joy Anderson at her
horne on Sa lem St.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND -The winning numt&gt;er drawn Wednesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was lll6.
The lottery reported earnings of $701,450.50 from the wagering on
Its dally game. The earnings came on sales of $918,857. wh!le holders
ot winning tickets are e ntitled to share $217,406.50, lottery otl!c!als
said.

Court actions
A suit in the amount of $1,500 was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Carl Hysell, Pomeroy,
against Stan Clark. Healdsburg,
Calif
The action i~ fur money due for the
sale of radios and other radio equipment.
Two suits for divorce and four
di ssolutions were also filed.
Filing for divorce were William
Phillip Davis, Long Bottom, agains
Sandra Davis. Newark; and Frances Loretta Viola . Reedsville.
against LoUis Jesse Viola, Parkersburg.
Filing for dissolution of marriage
were Carl Vanover, Ractne, and
Ariella J . Vanover, Syracuse; Carl
Salser, Rt. I, Racine, and Edith Ann
Salser, Racine ; Lyle Reed Sinclair,
Tuppers Plains, and Sheila Diane
Sinclair, Tuppers Plains; Charles
Pennington, Middleport, and
Virginia Pennington, Middleport.
Cheryl D. Young !!Jed for support
under the Reciprocal Agreement
Acl against Charles Steven Young.

Name guest speakers
Captain and Mrs. Gordon Magill of
the Salvation Anny, Marietta, will
be tbe guest speakers at the local
corpa, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, on
Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
They will be accompanied by a
youth group which will present a
brass quartet and a timbrel brigl!de.
Envoy and Mrs. Ray Wining, and
Mayor Glenna Rwrunel invite the
publ!c to attend.

Marriage license

Weather forecast

.•

~

'.
••

·All natural ingredieitts
·No preservatives
Heiner's begins with quality, the freshest all
natural ingredients like honey and bran, and nutritious whole wheat flour. Then they add something
special, the sweet juice of sun-ripened raisins. No
preservatives, just the best of Nature's Bounty. ·
Then they take the fresh dough; shape it; split the

~·e·~
,. 1

.

tV~
~

'

;•.: t .

I

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Partly cloudy tordght. Lows near 45. Winds southeasterly around
10 mph. Partly sunny Friday. Highs 65-70.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Saturday through Monday:
Fair and mUd through the period. Lows 40-411 Saturday and 45-i!O
Sunday and Monday. Highs In the m!d-ID!i to low '708.

HEADED FOR VICTORY - The riverboat "Natchez" of New
Orleans churns up the Ohio River during Wednesday's Great Steamboat
Race. The Louisiana visitor won the race over the "Delta Queen" of Cin-

cinoati, "ith the "Belle of Louisville." shown at teh. finishing third. The
annual race is part of the Kentucky Derby Festival. IAP LascrphntoJ.

New Orleans atmosphere fills
•
river as Natchez takes race
LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) - II
Is b!lled as the Great Steamboat
Race. but judging by the drink Ing, danctng and occasional
stumbling aboard the three
boats and the waves from thou sands along the shore, nobody
much cares who wins.
And the partying didn't stop
even when an out-of-town boat,

Otllctals claimed the Delta
Queen was disqualifted for
jumping the starting gun.
The owner ofthe Natchez, Wilbur E. Dow. said the trip upriver
fro m New Orleans and back will
cos t his company about $250,000.
In the average hour, he said, the
boat burns 100 gallons of!uel and
travels nine miles .

the New Orleans-based Nat ·
chez, easily outpaced the two
longtime Ohio Rtver rivals, the
Delta Queen of Cincinnati and
the hom etown Belle of
Lou!sv!lle.
The Natchez outpaced the
Delta Queen by about an eighth
of a mlle and the Belle of Louts·
v!lle by about a quarter-mile In
capturing Wednesday's race.
The 13-mlleevent was viewed by
thousands along the Kentucky
and Indiana sides of the Ohio
River.

"Monetarily, we'll just about
break even, but the thrlll and the
experience Is something that
you just can't put a price on,"
Dow said. His boat gets to display the Golden Antlers. the
race trophy, until next year's
encounter.
The Natchez. built inl974. took
an early lead upriver and was
way ahead when It made the
turn tor home, even though It
was plagued by a flotilla of plea·
sure boats that crowded the

rtver to watch the race.

The Natchez. which had about
1.100 people on board to cele·
brate, had an easy Ume of It be·
fore returning to be greeted by
large crowds on Louisville's
publlc landing.
The victory was sweet for Na I ·
chez Ca pt. Clarke "Doc" Haw·
ley . who had served on both the
Delta Queen a nd the Belle o!
Louisville, where he began as a
calliope pla yer at age 16.
''I'm thrtlled to beat my
former charges," said Hawley,
as he guided the multl-t!ered
white steamboat Into its dock.
''Mr. Dow told me s pare no compassion on either boat."
On the Delta Queen. finis hing
about 25 length• back, Capt.
James R. Blum stepped out on
the bridge wing to address his
shipmates and the passengers

gatherrd around thr bow bar
and sa id. "Well. we won in spir·
it s . anyway ."
He dc niE'd thC'n:&gt; was an~' dis·

qualification.

saying

hr had

heard a starting ca nnon neither

of the other capw ins apparently
heard a nd. al worst. had
paddled up the river 10 I he sound
of a differenl ca nnoneer.
The third -place ftnis h didn't
damJ)('n ihe spirits of the rau cous c rowd of 500 fX'Ople aboard
the Belle . many of whom werf'
dancing when th e boat. which
was buill tn 1914. c rossed the fin ·
tsh llne lasl.
Among 1he officials on the
Belle was Kentucky Gov. John
Y. Brown Jr.. who is using
Derby Week 10 show some l!iO
business leaders from around
the counuy the delighL' of
Kentucky.

In Falkland crisis

Peace proposals under study
By The Associated Press
Argentina and Britain were studying a slightly amended U.S. proposal to head ott war over the
Falkland Islands, but the prospects
for a diplomatic solution s!lli apP£ ll'ed sUm In both London and Buenos Aires.
Argentina's ruling three-rna,
junta said It expected a British attack on the disputed Islands before
the weekend, and a Foreign Mlrdstry source said the American proposal was substantially unchanged
from the last one the junta rejected.
In London, Britain's announcement that It was extending Its sea
blockade of the Falklands to air
traffic at dawn Friday was seen as
the deadline for diplomacy. But

British mll!tary sources said the assa ult probably wouid await thearrtval In two or three days of
paratroop reinforcements being
flown out to join the 1,500Roya l Ma·
rlnes with the British war fleet.
As ot Wedresday night, the State
Department had received no response from Britain or Argentina to
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig's latest peace proposals, said
U.S. o!f!c!als who declined to be
Ide ntified.
State Department spokesman
Dean Fisher said Ha!g was prepared to resume his shuttle between Buenos Aires and London If
that would help. The United States
believes the situation Is at a "critical stage." The time !or diplomacy

Is "very. very short," said Fisher.
U.S. officials said the proposals
submitted to Argentln,c and Britain
Tuesday made only sllght changes
In a previous U.S. plan. The Ne·
York Times said they call for the
withdrawal of Argentine troops
from the Falklands; an end to Brit·
Ish military threats; brte! restora·
lion of British rule Jver the Island
colony followed by a joint British·
Argentine administration. ar1 negotatlons on the future status of the
windswept Islands 250 m!les east of
the Argentine coast.

binding referendum sought by Brttaln to allow the 1,800 is landers.
most of them of British ancestry, to
decide their own future.

"The plan Is unde r study and ail
diplomatic channels re main open."
Public Information Secretary Ro. dolfo Baltlerres said In Buenos
Aires.
"Thai Is the official position,"
sa id a Foreign M!rdstry otl!c!al.
who declined 10 be ldent!fted. "Unofflctall y. the proposal appears to
offer littl e new and seems
unacceptable ...
British government sources also
However. the paper said the plan
reported "no fr es h optimism" that
did not Include a guarantee of evena negotla ted setUemenl ca n be
tual Argentine sovereignty as dereached.
manded by Argentina or the

top, and bake it to just the right color, a rich,
golden brown.
·
Heiner's has baked the best-tasting all ~tural
bread money cart buy, Old-Fashioned Split-Top
Wheat Bread. It's so good it even iooks delicious.

Good things go \With

I

..

A marriage IJ&lt;:erise was issued in
Probate Court to Michael L. Miller,
24, Rutland and Gall A. Anderson,
26, Rutland.

!.

"'

,•

Rivera defends news broadcast

Brigade in the U.S. Army, including
one year in Vietnam.
He attended Beckley Junior
Co llege fur two yea rs after the service, JT!Hjoring in sociology. He also
has extensive underground
union experience.

IS Cent1

A Mult imedia In c. Newspaper

•

JOHNSTOWN. Ohio- Congressman John M. Ashbrook, the conservative who represented Ohio tor 21 years, was eulogized as a
nearly lone champion of conservatism before the conservative tide
swept the nation In 1~.
"The fact Is, Johnny Ashbrook was a Reagardte before Reagan,"
said conservative poUtical writer Vtctor Lasky, Ashbrook's brotherIn-law. Ashbrook, 53, died Saturday of Internal bleeding after an
attack of gastritis whtle In his otl!ce at the Johnstown Independent.
He was burled Wednesday.

·· ~·

..Ov~r 1M Qollilr G~rr•l Store In Pomuoy"

2 Section•, 11 Page•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, fhursday, Apri 1 29, 1982

Congressman Ashbrook buried

JUNIOR, MISSES'AND HALF SIZES
TOP Of THE STAIRS

entinel
c

MANY NEW STYLES FOR NURSES,
RECEPTIONISTS AND AIDES. EX·
CELLENT QUALITY AT THE RIGHT
PRICE.

"800Y WRA1&gt;1'" CRUII. IS" SCIE HTifiCALl Y PROVEh
WEOICALL Y T[ SJEOUO.USl\1(

The Daily

I Village mayors terminate cases.

Area deaths
Lahoma F. Epperly

Wednesday, Apr!l28, ·1982

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

,l
I

'~

' ..
' l. f
.
-r~

SIOID (Eric ·Gryszk.a, absent), brass quartet, fair
pcte; HCODd, I to r, Gary ColeiiUID, Carol Smith,
(Pebble Wyatt, abient), trumpet trio, grade ol good,
lllll ..d, I to r, Sbella PDUIDI, Carrie Karr and Pollie
CblldweU, Oute trio, exceUeol

SEVENTII - Seventh grade Instrumental music
ensembles received grades of fair, exceUent and
superior In the dlstrlcl solo and euemble competition
beld at Oblo UDlvenlty. 'lbey are taught by Douglas M.
Hill. P!clured are frollt, I to r, Jeaolfer Couch, Usa

Pullins, Beth Mayer, Ben Davies, brass quartet: fair;
second, I to r, Heather Cullums, Jeff Arnold, Enn Anderson, (Stan Broome absent), sax quartet, superior;
and back, I tor, Brenda Sinclair. Rachel Steele, Cheryl
Roush, Sally Radford, clarinet quartet, excellent
grade.

�'I 29, 1982

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill l'tHJrt Stn•d
l'umnu}. ( lhin

614·992·21S6
UE\'OTEil 'Nl Tm: INTEH K"iT OF Tm: MF:I(~S-1\t ,\SON ,\HEA

ROBEHT L. WINGETT
l'uhlt ~ ht'r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
DALE HOTHGEB, JR .
Nn~ s

Eth lur

1\ MEMHEH nf Th\' A ~ M~ · iat.-d l'n·~.-.. Inla nd llaih Pn·~~ ,b sul'iatinn and tht•
Amo·ri n tn N n• !~C pi!p.T l'uhh.,hrr.. ,h ..,udutiun.
·
1.1-:TTEK.'\ OF OPINION un · ~ d cu nwd . Tht•y ~ hnuld ht· lt'SS than 300 "nrtls lun~. All
lt'lt .. r' un· subjt't'l In t· dilin ~ l!lld must bt• ~ i l!:nt•tl with namt·. ilddrt·s~ and ll'lt•phmw
numlwr . 'lu unsi!(rwd kth•rs "ill bl· jwblf.., ht•d . Lt'ltt-n. shuuld l&gt;t· in~uod Ulsh· . addrt&gt;ss in.:
i .~ S UI' , , nnll)t: r :o. unalitit· ...

A comic opera?
Acomic opera, a mistake and a waste.
All that and more is bein~ said about the esca lation of the Falkland
Islands dispute to world-scale crisis that has taken everyone by surprise. Including especially the British and probably the Argentines.
It is all certainly true enough. The spectacle in an age of missiles and
nuclear overkill of one fleet steaming two weeks to confront another half a
world away over a few islands largely populated by sheep requires a suspension of disbelief that few scriptwriters would have the skill to bring off.
It is certainly the wrong crisis between the wrong parties over the wrong
issue in the wrong place at the wrong time. And even should it be resolved
tomorrow through diplomacy rather than bloodshed, it already has cost both
parties - in cash and, in the case of Britain, the loss of a world-dass foreign
secretary - far more than either can afford.

But it would be a greater mistake to think that there is nothing more to
the Falklands fiasco .
There is, as is most apparent in Buenos Aires. The Argentine move has,
as correspondents and commentators point out, transformed a dicey
political situation at home to the advantage of the military regime. Labor
and political opponents that were clashing with government troops in the
streel&lt; are now stumbling over each other io the rush to pledge patriotic support, a development that surely was the regime's immediate goa l.
But there has been no change in the conditions that produced the increasingly threatening opposition to military misrule. The generals still cannot make what should be a thri ving economy work. They refl1Se to satisfy
demands for broader participation in the political process and an accounting
for the state terrorism they have mflicted upon the country for six years.
Theirs is a bankrupt Argentina, literally and figuratively . They have
bought time for themselves, but at the cost of transfonning unsolved
domestic problems into an unpredictable international crisis.
It is a transformation in which the United States is deeply involved for
reasons that go beyond its interests as a world power.
The Reagan administration is correct in approaching the confrontation
as a declared friend of both parties, despite criticism that it is short- '
changing a traditional and staunchly democratic ally to the undeserved advantage of an opportunistic anj.hmreliable military dictatorship. The United
. States is the sole third party in a position to be an effective intermediary . To
be credible in the role, it must maintain the appearance of impartiality.
If Argentines as well as British are assured that the American offices
are indeed good, there is a chance of negotiating a settlement along the lines
of the fonnula already worked out on their own that envisages sharing and
gradually transferring sovereignty over a 2a-year period.
That would let both adversanes off the hook and the intennediary might
even gain something. Namely , a lesson as to the reality as opposed to the
theory of distinguishing between totalitarian and authoritarian re~imes in
the behef that the United States can in good conscience deal profitably with
the latter.
The Argentines have been the prime example of acceptable
authoritarians and the most enthusiastically courted, which is now seen as
having encouraged the generals in Buenos Aires to think that they could
make the Falklands move without serious opposition from their new friends
m Washington .
To American disc01nfort, they have been proved at least half right.
f right.
There's a lesson 10 the fi asco that, if learned, might prevent future
Americanntistakes in this line.

Then again, given the determined ideological tilt of this administration,
probably not.

Letter to editor
Seeks levy vote
1 am writing this letter asking

your help in getting the mental
health levy passed.
1 have a niece by marriage who is
mongoloid. She is very capable of
doing things on her own. The Me1gs
mentally retarded school has done a
great deal for her, even though there
ar'~ some things she needs supervision on. She babysits for her sister
when they go shopping.
I feel very stron~ly towards this
levy and I plan to vote for it myself.

If you would only take a few

mnutes of your time and stop by the
school for the mentally retarded and
see how .they are helping these
children, you'll see just how important this levy is to these children.
They really need your help. So won't
you please vote YES on the tax levy
for the mentally retarded? I don't
have any children in this school, but
if I did, I'd like to know .there'a
school for them. - Gladys Yates,
Pomeroy.

Today in history
Today Is Thursday, Aprt129, the l19th day of1982. Thereare246days left
1n the year.
Today's hlghllght In history:
On Aprtl 29, 1945, American soldiers In Gennany Uberated 32,&lt;XXJ Nazi
victims at a concentration camp In Dachau during World War n.
On this date:
In 1429, Joan of Arc enterm Orleans, France, and won a victory over the
English.
In 1639, the colonial settlement of Newport, R.I., was founded.
In ll!62, New Orleans fell to Union forces during the avU War.
And In 1946, fonner Japanese leaders were Indicted In Tokyo as World

war n crtmlnals.

Ten years ago: A North Vietnamese offensive In northern South VIet·
nain gained momentum and the defenders of the key center of Quang Trt
were outflanked.
Five years ago: The Commerce Department said Its list of economic
Indicators rose the month before by the lal gest margin In 20 months.
' In 19SI, Syugman Rhee resigned as president of South Korea.
And In 1968, Soviet cosmonaut Yurt Gargartn, who had been the llrst .
man to Oy In space, was ldlled In the crash of a training plane.
Ten years ago: Apollo 16aatronauts John YOWJg, 1bomu Mattlngly and :
Charles Duke made a safe splasbdown In t.be Pacltlc alter an exploratocy ,
rttlBslon to the moon.
1
Five years ago: West Germany announced a major program to build 1
and export nuclear reecton ualni plutonium, despite U.S. IWIJII!tlon.
1
One year ago: 1be White Houle backed cl1 trom a tlu'eatmade two days 1
earlier by Secretary 11 State Alexander M. Hal&amp; Jr., that the U.S. would :
1mpo1e a total.embargoon trade with the Soviet UnlonUit Invaded Poland.

Paa-2- Tht Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thunday,April 2~ 1982

such personal expenses as his mor-

lgage payments, home improvements, vacatiOns and, of course, his mistress."
As security for their investmen~
those euchred into providing the funds were promised first mortgages on
tracts within the prposed 896-acre
residential community known as
The Swallows, to be built in DeBary,
Fla., a small town about 25 miles
north of here.
Instead, many of these investors
received second mortgages. None of
the parcels had access to any roads
and some were on the edge of a
sewage treatment plant, in the middle of a golf course or at the bottom
of the lake.
The federal criminal case, tried in
U. S. District Court here, was
described by one prosecutor as the
largest Florida land fraud of the
1970s. But numerous similar cases,
some of them involving even more
money, have surfaced in other states
during the past decade. Among
them·
- The Great Western United
Corp. agreed, under pressure from
the Federal Trade Commission, to
refund almost $4 million to approximately 14,&lt;XXJ people who in-

vested in land development projects
in California, Colorado and New
Mexico.
- A McCulloch Oil Corp. subsidiary pleaded guilty to 19 criminal
fraud charges in connection with the
sale of retirement and vacation
home sites at 27 ,oro-acre Colorado
subdivision.
- An FTC administrative law
judge found that the Horizon Corp.
perpetrated a "vicious consumer
fraud " by selling hapless customers
millions of dollars' worth of "virtually worthless desert land" in
Arizona, New Mexico and Texas.
- The Amrep Corp. was convicted
of conducting a fraudulent scheme
to sell $170 million worth of undeveloped desert land in New
Mexico to 4),000 unsuspecting
buyers from 37 states.
Despite years of scandal, there is
pitifully little government protection

for those likely to be bilked through
installment sales of recreational
land. In most states, the (ega!
prohibitions against such real~state
fraud range from ineffective to
nonexiste!lt.
At the federal level, the FTC, the
Postal Service and the Jwtice
Department have investigated and
prosecuted major cases, but routine
enforcement is the responsibility of
an obscure agency within the Department of Housing and Urban
Development whose inadequate
staff administers a toothless law.
Typical of the people 'Victimized
under those circwnstances was

Lorraine Huber, a handicapped
woman confined to a wheelchair,
who invested $21,000 in The
Swallows.
That money came from a modest
inheritance from her father, a New

By A-ncl•led l'reM
The lnnlng that helped Kansas
City snap Boston's eight-game winning streak came at the right prtce
said Red Sox Manager Ralph
Houk.
''The big lnnlng was pretty cheap
- one home run off the foul pole
and a bunch of ground balls through
the Infield," Houk said Wednesday
night after the RDyais downed Boston S.5 at Fenway Park.

York City fireman who sought to
provide financial security for his
widow, who was afflicted by arthritis and partial blindness, and hls
crippled daughter.
Dr. Martin J . Skrowonki, another
victim, lost $15,000 - half of the
reparations he received from the
German government in compensation for five years of incarceration in a Nazi concentration
camp during World War II.
His youngest daughter, stricken
by cerebral palsy, lost $3,&lt;XXJ she had
saved from her Social Security
benefits.
One final note about The
Swallows: The principal defendant
was Frank R. Carcaise of Boca
Raton, Fla ., who was president,
board chainnan and chief executive
officer of the corporation that
proposed the development.

Designated hitter Hal McRae
drove In five runs for Kansas City,
three with a checked-swing homer
that bounced ott the right-field foul
pole In the first lnnlng, when the
Royals scored five runs.
"Everything they hit was a base
hit whether they hit the ball good or
bad," Houk said. "'When that starts
happening there lsn 't much you can
do."
Elsewhere In the America~
League, New York blanked Callfornla IHJ, Milwaukee edged Chicago
2-1, Toronto downed Texas 6-2,
Cleveland whipped Seattle 6-1, Minnesota de!eated Detroit 4-2 and
Oakland and Baltimore split a twinbill, Oakland winning 6-2 1n the opener and Il;lltlmore taking the
nightcap 5-1.
George Brett started the Kansas
Clly first With a double, and Amos
Otis drew a walk from Boston lefty

, Ohio

John Tudor; 3-1. McRae, a righthanded hitter, then sliced an o-2
pltqh from Tudor down the rightfield line, whiC'h measures only :ll2
feet. Singles by Jerry Martin,
Frank White, Dennis Werth and
Greg Pryor produced the final two
runs of the Inning.
The Royal!~ scorod their final
three runs In the next lnnlng on
McRae's tw~run dowble and an
RBI single by Frank White.
Dennis Leonard, 2-1, allowed Uve
runs on seven hits In the first three
Innings, but blanked the Red Sox
the rest of the way for the win.
y a.nkees 8, Allgei8 0
Tommy John tossed a six-hit shutout, and the Yankees scored three
of their runs In the third lnnlng ot!
Ken Forsch, 2-2. Consecutive doubles by Ken GrUtey, Oscar Gamble
and Dave Wlntleld produced the
runs. The Yankees already had
scored twice In the first lnn1ng on
Griffey's RBI single and a groundout by Winfield. ·
The victory was John's first In
four· decisions and the 224th of hls
J..S.year major league career. He
walked one, struck out five and held
the Angels hitless until Fred Lynn
doubted with two out In the fifth.
Brewers Z, Wblte Sox 1
RoUte Fingers shut out the White
Sox on one hit over the final 22-3
lnnlngs; and Jtm Gantner's single

broke a 1-1 deadlock 1n the seventh
Inning. Fingers earned the victory

•
WID

streak. Barker, 3-1, yielded a run on
three hils, and left after seven Innings when he was troubled by a
bone spur In hls right elbow.
Rick Manning and Jack Per·
conte hit tw~run singles to highlight the Cleveland first Inning.

tor a 2-2 record.
Gonnan Thomas started the Milwaukee seventh with a walk ot! Chicago left-bander Britt Burns, 2-1.
Thomas went to second on a sacrifice and, one out later, Gantner
drove a grounder up the middle to
score Thomas.
Fingers got the call with one out
In the seventh and runners on first
and second. He got Ron LeFlore to
hit Into a forceout and fanned Tony
Bernazard.
Blue Jays 6, Rangel'!l i
Toronto pinch-hitter Rance Mulllnlks smacked a tw~run single In
the seventh Inning that snapped a
4-4 tie and handed Texas Its sixth
loss In a -row.
The victory gave Toronto a
sweep of the tw~game series and
was the first time this season the
Blue Jays have won consecutlve
games.
Jim Clancy earned hls first victory In three decisions, getting relief help from Joey McLaughlin 1n
the eighth. McLaughlin yielded h~
mers to Buddy Bell and Lee

Twins l, Tlgel'!l

z

Randy Johnson and Gary Gaettl
each homered In the fourth Inning
as Minnesota ended a four-game
losing streak. The Twins led Hl
wnen Johnson led off the fourth
with a solo shOt. After John Castlno
walked, Gaettl hit hls homer, givIng Minnesota a 4-0 lead.
Howard Johnson homerod tor
Detroit In the fourth .
Pete Redfern, 2-2, got the win
with seventh-Inning relle! help
from Ron Davis.
A's 6-1, Orioles U
Cliff Johnson and Dwayne
Murphy hit home runs for Oakland
In the first game, and John Lowenstein and Eddie Murray homerod
for Baltimore In the nightcap.
Mike Nonis, 1-2, scattered !lve
hits and struck out slx In Oakland's
victory, whlle Baltimore's Scott
McGregor earned hls first victory
In the nightcap with a five-hitter.
Murray went hitless In the first
game, losing ·an J..S.game hitting
streak that Included the final four
games of 1981.

MIIZlllll.

Indians 6, Mariners 1

Len Barker and Tom Brennan
combined on a four-hitter, and the
lndlans scored six runs In the first
Inning to end their four-game losing

Noles fires one-hit 6-0 win over Reds
ClllCAGO (AP) - All Dickie
Noles wanted to do was come In
from the cold.
""I like hot weather, as bot as I
can get It," the·Chlcago Cubs righthander said. '"The hotter the
~-··
Noles turned on the heat on a
chilly Wednesday, hurllng a onehitter In a brisk hour and 51 minutes

as the Cubs defeated the Cincinnati
Reds~.

The game marked a pair of !lrsts
for Noles- his first complete game
and his first shutOut - and was the
first Cubs shutout since Ferguson
Jenkins and Lee Smith teamed up
to blank the New York Mets 1n Chicago's home opener.

Scoreboard...

--

Mortgage lenders have broken
through usury laws and again can
lend at a profit. Analysts term extremely favorable the outlook for
fixed-Income securities, such as
long-term bonds.
The changed outlook, a consequence of lnOatlon having been reduced to manageable levels perhaps only 4 percent for the
calendar year - Is described by
'some securities analysts as poetic
justice.
For 15 years or so, they remind
us, the exploiters of tnnation grew
without necessartly Inventing or
manufacturing or providing any
greater services. They Invested In
tnnatlon, and often borrowed to do
so.
In borrowing, Investors often
drew In Uncle Sam as a partner,
and he absorbed a major portion of

the costs by agreeing to allow. tocome tax wrlteot!s. And, of course,
they repaid lenders In cheaper
dollars.
Meanwhile, their lnvesUnents
may have rtsen faster than tnnatlon In general. And while the Investment appreciated In market
value, the Investor often could deduct a good deal of taxes for
depreciation.
The fortunes of those whO fed fl·
nanclng to the exploiters went the
other way. They lost. The tax deductions that helped finance
market exploitation were matched
by higher tax brackets for others.
Savers, In effect, lost savings. Mortgage lenders lost on loans. Automakers and munlclpaUltles almost
went broke financing big wage
Increases.
To apply moral measurements tn

..\MBBICAN LE.4.0UE

such activities accompUshes llttle
or nothing, because the exploiters
were only doing what they felt they
had to do: Follow the Incentives of
the marketplace.
The Incentives were warped. You
could actually save by bolTOWing.
If you borrowed at 12 percent and
Invested at 15 percent you pocketed
the dltference after paying taxes.
Often the taxes could be deferred.
The other '"If' - the !lrst was If
lnflatlon continued at low, singledigit, manageable levels - is If the
losers over the past 15 years can
take advantage of the advantage
that seems to be presented to them.
Reducing the rate of lnOatlon,
and making It stick, may resolve
one part of the problem. But until
the economy expands again, the
losers to to tnnatlon over the past
decade or so must walt for justice.

Voting rights illiteracy

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Oakland 6-1, Baltimore 2-6

Toronto 6. Texu 4
~&lt;anus

ary &amp; ao.~on 5

~

CIUcqo at Atlanta, (AI
PhUadelphla at San 06e&amp;o. (nl
Montreal at Loa Anaeft, tn )
NNP York at San FrandiCO, tnJ

Transactions
IIASEIIAU.

...

Nolloool .......
CH I C AG 0

LOS

ANGELES

--

ClEVELAND

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Detroit (Pu.hnick 1~1 at OUcqo
(Lamp 1.()), (D )

at Kanau Oty

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Tex.u at bton, ( O)
SNtUe at New York, {n)
Detroit at Chlcqo, tnJ
Mllwallkee at Mlnnetota, (n)
Toronto at Kanaaa Oty, (nl

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Montreal
N!'W York

Plttlbuf"'h

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VInt'OUVel' •t Odeqo.
WAU!IIIlONI'IIIIENa!

2-11 at Ad&amp;ntl (O:M·

(-~jl.(nl

3 ga me en route to a 12-4 victory over

and fanned six. while giving up three

the Southwestern Highlanders. This
important SV AC contest boosted
Southern to 8-1 within the SVAC with

came on in the sixth to finish the

one game remaining in loop play.

the win on three strike oul"i and one

walk . Nida sta rted for Southwestern
walks in suffering the loss. Walker
game .
Southern plays Meigs at home
Thursday , then travels to Eastern
for what may prove to be the SAVC
championship game on Friday.

The Tornadoes are lo-5 overall.
The Wolfemen of Coach Hilton
Wolfe had another good night at the
plate as Tony Riffle paved the way
Linescore :
with two big triples and three RBI's. Southwestern
100 011 1- 4 10 3
Jay Rees followed w1th two Southern
301 008 x- 12 9 3
singles, Kent Wolfe had a bases
Batteries : Zane Beegle, John Porloaded double, and Joe Bob Hem- ter IWPI, and Jay Bees. Nida ILPI ,
sley, John Porter, Zane Beegle, and· Walker 6th, and Daniels.
Paul Harris each had smgles.
Nida had a good night for Southwestern with a triple and two
singles, Daniels two singles, and
Walker a big double and single.
Layton and Huff had long doubles,
while Pelfry had a single.
Southern's bats came alive in the
531 JACKSON Ptt&lt;E · Rl . 35 WEST
sixth frame when with one out Zane
Phone 44e- 45.24
Beegle walked and stole second.
John Porter singled him home, then
after another out, Paul Harris
singled, and Wade Connolly and
Hemsley walked to load the bases.
Bees singled two runs home off the
second baseman's glove and Riffle
walked to again fill the bases. While
still in the echo of Rees' smash, Kent
Wolfe climbed into the box and rapped a double. Beegle in his second
time up of the inning hit a single to
plate the eighth run.
A luM ~~nf .
Zane Beegle started for Southern,
~ iinJ lllajliC .
going two innings with a walk and
Th&lt;
SWORb Ai'~

SORCERER
"-1••017"-'"'
tbar-a.-.._.
Uo.t sr-tnc.,

_.....,,

IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE

~

(Rboden 6-2), (n)

&lt;llklfrO (~
ley 1).(1), (D)

one strike out. John Porter came on
in relief in the third and picked up

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

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t, 15 lnnlnp

2·11 at San

ARIZONA STATE-Named lvenon W!l·
llarru an a.!Jtant tootbiJI COICh.
flORIDA STATE-ArulouDced tM retlpadoo d. Mar1r. CaN::In, IJXII1IInfl::lr"1N·
lklrl director.

NHL results

3

New York

RACINE - Allhough outhit 1{}-9,
Southern's Tornadoes pulled away
in the sixth inning with a big eight
run outburst to break open a close 4-

6~

Ollc'i&lt;&gt; ~·~·0...
Clndnnad 0
St.Loull ~ Houston 4
San F'rancflco 7, Mootrell 0
Atlanto 7,
10 .......

1&gt;1-'
D1eF

OOUJ!IGE

6\o'j

Southern dumps
Highlander crew

Jay Mar Golf Club held il&lt; weekly
ladies day Tuesday with 16 ladies in
attendance.
Prizes were awarded to Margaret
Follrod for low gross and low putts.
Lot net went to J oan Childs.
All lady golfers are invited to attend ladi es day every Tuesday at 9
a.m.

Ed· .

.Eill

San Otego
1.4 A"ifiel
San Francilco
Houlton

New YOl1l '- SID

· FORCE-F\red

SLIDES ACROSS PLATE- An unldentified Southern player slldes
across the plate during action in Wednesday's 1.2-4 Tornado victory over
Southwestern. Troy Daniels awaits the throw for the Hlghlanders. Tim
Tucker photo.

Golf session held

._,..

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WfllltenDivllbl

7

___
IIOIZIIY

Atlanta

~tl

DI."TROrr UONS-Track~~ Lutber Bradk!y, deferlJiw back, to Houston for the
OOert' 198:2 JeVenth I'OllDCI draft pick.
NEW ENGLAND PATRI&lt;YIS-Traded
Rod Sboat.t, linebadter, to Cllbeo for
the Bean' fttth-round ~ iD next
ytoar'l dTatt.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Thaded their
ninth lOth, 11th and 12th-round 1982 draft
plckl and an eJ&amp;bth·round ptci. they ac·
qulred from San F'ranct.co to Wuhin&amp;1m
ror the Redsklnl' fourtb·round p6ck next

6
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9

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MOm'REAL CANADIE~ Guy
Ca.rtonneeu, cftlcer, to a fW[).)'Nl" CUI·
. .ct.

-w

........

IIRO\VI'IS-1nded

Rakien' e!Pth-I'OWICI pick iD the 1982
dnll Tndod
I'!Wit, """""" bock,
10 me OUlaDcl Raklen rcr f'utl.lre draft

,.....

NA'I10NAL LEA.GUE

Sl. Laull

tul run-scoring et!orts In recent
days.
"We had good hitting and great
defense," Noles said, citing Hend·
erson's lunging grab of a Dan
Driessen line drive In the second
Inning .
But the speculation swirled
around the one that got away- the
Eddie Milner drive that fell at
Henderson's feet In the fourth Inning for the only Cincinnati hit.
" It was a hit all the way, " Noles
said. But Ella thought differently.
"It was a posslbWty that It could
have been caught," he said. "It
would have been a heck of a play,
though, better than the one he made
on Driessen."
However, Ella was counting hls
blessings. He said a turnaround
was long overdue for the Cubs, who
have lost five of their last seven and
nine of their last 13.
Cincinnati starter Tom Seaver
was again frustrated In hts quest
for hls first win of the season. But
Ella and McNamara both saw
bright spots In Seaver's third loss
this year.

Ab.ado, ddenalw end, to Oakland lor the

renaen 0.1) , (nJ

(Steib

DqDGERS-

lnded
Leo Hernande:r.. lnftekler, to tb1! Ba.JU·
~ Or1oB for .be Moraiel. ca~.
OptJoned Ron Roenkkir, oudlelder, to Al·
tJucruen1ue of the Pacttlc Cout t..eaaue.

"He had command of all of hls
pitches: fastball, curve ball and
sUder," said Cub Manager Lee
Ella. '"When you've got 1t all gotng
with the abWty be's got, you're go.
lng to get It together sooner or
later."
Facing 29 Reds, Noles struck out
seven and walked two, allowing
just three Cincinnati baserunners.
One was erased In a double play
and another was stranded In the
ninth lnn1ng when Ron Oester lined
out to Cub !lrst baseman Blll
Buckner to end the game.
"Give the man credit," saki Cincinnati Manager John McNamr ·a.
"He had good stuff. He had good
pitches and he had good control of
hls pitches."
Though one run would have been
enough, Noles' teammates gave
him six, with Steve Henderson and
Jerry Morales strtklng the key
blows. Henderson rapped a tw~run
triple In the fifth Inning, then was
replaced by Morales as a de!enslve
measure. Morales belted another
tw~run triple In the seventh, capping one of the Cubs' most success-

I'OOnA1L

Mlnnelota t. Detrott 2

Toroato

JJec.

C'tlm-R.f!caUed

Cru2. outnelder, from Iowa cJ. W Amert·
can Aaoctadon. Sent Herman ~.
pitcher, to law~~ .

6, Seartle 1

New Yorli: 6, C&amp;1Jtornia 0
MUwallkee 2, &lt;lUcqo 1

Julian Bond

That ruling •inL-;-M;-o-;-b:;-ile-v-s.-:B:-o-:Jd7e-n--::s::;ubc&lt;=o=mm=i-;;tt:-ee:-:t:;:ha-;-t;-:t:;:he-p-ro-po-s-·ed-:-:la_w_
members of the minority group have
If the law says that the speed limit
not been elected in nwnbers equal to changed what had been law for 15 would '"place in doubt the validity of
is 55 mph, that's pretty clear.
the group's proportion ·of the years and imposed an impossible any election system under which
It means that the speed limit isn't
60 or 65 or 100 mph and that anyone population shall not in and of itself standard on the victims of racial candidates backed by the minority
bias at the ballot box. For example, community were not elected in ownwho drives faster than 55 is breaking constitute a violation of the section."
the
objectionable procedure in the bers equal to lhe group's proportion
This refers to Section 2 of S. 1992,
the law. All those able to read can
Mobile
case dated back to 1911; of the total population."
the
renewal
of
the
1965
Voting
Rights
understand that their lawmakers
That's the Reagan administran's
have set 55 as the fastest speed Act that is scheduled to expire this proving the intent of long-dead
politicians has thus far been im- major misunderstanding of the
anyone can drive on the public high- Augwt.
renewallegislation.
Section 2 prohibits practices that possible.
ways.
As a result of the barrier raised in
The legislation says that there is
deny, dilute or abridge the voting
If, after several years of good experience with this law, a court ruled rights of racial and ethnic the Mobile decision to successful no requirement for racial quotas.
that the speed limit could be as high minorities. Under Section 2, the at- voting-discrimination cases, Smith and Reynolds deny that the
as 00 mph, the legislature would torney general or a private plaintiff language returning the law to the legislation says what it clearly does.
swiftly slow down the traffic again. can challenge discriminatory voting pre-Mobile standard was inserted in- Unfortunately, some senators who
to the renewal legislation.
can't read may agree with them.
A lawmaker would introduce a bill practices or procedures.
And to keep any literate person
The "quota" argwnent is the lastFrom 1965, when the Voting Rights
saying something like: "The speed
limit on our highway shall not ex- Act became taw, until 1980, citizens from believing that quotas would he ditch effort by an administrdtion
who believed tbey had been victims required, the sentence regarding hostile to civil rights to bury ihe
ceed 55 mph."
of
voting bias had to prove either proportional representation was in- most effective civil-rights law
Everyone would understand those
serted in Section 2.
passed during this century.
words, and anyone who said they discriminatory intent or effect That's the sentence Attorney
But no matter what the Reagan
mean anything else would be called that is, that the objectionable practice was begun with the pUI'plllll! of General William French Smith can't people say, there are no qllillas
crazy or stupid or illiterate.
required by in lhe Voting Rights Act.
But now the attOrney general of discriminating or that its result was -or won't -understand.
Neither can · Assistant Attorney Thm:e is no requirement that the
the United Sta~ and hls assistant discriminatory.
In 1980, however, a plurality of the General William Bradford pereentage of minorities in elective
attorney general for civil rights
have revealed that they can't read U. S. Supreme Court ruled that . Reynolds. He is the man in charge of office equal the percentage of
plaintiffs had to prove enforcing the Voting Rights Act, 119 •minorities in the population.
something almost a8 simple.
But there should be a requirement
They have been unable to un- discriminatory intent. Proof of hls understanding of the legislation
that the attorney general be able to
derstand the meaning of the discriminatory resUlts would no is crucial.
ReynoldS told a Senate Judiciary read.
following sentence: "The fact that · longer Ill! enough.

St.Louis at QndnnaU, {D)
Hooston at Plttabw"Jtl, (n )

IIJ '1\e ~ p,_

w

turns that enable assets to grow.

F'ltdiQ"a G&amp;ml!ll

Majors

Drastic shifts will follow inflation game
NEW YORK (AP) -II the tnnatlon game Is over, as so many economists claim It Is, then a drastic
shift of fortunes, probably one of the
most pronounced of the century,
could ensue.
Should It occur, It would mean
that the noaters -certain housing
Investors, workers, oil producers,
borrowers - whO used tnnatlon to
balloon assets would lose their updraft and return to earth.
For those who financed the flotation - savers, mortgage lenders,
!lxed·lncome Investors and In general those who believed In sensible
economic management, It would be
the return of justice and a fair
return.
Whlle two ominous '"Its" still
loom, optimists already feel the
!lrst evidence of the shift Is now takIng place. Savers are receiving re-

-Middle

McRae has five RBI's in 8-5 KC

Aid for fraud victims_____Ro_be_rtW_a_Ite_rs
ORLANDO, Fla. (NEA) - The
trial ended more than three years
ago, the convicted defendant has
exhausted all of his legal appea ls
and the case is closed - but the hundreds of victims who lost their
savings still haven't recovered.
More than 550 people, most of
them elderly or disabled, invested a
total of $6.25 million in a real-estate
development project that was virtually guaranteed by its promoters
to double in value ,.;thin three
years.
In fact, the principal organizer of
the venture, according to a government document, "siphoned off
staggering amounts of monies for

P

READY TO SWING- ASouthern bitter gets ready to tee off on 8 pltcb during Wednesday's SV AC encounter at Racine. Sautbern remained In
the league Iitle picture with 81.2-t victory over Southwestern.

JUNE 8 ELECTION
YOUR MUST BE REGISTERED BY

N.Y. la&amp;&amp;Dden .. ~ 1, NN' Yort:

_.

ieadJ l«&lt;et 1..0

MAY 10

Quebec..•t N.Y. laludtn.

-

5" X 7"

Pick a Pair 0'

PECOS
. o Ful gtaln, oil taMed lNther
o . Fuly leether Uned

• Lqng-rlng
ChemiQum sote
ancfhHI

I

8" X 10"

79( 1R$129
r-........_--~~--~------------.

1.

-ENLARGEMENTS
5" X7"

I

l 79C

8" X10"

OR

1
I

$1.29 !

!Coupon must accompany order. From your
!color negative or slide. ·

1
1

L----~!«!.~[!~L.M~!;~~~;_ ____ _I

Village
Pharmacy
.
.

.

IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED : VISIT .
THE BOARD'S OFFICE IN PERSON -OR
- PHONE THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS
OR ~ MAIL THE BOARD A CARD .
Also, if you move you must notify the coun ty office. Or if you are in doubt as to whether
you are properly registered, phone the board.

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF ELECTIONS
MASONIC TEMPLE:. BUILDING
P.O. Box 488, Pomero:, Ohio45769
PHONE 992-2697 or '92-7595
Regular Hours: 8:30-4:30 Monda •s through Friday
ADDITIONAL HOURS FOR RU&gt;' ISTRATtON
Friday evenings, April 23, April 30 ' May 7, 6 p.m . to
9 p.m. Saturdays, April 24, May 1 &amp; ~ay 8, 9 a .m. It&gt;
12nc . Monday,May10,9a.m.to9p.n ..

�Thunday, April 29, 1982

Rookie Laskey ·whips .Expos
By Aoeoclated Preoo

It wasn't bad for a first major
league start - a three-hit shutout
and an RBI single to boot.
"This ts the first dream-cometrue In the big leagues lor me," Bill
Laskey said Wednesday after pitchIng the San FranciscQ Giants to a
7.() victory over the Montreal Expos. "A lot of fans and ft1ends In
Toledo are going to read about It
and say, 'I can't believe he did it.' I
won't believe It untU I read it."
At any rate, Laskey's parents
came to San Francisco from
Toledo, Ohio, to watch their son's
fine debut. That a lone made h!m

nervous.
"I was nervous the whole first Inning," he said. "But then I settled

Premature honor
THREE ON A BASE - Oakland Athletics' shortstop Rob Piccioio,left, forces out the sliding Joe Nolan
of the Baltimore Orioles at second base but his throw to
lint trying to complete a double play on Bob Bonner

arrived too late. Second baseman ·Davey Lopes backs
· up Picciolo on the sixth Inning play. Oakland went on to
beat the Orioles In the first ga me of a double head,er S.
2.(AP Laserphoto).

Bengals choose six players
CINCINNATI (AP) -Offensive
lineman Kart YII·Renko halls from
Ca nada, but his transplanted
dreams of football success are bios·
somlng In the United States.
Yli·Renko, a huge tackle for the
University of Cincinnati , was delighted Wednesday when the Cln·
clnnati Bcngals drafted him In the
eighth round.
"I was hoping to be drafted by
Cincinnati ," Ytt-Renko sa td .
"Gosh, my dreams have come
true . I'll get to follow (UC) Bcarcat
football, too."
YII-Renko was the only offensive
lineman drafted by the Bengals In
12 rounds. The Bengals selected
four offensive players and two del·
enslve players Wednesday.
The 6-foot ·5, :liD-pound YII·Renko
grew up In Sudbury, Ontario, and
had been drafted by the Hamilton
Tiger-Cats of the Canadlan Foot·
ball League. The Bcngals have
good depth In their young offensive
line, so YII·Renko figured he'd have
to master several positions In order
to make the roster of the defending
American Conference champions.
" If I'm not a starter, I'll have to

be versatile and be able to fill In at
all spots," he said.
Other Bengals' draft choices
Wednesday were Ben Needham,
linebacker from Michigan, In the
seventh round ; wide receiver
James Bennett from Northwestern
Louisiana In the ninth ; cornerback
Larry Hogue from Utah State In the
lOth; running back Russell Davis
from Idaho In the 11th; and quarter·
back Dan Feraday from Toronto In
the 12th.
Feraday, 25, Is Canadia n college
football's all-time leading passer
a nd recipient ot the 1981 Hec
Crlghton Award, a Canadian coun·
terpart to the Helsman Trophy. A
four-year starter, Feraday threw
for 50 touchdowns and more than
7,100 yards.
However, Feraday technJcally Is
under contract to the Toronto Argonauts of the CFL, although the
quarterback and his agent report·
edly are contending that the c lu b
has breached the agreement.
Paul Brown, Bcngals' general
manager, said the club was taking
a "calculated ga mble" In selecting
Feraday.

"We'll wa lt and see what
happens. We're not concerned
about It, " Brown said.
Offensive coordlna tor Lindy In·
!ante was Impressed with films of
Feraday's performances. He said
that although reraday Is slow. he
has a strong arm.
"He's the most accurate thing
I've seen on film this year ... He
showed great poise, he's calm a nd
cool," Infante said . "!kept under·
lining as l wrote about hlm that he's
extremely accura te."
Brown said he was pleased with
the results of the two-day draft.
the way
through
thiscompedraft,
our"All
thoughts
were
to create
tition . And we wa nted to s hore up
the pass rush, " Brown said. "Of
course, we don't know how It 's goIng to work out, but we accomplished the things we were trying to
do, on paper. On paper."
The draft choices will report at
Spinney Field for a rookie min!·
camp this weekend . The coaches
will conduct one workout Saturday,
two Sunday and one Monday
morning.

CHICAGO (AP) -Dan Drt~n
was honored tor getting his 1,000th
career hit Sunday, but It turns out
that the lesttvlttes were a bit
premature.
The Cincinnati Reds' first baseman learned Wednesday that he's
still short ot the 1,®hit mark.
Reds' officials Incorrectly credlited
him with 986 hits at the start of the
'"'l2 season, 16 more than his actual
total.
"They tricked the heck out ot
me," said Driessen, who was honored In Houston on Sunday when
he got what was believed to be his
l,OOOth hlt In a game against the
Astros. "!thought It was over, but I
guess I've got to ~rank ... Who's
going to apologize to Houston tor \
puttlng It on the board?"
·
Reds' officials made the mistake
when computing the 1979 media
guide. The mistake was carried
over each succeeding edition, but a
fan caught It and pointed It out to a
C incinnati n ewspaper on
Wednesday.

down and started getting ahead ol
the batters. I didn't ·think people
knew me here, but !herr they
started chanting my name by the
end of the game."
Laskey's teammates, and Manager Frank RobinSOn, then gave
him a big hand In the dressing

room.
"This ts a shot In the ann tor the
whole club," Robinson saJd. 11 He
was the laSt one we cut In spring
training, but he knew If he stayed In
the groove, he'd be back soon. He's
In the rotation now."
Laskey, called up last week from
Phoenix where he bad a 1.29earned
run average, pitched no-hit ball tor
32-3 Innings before yielding a dou·
ble to AI Oliver. The 24-year-old
Laskey gave up a pair ol slngley In
the tttth, then retired the f1nal 14
hitters he faced.
The Giants took a 3-0 lead In the
fourth with the help of five singles.
Jack Clark singled home one run,
Jeff Ransom's, sacrlftce ny dell·
vered another and Laskey's first
major league hit, a hard grounder
between first and second, capped
the rally.
Bill Gullickson, H, took the loss,

Elsewhere In the National
League, Phlladelphla beat Los Angeles 9-3, New York edged San
Diego 5-I 1n 15 Innings, St. Louts ·
tripped Houston 5-4, Chicago
blanked Clnc!nnati 6-0 and Atlanta ·
beat Pittsburgh 7-6 In 10 Innings.

o

with the Raiders.
Jackson a nd Alzada, according to
Coach Sam Rutigliano, became ex·
pendable when Cousineau, Banks
and Baldwin were acquired. The
coach said Banks will assume the
lett outside linebacker's job, with
Cousineau joining Dick Ambrose In
the mtddle. Clay Matthews will remain on the right side.
That lineup, plus the addition of
Baldwin, should lnnprove Clevela nd's weak pass rush.
Last season, when Cleveland
went 5-11, the club was 23rd of 28
NFL teams In scoring defense, giv·
lng up 375 points. It rated 16th In
total yardage a llowed.
Offensively, the trade of Pruitt
clears the way for third-year pro
Charles White to become a full time

RACINE - Special Meeting,
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m.
Thursday with work in the
Master Mason Degree; refresllf1lents following meeting.

Phlll1es 9, Dodgers 3
Pete Rose tled an NL record with
his ninth career live-hit game, and
Phlladelphla scored all Its runs In
the last two Innings, Including a sixrun ninth, to come from behind to
beat the Dodgers.
Bob Demler's double broke a 3-3
tle for the Phlllles In their big ninth
Inning and Ivan DeJesus contributed a two-run single.

THE MEIGS County Branch of
Holzer Clinic Ltd. will hold an
open house from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
Thursday at the facility located
at 150 Mill St., Middleport. There
will he a tour and refreshmenls.

SATURDAY
DYESVILLE- Bean soup supper at Dyesville Community
Church, 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday ;
public invited.

Rose singled his first three appearances, doubled In the eighth In·
nlng, and singled again In the ninth.
His ninth ttve-hit game and first
since 1978, t1es Max Carey. The
major-league record ot 14 five-hit
games is held by Ty Cobb.

POINT PlEASANT - Singles
dance Saturday at Krodel Park,
Point Pleasant. All divorced,
widowed or single per.;ons, 21 or
over, are invited to attend.
STIVERSVILLE
Rev.
Robert Byer of Mannington, W.
Va. will be the speaker at 7 p.m.
Services Saturday night at
Stiversville Community Church.
The public is invited.

CHILDREN'S
WESTERN
BOOTS

~arpenter

20% OFF

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE
CORNER THIRD AND OLIVE , GALLIPOLIS

LA-Z-BOY CHAIR SALE
JUST IN ·TIME FOR
MOTHER'S DAY (May 9th)

running back. Pruitt- Clevela nd's
third-ranking career rusher behind
Jim Brown and Leroy Kelly - has
been used little as a runner In recent years due to Injury, although
he became one of quarterback
Brian Slpe's favorit e passing
targets.

Celia Irwin, Marysville, and Dawn
Walker , Thurman, visited with thei r
lather, Dale Dye. They were joined
by Murl Galaway, local, and then
the group went to a craft shop near .
Wellston.
· Mrs. Walter Jordan and sons have ·
returned from Florida where they
spent severa l days visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Gilkey. They new fro1n Columbus to
Orlando, then went to visit her
J&gt;arents at Webster, ria. The
Gilkeys have completed a new home
In Webster. The Jordans and Gilkeys
returned to their homes here on
Saturday.
' Tara Bolen, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Bolen, spent several
days at Children's Hospital for obServation and treatment.

' Dr. and Mrs. Billy R. Allen and
Katie, Westerville, were weekend
.guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eichinger
~nd Suzannah and Miss Laura
Eichinger, Columbus, were weekend
guests of Mrs. Opal Eichinger.
Joining them for Easter dinner were

"Charles White Is the guy that we
want to give a complete cha nce as
running back In our system," Rutigliano said. "Also, two young guys
like Dwight Walker (a fourth-round
pick) and Mike Whitwell (sixth
round) will be given the chance to
come out of the backfield ."

~mmunity

SAVE UP TO 20% OFF DURING
OUR SALE!
WlN$SOOA

r---------------------------j

TEXAS COMMUNITY - The
Unity Singers directed by Sue
Matheny will present special
music at Mt. Hermon United
Brethren Church, Texas Community, Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The
public is invi!ed.

BIG BEND C.B. Club will stage
its annual coffee break at the archery building at Royal Oak Park
Sunday. There is no adnnlssion
charge and the public is invited to
attend. Parking is free. Displays,
dealers, games and prizes will be
featured during the day along
with music by the Charlie Lily
band from !0 a.m. to 5 p.m. Food
will be sold.

A HYMN SING will be he ld at
the Nease Settlement Church
Sunday at 2 p.m. The United
Gospel Singers will be featured .
The public is invited.

Carrol and Kevin Woodgerd were
in Columbus where they called at
Doctors' North Hospital to see
Carrol's uncle, E ldon Markins, who
is improving following hip surge ry.
They also were at MI. Carmel West
Hospital to see a brother-in-law,
George (Jack) Lowther, who is
seriously ill following heart surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stansbury,
Reynoldsburg, spent a Sunday with
his mother, Golden Stansbury. and
their sons, Benny and Scott. returned horn e wi!h them after spendmg
a week with their gra ndmother.
Recent guests of Mrs. Stansbury
were her sisters and brothers-inlaw, Mr. a nd Mrs. Merle Davis,
Rutland, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
rriley, Pomeroy .

REST OF YOUR

ENTER THE LA·.Z·DOr®,.. SWEEPSTAKES! ~:=~ST~~E

------------------------------------.fJJ!!:iU!!~~-=--

CruluaQ eootbot«: styo.ed it'-~ought i/!Ott

Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. B.
K. Ridenour on Easter were Mr. and
Mrs. John Wickham, Mr. and Mrs.
James Ridenour, Lowell and John,
Mr. and Mrs. John Ridenour, Jason
and Jared, and Miss Turner.
Mrs. Erma Cleland, Mrs. Marcia
Keller and Mrs. Thelma Hayes have
returned home from a trip to
Washington, D. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen visited
Sunday in Ashland, Ky., with Robert
Allen and Mrs. Grace Buchannan.

Refreshments were served and
social time was enjoyed by all. Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Weber, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Myers,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Osborne and
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hannum. The next
meeting will be with the Whiteheads.

•

SIDEWALK SALES
GROUP OF
WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES

The Daily Sentinel

CONNIE
&amp;

!USPS 145-MIII
A Dlvlalun of Multlm~la. Inc.

Published t' V~ry art ~t moon , Monday throu~h
FruJa y, Ill Court SIJ"ei!l, by ~O hi o V~:~ IJ~y
?ubli s hin ~ Cmnpany · MultimWia, lne.,
P1nm•rny. Ohio 457S9, 992-2151. &amp;cond daSlj

'l{emember !Mother
fMother~ 'Day, May 9

POSTMASTER : &amp;nd cu.klros hl The Daily
St!nti nt!l, Ill CourtS! ., Pomt'rtl)', Ohio 4&amp;769.

SUBSCRIPTION ItA TE§
8)' Carrier or Motor Rootr

One week . ..... . ....... .. ....... 11.()0 ·

One Month
One Year .

............ . .. .. $4.40
. ............. ... S52.110

Rem•mber Mother with a eift ol
RUMU Stover Candiea, beautifully

PRICF.'l
. ............ .. 15 CentJ

Sulxfc ri~ rs not

desiritlf( to pey the carrier
may remit in advance direct to The DallY.
Sentinel on a 3, ' or 12 mooth basla. Credit
will be given carrier each month.
No subscripllol\! by flllil penn.ltted in towna
where home ca rrier service ill available.

SWISHER LOHSE

MAILSUBSCR!P'TIONS

Phar mac y

Ohio aDd West VIrginia

3Month . ... ...... .... .... .. . ... $12.35

...........".......
. .. . .
....,.,.........

Si.t monU1 .......... ~ .....• 1. . . . . . f20.80

I C - McCwl-..., . ......

JYear ..........• . ............... $3j.OO

'

~!!~

a.ta O.tllde Ollie

~ . --

ud w..t Vtrpolo

CMr1n II H... . ..... .

,

IMNyiiJIIIiiii:»IMt .. f .fll .
P•IIC.IMION~
'
.. H. ftJ·Jfll

·

Jllonlh .................. .. .... .. 113.00

I Monlll .......................... t%3.10

I . MII•

!Year ... . .. : . . ........ . ......... $&amp;4.20 .

,.....,..,...,.•In
1

0.... NIIMI till f

'MitrtJ, O.

IN
STRAW,
MACRAME
&amp;
LEATHER

Colors of . vanilla and
yellow.

arf

t

PURSES

Shown:
Wrought iron group
witH thick cushions -

Gift &amp;x $8.00, which ore pictured above.
A lift of IOOd taste, Mother's,
Aunta, and Grandmother's
sure to love,

lift wrapped for Motber' Day.
Chao. from our Ylriety of ehorolatealneludinl the delicioual lb.
A.orted Choeolatea $5.60 and
the beautifully wrapped 'Ao lb.

SINGLE COPY
Daily . .

MIN'S DRESS AND
CASUALS
GRIZZLIES
HUSH PUPPIES
PEDWIN
GROUP OF

poslil)!e paid til Pomeroy , Ohio.

Ncws!JI:t~f &amp;t ics, 73:! Tl1inJ Avenue, New
York, New York 10017.

Was Now
Easy Chair
$130 $117
Sola
$325 $292
End Table ·
S5~ .$45
Buy All Three Pieces
Reg. S505
SALE $404

GET READY
FOR SUMMER!

GROUP OF WO~EN'S

SAVE 20% ON. ANY GROU-P!
•DINING GROUPS
•SEATING GROUPS

\

-cHAISE LOUNGES
•UMBR£UAS

l
.
FURN,ITU.RE
·.L'Jesty e.s~~
rI.

aiRIIER Of lHIIO AIID Ol.lV£ --&amp;~POll~

.o'

SANDALS AND
·SPORT
SHoES
'

'

•UMBRELLA TABLES
•W,YCHAIRS

•FREE DE\.JVERY
•FREE PARKI"!G

•'

I

~,,

''

'
)

.
' '

..

SIDEWALK SALE

CHILDREN'S
CASUAL
&amp;
DRESS

Sl DEWALK SALE

VALUES TO $8.99
MEN ' S

SPORT SHIRTS
SHORT
SLEEVE

$300
EACH

.

SIDEWALK SALE

VALUES TO $5.99

MEN'S FAMOUS BRAND

LADIES
KNIT SLACKS

Long and Short Slee ve s

$20~IR

VALUES TO $10 .99
GIRLS '

DRESSES

SHIRTS

¥2

OFF
REG.
PRICE

$300

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, APRIL 30th &amp; MAY 1st - 9:00A .M.
SIDEWALK SALE

SIDEWALK SALE

S ID EWALK SALE

MEN 'S AND BOYS '

VALUES TO $12.99

VALUES TO $5 .99

BOYS'

HANES

UNDERWEAR
CLOSE
OUT
LOT

lf2

LADIES'

BETTER OXFORDS

S ID E WALK SALE

SIDEWALK SALE

VALUES TO $24.99

CLEA N UP LOT

SIDEWALK S ALE
VALUES TO $19 .99

FOOTWEAR

$}~

OFF
REG .
PRICE

LADIES'

MEN'S

CHILDREN'S

DRESSES

BElTER OXFORDS

SPORTSWEAR

$5~

NOW

~2

OFF
REG.
PRICE

SIDEWALK SALE

S IDEWALK SALE

S ID EWALK SALE

COATS AND CLARKS

ODDS&amp;END S

CLEAN UP LOT

ZIPPERS
CLEAN
UP

SPORTSWEAR

25¢

OFF
REG.
PRICE

LOT

SIDEWALK SALE
VALUEST0$10 .99
LADIES '

SPORTSWEAR

EA .

VALUES TO $10.99

LADIES' JEANS

SIDEWALK SALE

REG . $3.49 VALUE
FANCY

CLOSE OUT LOT
FANCY

SHEETS

PILLOW CASES

$}9~.,

SEWING THREAD

SIDEWALK SALE

SIDEWALK SALE

TWIN
ONLY

OFF

CLEAN
UP
LOT

REG .
PRICE

S ID E WALK SALE
VALUES TO $8.99

BOYS SHIRTS

SIDEWALK SALE
MEN'S and BOYS ' 1 LOT
FRUIT OF THE LOOM

UNDERWEAR
BROKEN
SIZ ES

ll2
7~

OFF

REG.
PRICE

SIDEWALK SALE

SIDEWALK SALE

ONE LOT
MEN 'S ASSORTED

REG. $1.99
STRIPES AND PLAIN

REG.JScVALUE
ASST . COLORS

PAJAMA~

BATH TOWELS

SIDEWALK SALE

WASH CLOTHS

OFF

REG.
PRICE

SANDALS
"'KUU•P"

OF

.• TENNIS SHOES

· Men, Wom~n &amp; Children
ZIPS
1CONVERSE
.. oSAGA
KED$
ASPE

REG . $2 .99 &amp; $3.49

SIDEWALK SALE

BIG 22 x 44 SIZE

VALUES TO $3.99
LADIES' SHORT SLEEVE

BATH TOW.ELS

KNIT TOP$

2roR·$500

FlOURS: 9·5 Daily
9-8Mopday
, ,
&amp; Friday

' .' 446-364, .

$}00

Mr. and Mrs. Don Eichinge,r Tuppers Plains, and Dennis Eichinger,
Riggscrest.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Member : ~ Associated Pres!f, Inland Dai·
ly Press Associatioo antl the Anwrit:an
Newspapt'r Publishers ~ iat ion , National
Advert iSWK Rep resenlative, Branham

KNIT SLACKS

REV. DONALD Carrico of
Grove City will be guest speaker
at Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene at 10:30 Sunday morning. At the 6 p.m. evening service, the special speaker will be
!he Rev. Thomas McClung.

Builders _ _ _ _ _ _ __

The Reedsville Community
euilders Club met with Mr. and Mrs.
Lyle Balderson for their April
meeting. Business meeting was conducted by President Ronald Osborne. A comnnlttee, Warren Pickens,
Maxine Whitehead and Denver was
$ppointed to work on the
l!eaulificalion project at the Reed~ille-BellevUle Dam Park.

~~-~~~ MONTHFORTHE

iiJ;.,~Jflr,rrJ

VALUES TO $3.99
LADIES'

SUNDAY

Personals

By CLARICE ALLEN
: Going to Toledo for the funeral
g.rvice of their brother, Arthur
linger, were Mr. and Mrs. William
Krackomberger, daughters Mary
~nd Iva, Mrs. Opal Hollon and
daughter, Janice, and Mrs. Roscoe
Hollon.

Overall, Cleveland choseflve def·
enslve players and seven offensive
players during the draft.

SIDE WALK SALE

(:hester News Notes

Browns trade Pruitt, Alzado
BEREA, Ohio tAP) - You can
call It a housecleanlng, a youth
movement or a new philosophy.
Whatever, the Cleveland Browns
this week made certain they will be
a noticeably different team In 1982.
The week began with the acq ulsl·
tton of linebacker Tom Cousineau
from the Buffalo Bills, at a cost of
several draft choices and an estlmated salary of $2.5 mllllon for five
years .
The Browns then continued hammertng away at their defense dur·
Jng the two-day National Football
League draft, which concluded
Wednesday. They made blue-chip
linebacker Chip Banks of Southern
California their No. I selection, then
added defensive end Keith Baldwin
trom Texas A&amp;M In round two.
Traded away were veteran linebacker Robert L. Jackson, to
Denver for a sixth-round choice,
a nd veteran defensive lineman
Lyle Alzada, to Oakland for an
eighth-round choice.
AlSO traded to Oakland, In perhaps the most shocking Browns'
deal ot the week, was popular run·
n!ng back Greg Pruitt, who ts
among the leaders In many Clevela nd offensive categories. The
Browns In return received 1983
draft considers !Ions tba t will depend upon Pruitt's performance

TIIURSDAY
EASTERN Local School Board
will have a special meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the high school.

worked.

r-.:;::::::::::::::::;:;:;~~:::::;:;:;~;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

L t•:jeStyl.e

Calendar

becoming the first Montreal
pitcher to tall to go at least s!x Inrungs In a start this season. He gave
up three runs 1n tbe tour Innings

VALUES TO $8 .99
LADIES ' NEW
SPRING&amp; SUMMER

HANDBAGS

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Thunday, April29, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, April 29, 1982

Meigs County area groups' meeting notes
Middleport Lit Club
Mrs. Juanita Bachtel reviewed
"Surprised by Joy" at the recent
meeting of the Middleport Literary
Club held at the home of Mrs. RIchard Owen.
Mrs. Owen presided In the absence of the president, Mrs. Ben
Philson, and opened the meeting
wlth the club collect. Mrs. Arland
King and Mrs. Herman Mourning
were guests.
Reviewing the book by C.S. Lewis, Mrs. Bachtel told of a man who
lost his faith In Christianity and
then found It again. Born In Belfast
In 1898. he went through a period of
accepting Christianity, a period of
atheism, and then a return to his
Christian faith where'he found joy.
He was well educated, received a
scholarshlp to Oxford University
where he later became a professor.
Although he disliked organ music
and crowds, he went to church
anyway.
For roll call members answered
wlth a personal challenge.
The hostess served cookies, candles and coflee .

D of A
Election and Installation of new
officers was a feature at a meeting
of District n. Past Deputies and
Past Councilors Club, Daughters of
America. held at University Inn.
Athens.
They are Esther Srnl th, Chester
Council 323, president; Doris
Blake, Belle Prairie 269, Belpre,
vlce president; Helen Ba uer, Perry
Council, secretary, and Beulah
Moyers, treasurer.
Plans for a picnic to be at the
home of Jesse Ryan on Sept. 12 at 2
p.m. were dlsussed . The Christmas
dlnner and meeting was set for
Dec. 5 at 12:30 p.m. at University
Inn.

The Lord's Prayer In unison preceded the dinner served at tables
decorated by Mary Moose, Perry
Council wfth Easter flowers, tullps
and candles .
Mrs . Moose presided at the business meeting with Vera Householder, Perry Council giving the
93rd Psalm.
The secretary and treasurer's report was given by Beulah Moyers.
Elizabet h Hayes of Chester Council
read "A Mother," Mrs. Hoselton.
"A Srnlle," and Mrs. Moose. president, "Citizenship."
Mrs. Smith, deputy of Dlstict 13,
spoke briefly thanking all those
who helped wlth the rally held recently In Pom~roy and also forgffts
presented to h ~r. She appoin ted a
district good of the order comrnlt tee, comprised of Dorothy Ritc hie,
Chester Council ; Betty Wolfe,
Perry Council; and Doris Blake,
Belle Prairie Council.
A friendship meeting was announced for Nov. 4 at 6:30 p.m. with
a potluck supper at that time. The
place \\111 be announced later.
Others attending were Dorothy
Vannoy, Florence Fleming, Iva
Shutts, Essa Varner, Belle Prairie
Council 269; Belpre; Margaret EICHINGER, Eileen Clark, Gulldlng
Star 124, Syrac use; Lousie Roberts,
Jessie Ryan, Golden Gleam, 254,
Marietta; Ruth Abram, Betty
Wolfe, Helen Bauer, Perry Council
283; Dorothy Ritchie, Zelda Weber,
Mary K. Holter, Lora Daumewood,
Betty Roush, Chester Council 323.
and Maurice Rickett, Perry Councll, a guest.

Rutland Sll'm
and Trim
Rutland Slim and Trim aerobic
classes will begin Monday at Rutiand Civic Center at 9:30 a.m.
Classes will be held each Monday,
d Th
day morning. Information may be
Tuesday,
an Anne
ursobtained wednesday
by contacting
7

;:e;4z ~~~ c';::;~a~:C:;~:

profit withtoweekly
whlch are
returned
those dues
attending
for
weight loss.

Harrisonville
Slim and Trim

Hensley, Ada Bissell, Doris Grueser,
Alta Ballard, and Helen Wolf,
pianist.

Roberta Hudnall and Glorla
Fowler were the top losers In a twomonth contest staged by SUm and
Trim aerobic classes at HaJT!sonvllle School. Other top weight losers
were VIckie Hanson, Donna Vance,
MOdred Lee. BUJy Hall, Judy
McDonald, Joyce Vance, Linda Donahue, SonJa Parsons and Margie
Hall . A new contest began this
week.

of Allensville. Arthur Crabtree was

" Herbs, !heir Edible a nd
Medicinal Value" was the topic
discussed by Paul Strauss, speaker
at the recent meeting of the Alpha
Epsi lon Chapter of Alpha Delta kappa, held in the Riverboat Room of
the Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
Strauss noted that Southeastern
Ohi o is as rich as any pla ce in the
world for finding edible and
medicinal herbs. He displayed tools
which he uses in gathering herbs,
and showed slides of various plants,
explaining their varied uses.
He suggested that when gathering
plants, that one not take more than
is needed and gave the advice of the
Indian, to always leave the best
plant for seed.
Mrs. Jean Alkire of the scholarship corrunittee reported that a
scholarship of $100 would be given
this year to a graduate of either
Meigs or Southern High School, and
that in subsequent years, the
scholarship will alternate between
the two schools. It was noted that
Eastern was not included in the
scholarship program since the chapter has no members from that
district.
Officers were elected and include,
Debbie Roush, president ; Leah Ord,
vice president ; Bonnie Fisher,
recording secretary; Joyce Ritchie,
correspn ding sec retary; Pa tt y
Struble, treasurer; Bernice Carpenter , chaplain ; and Becky
Triplett, sergeant at arms .
Helen Smith, Nanga Roberts,
Da1sy Blakeslee and Jennifer Butcher served refreshinents. The May
meeting will be a dinner at the Meigs
Inn.

Bashan LA
projects

Edgar Hall, past master of the
West Virginia Grange, and Mrs.
Hall, a past national Flora, were
speakers at the annual Meigs County
Pomona Grange banquet held recently at the Salisbury Elementary
School.
Approximately 14() persons attended the banquet which featured
special music by the " Revelators"

Alpha DELTA

Fund-raising

Pomona Grange

were

discussed when the Ladies Auxiliary
of the Bashan Volunteer Fire Department met recently at the station.
It was noted that the recent bake
sa le with donations brought in
$182.90. Other ways of raising money
were diScussed. Officers' reports
were given. Twelve members
responded to roll call after the
Lord's Prayer which opened the
meeting.

Chester Council
Plans for initiatory work on May 4
were discussed at a recent meeting
of Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall.
Ca rol yn Holley presided at the
session. Members were asked to
wea r short white dresses to the May
4 m ee tin~. The death of Clarence.
Ne utzlin g was reported and m e m-

master of ceremonies and Pauline

Atkins gave the invocation and
benediction.
Bob Reed, Meigs County Pomona
master and Elizabeth Jordan, county junior deputy, introduced Mr. and
Mrs. Campbell Lewis, State CWA
chairmen ; Mr. and Mrs. Ishmel
Glispie, Gallia County deputies;
Meigs County Pomona Grange officer.;, masters, Henry Wells, commissioner; Larry Spencer, clerk of
courts, Emogene Holstein, recor·
der; Mrs. Atkins, past county
deputy; and Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Starkey, past state officer and Star
Grange degree teaum.

Alfred UMW
A visit to the Arcadia Nursing
Home was planned for June 17 when
the Alfred United Methodist Women
met at the home of Nellie Parker.
A report on times for visitations at
local nursing homes was given by
Gertrude Robinson. A birthday card
was signed for Muriel Henderson,

laity leader in Pueblo, Mexico.
Members also signed friendship cards for Emma Lou Finch, Kate
Rodehaver, and Helen Woode, and a
sympathy ard for Ada Neutzling.
Ossie Mae Follrod read excerpts
from a letter written by Florence
Walters, missionary in Nigeria,
Africa . Ms. Walters described events of her year in mission work.
Mrs. Parker led the program
"Language, A Reflection of Right
Relationships" with all members
taking part in reading and
discussion. The program was composed of reading and discussing
selections from different translations of the Bible; reading and
discussing selections from different
translations of the Bible; reading
basic facts about language, and a
discussion of the way language can
uplift or downgrade people, along
with the worship service on recon·
ciliation .

Mrs. Parker served homemade
i ce

c r eam,

coo ki es,

Eastern Star
Past Officers
Bernice Carpenter was elected
president of Past O!ticers Club of
Racine Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, at a meeting held
Thursday night at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb.

Your FTD Florist

~\~~,-~-fi~\~vi.-"

VALUES TO $30.00

ssooPAIR

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

CONVERSE
5

By Keels
Brollen Sizes

$ 99 . PAIR
GROUP

CHILDREN'S SHOES

WMP092FM

'3D0 A;AIR OR
2 PR.FOR 1 500

10~AIR
GROUP

lADIES'

GRASSHOPPERS

Fernwood Garden Club held at the
home of Mrs. Ida Murphy.
The club discussed having a fioat
In the Rutland July 4 parade and

WAG OA y- Be Kind to Animals Week, May z-.8, wlll be observed by
tbe Meigs County Humane Society wltb "Wag Day" on the streets of
Pomeroy and Middleport. Society members will solicit donations In
Pomeroy on Saturday, and ln Middleport on May 8. Contributors will be
given Humane Society bookmarkers In appreciation for gifts of money.
Among tbe workers wlll be Rita Lewis as "BUly, tbe Bulldog," pictured
with Mark Lewis, Lori Hudson and Unda Hudson, left to rlgbl

alsoptan~at~onCh~hatthe

SIDEWALK SALE DAYS
I

STOP BY AND SEE
OUR SPECIALS
THIS FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY

r(Qt~

LADIES SHOES
Vorue . Auditions · loltne

$} ()00

2

APAIR DR

PR. FOR

•uoo

··&lt;;

WeyenburtUIOJpn Quinn
'l)OO ,PAIR

113COURT
STREET
POMEROY,OH.
992-2054

tes, birth control pills, coffee, hair
dyes and saccharin. Also to be
analyzed are air and water
pollution, occupational exposures
and low-level radiation.
The task of enrolling the rnlllion
study participants falls to a
dedicated army of more than 80,000
American Cancer ~iety volunteers. In Ohlo, 4,500 volunteers will
enlist the 66,000 needed subjects.
Participants will be expeded to
complete and return questionnaires
to research volunteers by the end of
the second week in September.
Once every other year for the next
six years, these "research volun·
leers" will keep track of the million
study participants and report to ACS
headquarters on their status and
whereabouts. When study participants die, health statisticians
will be able to determine how their
lifestyles affected their health by
referring to infornnation in the
questionnaires.
"We're very grateful for the enormous contribution the volunteer
researchers will make to Cancer
Prevention Study II. Without their
donating time and energy, the cost
of undertaking such a comprehensive study would be
prohibitively expensive," Holmes
said.
For further infornnation call 9927531 or stop at the office on Mulberry
Heights.

chapter's number one priority, will
be highlighted in the meeting's
general session when two in·
vestigators describe how they are
working to save hearts through their

COHC-sponsored research projects.
The daylong meeting will also include sessions on fund-raising,
special events and program objectives.

Featured luncheon speaker will be
Ohio native Jacquelyn Mayer Townsend, Miss America 1963, who suf·
!erect a stroke at the age of 28 and is
now fully recovered. She will address volunteers stressing the im·
portanee of their work In advancing
the fight against cardiovascular
disease, this nation's leading cause
of death.
Cardiovascular research, the

Farley honored
Angela Farley, daughter of James
and Judy Farley and former Meigs
High School student, was inducted
into the National Honor Society of
Crystal Lake South High School,
Crystal Lake, m. The formal induction cerernny took place on Mar·
chl8.
At Crystal Lake South, honor
students receive medals. Freshman
receive first year bronze;
sophomore, bronze; juniors, silver,
and seniors, gold medals. Angela
has already received her bronze
medal and will get a silver one at
another honors night next month.

WE HAVE ASELECTED GROUP OF

TIMEX WATCHES

30% OFF
VILLAGE PHARMACY
PH. 992-6669

smoking and lung cancer and heart
disease was an important outcome
of the study and helped to Initiate the
public health campaign against
smoking. The study also revealed
the relationship of obesity to certain
cancers, the profile of women at
high risk for cervival cancer, and
the role of exercise in preventing
heart attacks and strokes.
Though conceived along the lines
of the first study, Cancer Prevention
Study II will break new ground in
areas of investigation.
"CPS II will be even more timely
and more inclusive than CPS I, and
will respond directly to public
anxieties and frustrations about our
environment: what is carcinogenic
and what is sale," said Dr. Collins.
Notes Lawrence Garfinkel, Vice
President of Epidemiology and
Statistics for the ACS and Director
of Cancer Prevention Study II, "Since our first ·study was conducted
changes have taken place in the way
we live, the food we eat and the
products we use. We're anxious to
see how such changes have affected
our health risks."
Loretta Mae Holmes, Chardon,
will coordinate the study ln Ohio.
Study participants will complete a
confidential questionnaire about
their working, living and eating
habits. Covered in the four-page
questionnaire are such topics of con·
cern as low-tar, low-nicotine cigaret·

trustees.

CANCELLED IF RAIN

MIDlll t I' U H 1 OH

,.
j'

/
NATIONAL DANCE WEEK was proclaimed Wednesday by Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews. Dance
week Is being observed from April 25 through May I.

Pictured are Mayor Andn•ws, sea ted; standing 1-r,

Shirley Carpenter, operator of Carpenter's Dance
Studio and Tonya Davis, ass istant tu Mrs. Carpenter.

-Family Medicine-By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Assistant Professor of
Family MedlclDe

ment. This involves making a clear
statement during the confrontation
that all those participating really
care about the dnnker but to1ey also
care about themselves. Beyond the
offer to help, the confrontation must

decision. Therefore, he should pay
whatever costs there are - financia!, personal or busmess - that occur because of drunken act1ons.
However, as long as the nondrinking
members excuse the alcoholic's

of Osteopathic
MedlclDe
contain a clear statement not be acirresponsible behavior and hire
(Editor's note:
cepted,
those
who
are
involved
in
the
professional help to relieve him of
Dr. Schreck has
drinker's
life
will
take
steps
to
the
consequences for criminal acts,
asked Dr. An·
remove
themselves
from
hi
s
they
will continue to be sick and will
thooy TeoogUa to
negative
influence
and
will
seek
perpetuate
the sicknes.&lt; of the
answer
this
treatment without him.
dnnker.
week's question.
Since alcoholism is a true family
It is often sa id a drinker wi ll seek
Or. Tenoglla Is an
in
which
the
nondrinkers
as
help
when he's "sick and tired of
disease
associate professwell
as
the
drinkers
are
affected
by
being
s1ck and tired." I believe this
or of family medicine at tbe Ohio
the
illness,
the
most
difficult
step
to
to
be true. It 1s up to the drinker to
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine. His special area of 11&gt;- take is carrying through with the make the decision, but a well planned confruntatiun can help him
terest Is the treatment of plan should the drinker refuse to accept
help.
At
this
point,
those
conmake
it sooner.
alcoholism. l
fronting the drinker must feel
Sometimes when the drinker
QUESTION : My girlfri end 's
father has just been admitted to a strongly that they no lon~er wish to finally understands he will lose those
detoxification center. The whole be used or abused. Unfortunately, it he abuses, he decides he is ready for
family worked to get him in. They is difficult to make this statement help. At that point. do not hesitate.
used a "confrontation" technique. because the drinker has cleverly ' Be ready with a definite plan of help
created the illusion he is dependent
for him and see he gets it without
Can you explain what this is?
upon
them
for
his
very
existence
or
delay . However, regardless of the
ANSWER : The confrontation
even
more
absurdly
they
are
drinker's decision, don't neglect
technique Is simple io define but
dependent
upon
him
for
their
yourself.
frequently one of the most difficult existance. The drinker makes the _ helping
_:____:::.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
hwnan interactions to successfully
achieve. Confronting an alcoholic others feel responsible for his
PRE -PUBLICATION
means significantly people (such as drinking . Please note, this is truly an
SALE OF
illusion.
The
drinker
is
responsible
friends, family or co-workers) in the
time
he
decides
to
swallow
every
The
Pioneer
Hi s tory of
alcoholic's life literally meet and
alcohol,
and
he
is
responsible
for
his
M
e
ig
s
Co.
-1908
confront the alcoholic with the
For $16.00
•pecific negative or harmful behavior when he has made that
and
behavior exhibited when he or she ~------------j
Har d esty 's Hi s tory of
drinks.
M e igs Co. -1883
One purpose of this interaction is
For $20.00
to let the sick person (the alcoholic)
Reprinted by : The Meigs
know exactly how his illness has
Co . Pioneer &amp; Hi s to ri ca l
progressed. This technique also lets
SYRACUSE, OHIO
Soc ie ty , In c. and th e
the alcoholic know there are people
NOW OPEN FOR THE
Me igs Co . Genea logical
concerned about his health and
SPR
t
NG
SEASON
Soc
ie t y .
welfare. Such an approach is
•Vegetable Plants
Last Day to mak e out
designed to create the desire on the
•Bedding Plants
check s is May 15.
part of the drinker to stop drinking
•Foiiage
Plants and
Make checks paya bl e to
before further destruction and
Hanging Baskets
and send orders to :
despair can occur.
OPEN DAlLY 9 til8
Meigs Co . Pion eer Society
One of the necessary tools em·
SUNDAY1Tll5
P .O. Box 145
played in confrontation is giving the
Pomeroy,
Ohto
PHONE
992-5776
drinker a chance to choose treat-

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

PASTOR APPRIOCIATION DAY was observed by the congregation
of Rutland Church of God April 25. Honored were Rev. John Evans, his
wife, Bonnie, and tbelr two soas, John and Jason. The minister eame to
Rutland last October from Columbll8 wbere be and his family were actively IDvolved at tbe Frebls AveliUe Cburcb of God. Under biB pastorate,
tbe local cburcb has enjoyed revival and growlb and plans to build a new
cburcb.

MIDDLEPORT

MAY DAY SPECIALS
FRIDAY- SATURDAY- MONDAY· TUESDAY
1 RACK OF

LADIES' SLACKS

How is it possible tor Rice's to sell high quality suites for
such unbelieveable low prices??? Here are 6 reasons:

LADIES

LADIES

BLOUSES

1. Low overhead.
2. Family operation
3. Direct
buying.

DRESSES

Long &amp; Short steel/e.

REDUCED 20%

LAD E S
1

KNIT TOPS
-SHORTS 1fz
SKORTS
REDUCED20%
1 RACK OF LADIES
SPORTSWEAR
SKIRTS, SLACKS
AND SUITS

LADIES

COATS

REDUCED20%

REDUCED 20%

LADIES

MEN'S

%Pii~CE

COTTON
DRESSES
1
/z PRICE

MEN'S
ESS
&amp;CASUAL

MEN'S
lEVI FASHION

REDUCED20%

'138

LADIES
ALL WEATHER

SKIRTS

SPORT COATS
REDUCED

20%-30%

•,

SPORT SHIRTS
REDUCED 30%
TRENCHCOATS

20%0FF

REDUCED20%

IBAHR CLOTHIER.S
..

1 RACK OF MEN'S
LONG SLEEVE

KNIT SHIRTS

'

•

Announcements

ER

JEANS
REDUCED20%

'-'

•

I

OHIO !
I

.... .

4. Volume buying.
5. Volume selling.
6. Small mark-up.
New2 PC.
Living Rm. Suite
Reg. S239

REDUCED 30%

f----------+---------""---------1
REDUCED 30%

iiEII'S

SHO~S

The Meigs County Heart Branch
has named Lois Kelly of Pomeroy
and James Witherell, M.D. of
Pomeroy as delegates to the Central
Ohio Heart Chapter's (COHC) an·
nual meeting, Saturday, May 22, ln
Columbus.
Delegates attending the meeting
will be representing the 47 counties
of the COHC and will elect new
members to the chapter's board of

SATURDAY, MAY 1st
BARGAINS GALORE

TENNIS SHOES
$4.99-$!;.99JEi.99
BAILEYS SHOES

Starting Sept. I, 66,000 residents of
Ohio will have a chance to participate ln medical research.
During September, volunteers of
the American Cancer ~lety will
encourage persons to take part ln
Cancer Prevention Study II. The
study will be the society's second
major research endeavor to learn
how lifestyle and environmental factors influence cancer and other
diseases, according to S. Michael,
public lnfonnation chainnan of the
Meigs County cancer unit.
One of the largest epidemiologic
research projects ever to be carried
out ln the United States, the study
will involve more than one million
American men and women from all
racial, ethnic and economic groups.
"With infonnation provided by
study participants in Ohio and all
over the country, we hope to Identify
lOOse factors that increase a person's chance of getting cancer, lOOse
that carry little or no risk, and those
that actually may help prevent cancer," said William T. Collins, M.D.,
president of the Ohio Division of the
Amerlcan Cancer ~iety. "We'll
then be able to develop programs to
help people follow lifestyles that
rnlnimize their cancer risk."
The first Cancer Prevention
Study, conducted from 1959-1972,
identified many factors related to
the development of cancer and other
diseases. The link between cigarette

Heart branch names delegates

Pomeroy

$!;.~-$Ei.IIII-$J'.~

[ID~a~·m~ew;ooct~;·;B~ettiy~Ro~us~h~,=~Leo~n~a~~~f~~~~~;~:;;l~

SHOES &amp;SANDALS

Several civic projects were discussed at the recent meeting of

JOGsGERS

ber.; were reminded of group
visitation at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at
the Ewing Funeral Home.
Refreshments were served by
Elizabeth Christopherson, Nettie .-------------1
Hay es, Betty Denny , Lillian
Demoskey and Nelle Werner. Others
Vour"EstnTouch"
attending were Virginia Lee, Inzy
~rii1Stoctllr7
Newell, Everett Grant, Pauline
Ridenour, Jean Frederick, Virginia
Newland, Daisy Canter, Iva Powell,
FLORIST
Th e lma McMannis, Mary
Showalter, Letha Wood, Ada Morris,
PH . 992-2644
Dixie Baier, Goldie Frederick, Marcia Keller, Fern Morris, Laura
·352 E . Main, Pomeroy

11

Fernwood
Garden Club

strawberries using a springtime
motif. Others attending were Clara
Follrod, Anna Thompson, Genevieve
Guthrie, and Thelma Henderson.
Next meeting will be at the church, ~------------1
May 18 with Anna Thompson leading
the program on "Sojourners in a
Foreign Land."

FRI., APRIL30, SAT., MAY 1, MON. MAY 3
LADIES DRESS
GROUP

HEAR THE REDS ALL
SEASON LONG ON

and

Participation in medical research
may be an option for residents

Other officers named were Chlorus Grimm, vice president; Gretta
Simpson, secretary; Ull1an Weese,
treasurer.
It was voted to purchase a roll of
table paper for the chapter. WOllam Stewart, worthy patron, asked
the past officers to assist wfth Inspection on May 3. The next meetIng will be held on June 10 at the
home ot the Stewarts. Mrs. Grimm
had the program entitled "Scrapbook Memortes" with members
participating wlth readings. A getwell card was signed tor Ben
Philson.

Walt Pen sign. New officers were
nominated and will be elected at
the May meeting. The program for
that meeting will be "How to Make
a Compost Pile."
During the business meeting offleers' reports were given and letters were read with Invitations to
an open house by Rutland Friendly
Gardeners on Aprtl 28, Chester
Club on May 5 with Thomas Stahl
speaking, and a fiower show held
over the weekend by Chester
Garden Club. The regional meetIng, to be held at Marietta on May
15, was announced. Mrs. Brawley
· Arfkawa wlll show Japanese
arranging.
Mrs. Knapp presented the program. "Blooms from Early Spring
to Late Fall." She sald that In the
fall a sketch of plantings should be
made so that design, form, color
and size can be planned. Perennlals
will produce from three to ~years,
she sald, t! divided periodically.
These should be Interspersed with
approprlate size and color of annuals to keep flowers producing
through the season. When planting,
plant annuals and perennials by the
dozens and bulbs by the hundreds.
Bulbs can also be planted In layers
and Mrs. Knapp showed several
pictures of planned gardens.
Mrs. Susie Warner had devotions
using a poem, "After the Winter
God Sends the Sprtng." For the roll
call there was a silent auction of
pipts brought by each member.
The hostess served retresbinents
to those named and Mrs. Helen
Johnson, Mrs. Thelma Giles, Mrs.
Kathryn Johnson, Mrs. Evelyn
Thomas, and Mrs. Susie Warner,
and Mrs. Marjorie Purtell.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Revival services will conlinue
through Sunday at the Chester Church of the Nazarene, 7:30 p.m. each
evening.
Rev. Richard W. Jaymes is
evangelist for the services to which
the Rev. Herbert Grate, pastor, invites the public. The Rev. Mr. ·
Jaymes is an elder in the Church of ·
the Nazarene having earned a ·
bachelor of theology degree from
OUvet Nazarene College, Kankakee,
Ill, and later pastoring churches in ·
r..ura and Hamilton before going in.to full-time evangelism.

Myrlam Rutbchlld of Pomeroy is
beading new organization 1plown .
uS.T:A.G.E.S., a IRIPPOI'\ group for ldult university reentry liludents.
The fii'GUPI Ia holding an open lun~frcmll:30a.m. to! p.m. each_
· at the Baker Center of

best-dressed
values
if looking your b est is importan t
to you , don't se ttl e for less than
Connie's versatil e s tyl es. They bring
out the best in your wardrobe
and bring you the best values
a round . Slin g in whi te.

Reg. $299.95

$19995
SAVE '100

Floral cover In
extra henv oak frame.

Pilow
.Ann

Special

·$299'

a

New 2 pc. pillew arm living
room suite wtllll~ nylon
cover and maple trim. This

II a barpln If ~- e~er

wa.-one.

SENIORS
ASK FOR YOUR

20% DISCOUNT
DURING MONTH OF MA
OUR GIFT TO YOU!

. . SA\le. $200

heritage house
OF SHOES
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

�Thunday, April29,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1912

Thursday,

Motorists urged to use· caution at SR 124 site
Meigs County Sheriff James J.
Proffitt urges motorists traveling
SR 124 between Syracuse and Racine to use cautlon at the constructlon site a t Bowmans Run.
The traffic Is now routed on a
te m porary sectlon of roadway with
the speed limit being 35 MPH.
The sheriff's department Is lnves-

unknown, was traveling south on
the Bashan Road and r a mmed a
mailbox a t the J ohn P ape reside nce
and contlnued on and da maged the
ma llbox of Dale McGraw.
J ohn Grueser, Forest Ruin Road

tigatlng the theft of a bike and two
rtms and tires taken sometlme
1\tesday from the Bill Doefer residence, Rt. 3, Pom eroy.
The departme nt Is also lnvestlgatlng va ndalism to m a ilboxes.
According to the sheriff's department a t approximately 12: :ll a. m.
Wednesday a vehicle, descrlptlon

A 'I 29, 1982

Sew-Simplest!

also reported that hls mailbox and
a nd newspaper tube were knocked
down.
Anyone with any Information regarding the Incidents Is asked to
contact the sheriff's department.

Printed P attern

SPINNING WIZARD - Lizzie Fanning has been spinning wool fo r
more tha n 60 years and will sha re her knowledge during a School of
Homestead Livi ng rlass Jul y 19-23 a t the Bob Eva ns Farm Craftharo
nea r Rio Gra nde. Twenty wee k.long classes will be taught by some of the
region's fines t artisans between June and Augus t in the Bob Eva ns Farm
Craltba rn. Workshops a re offered Monday through Friday. Registration
ra nges from $35 to $100, with a three-day furniture refinishing class offered J une 2!&gt;-30 for $30. Courses ava ila ble through the School of
Homes tead Living include instruction in America n and a ntique collectible glass, beekeeping, basic a nd advanced blac ksmithing, pottery,
basic coopt•ri ng, introduction to stained glass a nd funda menta ls in horse
tra ining.

Chris Snowden a single a nd double,
Lambe rt and Mel Dillard had two
hits each.
Meigs, :;.7-1 ove ra ll and 3-4-1 in the
SEOAL, hosts Trimble today.
Linescore:
601 221 0- 12 II 0
Meigs
J ackson
000 010 (). I 3 12
La mbert rWl a nd Horton. Barnes
rL) and Wilson.

Veterans Memorial

Emergency runs

A dmi tte d --W illi a m Mor r is,
Pom eroy; Della Stahl. Pom eroy;
Karen Brown , Langsville; E thel
Moore, Letart, W. Va.; Kimberly
Da lley, Pomeroy; Francis Rizer ,
Mason, W.Va.; Mary Bissell, Long
Bo tt o m ; Mar il y n S ha m b lin ,
Hartford.
Discharged- -An na Bareswllt,
Marcia Karr, J unia P ierce.
Adm itt ed-- Mau d e
Ba il ey,
Pomeroy; Sherri King, Long Bottom .
Discha rged-Gary Hysell, Dwight
Burton, Violet Ritchie, Bradley Hoffma n, Maggie Hoy, Michael Kincaid, Jr., Shirley Frazier, George
Nic insky, George Folmer.

I

Area deaths
Lucille Cousins
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m . Friday at the Naomi Baptist
Church In Po meroy for Mrs. Lucille
Cous ins who died In Clevela nd.
Local survivors Incl ude Mrs.
Margaret Bowles, a nlece of Mlddleport; Mary r . Baumgardner, a
nlece; Charles Lewis, nephew;
Josephine Morton, great niece a nd
Ja mes Morton. Jr., great nephew,
a ll of Pomeroy.
Burlal will be In Middleport Hill
Cemetery.

John C. Golden
John Charles Golden, 71, Route I ,
Portl and. died Wednesday afternoon at the St. Joseph Hospita l In
Parkersburg following a lengthy
Illness.
He was born May 14, 1910 In Coolvi lle, a son of the late Charles and
Bertha Walton Golden.
A retired carpenter, he Is s ur vived by his wife, Gladys Dorst
Boso Go lde n; a s tepda ug hter,
Sha ron Bush, Columbus; a stepson,
Robert Boso, Portla nd; three sisters, Mrs. Inez Devaux, Mrs. Dorothy Sha nks, both of Baltimore,
Ohio, and Mrs. Mlldred We idner ,
La ncaster, a nd five b rot hers,
Ra lph, of Salem ; Clarence, Carroll ; Woodrow, Athe ns; Roy,
Am esville, and Clay of Stewart .
Services will be held a t 11 a. m .
Saturday at the Stralg ht-1\tcker
Funera l Home at fulvenswood wi th
the Rev. Robert Pa rk offlclatlng.
Bur ia l wi ll be In fulve nswood
Cemetery. F rlends may call at t he
funeral home after 2 p.m. F riday.

Dr. Edward Schaekel
Dr. E dwa rd A. Schaekel, 64, of
Parkersburg died Wednesday In
the Camden Clark Hospital In
Parkersburg.
He was born Sept. 22, 1917 1n Lincoln. Nebraska to the late Ernst
and May Belle La rsen Sehaekel.
He was a mem ber of the Ways ide
United Methodist Church, VIenna,
W. V. and was a former member of
the New Haven Rotary. He entered
service In the Medical Corp In 1942
a nd discharged In 1946 as a Major.
He practiced medicine In Mason
for 31 years and was the Dean of
Cllnlcal Medicine at the West Vlrglnla School of Osteopathic Medicine
at Lewisburg, W.V. He was also a
West VIrginia Osteopathic Practloner In 19T7, senior member of the
Amerlcan College of Obstetricians
and Gynecologists and was made a
life time member or that organlzatlon In 1981.
Surviving are his wife, Goodrun
E. Jacobsen Schaekel; one son, Edward A. Schaekel, Jr., Long Bot·
tom; one daughter, Mrs. Richard
D. (Kay) Moore, Laurel Springs,
N.J. and three grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
the Foglesong Funeral Home on
Saturday at 1: :lJ p.m . with the Rev.
Richard Wr1ght and Rev. D. Edward Bayer otflctatlng. Burial will
follow In the Suncrest Memortal
Park In Point Pleasant.
Friends may call on Frlday from
2 p .m . untll4 p.m . and from 7 p.m .
untll9 p.m.

,

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

He married Ocel Sears, who surWilliam E. Elliott
vives,
on Sept. 29, 1935. Other surviWilliam (Bill ) E. E lliot, 44, Wavors
are
a daughter and son-In-law,
shington, Ind., died Wednesday at
Ann
a
nd
J lm Rife, Cheshire; son
Davis Coun ty Hospita l.
daughter-In-law,
J a mes and
a
nd
Mr. E lliot was formerly of ChaJ
ua
ni
ta
Sears,
Gallipolis;
a daughr leston, W. Va.
ter.
Betty
Bayes,
Mlddleport;
a
Local survivors Include one
and
son-In-law,
Carrie
da
ughter
da ughter, Mrs. Joseph (Delores E lliot) Sheppard and three sons , J eff , a nd Charles Neal, West Columbia ,
W. Va.; seven gra ndchildren, three
Mark a nd John E lliot all of Pom egrea
t-grandchildren; a brother,
roy; one son, Timmy of Kingsport,
ac
k,
Cla rksburg, W.Va.; and two
J
Tenn.; one grandchild ; step-father ,
sisters,
Pearl Dawson, Wilsonburg,
two brother s and two sisters of Cha.,
and Ada Spanks, Gauley,
W.Va
r leston; one sister In Germa ny and
several nieces a nd neW.Va.;
and
one sister In North Carolina.
phews.
A
son,
Ason Ra y Sears,
The body will be ta ken to the Elkpreceded
him
In
death.
view Fu neral Home In Charleston
Services will be held a t 2:30 p.m .
where funera l services will be he ld
Sunday
a t the Independent HoliSaturday at 11 a .m . Friends m ay
ness
Church
In Middleport with the
call at the funer al home Friday
O'Dell
Ma nley a nd the Rev.
Rev.
fro m 7 to 9. The Rev. Bonner will
offlcla tlng. Bwial
W.E
.
Curfman
officiate.
will be In Me igs Memory Garden.
F riends m ay call a t the RawlingsZuelelia Smith
Funeral Home from
Coats-Blower
Funera l services for Mrs. Zuele7-9
p
.m
.
F
rida
y
and from 2-4 and 7-9
lla Smith, 96, who died Tuesday a t
Saturday.
The body will be
p.m
.
her home a t '1:12 West Ma in St.,
take
n
to
the
church
to lie In state a t
Pomeroy, will be held at 2 p.m . Sun1: :lJ p.m. Sunday.
day a t the E wing Funeral Horne
w ith th e Rev . Ny le Borde n
officiating.
Mrs. Smit h was bornat E lberton,
Oblo Valley LlvetStock Co.
Ga., a da ughter of the late J ohn and
Market Rrport
&amp;lie every Saturday all p.m . Prices a rc taken
Mary J ones Bradley. Besides her
from the s.i:i le of SC:Iturday, Apr i124. Tr ends: V ~ta l
parents, she was preceded In death
ca],..cs $2Lo $4 lower, fct.'de r catllc $1 to $2lower,
cows $! to$3 .50lower.
by her husband, three sisters and
F't't.'t.lcr St~ rs : Good and Chmt'-' 25G to 300 Jbs.
eight brothers.
~2 : 300 lo 400 Ih.-;. lil).6 1.50 : 400 to 500 lb:;. 48-64 ;
500 to 600 lbs. 43--62.75 : 600 t o 700 lbli. 56-61 ; 700 to
Mrs. Smith was a m ember of the
800 lbs. 48-{)ll.SO: 800 and owr 49.50{,6.
Forest Run Baptist Church, the LaFtt'der Heifers : Good and Choil't• 250 to 300 lbs.
43-55.50 ; 300 to 400 lbs. 46 .~; 400 tu500 lbs. 44dles Auxiliary of Lewis Ma nley
52.50: 500 to 600 lbs. 42.50-S I: 600 to 700 Jbs. 40Post, American Legion, and of the
48.50 : 700 to 800 lbs. J8..43.50 : 800 and over 4G-51 .
Fet.'dcr Bulls : GootJ Hnd ChoJ ~ 250 to 300 lb.-!.
county 40 et 8.
43-M : 300 to 400 lbs. 43-55 ; ~00 to 500 lbs. 50-SJ: 500
Surviving are several nieces and
to 600 51.50-:i9; 600 tu 700 lbs. 47..:;1.::.0 : 700 to 800
lbs. 42 .50-46: 800 and over 40-48.
nephews am ong whom are Willie
Hols tein S h.~rll l:tn tl Bulls 300 to 80() lbs. 39.5().
Marie J oy, P hiladelphia, P a.; Ro48.25.
Bulls J ,(MX) lhs . 1:1ntl up 45 51'1-48.50
na ld Odlster , Trotwood, Ohio; KimShmghler Cows - utilities 37-4 1. 25: ca nners
be rl y Odl s t e r, Mi c hae l and
and c utlers 36 down .
Veul Cal ves : c huit'c Hnd prune 74-85.
Kenneth Odlster, and Sharon PhoB&lt;lby C&lt;!1 ves 4!)..95,
enix, a ll of Dayton, and a dear
Springer CoY.'S 200-360.
Cow 11nd c11 1f ('ombillll tioo 325-5 10.
fri e nd, L ul a B. Ha mpto n of
Top HoKs 210tu 230 Jbs. 4!H9.75.
Pomeroy.
Boars 36-38.
SmNs -400 lhs . 11nd up 5 1 .~ .
Memorial services will be co nPigs by the he11d 21-45.
ducted a t the funera l home by the
Needs aquariums
Auxiliary of Lewis Manley Post a t 7
Rusty Bookman, science teacher
p.m . Saturday followed by memora t Meigs Junior Hig h, Is In need of
Ial rites by the 8 a nd 40.
Graveside rltes will be held at 2 aquariums to house his classroom
p.m . Monday a t the Woodland collection of tropical fish, hamsters
and other small animals.
Cemetery In Dayton. Friends may
Anyone wishing to donate an aqcall at the E wing Funeral Home
uarium may contact Bookman at
beginning Saturday morning.
the school by caillng
James F. Sears
'

,

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Belt it wh en yttu wish, this
cool coatdress flows down ireely
from the shoulders. Scooped
neckline, patch pockets, it has
everythmg yttu want right now.
Printed Pattern 4805: Half
SIZes 10\!, 12\! , 14 \\, 16\!,
18 \! , 201!. Size 14 \1 (bust 37)
takes 2 518 yards 45-inch fabric.

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The Daily Sentinel

243 WISt 17 S~.!ftW tort, NY
10011. l'rint li1111l, AOOitlSS,
ZIP, Sill, and STYl£ NUIIBER.

m
~·­
--

.,,_,

Up&lt;o!\""""'

a... ... ,

-·-

upooo\-"'

I OV«tOOf

-

... , . ,

-•-

u poo t ! WO&lt;,.

..

Savings Breakthrough! Send
now !01 NEW SPRING-SUMMER
PATIERN CATALOG. Sew and get
ma.-.elous clpthes for much less.
fre&lt; Pattern Coupon - choose
from over 100 styles. $1.50
AU CUfT IIOOIS . . $2.00 uch

Ll ..

·-

"•

l~ ...

Root Estoto - Generol

121-l'itlow Sllow-olls
124-U., Gills 'n' Ornat~~t~~ts
125-1'1111 ~Ills
126-Tit rilly Ctafty Flolm

~

fiJr WllfIIIII/.

HOBSTETTER REALTY
Georre S. Hobsner Jr.

Books and Catafog - add 501
each f01 postage and handling.

Broler
OffiCE 742-2003

l

NEW

SUCCESSFUL
BUSINESS
IS A_CINCH
IF YOU USE

LI STING -

4

bed r oom f ramr home on
Sl Route 124 . Extra
qood loca t ion . '1 en
ctnsed por chPs. Sits on
114 r~cres, oreal qarden

)

I

JUST RECEIVED
A complete line of
shrubbery, trees
and rose bushes .
See us for the
lowest prices in
town .

spo t. Some ti.Jrn•sh1nqs
inc luded

Ask i nq

only

$15.000.00.
N EW l i STIN G -

F.u m

-· 33 ac res wtl h lov e ly 2
y r . old hom e. The Iaroe
spac ious r ooms tnc tu de
3 bedrooms, 1 fu ll ba th s,

f itmHy r oom, laundry,
li vi nq room and d r eam
ki tchen . '1 ca r qarage .
th is !arm is mostl y

THE INCH!

pr ice

1S

POMEROY
LANDMARK

--

If.

pas tu re and loca ted on
hardtop r oad
Se ll i nq
$69 ,500 .00 . More

l and is n eqoti a bl e .

NEW LI STING - On St.

614-992-2182

• Doters
• Backhoes
• Dump Truck s

Isn't it
about time
you ran a

GE

Trencher
Water
Sewe r
Ga s Lines

• Septic Systems
L arge or Small Jobs

PH . 992-2478
~ - 11 · 1 mo. pd.

Ca ll today .

Heater Core to
Largest Radiator .

CLEANED
PRICE IS RIGHT

446-4782
CALL COLLECT
GALLIPOLISf DH .
4·1 -1 mo.

SALE

All of those unwanted
household arUcles~as~
c1otbiDg, old balw Jlll1lto
ture, ased Ures from your
car Bud old ~.YI CaD tie turDediDtoaseabfeCASB.It's ·
=~Jut ptber dlelil up
a~ tbeD brig It
IDa classtf{ed adalilbr~'ll

run It under our Yatd S81e
bea!IIDg. Thea get readt for
lhe buyen! our classtfled .

'·

ads bnug results! .
CASH ONLY

PHONE 992-2156 ,

HARTLEY
SHOES
.

The Daily Sentinel

Radiator Specialist

NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experienc e

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC .

=Announ cements

FRYE'S PENNZOIL
Salem St.
Rutland, Oh .
TUES . IhruSAT .
9 AM . lo 10 P.M.
SUN . tO A.M. Io6 P.M.
Phone 742-9575
Tire sales &amp; repairs , gas
&amp; groceries. We now
have new Am erican
made Moped s i n stock .

U9S Plu s Ta x
4-18·1 mo.

!~~~.~R~

Ve lm a Nicinskv, Assoc .: ·.·
Phon e 7~2 · 3092

216 E. 2nd $1. .
Phone

608 E. MAIN

1-(614)-992·3325

POMEROY, OHIO

• backhoe
• excavating
*septic systems
*A water, sewer
&amp; gas lines
•dump truck
• limestone

Licensed &amp; Bonded
PH. 992-7201
3-29-ff c

16 YEARS EXP .
•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial
Racine, Ohio

247· 3534
Free Estimates
4·20-tf c

-

Clll Bill Ward
1-446-4372

446 0294 ..

e Washers • Dish ·
washers
• Ranges • Refrigerat·
ors
• Drvers • Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4· 5· ttc

MINIATURE
GOLF COURSE
Ravenswood, W. Va .
Now Open Weekends

1to4P.M.
Weather Permitting

Small &amp; Large

Carpel Pieces Bound
Carpet Installation
Rea sonable Rates
For more information-

PH . 614·992-7848
~ - 12 - 1 mo. pd

Thurs .- Pool
Tournament 8-l
Fri. &amp; Sat.
Country Rock Band
Drink &amp; Drown

Clip This Ad 101 1 Fret
Game with 1 paid Game.
Eapirn Ml! 15.

Both Nighls
sun. - Pina &amp; Picture
of Deer

BAND: This Week
WILDWATER
(For J weeks)

Then
CROSS OVER
(For 3 weeks)
And
Marsha ll Tennant Band
For Month of June

4 rooms, bath and large
tot. Both only $37,500.
COUNTRY HOME -

J&amp;LBLOWN
INSULATION
VInyl&amp;

Dortr &amp; backhoe ser·
vice, water, sewer, pon-

ds,

foundat i ons ,

reclamation .
licensed &amp; Bonded

PhOne 949·229l
or 949-2417
3·3-tfn

Located across from the
Shopping
Plaza
at
Washington Motel.

1-----------J
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

natural

small ~ r

lot s with a lO'xSO' , 1965 m obil e hom e, equipped kit·
chen, c ould be good investment . $9,000.

"Beautiful, Cu stom
Built Garages "
Call for free siding

estimates, 949-280t or
949-2860.
No Sunday Calls
3·11 -tfc

ch and post office. Has 3

r emodeled home on approx. 112 ac re, ba sem ent,

bedrooms ,

many features. Want $35,000.

bath, T. P. water, . car·
peting, large eat-in kitchen, fu ll ba ~ment and
furnace .

POMEROY - This property shold be sold. LOO K
HERE - four lots, three bedrooms, basement .
fireplace, large 17'x 17' living room , new dining area
and kitchen . All in good condition and all on one

floor . Steal this at $24,500.
OLDER HOME - Needs some repair but has two
large lots. Four or five bedroom s, base m ent, could

be a real nice home for $20.500.
VACANT LAND - We have seve ral parcels.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - We have several.
FARMS - We have several.
HOMES - We have several, ca ll today .
COUNTRY HOME - Near town, one acre, new split
entry . $49,000.
"REALTORS
HE'NRY E. CL:El!ANil', JR., GR t
992-6191
'JEAN TRUSSELL
949-2"0
DOTTIE TURNER
r ffl-Stt2
OFFI~E
992-2259

. modern

'l

BUSINESS - Car wash
that takes Hille time to
run. BuildinO and land.
Good chance for you for
only 515,000.
NEWLY PAINTED
Ins i de
and
out .
Necessary repairs being
made, level . tot, 2·
bedrooms, bath, porch, .
nice kitchen with lots of
woo9 cabinets and '
garage. Only St6,500.
1
CLEAN AND MODERN I
_ . Real nice 8 rpom l
home wllh 2 full bathS,
forma l dining, good car-,
poling, fUJI basement,·
-garage and 2 apts. Allin
good repjllr. 565,009.
ASSoCiATES
Holen THferd, Gonion
THIGrd, ancl sue Mur-·

POMEROY, OHIO
992-5272

•

HIIIJ',flllf
Ht:,l(/if/1 fflt •r·,

•

Pl aza. 446·8025 .
No tr.ess passi ng or huntin g
on land ow ned b y J A rthur
Eva n s. V iol a tor w ill be
procuted .

304615·5151 .
Yard S&lt;~ l e

t ram SAM t i ll 6PM . U n if or

Ga r age Sa le Sa t . &amp; Sun
Ga ll ia Rural Wa t er) . Two
f am il ies. 9AM to 6PM .
Ad ult &amp; ch i ldren 's clothes,
toys , inst rument s, r eligiou s
books&amp; mor e.
Large Yard Sale Fr 1. &amp; Sa t .
We st Co ll ege Or•ve 9 to 6 .
Rain cancel led
Garage Sa le 9 to 5, Thurs ..
Fri &amp; Sat . Bidwell Rod ney
Rd . Jrd . house on right
Lots of goodies.
Garage Sa le May 1. Sa tur
day
504
LeGrande .
Ga l lipol i s.
Furniture ,
c lothing , hou se hol d il em s .
camper 10 to 5.
Garage Sa le Fri &amp; Sat ,
Furnitu re and hou se hold
items 7 m i les Wes t of
GallipOlis on Rt 141
Yard Sale 17 V •nton Ave.
Gal l tpohs . Fr• &amp; Sa t April

JO&amp;May 1.9to5
5 Family Yard Sal e

125
Por tsmouth Rd April 30th

9·?
AC TS 2: 45 Yard Sale Sen
di ng a Miss iona r y to Kenya
Af r ica . Fr iday a nd Sa lu r
day . 7 mi les S. of Ga ll ipol is
St Rt . 7 on right . See
Sig n s. r
Yard Sale Thur s .. Fn &amp;
Sat . 1/i mil e on Bu l avtl le
Road . 9 ?
Garage Sa l e Fatr f •e l d
Acres Sud i v ision. Fa•rf iel d
Centenar y Rd . May I. 2, &amp;

3.
Hu ge Yard Sa le Yellow &amp;
w hi te t rai ler , bes ide Rod
ney Meth odis t Chur ch on
Rt. 588 . A r i l 29·30 .
Ya r d Sa le May 4 &amp; 5 on
Fa i r f ie ld ·Va nco Rd . 4 1/2
mi . fr om Gallipoli s. Wa tc h
f or signs at Fa irf ie ld Chur
ch . Ma ny items .
Yard

Sa l e
Friday
101 I Jrd
95
Fol low signs. Baby , mater
nity and mor e.

Sa tu r day .
Pu bli c Noti ce,· Ga ll i a Co.
r ur al Wafer Assoc i a tions
announces as of M ay 1st ,
1982 tap pri ces w ill in·
crease
as
f o ll ows.

5&amp;8' + SJOO .
I' + $450. 1

3/ 4' + $350 .
1/1' + S675.

1' + $915 .

4

3 F amil y Yard Sa le M i sc.
house hol d i tems . me n
wom an·c hi ldr en c lot hi ng .
Rt . 35. Rio Grande. F r iday
1
&amp; Sa tu r day .
Gia nt
Yard
Sa l e
8
F am il y's . April 30 &amp; May 1.

Giv_! a_W_!i V~ _ ~ ~

ANY PE RSO N who has
anythin g to g i ve away and
does not ott er or attempt To
offer an y other th ing for
sa le m ay place a n ad in thi s
co lumn. Ther e wi ll be no
charge to the advertiser .

9 :00 5:00

Shoe

St ri ng

Ridg e, dow n R t 7 to Clip
per Mi ll s and turn ri g ht.
f oll ow signs. At Dennis !
Bab y, boys &amp; gi rl s, m en &amp;
wo m ens c loth es, wi nte r
coa t s .
t oys,
l a m ps ,
d r esse r s, cha ir s, toy box ,
a ll m apl e desk , ha ndm ade
a lum inium w i nd ch imes
and afghans. Oth er odds
and end s! Cal l 446 2847.
Ya r d Sa le·Sa tu rday , M ay

I, 9 a .m. to 3 p.m. 108 So.

Aluminum Siding ·
•Insulation
•Storm Doors

•Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows

•New Roofing
_
Free Estimate
James Keesee
, Ph. 992·2772
-112911 mo.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
And Home Malnlenance
• Roofing of all types
.Siding
• Remodeling
• FrH estimates
t20 Vrs. experience

TOM HOSKINS

Ph. 949-2161 or 949·2322
4-20-lfc

BOGGS

2 part Terri er ·pa rt Collie

puppies. Ca ll 388-9679.

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U.S. Rl. 50 East

4 kittens Ca l ic o &amp; Ye llow

Tiger . Ca ll 379·2637.

Guysville, Ohio

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Deater
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1-3-lfc

2 fem ale Terri er pups, 10

wks. old. Call446-2108 .
Ni ce Loving

2nd .Ave . Midd leport , Oh .

3 f amit v

va r d sa le· Bob
Fi sher 's, Ye llowb ush Rd .,
R ac ine. M on.·Ma y 3, 9 t o
! ! ! 21 ft .·73 c am'per , H on ·
da, 2 riding m ower s, tabl e
and chairs, 2-10 speeds,
stereo, lamps, TV game. 21
in . Bl ack and white TV, se t
of mirro r s, X m as tree,
c lothes, clothes. clothes.
Free coff ee .

----'----- - - -

Sat. Ma y 1. lots of item s fo r
sal e. L eading Cr ee k Rd . off

Puppi es to give away .
Boston Bull and Terri er .

Rt .l .

"'~I

P'MON(

W

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVrCE

Wttei--Stw'tr·Efoctrlc
Gil LI .... Ditchlls
Water Lint HOOk· Ups
Septic Tonks
C041nty Ctrtlflocl
ROUihLiftt
·•
CMihlrt, Oh.
fh. 36J.7UO
"1-7-11fc

'the Automatic
FreezeWater

992·7046.

5 family garage sal e. Rain

man, comes to the name of
Prissv . Rewa rd offered.
Lost around Union Ave.

Fridav. April 30, 9 till o,
Mens, womens. childrens

clothing, Misc. toys, tires.
2205 Lincoln Ave. Point
Pleasant.

at

sub
zoro temperofl!cts.
• Spring DtYtiCIIImtnts

JIM LUCAS

Ph. 742-2753

4-9-1 mo.

AVO N Be a success . Se l l
Avon wh ere you work or
ltve Ca ll 7.4 2 2755 or co l lec t
61 4 69871 11

204 9t h St Sa turd ay 10 3
F ormals S1Ze 10, couch.
other mi se

Full or part t tme R .N . or
L PN for 3 to 1 I sh i f t . Ca ll
Nancy Van Meter 992·6606.

Yard sale 11 14 Monroe Ave
Pt . Pleasant, Thur sday ,
Fnday , Sa turda y

7
Yard sale Friday 9 3 A l1!
ti e of even• t hing , I mile
from Shad le Bridge Hen
der son on Rt 35, on RtQ I1t,
watch l or sign
8

Publi c Sa le
&amp; Auc ti on

Rick
Pearson ,
Ex
penenced AUCTIONEER
E states, an t iques. farm .
household . Licensed Oh10
WV Buying ant ique s 304

773 5785. 773 9185.
L .E Neat Aucttoneer Se r
v1ce
Estate F arm
House hold · M isc. W e se lltt!
L1censed &amp; bond C'd Oh10 &amp;

RN'S OR LPN'S RN " or
L PN 's fo r 11 to 7 shift at
Scen tc Hill s Nursi ng Ce n·
ter Ca l l 446 7150 bewteen

BAM 8.

30 PM

4

Help Wan ted
Ga lli po li s
Re c r eation Depar t men t
needs A . S.A . Sof tba ll Urn·
p1res l o r adul t m en 's
leagu es. Also needed ar e
umpires
l or
yout h
ba se ball&amp; softball leagues.
Wage s va ry with leagues.
Ap p l y tmm ediate l y at
Ga ll i pol• s
Recrea t ion
0Ppartment , 518 Second
Ave , or call 446 1789 .
Don' t m1ss tht5 one The
per fec t f amt ly bustness , no
rt sk s. have fun , make
money Ca ll 992 2088 alter 6

pm
12

Auctton every Fn n1ghl at
the H art ford commun,ty
Center . Truck load s of new
mer c handise every wee k
Consigmen ts of new and
used mer chandt se a lway s
welcome
R 1chord
Rey nold s Aucttoneer 775
J06q
Wa nted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old lur
n•tur e and Ant.ques ol all
k.nds . ca ll KenneJh Swa .n .
446 3159 an d 256 1967 •n the
event ng s

Si tuat 1ons Wa n ted

Need r1de
S1ly (8 ·00
Fema l e
Sa tu rdays

to Oh to Univer
5 001 Mon . Fr1 .,
Ca l l 992 3390
aller 5 p m

Hav e vc'lcancy 1n my home
for elderly
Ambu latory
man or woman 7 years ex
prr,pnc e
667 3407
Tup
per spla ,ns.Oh
13

I n sura n ce

SA ND Y AND BEAVE R In

suran cc Co has offered
scrvtces t or ltr e 1nsurance
co veraqe tn Ga llta County
l or
almos t a ce ntury
CASH PAID lor clean. lat e Farm . home and personal
model used ca r s. Smtih proper ty co verages are
Bui c k Pontia c. Gall,poii S. ovailr~ bl e 10 meet tn
Oh 10 Cal l 446 2282
d 1V1du a1 needs
Contac t
R fiY Wedemey er , agent
Buying
Gold ,
S1lv e r . Phone 388 8249
Pla t inum , ol d co in s, scrap
rings &amp; si lverwar e. Datly 15
Sc h oo l s In stru cti on
quotes available
Also
coins &amp; coin supplies l or
Karate the ult i mate i n self
s ale .
Spring
Val ley de fence all pr•vate lessons,
Trading , Spr i ng Va ll ey Men , women , &amp; c hild ren .
P l aza . 446·8025 or 4.46 8026
Instruct ton fhr u black be l t .
A l so available Ka r ate
We pay c ash for l at e model unif o rm s puch ing and
k •ck tnQ bag s, and protec
c lea n used cars .
l• ve equtpment
J e rry
Frenchtown Car Co
Lo w ery
&amp;
Assoc•ates
Bi ll Gene John son,
Ka rat e
S tudt o,
143
446 0069
Bur11ng ton Rd .. Ja ckson ,
Oh Ca ll 286 3074
Early An t ique coun try fur
ni tur e, cupboards, all ktnd s
of
chests,
de s k s.
17
Misce ll an eous
sto neware, etc Call 367
8
Fl
sl1d
e 1n cam per slee ps
0138
4$950 . 175 Honda tr ail bike
1973 S450 Russe ll Young,
Lots a lready se t up lor Wes t Co l umbta, W .Va .
mobi l e home in Kyer Creek
Dirstr ict . Call446·1462
18
Wa nted t o Do
Used kitchen cab1net &amp; 7
Shoats hogs about 100 lbs.
each . Ca l l 388 8437 .
Good used car sea t
440 3383 .

Th e Sdk Hou se (c ustom
sil k
flowers)
Com ple te
br•dal lin e, wedd in gs, and
all occ as tons. Ca ll 367· 7566.

Call

BEDS I RO N, BRA SS. old
f urniture , go l d, si l ve r
dollars, wood ice box es,
stone jar s, antiq ues, etc ,
Comp l ete
households .
W r1te : M .D. Mi ll er, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992 7760

L awn M ow •n g Serive. no
yard to big or sma ll , house
pa1nl1ng &amp; roofing, and
ltQht hauling. Ca ll .446·3159
after 6PM I 166·57 40 .
Wtll care for elderl y m a n
or woma n on our fa rm
privat e roo m , $700 per m o:

C" ll 446 6163 .
Go l d.
silver, s t e r 11ng .
jewelry, rings, old co 1ns &amp;
curr ency Ed Burk ett Bar
be r Shop, Middlepor t . 992

3476.
OLD FURNI TURE , beds,
ir on, br ass, or wood . Ki t
chen cubbards of all types .
T ab i es. round or squa r e.
Wood ice boxes. Old desk s
and bookc ases. Wi ll bu y
co mpl ete hou se hold. Gold,
si l ver , old m oney, pocket
watc hes, chai ns, rings, and
et c Indi an A rt if ac ts of a ll
t ypes . A lso bu y in g baseba ll
card s. Osby Mar ti n 992

Cr~rpe n t cr work. re m odling
or repatrs, ce d ing fil e and
wall pane ling A l so pain·
ltn g 997 2759 .

Pa1nt,nq tnte r• or and ex ·
ter.or . L M John son, 304

615 1116

Yards, mowed and tri m ·
m ed.
r easona b le
rates,
rel1able
Phone 30.4·675·

1804
F ina n cial- ~ ~
--- ~-

6370.
21

Employment
ser·.-Jees

A REPEAT SA LE. 21 to
36,000 yearl y if you ar e on
fi xed income and a chance
at mana gement, here's an
opportunity to m eet your
goals quickl y . We make
and
sell
maintenanc e
products to the industrial
and institutiona l market s.
We provide a draw pl us
commission, furni sh a car
and gas all owance and
provide manv other fringes
to a qualifi ed individual at

Lost near Portland area.
Brown and white female Yard Sale, April17 to May
fox hound . 8~ · 2354 .
I, from 9 till 0 , lsr house on
right on Broad Run Road .
Lost· Btue Tick coon dog. from Sporn 1'tant. clothes,
Lost In Tanners Run area . chain saw, electric motors, least 2 years di rec t
Has collar with Melvin a rt obl•cts, artifi c ial tangible commission sales,
Forrester name on II. Call flowers , dished, lawn experience is a mu st . 216·
collect 304-882-2361 or 949- mower, harlequin books, 499-2200, ask for Dick
·21S7.
Morena .
knick knacks.

'·

446 7313

wva . 367 1101

err ands, 304·773-5897.

Sat. 1st. right in Syracuse.
6
Lost and Found
992-3086. Lots of ilems.
Lost-6 mo. old Reg. Dober-

area . 992-54112.

•
•

Yard sale 2 mtles off 87 on
Leon
Bad en
Road
So mething l or eve ry one.
Wednesday . 28th to May 2
Quilts for sale.

P A RT
t im e
h e lp ,
housework , will i ng t o r un

or shine. 10 to 5. Fr i. and

LAFF·A·DAY
·-------

on l y. Rain c anc els. New
cosme t ics. tots of f urni tur e,
baby items , ntc na cs,
every th ing in c ludin g a dog
co ll ec1ion .

long haired

cat. Half grown . 992-3489.

-~­

M ediamobtte Drtve r / Prog·
ram Otr ec tor . 20 hrs ./wk .,
summer. to opera te/main·
lain small truck , pl an/ im p lement program s. Prefer
BA in ed uc at ton or re l ated
f iel d &amp; experie nce in
dram a t i cs .
puppe t ery,
mu s tc. storytel l ing . Ca ll

Fnday , 19th. &amp; 30th. 10 3

May 1st. &amp; 2nd . 484 Upper
River Rd . (a cross from

Help Wa.'!_l ~-

11

~--

TEN family yard sale. Sch
wa r tz ' Tra iler Court out
Locust Road by K &amp; K , Pl.
Pleasant
Thursday &amp;.

chi ldrens , clothes al l sizes,
ms,
and
t oys, ladies
househol
d
coa t s, jeans.
i tems, furni t ure, an t iques,
motor,
sc hoo l
outboard
desk, library tab les, lg .
w hite cof f ee tab le. car par
t s, ti res .

May 14 &amp; t5. Fr iday &amp; Sat urday

M a le Coc k apoo. 2 months.
old. Ca ll -446·9361.

gas furna ce. 2nd

Nice location near chur ·

NEW LISTING - NEAR POMEROY - 1'1J story

Turkey Hun te r s We have
m oufh ca l ls, sl ate box
ca ll s, ca m o gear &amp; decoys
i n stock . Sp r i ng Va ll ey
Trading Co ., Spr in g Va ll ey

No Huntin g o r trespass in g
on the Edse l Hu ghes F arm ,
Lu cas
L a n e,
Po i nt
Pl easant.

houses in Rac ine on

P'H. 992-2259

F i shin g License on sa l e.
Com e and see our new sh ip·
m ent at 1982 Fisi ng Rods,
Ree l s, &amp; Lures . Spring
Va ll ey Trading Co., Spr ing
Va lley P laza, 446·8025.

F L E A Marke t open air,
Chil l icothe Ma ll Shopp ing
Ce nt er , u.s. 23 Chi ll icothe,

3·19·1 mo.

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

up

Clea ner , one ha lf mil e up
Geor ges Creek Rd.
Ca ll

All Makes

CARPET
BINDING
SERVICE

At Ward's Keyboard

Watch in l ittl e league f iel d
H armon Park . Ca ll lden
tify and pay for ad. Phon e

~

Pa ge-9

Ya rd Sa le Firs t Time thi s Want to get ou t of t he
year . Fri . 30 &amp; Sat . 1st . .41 H ouse? Se l l Avon and
Neil Ave ., oft of .4 th Ave . make good SSS. Meet t rie n ·
Ga ll ipo l is
Curtains, dly people Ca ii 446·335B .
fishing rods , roller ska tes,
baby i tem5 . cl othing a ll
Immediate opening
for
si zes , &amp; more .
Medi ca l Techno logist or
qua l i f iy
ML T
w ith
FOUR f a m i l y yard sa le, background in Clin ical
Grandv iew Heigh ts near Chemistry . P lease cont act
Mason Co. Fairground s. Valley
Diag n ostic
Friday · Sa t urpay
10 .4
La bora tories 446·0353 .
Cl othing, toy s, appltan ces.
furnitur e. mis e
Ltve 1n se rvi ce li9h t
housekeep i ng and
light
SIX family yard sa le. Thur
COOk tng Ca l l 388 8376 .
sday, Friday &amp; Sa turd ay, 8
3,
113
Park Dr . Pt
Baby s1 tler needed in m y
Pleasant.
Everylh tng
hom e
E xce llen l sa l ary.
imaginab le.
Ref req Ca ll 4.46 1259 .

9

Sad l y m i ssed by wt te,
and
g r and
c hildr e n ,

P ick

,-----------CHERRY TREE

PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR

Hrs. Mon.-Tues. 2-2:30

-

sad regre t' s.
Th
is imon
th comes
I t br
ngs back
dayswith
We wi l l never forget .
As each day passes
Our em pt iness g r ows
T he tea r s we shed .
We can w i pe away
B ut the ache i n our
heart wi ll al ways stay
Dad we miss you
Bu t we unders tand
tha t God made you
pari of his pl an
And w e know you
Have a better home
For y ou won' t ever
be alone

3

2
Rt.
124. One has 9 rooms. 2
'baths, good carpeting,

NEW LISTING

I n Mem or y of husband,
f ather and gr andf ather
Willie Shafer who passed
away 13 yrs . ago April 29 ,

t-;:=========::;-t=========jt=:;;:;~~;:;;::;:;;;:;:::=j
chtld r en
SAVE Sl.OO WITH
THIS AO
Announ ce m ents
J&amp;F
O'Brien Electric
SWEEPER
and sewt ng
KEN'S
mac hi ne r epa i r, pa rt s, and
Service
CONTRACT! NG
and
suppli es.
APPLIANCE
deli ve r y, D av is Vac uum

Reduced 8-1

Root Eotote - Generol

In M emori a m

3·7-tf c

1·26 -ll c

Milwaukee Products

state . L ook a t thi s one
today . Mak es an ex·
ce ll ent starter hom e at
an aff ordabl e pr ice ot : ,.!.
onl y $28 ,000 .00 .
-\
Cheryl L emlev, A ssot. 1

2

1969.

Call742· 3195

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph.992-2174

Wed .-Ait Old

'plly.

•

the

304·576·216 1.

Fam il y Garage Sale
Thurs ., Fri . &amp; Sa t 2nd .
house pa st Coon Club on
Criner Road .

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation .
Residential
&amp; Commercial

2- 2~ - tfc

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVIC E
From the Smalle s t

Happy Hour
Mon.- Fri . 4-6

PRICE REDU CED Thi s house is an ex tra
qood buy! ! ! 3 bedroo m ,
tot al elec tri c. 11;, baths
w ith country settin g.
Owner wa nts to leave

IN POMEROY - Two

Freo Estimates
Reuonoble Prices
Call Howard
949-226J
949-2160

Sma ll bl ack dog, fema le,
bobt ail ed, part dasc hund,
App le Grove area . Phone

7

~==========1~======~=~+~~~~~~~~~3

PH . 992-9913
Rt. 1 Cheshire,Oh.
PRESENTS

las t long at $11.500.00.

NEW LISTING -

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
cleaning and palnllng.
All work guaranteed.

e Lo-Boy
•
•
•
•

plumbing, electric, and
heating.

new or repair gutter and
downspouts,
gutter

neck16,.,
. L0st 2or3daysago.
991·

5 Fam il y Yard Sale Cen
tenar y Town house. Fr i .
Apr i l JO and Sa t . May 1.

4 2 1· 1 mo.

Yard Sa l e
~

G i an t Yard Sa le Apri l 30,
May 1. 11 05 Teodora Av e.,
Ga ll ipolis. Boy s clot hes. 0
6, adu lt clothes. antiques,
m i sc., 9·5 .

All types of roof work,

CANDLELIGHT INN

Phone 742-3t It ·

20% OFF ALL OVER ·THE STORE

•

• E l ectric work
• Custom Pole Bldgs.
•Roofing work
14 Y ears E xperien ce

bathroom s, remod eling,

Rugs Bound

One ca r ga r age. Won't

I

BARGAINS GALORE

Monday-ThuB., Sal 9-5
Fridly 9-1

Custom kllchens end applian ces,
cu s tom

Room Site and Area

wi ring and dr ill ed w e ll .

The Daily Sentinel

SIDEWALK SALE

STORE HOURS

New Homes - ex·
tensive remodeling

4-9-tfc

bedroom fr ame home
w ith basement. New

That's right ! When you us e a column
inch or more in newspaper advertising
be it display or classified you reach
thousands of potential buyers that are
eager to receive your monev· saving
message.

The Rev. Cecll J. Wise Is the new
pastor at the Hobson Chrlstlan UnIon Church.
Sunday and Wednesday evening
seJV!ces are at 7: :ll p.m. and Sun·
day morning services are at 9: :lJ
a .m .

PH . 992-3543 or 992-2386

7

L ost·On Fores t Ru n Rd .
Fem ale goat, br own and
w hite, chai n ar ound it's

7

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BElWEEN

Rt. l, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
6·15 -lfc

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

Route338 in An tiquit y . 2

New pastor named

Insulated Dog Hou ses

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

$2.25 for uch fllltem. Add 504
for uch flltlom for . . .
and lundlln1. Send Ill:
~ne Adams
Pattern Dopl
1 ~-~ I_

fA:~

fo llo~i"B fljl~plwn ~ uclu~

"'•""'•"9 &amp;,..,,,,..

~

t.,./1.._ 4.1- $

Wro ~ O~ut w S~ltnt t C11ntftH O.ltl
I ll (our! St . lt- w. 0III04trtf

CYa ified p~~p cowr

,,,..,....,..,.,..o•-"''

..................
u,,.,,_,
,,~

./c!or»c&lt;&gt; 10¥.-20\'o

PHONE 992·2156

...... l ...............

II . . . tpWI"!o&lt;t

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

SOLOISTS - Anita Smith, left, received a grade of excellenl with her
trumpet solo and Carrie Karr, a grade of good with her flute solo, 1111
representatives of the Meigs Junior High School Instrumental depart·
men! at the recent solo and ensemble competition in Athens. Not pictured
are Daphne Dillard who received a grade of good for her flute solo, and
Stan Broome, who recei ved a grade of superior with his saxophone solo.

l'
B"''"""
O-Iu"'''
n-.o
, ooL_.,
11 p, ........,.,•• :,.•• •, ••

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

''"" ' "''

wood buildings 24xl6.

or fix ed we c an do
it .

- ·-

ncohi. "&lt;• •09"

mm.

.

,

• •• &lt;1\ o&gt;&lt;
t1 ,...,,.,
\ o,.'""'"
&amp; ...... .....

Market report

J a mes Fra nklin (Frank) Sears,
73, Mlddleport, died Thursday In
Holzer Medic al Center.
Born Sept. 19, J.90l at Barnesville,
W.Va., son of the late George and
Ann Pasey Sears, he was a retired
coal miner .

~,

If you need it built

~~=========t,=========~+~~~~;~~~~~t~~~;;;;;;~

·m
(

CAN HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
New Construction
and Remodeling.

Utility Buildings

lmo.

Or

I Co•&lt;IOO ' " ' " ' ' ooo ·&lt;! " " " . . "' "'
l .~ """""""""""

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

Sites start from l0x24"

742·2328

-~

,

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

RUTLAND

Th e Daily S e ntin e l

Wilma Anderson, Rt. 2, fulci ne, is
a pa tient at Uni ve rsity Hospital,
Columbus.
Cards may be sent to her in care of
the hospi ta l, room 767, 410 loth Ave.,
Columbus, Ohio, 43210.

6._ _ __!:,~_~d- F~~ nd

1~:::::::::::::::::::Jr,:::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~

Sizes from 4 to 6 and all

Four runs were made by local
units Wednesday, the Meigs E mergency Medical Service reports.
Mlddleport a t 1:22 p.m . took Melissa Hart from the Holzer Clinic In
Middleport to Holzer Medical Center; at 5:24 p.m . took Sara h Boyles
from VIllage Ma nor Apartments to
P leasant Va lley Hospital a nd at
8:27 p.m . took Lea nna Booth from
Russell St. to Holzer Medical Center . Rutland a t 7: 53 p.m. took Don
Osborne, Allen MUls a nd Don Deal
from Meigs Mine 2 to 0 ' Bleness
Hospital In Athens for treatment of
smoke lnhala tlon.

In hospital

The Doily Sentinel

Business Senices
AL TROMM
BUILDING &amp;
REPAIR

Mitrauderettes post 12-1 win
The Meigs Mara uder soft ball
team pounded out II hits enroute to a
12-1 romp over Jackson Wednesday
eveni ng.
Nata lie Lambert had a no hitter
going for four innings. She finall y
yielded hi ts to Trace and Davis
while recording 12 strikeouts.
Leading the Meigs' attack were
Ci ndy Crooks with three singles;

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

BusinesS
Opportunity

We wan t one stove dea l er
in Meigs Co. If you have a n
es tabl i shed bus,ness or a r e
a sertous wood bur ner , con·
ta c t G le n M ar p le a t the
ya ll ey Gem Stove Fac tor y
•n So.Zanesv itl e, Oh io. 61•·

454 3348 collec t.
Cigar e tte

Ve nd i ng

Business. Ca ll 304·773·5651 .
22

Mon e_y to _Loan

RE FINANCE or purchase
your ho m e. 30 year fixed

ra te. w va . &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mor tgage, 77 E . State St.,

Athens, Oh . 592·3051.
23

P~oiesSiOna ,- - - -

Services
-~- - - - --- -·-

Windshi e ld broken? Call ·
Southern G lass. Insurance :
c l a i m s w e lcome . Free
m obil e serv i ce ava i lable.

Ca ll 446·1011 .

..

�Page-l 0-The Daily Sentinel
Professional
- -Services
--------

They'll Do It Every Time

C&amp; L Bookkeeping
Bookeeping &amp; tax 5ervice
for a ll types of businesses.
Carol Nea l 446·3862

CW HIS NEW JOB
ROIO ENVIES 7HE
~101-'f NI!Re ~ 7HE
07H&amp;l. WO/lJ&lt;CRS --··

SO SUI&lt;!: OF

OF THf.I\OflW--

56 · ·· - P~s}~ ~ •}•:

GOOD
U SE D
A' P
PLIANCE5
washers,

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY
KENNEL. AKC
Chow
puppies ,
CFA

Sof a, chair, rocker, ot
tern an. 3 tab les, $500. Sofa ,
chair and toveseat, $275.
Sof as and chai r s priced

1972 Concord Mobile Hom e,
12x6S. Cal l 446 lOIS afler
5 :30p.m .

fr om S285. to $795 . Tables,

Beautiful brick &amp; frame, 3

home

$38 and up to $109 . Hide· a·
beds,S340 .• quee n si ze, S380
Recline r s, $175 . to S295 ..
Lamps from $ 18. to $65. 5
pc. d 1nene s from $79., to

IINPTNtYTHiiiii&lt;H£!;A816SHOTOUTTOIXJTH6HtN----

w/ scenic

view.
wood - burning
fireplace, f ormal dining ,
cen tral air w / heat pump.
Lanscaped.
1 acre lot
w / fenced in ba ck ya rd ,
$4 5, 900 . 11 %
financing ,
small down payment . Call

$385. 7 pc.. $ 189 . and up .
Wood tab le wi t h 4 chairs,

$2 19 up lo $495 . Des k $110.
Hutches, SJOO . and $375 ..
map l e or p i ne f i nish .
Bedr oom suite s
Bassett
Cherry, S795.
Bunk bed
c omplete with mattresses,

446 3766
6 r
house, bath, full
basemen t i n ci ty limits,
$22 ,000. Farm 6 r . house,
bath, ut tltt y room, root
cel lar, 25 1/2 a., tractor,
farm equipment, large
barn, 900 lb. toba cco base ,
$35.000 . Call 614 -446 4767 or

256 1773 .
J bdr

bri ck hou se, exc.
Energy eff icien t,

cond ..
c lose to Holz er Ci ty School
Ot s 1rtc1. IO ~o
in t eres t

assumab le loa n. Ca ll 446
7080 or 675 1990 .
For sa le 6 rm . &amp; bath house
with 6 acres of ground .
Located 5 miles from town .
Asking $14,900 Call 446

7504

r----------T'"---------lo1s &amp; Acreage__-

35

Improved flat l ots . 1 l / 4
acre S.5, 000 . 3 3/ 4 acres

$12,000. 5 ac r es a t $15,000.
Ci ty sc hool dis tri ct . Will
f i nance at 10% down. Ca ll

379 2196.

nentals
41
~

I fl oor, full basement. cen
tral heat and ai r , fu l l ca r ·
pel , carpor t, 3 acres in Mid·
d leport . 927 Browne l le. 992

3935.
32

Mobi le Hom es
lor Sa le

TRI STA TE

Houses for Rent
-----

1 bdr . hou se in Rio Grande,
$200 per mo. Ca ll 245·9325
or 245· 5364.
Furnished 3 room cottage
in town one lad y or married
coup le. Call 446 ·2543 .
3 bdr . deluxe home, ex c.
neighborhood, pool, centr al
air . Call 304·675·5104 or 675

5386.

MOBILE

HOME S. GallipOlis. Pri ce
used
mobile
r edu ced.
homes . CALL 4d6 7572

CLEA N USE D MOBILE
HOME S
K E55EL'5
QUALITY
MOB I Le
HOME SA LES. 4 MI .
WE ST. GAL LIP OLIS. RT
35 . PHONE 446 3868
For sa te 1965 Prenston
tr ailer, double fram ed , 3
bdr ., new carpet &amp; cur
ta1n s, stove &amp; refrigerator ,
k i tchen table &amp; cha1rs. 2
se ts of und erpinn1ng Call
a lt er 5PM &amp; ask f or K1m ,

Apartment
for Rent

Deluxe furn . apart ., cent .
air &amp; heat . 1 or 2 adutts

on ly. Ca ll 4460338.

446 0957 .

Large nouse for rent. 4 bdr

Ca ll 446·1339 or 388 9351 .

44

Apa rtm en t no. 3, 2nd fl oor
furnished . adu l ts on l y, no
pet s, ref . &amp; dep. req . Call

Ca ii3BB ·9909
5 rm s. &amp; bath, gas fur ·
nance, storm windows on
55.!1 in Bidwell, Oh. $15,500 .

Furn i shed 4 room co ttage ,
near HMC. S190 . Water pd .,
ch il d acceptable . Ca ll 446·
4416 aft er 7PM .
4 bedroom, cen tr a l air and
hea t. ci ty wa ter, firepla ce,
unfurnished except
ki t ·
chen
$300 mon th plus
utitilies. Reference and
deposit
required .
In
Ra ci ne. 949 2293 .
Trail er in Sy racuse . Apart ·
menl
and
house
in
Pomeroy , house in Le tart
Falls, A partment in New
Haven and Middl eport . 992

379 1184

7511

28 II 1973 Royal Knight
trailer with 1 112 x 8 112 add
togeth e r
or
a
r oom,
separa te , exc. cond . Se ll
cheap Ca ll 367 7844 .

Extra nice country home
c arpet ed natural
gas 2
bath's, no c hildren· no pet s.
Located at Snowvi ll e. 698·

4040 .

Furnished apt . 3 bdr ., $200,
water pd., ch i ldren ac ·
ce ptab le. Ca ll 446·4416 after
I PM .

Call 446 4179 .
12 x 60 t ra il er . ellce llent
cond1tion . Call 446 1552.
Furni shed, air conditioned,
underpinning , se t up on lot
1n Middleport

2 bd .room, un furni shed,
Living room, kitchen · 111
basement, ni ce and c lean .
Some ca rpeting . No inside
pets. Deposi t requir ed . 992

3090
Ra cine. Nic e 2 bd .r oom,
complete l y turn ., AC., $260.
month . Deposd req . Glen

5091
1971
R it z Craft
mob il e
home 3 bd .room air cond .,
tot al nat ur al gas front k1f
chen, part1ally furnished .
992 7313 af ter 5

USE D MOBILE
576 1711.

HOME .

Furn1shed house f or r en t . 3
room s and bath in Mason,

Pomeroy 2
bd . room,
r emodeled, 408 Spring.
Ca rpeted, sec urity deposit .

$100 . Ren t $195 Ca ll a lt e r 6
p.m 992 2288 .
L ovely six room co ttage, no
chi ldren, $125 per mon th .
One
month
sec urity
deposi1. App l y in person
Friday or Saturday , May 1.
79 Jim H i ll Road, Hen
derson, WV .

513 3rd . Ave . 3 rm s &amp; bath,
downstairs , private en·
trance . kitchen furn ished.
washer &amp; dryer , dish
washer, $150 per mo., $100
dep. Upstairs 1 bedr . &amp;
bath, private en tran ce, $20
week . 65 Garfield Ave .
small house 3 rms . &amp; bath,
off stree t parking in rear,
half basement, $125 mo.,

$100 dep. Ca ll afler 6 :00
Wednesday

evening, 446

0830. Fripay ca ll 614 533
3884 .
2 bdr unfurnished upsta1rs
duplex. Stov e &amp; refrig . in
el uded . Ref . &amp; dep. r eq .
Ca l l446·24 19 or446 3949 .
Un furn1 sped apar t ment, 4
rms . &amp; bath 1n Vin ton.
Ref r ig . &amp; stove furnished
Large yard &amp; garden spo t .
Dep. &amp; ref req . Ca l l 245

5818.
Downtown furn ished up
apartment,
air
s ta irs
cond ., $225 plu s utilit ies.

304576-271 1
For sa le 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
tr ai ler s, furni shed. with
air Ca ll 304 773 5651.

198 1 ALL ELEC T R IC 12'
WIDE .
1
BEDROOM
mobi le home se tt ing on lot,
ready to move into. $8995 .
10°to down, BA N K FINAN ·

CI NG AVAILABLE . 304
576·2711.
1969 R 1Chardson , good con
dition . $3,500 . Phone 304

2 bedroom
unfurni shed
house. Phone 304 ·675·4191.
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Centenary, 1bdr., private
lot, rei. &amp; dep ., $160 mo ..
adults . Ca ll 1·643·2644 .

2907 .
1973 Grand vil le 14 X 70, 3
bedroom m obile Hom e wi ll
se ll furnished or
un
furn1 shed mu st be moved .

5818

2 bd.room house tr ai ler .
Yo u pay utilities· un·
furnished · exce pt tab le,
chairs and cook ·stove. \ 175.
per month. S75 . deposit .

TWO
bedroom,
un ·
furni shed. One bedroom ef ·
fi ciency . 304·675·2722 .

Apar tm ents. 675·5548

APARTMENTS.
h omes,
Pleasant

mobil e

hous es,
Pt .
and Ga ll ipol is.

6144468221 or6 14 245·9484 .
TWO bedroom apa r tme nt,
i n H enderson, phone 304·

4S

Furnished Rooms

SLEE PING

ROOM S and

light housekeeping
Park Cen tr al Hotel

apt.,

Sl ee ping
ro om,
$125
utilitie s pd ., singl e male .
Ca ll 446·4416 aft er 7PM .
Space f ~ r_R ~ n_! __

Park, Route 33, Nor th of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Ca ll
CW2 ·7479
Large trailer lots for rent

in Midd lepor t . Ca ll 992·2101
or 991·1319 afte r 5PM.
PASTURE for rent. Phone

L arge lot for mobile home

in Sa ndy He ights area. 304·
675·2524.

one

at

As hton·

plus deposit and utili ties .

Phone 304-675-4088 .
Mobile Home, 2 bedroom ,
furni shed , all e lect ri c,

washer,dryer hookup, S175.
montn ly

plus

Merebandise

el ec tric ity .

One bedroom mobil e home,
utiliti es furnished , air con·
ditioned, outskirts Hen·

derson. Phone304·675·6730.

-

51

~

Household Goods -

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St ..
Ga llipolis. New sofa beds
$250: used sofa beds $100,
rec lmers sao. bunk beds
SIOO, bunkie mattresses
S40, maple rockers $49,
maple

dmett

sets from $125

to S175, bedroom suites
1150, 3 pc . living room
suites S199, 2 pc. living
room suites $140, love seats

170, owl la mps $25, ringer

510,000. 985·4 116.

de posit, 304·675 -6512.

~t~~~!Xic's t~is~ in~~~·

TWO acre lots-150 fl. road

FURNISHED
mobile silver stone, TV,s, wOOd:
home, $165. per m onth plu s burners, stero's and lots

frontag~.

ci ty

water,

behind 84 Lumber, call304·
675-6873, 675·36l8 .

S2

CB,TV, Rad i o
E quipm ent

mch, $115 . One Magnavox
20 inch wi th stand $100. 304·

675 5007 .

bel·

r

POODLE

pups,

Livestock
Registered and grayed hor ·
ses, exce ll en t 4·H projec t .
Eng l ish and western sad·
d i es
eve rything
imaginable in horse equ i p·
mcnt and supp li es, al so
riding lesso ns and trail
rides and horse tra ining .

63

AKC

reg ts tered . No Checks. 304·

895 3958 .
Fruit

S8

&amp; V_ege ta ~e_s _

For Sa le : tomato plants, all
lead i ng varie ty s,
some
new ,
also
cabb.age ,
cauli flow e r ,
broccoli,
mango peppers, sweet
potatoes, later when season
is favorab le. Spencer's
Green Va tl ey·3 mi . N . of
Chester on W. Shade Rd
Call before co ming 985·
3838 . Full cou nt guaren
teed . No Sunday ca ll s.
D. E .Spencer .

~

Hoof Hollow . 614·698 -3290 .
Young brown laying hens

for sa le . 992 -7713 .
Goa ts, 3 baby A m erican
Arpine buck s. Phone 304 -

450· 1825 .
64

~ay _ &amp;

G_rain

1ranspartatlen

74 Couga r XR7. exc. cond .,

very s ha rp, $1,500. 72 Mon ·
tego, good running motor,

A lot of different par t s for
350 or 400 engines. A l so pa r ·
ts for 74 I mpa l a . interior

$300 . Ca ll446·9380 .

perlec l. 742 3063

dition, 6 cyl., 27 MPG . 2
con . fops, 53 .375 . Ca ll 245·
9118.

75 TR6 Conver tibl e A ·1 con-

Ca ll 675 467 1 $150 .
Ex ce l sior Oil Co .. 636 E
Main St .. Pomeroy , Ohio

992·1205 .

BS46 .

Daytime 992 ·3768 . As k for
Bill or Barb Mi ll er .

1967 Mercedes 200 D , ex ."
co nd., r ebu ilt e ng in e,

15 ft . Mo tor boat wi t h
trailer , 1 farm tra c t or,

$4,200. Call446·0026.

1981 Chevy Ci tation . Ex ·
ce ll ent cond .• low mileage.
Will con sider 4 w hee l drive

Farm E~ui p '!l~nt

1 se t of John Deere 4 bo t·
tom 16' semi mount pl oWs,
l ·Hillsboro tri ax le goose·
neck 28' tr ai ler . Ca ll 614·

on lrade. 992 -5170.

256·6534

AC, exce ll en t conditi on-388·

20 fl . boat tra ile r , 1975
Dodge Charger, PS , PB .

Deere 4 row corn
planter, $450 . Ca ll 156·6205 .

1981

li st price is $5750 . Outdoor
Equipment Sa les, Jet . Rts .
7 &amp; 35, Ga llipolis. Ph . 446·

3670. Weekdays 9to 5, Sat . 9

TROYBILT ROTOTILLE

2089 .

R S, a ll mod els. Discount s!
Immediate
sh ipment,
Trades co nsidered. Ca ll
703 941 · 3871
or
write
Hi ckory Hill Nur se ry , R t . 1
Box 390 A, Fishersville. VA

22939 .
Forma l s, worn once . Ca ll

304 675·6233
new

Rattan Hangin g Swing &amp;
Stand . Lide new. 304·675·
6162 .

SS ~ _ I!~.!_I C!i'!_g _Sappl!_e ~ _
Bu il ding ma ter ials block,
brick. sewer pipes, wi n·
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Win ters, Rio Gra nd e, 0 .
Ca ll 245·5121.

Ave .

was hers
se~e.r al

$75,
dryers,
refr _ig erators,

ulililies, S50. deposit. 304· more. Open lOam ·to 5pm
446·3159.
•
675·6512.

- ~--------

)

Nov a

B

4

318

Main

from the sale. 1978 GMC,
Serial HCL448F736636, Ac ·
count W232 · 1935-91136.

For Sa le 147 Cub Cada lle
&amp;

mower . Ca ll367 ·7560 .

1980 Datsun, 2 dr ., auto ..
17 ,000

HAY BALER, sq uare type.
Ca ll
256 · 6038
af t e r
I 1:30AM.

miles,

exce ll ent

cond ., S4,500. Call446·7322 .
The following desc ribed
vehicle will be offered for

New For d 2 row corn plan ·
ter . never bee n used . Call

Public Sale at Smith Buick
Co . .
Eastern
Ave . •
Gallipolis, Oh on May u ,

379 2468 .

1982 af 10 :30 AM . Terms of

T RACTOR. John Deere
1010 gas 8. brush hog . Call
304 675 1121. Af te r 5 :00, 30&lt;·
675·1043.

sale is cash in hand at time

of sale. Written bids may
be submitted to GMAC at

house ca ll s . Phone 516·2398
or 446·2454 .

675-5379 alter 5 p .m .

F &amp; K Tre e Trimming ,
stump r emova l. 675· 1331 .

1980 Honda C R 250, ex c.
cond . 51,100. Ca ii3BB -8659.

1980 650

Ho nda

act ual

c ustom,

m i les,

exc.

cond. Mu s t se ll $1.795. Ca ll
446·0972.
1975 Honda 550. good shape.
Cal l 256· 1571.
1971 Honda 80. Ca ll 446·
1950 .

bike.

new

parts, 304·773·

5170.
1976 Kawasaki 750, 304-675
2183 .
1975 Honda CB , 200 T, $400 .
Phone 304-675-3794.

---

__

------..~:..

____· -.

IN Tll' CHAIN 0'
LIFE, ANNIE ·•

.-I'EB6E IF 1IE GET MORE OF AFEELIH'
FOR I'IHAT CAME BEFORE U5, I'IE'LL
TAKE MORE CARE T' R:JRGE 5000,
GTRON6 LINK5 FOR THE ONE&amp;

T' CONE T' GRAB HOLD OF --

Wa ter we ll s. Commercia l
and Domestic . Test h oles.
Pumps Sa les and Service .

ADVANCED

BIG BOULDEI&lt; INTO DER CRADLE UND IT'S
ALL ZET lO GO!

Seam less

Gu tt er · Ooor s.
Offeri n g
co ntinu ous
gutter in g,
seam less sid ing, r oofing,
garage
doors ,
fr ee

I)

I1J CD Seventeenth

Annual Acad - emy of
Coun - try Mu sic Awards
Knott ' s Berry Farm near
Los Angeles IS the site of
th1s awards cere mony , t o
be ho sted by M1ckey Gil ley , Conway Twmy and
Dotty West.

AF'TER ZE LAUNCHER ISS FINI SHED, VE ROLL

estimates, 614 -698·8205 .

1976 Kawask i KZ 900, lfd ·
pipes, pull back hand le

CID

and 85 HP outboard motor
wi th all accessories. Call

446·8127 or 446·8286.

675·2440.

GASOUNE ALLEY

Gallipolis Diver sifi ed Canst . Co. Custom dozer- &amp;
ba ck hoe work . Special
farm rates. Call us tor free
estimates. 446·4440.
Lawrence

Sidenstricker

SO ..• YOURR£17
ZAFER ANC7 ARE
CALLING OFF OUR

___ ~ ~~trig~~tLol!. __ _

El ec trician "
li ce n se d
ma s t er,
l owe s t
rates

H. P . Chrysler Motor, fool

around. Phone 304-895·3826.

0) 1121 Taxi Firs t of 2
parts . The drivers tell w hat
made them become cabbies.
10 :00 (!) MOVIE: ' Gigi'
1121 20120
0 Cil ® Knots Landing
Abby and Gary·s steamy
affair is about to boll over
(60 min .)
Cll Kitty : Return to
Aushwitz

mm

Back hoe Service. Ca ll 6755580.

fiberglass ba:;,s boat, 73· 70

... 1 HEARI7 All
ABOUT THE WAY

YOU Cffi?ATE ...
ANI/ WHAT YOUR
COUNTRYMEN
THINK OF

YOU CAN'T
BEUEYE EYE/lY.

THING

)'OU

HEAR/

AND I OVI 1T 6EUEVE EVERYTHING
YOU SAY/ IF YOU THINK YOU'RE
ISOING TO GAIN C'O/iTrol. OF Nrl
CQ\Ifli\MY, Yai'Vt' 6'0TMf)TWE'K
7lf1NK COMIWG/

(ill News

10:30

8_5 __ ~~n~r~LH~u_!i~g

5521.

JONES BOYS WATER
SE RVICE . Call 367 ·7471 o r
367·0591.

16 IIJ foot deep V . runabout

with

30

H. P .

fer Phone 304·675·4631.

===----=------===Auto Parts

tires,

Remington

1! --- -- ~!!!_o Ref"_!!_ __

_
Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Professional custom

paint work on motorcycles.
Auto T~im Center, 446·1968 .

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

America

1 1 :oo

(fi) Hitchcock

u rn CIJ o m ® m 1121

News
Nashville RFD
C1) News/Sports/W eather
1 1 :30 I) I1J CD Tonight Show

Cil

YOU!

Johnny is joined by Sheena
Ea ston. (60 min .)
ffi Another Life

Cil All In the Family
Cll ID CHI Nightline
0 (I) Quincy Sam goes
after an accused rap1 st
w ho is freed due to a
technical discrepancy . (RJ

(60 min)

BARNEY

Mercury

Motor and trailer, make of·

Cil Sing out

Cil TBS 'Evening Ne ws

control trolling motor, live

well, bilge pump, lois of ex lrbs. 52,500. Phone 304-773-

IClosed Capti oned/
(fi) Last Chance Garage
Host Brad Sears assesses
the value of a "78 Ply mouth Honzon and rates
automob ile
stereo
sys tems .

.. _

Pom e roy . 992·2284.
fl .

9 :30

Cor . Fourth and Pine

446·0498 .
15

ID CHI Barney Miller

CARTE R'S PLUMBING
AND HEATIN G

SE WING Ma chine r epair s,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors.
Fabri c Shop,

Monarck

Is we callin' onth'
Skinners or
ain't we?

Plumbing
~ H~a_ting ___ .

4 cyl. Chev. engine, 140 hor·
se Merci' uiser outdriver
eas y on gas, perfect con ·
dition, many extras. Call

1972

Sneak Previews Eac h
week co-hosts Roger Ebert
and Gene Siskel g1ve view ers the 1ns1de story o f
w hat" s currently mak1ng
the screen at the local
movie theaters.

carpentr y, roofing, plum ·
bing, concrete work . 304·

&amp;4 - · - - E-lecir ical - - ..

1979 Caravello boal, 18' I 0,

,.,_

..... _

I I

r [] .
IYAHRLD±
I I r j
[SELAMY I
rJ I I
rI XI )- ITJ "
II

R:AN OFF WI\H
A ROLL OF
CLOIH.

Now arrange the Circled letters 10
form the surpnse answer as sug
gested by Ihe above cartoon

1

Print answer here: "

(Answers tomorrow )
Yes terdays

Jumbles AFTER

I1

Answer

PIKER

JOYFUL

MALLET

What the gambler named hi S daughter -

Jumble Book No. 20, containing 110 puutes, Is available I Of $1 .95 postpaid
I rom Jumble, cJo this newspaper. Box 34, Norwood , N.J 07648 Include your
name, address. zip code and make checks payable to Newspaperbooks

BRIDGE
'Book hand' review
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

NORTH

any

hand

that

ha s

4-29-BZ

• J 10 0
9K IOYtiJ

The ex pre ss10 n ··soak
hand" is given to descnbe

• Q83

bee n

+AQ

a round for years and ha s
appeared in many book s

EAST

WEST

Today 's hand from " More
Killing Defense at Bndgr "
ha s been around sin cr the

yea r one.

• Q4

+ a:&lt;

9 A8 15 4

9Q J 2

• \0 6

t AKJ I~

+1 0852

• 76]

SOUTH

Simil ar pla ys ha ve hrf'n
credited to everv rx pNt
from Joe E lwell. wl1o dt('d m
1920. to so me of the wh1z
k tds of today Anywa y. 11 1s
tnt eres tm g enough to app(•ar
1n our co lumn
You s1 t West and get off to

+AK 9 762

·+ ---

• 942
K J !H

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

the successful lead of I he I 0
of diamonds . Your part1wr
r un s off threC' d1amond
tnck s and you havr 10 makP
a d1 sca rd
You may have been so
1mpresse d by your bnlltant
tour -de-force 1n lead1ng a
diamond and yo ur posst'S·
s10n of tha t mre ace of
hea rts that you ha ve het'n
wool -gathermg.
If you ar e an expert you
have been doing qull " the
opposite
You must ha vr
r ea li zed that if yo ur partn er
lead s a lourth d1amond vou
are sure to score the setl1ng
trick w1th the queen of
trumps . e1ther right away or
l ater on . But you al so mu st
recognize the possibility th en
decl a r er is v01d of hrarts So

Wf'st

~orth

~1st

!'ass
Pa ss
Pa ss

2•

!'a ss
l'a ss

4+

I.

South

2+

f 'as~

Openmg lead t l 0

II IS Up 10 \'0 \1 t o
that yotJr Part 1wr

dt ' lliJn l~

lt.' t11l 1
fourth dtarnnnd and thtTI' 1-.. .
an (•asv wav to do till "
.Ju st· di sC ard \Our .tc t 111
hf'art s

un

t.h ;1t

tLI I ' I

(ilamond
Thl'rf' 1:-. no W tl \' fur \"IIIII
paruwr to de('ldl' that ~·our
&lt;H'C' wa s a singlelOn and ht•
will gt vt· \"lltl th;~t hoped {ill"
trump tr.1ck With .1rwlll 1·r

dJJmond lt'ad

(60 m1n .)

83 _____E~c_a'!'a!i~9 ~

=· ===·==

Simon &amp; Simon

BUILDING &amp; re mob e ling ,

1975 Suzuki GT 550, very

===

®

Phone 304·576 ·2010.

Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

10,500 mil es. 304-675·5693 .

(I)

A .J . and R1ck are thrown
1nto a baffli ng case 1nvolv1ng stolen d1amond s. (R)

bars, king queen seats,
very good cond . 9500 miles.
good c ond .
Windshield,
siss y bar, luggage rack ,
new tires, new tune up .

0

STARK'S tree and l aw n
service, free fertilizer with
a nnu a l care.
in su r ed .

,

KITTY

(1) ffi) MacNeil -Lehrer
Report
® News
0)1]21 Muppet Show
7:30 I ) Cil You Asked For It
Cil Another lJfe
(!) Strange Death / Desert
Fox The my stery behmd
the death of Hnler 's favor Ite general, Fteld Marshal
Erwin Rommel . ts exam ined.
Cil Sanford and Son
Cll 0 (I) Family Feud
(I) Laverne and Shirley
()) Business Report
@) Richard Simmons
® All Creatures Great
and Small
li)
~
Entertainment
Tonight
B:OO D I1J CD Fame Danny
turns pool hustler to bnng
Leroy" s mother to New
York . (60 mtn .)
(J) National Geographic
Special
(!) MOVIE : 'Th e Last
Chase'
([) MOVI E: ' Breakfast at
Tiffany 's'
(]) MOVIE : 'A Woman
Called Golda' Part 2
0 Cll ® Magnum. P.l .
Superst1t 1on and sc 1ence
comb1ned may prove a
deadly m1xture for Magnum
and h1 s client (A) (60 mm )
Cll Woman Called Golda
0) 1121 No Soap. Radio
8 :30 (jj) Omni
0) 1121 Mork and Mindy

9 :00

304-89~- 3802 .

82
____

makes and mOdels under· 18
Camping
$200. Sold lhrough local
' - ·-government sales. Call 1· -- ~-!!~~714·569·0241 ext. 1855 tor 8 II. camper for pickup.
directory on how . to pur- iJso: Ca112.ci·9316.
chase.
-----· 1975 Ford mini home. low
1973 PONTIAC Deluxe mileage, good condition,
LeMans, power steering, loaded. $9,500. Can be seen
power . brakes, automatic, at 167 Layne St., New
air corlpllioned, :i50 epglne. Haven, WV, 304·882·2636.
304-675·6605.
23 Fl. Dodge Motor )lome.
1979 Pontiac · Bqnnevllle Phone 304- 6~5- 1181 or 615·
Stat.lonwagen ,
PS·,PB, 3226.
Power ' seats, AC, below
loan value. Phone 304·675· 811 . • Camper
with
2499.
everything, Ills pickup
truck. UOO. 304-675-4373 or
1972 Olds .Della
350, 301·675· 7845. 70 model
UOO. Ph0ile304-576·2181 . • Chrysler$175.

aa.

- PLACES LIKE THIS ME m.r:r-ut.l,. ~~:J
'100NG6TER5 TEND T' TliiNK ;.- BUT
TH' I'IORLD I'IAG CREATED
I'IE'RE ALL
TH' OAY THEY I'IERE
JL6T LfNJ(G
BaN -

2088 or 675 4560.

1981 KAWASAKI KDX 175,
927 actual miles, 304·882
2428.

CARS AND TRUCKS, most

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

GEE! OATEG' f"Miti.A
OH, 'IOU CAN'T
HIS10fliC £N(()IWJ(/ PflSEflVE TliE
I THIH!t IT'S 4/CEIIT,
PA5T, AIINIE PR.E!iERVII'I' T11'
OOIIOWN YOU
Prt;T!
CH 60T1LE nlfE-

R IN GLES'S SERV ICE ex ·

PA INTIN G interior &amp; ex ·
teri or , dry wall &amp; t~"x tur ed
ceilings, 304 · 6"~" , ~; J .

Chevy
Blazer .
Serial X T -120 60x14, good con·
NCKL189F202783, Account dition, best -offer, 304·882·
252'1.
#117 ·1303-43479.

1 Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars In

ANNIE

perienced mason, roofer .
carpe nter,
e l ect r ician,
ge n era l
r epai r s and
remodeling . Phone 304·675·

1978 HONDA XL 350, 304·
675-6544 .

vehicle from the sa le . 1979 · USED

1-----------L-----------1

(1 •-""'*• ""' ,.. ...,. uS"•'''.. Ofl

Happy Days
Cll Tic Tac Dough

ffi 700 Club

&amp;· Accessories
------------

$600. Phone 304-675·4373.

,A,._ •

74 ~ - ~~t~r~yc l es~ __

318 Main Street, Belpre, 76
Ohio. GMAC reserves the
right to w ithdraw with

disc

1 r:ot.l'T Tl-li~K ~ \IIA.IJT
6USI~6SS 1

Specia l March and April
on l y. Gene's Deep Stec.m
Cleaning. Scot ch Gaurd.
Free est imate . 992·6309

74 Camero. 1 owner, 68,000
mi les, 6 cy l. au to, ps , pb ,
exc . condition . $2.000. 304·

1978 16 fl . Chrysler Ski boat

at

BORN LOSER

Crea ti ve wood
decks,
pressurized pine, cedar &amp;
redwood . Free estim ate .

RON 'S Te levision Service.
Specializ in g i n Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar . and

Ma y 14, 1982 at Smith's

GMAC

0

367·7160.

10 Oatsun S425. 304 615·2295
or 304-675 · 1304.

-·::
=-::
75
Boats and
___ ~«!!~~~r .!~~- - -

Stre et ,
Be~pr e,
Ohio.
GMAC r ese rves the right to
withdraw with vehi c l e

Ca ll 446·4053 .

tr ac tor

74

CD

Ca ii3B8·9762 .
Hatchbck5

The foll owing descr ibed
ve hicl e will be offered for
Public Sale at 10 : 30 AM on

to

Heavy duty

P a rk

GMC Truck Center , Inc.
Term s of sale is cash in
hand at time of sale. Writ·
· ten bids may be submitted

Wanted to buy good used
ad ju stable pickup
d isc.

tra c tor

Buick

Diesel Demo. Save :10n·
dreds of dollars on this
ve hi c l e. Smith Nelson
Motors of 500 E . Main,
Pomeroy. 992· 2174.

198 1 model, new. $4 100. 1982

$85. 742·2352 .

ROTOTILLER. like
$125 . 304·882 ·2239 .

1978 Ford LTD . Call 614·
245·5682 .

Grave l y riding tr ac t or, 17
HP , 2 cy lin de r
with
hydrauli c lift. 50 inch
mower and dozer blade.

For sa le Gravel y t rac tor
with
mower , s ulki e,
r o t o till er,
plow
&amp;
cu lti va tor , $1,050. Ca ll 446·

Mary Jordan, 304· 743·3337

1979 · RM 400 Suzuki di rt

1977 Chevrolet Nova Con·
cours low mileage, PS, PB,
air, AM -FM, garage kept ,
extra ni ce. Ca ll 4.46·4053.

to 1.

JOi n . gas range $75 .,
May tag aut'oma ti c washe r

76 FORD Torino, contac t

4,700

9755 or 4461642 ex t .332 .

Se ll pr ope ll ed mower, 5
H P, 26 in . cut, like new

Phone 304-675·3182.

Ca ll 446·0648 a lt e r 5PM.

John
N ight c rawl ers, 90 cents
doz . 500 ft . back of th e
Kanauga Drive In on left

French
City
Painting
r esiden t ia l &amp; commerciaL
interior, ex terior, paper
han gi n g,
&amp;
textured
ce ilings. Cal l 367 -7784 or

1 condition, fully loaded .

1975 Chevro let Impala. 4
door, automatic, P S, PB,
air, 51.000 miles, very good
cond . One owner . Ca ll 446 ·

0929 .

U sed del uxe zig zag par·
tab le sewt ng ma chine. ex .
cond ., $85. Cal l4460418 af

Vo lkswagen Beetle 1969
$450 . engine needs work .

E x·

1977 Honda Gold Wing· lOOO,
full dr ess, low mileage.

road mil es, $7 ,475 . Ca l l 245·

SBOO. eac h phone 458 -1780 .
Antique
and
m t SC
hou se hold iterns Ca ll 446·

cond . Cal l &lt;46 0990.

Cal l446·2107.

1977,

reg . gas. 22 MP G, 68 ,000

F or
Sa le : J
yr .
old
Regts tered Appa loosa hor
se, greenbroke, fr iend l y .
Ca ll 992 3562 aft er 6 p .rn .

61

ce ll en t Condition . Ca ll 304·

280Z

Cl) Entertainment Tonight

CAP TAI N 5TEEMER Car ·

675· 1183 .

Datsun ,

79 Cadallic D' Eiegance, A·

9118 .

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spou ting . 30 years ex peri ence. specializing in
built up root . Call388·9857 .

pet Clea ning featured by
Haffelt Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free es timates .

7455.

51 .. Middlepor t 992 1805.

Gold sota 92 tnc hes long,
small er co uch green prin t
Both 1n good co nd . 2 mat·
c hmg swivel c ha irs, good

1975 Chevro let Nova, 6
cy linder , good conditi oned
304·882·225.4 .

4

1975 Cnse 450, dozer
tra c tor , 1.800 hrs .. very For Sale 15 shee t s 4x8
qoocl cond , $14,900. Call Celotex, Redwood 6 in .
446 4537
Siding . Eldon Walburn, Jrd.

Ca ll 367-7759 .

=-Autos for Sale_ _

304-675· 5506.
1970 Dals un SIOO . 304-675·

Sk 1equipment . 992 ·6040.

Small 2 cus h1on sofa.
green. orange, &amp; gold fl oral
Herculon, exc. cond ., S150

7} =

72 FORD torino, 6 cy l.
aut omatic, 5300. 304·675·

Round ba les of hay for sa le.
Call 446·4036 or 4.46·6566 .

For Sa l e or Trade

5930, Jackson. Oh . RON For Sa le : 16ft . fiber g la ss
EVA NS ENTERPRISES
Si lverline
85 Evenrude .

3886.

(fi) Ulias, Yoga and You
ID 1]21 ABC News
7 :00 I ) Cil P.M . Magazine
Cil Bull' s Eye
Cil Carol Burnen and
Friends

9

~isc . _~ ~':_chandice

Golf cl ubs, youth model ,
exc ellent c ond1t1on with
bag &amp; car l, $35. Call 446

Cll Muppet Show
0 Cll ® CBS News
Cll Dr. Who

~~~0children. s 1oo. ca 11 256- ~~~~=~=====lr~==;~~=~~=12oyr~~&gt;&lt;P~c~~3-B_8 ~s~ -

For Sa le : Hard brick , steel
posts(4) 6 .ffi ., stee l ' 1'
Jois ts, lumber -used, used
doors ex terior -interior, t ri ·
m , 2 mantel s-oak . 3 pr .
sl iding oak door s with
guide walls, so l id oak an
tiqu e stai r s, spindle and
r ails 992·6254 after 5 or
wee k ·ends.
Pla stic Sep ti c Tanks . State
and county approved . 1,000
gal. tank, price $340 . Other
SIZ es in stock, hau l in your
pi ckup tru ck Ca ll 614 ·286·

1

m Gomer Pyle

PAINTING
interior and
ex t er i or,
plumbing,
rooting, some remodeling .

byHenr1ArnoldandSob Lee

"

(I) Andrews Raiders Part

tex tured cei lin gs com ·
mercial and residentiaL
free estimates. Ca ll 256·
1182.

For sa le pony, mare ni ce

S9

54

CAPTAIN EASY

STUCCO PLASTER ING

stock .

---

TWO bedroom furnished
mobile hom e, $185. per
rnonth plus uti liti es, $50

18 acres for SAle La'{S nice.
meadows .lnd wood lan ds.

446·0322

367·0544

International

bedroom

~~c reage

ava ilabl e. Call after 1 p.m .
378·6278.

Quee n se t s, $195. 4 dr .
c hes ts. $42 Bed fra mes,
S20 .and $25., 10 gun Gun
c ab1nets, S350. , dinette
c hairs $20. and $15 . Gas or
elec tric ranges, $295 Or ·
thopedic super firm , $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35.
bed frame s S20, $25. &amp; $30 .
Used Furniture bookcase ,
5 pc. dinett se t , 3 Livi ng
room su i te . Ranges and
TV's . 3 mi tes out Bu l aville
Rd Open 9am to 7pm, Man
thru Fri ., 9am to5pm , Sat

81
Home
_ _ I mprove_!!'.!_n_.!~ _

HARTS Used Cars, New
2

Up land Road , 1150. monlh,

1 ac r e river front lots, first
time advertised. Financ ing

Furnished Apt . 5 rooms
and bath -no pet s. Deposit
required . 992·2937 .

304-675·5110.

367·0288.

304-576· 2441 .
__ _!, ots

ween 3&amp; 6 PM .

$58.. firm , $68 . and $78

News
(1) Andy Griffith
Cll ABC News
Cll 3 -2 -1 , Contact
(fi) Over Easy
8:30 I ) Cil CD NBC News
Cil S50,000 Pyramid

Ca ll388 -9790.

Ca ll

~,

EVENING

sertlees

Purebred Beagle 4 mos.
old . Co lor balck, white &amp;
tan . S75 tor both or wi ll

I DOLMY·I
I ...

DCIJCDO Cil® ID CHI

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these four Jum~s .
one lener Ia each square, to fOfm
four ordinary words.

4/29/82
8 :00

POODLE GROOMI NG .
Ca ll Judy Taylor al 3677120.

'\l'Jt\1'\Ml ID'll

~~~~ !I

rJ
__
---

THURSDAY

BR IARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
AKC
Go rdon
se tt e r s,
Engl ish Cocker Spa ni el s.

tain 's bed s, $275 . comp lete .
Baby beds, $99 . Mattresses
or box spri n gs, full or twin,

COUNTRY MOB IL E Home

2 bdr. trailer furni shed,
adults on l y , Brow n Trail er
Park . 992·3324 .

trail ers ,

3~

773-5187

ter 6PM .

2 bdr . furnished, m odern &amp;
clean . Conv eni ent loca tion
Ref &amp; dep req Cal l 245·

ter4 : 30 .

Farm 76 acres . Good
house, barn , work shop,
sm a ll chi c ~te n hou se . 1 mile
west of Langsville on Sr .
124. 742·2860after4 p .m.

304 485 5185 .

Mobil e home space for
rent, private lot in Cen ·
tenary . Ca l l446 4053 .

T H REE

_ f~r_m_s ~o~ ~a l~ .

Modern 2 bd .room Town
House Ap t . in Tupper s
Plains area . No pets. Call

46

615 2474 or 30 4 576 2490 a l

33

I bed room furn 1shed apt .

9915434 . 992 5914 or 304 882
2566.

446 4225 or 446·0756 .

Phone 304·882 2820
1979 3 bedroom, l1berty,
14 x70, $14,000., exce ll ent
condition , excel lent buy ,

mans. Cal l 446·7795.

KENNEL

I PM .

Mobil e hom e f or ren t . Ca ll

675 3773
1977
Sc hult z.
thre e
bedroom gas heat. par
t ial l y furn ished, 304·675

Furnished apt
1 bdr .,
adu lt s, $100, e lectnc. water
paid . Ca ll 446·4416 after

675 1972.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; 1nsured . Ca l l

Board in g a ll breeds, cl ean
indoor ·outdoor facilities .
A l so AKC Reg . Dober ·

11

The

Television
•
•
VIeWing

1971 10 FT Sycamore truck
ca mper, gas stove, hot·
water h'ea ter, 2 way
r ef rigera tor, shower &amp;
commode, exce ll ent con·
dition, $1,000. Phone 304·

trade.

Bissel l. 949·2801 or 949 2860.

W.VA . 992 7352
Elcona 12x65 Mobile home
for sa le Furnished in good
co nd on co unty road I 669

3844 a fler 4 p .m .

S250 . a nd up to $350 . Cap

COLOR TV's, 1 Sy lvanoa 20

APARTMENTS
bedroom , rent star ts at
$152 per month . 2 bedroom
star ts at \188 per mon th .
Specia l ra tes for Senior
Citizens . Call 446 2745 .
Jackson Estates .

Ca ll 446-1788 .
Brick &amp; lrame b i level
hom e on over 1 acre of
wooded land, 3 bedrooms,
par t ially
finished
ba se ment
wllh
wood
burner . Poss1ble 9 112o-o
loan assumption $56,000

DICK TRACY

Himalayan , Persian a nd
Sia mese k ittens. Ca ll «6·

HILLCREST

Homes
for Sale
----------

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

29 1982

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

446·7398 .
LAYNE' S FURNITURE

bedroom

==

Sl

dry e r s,
r efrigerators,
rang es .
Skaggs
Ap
ptiances. Upper River Rd .,
bes ide Stone Crest Motel.

TMGMSecvES --·
S ITTIN' ON ToP

Rea'l Estate
31

Thunday, April 29, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Need so mething hauled
away or something moved?
We'll do i t . Call 446·JIS9 or

Cll Captioned ABC News

MAW!! FETCH ME MY
CORtJ-SQUEEIIN'S !!

614·186·5740 afler 6.

OL' LAZY BONES IS

NEVER AROUND WHEN

I NEED HER

Limestone haul ed tr ac tor
and trailer-25 to 35 ton

® MOVIE : ' Paper Chase'
1 1 :45 (!) MOVIE : 'Escape from
New York'
1 2 :00 Cil Burns &amp; Allen
Cil MOVIE: 'Red Toma hawk '
(I) 0) 1]21 Vega$ A castno

limit 992 -5275 or 742 -2153.

owner frames Dan for the

murder o f two

g~rls.

(Ri (60

min.)

JIMS Water Service. Ca ll

Cll PBS late Night
12:30 I ) I1J CD Late Night with

· Jim Lanie r, 304·675-7397 .

If you need your trash
hauled away, ·call H arper

David Letterman David is
joined by Richard Lew1s.

304-675-5868 between 1 PM

(60 min .)
Benny Show
0 Cll MOVIE: ' McMillan
&amp; Wife: Death is a Seven
Point Favorite'
I]) I Morried Joan
8GZNews
ill My Uttle Margie
CD Newa/Sign Off
(!) MOVIE: ' Nobody's
Perfekt'
I]) MOVIE: ' Manfish '
(])Bachelor Father
ill I Believe
Cil Ufe of Riley
Cil Bums &amp; Allen
(!) MOVIE: 'Up the
Academy'
Cil Jack Benny Show
I]) MOVIE:
'Sherlock
Hollllft Wid the Voice of
Tenor'
ill I Married Joan
ill My Uttle Margie

and S P . M . Lawn mower
r epaired .

limestone,

•

sand

1 :00

and fill dirt 304-882-2867 .

'

i~ " ~ ~ ~~H~~;_p~ir~ ~ ~

PEANUTS

Escort Service. Call 245·
9514. '

. TRI 'STATE
UPKOLST'!=.RY SHOP

1 :30
1 :45

Mobile home .repair, , V ee.

~ : ~ ~ ~i~~-i!ry ~ ~ ~

2:00

,;
"

2:30
3:00
3 :1 6

1163 Sec. Ave., Galllpotis.-,

446·7833or446· 1833.

'"

-·-.--·- ---·-- ·-- -·- .,..•
MOWREYS Upholstery Rt "
1 Bo-1:/4, Pt. Pleasant, 304:,:
67S.4154. •
'

___ _. - -- __.__ . .-·--...
__

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
DOWN
I Take the lead I Late
potentate
5 Fine
2 "G WTW "
porcelain
setting
10 Rabbit
11 Deb ilitating 3 Near East

native
13 Ir is h islands
4 Italian
14 Partial
refund
painter
15 Native
5 String
e nvirorunent
of pearls
17 Beach
6 Michelangelo
benefit
work
18 Actress Balin 7 Eye
19 Get - of
8 Vituperation
20 Drugged
9 Involved
23 E ig ht
12 Grammatical
furlongs
tenn

3 :30

4:00
4 :30

Yt&gt;sterday's Answer

16 Row of sea\5
20 Ruling
21 Common
fra ction
22 Average
23 Toby
24 Lead astray
25 Curse

27 Trumpel's kin
29 Derision
.12 E:ncou r age
13 Anklebones
:14 Viva voce
l5 Pay
for usage
:11 Pedro's aun t

24 Sub's "e yes"
25 Jewish
philosopher
26 Cuchulain's
wife
27 E nclosed
28 Surnamed
(Fr. I
29 One of
t he Trinity
30 French one
31 P roducer
36 Ohio
38
39
40
41

ci ty
Disclose
Intact
Joie de vivre
Secy. -Den.

U42 Joust

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how
AXYDL8 AAXK
li

Cil Jack

Will do general hauling ,
gravel,

~

to work it:

LONGFEI.I.OW

On e letter simply stand!i. for anoth er. In this samp l e A iA
used for th e thre~ L's, X ror th e two O's. ('lc. Si ngl e l etters.
apoatrophes, the l ength and formatio n of the words are all

hints . Each day the code le tte rs are differe n t.

CKYPTOQ UOTES
QT
QT

MFT

YTFT

VMR

Q Y M C

D W Z T.

CL

QT
PWF

CL

MXX

RLC

V M R
QWDDWMI

QYM C

CL

JTC

Z F L I ,
LPDTF

Yestenlay's Cryptoquote: TIIAT IS THE BEST GOVERN~NT WIDCH DESIRES TO MAKE TilE PEOPLE HAPPY ,
AND KNOWS HOW TO MAKE THEM HAPPY. - LORD
MACAULAY

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) House members have come up
with a new version ot an alleged
budget·balancing bill, raising the
state Income tax and cutting state
spending by as much as 9 percent.
A three-member subcommittee
completed It Wednesday and sent It
to the tuJI Ways and Means Com·
mlttee, which was expected to OK It
today.
The bill retains the 25 percent Jn.
come tax surcharge in the Senate
version, but makes deeper cuts in
some spending areas whtle reslnr·
ing some of the reductions made by
the Senate in education and
welfare.
Chalnnan Wllllam E. Hlnlg, DNew Phtladelphla, said new tax revenues and spending cuts In the
redrawn bill total more than $Ul43
blll1on.
That amount, combined with $318
mllllon worth of cuts already

salesman ; Kevin Kane, Newspaper Advertising
Bureau, New York, N. Y., wbo conducted the two-hour
session; Tom Skinner, advertising manager, GalllpoUs
Tribune, and Ken Drum, executive director, Ohio
Newspaper Association.

Budget draft, piece by piece
WASHI NGTON tAP ) - Co n·
gress has no choice but to try to
draft a budget "a piece a t a time"
after the !allure of President Rea ·
gan a nd House Speaker Thomas P.
O' Ne ill J r. to resolve the lr dlfferen·
ces on "dollars and phllosophy"
during a three·hour ba rgaining
session.
"This doesn't mean tha t the government has broken down," said
House Ma jorit y Lea de r Jim
Wright , D·Texas. "Now It goes
back to the orderly process of legls·
Ia tion In the House a nd in the Sena te where It would have had to go
in any event. ''
The pres ident sched uled a na tion·
ally broadcast address tonight (8
p.m. EDT ) to discuss the afterm a th
of his unprecedented Capitol Hill
meeting Wednesday with O'Neill
a nd other congressional leaders.
" Our feeling Is we slrnply were
not met half way," said White
House Chief of Staff James A.
Baker m. He led administration
bargainers In the series of 13 budget
m eetings between White House off!·
cla ls and members of Congress
that led up to the session Wednes·

day in the richly decorated Pres!·
dents' Room off the Senate floor .
O'Neill, D·Mass., said comprom·
lse was elusive because ot "basic
phllosph!ca! disagreement" be·
tween the White House and con·
gr es slonal Democ rats . The
president believes hls "spending
cuts of last year, which he wants to
cut some more, a re not hurting
anyone out there In America," the
speaker added.
Senate Majority Leader Howard
H. Baker Jr., R·Tenn., who also at·
tended the meeting Wednesday,
said the "differences between us
were so great in both dollars and
phllosophy" that agreement was
Impossible.
Democrats said the talks col·
la psed with thelr rejection of a last·
minute compromlse proposal from
Sen. Baker - that Rea gan had ac·
cepted - calling tor a three-month
delay In the 10 percent personal in·
come tax rate cut scheduled for
July 1!Rl That was to have been
coupled with a three·month delay
In the 7.4 percent Social Security
cost-&lt;&gt;f·llvlng increa se scheduled
for thls July.

achieved In the current biennium,
are designed to wipe out a budget
detldt tor the 1981-1983 biennium o!
$1.362 blll1on,.Hlnlg said.
The subcommittee used revenue
forecasts and estlmates ot savings
as a result o! cuts which were supplied by the Legislative Budget
ott!ce.
Those estlmates were more optimlstlc than Gov. James A.
Rhodes' ott!ce o! Budget and Man·
agement, which said the deficit as
ot July 1, 1983, without any leglsla·
tlve action, would total $1.5 blll1on.
Hlnlg's subcommittee used a ser·
les ot schemes to reach the $1.043
blll1on total.
It decided to pay Medicaid providers only 90 percent ot their estl·
mated costs the remainder of the
biennium. It did the same tor nurs·
Ing homes, except that they would
receive 92 percent.
Alter the start ot the next bien·

......

&gt;-4

Si

04

IIIU

FRI.-SAT. and MON.

ONE RACK

75% OFF

JOGGING SHOES •1000

20% TO 50% OFF
OPEN MON .· SAT.
9: 30·5: 00

s martly styled ball poinl pen

- S i Iveror Gold
- Stretch Band
MEN'S and LADIES
STYLE
ONLY

$13.95

LADIES'
LITTLE GIRLS'

SUMMER SHORTS

Extra special sale prices on
our entire stock of misses
and half size dresses. sundresses. jacket dresses, 2 pc.
dresses and many, many
other styles.

Reg. 16.00 ........ SALE
Reg. 24 .00 . ...... SALE
Reg. 32.00 ....... SALE
Reg . 40 .00 ....... SALE
Reg . 52.00 ..... . . SALE

Sale 2.79
Sale4.39
Sale 6.39
Sale 9.59

LADIES DUSTERS
Zipper or snap front sty les
in terry, plisses or po·

ly / collon blends. Sizes S
thru XXL in assorted
prints and co lors.

Sale Priced

From Only

Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships
and corporations .• ,, .• , ...•. . •.. ••••• •••.•••••... ,., •• •• •••••• ,.,, •• ,. 2,003,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals, partner·
ships and corporations •• ,, •••••••.. , ••••.. •• ,,., .•....•••••• ,,,, .••• • . II ,848,000.00
Deposits of United States Government. ••••. , •••.• ,,, .••••• , ••••• ,., ••• , ••••••• 42,000.00
Deposits of States and political

Our new summer selection of patterns and col -

waist - Buy now for
graduation
and
Father ' s Day gifts.

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

Coroner orders additional tests

Sale 12.60
Sale 16.10
Sale 19.60
Sale 25.90
Sale 33.60

JOHNSTOWN, Ohio- Tile body ot U.S. Rep. John Ashbrook was
not buried after hls funeral Wednesday because a coroner ordered
more tests, but w1ll be buried thls week, ottlcia!s say.
Ashbrook died suddenly ot what a coroner said was massive Inter·
nal bleeding.
Funeral dlrector Lloyd Crouse Jr. said Thursday that Licking
County Coroner Dr. Robert Raker ordered the casket contalnlng
Ashbrook's remains returned to Crouse and Son Funeral Home after
Wednesday's funeral.
The coroner said later Thursday that no additional tissue samples
were needed tor testing and said he expected burial to be either
today or Saturday. He said burial would be private and that he
ellpected results !rom tests In about two weeks.

Sizes 8 to 20 in a fine selec tion of styles and colors for
spring and summer wear.

Entire Stock included .
Boys'
Boys'
Boys'
Boys'

2.95 Knit Shirts . .. 2.34
6.95 Knit Shirts . . . 5.44
9.95 Knit Shirts . .. 7.74
12.95 Knit Shirts. 10. 14

Suspension~

KNilSHIRTS ·
.+
Entire stock included for this

sale. Sizes: Small, medium,

large and exira large. Short
sleeve styles for spring and
summer wear. You'll l)ke !he
selection and savings.

----

lifted on playcop

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio- The city on Thursday utted the inde!lnlte
suspension ot a policeman who appeared In un!torm In two phOtographs ot the May edition o! Playboy magazine along with a woman
ottlcer, who appeared nude in a photo layout.
. Patrolinan Douglas Radel w1ll return to work li'r!day, !oliowing
live days ot suspension without pay, City Manager Thomas M. Bay
said Thursday afternoon.
Radel had been photographed while on duty with policewoman
Barbara Schantz, who was paid
to pose nude in other photos
lor the Playboy edition.
Both Schantz and Radel were placed on lndetlnlte suspensions last
Friday. A police board o! inquiry recommen&amp;!d that Ms. Schantz be
dismissed.

MEN'S

Time certificates of deposit in denominations
of $100,000 or more. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 806,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month)
ending with report date :
Total deposits ••••••. ,, ••..•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 14,975,000.00

m,oo

Men's7.9SKniiShlrts .. . 6.24
Men's 9.95 Knit Shirts . ... 7.74
Men's 1o.9S Knit Shirts .. : 8.54
Men's 12.95 Knit Shirts .. 10.14

By The As._oociated Press
Britaln and Argentina main·
tained a collision course toward a
shootlng war over the Falkland Is·
lands today and the Reagan ad·

'

ministration prepared to side with
the British.
There was speculation In London
of an attack later today by British
carrier planes on the alr!leld at
Stanley, the Falklands capital and
the bridgehead tor Argentina's alr·
l1tt to the estlmated 9,(XX) troops oc·
cupylng the British Island colony.
With Argentina's ruling mllltary
junta retuslng In pull back from the
Islands its forces seized Aprll2, Bri·
taln set the countdown clock run·
nlng Wednesday with the
announcement that It war expand·
maritlrne blockade
lng Its """mtle
u..or
Falklands
to the skies
around the
over the area at noon today London

WASHINGTON (AP) -The government's Index ot Leading lndi·
cators, an important gauge ot
future economic activity, tell tor
the 11th straight month &gt;In March,
the Commerce Department reported today.

CLEVELAND - The wtniJing number .drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game ''The Number" w8s 647.
In the semiweeklY "Pick 4"
the winnlDg number was 4248.
. The lottery reported eemtnp ~ $f'l5,l!N.50 onlts dally game. The
eemtnp came on sales Or $!161.112-M, wblle holders ~ winDing
tickets are. entitled to share $4116,0, lottery omctala said.

pme,

TOWEL SALE .
tntavy weight !Nth towels · wiih matching
. washcloll1 or twtnd towel. Floral pallern on
light background In blue, pink or tan.

Directors

I, Gary P. Norris, Cashier, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition Is true and
correct to the best of my knowledge and belle!.
Gary P . Norris, Cashier
Aprtl ~. 1982

.

..

.

~- ~ · ~'

.

.'

~

televised address from the Oval Office o! the While

'

entinel
2 Section1 , 12 Pages

1S Cenh
A Muhim.dia Inc. New1paper

line.
At the proceedings, Assistant
Franklin County Prosecutor Dave
Johnson explained the check·
cashing scheme to the court and
how Collins !alsltled records of deposits of state funds with the BancO.
hlo National Bank in Columbus.
Johnson said Collins cashed per·
sonal checks in amounts between
$300 and $750, "but mostly in
amounts o! $500," each tlrne mak·
lng tt appear as it the money had
been deposited when no such deposit had been made.
Johnson estlrnated that approxi·
mately $35,(XX) was Involved in the
scheme, but Slgall contested the
amount
Collins worked tor the state treas·
urer's ottlce about 13 years before
resigning last August. He had
worked in the office two years betore state Treasurer Gertrude W.
'Donahey assumed office.
In an unrelated matter, Mrs.
Donahey came under !Ire tor $1.3
mllllon shortage ot state funds, revealed in an August 1981 audit

time (7 a.m. EDT).
The Argentine junta retaliated
Thursday night with an Immediate
embargo against British ships and
aircraft within 200 mtles of the Ar·
200 mtl
gentlne coast and for
es
around the Falklands and Its depen·
dencles, South Georgia and the
South Sandwich Islands.
It said British violators of these
zones would be "treated
accordingly."
A spokesman for British Prime
Mlnlster Margaret Thatcher said
the Argentine declaration "does not
change Britain's position one Iota.
We are sticking to our plans tor a
200-mtle total exclusion zone."
The British on Sunday recaplured South Georgia """mtles east
''""'
of the Falklands, putting one ot Ar·
gentlna's tour submarines out o! ac·

The 0.5 percent decline in the in·
dex was the same as in February,
hardly a sign that the recession
might be nearing an end.
The Index ls designed to forecast
economic trends ohe month or
more in advance.
Many economists, Including
thOse in the Reagan admlnlstra·
tlon, are forecasting at least some
recovery by late spring or summer.
But lew signs ot that are showing up
5o tar.

Pomeroy Is at !be local forefront of a
nationwide trend in hospital care :U hour emergency physician care

Mostly cloudy tonlgbt. Lows near 50. Winds southeasterly less
than 10 mpb. CbaJice ~ · ~ ~ ~t. .Varlal* cloudllleSs
· Satlq'day with a 30 percent cbaDce ~ illloWeP.' Hllba 65-70.

· ·',IN.POME · . ,

Exteeded Oblo FGiec.it

8aDcla,y lhroaP on-lay.

' 'a.- oi ...... !laadt.J.

Fair MGIIda,y ...

'l'lleldaJ. Mild.

' m.- Iaiiie apper . . to !lllli!II'~.:.W.~Iallle 3 ,
"

·~

/

House Thursday evening on the budget. During the
speech, the president had some trouble getting a red
marker to work on the chart. lAP Laserphoto) .

CARRIER ON STATIC'/ - Argentina's aircraft carrier "25th of
May" Is on station in the South Atlantic in this photo made Wednesday
and released Thursday in Buenos Aires. Tbe government announced It
w111 shoot any plane or sblp In 200 miles of Its territories In answer to the
British-announced blockade of the Falkland Islands. (AP Laserphoto).

••

....•

•to low

p

'

'.

DR'. JACit DOENINQ

,.
t

\

'

tlon, and the Sandwich Islands
have not been touched by the con·
ru
ct so 1ar.
Mrs. Thatcher was urged again
Thursday by the opposition Labor
p rty in th H
f Commons to
a .
e ouse 0
halo back t he fleet and pursue dl·
plomacy, and again she refused.
'"hi d
to
"It would be h.,; Y angerous
" h
lied
bluff in that way, s e rep
·
"Gentle persuasion ls not go in g to
make the Argen tlne governmen t
"
give up what It se!zed by force.
She said the two-week-&lt;&gt;ld sea
blockade o! the Islands had been
completely success tul and afte r taday's introduction ot the air exclu·
slon zone, the Argentine forces on
the Falklands w1ll be totall Y Iso"
ff by
d 1r "
Ia ted - cut o
sea an a ·
"It was the Argentlne invas Ion
risi
d It Is
which started thls c s an
Argentine withdrawal that must

pu.~;:::~ ~n~~~ ~= d~l~~· rered
g t
thr
vy t .. ytlredp
pa
to mee any
ea , re
Adm. Jorge Alberto Fraga told for·
d
elgn correslBpon e ntsA!at a news coedn·
fer ence n uenos res sponsor
by the Argentine J oint Chiefs of
Staff
·
U.S. efforts to arrange a peaceful
solution crumbled with Argentina's
cool reaction to new Amertcan
proposals. Amid mounting proBritish congressional pressure, a
U.S. official told The Associated
Press that the State Department
was drafting a statement support·
lng Britain.
The official said the decision to
make It public had not been made
yet But there was no doubt that the
Reagan administration , after
weeks of fence-sitting, had decided
It must side with Britain .

The government reported last
week that new orders tor durable
goods rose strongly In March. But
other '"leading indicators" in the
new report were less encouraging.
A decline In the average work·
week was the biggest !actor holding
down the March Index, the report
said, Indicating that the national
unemployment rate may well rise
above the March level o! 9 percent
- already matching the highest
mark since World War II.

Other negative Indicators for
March Included ln!tlal claims for
state unemployment aid -another
bad sign for the jobless rate vendor deliveries, raw materials
prices, stock prices and total Uquld
assets, the new report said.
Positive indicators Included new
orders for consumer goods and
materials, contracts and orders tor
new plants and equipment, riSing
building materials and an increase
In the nation's money supply.

Emergency physician is chosen

Weather• forecast

' .•.. 1STORE HOURS FRI~Y 9:30-8 P.M•.:..~TURDAY 9:~5.~~M.

. ·-· LS

BUDGET SPEECH - President Reagan points to

a chart as he poses for photograpben just after his

Veterans Memorial Jlospltol of

4.99 Bath Towel ••••.•...... Sale 3.49
2.99 Hand Towel ••• , ••••..• Sale 1.99
1.49 Wash Ciotti .... , ....... Sale 1.09

···.··

.

Indicators reveal recession still on

Winning Ohio lottery number

We, the undersigned !lirectors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge
and belief is true and correct.

s"

U.S. peace effort fails, conflict at hand

New Spring Douglas Marc
and Bradley coordinate
sportswear. New colors
and styles in
iackefs,
skirts, slacks, tops and
blouses. Misses sizes 5/ 6

BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS

Men's 14.95
DRESS SLACKS . 11.95
Men's 18.95
DRESS SLACKS . 15.15
Men's 21.95
DRESS SLACKS . 17.55
Men's 26.9S
DRESS SLACKS

subdivisions in United States •••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• , ••••••••••• 855,000.00

SPORTSWEAR SALE

SAVE FRIDAY and SATURDAY!

ors in sizes 29 to so'

Certified and officers' checks , . .... ,, •• , •••• ,, •• ,,,, ...... ,,,., ••••••• ,...... 64,000.00
Tota I Deposits, , •• ••• ••• , , , ••.•..••••••••• , • , •• , , , , ............ , , • , , •••••• 14,812,000.00
Total Deposits
Total demand deposits.,., •••• ,,, •••••••• , ••••••••••• ,....... 2,558,000.00
Total tlrne and savings deposits ................... ·•••• , ••••••• 12,254,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debentures )•• ••••• , .............. ... ,.,, ••• ,, •••• ,., ....... ; 14,8121000.00
Common stock
No. shares outstanding
5000 (par value)

-,LADIES'

lo 17118.
Reg. 18.00
Reg. 23.00
Reg. 28.00
Reg. 37.00
Reg. 48.00

ME

DRESS SU.CKS

·---~ Amounts outstanding as of report date

Reg . 3.50 . . ...
Reg. 5.50 .. .. .
Reg. 8.00 . . .. .
Reg. 12.00 ... .
SALE

4.000.00 ___

No. shares outstanding
5000 (par value), ••••• ,.,, •••• ' ••••• , ••••••••••• 126,000.00
Surplus •••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • 125,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for
contingencies and other capital reserve .... .... ......................... ·1,157,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• , 1,407,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .................... , ........ 16.219.00Q.OO

Many colors and styles. ·
Knits,
poly/cotton
blends,
terry
and
denim. Sizes 6 to 24
mos ., 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7
to 14.

12.00
18.00
24.00
30.00
39.00

! ll 0 '•

Later, Bolling told reporters the
president's speech "almost assures
It w1ll tie up the Congress In a sltua·
tlon where we don't get a result"
He added that he had pushed tor
budget negotiations with the ad·
mlnlstratlon rather than contronta·
tlon this year "because I !eel so
strongly that we've got to be able to
!unction thls year, in one way or
another."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ronald E. Collins, a former cashier In
the state treasurer's ottlce, and
former Meigs Countlan , has
pleaded gullty to theft in ottlce and
record tampering.
Franklin County Judge George
E. Tyack ordered a pre-sentence
investlgatlon Thursday before lm·
posing tlnal judgment
Collins, 35, who resigned last
year, was indicted in December by
a Franklin County Grand Jury on a
six counts.
Tyack explained to Collins that
he could be sentenced !or a min·
\mum of one to three years to a
maximum ot 10 years and a $10,00
tine on the theft·ln-ottlce charge, a
third-degree felony. While Collins
sat tlanked by attorneys Herschel
M. Slgall and Larry Zlngareill,
Tyack explained to hlm that, by
pleading gullty, he could no longer
serve on a public payroll In Ohio.
On the charge ot tampering with
records, a fourth-degree felony,
Collins could face a minimum sent·
ence ot six months to two years to a
maximum of five years and a $2,500

- LCD Quartz
- 5 Functions

with an LCD Quartz Watch built
right in! Watch functions in·
elude : hour, minute, second,
month and date.
Don' t Forget Mother's Day!

s

Former cashier
pleads guilty
to theft charges

Pomeroy, Oh.

WATCH SPECIAL

PEN WATCH

(THREE YEARS)

we can produce something that's
good tor you and good tor the coun·
try and good tor the future of the
country," said Bolling, responding
without a prepared text
He said the budget problem' Is
neither Republican nor Democratic and "It's very lrnportant that
we have blparllsan cooperatlon all
the way through."

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 30, 1982

KIDDIE SHOPPE
111 W. 2nd

SPENDING CUTS

he Daily
Voi.30,No.267
Copy•lghtod 1912

SPECIAL VALUE

TOTAL ASSETS.,, ..•• •••• •••.•.•••••• ••••• . •••• •• ,,,,,,,, •••••••••••••• , 16,219.00!).00

Earl Cross
John T. Wolfe
Carroll K. Norris

SIDEWALK SALE

OTHER BARGAINS

Charter number 9815
National Bank Region Number 4
--.-Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Thousands
Cash and due from depository institutions , ••• , . . ... , ...... , ..... . ..... , • • • • • 671,000.00
U. S. Treas ury securities , ............ , ••• ,, •• • ,,, .•. ••. ,.,.,,,,,,,,, ....... 2,177,000.00
Obligations of States and political
sutxll vis10ns in the United States •• , ••• ,,., .. ,, ••• ,, ••••.•.••• ,, •• , •• ••• • 1,413,000.00
All other securities .. ... ............... .. .......... , .• • . •••••••••••• •.. ,.,.. 111,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell,, . , •• , ••••••••.••• •• ,.,,,.,, .. , ••••••••••••• 1,400,000.00
Loa ns, Total (excluding unearned income) .. .. . .. ............. 10,465,000.00
Less : Allowance for possible loan losses.... . ............ .. ...... 126,000.00
Loans, Net •••• ••• ••••• .••••• , •• • ••• , ..• • ,., .. , •••••• , •• •••••••••••••• 10,339,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises,, .... . ,,.,., ... ,,, ..... , ••.••• , •.. 104,000.00

_,

ments which were to go back into
the emergency school loan lund.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on March 31, 1982 published in response to
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.

.-..

general tund an expected outlay ot
$20 mllllon In school loan repay·

"You did It once - you can do It
again," Reagan said.
With the t!rst budget Reagan submitted ,o Congress thls year all but
forgotten - and ettorts to tlnd a
biparllsan alternative to It in sham·
bles - Reagan said he intends "to
forge the beginnings o! an accepta·
ble budget lnltlatlve."
·
Congressional Democrats, how·
ever, said Reagan's strategy w111
not work thls year and w1ll succeed
only in tying Congress In knots.
Rep. Richard Bolling ot Mls·
sour!, glvtng the Democrats' broad·
cast responSe lrnrnediately after
Reagan's speech, said the pres!·
dent was being too poUtlcal and
making an appeal that threatens to
deadlock Congress on the budget
Issue.
"It we work together effectively

SAVE AT ELBERFELD$

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

4

The subcommittee came up with

$20 mllUon by transferring into the

IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

Ill

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
dent Reagan ls launching a new
budget campaign with a call to the
voters to "do It again" ar.d convince
Congress to line up tor hls economi~
program.
The president summoned con·
gressional Republicans to the
White House today and planned to
meet with prospective Democratic
allies Monday In an apparent at·
tempt to reassemble the coalition
that delivered his t!rst round ot tax
and budget cuts last year.
In a nationally broadcast address
Thursday night, the president told
the public to let "your representa·
tlves know that you think thls ls no·
time tor politics as usual - that
you, too, want an end to runaway
taxes, spending, government debt
and high interest rates."

the total addition to the bill !or those
services to $64 m1111on.

CONVERSE BASKETBALL OXFORDS
1fz PRICE s4oo
.SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

REPORT OF CONDITION

--......
iii

amountlntederaldollars , b~

SIQEWALK_SALE DAYS

DRESS SALE

lit

Reagan requests
•
voter .assistance

nlum, both providers would receive
the amount ot actual costs tor
which they were not relrnbur.!ed.
The subcommittee estlrnated the
maneuver would add about $32 mil·
Uon to the state's general lund over
the next Knnonths. The $32 mllUon
would quaLity Ohio tor an equal

SIZES UP TO 6

"That, tor all practical purposes,
was just not any deal at all and we
turned It down rather quickly,
flatly," said Rep. Richard Bolling,
[).Mo., who attended the meeting
and emerged as the spokesman tor
House Democrats.
"About that tlrne, we got to the
point where we were talking about
the lnabillty to get together on the
crucial Issues," Bolling said.
Senate Republtcans had a
slightly dltterent version.
A Senate Republican source, who
asked not to be quoted by name,
said Reagan himself altered a ~
day delay in the July 1983 tax cut It
the Democrats would split the dlf.
terences remain!ng in other areas.
Presumably, thls would have meant some adjustment in cost-&lt;&gt;!·
living increases, although not in
1982. But, the source said, Democrats rejected that otter.
"President Reagan and hls people honestly believe that thelr program Is !alr and I know that we're
convinced that It Isn't fair ," Bolling
said . "And I think It broke really on
that Issue. "

• -- +- All otherassets.......... ....................................................

Thursday, April 29, 1982,

Budget balance bill rewritten

'!
TAKE PART IN CLINIC- Approximately 75 individuals attended Wednesday morning's retail advertising clinic at the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis. The
event was sponsored by the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Left to right are Tim Halstead, Sentinel advertising

.

provided tbrough a specialty group.
Earlier this month, VMH formally
contracted with Medical Emergency
Associates, Inc., a Louisa, Kentucky, based finn, to provide around
lbe clock emergency room physician
care at the hollpib\1.
Directing the services in Pomeroy
Is Dr. Jack Kroening, a partner in

•

Medical Emergency Associates, hospitals in West Virginia, Kentucky
Inc., and a· board certified physician and Ohio. The specialty group
with a strong background in family utilizes the services of more than 30
practice and emergency medicine.
physicians in the three slates. Dr.
Dr. Kroening, a Nebraska native, Kroening says the firm focuses on :
operated a successful private prac- emergency medicine "as a
!ice in Scotts Bluff, Nebraska, for speciality, not as a sideline," adnine ye~~rs before joining Medical , ding, "we work within the adEillergency Associates, Inc., in ministrative structure and staff
May,l981.
structure of every hospital we serve
Medical Emergency Associates, to provide the highest quality
founded , four years ago, provides emergency care."
emergency room caR to seven

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