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Pag8- 16-The Daily Sentinel

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Thursday, FebNary 16, 1~ .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Protection campaign jeopardizes merger plans
WASHINGTON iAPl- The steel
Industry's successful campaign to
wtn quotas and restraints on foreign
Imports played a key role In the
government's decision to block a
major domestic steel merger and
may jeopardize the prospects for
another.
"They can't ha ve it both ways.
They can't have both protectlonL~m
in the U.S. market and then expect to
be judged on merger questions as If
they operated in a free world
market," said William F. Baxter. a
Stanford University law profe5sor
who until two months ago served as
the Reagan administration's anti·
trust chief.
As head of the Justice Depart·
ment's antitrust division, Baxter
wrote the new merger guidelines
under which his successor, Assist-

ant Attorney General J. Paul
McGrath, moved Wednesday to
block the proposed $170 million
merger between LTV Corp. and
Republic Steel Corp. The deal would
have produced the nation's second·
largest steelmaker. U.S. Steel Is the
largest.
McGrath explained that foreign
competition could not be used to
justify the deal, particularly because there are a variety of Import
quota and voluntary restraints on
steel Imports trom Europe and
Japan - restraints which the U.S.
steel industry Itself campaigned for.
He said If the merger were
approved and U.S. steelmakers
used theresultingincreasedconcentratlon of ownership here to collude
on_ a steel _price increase, these
restraints would prevent foreign

steelmakers trom sending in
enough low-cost steel to drive the
prices back to fair market values.
McGrath's explanation also cast
considerable doubt on whether he
wtli approve the proposed $575
million merger between U.S. Steel
and National Steel, the nation's
seventh-largest producer.
In a joint statement, LTV, which
owns the nation's No. 3 steel
producer Jones &amp; Laughlin, and
Republic, the nation's No. 4 steelmaker, said they were "surprised
and deeply disappointed" by the
decision.
They said they would Initiate
further talks with Justice "to
explore whether we can resolve our
differences," but McGrath indi·
cated It would take a substantial
change before he would drop the

government's Intention to sue to
block the deal.
The companies criticized
McGrath for not giving greater
welght to the Imports of steel trom
the European Economic Communlty and Japan,
saying "to
that
substantial
tonnage
Is Ignore
to Ignore
reality."
But McGrath said, "Under the
merger guidelines, foreign competitors are relevant It they may step In
and In effect help to control the
market where domestic producers
are ralslng'prices. We concluded on
the basis of everything we know that
at least over the short-run foreseeable future, the EEC production and
the Japanese production are not
available to play that role."
He added that, even counting all
the foreign Imports, the Increase in

astateofcrtsis," McGrath said. "It
has a very dltflcult time comPetlni
1n the world market. I am 'totally
unconvlnced. however, that revltallzlng the steel Industry requires the
proposed merger."

concentration of ownership was
larger than allowed by department
guidelines and was probably large
enough to raise the threat of
collusion on prices In the steel
Industry.

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BEffi.UT, Lebanon !API -Army
gunners defending President Amln
Gemayel's government palace
traded artUlery fire toe!ay with
Druse Insurgents In the hills above
the U.S. Marine base, and opposition
l~ers rejected a Saudi Arabian
~JI~Pial! fqr ~panon.
l?oUce said the artillery duels
pitted Lebanese army 155mm
howllzer batteries In Christian
villages around the palace In
suburban Baabda against mountalntoprocket launchers manned by
Druse southeast of Beirut.
Druse and Shiite Moslem militias
In two weeks h;IVe routed Gemayel' s
shattered army from nearly all of
the central mountains, from the
weste rn halt of the capital and from
the crucial coastal highway south of
Beirut. As result, Gemayel has
reportedly endorsed the Saudi
peace plan, which would comply
with some of the rebels' political
demands .
Pollee said at least five civilians
were killed and 13 wounded In the
artUlery exchanges. The Voice of
the Mountain radio station of the
Druse said army bombardment of
Druse strongholds around the town
of Souk ei-Gharb fe!iUmed after a
brief lull at dawn.
The American base at Beirut
International Airpor;t. now virtually
surrounded by thl' Insurgents. was
not affected by the fighting and
Marines continued to transfer
equipment onto nearby U.S. war·
ships while a walt lng orders to move
themselves.

a

\

already under way with the moving of some
equipment from the Beirut airport to the ships to which
the Marines are assigned.
Meanwhile, Beirut radio reported that President
Am!n Gemayel of Lebanon has agreed to renounce his
government's May 1983 troop-withdrawal agreement
with Israel, and to endorse an eight-point Saudi plan
that will allow him to remain In office.
While revealing the timetable to reporters, the White
House official was adamant In rejecting the notion that
the redeployment, or the Saudi diplomacy In the
region, signal a failure of U.S. policies In the Middle
East.
"Look at what Is happenlngherelntheframeworkof
two years of effort." he said. "There have surely been
setbacks. bad ones, but I think we have to recognize

2 Sections, 1'2 Pages

'20 Cents
A. Multimedia Inc. New\pGpef

that there ha ve been substantial gains."
As an example, he cited the exodus of the Palestine
Liberation Organization trom Lebanon. "It was not
until the multinational force went in that the United
States was able to broker the departure of 5,&lt;XXl
IPalestinians) trom Beiru t," he said.
"The strtk!ng outrome Is that there Is even more
deeply felt today an awareness of the lmperatlvt of
solving the Palestinian problem and a recognition that
· only the United States can advance all the parties
toward a solution," he said.
He also said the Lebanese government has shown It
Is willing to take rtsks in an effort to establish a
representative government thatwouldlncludealloflts
various factions.
Maintaining he was "very puzzled" by any assertion

of waning U.S. influence In the area. the official said
that the United States "is acknowledged by the states
in the area as central to the peace process."
The official insisted there was no reason for
Secretary of State George P. Shultz to cancel his
planned vacation in the Bahamas because of the
Lebanese situation. Shultz left Thursday.
The 500 rnllltary personnel staying behind include
about 200 Marines who will guard the U.S. E mbassy.
about 150 Army trainers and others who were
described only as managerial persoMel.
He refused to say specifically when the Marines
would be moved, maintaining it was military secret.
But he said Weinberger's plan lnclll(les a contingency
for removing Marines more quickly in the event of an
emergency.

a

Coal finn
files suit

•

Ill

RIVER STAY AWAY FROM MY DOOR-'1111swasthesentlmentof
Pomeroy buslne8slnen as water came up In the dip between the two
parking lots In Pomeroy. Friday ~omlng the rive~ crested at 39 feet.

F1ood stage In Pomeroy is 46.5 feet. Offlclati do not feel the rain that L&lt;;
expected today wW have much eHect.

Economic-recovery _ _ gains momentum
By The Associated Press
The economy'sgrowlh in the final
quarter of last year was stronger
than first estimated. the government said today In a report that
followed a parade of upbeat signs of
expansion early this year.
The recent batch of reports of
robust growth, including a surge In
home building and factory operations, points to what one economist
called "terrific momentum" for the
economy.
The Commerce Department said

today that the "real" gross national
product - the inflation-adjusted
value of the na tion's output of goods
and services - grew at an annual
rate of 4.9 percent In the final three
months of 1983. A month ago,
fourth-quarter GNP growth had
been estimated at 4.5 percent.
The revision did not change the3.3
percent Increase in GNP for all of
1983, the best performance since
1978.
Among encouragin!( signs In
today's report was a29percent spurt

.

in business investment spending.
the sharpest increase since the first
three months of 1965 and a sign of
encouragement for future economic
growth.
But the report also pointed out the
nation's foreign trade troubles.
saying that imports rose by an
annual rate of 25.9 percent in thE'
fourth quarter while exports only
managed 7.7 percent growth.
The !(OVernment reported Thursday that construction of new homes
jumped 15 percent in January to the
highest level in five years. and that
Americans' personal Income rose
1.1 percent in the month .
Other reports said U.S. factories
operated at the highest percent of
capacity in more than two years,
while applications for unemployment benefits fell again.
Treasury Secretary Donald Re·

gan said Thursday's figures, together with reports earlier this week
of surging retail sales and industrial
production. "underscore the
strengih of the current expansion
and indicate the economy continues
to move ahead at a steady pace in
1984."
"We thought th~ terrific momentum of 1983 would carry over into
1984. and it clearly has. " said Roger.
Wescott of Wharton Econometrics.
a private consulting firm .
For January. housing starts
climbed to a seasonally adjusted
rate of 1.92 million units. the best
showing since December 1978 when
construction starts were at an
annual rate of 2 million units.
The January increase was the
largest since a 25.9 percent surge in
January 1~. when the housing
(Continued on page 81

Perhaps the largest suit for
damages in local history was filed
today in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court .
The suit flied by theSouthernOhio
Coal Company Athens, against
Magnum Drilling Inc., Rutland, and
Royal Petroleum Properties Inc.,
Cleveland, asks for minimum
damages totaling $2,500,&lt;XXl,&lt;XXl if
the defendant companies proceed in
drtiling oil and gas wells through
coal on lands owned by Southern
Ohio Coal Co.
Southern Ohio Coal Company
says It owns approximately OO,&lt;XXl
acres of coal In Meigs, VInton·,
Athens, Gallia and Jackson CountJes, which It legally acquired
through various deeds.
Southern Ohio Coal charges that
Magnum Drtlling, Inc., has leased
certain oil; and gas Interests
situated below plaintiffs coal,
principally in Rutland and Salem
Townships, Meigs County.
Southern Ohio Coal claims defendant, Royal Petroleum Properties, Incorporated. controls Magnum's activities in drilling on the
leases and is a party In interest to
these leases and inte rests .
The coal owned by Southern Ohio
Coal in those counties lies below the
surface in a seam known as Oarion
4A. which is closer to the surface
than any oil or gas that defendants
may drill for in the same area. so
that dilling for oil and gas in this
vicinity, requires drilling through
plaintiff's coal.
The petition alleges mining methods the Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
must use to mine it s coal at an
economically viable price cannot be
properly utilized If oil or gas well!;
are drilled through plaintiff's coal
before it is mined. accordind to the
charge.
The Southern Ohio Coal Co. also
states that If Royal or Magnum
drUis any oil or gas well through
plaintiff' s coa l pursuant to any
permit granted by theStateofOhio,
such act ion will constitute a
violation of plaintiff's property
rights protected by the Fourteenth
Amendment to the United States
(Continued on pa!(e 81

Rescue workers find bodies

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Oil-gas story on Page 12

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan Is
ordering U.S. Marines to begin their pullback from
Beirut to Navy ships off the Lebanese coast this
weekend, though a contingent of 500 American
mUitary persoMel will remain, a senior White House
official says.
The president was expected to receive a report today
from Oetense Secretary Caspar Weinberger outlining
the timetable for removing Marines from Beirut. and
to approve It almost Immediately.
The withdrawal of the Marines, who were sent to
Beirut 17 months ago as part of a multinational
peacekeeping force, will be completed ll days from
today, according to the official. who briefed reporters
Thursday with the stipulation that he remai n
anonymous .
In fact, the Initial phase of the redeployment is

.,'.

New For Spring!

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Story, photo on Page 4

Marine pullout hegins this weekend

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17TH- SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18TH- MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20TH

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COMMOOORE. Pa. iAP) Rescue workers today found the
bodies of three miners who had been
trapped a mile underground by a
coai mine explosion, the company
announced .
The announcement was madeata
press conference by Barry Novotny.
mine manager for administra lion
for Greenwich Collieries No. 1. The
i:Jollies remained Inside the mine at
the site of the accident while officials
contln.ued ventilating the deadly
methane gas that exploded, he said.
Ten other miners were hurt In the
..blast, which happened early Thursday In the mine's North Portal,
located about 90 miles east of
Pittsburgh .
The re~~ue teams, carrying air
packs and·wearing masks, plodded
for hour• Thursday toward the
trapped men. They were forced to
stop to build a makeshift ventilation

system when the methane threatened another explosion. said Jack
11sdale. vice president of coal
operations for the Pennsylvania
Mines Corp .. which owns the mine.
·Searchers found thethreeabout45
minutes after resuming the sea~h
at 3 a.m. today~ and the families
were notified about 30minuteslater.
Novotny said .
Ambulances and official cars took
about 15 waiting relatives away
from Greenwich offices after they
had been told the news. The farnlly
members left the building, about
two rnlles trom the mine, holding
onto each other, some supporting
others on their arms.
The trapped miners were Walter
S. Depto, 47; GaryL.Miller,34; and
Stephen M. Parzatka, 31, according
to Novotny. Their hometowns were
not released.

I-

·'
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United Min~ Workers Pt-~sident
Richard Trumka was expected at
the mine today. Kopp said.
Workers at two other sections of
the mining compll'x were called off
today's early shift out of "respect for
the families:· said Doug Horne.
Local1609 president.
There was no word on theca use of
th&lt;' explosion that hit at least two
branches of the Greenwich Collieries No.1 mine owned by Pennsylvania Mines. a subsidiary of the
PeMsylvania Power and Light Co.
of Allentown.
Tisdale said the ventilation system was working propei-ly before
the blast. and there was no evidence
of a cave-ln.
The threE' trapped miners, work·
1ng about 450 feet underground, had
been using an electric water pump
to prevent flooding, Tisdale said.

�Commenta..y
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVt:JrE D TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~~~

t:.!m~

,.....,__,.__,...,I"T"E!!doo=o

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFUCH

Assistant Publish e r/ Co ntroller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·

lion and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

Exit

Consider Mr. Seweryn Blaler of
Columbia University. He was
recently In the Soviet Union and
was terribly dlstressed by what he
calls the "Incessant, agitated and
strident vilification of the United
States." Terribly put off beclluse he
fears that the Soviet Union may
very well go on to Indulge Itself by
being obstreperous. What went
wrong? Reagan Is what went
wrong, Professor Staler says .
Because Mr. Reagan's rhetortc
"has badly shaken the self-esteem
and patriotic pride of the Soviet
political elites."

again permitted the Soviet Union to
treat the bargaining table as a
psychO-poll tical venture. The Soviet
Union generally comes to the
bargaining table not to bal'llaln, but
to manipulate Western policy, For
Instance: The United States an·
nounces It Is prepared to bargain. It
goes to Geneva. The Soviet Uhlon
makes proposals that add up to
unilateral Western disarmament.
We· reject those proposals. They
call back their ambassadors to
Moscow and pout. But their pout is
transformed Into such Instruments
as Professors Blaler and Cohen and
the great legions of those who feel
that faUure at the bargaining table
Is a failure of the West to comply.
It Is true that Reagan speaks
about the Soviet l'"llon much as
Winston Churchill used to speak
about the Nazis. That Is to say, he
told the truth. This Is not merely
self.lndulgence. It Is, tor the leader
of a democracy who IS 'asking for
almost s:m billlon per year for
defense, a necessity. You see, such
sacrifices as Amertcan taxpayers
are asked to make do not make
sense In the absence of a clear
vision of what an alternative way of
life, dominated by the Gulagtenders, would be like. It the Soviet
Union were simply a matter of a
different way of life, a different
culture - that sort of thing - we
would not need to bank all that
firepower.
What ls generally not recognized
about Ronald Reagan is that other
than the increased military budget
and the disposition to say the truth
about the Soviet Union In flltallatlon
tor the Soviet Union's telling
falsehoods about the United States,
Mr. Reagan has been a remarkably
unprovocative president. He gave
up on the pipeline ISSue. He ended
the agricultural boycott.

And Professor Stephen Cohen of
Prtnceton argues that the next
leader of the Soviet Union may
come In committed to the Cold War.
Because the Cold War lobby will
"finally prevaU, If It has not
already, largely because Soviet
pro-detente arguments are In
shambles." And why is that? Right.
Because "Ronald Reagan, not
Richard Nixon, Is the real face of
America. And thus, tor the Soviet
Union, Cold War Is both political
virtue and eternal necessity."
Henry Kissinger has frequently
warned that we have tlme and

LETTERS OF OPINION are wel comed . They should bt" less than 300 words
lon«. All letters art&gt; subj ect to editing and must be s igned with name, address and
tel ephone number. No unslcned letters wUI be published . !..etters !6hould be In

good taste, addres!llng issues, not personalities.

Those who claim
to see the future
You can never tell what the economy will produce next, despite the
efforts of several hundred thousand people who, to one degree or another,
earn a living by claiming to See the future.
They write letters about the stock market, they run research projects in
banks, they occupy chairs in academe, they occupy slots at the Federal
Reserve, they advise the president.
But so far as can be determined, none of them told Americans that with
the improvement In the economy they would start bending fenders at a
greater rate than In the late recession.
Word from the Insurance Information Institute suggests that automobile
accidents have grown more frequent as the economy improves and as
people become more active in pursuing their selling and buying goals.
Sean Mooney, institute vice president-economist who studies 12 key
states to compile his statistics, found a 5.6 percent increase in accident
frequency between the third quarter of 1982 and the same months of 1983.
,. More lllsturblng, says Mooney, is that the worst of the three months·: July, August, September- was the final one of the quarter. In September,
:. he reports, accidents jumped 10.2 percent over the same month in 1982.
·· Since then, consumers have been even more active, especially around
the Main Streets and malls at Christmas tlme, and In January too.
Statistics for those months are still being compiled.
-From Washington there are reports that a Oat tax might be among
changes sought In tax policy later this year. U so, you might see an
unusually active exhibition of special-interest lobbying.
·: A Oat tax would require most people to pay the same percentage or their
• Income to the govenunent, which means that many deductions and
:· exemptions would be reduced and some even ellmlnated.
. Tax fillng would be slmpllfied, and many people would appreciate that.
· But others wouldn't because they make their living off tax complications,
: incentives, loopholes and the like. Tax preparers, for Instance.
: · The tax-shelter industry also lives orr little details of income tax
regulations. Its members often do quite well with Investment vehicles that
permit participants to obtain big tax wrlteorrs by putting money Into real
: estate, oil and gas, and so on .
·· Still another constituency exists among those In society who benefit from
: such deductions. Permission to take tax deductions for certain
: Investments, It should be remembered, often were put there for ·social
: reasons.
· Homeownershlp, for example, Is coliSidered socially desirable, and so
.: there are benefits for those who take the risks of owning houses and
·: building rental units. Some benefits are further enhanced for investing in
: poorer areas.
• You may be sure that those who take deductions will defend them as
:necessary to America's future . You may be just as certain that those who
: receive the Investment flow from those deductions will be just as patriotic. 1
::
..
'
:
·
·
:.
:

: ~ The events that occur
.: ~ while he's on vacation
'

, During his three years In office, President Reagan has spent 175days in
: · Callfornla - an ~vPr'lge of one day out of six.
• He was In Callfornia when U.S. jet fighters shot down Libyan jets over
: : the Gull of Sidra. He was in California when U.S. Marines in the
: · multinational peacekeeping force in Lebanon suffered their first
: : casualties. He was in California when the Soviets shot down a South Korean
· : Air Lines jumbo jet.
·
And last week, he was in California when Soviet President Yurt V.
: : Andropov died.
, · So, what did he talk ahout when he sat down to chat and pose for
· : photographers during hi~ first formal meeting in the Oval Office after
: · returning from the latest vacation? The events that occur while he's on
: : vacation.
. Reagan was meeting with King Hussein of Jordan on Monday when the
: ' king asked about the trip.
: ' "I was On the phone more than I was on the horse," Reagan· said. "'I've
: : decided presidents don't have vacations. They just have a change of

•

· · scenery."

1

·
Reagan complained about a problem he had with the fireplace in the
: : five-room ranch house he calls home in the Santa Ynez Mountains about 30
·: miles northwest of Santa Barbara.
He was overheard telling the king that he had built a big fire In the
: · fireplace, which Is raised above the Door, when some logs tumbled out.
· "The fire fell onto the Door," Reagan said, relating thedltflculty he had
: : getting It back into the fireplace "without burning my hands off."
·
The president Isn't the only one having fireplace problems.
•
L . .• ry Speakes, Reagan's spokesman, likes to keep a fire smoldering on
:: chilly &lt;jays. It's stoked up jn the morning, and throughout the day a log or
. : two are thrown on to keep his spacious office wzy.
:
While Speakes was at a meeting elsewhere, a Secret Service agent carne
: : padding down a nearby hall and up to the spokesman's open door. It might
-: be a good Idea, he suggested, to open t11e Due just a bit more.
·, It turns out the smoke had drifted down one hallway, turned right up
:·· another, passed through a doorway, and could be noticed outside the Oval
: : Office.
•
. Still, it had not gotten to the stage of settin'g orr the supersensitive smoke
: · alarms In the White House.
•
Speaking of alarms, a false one that went through various financial
· : markets on Thesday kept telephone operators and press officers at the
: : White House jumping.
:: The rumor was that Reagan had suffered a heart attack. The rumor was
~ quickly denied by Speakes and several of his deputies. Then, presumably,
~ it was put to rest by the sight of Reagan conferring with President Hosnl
; Mubarak of Egypt and then walking with the Egyptian and King Hussein of
: Jordan as the three strode along the .Rose Garden to lunch In the State
·;- Dining Room.

~ Today in history
~
TodaylsFrklay, Feb. 17th, the&lt;l8thdayof1984. Thereare318daysleftln
• theyear.
: . .'Thought-lor Today: "From the sublime to the ridiculous there ls only one.
: step."- Napoleon Bonaparte (17~1821) .

...-:

Eaglettes-SWHS post wins

~dropov~____________w_ul_w_m_F._.B_~_k~~~~-~

On the whole, I favor frequent
rather than Infrequent changes of
tenure by Soviet leaders. Moreover,
It must be assumed that they pass
on Into a better world or If not that,
to a world not very much dltferent
from the one they had got used to.
But the trouble with the periodic
deaths of Soviet leaders is that they
fertilize the most awful rash of
commentary by scholars and pun·
dlts, which commentary no matter
how It gets there, always, but
always, erids by saying one thing,
namely that the United States has
got to Improve Its ways.

'llornet'

StUngs~__________________J_oc_k_A_nd_e_N_on

WASIDNGTON - The Pentagon spelled out In a series of classified
Is stuck with still another high· and internal Navy reports seen by
prtced lemon: the Navy's F /A-18 my associate Donald Goldberg.
fighter-attack plane.
The plane was originally In·
You can round up the usual tended as a cheap altern;~tive to
suspects to share blame for this more costly Navy fighters . But by
multl·bllllon-dollar boondoggle:
the time Its mission was expanded
brass hats who kept adding on too and all the fancy doodads were
many expensive extras, bureau· loaded on, It became the most
crats who have a professional stake expensive tactical aircraft ever
In continuing the half-baked pro· made: The current price tag Is
ject, and lnOuential members of • about $30 million per plane. And the
Congress who want lucrallve ])e. Navy has ordered 84 of them this
tense contracts for their home-state year alone.
factortes.
The stupidest mistake of all was
Navy Secretary John Lehman combining two Incompatible pur·
has reportedly recommended poses In one plane. The F/A·lBwas
mercy killing for the F I A·lB, but he designed strictly as a fighter plane
has been unable to prevall over the to shoot down enemy aircraft a~
constituency that this over-prtce protect the Navy's ships. Then It
weapon has built up-over the past was given the second role of Its F 1A
six years. So the spending goes on. designation : attacking enemy
The plane' s nickname Is targets on land and sea.
"Hornet," but "Turkey" would be
The result Is that the plane dOes
more fitting. About the only thing neither job well.
the Hornet has proved capable of
The F/ A·18's split-personality
stinging Is the taxpayer. The shortcomings were pointed out
F I A·lS's serious shortcomings In earl~. In an "Initial operational
both concept and execution are

evaluation" dated June 16, 1981, and
stamped "Confidential." The appraisal expressed "serious con·
cern" over the Hornet's fighter
performance, Including close air
support and Interdiction of enemy
planes. As for Its attack functions,
"many limitations to air-to-ground
weapon . employment wer e
Identified."
Navy test pllots were even more
critical In later evaluations.
Another confidential report In
November 1982 said starkly: "F1A·
18 Is not operationally suitable.
Provisional approval for service
use Is not recommended."
Two sertous deficiencies are
maintenance and repair. Internal
Navy records show that from July
1981 through June 1982 each Hornet
filght required seven man-hours to
get the plane back l!Jto shape. Those
were Navy tests. When the contrac·
tor, General Electric, ran tests on
the engines, It reported only a
fraction of the repair time.
During a six-month pertod ending

last May, the Hornet was "tully
mission capable," that Is, able to
perform all Its combat functions,
only 42.6 percent of the time. The
percentage fell steadily over the
next five months, and during the
first week In November, the Hornet
was fully mission capable only
one-third of the time.
The Hornet lias other fatal naws.
It uses too much fuel to be a good
attack plane. To make It back to
base, it must climb to fuel ·
conserving high altitude Immediately after attacking Its target,
making It vulnerable to enemy
detection and counterattack.
It also has virtually no all·
weather capablllty, even though a
likely area of combat Is the stormy
North Atlantic oft Norway.
Taking all this Into consideration,
a secret report to Lehman last
August recommended: "During
the next year, examine the posslbll·
tty of developing a new attack
aircraft for procurement In the
1990s." In other words, the navy
admits the Hornet Is a dud.

The 0 lympics_______---..::.Ar:...::._t=...::.B~=h=wa==-ld
"Hey, kids, the Winter Olympics
from Sarajevo are on."
"We don't want to see the Winter
Olympics."
"What kind of talk Is that? ABC
paid $100 mllllon to bring you 63'n
hours of pure sport. Stop doing your
homework and sit In front of this
set.''

"Aw, Dad. All they do Is show
people pushing turnip carts down
cobblestone streets, and sheep In
snowdrifts, and they keep going
back to the 198! American-Soviet
hockey game."
"That's not ABC's fault. A lot of
events had to be postponed, and It
Isn't easy to fill all that time. Hey,
look, there's the Inside or a Sarajevo
restaurant with people eating real
Slavic sausage and grape leaves.
You don't see that on TV every
night."
"Can we go back to our school
work now?''

"Aren't you Interested In how the
American hockey team does?"
"We know how they did."
"How would you know that?"
"It's already been announced on
NBC, CBS, PBS, Metromedla,
CNN, and every radio station In the
country. They even broke Into
'Casablanca' this afternoon with a
Special Bulletin."
"I think It's unfair for the other
networks to announce the reSJilts of
\he Olympics. before ABC has a
chance to show ~mon television."
"Maybe they do It so we won't
watch the Olympics, but their
shows · Instead," one youngster
suggested.
"That's a rotten WilY for another
network to behave. I'll bet If CBS
had the rights to the Winter
Olympics ABC would never do ltto

them."

~~Why

not?"

"Because Sam Donaldson Is too
nice a guy. Look, kids, they're
having a blizzard on the screen. I'll
bet none of you have ever seen a
blizzard In Yugoslavia."
"I have to study for a math test."
"You can always study for a
math test. But you'll have to walt
four years to see another Winter
Olympics."
"It's boring. The East Germans
and the Soviets keep winning all the
gold medals."
"That's because they're profes·
slonals. They practice for four
years. Our kids don't get to see
snow except during their spring
college breaks. Here comes the
women's luge competition. This
should be'pretty exciting."
"It's boring."
"It Isn't boring. It just looks
boring. Do you realize those sleds
go 75 mll~ an hOJ!i'?" ·
"It you've seen one East German
woman lie cjown on a lu~. you've
seen them all."
·
,
"Walt a mlnute. ,They're going to
go to a Sarajevo discotheque after ,
the commercial. I'll bet you kids
never knew Yugoslavia had
discotheques."
"I've got to write a paper on Paul
Volcker."
.
"Paul Volcker can walt. You're
going tj) stay here ,and Wlllch the.
Olympics: whether you want to or
1161;-o'l'he cross-country" skllng-is
coming up very soon and ·It's an
educatonal eilperi~ .r don't want
any of you to miss."
"I'd rather do a paper on the
Federal Reserve Bank."
"That's out of the question. Look,
there's a wonderful shot of the
YugOSlav Arp\y - reriioVtrif' snow
from the downhill race flnlsh llne.

Now they're doing It In Instant
replay. Don't tell me you've seen
that before."
"I think I'll go to bed. Wake me up
If an Amertcan does . anything
Interesting."
"I'm disgusted with all of you.
Yau have no sense. of history. Do

you realize World War I started In
Sarajevo?"
"What has that got to do with
watching Commies win gold me·
dais at the Winter Olympics?"
"If you hang around just a little
longer, I'm sure Jim McKay will
tell us."

Eastern and Southwestern ad·
vancell to second round play In the
1984 Class A Girls Basketball
Tournament at Gallipolis Thursday
evening.
The Eagle girls eliminated North
Gallta, 42·2'7. Southwestern ousted
Kyger Creek, 54.·32.
In the evening's first contest, Dee
Dalley and Margaret Horner
scored 18 points apiece In the
Eagles win over the Pirate ladles.
Michele George led the losers
with 15 points. Jayne Campbell
added eight.
Eastern led 18-13 at hal,ftlme after
a IHi first period tie. The Eagles led
27·22 going Into the final period.
Eastern will battle Southwestern
at 9 p.m. Thesday, Feb. 21, In a

Berry's World

lower bracket game. Winner of that
contest will advance to the Waverly
district, and battle the Hillsboro
sectional upper bracket winner.
Southern will meet Federal
Hocking In Thesday's 7 p.m. rontest
In the GAHS gym. Southern and
Federal Hocklr.J oosted opening
round wins ave.· ymmes Valley
and Hannan Trace Wednesday
evening.
In Thursday's nightcap, Tanya
McNeal tallied 26 points as the
Highlander girls ellmlna ted Kyger
Creek.
Dianna Nlda added nine and
Sandy Patrick six for the winners.
Amy Roush and Dee Dee Henson
scored 10 each tor the Lady

Meigs' seventh grade advanced
to the finals In the Southern seventh
grade tournament with a 4740 win
over host Southern Wednesday.
Meigs wUI play Eastern Saturday
at 5: 45 p.m. for the championship.
Eastern won by forfeit over Logan,
which failed to show. In a makeshift consolation game, Meigs will
field a "B" team to take on
Southern at 4:30p.m.
With the win, Coach Ron
Drexler's ball club goes to 11·3 on
the year.
Matt Baker led Meigs despite five
stitches In his chin with 12 points
and Kevin Oller had his best game
of the year with nine points, but It
was the hustling play of reserve Jeff
McElroy that brought the Little
Marauders to life. Trailing going
into the second hall, McElroy
entered the game and his hustle
seemed to spark the entire team.
Other Meigs scorers were Wes
Howard eight, Todd Powell and
McElroy six each, Jared Sheets
tour, and Decker Cullums two.
Chrts Stout was the game's
leading scorer as the Southern ace
drilled 21 points followed by Shawn
Diddle with 16. Dave McMUllan
added two and Todd Lisle one for
Southern.
By quarters:

DAILEY FOUUI mGIEY- EMtem'sDeeDalley (40)foulec1Nortb
GaDia's Cindy IIJiley (tt) on tiD play In 'l1lunlday nlpt's ClaM A
Sectional girls toumament pme In the GaBipolls IYIII· EMtem won,
4Z-2'7. On right Is Ealllem's Martaret Homer (42). OVPphiMobyKelth
Wilson.

Marauderettes get
another chance
against Warriors
The Meigs Marauderettes will
get their third and final shot at a
veteran . and undefeated Warren
Local crew In second round sec·
tiona! tournament play Saturday at
Athens High School.
The Tri·Valley Conference cham·
pion Lady Warriors are 21.0 on the
year, but had all they could handle
Feb. 6 when they nipped Meigs
4644. In the first meeting of the two,
Warren walked off with a 70-42
landslide.
Coach Ron Logan's Marau ·
derettes are 16-5. They advanced to
the second round with a 47-42 win
over Alexander last Monday.
Warren pasted Nelsonville· York
62·39.
Warren's run and gun type
offense vs. Meigs' patient, strong
Inside game style will be the key
match-ups. Warren, with four
seniors In their line-up, have a
starting five that can all handle the
ball well and shoot extremely well
from outside.
"If we play our tempo and don't
let them speed It up, it could be a
very good ball game. We tried to
run with them the first game and
they blew us out. We controlled the
tempo In the second game and
nearly beat them ," commented
four-year head Coach Ron Logan.
Meigs' ace-up-the-sleeve will be
senior center Jenny Meadows. The
5-10 Meadows scored 26 points
against Warren In their last.
meeting and always has that knack
of playing her very best against
strong competition.
Meadows, the third all-time girls'
Meigs leading scorer, has averaged
24 points and 17 rebounds against

the Marauderettes' two strongest
opponents, Trimble and Warren .
The Lady Warriors have their
own trump card, however, In 5-8
senior Denise Wllllams. She Is a
member or the 1,00! point club In
her career as the all-time Warren
girls' top scorer. She dropped in 21
against Meigs In the second
meeting.
Also on the talented Warren crew
Is the school's third all·time leading
scorer In 5-4 senior Jenny Adams.
Contradicting the Lady Warriors'
pertmeter. shooting will be the
aggressive defensive play of
Rhonda Haddox, B. J . Gordon, Jodi
Harrison, and Cathy Dean. Jenny
MUler adds to a very strong Meigs'
rebounding department and has
scored well. Meadows and Dean
are the only seniors among the
starters.
" If we play like we're capable, It
could be very Interesting. It will be
our Inside against their outside,"
added Logan.
In the first game, Sheridan faces
powerhose New Lexington at 6: 30
p.m. New Lexington Is the tourna·
menl's number one seed. The
Meigs-Warren game will start at
8: 30 p.m. Winners wUI play Satur·
day, Feb. 25, at 2 p.m. Winner of the
Athens sectional goes against the
Zane Trace sectional winner at
Athens High School on March 3.
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M&lt;'IRS . .. .. . .. .. .. .. .

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Woods had six, Shelly Stoban two,
and Stephanie English two. Vor·
hees led Logan with 14.
By quarters:

CINCINNATI (AP 1- TheCincin·
nat! Reds have signed five more
players as the team prepares to
open spring training this weekend at
Tampa, Fla.
Thursday, the Reds signed
pitchers Curt Heidenreich and Bob
Owchlnko, catchers Dann BUar·
della and Dave Van Gorder, and
outfielder Duane Walker.
New Manager Vern Rapp has
promised competition at all posl·
lions, particularly in theoutfleldand
at pitcher and catcher.
"Mario Solo, Joe Price, Frank
Pastore, Bruce Berenyl, Jeff Rus·
sell and Charlie Pulro are starters
back from last year," Rapp said.
"The bullpen needs a healthy Tom
Hume togo with Bill Scherrer.

c

.............. !\-11 9 F
.... ~ II F

JC'nny MIIJ('r ... .. .

1\'. L Tol.

~~~~:~::!;;h

·:Hey, that's pretty gdod, ,Fritz - 'Vot~' for me
-~.'.C.BUSJI L,oe«U/111 w.~r!f/ "
·
:_ :..• ·- _.

Box scores:
ENITEIIN (4%1 - Dalleyii-2-IB: Whl!latch
IJ.J.J: Hibbs ().{).{); Ca peharT OM: Diddle
0-0-0: Spt"nC('f J.J.J : Mank.ln (}.0..0: Homer
f!.:l-18: Team 1-0-2. Totalo ~
NOR'111 GA!nA (Z7)- HlgleyiJ.H Shllot
().{).(); Gforgt&gt; 7-1·1.5; ~ac kbum ()..()..(): Ruta n
().{).{); Ca mptxoll 3-2-11: West OM. Totalo
IIJ.7·Z7.

Amy Uttlefleld'a 34 point performance asalnat Symmes VaBey
Wednellday night In the ClaM ~
Sectional Tournament at GalHpolla
pu8hed her 1100rlng output over tll6
1,000 point DlBI'k In her two years at
Southern.
Laat year Uttlefleld taiUed 582
polnt.l.

ot 49 shots from the field . Leading

Reds sign
five players

u .... u""
......... !\- tO 12

I~

four
missed chances
in the finaland
90
Meanwhile,
cold shooting
seconds by the Meigs Junior High
girls allowed Logan a 22·21 win In
the Muter Tournament champion·
ship here Wednesday. Meigs, which
never had the lead In the fourth
quarter, had four chances late but
two traveling violations, a missed
shot, and a missed tree throw gave
Logan the win. All this came with
the score at the final count, 22·21.
Coach Rich Ash's crew, which
ended a fine season at lH, made 10

Ht. Yr. P&lt;M.

Name
Jl'nny Mradows ..... . .

.. 10 10

Sooth&lt;&gt;rn ......................... 12 9 8

Melp (16-$)

J£'an HaMa ..

Local bowling

Team

,,

Bobcats.
Southw«Stern led 15-2, 27 ·12 and
39·26 at the quartermarks.

Sooro by quan.n:
K yjil:er Creek ..
. . . . .. . . . .. 2 10 14 6-32
SouthWf'Stern ..
... 15 12 12 15--54

Monday Nile Mixed
,January 9, IMI

'

Surp1188e8 I ,000 poinl8

Younger Marauders advance
in seventh grade tournament

I

0

rhe Daily Sentinei-Page-3

PonMNOy-Middleport, Ohio

~ 2- The Dally Sentinel
T • ·Midcfleport, Ohio
Friday, February 17' 1984

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Local Owner.
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The Daily Sentinei- Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Page-4-The

17, 1984

Sentinel

U.S. rejoices
in double gold
S\RAJEVO Yugoslavia tAPIThanks to a refmmed mavenck on
skts and a whtrimg dynamo on
ska l ~s. the Umted States ISt'!'JOicmg
tn It s ftrst double-gold pertmmance
oft h~ Wmter Olympics
Jt started Thursdavmornmgwit h
Btll Johnson's sizzlmg. sometimes
au bo rne dash down Mount Bj!'las
mea It ended wtth Scott Hamilton s
suspenseful tnumph on tee
Johnson was tossed off the U S
squad m 1982 tx&gt;cause he was out of
shape and rebelltous At Lake
Plactd 111 19&amp;1. he could do no bettet
than serve as a slope test runner for
the real talent But on Thursda'
Wild Bill" was brillant
In one mmute. 45 59 seconds, he
shattered E uropean dommance of
the downhtll and gave the United
States ti s ftrst men 's Alpme gold
ever No Amen can male skier had
ever fmtshed better than fifth m an
Olymptc downhill. and noAmen can
woman has won the event
Johnson had predicted his vtctory
and satd later, " I put a lot of pressure
on m yself If I had gotten second, I'd
be,p real bum "
Hamilton 's gold medal m men's
ftgure skatmg - the first for
Amen ca smce Davtd Jenkins dtd tt
at Squaw Valley m 1960- capped
the United States' best day at the
14th Wmter Games, takmg some of
the stmg out of a thm Amencan
medal harvest
Now ftfth m the medal standmgs
WJth five- three gold and two silver
- the Umted States had a chance to
add more today, plnmng hopes on
Tamara McKinney and Chnstln
Cooper In the women· s slalom
The only other medal event today
ts the men's 4x7 5-kilometer btathlon relay.
The hockey medals round was to

begm today with the Soviet Umon,
5-0. facing Canada, 4-1, and Czechoslovakia. 5 0, agamst Sweden, 3-1-1.
In a match for seventh place, the
U S team. 1 2-2, faced Poland, J.4
A.lso scheduled to begin was the
fow· man bobsled competition Two
runs were set for today wtth the final
t\\ o on Saturday
Defendmg world champion Rosa
lvnn Sumners. 19. of Edmonds,
Wa sh . slipped to second m the
women' s f1gu re skatmg Thursday,
but was pnmed for a gold medal
assault 111 Saturday's free skatmg
finale
lf Sumners can wm a gold, she will
be
the ft rst Amencan woman to do
I
so smce Dorothy Hamtll m 1976, and
It would mark the first U S sweep of
the smgles tttles smce 1956 when
Hayes Alan Jenkms and Tenley
A.lbnght did it
In the medals race, the Sovtet
Umon grabbed three Thursday- a
silver m the 4x10 cross-country
relay, and a silver and a bronze m
the men's 1,500-meter speed ska tmg
race - to overtake East Germany
for a 20-19 overall lead. The East
Germans, however, led m gold, Wlth
seven The Soviets and Amencans
had three each with three days left
and 10 gold medals still to be
awarded
The finish by the 23-year-old
Johnson, coupled with the 1 2 finiSh
by Amencans Debbte Armstrong
and Christln Cooper on Monday In
the giant slalom, gave the Umted
States Its best A.lplne showing m 32
years
Shut out of medals so far In speed
skating, hockey, the Nordic events,
luge and bobsleddmg, the U S team
was looking for someone to tgmte
them .
Johnson stepped forward

Wildcats upset
Buckeyes, 6I-6o ·

I.

EVANSTON, Ill (AP) -Northw
estern Coach Rich Falk adrmtted
his game plan was to get the ball to
Paul Schultz, but not even Falk
dreamed Schultz would play so vital
a-part In the game.
Schultz, a 6-7 senior center, drllled
a pa1r of free throws In the !mal
mmute to put Northwestern ahead
and then he slapped away a shot by
Troy Taylor with four seconds
remaining
That clinched a 61-60 Big Ten
basketball VIctory for Northwestern
over Ohio State that left Buckeye
Coach Eldon Miller steaming.
Mllier, thinking goal tending
should have been called, took off his
jacket and slammed it on the bench
and then stiff-armed a handshake
attempt by Falk
Falk, clatmlng Schultz had played
one of his finest basketball games at
Northwestern, dtsrmssed Miller's
actions.
"We put our heart s and souls m
thts game," sa1d Falk " Eldon ts a
class guy. He was JUSt upset and It
was an emohon packed game "
It started out as a close game and
remamed that way Northwestern
held several SIX pomt leads m the
first half whtch ended 27 25 WJth the
Wildcats on top.
Northwestern remamed ahead
throughout the second half except
for a bnef 47 45 Buckeye edge and
the Wildcats were m front 5749WJth
about five mmutes to play
Then Tony Campbell, who led all
scorers wtth 26 pomts, and Taylor,
who flmshed wtth 16 began smpmg
and wtth less than two rmnutes togo,
Ohto State took a 60-59 lead on a
basket by Campbell
Wtth56seconds left, Taylor fouled
Schultz, a notonously poor free-

throw shooter who makes less than
50 percent of his shots.
But this was Schultz' mght and he
canned both to give the Wildcats
their final lead of 61-60.
Ohio State played tor one sbot but
lost possession with 13 seconds to go.
But the Buckeyes regained the ball
and as time was running out Taylor
went up for a shot only to have It
rejected by Schultz.
"I felt I had a chance to block It,"
satd Schultz, who was 5-for-5 from
the field for tbe second straight
game and finished with 14 points,
second only to teammate Art Aaron
who led the Wildcats with 18.
"I didn't think about goal tendmg," said Schultz. "I!elt lfwewould
get the call, we'd get It at home. I'm
not sure tf tl was goal tending, I'd
have to see the tape. It was awful

close"
Falk satd he didn't know If It was
goal tendmg because "I was
blocked. I saw the penetration but
that was all "
UMUierfeltttwasgoaltendlng,he
wasn't talking
"There's not much to say,
" M 11
gentlemen,
1 er said alter the
game "I'd like to congratulate
Coach Falk Northwestern did
everything they had to, to win the
game W!&gt;dtdn 't. We didn't deserve
to win tomght "
With that, Miller walked out
refusing to answer questions about
goal tending
"We had four or five calls go
agamst us 111 crucial situations,"
satd Falk, "so maybe It's time those
kinds of thmgs evened up Maybe
the game dtdn't quite go according
to script, but we'll take It "

VICI'ORY LAP - U.S. IIeure
skaler ScoU Hamlllon of
Denver, Colo., can1elaU.8. Dac
u he IIWelput cheerlnl public
a1 Zetra'e Ice rink 'l1luncll;y
nip!, after he wu •warded a
JOid meUI In IIeure llkallnl M
lhe Wlnler Games In ~evo.
(AP Luerpholo).

~THE

~

2. The project will be under the supervision of the Vlllaae of Middleport, Office of Community Development.
3. The proposed project will have no sianificant effect on the natural
values of the flood/lain. Tht area already has sianificant commer·
Clll, residential an Industrial development. located in the center
of the community, there are no natural features that will be da·
maaed by the construction.
4. Actions taken are m conformance With all applicable state or local
flood plain protection standards.

ll!hJi ; Toledo travels to Ball State
(2-11); Eastern Michigan to West -

League-leadmg Mtaml and
second-place Ohio Umverslty at- ern Michigan (2·11), and Northern
ready have clinched berths In the illinois (6-7) to Kent State (5-8).
Mtd-Amencan Conference basket·
While Miami 1s through playing
ball playoffs, and Toledo can join Its closest challengers, Ohio and
them Wllh a victory Saturday at Ball Toledo still must meet on the
State
Bobcats' floor Saturday, Feb 25.
The new tournament format this Ohio and Toledo also must face
year callsforthe!lrstseventeamsto Bowling Green, and each wlll play
play March 9-11 at a neutral site, the three of their last five league games
Rockford MetroCentre, Instead of on the road.
playing first -round games on the r-:===========::::l
floors of the second-, third-and
fourth-place flmshers In the regularThe Datly Sentinel
season race
( l 'SPS 1411-NO)
U the Rockets, third with a 94
.4. Dh: I~ Ion of Multimedia, Inc
league record, win at Ball State, that
Published every afternoon, Monday
wll11eave five teanns In a battle for
through Friday, 111 Court Street, by the
the rema)nlng IOUf tournament
Ohio Valley Pilblbhlng Compeny . Multimedia . lnc, Pomeroy Ohlo4~769, 992
spots StU! In contention are BowUng
2156 Second c lass postage paid a t Po
Green and Eastern Michigan,
meroy Ohio
sharing fourth place at 7-6; sixth
M£&gt;mlx&gt;r Th e Assocllltcd Pr('ss, In
place Northern lllmotS, 6-7, and Kent
land Dally Press Assoclaton and the
State and Central Michigan, !ted for
American Newspaper Publishers As
soclatlon National Advertising Repre
seventh at 5-8.
senl a li ve Branham Newspaper Sales
733 Third Avenu('

York 10017

Meanwhile, league-leadmg MIami has the schedule on tis stde
down the stretch In the regularseason race. The Redskins. 12-1, do
not play either of thetr closest
challengers, Ohio or Toledo, m the
last !fve league games.
Four of Miami's remaining MidAmerican games are against
second-diVISion opposition, Ball
State, Kent State, Central Michigan
and Eastern Michigan.
The Redsk!ns completed the most
dangerous part of their schedule,
successive trips to Toledo, Ohio and
Northern illinois, with a 2-1 record.
Now three of their last five
conference contests will be played at
home, startmg with a Saturday
afternoon game with Central Michlgan (5-8) .
In other Mid-American games
Saturday, 1983 champion Bowllng

New York

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,_::G~ree::n:_v~ls:t~ts:_seco::::nd~-:p:la:ce:_~O:hl:ol:::w=oe:k:s

MAKE US YOUR
ONE STOP SE

::J

6. The site selection critena was rank orltred and the proposed action
determined to leave no sianificant effect on the environment or the
flood plain for the followin' reasons;
a) All other sites were either tn the flood plain or did not have public
water, sewer, or access;
b) This is the only site within the vill11e served by public infrastructure larJt enouJh to accommodate subdiviston activity;
c) The site has never durin&amp; the course of the past twenty-five years
experienced floodina;
d) The area surroundina the site is already well developed with
housina. li&amp;ht industry, and commercial activities;
e) The compellina need for slncle family housina opportunities in
lleip County and the precautions taken to protect the dwellina
units from flood activity make this a responsible action.
The proposed project is to be located within the Villaae of Middleport
and accordina to the lepl description consists of twenty-three vacant
lots, most measurina50'x100' for atotal square footaae of approx1m1·
tely 121,033 s.f. There is a 14' alley and a 60' street dividina the prop·
ertr There is 207' feet of frontaae on Locust Street, plus 14' alley and
60 frontaae on Plum Street, which is not on existina used road.

lot Four Hundre~ Forty-three (443); Four Hundred Forty-four (444);
Four Hundred Ftfty-one (451); Four Hundred Fifty-two (452)· Four
Hundred F!fty·t~ree (453); Four Hundred Fifty-four (454); and Four
Hundred FJfty·eiaht (458) of S.W. Pomeroy's Addition to Lower Po·
me roy, now incorporated into and made a part of the Villace of Middleport, Meias County, Ohio.

of Columbus, Oh.
804 W. Mam

992-2318

/

·~

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Work·
Cabinet Making
Syracuse
. 992·3978

a m Choir rehearsal, 'l\le5day, 7 :11 p m
. . - dlredlon d Allee Neai&lt;o

m&lt;rnJng wonhlp 10: :1) a m . Nmlng M'IVI&lt;'&lt;' n
p m , mid-"""" S&lt;!fV(ce, Wednesday 7p m
GRACE EPL&lt;;COPAL CHURCH :tl6 E
Ma,In St , Po....-oy Sunday """""" Holy
conununlon on I ~ tlnn Sunday of Pach roonth

and combined with morning prayer oo tho
thlrdd SUnday Morning prayer and SM'IllOn oo
aU other SUndays d the month Olureh School
and Nursery care provided Cotfre tw:lur ln th£•
Parish Hall Immediately following tho"""""
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRISf 212 W
Main St . Noll Proudfoo&lt; , pesror Bible School

9l)a m , MomingworshJp, tO::Jla m Youth
""""lng!l· 6 00 p m , Evonlng WOI'!Ihlp 7 00 p

m Weme.!ay nlllhl JX'ayer llll't'llng and Bible
study 7 00 p m
TilE SALVATION ARMY 115 Bu!l&lt;'ntut

J.l

Maroon PB, PS, a1r, t1lt wheel, crUise, AM/FM stereo, rack on top,
wtre wheels, excellent car, 47,000 miles.

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1976 FORD PINTO.:.................. $1395

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CARS &amp; TRUCKS

~

SUGAR RUN MILLS

SYCAIWORE

PH. 992·2115
Mulberry Ave.
''

-=----~
---=-~--~-·~·,. ---- ,..

"

Worship 10 30 a m
P rayer m eellnR 7 lOp m Thursday

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

CHURCH corner Ash a nd Plum L ('S l\ £&gt;
Hayma n pas tor Sunday Sc hool 10 00 a
m , Mornln~ Worship 11 00 a m W!'d
nesda y and Sa turda y Even ing SE&gt;rvlcf&gt;s at
730 pm

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE P.\RISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURC.JI

If you h ave been llving In a winter of your o wn wh}
n ot take a lesson from the old mill ? The w int ers of our
life arc bleak - they a rc h a rd to weal h e r But for('\tr
and ever there Is the c h a n ce to s ta rt ap;am S prin~ Wi ll
come a nd your c hurch will s u s tain you through doubt
and disappointment and p;lve you promise of a nothe r
ch a n ce - a n o t her life

Sunday
Mondey TU6sday Wednesday Thursday Fnday Saturday
Psalm
lsatah
Psalm
1 ConnthiiJil! Matthew Psalm 1 Connth1ans
951, 58112 112110
1 18 31
5 r 12
7r r 24
13 1 13

Fay Sauer, Director
Rev Jamet E. Corbitt, Aulstant

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Don An:her
Rev

Roy Deeter

e ry W('(&gt;k

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Rev

nesda y 7 30 p m UMYF, Wed nesday
6 00 p m
Communion First Sunda\
t Archerl
REEDSVILLE- Chu rc h Sc hoo\9 30 a
m , Worship Service 11 00 a m t Deeten

Harrisonville Rd Robert Purtell minis
ter Strve Sta nl ey Sunday School Supter
lntendent Su nday School 9 30 a m , Wor
ship service 10 30 a m , Evening \\.Orshlp
Sunday 7 p m and Wednesday, 7 p m

Chu rc h School 9 a m , Worship 10 a m
Blblf" St udy Tu('Sday 7 30 p m , UMW
Third Tuesday 7 30 p m , Communio n
Firs t Sund ay tArchrrl
CENTRAL CL USTER
Rev James E. Corbin
Rev Steven Nelson

Grove The RPv William Mlddl£&gt;Swarth ,
pastor Church service 9 30 a m , Sund ay
Sc hool10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHU RCH OF CHRIST
J ohn Wright passtor Sunday School 9 30
a m , La rry Haynes, S S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m

e rry Hl"lght s Road, Pomeroy Michael PI
Rev Robert E. Robinson
onkowskl pastor Marte Spi res Sabbath
Rev Andrew Rubenklnl
School Supt Sabbat h School at 2 p m on
ASBURY tSyracuse)- Worship 11 a m
Saturday with wors hip SE'rvlces fo li o~ lng ,
Churc h Sc hool 9 45 a m Charg(' Bib\('
at 13 15pm
Study Wednesday, 7 30p m UMW, fir st
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Tuesday 7 30 p m , Choi r Re hra rsa l
- ·s ister HarriNt Warner Sup! Sunday
Wednosday 6 30 p m UMW, fourth Sun
School 9 30 a m , M o.rnl n ~ Worship 10 4~
day 6 30 p m t Nelson 1
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m
a ~OMEROY FIRST BAPTIST David
Churc h SchoollO a m Blblr Study Tu£&gt;s
Mann, mlnls t('r William Snouffer Su ndav
dav 7 lOp m UMW First Monday 7 30
School Supt Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m
p m , UMYF -sund ay 6 p m Choir Re
M6rnlng Worship 10 30 a m
hea rsa l 6 30 p m Wed n!'sday t Rothe
FIRST SOUTH ERN BAPTIST Po
mic hl
mrroy Plk£' Dav id Hunt pas tor Jack
FLATWOODS- Church School lO a m
Needs , Sunday School Dlr('('ctor Su nda )
Worship 11 a m , Bible Stud y, Thursd
Scpol, 9 30 a m Morning Worship 10 30
day. 7 p m
UMY F . Sunday, 6 p m
ewnlng worship, 7 30 p m Tuesday Vlsl
tRothemi chl
tatlon 7 p m Wednesda y , Pra yer service,
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 am
7 '"' p m
Miss ion Friends 7 30 p m
Church Sc hool 10 a m , Choir prac tlc!',
G(rls In Action 7 30 p m Ac teens 7 30 p
Tuesday 6 30 p m, UMW , first Tuesday
m ~ Choir Pract!Ct" 8 30 p m
7 30 p m tNe lsonJ
FAITH TABERN ACLE CHURCH Bal
HEATH (Middleport)- Churc h SChool
ley Run Road Rev Em mett Ra"' son pa s
9 30 a m , Worship 10 30 a m , Bible
tor Ha ndl ey Dunn sup! Sunda y School
Study Tu('sday 10 a m , UMW second
10 a m Sunday evrning s!'rv lcl' 7 W p m
Mond ay , 7 30 p m , UMW Second Mon
, Bible !£'aching 7 30 p m Thursda y
day 7 30 p m , UMM, Third Monday, 7 30

RENE. Rrv Thomas H Colllr r pa stor
Martha Wolfe Chairman of t he Boa rd of
Chris tia n Life Sunda y Sc hool 9 30 a m
Morning wors hip 10 30 a m Sunday
£&gt;v('n\ngworshlp7 30p m Prayer meeting
7 30 p m Wednf"Sday

Invited, 6 45 p m Thunday COfllO CadPI
C1a5ss !Young Proplo-Biblot, 7 :1) p m Blbk&gt;
Study and Prayer """"~· open IO lh&lt;' J&gt;Jbllc
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH Of

cHRfST, llll6 Chlldnon's Home Road I County
Road 761 992 5%1) VOC'al mU!dc Sunday Wor

slhl' 10 a m . Bible Study 11 a m , Wonhlp 6p
m Wedneoday, Bible Stud' 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BfBI.E CHRISTIAN
CHURCH. CUfton Lucas postoc Surda)
School 9: :rJ a m Mrs Worley Franct.'i, supt

~ first and third undays lol
ioltllnR Surday School Youlh """"lng !'V&lt;'f\1
Sunday, 7 :1&gt; p m
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST

Proachlng

Preaching 9 30 a m tlrs l a nd second Su n
days of each m onth , third a nd fourth Su n
days eac h m onth worship services a t 7 30
p m Wednesday t&gt;V('nlngs at 7 30 p m
Pray£&gt;r a nd Bible Study

SEVENTH DA Y ADVENTIST Mull&gt;

SYRACUSE MISSION CHerry St s,

racuse Services 10 a m Sund ay Evening
srr v lccs Sunday a nd Wednesday ut 7 00 p
m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH Of CHRIS1

IN CHRISTIAN UNION La wrcncr Man
1 ~ pastor Mrs Rossell Young Sunda \
SChool Supt Sunday SC hool 9 :lO a m
Evening worship 7 :lO p m Wcdnesda\
prayer m£&gt;e llng 7 :lO p m

MT

MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD

Rac in(' Rev .James sauerfif'ld pa stor
Fr('(&gt;man William s, Sup! Sunda \ School
9 '45 a m , Sunda y a nd Wednesdav t'\('n
tng servlc('s. 7 p m

MIDDLEPORT

Fl RST

BAPTIST

CornN Sixth a nd Pa lm ('r Thr R('v Mark
McCJ unjit Sunday SC hool 9 15 a m Dan
Whit(', Sunda y School Sup! .John Ri !'bt'l
Sr Asst Supt Morning Wors hip 10 15 a
"1 Youth m ('etlng 7 30 p m Wt'dn£'Sday
lr\cludlng We(' Tots , Eag!'r BeavPrs Ju
nlor Astronaut s a nd Junior and S!'n\01

H,Igh BYf choir practiceR 30 p m Wro

nrsday Prayer m l'&lt;'ting a nd Bible study,
W('dnesdav 7 30 p m

CHURCH Of CHRIST Middleport 5th
and Ma in Bob Mt'llon, minister AI Har t
sQn, ass()('iatl' minister. MlkP Gerlac h
SYnday Sc hool Su(X'rlntendent BIPI('
~hoot 9 30 a m , Mo rning Wors hlfl 10 30
a f" , Eveninlit Wors hip, 7 00 p m Pra yer
meeting, Wednesday 7 00 p m
ZARENE. Co pastors Rev Charles Coyle
avd Rev Nancy Coy!!' Bill Whit(' Sundav
Sthool Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morning Worship, 10 30 a m
Sundav
E}'angeltstlc meeting, 7 00 p m Prayrr
meeting Wednesday 7 00 p m

,
'

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY

Rev. Wanda Johnson, Director
Harold Johnson
Director ol Education

~

Sr hool 9 30 a m

In wlnt...r the pond freezes over a nd the old mill
wheel Is idle But although the land scape appea rs
d o nna nt there Is hidde n llfe beneath the s urface One
day II w ill be sprln~ agai n with water rushing over the
milt wheel and corn being ground Into m ea l

To m Staten, pastor Su ndav School9 30 a
m Evenin g servicE' 7 30 p m Wednesda y
prayer meet ing 7 30 p m
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duane Warden minister Blblf&gt;
c lass 9 30 a m , Morning Wors hip 10 30 a
m Even In~ Wors hip 6 30 p m Wed nes
day Bible Study 6 30 p m
NEW STJVERSV ILLE CO MM UN ITY
CHURCH Sund ay Sc hool service 9 45 a
m Worship !H"rvlce 10 30 a m .
Eva ngelistic Service 7 30 p m Wednes
da) Prayer m eetln~ 7 30 p m Thursday

ltollneso """"tng, 10 a m , Surday

School, 10: :1) am Surday School YPSM
E~ Adams. loader 7 :1) p m Salvation
""""lng. various speakers and musk specta~
Thunday, U :1) a m to 2 p m Ladk&gt;s Home
U&gt;ague, members In cha.f'Re aU W()rl1('fl

BOSWORTH

1979 CHEVY IMPALA WAGON .... $3995

;;;;;;;:.t

212
992·3785. Pomeroy

JEHOVAH S WITNESS

Rev 8eldon Johnson
ALFRED - Churc h Sc hool 9 30 a m
Worship 11 a m UM YF 6 30 p m UW
T hird Tu('sday 7 30 p m Communion
fir st Sunday !Archert
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m , Church
Sc hoollO a m Bible Study, Thursday 7 p
m , UMW fi rst Thursday 1 p m , Com
munlo n firs t Sund ay lArcher l
JOPPA - Worship 9 30 a m , Churc h
School 10 30 a m Bible St udy Wednes
day, 7 30 p m tJohnson )
LONG BOT'TOM - Churc h School 9 30

Sunday

,.sC

Blue, PB, PS, air, stereo

MT HERMON UN ITED

a m Worship 7 p m , Bible Study Wro

TUPPERS PLAI NS ST PAUL-

Rev Richard Rothemlch

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Don L

Walker, Pastor Robert Smith Sunda)
School Supt , Sundav Sc hool 9 30 a m
Morning worship 10 40 a m , Sund a \
evening worship 7 30 p m Wednesda't
('V£&gt;nlng Bible s tud ) 7 30 p m
BURLINGHAM CO MMU NITY
CHURCH, Burlingham R('v Oke) Ra \
Launde rmllt pastor Ph 992 7324 Sunda)
Sc hool10 00 a m Sunday evrning serv ice
7 00 p m Wedn('sda y rvenlng serv ice,
7 00 p m

DANVILLE

HOLINESS

CHURCH

l()('a ted on Rt 325 bet'APen Vinton a nd
Langsv\11£' Rev BE-n Wa tt s pa stor Sun
day School 8 30 am Bobby Lambert S
S Supt Morning "' or s hip 10 30a m Chll
dre n's Ha ppy Hour 6 45 P m Prayer a nd
Bible Study 7 30 p m Mi ss ionary met'ling
fir st Wednesday of £&gt;ac h month 7 30 p m
For Informa tion ca ll 388 8467

'

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl

Shulf&gt;r pa sto1 Wors hip sen Ice 9 30 a m
Sund av Sc hool10 30 a m BlbiP Study a nd
pra yer !.dvlce Thursda y 7 30 p m

CARLETONINTERDENOMINA

TIONAL CHURCH Kings bury Road Re\
David Curfman past or Sunda y School
9 30 a m Ralph Ca rl Supt Evening wor
ship 7 30 p n1 Pra) £&gt;r m l'&lt;' tln~ Wedne-s
da y 7 30 p m

LONG BOTIOM CHRISTIAN Jodv

Holl a nd , pastor Wa l\ ac(' Dame\\.ood
Sunday School Supt Worship service 9 a
m , Bible School 10 a m

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH

RPv Thereon Durham pas tor S unday
School at 9 30 a m Morning wors hip at
10 30 a m Su ndav evrning sen Ice at 7 30
p m Tht.rsday services at 7 30 p m

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald

Kn ob, located o n Count y Road 31 Rev
Lawrpnce G lursenca mp pa stor Rf'v
Roger Willford asst pastor Preac hing
ser vices Sund ay 7 30 p m Pra )er m E'l'tlnJ!:
Wednesday 7 30 p m Gan G riffith
leadrr Youth groups Sundav evening a t
6 30 p m with Roge r a nd Violet WIIUo rdd
leadt&gt;rs Commun ion servict&gt; fi rs t Sunda\
each m onth

WHITE S CHAPEL Cool\ !lie R D

Rev Roy D£'e trr passtor Sund av Sc hool
9 30 a m Worship sen JC£&gt;, 10 30 a m Bi
bl e study a nd prayer S£'rvice W£&gt;dn('sda)

730pm
RUTLANO CHURCH Of CHRIST

383 N 2nd Ave, Middleport Sunday
School 10 am Sunday and Wcdn£'sday
Eventng serviCE's at 7 30 P m

hea r sa l Wedn('sda y, 7 30 p m , UMW, se
cond Tuesd ay, 7 30 p m UMYF Sunday ,
6 p m 1Corbitt 1

E Robinson , pastor SundavSchool 9 JO a
m . Worship servicl' 11 am, Evening
servi ce 7 p m Mid wNk serviC(' Wednes

ROCK SPRI NGS- Church School 9 15
a m . Worship 10 a m , Bible Study Wro

day. 7 P m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH

nesday, 7 30 p m UMYF tSenlorsl, Sun
day 5 p m tJuniorsl every othr r Sun
day 6 p m t Rothl'mlch 1
RUTLAND- Church School , 9 45 a m
Worship, 10 30a m, UMWIEvenlnlgCir

Robert E Musser pastor Sunday Sc hool
9 30 am, Paul Musser supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m , Sunday PV('ning ser
vice, 7 P m . mid week service Wednes
day, 7pm

!Afte-rnoon Circle I second Thursday, 1 p
m tRubenklnliit\

ZARENE Rev James 8 Kittle, pastor
Sherman Cundllf, supt Sunday School

clel second Wednesday. 7 30 p m , UMW
SALEM CENTER - Church School, 10

CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD Rov R

SYRACSE CHURCH OF THE NA

9 JO am. Morning worship 10 30 a m

a m Worship 9 4!l a m (Jlubenklng\
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 8 30 am,
Churc h School10 a m ( RubenklmO

Evangelistic service, 6 p m , Prayer a nd
Praise Wt.'dnesday , 7 P m , Youth m eet
lng, 7 P m

Rev. James M. Clark
Rev. Paul McGuire
Rev Orville White
APPLE GROVE- ChurchSchool9a m
Worship 10 am (First and third Sun
d ays ), UMW, Secon!! Tuesdayt 7 30 p m ,
Prayer m eeting, Wednesday 7 p m

CHRIST. Elden R Blake , pastor Sunday
School tO a m, Robert Reed Supt Morn
lng sermon, 11 a m • Sunday night ser
vices Christian Endeavor? 30 p m, Son~
service 8 P m Preaching 8 30 p m ~ld
week prayer meeting, Wednesday 7 p m
Alvin Reed. laylead e r

SOUTHERN CLUSTER

!Clarki
BETHANY - Wors hip , 9 a m , Churc h
School, 10 am, Bible Study, Wedn~day
10 a m , Dorcas Women's Fellowship,
Wednesday, 11 am (McGuire)

CARMEL- Church School 9 :1&gt; a m .
Worship. 10 45 a m Second and F'ourth

EDEN

UNITED

HEMLOCK

BRETHREN

GROVE

IN

CHRISTIAN,

Roger Watson, p astor Crenson Pratt
SundaySchooi Supt Mornlngworshlp9 30
am, Sunday School tO 30 a IT), E"venlng
service, 7 30 p m '
"

MT Ul!IION BAPTIST, Joe Sayre. Sun
day School Supl Sunday School 9 4S a m ,

Sundays Fellowship dinne r with Sutton,

Evening worship 6 30 p m , Prayer Meet

, Wors hip 10 a m second and fourth Sun ·

CHRIST Jody Holland, minister Deryl

lhlrd Thursday 6 30 p m tMcGutrel
EAST LETART- Church School9a m

lng, 6 30 p m Wednesday
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF

I

'

'-

ST

PAt:L LUTHERAl\ CHL'RCH

Corne r S\camorf' and S!'rond Sts Po
merov The RP\ William MlddlC'S"-arlh
pstor Su nd av SChool 9 ~ 5 a m Chu rc h
sen\C't' ll am

SACRED HEART CHL RCH Msgr

Anthony G la nn a morr Ph 992 !)898 Satur
da\ Eve ning Mass 7 30 p m Su nd av
Mass R a m a nd 10 a m Co nfessiOns on!'
half hour f:x&gt;forf&gt; PaCh Mas s CCD claSSC'S
11 am Sunda )
VICTORY BAPTIST 525 :-. .; 2nd St
Midd lepo rt James E K('(&gt;S('(' pastor
Sund ay m gc nln ~ ~Aor s hlp 10 am E\ e n
I n ~ serv J c~ 7 p m
\\ £&gt;d nesda\ ('ve n in~
~Aors hlp i p m \'I s\ Tall on T hursd a) 6 :\0

pm
TRINITY

C HRI ST I A~

ASSEMBL\

Coolv lllf' G1 lf:x&gt;rt Spencf'r pastor S undav
Sc hool 9 30 a m M o rmn~ SE'rv1ce 11 a m
Sunday eveninR service 7 30 p m . Mid
wrek prayer servlcewro nesda\ 7 JOp m

MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH

Lawrence Bush paslor Max Folm&lt;&gt;r Sr
Supt Sund a\ Sc hool a nd Mornm ~ Worsht p
9 30 a m Su ndav evC'nin2 .sen lcf' ; p m
Youth ffl ('('ting and Blblf' Stud\ \·h&gt;&lt;1nes
da) 7 p m
UNITED FAITH CHURC H Rt 7 on P o
meroy By Pa ss R£&gt;v Rotwr1 Smit h Sr
pastor RP\ Jamf'S Cundiff asst pa stor
Sunda \ Sc hool 9 30 a m MornmJ!: \\.Or
ship 10 30 a m E\enmg worsh ip 7 30 p
m Wom('n s F PII o'A sh1p Tuesda) 10 a m
Wf.'dnC'sday nl ~ h t pra' f'r serv1ce; 10 p m
FAITH BAPTIST CHURC H Rai lroad
St Maso n Su nda\ SchoollO a m Morn
ing " orsh1p 11 am E\f'nlng s£'nlcC' 6 p
m Pra ver m P!'tmg a nd B1blf' Studv \\('(!
nesda\ 7 p m
FOREST RU!'\ BAPT IST Re\ 1\vl!'
Borden pas 101 Co rnPllu s Bunch s up!

m

MT MOR IAH BAP JI ST F ourth and
Ma in S1 Middleport R£'\ Cal\ In Mlnn 1s
pa st(Jr Mr s Eh 1n Bumg&lt;.~rdnC'r su p1
Sunda } Sc hool 9 10 a m \\ &lt;m, hlp ~n 1ce
10 ~ 5 a m

RCRLJM, HAM SOLTHER' BAPTIST

CHLRC H Rr l Shadr Affiliated ~llh
South£'rn Bapti st Conve nTion Don Black
pa stor Su nd av School J 10 p m Sunda}
"-Orshlp 2 30 p m Thur sda yP\ Pning Bib\£&gt;
Stud ) 7 p m
PE NTECOSTAL ASS F.\1811 Ra c inf'
Rt 124 \\ illlam Hoback pa !. to r Su nda '
Sc hoo ll O am Sunda\ P\Pnlng sen ice 7
p m Wt&gt;dnesday ev(' n\ng S('r\ICP 7 p m
CAR PENTER BAPTIST Don Ch£'adle
Sup! Sund ay Sc hool 9 10 a m Morn ing
Wors hl p10 30a m Pra y£'r sC' r\lce altern
ar(' Sundon s

MIODLEPORT Pe,TECOSTAL Thtrd

Ave Re\ CJark BakPr pa stor Carl Not
!Ingham Sunda \ School Sup! Su nda'
School 10 am ~llh rlas~es for all ages
Ev!'nlng sf'n ICf's at fi p m \\N:inPsda \ B1
ble stud\ at 7 10 p m l outh o;('f\ 1ces Fn
da\al 7 30pm
ECCLES! A fELL0\1 SHIP
M11l Si
Middleport Brother Chuck Mc PhPrson
pa stor Sunda\ School 10 a m Su nda\
e\e nlng s!'nJcPs at7 p m and \\f'dn!'sda y
S!'f\ IcC's at 7 p m
:-..;TIQL ITl BAPTIST Ear I Shuler pas
tor Sund a\ School 9 lOa m C hurc h ser
\ 1cr i p m Youth mf'f'nn g fi p m Tu&lt;&gt;s
da\ BtbiP STudv at - p m

m

fL LL (,OSPEL LIGHTHOLSE 3:W45

Hi la nd Road P omero\ Tom KPII\ pa s
tor Danm La mbert S S Supt S unda\
mormng sPn lcf' aT to am Su nda\ e\P n
w g se n ICf' 7 30 p m TuPsd a\ a nd Thurs
da\ SC'r\ !cPs at 7 30 p m
WORD OF FAITH 91 Mil l St Middle
port Rich ard S!£''A'ar t pa stor Sund a\
mor nmg Sf'f\ ICf' 10 a m Sunda\ f'\ C'mng
7 30 Tuesda\ m ormng Blhlf' stud\ 10 a m
\\Pdnesda \ f'\f' mng ; 30 p m Thusda'
mmnmg \I deo v.llh KC'nnf'th l op(' land to
a m Fnda v £'\(' nln ~ ' Jd!'o "11h K('nneth
(OP£&gt;\and i :lOp m
~E W HAV Er-.; CHt; RCH OF T HE ~A
ZA.RE~E RP\ G\C'ndon S1roud pastor
Sunda) Sc hool9 lOa m \\ orsh1p Sf&gt;rVJCP
10 30 a m l oulh sen ICf' Sunda v 6 1 ~ p
m Sund a\ ('H'mng sen\cei OOp m Wed
nPSdav Pra\er Met'lmg a nd B\bll' STud)

iOOpm
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURC H Sun
da\ a ft f'rnoon st'n IC'!'" at 2 10 Thu1 sda\
('Ven/n g Sf'rVICf"S at j 1lJ
F IRST BAPTIST CHLRCH Mason \\
\ a Pa s tor B1ll Murph \ Sunda\ Schoo) 10
am Su nd a) f'H'nlng 7 10 p m PravN
mef'tmg a nd 8 1blc s 1ud\ \\ C'dnesd a\ 7 10
p m E\ f'rvonC' v. f'lcomf'
RLTLAND FREE\\ ILl RAPTIST Sa
lf'm Sr RC'\ Pc~ul T ~nl o r pastor Sund a \
Sc hool lOam S und a\ C'\C'nlng7 :lOp m
"Pdnesda\ !'H'm ng pravf'r mE'f'trng 7 30

pm

SOUT H BETHEL !'\E \\ TESTA~E'T
l HLRC H S1he1 R1d gt Ou a nf' S\ den
smcker pa stor Sunda\ School 9 a m
Church "~" ' \ IC£&gt; 10 a m 81blP Stud \ \\ ('d
n&lt;'sda\ ar 7 10 p m Junf' thru Sep!Pmber
7 p m Oct obeJ t hr u ~ a\ Sunda\ e\ rm ng
f'('l\ 0\\. ship 7 p m JunC' lhru S('pt£'mlx'r ti
p m Octol:x&gt;r thru Ma\

RUTLAND CHURCH Of THE NAZA

co ndTuesday7 30pm UMYFiastTues
day 7 30 p m tubenkingl
POMEROY -Church School , 9 15 am

Worship Service 10 30 a m , Choir re

BRADFORO CHURCH Of CHR IST St

RT 124 a nd Co Rd 5 Mark S('f'vers mint s
l!'r Sundav School Sup! Ste\P Pic kC'ns
Sunda y School 9 30 a m Morning 'A Or
ship 10 30 am E\P nln ~ ~Aorship 7 p m
WNi nesday 'A orsh\p 7 p m

Sunda\ Sc h(JO\ 9 10 am
SN ond and
l0ur1h Sunda\ " "orsh lp &lt;o,ri\ICC" at 2 30 p

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST Amos

St , Mason W Va E ugrne L Cong!'r m1
nis te r Snday Bible St udy 10 a m w or
s hip 11 a m and 7 p m W£'dn£&gt;sd av Rible
Studv , vocal mus ic 7 p m

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH,

CHURCH OF GOD Of PROPHECY

Located on 0 J White Road of Hig h"' a"
160 P at He nson pastor Su nd,ay School JO
a m Classes for all ages Junior Chu rch 11
am
Morning wors hi p J1 a m Adult
Choi r practicE' 6 p m Sunda) Yo ung Pea
pips Chlldrf'n s Chu rc h and Adu lt Btbif'
Stud \ WednPSda \ at 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL 570 Grant
St Mlddlrport Affiliated ~Aith SouthNn
Baptist Conve nTion S unda ~ Schoch lOam
Mornin~ wors hip 11 am
E\('n!ng "- Or
ship 7 p m WednPSday evr ning Bi b \('
study a nd pra)er mf"('tl ng 7 p m

~
' ':). •

Tillis, pas to1 Sonny Hudson supt Sunda)
School 9 30 a m , MornlnJI: wo1 s hip 10 30
a m , Sunday eveninJ!; servlccr 7 00 p m
Wednesday s!'rvice 7 p m WMPO pro
gram 9 a m each Sunday

SILVER RUN BAPTIST Bill Lillie

a m Church School 11 a m, UMW se

37319 State

Ro ut e 124 lone mile east of Rutland 1 Sun
day Bible Jf&gt;(' ture 9 30 a m Watc htO"-f'r
study 10 30 a m Tuesday Sible stud\
7 30 p m , Thursday Th('()Crdtlc School
7 30 p m Service m eeti ng 8 20 p m

.,~

Mark J o n('S pastor Bi ll Nichol so n Sun
da y Sc hool Supt Sundav Sc hool 9 30 a m
Mo rning Worship a nd Commun1on 10 30a
m

pastor Steve Little, S S Supt Sunda y
School 10 a m M or nin ~ worsip 11 a m
Sunda} evening wo rship 7 30 p m Prayer
m ee tln~ a nd Bible s tudy Thursday , 7 30 p
m , Youth m eeting Wednesdav at 7 p m

_

"' . \

land RacinP Road William Roush pastor
Lind a Evans c hu rch sc hool dirPCtor
Church sc hool 9 30 a m Morning worsip
10 30 a m Wednesda v evrnlng prayf'r
serv ices 7 30 p m

MINERSVILLE - Wor ship Serv ice 10
a m , C hurc h School, 11 a m , UMW, third
WNnesday 1 p m , Choir practice, Mon
dav, 7 30 p m (Nelson 1
PEARL CHAPEL -Wo r ship Service 9

days, UMW first Tuesday, 7 30 p m
Wells, Supt Mornlng worship, 8 00 am ,
;HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
(Clark)
Church School 9 00 am ·
,·
OHURCH Worohlp ser~lce. 9 00 a m
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a m,
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA
C)lurch School 10· 30 a m
Church School 10 am (Clark)
RENE Rev. Herber! Grate, pastor
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN
MORNING STAR- Worship, 9 45a m .
Frank Rl!rie, sup!. Sunday School 9 JO a
oHURCH Church School9 00 a m Morn
Church School 10.30 am .. Bible Study,
m ; Worship service, II am and 7 p m
lng Worship. 10.15 p. m Bible Study. Tues
Thursday,
7
30
p
m.
(While)
Sunday. WedJiesday, 7 p m Prayer meet-~f~ ~~~ a.m. ~e- s~uy, Thursday.
MORSE CHAPEL- Church School 9 30 lng.
·
- ·--I:AUREio- CLIFF-FREE METHODIST
•SY~CUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBr.· -a m f WOJ'SHIP11I 111. !WHII~I ---PORTLANDChurch
School
6
30
p
m
CHURCH
Rev
Robert
Miller,
pastor
'I'ERIAN CHUROH Churcft School 10 15
, Worsftlp 7 JO p m., UMYF Wednesday,
Lloyd Wright, Dtreclor of Christian Edu
a.' m Morning Worship 11 30 a m , Bible
7 30 p.m (McGuire) .
cation. Sunday Sc!IQOI 9:30a.m.: Morning
siud). Tuesday. 10 am., J~:~nlor and Senior
RACINE
WESLEYAN - Ch~rch ,worship 10 30 a m.: Choir practice, ll_un
High Youth Group Sunday, 6 00 p m
School, 10 a m , Worship, 11 a m, UMW day 6· 30 p.m : Evening worship 7• :.&gt; p m
1 RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO Pastor,
fourth Monday 7 :1&gt; p m.; Men's Prayer Wednesday Prayer and Bible ~ludy, 7, 30
Rev John Evans Sunday School 10 00 a
Breakfast. Wednesday, 7 a m (Clark!
p.m.
m , Sunday Morn!ng~orshl~ 11 00 a m
SUTTON - Church School, 9 30 a m ,
Children's Church 11 a m , Sundjly even·
Mprntq worship 10: 45a.m. llrsland third
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
J~g service, 7• 00 p m , Wednesday even
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Carmel,
Charles Russell Sr ' minister Rick Ma
lng Young Ladles' Auxlltary, 6·00 p m
third Thursday, 6·30 p m· (McGulre)
com~r. supl Sunday School 9 :1) am,
wednesaiy, FamilY worship 7 00 p m,KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Oliver Worship service 10 J0 am Bible study,
., HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH, near
Swain, Supt. Sunday School 9. 30 a m ev
Tuesday, 7 30 P m
Long Bottorp Edsel Hart , pastor Sunday

••
·-.. ,,.

REORGANIZEO CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATIER DAY SAINTS Port

RENE Rev Lloyd D Grimm Jr pa stor
Sunday SChool 9 30 a m Worsip Sf'rv lc!'
10 30 a m Young people~ sen icC' 6 p m
Evangelistic servicP 6 :lOp m WPdn('sda\
service 7 p m

p m 1Robinson)

BRETHRE~

IN CHRI ST CHURCH L()('a!E'd In Texas
Communit y off Ct Rt 82 R('v Rol:x&gt;rt
Sanders pastor Don Will Jayleader Sun
da y School 9 10 a m Morning Worsh 1p
10 45 a m E\ e ning preaching service se
cond and four th Sunday at 7 30 p m
Chri s tian Endra vor first a nd third Sun
day 7 30 p m Wednesda y pra )er m ('('!Jng
and Bible Stud y 7 30 p m

A-~

GrocertesGeneral Merchandtse
Ractne 949-1550

Mrddleport

lng worship M"rvice 7 30 p m WE:'dnesda v
prayer m eetl n ~ 7 30 p m

Mtddleport. OhiO

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

992-3 840

MiddleportPomeroy, Oh.

RALL'S

u

r

tL

CK
SUPERMARKET

SENTINEL

John F Fultz. M&amp;r.
Ph 992-2108
Pomeroy

~

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA

....__ _ _--lz

1977 FORD T-BIRD ................... $2895

~~~ \

•

RENE, Corner Union and Mulberry RL'v
Thomas Glen McClung, pasur Clyde Herder
son, S S. Supt . Surday School. ~ :1) a m

BROADWAY

2 Dr. hftback, auto, 4 cyl. Nice c.ar

THE DAILY

"' MEIGS TIRE
\ \ CENTER, INC.

l'

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA

$3895

Rf. I, Reedsvtlle. Oh

BEN
;tFRANKLIN'

TRINITY CHURCH, IW\ W H ~rrtn.
postor: Debllie Buck Sunday School Supt
Olurch School9 ~a m , Worship Servle 10: :1)

A map of the location of the proposed project is shown below:

~~--~

"for AReal Auct1on
Call the Ral McCoy'
I 0. "Mac" McCoy

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Any party wishing to comment on the proposal should provtde wntten
comments by March 3, 1984 to;
Bernard T. Chupka ·
State Director
Farmers Home Administration
200 N. Hiah Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215

1980 AMC SPIRIT ..................... $2695

SEVERAL

Nationwide Ins. Co.

The pr~posed amount of Farmers Home Administration fmancina tS
approximately $798,000.00 and the total cost of the project is
$220,000.00.

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

no rust.·

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Being part of the ~ame real estate conveyed to J. E. Lyon Corporation
by deed recorded tn Deed Book 168 Page 120 of the Meigs County Deed
Records.

~----------~

Pomeroy

214 E. Matn
992-5130

Ave. Pomeroy Mrs Dora Wlntrlg In charg('

Also the followinc described real estate situated tn the Villaae of Mid·
dleport, Ohio, and described as follows;

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
13 Weeks
26 weeks
52 Weeks
13 Wooks
26 Weoks

5. Alternatives to the present site have been considered. There are no
Sites suitable for housina subdivision construct ton with the Villaae
of Middleport. All other sites are either in tht flood plain or are
located on cliffs above the villaae. Alternative sites outside the
flood plain were considered as well as the effects of not construct~
ina the subdivision. All available sites were considered on each in·
divldual merit and a determination was made to proceed with the
captioned project on the site selected.

LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Situated tn the ·county of lleip, in the township of Salisbury, and
the state of Ohio. Bein' lots numbered One Hundred Ninety·live (195);
One Hundred Ninety-six (196); One Hundred Ninety·stven (197); One
Hundred Ninety-eiaht (198); Two Hundred Twenty-three (223); Two
Hundred Twenty-four (224); Two Hundred Twenty·five (225~; Two
Hundred Twenty-six (226);Two Hundred Twenty-seven (227 ; Two
Hundred Twenty-eifht (228); Two Hundred Fift~·thret (25 ) Two
Hundred Fifty-four 254); Two Hundred Flft1·five 255); Two Hundred
Fifty·six (256); Two Hundred Fifty·seven (257) wo Hundred Fiftyeiaht (258), in Marcus l. Bosworth's Addition to lower Pomeroy, now
mcorporate_d into and made a part of the Villaae of Middleport, Meics
County, Ohio.

Ohio 45769

00

INSURANCE
SERVICES

Rutland, Ohio 45775
J. Wm. "Bill" Brown. owner
Phone (614) 742-2777

I. All prallcable desians and notifications to minimize harm to or
withtn the flood plain have bttn identified and aaretd to by the
prospective applicant. Thest missions Include fllllnaand compact·
tna the site under the supervision of a reaistertd enainetr, construction of the house in a manner that the first floor level of the
structure is raised above flood level. and public infrastructure
servma the site will bt constructed in a manner to provide maximum protection from potential floodlna.

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Pursuant with FmHA public explanation releases solicttinJ final comments on a proposal when there Is no practicabl' alternative to local·
ina it within the flood plain, the followin&amp; requirements have bltn con·
sldered:
•

ByGEORGES'DWDE

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955

Brown's Fire

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By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

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Notice is hereby alven that tht Vllltae of Middleport has madupplication to the United States Department of Apiculture, Farmers Home
Administration. for financial assistance in order to construct eiahtetn
sinal• family Section 502 homes for which there is no practicable alternative to lmpactlna the flood plain.

1978 FORD THUNDERBIRD
Priced At Unbelievable

This Message and Church

PUBLIC NOTICE

,..,.~···················~,·~~·-~·~··~~·····~~

!

20ot Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
Phone 992-2975
FALL a WINTER HOURI:
EHtotlvt Oat. 1·Mtroh 1
CloHCI Mondey
Tuee.·Frl. I to I. Itt. I to 1

Service
locust &amp; Such Street
992·9921 Middleport

FEBRUARY SPECIALS

,..

on

-GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

MASON CHURCH Of CHRIST Miller

MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD Duddtng

Lane, Mason W Va Rev RonniC' B Rosf'
pastor Sunday Sc hool9 45 a m M o rmn ~
wors hip 11 a m E vrnlng serv ice i 30 p m
Wednesd ay Wom r n's Ministries 9 a m
( m eeting and prav£'r\ Wednf'sda y Pra vN
and Bible Study, 7 p m

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR IST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev William
Ca mpbell pastor Sunday School 9 30 a
m , James Hughes supt E\!'ning s!'n icf'
1 30 p m Wednsday evening praH•r m f'f' l
ing 7 30 p m Youth prayer S('r vlcC' each
Tuesday

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Letart

W Va , Rt 1. Mark Irwin pas tor Wo rs ht p
servires 9 30 a m , Sunday Schoo\11 a m
Evening worship 7 30 p m Tu('sday cot
tage prayer meeting a nd Biblr Studv 9 :lO
a m , WOrshlpservlcr, Wednesda y? 30p
m

OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Wa lnut and He nry Sts , Ra venswood W
Va The Rev Geor!it:e C Weiric k pa stor
Sunday SChoo\9 30 a m Sunda y wor ship

llam

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH loca ted on

Pomeroy Pike, Count ) Road 25 near Flat
woods Re v Blackwood pastor SNvices
on Sunday at 10 30 a m a nd 7 30 p m with
SundaySchool9 30a m Bible Stud y, Wed
nesday, 7 30 p m

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST. S! Rl 338, Antiquity Rev
Franklin Dickens, past or Sunday morn
lng 10 a m , Sunda y evening 7 30 p m

Thursday evening 7 30 p m
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAP
TIST CHURCH Pastor Robert Byers
Sunday School tO a m , Worship sPrvicr 11
a m , Sunday e vening service, 7 30 p m
Wednesday f&gt;Venlng service 7 30 p m

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH
Inc , Pearl Sr , Mlddloport Rev 0 0.11

Manley. pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Morning worship 10 30 a.m , Evening

worship 7:30pm Tuesday, l2 30pm Wo

men's Prayer meeting Wednesday , 7 30
p m Prayer and Praise service

OF
JESUS CHRISf, Elder James Miller Bl
ble Study, Wednesday 7 30 p m , Sunday
~RU'fLAND-AP-OSTOLI C-C HURC H

School 10 a m , Sunday night service 7 30

pm
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS.
Harrisonville Road Earl Fields , pastor

Henry Eblin, Jr , Sunday School supl Sun
day School 9 JO a.m , Morning worship 11
a m ., Sunt'tav evening service 7 30 p m
Prayer meeting Wednesday, 7 30 p m

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD

Joy Clark, pastor Worship service Sun
day 10 a m , Sunday School11 a m Even

Sermonette
Spnng Is on tt s way The davs are gPttmg longct and the
mormng comes a little earlier each dav We all at c glad to S('(' sunny
warm mornmgs We can cheertull v anse look out mt o the sunl)&gt;
morn and say. "Good Mornmg, Lord ·
My orgamst told our women's group the ot her day she has to sa\
good morning to someone when she gets up each dav Smce God IS
always there she feels It is only right to say each mormng, Good
Morning, Lord "What better way to greet the day 0 Wh at better wa\
to start off on the nght foot • Sometmes we say someone got out of bed
on the wrong stde This should never be satd of us If we begm each
day with a word to God "Good Mornmg, Lord, " tsa v~t) good wav to
start the day nght, step off on the rtght foot and . ws g~t up on the
right side of the bed each day
So much of life ts made up of little thmgs that"" forg~t gtea t
tasks are only accomplished one step at a ttme Great books and
poems are wntten only one word at a time Makmg another's lift&gt;
happier Is begun by a cheerful word and a ready smlie on out part
Such little thmgs, yet they mean so much to us all
Greet each day with a word to God Say somet hmg pleasant to
the first one you meet and keep It up all day When even ttde comes.
we can sleep with joy In our hearts, God watchmg ov~t us and the
world around us happier place. This all happens because the first
Jthlng ln the morning we get up and say, "Good Mmnmg. Lmd, tt 's a
nice day."- Rev, WOllam Mlddleswarth, Meigs County Lutherans

a

�Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

-,
I

-

MIDDLEPORT - A revival
will be held at the Middleport
Nazarene Ch.urch Friday, Saturday and Sunday ·at 7 p.m.
nightly. Evangelist and singer
will be Richard Baker. The
public is Invited to attend.
POMEROY - ARC will spon·
sor a dance Friday from 7 to 10
p.m. at the Carleton School with
proceeds going to the Special
Olympics. Music will be by Scott
Brennan, Ripley, W.Va. Donations can be made at the door.

\

•"r&lt;r
,, l
~~·

SATURDAY

;.~

HARRISONVILLE - Harri·
sonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM will
hold its annual inspection Saturday at 7: JJ p.m.
AU Masons are welcome

''1

;

Ill'

\'

~;

"

'

'

-~

f

't

~

'

POMEROY - A round and
square dance will be held at the
Senior Citizens Building on
Mulberry Heights Saturday
from 8 p.m . to 11 p.m. The public
is Invited to attend .

,,

\

"

~

WINNER - Carol MitcheU, a yeUow belt In karate, won a second place
In the women's free sparring competition at the Karate tournament held
by the Ohio University Karate Club F eb. 4atthe NatlonaiGuardAnnony
· : In Athens. Ed Cozart, a black belt of the Meigs Club, presented her a
ribbon for her perfonnance.

RUTLAND- Second perior·
manceof "Kids Praise 3" will be
given at the Rutland Church of
the Nazarene at 7 p.m. Saturday. Debbie Gilmore is the

Local Karate club takes
part tn recent tournament

director. The public is invited to
attend.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - An alcohol and
drug abuse meeting will be held
at the Enterprise United Methodist Church Sunday. Zelia Nizly
will speak on how parents can
detect if their children are on .
drugs, prevention and treatment . She will also conduct a
question and answer session.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Genealogical Society will meet
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Meigs
County Museum. The public Is
invited to attend.

MONDAY
HARRISONVILLE The
Harrtsonvlile Chapter, Order of
the Eastern Star, past m atrons
will meet at the home of Mrs.
Stella Atkins Monday at 6: JJ
p.m.
CHESTER - Chester PTO
will meet Monday at the Chester
E lementary School. There will
be a book fair beginning at 6: JJ
p.m. and the meeting at7:J:lp.m
Mrs. Mary Rose will haY€
charge of refreshments. Child
care will be provided.

•

Seven members of the Meigs
. County Karate Club participated in
"the Feb, 4 Karate tournament held
.at the National Guard Armory In
Athens, The tournament Included
kata competition and kumite !free. style sparring competition.)
In the women's free sparring
which Included aU levels of rank
from yellow through black belt, first
degree, Carol MltcheU of the Meigs
Club, a yeUow belt, won second
place.
It was her first experience in
competition. The yeUow belt level is
the first promotion level after

- - - cnmpleres basic training--Pvt. Carrte R. Adkins, daughter
of Suzanne K. and George R.
Adkins Sr. of 33656 Swick Road
Middleport, has completed basi~
training
Fort training,
Dix, N.J. students
Duringat the
received Instruction in drill and
ceremonies, weapons, map readIng, tactics, military courtesy,

hosted a recent meeting of the
Reedsville Community Builders
Club with plans being made for a
dinner party In Parkersburg Saturday evening.
Roy Hannum presided at the
meeting with the members vot lng to
retain the same officers for another
year. A thank you note was read
from the Terry Smith family for

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Students and the areas In which
they participated were Lisa Ashley,
Records Management I and Accounting I ; Tammy Black, Business
Proofreading and queen's 11i~~
Meg&lt;ln Long and Diana N
Promotional Display and Business
Proofreading; Jodi Miller, AccountIng I; Debbie Porter, Job Interview
I; Angie SnydeJO, Business Proofreading; Terri Thoma, Accounting
II and Business Proofreading;
Debbie Werry, Queen's Contest;
Pam West, Information Communication I ; Rcth Yost, Information
Communication I ; Rita Williamson,
Receptionist; Teresa Van Cooney,
Business Proofreading; Laura Van
M eter, Promotional Display;
Kenny Sue Thomas, Information
Communication II and Extemporaneous Speech II and Pam
Walburn, Business Proofreading.
OEA advisors at Meigs are Carol
Crow, Beverly Gaul, Becky Windon
and Gordon Fisher.

PRIME RIB $895

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Building a Tradition of
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DANCE TO THE MUSIC
OF ARMAND AT THE ORGAN

In The LaSalle Lounge: Windmill on Fri. &amp; Sat.
-,

You were smart to wait
to take out ahome equity
loan. Our interest rate is now
24%

community flowers received at the
time of their bereavement. Dues
were collected.
Refreshments were served to
Mrs. Walter Brown, Mr. and
Mrs.Hariiss Frank, Mr. and Mrs.
penver Weber, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Hannum, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, and Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Pickens.

•

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and Savings

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And at rates like these, you can
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So if you've been waiting to
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make a smart invest. ment pay off. Ri ght
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See the Yellow Pages
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BANANAS

N L'iiil AVf

r~~~li~iiiiiili~-

Paul Michael has returned home
from St. Anthony's Hospital in
Columbus where he underwent
surgery .

FRESH

5LBS.

military justice, first aid, and Army
hlstory and traditions. She is a 1983
graduate of Meigs High School.

Returns home

" Community builders meet
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Balderson

Mother's March. of Dimes successfui. She also reported on the planned
auction for the Jaws of Life and
noted representatives of the three
chapters will meet to complete
plans.
Donna Byer, Ways and Means
chairwoman, asked for volunteers
to help with the advertising for the
Meigs County Falr premium schedule. TheFounder'sDaydlnnerwas
announced for April 26 at the
Sportsman Inn In Athens.
Sharon Werry, home Interior
demonstrator, talked about uslng
mirrors and pictures to decorate a
·home. She was introduced by Irts
Payne.

The LaSalle Restaurant

Eight place in skills competition
Eight of the 16 participants from
Meigs High School In sklll cat~ories
I;Vere winners in the competitive
events of Region 2, Office Education
Association, held Saturday at Buckeye Hills Career Center.
: Approximately 500 students from
12 southeastern Ohio counties participated In the competition.
Placing were Lisa Ashley, first In
Records Management; KenneySue
Thomas, second in Information
Communication II and third in
Extemporaneous Speech; Terri
Thoma, fourth in Accounting II;
Rita Williamson, third In Reception·
1st; and Megan Long, Diana Magors
and Laura Van Meter, fifih In
Promotional Display. Debbie
Werry was the first runner-up In the
queen's contest.
Lisa Ashley and K enney Sue
Thomas are now eligible lor the
state competition to be held in
Columbus, March 16 and 17.

Bob Byer of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service was
speakerat arecentmeetingof theXI
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority held atthe firestation In
Middleport ,
Byer showed a film on CPR and
then discussed classes which are
offered.
The chapter decided to begin
c lasses in the near future. Carol
M cCullough announced a meeting
to be held Tuesday night at her
home. A heart and hands themewUI
be carried out with each member
making a special gilt for her secret
sister.
Murtsha Nelson reported the

IN CASE YOU FORGOT HER ON VALENTINE'S DAY ...

someone begins training In ShotoKan kar ate.
Other members of the Meigs club
participating were John Beaver,
purple belt, Mark Hood, green belt,
Mark Riggs, brown belt, Ray
Pullins. green belt, Ron Cozart,
yellow belt, and E d Cozart, black
belt. There were lour levels of
competition In which the Meigs
members participated.
The toumamentwashostedbythe
Ohio University Karate Club with
clubs from Ohio, West Virginia,
Michigan, a nd K e ntu c ky
participating.

OIL

17 1984

'

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•12.25% + 4 points. Rote may be . lower or
higher based_on specific terms of the loon

Rates subject to annual decrease or increase o'f
1%. No opPiicotionJees. Approvals hi 2 to 4 days.

• H-. __ no more than

The Dailv Sentinei-Paae-7

Ohio

Xi Gamma Mu welcomes
Meig·s EMS speaker

Calendar

•

FRIDAY

'

Friday, February 17, 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Rutland alumni
president

BEST ACI'RESS NOMINEES - Nominees lor
Academy Awards for best aclol'!l are, from lefl:
Meryl Streep, "Silkwood"; Jane Alexander, "Testa·

ment"; ,JuDe Walteni, 'Educating Rita"; Debra
Winger, "Terms of-Endearment"; Shirley MacLalne,
''Terms of Endearment." (AP LaserphOOJ).

(Terms of Endearment' scoops
Academy Award nominations
By BOB THOMAS
Atisociated Press Writer
BEVERLY HILLS,Caiil. (AP&gt;" Terms of Endearment, " the funny sad story of an eccentrtcmother and
a willful daughter, scored top honors
today at the 56th annual Academy
Award nominations, placing In 11
categories.
" The Right Stuff," a panoramic
vlew of the America's first space
travelers, followed with eight nominations. "Fanny and Alexander, "
which Ingmar Bergman says is his
last movie, placed third with six.
As expected, "Terms of E ndearment" dominated the nominations,
collecting for best picture and for
four periormers. Stars Shirley
Mac Laine and Debra Wlngerwlli be
competing against each other for
best actress, and Jack Nicholson
and John Lithgow as supporting
actor. The film also was nominated
for best direction and wrttlng by
•James L. Brooks.
Also nominated for best picture
were "The Big Chill ," "The
Dresser," ''The Right Stuff" and
" Tender Mercies."
Two-time winner Meryl Streep
again was nominated for best
actress for her periormance as the
doomed nuclear plant worker in
"Silkwood ." Other nominees for
best actress, besides Miss Ma·
eLaine and Miss Winger, were Jane
Alexander of "Testament" and
Julie Walters of "Educating Rita ."
None of the best actor nominees
has won before. They are: Michael
Caine, "Educating Rita"; Tom
Conti, "Reuben, Reuben"; Tom
Courtenay, "The Dresser"; Robert

Duvall, "Tender Mercies," and
Albert Finney, "The Dresser."
Besides Nicholson and Lithgow,
nominees for supporting actor
were: Charles Durning, " To Be Or
Not To Be"; ,Sam Shepard, "The
Right Stuff," and Rip Tom, " Cross
Creek."
Nominees for supporting actress
were Cher, "Silkwood" ; Glenn
Close, "The Big Chill" ; Linda Hunt,
"The Year of Living Dangerously";
Amy I rving, "Yentl," and Alfre
Woodard, "Cross Creek ."
Nominated as best dlrectorof1983

were Brooks, for "Terms of
Endearment"; Peter Yates, "The
Dresser";
Ingmar Bergman ,
"Fanny and Alexander"; Mike

The resignation of Richard Rupe,
president, was accepted when the
Rutland High School Alumni Associ ation met for its fi rst planning
session for the 1984 reunion at the
home of Marie Birchfield.
James Sheet~ presided at the
meeting.
The annual banquet and reunion
was set for 6: JJ p.m., May 26 at the
Rutland Civlc Center: "A Stroll
Down Memory Lane" wUI be the
theme with dress to be casual.
Clr:cles Restaurant, Gallipolis, wUI
cater the banquet.
The annual dance, following the
banquet, wUI feature the big band
sounds of the Keith McCall Band,
which has appeared several times
locally for the Royal Oak Ballroom
Dance Club and Pomeroy High
School Alumni reunions.
Committees were appointed.
Anyone planning a class reunion is
to contact any officer so that tables
wlli be reserved for those classes.
ThenextmeetingwillbeeMarch5
at the home of Janet Morris with
members of vartous committees to

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Nichols, "Silkwood," and Bruce .!!a~tte~n.!!:d~.
Beresford, ''Tender Mercies."
'"
A prominent omission was Bar·
bra Streisand, who received no
nominations for her producing,
directing, co-wrttlng and starring In
"Yentl." The tum drew five other
nominations, however, including
M iss Irving as supporting actress,
as well as original film score and for
two songs.

Lydia council meeting held
Assistance to a missionary fam Ily, George and Debbie Pickens,
was pledged during a recent
meet ing of the Lydia Council of the
Bradford Church of Christ at the
church.
' It was decided that the group wUI
send money each month to the
missionaries Instead of supplies,
and Dreama Pickens wUI have
charge of the account .
Members were reminded to take
soup for February and vegetables
for March for the "pack the pantry"
projeect. Families ln need of pantry
items were discussed and some
hoxes will be fUled and delivered this
week. Norma Russell and Frances
Hysell are overseeing the project.
It was noted that Jackie Reed and
Ruth Durst are making new drapes
for the basement and the Council
agreed to donate money for the
project. A men' s pancake and
prayer breakfast was set for March
3at the church and a committee was
named to serve.
The mother -daughter banquet
was discussed and thetentativedate

or May 11 set. Ruth Seevers of
Belpre will be the speaker . "Purtty"
will be the theme.
Becky Amberger talked ahout the
needs of the nursery and it was
agreed that each person or family
will supply one new toy or item .
Cheri Seevers presided at the
m eeting giving devotions on
"Peace," using the beattitudes as
the scripture reference. Following
prayer, she challenged the women
of the group to fellowship thi&amp; week
with someone they usually do not see
through the week.
Reports were given by Tillie
Rowley, secretary; Nancy Morris,
treasurer, and Jackie Reed,
mother-daughter banquet fund.
The March 12 meet lng will be held
at the horne of Helen Miller. Norma
Russell closed the meeting with
prayer and refreshments were
served by the hostesses, Gerrt and
Suzie Lightfoot:
Others attending were Dreama
Pickens, VIcki Smith, Delores
Frank, Norma Russell , Madeline
Painter, Cherie Williamson, Carol
Anderson, Frances Hysell .

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USEYOUR

Evangeline Chapter OES
schedules local inspection
A donation was made to the Heart
Fund and plans discussed for
participating in the annual waik-a thon for theOES Heart Fund on May
1 at Belpre at Thursday night's
meeting of the Evangeline Chapter
172, Order of the Eastern Star, held
at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
TwUa Childs, worthy matron, and
James Clatworthy, worthy patron,
presided at the meeting. The
sunshine collection was collected by
Doris Lewis an&lt;! Adria Wilcox.
There was initiation for one candidate with Bea Kuhn singing "He
Looked Beyond M y Faults and Saw
My Needs."
The cheer committee was asked
to remember Norma Jean Stivers
and Betty Archer . !twas noted that a

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products demonstration will be
given at the April meeting.
Inspection was tentaiveiy set for
June 2, and plans were announced
for a fun and entertainment night at
the March 1meeting. E ach coupleor
family is to have a presentation of
approximatiy five minutes with the
prize for the best couple to be
determined by applause.
Bill King had prayer before
members were serve refreshments
in the dining room. Awhiteelephant
sale was conducted by Emma Kay
and Jim Clatworthy.
A thank you not.e was read from
Marie Pickens and an invitation
from the Point Pleasant Chapter.
Order of the Eastern Star , to attend
their visitation of West Virginia
grand officers on Feb. 25.

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Rebekah AnD Manley

Manley birth
The Rev. and Mrs. Carl Steven
Manley, BeeCh St., Middleport, are
announcing the.birth of their second
child, a daughter, born Jan. 16, at
Holzer Medical Center. The seven
pound, 11 ounce Infant has been
named Rebekah Ann. TheManleys
also have a son, Carl Steven Manley
Jr•• age three.-- -;- --Paternal grand!)arents are the
Rev. and Mrs. Odell Manley and
maternal .. grandparents are the
Rev. and Mrs. D,avld Light, all .of
Great-gr~dparents
Middleport.
are l\fr., and Mrs. Irvin LugenbUI
and Mr. and Mrs, Robert Light, both
of.Ilecatur, Ind., F'rancis Da'tidson,
Rullli!td, and ·
Rathburn,
Columbus.

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Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith were
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Mrs. Harley ' Smith, Gallipolis,
Route1.

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Martha Lou Beegle was in charge
of the love gilt program . She and
Naomi Stobart had a playiet entitied
"Faith, Hope, Love, Giving." The
circle offerings were by Gretta
Simpson of the Esther Circle and
Naomi Stobart, Ruth Circle.
It was announced that the Church
Women United World Day of Prayer
wUI be held on March 2 and the
AmeriCa for Christ offering will be
taken on March 4.
Florence Adams had the program
entitled "What Is In Thy Hand?"
Bible books to read were listed,
Joel ln February, Galatians in
M arch, ~d Micah in Aprtl.

NEW

495

Belt loop keeps phone at your
side . Padded vinyl helps protect it
from dirt and scratches. #43-190

Modular Phone Jacks
By Radio Shack

,.~~~~

Low As

I

695

Low As

Lets you operate two phone devices from
only one modular jack.
12·ft. #279-373, $6.95
25-ft.
$7.95

219

•)

Quick-Connect Jack. With spade terminals.
Connect to existing block. #279-355, $2.19
Modular Jack. As above, with clips. Easy to
install yourself. #279-386, $2.99

Wireless FM Monitor Phone Rf!cording
By Radio Shack
System By Realistic

1995
·
9
95
2

I

Wolf Pen Personals

--

DUOFONE Ul

Coiled Handset Phone Cords

Ruth Circle gathers recently
Ruth Circle members were hostesses when the Bertha M. Sayre
Missionary Society met in the
fellowship room of the Racine First
Baptist Church recently. A 6 p.m.
dinner greceded the meeting which
was opened by Barbara Gheen. Her
topic was "True Rlches" with
prayer by Marie Walker . Reports·
were given on the sunshine fund by
Emma Adams and on the white
cross quota by Nondus Hendricks.
The quota has been sent.
Readings were given by several
members on tlje race track ministry, the overland white cross,
Okinawa and Zaire.

ltllll•

17995
Records Messages Up to 3. Minutes Long

COMPLEJ'E&lt;I BASIC Pvt Paul E.IIIB, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs- Paul E.IIIB, Sr., Route
2, Racine, graduated Feb. 11
from basic training at Fort
Leouard Wood, Mo. Pvt. Hill also
received an award lor outstandIng achievement In physician
training. He is now serving his
AIT at the Amzy Signal School in
Fort Gordon, Ga., specializing In
radio-teletype operations. He is a
1983 graduate of Southern IUgh
School.

,/.; "'&gt;--

- , _NEY

Set

spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs.
EiigelieHaiilli'g and ROnald. ~

Keep a Record
of Your cans!

Mrs. Greg Davis and children,
Ashley and Joshua, Pomeroy, were
Sunday vlsitors of Mrs. J. R.
Murphy and Peggy.

----

with pic
competition

to

come,

Karate

'i

•

�••

Sentinel

'

• •

~

17, 1914

Ohio

: No forced

busing

Friday, February 17, 1984

The· Daily Sentinel ·

involved

.-

. .. ~· ~

J

PHONE 992-2156

Business Services

OrWIMollliiJ--MIItl~.

lllc:.wtll. _ ,, Olllt 4$711

in Cincy

CINCINNATI (AP) -A proposed
out-of-court settlement of Clm!lnna11' s decade-old school desegregation
lawsuit gives the city school board
authority to implement a voluntary
program to reduce student racial
Isolation without forced busing,
officials say
"There ts cause to believe that the
wide variety of voluntary choices
ava ilable under the settlement wUI
make It unnecessary for any chUd to
ride a bus, except by choice,'' U.S.
District Judge Walter H. Rice said
Thursday, reading a joint statement
of the part les in court .
"The agreement acknowledges
that the school district should have
tnaximum flexibility in determining those methods and that no
school-by-school standard should be
applied," the parties said in their
statement.
The seven-year agreement commits the Cincinnati Board of
Education, with an infusion of an
extra $35 mUllan in state education
aid, to expand Its existing "alternative schools" program designed to
enroll students from various
neighborhoods.
The agreement Is intended to
improve the racial balance of the
90-school, 51,250-student district
through continued "open enrollment. "It requires the school board
to implement a remedial education

program for low-achieving schools.
The proposal must be formally
approved by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People, which flied the lawsuit in
1974, and the defendants, the
Cincinnati and Ohio boards of
education. Rice and negotiators for
the parties said they anticipate
receiving those approvals.

The settlement would fonnally
becomeaconsentdecreeoverwhich
Rice retains jurisdiction. The decree will expire June:.&gt;, 1991, unless

-First-time claims for unemployment compensation insurance
benefits m the first week in
February fell by 33,(XXl, to 344,(XXl. It
was the second lowest level since
June 1979 and tar below the 510,(XXl
new claims filed in the same week
last year.
-The Federal Reserve said a
basic measure of the nation's money
supply, called Ml and representing
funds readily available for spending, expanded by $2.5 billion in early
February.

Stx calls were answered by local
units .Thursday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services

reports.
At 7: ll p.m., Pomeroy took Sylvia
ZwUitog from Rock Springs to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 11:57 p.m . took Christopher Jones from Beech St., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 8: 19 p.m. took Ray Clark
from Park St., to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 1: 27 p.m.
took Charles Bissell from Bashan to
Veterans Memorial; Racine at 1: 39
p.m. took Carl Shultz from Mile Hill
to Pleasant Valley Hospital and at
1: 06 p.m. Tuppers Plains took David
Decker from Route 681 to Veterans
IVIemorial.

Minor brush fire
The Pomeroy Fil'P Department
was called to the Snowville area at
i2: 11 p.m. Thursday to extinguish a
brush fire. Firemen returned to
their station at 1: 54 p.m .

OSP cites driver
The state highway patrol cited
Kittle L. Harmon, 18, Racine, for

failure to yield in a two-vehicle
accident in the village Thursday.
The patrol said Harmon was
westbound on Fourth Street at 8: 10
a.m. when she ~rtedly pulled
onto Main Street into the path of a
vehicle driven by John W. Stobart,
65, Rt. 2, Racine, and coUided.
No injuries were reported in the
accident.
•
A vehicle driven by Lewis Smith,
48, Pomeroy, was damijged after It
struck and killed a deer on Ohio 248
at 7:10a.m. Thursday.

Veterans Memorial

Police cite driver
in Thursday wreck

IICI TValll..._l.-..-.

·--

"'--

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

-· -

,,.....,"_"
II lii ...

- For a declaration of plaintiff's
rights under the deeds to the coal it
owns in Meigs, Vnton,. Athens,
Gallia and Jackson Counties of Ohio
and under state and federal law
regulating coal mlntng and drilling
ot oU and gas wells.
Southern Ohio Coal requests a
permanent injunction against the
defendants enjoining them from
drilling through any coal owned by
the plaintiff until such time as the
coal Is mined and removed and It ts
otherwise safe to undertake such
drilling.
Southern Ohio Coal asked that the
court retain jurtsdictlon of the court
action to award damages to the
plaintiff for each and every wee!
which the defendants drill through
the plaintiff's coal, said damaged to
be based on the value of the coal
rendered unrecovable by the plaintift's mlntng methods up to the
approximate minimum sum of one
bllllon, two hundred fifty million
dollars and that the court retain
jurisdiction of this action to award
punitive damages to the plaintiff
additionally for each and every well
which the defendants drill through
the plaintiff' scoal punitive damages
equal to the amount ot damages
awarded under the earlier damage
request up to the mlnlmum sum of
one bllllon two hundred fifth mUllan
dollars.

-

.
.
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Public Notice
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
FOUNTAIN SQUARE
COLUMBUS, OHIO
43224
LEGAL NOTICE
INFORMAL
CONFERENCE
COAL MINING &amp;
RECLAMATION
PERMIT APPUCATION
NO. 0257, 0281.
0282
APPUCANT Southern

coe1 Compony
P.O. Box 490

Ohio

Athena. Ohio 45701

The Dtv~s ton of Rectamat•on
hereby grves notrce that an
rnformal conference on the
above coal m•n•ng and reclama tiOn per m1 t applica tion w1ll be

held on March 3 1984 a! I 00
P m at the locat•on stated
below,
W1l ton Elemen tary School
W• lkesv•lle Oh1o 4 5695
Persons who ar e or)Tia_y, ~'!
adversely affected or any office r
or head of any federal stat e or
local government agency or
authonty may attend to presen t
their VIewS

121 I 7 lie
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
OF MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
Cart Clive l..ucluodoo,

...

Plain1iff.

Fronc:eo l..ucluodoo, et ol .
Delendonta.
CaM No 84-CV-15

To

NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION

Donald l uckadoo whose last
known oddress or res•dence
was P 0 Box 136 Rutland OH
457 75 ot herw1~e unknown
The unknown he~r s dev1sees
legatees dl :~ tn butees adm•n•s ·
trat o rs exec".J t ors ass•gns
gua rd1an or custod •an 11 any of
Donald luckadoo Deceased
John Rom.ne Jr whose last
known add ress o• res•dence
was Rutland Oh•o otherw•Sf1
unknown
Ru th Rom•ne whose last
known address or res•dence
was Rutland Oh•o otherw•se
unknown
The unknown hP.HS dAVISP.P.S
lega tees d •stnbutees adm•n•s
tr ators executors and ass•gns
of John Aom. ne Deceased
M rs John Rom•ne DecAased
John Rom1 ne Jr Deceased
Ruth RommA DecAased Spot
Worm ley D eceased Ka t •e
luckadoo aka Kat1e lucka doo DAceased EIIIA Luckadoo
a k a E lt1e l u c kadoo
Deceased
You wilt take not•ce th at thA
pl a•nt1ff Ca rl Cl 1ve l uc kadoo
has fll f!d an action aga1nst Aach

r

2

of you P.nll tled Carl Cl 1ve
luckadoo pla•nt•lf vs Frances
Luc kadoo At at defendants
Th1s ac t•on ha s been ass1gned
Case No 8 4 CV 15 and 1S
pAnd•nq •n the Common Plea s
Court Of M e•gs Cou nty Oh•o
That the pla•m• ff •s the owner
ol an und1v1ded one fou rth
( \ 1 4) •nterAst 1n thP. foUow1ng
descr •bed par cels of •eat estate

PARCEL NO. 1.
The lotlowrng real est ate
s• tuated •n the Coumy of M A•gs
1n the State of Ohro and .n the
Towns h •p o f Ru tland and
bounded and descnbed as
follows Be•ng •n Fract•on No 2
Town No 6 and RangA No 14
of thA Oh•o Company s Pur .
chase and beg.nnmq 1n the
center o f the public road at thf!
Non h west cornAr of a 1ot
conveyP.d to Ew•ng L Ca rt er
thence easterly paraltf!l to the
no rth l1ne of sa•d lot 100 feet
thP.n ce northArty parallel to the
cen ter of the publ•c road 100
feet then cA westerly 100 feet
to tj"le center of the publiC road
thenCP. sou thArly fotlow1 ng the
cen ter of the public road 100
feAt to the place of beg•nn.ng
conta•n•ng 2 31 100 acres
morA o r lASS
'
Re f erenCf~ Deed Vol 1 26 p
2 4 9 Deed Records of M Args
Coun ty OH
The lottow1ng real Astat e
Situated m the County of Mergs
m the StatA of Oh10 and •n the
Townsh1p of Rutland and
boundP.d and descnbed as
follows tO·wil 8eg•nn•ng 42 '!1
rods Non h of thf! Southeast
corner of Fr act•on No 2 Town
No 6 Range No 14 of the Oh10
Company s Purchase thence
West 11 111 rods thAnCA North
52'h rods thAnce WP.st 45
rods to the cAntP.r of L•tlle
LAad•ng Creek thence North·
erty tollow•ng the meander~ng
of thA crP.P.k 12 rods thP.ncP
North 36 'h dP.grees W ASt 10
rods thAnce North 4 . .rods
thence East 13 rods thenc e
North 40 degrees East 7 rods
and 19 l•nks to land conveyed
to J E Stansbury thence Sou th
38 '12 degrees East 4 rods
then ce South 33'h degrees
East 17 rods and 15 ltn ks
thence South 9 degre~ East
10 rod s and 10 lin ks th ence
East 19 rods and 18 li n ks
thence Sou th 15 rods and

I 7/ 1 2

l&gt;nks thence East 2 I

rods and 22 links thence Sou th
35 112 rods thence 1n a North
W esterly d•rec!IOn about 1 L
rods to the place of beg•nn•ng
cont 'l•n•ng 10 acres more o r
tess Also th e fight of way to
the public mad
Reference Deed Vol 98 page
553 Deed Record s of M e1gs
Coun ty Oh1o

PARCEL NO. 3:
The follow1ng descr1bed r eal
estate Situate •n Rutland Town sh•P 1n the County of M e1gs
and State of Oh10 to -w n
Beg1nn •ng 159 rods SOut h o f
the Norti"M-es t corn er of rr act•on No 3 TCl'vVn No 6 Range

No 14 ol !he Oh&gt;o Company s

11nks thence NOnh

Birthday: Feb. 18
Missed and Loved
Mor_
e As The Months
and Years Go By.
Your Wife, Trudie,
Children: Roger,
Jerry. Joyce &amp;
Sandy

Judgment sought

,, c-,loltl...,_..

11

w .. c-"

8 'h rod s

Help Wanted

MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIST
Evening shift posltlo
vallable. (A.S.C.P.
Equivalent
Certification. l
Require
knCM(!edge In all areas
labo~atory.
Excel!en
nellis, shift differential
y and no weekends.
Cont•ct S.m
Neal,
Dlftctor of Personnel,
PIHMnt V•lley Hospital,
•lley Drive, Point
PIHMnt, WV 25550 (304)

IN - Chrr.. DIM

.....

111- ,..._

UO...II N.to61t

:~ ~~~-:·

(

an - W$.,.,111

tu- ,._ .._

··-CIMflll
- 11.-

·· - ~..,

OM..., ....,_

1100

.... ..... .

Public Notice
thence East 10 rods arid 9'12
i•n ks 10 the place o f beg•n n•ng
conta•n,ng one aoe more o r

less
ReletOnco Deed Vol 92 p
PARCEL NO. 4.

n

Clerk of Cour ts
M A•Qs County
Com m on Plea s Cou rt

11127 1213 10 17 24 !312
6tc
Public Notice
LEGAL

ADVERTISEMENT
The Board ol Ce1an Township Metgs County of Oh•o will
rece1ve btds at 7 00 P M the

5!h day ol March 1984 lor the

MINIMUM SPECIFICATIONS
AS FOLLOWS
I One 1984 Model Dump
Truck w1th Peabody Gahan or
eq Uivalent d ump body 1 20H )(

84 30 head Ta1lgate w11h
center door 1n gate mmtmum
gate s•ze 16 )( 10 open1ng
2 Front mounted 1 2 ton
teleSCOpiC hOISt
3 3/4 cab pro tecto r With 4
w•ngs
4 Cab light s 4 corner li ght s
and 6 reflectors

64 Misc. Merchandise

,PRICES ARE SLASHED £VEN
LOWER FOR ROLL CARPET

PRICES ARE
BELOW WHOLESALE

RUTLAND FURNITURE ·

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

KAY'S

BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH .

992 7121

Rodney &amp;

PH. 992-2725

3_24 _11c

1 0 loot

axle or SUitable for

dump body

New Holllfs- htensive
Remodelin1
lnsur1nce Work
Cu1to.m Pole Bld1s.

7 24 000 GVW o r heav•er

8 9000 lb I beam Iron! a&lt;le
9 18 500 lb 2 speed rear
axle

10

i285vl
II

GlriiiS

5 speed syncromesh

transm•ss.on

d1rec1 1n

Rooflnc Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidin1s
15 Veers Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-76B3
or 992-22B2
11 -1-tte

5th

LH &amp; RH 50 gal s!eel

step tanks lL S

12 370 CU IN V-8 gas eng
4V
13 4 000 lb M&gt;n front
sprmg capac•rv
14 11 000 lb rear spung s
capao tv
15 Aux1hary rea, spr•ngs
16 Comb1nat1o n fro m and
Rear d• rect10nal s•gnal s
1 7 Tr aff1c hatard sw• tch
18 Dual etec tnc horn s
19 Heater and Defr os ter
20 Two speed w•ndsh •etd
washer and w1pers
21 Power steenng

2-6-1 mo.

7

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

SALES &amp; SERVICE

!Ires on and off road tread
24 Ona add• t•onal 7 nm and
R•ng
25 Cast spoke wheels
26 Heavy duty clutch
2 7 Heavy duty brake boos
ter wr th 7 Brakes
28 Heavy duty bumper and
Tow hooks
29 l H and A H Sen•or wes t
coast m•rrors

•Storm Doors
•Storm Window• .
•Replecement Windows

Mecrame Cleaaea. Morning
end evening, marting aoon.

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

t 19 I ma

949·2eo0

No Sunday Cells
3-llllc

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S

•W11hera •Diahwaahera
•Aangea
•Refrigeratora
•Dryert tFrHzers

CHIMNI!Y SWEEP

PARTS •nd SERVICE
4-5-tlc

57 Ptnt St.

R

Survt1llance

'446-Z

awe

33 V•k•ng T Bar Onver s seat

34 tnd•v•dual passenger seat
35 Heavy du ty factory re•n ·
forced frame
36 Chang1ng Spreader con
trois and PTO and Snow Plow
controls
3 7 Color Flame orange
38 The Front of the envelope
enclos• ng the b1d must be
marked Dump tr uck B•d

INVESTIGATION

Consultation by Appointment
Only. Proem Service. Child
Custody. Mtssln&amp; Persons.

V-Illi\ IWIIIGS. FUSIS

32 Cab g1ab handles L and

II fll

..,

ector mMM

col-

...nl~

~

...,.,

•Wire biulhu tor creosote

Ph,.• · ~ · a t~hy ,

In-

surance Cit~1ms . Locate Heirs.
Puce of Mind Roport. Vodeo
Inventory Cassotte of Pmonol Property
LICENSED - INSURED
6 Years Experience
WOLFE INVESTIGATION
MIDDl.oiT

614-992-7626

PH. 949-3046

64 Misc. Merchandise

EVERY,_
SAT. NIGHT

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

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and re·
core radiator~ and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

W alter H Roush

Don R H1ll

MEIGS INN

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

Ph 448-5042.

Buying doolv gold. olivet
coins. rings, jewelry, sterling
ware. old coins, large currency. Top pnces Ed. Bur-

Gun ahoot Racine Gun Club. kett Borbor Shop, 2nd. Avo.
Every Sundov otorting 1 Middleport. Oh. 814-992 p.m Fectory choked guns 3478
only.
Vecency Julie's Personel
Cere Home . Formerly
Mercer Conveleecence
Home 18 yeert experience.

Clifton, W V
6873

Cash paid for fancy Iron or

hOOif'/ Iron boda. •160 and
up for certain M11g1 Co
stone jars. Old t1me cup-

board
304-773- 2711

coli 1-304 -882 -

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
The Rutlend Nazarene FURNITURE
Bodo. tron,
Youth . Proudly preaenta wood , cupboards. chairs,
Kid't PreiH13 Saturdey. chests. baaketl . dtthes,
Fobruory 18, 1984 7:00pm. stone Jars, ant1que1, gold
Rutlend Church of tho Nne- and 11lver Wute -M D

rene Deboreh J Gilmore.
Director The public it invited

to ettend.

Miller. Rt 2 , Pomeroy, Oh10

46769 or call 614 -992 7760

INC now leasing mineral
rights, pleaH t~~ll Richard

78 '1, 33 's. 45 ' s. Buying
collections. Call Steve even -

dov. 7-6 p.m 304-8823224.

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

ordering graduation an nouncement• at lowest pri cea After thia date, order•
will be accepted until Mev
11t at reguler pricll. Altoat ,
available; neme cards, memory booko. jewelry. party

aupplioo SN uti HOCKEN BERRY PHARMACY
NORTH. Point Plouont.
304-876-2113 open even-

742-2328

CALL 992-3629
For tesesmtrons

10/20/ t f n.

MEIGS INN
POMEROY. OHlO

Curb Inflation II
Pay Cash for -1I
Claulfleds and I
Scivelll
!
vour own

Phone
1·(614)·992· 3325
LAND CONTRACT - Th1s 3
bedroom home ts on a h1gh
lot m Rutland. Has oak
floors, gas heat, bath, and
root cellar $5,000 down.
$216.51 a month at 13%for
10 years

write
.c~ and order by mall wlltl ltllsl
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you llel 1
, results. Money not refundM!Ie.
1

CHESltiRE - Over II acre
of level land. Good 27 year
old one lloor 3 bedroom
home. Bath, new gas FA lurnace. oak lloors and alumi·
num s1dmg for $39,900.

Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10 6-tlc

YOUNG'S

S&amp;W TV
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
If

Ph. 986-4269
No Answer. C.ll 985-438Z
Dewayne William•

&amp; Scottie Smith
All llakes and Models
Antenna lnstallotoon
House Colis and Shop
Servoct Ava1lablt

IFroo Estimatoo)
REDUCED WINTER RATES
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

3------

~

17. - - - - - 18. - - - - - 1
9,-----20. _ _...;__ _

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and inslal!ation.

Resitlential
&amp; Commercial

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

pd

21.

______

5. _ _ _ _ __

145 ACRES - Of rollin&amp;
land. Good barn, crib, implement shed, etc. Wrth minerals. Only $65,000.

DICK
ROBERTS
1614144C-1nf
Gallipolis. OH.

~rnon

22.

,•------ 2~25---~-1.----- 26-----•'------------ 21-----11.- _......_ __ _ 29.-----1
12.------- :: --_,._..__.I

room ranch home with full
basement and mob1le home.
All for just $35,000.

23.

------

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE

SERVICE

'Lowest Rates

"PillS "Wooden Nickels
"llatches 'IIIII Caps
'Pencils 'Sclltch Plds
'BIIIoonS 'Dais
'"Hird Hat" lltcals
'Bumper Sticb11
2-10-1 mo.

~round

"Dump Truck
Serv1ce

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328 l·ll·tk

71. - - - - . - - - ,

10. _ _ _ _..:..._

-

tB

:10. -

5% DOWN ON SOliE
OF OUR .HOMES

-

- - - - ....

13.

14.

33.

15.

34. - . . . . - - - -.

16. - - - - -

I
I'
II

35------ .
I

.

Mall Tills COUPIII witlllamltlanc.

ntDeiiYS.Itllll
111Cewtlt.

.I

.

~~...:
,I

:L-----==~':"--~!'~.......--J
'r

FOUND female German
Shepard 1n vicinity of At

68B. Coll446-8120, ploaoo
leave meaaaga.

(

cheet in Bleating Road area.
Rewerd if found or returned .

Uncoln Hotfoold 304-89636B3.

7

Yard Sale

------Pt'Pieiisint ____ _
&amp; Vicinity
mage aale

Six miles out

Jorryo Run Rood, at Apple
Grove. Fob. 16. 17 and 18.

8

Public Sale
8c Auction

Auction every Tuesday

night, Pt Ploount. WVo.
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth

Contor Bldg.. Camden St
614-387-7101 .
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Ferm, Antique &amp; liquidation aales.

UconHd &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;
WVo . 304-773-67B6 or
304-773-9186

Include discount

12 ACRES - Barn 2 bed·

Happy Ads

6 Lost and Found

II

These Clllll ram

1.-----2. -----.---

Hoolora. phone 304-6751487

LOST block pup with white

- Addon1 and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concnte work
- Plumbing and electnul
worlo

I 111 mo p!1

\! IS/I mo

I )For Rent

Five puppies to good home,
Terrter and Australian Blue

collar with boll. Call collect
606-324-0294 REWARD.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

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

WARM - Hoi waler heat, 3
bedrooms. range, refrrgerator and full basement wtthm
walkmg distance of slores
Has slorm wmdows and
doors

SYRACUSE - 13 years old,
3 bedroom, all elec. ranch
home wllh altached garage
and lg landscaped lot.
Really worsh $38,500.

304-676-6608 or 304'11963612

male. wearing an orange

CARPENTER
SERVICE

AND

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Phon•--------~------~

( )Wanted
( )For Sale
1 l Announcement

Terrier poodle pugpy, 4
months old, 1maQit, dog ,

FOUR FAMILY tndoor rum-

Addre~u..------­

SYRACUSE - 2 level lots
50xl00 each and a 3 bedroom one floor home Bath.
gas heal and mce k1tchen
Only $25,000

742'2328

dog white-block ticked, fe-

Name'----------

SMALL - Very reasonable
2 bedroom home above
flood area Natural gas heat,
bath and all ut1httes 1n Mtddleport

•2 free cats. C1hco 1triped,
•Muced w1th white. Call 614-

LOST Fob. 9 on tho Vernon

I

VIRGIL B. SR.
21H. 7nd St.

Hampsters to gtveaway Call

446-9660

wooda area of Gallia
County. Engtiah Setter Bird

------------------..-;;.';.---- -

TEAFOR-D

Giveaway

TAMMY. I LOVE YOU
DON'T EVER FORGET
FOREVER YOURS. JOHN

614-992-2181

Reel Estate General

4

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Reel Estate General

I. 'L "Bud" lcGH£E

Broker-Auction Service' . Chtlyl Ltntltr.
Mtlp County Associate
Phone 742·3171

for motorcoach toure. air

tours. and cruiMt. Wortc

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckload• of new
merchendill every week .
Conalgments of new and
uaed merchandise always

welcome. Richerd Roynolda
Auctioneer . 304-275 3089.
Mt. Alto Auction. reopen
Merch 3. 8pm. Contlgnmenta eccopted every Sot ..
One till Nle time. Flr11 Set.
each month, all new mer-

cllendlao. Emma Boll euctloneor, 42BB177. Licente
429-84.

Sale1 - Automot1ve After ·
market National corporatio" needa self-atarter with
proven 11le1 experience to
work out of Ohio, W Virg1 ·
nia, and Eastern Kentucky
Excellent growth potential.
ulary. bonua. car, expen111.
end excellent fringe benet ill Send resume and 11lary
requirementa to Worldpans
Corporation, 354 R1chmond
Lane, Cry1t1l lake. lllinoi1

heat. city schools, down·

you . Commiuion sales
Reply with resume. to · Park

Home must sell!!

oolf-llortor willing to put town ohopping. UO,OOO
your peraonality to work for Call614-367-7817

who feel they are able to
manage their own busme11
No experience necessary,
factory traming program
Mult be neat in appearance

Coil 1-614-446-8212 Froday &amp; Saturday, 1-5. Sun day 3-6 for 1nterv1ew

12

Situations
Wanted

342. Gollipolio. Oh 46631

Wanted Recept1oni1t ·
Secretary. Typing, word
proceuing akilla requared
Send reaumea to Post Office

o•

Cell 614-668-

Will care for the elderty 1n my
home loti of reference•
Men or women Call 614-

mobile home, 3 bedroom, 2
bath, new carpet,new gaa
furnace . refr~gerator and

667-3402

Mercer' • A1verv11w Per·
1onal Care Home haa vacan cies for elderly per10n1
Betty Mercer owner 304-

773-5882.

W1ll care for elderty tn our
home. l P N. care 10 yeara

111 Court St . Pomeroy. Oh
45769

Part - time charge nurse ,

3PM to 7PM , Mon -Fro

Must be experienced and
posess strong superviaory
1kills. Love feat paced envtr·
onment. Also accepting application• for part time RN 3

Would like to care for elderly
in our home l P N care. 10
years experience call 992 -

9185
I would hke to have a m1ddle
age to older lady to hva 1n,

coli 992-3704
Harper's Adult Care Home
h11 a vacency for another
re11dent . elderly person Call

Will

do

house

304-675-6683

13

cleamng

2,

Bookkeeper - Full Charge
local Real Estate Develop·
ment Co 11fek1 experienced
lllf· ltarter capable of re·
suming full reapon1ibihty for
day to day eccounting matters. Must be capable of
working with multiple gen eral ledgers in a computer·
ized environment, preparing
financial atatementa and
cash flow reports . Will be
involved in a new computer
mstallation Send resume to
and salary requ~rements to

5 room home, full basement,
1 car garage, patiO, 2 patioa.
2 fareplacea, extra lot. bedroom• and living room
carpeted{"
Near Pomeroy
elementary. in town. Priced
in low 40 ' s or make offer ..

SANDY AND BEAVER lnlurance Co has offered
serv1ces for ftre inaurance
coverage tn Gallla County
for almost a century Farm,
home and peraonal property
coverages are availeble to
meet tndividual needs Con·
tact Neal Insurance Agency.

agent
1691

Nice 3 bedroom home, cloae
toMe1g1 Mine no 1, 2.5
acrea
Muat aacrifice .

&amp;20.000 . coli 614-742 .
2126 .

Bashan, 3 bedroom, 2 story,
garege, chain link fence.
natural g11 furnace • re-

duced to &amp;29,000
614-949-2639

call

SOMERVIUE REAL
ATE . 304-676-3030
denco 675 -4232,
Caoto 676 -3431 .
McNeely 676 -2663.

ESTRoaiJoon
Jock

Excellent condition. tri level, 8 Y2 percent assumeble

loon. e11 .000 00 dowrt
Coil otter 6 p m . 304-6761529

Insurance

Phone 614-446 -

$48,500 00 aasume 8Y:t per
cent loan, exc Pomt Plea·
sant location, 3 bedroom, 2

baths. full buemont 304675-1219
Six rooms . one acre. land
contract. low payments. low

mteroot 304 -675 -7641,

evenmgs

A FRAME HOUSE two
bedrooms. acre lot 1f4 mila

18 Wanted to Do

to 11 and 11 to 7 ohift 1---------Apply 8·30 to 4 30. Mon Bidwell. Call 446-7150

llovo. Call 992 -5264 or
992-7766.

oxperoonce coll992-7314. coli collect. 614-267-6658
or 614-268-7979 .

304-675-1293.

District Menager-Saktl, aervice and collections Posi·
tion require• enthusiastic
person to recruit and train
newspaper carriers. insure
excellent serv1ce to 1ub·
acribers end maintain
prompt collection of ac·
count1 Previous work wrth
youth groupe a plu1. Send
resume to Circulation Manager, The Daily Sentinel,

Rt

N1ce 3 bdr • 6 acres, C8rpeted . c1ty water , new
24x36 metal budding. near

located 1n Syracuse -Near
achool &amp; 1w1mming pool. 3
bedroom 1ituated on one•
third acre lot , Price reduced
e23,600 or will rent for

Will care for elderly peraon 1n
my home Experience Will
gtve references 1-304-773-

Hills,

Call614-367-7870

Have openmg for elderly
lady'" my home Large room
with bath. hot meall, TV.
nursing care Handicapped

Electronic field . be able to
work &amp; repaar on stereo ' • ·
CB's, FM &amp; installattonl
Send reaume to P 0 . Biox

Scentc

Mobile home. 2 large bdrm ,
furmshed , carpet , nice flat
2 55 acres land Garage,
patio. cellar 2 miles from
Rt 7 , Grover Rd. Cheahire.

Wilkovtlle
3361

7314

Fri.

Remo·

Toura. Suoto 404 Pooploo deled. fireplace. super extra
Building , 178 Summoro Deal! Some furnrture tool
StrMI. Chorlellon. W . Vt Middleport Call 814-8928941 .
25301
Manager Tramee up to 3 bdr . 1 Y, both. fomify
•1 .460 per month pluo room, 2 car garage. cent. air,
70 -year-old company is ex· on Rt 160 across from
pending into the Pomt Plea - North Gollio HS Owner w~l
sant area and 11 k&gt;oking for help fonance Coli 614-38Bhighly motivated people 9729

60014

Box 171. Gollipolio.
46831

2 SR . 1 t1ory. newly remodeled, carpeted. nat. geo

from your home on full or
pert time b11i1 Must be a

or dioobled Call 614-256 - U40 mo 304-865-3834
6609
1978 Hrllcroat 14 x 70

ATTENTION ALL AREA
HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS. 11 Help Wanted
Merch 1II it doedlino for - -- -- - - - - -

6

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

EmploynH:nl
S1:rvtces

McDaniel Cuatom Butchering. every Fridey &amp; Satur·

Homes for Sale

Care of two elderly people.
8.00om to 8:00pm. e d•v•. 4 bdr. ranch homo, terge LR.
WMk Call 304-678-2770. full batement, with garage.
wood burner Included. city
SALE8 HELP WANTED : schools, 2 miles from town.
NMd locol reproaontatlvo Coil 446-0276

K O.G EXPLORATION. ue Cuh potd for rocordo·

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
UTILITY BUILDINGS

AL TROMM

MOM PIOfll OIGUIZATIOM$
Wt Accooo-o ' ' tol!O fiiOplo

POMEROY
LANDMARK

12) I 0 17 24 31C

GRAVEL
HAULED

36 CLEAII. SAFE. MODERN
ROOMS. CABLE TV. STEAM
HEAT. AIR COIID. lllt1111
low 11:
110 A Niaht or
140 WHkly
I!Ell!IG IOOIS flEE TO

Don't Miss lt.
lla&lt;k Bottom Pric11

June W •ckersham
Clerk

kitchen Cabmets - Roofina - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
Palios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodelinc - Custom Pole
Barns.

'r - - - - - - - - - ,

UNBELIEVABLE
GIGANTIC SALE
AT POMEROY
LANDMARK
WATCH FOR
ANNOUNCEMENT
IN THURSDAY'S AD

Harty C H1ll

t

Call for free siding es-

timate..s~ 949-2801 or

CHIMNEY KING

Al/ICIIOlM IUCIIICAL IEPAII
All£llllATOflS. S!MTUS &amp; Wfllll
ElLCIIIC 101011 &amp; PU. llfiAII
ElLCIIIC 1101011 SAlLS

larger

Rutland, OH. ·
DRIVE A LITTLE. SAVE A.LOTI

GUN SHOOT

Help Wanted

31

ings until 9

GALUI'OLIS ELECTRIC
SEIVICI, INC.

3 1 60 Amp Al terna tor o r

SUE •UIPHY
IILTOII IOUSH .
992·3325

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Gere.Qes"

Announcements

Good uaed baokotboll backboerd, rim, net, &amp; motel
poll. Cell 448-8038

Wanted To Buy

•lnwletion

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

Boahan Building

985-3561
All Makes

Parta &amp; Service
1-3-rlc

CHESTER-985-3307

30 77 Am p Banery heavy

CALL
HELEI!J
BRUCE

BISSELL
SIDlNG CO.

9

SWEEPER ond aewlng mo- Wontodtobuy Now, uood&amp;
chlno repelr, porto, ond entlque furniture Will buy 1
auppll...
Pick up and piece or complete house delivery, Devla Vecuum holdo. Alto complete Aucti·
Cleenor. one hell mile up oneering service. Call
Georg.. CrHk Rd
Cell Rodney Howery 614 -698e 14-44&amp;-0284.
7231

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Authorized John DHre.
New Holl1nd. Bush Ho1
Farm Equipment
D11ltr
Farm Equipment

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE

duty

.

SIDING

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

AND OTHER MAJOR BRANDS
We Have A Full Time
Shop Technician
on Duty

nms

Interna tiOnal D um p Tru ck
I 700 Senes
B•dder to submit deta•led
spec•f•cauons ol eq u• p ment
o ffered The Board of Trustees
reserve the ngh tto retec t any o r
all b•ds
By o rder of the Board ot
Trustees ol Leta rt Townsh•P

BOGGS

*ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

23 4 1000&lt;20 12 ply rear

Offered as Trade •n Ill 1973

Vinyl 8o Aluminum

11

A11111111111.t:111 1'111 :.

W Knight Roo. 13041576- ingo 614-992-7160.
2863 But (3041875-3276. 1- .::.....-------

22 2-9 00&lt;20 12 ply !toni

!Ires. h•ghway tread

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd like to Introduce you to
EnPCt·A-Car. the modern way
to drlve the vehicle of your
choice.
No Down P1yment
lower Monthly P1yment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Bo•. 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Futtr Strvitt
Call 614-992-6737

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTIQN

5 Mud Flaps

6 Wheel base 84 cab 10

1984

In casP. of your la1 lure to
answAr or othfHWISf! rAspond
as rP.Qu•red by the Oh•o AulAs of
C•v•l Pr ocedurA tudgment by
default w•ll be rendP.rP.d aga1 nst
you for thA mlief demandAd •n
the Compla•nt

Expires Mlrch 17

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

Public Notice

247 Deed Records o f M e•gs
Cou "'y Oh10
The follow•ng real estate
s•tuatecl•n the Coumv ol M e.gs
•n thA Statf' of Oh•o and •n the
Townshtp o f rutland
and
bounded and dAscubecl as
follows 8Agrnn1ng 149'12 rods
·south of the North wAst corner
of Fr act•on No 3 Town No 6
Rangf! No 14 of the Oh10
Company s Pur chasP. thP.ncA
East 11 •;, •ads thnnce South
9 1h rods thAnce WP.st 21 rods
and 22 lmks thencA Nonh 7
rods and 5 links thencfl Nort h
78 degrP.es Ea st 10 rods and
16 links to the · place of
beg•nn•n~=J conta•n•ng onf! ( 1)
acrA mo1e or less
RAIA•encA Deed Vol 93 p
36 Der.d Rocord s of M etgs
County Oh•o
Fwthermore plamt•tf altegAS
that dPfendant FrancAs Brad ·
ley dAIP.ndent Franr.es Lucka ·
doc and dAfendant Donald
Luckadoo arA each se•zed of an
undiVIded one fourth( 1/ 4) part
of thf' aforesmd desc r~bP.d
pai Cf!lS Of leal estate
That the sa•d plamt.t f alleges
thai thP othm defendants 1n thrs
taw SUit may havA some cta•m
or •nterAs t m the parcels 3 and
4 dOSC flbAd heretofOIA
Thai thf! pla•nt•ff dAmands
th at t•tln to thf! afo rftsa•d pa •cets
of real estate be Qwf!ted 1n the
names of the ola•n t•ff and
dAffmdants Frances Luckadoo
Frances Bradley and Donald
Luckadoo
Furthermore that sa•d rAftl
estatf! be part• t•oned or otderf!d
sold •I •I cannot be part• t•onP.d
lor an allowance of att ornP.y s
lees hArP.1n and further pta•nt•ff
demands that all parflf!s hmeto
Sf!t up theu cla• ms as they may
have •n sa•d real estatP. abovP
descr1bPd 1nctud•ng thP,ownP.r
Ship thArA•n any Qr beforevfH
barred from assP.rtmg same
Each df!hmdan t •n thts case
shalt be IAQlii i P.d to ans~ r
wtth•n 28 days aft er the date of
th e last publiCation of t ~u s
notice wh1ch w1tt be publ•shed
oncf! a weAk lo r s•x consP.cut•ve
weeks Tho last publ• cat•on w •ll
bA madf! o n M arc h 2 I 98 4
and the twenty ·A•ght days fo r
answe• wrtl commencA on that
date Answer date Apnl 5

FOR 10% OFF
ANY SERVICE

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

Also Tranami11ion
PH. 992·5682
or
_

South of Ch11t11
. Polllfroy. Oh .
"Cullom bhauata"
OWNERS:

:;:

~:: : ::t ::-:.~=~

Selections Are
Getting Thin For
Roii ·Carpet'
Shop Now While
Selection Is
Still Good

- 742-2211 -

_"-

741 - JIIIIIIM
IIJ - ~

u, .. , , _ ,..

LAST CHANCE!

or·

.,.._.,

11.:::::t~~. . . . . . . . ......
. . . -1-----..::.:.-==------l
~...,_U

,75-4340

~FiURRYrBEFOR'
IT IS .
TOO LATE!

111- l't , . . _,

-~.

(An Equal Opportunity
mployer)

64 Misc. Merchandise

Partly cloudy tonight. Low near
40. Westl!!'b' wlndll about 10 mpb.
Saturday, I!IIJiey periods, then
Increasing l:louds. ijlgh SG«i.
CJwioe, at. rain 10 Perl~t .tonljihq
and Saturday.

A... CMttU

117- 014......

purpose of a 1984 D ump Tr uck

Weather forecast

...... CwMy

A-C...IU

LARRY E SPENCER

!hence West 21 1ods and 22

IN LOVING
MEMORY OF
Harold (Gene)
Swartz

"·,.......·-·............. . . ... ..._......,.,. .,.___._
...,, _...._
··-\
1
··..,_-·-·
.,..,..Diot .
....,_.......,.. ,,_...,....

.,,.,..........
.,..,........, ,__ ,

Public Notice

Pu rchase thence East 11 'h
rods then ce Sout h 8 'h rods

In Memoriam

I'•••• em " 1h ,
followln, ! trl flplwn ,. uehntt-•

Brin1 This coupon In

GARAGE

CUSTOM

Cl~tulfl t'd

., • ..,•••• wo

11

Roger Hysell

KELLER'S

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

1.. - .... -

Pon:el No 2·

Wtnn!ng number drawn Thursday
n!gllt In the Ohio Lottery's dal)y
To end maniages
game, "The Number," was 315.
In the "Pick 4" game, played
Two dissolution actlona have been
E•MowW OWo FOI'eCIIt
Monday through Friday, the winllled in Meigs County Common
SuadaJ lllroqb '1'aelclq.
ning number was 0687.
Pleas Court.
BalD llreJ.J, • ...,. ~
. The lottery reported a . loss ot
Filing fordlsaolutlonofmarrlages MlladaJ_.Wr'l'l! 'qr,JIIPIID
$761.250 from wagering on Its dally were' Terry Lee Garten, Rt I,
lbe upper ........~..... to low
pme. The loss resulted from sales Middleport and Marcl L Garten, lfll e&amp;lniiNI 1111111. Lon Iii lbe
$1;l38;al2,- whDe ·holders - of - Gallipolis, and-JulleAnn'lbcmpaoo;- IJIIIII!io .. Cildr!meaonhllldnllliii.J'
wblll!ng tickets were entitled to
Raclne and Timothy Jenme · 'lillbe ilul1 wben.
Share $1;819,!N2.
1bolnpsoo, Racine.
r

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

........... ~.e...

I...U ifl-- 1

.........

Damages to two cars were heavy
and one driver was cited as the
result of an accident on W. Main St.
Thursday.
Pomeroy Police said that a car
driven by Harry Schwab, Pomeroy,
was attempting a lett turn into
Craw's Steak House and collided
with an eastbound car driven by Ellen Swartwout, Racine. Swartwout was taken to the office of Dr.
James Conde in Middleport by the Gerald V. Rupe
Pomeroy Emergency Squad for
examination. Schwab was cited on a
Gerald V. Rupe, ID, Warren, Ohio,
charge of falling to yield the right of formerly of Middleport, died Thursway.
day afternoon In Gillette's Nursing
Home, Warren following an exTo bum mortgage
tended utness.
Mr. Rupewas born June 15, 19m in
A mortgage burning ceremony
Meigs
County, the son of the late
wUI be held during the 10: llmorning
WU!tam
W. and Alma Hysell Rupe.
worship service at Trinity Church,
He married Sarah Lucetta ReyPomeroy, Sunday.
noldsonDecember24, 1927. Shedled
The ceremony wUI mark the t!nal
in
1983. He was also preceded in
payment on the parsonage mortdeath
by one sister, Mabel, and two
gage which was built in 1900. A
brothers,
Wayne and Morton.
fellowship dinner wUI follow the
He
moved
to Warren in 1983. He
service.
was a member of the Middleport
Funds received
Church of Christ. He was a public
sehool
teacher havtogtaught in Ohio
State Auditor Thomas E. Fergutor 35 years and 10 years in West
son •s office reported the February
distribution of $5,376,832.82 to Ohio Virginia.
Most of his career was in
counties, townships, cities and
and Magadore, Ohio and
Middleport
villages in revenue collected from
Mason
City,
W.Va. He was an
the state's 5 cents a gallon gasoline
English
teacher
and school princitax.
pal
and
coached
various
sports.
Meigs County will receive
He
received
his
bachelors
degree
$22,729.34 and each township wUI
receive $815.91. The remainder will tom Ohio University his masters
go to cities and villages based upon degree from Rio Grande and a
40 cents per motor vehicle regis- degree in administration from Ohio·
State University. He had a masters
tered within their bonjers.
I
degree in speech and drama from
Wesli!rn Reserve University. He
was a member of the National
Education
~Usoctatlon, Ohio EducaA suit totaling $8,700 was tlled in
tion
Association
and Retired
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Teachers
Association
ot Ohio and
by Keith Adkins and Diana Adkins,
Wellston against Clifford Manley West Virginia.
He ts survived by one daughter,
and Emily F . Manley, aka Faye
Mrs.
Joseph (Ann) McKay,
Manley, Middleport.
Warren,
with whom he made his
According to the entry the
home;
three
grandchtldren and one·
defendants wrongfully tennlnated
great
grandchtld.
'
the purported land contract without

Admitted--Christine Peck, Middleport; Leonard Haning, Athens;
Judy Wise, Middleport; Don fWach,
Middleport; Sylvia ZwUltng, Syracuse; Ray Clark, Middleport.
Discharged-Charles Ihle, Mar- complying with the requtrements ot
tha Stewart, Nlcy Bass; Ben Fields. · chapter 531 of the Ohio Revised
Code. The entry also stated that
$5~ Is for down payment plus
Ohio lottery winner
monthly payments plus $3,500 for
Improvements.
. CLEVELAND (AP) The

:~~.!'!.1".:·

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

111....... ~110111,

~---·
·~ .......

drllltng.

Area death

• w....... ..,

llll ...........

Constitution and Article r. Section
16, of the Ohio Constitution.
Tl:Ie Southern Ohio Coal Company
says they wUI be irreparably
harmed by the drllltng of any oU or
gas well through Its coal and such
action wUI harm the public Interest
in the safe, efficient and economical
production of coal and electric
energy. Such harm to plaintiff ts
continuing, permanent and irreparable, the coal company charges.
The Southern Ohio Coal Company
demands judgment as follows: For
a temporary restraining order and a
prellminary injunction against defendants Royal and Magnum, their
officers, directors, shareholders,
Investors, employes, agents and
anyone ~cting in concert with any or
aU of them, restraining and enjoining them and each of them for
drilling through any coal owned by
plaintiff until such tlm'iJIS said coal
ts mined and remov~ and it ts
otherwise safe to undertake such

r

IKIHT . .I
l l . , ... , .....
?'I'.... .... I...... NI ......M I

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

1 c.... . ,,._,,,.••• _ _ ,

Coal
••.
(Continued from page 1)

The city school board was to
consider this afternoon whether to
approve the settlement, and the
state board ts to debate It Sunday
afternoon In Columbus. The NAACP
and plaintiffs wUI get to comment on
the proposal at an April 6 hearing
before Rice. after which he wUI
formally register Its approval or
rejection.

Meigs County happenings
Emergency runs

the court or parties change that
date.

The NAACP flled suit on behalf of
Mona Bronson and other Cincinnati
school children, actusing the city
and state school boards of deliberately separating black and white
students In the city public schools.
The NAACP contended the children
received inferior educations as a
result.

Economic:__(c_o_nti_nu_ed_fr_om_pa_ge_l_)_
industry began to rebound from the
recession.
· In other reports Thursday, the
government said:
: -Personal income rose 1.1 percent in January, posting its best
monthly increase since October
whtle personal consumption spending increased 1.2 percent.
-Factories operated at 79.9
percent of capacity in January, the
14th monthly increase and the
highest rate since the summer of
1981. The auto industry continued to
tead the comeback.

~==~~~~~==~~~::::::::::~::~r;~::::::::::::::=;t::::::::::::::::::;-1 3

desegregation issue

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Pomeniy Middlepolf, Ohio

off Rt 35 Southaido .
S31 .000 .00 phone 304 676-3489
Stx room frame house, 2124

Will do baby1rttmg 1n my

home Call 446-0028

Uncoln Avo. 304-675-4680
oftor 5.00

l P N. deSires positton. or
will care for the elderly or
disabled m their home. Supervisory experienced and
1 0 years experience in direct

Three bedroom. one and half
bath with helf acre. 7mi.
from town Qualifiea fo'r
bond money , Priced on

patient core Call 614-4462010

Wanted to do, house clean ing and spring house clean -

Ing Coli 446-7447
Patnttng ReSidantlai Commerctal. lnter~or ­
Extenor Free estimates call

P 0 Box 171 . Gelhpohs. Oh
45€31 . ATTN Joan 614 -367-0637. ask for
John
Oascenco

tnspection Coli 304-675·
5689 otter 5pm.

BY OWNER : Three bodroom . tri-level house on ~
acre lot. Fully air conditi-oned. family room with
fireplace. One and one hall
baths Carpeted throughout.
Coli 13041 675-2497 otter
6 00 o'clock

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

PhySical Therapist Consul tant wanted 5 days a week
Part t1me. excellent hourly
wage
Send resume to
Pomeroy Health Care Can -

Financial

tor. 36769 Rocksprings Rd .
21
Pomeroy. Oh, 992-6606

Business
Opportunity
The Moiga Local Schoolf - -- - - - - -- -

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES USED- CARS.
TRUCKS GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CAU
614-446-7572 .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALNOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB- ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
Softball coach and • Ro- LISHING CO recommends 4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
aorvo Girls' Softball Coach that you do busineas wrth RT 36 PHONE 614-446at Meigs high School for the people you know. and NOT 7274
1983-84 achool year. Appli- to send money through the
cants muat hold a valid Ohio mall untrl you have investi- 197712x60mobolehomo, 2
Diltrict is currently seeking
applications from certified
applicants for a Vars1ty Girl's

teaching certificate end
muat meet certification requiremenu of Ohio for
sports sporta medicine and
CPR . Persona intere1ted
should contact Dan E. Mor1
ria, Superintendent of Meigs

Loco! Schoofa. ot 621 South
Third Avo In Middleport,
Ohio.

Special repreaontotivo, high
celiber peraon . A career
poaition with management

opportunilleo. Age no barrier. lntenalve ehort training
program. Commluiona ere

In excou of •1 e.ooo: onnuollv with no llmlta. A cor lo
nocetNry. Thla could be tho
opportunity you ere looking
tor. Cell for confldontiot
ln1ervlew. Aok forM . Done.
1-814-1182-6151 .

I

bdr • furmahed , good cond •

gated the offering

$6.300 Coli after 4 and on
weokenda. 614-266-6618

22 Money to Loan

1978 Shultz 14x70 control
air, all new furniture. ex
cond on rented lot Call

HOME LOANS FIXED evenongo 446-2075
RATES 12'h% purchase or
refinance. 9% adjuatable 1972 Kirkwood 12x65 2
rate . leader Mortgage. bdr .• unfurnished, with unAtheno, collect 614-692- derpinning 8t porch, exc.
3061 .
cond Coli 614-256-9325. ·
Thinking about a homeloan1 14x70 Kirl&lt;wood 2 bdr .•
N.L. Stovone &amp; Auociotu unfurniahed mobile home.
have

conventional

loena

Centrel air-heat, carpet, ep-

with o little •• 6% down and plioncot $10,000 . Call
rates as low aa 9%. Call Jeri 614-258-6036 or oftor 6PM
Allie 11 614-379-2789.
446-8261 .

23

Professional
Services

Vondolo trailer, 12x80, 2
bdr., AC. new carpet, new

underpinning, 20ft. &amp; 40 tt
owning Outbuilding good
cond .. all •6.500. Mull NO
HAIR DRESSER, New Vorl&lt;.
9 Wanted To Buy
New Vorl&lt; Heir Solon Ia PlANO TUNING Lower to opprociato. Coll814-241ilooking for experienced otv- priced regular tunlnge- 6142 otter 4PM, ~on.-FJi.
We pey c..h for tate model 1111. Apply 401 Vlend St. Pt. dlacountato Senior Citlzona.
clean u1ed can. ,
Churches &amp;Schoola. Werd' 1 Mobile homo in good cond ..
Plee.. nt. 304-8711-7311.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oldt Inc.
Koyboord, 304-676-3B24. S8,000 Coil 446-3548.
Bill Gene Johnaon
Eoater It coming, atert NV·
448-3872
lng money, Hm U.OO hour Brunlcordi Mualc Co . Gelli- For Nlo 1972 mobile homo,
.,..,. time. 304-8711-1429. potla. Coli 448-0687. Piano 1'It ocroo and outbu~dlng .
Wonted to buy used coel &amp;
tuning repair with tklll &amp; Coli 446-0063.
wood holltert. Sweln Furni- HELP WANTED. excellent Integrity. Lone Daniele. 614UNd 2 bedroom mobile
ture, 448-3t Ill, 3rd. • opportunity, looking for 742-2951 .
homoo, furniahod . 10x50
j)ll1f!. St., Goll!J!!IIIt. Oh. _ I.QmtiOn• to take over clqlhlng butlneu, Includes In- TWO MONTH ~PECIAL. onH 12x52 oizoo : Your
Sgndlng timber wiH poy top ventory, flxtu- end
Jan. end Fob. 1984 off chance. to own • comfortapriced for red • white oelt. Ilea. - •2.000 . 00 . IHIOn pricea on furniture ble home. Brown• . troller
Cell 6 t 4-388-8908 or 814- 814-387-760B or 304-875- ,.. upholatering. Mowreya Court. Minertvitle, Oh. 614Uphotllory. 304-676-4154. 992-3324.
38B-8817 etter e.
32t7.
r-~------------

�-

Page- 10-o-- The Daily Sentinel
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

They'l! Do It Every Time

1977 Titan 12x66 trailer.
New ca rpet, 2 bedroom,
total electric, excellent con' dition. $8000. Call 614992 -6687 days or614-992 -

52 CB,TV, Radio
Equipment
Tha Fl•-lt Shop: TV. otareo.
for R.C. A.. Zenith, KMC,
Gold Star, Emerson . Houee

3909 evenings.

Collo, 266-6218 .

1968 Schultz trailer, 12 x
60, for sale. 2 bedroom,
unfurnished. on rented lot.

63

~ntiques

near Meigs Co. fair ground;

84600. call 992 -6354 .

AntiQu .
f- na cupboards.
ovel glass and buffet. over

1976 Bayview 14 lC 70
mobile home, 2 bedrooms, a
dan . underpinned , a .c .,

1 j)O yaara old. Good condition, 304-676 -3637.

811 ,000. call after 6:30
p.m .. coll992 -736!l.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Pickup or

Delivered. 12"- 22" stocked
yard .

HEAP

vender ,

limeatone. Sand, Gravel .
Delivered in Muon, Meigs.
Gallia or pick up It Richerda
&amp; Son. Call 446 -7786.

Farms for Sale

62 acre farm , 3 miles from
town . Phone 304 -676 6337 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

45

Mobile home for rent , in

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

Racine . Call 614 - 367 7148 .

Business
Buildings

12x60 mobile home. New
carpet, utilities paid . 1 kid
accepted. no pets, drunks.

Investment property in Rio

dopa. John Shoata-304367-0611 . 3 'h miles south
of Middleport . R-7 . Call
after 3 p .m .

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

WITH OPTION TO BUY, 14'

Good monthly income,

f42 ,600. Call 446-8038 .

wide all electric mobile
home. ~etting on lot ready to

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

move into. $200.00 down
f175 .00 MONTH . 304 676 -2711 .

35 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd. Owner financing available. Call446 -8221

Two bedroom mobile home
on lot (unfurnished). Married
with one small child accepted . Water and sewer

,ftar 8 weekdays.

fumishad . 304-6715-1076.

near Gallipolis
Farry, WV. Moatly wooded,
tobacco allotment. Call
614-367-7271 .
acrea

quired. $176 month, 304 676-7361 .

44

utilities near by. $3,950.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) h11

Rentals
Houses for Rent

House for rent . will sell on
land contract with small

down payment. Call 4461339 or 446-7672 .

K-Mart,

$200

mo..

city

. water free, you pay gas &amp;
ilectric, no children. amok-

oro or pets. Call446 -1822.

· ~ bdr. houao, 1 bdr. apt .. 2
bdr. apt. Utilities partialy

:fum . Call 304-675-5104 or
~04 - 675 - 6386 .

3643.
For rent . house. 2 bdr, turn .
or unfum. On Texas Rd . Call

446 -0766 .
2 story frame house. 3
bedroom, Syracuse. Deposit

required . 614-992 -6284 or
614 -992 -6732.
For rent , 3 bedroom house in
.Rutland, carport. %acre of
-land . References required .

$160. call614 -742 -2460.

6 rooms basement gas heat.
garden. 1 kid accepted . No
pets, drunka. dope. 3'12 miles

-south of Middleport. R-7 .
John Shaou . 304 -367 :o&amp;ll after 3 p.m .
· 3 bedroom house, 1% bath.
:Addison, Oh . River view,

.large yard. •276. month.
·Phone 614·992 -3233 from
;9 o.m. to 6 p.m. Altar 6 p.m.
.call614-992 -7046 .
Two bedroom brick all elect'ric home. 4.4 miles out

Sandhill Road. Phone 304489· 1134.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
12x60 2 bdr. modern furtrailer.

convenient

location, Upper Rlvar Rd.
doPOiit req. Cill 614-4468668.

panel '109.96 181 grades
$89 .95 .

12 in, thermel pane glass

1

Commercial space down·
town office, store, etc. 8160
mo . includes water . Cell

21 x56 diamond decorated

breokero, etc. HotPolnt
heavy-duty electric dryero,
thl1 month only •279.
Klngobury Homeo Porta and
Acco11ory Stort. 900 Ea11 ·
Main St. , old Bookmobile
building In Pomeroy or call
992 -15587.

76

304-

$7.00 ea.

LEASE OR RENT 100 aero
farm 304-876 -2991 .

384-3646 .

Firewood cut up slabs $16

pickup load. Call 614-2466804.

51 Household Goods

Case 31 0 front end loader

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olivo St .. Gollipolio. Now
&amp; uaed wood &amp;. coel atoves,
6 piece wood living room

METAL CULVERT PIPE 6 in .
thru 60 in. diameter in etock.
RON EVANS, Jocklon, Oh .
614-286-6930.

dozer. f4,600 . Call 614 256 -1 427.

auite with 6 inch flat arms

PLASTIC

•399, bunk blda complete
with bunkioo •199, 2 piece

Haul in your pickup truck .

SEPTIC

TANK

RON EVANS. Jockoon, Oh .
614-286-6930.

dinette

proved for drinking weter .

springs 8t mattress twin or

Valley Plaza, pool and TV
ont. Coli 446 -2746 or leave

full fl 00 oat regular-firm

message.

t36. wash otands •34,
maple rockera t59, 7 piece
chromo dinette oot $149, 6

Furnished garage apt. 1 bdr.
S226. Utilities paid. 29'12
Nail Ave.. Gallipolis. Coli
446-4416 after 7 PM .
Attic apt. fumiohad $176.
Utilities paid. Share bath,

man only, 919 2nd. Ave.
Gallipolio. Call 446 -4416
after 7 PM.
843 Second Avo .. Gallipolia.
5 rooms, off street parking,
no peU, dop . &amp; ref . Call
Effitiency apt. downtown,
$150 plus utilities, no pets.

Call 446-9283 .
Unfurniahed apartment, 2
bdr. , carpeted throughout,
central air, over looks city
park. alec. refrig., stove,
disposal. Call or see Roger
Hood at Haskins &amp;. Tanner,

322 Second Ava., Galli polio,
Oh. 446 -0676 .
3 bdr. apt. Honeysuckle
Hills. across from Hwy.
Patrol. Appliances, water
and sewer furnished . Rent
1tart1 $240 mo. equal hous·

livingroom suites

1011

f179 . box

piece dinette aet $99. ueed
bedroom suites. refrigerators, renges, chest, dressers.
wringer weshers. TV's, dry·
era, &amp; ohooa. Call 614-446-

rates

for

Senior

Citizona. $130. Equal Houoing Opportunities. 614·

992-7721 .
Newly

decorated

eeml-

fumiohod 1 bedroom Apt. In
Middlapofl. Second floor of
Coats building. Sultoble for
'1 or 2 adults. Inquire at

Apt.18 in Middleport. 814992 · 7347 or 614-992 2610 .
· homes, houses. Pt. Pleennt

and Golllpolio. 614 -4468221.

poplar, 2x4, 2x6. 2•8. 1x4,
1 x6, 1x8. length available, 8
foot through 14 foot . Hogg
&amp; Zuspan, 304· 773· 5654
daytime.

Now open

for

buoine11,

'78 Hondo Goldwlng, aale or
trade, UOO.OO. 304-8915·
38157

f &lt;~ill' Suppfit''
,\ li '• I'. !ttl

Will cut and deliver firewood. Call 614 -266 -1 528.

Motoorola In daoh AM -FM
8-track, CB with 40 Chon nels and antenna, to fit moet
all, GM &amp; Chevy pickup,

f150 . Call446-1822 .

61

12" block. Delivery ~ervl~o .
Phone dey 304-882-2222,
evening 882-3239 .

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor- outdoor fecilities .
AKC Doberman puppies:

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220.

Dragonwynd

Cattery -

Kennels. AKC Chow puppial. CFA Himalayan. Persian and Siamese kittens.
Call 814-446-3844 after 6.
For ule or trade 1 female &amp;.

1 mala. 8 yr. old, Walker Tree
Dog. Non registered . Call
614-266 -1416.
Pedogree Rex rabbits,
mother winner of two lett.

Clal 614-246-15467.
Yellow pure bred 4 yra. old
male Labrador Retriever.
needs large fenced yard or

farm . Very good with child ren, $60. Call 614-3889624.
Regioterad Plott hound, 7
yra. old, $260. Call 446 9780.

Reg . Quarter horM mare.

born Jun. 79. Reg. Quarter
horae filly born Mar. 82.
Reg. Quarter horN gelding
born Jon 82. Western show
aaddleo with oliver. 6142815 -61522.
Hogo rNdy to be butcherld.
Call 614-256-68155.
11 year old AppolooN morekid broke, $ YNr old 34 ln.
pony, 11500 lb. work horoewell broke. 2 yNr old 155 in .
more pony, gr- broke. 2
year old atondord breed stud
colt. 3 weatem aaddlea.
814 -992-6102.
BOARDING HORSES at
Stonohoven ·Riding Stable
near Point Pleooont, 304676-71541 oveningo.

64

to 6pm, Sat.
614-446-0322

elec·tric dryers , auto
washers, gas &amp;. electric
ranges, refrigeratort. TV
sets.

Dozer. new 90 HP.
$27,600. Call 446-8038.
Yellow twin Holly Hobby
bodopreod. 1 pr. yellow 64'
Cape Cod Priacllla curtain•
$26. Yellow twin chenille
bodoproad •6. Garry child
back pock corriar $16. Coli
614-367-0482.
Shopmutor joiner Vz HP
motor, with 4' blade and
otnod $120. Coll448-6322 .

Hay 8t Grain

Conditioned mixed hay for
lOla.
Clll 992-15383 or
949 -2588.
Ground ear corn t6.150 per
100. Bring own container.
304-875-3308. No Sunday
aaloa.

Large round bole• good hoy.
Rat terrier pup for oalo.
304-4158-1758.
Female 8 wka. old $60
.
•
·• MilOd Hay, •1 .110 bole,
_6_1_4-_9_4_9-_2_6-'
6)1_· _ __ _ 304-8711-15579.
1-5 year old UKC Rogiotorod
female Walker. Genna Finisher and Tinley River' bred.

Tron spurt"llllll

Needs ht place to be night
champ. Aloo 1-16 month
male Walker, started Wicks

71

Thunder · and Spring Crook
Rock bred. Hu boot of
bread. Call 614-992 -3023
after 4:30p.m.

unfurn .• nice It clean, adulte

TOP CASH paid for late
Smith
model u~ed cora.
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Ellt·
ern Avo.. Gallipolla. Call
614-446-2282.

Five year old regietered Blue

Registered Border Collie
from wort&lt;ing parents. 304676 -2173.

1979 Chevy Impala,' V-8,
PS / PB, AM / FM, AC, Immaculate, f3700. Call 4461282.

AKC MALE DOBERMAN. 1
old,

mllaege,

.---=-~---.

I"t..L. TA KE- HIM. YOU GET

fHf OTH ER TWO. W'"' L-1.GET UP AB OUT 30,000
FEET AND THROW

STIL.L. Ot-.1 THe

RUNWAY.

THEM OLIT.

- -lil'l'

vll.i',,
THAT'~

81

1

locel

RUNE'S THIH~illG. OIJII 5E&lt;IIET
()E(iflfi(JI/TIOIIANO
5T~EN6TH
()EGTRUCT/011.. NOTI11Nu LIES IN THE
LESS THAH WOflLO
~NOWLEDI:lE
CllTIICLYSI'/ IS HIS THAT EI/CII At()
OBJECTIVE!
EVEflY LIFE 15
f'REGIOU5!

repair commercial end reel-

dontlol. free el11motea. Cell
814-2158-1182.
Marcum Roofing &amp; SpoutIng. 30 Vllrl oxperlence,
opeclollzlng In buHt up roof.
Coll814-388-88157.

1981 Pontiac, Bonnevlllo,
with all extroo. A-1 cond.
Priced to aell. Call 4411·
4109.

Apptlonce S.rvlce all mokea
&amp; model• refrlgertoro,
waahera. dryere, rengee,
compoctoro, dlohwuhero.
mlcrowoveo . Hooting &amp;
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work .
Golllo R'frlgorotlon Co .
814-448-'4088.

1973 VW Square bock auto·
motic, excollltflt condition.
No ruot . Must - to oppreclotl. 814-949-215158.

n

Cuti111 Supremo with all
extru, •1800 .. call 814 742 -2748 .

all shote. earl

1982 EXP many extru.
muot nil. Call 448-4680.

cropped. Obedience ochool
trained. $160.00. 304-67153666 .

1980 Renault LeCor, 4 op ..
ounroof. A .C .. AM/FM ,
AKC Regiotorod Pomoro- t2495. 1978 Chevy Nove,
nl-m pupa, S weolcl, mole auto., AM/FM, U196.
and female. AKC Reglotored John'l Auto Soles, 8ullvllle
DIQh,bdnd pJ!pl, 7 montho. Rd .. . QJIIIf!9lll, 448-rt782.
304-895·.~968.
, Qpen till dark.

1---------

Motorole,

'•'115 Chovy Monzo UOO.OO.
304-8715 -1154&amp;.

•

LAST' NIGHT, GUZ '
HE'S ONE STIFF

SNAKE !

Ouazar.

end

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, 11ump
removal . Call 304 -8715 1331 .

1----------

RINGLE'S SERVICE experllflced roofing, Including
hot tar application, corpentor, ollctrlclon, muon. Call
304 -876 -2088 or 8715 41580.

1---------Water Wallo. Commercial

and DomNtlc. TNt hoiH.
1978 MG Midget Special. Pump• 88111 and 8 111'VIce.
815
44,000 mlleo. See at 2433 1-3
_._3_8_0 _2 _
· _ _ __
_ 0_4_._8 _
Uncoln. 304-8715 -8819.
GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water ,.movlf,
72 Trucka for Sale
furniture cleaning, frH 8111·
mateo. 304-8715 -22915.
1979 Fod Courier Pickup, 4
opeed. f215915. John'• Auto Cullom built coblneto,
Soloo, Bulovillo Rd .. Golllpo- counter top. counter•. relio, 448-4 782. Open tMI pelro olltyPOI. Plumbing
dark .
electrical. 304 -8715-15318 .

1----------

1970 GMC truck 18ft. box,
llC. cond.. '4,000. Coli
after 15. 448-3438.
1974 Ford PU, F-100,
&amp;5.000 miiH, II cyl., auto ..
•1.8150. Batz Hondo Soleo.
448-2240.
New truck londero &amp; doora.
Chevy fendero f84.915 .
Chevy door1 '17&amp; . Ford
fendera f75 . Coll814 -2158 1280.
1971 Chevy PU II cyl .. 4
apd .. •400. Call 814-379 21504.

82

reo. nice. Call 814-2511·
8494.
'78 Ford F1150 Super Cob,
otenderd trona .. 300 angina,
•eoo.oo. 304-875-7421 .

73

Vena 8t 4 W.O.

1981 Chevy PU, PS, PB, AT,
40,000 mlleo, oport wheel,
•&amp;.800. Betz Hondo Soles,
448-2240.
1980 Bronco, 4 -wheol
302 motor crulae,

AM-FM radio, tilt otnrlng
whnl, good g11 mileage,
good condltlon,one owner.
tl5600. coll814-992-7217.
72 Ford Von, fair condition,
new motor, new blittery,
noo. colll514-742 -2838.

74

WEDDINIS ~lNG TO I&lt;NOW
MIDf·TO·BE A LITTLE

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Plno
GoHipollo, Ohio
Phon• 614-448 -3818 or
1114-448-4477
JIM'S PLUMBING. HEATING . Rt. 1, Box 31515, Galli·
polio. Cell 814-387-01578.

83

Evening television l i s t i n g s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

E11cavating

FRIDAY
8:00 •

crJ Nowi/Sporti/Wuther
(J) Dr. Who
()]) 3-2·1, Contlot
Bottlllllr Geiaotlco
6:30
&lt;IJ crl NBC Nowa
&lt;Il MOVIE: 'Ooffy Ouok'o
Movie: Fentlltio llllnd'
(]) Rifleman
C!J SportoCinllr
Cll Carol Burnlll
(f) II) (1]1 ABC NIWI
• ClliiD CBS Nawo
Cl) Buslne11 Report
[D Working Women
7:00 · • &lt;Il PM Magazine
&lt;Il All11 Smith and Joneo
C!l SportoCintor 'Olympic
Edition.'
(() Hogen'• Heroee
()) Entertlinment Tonight
crl Charlie'a Angola
D (f) WhNI of Fortune
([) ()]) MocNoii/Lohrer
Newahour
®NIWI
Ill (1]1 Poople'• Court
till Jeffereons
7:30 • &lt;Il Tlo Too Oough
C!J Coli. Bo0 kotblll Roport
Cll Sanford and Son
Cll Ill 1Di XIV Wlntor
Olympic Gam•• Today'a
program
featurea
Ice
hockey, women's slalom.
4-man bobsled end the
biathlon. (3 hr1., 30 min.)
D '(J) Family Foud
liD WhHI of Fortune
One Day at • Tlmo
8:00 •&lt;Ilm LIGman Jack and
David are iuspectld of aidin'b end abet1ing 1 prisoner
when 1 men hldll In their
car trunk during 1 jill
braak. (80 mlnJ
([) MOVIE: 'In opendonco
Ooy'
,
·
CD MOVIE: 'Man on tho
Roor
.·
([) Timmy and Llaale
(J) llohlitd the 8-8111: A
· ' -tliOirlt'lllllartll' liNt · - (]) NCAA l11kllblll: L8U .
ttAioboml
(])liD DukH of Hazzard
Boll Hogg'o nophow trial
to ruin Uncia Jt11a. (110
mln.l ,
(f) ()]) Wolhlngton WHkl
Review Poul Dukall join ad
by top Wllhlngton iournalilll
analyzing
the

e
e

B4

Electrical
. 8t Refrigeration

Aerlel

SEWING Machine repolro,
oorvico. Authorized Singer
Salol &amp; Sorvicl Sharpen
Scluon. Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 614-1182-2284.

· 85

General Hauling

([) Soulon '84

()]) lnaide Story 'Good Copy... Bad Medicine?' Tonight's program looks at
medical
breakhow
throughs and stories of ma·
jor medical problema in the
U.S. are reported .

9:30 Cl) Enterprln 'Fired.' Tonight's program profiles a
despondent fired executive
who must pull himself to·
gather and find another
~(1l)

1

Need oomethlng hauled
ewoy or oomething moved?
We'll do lt. Coil 448-31159
botWIIfl 9 lnd 15.
JIM&amp;' WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim Lanier, 304-8715·
7397.
!.
Dump truck for hire, wHI
heul coal ' or limeotone.
Pllone 304-8715-3180.

e

Upholatery

. ---~ TRI ITA'I'E ~
UPHOLITERY '8HOP
1183 '8oc. Ave., O.Hipolla.
114·4411-7833 or814·4411833.
.•

· wttk'l'"news.
•

I::IO

·ll)

" ·-

MOVIE: 'Piranha'

rw:r'

10:00 U &lt;Il crl Now Show
&lt;IJ MOVIE: 'Tho Amotou(
&lt;Il MOVIE: 'Night Shift'
(I) TBS Evonlng NIWI
II ClliiD Falcon C,.ll
([) Auotln City Llmltl 'Tt o
Whltii/Ttli NiW Gtats Re·
vival .' The WhitiS and The
New Grass Revival present
their spacia l brand of mu·
sic in this specil l perform·

enco. (60 min.)
()]) NIWIWitch
g) INN Newa

CID : Metterpiece

Theetre
'The Irish A.M.' Sally Knox
arrives at the Hol'le Fair on
the arm of Bernerd Shute
end Flurry 11111 Bernard
his dangerous mare Juno.

1

~.

(80 min.) [Cloud Cap·_
tlonad]

·11:00 I

Lova Amerloen Sqle

&lt;Il' Cll • (f) liD • (1]1
Now•
&gt;--- ~
_
Another Life
All In the Family
Nowi/Sporti/WNth'or
(f) Not' tho Nine D'Ciook

I

N~l

'

.

llnMHIIIIhow
t 1:30
IIl crJ Tonight Show
liNt of Qrouoho
lportiConter
·
(J) Cltllno
(() · - iDI XIV Wlntar ..
Olympic Qei'IIN Tonight'•

l

feeturet

from Sarajevo, Yugoslavia .
C) Cll MOVIE: 'Diary of a
THnage Hitchhiker'
(f)
MOVIE:
To
Bo
Announced

&lt;IJ

C!J E8PN'I SportiLOOk
12:00 &lt;Il Bum• a. Allan
Cll Night Trocki
Cll Bonny Hili Show
® MOVIE: 'Race With tho
Devil'

Ill (1]1 Nlghtllno
fJJ Gunamoke

12:16 (!) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City, NJ Top Rank
Boxing presents a 12·
round Middleweight bout
featuring Mike Tinley vs .
Doug DeWitt for the ESPN
Cha~ionship .

12:30 D

C2.J crl Frldey Night

Videot
(I) For Love of a Hungry

Child

(f) Nlghtllne
Cl) Cl2l Mualo Magazine

high·

llghll of tho day' I actlvltl11
at the Wlntor Olympici ·

O Cil Hoo Haw
Cl) Or. Who Movie
(llll This is Your Life
(fi) All Creatures Great and

(I) The Monroes
CJ) SportsCentlr 'Olympic
Edition.'
Cil World Championship
Wrestling
(!) God Has the Answer
()) Undersea World of
Jacqull Cousteau
()])
Greet
Chefs/ San
Frenciaco
fJ) Big Time Wrestling

liD All In the Family

(fi) Fall • RIM of R. Perrin
g) Twilight Zona
11 :46 (]) Devld Bowl• Serious
Moonlight This SAO special was taped at the Pacific National Exhibition
Coliseum in Vancouver ,
British Columb ia.
&lt;Il SCTV #7

CI) Star Search

MOVIE: 'Tho Oey the
Eonh Stood Still'

Small
El) How the West Was

Won
7:30 II &lt;Il Courage
(2) Album Flash

® At The Movies
8 :00 0 (2) (L) Oiffrent Strokes

Mr. Drummond catches up
with Maggie and they decide to get married while
Arnold meets his new little
brother.

8:30 D &lt;Il CD NBC Now1
(]) ~rtaCenter
(1) 11) (1]1 NIWS
D ([! Concern

&lt;Il MOVIE; 'Star Trek II;

® CBS News

()]) Sneak Previews Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons take a look at
what"s happening at the
movies.
7 :00 II (]) Dance Fever
(]) Alias Smith and Jones
(JJ NCAA Boakotboll: Ohio
State at Iowa
Cll Ill (1]1 JIIV Winter
Olympic Games Tonight's
program features women 's
free program speed skat·
ing . ski jumping. man·s
10,000 meter speed skat·
ing, four-men bobsled and
cross-country skiing . (4
hrs.)

The Wrath of Khan '
(]) MOVIE: 'From Here to
Eternity'
(]) MOVIE: 'Operation
Petticoat'
(I) MOVIE: 'Behold a Pale
Horse'
0 (]J ® Whiz Kids
(}]) Austin City Limits "The
Whites/The New Grass Ae ·
vival .' The Wh ites and The
New Grass Reviva l present
their special brand of mu·
sic in th is spec ial perform·
ance. (60 min.)
fJ) MOVIE: 'Lilliea of The

Field'
8:30 0 &lt;Il crl Silver Spoons

12:45 &lt;Il 8edroom1 This HBO Comedy Playhouse specia l
features four stories about
love, sex and marriage.

ftlJIJNlffift

~TIIATSCIWIIILEOWORDGAME

~ ~ .!NU/.!)~•
Unactembtl thne four
one litter IO eiCh IqUiri, IO
lour ordlnlt')' words.

&lt;IJ MOVIE: 'The Exoroior
1:00 &lt;Il l Morrlld Joan

(() Entertainment Tonight
Ill (1]1 News
g) Thloko of tho Night

byHenr\Amoldond8obloo

crJ Newa/Sign Off
2:30 &lt;Il Lifo of Alloy
2:4&amp; &lt;Il
MOVIE:
'Henovor
&amp;treor
C!l SportoCentor
3:00 (]) 700 Club
(JJ Coli. Bukotblll Roport
liD CNN Haadllno.Now•
3:30 &lt;Il MOVIE: 'Th,.ahold'
(JJ ESPN'o HorM Roolng
WHkly '
.
£ ,1\1\ (JJ E8PN'1 8-r11WNk
~;;b (J) M'OIIIEf W'Iili!IIDqwli .
tho Wind'
&lt;Il Roaa logley
C!J 2nd Annual .crookor
. Jook Old Tlmo(o BoNblll
CIIIIIO from Wllhlngion,

I I

(lJ

IFLUFEMt
I (J )
Yuterdoy'al Jumllles: CLOAK
·

star

weather

5 Disney pooch
10 Arab seaport

wear
4 Gemllln

11 Spice mixture
conjunction
13 Fat
5 Became
It Arouse
inedible
15 Scope
6 Cried,
16 Froth.- drink
as a crow
Yesterday's Answer
17 Night.
7 M.D.'sorg .
preceding
8 Just aboul
23 All-time
30 Russian
18 Defealed
survives
N.F.L.
republic
20 Theological
9 DiscouraPe
scorer
31 Grandilosetting ! abbr. I 12 Blood
24 Optimistic
quize ..
21 Property
condition
25 Prod
36 Small
transfer
16 Resting
27 Fancy d1ve
violin
22 Kidney
19 Nota 29 "-'sa Small
(prefix)
22 Vex
Hotel "
37 United
23 Trade name ,.....,.,,....,.....,.,..%5 Oct. 12 ship
2&amp; Get no prize
27 -dust
28 Rowan tree
2911kes
32 New i pref. l
33 Betake
oneseU
34 Spoil
35 Obscure
37 Greek

DAILY .CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how 1o work it :

WHAT '(OU M15HT
51!E IF '(OU IIU!FUeE
HI!~ III:EQUI!ST 1'011:
A MINi&lt; COAT.

__

,

oc

2/18/84

by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
%Robin I " Jungle Boy" 3 Warm-

moWltain

r

DARIFA

SATURDAY

tiHM,trf

chain
38 Raiment
39 Tidy
40 Chemical
compound
41 To be !Fr.)
DOWN
I Weight
watcher's
lunch

1:30 &lt;Il Love That Sob
(f) Star Boorch
liD MOVIE: 'laoerblut'
Ill (1]1 CNN Heodilnl Nowa
1:45 &lt;Il MOVIEi 'Lovooick'
2:00 D&lt;Il'Nowl
(]) leohelor Father

10:30 &lt;Il 81ondle

progrem

ltrHt Week

Loulo Auklyaor analyze•

r

(R) [Cloud Captlonodl

lnternltlonel Edition
Journalist Ford Rowan
holts this look at important
trends and news events as
they are reported by for·
~n journalists.

e

JONES BOYS WATER SER·
VICE. Call 814-387-7471 •
or 61 4 -387-0159' .

87

(]) Top Rink Boxing from
Atlentlc City, NJ_Top Rank
Boxing presents a 12·
round Middleweight bout
featuring Mike Tinley VI.
Doug DeWitt for the ESPN
Championship.
C) ClliiD Dallal

Cll Andy Griffith

J.A.R . Conotructlon Co.
Water Llnu, Footon,
Drain a. All klndo of Ditching.
Rutland, Oh . 814, 742 2803.

guerenteed .

1]) 700 Club

(]) New TrHaUre Hunt
(JJ ESPN'1 Sportolook

owner.

work

Oown

tho Wind'

mente, footera, drivewaye,

truck rental . 814-4464088.

&lt;Il (f) . . ClliiD .. (1]1

&lt;IJ MOVIE: Whlotlo

Nptic tonko, londacaplng.
Call anytime 814 -448 4537, Jomoo L. Dovloon, Jr.

• ':"eekty ~·­

Senator's daughter it kidnapped by terrorists . the
Master joins forces with an
old enemy to storm the abductors' fortre11 . (60 min.)

News

Good-1 E•covotlng, boN·

·eos with

vottment menars.
9:00 D &lt;Il crl Moator When a

EVENING

Cit 2115 hoo, dozera, crono,
loodera, dump truck. Call
814-448 - 1142 betweon
7 :00AM &amp; 5:00PM.

1983 Hondo V615 Magno,
2,500, like now. Call 448 0848 after _6.

th i

v•ew of econom•c and m -

2/17/84

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna, ponds, dltch11.
bllamltflto, llc. Call 814448-4907. Corter • Evtno
Tronoportotlon.

Pooquelo Electric Co. all
.pheaos of olectrlc work, all

•

CARE OF.

BETTER.

Motorcycle•

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

AH. I 5Ef lAY 5fCRETARY
YES, SIR.
HAS ARRANGED FOR A CAR
I'VIKY·
lO TAKE ,liE lO MY HOTEL. THING HAS
6EEN TAKEN

WE'lL eE AeLE lO SPENO A
COUPLE ~ ~ eEFORf THE

1978 Ford F-160 auto ..

3

'

ZAKK'S THROAT

FRIEND! NOW
LISTEN T'ME . , .

houoo collo. Call 304-15782398 or 814 -448-24154.

1979 Hondo CBX -8 cyl ..
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
ro11onobly priced, mint
Waohoro, dryoro. refrigaracond. Call 448-0848 altar
tora, rongoo. Skegg1 Ap15.
plioncoa, Upper River Rd.
bolide Stone Croot Motel. 1----------....L----------~ 1981 Pontiac Phoilnl• W. 1983 Hondo Shadow 1500
614-448-7398.
V-8. 4 dr. hotchbock, AC. ex. cond .. very low mll11,
atereo radio, tlntad , gl111, t1,9150. Call 814' 388 Nice selection of Wllhora &amp;
cruloe. tilt wheel, wire wheel 9832.
dryero. t89.95 &amp; up, guacovers. Call 448-42015.
ranteed. Hupp'a Applionce
1 1178 Kowoaakl 400 motor-'
&amp; Gluowore, Corner of Rt.
1979 ' Lincoln Continental cycle. Exc. cond .. low mlleo,
141 &amp; Rt. 7. Coll446-8033.
Mark V, 31.000 mi.; ••c. · good price. Call 304-8715:~~
::i~oo. CoH after 15, 34111 ovenlnga only.
21 in. froetle11 refriger1tor,
Whirlpool alec. stove, Curtla
M1thi1 console tolevlolon, 2
18'78 VW Doohlr •e915. 715
Boata and
dlnotts, furniture. Coli 448good cond., outo. Coli 814· Motora for Sale
7533.
388· 99015 or 814-3888818.
S.ofo good cond. Call 614' '
ns: s1U.
·
Ull2----ehovy Cltlitloii -·111.11 fl. flborglon boat, 40
32.000 mllea, II cyt., iUtnd· HI' . Johnson tuper quiet
8 pc. pit group, choir, rocker,
ord, P8. Pl. Cell 4411·1 B73 engine . &amp;. treller. All lor
Iampo. end tebl11, 8 dr.
deyo, 4411-7272
1 ,888. C.111 441·4337.
dreiMr, coffee table. Coli
448-3381 . .
111n T.'blrd, 87,000 mlleo. 111l 111ft., Glo11ron boet,
•-en,
end troller with 1878
AT, PI, PI ,' AC , wryc..
Uaod furniture, lncludeo op•2.800. IIetz Honda lelee, · 90HPMerourymotor,oltleo,
pllonceo arid othlf mloc.
448-2240.
- · life iecltate ln!)luded,
lllle new, •4,1100. Coll814furniture . 304-8715-151508
m~re:oopm : -- f881 DeUIIOirZBqZX tux- . 241-1222 or 11 4 · 111coupe; turtoo ahergecl, eut. 4.41.
·
Wringer wuhef:, twin ltlbo;
trona, looded, very low,
mMN. Call 448-0848 lftor 11 HP Johnaon bo!t motor
heotinlotove, d'Hit, 30415.
lor ule. Cal 448-0228. .
4158-1 97.

,

SOMEBOO'I' SHO&gt;.'ED
A sPEAR DOWN

MAYBE WE'RE NOT
OUT OF IT VET. MY

RON ' S Televlolon Stii'Vice.
Specializing In Zenith ltfld

'118 Camero otock cor. 327
angina with 4 opHd. 3048715-18151 .

1981 Pontiac Gran Prix,
automatic, loadod. 27,000
m lie I . I u · con d · •
17,500.00. Call 304-8715_15_e_&amp;_8_•_"_•_r_&amp;;,.pm_._ _ _ _

Home
Improvement•

PLASTERING • New and

owner.

U,296. John'a Auto Sol••·
Buloville Rd. Coll448-4782
Golllpolla. Open till dark.

co-.

Nice one end two bedroom
epto.. unfumlohld, phone
304-8715-2218, 8 tHIS.

t-/0. 91Jt ,

THAT PLANe I!&gt;

Autos for Sale

1981 Chevy Chevetto auto,
olr. AM radio , t3,1915 .
1978Chevy Chovette 4
opd .. U ,095. 1978 Dodgo
Aopen II cyl .. auto, olr. low

drive,

Tick Coon hound. 304-8766434.

year

Autos for Sale

eve. .

only. Dep. req . V. tank fuel
oil tree. Coll814-266-1838
weekdeya before 2PM.

71

tranaml11ion, 8-track. ltl·

out 8ulaville Rd. Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri .• 9am

.

16ft. atock troller, good
cond.. •1.1 00 .00 . 304 -882 -2532 or 882·2938 .
1981 Plymouth Horizon.
power lteerlng, powor
brokea, AM -FM. air, excel lont condition, 304-773 63
Livestock
91509 after 15 p.m.

Pets for Sale

Stud Service. Call614 -4467796.

Farm Equipment

Beat doolo on tho Beat
Troctora. Sidera Equipment
Co. Henderson, WV. 304676-7421 .

maaonry suppliea. 4". 8 ".

56

k

Troy-Bill tillora. Check our
opeclol price before you buy
any tlllera. Swioher lmple·
ment Co. St. Rt.7 N, Gollipollo,OH . Coli 814 -448 04715.

33. New Haven. Complete

cilitiaa. English Cocker Spaniel puppiu. Call 614-3889790.

suitee.

1 bedroom Apt. S196. mo.

Special

'67 Chevrolet 2 ton truck,
304-876-2970 after 6.

size 28. 304-676-1484.

PLASTIC CULVERT PIPES .
8 in. thru 18 ln . State
approved, guaranteed. RON
EVANS. Jockoon, Oh . 614286-5930.

36x36 block garage and lot.
1936 and 1936 Ford truck.
Sofa, chair. rocker, ottoCall between 1:00 and
man, 3 tabloo. (extra heavy 6:00PM . Will accept any
by Frontier), $686. Sofa, reuonoblo offer. Call 446 chair and lovoaoet, $276. • 0181 .
Sofoo and chai11 priced from - - - - - - - - - f286. to $896. Tableo. $46 4 show cases nice, 4
end up to $126. Hido-a- l1dders, tools. lots other
boda, '440. and up to itomo. Call614-266- 1661 .
•626 .. Recliner~. $176. to
f376 .. Lampo from $28. to Fresh manure for garden,
$76.6 pc. dinette• from
$20.00 pickup load. 446 •99., to 435. 7 _pc. t189 8263.
and up. Wood table with olx
choi11 $426 to $745. D11k 16 ft . tandem equipment
$110 up to $226. Hutches. trailer. fl,OOO . Gravely
f660 . and up, maple or pine backhoe $1,200. Coli 614finioh . Bunk bod complete 256-1427.
with mattrooaoo, t250. end
up to $396. Baby boda. Uood R-40 Ditch Witch
$110 . Mattro11ea or box trencher. Coli 1-614 -694opringo, full or twin, $68 .. 7842 or 614 -694 -6006 .
firm, $68. and f78 . Queen
1011, $196 . 4 dr. chests. Firewood pickup or deli$42. 6 dr. choota. $64. Bod vered. Call after 6:30. Coli
fromao, t20.ond t26 .. 10 614-266-6689.
gun · Gun cabinets. $360.
Sthil chain aaw $275, rotoGas or electric rangea $376.
8aby mattreooea, 126 &amp; tlller $100, omall grinder
$40, 6 pc. dinette oot $60.
$36, bod frames 120, $26,
&amp; $30, king frame $60.
Call 614-388-8409 after
4PM .
Good selection of bedroom

Ave ., Gallipolis. 614-4481699. Spin wuhera. gao &amp;

Riverside Apto. Middleport.

Men and women 's white
uniforms, dre11 troueers.

Briarpatch Konnels Profeasionel All -breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boerdlng fl·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

cedar chests.
rocker~ . metal cabinete.
swivel rockers.
U11d Furniture ·- bookcase,
rangee. chairs, dryers, re·
frigeratore and TV' a. 3 miles

69 For Sale or Trade

7 :00pm Fri., Sot., Sun.

RON EVANS. Jackaon, Oh .
614-286-6930.

3169.

TV &amp; Appliance•. 627 Third

614-992-7787.

CISTERNS Ap·

$120. maple dinette chairs

ing opportunity. Call 4467250 or 446 -1134.
including utilities . Equal
Housing Opportunity. Contact Village Manor Apts .

1 :00-

Mountain State Block, Rt.

near Foodland and Spring

Utilitioa paid. Adults, 920
4th. Avo., Gallipolio. Call
446-4416 otter 7 PM.

East Revenswood.

more 5% extre dltcount.
. 0 . Coll614-246-6121 .
Commercial eluminum dou - - - - - - - - - - ble entrence door' s com - LUMBER - Rough cut. oak.

Rengel hood's various sizes
and colors e25 .
Penn ' s Warehou11 . 614 ·

Pets for Sale

7 wk. old fomola·Beogle pup.
Call 614-258-8865 .

ARMY SURPLUS-DENIM CARHART. Rental ourplua
clothing. Sam Somerville'•·

Building meteriale
block. brick, sewer pipee,
windows, lintela, etc .
Claude Wintera. Rio Orende.

with $200 dopooit located

Furnished efficiency. $175.

1- - - - - - - - - -

55 Building Supplies

For Lease

N7110P f

Pleaunt.

42 in. or 36 in. marble vanity

49

66

ment 304-&amp;715-4476 Point

top'• (B) grad01 $39.96.
Vinyl coated wall paper
double roll•1 .99 .
Eloc. buoboord hooto11 220
volt 14-2900)16-3300)16 4000)18-4960) 6 pc. or

plato f699 .96 .
5 pc. acrylic tub wall kitl
with 1holv01 '49.96 .

CAPTAIN EASY

For Sole or Trede -1883
Alrotreom Motor Home ,
fully equipped, like new,
tl52,000. Call 448-3423.
Si!l

vertising apecialtiee.
matchea.signs,foreppoint·

large private lot in Cente·

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Largo lou. Cell
614-992 -7479.

..

~-~========:;~&lt;&gt;~·=~:·:·:~::··:""::":·:··:·:·:·=~

3334 . ' S union mode Ia- ~
SUSAN
baled political Imprinted ad -

neling goodooloction $6 .99 .

nary. Call 446 -4063 .

,., &amp;

signa.

446 -9283.

PLASTIC

dryer hookup, $175 plus

metchee.

Sam Somerville lbeforo
9am) laftor gpmJ 304-876 -

Auto Parte
&amp; Acceeeorlea

79 Motora Homea
8t Campara

POLITICAL IMPRINTED unIon labeled odvertlolng opocialties.

Boatl and
Motora for Sala

Billy LH'I n ..a and llttlry
Soleo. New and u~ tlreo.
also, tl,. repelro. 1803 Jeffltrlon Ave. Point Ple111nt .
304-8715-114015. Now open
24 hro. • day, mochonlc on
duty.

26 ln. Ouasal colored floor

model T.V.. •1110.; 19 ln ..
Admiral color table modal
with otond, •100.; wood

Firewood delivered .

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Co"ec1 Croft • lkl lu·
preme, family akl bOlito.
New • ueed, Porkenburg,
WV 304-422·1433 or 304422-2387.

mente, water heater. atepa,
windows, doore, faucete.

4x8 wood or m11onlte pa -

other recliners $80, meple

One or 2 bdr. fum . or

Portially fumlahod 3 bdr .. 2
both, on llrge privlle lot. 4
mi. from Gelflpolla. Recently
remodeled. Dep. &amp; rlf.
,.quired. Call 4411-2876 after II -kdoya.

Exter1or prehung steel
door's embossed 6 or 8

month for two bedroom,

APARTMENTS, mobile
nished

gocy oak end walnut and
birch $39 .96 (B) grodOI
120.00.

8199, antron recliners 899,

614-266 -1529.

: Nice 2 bdr. home, fireplace ,
. new kitchen, city school
·district. Call Jim Cochran at
the Wiseman Agency, 446-

Selvage.
Interior prehung door's le·

antron

f193

space. Now opt. on ground utilitio1. Call 1-304-273floor . Equipt. kitchen. Car- _9_74_6_._ _ _ _ _ _ __

Mostly furnished, smaller
house. 3 bdr ., 2 baths, near

An

per

end

Nice 2 BR. carpeted opt. in
Kanauga with washer &amp;.

1

Surplus

bedroom

fum .. dop. roq .. edulto only.
call446-1519.

Country living, aeven minutes from town. Garden

Builders

one and two bedrooma. rent
starting It $167 for one

Furnished 2 rooms &amp;. bath,
upstairs, clean, no pet1, util.

3 bedroom•. stove, refrig.,

wuhor &amp; dryer. Kygor Creole
Diatrict, $200 per month,
UOO dopoalt. Call 4460486 after 5:00.

bdr .. $250 plus deposit. Call
614-266-1623 .

46 Space for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

Utilities paid. Shere bath.
607 2nd, Gollipolia. Call
446 -4416 after 7 PM .

mately 400ft. road frontage.
2. 8mi. N. Point
Plaaaant. Will accept partial
trade. $10.000.00. 304676-3717.
Route

House for rent on Rt . 218, 3

Call 614 -446 -0766 .

Furnished efficiency. 8145.

Two acre level lot approxi-

room , f226 plus deposit.
Call 446 -4491 or 446 3763 .

Sl~ng

Merchandise

Call 614-388 -8801.

port. storage room. 2 bed-

Furnished Rooms

Crob Crook Rood, unfurnished, 2 bedroom trailer.
reference and deposit re-

1 .8 acre, ex. Building or
mobile home site, with 360
ft . road frontage, located on
old 160 near Porter, ell

41

r-----------~--~~

Mobile home 1uppll11: nontoxic antlfreeze-•15.150 per
gallon. Water h..tlng ale-

675 -6963.

prompt delivery. 614 -2666246 .

28

715

A-1 condition. cell 814 949 -2994.

in

34

by Larry Wright

and coal stove, e75 .. all In

1973 Shultz mobile home, 2
bedroom . partially fur nished . S4,000.00 coll304882 -2247 or 882 -2018 of tar 4:00.

33

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

64 Miac. Marchandiae

microwave. repair , warranty

friday, F.bNary 171 1984

friday, febNGry 17, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MI_NER CABANA . HECTIC

AniWef: Thoae femoua sculpturea were sure

aomllhlng to thla- "MAR8LE" AT

Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply sta nds for an othel\ In thi s sa mple A iS
used for the three L 's, X for the two O's. etc Single letters,
apostrophes. the leneth and formation of thr words are all
· hints. Enh day the code-ll:'tters att dlffl'tent.
•

CRYPTOQUOTES

,

VREG
' XU

TRLG

VFG

XU

DXX L,

VFG
UXL

TFQSPLGY
ULXN

VFGN·

KQSS EYXKSGPMG RLQCG . - VRSNI P
: Yellerday'aCryptoquote: I BEUEVE THAT WHAT A WOMAN: .
RESENTS IS-NOT SO MUCH GIVING HERSELF I N PIECES
. ASGIVINGHERSELFPURPOSELESSLY -ANNE MORROW
' UNDBERGH

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Page

12

The Daily Sentinel

Postal Service turns -profit
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Postal Service made money for the
second straight year In 1983, the first
year It did not get Its usual subsidy
from Congress, Postmaster Gen·
era! WWlam F. Bolger says In the
agency's annual report.
Bolger told the Postal.Servlce's
Board of Governors that the agency
"has firmly established Its financial
credentials as an efficient public
agency that Is making significant
contributions to our national life and

economy.''

mayor Dana Rinehart, Toledo mayor Donna Owens,
Celeste, Cincinnati mayor Am Bortz. and Canton
mayor Sam Purses. ( AP Laserphoto).

would cause the loss of$1.7mUllon to
the department thereby taking
funds that the department needs for
policing present well operations,
Lucas said.
There are now 48,00l wells In Ohio
producting 160,00l barrels of brine
each day and only 12 percent Is
disposed of properly, Lucas reports.
At the hearing It was suggested
that possibly haulers of brine could
be licensed and bonded and be
required to maintain a log as to
where brine Is picked up and Its

disposition, Lucas stated. Trucks of
haulers would carry the company
names and permit numbers on the
sides of the vehicles.
Lucas reports that there was also
a discussion on use of a process
which would remove harmful

"The CETA Strike Force has
found records In offices throughout
state government, and we have
reason to believe Important records
can still be found," he said.
Celeste asked employees who
know where the records In question
might be to notify the Bureau of
Employment Services, which Is
conducting the search.
The reverse side of the letter
contained specific Information.
It said records "may be located
anywhere In state government
offices and property, Including
storage rooms, offices, file cabinets,
old desks, computer tapr libraries.
Allnost all state agencl£&gt; received
CE'TA funds dljl'lng thes ~years and

chemicals
brine and
sale of thefrom
endthe
product
for the
Ice
removal and water softener salt.
A report "'as given stating that In
1!1!3, there were 22,00) fish and
animal kills In Ohio as a result of
Improperly disposed of salt brine,
Lucas concluded.

three-fifths of a mill levy.

PIZZA SHACK

·

VAN JOHNSON
LONE WOLFE BAND
ON THE 19th

126 Main St.

Pomeroy

992-6674

***************
2 RACKS OF
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

1 LOT OF

MIN'S

SPORT SHIRTS

1 LOT OF
MEN'S

SUITES

V2 PRICE

SPORT
COATS

VALUES TO s26.00

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

LEVI CORDUROY

REG., SHORT. LONG
&amp;EXRA LONG

SALE PRICE

PANTS

VALUES TO '85

SIZES 28 TO 38
VALUES TO S28.00

$5QOO

f um· r~l ~rr~n,~ttnic-nt .

"r v" n

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

51 UNITS

SALE PRICE

1 RACK OF

PANTS

MEN'S
VESTS

VALUES TO s22.00
SALE PRICE

1 LOT OF COLORED
LEVI'S &amp;FASHION

SALE PRICE

JEANS

$700

$12°

COATS &amp;
JACKETS

REGULAR 50 TO 172.50
1

1f2

1

PRICE

SALE PRICE
TO 186.

local owner, 351 cu. in. V-8, air cond. "A Very, Very Clean Car."

SIZES

Dealhs ... ........ ...... ... ..... A·5
EdiiAlrlals .. ................... A·2
Sports ...................... .. C.l·8

tnfintl
'

10 Sections, 70 P1ge1 36 Centa
A Multimed!• Inc . Newspaper

situation Is resolved ...but, that's asking a lot ."
Riffe said -In addition to the staff not being paidthe employees were told Friday that If they choose to
maintain family medical Insurance coverage _they
must pay their share of the premium, In person, Into
the county auditor's office.
"The premium Is normally taken from their
·paychecks," Riffe said, "but there are no checks to ·
take-It out of."
"We have a tremendously dedicated staff ...but, the
continuing controversy Is having an Impact on
morale," Riffe added. "I can't. force them to work
without pay .. .and, If they do It's bound to affect their
work."
(Continued on Page A·3)

Mrs. Boster, who defeated locum·
bent Rep. Claire "Buzz" Ball Jr. of
Athens In 1982, Is sponsor of two
major bllls In the legislature. One
bUI requires the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio to grant
compensations to consumers who
have been overcharged by utilities,
while the second bill provides pay
equity In Ohio.
She Is a member of the following
House comrnlttees - agricultural
and natural resources; clvU and
commercial law; education; and
judiciary and crlmlnal .tustkle: She
Is also a member C1 the colleges and
universities subcommittee.
Mrs. Boster has practiced law In

-

~

Represmtat!ve

. \. . Jolym BoMer

G~\Jil: 1978an~

Is CUI'IBitly
In partnership with attorneys Dou·
glas M. Cowles and Brent A.
Saunders.

38 TO 48

MEN'S DENIM

SHIRTS

REGULAR S22.95

SALE PRICE

1 RACK OF
LADIES' KNIT

LADIES
DRESSES

TOPS &amp;
BLOUSES
1

VALUES TO S64.00
SALE PRICE

LONG SLEEVE

. LADIES

BLOUSES
SWEATERS
Q CARDIGAN &amp; PULLOVER

VALUES TO 22

SALE PRICE

ssoo

lADIES'LEVI DENIM

SHIRTS &amp;
SLACKS
V2 PRICE

BY JANTZEN
. AND WHITE STAG

JEANS

. MISSY &amp;JUNIORS
VALUES TO 132.00

SALE PRICE

.$22 8 ~ --.

LADIES'

VESTS &amp;
SLACKS
R£0UCED

CLEVELAND (APl - Solutions
to environmental Issues such as acid
rain shOuld not be sought at the

LADIES'

SUITS

1 LOT OF

Congressional panel hears
views on acid rain control

1 RACK

LADIES'

40 Yo ¥2 PRICE . ¥2 PRICE

1 RACK OF LEVI
BEN DOVER

·KNITS

40%.\IO.IIU\IIIu-4.. 0o/o

BAHR .CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

':"'f

AGJUN~.IT .

ACID
BILl.- U.S. Rep. TJIOmi!S A.
LulleiJ of Cine~, voleea his
opii!JIItlon to H.R. 3400, lhe
controv~al acid rain cleiUIUP
biD, In opening ,statem~ belore a HOlMe · Environmental
!luboomml&amp;tee-fteld -hearing In
Cleveland Prlday. ( AP

if
' _·f i
·-· ~
I
.

'

-

~'·

I.

·'

I ,. ~rpbclto ),
·'i

' I

'

Along the IUver ........... B-1·8
Bu81ne88 ....•..........•...•. •. D-3
ClassHleds ................. .D-3-7

SI695

1 RACK OF

PANTS &amp;
.BLAZERS

Ohilfweather:
rain spreads
across state
-Page A-3--

16 UNITS

S2Q

LADIES' LEVI
. BENDOVER

Inside:

COATS
V2 PRICE

0

LADIES

LUUULU

•

r.tEN'S TOP &amp;
ALL WEATHER

CORDUROY,
KNIT OR WOOL
VALUES TO s20.00

$SOO PAIR

There wUI be a dance at Rutland
Civic Center this evening from 8
p.m. toll p.m.
Admission Is $3 a couple.and $2 a ·
sqle. Music wUI be provkl!!d by
ttomlc Soonds.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Rep. Jolynn
Boster wUI seek a second term In the
Ohio House In this year's election.
Mrs. Boster, o.Galllpolls, said
Saturday that she has provided
"effective and sound" representa·
tion for the 94th legislative district,
consisting of GaiDa, Meigs and
Athens counties.
She wUI file her petition for
candidacy by Thursday In Athens,
the count;y with the largest popula·
tlon In hE1' diStrict.
, "I 1;\ayeworke!l with my constltu·
~ts a'nd wlih city, county and state
offices and have had their best
Interests In mind when casting my
vote In the House," she said.

SlQ ro S3Q

1983 BUICK REGAL 2 DOOR

One owner, 23000 miles, cruise, tilt wheel, AM/FM stereo, landau
top. "like New".

,

Rep. Boster seeks
2nd legislative term

SALE PRICED

$}488

1 LOT OF MEN'S

Dance set tonight

•

A judge's ruling that the county must provide
"sufficient " funding to the school has been appealed
by the commissioners to the Fourth District Court of
Appeals. Late Friday afternoon, 169 board attorney
William Conley tued a motion with the appeals court
asking that the case be expedited.
"We're down to almost nothing, " Superintendent
"·ohn Rltfe said Friday afternoon. "In fact, we are
operating on a negative balance."
"There's no money ...no pay day," Riffe said. "I'm
going to try to keep the doors open ... l've asked our
employees to keep working."
The 169 board will not beabletodrawonltsfirst half

- Titr IJ'•• ·l'" "'j,.. _.._.,.,, /,m,:·
Pfll. ftHOH or HHnt

SALE PRICE

•

tax collection untU the tax books close on February 29.
At that time, slightly more than $40,0ll will be
available to the school and Its operations.
A majority of those funds however wUI be needed to
make good on Fr.day's salary obUgation, to repay
$10,00) borrowed from the county earlier this month
to meet the ~eb. 3 payroll, and to meet current and
anticipated expenses.
.
"Our tax funds wUI be collected and depleted In
March," Rltfe said, adding that an anticipated
coUectlon of approximately $25,00) In .state and
federal title funds should carry the school Into AprU.
"Mter that, I don't know," Rltfe continued. "The
situation Is really discouraging .. .! think our teachers
and staff arededlcatedenough tostaywlth us untU the

' Rural hospitals
fight Medicare
payment plan

SALE STARTS FRIDAY AND RUNS THRU TUESDAY

T" \('oJ J
Jt·,..wnnl

;

Guiding Hand staff goes without pay
GAU..IPOLIS - The 25 employees - Including
teachers, bus drivers and support personnel - of the.
Guiding Hand School did not receive paychecks
Friday.
And, If the school's financial condition remains
liJICtlan&amp;'ed, they cannot expect to be paid untU early
~.
.
The default on payroll Is the latest In a series of
financial dlfllcultles arising !rom a continuing
funding controversy between Gallla County commls·
sloners and the 169 board of mental retardation.
While under a standing - and disputed;- court
order to fund the operation of the school, the county
has refused to allocate funds to Its operation beyond

huuulull ~

o-'

Middleport Pomeroy-Gallipolie-Point Pleatant Sunday, February 19, 1984

C.p,rftllh:d 1914

CHICKEN PALACE

VALUES UP TO 116

1979 FORD LTD 4 DOOR
Gov. Richard F. Celeste today
announced that the Meigs County
CouncU on Aging's application for a
van has been approved b)l the Ohio ·
Department of Transportation's
public transportation division.
Governor Celeste's announcement Include 58 private, non-profit
agencies as recipients of vehicles
and transportatlonequlpJ71enl totalIng $$!,00l under the federally .
funded section program of the
Urban Mass Transportation Act of
1964.

Voi. 19No. 2

lUttS

the$97,00lexpected to be generated by the 169board's

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

IUM (J II

•

unba

Ir~;;;;~~~~~~f~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

may still have tETA records."
Employees also were asked to
report any Information they have
about reCords that may have been
stolen or destroyed.
Cost of printing the letter was paid
with federal funds.

Pomeroy firemen
answer two alanns

Approve van application

James J, Kilp~trick on the art of avoiding the
"Bonehead Play" in politics-Page A-2

'11mea Smffnel Staff

"LIVE BAND"
DOUG CIRCLE
SAT FEB 18

the
money.
But otflclals
have II
'liiiiiiiiiiiifii·iiii~iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiPiiiiiiriiii~iiiiiiiiii
managed
to reduce
the potential
ltAblllty by about $50 million.
• Ce(este, who took otflce rn 1!1!3,
charged that the CE'TA books and
records had beenserlousty mlsman·
aged. He told employees In the
paycheck·letter that nearly $58
mUllon Is still In jeopardy.
"ln many tnsiances, this jeopardy
could be substantially reduced If
missing CE'TA records could be
found. Yet after nine months of
searching, key records are stUI
missing," Celeste said.

The Pomeroy Fire Department
answered two calls Wednesday.
At 10: 10 a.m.. the department
went to the George Starcher
residence near the Beech Grove
Cemetery for a cl)lmney fire. Losses
were setal about $1,00l. Four pieces
of equipment and 12 men answered
the call. Thedepartrnentreturned to
station at 10: 55.
At 2 p.m. Wednesday, the
department went to Bedford Town·
ship Road 247 where a brush fire had
developed on property resided on by
Dora! Hill. From five to seven acres
were burned and firemen were on
the scene untU 3: :rr p.m., Tom
Werry, assistant fire chief reports.

Keeping track Bob Hoeflich discu88es a · mortgage burning
of family roots ceremony at a Pomeroy church-Page B4
-PageB-1

By LARRY EWING

Worker support sought by govern
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) There's something extra In the
paychecks of 19,00l state employees
In Franklin County today- but It's
not negotiable.
It's a letter from Gov. Richard
Celesteenllstlngworkers' support In
tracking down missing records
IJ(!eded to solve a $58 mUllon
problem In Ohio's Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act
program.
Consultants and auditors have
been working for nine months to
justify about $:nl mUllon In expend!·
tures from 1975 through 1982 which
. had been questioned by the federal
government.
The state could be forced to repay

additional pieces of maills aotna to
18 million additional addresses,
Bolger said. He said that postal
productivity has Increased faster
than that ofthe private sector nlneof
the last 13 years.
Bolger said 19844 may be the year
when automation and the niliiHI!glt
ZIP Code "begin to yield significant
economies for maUers." Most mall
Is sent by businesses.
He said that In 191!3 about 1.2
mUllon deliveries were made to
central delivery facUlties, which
usually are clusters of mall boxes
together '' Instead of one at each
house. Bolger sa !II this represents
annual savings of $.n.2 million over
comparable door·llHioor service.

Uncle Bob's

·•

\~ I~ ·;.;..~

GAHS,-Southerri, HT win titles--C-1

was reorganized Into the independ·

ent Postal Service, 5!1.5 billion

LARGE PIZZA

Drilling moratorium sought
A one-year moratorium on all
oU·gas well drUllng In Ohio was
among the proposals at an Ohio
legislative committee meeting held
In Columbus Tuesday to discuss
legislation for the control of salt
brine.
Jim Lucas, Rutland, of the Meigs
SoU and Water Conservation Dis·
trict, attended the session at which
the moratorium was proposed.
However, Renee Houser, of the Ohio
Department or Natural Resources
pointed out that such a moratorium

nui board lh November asked the
Postal Rate Commission to approve
higher rates, Including 23cents for a
first-class letter Instead of the
current 2!kent rate. The board said
then that higher rates would not be
needed untU at least October,1984.
The Postal Service reported a
surplus of $1m million In 1982 and .
losses for 191ll ands 1981.
Bolger said a program to mechan·
lzemall·handllngcomblnedwlththe
Improvement of the nation's econ·
omy and the lower Inflation rate to
produce the result.
He said postal productivity - how
much mall Is handled per workergrew In 1!1!3 for the ninth year In a
row.
Compared to 1970, the last year
before the Posl Otflce Department

He said the $616 mUllon In Income
for 1983 marked the third year In the
past five that the Postal Service
operated In the black. "A stronger
economy that boosted volume to
119.4 bllllon pieces of mall and
continued productivity gains made
major contributions to 1983's posl· . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - live results," the postmaster gen·
era! said In the report Issued this
week.
Bolger, who had told a congres·
slonal comrnlttee last year that a
surplus would be achieved for the
One Dollar Off
year, said the result of the Postal
The
Purchase of
Service's abUity to Uve within Its
Any
Income means "stretching the
Interval between rale Increases."

discuss their city's problems. From left areColwnbus

"-

Friday, February 17, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MAYORS VISIT CELESTE - Ohio Gov.
IUchard Celeste, center, greets four mayors from
around the state Thursday morning at the governor's
mamlon In Bexley where he held a bnmch for them.
The governor meets periodically with mayors to

l

'

.

expense ·of Ohio's economy, Gov.
Richard Celeste told a congres·
slonal subcommittee studying the
problem.
Acid rain, which many sclenllsls
believe Is caused by sulfur dlqxlde
pollution from coal·burnlng plants
In the Midwest, has been blamed for
killing fish In lakes and streams In
the northeastern United States and
eastern Canada.
The Health and Environment
Subcommittee or the House Energy
Commerce Committee, which Is
considering legislation to reduce
acid rain levels, held a hearing
Friday In €leveland.
"Action Is needed soon tostopacld
rain from endangering the fragUe
environment In vulnerable areas or
thls
country· and Canada," Celeste
• ..
said.
Opponents of legislation to control
acid rain, however, say It would
result In higher electric rates and
fewer jobs In coal-related fields.
· Celeste proposed a nationwide
clean air tax that would cost electric
customers about $3 mQnthlY,. 'IJ!.!1,
tax woukl provide money for·
Installation of scrubbers on the
~

nation's dirllest eleclrical utUity
plants.
Others at the hearing disagreed
on whether acid rain Is really a
problem. U.S. Rep. Thomas Luken
or Cincinnati, a subcommittee
member, called acid rain a "glam·
our Issue" and an "overnight media
sensation."
"There Is no environmental crisis
caused by acid rain," Luken said,
adding thai acid rain legislation
cq.sponsored by subcommittee
chairman Henry A. Waxman of
California Is "an Incredibly expen·
slve' experiment In which Ohio Is
chief guinea pig. "
William L. West, director of ·
ehvtronmental control for Rep\lbllc
Steel Corp., said the company's
large Integrated steel facUlties
· woold be hit '·hard by-additional
limits on sulfur dioxide emissions.
"Certainly any additional con ..
trois placed on sulfur dioxide
emissions · should be done only If
there Is some certainty that It wUI ,
ACID RAIN HEARING - Ohio Governor
result In dernoruitrable ecological
Richard Celeste, lell, looks over the shoulder of Ohio
and health Improvements to justify
EJ"A Dlrt!ctor Robert Maynard· during. Maynard's
'!he tremendOus coiiUnltmenl of our • ~ before the HolL'Ie Environmental Subresources," West said.

.

•I

I

I

'

CommiUee Friday at a Held hearing In Cleveland.
The sub-committee, chaired by Rep. Hrnry !\ .
Waxm1111 of CaUfof!lla, are seeking Input on
legislation to control the problem of acid rain.

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