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•
12-The

Tuetday, FebNGrY 7, 1984 :

Sentinel

Controlling board ·approves
request for monitor systems
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Liquor Department plans to have roving electronic monitors watch
state liquor stores In an effort to cut theft losses that
run as much as $250,00&gt; a year .
The &lt;::ontrolllng Board on Monday approved a
Department gf Liquor Control request to lease a video
surveillance system for five years - a t a cost of
$17,450 per year.
Controllers were told the agency will hire the
Digital Matrtx Co., Columbus, to install the system a t
30 stores around the state which have the highest
Inventory shortages.
Television cameras can be Installed In devices
known as "domes" tha t wUI be placed In the stores.
They wUI be capable of transmitting a picture by
microwa ve to electronic gear In a van located up to
five miles away.
"Any dummy dome may ha ve a camera Installed
to make It an active surveillance dome, but no one wUI
know where the real one is, " controllers were told.
"These dummy domes wUI a lso act as a holdup
deterrent as we wUI supply and post the necessary
warning 'surveillance by closed circuit television'
signs within the store, " the department's request
said.
Richard Carey, department director, pegged the
agency's loss to shoplifting at $250,00&gt; annually out of
gross sales of some $400 million.
Carey said that while most of the problem is
believed to be with customers, "We do have quite a bit
of shoplifting by the employees."

In other action, heeding a utility's proposal, the
Controlling Board Indefinitely postponed two Consumers' Counsel requests for hiring consultants to study
conversion of the Zimmer Nuclear Power Plant to a
coal burning facility .
But controllers granted a third rela ted request for a
$57,032 contract with MHB Technical Associates, San
Jose, Calif., to study whether coal conversion Is
feasible and wUI be the most cost-effective alternative
for Zimmer owners to follow.
The panel's 4-3 votes came after Sam Porter, an
attorney representing the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. - one of the three companies
building Zimmer - argued delay.
Porter said the plant's owners, Cincinnati Gas and
Electric, Dayton Power and Light and the Columbus
utility, had already determined tha t conversion to
coal was the least costly alternative.
He said the studies sought by the Consumers'.
Counsel office were prema ture and would duplicate
efforts already. under way, ultimately forcing
ratepayers to pay twice for the 5ame Information.
Rep. Edward Orlett, D-Dayton, won postponement
of two consultant contracts until the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio grants a Consumers' Counsel
request for ·a formal hearing Into the Zimmer coal
decision.
Kenneth Rosselet, consumers' counsel technical
director, said that If the PUCO schedules the heartog
there may not be enough time allowed to prepare for
It.

C.K. SUPERMRKET
'

BUCKET STEAKS
$1 -~99

CRISPY SERVE BACON .......•L,~ 1.09
SUPERIOR CHUNK BOLOGNA ......~B.· ••••• 89¢
SUP.ERIOR POLISH SAUSAGE •.••••.•~B.· ••••• 99¢
FRESH-LEAN

FRESH-LEAN

Ground Beef

Ground Round

The Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District (SWCD) Is
announcing Its conservation tUiage
program for the 1984 planting
season for com and hay.
The !:i'WCD wUI beoffertogfor rent
a new 2-row, no till Allis Chalmers
pull type com planter. The planter
rental cost Is $lJ minimum charge
up to five acres and then $6 for each
acre over five acres.
Attachments on the planter Inelude fertilizer box, Insecticide
boxes and planter monitor.
The SWCD also has available for
rent a Moore no till drill. The drlll
can be used for hayland and pasture
seedlngs. It works well with both
conventiona l and no-tillage

$1.29

VALLEY BELL

2°/o MILK

..

Seedlings.
Rental cost for the Moore drtllls
$25mlnlmumchargeuptollveacres
and then $4 f&lt;!r each acre over the
five acres.
SWCD technician David Burt wUI
be available to deliver and adjust
both pieces of equipment. He can
also help landowners with questions
and guidance on making no-tUiage
com and grass seedlngs.
For more Information contact the
Meigs SWCD Office In Pomeroy at

992-6647.

•"Wipe-Clean leisure-Time"
interiors .
•Adjustable shelves and slideout trays
•Solid oak frames. doors &amp;
drawer fronts
•Furniture quality finish
•Merillat designed drawer system
•Self-closing hinges
•An array of convenience accessories

. I

RACINE PLANING MILL
SYRACUSE

3rd
992-3978

$1 .59

GALLON

MORE THAN JUST A PRETTY FACE ....... .

VAUEY BELL

PREMIUM ICE CREAMmM ........ '1.69

BROUGHTON'S

BUTTERMILK'1.«i~~h•···

$1.39
MIRACLE
WHIP .qu"sr•••• $1.6·9
•
SHUR FINE
CAKE MIX ............ ·77¢
SHUR FINE
FROSTING MIX 16'izOZ.
88 ¢
~A~
' .

.

GALLON
SEEKS RE-ELECI'ION Praildlng Judge Horner E.
' 'Pete'' Abele has IIIIDOIUKled his
candidacy for reelection to the
Fourth District Court of A~
peals. Judge Abele was first
elected to the court In 1966 and
has been reelected twice without opposition, In 1972 and 1978.
Judge Abele was elected Chief
Justice of the Courts of Appeal of
Ohio In 1977 and .received a
resolution of congratulatloos
passed by the Ohio Senate. The
Foorth Appellate District Is
composed of 14 Southeastern
Ohio counties InclUding Athens,
Meigs and Gallla..

$1 4 9

Limit One

With Thio Coupon
Coupon Effective Fob. 8·12, 1984

~=~:·~v:a:!: .

statewide study Indicated COAD

was operating an efficient program
~- and-provided . assistance to ww---c~-11
Income houSeholds.

16 oz.

10 LBS.

With Thio Coupon
Coupon Effectvo Fob. 8· 12. 1984

C.K. SUPERMARKET

DR. PEPPER

89 ct

.

1914.

.:.r~

.

.

• .

'

C.K~ SUPERMARKET

Ci)PEN DAILY

f

'·

We ReMrve the Right to

Non-essential
Personnel
Evacuated By
Helicopter

West Beirut

I
Peacekeeping
Force

American
Peacekeeping
Force

AMERICAN PERSONNEL EVACUATED The United states Tueilday evacuated n nonessential per110nnel and depeudeul&amp; by helicopter
from Its emballsy In embattled West Beirut, tbe state
Department said. The workers and dependentll were
Down oot by U.S. MariDe helicopters and taken to the

USS Manitowoc, part of the . lxth Fleet sta&amp;ioned
offllhore. Since the fonner U.S. Embaasy was
destroyed by a terrorist bombing In April, III08t
embaesy adlvllles bave been conducted from the
Brlllsh facUlties aloq the coast In West Belnlt. (AP
Laserphoto ),

Social Security rolls enlarge
WASHlNGfON (AP) - The
Social Security rolls, after dropping
twoyearsagodue tothe ellmlnatlon
of some benefits and a disability
crackdown, are growing again and
hit an all-time high In January.
James Brown, spokesman for the
Social Security Administration, said
36,182,!98 retired or disabled
workers and their families received
benefits In January. That was about
22,00&gt; more beneficiaries than iu
March 1982, when the previous
record was set.
The number of beneficiaries had
soared upward without Interruption
every year from 1940, when the first
222,488 people began drawing
monthly Social Security checks.
But afte r hitting 36,161,00&gt; In
March 1982, the rolls began contractlng as the system felt the Impact of
changes that the Reagan adminls·
tratlon and Congress made In 1981,
as well as the sweeping disability
reviews launched that year.
The lawmakers ordered a phaseout of Social Security benefits for
college students ages 18 to 22, who

,

s

has received $319,2.13 from the u.s.
Department of iiealth and Human
. Services for Its new program year,
ending Jan. 31, 1985.
..
· Pfugram Director Christopher
Zimmer reported that the program

·

...

oowserves1~p~~chilmen

...

•

•

,,
\

Temporary U.S.
Embassy

Gallla-Melgs Head Start program

P.. M.
· ~IDDLEPORT, oH:

Llmlt 'Qu~ntltles.

20 C.ntt
A Multimedia Inc. Newspa,_,

used to draw regular dependents'
benefits If they had a parent who was
retired, disabled or deceased.
Students' benefits also were halted
for the first time In the summer
months.
Another change adopted In 1981
led toacutoffofbenefltsforwldowed
mothers when their youngest child
turned 16 Instead of 18. Widows
without children In their care must
walt to age 00 to.draw benefits, or 50
If they are disabled.
In January 1!*11, before the
congressionally-ordered disability
reviews began, 2,857,331 disabled
workers were drawing tax-free
monthly checks. A million had their
eligibility checked over the next 2'n
years and 45 percent were told they
were fit to work.
Many managed to keep their
benefits on appeal. Counting those
workers awarded disability for the
first time, the number of disabled
worker beneficiaries dropped to
2,571, 7Z7 by Apri11983- a reduction
of 285,004. There has been llttle
change In that figure since then.

The total number of beneficiaries
dipped to35,278,0271nAugust 1982down by nearly 900,00&gt; In five
months. But then It began building
·back up, with some monthly
fluctuations , to the current all-time
high.
Brown said Social Security's
actuaries expect the number to
swell to 36.4 million by June. The
Reagan administration fiscal 1985
budget projects further growth to
nearly 37 million next year.
"It's due to the greying of
America," said Brown, referring to
the nation' sgradually rising median
age.
,
The cost of Social Security' s
retirement and disability programs
is expected to rise from $179.8 btlllon
this year to $191.3 blllian next year.
But the administration says that
thanks to higher payroll taxes, a tax
on half of some retirees' benefits
starting In 1984 and a six-month
delay In last July's cost-of-living
Increase, Social Security's trust
funds actually will Increase by $11
billion In 19R'i.

formal written proposal be submitted for conslderatllon.
In other business, bids were
opened for a front -end taoder, a
vibrating compactor (roller) and an
ambulance for Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
One bid was submitted on the
loader from Southeastern Equipment Company In the amount of
$49,955 or In three yearly payments
of$19,014.82. Submitting a bid forth ··
·compactor was Dravo-Marks for

$11,500.
Three bids were received for a

new ambulance.
Submitting bids were Horton Co.,
$40,534, Burgess Hearse and Ambulance Sales, $44,539 and Springfield
Equipment Company, $44,302.
Bob Byer, administrator of Meigs
County Emergency Service, told the
board that a large unit was needed to
carry rescue eqq)Pment.
•
Byer said the new unit will go the
village of Racine and Racine 's old
vehlclewUI beusedbyMelgsCounty
Emergency Medical Service.
Commissioners tabled all bids for
study,

Head Start program receives funds

l SUf'4DAY-9:00 AM, TO
,

2 Sectionl, 12 Pogn

.

.
• ··MIRKET
a:·oo

SECOND ,&amp; M.ILL ST.

enttne

The possibility of placing the
county's real estate tax Information
on a computer system was discussed at Tuesday's regular meetIng of the Meigs County
Commission.
Meeting with the county commls·
sloners were Bill Wickline, county
auditor, George Colllns, county
treasurer and representatives of P .
M. Computer Services of Canton.
It was noted that the county could
show a cost savings If tax collections
were done by computer.
Commissioners asked that , a

.S·UPE'R

With Th.la Coupqn
Coupon EflactiWI Fob. 8-12. 1884

N.-2ND AVE:-·-

.

•

Computerized tax system discussed

PRIC~S EFFECTIVE THRU SUJIII)_AY. FEB. 12TH

Limit Ont

PH. 992•3480
-" MIDDlEPORl;'OH.

LB. PKG.

•Redeem your manufacturers money-savinc coupons at C.K.'s andreceive double the value when you purchase the specified item. One couDouble the value of manu~ pon per item. No expired coupOns accepted. Double redemption offer
facturers' cents off coupons does not apply tb "Free ,lltrchandise"., coupons or coupons over 49' in
fact value. No cash refunds when Double C011pons value exceeds price·
up to 494 in face value.
of ·item. Ciprettes and certain other items are excluded by law. Tojnture product to all our castomers, we are limitin1 our "Double CouSAVE DOUBLE $$
pon" offer to one ilr of Instant Coffee and one can of Ground Coffee
AT C.K. SUPERMARKET per shopjJin1. Double Coupon offer aood Thursday, Feb. 9th,

~~~sit

C.K. SUPE.RMARKET

1984
Jan. 30- A Marine Is killed In a flreflght, raising
the death toil among U.S. personnel serving In the
peacekeeping force to 259. Four other U.S.
servicemen had been killed by a car -bomb explosion
at the U.S. Embassy on April, 18, 1983.
Feb. 6 - One Marine Is wounded as Moslem and
Druse militias continue furious assault to drive
Lebanese army troops out of predominantly Moslem
west Beirut.
Feb. 7- Rebel militias gain control of west Beirut
and one Martoe Is wounded. President Reagan orders
the Marines transferred from their positions at the
airport to offshore Navy ships, saytng "This
redeployment wUI begin shortly and proceed In
stages." A Martoe wounded on J an. 30 dies a t a
hospital In West Germany , bringing the peacekeeping
force death toll to 200.

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9TH

COI'POY S lJ7NGS

the rebels. A statement published by
the leftist newspaper As·Saflr said
the brigade would assume security
duties In west Beirut
In Paris, the Defense Ministry
said more than 1,lm French troops
In Beirut remained at their posts In
west Beirut this morning, but
patrolsoutsldethelr sector had been
halted. It said there were no
Immediate plans to redeploy the
French contingent.
A spokesman for the 1,400-man
Itallancontlngentsaldtberewereno
new orders concerning Its mission.
But In Rome, Defense Minister
Giovanni Spadollnl said J taly will
reduce Its force, although Jt·ptans no
Immediate withdrawal.
Prime Minis ter Margaret
Thatcher's office said the British
troops were withdrawing to a Royal
Navy ship off the Lebanese coast.
The British contingent arrived In
Beirut on Feb. 8, 1983- exactly one
year ago - In a show of solldarlty
with Its Western allies.
The future of Christian President
Gemayel was uncertain, his army
weakened by Moslem defections
and his U.S-backed govenunent

1983

Crispy Serve Bacon

$199

REG. &amp; DIET

89¢

89 4

1f2 GAL.

aily

March 16 - In the first aitack aimed directly at the
Marines, five suffer minor shrapnel wounds from a
grenade tossed at their patrol south of the airport.
Aug. 29 - The first Marine deaths from hostile
action are reported, with two kllled and l3 wounded
when shells hit the alport compound durtog clashes
between Lebanese army units and Moslem militias.
Oct. 23 - In the bloodlesl attack on the
multinational force, a truck bomb explodes at the
Marine headquarters, killing 241 U.S. military
persoMel.

KAHN'S,.

Plus Deposit

Limit One

99 4

VIT. D. MILK

ALL PRODUCTS

$11 9

1982

BROUGHTON'S

POTATOES
R.C. COLA

'

Until nbw, U.S. naval firepower
has been used only to protect the
Marines and other elements of the
multinational force.
It was unclear If the New Jersey's
she lUng was Intended to protect the
Martoes or aid the Lebanese army.
Brooks said IK: did not know If the
Americans were fired upon before
the battleship opened up at 1: 25
p.m., but said the compound at
Beirut International Airport was hit
by "three or four mortars or
rockets" within minutes after the
battJeshlp began firing.
The Voice of Lebanon radio
station said the New Jersey fired at
least 100 shells In :Jl minutes and
destroyed at least eight Druse
militia gun positions In the central
mountains,
Moslem and Druse militiamen
who took control of west Beirut after
a week of fierce fighting tightened
their grip on the largely Moslem
sector today and the army's 6th
Brigade; under Brig. Gen. Lutfl
Jaber.
to

Aug. 25- A contingent of 1m Marines from the 32d
Marine Amphibious Unit lands at Beirut's International alport as the first group of about 1,00&gt; Palestine
Liberation Organization guen1ltas Is evacuated by
sea. The Palestinians had been under siege In Beirut
by lsraell forces that Invaded Lebanon June 6.
Sept. 10 - The Marines, without suffering
casualties, leave Beirut aboard U.S. Navy 6th F1eet
ships for Naples, Italy, after the evacuation of 8,00&gt;
PLO guerrillas.
Sept. W - President Reagan orders the Marines
back to Beirut following the Sept. 1&amp;-18 massacre of
hundreds of Palestinians In two refugee camps by
Lebanese Christian militiamen. The Martoes are
part! of a 5,&lt;IDmember multinational peackeepklng
force Including French and Itallan soldiers. A small
,
British contlntent joins the force later.
Sept. 29 - The Martoes land again and, with their
troop strength enlarged to about 1,600, and take up
positions at the Beirut Airport.
Sept. :Jl - They suffer their first casualties when
one Martoe Is ldlled and three are wounded by an
undetected ' cluster bomb left from the summer
fighting between the Israelis and PLO guerrillas.

8 8

8 PACK

iDAHO

Weatherization
funds released
The state office of weatherization
has released $426,813 to be used
locally by Gallla-Melgs Commwilty Action Agency In Its home
weatherization assistance program (HWAP).
.
This makes a total of$6,351,541 the
office has provided to too Corporation tor Ohio Appalachl!l!l Development (COAD), said Rep. JolyM
Boster, D-Galllpolls. Athens, Meigs
8nd Gallla counties are members of
COAD.

POTATOES
10 LB. $169
BANANAS
3 LBS. $1 00

The British move followed PresldentReagan'sannouncementTuesday night that the I,QXI U.S, Martoes
would be redeployed to American
ships ott the shores of Lebanon. But
Reagan authorized broader use of
American naval guns and warships
to support the disintegrating Lebanese army and the embattled
govenunent of President Amln
Gemayel.
The salvos by the New Je rsey
apparently were In keeping with
that poUCy, but the targets were not
announced.
A spokesman for the Martoes,
MaJ. Deanll Broolca, said the New

Jersey was "hitting targets way
east of Beirut, oft my map" with Its
1&amp;-lnch guns, the largest afloat.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Following Is a
chronology of the presence of U.S. Martoes In
Lebanon:

SUNDAY ONLY
DR. PEPPeR

UNCLASSIFIED

Story, photo on Page 8

U.S. Marines' Lebanon chronology

SPRITEsrlciJ\~z.

COKE &amp;

PRODUCE
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READY TD SPREAD

VALLEY BELL

99 4

PEPSI ...... }/I~K.~&amp;.Ol-. •• $1 •.59
COKE ..••.•. ~ ~i~~
$1' .09

ALL
WEEK

Story on Page 4

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 8, 1984

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The
battleship New Jersey bombarded
~ positions In the central Leba·
nese mountains today with Its
1&amp;-lnch guns and u.s. Martoes
awaited orders to pull back from
their airport bunkers to ships off the
Lebanese coast.
The 115-man British contingent of
the multinational force withdrew
from Its suburban base and moved
to a ship offshore because of the
"deteriorating" situation In
Lebanon.

Valvolme ANTI FREEZE ...ON. .. 12.99

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1

Business anniversary

U.S. Mari":es leaving
Beirut for battleships

Dr. Pepper .... 994

TECHNICIAN - SWCD District Tecbnlclu David Bun ·cbecks
haylandsee'dngmadewlththeMooreunJ.drfii.Bunlsavallableto8!!81M
Meigs Couniy landowners with this year's no-W CI'Opl.

SVAC leader wins

Vti.32,No .210

'RC COLA
8 PACK

Story on Page 7

Copyrlthrod 1914

$1.89La.

Equipment,
technician
available

Siorle8 on Pace 3

he

$

LB.

Senior center changes

LB.

KAHN'S

$1,19

Olympic round

·,

In Gallla and Meigs counties.
It provides educational experlen·
ces, health and dental services,
parent Involvement and social
serv~ ~.!'_}!Q:.!tyear olds from
law-Income fall)llles, as well as
servicing handicapped children.
Since 1975, the program has

operated an eight-month "full year
part day" program. Head Star!
centers are loca ted In Gallipolis and
Racine. The program employs 23 .
pe9ple ant\ utilizes volunteer and
community contributions, Zlmmt?r
said.

�=::

Commenta•=y
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVIYI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ol The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should be less than 300 words
long. AU leUers are subject to editing and must be slcned with name, address and
telephMe number . No unsigned letlers wUI be published. Letters should be In
good lute, addressln1lssues, not penonaiUies.

:Not necessarily
a contradiction
President Reagan says he supports a balanced budget and equal rights
·for women, yet he wants to amend the Constitution to achieve one but not
.·the other.
· 'That's not necessarily a contradiction. Yet the argument he uses to
oppose the Equal Rights Amendment could apply to the proposal to ·
mandate a balanced federal budget. Reagan feels the courts can force it
. l!tto balance. But on the matter of women's rights, he foresees judicial
- Intervention as "an opportunity for mischief-making."
~- Opponents of a budget amendment claim it has potential for mischief,
·that either it would have to contain so many loopholes that its Impact would
·be llmlted, or its effect could be devastating.
The Congress Budget Office chief talked about "too strong a Shock to the
' economy" if the budget were abruptly squeezed Into balance.
, The amendment that passed the Senate and was killed by the House
· would have permitted deficits. Its principal provision would require
: Congress to approve red ink by a three-fifths vote.
: Both issues are part of the current political debate and are likely to
.remain so through 1~84 and beyond.
· The rhetoric sounds more like politics than substance. Feminists vow to
wreak vengeance on members of Congress who voted against ERA.
; The budget amendment could enable Reagan to control the debate and
· turn the tables on Democrats who lambaste him for reCord deficits.
: After the House killed a balanced budget amendment last summer,
:Reagan eXJ)ressed a "deep burning anger." He said the Democratic
leadership had " played politics with the will of the people."
His anger was echoed a few months later by Judy Goldsmith, president
.· of the National Organization for Women, after the House killed ERA.
:· "The Republican members of Congress who orchestrated the loss of the
·. Equal Rights Amendment in · the House ... will face the wrath of their
constituents," she said.
On the Equal Rights Amendment, Reagan has said his opposition is
based "not because of opposition to what It was supposed to accomplish,
.but to the fact that It would takeout of the legislat ure and put In the hands of
. the courts this matter."
, A lot of questions are raised about the Impact of ERA should It become
- part of the Constitution.
, reagan surely is right in expecting that adding F.RA to the Constitution
would prompt lawsuits by women claiming that particular laws and
government practices are making. them victims of unconstitutional
discrimination. Equally possible would be suits under a balanced budget
amendment that would challenge governmental actions as unconstltution·
ally forcing excessive spending.
Reagan wants to take the budget balancing initiative away from the
legislature because that branch didn't approve all the spending cuts he
requested. Critics of his deficits contend that the root of the deficit problem
is that .Congress gave him too much of what he wanted in the form of tax
cuts and defense spending.

Berry's World

Wednesday, F.bruary 8, 1984
2-The Dally S.!!Hntl

Pame.vy Middleport, Ohio
Wednnclay, IWHuary I, 1914

Really stupid .order ______:_Ja_m_es_;_J._K__:tlpa_t_ric_k
WASHINGTON - The Reagan
administration has been hurt by
relatively few stupid actions over
the past three years. Like every
administration, II has sliffered from
occasional gaffes, boners, embarrassments a nd acts of individual
misconduct. but until the White
House last year pronounced Na·
tiona! Security Decision Directive
84, we had seen little that was really
stupid. This thing Is downright
dumb.
The purpose of Directive 84 is to
prevent the disclosure of highly
sensitive Information In ways that
would harm our national security
interests. No person with even a
touch of patriotism could oppose
that purpose.
But ends are one thing, and
means are a nother. Directive 84
would directly and immediately
affect more than 100,!XXl civil
servants. It would compel them to

sign an agreement, binding tor the
rest ot their lives, In which they
pledge to submit tor prepublication
censorship anything they may
write that deals with their experience In government or makes use
ot Information they handled In the
course ot their work. Failure to stan
the required oath will result in
dismissal.
•
James Baker, White House chief
ot staff, attempted a feeble defense
ot Directive 84 recently on "Meet
the Press." fie said it really _applied
only to top-level people In Defense,
the National Security Council, the
CIA and related agencies. It was
"only an expansion" ot rules the
CIA has enforced tor many years on
its own employees. But Baker
conceded that the directive, which
has been temporarily suspended
until April 15, Is the subject of
&lt;'rethinking. II

A whole lot ot rethinlclng needs tc

be thought. As a condition ot
original employment the requirement probably is defensible. Thi~
was the position the Supreme Court
took In thematterofFrankSnepp, a
onetime agent of the C!Awhowrote
a book about his experiences in
VIetnam. No one had compelled
Snepp to sign on with tile CIA. He
voluntarily pledged his word to
abide by the requirement ot
prepublication review. He broke his
word, thus breaching his contract,
and he got what was coming to him
by being forced to disgorge his
earntogs from the book.
But to impose this requirement
retroactively upon thousand• ot
civil servants with only occasional
access to sensitive Information Is
absurd. How In the unholy name ot
J . Edgar Hoover would this draconian censorship ever be enforced?
The directive speaks at one point of
unlawful "disclosures" and at

~(~~

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another point of "prepubUcatioll
review." Obviously, unlawful dlaclosures may be either oral or
written. Taken on Its face, the
directive would prohibit a Jim
Baker from answering questions on
"Meet the Press" until the questions and his proposed answers had
first been submitted tor review toto whom? To Jim Baker?
Had this foolish directive been In
effect during the Carter admlnlstra·
lion, tormer VIce President Moodale would now be tongue-tied. No
bad thing, perhaps. But Molldale ot
course had access to top-secret
documents. Under this directive he
could not make a speech about
national defense without tli'st IUbmltllng his speech to Cap Weinberger for approval. George Shultz
would have to vet the further
memoirs of Henry Kissinger. Jody
Powell, Carter's press secretary,
could not now be writing a
syndicated column. Tile whole
thing Is looney.
In proclaiming Directive 84,
President Reagan acted In unchar·
acteristlc pique. At the time he was
" up to my keister" In leaks; he was
sore at the press, as every president
Is sore at the press. He wanted the
leaks stopped. But surely it was
uMecessary to propound this bristling directive with Its heavybreathing threats ot "appropriate
adverse consequences" tor tllose
who tailed to take lie-detector tests.
It there were convincing evidence of widespread abuae, per·
haps these measures could be
resentfully tolerated, but no such
evidence has been forthcoming.
Sen. Charles McC. Mathias ot
Maryland held heartngs last September. He asked tor examples of
damaging disclosures from the
Departments of State, Justice and
Defense.

VVasteful lVays ___________________k_ck_A_oo_e_rw_n
WASffiNGTON- For almost a
year, I have been Investigating the
u:s. Synthetic Fuels Corp., which Is
supposed to help develop alterna·
live fuels to reduce our dependency
on foreign oil.
In thewakeofmyrevelatlons, the
president and three vice presidents
of Synfuels have resigned. Now
Congress is giving closer scrutiny to
the taxpayer-funded boondoggle.
Yet the wastrel ways go on.
My associates John Dillon and
Corky Johnson have uncovered stU!
more dubious practices Inside the
government corporation:
- Shrinks: Synfuels may be
slowly driving Congress crazy, but
it's the corporation's executives
who are getting therapy. The
taxpayers, of course, are paying the
bills. Ten top Synfuels executives
were flown to Texas to see a
corporate psychologist. who
charged a total of $5,500.
Synfuels Chairman Ed Noble
claimed he couldn't find a psychiatrist in the Washington area who
could do the job. He said the mental
examinations were to determine
job sultabUity and aptitude. Insld·
ers suggested, however, that the

psychologist may have been testing
his patients tor political loyalty.
-Data Have~: Even though It's
exempt from some public disclosure laws, Synfuels has been using
"sat~ houses" to store documents
where the press can't find them and Congress can't subpoena them.'
Synfuels Vice President Len Axel·
rod told Rep. John DlngeU, !).
Mich., that the documents are
proprietary Information belonging
to companies that apply tor government energy-development ald.
"It puts us In a Catch-22 situation,
whereby if we have the document,
we can be subpoenaed ... by some of
you gentlemen," Axelrod said.
Synfuels officials promised to
give DlngeU the exact number and
nature ot these "data havens,"
which are usually offices rented by
the corporations applying tor Synfuels assistance.
One serious drawback ot the
"safe house" system - aside from
shutllng out Congress - Is that the
Synfuels board Itself doesn't even
see the documents. The board must
depend on staff notes or summaries
of the hidden documents when it
decides on the merits ot an

application.
- Consultants: Synfuels recently
chose a "headhunting" firm with
close White House connections to
conduct. the search tor a new
corporation president, even lhoullh
the age_ncy's Inspector general had
criticized an earlier contract with
the firm.
Last summer, the IG warned: "It
would appear that Synfuels should
not have given an exclusive con·
tract to any one search firm, and
should not · have agreed to the
comparatively high fee ... " Korn·
Ferry International was paid
$26,!XXl to find a vice president for
Synfuels. The latest search contract
with Korn-Ferry is tor $41,!XXl.
Presidential searches evidently
come higher.
The search firm's chairman,
Lester B. Korn, is a member ot the
"Eagles," the exclusive club whose
members have donated at least
$10,!XXl to the Republican Party.
The company's vice president, Ron
Walker, will be manager of the
GOP convention in Dallas this
summer, and will take leave ot
absence to work tull-tlme on his

convention chores.
Footnote: The Korn-Ferry
search tor a new president, already
paid tor, may have been a .yaste ot
money. Synfuels may decide to
restructure Its executive hierarchy
and eliminate the need tor a $13.'1,!XXl
a year president:
SPY STORY OF THE WEEK:
This is about the spy who came In
from the cold and got rolled - by
Uncle Sam's sharp-eyed auditors.
A National Security Agency analyst
(It's now against the law to name
her) was transferred from the
faciUty at Menwlth Hill Station,
Harrogate, England, to the agency's headquarters at Ft. Meade,
Md. She was authorized to ship her
car on the Queen Elizabeth II,
which cost her • .10 up front.
Citing the official authorization,
she asked for reimbursement. But
the accountants cited the Merchant
Marine Act of 1936 and rejected her
claim. The act prohibits relmbunement without justification tor using
a foreign-flag vessel.
The comptroller general backed
the rejection, even though her boss
had given her the go-ahead. 4

VVild time in D.C._______Ar_tB_uc_h_wa_ld
You should have been In Wa- the big wtoners?"
shington, D.C. last week. The whole
"The mUitary and tax cuts."
town was celebrating the presi"And the big losers?"
dent's 1985 budget.
"Domestic spending across the
I dropped Into a pub near the board.''
Capitol the other evening tor a quiet
The bar went wild, people
drink and found the place jammed slapping each other on the backs,
with people.
and klss{ng strangers.
"Why the crowd?" I asked the
"It's thebestelectionyearbudget
bartender.
'"1'\le 1985 budget Is going to be
aMounced on television In a few written all over him shouted In my
minutes. Where have you been tor ear.
the last few weeks?"
"It's not a bad deficit either," I
"Shut up!" someone yelled, "and shouted back.
turn up the set."
"It's a beaut," he yelled, "I'll buy
The bar quieted and we all looked you a drink."
up nervously at the screen.
The bartender poured out our
. Secretary ot the Treasury Donald drinks and said, "'That will be 10
.
Regan, in a black tuxedo, came on bucks."
the stage, told a few jokes, and then
"Put it on my dellclt,'' the
said, "And now heerree's lobbyist said.
Ronnie's Budget! May I have the
"And who's going to eventually
envelope please?"
pay tor it?" the bartender wanted to
David Stockman, the· head ot the know.Office ot Management and Budget . "My kids will," the· guy said,
came out and handed the envelope breaking hlmfelt up, "and If they
to Regan, who ripped It open. "I'm don't my grandchildren will."
always nervous when I do this," he
The man on the next stool wu
said a&amp; the audience tittered.
staring silently Into hla drink.
Regan read from the card. "The
·"l{ey, fellOw,'' IllY drlnklni pal'
budget tor fiscal 185 is an all time said. · "Didn't you just ~ the
high · ot · 925 billion, 500 million news? · We almost got a tt11llon
dollars! " 1
dollar bQdget."
Almost everyone In the bar
"I hate de1lclta,'' the man said.
cheered, and waved pompoins.
"What are ybu, 10111e kind of
Mr. Regan continued reading, tlscal nut?".
''The detlclt will be 181 bUlloli, 400
"I happen to be a Democradc
mlmon dollars, but could reach an Co~. ··
even 200, It both parties work atlt."
"I ihougJu Democirata loved
Again we aU cheered and raised deficitS,'' the man )oshed.
our glasses.
I'We Uke them within reuon, but
Regan said, · " David, who were this Is ridiculous."

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

"Since this IS 1984. how about r:alling Cap :the
secretary of peace '!

Today in history
. Today is Wednesday, Feb. 8, the 39th day ·o n984. There are 327 days left
lh the year.
· Today's Highlight In History:
On Feb. 8, 1837, In the only time the Senate has chosen the vice president,
it elected Richard Mentor Johnson after no candidate received a majority
of the electoral votes.
•
.on this date:
. In 1587, Mary Queen of Scots was beheaded after being accused ot
l)lottlng the murder of England's Queen Elizabeth I.
: In 1910, the Boy Scouts of America was Incorporated In Washington, D.C.
- In 1922, President Warren Harding had a radio lnstalled In the White

H~.

.

And In 19«&gt;, the Nazlsshoteverytenthperson In twoPollshvillagesnearr
Warsaw In rE~&gt;risal for the deaths of two German soldiers.
-- :ren years ~: Astniiia\Jts.E:dwaid Gibson, Gerald carr and ·wUlliun
P.ogue splashed down In the Paclflc after a record 84 days aboard the
!lkJrlab 3 space station.

gressman sternly, "Watch your
Ah, come on, fellow, It's only
language, fellow. This Is a respectamoney. We can always borrow It
ble place."
when we need' it."
"Yeh," I said, "And if we can't
My pal and I had several more
borrow It we can always print some
drinks and then with our anns
around each other's shoulders, we
more."
"'That's a good one,'' my buddy
staggered out Into the street
slnglng, "Two hundred billion
said, almost tailing ott his stool. .
dollars parlez-vous/Two hundred
The stuffed shirt DenJocratlc
Congressman said, "Haven't you
billion dollars parlez-V9US/We'li
people ever hear!! ot tlscal , hug the rich and shaft the poor/Ua. W tJie deficit climbs some .,..
responsibility?"
The bartender said- to· the Con- rellnky dinky parlez-vous."

The Daily Sentinei-Poge--3

. Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Winter Olympics opens with pomp, pageantry
SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia (AP) Set against a backdrop ot ancient
Turklsh minarets, snow-crested
mountains and 20th century smog,
the XIV Winter Olympic Garnes
formally opened amid traditional
pomp and pageantry.
The world's greatest winter
carnival· was officially beginning at
mid·afternocin with the playing of
the Yugoslav national anthem,
followed by the parade of athletes
representing a record49countries In
the winter events.
An estimated 50,!XXl spectators
were expected to see 1,500colorfully
clad participants enter Kosevo
Stadium whUe "March of the
Continents" was played.
Carrying the American flag and
heading the U.S. delegation was
Frank Masley, from Newark, Del.,
a23-year-oldcomputerexpertanda
member of the American luge
squad.
For the next 11 days, Sarajevo, for
centuries a world crossroads, holds
cente r stage. It marks only the
second time theOiympicshavebeen
held In a communist country.
Moscow was host for the 19!ll

Surruner Olympics.
"Since 1955 there have been
rumors ot ·the Olympics coming
here. I !\ever dreamed 1 would see It
,happen," said Dovl Aztz, 56, a
Sarajevo businessman.
The dream unfolded In a cascade
otcolorshighllghtedbythesymbollc
lighting ot the Olympic torch. The
honor went to 19-year-old Yugoslav
figure skater Sanda Dubravcic, but
she first would climb 9hteps to the
top of a ski jump model, centerpiece
of the soccer stadium.
Dubravclc was one ot nearly 3,!XXl
Yugoslavs chosen to participate In
the ceremonies, televised to an
International audience that organlz·
ers estimated at 350 million.
A group of 1m gymnasts dressed
in red, white, blue, violet and
turquoise jump suits shared the
program with 400 cadets from

Yugoslav National Anny schools,
1,200 folk dancer! and the 00member Yugoslav army band.
Although the mountains sur·
rounding Sarajevo have plenty of
snow tor the Olympic events, the
city has experienced spring-like
weat.herandhasnone.Tonsotlthad

-=

to be trucked to the stadium to
provide a winter setting tor the r-:::::::--=;;____.;...;..:.;.;_;;___;:..;_______;___
ceremony, though there had been a ·
forecast ot snow.
No sporting events were scheduled today.
QUESTION· Ia it absolutely nece11ary
But Thun.Ja • lli a big day, with
to includ anything about tax exemp·
tiona for the children in the divorce
women's spo_31 skating, men's
decree? 1
ANSWER : No. it is not absolutely neceaaary tc include this decision in the

divorce decree. However. what is

COPPER, PLASTIC &amp; GALVANIZED

FITTINGS &amp; PIPES

SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia (AP)Actor Kirk Douglas; Mayor Tom
Bradley of Los Angeles; former
Olympian Jack Kelly, brother ot the
late Princess Grace ot Monaco;
singer John Denver and Kara
KeMedy, daughter ot Sen. Ted
KeMedy, are aniong · the notables
who have arrived tor the Winter
Games.
KeMe&lt;:IY came early, did some
TV appearances and visited many
ot the venues. Denver is here
because he composed the music for
ABC's broadcasts.
·Olympic' skier Adjan Pasovic lit
the Olympic flame In front ot
Sarajevo's Skenderlja Arena, completing the tire's journey from Its
home In O!yn:lpla, Greece'.
Among those taking part In the
ceremonies late Tuesday afternoon
was the 24-man !)and
the
Norwood, N.Y., ftredepatrnent.
, They were Invited to take part In
loday's opening ceremonies by
Lake Placid Mayor Bob Peacock,
w)lO will.give Y~votflclals the
OJyrripfc
that hu 'flown at the
site of the 1911) Winter Games. In
order to make the trip, the band had
to raise $18,!XXl.

ot

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U.S. hockey
team needs
big miracle
SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia (AP)If the American hockey plaYWS
want another miracle, they better
start praying.
The successors to the team which
soared abOve aU expectations to
. grab the gold at the 19!ll Winter
Olympics could be unceremonIously closed out of medal contention
one day after today's opening
ceremonies of the 1984 Games .
"It'll take a tremendous effort for
us" to keep the shiny top prize
around American necks, U.S. Coach
Lou Valro said.
One loss In the tlve-game prellml·
nary round puts a team on the brink
of disaster. The Americans teetered
there when Canada outplayed them
4·2 Tuesday in the first game for both
squads. A powerful Czechoslova·
klan team could push them over It
Thursday.
"TheY're probably the second
best team In the world. TheY are
beatable," Valrosaldot his next toe.
"I'm won'led. I'm WQITied. 1 waa
·'hoping very·much tor a win today
because my gut feeling is the team
that won today would probably fight
It out with Finland tor who would go
to the medal round. So, I'm
obviously extremely disappointed.''
Two teams from each of the two
six-team groups go to the medal
round . Czechoslovakia, which
crushed Norway 10-4 Tuesday .Is the
favorite for the top spot In the United
States' grouping. Finland also won
Its opener, beating Austria 4-3
Tuesday. Canada meets Austria
Thursday, while Finland takes on
Norway.
In Tuesday's games In theA pool,
the gold-medal favorite Soviet
Union burled Poland 12-1, West
• Germany routed Yugoslavia8-1and
Sweden stomped Italy ll-3.
Canadian Coach Dave King,
hoping for an even greater miracle
than the United States achieved at
Lake Placid, N.Y., said his squad Is
the fourth best ·IR Its group.
"The guys were very realistic in
knowing where they are, talent·
wise," he said. "They understand
that they have to work very hard to
compensate for that, and that was
probably what happened in the
hockey game."
A blend of hard work, sound
strategy and one productive line
was the right recipe for the upset in
. which the Canadians never traDed.

in ~

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�---•
Wednesday, February 8, 1984

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

The Daily

GAHS girls hand Southern 62-52 def~at
Galllpols' Blue DevU ladles piled
up a 22-12 first period lead, .then
raced past visiting Southern, 62-52;
In a non-conference hardwood
came on the GAHS planks Tuesday
evening.
Galllpolls, now 17-1 on the year,
will visit Logan Thursday where
another victory wUI give Coach
Gordon Baker's quintet the undls·
puted Southeastern Ohio League
championship.
GAHS Is 6-1 In conference play,
Logan Is 5-2. The Chieftain ladles
are 12-4 overall.
Southern dropped to 10.5 on the
year (four of the SHS Losses have
been to Triple AAA teams) . The
Tornado ladles are 8.{) In Southern
Valley Athletic Conference play.
Gallipolis led 33-20 during the

halftime lntennlsslon Tuesday, and
49-32 going Into the final period.
Southern outscored GAHS 2().13 In
the final stanza.
Amy Uttlefleld led the visitors
wtth 16 points. Laren Wolfe chipped
In wtth12polntsand13ofSouthern's
30 rebounds. Deb Michael also had
12 markers for Southern.
Southern connected on 22 of 57
field goal attempts Cor 38 percent.
The Torando girls were eight of 11
at the foul line (72percent) and had
18 personals. Southern committed
11 turnovers.
Renee Halley paced Gallla's
attack "1th 18 points. Theresa Todd
followed wtth 13 points and 12
rebounds. Jodi Adams added 11
markers and picked off 17 of
Gallipolis' 42 rebounds.

JUI Miller led GAHS ball handlers
wtth nine assists. Gallla had six
steals, four by Halley. TheGalllans
had 12 turnovers.
Gallipolis connected on 28 of 75
field ~I attempts for 37 percent.
The Angels were six of seven (85
percent) at the foul Une.
In Tuesday's reserve game,
GAHS defeated the Uttle Tornadoettes, 34·21. Missy WUUamson
had 21 points and Krts Berklch 12
for the winners. RachaelRelbelhad
eight for the losers.
VBI'III&amp;y box:
801J'111ERN IN) - Utlleflekl 7·2·16; Wolle
4+12; Michael 5-2·12; BenUey 3-Q.6; Adams
1.0.2; HOIIdashelll.Q.2; Lyons 1.0.2. rot.uJ!

DHl

·W.UIS. SLn'S NSIDE FOR TWO - GalllpoUs' Jodi Adams (20)
~
a """'1JJOD&amp;er bt this Keith Wilson photo durbtg
~
~basketball game agalm;t vlsltbtg Southern.
Slti ....... 6 UMI Wolfe (21) in dark unlfonn. On right Is Amy
l.ilzll!lietil 1:$~ . . - ~ 1&amp; points for Southern. Adams had II points

.,..'s

....,.. w

a

Ill: ~

Oaks, Wildcats,
Highlanders win

Halley 8-2·18; Cook
3-Q.6; Todd 6.J.13; 'Adams 5-1 ·11 : Miller 2-2 ~;
E11111i$011 1.0.2; Amshary :l.Q.6; Combo liM.

rot.uJ!tu«.

.Score by quu1&lt;n:
Southern .............. .. ...... ..... 12 8 12 :B-52
Gallipolis ............... .. .... .. .... .22 11 16 13-62

Two tbuL sllots by Cr-dig Crl'6l in
the d osing ~'tlnds of Thesi.Ja,:.·' s
oon-iefJgtlt' g;u:ru; &lt;it :"orth Gallia
gaw the Oak f.1ill Oaks a 11&gt; 7S

Southern Valley Athletic Conference, coasted to a 6949 win over

lrontonSt.JoeontheWUdcats'court
Tuesday.
''fctory.
HT's Jeff Barnes scored 24 points
Tlie Pird~ bad led by a singk&gt; whUe Robbie Brumfield added 12
point in tile last lO•sa'Ol!li!s wb61 NG and Deke BarneS, 10. JSJ' s Eric
turned o••er the ball !ben committed
Rawlins placed In the double-figure
afoul
column with 18 and David Lutz
In ooe of 1'\G's fiDI'r offensive supplied 14.
games this season. the Pirates were
The Wildcats were 47 percent
oeck and lll'Ck with the Oaks for from the field on 26 of 55 attempts
most of the game, traUing by one and sank 17 of 26 trles from the foul
going into the second quarter and line for 65 percent. JSJ was 44
behind J4.33 at the half.
percent on field goals (21 of 47) and
NG led by four at the end of the 70 percent from the chanty line for
third stanza and was within scoring seven of 10 trles.
!We ahead of Oak HUI in the fourth .
BUly Swain was top rebounder for
quarter, but missed two crucial HT with 10, while Jeff Barnes
Inside shots.
supplied nine and Rick Randolph,
The Pirates were 53 percent from seven, for a game total of 32. The
the field on 32 of 60 attempts, and Flyers had 18 rebounds and 19
were 11 of 18 from the foul line for 61 turnovers, while HT recorded 10
~t. Tl)$l Oaks·we~ IK ~t
on free-throws, sinking 18of19shots,
the
With top shooter Johnny Harrlson record 14-3 on the season. HT goes t~
canning 12 of 13 shots during the Kyger Creek Friday.
game.
NORTH GALLIA (75)- BlackbW111CH&gt;2D;
Harrlson, who scored his l,(XXJth
H&lt;llllday 7·1·15; Pe nick &gt;-2-12; Smith 7-1-15;
career point last week against Glassburn 0.1-1; Beach ~12 . rotALS
Symmes Valley, canned 46polntson 32-IJ.'lS.
OAK HIU. (7f.-P&lt;&gt;ner2.Q.4; Green0+16;
the Pirates, with Green adding 16. Roach
3-2.S; Fisher 1.0.2; Hamson J7.J2.4G.
F.or NG, Anthony Blackburn had 20, rorALS 111-18-76.
Score by quarien:
Thunnan Holliday and Tim Smith
North Gallla ............. .. ...... IS 17 25 17-75
15 each, and Ertc Penick and Aaron Oak
Hill ......
.. ... .. .... 16 17 2D 22-16
Beach supplied 12 each.
The Pirates drop to 4-13 on the
HANNAN TRACE 1119)- Brumtlekl&gt;-2·12;
season, and travel to Southern J . Barnes 9-6-24; A. Batley 1·1·3: Randolph
3-1-7: McGuire 1-0-2; Swain 3-3-9; 0. Barnes
Friday for SVAC play.
4-2·10; P. Bailey 0.2-2. 1'&lt;Kals 2fl.17.e9.
Wghlanders romp
IRONJ'ON ST. JOE (49) - Willis 2-3-7:
Lutz7.0.14; Rawllns74-18;
: Southwestern with five players Compllmentl.0.2:
Riley 3.().6; Wallace 1.0.2. Tolal&lt;l 21·149.
hitting double figures bombarded
Scorebyquariet'f!:
Hannan, W.Va., 9441 Tuesday Hannan Trace ....... ... .. .. ..... 17 22 14 16-00
night. Mike Bailey led the way with Ironton St . Joe .......... .. ..... ..11 13 11 14-49
19 points; Randy Layton scored 18
HANNAN 141) .:. Ferrts 1.0.2: Wilson
points; Roger Wells, 17; Steve
S.3-13: Johnson 8.().16: Holley 1-1-3: Conrad
Pelfrey canned 15 points and Joe Q.J .J, a nd Adkins 2-2-6. 1'&lt;Kals 17·741.
SOUTHWESTERN (IM) - Meeks 3.().6;
Baker had 12 markers.
7·3-17; Layton 8-2-18; Pelfrey 7·1·15;
. Chrls Johnson led Hannan with 13 Wells
Bailey 9-1 ·19; Baker &gt;-2-12; Halslop J.J-7.
pbints while Tiger WUson had 13 Tolals 42-10-IM.
By quarten:
points.
Southwestern .. .. .. .... ....... .. . 28 19 24 23-94
Hannan sank 17 of 51 attempts 31 Hannan, W.Va ....... ......... ..... 5 9 8 19-41
percent.
Southwestern jumped into a 28-5
first period lead and never looked Stunning upset
back. The hosts led 47-14 at the half
and 71·22 going Into the last quarter.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - St.
· Southwestern, 5-12, hosts Eastern Joseph's stunned second-ranked
DePaul 58-45 in college basketball,
Friday.
Wildcats wbt again
handing the Blue Demons their first
Hannan Trace, leaders of the loss of the season In 18 games.

(USPS 1411-Hi))
A Dl\lls lon of Multlmedhl, lnt:.

We Rnerve The Right
Umh Quentltlee.

Published ever y afternoon, Mondoy
through Friday. 111 Court Street, by the
Ohio Valley Publis hing Compa ny · Mul·
llmedla .lnc ., P o mrroy, Ohlo 45769. 9!!2·
2156. Second class poslaR'l' p8 ld a t Po·

..

Member: The Associated Press, In·

AND

MULLEN INSURANCE

American New spaper Publlsh£&gt;r s As-

soclallon, Na flonal Advertising Rep re·
sentatlve , Branh am Ntowspaper Su les,
733 Third Avrnuf'. New York. N(•w
Yor k 10017 .

992-2342

ward

COUPON
One Dollar Off
The Purchase of
Any

SUBSCRII'TION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
Onr Week ...... .
I I.IJO

Ont&gt; Month .......... .................. $4 .40
On(' Y('a r .............. .. ............ l"'12 .RO
SINGLE COPV

PRtct::S
. 20 (('OI S

rle r m ay rem! I · vane£' dlrC'C I to
The Da lly SentlnPI on il. 6 or 12 month
bas ts. Cred it will bfo g lvf'n rarr\N 1•ach
month .
No s ub5cr lpll o n ~ by mall jX'r m\l tcd In

BUCHTEL - The Meigs fresh·
men advanced to semi-final round
action In the Trl-Valley Conference
freshmen tournament with a decisive 32-22 win over Trlmble here
Tuesday.
The unbeaten Meigs group now
plays VInton County tonight at 5
p.m. while Alexander, upset winner
over Warren, goes against Belpre.
winners over host NelsonvilleYork, In the second game. Winners
meet Saturday, Feb. 11, at 11:30
a.m. for the championship while the
losers wtll meet In the consolation
~~;arne at 10 a.m.
Winning their 15th game of the
year, Meigs was led by Jesse
Howard with 10 points. Howard was
fiVl!' of five from the field . ~uey
Eason followed with eight points
and four rebounds. Mark Elliott
had six points and led Meigs with
five rebounds. J. R. Kitchen added
thn!e rebounds.
Karns led Trlmble, who had
whipped Wellston in the first round,
wtth 11 points.

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

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

PIZZA SHACK

126 Main St.

Pomeroy

992-6674

.,quarters:

'

·~':;ups ~lldcats' o~e'iau:'}~~~;;~~;;~~~~~~;;;;~~~;;;;;;~

&lt;,

1
~

HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD ........... ~~·... s1.59
ECKRICH SMOKED

SAUSAGE .•.•...•....... ~~·... sl.99
DAif-'l'r
The Heart-to-Heart'" Bouquet
from your FTD® Florist.
Valentine's Day is Tuesday, February 14.
Valentine's Week is February 8-14.

I'

Office

Ho~rs:
-·

-~-

,,

--

--

Kill! Sincles 16 'Slic:o Anwican Processed

CHEESE .• U.Q~.• tv1 .•. s1. 93

Letter Perfect Valentine
The new Letter Holder
Bouquet. Fresh flowers
delivered in a solid,
polished brass letter hol·
der. Your Valentine will
love it now, and use it
forever. And one quick
call to our shop sends it
anywhere in the country.
Call today.

Valentine's Day.
Tuesday, Feb. 14.

WE WILL ALSO HAVE SPECIAL PRICES ON:
•SWEETHEART-i~OSES .

~f4_. FLORI~n·
Meig• County'• Oldelt Florill .

352 EAST MAIN

.

..

..

. POMEROY. OHIO 45769 .

614-992-2644 or 992-6298 .

----

"Order Eorly"

CHOC. MILK ...••••.••• 69'

3 lb. Baa Red

·

DELICIOUS
APPLES

BaJ. '1 19

FROZEN

BANQUET 2 LB. 10 PC. FRIED DINNERS

C
HICKEN••••••••..••••~~~ ••• s3.29
12 OZ. HOMESTYLE REAME'S
NOODLES ..•............... !.KG. 99¢

$

DINNER BELL BONELESS

$

Steak/Roast .. ~~- ... 1

Melp ........ c......

... 7 10 12 19-48

Nei.-York ....... .. ......

.. 4 10 13 s-35

TOMATO SOUP.~~~~... 2JS1.29
16 OZ. STOKELY
FRUIT COCKTAIL~.A.~~ 2JS1.59
15'12 OZ. GENERIC CUT
GREEN BEANS ..... ~~~.s.. •2/69¢

..

49 OZ. SOAP DETERGENT W/25' OFF

TIDE••••••••.•.....•.•••• ~~~•• s2•39 ...
32 OZ. PREGO
SPAGHETTI
SAUCE.~~~ .. s.L69
8 OZ. 'KRAFT PARMESAN
. ,
CHEESE
••.....•.........
~~!~. S2.39 '•
46 OZ. HUNT'S · .
...
TOMATO JUICE ...... ~~~.u •• gg¢·
..

•

.

.

TOWElS .••..........•... ~~~~ .... 89¢

10 OZ•.MAXWELL HOUSE

.INSTANT COFFEE ••. ~~~ •. S5J9

,.
I

••

•"•
•
'

9
16
Hams ................ .
39¢
Drumsticks ... ~~- ....

TURKEY

LB.
Round Steak ••••

Ground
Be~f
..
~~...
Sl
-

29

Ground Chuck .L~; $1

49

2/$1
$ S9
2Yo M1lk ............ . 1
3
9¢
Margarine ..... ...
Lettuce •••••••

HEAD

BROUGHTON'S
0
•

LT. or DARK BROWN. lOX DOMINO

Sugar .........L~--~~~-2/

$

'

1

~~-

$109
6·
·
9
¢
.etch.up.......... •
p1•zza ................ .

HEINZ

32 OZ. BOTTLE ·

K

MR.P's

.

l

•

.

GOLD MEDAL
.

ARMOUR TREET

FLOUR

LUNCH MEAT

. '7.
5 Lb. Bag ·. ·

9¢'

12 Oz.

$} 09

•••••

•' ·
•

•

• • • •&lt;

9·5 OZ . .

COUPON ••••••

• • • • • •

STARKIST

•

CHUNK TUNA
6.5 Oz•
Limit 3

Please

69¢

Limit Three Per Customer
.•
Good Only At Powell's - · :
•. · Offer ExP-irea Feb. 11. 1984 , .•

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

HETTI ., .......... ~~~..... 69¢
.'

GALLON

SHEDD'S SPREAD

•
__! '.

.

USDA CHOICE

-l&amp;·oz••SKI"N.ER'S THIN

S

19

WHOLE LB.

26 OZ. CAMPBELL'S

30'S JUMBO BOUNTY

·

-· .

l!!'!rts ·aroupton's

YELLOW
ONIONS ..............8~~. '1.09

"

•ROSES •CARNATIQNS

.: For Appointment Ph. 675-6060
· Practice Limited To Urology

.. v .

MARGARINE ••.•.. JJ1, •• 87'

Which Is A Mixed Bouquet Featuring A Vile of
Perfume &amp;3 Ounces of Swiss Chocolates.

Monday-Friday 9 a.m. ~ 5 p.m.

PRODUCE
3 Lb. Baa New

l·Lb. Blue Bonnet Qu1rters

FRESH PORK BUTT

NELSONVILLE - In a recent
Meigs Junior High girls game, the
Little Marauderettes of Coach Rick
Ash upped their record to 10.2 with a
4lhl5 win over Nelsonville.
Meigs used a strong 19-8 fourth
quarter to pull away from a tight
game. A total of 56 fouls were called
and six players, three from each
team, W1!re exited on fouls.
Leading Meigs were Tammy
Wright with 20, Including 16 In the
second half, Shelly Stobart wtth 10,
and Teresa Johnion had five. Other
scorers were Stephanie English
wtth four, L.e$lle Carr three, and
Missy Woods had two.
Mays, a sister of OU and
ex-Nelsonville-York all-state linebacker Bryan Mays, led the losers
wtth 14. The Uttle Marauderettes
are In action again tonight against
Southern at 4: 40.
By quariers:

LUNCH MEAT ......... ~~·... sl.79

"SWEET ESSENCE BOUQUET'

February 9, 1984

up record to 10-2_

BAR S CANNED HAM

OR SEND OUR OWN SPECIALLY1 PRICED

Announces the opening of
offices at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
• in Point Pleasant, WV ·

Young Meigs gals

WIENERS ............... ~~~:. sl.79

Merlin Olsen

( ...............................
:sHRIKANT V AIDY A, M.D.
Adult and Pediatric Urology
Infertility

. . . . .... .... .. ............ ........... R 8 10 6-J2
Tr1rnble .... ...... .. .. .. ............. 3 7 10 2-22

•

J'Make your love
blossom:'

f~CTIVE THRU SAL, FEB. 11, 1984

Marauder
freshmen
advance

towns wh&lt;'rE' hom£' ra r rlf' r Sl'rv lrf' Is
avall abl&lt;'.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT ·
GENERAL ALLERGIST

LARGE PIZZA

lor the Metp Marauders,

hu been honnred u the Jay·
ceee' Player ol the Week.
Cllancey 8COred n po~a~a and
grabbed 16 rebounds bt two
l&amp;mea Iaiit week. In lut Tue&amp;day'a up!l!t victory over Alexander, Chancey held the Spartans' leadln1 IICOI'er - Mike
Bobo - to 14 polnt8.

~~=========~~======:::;:;~
JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

Irr==::;~:;~;~;;;;;;~;~;;;;~;;;;~==;l

298 SECOND ST.
·POMEROY, OH.
\

PLAYER OF WEEK - Mike
Chancey, •a, aophomore for-

POSTMAST E R : St-nd uddress to T hC"
Dally Sentinel , 111 Court St .. Pom (•roy.
Ohio 45769 .

MAIL SUBSCH IPT IONS
l"'1lde Ohio
13 Weeks . . ... .. . .. . ... . . . . .. .... 114.04
26 Week5 . . . . .. . .. .. . .. . . . . . ...... fl7 30
52 W ee k.~ . .
$.11.48
Oullddl' Ohio
13 Week5 ............................. 1 1 5 . ~ 1
26 Weeks
............... ........ . fl9 .64
52 Wre ks .....
. ...... ..... $56 .21

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381

· STORE HOURS

land Dally Pren Assoclaton and lh(&gt;

Subsc rl bf&gt;r s no des lrtn to pay th('car ·

DOWNING-CHILDS

.

Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

mer oy, Ohio.

Dall y .

"I'm In no hurry," said the
veteran Curtis.
Steve Novak, Hicks' agent, said
he has been negotiating with Mike
Brown, assistant general manager
but has not reached an agreement.
"We're stU! not where we want to
be," said Novak, adding that the
Bengals had Increased the offer to
Hicks.
Novak said he has also discussed
signing J,Jicks with the USFL teams
In JacksonvUle, Oakland and New
The Bengals, meanwhile, have
announced
Orleans. the dates of their 1984
training camp at Wllmlngton
College.
Rookies wUl report on July 15.
Veterans wUlarrlveonJuly19and
tralnlngcampwUlbreakonAug.17.

The Oqily Sentinel

GAU.IPOUS (ill) -

Burley signs new Bengal pact
CINCINNATI (AP)- Defensive
lineman Gary Burley, who played
out his option last year t.o become a
free agent, has signed a new
contract with the Cincinnati Bengals of the National Football
League.
Burley, who has been used
prlmarUy In pass-rushing situations
the last few seasons, was one or the
free agents who said he expected to
remain In Cincinnati. Terms were
not announced.
The Bengals stUI have two free
agents unsigned, wide receiver
Isaac Curtis and safety Bryan
Hicks.
Curlls said Tue!lday he has not
talked contract with the team or any
of the rival United States Football
League teams.

r;: =========::,

I

....
. . . .... •
·····couPON·······

•
••
:

.

VET'S

DOG FOOD

• Cans

•
•
:

.

Limit Five Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires F'eli. -,-,-;- 1984

••

:

••
•

•

::
•
•

e
•••••••••••••••••••••

�1., ~

Pa~The Daily .Sentinel

High school
cage results

BMJamln I...QRun 1\1, l;raham 1B
Bl&gt;r"RhJlz Sprtnj;:. 77. Unltt'd l..Oc'al 73
Blome Union 66, Canal Wlnchrtter 00
&amp;rUn Ctr. W. Rf.'SE'I"\'t' 44, l..owt'ltvUk'
Bklom.("amXJ

"AshtabulaEti

Harbor

n,

Er1t&gt;

IPa. t

MdloweU
Ausllntown·F'Itch 78. NUt'S McKinlE'y ~
Avt11 45. AYOil Lake 4:.!
~ 42. CU'tland Lakt"VIew 41
Bttdtord, Mich. Ql Sylvania Nontwk&gt;w

.,

&amp;&gt;dfon:l Chant'! 67. Chagrin Falls lli

c tn. Nonhwe~t 10. Readina 61
Ctn. Phya. Ed. 67, BatAvia tl
C!n. Pur-Mar '10, Ck'l. ForNI Plrk 55

t5 ..

Amanda ·~

ll

BoarGtlaJI 1'2, Warren HardlnR :W
t:mwllna Gl"1'l't\ G:l. Anthol"l)' WaynE'

~

Bn&gt;cbvUie 57. Nordonla !1.1

Akron Ellfot ~

Ashtabula !1, Elit' 4Pa.l StronR Vlncml

Ctn. Mt.Heelttzy 49, Cln. LaS.Ue :1

42

Tue.day'• .....

Sprtna. m.

"'

...

""

-

...

Wednetday, February 8, 1984

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

1\kn::Jn StV·St.M til. Akron Kenmon&gt; 00
AkrOn

•

Brldgepon 66, WhreUng tW .Va .t LW!y

,.;
Bristol 93. Farmlngtoo 52
lfaU 53, NewCOill('I"SIOWn 41

Buck(")-'t'

Canton Trtnlty Ill. lndlaJI HUIJ Chr. 64
Carrollton 61. Tuscarawas Val. 46
C«&lt;arvU.Ie bi, CUnton·Masslf' 64
C1n. Country Day 37, CovlnR1on tKy •
Calvary :ll
On. EldM" 6.l On. Colpraln 00
Cln. Mol'ilf'!' 9&lt;1, Cln. McNicholas 73

Cln. Taft 81, GaUalln Cwnt:y, Ky. tO
Ctn. 1\ulin ~. Amelia !)
ctaym&lt;rll :'10, Sandy Val. 4J
Ot&gt;. Baptilt Chr. trr. Luthenln z. t8
Ck&gt;. East 57, 0.. CoUlnwood !1G
C1P. Glenville 841, C"". HayN 51
Clt. Kennedy Ell. Garftlat Hll. 67, OT
Oe. St.JCRph n. W. Geauaa ~7
Ck&gt;. n1nlly 72, Ck&gt;. Sooth 53
Clf'. UntvenJty 57, GUrrour A.cad. ll
Ck&gt;. W. Thch Ill. Ck'. Hay tr1
Clevt&gt;land Hts. Z. Ck&gt;. Sl.!inattus 48
Columbiana 72. Jacluon-MUtm 51
Col. East rnotll; 61, GI'U'o'P C1ty Iii
Cot. HIIJT\Uton Twp. n , Utrrty uruon oo
Col. Hl'rllqrt'
COl. Tt'mpk&gt; .!'1

m.

Col. Underi-McKinl(')' 72, Worthington

Ill. 301'
Col. SI.Charlel IW, Cot lndfopend!fl~ 41
Col. Waltt'I'IOO 68, Col.. ~tmnlaJ !m
Col . Wl'hrle 64, Miami 'l'racf !!8
Columbus Gnr.'t&gt; Ill, PanOlra.GUtnl ~

"'

Corotton Val. IIi, Cadb. ~
Copley 56, Akrm Flreltooe !W

Crestwood IW, AW'OI'I

~

E)yrla Cath. 64. C'lt. Central Cath. 62 '
E)yrla ~ Door 'm, Klnts A.cad. 00
Falrtleld Union 63. t.oe:an Elm f7
Fa!Jvk:ow Park 49. Columbia 46
GarT't'nsvllk&gt; 66, Waterloo 64
~IM'n ~7. Cln. Srwn Hllls 38
Glran:l 511, B~d 57
Grand Rfv('f' .JI, A.~tabula Olr. ~

Hardin Nonht:nl !18, McComb !16
Howland Chr. 63, MCidvUie rPa .1 Chr.

Ill\ Wellltoo rr
.~«tenon '13, Pony 10
Jewett·Scto !12. M~ao 111
John Cilmn IW, Rivet Vk!w 11

Maaon ~- Cari!J~ IS
MauWon Wuhtn;ton 11, A.kron Hobttlll

Calendar

Mayf\eld 91. Pa~ R!YM'Iktl! Sl

M.lytvllil! 93, Ptlllo I!
Medina Baclc.rye :W, Mldk\1 tl
~own Fenwktl. 91. l...emOn-Monrot

71

Mldclle4own Madilon fi'J, 'T'WtG Vallfy S.

IH

t3
UrUonlown Llkt 54

Mlnrrva 7i.
NtllonYWe- Ym-k 18, MILler 13
Nf'WbuJY ft, Clt. HawMI -.1
N. Oli'Nted 83, BruniYridl 'M, 201'
N!rwalk St.PauJ ,., ru. Country O.y

46
Lorain Klng ~. WNilakt' l'J

L.ordltown Iii, Bloomneld 62
LrudonvWe !7, E. Knox~
Lucu ~. Cmtllnf 46
Lucuvllle Val. at, . Ports. Clay Ill
Luthenn W. 67, Brooklyn~
Mancheskr In, N. Adami ~ I

Ml~l'k ~7. Olmlltd Fallt

"'

OWe HW 76, N. GaUia 75
ObPrUn 71 MkMPw S&gt;
Onawa Hlllt iO, £~ Bapt. 40

.,
n.

lHURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Sprtnas Grange ww meet Thurs.
. day at 7:ll p.m. at the hall.
Members are reminded to take
articles for a country auction.
POMEROY - Mt. Olive
Community Church wW hold
services Thursday at 7: lJ p.m.
Pastor Is Lawrence Bush.

POMEROY - Ohio Valley
Commandery wW meel In spel·
cal session Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Work In the Order of the Red
Cross and Order of Malta. All Sir
Knights welcome.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution wW meet at 1: llp.m.
Friday al the Heath United
Methodist Church. Medals wW
be presented to the essay contest
winners.

SUNDAY
VINTON - A Citizens OrganIzed Against Longwalllng
(COAL) meeting wtll be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at the VInton
Township Trustee Building on
county road 43, off the Appalach·
lan Highway. All Interested
persons are lnvi~.

Civitan club forming

ou
nt

COf'YitGHT 1.... . THI KIOGII CO . ITEMS AND PIICU GOOD SUNDAY
Fll . 5 , THROUGH SATUIOAV , Fll. 11 . 1.... IN Gltlipolts and Pomeroy.
WIIISIIVI THIIIGHT TO LaMIT QUANTITIES . NONI SOLD TO DIAUIS .

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
....,,....... ,."'

~,

.. .,• .., ,. ldrtlftteetl .. , rovr ....,

...,,,_,,.,. ,...,.,le.. ef ,...,.ufectvr., . If ,.."' are Mt setllflell .

Rr...r will ,.,..ca revr ltaM with the ............ ar a ca...,.raW.
llrai'MI ar refvfl4 r-vr '"''c ... •• Jlltka .

ADVIRTISID ITIM POLICY

':::J' •......_

lad1 ef W.... e4nrttn4......., 5I ,...,,. . ta ~
fer ..-. lfll Met. lr...,- Stera . •• ,.,. •• ••dfkalty
In ttllft ...
M. . lie '"'" avt ef H e4weffl•. . ltetR . wa wMI ...... rev fh' c... k•
., • c....,.,.W. ....... ..._ awa~WtM , ,.,._•.,._ "'- ••-... ........
.' ar a rPict..d whkh w~l ........ ,.-v fe; JIIVtch... tt.e•.._,..,..
Jlltka wtthl• • Mys . O.ly • • ....._, c~
wtH Ita ecc.,te4 ,., "•"' f11vtchaM4 .

PLAIN OR SELF-RISING

.._.at ... ....,_,....

Kroger
Flour

Rinso Laundry
Detergent

Efforts to establish a Clvltan Club
In Meigs County wW g~ undetway
Friday.
Mrs. Vonlce MUJer wW host a
meeting of aU Interested persons at
her home, 326'h E. Main St., behind
Grace Episcopal Church. at 7 p.m.
Friday.
According to a resume ofCivltan··
Its objectives. Its work and Its goals
brlefly-Ovltan exists for service
only. It has never stood for the
prormtlon of business advantage
and does not seek those who join for
selfish purposes. Clvltan Invites Into
membership all persons In the
community working towards ser·
vice. Regular meetings are held by a
Clvltan Club with lnstnletlon and
advisement being presented on
lmportantclvlcproblemssothatthe
group can establish a positive effort
In the solution of Important civic
problems .
Services club are needed more
urgently today ·than ever before
because they promote the cause of
freedom and progress, M11ler points
out.
Ovitan Clubs are equipped to be of
ever Increasing service to all calls of
the community, state, nation and
world, she states, pointing out that

Dr. James Witherell, president of
the American Heart Association.
Central Ohio Chapter, Inc., Meigs

49-oz.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE BEEF CHUCK

Box

~~TFROZEN 10·1•·LB. AVG.

Wesson

Clvltan seeks to develop Its already
great strength for today and to
become a reservoir of the democratic way In that better tomorrow.
As a prerequisite for membership
In Clvltan International , local Clv·
ltan Clubs must have at least one
basic project !or citizenship building
and must be actively engaged In Its
promotion. Most clubs are promo!·
lng several projects.
Following Is a partial Ust of
projects through which Clvltan
Clubs are achieving their goals·
:working with youth through boys'
clubs; establishing Junior Clvltan
Clubs; promoting essay, oratorical
and citizenship contests In high
schools; giving citizenship awards;
sponsoring garden clubs; reducing
vandalism through Halloween parties; providing suitable entertain·
ment tor growing youths by forming
teenage clubs; providing clubs for
under-prtvlleged boys and girls of all
ages; cooperating with the Boy and
Girl Scout organizations.
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Coffman,
associated with Clvltan Clubs In
Marietta, wt11 be on hand to meet
with local residents at the M11ler
home Friday evening. The meeting
Is open to both men and women.

Senior center making changes
Several job changes have taken
place at the Senior CitizenS Center,
Mrs. Eleanor ThomaS. director,
announced
Allee Wamsley has taken rNer the
duties of activities director as well
as supervising the nutrition program; Susan Oliver Is the new
Retired Senior Volunteer Program
director In addition to being · the
administrative assistant for the
Meigs County Council on Aging;

Allee Wolfe has moved to RSVP as
assistant coordinator with Jeanne
Braun continuing as coordinator.
Wanda VIning Is the transportation
coordinator, and Margaret Am·
berger Is In the outreach pi'OIUam.
Other staff positions at the Center
will remain the same this year.
Leafy Chasteen Is the Information
and referral coordinator, a service
of referring problems to the
appropriate source for solutions;

Twoproclamatlons,onedeslgnat·
lng Feb. 12 as Four Chaplains
Sunday and the other designating
the week of Feb. 13 as Religious
Emphasis Week, were signed by
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seylor
Monday.
Both , observances are being
sponsored by the American Legion,
DrewWebsterPost39,Pomeroy. In
his proclamations. Mayor Seylor
caUsonallcftlzenstocornmemorate
the occasions with appropriate
observances In public places and by
prayers In their churches and
homes.
Friday marked the 41st anniversary of the sinking of the troop ship,
Dorchester, which carried to their
deaths four chaplains of three faiths
who stood united In prayer as the
ship went down. The tour, Roman
Catholic, Jew, and Protestant, gave
their own lite jackets to four
soldiers. SUnday has been set aside

Grade A
Young Tu~keys

Boneless
Boston
Roll Roast ..

Dailey told of the American Heat
Assoclallon campaign activities In
Meigs County.

V~erans

providing Information about ellgl·
blllty tor home delivered meals;
Ann Barrett, chore and home repair
supervisor, determining eligibility
for chore service and minor home
repairs; Noreen Ondrusko, health
coordinator, provkllng health servl·
ces and Information; Wanda Vln·
lng, transportation coordinator.

A Beautiful Idea
You'U Wann Up To:

to give special recognition to all
those who died on the Dorchester
including the four chaplains.
In the proclamation on Religious
Emphasis Week, the Legion Post
calls for the family observance of
regular public worship, dally family
prayer and the religious education
of their children .

REPLACE 't'OUR

OLDSLDNG
DOORWITHlHE
AJRIUM DOOR.
oal wood

: ~lllllf~!Moldel'"""nl

Senior Citizen
.
spectal events

.federal Energy
o
0

POMEROY -

TaxCiedK
Ready-lcHnltaA
Solid Brass
mortice lock

Two special

events have

Included
1he Afu'n Doo' is
aclu:JIIy a whole
system ideas a

been planned for
February at the Meigs Senior

Citizens Center. On Valentine's
Day a party wW be held with
games and entertalrunent at 11
a.m., and on Feb. 29aLeap Year
party wtll be held. Games wW be
conducted from 10 a.m to noon
and following lunch there wW be
a round and square dance with
the S~dusters playing music.

a

~c::

cane "'

l'ane.
1oclc:t{- lel us help
)QJ c.h::xx;e lhe
idea 1hal's rig1t b

vrutv;:me.

TURNER'S SATELLITE
RECEIVER SYSTEMS

LARGE
SHIPMENT
Buy Now
And Save

992-5692
DISHES

6 FOOT DOOR

Fibqlls

'

lleSI1

Aluminum

$450

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

8Ft. to 20Ft

MASON, W.VA.

PH. 773-5554

1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Synlcuse.
· Phamphlets from the American
Heat Association weredlstrlbuted to

those attending.
The club welcomed Duane Weber
and Ray Pickens Jr. as new

memberswhowtllbelnstaUedlater.
Dinner was served by the ladles of
the church.

Introducing The New
U-17-LB. AVG.

ho·le Fresh
Pork Loin

c

Oil

... $J88

ers at the Friday nlght dinner
meetlngo!theMlddleport·Pomeroy
Rotacy Club heW at Heath United
Methodist Church.
Witherell told how heart dollars
are used locally and how research
has supported the American Heart
Association .

~

HospitalsaW
wt11 sponsor the "Memortru
Fun Run
for Heart." Other activities of the
association Include Rock 'N Roll tor
Heart to be held at Pomeroy Health
Care Center, a golf tournamt to be
held at Jaymar Golf Course, and a
tennis tournament to be held at

providing lnfonnatlon on bus
routes, and the escort service to
hospitals and for doctor's visits;
Donna WWJamson and Mrs. Am·
berger for lnfonnation about any
center services and home visits;
and Mrs. Braun and Mrs. Wolfe,
giving Information and arranging
programs tor the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program.

Betty Carpenter, nutrition aide,

Chaplains' day proclaimed

Rotarians hear AHA officials
~ty Branc.!!.llld ~Dalley,
JtN., secretary were guest speak·

30C OFF LABEL

The Daily Sentinel- Page 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednttday, r.brua:y 8, 1984 .

"

Jacklon

Kirtland 87, Falrpon Hardlnl M
Lancuter FltJw 81, MIUenport 78
Lrbanon H , Frank.IJn iU
Ulbon 86, Columbiana C'reltVW&gt;w 61
lorain E!, MIWneld ~1
Lorain Brooklide 118, Loruln Clearvlf'w

CUyahoga Hll. 57. I ~!!
CVCA tm, Hudaon W. Rewrle Z
E. Canton 1'1, MuaWon Tualaw 'It
E. atnton ;,&gt;, G~ 52
Easlalc.t• N. b'7, Kmston ~

Maplewood IH, SoothlnKIOI\ Ill

88

II

38·01.
Btl.

lb.

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

SLICED FREE INTO ONE
CONVENIENT TAKE HOME PACKAGE

BLOWAVE PERM
by Realistic
PERM SUPPORt CREDITED
FOR BLOW STYUNG
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

SSOO

Off With
This
Coupon

Coupon good Thru Feb. 29th

CHATEAU BEAUTY SALON
OPEN TUESDAY
OPEN EVENINGS
THRU SATURDAY
BY APPOINTMENT
CALL SANDY, DEB or JANICE
Pomeroy

214 East Second

992-7606

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE,
TAB; SPRITE,

Californ
Lettuce

.90%

9

Diet Coke
or Coca Cola'

10· 1o%

ANNUAL YIELD

1Q.4&amp;%•

ANNUAL INTEREST

ANNUAL YIELD

GUARANTEED FOR 6 MONTHS

Send Her Flowers For Valentine's Day

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
"The Way Ame~ica .S,nw Love."

Plf. 992·2039------.los-IUnERNUT AVE.
or 992·5721
· Pomeroy, OH.
We A~ ell MeJor c;redlt Cerd1 • Wire Flo-ra E~rywhere

.

ANNUAL INTEREST

10.80%

ANNUAL INTEREST

11·21 %*

ANNUAL YIELD

GUARANTEED FOR 3 MONTHS GUARANTEED FOR 21/z YEARS

2-Ltr. Btl. .

\

10· 27 %•

10·25%

~NNUALINTERESl

10.64%.•

ANNUAL YIELD

GUARANTEED FOR 1 YEAR

1 Q.70o/o

. 11·10%• .

ANNUAL INTEREST

ANNUAL YIELD

GUARANTEEQ FOR 2 YEARS

1 Q.90%
ANNUAL INTEREST

11 ·31 %•

restriction on the amount insured.
So if you're not earning rates

like these, get moving. We've got as
many financial solutions as the"' a"'
financial needs.
See the Yellow Pages for the office
nearest you.

ANNUAL YIELD

GUARANTEED FOR 3 YEARS
There's just no excuse for lazy
Investing. Not with great rates like
these. So get your money over to City
Loan and Savings where six dlllerent
Investment certificate options lock In
high Money Market rates.
Rates that are guaranteed for the
full tenn you selecL Rates that provide
high yields for as little as $1000.. All
guaranteed by the Ohio Deposit
Guarantee Fund (ODGF) with no

Ci!YLoan

&amp;savings
&lt;52&gt;

COI'v\MER!=IAL CRJDIT
FINANCIAL NE:l"MJRK
.1Connot D.&lt;!M Cort~t~oln~·

�·'
Page-S- Tile Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
·•·'·

STAFFMEMBERS - The25thannlversaryofK&amp;C
Jewelers, Pomeroy, will be observed with a 25 percent
discount on evecy Item in !be store from Friday, Feb.

10 through Saturday, Feb. 18. Staff members pictured
from the left are Kim Krautter Young, Clarice Gibbs
Krautter, Karl Krautter, and Freda Grueser.

observance was set for February
because one of their employes,
Freda Grueser, began her work for
the Krautters 25 years ago this
month.
Mr. and Mrs. Krautter reside at
Five Points. They have two child·
ren, Kim Young, Lowell, who is now
associated with the store and is
studying gemology, and Keith who

is a student at Ohio University In
Athens. Mrs. Krautter is a native of
Meigs County and Krautter is a
native of Mason, W.Va.
To celebrate the silver anniver·
sary, Mr.and Mrs. Krautter will
hold a special sale beginning this
Friday, Feb. 10 and extending
through saturday, Feb. 18, with a 25
percent discount off on every lteni in
their establishment.

Indict three in· coal scheme
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -

Three

men have been Indicted in an
alleged scheme to sell more than $8
mUUon in coal investments, includ·
ing some in West Virginia, that they
did not own to 84 customers
nationwide through a high-pressure
sales campaign.
The federal indictment charged
Jack R. Weinstein,44,ofGienRidge,
Donald H. Eacret, 48, of Columbus,
Ohio, and Michael E . Levy, 45, of
New York, with conspiracy, mall
fraud and wire fraud.
The three defendants allegedly
induced investors In coal to send
them more than $!0),00&gt;, or 8
percent to 12 percent of the total
investment, from April to December 1981, said U.S. Attorney W.
Hunt Dumont.
The money' collected from Investors allegedly was used for the
personal benefit of the defendants
and to pay commissions to sales
representatives operating from offices In Union, Fort Lee, Glen Ridge,
Brtdgeport, Conn., and San Francisco, Dumont said.
'ane invesiur lost $28,00&gt; in the
scheme, according to the
Indictment.

The scheme operated through a
Fort Lee firm called Erg Resources
Inc., the Indictment said. Eacret, a
lawyer, was the president, \\11Ue
Weinstein was executive vice president and Levy was secretarytreasurer, said Dumont.
Erg allegedly ran a high-pressure
sales campaign using teams of
representatives who sa'ld in unsollcited telephOne calls to potential
investors that Erg owned or
controlled large quantities of coal in
Glen White, W.Va. and Lily, Ky.
''None of the coal ever existed ...
They did not own or control any
coal," Dumont said.
When a customer agreed to make
a purchase, Dumont said, the
defendants sent a coal purchase
agreement. Under the agreement,
the customer would be sold a
quantity of coal, generally in l ,IXXl
ton lots, which Erg did not have to
deliver for three years, the prosecutor said.
Once the agreement was signed,
the defendants allegedly would have
the customer wire or mall 8 percent
to 12 pecent of the total price as a
downpayment for the coal. The

remainder of the purchase prtce
woulll be due on delivery.
·
The Indictment also alleglld that
the defendants stalled the customers when they asked to resell their
coal before theendofthethree-year
period. The defendants put the
customers off by telling them that
the price of coal was about to rtse
and that it was a bad 'time to sell, the
indictment said.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael
V. Gilberti said Erg closed down In
December 1981, the day a search
warrant of the offices was executed
by federal authorities. ·
A few months later, Weinstein,
Eacret and Levy signed a consent
decree with the New Jersey Bureau
of Securities agreeing not to
continue the business, Gilberti said.
Weinstein's attorney, Alfred DeCotlls, said on Tuesday that his
cllent "is confident that when all the
facts are brought out at the trial, he
will be exonerated ...
He added that Weinstein "always
proceeded in g\)Odfaith that the coal
he was selling in fact existed."
Messages left at Eacret's office
and at the office of Levy's attorney
were not returned.

WASHINGTON tAP) - Talks between admlnls·
!ration olficiais and members of Congress on
President Reagan's call for a $100 billion "down
payment" to reduce deficits are getting off to a shaky
start with senior Democrats and Republlcans already
predicting failure.
At Reagan's urging, five top presidential advisers
and two members each from the House and Senate
were gathering today at Blair House, the government's olficial guest residence across Pennsylvania
Avenue from the White House.
But prospects for the negotiations were bleak.
"How," asked Senate Democratic Leader Robert
C. Byrd, "can anyone realistically expect the whole
budget to be rewritten by a few members of Congress
and administration representatives meeting downtown, whether at the White House or Blair House or
wherever?
The fact of the matter is the process of crafting a
budget requires weeks and weeks of careful
preparation," said Byrd, of West Virginia.
Reagan's Invitation to the talks was issued a week
before he sent Congress a fiscal 1915 spending plan
that projects deficits of $00 billlon In each of the next
few years, not far off the record $195.4 billlon posted In
198.1
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., 0-Mass., has
said the president called for the election-year talks
simply to "pass the buck" on the Issue of huge federal
budget deficits.

Emergency runs

Five defendants forfeited bonds In
Fourcailswereansweredbylocal
the court of Pomeroy Mayor units Tuesday, the Meigs County
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Emergency Medical Services
They are Allen Smith, Cincinnati, reports.
$55 posted on a speeding charge;
Pomeroy at 4:15p.m. took Marte
!Vlaurtce Thomas, Bidwell, $43, VanCooney from Batley Run to
failure to yield at an ilitersectlon; Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Shirley Wells, Long Bottom, $43,
Pomeroy at 4: 31 p.m. took Marvin
stop sign violation; Thomas Toban, Darst from the Eagles Club to
Middleport, and Christina Smith, Veterans Memorial; Racine at
Pomeroy, $45 each on speeding . 10: 51 a.m. took Charles Bissell from
charges. Fined $213 and costs on County Road 28 to Veterans
assault charges was Elbert Willl- Memortal andSyracuseat9:l2p.m.
ams, Langsville.
took Kimberly Roush from an auto
accident in Minersville to Veterans
Two defendants forfeited bonds of Memortal.
$450 each posted on charges of
drlvlng while Intoxicated when they
tailed to appear In the court of Group to organize
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night. ~
The Rutland Junior Fire Depart·
They are Kenton Mitchell, Galli- ment will hold its organizational
polis, and Michael Stanley of New · meeting Thursday, February 9, at 7
Haven, W. Va. Hettlna Miller, p.m.
Galllpolls, forfeited a $40 bond
posted on speeding charges.
Fined In the court were Carl J .
Loruebio, New Marshfield, $50 and
costs, assault; Kathy A. Justice,
Middleport, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation; Wayne WUltams, PomeTwo vehicles ~lyed moderate .
roy, $50 and costs, disorderly damages and the drtver of one was
manner; Kevin Milam, Middleport, cited on charges of drtvlng while
$50 and costs, disorderly maimer, Intoxicated as the result of an
and $100 and costs and placed on 30 accident on W. Main St., at 9:30p.m.
days probation for destruction of Tuesday.
property; Art Bradshaw, MiddlePomeroy Pollee said a cardrtven
port, $100 and costs and 30 days by Gregory Cook, New Haven, W.
probation, assault.
Va., pulled tmn a service station
Boostel'8 to meet
into a westbot.!.nd c"'drtven by Amy
· SOOthemBandBoosterswillmeet Fisher, Point Ple~t. W. . Va.
Thursday, Februs.cy 9 In the band TherewerenolnjurtesandCookwas
room. The pip'!:hase of new uni· . arrested on the driving whlle
intoxicated charge, pollee report.
fonns wm be dl&amp;Cussed.

The disposition of salt brtne from
oil and gas well site development In
Meigs County has become a major
problem and that topicwlli beupfor
discussion at a day-long meeting to
be held in Martetta on Feb. 29.
Jim Lucas, a Meigs County Soli
and Water Conservation Supervisor, reports that salt brtne pits are,
according to law, supposed to be
water tight, however, sometimes
they aren't JWhlch creates problems.
The meeting In Marietta has been
called by the Buckeye Hills ReSOI,ll'Ce Conservation and Develop- ·
ment Project with thecooperatlonof
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Dlvisloll ot Soli and
Water Distrtcts, the Ohio Coopera·
live Extension Service, the U.S. Soli
Conservation Service and the Washington Soli and Water Conse!Va·
tion District and will be held from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. atthe Ramada Inn on
Route7.
Topics will Include the present taw
now regulating oil and gas well
develo~ent and how this law may
change; the responsibilities ·and
rights of local governments In
working witJulll companies; hOw

Th~

'

\.

•.a.-..,.

..'·"-..............

The Ohio Extension Service Is
offertng a special one-half day
training program tor professionals
helping farmers understand the
1984 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC Program). Training
will be held at the Research Farm
on Route 93 south of Jackson
Friday, Feb. 17, 9 a.m. to noon.
Insurance agents, Vo Ag teachers,
Farm Loan personnel, who want to
receive this Information, along with
County Extension Agents, can
make reservations by calling
614/286-2177. Reservations will be
accepted until noon on Thursday,
Feb. 16.

...
....... """"_' ..............
..........

·-

l ·YMIIIit l .... iol-•1

..........
. ........
,,.._,
,,.......
............ ,........
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-dl-~o

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.

u
.....,.._"'•"""'
41-f-torll.ont

II· lit. . . . . . . .

44·111-•lot•ll....

1.. 11.-._ fVICI ,..,_

, ..w.... ,.o.

8

The Meigs County Coonhunten
will meet Friday at 6: :rl p.m . at the
club hoUse on SnowbaU Hill.
Refreshments will be served.

PHONE
992-2156
Or _
_,_
.... _ . . . , ._
lllc-tll.. _ ,_... 4!751

-

"'-·
..,._.. ....,..,..0·-

.._..,.,,..,

,,.._,.
_

u•- Oelleelo•

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Ul- lll!t G&lt;IM- O,.. DIM

IM - loo!M

ll'I- WIII""'
· · · - "'""" D;el

IJ..U... .....

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_

"""""'-" ' ... ' "'- ·

c•-••-••,..M••I

noo

Paula Swindell, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ned Swindell, is In Mount
Vernon preparing for competition in
the Ohio Junior Miss Pageant to tie
held there this weekend. Cards and
notesofencouragementmaybesent
to her incareofDr. and Mrs. James
Wanken, Summit Drive, Mount
Vernon, OH., 4.ll50.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
winning number drawn Tuesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 354.
In the "Pick 4" game, play!!~f
MOnday thrrugh Friday, the winning number was 8964.
The lottery reported earii!ngs of
rl71,'1'!1 from wagering on its daily
game. ~came on sales of ·
$1,122,Em.50, whlle holders of wJii:
nlng tickets were entitled to share

$344,883.50.

Public Notice
N ot ~ee 1S hereby gNen that on
Sdtu•dav . Febru .... ry 11th .
1984 at l OOOam apubltc
:;ale w1ll be held a1 the F .~ · me r s
Bank Park1ng LOI 21 I West
Second Street. Pomer oy Oh10
45 769. to sell lor cash the
lo11owtng collator al
1983 GM C lru ck - Se11at

No LGTCS 1486025008 14 -

ModelS 15
The Farmer s Bank and Sav ·
tnqs Company. Pomeroy Oh•o
rt1Serves the IIQht to btd at th•s
sale anrl to wtthclraw the above
vP.h1 cle or•of to sale Fur ther
The Farmer s Bank and Sav•ngs
Company rese rves the 11ght 10
'~-'l'' c t anv or all b•rl s su bm. ned
Funhm . veht cles are sold 1n
the condtl• on they ate tn w• th no
expressed or .mpl ted warr an ·
ltCS Q1"vf'll

AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985 -4289

If No Answtr, C.ll

91~ · 4312

Dew•Yne William•

Scottie Smith
All llehl end llodtil
Antonno tnstJIIetion
Hou11 Cells end Shop
&amp;

St~ice

Available

'1~3 1m opd

Vinyl 8t Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
"Beautiful. Cuatom
Built Gara.Qes"
Call for free Sid in&amp; estimates~ 949-2801 or

949-28110

No Sunday Catla
3-ll·tfc

in&amp; - Sldln&amp; - Concrete
Pallos - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodelin&amp; - Custom Pole
Barns.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashon Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
Lone Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
12·20-tfc

6 :30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns ·
Only

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
'lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328 4·21-!k

Coin-0- Matic
Formerly Duds and Suds
Attendant on duty.
Clothes Washed &amp;
Dryed $2.00 a Load
One Day Service
Phone: 992-5937
1-5·1 mo

ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

1-3-tl&lt;

KELLER'S

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
627 Jrd Avo .. Gallipolis. Oh ..
PH. 446·1699

CUSTOM
B

G11 an4 (lee. Dryers, Avto. Wash·
trs, Gas lftd (IK. ltfllfl, ltfri-

lfflton. TV sets.

o,..-

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'xl6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x3~'
Insulated Dog Houses

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

REPAIR
II\

Real Eatete General

South of Chester
Rt. 7. Pomeroy. Oh.

"Cuatom EJChlultl"

OWNERS:
Rodney &amp;

TEAFORD
216

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
AUTO &amp; '!'~UCK

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
~oily &amp; Sotwcli, 111 6 P.l .
PH. 446·1699

992-2388
Busi ness or Residential

· Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·5191
I0-6-tlc

Sll .

Phone ·

SALES
REPRESENTATIVE
Outsllndina rncome Opportunity SeilinL Gourmet
stun~, Poult!Y,~lfoods. '
Loctl ltrritory. Ctii 616·
459-6119. This Ad Will Ap·
pe1r Onl Once.

1-(614)·992·3315

NEW LISTING - I FLOOR
- 2 bedroom carpeted
home. Bath, gas furnace and
·carpeted on a nice lot in rut·
land. Only $27.000.
RACINE - 2.5 ACRES, 3
bed1oom home, furnace,
iireplace and carpeting.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addon• 1nd remodeling
- Roofing •nd guner WOJk

- Concrete work
- Plumbing M'd electrical
work

Bulinlts

Route 7, Mlcldleport, Ohio

992·61-1~ - -.L~.

.- ~. .

'

.

.• '

Bring This Coupon In

FOR 10% OFF
ANY SERVICE
ExpirP.s March

17

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH .

992-2196

PH. 992-2725

2-6-1 mo.

GALUPOLIS ELECTRIC
SERVICE, tNC.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

AUI'*IlTM n£CIRtCAliiEPAIR
AlllllltA10RS. SIAIIIliS &amp; WIRIIIG
EllCliiC 101~ &amp; PU .. RIPAII

New Homes-Extensive
Remodelina
Insurance Work
Custom Pole Bldgs.

II.ECliiC IIOIOR SALES
V-lllll. IIIM111GS. fUSI.I

57 Pine St.

Announcements
3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing me·
chine repair, parts, and
supplies .
Pick up •nd
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd.
Call

MEIGS
DEC. 30th

742-2328

104 COURT ST.
POMEROY. OH.
PH . 992-3383

61 4·446-0294 .

Gun shoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday starting 1
p.m . Factory choked guns
only.

WILL OPEN

10/ 20/ tJn .

Vacancy : Julia' s Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Convalescence
Home. 18 years uperience.

Clifton. W.V. 304· 773 6873.

12- ·tf

3 Announcements

NEAR HOSPITAL - EXCEL·
LENT 3 bedroom brick.
Many extras: central air, recrealion room. furnace, fire·
places. elc. Must see to ap·
preciate.

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

4.77 ACRES - WOOD·
BURNER and FURNACE, 3 ·
bedroom home, base·
ment. carpeting, porches
and extras. Near Pomeroy.

St. Rt. 681
Darwin, OH.
(formerly Duncan's
Grocery)

COUNTRY - NEW HOME,
ail carpeted, full basement,
lwo baths. leading Creek
wate1.
VIEW OF RIVER -LARGE 3
bedroom home, gas furnace.

·

WHALEY'S
GROCERY

Gene Whaley-Owner
Carla Harder-Manager

54 Misc . Merchandise

.SPECIAL
FEBRUARY
VALENTINE
SALE
NOW THRU
FEBRUARY 14

~

-··

POMEROY
LANDMARK
614-992·2181

WOLFE
INVESTIGATION
Consultation by Appointment
Only. Process Service. Child
Custody. llissinc Persons.
Surveitlsnce. Photocraphy. Insurance Claims. Locate Heirs.

Peace of !lind Report. Video
Inventory Casseltt of Personal Property.
LICENSED · INSURED
6 Years Experience
WOlfE INVESTIGATION
MIOOLir011

614-992-7626
. 1·

I------------------- -- ---~

II
II

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for

K.O.G. EXPLORATION ,

Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Commuruty
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Conaigmenta of new and
used merchandise •lwaya
welcome . Richard Reynold•
Auctioneer . 304 - 275·

3069.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson
Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heatera. Swain Furni·

male. 266 ·1924.

446-0494 .

3 baby Guinea Pigs. Call

•1 6% Discount Months

446·3180.

of January and February.,
•C•tl now to _protect your
family .

2 free cats . Calico striped,
mixed with white . Call 614·

These cash rates

I
I
I

-----1I

19, - - - - - 1
20. - - ' - - - - 1

614-379-2165.

12. _ _ _ __

t3. _ _ _ _ _...;.
1~

.

15. - - - - - -

t6. - - - - - -

742-2328 .

Full blooded mate Doberman to"give away; 2 yrs . old.
black and tan. good with
childr"en . Will also give dog
houae and chain with dog.

call 992·3'849.

Beautiful long haired black

To give away. 7 puppies,
terrier and minature She·

ttand collie, peek·a·pooh,
cotl 992-8613.

27.------.

28.
29. _ _ _ __

Two malo puppieo,port Etk·
hound. 304-896-3864.

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

33. _ _ _ __

The Dalty sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 457"

call 992·

3283.

2~. 25.
___
_
_-

Mall This COUJIOII with Remittance

18 Wanted to Do

homa. Coli 446 -0028 .

Financial

Rodney Howery 61.1-698- 21

Buying daily gold, silver
coins , rings, jewelry, starting
ware . old coins. large currency . Top prices. Ed. Bur-

Business
Opportunity

! NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAllEY PUB·

LISHING CO . recommends
kett Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave . that
business with
Middleport. Oh. 614-992- peopleyouyoudoknow.
and NOT
3476.
to send money through the
Cash paid for fancy iron or
he•vy iron beds. S 160 and
up for certain Meigs Co.
stone jars. Old time cup ·

boerd . coil 1·304-882 ·
2711

mail until you have invelti·
gated the offering .
Auto parts dealership availa ble. Full or part-time busine... Solid monthly iJ"'COme.

82.999.00 required . 1·800·
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS 336-6014. toH free .
FURNITURE. Beds. iron.
wood. cupboards. chairs.
cheats. baaketl. di s hes . 22 Money to loan
stone jars, antiques. gold
and silver . Write · M . 0 .
Miller. Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio

45769 or coli 614-992 7760.
Wanted to buy, good Used
car; 6 cylinder, econor11ical.
very cheap. call 992 · 7764.

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12 %% purchase or
refinance , 9 % adjustable
rate . leader Mortgage , .

Athens. collect 6t4-5923051.

Old quilts wanted. any 23
tion. Call 1-614·245 ·944B.

Complete estates bought or

Employment •
Serv1ces

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING lower
priced regular tunings ·
discounts to Senior Citizens;
Churches &amp; Schools. Ward 't

Keyboard. 304-676-3824.

Brunicardi Music Co ., Galli-

polis. Call 446-0687. Pianotuning, repair with skill &amp;
integrity. Lane Daniels, 614·

11

Hei~

Wanted

742-2961 .

Avis's Tu Service. 6 mile1
West of Tuppers Plains on

Restaurant manager, 2 yrs .
experience required . Sand
resumes to Box 4000, in
care of the Gallipolis Daily

Tribune. 826 3rd. Ave ..
Gallipolis. Oh 45631 .

691 . 61 4·985-3606 .

SPECtA~
Jan. and Feb. 1984 off
season prices on furniture
re · upholstering . Mowre'{l

TWO MONTH

Upholstery. 304·676·4 154.

ship. Call 446-3358.

strong supervisory skills.
Love fast paced enviror
mant. Also accepting appll
cations for part time R N 5 to

I
I
I
I
I
1
1

I

' J-.--------..---..--~--------·

The Middleport Recreation
Commission is now accept·
ing applications for summer
positions at the swimming
pool. Applications for Perk
Manager. Concession Man·
ager. and Ufeguards can be
picked up at the Mayor's
Office.
Phyaical Therapist Consul·
tant wanted 6 days a week .
Pan time. excellent hourly
wage.
Send resume to
Pomeroy Health Care Cen-

Individual needed 40 hours a
week till June 30. Provide
health related services for
public agency. Should have
degree in health related field
and or relevant experience.
Must have transportation
and be willing to contact
persona in their homes.
Send reaume to Box 722

Oh. 45769 . By
Three female pupa, mother Pomeroy.
Elkhorn, dad unknown. 304- Feb. 13th. E.O.E.
678-2173.
EARN EXTRA CASH in
time. Rawleigh ProRabbit&amp; end peno. 304·876· opere
ducts .needs distributors in
2887.
your erea. Phone 1-304876-1090.
HELP WANTED . expe8 Lost and Found
rlenced onty, foctory
Lost: Stack handbag. e100 aewlng · machlne oper•tor. ·
rew8rd If returned with Apply in peroon. Ripley
everything atltl in it . 268· Sportswear, Rt. 68 East,
Ravenswood, W.Va.
6487.
I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

--------~

4 bdr. ranch home. largelft
full basement, with garage,
wood burner included, city
schools. 2 miles from town.

11 and 11 to 7 shift. Apply
8:30 to 4:30. Mon .· fri . Call 446-0276.
Scenic Hitls, Rt. 2. BidweH.
Call 446-.71 60.
Middleport, home.

cocker spaniel.

J.l. - - - - - -

1891 .

7231 .

23.------

35. ------

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co . has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needs . Con tact Neal Insurance Agency,
agent . Phone 61 ' - 446 -

Wanted to buy. New, used &amp;
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete households. Also complete Aucti oneering service. Call

female dog, 10 mths. otd, ter, 36759 Rocksprings Rd ..
weigho 26 lba.: very playful
and toveble. She's part Pomeroy, Oh, 992-6808 .

7. _ _ _ _ __

10.
11. ______

Insurance

Will babysit in your home· .

21
--_
-22.
_._
_
_ -

6.----- 26.-----8.-----

'------

13

days. 850 o week . Colt
614-367-7202.

be experienced end posess

2 female cats one all white.
one black and white . Call

3. _ _ _ __

t -304-676-4082 .

We need tobacco poundage.
Will pay top price . Call

Part · time charge nurse,
3PM to 7PM. Mon-Fri. Mutt

2.-----~- _
---'---s.
_ _ __

maintenance. Job in exchange for lodging. food end
token pay . Will provide
refer~nces . Phone 1-304 575-1333 days. after 5 ,

Will cut and deliver fire ·

German Shepherd. 1 yr . old,

1. - - - - -

Single man, earty 20 's ...ll ing farm work or general

Call 814-388-9906 or 614- wood. Call 61 4·268· 1528.
388-9617 after 6.

Phone-----------------

18.

Drive. Point Pleasant. WV .

Standing timber will pay top
priced for red &amp; wh ite oak.

commission plus sponser·

17.

Tom Pullin. 121 S. Park

Will do babysitting in my

Giveaway

)Wanted
( IForSate
( l Announcement
( )For Rent

Master watchmaker , Jeweler , Stone Setter. Reaume on request . Inquire

ture. 446-3159. 3rd. t!o
Olive St .. Gallipolis. Oh .

4

include discoun1

304-676· 1293.

446-3872

Addre~--------------­

PH. 949·3046

Riverview Penon•l C•r•
Home now h .. i vacancy for
a elderty person . Betty
Mercer owner. 304·773·

AVON Eom 40 to 46%

vacuum soot
collector maana dustle11 ·
cle•ning .
•Wire brushes for creo aote removal.

Rutland, OH.
DRIVE A LITTLE. SAVE A LOTI

WVa . 304 ·773 ·5786 or
304·773-9186.

Name---------•

•Pc&gt;wo&gt;rliil

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service . Estate, Farm, An ·
tique &amp; liquidation sales .
Ucen11d &amp; bonded in Ohio S.

2853 Bus. !304}675-3275.

&amp; Wotfe
fem•le dog. Can be seen at
118 4th Ava ., Gallipolis.

PRICES ARE
BELOW WHOLESALE

614-367·7101 .

BIG BINGO Cherokee. N.C..

2 part Doberman

I

Auction every Tuesd•y
night, Pt . Ple•aant, WVa .
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg.. Camden St.

appraised. Call 1·6 14-2459448.

INC . now leasing mineral
rights, please call Richard
W . Knight Res. 13041676-

867-3402.

Harper's Adult Care Homhas a vacancy for another
resident . elderly person. Call

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rutland Church of the Na11·
rene . Deborah J . Gilmore.
Director The public is invited
to attend.

Tours. 1-304-346·7642.

Wilt cora for the tlderfy in nw
home. Lots of reference1.
Men or women . C•ll 614-

8

Beach. lu Vegas, Rod Lakes

ad and oro.=r by mail with this

Situation•
Wanted

5882.

amount in excellent condi -

Baseball. Naacar Racer and
many more. Special group
rates available. Call Lucaa

coupon. cancet your ad by phone when you !let
, results. Money not refundable.

CHIMNEY SWEEP

on January 29. 6001bs.

12

Page 9' '

cine. call614-843-6101 .

portation. One night motel
$60 .00 . Also. trips to
World'l Fair, Florida. Myrtle

I Classlfleds and
Savell I
ovm
· Write your

loll

Yearling polled Hereford
Bull in old town area at
McKenzie Ridge Road . Ra -

8260.000.00 Feb. 18
1 over
and 19th. Round trip trans·

.I

CHIMNEY
KING

PRICES ARE SLASHED EVEN LOWER
.
FOR
ROLL CARPET &amp;CUSHION FLOORING

TOO LATE!

II

992·6364.

The Rutlal\d Na1arene
Youth. Proudly preaents
Kid's Praisel3 Saturd•y .

Februery 18. 1984 7:00pm.

Selections 'Are
Getting thin
For Cushion Flooring
Shinyl Vinyl and
Congoleum

HURRY! BEFORE
IT IS

«6·2 6

&amp; Garages

Roofinc Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992 -7683
or 992-2282
11·1-tfc

Pomeroy, Ohio

POMEROY .:.. NICE CARPETING THROUGHOUT this 3
bedroom home. Furnace,
porch. patio and garage.

742-2211

Hours: 10 a.m.-"" to 5 p.m.

ASSOCIATE: FRANK HUTCHINSON

I! IIIII mo pd

Middlepon, Ohio
1· 13-tfc

Al TROMM

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CARPET FOR LESS

CARPET SHOP
'

- Dozers
- Backhoes
- Oump Trucks
- lo-Boy
- Trencher
- Water
-Sewer
- Gas lines
- Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

PAT HILL FORD

CAB CO.

992-6215 or 992-7314

54 Miac. Merchendiae

F;~DS

I !9 l mo

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks .

GRAVEL
HAULED

!Free Eatimsteol
REDUCED WINTER RATES

LAST CHANCE!

.ODDS &amp;

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH . 992 -2772

L . . . . - - - - 11·21·1 mo.

c

I

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

r. . 2nd St.

64 Misc. Merchandiae

DIRECT .MILL1 BUYING AND LOW OVERHEAD CO~IINE TO GIVE LOW PRICES .
WE ALSO HAVE EXPERT INSTALLA·
TION AND QNE OF TI1E LARGEST SE.'
LECTIOI\IS, OF CARPET IN THE 'lREA.
CALL TODAY FO.R FREE ESTIMATES, IT
COULD SAVE -YOU HUNDREDS OF
.DOLLA'RS.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tfc

(Formeriy lawrence
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)
ROGER MANLEY
Owner
PH . 992-3194 or

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Parts &amp; Service

•Refrigerator~

INSULATION

•Dryers •Free1era

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
In Middleport

MILLER

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL
Jerry and Ellen's

BOGGS
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

FOR FUTURE USE"
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makea

3 Announcements

C3

SUNDAY, FEB. 12, 1984-10:00 A.M.

AUCTIONEER: lODNtrKOWER

S&amp;W TV

1218 9 19 31c

Housing
Headquarters

Hobbyhorse, Slag glass lamps Tiffany type, large meal chest.
pie safes, high sideboard, ve1y nice secretary, two very
choice kitchen cabinets w/llour bins and slag glass doors,
step back cupboards, oak wall-hung telephone, hall seat with
oval mi11or, wooden ice boxes, stack-on bookcase (4 high),
set old Ume sleigh bells, round oak tabl~s center base, nice
apple buller kettles, high beds, bean pots, old tirrie wicker
baskets,llat wall cupboards, stone jugs and jars (wijh w1iting
and lree hand) (Palestine, W. Va., Hamilton &amp; Jones, Porter·
field , Ohio, Donag~o . W.Va., Shinnston, W.Va., James M.Pol·
ing, Jackson County Courthouse, W. Va., others), old humpback trunks, blue crocks, corn sheller, anvil and Iorge set,
cider press, old double barrel shotgun and other guns, stone
churns w~h the dashers, daisy churns, sad irons, carbide
lights, old washboards, tool boxes and tools, railroad lanterns
and kerosene lamps, old lime wash bowl and pitcher with
matching pieces, large square wooden bowl, old time potato
grader, corn planters, salt jar, wicker swing, marble washstand, old coins, nice oak dressers, old thimbles, old chairs,
'much glassware, 11111 hand-carved Indian (very rare), but·
ter molds, wicker table, large trunk·full of comic books (will
be sold in lots of ten), old watches, (Delmar Swiss. Republic,
U.S.A., Elcin 2,1llinois, Gruen, Waltham, Pencron, Train J. C.
Penney, others.
FAI TOO IUCH lORE TO LIST-ALL WILL BE SOLD
fOOD AVAIIAILE
.
NOTE: loll of furnlturalsstrlpped, but 'not til flnla~td.

Beef and Hoes
"from the Farm
to the Freezer"
Cut and wrapped to your
speclfiCitlons. fist. Dependeble Sarvica.
CALL: 742-2789
or 742-2515
111 ·1 mo ·pd

PV8uc Nonce

lAKE AN OFFER
SOliE 10% DOWN
HELEN, BRUCE
SUE MURPHY
IILTON ROUSH IIUL

Public Sale
8t Auction

ATHENS, OHIO

-

"Talk to yoo tater, Helen. 'The
Wrong Stuff' just walked ln."

4 BEDROOMS, bath, large
barn, nice fields, mostly
fenced .
&lt;&gt;

uoo
1100

ANTIQUE- AUCTION SALE

Prepares for pageant

Jerry's Custom
SlrAUGHTER

SYRAUSE - TWO LOTS, gas
furnace and woodburneJ.
bath and 4 bedrooms.

Friday

OM\ilc-1'1'

li·C•...,...t l .. _

•
......._....._ .,.,_ ........,..
.,......... .
... . , .,........
............"""''
"-·
.....
.47·••••111•111
........
.... _
................
,....,_ .....
JJ.Uot. . ......

Mee~

---

.··- ..._ '·-·,rw~.av.,...._,

J4......... ~

is part of a state-wide FCIC Crop
Insurance educational program
conducted by the Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service. Emphasis will
be placed on providing inf(lrmatlon
and background needed to assist
Ohio Crop Producers to evaluate
the vartous crop Insurance options.

l l·ffl.trt.IM

···'"""IIIIIMI'"""'" ..................
...............
.,........... ,..... ..
u ..._...._.,., ....
,,.,_
... .... ..........
,..
,
11 ·"-oe,. • •

This training session at Jackson

.,,_,._._.,...
C/11ui/iftfi f.O/tf'~ c-urrr tll r
n ...,..,,, •wo
fu lla winll ' "'''flllnn r • · .r ~llfln~.-.- .
.,.......,.._
,.. ,. .... ,..... ,....,_
••-c• .-c...,"
"-""'-"•
''·"-"""'"'

~

U ·CI, 1'VIIIOIII"h"'-"'
14·MIM

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

-

Insurance training session set

Loll end Found

III~==-======::;-r.:========::'J-;:========;r;:=======:::;Jr========::;i Tiger
n•m•
Loat. cat
am.allAnswers
orange tofem•le
of Bita. lncislon on atom•ch .
Now Open
" CUT OUT
GUN SHOOT Kitchen Clbinets - RoofJ&amp;L BLOWN REWARD offered . cotl

VIII Gil 8 .

Daily Sentinel

~-

County residents attending the .
meetinl hear and say at the session
will influence tutureactlonsrelat!Dg
to oil and gas development In
Soutlleastern &lt;.»Uo.
Any Meigs residents wlshinl
more infonnatlon or wishln&amp; to
report any problems they've encountered with the oU and gas well
site development, should contact
Lucas at 742-27531n the evenings.

8

Business Services

SIDING CO.

the Washington County SoU and
Water Conservation District has
handled the salt brtne problem;
viewpoints of the oil and gas
Industry; leasing, what landowners
need to consider before leasing for
oil; what's ahead and theroleofsoil
and water conservation districts
and other agenctes. There will be a
panel discussion.
Lucas points out that what Meigs

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

said.

ATHENS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

Vehicles danwged;
driver charged

\,

I ·C- -'"'-*''""" lfl.,._l
I .... ......,.
C... lfl~
J ·A - o

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Beulah Kapteina,
Pomeroy; Marlene Leone, Wilkesville ; Eugene Underwood, Middleport; William Guthrie, Middleport;
Charles BiSsell, Long Bottom;
Harry Wyatt, Racine; Marvin
Darst, Pomeroy; Marte VanCooney, Pomeroy; Rita Stobart,
Pomeroy.
Discharged .. Aaron Sayre,
Sharon Smith, John Motley, Everett
Ranson,Karen Douglas, Iris Roush,
Nomna Stivers:

Legislative efforts to signWcantly reduce federal
budget deficits have been stalled since last year by
Reagan's insistence that big Increases In taxes or big
reductions In mlliiii!Y spending are off llmlts while
Democratic leaders ruled out fUrther domestic
spending cuts.
.
But the president's key economic advisers have
been urging Congress to take the talks serloully and
slash·the enonmus budge~ deficits or rtsk sendin&amp;' the
CCQnomy Into a tailspin.
Majority Leader Jim Wright, 0-Texas, who will
represent House Democrats, said he will insist on
"serious deficit reductions, not cosmetic deficit
reductions," adding that the president's goal of a SlOO
billlon package over three years is too srnall.
But the question of election-year polltics is as
crltlfal to the success of the talks as agreement on
specific proposal!!.
Earller this week, Rep. Les Aspin, O-Wls. , said,
"It's stW not clear to me whether the admlnlstratlon is
looking for partners or accomplices in this thing."
Administration officials have said they consider the
$100 blllJon truly a down payment and that more
reductions will be necessary In 1915 and beyond.
Democrats question whether it is worth glvfn&amp; up a
prtme campaign issue to join In talks that, at best, can
produce only modest results In reducing deficits.
"We will have put a Democratic thum~rtnt on the
deficits and we wW not have done anything," Aspln

Salt brine disposition
topic for RC&amp;D mee•

Happenings around Meigs County..
Mayor's Court

Wednesday, February 8, 1984

Budget reduction talks
begin on shaky ground

K&amp;CJewelers note 25th year
Karl and Clarice Gibbs Krautter
are marking their 25th year as
owners of K&amp;C Jewelers, 212 E .
Main St. Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Krautter purchased
the store In January, 1959 when it
was the Collins Jewelry Store. Mrs.
~utter had worked at the Collins
store five years and for five years
prior to that when It was theChannin
Jewelry Store.The 25th anniversary

Wedl'lllday, February I, 1....

A what &amp;
of a deal with furniture too . .
Bargain priced . Call 614·

992 -6941 .

By owner with 2 acres more
or less. Been remodeled,
small orch1rd, ber utiful lo cation . Good neighborhood.
Priced S1 9,000 or will s.eU.
on land contract $8,00().

down. $1 50 month. Call
614-388-9053.
.
4 rooms and bath, rebuilt,
vinyl siding. insulateo , alec.
heat, cellar in cellar house.
nice garden, approx. 1acres·.

S24.000. Call 614 ·256:
1922.
.
Outstanding buy, reduced

510.000. Now 3 bedroom
house. must see to appre -

ciate. Now $39.900. Call
446-1759 .

2 story frame home 300
block 3rd. Ave .• Gallipol_is.'

Features 4 bdr .. 2 baths,

formal entry, living room;
formal dining room . kitcheft
with eating nook, !utility
room) all decorated in
charming Colonial style.
New gas furnanca . Large

beck yard (with carport &amp;

outbuildings). very conve-:
nient to schools &amp; down•

town. Catl 446·1171 br
448-1818 .

-----'-----Otho Burdette, house for

sate , behind Ctey School.
Call614-256·1281 .

�•
'
Page-l ~ The Daily Sentinel

31

Homes for Sale

2 BR , 1 story. newly remo -

deled. ca rpeted . nat. gas
heat. city schools, down -

town shopping, 820,000 .
Caii614-367 ·7B17 .
located in Syracuse-Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3

61 Household Oooda

64 Misc. Merchandise

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Woshors, dryero, relrlgerotors, rongu . Skoggo Applloncll, Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Crest Motel.
814-446-7398.

PLASTIC CULVERT PIPES.
8 ln. thru 18 ln. Stote

Patch re -creations . Call

448-1262.

aeparat,. or together. Cell

Nice

't -li'ln of washers &amp;

1

dryers Hd.96 &amp; up, guorontecd. Hupp'o Appllonco

867,500. No down
ment, owner will carry
interest for 6 years.
assumption pon ibla.
9B5-4387.

141 &amp; Rt. 7. Coll446-8033.

nogroph jnoods needle) and
Iorge opaokors •126, Kodok

Sound design alareo with

Colorbur at oamere with
electronic flash attachment

FOR

&amp; Glaaaware, Corner of Rt.

payat no
loan
614-

stand, 8176 . Sunboom mlcrowovo. 8200. 304-8767677.

SALE - 6

Six months old, llvtngroom
suite . teble and chairs.

$32 . 900 . 1 - 614 - 678 2613 .

52 CB,TV. Radio
Equipment

6 rooms and bath . 1 acre
lend. &amp;16,000. Colt 614742·2234.
For sale. completely furnished. 3 bedroom home.
Has all new furniture .
carpet. Buck Wood stove,
and wall insulated . Asking

$26.500.
For an appointmont.
Coli 614-949-2933
.
Excellent condition , tri level. Blh percent auumable

41

Houses for Rent

Three bedroom, two baths.
located Henderson, W. Va ..
phone 304. 676 -2007.

I-==========
I·

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

loon, $11 ,000.00 down. 1- - - - - - -- - Coll after 5 p.m .. 304-67512x60 2 bdr. modern fur·
1529.
SOMERVIllE REAL ESTATE. 304-675-3030 . Residence 675 -4232 ; Jeon
Cuto 675 - 3431 ; Jock
McNeely 675-2663.

nished trailer. · convenient
location, Upper River Rd.

44

lor R.C.A.. Zenith, KMC.

Apartment for rent . 5 rooma
and bath, double car garage,
furnished or unfurnished.

co lt doy s .. 992 238 1;ovoningo -· 992 ·2509 .
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614 ·446 ·

dapooit req . Colt 614-446' TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
8568 .
Apartments now available to

2 bdr. mobile home in city
ref. S. dep. requ ired . Cell

elderly &amp; dinblod with on
income

of

lass

than

$12,300. Renting lor 30

614-2 66-1922.

at 2330 lincoln Ave. Pt.
Pleonnt. 304-676-3435 .

3 rooma &amp; bath. laundry

.Phone 304-675-6679 .

Sand Hill Rood letart, 3

room. furnished , garden
apace, very reasonable rent,
no children or pets inside.

Four room, one mile out

percent of adjusted income-

446-2223.

places. 304-896-3929.
House trailer at 322 Third

BY OWNER : Three bodroom . tri-level house on :1.4
acre lot. Fully air-cond.,
family room with fireplace.

One and ono-holl baths.
Corpoted throughout. Colt
304-676-2497 after 6:00

Ave .. adults only, 446-3748
or 614-256-1903.
Mobile home for rent , in

Racine. coll367 -7148 .
WITH OPTION TO BUY, 14'
wide all electric mobile
home. setting on lot ready to
move into. $200 .00 down

o'clock .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS,
TRUCKS . GAlliPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CAll
614-446-7672 .
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35. PHONE 614-4467274.
1977 12x60 mobile homo, 2
bdr., furnished. good cond .,

86,300. Call after 4 and on
weekends. 614-266-6618 .

8176 . 00 MONTH . 304576 -2711 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

304-675-51 04 or 304-6755386 ..
Furnished efficiency. $146.

Utllitlao poid. Shore both .
607 2nd, Gollipolis. Coli
446-441 6 after 7 PM.4

1978 Shultz 14x70 control
air, all new furniture, ex.

paid. Coli 446-3919 .

cond. on rented lot. Coli
evening• 446-2076 .

: pinned. aituated on v. acre
.'lot. 4 miles from Gallipolis

·on Rt. 1 41 , rood frontage,

and

S1 93

33

. Farms for Sale

70 acres. 1 500 lb. tobacco
bue, opprox . 20,000 ft . of
... timber. old barn. good
' ~ woven wire fence, $28,000.

; : Coll614-256 -1922.
43 acres, county water.
,.. · pastUre. timber, small barn.

304-675-7690 .

I
~

Investment property in Rio
Grande. apartment building,

~ . 1 yr. old, 3-2 bdr. opt's.

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel .

Coli 614-446-0756 .

46 Space for Rent

Mobile home space for rent
in Green School District .

Coli 446-0682 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call

614-992-7479.
Two trailer lots, will take one
small child. Sewer and water

lumiohed . 304-675-1076.

49

For Lease

For lease. Chevron Station.
Mason area. Good location .

304-676-2982 after 6pm.
Merch andi se

61 Household Goods

message.
Nicely furn . 4 room apt. 1st.
floor. Inquire at lslandview

Motel. Coli 446-3573 .
Furnished 2 rooms 6 bath,
upstairs, clean, no pets. util,
fum .• dep. req .. adults only.

coii44B -1619.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. Now
&amp; used wood &amp; coal atovea.
8 piece wood living room
auite with 8 inch flat erma

S399, bunk bado complete
with bunkill s199, 2 piece
antron livingroom auites

4 rms . &amp; bath, carpeted ,
fumance heat. adult• only,

no pats, ref. 650'h 3rd.
Ave.. Gallipolis. Coli 4461163.
Nice 2 BR . carpeted apt. in
Kanauga with washer &amp;

dryer hookup, S1 76 plus
utilities. Coli 1-304-2739746 .
3 RM s. both, all utilities
poid, 8250 / mo. no pets.
Coli 446-9283 .
Furnished efficiency. 8175.

Utilities paid. Aduho. 920

Business
Buildings

34

Furnished RoOifiS

with 8 200 deposit located

'tond . Call 614-256-9326 .

Court. Minenville, Oh. 614.. ~92 - 3324 .

45

month for two bedroom.

ant. Coli 446-2746 or leave

homes. furnished. 1Ox 50
and 12x62 sizes . Your
chance to own a comfortable home. Browns trailer

1-304-882-2666 .

par

. 823, 600 . Colt anytime,
. 446-8196 .

U10d 2 bedroom mobile

In Middleport. Ohio. Two
room efficiency apt. Call

starting at $167 for one

bedroom

·ex. cond .. ready to move in .

' bdr., unfurnished, with un·
derpinning &amp; pOrch, axe.

Collo, 266·621 B.

4th . Ave .. Gallipoli1. Call

446-4416 altar 7 PM.
Furniohad garage apt. 1 bdr.
8225 . Utilities paid. 29 112
Neil Ave ., Ga'lipolls. Call

446-441 B after 7 PM.

Set diamond wedding rings

For Sale 23 in. Admiral
Color Console T.V. cell

8600. 304-675-1622.

61 4-985-4262.

RAWLEIGHS old loohlonod
cough syrup. combine• net·
urel herbs. D1le and Wilma

Wood .
1090.

64 Misc. Merchandise

$1 99. ontron recliners t99,
other recliners $80. maple

dinette uti

t179, box

springs &amp; mattre11 twin or

lull • 100 sot rogulor-flrm
81 20, maple dinette choirs
t36, wuh stondo 834,
maple rockers 859, 7 piece
chroma dinette set t 149, 6
piece dineue set $99, uaed
bedroom suites. refrigerators, ranges. chest, dre11era.
wringer washers, TV's, dryers. &amp; • ho01. Coll614-448-

3159 .

D lst.

304 -676 -

CAPTAIN

por, spray In room , use in
veporizer. Dale end Wilma

Knauff Firewood Pickup or

Wood .
1090.

Delivered. 12" -22" stocked
In yard . HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 614-2686245.

Diot .

304 - 87&amp; -

Annual cleartnce 1111 clo-

Golllo or pick up ot Rlchordo
&amp; Son. Con 446-778&amp;.

seout of new 1983 WORLD
BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA,
t12&amp;.00 off rogulor price.
Minimum tormo ovolloble.
Colt Morgoret Plorce. School

You ' ll love uving money on

304-676-3776.

llm01tone. Sond, Grovel .
Delivered in Maaon, Meiga,

Service Repre•entltlve .

your '83 model Singer free- .
arm sewing machine demonstrator cloae out· *89 four

left. Coli 446-9301 . ·

8x8

atorege

2, F-78 14 in. rodiol snow

• 400.00. 304-676-4667.
cious

Nutritious,

"Trlm -

lor 850. Colt 304-4681997.

Qwik" milk shoke diet pion
"12'.00 Raboto" at Hockenberry Phormocy.

Builtonyourlotonewhome

ATTENTION PARENTS .

you can afford. over 1.100

Great educetlonel tool , to

sq .ft .. 6 rooms &amp; both, help your children do o
carpeted, ready to move bonor job. Sove • 1 26.00 on
into. U6.600. Also gorog11 Worid Books. Torma ovollo&amp; bonmonto. Coli Potriot ble. 304-B82-24B&amp;.
Homoo Builders 448-803&amp;. 1- - - - - - - - - Will conoidor mobile home TROYBILT ROTOTILLERS
11

trade in .

Builders

discounts. Immediate- ahipSurplus

An

Solvogo.
Interior prehung door' s legacy oak and walnut and
birch e39.96 (8) grade•

t20 .00.

ment. Furrower Included
703-942-3B71 Hickory Hill
Nursery. Rt. 1 Bo• 390A,
Flshorvillo, Vo. 22939 .
delivered. 304-

Firewood

B75-2076.

Exterior prehung ateel
door's emboued 8 or 8

panel 1109.96 (B) grodK 66 Bul!dlng Suppliea
889 .96 .
1
h in. thermel pane gl111
Building meteriala
21x&amp;6 diamond decorated block. brick, sow11 pipes,

0 ,.,~,.,""

66

71

Pete for Sale

3 AKC mlnlotu;e oliver Poodles, • 12&amp;.00. Phone 304882-3872.
AKC reglstorod block Gormon Shophord pupploo,
•1 211.00, wormod end
ohots. 304- &amp;78 - 272~ . . .
with these Volentine Spoclols, Smoll Neons 2 lor
• 1 . 00 : Show Gupplu
12.2&amp; polr; Smell Plocoo •.,.
mus 12.1 0; Hornworth &amp;0
canto; Swordtollo 90 cents
sech; Hemston • 1 .911 end
12.99. Fish Tonk, 2413
Jockson Ave.. Point Plullnt. 304-8711-2083.

67

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

I ,IIIII

/'i IIVI' :, I I II.~

81

I

: · 36 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 ocr11 at Rodney on W.T.
· Wataon Rd. Owner financ-

•

'I

ing ovoiloblo. Coll446 -8221
after 6 weekdays.

i .. 44Pricedecrestoin sell.
L•t.anon TWP.
304-BB2·

Troy- BUt tlllero. Check our
apaciel price before you buy

ony tillers. Swisher Implement Co. St. Rt.7 N, Golllpolls,OH . Colt 814-4460478.
100 HP MF lllctor, 12'
whHI disc, 14' Horrogotor,
10' Farrowing crotH, 30 HP
Bobcot type loader. Colt
1-614-882-3931 .

a-

popler. 2x4, 2xl, 2x8, 1x4,

1x6, 1x8, length ovolloble, 8
loot through 1 4 loot. Hogg
&amp; Zuopon, 304-773-6&amp;64
doy1ime.

' For sole. Motthews Rotlry
Scythe, B ft . cut. very good
condition. priced to sell
'7&amp;0. coli 949 -2021 .

Now open for buaineu,
Mountain State Block, At.

B11t deolo on the Boll
T11ctor1. 81dero Equipment
Co. H,..derso~. WV. 304676-7421 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

plete &amp;699.95 .
6 pc . acrylic tub wall kito

33, New Hovon. Complete
masonry suppll01, 4", 8",

with shelves $49.96.

12" block. Delivery Mrvica.

Rong01 hood'o vorlouo ilzeo
and colors 825 .

Phone doy 304-BB2-2222,
evening 882-3239 .

Penn's Warehouse , 614 -

3B4-3B45.

Dozer.

new

90

HP .

I- - - - - - - - - 66

Pete for Sale

•27,600. Colt 446-8038.
2 c8metary Iota on Mount

Hill . Coll446 -1617.
Guns-Rugor, Rod Hawk 44
mag., 870 trap, Thompsqn
contender, 3 bbls. Call614367-0482.
John Dooro 350 dozer lull
conopy &amp; wench . Coll614367-7106 .
Firewood cut up slabs *16

pickup load. Colt 614-2466B04.
1 6 to 20 ocr01 of timber,
pluo 20 Walnut trees. Coli
446-8043.

HillCREST KENNELS
Boarding ell broods. Hooted
indoor-outdoor locllltlos.
AKC Dobermon puppleo:
Stud Service. Colt e 1 4-446779&amp;.
Judy Toylor Grooming. Colt
614-367-7220.
Brierpetch Kennels Profit·

sionol All-biNd grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boordlng focilitias. Englilh Cocker Sponiol puppleo. Coli 814-3BB9790.
Drogonwynd Cattery Kennels. AKC Chow puppies, CFA Hlmoloyon, Perlion ond Siamese kltton1.
Coli 614-446-3844 oftor e.
Get thet apecial eomeone •

puppy for Volontineo. AKC
Rog'ed, Lhose Aplo-9 wits.
old, wormed ond ohot1. 1
mole, 2 lemolas. Colt 4460706 .

Form troctor 230 MF, 400
houn, like new, H,OOO.OO .
. Phone 304-B9&amp;-34&amp;8.
Goooenock 1 eft . dump
troller, groin ond llveotock
bod, axe. cond .. n .aoo.oo.
304-4118-1982.

63

Liveatock

Reglotored Polled Hereford
bull, 3 yro. old. Colt t1437g-2e&amp;7.
Yoorllng Bullo, · rog'ed .
Polled H11eford Enforcer •
VIctor blood lines. Don Cox,
Potrl~t. OH. Coli 614-37g.
2671.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Good cleon 1111w (within 4
mlleo Sliver lridgel, 11 .7&amp;
bole. Ordero 211 pluo I 1 .&amp;0
bole. No Sundoy sole. 30487&amp;-3333.
Good mlxod hoy for sole
11 .80 per ·bole. Colt 81424&amp;-&amp;8&amp;3.

Houoing Opportunity. Con-

·House for rent In Pomeroy
, ' oroo. No dopooit roqulrod,
•100. 1 month. coli 9928848.

for

ing Opportunities . 814 -

992-7721 .

Newly docoroted oeml _lumishad 1 bedroom Apt. In
Middleport. Second floor of
Coots building. Sultoble for
1 9; 2 odulta. Inquire ot
Apt.18 In Middleport. 614992 -7347 or 614-992'
' 2610.

nmothy hoy, nover Wit,
Iorge boiH, 12.00, Cllil tl!tor
4:00, 304-88~·2422.

&amp; room unfurnished Apt.
614-9B2-&amp;434,or 81 4·8926914 or 304-B82-2&amp;88 .

71

.

Water Welle. Commercial

Plans to bring happiness to

her dying lather. (60 min .)
(J) MOVIE: 'How to Beat
"'!' Hi1!fh Cost of Uving'
Cll
MOVIE;
'Goliath
Awaitl' Part 2
GD To Be Announced
(j]) Newa-.:h
.INNN-a
10 ; 15 (I) TBS Evening News
10:30 I]) Blondie
(j]) Bernie Schuler at Home
e love American Style
11 :00 G &lt;Il Cll D Cll &lt;il Ill ~
News
(I)
MOVIE:
'Forced
Veng...,ce·
I]) Another Ufe
CIJ SportaCentor
(I) All In tho Family
(l) News/Sports/Weather
Cl) Not the Nine O'Clock
News
(j]) Alfred I. Dupont/
Columbia
Awards
in
Broadcast
Journalism
David Brinkley hosts th1s
ceremony that honors the

OH , EXCUSE ME .. ..

KING TUNK, MEET
KII&gt;JG BONGO OF

UPPER 'lORCH!

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

83

ll dll \ llllll.tllllll

Autdl for Sale'

TOP CAIH paid for 18te
model UNCI cart. Smith
Bulolt·Pontlec, 1911 j:alt·
11'!1 Ava., OolllpoHe. Coil
814·~-48·22~2.

ponde.

Olympic Games Tonight·s
program features highlights
of the day's activities at the
Winter Olympics in Sarajevo. Yugoslavia.
D (I) Police Story

d itches. :

besamenll, ate. Coli 614- ,
448-4907. Carter &amp; Evans •
Tronoportatlon.

Cll Letenight America

WINNIE

(j) All In the Family

Cat 216 hoe, dozers, crena.

etJSINESS TRIP .A&amp;ROAO
AND SAYS HE CAN' T
CHANGE HIS

Good-1 Excavating, base-

PlANS.

ments, footers, driveways,
septic tanka. lendsceplng.

Clll a_nytlme 614 -446 - ·
4&amp;37, Uomosl. Davison. Jr.
owntr.

J.A.R : Construction Co . ,

19BO Chevy C10-Diesel,
A.C .. AM -FM, P.$.. P.B..
Automotlc. 1 owner. Asking
1&amp;200. coli 9B2-73&amp;4.

Water

linea ,

Footers.

Drolns. All kinds of Ditching.
Rutlond, Oh . 614-742 2903.

· 84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Paaquale

Electric

•·

BARNEY

~HOW PARE YOU

Co. an·:

phons of electric work, all
work

guarenteed .

Aerial 1

truck rental . 614 · 446 - J
'
4066.

~CIILl MEliN Ot.~"~
~IN'?_B"'(S v

SEWING Mochln. repairs, :
aervice. Authorl1ed Singer ,

Vane &amp; 4 W.O.

Soles &amp; Service Shorpon ·
Scluors . Fabric Shop, :
Pomeroy. 614-992-2284. •

86 . General Hauling :
------~--------- :
'
1871 Blotlf, olr condition, ·
JONES BOYS WATER SEA- •

lock out hubil, 13BOO. 304488-11142.

~~
... ...

111ri Trari1 ~M. alt. oond.
Call 814-241-1319 alter

BPM.

I

.Need oomothlng hauled
owoy or oomathlng moved?
Wo'll do h. Colt 446-3169
blt-•n 9 e,nd 11.
. •.
JIMS WATER SERVICE,
Coli Jim Lanier, 304-87&amp;7397.

87

oa,

2:16 (I) SportaContar
2:30 (J) Ufe of Riley
(I) ESPN'o Horse Racing
Weeldy
3:00 I]) 700 Club
(I) 1983-84 Ford College
Chettriudlng Chemplon·
lhll' Coverage of this nochampionship
is_
tional
presented from Honolulu,
Hawaii. (60 min.l
' :30 (J) MOVIE: 'Evil Under tho

•

_

_

PEANUTS
1

20 used Hondlo 'to choOH
from, Mlnf to Mighty. Coil
.
·.
441-2240.

14 ft. V·boot • trailer, 71-'.
HP, Hondl
11 ,200. Ceil
441·2240.

~

VOII RE 60HNA1BE PROUD
OF Me, Sllt .••I VE BEEN
PRACTICIN6 MY SKATIN6

·suo'

THERE'S AN INDOOR .
AkENA AcROSS 10WN
WlTJ.I A 816 ICE RINK
AHICE COFFEE SHOP

I FELL DOWN IN
THE COFFE.E SHOP !

Upholatery

•

_

',
,_TRISTATE
uPHOLSTERY SHOP -~
1 183 Sec. Ave .. GoUipo:l,.l
814-448· 7133 ·o r 814-4411·'
1833.
• '
,

•

3:46 (J) SCTV rll6 SCTV Music
holt, Rockln' -Mel ·Slurp
(Guest star Dave Thomasl,
stageo a 1960s revival on
'Mel'a Rock Pile' but the
show turns into a bummer
when 11011110ne alipa Mel
some LSD and he winds up
in •an electric dryer.
4:00 (I) NCAA llalta1ball:
, Northwestern It llllnolo

Cll R8t Ptrtrol

0

v

• Twilight Zone
12:00 I]) ~urns &amp; Allen
(I) MOVIE; 'Fear No Evil'
Cll Benny Hill Show
&lt;il MOVIE; ' Rio lobo'
II (jJ Nlghtllne
eGunamoko
12:30 II (I) (IJ Late Night with
David Latterman
(I) MOVIE; 'B11Inwaves'
I]) Jack Benny Show
Cll Nightllne
I!J Cll MOVIE: 'Magnificent Hu1tla'
• (jJ Newa
1 ;00 I]) I Married JOin
Cll E~tertalnmont Tonight
II (jJ CNN Headline News
• Thlcke of the Night
1:15 (I) ESPN's Sports look
1;30 (I)
MOVIE;
Victor/
Victoria'
I]) love That Bob
(l) News/Sign Off
1:46 (I) Inside the PGA Tour
2:00 (I) MOVIE; 'lovesick'
I]) Bachelor Father
(I) MOVIE; ' Legend of
Cuater'
(JG CBS News NiAhtwatch

- . ::.:..:.~. ::-. - - ~·

VICE. Call 814-367·7471 ;
or 614-387-01191 .

Motorcyclea

Boatl and
Motora for Sale

A LOT OF PEOPLE ARE
E)(PECTING ME, •• PLANS
HAVE BEEI'i FI~EP UP...
I CAN'T
cANCEL .+IV
TRIP NOW/

NO, HE'S SCHEDULED A

loaders. dump truck. Coli
814-446- 1142 between
7:00AM &amp; 5 :00PM .

19B3 f. 100 Ford stepolde
PU, reol sh11p, 17,4911.
John's Auld Sales, BulovllleRd, 446-47B2. Open til
doric.

715

e Benny Hill Show
11 :1 5 (I) To Be Announced
11 ;30 B (I) (IJ Tonight Show
(I) MOVIE: 'Bill'
I]) Beat of Groucho
(I) Catlina
(I) II ~ XIV Winter

DOZER WORK By Ted ·

1 BBO Ford F-2&amp;0 4x4, good
cond .. would consider older
truck on trodo. Colt 44840&amp;3.

74

min.)

Excavating

Hanni,

1982 GMC &amp;-1 &amp;, flborglus
topper, 42,000 mi., outo.
t11n1, AM-FM cuoettl,
wide bod pockogo, 14,800.
Colt 448-80110.

1980 Chevy Luv, 4x4, colt
304· 17&amp;·2714 or 6711·
11177.

best in radio and television .

broadcast journalism. (90

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT- •
lNG. Rt. 1. Box 366, Golll-,'
polio. Coli 814-367-0578 .

Trucks for Sale '

1974 14 ton Ford truck flot
bod. Overhoulod. Excellent
condition. Cell 304-BB23242.

But you don't I just thouqht it
seemtol;'leed was sometliing I
an4 practice should know!
at -that!

.

.

-

Two Bral111'

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Plno
Golllpolls. Ohio
Phona 814-446-3888 or 1
814-448-4477

1 849 Ford pickup, 1984
Ford conv11tlblo, priced
reosonobla. LeRoy Ril11ell,
2 mile N. Leon, W.Yo. off Rt.
82 turn on 10 Milo Crook
Road

oubmarine and the bomber
plana. (60 min.) ICiosod
Captioned]
• (I) (l) Night Court
(J) MOVIE; 'The Man With

10:00 e CIHIJ St. Elsewhere Dr
Ehrlich finally wads Roberta
and Joan makes special

good.

1977 Dodge Rom Chorger,
lour wheel 'drive, nHCio
some -rk. 62,000 mlleo,
12;ooo. 304·882·28111.

Senior

9:30

Phono 304-675-52B9 otter
6;00.

614-992-7787.
ratea

COTTACE!

Blue and brown quilted
couch, excellent condition.

614-378-

Cll MOVIE; 'Good

4:30 (])-

·MOVII!:

'""-'

CD Roaa Bagley
Cll World/largo

\

'&amp;evan

•••
SHOUL.P YO U C:UT
THEM ANP THROW

[j

rJ I

THEM AWAY-0~
JU5i FIL.E THEM?'

au 1ETY
...:..,.;..~..+--r-,

Now orrango the Circled - . to
form tho surprise .,._, u suggested by the above cor-..

I. II D

I I II )

Print answer here: (

(AnlweriiOiliOfiOW)

leslerday·s t Jumllles: PAPER

BROOK

REVERE

CLAUSE

Answer · What they called the music librarian -

THE SCOREKEEPER

protest .

ond Domostlc. Test holeo.
Pumps Solos ond Sorvlce.
304-8B&amp;· 3802 .

B2

IONBOABI

Huntii&gt;gton. wv
Home Box Office

WS/Q

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Columbuo, OH
Pll'itarsburg, WV
Chortelton. WV
Huntington, WV
Columbuo, OH

WTVN
WTAP
WCHS
WPBY
WBNS

Cll
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Cll
C!D

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Establishing a suit

Bill Moyers traces the evolu·
tion of the machine gun. the

lockomlth Sorvico. Sharpening Sorvlco, Gleu ond
Screen Wire lnstolled .
Subkon Sorvlca co.. 304878-3894.

'75 Volvo 246 D.L serioa.
Nice cond. 304 - 876 8788.304-67&amp;-87116.

73

tact Village Manor Apts.

Special

House lor rent 127&amp; In
downtown Golllpollo. 1
block from pork. Colt 4480644.

firm . coll992-20&amp;4. 9:30 to
6:00 Monday - Soturdoy.

1977 Ford Explorer FtOO,
302 stondlrd shift, 62,000
mllos, oil new tlrea end
shocks. Body good cond.,
runs good, with topper,
.2.000 . 00 . 304-937 202&amp;.

1 bedroom Apt. S196 . mo.

Citizens. 81 30. Equal Houo-

Houses for Rent

For 11le. 78 Monzo, good

colt

IT'S PUH~B!

. AM' HE'S
CO/I'tjtf FA()Iol
Mit RUNE'S

GET your corpat SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Wotor removal.
fumltura cleening, frM etti·
motoo. 304-1176-2296 .

running condition. $1500.00

I I I J

Sport'
(I)
MOVIE;
'Goliath
Awaitl' Part 1
(j]) Walk Through tho 20th
Century with Bill Moyon
'The Amning of the Earth.·

RINGLE 'S SERVICE ..perioncod roofing , Including
hot tor oppllcotlort', corpontor, lloctrlclon. muon . Coli
304 -876 -20B8 or 676 4&amp;60.

For 1011, 79 Ninety Eight
Rogoncy, 4 door,A-1 condi tion. Hove to 101 to believe.
82,000 ICIUOI mileo, Spell
tiro nevlf been moved. Full
oqulpment. colt 742-2211
bofore 6;00. 742-&amp;320 oftor &amp;:Ot'

13&amp;11.00.
8349.

Quazar . end

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, ltump
11movel. Coli 304·875 ·
1331 .

1989 Chry1ler Newport.
Good running cond. Colt
814-2&amp;8 -8343.

runa

8

houH colts. Coli 304-&amp;76 2398 or 814-448-24114.

reel shorp. Coli 448-7633 .
Cindy.

---

(J) (l) Fllctl of Ule
(J) SCTV 116 SCTV Music
host. Rockin' Mel Slurp
(Guest star Dave Thomas) .

hrs.)

RON'S Telovlolon Service.
Spoclollzlng In Zonith ond
Motorola .

G

a union

'Mel's Rock Pile' bur the
show turns into a bummer
when someone slips Mel
some LSD and he w1nds up
in an electrK: dryer.
(J) 700 Club
(I)
NCAA
llalkatball:
Nor1hwestam It Illinois
Cll •
(jJ XIV Winter
Olympic Gamel Today·s
program features the Opaning Ceremonies and the
Men·s Downhill Trials . (2

Cooling, Sheet Metol Wort. .
Golllo Relrlg11otlon Co .
814-448-4088 .

1979 Chevy Chovette, oneowner, low mlleoge, good
cond .. osklng 12800. Colt
81 -388-8080.

including utilities . Equal

Two acre level lot approxl·
mately 400ft. road frontage,

41

• models refrigertor1 .
w11hara , dryara, ranges .
compecton , dlahwashen,
mlcrowavee . Heating &amp;

72

men only, 919 2nd. Ave.
Gallipolis. Coli 446·44 1 6
otter 7 PM .

Rlvorsido Apts. Middleport.

Rr.nlal s

197&amp; Jeep WogonHr •
1978 Ford. Gronodo. Colt
448-3249.

11

n1
·-·----....... ..

stages a 1960s rev1val on

Morcum Roofing &amp; SpoutIng. 30 yurs axporlence.
opeclollzlng In built up roof.
Colt 814-388-9B&amp;7.
Appllonce Service oil moke1

mileage,

BORN LOSER

dentlol, lrH o1tlmot01. Coli
814-2&amp;8-1 182.

11178 Chevy Chevetto 4
spd. , 4 dr. , rill nice ,
12.088. John'o Auto Seleo,
Bulovlllo Rd, 448-4782 .
Open til dorlt.

1978 Chovette lor sola .
Good work cor, good goo

peper

double roll • 1.99.
Elec. baseboard heataro 220
vol1 (4-2900116-33001164000)18-4950) 6 pc. or
more 5% extra di1count.

9:00

repair commercial end reai -

1973 Thunderbird , body
rough, runoa•collont . •17&amp;.
448-9407.

197&amp; Dodge Dort Swinger,
e cycllnder, good body, runs
good, 1800. colt otter 4 :00
p.m. 11 814-&amp;93-7390.

Attic apt. furnished $175.
Utilities paid . Share bath,

2264.

Route 2, Bml. N. Point
Ploolont. Will accept partial
' trodo. t10.000.00. 3047B6-3717.

1----------

1979 Ford Thunderbird l or
olio. In good condition,
price U8110. Colt 814-9492890.

Farm Equipment

lead

'

1978 Cordobo -bluo In/ out.

Siqqil l l' :,

Home
Improvements

PLASTERING · Now ond

naw tiNa, air, cruiM, PS,

lowroy Orgon, model SCT.
osklng 14200. coil 9927384.

Motor Home.

Serv1e1:s

1982 Chevy Cltotlon
31 ,000 mi .. 8 cyl .. llendord .
Coli 448-1873 doy1, 4411 7272ove.

19B2 Colo no-till corn ;iontor. like new. Plontld 30
ocru. Coli 814-742-2&amp;18.

llntela,

1- - - - - - - - - -

Commercial aluminum dOu ble entrance door's com-

tokes e look at the world of
trains and the train buffs
who keep the railroad era
live. (60 min.) !Closed Captionodl
® NCAA llalkatball:
UniNorthwootem et lllinoio
e
NCAA
Basketball;
8outhem Ml11i11ippi et
Louioville
B:30 D Cll Empire Ben 's hotheaded lather shows up to

81

ate .

well

whHI, exc . cond ., aelf con -

Autoa for Sale

4x8 wood or mosonlte po- Cloude Wlntoro, RloGronde,
noting good selection 86.99. 0 . Colt 814-24&amp;-&amp;1 21 .
42 in. or 36 in. morblovonity
top 'o (B) grodu 139.9&amp; .
LUMBER - Rough cut, ook,
coated

Traina.' Tonight's program

1 ~o~ 01 •

18811 14 ton Chevy tNCk, e
cylinder, stondord tllnsmlsslon, body end motor good
shape. *300. colt 9492021.

windows .

1 974 Coochmon 30 ft .. 6th

1-~-~========::;=========~

,.,. ·Good monthly income ,

:;:: e42,600. Coli 446-8038 .

1111 "-0 ut .... ,

11180 aATOH
Ill,
4-whHI drivo, with front
end loader. Ulod only 20&amp;
houro. Asldng only 14&amp;00.
Con 992-7364.

$7.00 ea.

EASY

fully oqulpped, like new,
•&amp;2,000. Colt 446-3423.

,.,

building ,

LOSE WEIGHT, Now Deli-

tires on Chev. wheela both

1 :00 • (J) (l) Rill P-'•
(J) MOVIE: 'Deify Duct&lt;' •
Movla: F...-tlc lolend'
(J) I Spy
Cll MOVIE: 'Big Jake'
Cll • (jJ 20/20
D Cll Domeotic Ule Excitement prevail&amp; 1n the
Crane home when Harold"s
little League team makes 11
into the city playoff .
Cll (j]) Ntrtional Geogrophlc
'love
Those
Special

For Solo or Trodo· 1 983

Put a little luv In YOur .....

RAWLEIGH medlcotad va -

·vinyl

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms. rent

near Foodland and ·Spring
Valley Plaza. pool and TV

" t972 Kirkwood 1 2x65 2

304-676-

Coli 446-3617. ·

2 bdr. apartment overlook·
ing the park, part. furn .•
deposit. reference, water

1977 Duke 14x70 trailer.
fully carpeted, total eloc ..
central air, 1 Ox 10 walk on
deck. 2 Iorge bedroom. 1
•bath. Iorge LR &amp; kit., under-

Sand Hill Rd.
4046 .

Mobile home space near
HMC and Robbins &amp; Myero.

Newly redecorated apartments kitchen furnished, 2
bdr .• utilities partially paid.

992-6587.

8221 .

4 room house on corner lot

bedroom house. bath and
half. total electric. two fire-

' =:-:-::----:-c---79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Airetreem

Page

UCLID

EVENING

304-8'1&amp;-&amp;406 .

building in Pomeroy or cell

Gold Ster. Emerson . Houle

2/8/84

tolnod. Colt 814-387-7108 .

Accouory Store. 900 Eost
Main St.. old Bookmobile

microwave, repair, werranty

fenders end

fereon Ave . Point Pl111ant .

816. Coli 446-7478. 6-9
PM weakdoyo, 12-6 PM

heavy-duty
this monthelectric
only dryera,
1279 .
Kingsbury Homes Parts end

The Fix-It Shop: TV, otareo.

Apartment
for Rent

truck

Sentinel

The

Television
Viewing

Billy LH'o Tlros ond Bottory
&amp;oleo. New ond used tires,
olso, tire ropolro . 1803 Jol-

white *69. Panaconic stereo
With 8 tracll player &amp; re corder, AM / FM radio, pho -

Mobile home auppllet: non·
toxic antifreaze -e6.60 per
gallon. Water heating elements, water heater. ateps.
windows. doors. feucets,
breekers . etc . Hot Point

Phone 304-67&amp;-&amp;066.

Pon lerOY Midcftqort, atio

Auto Parte

New

Saturday.

rooms , basement, double
garage, 1 and one third acre
lot. Rose Hill, Pomeroy .
Excellent condition .

Feltruary 8, 1~

doors . Chovy l ond oro
184.9&amp;, Chovy doors •110.
Ford lenders '78 . Coli 814288-1280.

21 ln . &amp;ylvonls portobla
color t .v. S186. 12 ln. KTV
AC / DC portobla block &amp;

Baum addition, 3 bedrooms,
2Vz baths, A.C .. family room
with firepla ce. 2 acres .

8, 1984

&amp; Acceuorlea

EVANS. Jockoon. Oh . 814286-6930.

Converlbl• Whirlpool porta·

FebiVCiry

78

epproved, guaranteed. RON

ble woshor &amp; dryer, will oall
446-9&amp;26.

$240 mo. 304-B65 ·3934 .

HOUSE

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

Sculptor dolls , Cobbago

bedroom situated on onethird acre lot . Price reduced
$23.600. or will rent for

t-

Wednetday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WEST

• to a 52

NORTH
l-1-14
+K9
.Q2
• 10 9 6 2
+AK8 63
EAST

+74

.64
.AKJ 108
• QJ 8 54
+ 73
+Q94
+J 7
SOUTH
+AQJ6 3
• 973
IAK
+to s 2

Vulnerable; North-South
Dealer; North

.. ,.

West

Pass
Pass

Nort~

Eut

2+
4+

2'P

Pass

Pass
Opening lead:

•s

By Oswald Jacoby
ud James Jacoby
Today's hand is taken
from Sumne't Cotzin's
'Communication." He gave
t as a problem in play. It
;eems that East won the

firs,t trick .with the 10 of
hearts and returned the seven of spades. Then Sumner
left it to his readen to play
the band. The rest of the
East-West cards were not
shown.
We have changed one of
North's cards from Sumner''
problem, because frankly we
are not sure that we would
find Sumner's play, which be
will show in his nest
communication.
With the band as is, we
have a rather easy problem.
We let the spade ride to
dummy, wh i~h wins with the
king or nine* appropriate.
Then we lead a low club
from dummy. It doesn't
matter which defender wins
the trick.. All East-West can
do is to cash one more heart ·
trick, and we will talte the
balance.
Why did we change one
card from the North band?
Sumner had given North thl
K-8 of spades. If VI~ let tbt
seven ride, West's , ·ne will
force dummy's kin . Then,
when we lead a lo club, a·
heart will be led. Eaat's ace
will win, and another heart
lead will give West a ruff
with the 10 of spades for the
setting trick.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.(

tlt~ctl..t~t!t'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Do someone in
1 Religious

4 Wool weight

body
5 Bistro
9 March in

5 Provide
party

room

I Malt liquor
7 Temporary

a company
11 Muslim deity
'13 Disintegrate

14 Tantalize
15 Albanian

success ( sl. )

8 Oriental
10 Allow
1% Partner

coin

ofhale

11 "Norma -"
18 As written

Yestenlay'a Aaeftl'

17 Indian
mulberry

!1 Chew the fat
It Taro root
Z3 Annadillo
ze Walking G.I. !5 Of the spine
ZZ Claw
ZS Football
!4 Tr\tmpeter AI
player
(mus.)

27Grow
canines
!9 Itinerary
(abbr.)

31 Ward
off

33 Mountain
ridge

34Consumer
cnmMier
3t

r.w (t.t.)

41 Palm leaf

!5 Slwnbered
!7 Metallic
!8Italiancity
!9 Budget item

3G Thankless
one
32 Chinese
dynasty
35New

(comb. fonn)

31 Animal doc
:17 Generation
38 Soap plant
441 Expected to
UUghtbeam
USpreldjoy

44 Barber's call
45 City of
Manasseh
DOWN
1 stone

marker

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

A:IYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply 81ands for onother. In this umple A Ia

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, el&lt;. Sincle .letlen,
apa.trophes, the lencth and formation of the worda are oil
blats. Earh day the rode letters are dllerent. .

, CllYPTOQUOTES

AS

YATR,
JLV

BGYV

PKN
TKJ

BVCVXP

ECKMXVB
VXMVCJ

EVKEXV

CVWEVFJGMXV',

OAXX

MV

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WK.tDVR .' '

LNMMGCR

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INDUSTRIOUS. WALTERBAGEHOT

C I... ICing FNtvrHSyndlc• ... Inc .
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�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

, Some U.S. families still bitter over losing sons

Crisis In Beirut

~
American Headquarters

u

Italian Headquarters

D

F..nc:h Heldquarters

Controlled by Leblnese
.net Phalangist Fon:es
ell IIR I Tllll Weel Beirut-

ii n ' t oleloinl irr8g~Aers take coo4rol ol West BeirUI. manning
cllee*poiiiS IWid QIB'dinO buildings. lJS., French and ttaian IO&lt;oes
-

lo.eeping " ' - in tlloir lieaiiQuiWterS · -

ePulh•Q-·IAII'g•Mon
I..Mclors ol lie SNite on1 Druse factionS press IO&lt; lhe
reeiguelion ol Preaideill ,.,.., Gemayel.

e T........... In Tile Sftela" ' - c:llllh wilh gowmment foroes on main roads tinlong
E.llll and Will Beirulas rocl&lt;et 8III8CIIS l'il -alol8i\fob0rll00d$.

es- U.S. [ ea , ,.,_... [

IC . .Itd

•

More INn tlwee dOZen noo--'ill personnel and dependents
ll'e evecueted by helcooter from the U.S. Embassy, buC Slate
~ olficials say lhe embassy remains "operational ...

MOSLEM FORCES TAKE WEST BEIRUT- This graphic detall'l
where various factions are In control In Beirut after MOIIIem forces look
over West Belnlt In heavY llghling. The Lebanese Army, aided by
CJu1st1aD Phalanglst troops, held East Beirut and the multlna&amp;lon~
peacekeeping forces were holding their headquarters areas.
Nor esneadlll U.S. Embassy persormel were evacuated by helicopter.
(AP Laserphoto ).

Voters reject issues
By'lbe Associated PrEss
Voters In five northern Ohio cities
rejected school Issues, while measures were approved In three
communities, according to final,
unottldal election returns.
School Issues were rejected
Tuesday In the Berea, Willoughby·
Eastlake, Nordonla Hills, Palnes·
ville Township and BrecksvilleBroadview Heights districts.
Voters passed school Issues in
Richmond Heights, Chagrin Falls
and the Ledgemont distrlct of
Geauga County.
Ledgemont' s emergency levy
passed by a 3-to-1 margin after four
straight lopsided losses. The measure will raise $145,00l each of the
next three years In the 810-pupU
district.
In Willoughby· Eastlake, voters
rejected a 4.75-mill operating levy
by more than a 2-to-1 margin after
Superintendent Roger Lulow said
nothing would be cut If voters
rejected the levy, which would have
yielded $3.2 million a year for five
years.
Lulow had told voters that the
district's budget was balanced by

Wednesday, F.bruary 8, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

the closing of tour schools, but that
levy passage would have meant
better quality In the district.
In contrast, Richmond Heights
Superintendent George Bowdourls
had told parents that busing for
children living less than two mUes
from the dlstrlct - more than 90
percent of the dlstrlct's puplls would be terminated Monday If the
levy faUed. Voters passed the
measure, which will raise $527,00)
annually, by !Krlvotes to839.
Early reports had Indicated
Berea's 6.9-mill levy was passing,
but final results showed It had been
narrowly defeated, 4,440 votes to
4,274. School officials said they
would press for the levy In May's
prtmary election, a move the school
board will consider.
In Summit County's Nordonla
Hills distrlct, where angry parents
protested an Interruption of bus
service last month, a proposed
6.2l·mill levy was defeated by 2,9()9
votes to 1,833.
· "A transportation cut would be
my recommendation, but the board
has to acton It," Superintendent Guy
Sconzo said Tuesday night.

Meigs woman has minor injuries

By Associated Preu
Families of U.S. Marines expressed rellef at President Rea·
gan' s decision to shltt the Beirut
peacekeeping force to ships off·
shore, but bitterness marked the
reaction of some whose sons and
husbands were among the 264
American servicemen killed In
Lebanon.
''We're not doing any good there.
It's not our war," Rebecca Stephens
of Beacon, N.Y., whose son survived
the terrorist bombing Oct. 23 at the
Marine's Beirut airport co~und.
said Tuesday.
She said she hopei) the forthcomIng shift of the l,QXJ Marines was a
signal that her son, Cpl. Matthew
Stephens, won't be shipped back
from Camp Lejeune, N.C .. But she
acknowledged that he "feels ditrerently.lftheysenthlmback,he'dgo.
He says lt'shls duty."
Some of those who have lost
family members In Lebanon, Uke
the wife of the late Marine Sgt.
Tandy Wells, said they bore Reagan
nogrudgeforhavlngwaltedtoorder
the redeployment.
"I was glad to hear he took the
Marines out of Beirut and put them
on the ships, but l don't think It
means we have to quit," said Cleta
Wells, 42, of Jacksonville, N.C., the
site of Camp Lejeune.
Her husband died with 240 other
servicemen In the attack on Marine
headquarters, "but the situation
wasn't then Uke It Is now. Of course I
would always wish something would
have happened so ... (her husband)
wouldn't have had to give his Ut.e.
But my husband died tor what he
belleved."
Marine Lance Cpl. Kevin' Miller Is
still In Beirut and his mother,
Beverly Miller of Avoca, N.Y., said

\
she was glad to hear Reagan's
decision. "It's a worry. Every time
one ot the Marines over there Ls
Injured or kllled, you don't hear
anything and you just sit and
worry."
,;
"I jus! thank God he's (Reagan's)
doing something," said Mrs. ThomasLancleofWebster,N.Y.,whose
son Jeffrey has completed one tour
In the ravaged Middle Eastern
capital and could be sent back In
July or August.
"We're just praying they're out of
there by summer."
But for Patricia Smith of Port
Huron, Mich., mother of the late
Marine Sgt. Michael Massman,
Reagan'sdeclslon Is too late.
"U he takes them out of there,
what did an theseboysdiefor?"sald
Mrs. Smith, whose son died In the

terrorist bombing. Vera Brown of
Detroit, motherofanothervlctlmof
thesulclde-bomblng, also expressed
bitterness.
"Uttle by Uttle, they're being
wounded and killed, and for what?"
said Mrs. Brown, mother of the late
Marine Sgt. Anthony K. Brown. "I
lost mine, and I hate to see these
familles and parents go through
what we went through."
"I am not a milltary person. l can .
only go by what my president says Is
necessary," said Arlene Lange, the
mother of Navy Lt. Mark A. Lange,
kUied during a December air raid
over Lebanon. "He knows an awful
lot more than you or I, or these
Monday-morning quarterbacks.
"PoUtlcshavenoplacewithUteon
the Une. There really Isn't any point
In speculating," she said.

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

.*'"

·-l

Sgt. Clifford Davis said the couple
told officers they had gone to work
and lett David In the care of their
1&amp;-year-old daughter and 12-year·
old son. Whlletheglrlwaselsewhere
In the house, the two boys began
playing with toy guns.
In an upstairs bedroom, the older
boy found his father'·s .22~aUber
revolver, Davis said.

Each time the card
opens, a special song
plays for your Valen·
tine! Melodies Include
"I'm In the Mood for
Love" and morel
$7.00 each.

DON'T BE LATE.

The Galla-Meigs Post of the Ohio According to the patrol, a truck
Highway Patrol reports a Racine drtven by Robert M. Brookover, 28,
woman suffered minor visible VIenna, W.Va., lost control after
Injuries following a 9: 10 p.m. slowing for traific. His rig ran off the
The two boys continued playing
accident Tuesday on Ohio 124 east of highway then traveled over an · when the older boy aimed the gun at
embankment toward the Ohio
U.S.33.
David from acro;;s the room, the
Receiving the Injuries was Kim· River. There was moderate dam·
sergeant said. The bullet struck
berly M. Roush, 17. Where she was age. Brookover was cited .by the
David In the face.
taken for treatment was not Ohio State Hlghay Patrol for !allure
No charges have been filed, pollee
to stop within the assured clear
reported by the patrol.
said.
Roush was traveUng west on the distance.
highway In her car when she drove ,......~-~-----------------~-~

ott

the road and lost control. The

:=~:ckaguardrallandthen

The vehicle sustained moderate

~~tor trailer driver escaped

=:~·~~:,:::,::
Wealherforecasl

Clear but not as cold tonight. Low
24-29. Winds llght and variable.
Thursday, sunny and a Utile
warmer. High 4!).00. Chance of
precipitation near zero percent
tonight and
again Thursday.
Extended
Outlook
FrldaytJJroupSunda.v:
Generally mild through the period. Fair 00 Friday and Saiunlay.
Chalice of showea:sSunday.lllghs 1!1
the upper .... and 4011 ' Friday,
wannlnc to Ole 501 Saiunlay, thea
cooiiD« to the. to low~­
Early morNnl lows In the 008
Friday, warmln1 to uwnd 30
Saturday llld Into the 30s Sunday.

••••••••••••••••••••~

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK -

A

~

8
~

..,_

CHUCKWAGON

99¢
WITH FRIE5... .• '1.49

~

ADOLPH'S

~

.DAIRY VA.UEY

~

~
,

"At The End of the Pome... y-Ma~«~ Bridge"
POMEROY OH.
PH. 992-2556

~

~

~· .

•

~
~

.,.
II

"••••••••••••••••••••

II~-~~ii~~iii!iiiiii!~~ii,i;!!~iiiiiii~
IALS
'
AT THE

t+ 1 •I )

~

LA ·SALLE
REsTAUR ANy
$495

ANN'S
CAKE
DECORATING

VAN JOHNSON AND THE LONE WOLFE·BAND.
WED. THRU SAT. IN THE LOUJI!OE

WEDNESDAY: Fried Chicken &amp; Homemade _Noodles:
FROM 4:00 UNTIL 9:00·

ARMAND AT THE ORGAN

Route 7
. Old VFW Hall
. Tuppers Plains

6:30 P.M.-9:30 P.M.
The LaSalle
Luncheon Specials
Middleport, Ohio
Open Se~en Days
992-6836 for Renmtion
- -AWeek

.667-6485

IUILDIHO A TRADITION OfiiXCIUINa IVHY DAY

PAT.HILL FORD, IN.C.
461 S. 3rd Ave.
SEE: GEORGE

1.

Middleport, OH ..

S, MAX MILLER.or--PAT. HILL
~·

SeePage7

First Olympic gold

1OOth birthday...•
Maybelle Mclitrye celebrates P. 8

Stories, photo Page 5

Valentlne'a
DayCarclel

ONLY 3 MORE DAYS LE.FT
OF OUR 6 DAY SALES EVENT
sggoo OVER_DEALERS COST

· Pollee said the shooting occurred
shortly before noon Monday at the
home of the boy's grandparents,
Roy and Doris Withrow.

Stories on Page 3

Musical

-Stuffed Animals
-Valentine Candy
-Party Supplies
-Gift Wrap

The child, David E . Withrow, was
In the Intensive care unit of
Children's Hospital on ute-support
systems, officials said Tuesday.

Income tax assistance

Basketball roundups

.

For Your Valentine..
... We have a eom•
plele 8eleelion of:

Game has
tragic ending

.

"My son was over there becallle.
he was a professional Marine
ottlcer," said Walter Wlnt Sr. of
WUkes-Barre, Pa., the father of ,
Capt. Walter Wlnt Jr., who died In
the blast at the compound. "I don't :
question what the president does." :

.he
Voi.32,No.21 t
Copyriphtod 1914

aily

entinel
2 Sections, 14 Pages

20 Gents
A Multim.dio Inc. NewspofMt

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 9, 1984

.

Ohio House approves tax rebate bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The House has
overwhelmingly approved a bill which could provide
Income tax-payers a rebate but members of both
parties are cautioning Ohioans not to count on refunds
just yet.
Assistant Minority Leader Waldo Bennett Rose,
R·Lima, said Wednesday that lawmakers "shouldn't
run home to their districts to set up a tax Uberatlon
celebration."
He and other Republicans, voting for the measure
as "better than nothing," predicted there won't be a
refund this year, If at all.
The bill's chief sponsor, Rep. Edward J . Orlett,
D-Dayton, said he did not believe Its refund
mechanism wUI trigger this year.
The House sent the proposal to the Senate by a vote

of 93-1 .
· Orlett said the measure "keeps a promise"
Democrats made to taxpayers before they defeated
on Nov. 8 a ballot proposal which would have repealed
last year's 90 percent boost In the Income tax.
He spelled out for the House the things that would
have to happen before a refund could occur.
They Included one stipulation for a $100 million
revenue set-aside and another requirement for the
state's unemployment rate to average below ll
percent during the last three months of the fiscal year
which ends June 30.
In addition, the Office of Budget and Management
could make an additional pre-refund set aside for a
so-called budget stabilization fund. Such payments

are determined by a formula based on the
unemployment rate and the growth, If any, of
personal Income In Ohio.
Rep. JoAnn Davidson, RReynoldsburg, offered an
amendment which would scrapped those criteria and
provided Instead that the state would have to refund to
taxpayers aU revenues It received In excess of those
which had been projected for the preceding fiscal
year .
Mrs. Davidson said her amendment not only would
make refunds more likely, but would brtng more
stabUity and rellabUity to the state's revenue
estimating process.
Rep. Michael A. Fox, R-Hamllton, said the
amendment "goes to the heart of the matter. It all

Appeal bond
set by judge
GALLIPOLIS - An appeal bond
of $750,00) cash was established
Wednesday by GaUia County Com·
mon Pleas Judge Richard C.
Roderick for Charles Lee ll, the
Point Pleasant teenager found
guilty of murder last December.
Roderick also allowed for a
property bond of $1,500,00) In place
of the cash bond for Lee, who has
~ inllarllerated In the Columbus
' Correctional FacUlty since his
conviction.
Lee, 17, was declared guilty by an
eight-woman, tour-man Dec. 9 In
connection with the shooting death
of 17-year·old Barbara Twyman,
Rt. 1, Ewlngton, on or about March
:.ll,l983.
Roderick said this morning that
appeal bond Is available to defend·
ants In capital cases. Lee's case was
of a capital nature and he was
subsequently sentenced to 15 years
to life.
Lee's attorney, Hamlin King, tued
an appeal In late December, and on
Jan. JO he (lied a motion for appeal
bond. A motion opposing that bond
was also filed by Prosecutor Joseph
Cain.
Roderick ruled that Lee Is entitled
to bond, but "based on the factors
Involved with this case and the
reports previously submitted to this
c6urt by the Shawnee Forensic
Center, an appeal bond, In this case,
should be very high."
If Lee meets one of the two bond
. options, Roderick said he will be
brought Into court Immediately and
the court will establish restrictions
on Lee's right to tmvel from his
home and Into Gallla County.
Failure to observe conditions that
may be set by the court will result In
suspension of the bond and arrest,

Roderick said.
King also flied a motion In
December tor a retrial, claiming the
nine-day trial In Roderick's court
was conducted In a "circus-like
atmosphere" and that "excessive"
use ofsherlff'sdeputles as guards In
the courtroom prejudiced Lee's
chances tor a fair trial.
Roderick tejected the motion on
JIP\. 13 attM •• hearln&amp; waa
conducted with King and Cain
presenting opposing arguments to
the motion.
Lee was arrested by sheriff's
deputies April 6, several hours after
Twyman's body was discovered In
ail abandoned well not far from her
residence. He was subsequently
Indicted for murder, to which Lee
pleaded not guilty.
Scheduled to go on trial Sept. 21,
that trial date was delayed when a
plea of not guilty by reason of
Insanity was entered by Lee.
Testing later proved Lee competent
to stand trial and the Insanity plea
was dropped.
Melp man Indicted
Meanwhile, a Meigs County man
has been secretly Indicted by the
Gauta County grand jury for assault
In Cl\nnection with a stabbing
Incident.
Michael L. Bissell, :.ll, Tuppers
Plains, entered a not guUty plea to
the charge Wednesday In common
pleas court. He was put on $5,00l
bond by Judge Richard Roderick.
Bissell Is charged by the sheriff's
department with allegedly knifing
Randy L. Daniels, :.ll, Rt. 1, Crown
City, at the Mercervute ConvenIence Store on Ohio 218, last Dec. 9.
A sheriffs spokesman said the
Incident arose out of a tight at the
store Involving Daniels and Bissell.

comes down to how you define a surplus. Without this
amendment, It Is very unUkely that there will be a
refund."
However, Orlett argued that the amendment would
tie the hands of the administration to deal with
contingencies. "They wouldn't be able to deal with a
justifiable emergency," he said.
Mrs. Davidson's amendment was defeated ~37.
along with another by Rep. Robert L. Corbin,
R-Dayton, who would have deleted the ll percent
unemployment requirement. His amendment lost

60.J4.
The bill fa~ an uncertain fate In the Senate where
leaders have lsa!d they think talk' of refunds still Is
premature despite recent signs of economic recovery
In Ohio.

Pentagon's
redeployment
plan awaited

ENGINEER FILES - PhWp ROOerts, Melp Couaay Engineer flied
his petition of candidacy with the Board of Elections Wednesday to seek
his !le()OIId tenn. Pictured with Roberts Is Frances 'lbomas, director of
the Board of Elections. ROOerts Is a 1962 graduate of Southern High
School bt Racine. He received his B.S. degree In civil engineering from
Ohio University In 1967. He Is a professional engineer and surveyor In
the State of Ohio. His mother Is Frances Roberts, Racine. ROOerts and
his wHe, Karen are the parents of one !lOR, Stephen age 21;1.

Jagers chosen as
Trooper of Year
For a second year, Trooper J.
Steven Jagers has been selected
1983 Trooper of the Year for the
Gallla·Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol.
The award was presented to
Trooper J agers, 32, In recognition of
outstanding service during 1983.
Selected by fellow officers, he was
chosen based on leadership abilities,
professional ethics, courteous treat·
ment of others, enthusiastic work
attitude and cooperation with super·
visors, peers and the public.
He Is now a competitor for the
District and State Trooper of the

Year Awards to be announced at a
later date. He will receive a
certificate at the District 9 awards
recognition dinner on Feb. 14 In
Jackson.
Trooper Jagers joined the patrol
In 1977 serving since graduation
from the Ohio State Highway Patrol
Academy. A native of Gallipolis, he
graduated from Gallla Academy
High School. He also served In the
U.S. Army prior to joining the
patrol.
He resides near Gallipolis with his
wife, Robin and &amp;-year-old son, Joel.

WASHINGI'ON (AP)- U.S. officials belleve Amln Gemayel's days as
president of Lebanon are numbered unless he can pull off a last minute
deal to win Syrta' s support, an accomplishment they say Is highly unUkely ·
One state Department omctal, who Insisted on anonymity, predicted
Wednesday that Gemayel will make a last-ditch attempt for Syrian
approval soon by ·renouncing the 1983 Israeli-Lebanese troop withdrawal
agreement negotiated with American help.
· Another said he thought Gemayel had "about a month" at most to try to
fashion a new government acceptable to his opponents. But the official
thought It was unlikely he could do so because Syria probably wouldn't
tolerate any government headed by Gemayel.
The next president, he said, "would likely be someone with good Syrian
credentials."
Meanwhile, the White House said It was waiting for the Pentagon to
submit a redeployment plan before beglnnlng the actual pullout of the l,QXJ
American Marines, which President Reagan ordered Tuesday. The first
• 500 Marines are to be withdrawn to ships offshore within a month.
Acting on the new directive by Reagan, U.S. Navy warships hammered
mUitary targets behind Syrtan Unes In Lebanon Wednesday In the heaviest
bombardment against any enemy since the VIetnam War.
The shelling came from the 1&amp;-lnch guns of the battleship USS Jerseythe largest guns afloat- and the 5-lncht~Jns of the destroyer Caron. They
lobbed more than 300 shells at 15 targets thought to be Druse rnllltla
artillery positions.
Alan Romberg, a State Department spokesman, said the rationale tor
the attacks was to protect American Uves In and around Beirut, although
the Pentagon said the firing was In line with Reagan's decision to use
gunfire and air support for the Lebanese government.
Some weU-placed State Department officials said they doubted the
wisdom of the heavy shelling, warning It could set off a new escalation of
violence Involving Americans.
"We just don't think It Is a good Idea torus to be blasting Arabs," said one
official, who Insisted on anonymity.
Another official said It could further alienate the very groups, such as the
Druse and ShUtes, who seem on the verge of gaining new power In
Lebanon.
Larry Speakes, the White House spokesman, held out the possibility that
even after the Martnes are deployed In Navy ships offshore they could
re-enter Beirut If the situation called for it. But he later said such a
possibility was "highly unllkely."
Meanwhile, the toll of Amertcan servicemen killed since the Marines
were sent to Lebanon In September 1982 reached 265 on Wednesday.
Forty-nine more Americans were evacuated from the U.S. Embassy In
Beirut, and the State Department advised Americans not to travel to
Lebanon because of the situation there.

School officials watch
liabilify insurance bill
Local and county school superln·
tendents are watching developments In the legislature on a biD that
waUtd allow school boards to buy
Uablllty lnsul!lllce.
Since sovereign Immunity - the
traditional protection school boards
previously enjoyed - was 11ullll1ed
bythestatesupremecourtlastyear,
boards .have been lelt open to
litigation and are "virtually unpro. tected," said Sen. Oakley C. CoiUns,
R-Ironton. ·
. The Meigs Local School District Is
facing a $12 million darilage suit
flied.:.on behalf · of a PQmeroy
Elementary student who reportedly
sufferedpermanentslghtlossln1981
due to alleged negUge~ on the
distrlct's part.
.
. ThebillLsco-sponsoredbyCo~.
who Is superintendent of the
Lawrence · County Board of
Education.

l .EBANON

"What this means Is that school
boards must have the authority to
purchase llablllty ~urance In order
to protect themselves and meet
their legal responsibilities," Collins
said.
John Reibel, superintendent of
Meigs County Schools, said, "pubUc
ottldals should protect themselves
against litigation.
"We'd have to give them the ·
opportunity to defend themselves,
particularly If we want good people
to run and get elected to the board," .
The bill must be approved by the
House and then go to Gov. Richard
Celeste to be made law.
"I hope this measure moves
sw1ltly through the rest ot the
process/' Coillns said. "Until It's
law, school boards throughout Ohio ·
are vtrtually unprotected from
million dollar Injury lawsuits."

~

Beirut·
D•mascus
Highw•y

~~~~~~

u.s ..Navy
Retaliates

NEW JERSEY lOTS BACK- The baltleshlp the USS New Jersey
!Ired more
w-~~~e~~~ trum 1111 JJ.Inch gw111 at targets In Lebanon
Wednelday after arUDery lire from Drule positions !ltnlck uwnd the
u.s. EmbaiBy. The targets were more than 15 ~Inland. (AP

u-

Luerphoto,t·

..

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