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                  <text>1984

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Lifestyle Furniture evolved in structure built in 1867
By JAMES SANDS
Special Coml8pondent
GALLIPOLIS - . For almost
eight decades school was taught In
a part of what today Is Tope's
Llfestyle Furnltur·ee .~~~
1867 as the Galllpolls Co lor ed
School, the name
would be
changed later to
honor "The Great
Emancipator,"
Abraham Lincoln.
of
the then six room school was $9,300.
For the first decade of Its
existence only primary education

was oHered here. But toward the
end of the decade of the 18'708 high
school co111'8e8 were given and In
1882 Uncoln School had Its first
graduating CIIUIII, W. H. llasldn8, .
Minnie Battles, ldeUa Blnck, and
Mary Nease.
There we're five graduates In 1883
- J. Henry Lewis (later principal
of Lincoln) , Ella Scott, LlllleSessor
Emma Jones, and Mary Buckner:
There were no graduates from 1883
to 1888, and we can assume that lor
part of those years the high school
program at Lincoln was suspended.
The high school program for
Lincoln appears to have been
firmly ·established after 1888 until

r

THE LEFT HALF OF Tope's I.Jiestyle Furniture was erected after
the ClvU War as the Gallipolis Colored School. Primary education was
offered here untU 1951 with secondary education taught here lor aboul40
years off and on. The name of the school was changed to Uncoln when II
was decided to name aU Gallipolis schools alter famous presidents, and
100 years ago there were the following Gallipolis pubUc schools:
Washington, Lincoln, Grant, and Garfield.

Upper Sandusky farmer
to speak here Tuesday

If your birthday comes on
Feb. 29, please tell Peeps

WE WERE TALKING with the
wife of one of them just the other
day - he Is Keith Callahan, whose
wife is the former Dian Swain andshesaidthatKelthwas32years
old. However, he has had only eight
birthdays! Or will have had only
eight birthdays ... he'll celebrate his
eighth birthday the last day of this
month.

DIAN CALLAHAN WORKS for
this newspaper. She and her
husband live at Mercerville, having
moved there not too long ago from
Jackson. On Feb. 28 J . Samuel
Peeps has a birthday, but there's a
28th every year - there's a
terminal 29th only every four
years!
ANYWAY, PLEASE drop us a
postal card giving your birth date
and birth place and any other
biographical facts you can get on a
postal card. Of course, give your
name and address. If you're a
woman you may think It's none of
Peeps' business how old you are; in
that case, please give us your
birthday, anyway, and the year can
be omitted.

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Agent
Agriculture and CNRD
Gallla County
GALLIPOLIS - An Upper Sandusky, Ohio farmer will be one of
the featured speakers at a farm
meeting here in Gallla County, this
coming Tuesday evening, Feb. 14.
His name is Marton Weaver and he ·
will be speaking on the subject of
"Producing and Marketing Hay as
a Cash Crop."
This is one of a series of Risk
Management-Farm Marketing
Meetings the Extension Service has
been conducting with local farmers
this winter. The Tuesday evening,
Feb. 14 meeting wliJ begin at 7:30
p.m., in the Production Credit
Association Building, Upper River
Road, Galllpolls.
We hope Gus R. Douglass,
Commissioner, West Vlrglnla Department of Agriculture will be
with us to speak on the same
subject. However, Mr. Douglas

Meigs County agent's corner

Detaling PIK tillage options
By JOHN C. RICE
Meigs Coonty ..
Agricultural Agent
POMEROY -To bring those idle
acres from the PIK program back
Into production may be something
new to many farmers. says Don
Eckert, Extension agronomist at
The Ohio State University .
Farmers should be concerned with
the same things they would be in
any other situation - tillage,
fertility, weed control, variety
selection and the other production
practices that go into building a
successful program .
The tlllage system to be used on
PIK acres Is probably first on the
farmer's decision list. However,
there Is no best system. Farmers
must evaluate each field for cover.
soil type and drainage - three
critical factors they must resolve
before deciding the tillage system.
If a field Is adequately drained
and was well cared for last year.
which means that weeds were
inowed regularly or a cover crop
was maintained properly, no-tillage
would certainly be appropriate. If
weeds were not mowed or a very
heavy grass crop was the case,
some tillage probably would be
needed. This would
be

blacks and whites. The Gallipolis
Board of Education promised to
keep Lincoln's facilities up to par
and to recruit the best teachers.
Indeed It would seem that this
arrangement was adhered to up to
1900 when the superintendent of
schools reported that It was costing
more per pupil at Lincoln than at
Union school (Washington) .
The first principal of Lincoln
School was John Cassell wlto was
followed by a Mr. Atwood, Thomas
Ferguson, a !'1r ..._Jones, Robert
Neal Caleb Cherrington, James
Thomas, A. G. Rubfliii'd, M. N.
Brown, W. A. Clark and J . Henry
Lewis.
I

true where drainage is inadequate.
Heavy residue from the year before
keeps the soil moist In the springtime, resulting in delayed planting
and reduced stands. Some of the
worst experiences in no-till have
resulted from spring planting in
wheat stubble where the straw was
not removed. Farmers facing
similar situations should definitely
consider some Ullage.
Most farmers are familiar with
their soils and know what they can
do In the way of early soli
preparation. Better-drained silt
loams often can be plowed successfully in April, but most heavier soils
such as those in the lakebed need a
period of weathering after plowing
to ensure adequate seedbed prepa·
ration. Farmers not In a position to
use no-tillage on heavy soils should
prepare the soil as soon as weather
permits, taking care to avoid
compaction.
Insects In Your Pantry?
Insects infest dlfferent kinds of
food in the home such as flour,
cornmeal, cereal, rice, spaghetti,
macaroni, dried' fruits , nuts, candy,
birdseed, pet foods and spices.
Insects In stored food, cupboards..
or food preparation areas may have
occurred at the processing plant,

warehouse, in transit, at the store,
or In your home. Such Infestations
are normally confined to the food
source area.
Homeowners sometimes complain that these pests eat or
contaminate the foods they Infest
and cause annoyance when they fly
or crawl around the home. They
complain of tiny moths, beetles or
even worms in foods .
Stored product pests are divided
into dlfferent groups. There Is the
Internal feeder where the larvae or
worms feed entirely within the
grain kernels as the granary and
rice weevils. Then, there Is the
external feeder, which feeds from
the outside. These are Insects that
chew through the outer grain coat
and devour inside portions. Exampies of these are the red flour,
confused and saw-toothed grain
beetles.
The most important step In the
control of these pests is to locate the
source of Infestation . This could be
packages of oatmeal, pancake
flour, raisins, dry dog or cat food,
birdseed, chill peppers and even rat
or mice polson baits - products
that are stored but used only
occasionally.
·

tells me his schedule may not
permlt him to attend. I'm hoping he
can be with us because he is also
Involved In producing and marketIng hay as a crop ori his own farm
operation.
Marlon Weaver presently farms
a little less than 200 acres near
Upper Sandusky and about all the
land is in hay. He also has a lime
and fertilizer business and a facility
to handle around 200 head of beef
feeder cattle.
He says the haying operation
works well In the slack time of the
fertllizer season. And, the cattle
operatlon gives a very good way to
utilize any hay that may not be
Ideally sulted for market.
The Weavers have a family !ann
operation and utilize very little
hired help. His wife and three
chlldren assist hlm In the business.
We'll have homemade pie and Ice
cream for refreshments- courtesy
of Howard Scott, Point Pleasant, w.
Va., Representative of Pioneer
Harvester Systems, Inc.
We do Invite anyone attending
any of these marketing meetings to
pay a registration f~ of $3.50 per
farm or business firm . This fee
covers anyone coming from any
particular !ann or business for any
one meeting and the money Is used
to help cover travel expenses for the
various speakers.

No relief in sight...Page 5

aily
Vol .32,No.213
Copyrlghood t 91-4

••
'

MOSCOW (API - Konstantin U.
Chernenko. 72, today was named
general secretary of the Soviet
Communist Party, succeeding the
late Yurt V. Andropov .
1be announcement was made by
the Communist Party Central
Committee through the official
news media as the country prepared
for the burial Tuesday of Andropov.
who died Thursday at 69.
Chernenko is the oldest man ever

He lacks significant administrative or policy-making experience,
oot his lifelong service to the party
makes him a figure behind which a
diverse membership could rally .
At 72, Chernenko Is the oldest man
ever picked to lead the party, which
rules this nation of 280 mliJion
people. He was by protocol the No.2
man on the ruling Polltburo, after
the late President Yurt V.
Andropov .
Chernenko' s ties to Brezhnev
went back 30 years. when he was
party propaganda chief for Brezhnev In the southern Republic of
Moldavia.
When Brezhnev replaced the
ousted Nlkita S. Klu-ushchev as
general secretary In 1965, he named
Chernenko chief of the party's
General Department.

...
BUUJ&gt;INGS COMING DOWN- Workers of the D
and D DemoHtlon Co., Stewart, began tearing down
two fire gutted buUdlngs on Coon Sl., In Pomeroy

MARION WEAVER

1

-------------l.-----.,...-------------------

FEB.I4t!'

selected to lead the 18-millionmember party and his election gives
him an honor he is believed to have
struggled hard for in the months
leading up to the deat h of Leonid I.
Brezhnev in November 1~ .
The announcement was made
first by the official Soviet news
agency Tass.
"Konstantin U. Chernenko has
been elected general secretary of
the CPSU Central Committee at an
extraodlnary

Centra l Committff• which was held
here today." it said.
Soviet television and radio said
Chernenko opened the plenum and
ca lled for a minute of silence to
honor Andropov, whom he praised
him for his domestic and foreign
policies
The announcement said Chernenko was nominated by Premier
Nikolai A. Tikhonov and that
Chernenko was unanimously
elected.

MOSCt N lAP) ·_ Konstantin U.
Chernenko,narnedtoday toleadthe
Soviet Communist Party, is a
veteran Ideologist who rose through
the party ranks alongside his ally of
:Jl years, former President Leonid
Brezhnev.

SORRY, NO LAYAWAYS
ALL SALES FINAL

"Fa•hiuns for the Young"
326 Second Ave.
Phone 446·4343 ·

1 Se&lt; t 1on. 10 Pag e~
20 Cenh
A Muh 1medio Inc New•poper

Chemenko:
a veteran
ideologist

WINTER MERCHANDISE

1ILL'S

enttne

Name Chernenko new
SQviet general leader

ENTIRE STOCK

)ACK &amp;

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 13, 1984

V2 PRICE
Saturday. 1be buUdlngs are owned by Amy
Kingsland Jones and have caught on fire twice, once ·
In 19'76 and again lasl August.

NEW SOVIET LEADER - Konstantln L. Chernenko, 72,
was named Monday as the new General Secretary of the Soviet
Communist Party, succeeding the late Yuro V. Andropov . (AP
Laserpholo)

Three judge federal panel rejects request to change order
By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Aslloclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio lAP! - A
three-judge federal panel today
rejected a request that It delay
Implementing Its order for OhiO to
redraw boundaries of the state's 21
congressional districts.
.....,, The judges also specifically said
th~rrent boundaries were unconstitutional and prohibited their use

by Celeste's attorneys over whether

to proceed as scheduled.
Brown also had raised the
possibility of having to hold a
second, special primary if new
districts a redrawn. Brown said that
would cost taxpayers about $5.3
million.
In their decision today, Judges
Nathaniel Jones, Joseph Klnneary
and Robert Duncan said they sought
to clarlfy some uncertalnity raised

In this year's elections.
Gov. Richard F . Celeste and
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown
had asked the judges to delay their
earlier order which Instructed the
Ohio Legislature to come up with
new district lines by mid-March.
In requestlngthedelay, thestate's
lawyers had said the new district
lin~ would have to be In place today
for the May8congresslonal primary

the court's Jan. 30order barred use
of the current congressional district
plan this year.
"The Ohio plan is unconstitutional
and 'Its use for the 1984 election is
enjoined," the court said.
"In this regard, the motion of
defendant secretary of state
1Brown 1 for an order authorizing
the conduct of the 1984 primary and

general elect ions upon congressiona l districts enacted in 1~ is not
well taken and is accordingly
denied."
In its Jan. 30 decision, the rourt
said the districts drawn by the Ohio
Legislature failed to meet the equal
population standards required by
the U.S. Constitution.
The judges called for an alt'ernate
plan ofdistrictsmorenearlyequalln

population to be sent to the court by
March 15 for review. If the
Legislature fails to act, the court
said it would draw the lines.
The population difference between Ohio's largest and smallest
districts is 0.62 percent.
Celeste and the others seeking a
stay of the initial court's order still
may take their case to the U.S.
Supreme Court.

Record· temperatures warm Ohio
By 1be Associated Press
In the wake of cold snaps that
shattered pr evio us low temperature marks and sent utlllty
bills skyrocketing In December and
January, the weekend's sudden
warm spell was a welcome relleffor
many locally and across the stlte.
RecOrd-high temperatures had
some spring-happy Ohioans shedding their jeans In favor of shorts,
although the sudden thaw also
brought the threat of some minor
flooding.
Joggers were out en masse,
convertible tops came down and
some people took advantage of the
weather to rtnse the winter salt off .
their cars.
Records that had stood for a
century fell statewide. The 62
degrees recorded at Mansfield
broke by 10 degrees the old mark set

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Rio wins 24th
cage tilt•••Page 4

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Rain likely tonight. Low 40-45.
Light southerly winds. Oearlng
Tuesday. High In the mid-50s.
Chance of precipitation 70 percent tonight and 10 percent
Tuesday.

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

TWO LOCA liONS

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Coml:e&amp;-TV , ,, , , , ...... , Page 9
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Editorial oo oo . .
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Sports
oo. oo,
Pages 3-4

Weather

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

FRUTH PHARMACY

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CIMilfleds ..... , . , ... Pagee 6-7-8

Dead beat daddies ..• Page 2

~

...

Agriculture and our community

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary:

By J. SAMUEL PEEPS ,
GALLIPOLIS - If your birthday
comes Feb. 29 please tell Peeps. We
want to ptint your name in the
hallowed walls of this intellectual
column as somebody who has a
birthday only once every four
years. That is, a birthday on the last
day of a month only once every four
years.

1918 when the last' class was
graduated from Lincoln.
It Is Interesting to note that In 188.'1
Wllllam Cousins - a black -'brought suit against the Gallipolis
Board of Education contending that
because of his race he· was not
allowed to enroll at Union School.
There was a long aeries of
negotlatloll8 between the black and
white community over' this maUer
lasting uniU 1881. In that IaUer year
the Slate of Ohio Pll88ed a law which
made It Illegal to keep IICbool•
(pubUc ones) segregated.
It appears that In Gallipolis thls
law was never observed due to a
mutual understanding between

Inside today:

\i .

.\ \
k

as the Ice broke and jammed up.
The weather service Issued flood
warning Sunday night In northwest
Ohio for the Tlffln River at Stryker in
Wllllams County and Maumee
River at Defiance. Minor flooding
was also occurring on the Portage
River at Woodvllle In Sandusky
County. The Portage Wlver wUI
remain above flood stage for the
next few days.
With today's forecast for today
calling for the posslblllty of thunderstorms, the weather service said
heavy rains could create flooding
problems for other streams In
northern Ohio.
Other record-highs set Sunday
and the old records Included Toledo
61, old record 56 in 1882; Cleveland
65, 60 In 1884; Akron-Canton 65, 58ln
1965; Marietta 73, 65 in 1965;
Youngstown 65, 59 In 1965·

In 1965.
Columbus' 69-degree high that
brought Ohio State University
students pouring out of dormitories
to revel In the sunshine erased the
,old mark of 62establlshed in 1884.
The forecast called for· highs to
remain at 50 or above through at
least Tuesday, allhough rain and
thunderstorms are possible.
Grace Swanson. a forecaster at
the National Weather Service office
In Cleveland, said the warm air
from the Gulf of Mexico was
funneled over the Ohio Valley by a
high pressure system near the East
Coast and a low.over Iowa.
"Usually we have a January
thaw. I wouldn't say this Is all that
unusual," Swanson said.
She warned, however, that some
streams and rivers that had Iced
over could back up over their banks

College announces tuition Increase
• •

0

RIO GRANDE _._ Citing ' rising other ututtles was one of the reasons
energy·costs and•a need to Improve presented to trustees to necessitate
educational quality, Rip Grande .ihe Increase.
The othe~ reason, Matthews said,
College boai-d of trustees approved
an lncrease.lntultlon and otherJees. was the.-to.!ru!!le ~taff l&gt;Siarles
AU prtva~ college fees have·been more competitive at a time when the
Increased 10 percent, effective In college Is expanding In student
spring quarter, trustees sald. The population and must.hire additional
'decision was made reluctantly' the staH.
Matthews said that the Increased
board reported.
Joseph Matthews, vice president _fee proposed by RGC continues to be
for business and flnimce at .RGC, below the average for · prtvate
- sakltherapldtncreaseoverthe.past colleges In the nation. Students at.
one of the 10 four-year colleges In
two years In the cost of,energy and

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•

Ohio surveyed wlll pay an average
of $8,570 for tuition, fees, room and
board.
Tuition, fees, room and board at
RGC will cost $5,816 when the
Increase take5 effect, Matthews
said.
Last October, Rio Grande Community College board of trustees
okayed a $41ncrease In fees, raising
the cost for In-district students from
$15 per hour to $19, whlle out-of.dlstrtct st11de11ts are.now.pa)'ing $24
per hour.

THE EFFECI'S OF WARM WEATHER
Members of Ihe Phi Kappa Tau ~atemlty, and Delta
Gamma sorority enjoy a roof-lop view of Ohio State
Vnlvenlty, as temperatures reached the high 60s

...)

•' '

I

Sunday. SpringUke temperatures broke records that
existed since the 1880s, and are typical of early May
not February. (AP Laserphoto).

'j ,

�S.n~nel

Comm
1-11-lent81'Y
--- _

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
BOB HOEFUCH
General Mana1er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
lion and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETrERS OF OPINION are welcomed. Th~y ~hould be le~s than 380 words
.\II h&gt;tters are subject to edltlnc and mu!llt be sl&amp;ned with name, addreu ud
telephone number . No unsl&amp;ned leUen wUI be publllhed. Letten should be Ia
JOod tastt', addres!ilnJ Issues, not personalities.
lou~ .

WASHINGTON - A hopeful
prospect Is developing In Congress
for divorced women whose ex·
husbands are falllng to meet their
obligations for child support. It will
take a while, but legislation Is on the
way that will make the deadbeat
daddies pay up.
President Reagan asked for such
legislation a year ago. A bipartisa n
coalition developed In the House,
where half a dozen bills were
combined Into a single hard·hittlng
measure. On Nov. 16 the House
voted 422.0 In favor of the "Child
Support Amendments of l!m."
Now an Identical bill has been
Introduced by 10 members of the
Senate - five Democrats, five
Republicans - and early passage
seems assured.

A little more than a year of economic recovery has gone a long, long way
for the U.S. auto Industry.
After three years In the doldrums, General Motors Corp. last week
reported record profits for 1983, describing It as "the turnaround year we
have been working for."
To highlight Its comeback, Chrysler Corp. recently announced Its first
dividend since the spring of 1979.
Now,lndustry analysts say, the nexl several months are shaping up as a
good test of the durability of Ihe car makers' comeback.
Alfred Nelson at the Investment firm of A. G. Becker Parlbas Inc., notes
car sales are on the rise wlthout being " forced " by rebate offers,
below·market loans or other promotional measures.
In addition, Nelson says, car manufacturers have had time to buDd up
Inventories of most models to the point where they can meet strong
demand from consumers. For several months late last year, low
Inventories acted as a brake on sales.
"Auto sales are likely to continue moving higher through 1984," declares
the Value Line Investment Survey in Its latest quarterly appraisal of the
Industry outlook. "This opinion is based on our belief that there Is a lot of
pent·up demand for autos."
The springboard for the dramatic resurgence In the Industry's profits.
most analysts agree, was the cost·cuttlng the car makers did during their
long slump. When business picked up, that allowed a lot of the extra
revenue to flow straight through to the bottom Une.
Another Important plus has been a swing In buyers' preferences from
small cars to Intermediate-size and big cars. As Value Line observes,
"When fuel prices were jumping, and gasoline sometimes was unavaUable
at any price, the public bought the small, fuel-efficient cars.
"But the mood has changed with the fuel situation, and drivers,
especially the more affluent, are giving more attention to elaborate models
that Detroit has always done best.
"The l~rger cars typically carry higher profit margins than their
smaller brothers, and they also usually carry higher, and even more
profitable, option loads."
Of course, restrictions on Imports from Japan, which are due to be
relaxed slightly this spring, have helped lUI the odds In the domestic
manufacturers' favor. But even wlthout them, Value Line analysts argue
that the U.S. rompanles' share of the business probably would have
Improved because of their comparatively strong position In the larger-car
market.
Beyond the Improvement that has occurred In a major depressed
Industry, recent trends provide fresh evidence that the automobile would
be awfdlly difficult to dislodge from itscenter·stagerole In the dally lives of
Americans.

Tobacco lobby prevails
•
•
on cigarette
gtveaways
Ohio's potent tobacco lobby apparently will prevail again this year In
watering down a bill to halt sample cigarette giveaways on public property
to minors under 18.
For four straight sessions, Rep. Ike Thompson, O.Cleveland, has
Introduced the legislation, claiming the samples get young people started
on a habit "which Is our leading preventable cause of d.eath."
But each time, the bUI has been stalled or gutted by Industry lobbyists
who Insist that the purpose of the sample packs is to acquaint adults who
already smoke with new or Improved low tar brands.
Last week, ThOmpson's bill was brought up for a House floor vote only to
tx! amended to permit giveaways but require the posting of signs In the
area saying persons under 18 could not receive them.
;Rep. Michael Shoemaker, DBourneville, offered the amendment which
passed by a lopsided vote of 59·31. What was left of Thompson's bUI -a
provision reinstating a ban on cigarette sales to minors - went on to an
urlcertain fate In the Senate by a vote of 89-2.
Shoemaker, who succeeded his father, Lt. Gov. Myrl Shoemaker, in his
ssih House District seat, said he does not doubt "the potential dangers of
cigarettes, but I don't think It is fair to target just one Industry and Its
products." Others said such a ban could be unconstitutional.
However, one House member chided Shoemaker and suggested he had
}'li:Ided to the Influence of Eugene "Pete" O'Grady, longtime lobbyist and
f~r Ohio Democratic chairman who smiled from his perch In the House
1101cony.
.
-Rep. Dale Van Vyven, R·Cinclnnati, observ~ that the-tobbaco Industry
hid donated $48,!XXllast year the the Committee for Ohio.
:The latter group ran the successful campaign to defeat on the Nov. 8
bfllot a proposal to repeal Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste's 1983. 90
iJI!rcent Increase In the state Income tax.
~ut the House heard an Impassioned plea from Rep. Harry C. Malott,
rj,wmiam5burg, who urged approval of the Shoemaker amendment after
~lntlng out that he represents Ohio's three largest tobacco producing
cOunties - Adams, Brown, and Highland.
~obacco production Is an Pssentlal element In the economies of those
cquntles which Malott said rank at the top of unemployment statistics In
· the state. He said the annual erop totals $52 million and permits the
employment of lO,!XXl persons.
;He said he opposed further restrtctlons on the industrY for economic
reasons. "I'm not trying to promote smoking to our young people," Malott
said.
:Thompson did not say whether he will seek to·have his bUI reconstructed
In: the Senate where his earlier bUls stalled.

Today in history
;Today Is Monday, Feb. 13th, the 44th day of 1984. There are 322 days left
11f the year.
•Today's Hlghllght In History:
Feb. 13th, 1633, the Itallan astronomer Gallleo arrived In Rome for
~ by tJie Inquisition for professing the belief that the earth revolves
ai'OuDd the sun.
·
this.date:
: 1n:·l881i, 99 years ago, former first lady Bess Truman was born !If
JOdejlendence, Mo.

:On

:on

I

The problem attacked by the bill
Is rooted In the bitterness and
unhappiness of divorce. The Census
Bureau has estimated that 8.4
million women, either divorced or ·
legally separated, are living wlth
children under the age of 21. In
about 60 percent of the cases, a
court awards child support, but
testimony before a House commit.
tee Indicated that such "awards"
often are hollow victories.
Twenty·elght percent of the
mothers ~lve no payments at all,
and another 23 percent get only
partial payments. The situation Is
remarkably better among poor
famllles: Slxcy percent of the
women whose Incomes are below
the poverty level get something
from the fathers of their children.

The worst deadbeats are divorced
fathers In middle and upper Income
brackets.
The House bill would expand the
child support enforcement program adopted In 1975. That program dealt only wlth women
receiving Aid to Families wlth
Dependent Children (AFDC). The
pending legislation would benefit
not only women on AFDC but all
single parents who are entitled to
child support payments. It's a
bareknuckled bill.
As a condition of receiving
federal welfare funds, every state
would be required to enact Implementing legislation of Its own. Let
us suppose that Joe Doakes has
been ordered to pay $40 a week to
his ex·wlfe Susan for support of

\

Recovery: a little bit
has gone a long way

_,

-=-~;.:,;:;:..=..:.::::_..,..-

•

!·

their Infant child. He doesn't pay.
The law has these teeth:
(1) Susan could obtain a court
order directing Joe's employer to
withhold the $40 from Joe's wages
or salary, the money to be remitted
directly to her.
(2) Susan could slap a lien on his
property.
(3) If Joe has a refund coming
under state or federal Income· tax,
Susan could collect her child
support from this source.
(4) It It can be shown that Joe has
"a demonstrated pattern of
overdue support payments," Susan
could Invoke procedures by which
Joe would be compelled to post a
bond to secure payment.
To be sure, In an estimated five or
10 percent of the cases,lt Is Joe who
has custody of the chlldren and a
working Susan who owes child
support. It should be emphasized
also, In fairness to the fathers, that
the pending bill assures them a
right to be heard before any wages
are withheld or liens attached or
bonds posted. In any event, under
the earliest schedule, the legislation
could not take effect before 1986.
The problem wlU get worse
before It gets better. During House
debate, Rep. Barber Conable,
R·N.Y., sketched the sad picture.
Every year the parents of 1.2
mUllon chlldren are divorced.
Every year 100;!XXl children are
born out of wedlock. "These
depressing statistics compound,
year after year, wlth the Incredible
result that halt of the chlldren born
this year are expected to live In
single-parent families before age

Coach Howie Caldwell's reserves
bltf'd c lutch free throw shooting In four, 8.l75, after Anton missed a
defeated
the Irishmen 46-17, pulling
lay·up
after
breaking
the
wide
open
Ihe comeback bid, went to the line
away
from
a lopsided 35-8 third
St.
Joe
scored
at
the
buzzer.
press.
for a bonus sltuallon where he
period score. Todd Adams led with
but the damage had been done as
swished both ends for a 63·6.111e to
Littlefield's free throws provided 11. Mark Jarrell had nine, and Scott
throw the game Into overtime.
Wickline six. C. Keyes had seven
the winning margin.
St. .Joe grbbed the tip a nd Anton
for
the guests.
raced It In for a 65-63 lead, but
Souther
plays Revenswood Tues·
Curfman knotted the score at 65-65
Coach Wolfe praised his senior
day
a
nd
Hannan
Trace Friday In
with a lay.up off the Southern line-up for a lremendous effort and
the
SVAC
showdown.
shuffll'. Littlefield got '3 timely ability lo come back In crucial
SO\!I'HERN TORNi\DOES 11131 - Curl·
steal. then set up the offense for a situations. Connolly, Teaford, Curl·
man ~2- 12: Roush 1·24 : Teaford &amp;2·14: Hill
Curfma n jumper from 20 feet
man, Deem, and Littlefield all
tH ·I: [}(&gt;f&gt;m 6-:1· 1~ : Littlefield .S. IJ.29: Con·
no)) v 44&gt;8. Totalo 31&gt;23-113.
away, lo make It 67·65. Tony Deem came up with "big plays" during
HUN11NGTON ST. ,JOE IKI) - Rl'J&lt;•·r
pulled down a n Irish rebound, then
the extension period.
1·0·2: Bl.&gt;IIC' 4-$-U: Adklno; 5-1·11; Rown H-44 :
the visitors lmmedla le ly fouled
C Anton JJ .J.25: J . A nton 7·2·16: Trea(·y
"Our kids showed a lot of c lass.
Co'(&gt; 111. Totalo JS. IIHI2.
Wade Connolly, who missed. Bob All of our kids played their hearts
S&lt;..,...byquar1enl:
Adkins drove the lane and took the out a nd our bench was very
SouTh('rn ...... ....... .16 16 15 16 ~ 2 4 JO-f{l
Sl. ,Jo£&gt; ..
.. ..1 2 18 12 21 4 2 ~ 8.-fll
shorl jumper with 13 seconds left
supportive. Every time It seemed
again tying the score lor another we were down, things changed In a
overtime.
malter of seconds. Connolly's steal
In the second overtime round made the difference and was
senior Dennis Teaford and Anton
probably the turning point of the
matched goals a nd Llltlefleld game," Wolfe said.
blocked a shot as both c lubs
"This win came a t a good time.
The Meigs Marauderettes open
tightened. The third overtime We needed something like this
tournament
play tonight when they
period pul the Irish on top 72-69 on a
going Into the tournaments. It
take on the Alexander Lady
RIGGSS&lt;X&gt;RESON LAYUP- Meigs' Nick Riggs (21) sUps inside for
thrre point play, the third time Ihe certainly Is a big boost!." concluded
Spartans at 8:30 at Athens High
West Virginians took the Initial
two of hl• I4 points against Wahama Saturday night. Tire Falcons woo,
Wolfe.
School.
overt Ime lead.
Southern hit 31 of 66 for47 percent
69-60.
A triple-header will be on tap as
Curfman notched a score at the from the field and hit 22 of 33 from
a n extra bonus for area fans. Sheri·
2: 17 mark a,s both clubs traded
lhe line. Besides a cont rolled floor
dan takes on Belpre In the opener at
possessions on missed shots. With game Littlefield hit a perfect 13of 1.1
:50 seconds showing SHS was from the line, Deem hit seven of 10 5 p.m . while Nelsonville-York tries
undegeated Warren in the second
whistled for a traveling vlolallon
from the Held, a nd Teaford canned
game.
and a ll seemed gloomy at the six of nine from the floor .
Coach Ron Logan's Marau ·
Tornado camp.
Littlefield led the winners with a
bas kerball contest with Southwest·
de rettes ended a fine 15-5 on the
'SHS fouled Anton, who had a hot game-high 29 points, Deem added
By SCOTI' WOLFE
ern . Eastern s teamrolled to a 24-2
yea r and' a third place finish in the
hand, however, he missed the last 15, Teaford 14, Curfman 12. and
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
TVC. Meigs defeated Alexander Earteltes of Coach Susan Arnold
lriumph over a young Southwestern
of the bonus for a 73-71 score. Connolly eight . Anton had 25 for the
Hig hla nder club lo remain In first
48-43
and
42-31
in
their
two
TVC
clinched a tidor second ptacl' in the
Southern missed a goal, but
losers, brother John Anton had 16,
place
In the SVAC JV race.
meetings
this
year.
S\'AC girls' basketball race here
Reny Bellre 13, Bob Adkins II, and
Teaford made a hlgh·Jumplng
been
led
by
center
Freshman
Erica Kessinger led
Meigs
has
Thursday
(l\'ening
with
a
stunning
rebound a nd missed, then found the
Bill Treacy IO as five men hit double
.Jenny Meadows. one of the premier ~1 ·30 triumph owr rhe Southwest ·
her team to victory with seven
handle a nd scored on the follow ) figures.
players of the area. The senior ern Lad'' Hi ghla nders. The win
points. while Amy Young aod
through. It was 73·73. Adding to
St. Joe hit 33 of 62 from the field
Meadows normally scores above avenged a n earlier dpfeat to Tony a Savoy added six points each.
Southern's momentum Deem drew
lor 5.1 percent and canned 15 of 20 at
the ZO.polnt mark and will get in Southwestern mrlier in rhe season Tina Silvers notched the lone
the line for 20 percent."Southern
an offensive foul as time ran oul,
Highla nder score in thPthird period
double
figures in rebounding.
when Soulhwes•ero blitzed Eastern
won Ihe battle of the board J6.28 1ed
sending the game lnlo over number
Other
Meigs
starterS
will
proba
·
as
Eastern rolled to a 15.() halftime
cJ..l J.
by Teaford and Littlefield with 14
lour.
blv
include
Cathv
Dean,
Jenny
lead
.
Eastern's
11·io
boosted
it
s
overa
ll
During the fi rst 45 seconds and eight resPectively. The Anton
B.
J
.
Gordo~.
Jodi
Harrison
.
M.lller,
Eastern
had 11 rebounds led by
r£&gt;Cord
to
S·B
and
i
·3
inside
lhe
Hunllngton went ahead 77-73 seem· brothers together pulled In 16
Rhonda Haddox, and Meadows.
Durst a nd Young with eight each.
SVAC. while Soul hwestern dropped
lngly spelling defeat for the home· rebounds for the opposition.
to 11 ·5 a nd 'i·:l in loop plav behind The 'winner had 24 turnovers and
town Whirlwinds. Littlefield drovp
Southern had seven stea ls: three
nine steals .
teague·leadiog Southern which is
the la ne to pull within two points, by Littlefield: nine turnovers. II
During a non·league battle at
~ ·2 in leagut' plav.
assists, a nd 15 fouls . St. Joe had five
then ~onnolly made the play of the
Wa
rerford Eastern's reserve gals
Sohomore c e nter Margaret
game, grabbing a steal on the press steals, 19 turnovers. nine assists
agai
n came home lhe winner as
Horner led the EagiPttes with 16
and 27 fouls.
a nd feeding Inside to Deem for thP
]3{'\·prt,·
Wigal tossed in six points to
nd
H
rebounds.
Horner's
points
a
Southern is now 16-2on the season
77-7 tie. Southern spent the rest of
In
r&lt;'CI'nt
Meigs
Junior
High
lead
EHS
to a 15-13 win.
srrong
inside
gam"
sparked
a
team
the game at the line, going ahead by
and St. Joe 9·5 overall.
action. the eighth graders whipped
Coach Pam Douthitt 's Eaglettes
effort lhat also opened up the
Trimble 63·29 while the seventh
gra bbed 32 rebounds. led by
outside shooting la nes. Junior point
graders defeated Nelsonville· York.
guard f\.ngil' Spenc('l norched 10 Young's nine.
46-31 and Southern, 5043.
poinls. and [)(&gt;(&gt; Daik\' added nine . - - - - - - - - - - - - Eighth Grade
pints.
Artie Hunnel set a Meigs' eighth
Coach Mrl Ca ner 's gals mel
grade rebounding record with 13
caroms breaking Steve Musser's defeat without junior all·leaguer
old record of 12 while Billy Brothers Ton,•a Mc:"Pal. who was sidPiined
led In scoring wlth 20 in leading with a SP\'ef'(' ankle injun·. Setting
markers. M. Roush led Wahama
ROCK SPRINGS - Wahama
Coach Rusty Bookman 's crew to 1he pace for SWHS were Sand\·
left.
placed four me n In double figures
their lOth win against three losses. Patrick. Dianna Nida. and Jo,·
The closest the Marauders came I,Vit h eight while R. Clark addf'd
Other Meigs' scorers were Mi · Cart!'r wirh four points earh. while
a nd avenged a n ea rlier loss to
after that was 64·60 with :ll seconds SC'ven.
Ton,•a Adkins added thl'{'('.
Wahama is now 4-9 on the year.
chat&gt;! Bartrum with 15. Scott
Meigs with a 69·60 victory over the
to go. Wahama scored Ihe game's
Eastern rdrPd tu a n 18-2 first
\\'AH,\,J\1;\
1691Brad)(".
7-:t-17:
\
'an:\1C'Williams
10.
Chuck
Pullins
eight.
Marauders here Saturday.
final five points.
JX'l'iod ad,·a mage hPhind dual
Paul Melton five, Hun net four. a nd
Donnie VanMeter paced the
Wahama repeatedly picked up II'r 7-.J -IR: Sorthrup 6-0. 12: C'lf'ndinnin R-1 -17.
Oa"·son :.H - ~. Totat-; ·~ Falcons, now 9·5, wlth . 18 points
Kevin Tanner had one. Jeff Koons six ·poinl rfforrs from Horner and
loose balls around the hoop for easy
MEIGS (601 - Rl~gs tl-:.!-H ; \\')Sf' ~).10:
Fisht·r :.!-04 : E '&lt;tn~ :.!-0.-1 : ChanN"\' ~.J - :."1 1 :
led Trimble with eight.
Dail!''' · During the nexr frarr.e
while Ron Bradley and Bill Clendln·
lay·lns and the Falcons, who haw
\ tii'Pf'Oif'r Hl-~ ; Powpll 11-H-0. Tot~ ti-6-'0.
By
quarters
:
Sout
hwest!'rn fought back. but its
nln each added 17 with Boyd
whipped Pt. Pleasant and Ravens·
Ry quartt·~ :
H 17 :.n 19-0.1
Mei gs .
r; ~ ~ n :.!1-~
earlier setback led to a 2~11
Northrup chipping In 12.
wood In earlier games. seemed to Wahuma ..
.. :.! Ill ~ R-:!~
Trimble ..
I ~ 1:.! )1. :!".!-~1
MPtgs ..
ha lftime scor!'.
Coach Lewis Hall's Falcons
be at the top of lhelr game.
Seventh Grade
E,·er\' player on both sq uads saw
outscored Meigs 14·2 In lhe !alter
"Our rebounding was the differ·
I Rf&gt;st't'\'t~ I
In rhe win over N·Y. Weste,·
WtUi
t\.\tt\
!HI
Hvsdl
:l.n.-ti:
(;n:-s~
:U..ti:
action
as Easrern br('('zed to" 29-17
part of the second and early portion
ence. I thought we played a good
Howard broke Mike Chancey's
C'lark :~ t -7: Wolf(' :!-0.4: Rou sh 1-ti-X: Barnil7
third
period
lead and the 37·21
of the third periods to go from one
team game and played very well ."
'! -:!-6: l.an•ndc'r 2-H-1: Cook fl.-n-O. Totals
scoring record Jot a single game
fin a le. EastPrn hit 18 of 52 from thP
down at 3().29 to a 43·32 lead they
lfi.!Ht.
commented Coach Hall a fter the
with 24 points. Cha ncey's I'{'('Ord
MEIGS U71 - Sha nk ~ --1- 11 : BakPr t;..tl-IR:
field a nd onP of two from the line.
never relinquished.
gaml'.
Kf'n n!'dv :l.fl-1: \\'al1h 1-:!-L Robin&lt;;;()n 1-0-:.!:
wa s 22.
ThP win ners grabbed 37 rebounds.
Mike Chancey led the Marauders
The Falcons made 30 of 57 s hots
Houda!1ih('11 fl.f).O: LonJ,! 1).(1-0: Harri son :1-:! -K
Ot her Meigs scorers were Kevin
T~ 1"1·13-47.
led b'' Horner's H : had 13 steals.
with 20 points and 12 rebounds while
for a dandy 53 percent but canned
Oiler nine. Jared Sheets seven. and
R)· qu~ :
Sf:\\'en b~' SP£'nCC'r: and 22 turnov·
Nick Rl~s was held to 14. Rick
only nine of 22 foul s hots for 41
............. 1:.! II II 7--1 1
Todd Powell six. Mike Eckels led
Wahama .
prs. Eastern pla,·s in thr sectional
percent. Meigs hit on only 27 of 62
... ..... 1:! 7 1~1.1- fi
Wise added 10. Meigs fell to 8-10.
Mf'IJ:s ...
N-Y with 17.
tourna ment nrxt Thursdav a t
Meigs started out with a flurry as
for 43 per cent and six of 16 foul
In tht&gt; win ·o\'er Southern. MPigs
Gallia
Academv High School a nd is
the Marauders scored their first
shots for 38 percent.
upped its record to 1().3. Howard
in position for a possible rematch
eight trips down the floor, hitting all
Wahama had a decided advan·
agai n parf'd Meigs with 19 while
with Southwestern for tht' S('('lional
eight of their Initial shots to take a
tage on the boards with a 38-27 edge.
Oiler
had 11. Matt Baker 10, Decker
SkyUtM.• RowUn~ Lwltos
Iitie.
16-8 lead three and a half minutes
Bradley led lhe winners with II
1\tomln~ Glorlt'S
Cullums four. Sheets four. and
.~t.•bru11ry 7, IAAI
Scorf' hy quarters:
while Clendlnnln and Matt Dawson
Into the game.
Powell two.
.rt....
f:..\ST•: n~ t:r.! - Sp4'nt't'l -~· 11\0 : Hornt'l
had seven each and Northrup eight. Tt'am
But' the Falcons, who did not
. . Ut1
Francis Florist ..
F'or Southern. McMillian had 12. lW-l+i: Oallt '\ -1 1 · ~1 : WhiTlaTC"h t~o.o: :\·1ankin
Jay Carpenter added eight along CUstom PrinT ..
....... !t!
substitute the entire game, scored
1 -1~ :! : ( '; l!)'h ;~rTil-0- 0 : Diddll·ll-11-tl: flib!Y.-;0-JI.Jl
Porter
e ight. Lisle seven. WPaver
Simmons Olcls. Cadill;u: and
Total-.
IK- 1-:r..
with Chancey's 12 for Meigs.
the next eight points and the tilt was
six. Stout six. a nd Diddle two.
Ch('v ..
. Kl
SOl ,IWF..'-11'ER:\ (:! 1I - 1',1T 1ick ".! ·B·-' ·
Meigs had only nine turnovers Thf' Fa blil' Shop . .
nip and tuck with the lead changing
. .. 7:1
Mt'igs' Todd Powell has been ,\Okin." J.J.:I: W,tlkl'r 1·1).:!: :\id,1 H-H : Huff
.. .. tVl
while the Falcons made 13 errors. Hf'rrtld's Oil and Cas f'o..
hands 13 times until Ihe half's final
selected the defensivl' player of thP 1 H.:!: l .II"Tl'l' :!~)·-' · Smuh 1-11-".! . Total' K.-$-:!1.
\.alll't;.' Hair ArT ..
.. ......... ti:!
Meigs was whistled for 17 foul s and
moments. Down 3().29, Bradley hit
High lndlvldualgamP- .tunC' l .ambl•rl :..lf l.l:
week with his splendid play over the
Duri ng a rf'Cent girls' reSC'T"\'f'
Shlrlf'7\' Simmo n~ l!l.l: Barbara \\'h\11ingTnn
two jumpers and Northrup added a
Wahama 16.
last
two ga mes.
IRa.
In the firsl meeting of the two
two-polnler within 30 seconds to
Hl~ot:h individual thiT"f'-gamf'S .luiV'
The Meigs' eighth graders play in r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~;;;;::::::::::::::::.
rivals, Meigs won 63-58.
give Wahama a 35·:ll half lead.
Lambf'l1 'l."ll: An n (;rowr ~I-WI : .lf'~m \orion
the
consola tion game tonight in the
4Cil.
The Marauders managed only
Meigs Reserves Win 13th
F'ederai ·Hoc kln g To urnam en t
High T&lt;'am ga me - Custom PrinT i'U"(
Coach Mlck Childs' Little Ma· Francis F'lor\st ft.t.!: Custom P1int 7ti7 .
two points In the first five minutes of
while the seventh grade opens play
rauders won their 13th game of the
Hig h IC'am thr('('.ga mf'S - Custom Prim
the third quarter and by that time
Wednesday with Southern in the
year against five losses wlth a 47-41 2ll1: Francis FloTist :..~1: HPrald 's Oil and
were down 43-32.
Southern tournament.
Gas Co. Z!.Tl.
Coach Greg Drummer's Maraud·
wln over Wahama.
Meigs was down'23·19 at the half, ..-----------------------~:-1
ers made a run at the Falcons In the
fourth quarter when they scored the
but rallied to tie It 34·34 after three
quarters and went on to the wln.
final canto's first six points to move
19 ln. Diagonal Measure Pictur~
Shawn Baker topped Meigs wllh
to within 4844.
18 points while Chris Shank added
Again the Falcons drilled four
SAVE $80.00
straight fielders within 75 seconds
11 and Rod Harrison had his finest
game of the year wlth e ight
to make It 56-44 with four minutes

By SCO'IT WOLFE
RACINE - Literally placing Its
hom~wlnnlng stn:·lk "on the line,"
the Southern Tornadoes overha uled
the Huntington St. Joe Fighting
Irish In four overtlmes at Charles
W. Hayma n gymnasium Saturday '
night as senior point guard Rod
Lltllefield swished both e nd• of a
one-and·one with just six seconds
remaining lo secure a hard·fought
8.l8I non·league triumph .
Hitting slx·Of·slx In thP final
extension period, Southern put Its 55
ga me home winning streak on the
line, but rose to lhe occasion ~nder
Immense pressure to preserve Iha t
coveted mark.
During the last period or regula·
!ion play Southern desperate clung
to a 5344 lead twlt h 5:41 left to
play), but saw that lead dwindle as
a tired Tornado defense allowed the
Irish to penetrate the base· line .lor
three consecu llve "threl'·pol nt
plays" that quickly axl'&lt;l away at
the SHS lead. Prior to the last two
three-point conversions Southern
took a 5749 lead on a Littlefield
jumper from the wing, then was
contenl lo run out the clock with a
stall on Its next possession with 3:00
remaining.
Tornado mistakes lhwarted their
tactics, which SEll lhe stage for Ihe
two three point plays thai cut lhe
score to 57·55 with 2:22 showing on
the clock. The Irish of Coach Bill
Carroll elected to foul, sending
Tony Deem to the line where he hit
the first of a one-and·one, to make It
J8.55. In the last 1:27 Iris h forward
John Anton ripped the nets with
three stra ight Inside jumpers to pull
c lose at 62-61 a fter Kevin Curfman
and Littlefield swished four free
1hrow anempts for the Tornadoes.
With e ight seconds rPmalnlng Rod
Littlefield, who hit 13 of 1:1from the
foul line. could havp sealed thP
victory, swishing his first shot for a
63-61 score. Confusion developed on
the court as the official ha nded
Littlefield the ball. while Tornado
timeout was summoned, caus ing a
violation and voidi ng LlttlPfield's
next attempt.
St. JOI''s Reny Belle. who exhl ·

18.''

-----NtWS 11£M: 1ME. ~V!AA&amp;E. H4RICAN BM\\..V W~TtHES
UV£N HOUIK tS- 'ft.Lf.VIliON A. ~V.

It Is the Innocent children of
broken marriages who suffer when
child kupport Isn't paid. I don't like
federal laws that say the states
"must" enact particular measures,
but the states should have no
problem wlth these requirements.
Nobody likes a deadbeat, and
deadbeat daddies will IJe. getting
what deadbeats deserve.

• the Arab fold ____J_ack_A_nd_ers_on
Back . In
WASHINGTON Egypt Is
making progress In Its efforts to
return to the Arab fold, from which
It was summarily banished after
signing the C~mp David accords
wlth Israel. Recently, the Egyptians were admitted back Into the
Islamic Conference, and In the next
few weeks It may be allowed to
rejoin the Arab League.
All this diplomatic activity has a
certain urgency for Egypt, which
desperately wants to find friends
among moderate Arab states as a
means of protection against
Moscow-backed radicals like Libya
and Syria. And the Reagan admln·
lstratlon is quietly encouraging the
Egyptians, In hopes that Cairo will
regain the leadership role It lost a I

'. Amp Davis and thwart the
Kremlin's mlschlef·maklng In the
Middle East.
The Importance of the U.S.·
Egyptian diploma tic offensive Is
underscored by President Hosnl
Mubarak's current visit tb Wa·
shlngton for White House talks on
the stalled Reagan peace Initiative
for the Middle East and Egypt's
desire for a large Increase In U.S.
ald. It Is the second time In six
months that Mubarak has met here
wlth President Reagan and his top
advisers.
Continued behlnd·the-scenes ad·
ministration support for Egypt Is
sure to be an Important part of the
White House talks. Meanwhile,
classified cables seen by my

associate Lucette Lagnado disclose
both Egypt's courtship of Its Arab
neighbors and the administration's
steps to further the reconciliation.
One cable, for example, reveals
that Egypt has been signing a
number of secret trade agreements
wlth other Arab states In recent
months. Some of Egypt's new trade
partners were among her shrlllesl
critics during the boycott of Egypt
that followed tamp David.
One agreement Is wlth Iraq.
Egypt has been sending the Iraqis
old Soviet wPapons and spare parts
for their war against Iran - as the
United States ships mon&gt; new
weapons to Egypt. Now, Iraq and
Egypt have signed a trade
agreement.

Although the agreement amounts
to only $35 million, Its political
significance Is (ar greater. It sends
a signal to the radical Arab states
that Egypt and Iraq have come to
terms. Already, Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein has loned down
his anti-Cairo Invective.

"And those are the major players
In the takeover war?"
"Not necessarily. There is the
'Godfather.' The Godfather Is a
friend of the Target, and he might
acquire just enough stock to scare
off the Raider, not because he loves
the victim, but because he stands to
make a sizable profit on his stock
which the Raider has driven up In
the takeover bid. Suppose Bicarb Is
selling for $7 a share: Sodium has
bid $10 for her body. The fact
Sodium has made the offer drives
thestockup$4ashare,becausethe
market Is betting the takeover
battle wlll be bitter and Sodium will
have to come In with a higher price.
Besides the Godfather there Is also
the 'Grizzly.' He buys up just
enough Bicarb stock, say 15 or 20
percent, so he can go to the Target
and say 'Be nice to me, baby, and I
won' t hurt yqu." That's known In
the business as a 'Bear Hug.' The
guy who gives the Bear Hug tnaydo
It either to make a lot of money, or
hemaysecretlywanttheTargetfor
himself."
;,Now what the Target Is always
looking for In an unfriendly ta·
keover battle is a 'Showstopper.' A
Showstopper Is a legal reason to
stop the Raider from molesting the
Target. For e'!llmple, If the Justice
Department or lhe Federal Tra!le
Commission decides the takeover
violates the antitrust laws, Bicarb
can throw the Raider out of her
house. But slqce . the Reagan
administration tloesn't have any
objections to one company raping
another, ,lt's harder and ha~ for
lawyers to come up wlth a
Showstopper. The most they can
hOpe for Is a 'Smokl"¥ Gun,' whl~h
Is shOrt ofa Showstopper but might
delay the .takeover bid so long that
thFTarget begins to look unattrac·
live to the 'Raider and he starts
wondering what he ever saw In her

In the ftrst place.''
"I think I understand It now. But
let's say for argument's sake
Sodium Is able to take over Bicarb.
What happens to Bicarb's
management?"
"This Is the beauty of takeover
battles and why no one gets hurt. If
the Blbarb management senses
they're being kicked out of bed they
Immediately vote themselves luc·
ratlve long·term contract~ which

Marauderettes
open tourney play
this evening

Eastern girls clinch tie
for second place in SVAC

Junior high
cage results

Wahama whips . Meigs 69-60
for ninth cage win of year

Egypt also signed a similar lrade
agreement wlth Lebanon - economically paltry, but a political
challenge by Egypt lo the Syrians.
The State Department document
reveals that•Egypt Is negotiating a
trade agreement with Jordan,
which also feels threatened by the
radical Arab states and the freewheeling terrorists they support.

Taking of America _______A_rt_B_uc_hwa_l_d
Every day you read more stories
about takeover battles and
mergers. It's hard for people to
understand what Is going on.
The takeover battle of corpora·
lions such as Warner Communlca·
lions and Texaco-Pennzoil are just
the tip of the Iceberg.
Takeovers have now become the
corporate equivalent of war.
The people Involved even have
their own sexy language.
An Investment banker explained
to me how the system works.
"The Bicarb Steel Company Is
selling at a very low price beause It
Isn't making any steel. Sodium Oil
decides to become an unwelcome
suitor and tender an offer.to acquire
her stock. Sodium Is known as the
'Raider,' and Bicarb the 'Target.'
"Bicarb doesn't want to marry
Sodium, so she seeks out a 'White
Knight' to save her. A White Knight
Is a company that Bicarb could go
to bed with, without feeling she had
been rape\~."
"How does Bicarb find a White
Knight?"
"Hopefully through an Invest·
ment banker or a hired gun. You
see the Raider plots his strategy for
taking Bicarb by force wlth his
hired g1111, and then we're aired to
defend ·the Target's virtue. Both
sides ha\le unlimited numbers of
lawyers."
"It sound$ expensive.''
••you better believe II. Now If you
can't find a White Knight, you look
fora 'GrayKnlght.'AGrayKnlght
Is someone the Targei Isn't In love
wlth, but could sleepwlth If she had
no other choice.''
"What about the 'Black
Knight'?"
"The Black Knight Is a third
party that comes Into the bedroom
liiilnvlfed - anlie Iastl!mn\l!ftt to-spoil the wedding night by tender·
lng a higher offer."

______

The Daily Sentinel Pagt 3
Pome10y-Middleport, Ohio
__:.~;...:::::;:.::..=;___~___,"":::':::::::::==========-··

Southern keeps home streak alive with
83-81 ·win over HSJ in four overtimes

Deadbeat daddies!,________Ia_m_es_I_.K_ilpa-:--tr_ick

The Daily Senti'nel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

Monday, FebNary 13, 1984

Page 2-The Daily
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
~y, February 13, 1984

are known as 'Golden Parachutes.·
Then when the Raider carries his
new bride over the threshold, the
Blbarb management balls out of the
49th floor, and floats gently to the
ground.''
"Okay, so everyone Involved In a
merger from the Investment
bankers to the lawyers to management makes a bundle out of the
takeover battle. How does that help
Bicarb sell more steel?"
"Beats the hell out of me.''

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9:30 to 5:00
Thurs. 9:30 to 11:00
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Ohio 45772

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, FebNGry 13, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MUS draws Sheridan
in Class AA toomey
The Meigs Mara uders will open
their tournament tra il with the
Shertdan Generals Tuesday, Feb.
21, at 8 p.m. In the Athens "AA"
sectional tournament.
Alexander got the num ber one
seed with a 15-4 sldte a nd will play
New Lexington (3-15) -Nelsonvllle·
Yor~ (IHO) winner Feb. 25 a t 6.
Nelsonvtlle-York and New Lexlng·
ton play Feb. 20 a t 8 p.m .
~a lllpolts drew the number two
Seelf, but must play a "toughie" In
Belpre on opening night. Gallipolis
is 12·6 and Belpre Is 14-4. They play
Feb. 22 at 8 p.m .
The Meigs-Sheridan winner plays
the Gallipolts-Belpre winner on

By The Bend

i\CCEPI'S TROrHY - Meigs Freshman Coach PhD JIJlJmon clutches

MEIGS freshman Donnie Becker takes his tum at net cutting after the
Marauder yearHngs defeated Belpre, 34-33, for the 1984 champ~p

champ~ptruphyoftheTri-ValleyConferenceafterSatunLly's33-32

Satunlay.

win over Belpre. The win gave Meigs Its first perfect freslunan mark In
the school's history.

Eagles edge Fort Frye five
60~55 in ·o vertime encounter
EAST MEIGS - In an exciting
overtim e non-league basketball
contest a t Eastern High School the
Eastern Eagles scored a 60-5.1
trtumph over the Fort Frye Cade ts
Saturday night. Eastern upped its
record to 4·14, While Fort Frye
dropped to 7·10 overall .
Jim Newell scored 18 points a nd
four other Eagles hit the double
figu re plateau. Bob Maison canned
stx fie ld goals for 12 points, Tim
Probert added 11, Troy Guthrte 10,
and Mark Shrtvers nine for the
winners.
Larry E lswick led the Cadets
with 11 points, Stefan Stewart
added 10, Darrell Thieman 10,
Kevin Lang eight a nd Don Dyar
eight.
Eastern led 17·14 a fter onepertod.
In the second round Eastern was
sparked by the outside shooting of
senior forward Jim Newell M'ho set
the nets afire with a barrage of
pertmeter jumpers. In•an effort to
contuse the Cadet offe~. Eastern
switched its defense from zone to
m a n-to-man every time down the
court, successfully stumping the
Cadets' e ffective unit .
According to Coach Dennis Ei·
chinger the Eagles " executed the
offense well" and hit the percentage
s hot with consistency. Newell
paved the way to success with 10
second period points, including a
bucket a t the buzzer that gave

•.

High school
cage results

Eastern a 34·38 ha lftime lead.
Jim Newell intercepted a pass, then
After Fort Frye tossed in four threw to Probert who was fouled
early goals in the beginning of the again, this time hitting both ends of
third pertod, Eastern got untracked
the bonus.
a nd m a tched goals the rest of the
Shrtvers hit two more free
way, however, Fort Frye led 43-41
throws, glving Eastern a seven
a t the e nd of the fra m e .
point lead as Fort F rye suffered
The Cadets threw a s uccessful
frustration in finding the goal
ha lf-court press a t the Eagles,
durtng the overtime. The Cadets
slowing Eastern's penetration to scored a t the buzzer.
result in a delibera te fourth period
Eastern hit 21 of 56 from the floor
of play. A see-saw ba ttle developed and 18of 20at the line. FFhlt 26of66
a nd FF took the lead la te in the tilt . a nd three of five a t the line. The
With 15 seconds remaining, Fort
ta ller Cadets won the bat tle of the
Frye led 53-51, EHS signaled for a . ooards ' 4().27 led by Thetm an's
time out. Goi ng for the tie on the
eight. Malson had nine for Eastern.
inbounds play Newell broke open
EHS had 18 turnovers. eight
a nd streaked down the baseline steals, four assists a nd stx fouls. FF
where he was fouled, sending him to
had 32 turnovers, five steals, four
the line for the bonus tosses. Newell
assists, and 24 s teals.
connected on both ends of the
In the re--oerve contest Eastern
one-and-one to knot the score, 53·53.
suffered defeat tn similar overtime
Royce Bissell cam e up with a
fashion 4847, only Its fourth loss of
steal, tipping the ba il to senior
the year. Eastern was up one point
guard Tim Probert, who hit Troy
with seconds remaining, however,
Guthrte in the open. Guthrte's
a tip In the at buzzer handed the
desperation shot barely missed and
hustling Eagles the heart breaking
the game went into overtime.
loss.
In the extension pertod, Bob
Box score:
Maison grabbed a n offensive
EASTERN EAGLES (.1 - Trov Guthrie
4-2-10: Jim N('We ii7-1-1R; Tim Proilf.rt -~ ~ II ;
e bound and drove it tn for the score,
Bob Malson G412: Mark ShrhT rs 1-i -9. Totals
then grabbed a rebound on the othe r
~J.I~.
FORT FRVE lliiil - Tom Dvar 1-11-R;
end of the court to retain possession.
K£"V1n Lan~ 4.(}.8: Darrell Thif'm~m 4-2-10:
EHS went into its s tall offense,
Sf('fan Stf'Warl ~ U ~ Larr)' ElswiC'k 5-1 -11:
prompting the Cadets to foul.
Pal Brookf'r J.-0..6; Ed Balwr 1.0.2. Totabi
f7obert went to the itne, hitting 16-3-M.
S&lt;'Oft' hy qwu1e1.,.,
the first of a bonus the score then
Easl('rn .. ... .. .. .... : ... ...... H '.JI .i 12 7-60
FF ... .. ........ .... ..... ... ..... 17 11 1 ~ 111 2-¥1
56-5.1. On the ensuing possession

Redmen bounce Knights,
99-81 for 24th victory
By SCOTJ' MILLER
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College outscored visiting Urbana
Cotlege 17·2 durtng a five minute
streak of the first half Saturday
night a nd coasted to a n easy 99-81
Mtd·Ohio Conference victory.
The victory moved the Redmen
to 24·6 on the season, 7·3 in MOC
play. The Knights dropped to 4-6 in
league play a nd 6-22 overall.
"Jerry CMowery) got back on
track tonig ht with a big offensive
showing," said Rio Grande head
coach J ohn Law horn. " Having the
big lead enabled us to use some
different people tn some dttferent
situa tions to get them som e playing
time for the playoffs.
"We got excellent play out of
everybody. Smith, Fumier, Wal·
ters, Morrison. and Rive rs each
played pa rticularly well off the
bench."
The win pushed Rio Grande's
record at Lyne-Center over the past
three years to 41·3. The teams

Feb. 25 a t 9 p.m. The gym will be
cleared after the llrst game tha t
night. Admission must be pur.
chased for each ga me.
Admission will be S2 and two
a lterna tives of parking wilt be
offered. Top level near the school
will cost $1 but bottom level wilt be
free.
Both Meigs and Gallipolis re·
mem ber the Shertdan Generals
from a year ago. The Marauders
lost 72·63 against Shertdan In their
opener a nd the Generals went on to
upset Gallipolis 59-49 the next
round. Nelsonville-York defeated
Shertdan In the llnals to win the
'
sectiona l.

The Knights held a 42-41 edge in
rebounds a nd turned the ba ll over
19 times to the Redmen's 13.
League standings going into this
week's action show Walsh College
In first place with a perfect 10.0
record, followed by Malone a t 7·3
a nd Rio Gra nde at 7·3.
Rio Grande wll.wrap up Us home
season this week with a pair of
league contests at the Paul Lyne
Center. They'll host Tiffin Untver·
stty on Tuesday night and powerful
Walsh College on Saturday night.
Both games are scheduled for 7: ll

'12

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Publl, h£'d rvrr~· afl f'rnoon . Monday
lhrOuRh F'rlday , 111 Court SIN"f'l , bvttw

Ohio V"a llf'y Pu blls htn ~ Compa n,v . ·Mul ·

!lml'dla . Inc ., Pomf'roy, O h lo4~769 . 992·
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mrroy, Ohio.
Mf'mbrr: Thf' Assoc la lf'd

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AmM'Ic a n N("A'SP8P"f Publls h£&gt;rs As
soclallo n. National Advrrtlti lnR Rf'prf"SC'nl all v(•, Bran ham NC'w 8paPf'r Sulf'll .
73.1 Third AvC&gt;nuC' . NC&gt;w Yo rk , Nf'w
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MAIL

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Katie's Korner

Doll birth
certificates
still popular

No relief in sight
at Syracuse utilities
By KATIE CROW
'llmeH!entlnel Stall
It's enough to make you want to
move to the s unny south.
After talking to Herb Gibson,
owner of SYTacuse Home Uttllties
there seems to be IP,!f.'tf'2!S'Il~~
no relief in sight
for Syracuse resi·
dents as far as
natura l gas bills
are concerned.
Glb5on stated
that It wtll take two years to get the
system In a ny kind of shape where
gas btlls might be a little less than
they are today.
Gibson informed me that customers of SYTacuse Home Uttllties
not only have to pay for the amount
of gas they use but also are charged
for any amount of gas that Is lost
due to leaks. Also, delinquent
accounts are passed on to the
paying customers.
Last month Syracuse Vtllage had
a 20.8 percent line loss due to leaks
in the lines. Intersta te Utilizer,
Mason and Racine Gas Service
Company, owned by Gibson, had
losses. Intersta te Utilities had a 5.7
percent line loss and Racine 6.5
percent line loss. Syracuse customers only pay tor the loss incurred
within the Syracuse Hom e Utilities
system .
Gibson said he has flied two suits
for money agains t two comparties
for ruptured gas lines. If the suit ts
awarded in his favor the money he
receives will be passed on to the
customers. This will help. At the
present time the purchasing gas
adjustmant (PGAl rate is $7.26per
1,000 cubic feet of gas used which Is
regulated by Public Utilities.

In add ition, residents of Syracuse
are charged $1.10 per I ,000 cubic
feet, the baste charge, plus a S.'i
service charge plus lea kage a nd
unpaid bills which are divided
eq ua ll y amo ng a li Sy r ac usP
customers.
Gibson says the gas business is
nothing but a "big headache" a nd
not a n easy business to operate .
He did say that some residents
get assistance through HEAP,
welfare and communi ty action .
According to Gibson after April
16, customers In Syracuse- delln·
quent In their payments wtll ha ve
their gas disconnected.
He a lso said that customers ma y
go on a budget, if they so desire,
after July 1.
Gas bills in Syracuse last month
ranged from $270 to over $300. 11 is
very difficult for people to pay
utilities and buy grocertes.
Gibson said the com pany is
presently placing 1,800 feet of high
pressure line on Snowball Hill and
will lay an additional 2,000 feet this
summer . He 5;lld this will make a
difference in the gas bills possibly
by summer.
Tighten your belt you say? I'm
tired of tightening the belt~
Members of the Star Class of the
SYTacuse Presbyterian Church de·
ctded early to serve election da y
dinner.
The complete chicken dinner will
be served in the a nnex of the
church. The menu wtll include
baked chicken, homemade noodles,
dressing, mashed potatoes, vegeta ·
bles, salad, roil, pte and beverage.
Make a note on your ca lendar to
atte nd. It wtll be a fine meal a t a
reasonable price.

Calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Elementary PTO will meet
Monday, 7: :.&gt;p.m. at the school.
POMEROY Cub Scout
Troop 249 will provide a flag
presentation and George Wrtght
will be guest speaker. Kinder·
galien will present the program.
Rl!li..AND - Rutland ?TO
will meet Monday, 7 p.m.
Valentine program will be by the
fifth grade. Refreshments will
be served.
MIDDLEPORT- Heath Unl·
ted Methodist Women will meet
Monday, 7 p .m . at the church.
Guest speaker will be Mrs.
Carolyn Edwards, discussing
nutrition. AU area United Methodist Women are invited to
attend.

Klskl 1Pa. 1

992-2668
· .,m e ory, Oh .

HaHUme""""' - Rio Gra nd&lt;'~- u rbana

t

tU~PS 11'1-IMI I
A Dlvl• lon of Mullltnf'dl•. lnl·.

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A.~hland C!T'!itl"kw

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.

The Daily Sentinel

Fon l ..tMamt. · till. \ "&lt;••-salll•.,.. \"1
Fnrr Hn"\ ·r·t"\ 'fl. Si&lt;inc'l· Lctlman 4!1
Fos to ria St Wmdl'lin Iii. :\f'W Hi1'J,.'I'I lol
Fn'f110n1 Ht ~~&lt;&gt; ..., ~~ . Tol. Waltt • ."II
( ~u-.twa \ IH. Cana l F'ullon SW r;
f ~'flf'\"a rol . Willuul!hll'l• S. ~ 7
Ha mllt tlfl &amp;!din 71. Jl amllt t:n RQK.'i ~
lh'a th Ki. l "Jk·a -Mi
llf'bn :n l..akt~·ood tili. .lohruliCM'n 'f1

TIJESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs High
School Choir will m eet Tuesday,
7: :.&gt;p.m., at the school to discuss
plans for a trtp to Pittsburgh .
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday, noon, at Veteran's Memortal Hospital. David
Stephen of Martetta College will
speak. Members are urged to
attend.

HARRISONVD.J..E - Harri·
sonville Senior Citizens will
sponsor a blood pressure day
Tuesday, 10 a .m . to noon.
Ferndora Story, R.N., will be in
charge.
RACINE - Rac ine Fire·
man's Auxiliary will m eet Tues·
day, 7: :.&gt;p.m. at the firehouse.

• •

DOIL'l CERTIFIED - Children who carne to
the Holzer Medical Center's i\dmlnl'ltratlon Offices
with their parents to have birth certificates made out
lor their dolls included, from left, Mayla Yoacham,
II , with doU Cassandra Lynn; Camilla Y oacham, 4,

with J essica Anne; and Legtna Han, 14, with
Courtney Renee. Mayla and Camilla are daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Yoacharn, and Leglna the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hart, all of Racine,
Ohio.

People continue to come to Holzer
Medical Center Administration otft·
ces to request Doll Birth Certl11·
cates, available to any doll owner
who would like to have one
prepared for a doli, according to
Charles I. Adkins, Intertrn Chief
Executive Officer at the hospital.
In commenting on the success of
the program, Adkins saki the
de mand far exceeded expectations.
Since the program began just
before Chrtstmas, 285 certificates
have been dislrtbuted to proud doll
owners.
Children with their parents, and
often carrying their dolls with
them, come to the admlntstrative
offices at the hospital to have their
special Doll Birth Certificates filled
out and officially dated, numbered
and signed. Because of the populartty of the program, the certificates
will continue to be available, Adkins
said.
The offices are open !rom 8: :.&gt;
a .m. until 5 p.m. Monday through
Frtday. No charge is made for the
"birth certificates," and having
them availa ble r'nerely recognizes
the importance of dolls to their
owners, a nd the very special love
and attachment between a doli and
its parent, Adkins said.

Chester Garden Club has meeting recently
Assistance with a landscaping
project a t the Carleton School.
Syracuse, was planned durtng a
recent meeting of the Chester
Garden Club held at the Chester
United Methodist Church .
Pat Holter reported she had
ta lked with John Foster, adminis·
tra tor of Carleton, who noted that a
maste r plan for the landscaping has
been prepared and matching money
is ava ilable for various plantings.
The posstbUtty of m aking the
landscaping a countywide project of
the garden c lubs was discussed and
will be presented at the next meeting
of the Meigs County Garden Clu bs
Association .
ft was decided that the an nual
flower show of theclubwUI be held in
the fall instead of the sprtng. Mrs.
Holter noted Mrs. Geneva Nolan
had given 40 books on gardening and

flower arranglng to the Pomeroy
and Middleport Ltbrartes. The Oub
gave the book, "World of Flower
Arranglng," by Barbara Pearce to
the Pomeroy Library in memory of
Guy Lee, father of Mrs. Maurtta
Miller, a member.
Mrs. Mae Mora presented a book
report. "The Lore and Legends of
Flowers" by Robert L. Crowell. It
traced the history of daffodils,
narcissus, tulips, iris, martgolds
and dandelions from the time of the
crusaders in Europe to the present.
An a uction "Anything Goes" was
held with Maurtta Miller serving as
a uctioneer. Proceeds went to the
club treasury for project work.
Crystal Rayburn and Janet Koblentz served refreshments in
keeping with the valentine theme.
Red carnations and tapers deco-

ratro tile refreshment table .
The March meeting will be held at

the home ot Dorothy Karr with the
program about birds.

"Make your love
blossom~
Merlin Olsen

The Loving Reflections '" Bouquet
from your FTD~ Florist.
Valentine's Day is Tuesday, February 14.
Valentine's Week is February 8-14.

PEAa OF Mf!JD

Daily delivery within 30 mile;

MARY C. KEBLER, E. A.

o1 Ravenswood.

COOK FLORAL &amp; GIFT
237 Washington Str•t
Ravenswood. W. Va. 2e164
Phone: 304/ 273-9303

"Enrolled 10 Practice Before The
Internal R•"enue Service"

'JRI.CX)UN1Y
80()IOC
1.0 S8MCE
611 lllriln Sl
r.uo,, Oil
IIU

Send your thoughts with special

CJ care:·

Girl Scout night
observed at

Your Farm

J-5-11 : Jut7.l' 5-9-19: Tanrwr 7 - J.J ~; Dos&lt;&gt;ct
2·2-6. Tololo 31 111-~ n
RIO GRANDE 1991 - Moworv R-2-lfi;
PE'nrod G412: VC'rhoff 2·2-fl: Cari-v .l-1·7:
Shaw 1-11-2; Wolfo :1-2-8; Smith 5-2·12: ·Furnlor
~2- 12; Morrison H -R; MrNirhols o.n
Rivers 2.1J.4; Frl17. 1-11-2: Wallm IM . ToWs
311 %l·U 1111.

r

Edgr ~ 3-J and Kllr h&lt;n 1-11-2. Tolalo U-1. ..
By QIUII'I&lt;n:
Mid Am&lt;'t1r an
7 1~ 10 2'&gt;-!!7
Kygor CN'&lt;'k
1R 14 :ll 1 ~

F'or1 .]t'flnin J.." ' tol . ('r1dt•rs \' ll ll' Pf' IT\' 'ii

URBANo\ tHII - Burg!'Ss 1m : Wollen·
5
burg H1 : Dav1s 2-11-1 : Rogm H~; Knerhl

r.tR1·cE-s

MID AMERICAN 1111 - f..&lt;olfln~~Wt• ll
!}.2-12: Robrrts .l-:l-9: Hutc hinson 2·1·5::
Jarrrll 10-S-25: Knockk's 1-0-2 and Martin
IIH. Tololo : J.t:J·I1.
KYGER CREEK 1•1 - VQIIr l 9-2-:!1;
Waugh 244; Martin 7-11-14 ; Bradbury 9-!1-ll

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR

But one llllllp at
the r11ular price,
111 the matchi~l
lamp for 1h priU.

8Ft to 20Ft

fk ~k'\"IK' ~7 . BUI""I Ill~

Kalida 6 1. lllulf1110

Lamp Sale

llesh
Aluminum

&amp; rlrrton 71. ( "k• { ;k1l\ Ilk· ti l
l id' 'iM. Bi'rl'a :~

Hlll'-dalf' n4 .

'12 Price

Fibe!Jlas

..

lhxlson W IW'if•n·,.

------~-------------------J

DISHES

An na 6.1. [)t-( ;rafl Hht •t-.;idt· ~ ~
.\ n ·htx:m• i'.! T lnora "'ll
,\ .-.ht..tbu
Eds.~""' 'nd 'lti. C11 • :'.1a t"'i ha ll

led by Bradbury's eight . Mid
Amertcan hit 21 of 51 from the field
a nd 15 of 22 chartty tosses.
Kyger Creek hosts Wahama
Wednesday in a m ake-up game
then closes Its regu la r season
schedule a t home Frtday against
Southwestern.

PntJ ~

p.m .
Saturday nig ht's contest will
mark O'Dell Lumber Company
Night. -Free ticke ts to the contest
are avatlable at O'Dell Lumber
Company

traded bas kets in the early going
with the score deadlocked at 10.10
aft er the initia l five minutes.
During the next five minutes
Mowery a nd Rick Penrod led the
Redmen on a 17·2 surge for a 27·12
lead . The Redmen held a 5().291ead
a t the ha lf as Mowery sank a s hot
from beyond half court as time
expired . Urbana outscored the
Redmen 52·49 tn the second half.

Oh6o HM
"i. Boylll BN..thldl
&amp;turday'!i Rnulb
,\da \7. Uardln ~orthrrn 1.1
Akron Cm !IrAAN lil r·,tnton T1mkr11 "II
Akron Hoban 'fl. Omitlf' \ 1
,\kron Mandw.-.lr'!" \l &lt;"In Ph' ' F.d ~;
,\kron Sl \ " !\LM lfl. Clf' llf'fll'd l&lt;'ILN' T;
,\11111 E 7tl. Wa \ lllv;llt•ld·f .o-hr'fl •,;

Monday, FebNGry 13, 1984
Page 5

Bobcats slip past foe
66-5 7 in non-loop tilt
Leading 52·32 going into the fina l
pertod, host Kyger Creek staved off
a last quarter ralty to defeat Mid
Amertcan High School of Hunting·
ton, 66-57, Saturday ni ght at
Ches hi re.
The victory left Coach Keith
Carter's Bobcats with a n 11·6
season record.
Kyger Creek jumped off to a n 18-7
first quarter lead and was not
threatened until the Patriots came
roartng back tn the fourth quarter.
Mid Amertcan was cut to eight, but
that was as close as · the West
Virglnta opponent could get.
With junior guard Chuck Vogel
scaling 10 points In the fi rst pertod
the Bobcats jumped into a big lead.
The hosts, with David Martin
connecting for six points a nd Vogel
a nd J. D. Bradbury with four each,
held a 32·22 halftime a dva ntage .
P acking Mid Amertcan's first
ha lf scaling effort were Danny
Leffingwell a nd Scott Jarrelt . Jar·
rell dumped in nine points while
Leffingwell added seven.
Kyger Creek's 20 point third
period sremtngly put the game out
of reach . However, the Patriots had
different ideas as Jarrell led a 25
point effort with 12 m arkers.
Leffingwell and Morgan had four
points apiece. The Bobcats' 20 point
lead quickly vanishcd as Mid
American scored eight unanswered
markers.
Kyger Creek got moving again
midwa y through the quarter. Brad·
bury connected for seven points and
· Vogel added four to pate a 15 point
canto.
Jarrell finished as the gam e's top
potntmaker with 25 points on 10
baskets a nd five free throws.
Leffingwell, before foultn~: out ,
added 12 points.
Bradbury led the Bobcats with 23
points, Vogel finished with 20 a nd
Martin canned 14.
Kyger Creek sank 28 of 56 floor
attempts and 10 of 16 free throws.
The Bobca ts grabbed 21 rebounds

The Daily Sentinel·

Lean on.

for a •to:ooo Joan
for just $180.18 a month
As a homeowner, you have a lot more borrowing power
than you may think. You just need a lender you can lean
on-affordably.

CALL TODAY ABOUT THESE OR OTHER
HOME EQUITY LOAN PLANS TO $50,000 OR M08E:
An!ount

FIIWiced

$7,600
$10,000

Monthly
Pay-t
• 190.411
:m.e8
1811.18

Montb.t
toPay

uaua

eo

U10.17
,180.18
,880.90

•a•ue

$15,000

'17G.27

Totll of
Payment.

...

eo

,11,427.00

120

:18,240.112
1112111.80
$111,2111.80

,17,el4.28

u

120
80
14

,21,81UO

•n.an.oo
'28,41.84
.82,4 .40

120

null Pe

• FIXED RATE • NO POINTS • NO CALL, • PHONE TODAY I

CRhD'JHm
0~
~ ,IE\
AMERICA

.

.,.,

-

..

1312 Eastern Ave..... , •••. 446-4113
· · (Next door to Pizza Hut)
I

I

Girl Scout Night was observed at a
recent meeting of the Salem Center
?TO with Dee Lawrence, field
director for the Black Diamond Girl
Scout Council, was the guest
speaker.
Mrs. Lawrence discussed the girl
scout program and Issued a special
invitation to the girls in grades tour
through slx to join the troop. Anyone
interested in joining the Salem
Center Girl Scout Trooop 1196,
Langsvtlle, is asked to contact Ann
Scarberry, 742·2495. Meetings are
held Mondays alter school at the
Salem Center Elementary School, 4
to 5: ll p.m. Leader is Karen Brown
with Mrs. Scarberry, co-leader.

Adult class
. Mr. andMrs.MelvinSmlthhosted
a recent meeting of the Adult Class
of the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Betty Spencer read a poem,
"What Are Valentines," to open the
meeting. Providing ~otions was
LaDonna Clark using Matthew 26
and prayer, Charles J,&lt;Jng.
omcers reports jVere given by .
Mrs. Clark, secretary and OUve
Siiilth, treasurer. Tlie same oftlcers
were elected again. Trudy Andrews
will host the next meeting. As a
special project for Aprtl, cta&amp;s
members will meet at the church to
clean !he basement chairs and paint
. thole needing II.

. ~~~th ~p~ cl~~
prayer. Retres~ts were sem:u
by the holteues to tholle.named and
Rosllee King, Mr. and Mrs. O&gt;nrad
()JIIInier, Mr. and Mrs. Elwood
Bbwers and Frances Es)cew.

When bill paying
is a problem,
this Columbia customer
helps us all.
Kathy McKean is a Columbia Customer Ser·
vice Representative, someone customers
come to when they have problems. And with
Kathy, they're coming to someone who is a
Columbia Gas customer like they are.
She has the same concerns about rising
costs and the effects that higher gas bills can
have on a budget. So she does whatever she
can to help work out a payment plan with each

person .

Not only does It help the customer, but it
helps everyone who gets a Columbia bill. Every
bill that goes unpaid is an added cost for all
Columbia customers, even as we're trying to
keep our bills as low as possible.
So when Kathy helps someone work out an
answer to a bill paying problem, she's also
helping everyOne who is a Columbia customer.
Through httr &amp;fforts, and the efforts of thou·
hnds of oth.er Columbia -employees, Colum·
bla Is, 'M&gt;ddng to hold down the rising costs
which affect us all.
·
··' .
.

'
'

,..

·'

�•
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

•'

Ohio

Monday, February 13, 1984

Monday, February 13, 1984

Business Services r

Local sorority member
chosen Valentine royalty
Nancy Thompson Hill of Pome.
roy, a member ot Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, has heen selected to serve
in the royal court ot the 1984
Valentbte Queen of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority International.
She was one of 70 contestants in
the international competition to be
selected for the court of Valentine
Queen Donna Arthur, memll'er ot an
Alabama Chapter ot Beta Sigma
Phl. ·
Annually thousands ot chapters
across the world select a chapter
valentine queen to compete bt the
internatlonalcontest.Mrs.Hllllsthe
first MelgsCountianbtmanyyears
to be selected for the royal court.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

The contest was judged by
Sylvester Stallone, a name synonymous with the "Rocky" movies.
Mother ot three sons, Jered,
seven, Joe, four, and John two, Mrs.
Hill is married to Patrick Hill,
owner-managerotthePatHillFord
in Middleport.
She has been a member of Beta
Sigma Phi tor seven years working
on nwnerous service and community projects.
ShelsamemberoftheMlddleport
First Baptist Church and the Ladles
GolfA.ssoclatlonottheJaymar.Golf
Course. A graduate of Rio Grande
College she majored in
communications.

,,·'

NEW OWNER - Etta Richardson Is the new
.owner of Shear Designs Unlimited of Mason, W. Va.,
' : fonnerly operated by Carol Lyo!L'i. She Is pictured
.' here seated with other operators, from left, Cathy

Young, Mary Gress and Lora Roach. An open house
will he held Feb. J.2.18wlth several door prizes to be
awardecj and special prices to be In eHect.

'

Area deaths
Mildred Fisher
- Mildred Lucille Fisher, 74. PomeryJY. died Saturday at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. Fisher was· born June 25.
1909, in Pomeroy, a daughter of the
:late Grorge Carl and Edith Phillips
joachim.
She was preceded in death by her
!)usband, Eugene Fisher; her son,
_GeraldBennetRice,in198l; a sister,
·Edythe Calvert and a brother,
'aenry Joachim.
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs.
Grace Holter of Racine and Miss
,Cora Mae Joachim of Pomeroy; a
ljfother, George E. Joachim of
Phoenlz, Ariz.; several nieces and
nephews and two sisters-in-law.
Prlva te memorial services will be
-held. Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemrtery at Pomeroy. Flowers are
to be omitted.

Carter Franklin

I

- . Carter Long Franklin, 74,80922nd
St., Point Pleasant, was dead on
arrival at Pleasant Valley Hospital
early this morning.
· · Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Wilcoxen Funeral
Home.

_Deryl EdwanJs

I

Deryl James Edwards, 4 ~
months, of Letart, died Sunday in
·Charleston Memorial Hospital.
;: Born September 28, 1983, in
Charleston, he was the son of Dery!
James and Donna Marie McVey
~ards.

· Surviving, in addition to his
parents, are one sister. Angela Lynn

I

Edwards, at home ; paternal grandparents, Willie and Evelyn EdwardsofHartford ; maternalgrandmother, Ellen McVey of Albany.
Ohio; maternal grandfather, Lee
McVey of Augusta, Ga .
Preceding him in death was a
sister, Emily Ann Edwards, in 1977.
Funeral services will be held at
the Foglesong Funeral Home in
Mason on Wednesda y at 10:30 a.m.
with the Rev. LPster VanMeter
officiating. Burial will follow in the
Zerkle CemetPry. near Gibbstown.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m .

PH . 949-3046

SALES
REPRESENTATIVE
OutstandinJ fnco'rl Op·
portunity Sellin&amp; Gourmet
Steaks Poultry, Seafoods.
local territory. Cell 616·
459·6189. This Ad Will Ap·
pur Only Once.

Nant'Y Thompson HW

Larry Wells
Larry Brooke Wells, 59. Brownwood , Texas, formerly of Long
Bottom, died Februa ry 11, at a
Veterans Hospita l in San Antonio,
Texas.
Mr. Wells was born January 9,
1925 in Long Bottom the son of the
late John and Laure White Wells, Sr.
He was also preceded in death by
four brothers and one sister, Joseph,
Fred, Clark and John, Jr. and Goldie
Clendenin.
He was a rWorld Wa r II veteran
having served with the U. S. Navy.
Hewas later a truck driver and crop
duster.
He is survived by one daughter,
Toni Saunders, Indianapolis. Ind. ;
one son, Randy Wells, Xenia; three
grandchildren: four sisters, Doris
M. Grathwohl, Parkersburg: Ida
Margaret Holter, Minersville: Fannie Durst and llah Roush. both of
Portland.
Funeral services a re incomplete
and will be announcro .

Kentucky man hurt
in Saturday mishap
p

I

A Kentucky man was treated and
released at Veteran's Memorial
Ho5pital Saturday for multiple
abrasions and lacerations following
a 6:45p.m. accident on Ohio 7.
Injured was Glenn Hammond, 19,
Ft. Knox. H" was cited for OWl by
the Gallla-Melgs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol.
" Hammond was driving south on
the Rt. 7, went off the road, struck a
telephone pole, and his vehicle

overturned . The ca r received heavy
damage.
A piCkup truck which smashed
into a tree off Ohio 134 received
moderate damage following a 12:15
p.m . accident Saturday.
The driver, Sandra Grindstaff, Z7,
Rt . 3, Racine, complainedofinjuries
but did not need treatment at the
scene.
She was heading north, went off
the road and over an embankment.

Stemwheel popularity rising
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)
- R.C. "Heck" Heckert wants to

spread the word - sternwheel
boating Is back.
'" Parkersburg; like many other
river cities, is developing tremendou.s nostalgic interest in old river
I)Oats, and one of the ways this is
showing is the reproduction and
restoration of old river boats," said
Heckert, a Parkersburg businessman and new president of the
American Sternwheel Association
Inc., headquartered across the Ohio
River bt Marietta, Ohio.
"Another way the nostalgia is
appearing Is in stemwheei boat
regattas in many of the river cities
.:_ Marietta, Charleston, Pittsburgh, New Martinsville, Parkers·
l!.ufg, Ravenswood, Portsmouth,
A_ugusta, Ky., and many more."
,.

Maniage licenses
'

,:A rna~ Ucense was issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
James Ronald' Stanley, 25, Middleand Crystal Ka~ ROush, 25,
f _Middleport. . ·' . .
I

port

UNBELIEVABLE
GIGANTIC SALE
WATCH FOR
ANNOUNCEMENT
IN THURSDAY'S AD

Deadline near
George Collins, county treasurer
reminds residents of Meigs County
that Wednesday, February 15 is the
last day to pay real esta te taxes.

Hospital news

Don'l Miss II.
Rock Bottom Prices

POMEROY
LANDMARK

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write O.lllr SHII1tf Ctnsffitd
Otpt.

Ill Cout1 St. P'OMtrof, Ollio 451"

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Or 992·5875

Parts &amp; Service

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
Wt'd tih to introduce you to
Enpet-A·Cor. tho modorn woy
to drive the vehicle ol your
choice.
No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Boa, 326
Pomeroy. OH. 45769
For Foster Sorvice
Call 614-992-6737

Public Notice

/ ul/uu lll fi lo •/o•/t/UJ II &lt;' ,. "

JIIH1t ........
71 Awtl ,.,lt. Accoooo •••
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093836

RtJ!I ~mct Tuwns hrp ownRt ca n
tw r; npn Jt th• ' lf!StdPnCP o f LP.O
Mon• &lt;&gt; At 1 Au tlanrl Oh10
B•fl s will h~&gt; OpPnf!d M arch 3.
1984 &lt;~I 10 a·c lor.k at the
Autl :rnrl F1rf' Hot rSP

11130 1216 13 3tc
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Seated btds tor the construel iOn ot the Chester St san•t ary
Improvemen t protect tor the
Vd laqe of Pomeroy. Oh•o. w•ll
be rece•verl by the Council ot
the Vdlaqe ot Pomeroy at the
M ayor' s · ott.ce 1n the new
Vlllaqe Halt at 320 E Ma1 n St
unt1l . 12 00 noon. loca l l! me.
Wednesd ay. Feb 22. 1984 and
at that t•me and place w1ll be
publ1cly opened and read
The work to r wh• ch Btds are
•nvi!P.d cons•sts ot lum1shmg all
mater•als ann la bor lor the
construCI•on ol 2.290 teet of 6 ..
and 8.. san•Tary sewer and
appurtenances. also a 3 1 gpm
sewaqe pump sta!IOn The
sa Oil ary sewer work •S lO be
perf o rmed on Chj!Ster St and
S A 7 1n the Vdlaqe ot Pome roy
Cop11~s o t the contract docu men ts are on Idem The oth cf! ot
the VlltaqP. Clerk and 1n th e
oii •Lf! oi ErlCJinP.ellnq Asso Cta !AS. Ltd . 700 W1nk ler Dnve.
Woo ster. Oh10. 44 69 1 and are
ava•tabte tor Ins peC ti On by
prospective b1dders A co py will
also be pl aced 1n the F W
Dod ge o ft.ce 1n Columbu s
Contr act .documents may be
purchased tr om the otf• ce ot
Enq1nP.er1 nq Assoetates. Ltd .
to( S25 00 per set. and there
wll be no rel und

.

Make your
lone
blOSSOm,
·•

nu.,_.,...,

Public Notice

M8E Anachmem 0 IO OMB
C"cular A-102 Secl•on 3tcll31
42 FA 45890 ISeplember 12·

In pur suance o l an Order ot
Sale to me d1rec1ed tr orn sa 1d
Court 1n thP. ahnve en w led
act•on. I w ill ex poo:;e to salf! at
publi c auc tton on the tre nt
steps of the M e•11s Coun ty
Court HOt iSP. on SJ turday.

met

By Order of the Pomeroy
V•llage CounCil. Po meroy. Oh10
A1c hard D Seyl m.
M ayor

1217. 13. 21c
Public Notice

-------,----

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
The a- of Ohio, MEIGS
COUNTY.
111 George Colina. oo T,.,.
.,., of Melga Co.
· 2nd Jockoon Production
Credit
3rd G,.. Equipment co.
Plolntlff
Defondont

No. 18380
in pursuance o f an Order of
Sale 10 the above entitled

acuon. I w•ll offer for sale a1
publt c · aucuon. at the front
steps · of the Co urt House tn
Pomeroy. 1n the above named

Counly. on Salurday. lhe 101h
day of March 1984. a1 10:00

~· o'clOck AM . the followtng
fro'm your FTD-".'Floljst. descnbed real eslale. S•luale •n

Valentine's Day is

·~

... c.......

...
ll )
H I

'•"'*""
"""""

1-etO&lt;! Ooflo

IU "c........
''"" ""
U7

,., ,. ,, ,..,a, '"'" '"-,.. ~

wi'!&lt;;T ~ cha• ns 64 l•nks thenn~
non h 56'1, oeg rees wesT 3
chJ•ns 43 link s alonn r. ~n T ~r ot
road Thf' lasT Three rl• stances.
thP.nr :P. south 5 1 1/ o deQr ees
wesT 4 ch;.uns 80 l•nks to an
P.lm lh P.nC P. north 63 degmes
wesT 5 cha1ns 97 l•nk s thence
no rt h 85 1/4 deq rees west 2
cha•f'l S and 65 l1nks to 111ace at
beq.nn•ng . con t a111•nq 29 331 100 acres m lot 330 and
4-30/ 100 acres •n Lot 329
Pr ope rt y apt:)ra• sed J l
S6.500 00 and cannot bP. sold
tor less than two ·th11d s ot that
amou nt
Terr ns Cash •n hand
JAMFS J PROFF ITI

R.':.otph Frotey. Jr.

The Lovi'ng
Reflections'" Bouquet

'" ,0_.
. ........
...

u••••
• -•• OftodO•"'"'"""
u, ,• •• _, ~ ~...... - ~··

I I·IIIHII-•

All b•d s wtll hP compa red on
ba s•s ol the PST•ma ted
Quan t111es q•vf"n •n thP h•rl
blan ks These Qurtn t11res are
apprmumate and are grven to
provrde a un1 lo rm baS• S to r the
compa r•son ot brd s ThP. Coun Cil ot the VrllaqA ot Pomeroy.
Oh•o. reservP.s th•! rtqh t to
•ncr ease. dP.c rease . or om• ! the
amoun t o t any cl ass or port •on
ol the work prov•ded 1n thP
Con trac t Doc umP.nl s
The nq ht IS resP.rved by The
Pomeroy V1 II.1QP. Counc..il to
re1et":t any or all b 1d s. to wa 1ve
•nlo rma lr!les . or to accepT any
b•d wh1c h •s dee mP.d most
favo r ab le to The Vll laqPAny cont rac t or contr ar:ts
awarded und er th1s •nv• tat:on
tor b1ds are expP.cTed to be
funded '" pa rt by a qrant !r o.n
the UnrTed States Depart men t
ot Ho us•ng and Urban Develop ment. (HUDI Ne1ther the Un•t ed
States nor any o t •ts Depart ·
ment s. Age nc1es . o r Em ployees. 1S. or wd l be. a party to
tht s HlVIIal• on lor b•d s o r any
resul!lnq con trac t The contr act
for th1~ pr o1ect will be subtectiO
HUD poli cy and qoal rega rdmg
the 1ncreased usf! of m•nonTy
bus•ness en terprt se IMBEJ Th1 s
policy •s 1n compl• ance w1th the
olf.ce at Man a(lement anci
Budget (OMBI reQUi rement ot
pos tt•ve eHo rt s by rec •ptents of
tederal grant ass1stance to use

197 7) Th e MBE spec •l•cat•ons
rtnd data sheet s are contamed
1n the pro tect spec •licattons
The M SE qo al for th• s contract
1s 5 percent. wh1 ch must be

3 Announcements
Saturday Admissions - Nancy '-======:;::==~

ll•oo CH o )01

W'&lt;'

.., ,........
'I"l l ..._o
....
Mo 4WI

'"
IU

'"

1-n

.....,

" - " • •••

. .11 ....

llOO
•• 00

ot oo

·· - - 4 - ·· .... .....

the

Dllrnp Tr uck "iPIIPal 416080 H

.... ... ~c ..

Aooo CHo ll l

Rowers Over All!

Consullotion by Appointment
Only. Proem S.rvict. Child
Custody, llissin1 Persons,
Surveillance. Phololfophy. Insurance Claims . Locate Heirs.
Peace ot llind Report. Video
Inventory Cossette ol Personot Property.
LICENSED - INSURED
6 Years Elperience
WOLFE INVESTIGATION

\

·-

(
I
I
t

PAT HILL FORD

Route 1
Lone Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
12-20-tlc

I

VI r." C,h. 8 . SR ,
216 r. . 2nd~~ -

I

)Wanted

17.
18.

1.------

23.. -_ ____

20. - - - ' - - 21.
22. ___
_
_-

s.
~- -----_ _ _ _ __

23. - - - - - -

6. _ _ _ _ _..,..
7 _ _ _ _ __
8 _ _ _ _ __

9. _ _ _ _ __

10. - - - - - -

11. ------

25.-----28.-----29.----26.

27. - - - - - - - - -

30------

12.-----13. - - - - - ~~ -

3
-- _-....
32. 1
_._
_-_
33. _ _ _ __

IS. - - - - - 16. - - - - - -

:M. - - - - - -

------

Jump into overalls with flowers
over all: prettiest way to play
under the sun. Wear w1th or without the basic must-have T-top.
Sew and save. hurry send now'
Printed Pattern 4733: Misses
Sizes 8. 10, 12. 14. 16. 18. 20.
Size 12 (bust 34) overalls 2'4
1ards 4'5-inch; top III yards.
$2.75 for ueh paHem. Add 504
for tach pattem for fiCIIIII'
degrees 09' 30' Wes1 156 4
111d handiiJII. Send to:
feet along ·the cemerltn e of
Aline Adams Patttms
Townsh•p Roan T-366 10 a · PK" Rtadtl Mall
4 &lt;j 1

2~ ! -------------

35.------

Mall This Coupon with RemiHance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St. ·
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Books and CataiQ&amp; - add 501 1
each fo1 po!tage -ilid hinilling. '

.HURRY! BEFOR~
'

'

TOO LATE!

I
I

RUTLAND FURNITURE
.

·Meers Tuesday

. 742-22·11 -

.

Rutland,

DRIV.E A liTTLE. SAVE A LOTI

..

'

OH.

MEIGS INN

36 CLEAN, SAFE, IODERII
ROOMS, CABLE TV. STEAM
HEAT. AIR COND. btes as
low as:
110 A Ni&amp;ht or
140 Weekly
IIE'fiiG 1001$ flEE ro

FOR 10% OFF
ANY SERVICE
Expires March 17

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

101 PROFIT OIGAIIZArlOIS
Wt AccoMIIOdate wp to 250 people
fOf l)lrties artd daMes.

169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.

CALL 992-3629
For Rtstsrvotions

MEIGS INN

PH. 992-2725

POMEROY. OHIO

2-6-1 mo.

Vecency: Julie'• Peraonel
Cere Home . Formerly
Mercer Conveleacence
Home. 18 yeera experience.

KELLER'S

CUSTOM
BE

CARPE~TER

SERVICE

- Addona and remodeling
- Roofing end gutter work

- Concrete work
- Plumbing end electriul

McDaniel Cuatom Butchering, every Friday &amp; Setur-

doy. 7-8 p.m. 304·8823224.

(Free Eotimates)
REDUCED WINTER RATES

l'h Miles South of Chester

V. C. YOUNG Ill

"Custom Exhausts"

Rt. 7. Pomeroy. Oh.

OWNERS:
Rodney &amp; Roger Keller

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
I .

4

Giveaway

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

GRAVEL
HAULED

Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6 ;30 P.M.

AL TROMM

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns
Only

742-2328
10/20/ IJn.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

LOST-Smotl orenge female
Tiger cat. Anawer~ _to neme
of Bita. lnciaion on rtomech .

Reword offered. Cotl 814992-5354.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Tueadey
night, Pt . Pleeeent, WVe.
Auct . Lonnie Neal . Youth

•lnauletion
•Storm Doora
•Storm Windowa
•RepleceiJient Windowa

•New Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES
· JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

1·19·1 mo

DICK
~ ROBERTS
(614) "«6-7612

Jtoii1Polls, OH.

AMWAY products moon
Quality ond personal oor·
vice. Try ua end 111. call
814·949·3027.

~

K.O.G . EXPLO.RATION ;INC. now teoolng mlnorot
righto. plooH colt Richerd
w. Knight Rea. 1304)576·
2853 Buo. (304)1176·3275.

PIANO TUN

G lower

priced regul
tunlngl·
dlacountl to stln or Citiaen1.

Churcheo. Sci olo. Wotd'o
Keyboard, 301·P76-3824.
8runicordi MJolc Co .. Golll·
polio. Colt 44,·PIIB7. Piono

tuning, repair ~th akiH •
integrity. Lane E&gt;anleta, 114·

Real Estat e
31

HoTs for Sale

end excellent fringe benetitt. Send retume end aalery
requirement• to: Wortdperte
Corporation. 364 Richmond
Line. Cry1tel Lake, lllinoia

full basement, with gerege.
wood burner ir1cluded. city
schoole, 2 milea from town. '

Electronic field. be able to
work &amp; repair on atereo's,
CB'a, FM &amp; inetelletione.
Send reeume to P.O. F8ox

By owner with 2 acrea more
or lese. Been remodeled.
smell orchard. beautiful to~ ·
cation . Good neighborhood.

342, Gottipolio, Oh. 46631 .

Phyeicel Therepirt Conaul tent wanted 5 deya 1 week .
Pert time. excellent hourly
wage .
Send re1ume to
Pomeroy Health Cere Cen-

Mayeville Stockyerda •
MeyiYille, Kentucky Auc-

your area. Phone 1 ~ 304-

676-1090.

4 bdr. ranc~ home. large LR,
Colt 446-0276 .

Priced e19.000 or will ooll

HELP WANTED, upe-

3069.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean ueed care.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johneon

446-3672

Wanted to buy used coal S.
wood heetere. Swain Furni-

Standing timber will pay top
priced for rod • white oak.

Colt 614-388-9906 or 614388-9617 after 6.
We need tobacco poundege.

Wilt poy top price. Colt
614-379-2155.
tained. Call 614-256-1216.
Wanted to buy mobile home

in good shape, 12 or 14ft. in
width. Call 614-379-2115.
Square

dancing

Sportowear. Rt. 66 Eoll,

2 BR . 1 story, newly remo ·
deled, carpeted. net. gas
heat. city achools, down-

Revenewood. W.Va .

HAIR DRESSER. New Yoric,
New York Heir Salon is
looking ftfr experienced Jtytiot. Apply 401 Viand St. Pt.

Rodney Howery 614-6987231.

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

Home must eellll Remodeled. fireplace. auper extra
Deal! Some furniture tool

Eeater i1 coming. 1tan saving money, eem •&amp;.00 hour

Middleport. Cotl 614-982·
6941 .

12

3 bdr .. 1 Y2 beth, family
room, 2 car garage, cent. air.
on Rt. 160 acro11 from
North Gellie HS . Owner will

opara time . 304-676-1429.

Situations
Wanted

Will cere for the elderly in my

ciea for elderly persona.
Betty Mercer owner. 304-

. 773-5882.
Will cere for elderty, in our
home. l.P.N . cere. 10 yeera
experience. cell992-7314.
Harper's Adult Cere Home
he1 1 vacency for another
reaident. elderly person. Cell

304-675-1293.
13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. he1 offered
servicea for fire inaurence
coverage in Galli• County
for almost 1 century. Farm,
home end personal p.ropeny
coveregea ere available to
meet individual needs. Conteet Neal lnaurence Agency.

ogant . Phone 614-446 ·
1691 .

18 Wanted to Do
Will do babysitting in my

3PM to 7PM, Mon·Frl. Must

otrong oupervlaory akllto.
love loll p•ced environmont. Atoo occeptlng applieotlono for pernlmi·RN 6 to
11 ond 11 to 7 shift. Apply
8:30 to 4:30. Mon.·Fri.
Scenic Hille, Rt. 2. Bidwell.
Colt 4411· 71110.

located in Syracu~e - N..,
school &amp; swimming pool.~
bedroom situated on onffthird acre lot. Price reduced
$23,500. or will rent for

S240 mo . 304-855-3934:
6 rooms end bath. 1 acre

lend. $16 ,000 . Call 614742-2234 .
- - - - - - - - - l e-

for sale, completely furnished. 3 bedroom home.
Has ell new furniture ,
carpet. Buck Wood stove,
end well insulated. Asking

826.500. For an appointment. Colt 614-949-2933,
Excellent condition. trilevel, 8% percent assumable

loan, $11.000.00 down.
Call after 5 p.m.. 304-675·
1529.

SOMERVILLE REAL ESTATE. 304-675-3030. Residence 675-4232; Jean
Caoto 675 -3431; Jock
McNeely 675-2553 .
$4B,OOO.OO aosume 8'1:! per
cent loan, exc. Point Plea.-nt location, 3 bedroom, 2

beths, full basement. 304675-1219 .
Six rooma ; one acre. land
contract, low payments, low

interest . 304-675 -7541,
-:--:-..,-,:-,--,.,-----,-,----

1
,.
32 Mobile Homes
Painting-relidentiel, comfor Sale

home, Colt 446-0028 .

mercial, interior. eKterior.
Reeaoneble ratea, free eati·

mates. Colt 614-367-0637 1972 Kirkwood 12•65 ::z

Ask for John.
Will do babysitting in my
home. Preferrably days. References &amp; experienced. Call

446-8261.

Ftnanml

bdr., unfurnished, with underpinning &amp; porch, axe .

cond. Call 614-256-9325.

14x70 Kirkwood 2 bdr ..
unfurnished mobile home.
Central air-heat. carpet, ap-

pliances . S10.000. Coli
614-256-6035 or after 6PM'
446-8251 .
12x63 Vindele,

21

Business
Opportunity

gated the offering.

board. call 1-304-882- LIBERTY FASHIONS invites
2711
you to investigate owning

be e•perloncod and po11a1

help finance. Cotl 814-3889729 .

evenings.

I NOTICE I
kett Berber Shop. 2nd. Ave. THE OHIO
PUBMiddleport, Oh. 614-992- LISHING CO.VALLEY
recommends
3476.
you do businesa with
- - - - - - - ·IC- that
people you know, and NOT
Cesh paid for fancy iron or
to send money through the
hoovy iron beda. e160 end mail
until you have investi·
up for certein Meiga Co.
stone jars. Old time cup·

town shopping. e20.000 .
Catl 614-367-7817.

Pleuant. 304·875-7311 .

clothes .

Wanted to buy. New, used &amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete householda. Alto complete Auctioneering service. Call

2 llory' !rome home 300
block 3rd . Ave ., Gellipolie.
Feeturea 4 bdr., 2 bathe,
formel entry, living room,
formal dining room. kitchen
with eating nook, (utility
rooml ell decorated in
charming Colonial style.
New gaa furnence . Large
beck yard (with carport •
outbuildinga). very convenient to achool1 &amp; down-

town . Call 446-1171 or
446-1818.

tion Every Monday • Fridoy, home. loti of references.
1:30PM. 'In weight'. Call Men or women . Cell 614·
608-684-5245, Jim Giboon 667-3402.
Mgr .. 613-649-4286. See - - - - - - - - - l c Clyde Elliott, 614-256 - Mercer's Riverview Per8504.
sonel Cere Home hat vecenAuction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckload• of new
merchendiee every week .
Conaigments of new end
u11d merchendiee always
welcome. Richerd Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304 - 275 -

•e.ooo

down. '150 month . Call
614-388·9053 .

rienced only , factory
eewing-mechine operator.
Apply in peraon. Ripley

your own Jean Sportswear.
Lldie1, Infant-Preteen. Accesaoriea or Large Size
Store. National brands: lee.

levi, Chic. Jordacha, tzod,

Eaprit, Heefthtex, Brittanie,
Even Picone. Celvin Klein .

300 others. 87.600. to
$24,000.. fi•tures, IUPP·

liea, inventory, in store training, airfare, grand opening,

etc. Mr. Koatecky 1601 )329·
9167.
22 Money to loan

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12'1:!% purcholl or
reflnonce. 9% odjuatobto
rete. Leeder Mortgege,

Atheno, collect 614·6923061.

Pert-time charge nurse,

~mon
'Pens
'Wooden Nickels

. 2-10·1 mo.

Ucon11d • bonded in Ohio •
WVo . 304-773-5785 or
304-773-9185.

The Rutt•nd Neurone 11 Help Wanted
Youth. Proudly preaonta
Kid's Proloot3 Saturdoy,
Februory 18, 19t!4 7:00pm.
Rutlond Church of the Nozo· AVON Eom 40 to 46%
rone. Deborah J, Gilmore, commi11io" plua aponHr·
Director The public lolnvltod ohlp. Colt 448·336,8.
to attend.

·

'Illicite$ 'Bill CapS
'Peiicili 'scmth Plds
'BIIIoons 'Deelts _.
'"Hard Hat" Decals
'Bumper Stickets

Rick ·Peer1on Auctioneer
Service. Eatete. Farm, Antique &amp; liquidation ..les .

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
-Dozers
FURNITURE. Beds. iron,
-Backhots
wood, cupboards, chairs.
-Dump Trucks
chesu, besketa. diahe•.
-lo-Boy
atone jera, entiquea, gold
end oliver. Wrlte-M.D .
-Trencher
Mitior, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
-Water
45769 or call 614-992·
-Sewer
-Gas Lines
7780.
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
FmplliYilll!lll
PH. 992-2478 , . --"
l / 18/ 1 mo. pd
St:rv tct•s
A11 11111111 Cl~ lll l' 11 Is

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

I

moricot. Notlonot corpore-

mixed w~h white. Catl 814- ter, 36759 Rockopringo Rd ..
Pomeroy, Oh. 992-6606 .
742-2328.
EARN EXTRA CASH in
apere time. Rewleigh Pro 6 lost and Found
duct• need• di1tributore in

Size 5 to 7. Call 614-3677670.

GUN SHOOT

If

Profe11io'nal
Serviclla

on Iandi contract

Wanted to buy Travel trailer
16 ft. or larger aelf con-

work

reaume to Box 7000 in cere

Clifton. W.V. 304-77380014 .
5873.
- - - - - - - ·lc-

ture. 446-3169. 3rd. •
Olive St .. Gollipolio, Oh.

YOUNG'S

m

Housing
Headquarters

New Homes-htensive
Remodel inc
insurance Work
Culto.m Pole Bides.
Garaces
Roofinc Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidin&amp;s
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683
or 992-2282
ll-1 -tlc

Brin&amp; This Coupon In

145 ACRES - pt rolling
land. Good barn. crib. implement shed, etc. With minerals. Only $65,000.
5% DOWN ON SOME
OF OUR HOMES
CALL
HELEN. BRUCE
SUE MURPHY
MILTON ROUSH
IEAt.Ta. .
992-3325

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Muot 1M oble to woric long
houro. 7 doyo woek. Send

Every Sundoy llorting 1 woric out of Ohio, W.Virgip.m. Factory cholcod guno nie, and Ealtem Kentucky .
Excellent growth potential.
only.
- - -- - - - --tc- ulary. bonue, car. expenMI.

•Refrigerator~

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tfc

1t1tlon end lubricating
room . Salary. commlelion .

23

tlon needa MH· Itllrter with
Gun ahoot Recine Gun Club. proven ules experience .to

•Dryers •Freezer•

i Il l mo -pd

12 ACRES - Barn 2 bedroom ranch home with full
basement and mobile home.
All for just $35.000.

PRICES ARE.
BELOW WHOLESALE

_IT IS

'

and evening, atartlng aoon.
Ph. 4411·5042.

All Makes

•W11hera •Diahwe1hera
•Range•

Beef and Ho&amp;s
"From the Farm
to the Freezer"
Cut and wrapped to your
specifications. fast. Dependable Service.
CALL: 742-2789
or 742-2515

SYRACUSE- 13 years old ,
3 bedroom. all elec . ranch
home with attached garage
and lg. landscaped lot.
Really worsh $38.500.

PRICES ARE SLASHED EVEN
tOWER FOR ROLL CARPET

--125-Ptlal Quilts
12 J.rliift! SIM!w-offs

985-3561

Jerry's Custom
SLAUGHTER

CHESHIRE - Over 1h acre·
of level land. Good 27 year
old one lloor 3 bedroom
home. Bath, new gas FA furnace. oak lloors and alumi·
num siding for $39.900.

Selections Are
Getti-ng Thin For
Roll Carpet
Shop Now While
Selection ·1s
Still Good

243 West 17 St1 New Yn, NY
10011. Print NAME ADOWESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYLE .NUMBER.
Easy-chemises, dashing sportswear- see ana ·sew 'all the
newest fashions. send for NEW
SPRING-SUMMER CATALOG. Over
100 styles plus Free . Pattern
Coupon. send $2 for Catalog now.
AU CRAfT BOOK_S . . $2.50 uch
13l•ldd I 8iecl Quills .
126-Tlllifty Crafty howl!l

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Now Open

LAND CONTRACT - This 3
bedroom home 1s on a htgh
tot in Rutland. Has oak
floors. gas heat, bath, and
root cellar. $5,000 down.
$216.51 a month at 13%for
10 years.

LAST CHANCE!

The Daily Sentinel

KEN'S

Help Wanted

Paga

742-2951
1
of the Golllpollo Dolly Tribune. 825 3rd. Ave .. Goltipo- Avis 'a Tax Ser;vice. 6 milee
llo. Oh 461131 .
Weat of Tupp~n Plein• on
Mocreme Clooooo. Morning 1-S-ot_o_o_
· A_u_t_o_m_o_t_lv_o_A_ft_o_r· 681 . 614-986-3606.

Center Bldg.. Camden St.
614-367-7101 .

Phone
1-(614)·992-3325

~-----~----l::::::~:::::

/hence

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

SYRACUSE - 2 level lots
50x!OO each and a 3 bedroom one floor home. Bath,
gas heat and nice kttchen.
Only $25,000.

)For Sate

)Announcement
)For Rent

Now toklng oub for the
O'IOnth of Feb. fort he !Herold
of Hollnoeo) The Neurone
denomlnetlonol Mogozlno.
24 luuoe •5.60. Con .. ct
4411·3224 or 4411· 1772.

-tc-

Real Estate General

TEAFOR-D

19.

ot satd day. the fo ll ow•ng
descnbecl real estate
Sttuatect 1n the T own ~ h 1 p ot
A'utland. Co unty at Metq:-&gt;. and
State ot Oh•o. and descrtbed as
follows . to w•t
Betn g Hl Sec: t•on No 4.
Townsh1p No 6. Range No 14.
West. of Oh10 Co mpa ny's
Purc hase and bet nq desc r1bed
as follows Beqtnn.ng at a pOtnt
W est about 1140 feet and
North 8 degrP.es oo· 4 5" W esl
874 feet !rom the So utheasl
corner ot sa•d Snct•o n 4. satd
pomt of beg •nn•ng bP. •nq o n the
ce nterline o f Townshtp Road
T-166 anrl bemq marked by a
"PK" na1L thence No rth 190

Current Owners' Name. Fran -

pl1

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

WARM - Hot water heat, 3
bedrooms. range, relngerator and full basement withm
walkmg distance of stores.
Has storm wmdows and
doors.

March 10. 1984 a1 I0 I5 AM

the County of Meigs and S1a1e crs L Ptclfens and M ary J.
---~
., b
of Ohio. and'" 1he Township of P1ckens
,
- Th ClH.ll)', re nutry 14• - -Sahsbury 10-Wit: ·
Adaress: 34053 Hysell Run
- Doily dttiverr wHhln 3o mllos ·
Si1ua1ed •n Salosbury Town- Road. Pomeroy. OH 4576 9
1 of Ravonlwood:
.
ship. Meigs Coumy. and S1a1e
TEAMS Ot SALE:_ Cash.
,-- - · . -.
ill Ohl&lt;5. being, In 100 acre.1o1s· Cannot
be sold for less than
'
·COOK
FLORAL
No.
329
and
330.
Town
I.
213rds ollhe appra,ed value.
Granted divorces bt Meigs County
Range 1"3. Oh10 Company's
APPRAISED VALUE :
Common P,leas COurt were JUI
&amp; GIFT
.
Purchase. Bog1nntng south 9 S27,00000
237 Washlnaton StiNt .
chams 3 lo nks lrom Ihe nonhwLawrence from Clarence M. Law·
. JAMES J. PROFFllT.
Ravonswoocl. fl. VJ. 2el64
es1 corner ol 100 acrelol 330:
renee and Tina Owens and Patrick ·
Shenlf .
Phone:· 304/273·9303
1hence soulh 16 chains 50
Me•gs Counly, Oh•o
OweJIS ~ere !lJ'anted divorces.
. Sendyour thou""'ts
'links ioWell s~ norJhwesi corner: DENNIS 'REIMER CO .. LPA
. . . I" .
thence easl 18 cha•ns 88 lonks BY: Dennts Aetmer
with special •
.care.'" 1o 1he eas1 J•ne of 101 330: Anornev Jor Piamttff
.
!hence Norlh 75 degrees E 7 9806 Ravenna Road
"'
chains 45 links to the center of P.O. Box 382
........_._"_
counly road. lhence n'or1h 35 111 Tw•nsburg, OH 44087
8
The Syracuse Pro wlU meet at 7
· i-;;:;;;;;;;id Dohlry ............,._
degrees west .10 chains 13 (216)425-4201
p.m. Tuesday at the school. .
1..---------~
· links: thence norlh 48 degrees 1216._13..20. 31c

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tlc

Kitchen Clbinets - Roofinc - Sidinc - Concrete
P1lios - Sidew1lh New Construction - Remodelinc - Custom Pole
Birns.

I
I

I

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS; MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

Surv~y

Also Transmiuion

• Sconle Smith
All llokos ond llodets
Antenno lnstottotlon
House Colts ond Shop
Service Available

1 13 1 mo

SMALL - Very reasonable
2 bedroom home above
llood area. Natural gas heat,
bath and all utilities m Mid·
die port.

Defenclonts

pomt of begmntng.' contatntng
0.538 acres. more o r less.
The _beanngs tn the above
descnptton are based on the
Ohto Co mpany' s Pur c ha 5e

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Dewayne Williem1

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and recore rad1ators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

i

Phon•------------------

...

00' 33" Easl 201.4 feel lo Ihe

·

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-1 3·tfc

Addre~~---------------­

FRANCIS L PICKENS, at. ot.

thence South 5 degrees 24 '
22" West 130.0 fee t to an •ron
ptpe: thence South 87 deg rees

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

Ph. 986-4269
II No Answer. Call 915·4382

No Sunday Calla
3-11-tfc

Narn•---------------------

Printed Pattern

Plolntlff

13 7.8 teet 10 an tron p1pe:

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

Call for free Sid in&amp; es·
timates~ 949-2801 or

Write your own ad and oraer by mail wlftl ttlls
coupon. cancel your ild by phone when you get
. resui!S . Maney not refundabl@.

SHERIFF'S SALE.
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER B3-CV·122
FIRST FAMILY MORTGAGE
CORPORATION OF
FLORIDA

Soulh 86 degrees 43' 25" Wes1

Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614·843·5191
10-6-tfc

AND

"Beautiful, Cuatom
Built Gara.u.ea"

Public Notice

a culve rt:

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

S&amp;W TV

BISSELL
SIDING CO..

SHERif f
lv•EIGS COU NTY
f'OMEROY OHIO
45769
121 6 13. 20. 31r

na• l over

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doc Houses

742-2328 01-!k

SIDING

WOLF
INVESTIGATION

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

lt fllljl&lt; ' •

....... ch"''

UTILITY BUILDINGS

11

Someone to do oewlng •
SWEEPER ond oewlng mo- ottorotlon foro fomlly. Mull
chino ropolr. porto, ond 1M ••perlencod ond ••pert.
oupplloe.
Pick up ond Roforonceo ond tronoporudollvory. Dovlo Vocuum don noceooory. Colt 448Ctoo...,, one holf mile up ,4_4_1_ll_ lfl
_•r_7_P_M_.- - -George~ Creek Rd.
Con• ·
Men·
to
work in Service
11 14-4411·0284.

2 free ceta. Calico atriped.

-----------------~ -·

I) loCOYI! ...

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE

r

'·· - · ·wo
J.v"''''
,11l..........
,........
,,nc._
. .......
.
.. ,._

Sizes Sllrt From 12'x16'

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

949-28o0

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

'Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

1-3-fl&lt;

MIDOUPOIT

( ln .. •/"' ./lmr•··•·•" ''' t il•·

11A- ..•IM

• ... , • • l ....

Veterans Memorial Hospital

'.

Call 742-3195

Authorized John Deere.
New Holland, Bush Hoc
farm Equipment
Dtaltr
Farm Equipment

6 I 4-992-7626

Emergency runs
Seven calls were answered by
local units over the weekend. the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reports.
Sunday calls included Pomeroy to
814 E . Main St. for Virginia Covert,
taken to St . Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg; Racine toGreat Bend
at 10:25 p.m. for Clair Boso, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland to College St. at 7:50p.m. for
Melissa Hauser, to Veterans
Memorial.
Saturday calls included Pomeroy
at 7:53a.m. to the county Infirmary
for Mae Ellis, to Holzer Medical
Center: Pomeroy to the sheriff's
quarters a t 12:11 a .m. for Veneva
Kerns, to Veterans Memorial;
Middleport to Route 7 below
Middleport at 6:57, p.m. for Gwen
Hammond and Ronald Cox, Injured
in an auto accident, to Veterans
Memorial; Tuppers Plains at-7:20
p.m. to Route 681 for Genevieve
Guthrie , taken to Veterans
Memorial.

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

3 Announcement•

AT POMEROY
LANDMARK

614-992·2181

The Daily Sentinel

On ~&lt;

Ackerman, Pomeroy; Nicy Bass,
Bidwell; Genevieve Guthrie, CoolRuth Daugherty, Pomeroy.
The sternwheel boa t association ville;
Saturday Discharges - Harry
was formed in 1976and has about 500
Wyatt, Marie VanCooney, Helen
members worldwide, Heckert said.
Engel.
Sunday Admissions _ Martha .
"The basic requirement is to have
Stewart,
Middleport; Douglas
an interest and love for the river
LutherOstiom, Jr.,
Phalin,
Bidwell;
boats and particularly the sternPomeroy;
Etollla
Cassell, )Vllddlewheeler and sidewheeler era," he
port;
Melissa
Hauser,
Rutland;
said. "The membership is made up .
Christina Peck, Waynesville, Mo.;
of about 100 sternwheel owners.and
Frank Roberts Green City, Mo.;
400-plus associate members who
Chadwick
Knight, Syracuse.
are interested in the nostalgia of the
Sunday
Discharges - Chrlstbta
old riverboat days."
Grimm,
Pauline
LaBonte.
·
The group, which meets ·every
Boosters to meet
other month, encourages both
restoration old boats and construcSouthern Junior High Athletic
tion of new stemwheelers, he said.
Boosters will meet Wednesday,
Heckert, who built a sternwheeler February 15, at 1 p.m. at the Junior ,
he calls the Leviathan, won the
high.
inal.lgural· stemwheel race at last
Divorces granted
year's Parkersburg Homecoming.

"We expect to have another
sternwheel gathering to coincide
with the Parkersburg Homecoming
...:: the second one - the third
weekendJn August," Heclleri said.
"The enthusiasm exhibited at
Parkersburg's first races at the
homecombtg Is an example of th.e
growing enthusiasm throughout the
._
country."

64 Misc . Merchandise

The program on "Building Personality" was given by Irene
Parker, with Margaret Eichinger ,
Mary Lisle, April Harmon, and
Marcia Karr taking part . Prayer
and group singing of" Just As I Am"
closed the program. Mrs. Cundiff
read "Common.Folks."
Linda Ferrell was a contributing
hostess and Julie Byer, granddaughter of Mrs. Hllldore, assisted
In the serving.

Bernie and Lbtda Anderson, Papas,
New Guinea.
It was noted that get well cards
had been sent to several members
who are ill. Mary Cundiff presided bt
. the absence of Opal Kloes and read
"Prayer for February." Devotio!L'i
were taken from Psalms.61 with the
reading by Helen Teaford. Officers'
reports were given and 36 shutbt
calls were reported. A free wlll
oHering was taken.

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Residential ~
&amp; Commercial

Probe series of
B &amp; Es in P o m e r o y . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Pomeroy Pollee are investigating
a series of breaking and entering
offenses which were reported Sunday at !l&gt;e Village Green Apartments in Pomeroy.
A number of apartments and
some cars parked at the complex
were broken into pollee said with a
number of articles being taken.
Included in the items stolen are
antifreeze, coveralls, wrenches, an
eight track· player, FM radio, two
speakers, FM converter, a 13 inch
black and white television with HBO
connections, another speaker, 50
cassettes, five eight track tapes, a
tool box filled with tools, and a tape
player.
Police believe that the offenses
were committed by the same person
or persons. Reports were filed with
police by residents of the complex
between 9 a .m. and 2: :Jl p.m.
Sunday.

BOGGS

For all your w1nnc
needs; furnaces repair
service and instillation.

Asbury UMW meeting held
World Day of Prayer, an observanceoftheMelgsCountyCouncllof
Church Women, was announced for
March 2 at a recent meetbtg ot the
Asbury United Methodist Women at
the home of Mrs. Anna HWdore.
Also announced was a meeting to
be held Monday night at the Heath
United Methodist Church, Middleport, with Mrs. Carolyn Edwards to
be the speaker. Read at the meeting
were letters from missionaries,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

23

Professional
Services

mobile

home. Colt 446-7165.

·

1973 trailer &amp; lot located on

Rt . 141. past Centenary.
$13,900 . Ca11446 -1081 .

Vindale trailer, 12x60. 2
bdr .• AC, new carpet, new
underpinning, 20ft. &amp; 40ft ..
awning. Outbuilding good
cond ., ell $6,500. Must see
to appreciate. Call614 -245 5142 after 4PM, Mon. -Fri.
For sale by owner 1972

mobile home. 12x65. 2 bdr.,.
good cond . Call 446-7171
or 446-8288 after 5PM .
Used 2 bedroom mobil,ehomes. furnished . 1Ox 50
and 12x52 sizes . Your'
chance to own 1 comforti·
ble home . Browns trailer
Court. Minersville, Oh. 614-

992-3324

1978 Hillcrest 14 x 70, 3.

bedroom, 2 beth. garde~
tub, new gas furnace, new
carpet, refrigerator and

etove. call 992 -5254 or
992-7766 .

1969 Champion rf.obile
home. 2 bedroom furnished,
WJ!I!J:"er POd dryor. ready

occupancy . S4960 . 614··
992-7479
1977 Titan 12x65 trailer .
New carpet, 2 bedroom.
total electric. excellent con -

dition. $8000. Call 614-.
992-6687 days or 814-9923909 aveninga.

TWO MONTH SPECIAL, ' 1973 Dougtoa 86•14, 3
Jon. end Feb. 1984 off bedroom, 1 bath, gas. ff.·•.
11eaon pricea on furniture nancing available. S6B95. DI
ro· upholstering. Mowroyo • W Homes. 304-675· '
Upholotery. 304·875-4164. 44f4

�Page-8-

The

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Monday, February

13, 1984·

Monday,

FebNary

DICK TRACY
52

32 Mobile Homes.
for Sale

Equipment
The Fix-It Shop: TV, stereo.
microwave. repair, warranty
for R.C.A .. Zenith, KMC.
Gold Star, Emerton . Houae
Calls, 2116-6218 .

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOM ES . USED - CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
614 -446-7572 .

AM -FM car stero with crolg
cusette ployer, all the options, 9 mo. old. •1 00. Coli
614-388-9809.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 614 -446·
7274 .

54 ·•isc . Merchandise
- - __..:
· \&gt;.,.(': ....__ __

36xJ6 block gorogo ond lot.
19~ ond 1936 Ford truck.
Co
between 1 :00 and
6: OPM . Will occopt ony
reosonoblo offer. Call 4460181 .

1977 12x60 mobile home, 2
bdr .. furnished , good cond ..

$6 ,300. Call aher 4 and on
weekends. 614 -256 -6618 .
1978 Shultz 14x70 central
air . a ll new furniture, ex .
cond . on rented lot. Cell
evenings 446 -2075 .
33

4 show cases nice, 4
laddera. tools, lots other
Items. Coll614-266-1551 .
Fresh manure for garden.
820.00 pickup lood. 4468263.

Farms for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Investment property in Rio

Grande , apartment building,
1 yr. old, 3-2 bdr. apt's.

Two bedroom mobile home
on lot (u(1furnished). Married

Good monthly income .

with one small child ac-

$42 .500 . Call 446· 8038 .

cepted . Water and sewer

furnished . 304-676-1076.
BAA BUSINESS AND
CARRY OUT . Pomaroy
area . $7500 . 614 -992 ·
6846 .

ing available. Call446 -8221
aher 6 weekdays.
28

acres

near

Gallipolis

Farry, WV. Mostly wooded,
tobacco allotment . Call
614-367-7271 .
1 .8 acre. ex . Building or
mobile home site, with 360
ft . road frontage, located on
old 160 near Porter. all
utilities near by. $3,960 .
Call 614-388-8801 .
Two acre laval lot approxi mately 400ft. road frontage.
Route 2. Bmi . N. Point
Pleasant . Will accept partial!
trade. 810.000.00. 304675-3717.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel .
Call614-446-0766 .

46 Space for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pari&lt;, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Call
614-992-7479 .

Furnished efficiency. $145 .

Two trailer Iota, will take one
small child. Sewer and water
furnished . 304-676-1076.

44

35 lots &amp; Acreage
35 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd . Owner financ-

CB,TV,

Utilities paid. Share bath.
607 2nd, Gollipolia. Coli
446-4416 ahar 7 PM .

1- - - - - - - - - JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS fEquol
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting at $167 for one
bedroom and t1 93 per
month for two bedroom.
with $200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza. pool and TV
ant. Call 446-2746 or leave
message.
Furnished 2 rooms &amp; bath,
upttairs, clean. no pet1. util.
fum ., dep. req ., adults only.
call446 -1619.

49

For Leese

.'

For lease. Chevron Station,
Mason area. Good location.
304-676-29B2 after 6pm.

LEASE OR RENT 100 acre
farm 304-675: 2991 .

Merc handi se
51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gallipolis. New
e. uaed wood &amp; coal atovea,
Rental s
6 piece wood living room
suite with 8 inch flat arms
Nice 2 BR . carpeted apt. in S399, bunk beds complete
Kanauga with washer &amp; with bunkie&amp; 8199. 2 piece
41 Houses for Rent
dryer hookup. S176 plus antron livingroom suitet
utilities. Cell 1-304-273- t199. antron reclinera *99.
other recliners $80. maple
House for rent $276 in 9745 .
downtown Galli polis . 1 1- - - - - - - - - - dinette seta $179. box
block from park . Cell 446- 3 RMs. bath, all utilities tprings &amp; manre11 twin or
0644 .
paid, $260 / mo. no pets. full $100 set regular-firm
1120. mople dinette choirs
can 446-92!f3 .
S35, wuh stendo •34.
In town 3 or 4 bdr. houae
maple rockert $69, 7 piece
very nice, no pets. Inquire at Furnished efficiency. *176 . chrome dinette tet $149. 6
Sheppard&amp; Sales &amp; Service, Utilities paid. Aduhs, 920 piece dinene aet $99, uted
1st. llo Olive St .. Gallipolis. 4th. Ave.. Gollipolis. Coli bedroom auitet, refrlgera ·
446 -4416 aher 7 PM.
tort. ranges, cheat. dreuera,
House for rent, will sell on
wringer wethers. TV't, dryland contract with small Furnished garage apt. 1 bdr. ers. llo shoes. Call 614-446down payment. Call 446- $225. Util~ies paid. 29 '1&gt; 3159 .
Neil Ave.. Gallipolis. Call
1339 or 446 -7572 .
446-4416 aher 7 PM .
LAYNE' S FURNITURE
2 story frame house. 3 1- - - - - - - - - bedroom . Syracuse. Deposit Attic apt. furnished t176. Sofa. chair, rocker, ottorequired . 614-992 ·8284 or Utilities paid . Share bath. man. 3 tables, (extra heavy
614-992 -6732 .
men only, 919 2nd . Ave. by Frontier!. 1686. Solo,
Gallipolis. Call 446-4416 chair and loveseat. $275 .
Sofas and chaira pric'd from
aher
7 PM .
Three bedroom, two baths.
1286. to 8896. Tobioo. •46
located Henderson. W. Va ..
Regency Inc. newly deco- and up to t1 26. Hido-aphone 304-675-2007 .
rated apartments. Good beds, 8440 . and up to
neighborhood
, close to 8625 .. Recliners, 8175. to
Two bedrooms. one acre.
schools
and
shopping.
2 8375 .. Lompa from 828 . to
$160 . month, deposit . Rt.
62 South Point Pleasant. bdr .• kitchen furnished , car - t76 .5 pc. dinettes from
Call 304 - 675 - 7541 peted. utilitiea partially paid . 199., to 436. 7 pc. 81B9
S200 per month. 304-676- and up. Wood table with six
evenings.
choirs 8426 to $745. Detk
5104 or 304-675-6386 .
t1 10 up to S226 . Hutches,
4 room house. bath, 1 mile
off 87 . Mail, school bus 843 Second Ave .. Gollipolis. t660. and up, maple or pine
5 rooms. oft street parking. finish . Sunk bed complete
route. 304-895-3865 .
no pets, dep. llo ref. Call w ith mattresaea, t250. and
up to 1395. Baby beds,
. For rent with option to buy, 614-256-1529.
t 110. Mattre11et or box
1982 2-bedroom all electric
mobile home. setting on nice 1 bedroom Apt. t196 . mo. springs. full or twin, *58 .•
lot, ready to move in to. including utilities . Equal firm , 868. ond 878. Queen
$200. down S176 . per Hout ing Opportunity. Con - 11111. S196. 4 dr. cheats,
tact Village Manor Apts . 142. 6 dr. chests, *54. Bed
month . 304-576 -2711 .
614-992-7787.
frames, S20 .ond f25., 10
gun · Gun cabineta, t360.
Four room . one mile out
Sand Hill Ad . 304-675 - Riverside Apts. Middleport. Gas or electric range• *375.
Special rates for Senior Baby mattresaes, 826 &amp;
· 4046 .
Citizens . $130. Equal Hout· S35, bed frames $20. $211,
Three bedroom home, Ma- ing Opportunities . 814 - llo 830, king frame 860.
992-7721 .
Good selection of bedroom
son 304-773 -5440.
suites. cedar chelta ,
Newly decorated semi - rockers . metal cabinets.
furnished 1 bedroom Apt . in swivel rockera .
42 Mobile Homes
Middleport . Second floor of Used Furniture .. bookcase.
for Rent
Coats building . Suitable for ranges. chairs, dryers, re·
1 or 2 adults. Inquire at frigeratorsand TV' s. 3 miles
Apt.18 in Middleport. 614- out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
12x60 2 bdr . modern fur· 992 -7347 or 614 -992 - to 6pm. Mon. thru Fri .• 9am
nished trailer, convenient 2610 .
to 6pm, Sot.
location. Upper River Ad , 1- - - - - - - - - - 614-448-0322
deposit req . Call 614-446- For rent . New 1 bedroom
8668 .
furnished apartment in Mid· TV llo Appliances, 627 Third
dleport . call 992 -6304 .
Ave.. Gollipolis, 614.446·
One or 2 bdr. fum . or
1699. Spin washers. goa llo
unfurn ., nice &amp; clean , adults Apartment for rent . 6 rooma electric dryera, auto
only. Oep . req . V2 tank fuel and bath, double car garage, washers , gas &amp; electric·
oil free . Call614 -266-1636 furnished or unfurnished .
ranges . refrigerators, TV
weekdays before 2PM .
call day s .. 992 - aets.
2381 ;evenings-- 992 -2609 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
House trailer at 322 Third
Ave .. adulta only, 446-3748
Washers. dryers. relrlgeroor 614 -256-1903.
1 bedroom Apt, in Middle· tors, ranges. Sk0gg 1 Apport, Oh . Call after 4 p.m . at pllences, Upper River Rd.
14x70 mobile home located 614-992-3690.
beside Stone Crest Motel.
on O.J . White Rd. Nice quiet
614-446-7398.
location . Call 446-7167 of- Furnished downtown, 1
tor 6PM .
bedroom Apt . for rent . Nice aelectlon of washers llo
up, guo·
UOO. plus utilities. 614- dryers. •&amp;9.95
2 bdr. mobile home at 446-1788.
ronteed. Hupp's Appllonce
Evergreen. Call446 -7032 . 1- - - - - - - - - - llo GIIIIWire, Cor- of Rt.
For rent in town, 4 room 141 llo Rt. 7. Call441-8033.
2 bdr. mobile home. fum . or apartment with bath, atove,
unfurnished, no pets. Call and refrigerator.
Electric 21 ln. frostlon refrl~ator,
446-3617.
heat. call 992-7314.
Whirlpool elec. 11.,.,., Curtis
Mathis consolo televlllon, 2
Portlally furnished 3 bdr., 2 APARTMENTS, mobile dlnottl, furniture. Call 441·
bath, on large private lot. 4 homes, houtea. Pt. Pleaunt 711"33.
mi. from Gallipolis. Recently and Gallipolis. 614·441remodeled. Dep. llo ref. 8221 .
Sound dollgn atoreo With
required . Coli 446-2676 afstand, $1711 . 304-1711 ·
tor·B weekdoys.
TWIN RIVERS TOWER . 7677.
1\paitments now ovolloblo!Q
Mobile home for rent, in elderly llo diaobled with an Kenmore oiWing mochlno •.
Income · of leu than outomotlc zig-zag . 304·
Roclne . coll387-7148.
*12,300. Renting for 30 6711-28111.
For rent, 2 bedroom trailer, percent of adjusted lncomolumlshed, clooo to Kroger's .Phone 304-6711-8679.
Now Heling I.Wn mower,
store. call 992-7314.
10HP, $710.; wood. round.
ln Middleport, Ohio. Two Klncllcle toblo with 4 choirs,
WITH OPTION TO BUY. 14' room. efficiency opt. Coli $4711. lozy . Boy recliner,
wide oil electric mobile 1-304-8B2-2666.
$3711, Monr-. ..-.ngo,
homo. aetting on lot rudy to
bod jrom.o, 11,00.00.
rnove Into. t200.00 down NR:".-lfnl lftlf two bedroom D r - tZOO.Oji;Nilroom
•175.00 MONTH . 304- opts .. unlumlshed, phone suho, $110. All Hko now,
1178-2711 .
304-876-221B. 8 till 6.
304-8711-1874.
4 rmt . &amp; bath. carpeted.
fumance heat, adulta only,
no pets, ref. 660 '1&gt; 3rd.
Ave., Gollipolis. Coli 4461163.

a.

1----------

1-------....:...-

1----------

Mobile home tupplies: nontoxic antifreaze-•5.50 per
gollon. Wotor hooting alamenta, water heater, atepa.
windowa, doors. feuceta.
breeken, etc . HotPoint
he~vy - duty electric dryera.
th11 month only 8279 .
Klngabury Homea P1rt1 and
Acce11ory Store. 900 Eeat
Moin St.. old Bookmobile
building in Pomeroy or cell
992-6687.
Used Buck Stove. severel
used Stlhl aows. Pomeroy
Home and Auto. 600 Eost
Main. Pomeroy. 614-9922094.

Will poy $150. and up for
Meiga Co. atone jers end
jugs. Good condition, CoolRidge Soh Co., Pomeroy, W.
R. Dye, Horrlsonville; John
Geyer. Pomeroy ; T .M .
Haines, Syrecute; H.W .
Soyro. lotort Foils; Henry
Seyfried, Middleport; Ml·
cheols. Middleport;. Any jug
or jar marked Portlend,
Dexter. langtville, Peg•·
town. Antiquity or Reedsville, Ohio. All other Meigs
Co. jors ond jugs wonted.
Call614-992-2592.
Sot diomond wodd.!ng rings
f600. 304-676-1522.
RAWLEIGHS old foshion~
cough syrup, combines natural herbs. Dale end Wilme
Wood , Dill . 304-876 1090.
RAWLEIGH medicated vo por. sprey in room, use in
vaporizer. Dele and Wilma
Wood . Dill . 304-676 1090.
Annual clearance sale closeout of new 1983 WORLD
BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA,
t126.00 off regular price.
MinJmum terma evailable.
Coli Morgaret Pierce, School
Service Representative .
304-676-3776.
8x8 storage building ,
S400.00. 304-876-4667.

LOSE WEIGHT. New Deliciout Nutritious. "TrimQwik" milk shoke diet plan
"U .OO Rebate " ot Hockenberry Pharmecy .
ATTENTION PARENTS .
Great educational tool. to
help your children do o
better job. Save., 26 .00 on
World Booka. Terma evailable. 304· 8B2-2486.
TROYBILT ROTOTILLERS
discounts. lmmedlote shipment. Furrower included
703-942-3871 Hickory Hill
Nursery, Rt. 1 Box 390A,
Fisherville, Vo. 22939.
BIG REDTAG9ALEcomein
and aevo on Bisq craft beods
ond pl'ater crofts ot the
Dob-lt-Shop, 1317 Ohio
St.. Point Pleosant, W.Va.
304-676-7720.
Cub tractor and 1ix piecet of
equipment t2,500 . 00;
XL500 Hondo '81 model
8600 .00; Wooden 381n .
wide ..terlor door $70.00;
Days call 304-675-7337
eher 6:00 304-676-6574.

Wingback c~oir, perfect
condition. 30'4 .676-4147.
Soft sculptured dolls. Cabbage Patch type; olso taking
orders for Eutar. 304-6754014.
Huffy exercise bicycle, girls
16" bike. Both good condl·
tlon. 304-882-2649 .
Kodak M-9 Movie Camero
Super B. zoom, outo Iris, 4
speed. 304-676-2965.
Boys Forroh cord. suit, size
20 jockot with pent• 28 w,
light tan, rust. brown, novy
cord. &amp;locka,· 2B W. All like
now condition. 304-676-

54 Mlac. Merchendl11

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

by Lerry Wrl

ht

78

r:::::=:::::::::::::~~

Auto Perti

1

Now truok london ond
dooro . Chevy londoro
..4 .811, Chevy doors $170,
Ford fondero $78 . Coll614,
216-1210.

Umostono, Bond, Grovol.
Delivered In Muon, Molgs,
Golllo or pick up ot Rlchords
llo Son. Coli 448· 77811.

WSAZ
HBO

Suitt on your lot a new home
you con offord. over 1,100
sq.h .. 6 rooms llo beth,
carpeted, ready to move
Into. t26.500. Also garages
llo baaemento. Coli Potrlot
Homes 8ulldors 446-8038.
Will consider mobile homo
as trede in .

Huntington. WV

Homo Box Ofllco

MAX

CI..CBN Coble N-rlt
&amp;porto Notworl&lt;
Adanta.GA
WTVN Columbus. OH
WTAP Parltersburg, wv
WCHS Charleston. WV
Huntington. WV
WPBY
WINS Columbus. OH
WOU8 Athens. OH
WOWK Huntington. WV
HurrlcMM. WV

CBN
EIPN
WTBS

Billy Lee's Tlros ond Bottory
8oloo. Now ond used tires,'
olso, tire ropolrs. 1603 Jof,
Iorson Avo. Point Ploonnt:
304-6711-114011. Now open
24 hrs. o doy, mochonlc on
duty.

2. F-78 14 ln. rodlol snow
tirea on Chav. wheeta both
for t60 . Coli 304-4118 1997.

CAPTAIN EASY

2/13/84

79 Motors Home•
&amp; Campara

tm
. . --------....j

EVENING

For Solo or Trodo-1883
Alrttroom Motor Hom ~,
fully equipped, llko noW:
U2,000. Coll448-3423. ,

Builders Surplus An
Solvogo.
Interior prehung door't leJ ·tt
-le0 . . .,. . ..... . , .. -.us,.. ,,.. 011
gacy oak and welnut and
1872 Concord TraveiTrellef.
birch t39.911 fBI grodu
sloops 8, oxcollont shope,
$20.00.
1--------~
t31100 .. co li 614 -742 ·
Exterior prohung stool
2009.
door's embollod 6 or a
---------~
Smell comper . Phone 3041
Autoa for Sale
penal t109.95 fBI grodos 56
P1t1 for Sell
71
882-2027.
$89.95.
'.
Y2 in. thermal pene gla11
19711 J - Wogoneer llo
21x66 diamond decorotad HILLCREST KENNELS 1878 Ford Gronodo. Coli
ServfCI!S
$7.00 ••.
Boarding oil breeds. Hooted 448-3248.
4x8 wood or metonite pa- Indoor-outdoor focllltlo1 .
neling good aelectlon $11.99. AKC Dobermon puppies: 197• Cord 0 be bl I 1
42 in. or 361n. morblovonlty Stud Sorvlco.
Co11614-441- new" tires. olr,• crulee,
uo n out.
Home
_
PS, 81
top's fBI grodos t39.911.
7795
rool shorp. Coli 446-71133.
Improvements
Vinyl cootod woll paper
Cindy.
1- - - - - - - - double roll •1 .99 .
Kennels ProfosElec. boaeboord hooters 220 Brlorpelch
llonol All -brood grooming. 1878 Chovy lmpolo, V-8.
volt f4-29001fll-3300116· Indoor-outdoor boordlng fo- P&amp; / PB. AM/FM, AC , lm- PLASTERING · Now ond
repair commercial and real- '
4000if&amp;-4950l 8 pc.
cllltiH. Engll1h Cockor 8po- moculato, $3700. Coli 448- dontlol. free oatlmotes. Co
more S% extra diacount.
nlol puppies. Calll14·388- 1282.
814-256-1182.
Commerclel elumlnum dou· 9790.
ble entrance door'• com·
18111 Cornaro 88 $800. Coli Morcum Roofing llo Spou~
plato 8599.911.
448-1081.
Drigonwynd
Cottory
·
lng. 30 yoors oxperlon
II pc. ocrylic tub woll kill Kennels. AKC Chow pupapeclollzlng In buHt up roo
with shelves $48.911.
piH, CFA Hlmaloyon, Por· 1977 Oklo Omogo PS, PB. Coli 614· 388-98117.
Renget hood' I veriout tizee
lion and 8lom111 kltton1. IUIO., 44,000ectull mi. Coli
ond colors t211.
Appllonco Service all moko
Penn's Worohouso, 614- Colll14-448-3844 oftor I . 814-2111-6003. John.
&amp; modela refrlgertors .
384-3846.
Got thot - I l l someone o 1181 AMC Spirit 4 ~~td .. weahera.' dryera, ranges ,
- FM topo , •unroof, compecton. diahweshers.
Dour, now 90 HP , puppy for Volontlneo. AKC AM
Rog'ed, Lhlll Apso-9 wl&lt;s. t2, 7111. 1979 Plymouth mlcrowevet . Heating e.
t27.600. Coli 446-8038.
old, wormed ond shots. 1 Horizon 4 spd.. $2,3911. Cooling, Shoot Metal Worl&lt; .
moll.
2 fomolos. Coli 448· John'• Auto Solos, Bulovlllo Golllo Rofrlgorotlon Co .
2 cemetery lott on Mount
0701 .
Rd. Co11441-4782. Open til 614-448-4066 .
Hill. Coll446-1617.
dorl&lt;.
RON 'S Television Service.
Guns-Rugor, Rod Howl&lt; 44 Garmon Short hlor Pointer
mag., 870 trop, Thompaon puppy, 4 mo1. old, fomolo. 1982 EXP mony oxtros, Speclollzlng In Zenith ond
$211, no papers. Coli 814- must eell. Coli 446·4580.
Motorola . Quazar , en ~
contender, 3 bblo. Coll614- 2411-11474.
houao colla. Coli 304-1178·
367-0482.
1978 VW Robblt Chom - 2398 or 814 -448-2454 .
pogno Edition, oxcollont
Firewood cut up slobs $111
condition, good mlloogo. F llo K Tree Trimming, stump
pickup lood. Coli 614-245- 67
Mualcel
Coli 441-111811.
romovol. Coli 304 -6711 •
5804.
lnatrumenta
1331 .
73 VW Super Beetle, good
15 to 20 ocros of timber,
cond .. e1 .0110. reliable . Coli RINGLE 'S SERVICE oxpoplus 20 Wolnut trees. Coli
Curtont Modol. Boldwln Or- 446·1108.
rionced roofing , including
446-8043 .
gon . "Overture" Model
hot t.r epplication, carpen
1880 Chov. Monzo. olr, ter, electrician . mason . cad
Coae 31 0 front and loader 170. 304-878-28111.
automatic tr•n• .• rad6o, exc. 304-875 · 2088 or 875 dozer, •4.600. Coli 814cond. 30.000 miles. 446- 411110.
266-1427.
0190.
f IIIII ~lillji lll '\
Water Wells. Commercial'
METAL CULVERT PIPE &amp;ln.
,\ 11 'I l'o,llll.~
1979 Ford Fl-o, good goa ond Domoatlc. Test holes.'
thru 60 ln. diomoter In stock.
mlleege, AM -FM / cosaotto Pumps Sal•• and Service.
RON EVANS, Jockson. Oh.
stereo. 448-7290.
304-896-3802 .
~
614-286-5930.
61 Farm Equipment
1980 Renoult l.eCor, 4 sp .. GET your corpot SHJP
PLASTIC SEPTIC TANK
Houl In your pickup truck. - - - - - - - - - - sunroof. A.C .. AM / FM. SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN'
RQN EVANS. Jockoon, Oh. Troy-lilt !Ilion. Check our t24911. 1878 Chevy Novo, STEAMER . Wotor remo~l";
614-286-6930.
speclll prlco before you buy IUto ., AM / FM, 821911 . furniture clunlng. free ottr-'·
ony tllloro. Swloher lmplo· John's Auto SoiH. Bullville mates. 304-675 -2296.
PLASTIC CISTERNS Ap· mont Co. St. Rt. 7 N, Golll· Rd., GoUipolls, 448-4782.
Cuttom built cebinetl,,
proved for drinking weter. polls.OH . Coli 114-448- Open till dorl&lt;.
counter top. countera. rJ.~
RON EVANS. Jockson. Oh. 04711.
1170 Dodge Poloro llotlon pairs olltypes. Plumbing •
614-286-6930.
100 HP MF trector, 12' wogon for oolo. Good condl· olectrlcol. 304-8711 -6316 . •
PLASTIC CULVERT PIPES . wheel dlac, 14' Horrogotor, lion. $1000. c.. 814-9928 ln. thru 18 ln. Stoto 1 0' Forrowlng crotos, 30 HP 7229.
82
Plumbing
approved. guoronteed. RON 8obcot type loader. Coli
'711 Volvo 2411 D.L. sorlos.
EVANS. Jackson, Oh . 814- 1-114-682-3931.
&amp; Heating
Nlco
cond
.
304
675
286-6930.
273 N.H. hoybelorwhhbelo 6788.304-8711 -6786.
Will cut ond dollvor fire- thro-r. 2 wagons with
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
wood. Coli 614-266-11128. rocka, ulod choln aows. Coli 1881 Chovy Citation, 4
AND HEATING
door. olr-cond.. PB, PS.
814· 388· 81184.
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
outo .. 4 cyl. onglno. 32.000
Coal burning hooter llo 2 ton
Golllpolls, Ohio
of coal. Call614 -367-7637. Boat dools on tho loll mllu . Exc. Cond .. Phone 614-446-3888 or·
Troctors. 81dors Equipment $4,800.00 . 304 - 675 ·
614-446-4477
Limestone delivered t9 .00 Co. Henderson, WV. 304- 1529.
1711· 7421 .
ton. Coll614-388-9812.
75 Oldo Cutlo11, ps, pb, o-c, JIM'S PLUMBING llo HEAv·
am-fm , new rodlols t996 . lNG . Rt. 1, Box 3611. Goll" '
4'hx6 ft . picture window 11o
Will toke trodo. 304-676- polls. Coli 614-367- 0678 ,~:
Uveatock
white podded heodboord for 63
7421 .
bed. Coll614-266-1788.
--------Excavating
Chovy Cltotlon, 4 cyl .. 83
Registered Polled Hereford 1980
2
door,
club
coupe,
radio.
56 Building Supplies
bull, 3 yra. old. eon 814· PS, PI, olr-cond.. steele
379-21117.
bolted tlru, 1horp , DOZER WORK By To~:
t3 . 2110 . 00. 304 - 675- Henne. ponds, ditchear·
Building materiala
Yoorllng Bulls, rog'od. 21811.
bosomenti. etc. Coli 614block, brick, aewer pipea, Polled Hereford Enforcer llo
448-4907. Corter llo Evons
windows, lintela, etc. VIctor blood llnos. Don Cox,
Claude Winters, Rio Grande, Potrlot, OH. Coli 114-379· '70 Chovello, oxc. cond .. Transportation.
bucket 10111, console, vinyl
0 . Coll614-246-11121.
2871 .
top, olr·cond.. 304-675- Cat 216 hoe, dozers. crane::
loodors. dump truck . Col!·
LUMBER - Rough cut, ook, Holstein cows wUI froohen 80113 oftor II .
614-446 · 1142 between·
poplor, 2x4, 2x6, 2x8, 1x4, within 10 doys. Also Regis·
7:00AM &amp; 6:00PM .
1 x6, 1 x8, length ovolloble, 8 tored Holatoln bulls out of
Truck• for Sale
foot through 14 foot. Hogg high producing' Doms. Coli 72
Good-1 Excavating, batt~,
llo Zuspan, 304-773-55114 814-286·2491.
1983 F-100 Ford ltepsldo menu, footera, driveway~..
daytime.
teptic tenks, lendtcap~ .
For nlo, hens obout 1'h PU, rool sharp, t7,4911 . Call
anytime 814 - 44 ~
John's Auto Soles. 8ulovllle
Now open for bualne11, yeors old. 304· 937-2266.
Rd, 441-4782. Open til 4637, JamuL. Davison, Jl,
Mountain State Block, Rt.
. owner.
'
33. New Haven. Complete BOARDING HORSES ot dorl&lt;.
mosonry supplies. 4", 8", 8tonlhovon Riding &amp;toblo
12" block. Delivery aorvlco. neor Point Ploooont. 304· 19711 Chevy Luv pickup J .A .R. Conatruction c~:
truck, $650 firm. Coli 614- Weter lines , Footert f
Phone doy 304·882-2222, 875-71141 ovonlngs.
Droins. All kinds of Dltchlna;.
378-21111 .
evening 882-3239 .
Rutland . Oh . 614 -74 1&lt;
•
.1979 Fod Courier Pickup, 4 2903.
64 Hey &amp; Grain
speed. *211911. John's Auto
56
Pets for Sale
8ol11, Bulovillo Rd .. GolllpoElectrical
lls, 448-4782. Open tHI 84
For solo. Good condition hoy dorl&lt;.
&amp;
Refrigeration
Registered toy poodlo pup- .
•1.80 • bolo.
coli
Chocoloto 992-7201 .
pies for solo.
brown males. t200. eoch.
Vena &amp; 4 W.O.
Pasquale Electric Co . eH
Nice Volentine gift. coli For nlo: Hay, Clover, Alfolfl 73
614 992 21107
ph1111 of electric work. all
•
• · ·
ond orchord gro11.
call
work guaranteed . Aerial
614-742-21211.
1977 Dodge Rom Chorgor. truck rental. 614 -446 Judy Taylor Grooming. Call Good· mlxod hoy for oolo. lour wheel drive, needa 4066.
:
some worlt, 112,000 mllo1,
per · bolo. 614·992- t2.000. 304-882· 28111 .
SEWING Machine repeiro~
3709.
aervlce. Authorized Singer
--------•
Ground oor corn ti.IIO per 1980 Chevy Luv, 4x4, coli Solos llo Sorvlce Sher~)j
100. Iring own container. 304-1711-2714 or 675- 8cluon . Fobrlc Sho'p1
Pomeroy. 614 ~992- 2284. :
304-1711-3308. No 8undoy 11177.

1----------

1----------

LOSER

li!Ml:MBER,"li~A~, ~OUR

'f)U REAuz:e,~ ca;R?e,

Mt9SIONI710 FO'% P6 A
9:L.mAR'I 10 '5f&gt;o/ Ofl-rn~

1AA1 SHOULD lll!:' Pt.~

...I WIU.. HAI/I:' 1D ceJ'{ NN
KIIOWL~

mKFIRf; .. ,

OF
"THIS.

COM~TITIOIJ .

••
Ef'l.. DIDN'T YOU DID SAY
SAY YClJ TOOil 011, DEAR ! I MEANT
A \'flONQ TURN VENICE! I NEVBJ
HEM VENUS?... COOLD FIND MY
'llfff ABOUT THAT

his bi rt hdalJ!

Bl-lt fm
Wasn't his qirl
qivinq Virqil friend supposed

a lesson! to be here last

week?

You're

invited!

BARNEY

TH' PARSON SAID
-IT WAS SINFUL-TO GOSSIP,
ELVINEY

UH -- THEN LET'S
TALK ABOUT TH'
WEATHER

IT WAS CLOUDY AN' WINDY AN'
COLD AS A FROG YESTIDDY WHEN
I SEEN TH' WIDDER DOWDY HOLDIN'
HANDS WITH THAT FLATLAND
SHOE PEDDLER

00101.

II d II , jllill

71

86

d III II

Autoa for 8111

TOP CAIH pold for fato
model ulod cora. lmhh
lulck·Pontloc, 1111 Eoot.·
orn Avo.. QalllpoNa. Coli
114-441-2212.
.
1171 . Ch..,Y Cll-m 4
epd.. 4 dr .. rool . nice,
U,0811. John's Auto loloo,
lulavlllo Rd. 441-4712.
Open til derlt.
11.7 8 Pqrd Muatong, 302
onglno, 4 IIIHd tr1111omle·
alon. 11100~ 304·875·

uu. .

Motorcycle•

GenBral Heuling

· :ZO uaed Hondao to chooae JONES BOYS WATER SEll':
from, Mini to Mighty. Coli VICE. Coli 614-367-7471
441-2240.
. or 614-387-0691 .

.'

Bo1t1 end
Motore for Sale

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lenior, 304-876739_7.

~,11.1 ft. llborglati boot, 40

Qump truck tor . hlro, • wlil
haul coal or llm•itona.
Phone 304·676-3190. ' • :·

715

nP Johnoon super qulot
11111no • traUor. All lor
., ,Ill. Call 441• 4~37 .
I

1971 f I ft., Gfutron boot,
CIOVII:. end troller with 1178
9Q HI" Mercury motor, oltloa,

- · lifo lackote . lilohided,

lllto - · •4.100. Cell 814·
241·1222 or 114·11811-

4148.

.

87

Upholstery

PEANUTS

WE HAVE A MAIL:BOX
'TAAT TALK510
11: VOU
DON1' 6ET A~ VAl r:t.rrii-Jii;S

'

.

... . ,~·

...

.. TRISTATE
:
· UPHOLSTERY SHOP '·
I 113 Sec. Ave., Oelllpoili'. ,
114-441•7833 or614 --.u; ·
1833.
:

• (J)
m
(J)
(J)
(I)

''SORR'r', KID..TIIAT'S
. WA'r' IT GOES! i•

II!

.,

[

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fi(J)
(J)

CD
liD
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• IPHOONC' 0

'A Choreographer's Notebook: Stravinsky Piano
Ballets by Peter Martins.'
New York City Ballet star
Peter
Martins
choreographs four pieces featuring the music of Igor
Stravin$ky. (60 min.)
9:30 lliCilriD Newhart Dick opposes a franchised fastfood restaurant to save
Kirk's cafe.
10:00 &lt;Il MOVIE: 'Bill'
(])
NCAA
Beskotbell:
Boston Collage et St.
John'a
Cl Cll riD Emerald Point
N.A.S. Oeanna Kincaid embarks on her double-agent
mission to assist the Navy
and the FBI in trapping Admiral Bukharin. (60 min.)
([)
NCAA
Beskotbell:
at
Appelechlan
State
Maraholl
riD Nowswatch
.INN Nowa
10:30 &lt;Il P-Wee Hermon Show
Cil Shirley Pot Boone
Cll TIS Evening Nows
riD Final Edition
. 611 Love American Style
11 :00 • &lt;Il (I) • Cll riD Ill ii2I
Nowa
Cil Anothor Life
CD Nowi/Sports/Weothor
• Bonny Hill Show
11 :30 G &lt;Il NCAA Baskotbllll:
Florida at Kentucky
&lt;Il MOVIE: 'T.A.G. • Tho
Asseulnotlon Game'
Cll.Bolt of Groucho
Cll Cotllno
Cil Ill. iJ2I XIV Winter
Olympic GIJ11oe Tonight's
progrom loaturoa high·
lights of the day's activities
~~ ihe Winter Olympics
from s,raJavo, Yugoafavla.
CD Tonight Show
• Cll Hart to Hert Ono of
tha world'• ric host mon dec Idea Jennifer will be hil
no~ pOIIIIIIQn. (R) )80
min.)
riD All In tho Fomlly
Twilight Zone
11:411 &lt;Il MOVIE: 'Body and Soul'
12:00 Cil Burna It Allen

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(J)
(J)

8:00 • &lt;Il (I) • (I) riD • lUI
Nowa
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'
&lt;Il MOVIE: 'Daffy Duck's
Movlo: Fantaatlc leland'
&lt;Il MOVIE: 'How to Bolt
tho HIGh Coat of Uvlng'
&lt;Il N- Treotura Hunt
(]) E8PN'a Sportalook
(I) Andy Griffith
CD N-a/8porta/Woather
(I) Dr. Who
riD 3-2-1. Contact
fll Buck Rogors
6:30 • &lt;Il CD NBC Nows
Cil Riflomen
(]) SportaC.ntor
Cll Cerol Bumon
f)) Cll lUI ABC News
Cl f)) 111 CBS Now1
([) Businon Report
riD Meklng Most of the
Micro
7:00 IJ &lt;Il PM Magozlno
Cil Alles Smith end Jones
(]) SportiContor 'Olympic
Edition.'
Cll Hogan's Horoos
(I) Entortalnmont Tonight
CD Charlie's Angola
Cl (I) Wheel of Fortuno
(I) riD MecNoil/l.ehrar
Nowshour
riD Nows
Ill lUI Peoplo's Court
fll Jofforoons
7:30 G &lt;Il Tic Toe Dough
&lt;Il Fragglo Rock
(]) ESPN's Sidelines
Cll Sanford and Son
Cil Family Feud
riD Wheel of Fortune
Cll lUI Entortalnmont
Tonight
fll One Doy ot a Tlmo
8:00 • &lt;Il CD TV's Bloopers
ond Practical Jokes Dick
Clerk and Ed McMahon
hotts this look at materiel
not intended to be seen by
an audience. (80 min.)
&lt;Il Not Necesaorily The
Nowa
&lt;Il MOVIE: 'Rocky Ill'
Cll l Spy
(])
NCAA
Baskotbell:
Auburn at Venderbilt (Th is
game is subject to black·
out)
(J) MOVIE: 'A Men Coiled
HorN'
f)) E ii2I XIV Winter
Olympic Gomes Tonight's
program fe Jturet wo·men's
giant slalom, the U.S.A. va.
Austria in ice hockey, women's 1.000 meter speed
skating.
men's
crosscountry skiing and men's
compulsory figure skating.
13 hrs.)
Cll riD Scarecrow and
Mrs. King
([) riD Frontline "Give Me
That Big Time Religion.'
Jimmy lee Swaggert. one
of the leading fundraisers
and
audience-getters
among TV preachers, is
profiled in this look at the
modern televisioh evangel·
ist. (80 min.) [Closed Captioned]
611 MOVIE: 'Tho Concreto
Cowboys'
B:30 &lt;Il MOVIE: 'Miaalng'
9:00 8
&lt;Il CD
MOVIE:
'Celebrity' Part 2
(l)700 Club
Ill (I) (JD AhlrMASH
D'Angelo decid81 to ac. capt a local dance school's
offer to stage a party for,
the patients at the hospital.

a.

'OIATICIWI8LEDWOROCWII
by Henri Arnold ondllobLoo

Unactlll'r'INI thooo four Jumblol.

~ riD Great Performancoa

WINNIE

Page 9

one- to each oquoro, 10 form
tour ordinary~ .

a

We're qoinq to Pop's
tomorrow n·,qht for

fja

Daily Sentinel

~ ~ ~~ ·

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TOWN • .'

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Television
Viewing

&amp; Acceaaorl11

Knouff Flrowood Pickup or
Dollvored. 12"·22" 1tockod
In yord . HEAP vendor,
prompt delivery. 814-211662411.

The

Middleaort. Ohio

13, 1984

IWEFURCI

0

I KJ

Answer here:

WHAi 'THE KIP WHO
~AlP HE PIDIJ'T
L.fKE ALF'HA5E.T ~UI'
EI\JPEP UP' EATING.
-

arrange !he drded loners to

lorm !he surprise onswer, u auggelled by !he a1x&gt;ve cortoon.

I I )( I I I I )

HIS (

fAnawerl tomorrow)

Salurday's l Jumblol: FEVER MANLY BAKERY HEALTH
An,_: Whal they called lhal classy new art gallery
-THE HALL OF FRAME

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

A lead-directing bid
your share of the win."
Oswald: "They are far too
modest. I could play only in
the afternoon sessions. In the
final session I played, we
establilbed some sort of
record by winning 23 of 33
boards. fn that one session I
played better than an 81year-old man should."
Jim: "Tbey say you played
"that session better than any·
one ever!layed."
Oswal ; "I was lucky. I
was in third seat with real
junk. Edgar passed as dealer, whereupon the bidding
went; one diamond - pass
by me - one heart - double by Edgar - redouble,
whereupon I bid two clubs,
not the one spade that was
bid at the other table. I
wanted to give Edgar a
lead."
Jim: "Your idea surely
worked. The game was
board-a-match, and the club
lead held them to five
hearts. At the other table
West's opening lead was a
spade, and by his usual
expert play Bill Root
brouaht in 12 tricks for a

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Opening lead: +3

By Oswald Jecoby

ud James Jacoby

win.tr

Jim: " Will you take over
the column this week and
give some bands from your
surprising Reisinger victory? It is the greatest win of
your long career and,
according to Edgar Kaplan,
Norman Kay, Bill Root and
Dick Pavlicek, you earned

Oswald: " Just one of
many lucky decisions I made
in that session , which
brought us from eighth to
third and set the stage for
my sreat partners to move
to f1rst with a sound 18
points that night. "
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

(!~,..".~
lay THOMAS JOSEPH
41 Forest

ACROSS
1 Existence
5 " Oliver-"
10 Oklahoma

creative
DOWN
1 Hire
city
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11 Befall
3 Grasp the
1Z Katherine
opportunity
- Porter
4 Dutch
13 Church
corrunune
official
5 Subject
14 But (Lat.!
matter
15 Gypsy
&amp; Distaff G.!.
1&amp; Jordanian
7 Imagined
22 School
mountain
8 Kid's vehicle
sessions
17 Obliteration 9 Earthly
23 Italian city
19 It follows
11 Ten million
24 Rosalind
printemps
rupees
Russell
Not a bit
15 Litter's tiniest
role
21 Dennis
18 - opera
Zli Across
O'Keefe film 21 Lacerate
the 22 Yugoslavian
24 Watered
fabric
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h-4---1-~
27 C&amp;to's
greeting
28 Funny
31 Legislative

zo

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river
30 Fragrant

wood
35 -soup
(fog)
36 Espouse

?""TL"""T':"...,.,..:.,,.....,

body
(abbr.)
3% New Guinea
town

33 Compass
reading

34 Hidden
marksman
31 Do gardening

31 Set ol nine

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38 carl
or Francoise

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used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
opoetrophes, the lenllh and formation of the words are oil
biDta. Eacb d~y the code letters ere dilrercnt.
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CaYPTOQUOTES
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ONE HAS ONLY TO GROW OLDER
. TO BEroME MOM TOLERANT. I SEE NO WRONG I MIGliT
NOT HAVE COMMITl'ED MYSELF .-GOETiiE
Yeaterdly'a Cl'Jptlqatte:

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~MEIGS

/

MARAUDERS
*EASTERN EAGLES
_*SOUTHERN TORNADOES

....... 0

.......

Fund raising project

ted champions

Beat of Bend Page !l

Southem story on Page 3

Valentine messages

Marauderettes advance

See Page 10

aily
Voi.32,No.2t4
.Copyrighted t914

•

enttne
1 Section , 10 Pages
20 C.nh
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 14, 1984

$100,000 fire hits Empire Furniture
Veteran fireman
loses life during
downtown blaze

MEIGS

vs.
Vinton County-Home--Feb. 14
Federal Hocking-Away-Feb. 17

EASTERN

vs.
Waterford-Away-Feb. 14
North Gallia-Away-:-Feb. 17

Man dies
mlieadon
collision
POINT PLEASANT-The death
of a Huntington man In a two-car,
head-on collision Monday morning
marks the fifth fatality on Mason
County highways this year, the
Point Pleasant Detachment of the
West Virginia State Pollee reported.
State pollee said Daniel Z. Boston
Jr .. 45, Green Valley Road, was
killed at 11:45 a.m. on Route 62.
one-half mUe south of Lakin. when
his vehicle was Involved In a
collision with a car driven by
Jeanette Taylor, 23, Point Pleasant.
Cpl. K.R. Beckett said Taylor was
Injured and was transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by Point
Pleasant EMS. A nursing supervi·
sor .a t the hospital said Taylor Is In
fair condltlon and Is being treated
for a chest Injury and a broken foot.
Beckett said Boston, who was
traveling north on Route62adjacent
to Klrkland Memorial Gardens In
his 1983 Plymouth ReUant, appar·
ently attempted to pass a third
northbound vehicle In a blind section
of roadway and In doing his passing
maneuver collided head-on with
Taylor's car.
Taylor was pinned In her vehicle
for about 40 minutes before she was
treed by members of the Point
Pleasant Fire Department who
used the Jaws of Life, he said .
Boston's car and Taylor's 1983
Buick Regal were totaled. Beckett
said Boston's body was transported
to the State Medical Examiner's
Office In Charleston.

SOUTHERN
vs.
Ravenswood-Away-Feb. 14
Hannan Trace-Home-Feb. 17
SOUTHERN RESULTS
THROUGH GAMES OF FEB. 7
Southern 50 Gallipolis 47
Southern 49 Southwestern 36

l-

J

Southern 58 Kyger Creek 45
Southern 64 Eastern 37
Southern 71 Miller 57
Southern 66 Logan 57
Southern 62 Ross Southeastern 57
Southern 62 Wahama 53
Southern 81 North Gallla 51
Hannan Trace 48 Southern 45
Southern 86 Ravenswood 60
Southern 77 Southwestern 43
Southern 71 Kyger Creek 59
Southern 86 Wahama 71
Southern 81 Eastern 50
Ceredo-Kenova 71 Southern 54
WON 14 - LOST 2

TORNADO SCHEDULE
Feb. 14.. ....................... at Ravenswood
Feb. 17, Hannan Trace ............... Home
. !EAD COACH - CARL WOLFE
RESERVE COACH-HOWIE CALDWELL

EASTERN RESULTS
THRU GAMES OF FEB. 7
Federal Hocking 56 Eastern 4~
Kyger Creek 44 Eastern 42
Hannan Trace 49 Eastern 39
Southern 64 Eastern 37
Waterford 44 Eastern 34
Federal Hocking 56 Eastern 37

Eastern 61 Wlrt Co. 49
Wahama 66 Eastern 40
Southwestern 51 EastPrn 44
Ea•t•rn 5.1 North Gallla 52 tOT)
Eastern 72 Wahama 66
Kyger Creek 56 Eastern 47
Ravenswood 66 Eastern 49
Hannan Trace 50 Eastern 47
Fort Frye 51 Eastern 49
Southern 81 Eastern 50
WON 3 - LOST 13

EASTERN SCHEDULE
Feb. 14, Waterford ..................... Away
Feb. 17, North Gall Ia .................. Away
HEAD COACH-DENNIS EICHINGER
RESERVE COACH-DON EICHINGER

MEIGS RESULTS
THROUGH GAMES OF FEB. 7

Meigs 62 Federal Hocking 52
Meigs 49 Miller 33
Nelsonville York 54 Meigs 48
VInton Co. Meigs 51
Trimble 70 Meigs 69 (OT)
Belpre 64 Meigs 61' (OT!
Alexander 69 Meigs 66
Worren 55 Meigs 54
Meigs 73 Wellston 5.1
Meigs 51 Miller 41
Meigs 73 Nelsonville-Y nr• "
Meigs 63 Wahama 58
Trimble 79 Meigs 6.1
Belpre 60 Meigs 55
Meigs 73 Alexander 59
Warren Logal 70 Meigs 53
WON7- LOST9

MARAUDER
. SCHEDULE
/

Feb. 14, VInton County ............... Home
Feb. 17, Federal Hocking ........... Away
HEAD COAC!t ~ GREG DRUMMER
RESERVE COACH - MICK CHILDS .

STORE GUTI'ED - Empire Furniture, fonnerly
Baker Fumlture, MlddlepoJt, was gu~ by a tire
MCJIMWI even1111. 1..-. hM been eet at more than
SIOO,OOO to the slnldw'e and Its contents which is
owned by Mr. and Mrs. Casby Meadows ID of

GaDipolls. Seven area fire departments ass1sled
Mlddlep"'t firefighters In brbaglng the blaze under
control. At one pobtt, the fire threatened the entire
Middleport Business Dlstrid.

Losses are expected to run more than $100,!XXJ and a Middleport
fireman is dead as the result of a major fire in the Midd leport
business section Monday night.
·
Gutted by the blaze which several times threatened to take the
e ntire block was the Empire Furniture Store, N. Second Ave., owned
by Mr. a nd Mrs. Casby Meadows ill of Gallipolis.
Dead is James Daniels, Middleport fireman, who was working
outside the Empire Furniture building when he keeled over. He was
Immediately given CPR and was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he died a short time later.
Seven fire departments were called to the scene before the blaze
was brought under controL
fire progressed. liremen were
The tire tlul&gt;atened to engulf the joined by departments from Gallientire business block and persons polis, which also furnished a ladder
living in second floor apartments truck; Rutland. Racine. Syracuse
over the threatened buildings, aided and Mason, W. Va .
Smoke poured from the buildlng
by friends. mo11ed most of their
and
flames shot high into the air.
belongings to safer locations.
Firemen
were able to keep the blaze
The fire brought out sightseers.
and as a result . Jaw enforcement from spreading 10 the Village
officials from across the county Pharmacy. on the upper side of
were stationed at aU entrances into Empire Fumiture and the Burkett
the town preventing motorists from Barber Shop, located on the lower
side of the Empire building.
entering the town.
Eddie Burkett, owner of the
Middleport firemen answered a
barber
shor said he lefl his shop
ca ll to the Empire FumitureStoreat
5:16 p.m. and shortly afterwards. about 5:05 p.m. and reaching h.is
the Pomeroy Fire Department was nearby home was met by his wife.
called along with the ladder truck who pointed out that smoke was
1Coni inued on page 61
which is kept in that village. As the

Council okays
annual budget

FIRE AFTERMATH- As darkness feU Monday
night, area firelighters were busy cleaning up after a
major tire guUed the Empire Fumlture Bulldlng In

Middleport. During the blaze, veteran tlreman,Jwnes

Daniels coUapsed and died a short tbne later at
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Loss has been set at
more than $100,000. The statellremarshal'soHice has
been caUed In to help detennlne the lire's cause.

Middleport VIllage Council Monday night approved a permanent
1984 appropriations resolution providlng for expenditures of $2,197.()15
this year, up $500,!XXJ ovN 191\1
expenditures.
Breakdown on expenditures
under the new budget include:
general fund. $134,!0l: safety fund ,
$143,900: s treet maintenance,
$91,100: HUD fund , $1,300,!XXJ:
revenue sharing, $11,300: street
light, $ll.!XXJ: street levy, $25,600;
fire equipment, $21,100: fire truck.
$6.600: fire house improvement.
$33,!XXJ; bond retirement, $W,875;
sanitary sewer escrow. $.1l,!XXJ:
water tank. $50,!Xll: water fund.
$145,300: sanitary sewer, $lll,270;
swimming pool, $20,!XXJ; cemetery,
$19,!XXJ; water meter deposits.
$4.200: economic development.
$9,!XXJ.
Attomey Bernard Fullz was
named the town's law dii'E'Ctor for
1984 and will receive no salary .
Council discussed plans for im provement of the marina area as a
recreational facility. Councilman
Horton outlined a recent meeting of
the Middleport RecreationCommis-

sion on the matter. The commission
proposes tc. improve the facility to
include activities for people of all
ages and different activities such as
a jogging area, basketball courts,
hockey facilities. a movie screen,
and tennis courts. Horton said.
Mayor Hoffman said a long range
impro\'ement plan is needed for the
marina . He pointed out that the U.S.
Corps of Engineers wiU provide up
to 50 percent of funds on such
projects and has money available in
1986. It was decided to proceed with
a long range plan for improvement
to the marina site. Councilman
AUen King stressed . however, that
the site should be monitored to
pr&lt;'vent \'andalism. Mayor Hof·
!man sa id that perhaps, living
facilities could be included if a
recreational building were included
in the improvement plans. It was
brought out !hat even though the
village plans to improve the marina
area. it still stands behind thecounty
w~dc r&lt;'Creational program which is
being developed for a facility in
Pomero)'. Mayor Hoffman will see
about pl"t'liminaty plans for the
1Coni inu£'&lt;1 on page 61

Emergency grant forthcoming for project
By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel stalf
Middleport V!llage Is apparently to receive a $ll,(XX)
emergency grant for the repair of a slippage on
Middleport HUI and the vUlage may go Into the gas
well drUling business.
Those Items were among the. major business
matters discussed when Middleport VUI~~ge Council
met In regular session Monday night.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported that Diane AIIEin,
Meigs County's HUD representative working through
the Ohio Department of Development, hilS Indicated
that a request for a $ll,&lt;XXIgrant to repair !he slippage
and to repair water llnes damaged a'S a result of tile .
sUp on Middleport Hill has been approved and has
gone to tite Ohio Controlling Board for approval. The
grant. is expected to be released In about a week. Bids
on repair of Middleport HUI and the water lines are
being sooght and wW be opened on Feb. 24. If bids are
\OUilln The prlce range then the n&gt;pa!r.WIU be poS516le

-

••

In the near future. At the present time one way traffic
Is being maintained at the site of the slippage on
Middleport HUI and portable traffic lights arP being
used.
oo· ahead given
Last night. council authorized Mayor Hoffman to
proceed with securiltg a firm to do a feasibility study
on the village drilling a gas well on the 60 acres the
town ·owns below Middleport. where the sewage
lagoons are located.
Mayor Hoffman said wells are coming in all around
the location. If the village daes get a well, It would be
helpful for the location of Industry and would pi:&lt;Jbably
provide less expensive natural gas rates for
Middleport Village, the mayor reported. He said that
Columbia Gas of Ohio has verbally agreed to
purchase gas from the town should the village get a
good well.
The mayor inl!lcated the costs Involved COIJld be..

prohibitive, but the survey will provide cost
information as weU as more specific Information as to
wbe'ther the village should proceed. BaU park figures
are $8),(XX) to $100,!XXJ for the drilling and from $~.&lt;XXI
to $.lXJ,&lt;XXI for the pipe line that would be necessary .
Mayor Hoffman indlcated that, perhaps, state or
federal fundlng might be available to help on such a
drilling project.
Council discussed the $5 permissive auto license tax
Which has been puf into effect through legislation
passed by the body. The Ohio Departrrient of Motor
VPhicles has Indicated that the tax will not be
collected until January, 1985 so It wlU be a period of
time before the village realizes additional moneys
from the measure.
In another-. action, council voted unanimously
against providing free parking at meters durtng the
next Christmas hollday season. For a number of
years, council has free&lt;! the meters for the season and
In tum, the Ghamber of Commerce gave the village a

,.

contribution. However. for th&lt;' past two years no
contributions were made to thf' \'illage when the
meters were freed . During the discussion, it was also
brought out that freeing tht' merers encourages
employes of businesses to park near their placl'&gt;i of
employment. thereby defeating the !!'('('parking for
shoppers. Mayor Hoffman point£'&lt;1 out that the v illage
does have a free parking lot now in the town :
Councilman Dewey Horton said that he dOl'S not want
business people to get the impt"t'ssion that council is
against the business community and asked that the
matter be reconsidered later if they arc complaints
about last night's action to discontinue free parking at
the meters In December.
The January report of Mayor Hoffman showing
receipts of $5518 in fines and fl'&lt;'s for the month was
approved and a letter was read from the Department
of Highway Safety indlcaling that the village will
receive an intoxlllzer to use in DWI ca~ as soon as
one Is available.

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