<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13398" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/13398?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T12:37:03+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44370">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/66e88b1d30cd8fc9b7356e2efaedf986.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6cd4b362028153053ef57e4e4408028e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41969">
                  <text>Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomen~y-Middleport,

Additional funds
appropriated for
Cheshire project

Area death s

I

CHESHffiE - Additional fundIng has been appropriated from two
sources to reclaim land In Cheshire
Township.
The state controlling board released $29,700, while an WISpeclfied
amount has beenappropriatedfrom
a special federal revenue grant.
Last July, the state began a $1.4
million project to reclalm 150 acres
of strip-mined land In the Afiica
Rood area.
Sen. Oakley Collins, R-Ironton,
said the controlling board money
would be used to remove silt from
Kyger Creek to prevent Hooding.
Siltation has been caused by
extensive strip-mining In the area
between 1948 and 1968.
"The Africa Rood project to date
has Involved the reclamation of
rooghiy 144 acres of abandoned
strip-mined area and the reconstruction of a small portion of State
Route554," Collins said. "Theactlon
by the controlling board will permit
the job to be finished."
The federal grant Is also directed
to removing silt that has affected
approximately 5,:nl feet of property
along Kyger Creek. Release of that

Elizabeth B.Thomas
Mrs. Elizabeth Belle Thomas, 86,
~Maple

St., Ripley, W. Va., died
Monday at her borne following a

grant was announced by Rep.
Jolynn Boster, D-Galllpolls.
Mrs. Boster's office said the work
will be completed by Kokosing
Construction Co., Fredericktown.
Kokosing was contractor on the
reclamation project on Africa Rood
that got underway last summer.
In that project, $1.4 mllllon was
appropriated to reclalm the road
and part of 554 that had been subject
to regular flooding due to mJnlng
and Insufficient reclamation.
The work was authorized as a joint
project between the natural resources and transportation departments
and was funded by the Office of
Surface Mining of the U.S. Depart-.
ment of the Interior.
Reclamation of!lclals from
ODNR have predicted that$8to$10
mllllon could be spent over the next
several years on cleaning up
remaining sections of Cheshire
Township where strip-mining
throughout the 1950s left heavy
sedlmentation In the Kyger Creek
basin.
That project Is known as Little
Kyger II. The first phase of the
cleanup was completed In 1981.

Five Meigs cases on agenda
Two Division of Reclamation
cases are among five Meigs County
cases slated for hearings before the
Fourth District Court of Appeals
which convened In Pomeroy this
morning. Cases scheduled for
hearing Include Osborne verses the
BoardofRev!ewoftheOhioBureau
of Employment Services; Southern
Ohio Coal Company against the
Division of Reclamation, Ohio
Department of Natural Resources;
Personal Service Insurance Company against Call, Division of
Reclamation; Jackson Production
Credit Association against Perry
and Dodrl11 vs Ohio Motor Vehicle
Dealers Board.

The court composed of Homer E.
Abele, McArthur, presiding judge,
Judge Earl E. Stephenson of
Portsmouth and Judge Lawrence
Grey ofAthens, directly reviews all
cases heard or tried In lower courts
In which a decision Is being
appealed. These cases may have
been tPed In Common Pleas,
Probate, Juvenile, Municipal or ·
County Courts, and may be either
civil or crlmlnal cases.
· The Fourth Dlstrtct Court of
Appeals serves 14 counties In
Southern Ohio Including Adams,
Athens, Gallla, Meigs, Highland,
Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence, Pickaway, Plke,Ross,Scloto, Vinton and
Washington.

Public input sought at session
The Ohio Division of Reclamation
has scbeduled an Informal confer-

ence for publl~ Input on Southern
OhloCoalCompany'scoalminlngln
the WUkesville area for 1 p.m.
Satunlay In the Wilton School
Audltortum at WUkesville.
Public comment will be taken
from people who live In areas to be
mined throogh Meigs Mine 1, Meigs
Mine 2 and Raccoon Creek 3.
"This Is the last chance people
have for five years to tell their
concerns a~t longwall coal min-

Ohio

111g to state officlals," stated Betty
Wells, President of Citizens OrganIzed Against Longwalllng. "H people have concerns aboutdamage to
water,
homes andIt environment
to longwalllng,
Is Importantdue
to
attend this hearing and speak out."
Citizens Organized Against Longwalllng have been working to
prevent damage to water supplles
andtheenvlronmentduetoiongwalllng. Residents needing more Information are to CO!ltact" Wells at
614-593-7490.

lengthy illness.
Mrs. Thomas was a mem~r of
the Order of Eastern Star and a
charter member of the West Ripley

BaptlstChurchandoftheMlllCreek
Valley Farm Women's Club. She
was a lifelong resident of Jackson
County and was a sehool teacher
before her retirement.
She Is survived by three sons, Ben,
Evans, W.Va.; Jack of Ripley and
Dan Thomas of Middleport; two
daughters, Nancy Thomas of St.
Petersburg, Fla., and Mrs.· Josephine Lippman, Ripley, 10 grandchlldren and four grandchildren.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the West Ripley Baptist
Church with tbe Rev. Eddie Henson
officiating. Burtal will be In Otterbein Cemetery. Frlendsmaycallat
the Casto Funeral Home In Evans
after 2 p.m. today.

Margaret McComb
Margaret Gower VanMatre
McComb, 85, Clltton, died Tuesday
evening In Pleasant Valley Hospital
following a long lllness.
Born Jan. 4, 1899, at Raymond
City, Putnam County, she was the
daughter cif the late Jacob Gower
and Adallne Reynolds Gower. ·
Her first husband, Homer VanMatre, preceded her In death bil.9«l,
and her second husband, Fred E.
McComb, preceded her In death In
19m.
Surviving are three daughters,
Mrs. Laura Johnson, Chester, Mrs.
Adallne Murray, East Liverpool,
Ohio, and Mrs. Margaret Riggs, St.

'

Wednesday, FebNory 29, 1984

Inside toda y:

Road crews working;
Meigs schools closed

•
By lbe Bead .......... p.,_ W.T'
CJ· 'ftedi ............ PapeU-10
Coltd•'n' .., •..••.. :.•..•.Pap 11
Dea&amp;lw ........................ Pap8

Mary's; one son, Ivan VanMatre,
Pomeroy, one sister, Mrs. Maude
Carney, New Haven, formerly of
Tornado; seven grandchildren and
15 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be at 1:ll
p.ni. Friday at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home. Burial will follow In Craham
Cemetery, New Haven.
Friends may call at the funeral
homeafter5p.m. Thursday.

All Meigs County schools were state. Thedeathtollfromthestorm, ·
closed today due to ley road which began Monday, rose to 10.
conditions which developed overA statewide declaration of emer,
night. Tuesday's snow for the most gency by Gov. Richard Celeste
part thawed with overnight freezing enabled local oft'lclals to ask for
temperatures creating Icy · National Guard help.
conditions.
Sandusky, Erie, Otlawa, HanThe Meigs County Highway cock, Lucas, Wayne, Union, FrankDepartment was ·working w.lth lin, Huron, Stark and Columbiana
plows and cinders Wednesday counties quickly sought the assistmorning spotting areas In which Ice ance, as did the cities of Cleveland,
buildup created dangerous road Elyria, Ashtabula, Akron, MassOEllis L Midkiff
conditions.
lon, Lorain, Sebring and Vennlllon.
Ml~dleport's Street Department
Ellls L. Midkiff, 70, Guysville, died
Eight people died while either
was salting streets while Pomeroy shoveling snow or trying to free
Tuesday morning at New Haven.
Mr. Mldklft was born In Hubbell, ,street workers were placing cinders trapped vehicles. Two were killed In
W. Va., a son of the late W. C. and In the hll1 areas. Roads were being wea~r-related traffic accidents.
Be5sle Lycan Midkiff. He was also shaped up at 10 a.m. However,
preceded In death by · two sons, officials although agreeing that
Ronald Elwood Mldldft, and TIX&gt;- roads were not all that bad urged
mas Midkiff, two brothers, Wlllls · motorists to·use care In drtving,
The Meigs Emergency Medical
Midkiff and W. C. Mldklft', Jr.
(Continued from page 1)
Services reported that It had no
He was a retired eJectrlclan.
Is responsllilefor allAJrForcespace
dl1flculty Tuesday and Wednesday
He Is survived by cine daughter,
activities.
morning In completing au of Its
Mrs. Jarrett (Estelle) Maynard,
Be(ore being named commander
Huntington; three sons, David calls.
Acm;s the state, the National of NORAD, General Hartinger had
Midkiff, South Vienna, Ohio;
served at the command headquarGuard braced for multiple emerDwight Mldklft', Westland, Mich.;
ters from June, 19'70 to Aprtl, 1973.
gencies as the winter's worst
Dale Mldklft', Ranger, W. Va.; 10
He
served as deputy chief of staff for
snowstorm
continued
to
cripple
the
grandchlldrenandfoura:reatgrandplans
at NORAD.
chlldren; four sisters, Mrs. EsteUe
Moore, Holden, w. Va.; Mrs.
Weather forecast
He Is a son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Odessa Walch, Dover, Fla.; Mrs.
Lawrence Hartinger.
Ona Mae EWott, Albaay; Mrs.
Partly cloudy tonight with a slight
Maxine Baringer, Rt. 1, Guysvtile;
TWo years ago, General Hartinchance
of Ounies. Low around 10. ger was honored at a community
four brothers, Elmer Mldklt!,
Westerly winds dlmlnlshlng to celebration In Middleport. At that
Huntington; Chester R. Mldldff, Rt.
around
10 mph. Thursday, mostly t1me a street and the community
1, Guysville; Bob and Thomas
sunny. High around ~- Chance of park were named In his honor.
Midkiff, Springfield.
snow ll percent tonight and near He was In Middleport several
Funeral services will be held
zero percent tonight.
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Hupes
months ago to ,unveil a plaque
Ohio
Extended
Funeral Home In Athens with the
honoring the late Edward Bennett
Friday through Sunday
Rev. Gay McCabe ollk:latlng.
and the late Jimmy Stewart,
MOIJ&amp;b' lair, highs lnlbe30!1Frtday Middleport servicemen who had
Burta1 will be In BUI'IOII Olmttery,
and
mld30slomld40s~ and
Shade. Friends may caD at the
earlier been awarded the CongresSunday.
Lows in lbe teens to 208.
funeral home Thursday from 2 to 4
sional Medal of Honor:
and7to9..

Sporta ..................... Paaetl-4

A meeting of the Meigs Athletic
Boosters scheduled for tills evening
has been postponed until Monday
night.

By The AIIOCiated Pre8e
With the nation's trade deficit In January a monthly
record $9.5 bllllon, economists warn that the red Ink
tor all of 1984 may swell to an unprecedented $100
billion or more.
The U.S. foreign trade account last year hit a record
$69.4 billion, In part because exports sagged while
demand ·for Imported goods Increased as the U.S.
ecoilomy gained strength. Imports are expected to
continue rising this year:
".While the domestic economy continues to be
strong, the trade deficit lsaneconpmlcdlsaster," said
Jerry Jaslnowskl, chief economist for tlie National
Association of Manufacturers. "We are hemorrhagIng Internationally because the dollar Is ·too !Ugh and
our strong domestic growth Is sucking In Imports at

The Gallla-Meigs Community
Action Agency announces the
HEAP Emergency Assistance Program Is stlll avalJable to help area
residents experiencing dlfflculty in
paying their home heating bills.
Applications will be ' accepted
through March .n, 1984. A one-tlme
payment per heating season of up to
$nl may be made for ellgtble
applicants. As Individual who has a
ten day or less fuel supply and Is
unabletogetmorefueldellvered; or
those being threatened with a

disconnection . notice YI'IIUid bt
eUglble for emergency a111lltaDce If
they meet federally established

Veterans Memorial
Admitted- Linda Fie!*, Syracuse; Eugene Unde! wood, MW!eport; Steven Morris, Rutlallc!; Mary
Evans, Portland.
Dlscharged-Dessle lkrlng, Kenneth Wolfe, Brenda I..lpmln, Paul
Saunders, Andrew . Mlller, John
Sisson, Kenneth Swartz.

Income guidelines.
Applicants must present vertflcation of total household Income; a
copy of a fuel bill or disconnection
notice, and social security numbers
for all household members. All
households with regulated utlllties
must enroll In the new 15 percent
Income payment plan.
Interested Individuals may apply
at the following Community Action
OH!ces: Monday through Friday, 9
a .m. to 4 p.m. at the Meigs County
Courthouse, 992-5600: Old Thaler

. ' ..... - -'
T1iE DAY AFTER-~ Boyd le-lnlo hill
work Weclnelday moi'IIIDIM he clean 1110Wfromlbe
drlveway of hill WeMervllle, Ohio home. 8trons winds

~

,. ....,~

"" · f" ;.IJ .... ...

-

'

.-.. .

.. ..~: .. . .....

drifted a heavy -wfaD clllllia111Cboo1 and tvz±I!M
cJoelnp and lllrandlnl 80me motGrt1ts. ( AP
I anerplloto ).

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Michael Del Bane, the controversial
cha1nnan of the Publlc Utllltles Commission of Ohio, says he Is
seeking reappointment.
Del Bane, 66, a Democrat and ·former legislator, had been
expected to leave tlie $58,(0)-per-year post when his term expires
Aprt110.
~
Del Bane, however, Is one of four finalists being considered by
Gov. Richard Celeste for appointment to a five-year term, according
to a published report In today's Dayton Journal Herald.
"I want to be ·re-appolnted," Del Bane, a Democrat and former
state representative tram Youngstown, said Wednesday. "I want a
job ... and I want to continue the job rve been doing."
The Journal Herald reported that Statehouse sources said Del
Bane was the leading candidate lor the position.
Word of Del ·Bane's possible re-appointment stunned consumer

Imports. But he added that It would also tend to push
up Inflation In thls country.
Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige predicted
the deficit will surpass $100 billion and said relief will
not come untO 1985 wben,"faster growth abroad and
some decline In the dollar should begin to reduce the
trade shortfall."
There was, however, some bright economic news
Wednesday as the govenunent'smalngaugeoffuture
economic actlvlty showed a strong Increase.
The Index of Leading Economic Indicators rose 1.1
percent In Its best showing In three montt •,
prompting presidential spokesman Larry Speakes to
predict "hearty economic growth In . the months
ahead ." More than half the Increase wasatlrtbuted to
a surge In constnlction permits taken out In January.

In other economic and business developments
Wednesday:
-The Agriculture Department reported that prices
farmers get for raw products dropped 1.4 percent In
February from the month before. The decline broke a
string of three consecutive monthly Increases.
-Culf Corp. confinned It Is actively seeking a
merger partner to rescue It from the unwanted
advances of Texas oilman T. Boone Pickens Jr. Gulf
announced It has opened negotiations with "several"
companies on a possible merger, although It declined
fo Identify the companies. The disclosure came
shortly after sources reported that one possible Gulf
suitor, Atlantic Richfield Co., Is finding bankers
"enthusiastic" about Its plan to finance a $13 blWon
buyout of Gulf.

By ROBERT GREENE
AIIOCiaw Pre. Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
officials hope they can bank on an
Ohio connectlon In Washington
when the bW ccmes In for fighting
the near-bllz:zard that clalmed at
least 17llves this week.
The Ohio connection Is former
state Sen. Sam Speck, now deputy
director of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency. As Gov.
Richard Celeste and other state
officials toured Ohio WednllSday to
penonat1y view the stonn's bnpact,
FEMA otflclals froQl Chicago
arrtved for their own aertal survey.
Federal funds, channeled through
FEMA, could cover up to hair the
C()Stsof the emergency services that
have been required since Monday .
Three of the six-member FEMA
team toured northwest Ohio by air
Wednesday. The other three
members beaded for northeastOhlo

but were turned back at Gallon by cleared and th3t It was tlme to focus
worsening weather and postponed on other primary and secondary
roads, 1Z7 of which remained
their trip until today.
Cleveland Mayor George Volno- Impassable Wednesday.
At least 17peoplewerecon0rmed
vlch met Celeste at a national Guard
annory In Brook Park. The gover- dead, the majority suffering heart
nor then headed for northwest Ohio, atlacks while sbovellng snow or
stopping In Port Clinton to meet with trying to free trapped vehicles.
"We're expecting that number to
Mayor John Fritz; Jlm Mazur,
president of the Ottawa County Increase as we keep hearing from all
corrunlssloners; and other local the counties," said Davida Matthews, spokeswoman for the Ohio
officials.
Celeste said his office has been In Disaster Services Agency.
Thebreakdownofdeathslncluded
touch with Speck. But the governor
;;aid he could provide no lmmedlate ' eight In Cuyahoga County from
various causes, two heart-auack
cost estimate.
Warren &amp;nlth, ~r of the vlctlms In Swrunlt County, one
state department of transportation, heart auack fatality each In Allen,
estimated, however, that his road Huron and Sandusky counties, one
crews cost more than $400,(01 In traffic fatality each In Paulding,
Musklngum and Wayne counties,
salary alone for each 16-hour shltt
that was required to tight the and a ~man who was knocked
unconscious by a fall and froze to
drltt1ng snow.
Smith tourPd with Celeste and death In Hancock County.
(Continued on page 12)
said lnterstat !5 have been m~tly

advocates such as Henry Eckhart, a Columbus,attorney and former
PUCOchalnnan. Eckhart, whooftenrepresentsconsumergroupsln
utlllty rate cases before the PUOO, said Del Bane may be "the most
anti-consumer" of the five PUCO members.
"The governor campaigned on a platform of getllng rid of the
guy," Eckhart said of Del Bane. "It Is with utter amazement that I
hear he wants to stay on."
Del Bane and three othel"l! were nominated for the commission
Monday by a 12-member PUCO nominating council chaired by
Michael Adler, president of Progressive Industries Inc. In Dayton.
Adler conflnned Bel Bane's nomination but would not Identify the
three other candidates. Heidi Findley, Celeste's assistant press
secretary, said the names should be announced by Friday.
Del Bane was first appointed to the PUCO In 1979 by former Gov.
James A. Rhodes. The PUCO then Included only three

commissioners Instead of the present five. ,
In 1982, Celeste campaigned against the "anti-consumer" PUOO
and pi'Ofl"llsed to fire Del Bane and the two other commissioners.
On Jan. 10, 1!&amp;, Celeste's first day In office, he accepted the
resignations of the two Republlcan commissioners and Del Bane.
But the governor then renamed Del Bane to the commission and
made him cha.lrnlan.
Celeste defended the move by saying Del Bane "has acquired a
substantial amount of experience."
Consumer advocates' crttlclsm of the move was somewhat muted
because Del Bane agreed to switch from a PUCO term expiring In
1987 to the one expiring almost three years earlier, In Aprll.
"Everyone was Jed to believe that It was to be a short-term
appointment, that Del Bane would be out In a year, and that thought
was comforting," said Eckhart.

Buckeye brigade heads south

,.

And to help you get sta rted saving, we're offerBuy three boxes of delicious Premium Crackers, ing 35C off yqur first purchase. So tear out the
regular or unsalied tops. Then send us the three
coupon and start saving on Premium Crackers.
proofs of purchase and the order form below.
· T-he crisp , fresh bite that's 12 calories light. In 4·
We'll give you a fourth box absolutely free!
"Keep-Fresh " reclosable bags.

''

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The · QperationsforGlennlnWashlngton, · tary of State Sherrod Brown, said
so-called "Buckeye Brigade," the said the Buckeye Brigade -In the Glenn's petition listed six delegate
army of Ohioans that has cam- South also Would try to reach groups candidates and one alternate, when
It should have listed five delegate
palg'ned for~ - John Glenn In Iowa of voters rather than Individuals.
"The types of things they did In candidates and two alternates.
and New Hampshire, Is heading
south. ButGlenncampalgnof!lclals New Hampshire ~not completely Shutt said Brown had asked state
say they're Jlnlng up some new dltferent In Alabama, but the partyofflclalstodetennlnewhetber ·
electorate In ·Alabama Is many Glenn had violated an,y party rules
soldiers.
GleM, who finished third In t1mes larger tlu!n In New Hanip- that would ellmlnate him from the
ballot In that district.
Tuesday's New Hampshire Demo- shire," he said.
"Sen.
Glenn
has
just
gotten
The district Includes part of
cratic presidentlill primary behind
Colorado Sen. Gary Hart and 1 through the first stage of the Columbus and Licking County, as
former Vice PreSident Walter campaign; he made the f)rst cut," well as an of Delaware and Morrow
Mondale, vowed to stay In the race Hedden said. "Helsamongthe!hree counties.
"The error was mine," said Griff
althouih he described the New candidates who are the viable
contenders,
and
there
are
some
Weld,
a Glenn volunteer who was
Hanipshlre results as "not so hot."
aJso-rans."
,
reponslble for checking the
Glenn campaign workers here
But, said Hedden, "He:s got to petitions.
· and In Washington Say the Ohioan prove himself from week to w,eeJc."
Weld said the petitions mlstak·now wW aim fOr Super Tuesdl!Y
Ms. Weld said Glenn Is not on the enJy listed one name ~ a delegate
March 13, when 511 pledged ballot In Verm011t, which has a that should have been an alternate.
deiegates ari! at stake In 11 evl!l1ts- primary T\jesday, and Is not , But he said Glenn should be able to
Key primaries for Glenn that day campalgnlng Iii Maine~ where party stay on the ballot because the
wW be In Florida, Georgia and caucu.Ses'are Sunday.
alternate list was within party
Alabama.
"I think the presumption Is that . guJdellnes.
.
WhlleGlenn'sBuckeYeBrlgadeln MondalebasbeendamagedbyHart
-Lydia ChamberWn, a .DemoNew Hanipshlre relied ~vlly on and clearly wlu have to focus a lot of eratic candidate for Athens Col!nty
studellts and other supporters, Ohio attention on thole states." she said. shel"lff;sakl Wednesday she will pay
e~~wUlbeas!a!d to bflp~ "And Glennwlll-tocus-lntenilvelylii . a .I..oulslana groceey -store.48l~ln-­
the aenator In the South, said Joan· the South, which IS his strength." . ·order to have a bad check Charge
Weld, tllreclqr of" Glenn's Midwest
In other political~
against her dropped.
~here. .
·
-State offtctals said Wednl!lday
St. Tanunany Parish, La,, She• She said"black el~ leaders, that Glenn's ,cupalp flied lm- riff's Set. Robert s&amp;chrnan said he
puc~~uRep, (:.J.MclJn,D-~.
proper delegate ~te petltlllns In would drop the , charge If Mi.
ilnd
Sen. Wllllam F. BoWen, . Ohlo's12thDlstrtct,whlchoouldcort ChamberlalnpaystheiJIOIIeY.SheiB
b-cbrc:taD.tt, maybe 'ulrl!d to~ · . Glein a spot on the May8prtmary accu.seditwrltlnathecbecklnJune
Glenn win black wtes In Ala~.. !:llll!lt. ·
1982 to a groc:ecy ati:lreln~.
lfer!iHeclden,dlrecfiir"C)f&amp;;~te ~ oaveSiiutt.~tOrSeere- . Ui.- - . - - --- --.
.:
'
..

ata"'

P~meroy

'.

! Sec:tiom, 12 Pog••
2u Cents
A Multimedia Inc . N.-'fMiper

Controversial PUCO chairman seeking reappointment

I.

i .

an unprecedented rate."
The $9.5 billion January deficit reported Wednesday broke the monthly record of $8.4 blWon set In
October.
Imports In January jumped 15.7 percent while
exports, hurt by the dolJar' s high value In relation to
the currencies 9! Its major trading partners, rose 5.9
percent.
Chief White House economist Martin Feldstein said
Wednesday night that the robust U.S. dollar, though
still attraetlve to Investors worldwide, Is bound to
decline, bringing both good and bad effects for
Americans. In remarks to the World Affairs CouncU
In Plilladelphla, he said a lower-valued dollar would
help U.S. exporters sell their wares overseas and
would help domestic companies canpete with

~~~========================================:-­

$3.99

PIZZA SHACK

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thurtclay, March 1, 1984

State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson reported the first advance
distribution of 1984 state motor
vel)lcle registration fees tota1lng
$17,029,148.19 to 1 Ohio oounties,
cities, townships andvlllages. Meigs
County's portion was $16,192.14.

FILLET OF
CATFISH ,

. 126 Main St.

•

at y

Funds received

TRY OUR DELICIOUS. BON~D

POMEROY, OH.

Southern girls advance.•.Page 3

•

Ford Building, Second Ave., Gallipolis, 44&amp;0611; or the Central Oftlce
In Cheshire, 367-7341or992-e629.

Seven defendants forfeited bonds
In the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Riclulrd Seyler TUesday night.
Theyo are David Gardner, Rutland,
$48; Wiley Phllllps, Middlereports.
port,
$46; Barbara Hensley,
At 7:06a.m., TUppers Plains took
TUppers
Plains, $48; Anna BlackRobin Guthrie to Camden-Clark
• Hospital In ParkersbW"g; Middle- wood, near Pomeroy, $48, all on
speeding charges; Paul Barnett,
; port at 2: 1l a.m. took Dennis Hart,
: Mlddleport, to Veterans"MemorJal near Pomeroy, $43, and Marcia
Hospital; Racine at 3: 28 a.m. to . Klein, Clifton, W. Va., $43, both on
assured clear distance charges, and
SarahCongotoVeteransl'!iernortal;
Rutland at 9:06 a.m. went to the Denise TUrner, Pomeroy, $6l,
scene of an accldentonRoutel24but traffic llght violation.

PH. 992-6432

Awards•••Page 6 .

HEAP funding deadline extended thru March

:. .Five calls were answered by local
units Tuesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services

228 W. MAIN

Blue and Gold

Ohio seeking federal
·aid for storm damage

Seven forfeit bonds

CROW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT

Heart disease top killer...Page 7

Trade deficit may top $100 billion

General

Emergency runs

.

Partly clOudy tonliht. Low
near 31. Variable wlndllO mph
or l!!ss. Tomorrow,, partly
cloudy. High near 45. Chance of
preclpltation 31 per-Cent tonight
. and Friday. '

1/ol.n, No.226
Copyrithtod 1914

there were no Injuries and Rutland
at 1: 49 p.m. took Hurling Green
from Meigs Mine 2 to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

DINNER

Weather

e

Meigs County happenings
Meeting postponed

Cast adrift•••Page 2

,,
I

.I

1,..

..

lD'IUI:FII!:LD NEl'8 ' 1'7 IN VIC1'0RY ...._ Ill 111 openlnc NIIDil pme of lbe 1884 Cla88 ~ Glrh . •.
S.llllloMu'1 q
I WI 'leld (S) -.oed .1'7 pomtll Dlllrlct 1'uunlamellt a&amp; Waverly. Defender on left Is ·
. , . . · Norib AUm1 ~a,y alp&amp; to pace Madelle Mclnllre (21). See details on PaJe 3.
It I' J!ll'•·lldleD a t141blctitlq.over.Nodb Adlm.. : .,
_ . . · _ . _ __ ·
_
'

�I'

~!Commenta..~
The Daily Sentinel

•

Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEV&lt;YI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

A~
~m~

I"'T"'L...J'....... , , . . . ,

..

~v

c::l·=

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
· PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Mana1er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They !ihould he len than 300 words
lona. AU letters are subject to edltln1 and mu!d be slaned wllh name, address and
telephone number. No unsiJned letters wUI be published. Letter.. should be In
JOod tL~te, addresslnJl'ISUes, not personalities.

: Timing, research key
! t~ successful products

•

ering the age of the contestants, the
Coliseum In Rome or the Acropolis
In Athens somehow seems more
suited to the occasion. It could be
billed as a grudge match between
Sugar Ron Reagan and Kid Konstantin and the promotional and
financial posslbUitles are limitless.
Both being on their public payrolls,
the fight money would go to their
countries and would help pay off the
deficits both have been responsible
for, Reagan as president of the
United States .and Kld Konstanlln
as a member of the Soviet Politburo
for the last two decades, How about
It, Sugar Ron? Let's you and him
fight!
Potential profits from such a
match are unlimited. The worldwide television rights alone should
be Invaluable to the network with
the high bid and llcket sales should
be enormous with millions of people
the world over anxious to see either
opponent beat hell out of the other.

•

Timing is crucial for introducing a new product or a new business, but
: John Luther, a business development consultant, believes too many
•• companies disregard the factor.
:
Luther is president of the Development Agency, a division of the
l1 Marketing Corporation of Amertca. He has helped companies like
Frlto-Lay Inc. and Ogden Food Products Corp. find ways to grow ,$Ially by suggesting new products and acquisitions.
• Sltouffer Food Corp. and Coleco Industrtes Inc. are not clients, but Luther
uses them as illustrations of his Ideas about developing "business
opportunities."
Stouffer, he notes, successfully introduced in the early 1970s a line of
frozen gourmet foods, an Idea that other companies had tried previously
' but failed. One factor in Stouffer's decision that the time was right was Its
• reading of demographics, such as finding an increase in the numbers of
: :~ .wprklng women, who have less time to prepare meals, Luther says.
1 ~
On the other hand, Luther says Coleco, mainly a toy company, may be
I '
) · courting disaster with Its new Adam computer.
.
1
Coleco knows toys as evidenced by Its success with the Cabbage Patch
'• • Kids dolls, Luther says.
: w
· But he thinks Coleco gave the wrong answer loa basic question about the
~- Adam: Does It have the light b\lckground and resources to be in the
; personal computer business .in the long run? Whlle conceding he is
! speaking just as an observer of Coleco, Luther believes the company did
~ not do enough study before jurnptpg into the computer market.
' •. ·.The DeVelopment Agency has been involved in adding the sandwich
ir)eat Ste~·Umms to H.J. Heinz Co.'s line via an acquisition. It helped
• ogden build up the popularity of Heinz's Progresso lines by advertising.
:
Luther, 45, a former executive with General Foods Corp., uses
l Frlto-Lay's acquisition of GrandMa's brand cookies to Ulustrate the
i ,lhlnklng process his teams go through in making recol(ID~endatlons for
: h:luslness growlh.
! About five years ago, Luther says, the agency was given the task of
:l;:*nnlning whether· Flito-Lay, a salty snack division of Pepsico Inc.,
....,Ji!Ould get into the sweet -snack business.
.
Idea that developed was selling a cookie that tasted like homemade
~~hewy on the inside and crunchy on the outside - and packag'lng It in

....,. :The

:ZS~le-servlng sizes.

•

:=::: f'rllo-Lay could capitalize on Its already developed distribution system
~r the snack, Luther says. It was decided that the best method for getting
' 'the snack Itself was to buy a "name" cookie, or acquire GrandMa's.
~ -· GrandMa's cookies now are sold In at least a third of the country and are
~nterlng some competition from a Procter &amp; Gamble Co. !,'OOkle.

. .... .
-~ .::- Berry's

World

.. .
•
'\··

•
•

'

J

;
I
I

,_
' ...

..' •

~.

.' ,'..

I !1. ·.,

I

• '

!

;

..'..

'

.
'
"This will be my last run for tod,ay. I'm goin'
back to the lodge - OK, Gr~nflma_J?':

'

•

'!

Today in hisioey

· ·!

_, L_one
1
''

Since Sugar Ron has been responsible for adding more than $500
BILLION to the federal debt;
millions of people would be glad to
see him do his part getting some of
It back. Although Russia is extremely secret about their financial
affairs, It Is only common sense to
assume their deficits are as great or
greater than ours. Both nations
have been busy as bees since World
War II piling up frozen assets In the
form of nuclear weapons good only
for destroying the world and
therefore useless In every day
living. The econpmy of both nations
Is so dependent on spend \Jig for war
that neither dares stop.
Botb nations have millions of
citizens concerned about the giant
Indebtedness they a re piling on
their children and grandchildren so
they will be happy 10 see a little
blood and gore spilled by those
responsible. At least, for a change,
It will not be their blood and gore. As

the television cameras switch from
the Soviet to the American training
camps, they will have the opportunIty to hear the contestants brag
about their own supeliolity and
their peaceful Intentions. Sugar
Ron lately has been cooing like a
dove with no mention of evil
empires and such while Kid
Konstantln also claims he wants
peljce but will match any effort
Sugar Ron wants to. put out. They
talk a good fight! Both men are
about evenly matched. Sljgar Ron
has to spot The Kid a year in age but
he Is taller and llas the most reach
whUe the Kld IS built closer to ·the
ground and wlll be able to punch
heck out of Sugar Ron's bread
basket. Before It's over, Sugar Ron
inay be sorry he sold the Soviets all
that grain.
· The Kid may be the new boy on
the block but his selecton by the
Politburo proves he had the strongest voice In that body which has
ruled since Yurl Andropov fook ott
work sick. fie was right hand man
to Leonid Brezhnev during the
· years he led the country and has
proven that he Is a very tough
customer. Sugar Ron, who prided
himself on his youthful appearance
and was proclaimed by none other
than Dan Lurie as the best
physically !It president ever, may
have his work cot out for him.
Lurie's proclamation covers over
two hundred years of presidents
and Included such -stalwarts as
Andrew I Old Hickory) Jackson and
that champion rail splitter, Abraham Lincoln. It Is such'accolades as
this that leads a contestant Into a
false ,.sense of security and overconfl~nce whlch.has been the downfall
of fighters before.
Personally, I doubt If such a
match ever takes place because It Is
an ·accepfed fact that the loudest
talkers are the most timid doers.
Just lately, Sugar Ron said, "Tip
O'Neill may be ready to sur'render
but I'm not" aod promptly ordered
tile Marines out of Lebanon. If
contusion and chaos was the
mission of the Marines In Lebanon,
then It has been accomplished. It
would be willing to bet that before
Election Day, Nov. 6, he will be
laying the blame on · Con~.
It's a wonderful fantaay tfllllllftlf

dollars to patrol the refugee routes
with armed vessels and to .Punish
any pirates Jhey catch. But I now
have evidence that on several
occasions recently, the Thais have
used their American-financed patrol boats not to ·rescue the ~I
people but to put them In double
jeopardy.
The Thais have been rounding up
refugees who made it safely to their
shores, forcing them · back • Into
boats and towing them out to sea .
Then . they are cast adrift, once
more at the mercy of the merciless
corsairs.
Thai officials deny this. But State
Department cables from our embassy In Bangkok give Irrefutable
Incriminating details of several
Incidents.
"There Is a long history of .
push-offs from these areas, but the
latest ones are of particular
concern because each resulted In
the loss of lives and each 'was
committed by elements of the Thai
Marine Pollee or Navy," states one
of the cables seen by my.associate
Donald Goldberg.
One of the tragedies occurred last
Dec. 3, when a boatloadof29ethnlc

'

Chinese from Cambodia landed In bly would have been operating (In
Thailand. After two days' detentlpn the areal at the time of the
by local autholitles, the refugees Incident. "
A second Incident Involved 72
were put abOard a small craft and
towed out to sea by a Royal Thai ' VIetnamese whose boat landed tn·
Thall&lt;!nd on Jan. 4. The refugees
navy patrol boat.
were held for six days at a temple
The motor on the refugees' small
near the Malaysian border.
boat conked out soon after the
01! Jan. 1, the refugees were
patrol boat left. The refugees
drifted helplessly for 14 days. divided Into two groups. One was
put aboard a small boat .and towed
"During this two-week period, they
out to sea by a Thai Maline Pollee
twice were attacked by pirates,
who abducted six women," one patrol cralt. All 33 persons made It
cable stated. "In addition, two salely to Malaysia. A cable tells
what happened to the second boat:
small children aboard the refugee
"It Is not yet clear exactly why,
boat died of exposure and
dehydration."
but the second refugee boat capFinally, the. 21 survivors landed sized and 23 per-Sons aboard
once more on a Thai beach. One of drowned. Refugee sources Initially
lntllcated that the two rope sn&amp;pped
the abducted women also made it to
safety, put ashore by the pirates. and that the Thai fishing boat
Oowlng It) then came about and
She told refugee officials that she
rammed the smaller refugee boat.
believed at least two of the other
women were dt!ad.
Subseq~ent . refugee accounts reThe ·refugE;'e§ described the boat -ported that the refugee boat cameapart while being towed at speed.
that towed them out to sea as a
"The 16 survivors of the second
30-meter armed patrol cralt with
boat who swam ashore were again
the number "93." A cable . to
apprehended by pollee. The pollee
Washington said, "The embassy
provided food and dry clothing, and
has confirmed that the (Royal Thai
then placed them In another small
Navy) has a 36-meter patrol craft
boat that was towed to sea by
designated T-93, and that It probaMarine Pollee Patrol craft ."

Arm .wrestling the Prez _ _ _ _A_rt_Buc__._h_wa_Ld

. My Uncle Phil called me f1
Fort Lauderdale.
"You know anyone at the White
House?" he asked me.
•
. : . Today is Thursday, March 1st, the61st day of1984. There are ~days left
"Well, yes and no. I know people
• ID·tfle year.
.
·there, but we've never munched
: l'oday's Highlight In History:
.
' .
..
· · any jellybeans together, If you get
; ·.Pn March 1st, 1932, the Infant 5onof famed aviator Charles Lindbergh what I mean. Why do you ask?"
: was·kidnapped from his home near Hopewell, N.J.
"I want to arm wrestle President
; bn this date:
.
•
Reagan."
: .. -lli 1'192, It llf:came law tha:t the Pt:esldent pro tempore of the Senate and · "AI:eyou crazy, Uncle Phil? You
: the speaker of the House, in that oroer, woold follow the viCe president In
can't' arm .wrestle the president of
• -tt~e .llne of.successlon.
,
··tile Ul!!ted,States."
·
: In 1912, Capt Albert Berry made ihe first parachute· Jump from an
"I not o!lly can, IJ;an take him .: ~. at rul altitude of 15,lXXl teet over St. LOuis.
.two out of three."
{ · ih 1952, Naricy Davis married Ronald Reagan. ·
.
"Hold It, what are you talking
·: In 1954, three Puerto Rican nationalists, firing WildlY ~ the Houle ot · ~bout?"
.
•
'
. '
• Representatives, wouilded five congressmen.
.
"Didn't·you see the picture In the
In 1961. President John Kennedy established the.Peace q;rp...
pajler? They showed this heavy guy
, In 1967,
York Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, accused ol rnlsconduct, ' named Dan Lulie who editS a ·
I -":.-,...J!- rn•Jo•·•""'t"" .i'IIL• seat In the 90th'-ColllireSS. ~ · ' ·
' " ··
' ·~called 'Muscular Train-·
And in 19&amp;1, ·a New Orleans jury acquitted businessman Clay Sl\&amp;w' of !J11!. He was in the Oval Office of~
• conspiring to a5$1sslriate President Kehnedy. , . · · ,
.
· White House anc1 thei said he got
Ten years ago: A federal grand Jury fn. Washington lndlcted seven
there to preaent Reqan with a
former Nixon aides, incl!!ding'H.R. Haldeman, JohnEhrllchrnlm and John
plaque u 'The belt pbyllcally fit .
·Mitchell, on charges of covering up the Watergate scandal.
.
president of all time.' So accord1ng
: · Five years &lt;ago; Israeli Prime Mlrdster·Mena~hem Begin, arriving In . to the papers, Lurie, who 1s 61 )(ears
· : Washington, sa~ negotlaitons tor peace with EiYPt were In "deep crtals."
~; ' chiJienaa R.onme to an ann
year aiQ:Jl.litaln:s.Queen EliZabeth llbraved a rainstorm to pay a
~ matcllllld tlte"pn!lldent
)uncheon vlsJt to President Reaga11 at his mouiltalntop ranch
. .in Santa · wins hands down...
J-~rbara, Caut.
1b
·
tl

THE RIGHT PARTS
-THE FIRST TIME

"It seems to me I did see the

like the smokestacks at Three Mile clear brush on his ranch - but then
picture, Uncle Phil. But w~at has Island . Last week I had hiiJI again, maybP Lurie didn't push as
that got to do with you wanting to screaming and gasping for air pn
hard as he cOuld have. But look at It
· arm wrestle the president?"
the gin rummy table In 12 seconds." from his point of view. U Lurie wins
"Uncle Phil, you have to hear the match, no one Is going to know
"I'm 75, lmc;l I'm sure I can beat
him. I studied Reagan's grip In the what i•m saying. So·they let Lurie him and his magazine. U he loses It,
photOgraph. His fingers were too Into the White House to give the . he'll be on the front page of every
·widespread."
president a plaque. The White newspaper In the free world."
"IJncle Phil, I believe I ought to House photographer Is there for the
"I never heard of a guy ihrowlng
explain to you how the White Hou~ picture. Then someone jokingly ·an arm ·wrestling match In• my
operates. They get thousands of says, 'Do something physical,' and · life.''
.
requests from people who want to Lulie, who Is no dummy, says,
"You never saw an arm wres- ,
give the presld~!!l plaques. When
'How· about arm wrestling?' The
Ulng matcri where four Secret
the cine from 'Muscular Training Secret Service starts 'moving In on
ServiCe guys were standing around
Magazine' c;ame In they were going Lurie when the political · manager one of the participants. ''
·
to dump the letter In the waste- says, 'Walt, It's a greatldea, and the
You'~ trying to tell me you can't
basket, when a Reagan political
best photo opportunity we've had
arrange a match for me with the '
manager said, :·walt. U the presl: all month.' One of the president's
president?" ,
dent gets an award as the best aides says: 'Stop. Suppose \ the
"The' people JUnnlng Mr. Rea!t¥slcally fij_prest~ o( all tlr!t!! •. ·....:ll~Jd!!n!l~?.:,..And ~~ political .eanJ c.ampalllliJlaYe proved !heir
this .w111 take care of the age gap · manager · says, 'Then 'we'll shred
point. I don'fthlnk lh!! pteSldent will .
once and for all.' " ·
'
· , the picture.' "
·
be arm wrestling ·anybody else In
Uncle Phil didn't seem ·, to be
Uncle o Phil .started taklhg In
the 11ear future.' ' ·
·
··
listening. "I .haven't lost a match something of' what I w~ saying. _
"So what dol tell the ~pie In the
stnceJ moved to Flol'lda. You know "So you don't think the Oval.Office
COndo?"
· , ~
Sam Braunberger In apartment 2-C arm wrestling match was on the up
, "Tell them It wouldn't have been
In my condo?"
and .up?" ·
'·
worth your, trip to Washlneton
"I don't belleve we've met."
. "lean'! say that because I wasn't beoause even ·1r by . !Kline wild
there;'!- I- told- hlm.- "Maybe \he.: 1:haoce tile prestdentagreafto·arm - , -''He's-a kid -10yeariold ~arid
built Uke blick wall. He has arms
pre51dent won fair and sqllllJ'1! wrestlfl with you, and you ·won, no
after all, he does chop wood and
one·would ever know/'
!)
'
~
'' '

a

PRICES GOOD THRU

·Lawell Wingett

They' are cast adrift _ __::______~Ja_ck_A_nd~e__,rso_n
WASHINGTON -The plight of
the Indochinese boat people desperate refugees trying to nee
their communist-ruled homelands
- has gone from bad to worse.
Their fate should be of particular
concern to the United States: Many
are forgotten employees and
fliends whom the. U.S. forces left
behind In South VIetnam.
To escape tyranny, many have
set out In frail boats across the sea.
Some have been caught by patrol
boats and hauled back to work
camps. Others have been lost In
storms at sea.
But the greatest menace of all are
the pirates who ply the Gulf of
Slam. They are cruel cutthroats
who overtake the flimsy boats and
assault the helpless refugees, rapIng and abducting the women,
murdering on whim and stealing
everything of value. Even gold
fillings have been ripped out of the
refugees' mouths.
The odds of getting safely to a
have!! In a nelghboling country
have always been slim. Now
they're slimmer. Here's why:
The United St.ates has given the
government of Thailand millions of

The Dailv Sentinei-Paae-3

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
PomeiOV ~ldd~. Ohio,
Thurtday, Mardi 1, 1984 ._
.

Sugar Ron vs. Kid· Konstantin
The newspaper picture of President Ronald Reagan and Muscle
Training Illustrated publisher, Dan
Lurie, arm wrestling In the Oval
Office led me to regret the passing
of the Age of Chivalry when feudal
leaders settled their differences by
physical combat. Perhaps a good
old-fashioned brawl between Reagan and newly appointed Soviet
leader, Konstantln Chernenko,
would clear and air and save us all a
great deal of expense and worry.
1n view of the gravity of relations
between this country and the Soviet
·union, I don't thll)k arm wrestllng
would be enough. Something like a
good old Irish shenanigan with
black eyes and bloody noses seems
more likely with the winner proclaimed the bully boy of the world.
That's what they have wanted all
along, isn't It ? I am sure that Fight
Promoter Don King would be
happy to arrange the match In
Madison Square Garden but consld-

Ohio

3-7-"114

~

DISC BRAKE PADS
o~"-{$795
Axle Set
For Most Cars &amp; Light Truc~s
PART ITP7019 .. .........................

"Trust"
Quality

Wiper
Blades

REFILLS

Suo...,.,,

WaVfll'\y. Sou&amp;hern Willi, 47-G. Norill AUm1 playen
left 1o r1aN are NIDC)' (Ampbel (I%); Lila F1eldll
(20); Julie DeBoyd (Z2) and Marleae Mclalire (%3),

SALE

eXTRA DUTY
DEGREASER

&amp;

..

Engine Cleaner

Southern girls advance to
Class A district cage finals
By SCOTI' WOLFE
WAVERLY - Hitting 19 of 24
from the foul line, the Southern
Tornildoettes posted a 47-42 tliurnph over the North Adams
"Devilish Darlings" here Wednes:
day evening In the first round of the
Dlstlict Tournament at Waverly
High School.
Seniors Amy Littlefield and
Laren Wolf~ combined for 40 points
and 25 . rebounds to lead the
Tornadoettes to victory and a berth
in the dlstlict championship Saturday at 6: ll p.m.
Ironically, In both first round
games the losing team made.more
field goals, however, foul shooting
proved to be the difference in the
final score. Southern hit a meager
14 of 51 for just 29 percent from the
field, but ripped the nets for a
blistering 79 percent from the Une
(19of24). In theflrstcontestGreen
hit one more field goal than
Huntington, but the "Lady Huntsmen" hit 21 of 17 from the chanty
stlipe for a convincing 51·54
triumph.
Littlefield paced • the Tornadoettes with a game-high 'IT points
and grabbed 13 rebounds with a fine
Inside effort. Littlefield had an
off-night from the floor, but her
outstanding foul shooting proved to
be one key In the game as she netted
15 of 18 attempts for 83 percent.
Laren Wolfe, In control much of
tl:e first half, netted 13 points and
bauled down 12 rebounds, while
adding three assists. Senior Debbie
Michael added five points, and
Jenny Bentley added two points.
Five-foot-five freshman guard
Angle Haslam led the "Devilish
Darlings" with a team-high 22
points, including 16 points in the last
half and an 11 of 22 night from the
floor. Senior Denise Curtis added
seven pOints, Marlene Mcintire
nine, and Julie DeBoyd two, and
Gee Palmer two.
Although Southern never trailed
in the contest, a scrappy North
Adams squad crew produced some
anxious moments for Coach Hilton
Wolfe Jr. and company, and
especially In the latter minutes of
the game. The Tornadi&gt;ettes took an
early 3-0 lead on a three-point play
by Debbie Michael with 7: 33
showing on the first period clock.
After missed soots by both clubs,
Laren Wolfe powered In for a dlive
and 5-0 SHS lead.
Haslam notched her first score on
a long bomb from 20feet away, then
Denise Curtis made a hasty theft
and drove It In for a score at the3:50
mark for a ~ ·score.
Another goal by Wolfe and four
free throws by Littlefield gave SHS
a 12-8 advantage, before Haslam
netted another goal with nine
seconds remalnlng for a 12-10 first
peliod score.
In the second peliod Southern
scored 10 of Its 12 points from ~
foul Une, led by Littlefield who hitlO
of :il. SHS held a two point lead until
midway through the frame when It
dropped Into Its ,full court press .to .
force three consecutive North
Adams turnovers, atld gain a 21·14
lead. Southern had the chance to
blow the eatn!1 wide open at this
point, but three missed field goals
stalled the victory dlive as North
Adams manaied to stay close 23-15

SHOCK •

II/

PAIR

WOLFE SURROUNDED IMaJ
Wolle (21) II llln'OIIIIded by four Norill Mimi
pia)oenlnU.IIdloapbatobysteveW.olleutDciM&amp;
alaN'• aa. A Dlltrld Touraunent pme at

WITH MONRO

IAUBr'

$259

at the l\lllf.
Haslam hit three straleht field
goals In the beginning of the third
frame to erase the To1"!18doettes'
eight points advantage, and gain
new momentum In the second half,
the score now 23-22. Meanwhile, a
cold spell from the floor carried
over from the last part of the first
half, as Southern's lloor game and
field shooting sputtered helplessly
throughout the remainder of the
game.
With the score ll-28 with 1: 10 left
in the canto Southern utilized Its
press and again boosted Its lead to
37-30 by the end of the third frame,
but that momentum dwindled In the
last round as North Adams pulled
close at 37-34 wltll 5: 00 left in the
game.
Sharp-shooting from the foul line
saved the win~ as Wolfe,
Littlefield, and Michael notched
several key charity tosses In the
latter minutes to secure the victory
47-42.
Southern had 36 rebounds, 19
tlu-no--s, 10 steals, eight assists,
and 11 fouls. North Adams hit 18 of
50 from the field and six of 14 at the
line, whCe committing 20 fouls and
24 turnovers.
.
Southern now plays Huntington&amp;&gt;55 In the dlstlict finals Saturday.
Southern is now 15-5 and Huntington 23-0:
Tickets are $2.50 at the door for
both students and adults.

SUD

• SPRAY ON

• RINSE OFF

25.
. _.

S28 '
. bO

-----.

N. Adams ... .... ......... ......... 10 5 15 12-42

Sl8.5Q :r
s 9.25 ..

ONE SHOCK
2ND SHOCK 1/2 PRICE
PRICE

EASY TO USE

BOTH ONLY

lflltlmN(l'I'ON (Ill - Peay Coppock
l -5-7; .1«1 Cozy 1.()-2; DeiJille Conley 2-7-11;
Melony Blick 3-7-13; Dona Keys 1-H nna
Black 7.()-14. ror.u.s 11-ti..L
OIIEEN tlfl - Slacy Bentley~; Swan
Knapp 2-1-5; Mlcl&lt; Kouns 6-1·13; April
wamo~ey 1.()-2; Andrei White ~. ror.u.s
If-l-N.

ONE SHOCK
2ND SHOCK 1/2 PRICE
PRICE

S36;50
s18.25

No. 24-50
No. 24F-50
No. 70.50
No. 73-50
No. 74-50

80lmiiiJIN (411 :... Jenoy Bentley 1-0-2;

. AI!IY UJ1]elleld C-15-71; Debbte Mlchaell-3-5;

Liret&gt; WoUe 6-1-13:
Lyons~.

L&lt;lrt Adams~ Alana

ror.u.s lt-IH'I.

NOR'111 ADAM!! lUI - Nancy CampbeU
DenW Curtis 2-3-7; Julie DeBoyd 1.()-2;

~

Jenriuer Downs~ Angle Haslam U.()-22;
Marlene Mclntlro 3-3-9; Gee Palmer 1.()-2,

PROFESSIONAL

:ror.u.s IU42.

HYDRAULIC
FLOOR JAC

by quarten:
'
Southern .......... ..... .... ........12 II 14 10-47

,I

S14900

.•.

No. 68042

GARDEN TRACTOR
&amp;

LAWN MOWER REPAIR

-FREE PICK-UP
(GALLIPOLIS AREA ONLY)

· in our town

PICKUP AND DEUVERY AVAILAeLE
IN OTHER AREAS-REASONABLE CHG.

r~ur
ne·
borhood
m
r expert
I know your car and sell
Arvin Exhaust system parts
made especialy "" " · Aitd

since we sel more than just
mutfters, we want to keep you

for clependlble, long-l•llng

at.tlng power
Soundly engineered,
quatlty·buitt
Crown Batteries

our town

are your assurance

that your lawn
and garden tractor
will be ready to
go when you

$3699

happ.l. That's our ~USon fof
...... AMo ....tfleos..tt.e best
you can buy.

·

EXCHANGE _

I =i:i I tiJ.!,
MUFFLERS

G&amp;J

,~ Parts PI\IS a'1tostorC'

GALLIPOLIS, OH,
240 THIRD AVE. 1704 EASTERN AVE.
PHONE--446-1813 PHONE 446-4204

grofiaalorial Couosellng
and :
FamilY Services

-:

POMEROY, OH. MASON. WV.
119 W. 2ND AVE. ROUTE 33
-PHONE 992·2139 PHONE 773-5511

OPEN 8 A.M.TIL 5:30P.M. MON.-SAT.

'

.. ,

EASTERN AVE.

POINT PLEASANT,::::::~:~: tOPEN~ll 7 P.M~· .
. Recine, Ohio 45771

IEIIEI fl)IC ehelniJ6.14l _949-2210--c

515 MAIN st.
--'-PHONE 675·1520

.MON.-SAT.
SP.M, 'til-5;30 P.M. "SAME OWNERSHIP"

2611 JACKSON AVL . '
PHONE 6J5-2731-.. ,:...
· ·.':::.

�Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

March 1' 1984

Thundciy, March 1, 1914

IRS empolyees helping
~ocal fomz preparations

Cavaliers upset Deacons for third . straighi ·ACC.triumph
By JOHN NELSON

.

APSponsWrtter
· It appears the VIrginia basketball

teaJ]'l finally Is making the transition
10 ~lte without Ralph.
tumbling early this season after
the graduation of 7-foot-4 All·
~~rlcan Ralph Sampson, the
llers have won three straight
~Uantlc Coast Conference games,

I

I

Sports briefs...

'

TENNfl

• NEW YORK (AP) - Pancho
~ra, Neale Fraser, Manuel
Santana and the doubles team of
John Bromwlch and Adrian Quist
were named to the International
TeMis Hall of Fame.
• They will he formally Inducted
ioto the shrine at Newport, R.I., on
July 14 during the Miller Hall of
Fame Tennts Championships.
1 MADRID (AP) -John McEnroe
\
and Jimmy CoMorswon tlrst -round
matches In the Madrid Open TeMis
1burnament.
McEnroe defeated Wojtek Flbak
7!5,' 6-1. and Connors beat Heinz
qunthardt of Switzerland 6-4, 7-5.
In other opening-round matches,
~evln Curren downed Steve Denton
6&lt;7, 7-6, 7-5; Tom Gullikson whipped
Peter Fleming 6-3, 6-4; andVItas
~rulaltts ousted Mlroslav Mecir7-6
('1-4)' 6-2.
•.
1

their latest a ~1 upset of
17th-ranked Wake Forest on Wednesday night. .
TheCavallersarenow17-9overall
and one game under .500 In the ACC
with the same record as Wake
Forest, 6-7. The Demon Deacons are
19-7 overall but only Hl In ACC road
games.

NEW

FOOTBALL
YORK (AP) - In a ruling

made public Wednesday,

U.S.
Qlstrlct Court Judge Laughlin
W'aters saki the United States

t-

Football League's rule barring
college underclassmen from enter·
lng the league constitutes a "group
boycott" In violation of antitrust
law.
It was the result of a suit flied last
August by former Arizona punter
Bob Boris, who sought to play In the
USFL even though his class had not
been graduated.
Jay Moyer, counsel to the
National Football League, said the
NFL had no Intention of changing Its
rule, which Is nearly Identical.

MOI'OR SPORTS
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)Dick Berggren, editor of Stock Car
Racing Magazine, has been named
as the 11th recipient of the HeDijl T.
McLemore Motorsports Press
Award.
Berggren, 41, of Ipswich, Mass.,
became editor of the magazine In
1977 and has served as a commenta·
tor for motorsports events.The
award Is named for the late
McLemore, a pioneer journalist In
motorsports coverage.

Scoreboard ...
NBA results

.

N.._. a.lletW A.IIOdadoo
w.....,..aGames
New Ya-k 102, Boston !II
New Jmey 1(12, Los A.n#')es 92
Ot&gt;trat 137. Washington 100
Milwaukee 112. OUcago 83
Seattle 177. Dallas 1)1, 2(11'
Ptuladtlphla 100, Utah 97
San Dietl&lt;&gt; Ull. l'lloenlx !II

\

•

Dew Tippen, cmter.
Rob
PahTlfr. defmseman, to Maine of thE&gt;
Amerll'an Hockt&gt;y t.eaeue.
NEW

'nllndat• Games
Kansas City at HOOS1oo
Pt1iladelphla at Pto!nLw
C1evt&gt;land at DenvPr
San Antonio .. : t-U11and
f"rrdqa Glrnftl
vs. Ebton at

~Jcago

•·•.
(

'·

r

EABr

AmM1can U. 62. Oelawart&gt; ol2
Georgetown n. PII15WTgtl S2
Lena lsland u. Ill. WIR"'ef' 16
Maryland 63, N. Carolina St 50
Nf'W Hampshire li'J. Colgall' 49, 1
Rider 46, Bucknell 44
• -·
seton HaD gr, Bollon Coli. m
Syracuse Ql, Canlslus S.
TCI'NSa\ WI . 61, l..ehigh Sl
SOllftl
Campbell 13. E. Carolloa 63, OT
Clemson 1T' Duke 16
l...outsville lit Tulane Ill
N. Carolina fB, Georgia Tech ~
. N('W Orttans 86, Sprtla: Hill 59
Nlcholll Sl. 73, So.tthem U. ~
SE l..o.llslana 16, NW l...ouls1ana Ill
Tm.J'l'!ll!le St. EB, AUitin PNy ~
~Tech 18, Ga. Southern 75
Vlr&amp;Wa IIi, Wake Farest 61
Wllllam 1: Mary Mt. James MadiJon 47

Oevcland at Utah
Golden State at San Otego
Indiana vs. Seattlt&gt; at Tacoma

NHLN_
results
_ ..._
w~. olll'le8

Vancouver 9. PlftSburxh s
3, N.Y. Ran~ 1

Tmx~to

C'!UciiO •• Buffalo 3
Sr. Lwls 7. MlruBOta 5

N.Y. """""" 4, Wlnnlpeo 3
S. Edmonton 3

Phlladelphia

..,.....,..o~ma

Lol

~at

Bolton

MID'II'fBr
Bowllng Green 82. E. MlchJaan 11

Montreal at Detroit
Plftsbw'Kh at Washington

E. l1llnots IW, Valparallo 79
F'1olida St . t"fi. Ctnctmatl 64
Indiana 78, Purdue liB
Kent St. rr. w. Michigan m
Miami. Ohkl at BaU St:., l)pd .. srow
Ohio u. !!S. N. Dllnois m

Phlladelphla at CaJgary
Friday's G~me

Vancollvt'f at New Jt.'nt'y

'

: Transactions

•

SW Missouri St. 82, Oklahoma Oty 61
Toledo 71, Cent. Michigan~
·
Xavk&gt;r. Ohkl 72. Dayt&lt;r~ 61
sotmiWI'liT
Arkansas 79. Rice 54

BASEBAlL

~

Amertcaft f..HctH'

SEA ITI..E MARINtRS-S!gnt'd Jim
... Prrsk'y and DomlnliJ:O Ramos. Infielders.·

Houston Ill. Baylor

to

Lamar IIi, Tt&gt;xas-San Ant..WO 73
OklaOOma St. li, Iowa St. 63
So. Mt&gt;tOOdlsf 100, Texas 72
FAIIImlr
Colorado ~. Kansu 85
Colorado St 61, San 06ego St. ~
Utah St. 83, Pactnc, Ca.l.tl. 16

and Ivan CaldPron, outficlct&gt;r. to ont&gt;-yl'ar

~. • contracts.

F'OOI1IAlL

.

OEVIIS-Smt

c--""'""

Hartbrd

NN' Ya-k at [)('IJ"oot
Lol Angeles at Atlanta
Kansas City at DaUas

..

JERSEY

CoUege scores

MUwaukel' at Washington

•..

IIO()(E\'

Noliiir_IAi_ - DETROIT RED WINGS-Purchased
Plm"t' Aubry. ll'f1 wing, from the Que!)e(&gt;
NcrdlqLM.&gt;S.
HARTFORD WHALERS-Staned

u........... F...... ._..
WASHINGTON FEDERALS-Fired Ray
~ Jauch. head roach. Named Dick Bk&gt;lskl
• head roadl.
': ·

Accuracy Is
Most Important

(

Top~ ·
North CaroUJi. 1«1 by Michael
Jordan and
turned a
three-point lead tnldway through
the second half Into a :!}point bulge
late 1n the game to bliiat Georgia
Tech In the ACC. Jordan scored
eight of his ~points In a 21-4 spurt,
andhisthree-polntplaywlth3:29left
put the Tar Heels llj)64-41.
NorlhCarollnanowls25-1,1J.Oin
conference.
.
Akeem Olajuwon led Hwston to
Its second stra181it SouthWest Con·
terence championship with an easy
victory over Baylor. . Olajuwon
scored 24 points, had 18 rebounds
and blocked seven shots as ' the
Cougars led 29-8 with more than 10
minutes left 1n the first half. The
victory was the 39th straight 1n the
SWCforHouston,26-3andl5-0inthe
conference.
Georgetowncllnchedatleastatle
In the Big East Conference by
beating Pitt. 'lbe Hoyas, 25-3 and
13-2 In the conference, got 17 points
from Patrlck Ewing and 16 from

SamPerktns

Tournament results
-H.S.~­
w-.,..-

"-"'"-

Cln. Oak HllJs 61, Falrtteld :!1
Cln. St.Xavler 91. Cln. Taft~
Cle. Hay ,., Owl.t 61
Col. Brookhaven 58, Col. Wanenon ~

Col. Walnut ~e 61 , Col. Beechcrott
Day. Oun.blr liD, Day. Pattenon 62
G - :11, Col Eost 46
Kettertna Alter 72. Day. Whitt&gt; IJi
l.dlonon «l. Day. Carolll!
Mldd~own 16, C!n. Greenhllll 6t
Rtvt&gt;r Vlew t6. Cambrii:We 4.5

,.,,
-..- -

Ill. Cloytu&gt;

-~

w.....,......

• ONo H..&amp; Girts .........

a . - A M -.'

Col. wanenon 61, eo.. SWth 51
WonhiniUJn t9. Wa!Jdns Memorial 43
O...U.Tww•....
Eb::kf')E' Val. &lt;H. Jonathan AJI2T t:l
an. Lady ot Anlfa&amp; 42, KamUtan Rail
l!

Xenia 58, Day. Belrmnt 56
O...U.Twwww•..,.
Cln. McNidlol.u 61 . C1n. FOmeytown 47
N. College HW 7•• Hamllton Rcu 00
Piketon t8, f'Ms. Wfll 41
Portsmouth II. Jacttsm Ell
Rod!: HW m. Chela~e 63
Wheelersburg 79, Ironton 54
O..AT..,.....
BPa'm' Eastem Ell, NN BoltCI\ •.1
~ EO. Bud!&lt;ye w. 49

an. Reedkla: e. M*ln :a
!Joy. Ookwood ., "'""'""~
"
:rl
M.oysvtllo Tl, St""""vtllt 61
Urbana Ea. venames st

a.......,.,...._,.....

'l'nly " · Folrtlom &lt;7
wtntemotllf 61, Tr&gt;Votley S1

34

RM!o' "'· - - Calli. ,.
.
O..A'h&amp;Wi. .
E. Cllntat 52, S. 0wie1ton SE 19
""""-• &lt;7, Riptoy 41
Hui&amp;lfon 51. FrankUn ~ Green

.
Maceo Eutem 61, Lodltond :rJ
NNark Cath. 88. .DulvWe 43
Racine 17, N. Mama 42
TH-County N. !l, Nf!W Milml

•t

Weese has good season
'

ZANESVILLE Melanie
Weese, a former student with the
Southern Tornadoes, has enjoyed
success as a freshman with the
Musklngum College Women's basketball team, which recently received an NCAA play-off bid among
division three schools.
Weese will accompany the team
on Its trlp to New Jersey, where It
will play the winner ot the Atlantic
Region, Division III, Friday and
Saturday, March 2 and 3.
The play-off bid Is the first-ever
for Musklngum College's women's ·
program. This season Musklngutn
was ranked 16th In the nation
among Division m schools, win·
nlng their conference championship .and posting Its first ~ game
winning season. They are also
ranked fourth In the NCAA Division
ill Atlantic Region.
. Another landmark was attained
at the. school as Coach Donna
Newberry celebrated her tOOth
career victory at the school this
season.
Weese, who was sidelined with an
Injury early In the season, has
returned to the winning team that

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

Louks, student at Eastern
ljlgh School, has been named a 1984
'!'nlted States National Award
wiMer In mathematics by the
Qnlted States Achievement
Academy.
: Daugher of Jim and Sharon
Couks, Amy was nominated for the
J)ationat awrd by Nancy Larkins,
~tern mathematics teacher. Her
P,lcture and a resume will appear In
· tbe u. S. Achjt\lement Academy
official yealobook, published
nationally.
( Selection Is made on the basis of
Q!commendatlon ot teachers,
Q:lacbes, counselors or other school
~rson the baslsofthestuden.t's
lfademlc performance, Interest
and aptitude, leadership quaUtles,
ri!ponslblllty, enthuslam, motlva·
,.,.. to learn end Improve, citizen·
ship, attitude and cooperative spirit,
dependability and recommendation
ftom a teacher or director.

POSTMASTER: S.nd addreu to The
Dally S.ntlnet, Ill Court St ., Pomeroy,
Ohio '5769.
8VB8CKJP110N llATIEJI

...
, kCurler
· - - JI.OO
One w
............
........................
One Month ................................ IUO
One Year ........ .... .......... .. .. ...... 152.80
SINGLE COPY
PKJCD
Dally ............ ...................... :Ill Cents

Subscribers not dOIIrtna to I"IY thtcarrlfr may remit 1n advancf dlrf'Ct to
The Dally S.ntlnel on 3, 6 or 12 month
ba11l. Cr.dlt will bf' given carr&amp;.r each
month .

No lublcrlptlons by mall prrmltled In
towns wher. homtt carrier wrvlce ll
available.
MAIL SVBSCRIPTJONS

...... ototo
weeu ................................. IJC.OI
~ :::~ : : : ::: : : : :::: :m~
13

Melanie Is the daughter of Mrs.
Lillian Weese and Don Weese,
Racine.

US FOR EXCITING
OHIO UNIVERSITY BASKETBALL

'

ON THE SPORTS LEADER
92 FM, WMPO-FM
MIDDLEPORT

'

',.· .

,.

'.

.

MElANIE WEESE

Ad Price •3.99
$4.00 Money Back Offer
Rebate '4.00
On Any Filler Spool Of
Trilene XP World Record Line Net Cost '0.00
March I thru 31, 1984

•'
'

•

.••

. ~·

SPECIAL 4·20. LB. TEST • '3.99

•'•

FISHING

"&lt;C ~ARATE ~TICK

Sale

Regular ·

19.59
17.49
1-6.09
13.29
16.79

••
••

I·

SENSOR GRAPHITE SERIES
SKIRTED SPINNING REELS

••
'

•••

••

-~·

PH. 992·2955

.

J

-·

E. ~1n

·

-

PCNt\trey, 0 .

O,.nNitftftflllf

-

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

••
•'

(Acroea from the 'AI..J,ort)

~

.

il

Upper Rl"~r Rd.

.Citlrltl RIHit, R. Ph.

FritfNfly S.rvlct

AUTO CAST

~

17.49
16.79

SWISHER LOHSE
Phor moe r

PRESCR.,TIONS

•

Model PMA15S

1984

:•
J
,

-------·~----------

tot p.m.

,

••

· 14.69
13.99

.

...... "."'"''··'"·

,

Graphite Rod

.f•
.•,

MEN/WOMEN .................... :.............................. 24.99
CHILDREN ..........................................................
.
.~3.99,.

Mon. ttwu S.l. I :M •.m.

'1999

1 Piece Midium·HIIVJ
~

. L. A. TRAINER

. Suodlr 10:30 to 12:30 lOti ~to I •·•·

____ ...................

INTRODUCTORY REBATE

,.

MEN/WOMEN·................................................... 20.99
CHILDREN .......................................................... 19.99

Ktflntth McCuU_,.., R. ll'ti.

For Appointment Ph. 675-6060

Practice Limited Jo Urology
.........
,_

. ROAD STAR

-

Adult and Pediatric Urology
Infertility

~

·-

,,_.

by Scotch&amp;ard (Inc! p1d &amp; mstJIIa!IOn )

Offi.ce Hours: Monday-Friday 9 a.m. • 5 p.m.

·•

,..._
•

throu&amp;h the

scutplwtd Slaony tuturt. 11)()1!1. continuous
liiiMtftt nylon .;u not pill Of shtciMd makn
tM carpt1 usy to care IOf .

CARPET -Clover

Crown loyal Col1tc110n IOOGta continuous
hlament nylon . !nett loop styhn&amp;. Proteded

:iAnnounces .the opening of
offices at
Pleasant Valley ·Hospital
.in Point Pleasant, WV

••
•'
••

..
,

Kines Wish

ltctt tMIIitoiOfltion/ wtlisptf

.-

'SHRIKANT VAIDY A, M.D.

•

9'

o=

ARMSTRONG CARPET

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

IIGULAI SIASON AND POST -SIASON TOUINAMINTS

CARIB ..... M~.n/.~!m~................. 27.99
OCEANIA¥.~~1:-Y.~'l'.~~ ................. 24.99.
DIABLO ... !'l!~/.Y.:~\'l~~................. 22,99
CUJT CANVAS ... ~.~;.1~·-~~:! ............ 18.99
ROAD RACERCM~m!'!............... 23.

.r.

r---:::;;::;;.::----j

oiVtll"''

ON FOLLOWING STYLES:

r

'~ Amy

~M:;s~~ g~~~~~
: ~E:! : :707:7"::: : :::: 5:*
Weese alsoleading
started the
as ateam
freshman
at lr:===Sec=r:eta:ry;;;~~~;;;::::::::::::;
Southern,
to tour
straight SVAC championships.
::;ed

~~= ~"::ruv~!~

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No. 83·31-EL·EFC (Sub·
file A), to review theluel
procurement practices
and policies ol The Ohio
Power Company. the
operation of Its Electric
Fuel Component and
related matters. This
hearing is scheduled to
begin 1:30 p.m. on
March 7, 1984 at City
Coyncll Chambers. 218
Cleveland Avenue. SW.
Canton. Ohio 44702 .
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further In·
formation may be Ob·
tained by contacting the
Commission .
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES

attending 81 they prepare their own
returns. Employes will exp~ln how
to report Income aJid claim various
deductions. Only the most common
Items will be covered In detall. For
buslneu related Issues or thole
which are complicated, advice will
be given on how to get further
assistance from the IRS.
'lbe sessions are tree of charge
and wlll.be handled on a first -rome,
tlrst served basis.
Any organizations Interested In
sponsoring an outreach session In
their area should contact Teresa
Dixon, P.O. Box 1666, Parkersburg,
W.Va .. 26101 or call toll free,
l·lro-424-1040.

•

Member: The Auoclated Prest, In·
land Dally Pms Auoclaton and the
Aml!f'lcan NOWIP'Ipt'r Publllh«s AI·
aoclatlon, National Advertlalna Representaflvt, Branham New1pa~ Saln,
73.'1 Third Avenue, Now York, New
York 10017.

LEGAL NOTICE

'

Y&gt;cal girl
pamedUSAA
~ward winner

~

RE MAKING ROOM FOR
NEW STOCK
THIS FRIDAY &amp; SATURD AY
MAHCH 2nd &amp; 3rd
·'

--· ·-~

'

' Internal Revnue Service employees will be at the Mason County
Ill!bllc Llbr8ljl, 6th and VIand
Stl,'l!ts, at 1 p.m., Saturday to assist
residents with the preparation ot
tl)elr federal Income tax returns.
' :I'he free assistance Is avauable
tllfough the IRS Outreach Program
and Is being sponsored In the Point
Pleasant area by the Mason Coonty
Pljbllc Library.
Jnterested persons should take
their fonns package, tonns W-2,
Interest and dividend statements,
, list of deductions and any additional
Information needed to prepare their
tax returns.
An IRS employe wUI guide tho5e

meroy, Ohio.

Col. Wehrle 'X), 8emt Upbn ~I
DenvU.W 17, E . Knox 10
Grandview 75, Uckm, HIS. l1
Newark Cath. 70, Cantington :i2
Skyvue18, BNIIsvtlleSI
WettMIIetll. Minao33

Cin. H...... 16, Mllt&gt;rd ~

.
David Wlnpte. Georsetown led rnlredlntheACCbuement,lanow
37..zl.thaltllme.PittiCOJ'edtheflnt 3-U In the conteae11ce and 13-13
elal.tt ptllntl of the second half, but overall.
GeOrgetown' pYt the game away
8yracUie IIUl'Yived uecoad·half
with a 10-2 ~ tanited by Michael Canlslu rally to win their 1\oncon,,
Jackson's~fobtjumper.
terence contest. 'lbe Clranpmen, .
Secoad Tea
21-6, led:ll-23atthehalf, 1:\Utcanlalua
Indiana ·~ within a half· cloled to s.-62 011 Ray HaU'alayup
gameofBigTenConterenceleadlng wlth4lii!Cillldaleft. RafaeiAddllon
Purdl!e. Stew Robinson, a reserve ledS)TaculewlthlSpolnta.
guard. acored a career-high 22
AdrlanBrancJucored18pointa,l2
points for lbe Hoosiers, 19-7 overall In the second half u Maryland held
and 12-41nconterence. Purdue !a~ - off N«th Carolina State. Maryland,
and J.2.31n the Big Ten. Indiana led 19-7 and8-51n theACC,Ied38-29early
36.:14 at ~ but outscored the In the second half before State
Botlermakers1f4atthestartofthe · acbred six atraliht polnta ·to pull
secQnd half.
within three. Brancb then tanlted a
Arkansas, second to Houston In seven-point nm with a three-point
the SWC, go~26 points from Alvin play that put Marylandahead45-.11.
Robertson to beat Rice. · 'lbe
Raz«baccll*l41-22athaltt1nleand
by 81 many 1!8 27 points late In the
' Tb~ Daily Sentinel
ganie. Arkansas Is 23-5 and 13-2111
the' SWC.
(VIPSJCJ.-1
A DIYJoiGoo af illllllt .....Ja, Joe.
Anthony Jenkins scored 20 points
to lead Ciemlon over Duke. 'lbe
Published ...ry afternoon, Monday
throuall Friday, 111 Court Stlftl, by tht
Blue'Devtlsmlssedthreeshotslnthe
Ohio Valloy Pubtllhtna ConiiJOiny . Mul·
llnall4 seconds as theY fell to 7-61n
tlmedla,lnc., Pomeroy, OhloC57ttl, 992·
the ACC and 22·7 overall. Clemson,
21M. !le&lt;ond CIUI poota(l&lt; potd It f'o.

SAVE 30o/o

There's no room for error tn our
business. That's why we'll take
extra care to see that all prescriptions are filled exactly to
your doctor's orders. You can
depend on us for all your health
care needs ... because we care.

'.

Wednesday nlght's vtctory came
despltethelossmldwaythroughthe
tlrst half of starting guard Othell
WUson, who sprained his ankle.
Senior guard Rick Carlisle scored 18
points 1n his stead as VIrginia led
nearly all the way.
"It was an emotional game for us,
especially after losing Othell,"
Virginia Coach Terry Holland said.
"But I thought Rick Carlisle and
Ricky Stokes (reserve guard) did a
great job of controlling the game
and controlling the tempo."
KeMy Green led Wake Forest
with 19 points.
Other ranked teams were more
success1ul. T~rated North CarolIna beat Georgia Tech 69-56, No. 2
Houston defeated Baylor ~.
fourth-ranked GeorgetoWif' defeated Pittsburgh 71-52, Indiana
upset No. 11 Purdue 7S{i9, No. 12
Arkansas beat Rice 79-54, Clemson
surprised No. 15 Duke 77-76,
16th-ranked Syracuse edged Can!slus ~and No. 19 Maryland beat
NorthCarollnaState63-50.

.

·
-

_:_

--

--

. Gallipolis .

'

~

'

f

•
'i•
I

)

. MIDDLIPOitT ·.";

I

\J

•

;

I
!,

�,

Page-6--The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 1, 1984

Blue and Gold banquet held
honoring local Boy Scouting
Numerous awards were presented at the blue and gold banquet of
the Chester Cub Scout Pack 235 held
at the Chester Fire Station Saturday
night.
The recognition pro~am was
preceded by a covered dish dinner.
Luke McDaniel, cubmaster, extended the welcome and Introduced
the guests, Gale Osborne, Troopl25,
scoutmaster; Bill Slm and Roger
Starcher, Troop 235, assistant
scoutmasters, Bob Workman,
Troop 249, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hlll,
Terry Newsome, Mike and Elic
Slm, Floyd Ridenour, Scott
:Starcher, and Henry Hunter, Ches:ier Youth Committee building
t halrman.
Hlll had grace preceding the
dinner and the speaker was Slm. A
reading entitled 'Someone Died"
;was by Kathy McDaniel.
• Jo Ann Newsome, committee
c hairman, . presented the God and
l amlly award, a first for the Chester
.Cub Scout Pack, toJamesMcDanlel
andhlsparents. Shealsoconducted
the ceremony advancing the cubs
.holding bear ranks to webelos. In
-the group were Tony Grate, Keith
:Hunt, Matt Ridenour, JamesMcDa:ruei, and Rod Newsome.
: Luke McDanlel' and Mrs. New:some had charge of the Arrow of
Light ceremony In which webelos

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172, brder of the
Eastern Star, will meet at 7:ll
p.m. Thursday night at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
There wlll be lnltlatlon and
officers are asked to wear their
chapter dresses. Members are
also to have skits.
MIDDLEPORT- The Ladles
Auxillary of the United Pentecostal Church of Mlddleport will
_ sponsor a yard and rummage
• sale Thursday and Frtday In the
: Sunday school building adjacent
: to the church on South Third .
• Street, Middleport .
MIDDLEPORT - The Mld-

dleport Youth League will meet
at 7: ll Thursday night at the
Middleport Vlllage Hall. Anyone
Interested In coaching Is asked to
attend the meeting.

FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE - Week-end
revival at Reedsville United
Methodist Church Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 7: ll each
evening wlth the Rev. Norman
Butler, Paden City, as evangelist; public Invited.

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Eastern
Athletic· Boosters will meet at
7:30 Monday night at the school.

district's first state coimcilor ofOhlo
In the organization.
The Dlstict 13 Deputies and Past
CouncUors Club will serve 11 dinner
on Aprll29atl: llp.m. at the Chester
lodge hall. Reservations to the
dlnneropentoallmembersaretobe
made with Erma Cleland.
Mrs. Smith read the district
by-taws. Refreshment were served
by the hostess. Attending were
Mary Garwood, dePUty, Galla 114;
Helen Bauer, deputy, Vera Householder, Betty Wolfe, Perry 283;
Mildred Lowery, Mary Peart,
Logan 120; Eileen Clark, deputy,
Mary Donna Simms, Guiding Star
124; Essa Varner, deputy, Faye
Hoselton, Belle Pralrte 200; Betty
Roush, deputy, Erma Cleland, Pam
Davis, Opal Hollon, Thelma White,
Marcia Keller, Charlotte Grant,
Dorothy Ritchie, Mary K. Holter,
Doris Grueser, Chester 323.

Harrisonville community news
'•

Mr. and Mrs. CecU Blackwood
were In Dayton recently to visit
their aunt, Mrs. Ellen Berges.
Mrs. David Ray Riggs of Columbus visited a recent Sunday wlth
Mrs. Gloria Riggs and famlly.
Mrs. Don Gibson returned to her
home In Maryland after spending
two weeks with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Douglas.

According to Janet Byers, Dean
or the School of Nursing, the
Information days wlll be Wednesday, March 14, and Wednesday,
march 21, In the skills lab of the E.
E. Davis Careers Center. There wUI
be morning (10: JO.ll: 30 a.m.) and
evening (7-8 p.m. ) session both
days.

Heart-related diseases continued
to be the leading death cause In
Meigs County during 1983, accordIng to Meigs County Health Department records released today.
During that year, 71 deaths were
attributed to heart diseases. Cancer
and emphysems or respiratory
!allure were the second leading
cause of death with 12 deaths each.
Other deaths were strokes, 11 ;
pneumonia, four; accidents, three:
diabetes, one: and small bowel
obstruction, lour.
Communicable diseases continues to be an Integral part of the
deprtment's workload. There were
37 VD smears went to the Ohio
Department of Health. In addition ,
the local department checked the
following: 20 lnnuenza and three
rubella cases.
Certificates · or permits Issued

organized 21 yjears ago and consists
of the Church of Christ In Christian
Union, Free Methodist Independent
Holiness, Chur¢h of the Nazarene
and Wesleyan Congregations.
Song evangelists for ~ year's
camp meeting will be the Sisson
family. They have been tun time
song evangelists In the Church of
Christ In Christian Union and have
been slngtng In youth rallles, camp
meetings, revivals and other meetlngs for the past eight years.
Further lnformatkln on the Indoor
camp meetl.g may be obtained
from the Rev. Clyde Henderson,
992-7350, president.

For additional Information, contact the college at (614) 245-5353.

Cancer AnswerLine:

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

Mr. and Mrs. CecU Blackwood
visited fliends In Portsmouth a
recent Sunday.
Mrs. Frances Alkire visited Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Gibson and Robin and
Ray Alkire In Columbus recently.
Mrs. Mollie McGrath and son of
Logan were recent Sunday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
McGrath.

Adonatlonf#$100wasmadetothe
organ repair fund when the HomebuDders Class of the Middleport
Church of Christ met In regular
session at the church recenllv.
Martha Searls, Allee R. Brown
and Arnold Richards were reported
ill. Bud Wilson had the opening
prayer wlth Coleen Van Meter
presiding at the meeting. Devotions
were given by Dorothy Baker and
Clarlce Erwin and consisted of an
article "Housewives Cold War on
Communism," a poem, "Lord of AU

Your ''Extr1 Touch "

~It Since 19&amp;7

FLORIST
PH. 992·2644
352 E. Main, .Pomeroy
Your FTD Floriat

Alfred UMW meeting
recently held at home
Nursing home visitations were
planned when the Alfred United
Methodist Women met at the home
of Clara Follrod and Nina Robinson
recently.

Gertrude Robinson will check on
visiting times at Arcadia Nursing
Center. Twenty-nlneslckcallswere
reported and members reported on
visiting Helen Woode, a patient at
Arcadia.
NeUie Parker had the special
prayer for Linda Muterspaugh who
works In education at McCurdy
School In New Mexico. The group
signed a btrlhday card for her.
Thelma Henderson read a letter
from Phyllis Powers In South Korea
In which she told of her mission work

JEWELRY PRESENTS

Nations" and ·some remarks on
February's fambus presidents and
how they were positive, contldent,
calm and serene by putting their
trust In God.
Offices' reports were given.
Prayer by Raymond Cole closed the
meeting.
Refreshments Were
serVed by Mrs. Erwin and Mrs.
Baker to those named and Willard
and Nettle Boyer, Bud and Hazel
Wilson, Dorothy Roach, Thelma
Boyer, Delcle Forthe, Raymond
Baker and Farte Cole.

Celebtole

Revolution with 1 new RCA TV, VCR or
VldeoOiaC Pleyet'

~;~ Video

2 DAYS ONLY
MARCH 2ND &amp; 3RD

1-----~~(llMITED QUANT_IT_I_ES_J,.....-------1

Console

$549

95

- RCA's
lowest-Priced

Mrs. Jerry - Northway, Grand
Rapids, Mich., have been here
several days with her mother, Mrs.
Ma Van Meter, and other area
relatlvs.
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Curtis,
Chester, visited on Tuesday afternoon wlth Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Carpenter.
Cindy Evans. student at Ohlo
University, spent the weekend here
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Evans, Ryan and Matthew.

...l

25'~n:::
r..onbol c
Ct't1nge channel s. adjutt

volume . turn t tl on 1nd ofl
- all by r emot e control
127-ch annel multi -ba nd
~a ble tunu\g. •

Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brooks and

Padded Top
CEDAR CHEST
By Lane

THIS NEW UVING ROOM SUITE AT THE
REGULAR PRICE OF '499.95

. . . .. 7 ~ .--;r

· if
.p,

·IW€··

1

•

lt

,.!;i! 1... -

J

"God IH"

Hf'

l o~

11\('

Pillow
Arm
Special

and vou

Hf' wUJ cll'il rLW oUr sins " 1th for£ivf'nrss

Now 2 pc. Eertv Amo,rican
~Ann lMng Room Suite
with Maple Trim.

Ou r God's promJSf'S Ull' 111K'.

bod Is r1ch In H is glorv
Shining r.o bt1ghl
·

death of her uncle, Francis Carsey,
frl, Columbus.

Hf' ·~ my llUidlng Ugh'

Due to an Informational error, the
name of Langsvllle Junior Glrl
Scout :rroop 1196 was recently
omitted from the list of groups
participating In International
Thinking Day actlvltles held at the
Amencan Legion Post, Rutland,
Saturday.

Reg.

Cod l"' In nw world
Not ot !h&lt;' world

famlly have received word of the

Omitted

OR

....""'J

Poet's Corner

YOUR CHOICE

NEW

i&gt;~~i

Alfred area happenings
Mrs. Wilber Parker has returned
from Seattle, Wash. where she went
to attend the wedding of her son,
Edward, to Allee Fournier on
Whldbey Islalid In Puget Sound. The
new Mr. and Mrs. Parker are now
living .In Muldlteo, Wash. She Is a
realty secretary and he Is an
electrician. Mrs. WUberParkeralso
visited her cousin and husband, Mr.
and Mrs. Bert Avery, In Seattle
before returning home.

screenings lor blood and blood
forming diseases; 39 people
screened for mental retardation
and referred to Carleton school; 42
screen lor psychoneurotic and
personality disorders and referred
to Mental Health; 10 screened lor
epilepsy and other seizure disorders; 75 screened for healing
disorders; 68 screened lor vision
problems; 40 screened lor nervous
system and sense organ disorders;
:¥JI screened for heart-related
disorders; 10 screened for rheu·
rna tic fecer; 367 screened lor
diseases of the circulatory system;
100 screened for diseases of the
respiratory system; 136 screened
lor diseases of the digestive system; 24 screened for diseases of the
genitourinary system; one client
screened lor pregnancy and pregna ncy co mp licat ions: eig ht

r.oo l'&gt; happlncoss a nd pP:tCf'

screened lor arthritis conditions; 28
screened lor bone and organs or
movement disease: 25 screened
with congenital malformations and
referred; 34 clients served due to
prematurity; 2 clients served for
other diseases of earty Infancy; two
clients served wit h Reye's syndrome; 5,602 clients given healt h
promotion Informations ; 1,434 ane·
mla screenings; 166 Denver Devel·
opmental screenlng tests given to
Inf a nt s, pre sc hoo le r s a nd
kindergarten-age children: 475
blood press ure screenings; 52 lead
polsonlng blood est drawn ; two
blood tests drawn for PKU !Phenyl·
ketonulia; six pregnancy tests
!done only while prenatal program
existed from Dec. 12-Dec. 31, 1983.
In addition, 29 children to age 21
were screened for vlsual disorders.

REG.

Medical opinion Is divided on the
Issue of prophylactic mastectomy.
Some physicians feel it Is a justified
preventive measure for hlgh·risk
women. Most believe the actual
risk of developing breast cancer
does not warrant the premature
removal or the breast. Instead, they
advise women to receive freq uent
physical examinations and periodic
mammograms for the early detection of the cancer.
QUESTION: Who is at risk for
developing colorectal cancer?
ANSWERIIne: About the same
number or inen as women develop
the disease and the likelihood
Increases with age, especially after
age 50. Anyone with a personal or
family history or colorectal cancer
or of polyps in the colon or rectum
should be examined carefully. Two
other diseases or the dlgestivl' tract .
chronic ulcerative colitis and polyposis, are also linked to colorectal
cancer.
For more lniormation call 9922101 and ask for Teresa Collins.

Li czst lcz

Lifestyle
FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

Covered with Herculon
solid cover only.

-Meigs County CourthousePrints
NOW AVAILABLE AT

RCA

PomerOJ'· Ohio

y S34995

ON -ALL WINTER

,~~~~~~~~®$®~,

SALE SHOES &amp; BOOTS

H&amp;R BLOCK·

Found
Richard
'Ruflirii
$769
: In arecent survey of customers who got refunds, we found 3 out
• of 4 believed H&amp;R Block got them bigger refunds than if they'd
prepared their own taxes. 3 out of~·

What can we find tor . You?~
KARL KEBLER ·- Owner
PHONE: 99:l·3795
_61.8 E. Main _St__ · :.,____ _

POII!.!Ir!)v,Q!!io ~J~_9

'.

.

SALE PRICE
$600 T0$}}50
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT 'TIL 8
FREE PARKING ON THE MUNICIPAL PARKING LOT
" OVER 48 YEARS IN THE SAME
PLACE UND.ER THE SAME MANAGEMENT"

FURNITURE SHOWCASE

•FREE DELIVERY
•FREE PARKING

OPEN DAILY TO 5 P.M.
MON. &amp; FRI. TO 8 P.M.

" WHERE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
IS OUR MAIN C()NCERN"
CORNER OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE • GALLIPOLIS • 446-3045

Get a Ftsee Chic
SUit.
When you buy the world's
best-fitting jeans or any
Chic product.

Clark's jewelry Store

19" Color
Portables

FINAL CLEARANCE

Values 1 ll 99 to 122 99

Stop In Today &amp; See Our Large Selection!

Model YJT1i5

S79 95

V2PRICE

IN NEW EXCITING COLORS AND COVERS

non·,

LY

BLOUSES &amp; TOPS

We Just Received ANew Shipment Of
SOFAS, CHAIRS,LOVESEATS,
SECTIONALS &amp; PIT GROUPS

Pralsr .J£'S us . - Mrs. R&lt;trlx•ra .laml'S. 1517

B&amp;W

RACK OF
lADIES' &amp; JUNIORS'
lONG SlEEVED

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

N.Vt' Avr., Pan "Oy, Ohio 457ffi.

12"

In Crippled Children's Clinics: friO 1hea rt! clinic; .187 children examtotat clients served via WI C . !ned In Well Child Cl inic; 127
services: 1,201 screened lor hemo- scTcened In D.O.P. ivlslon) clinic;
eight "plastic-clinic" children given
tocrit and hemoglobin !blood Iron ~:
follow-up: I,221 nutrition counsel960 screened during WIC and Well
Child Clinic for head and chest lings completed ; parenting sldlls.
circumferences; 50 head start classes to a total of 137 1ndlvlduals;
children received Immunizations, imm unlzatiolns included 750 lor
physical exa ms, blood screenings infl uenza; 567 DPT iDiphthertaand referra ls to appropriate agen- PertussisTeta nusl ; 36 adult tetacies; 69 screenings In orthopedic nus; 382 Trivalent oral polio; 147
clinics; 1,434 Well Child conferen- MMR IMeasles-Mumps-Rubellal .
The Meigs County Health Departces done with pa rent or relative; 170
ment
offers the public free
screened In P.O.D. clinlcs 1hea rImmuniza
tions.
Ing I: 25 examined In Ca rdiac

Is Hodgkin's a form of leukemia?

RICE'

Stiversville
personals

2 ONLY

In schools and prison service. She
sent a Clu1stmas card made by a
quadreplegla who paints by mouth.
Florence Ann Spencer led the
program of prayer and self-&lt;lenlal
using a booklet, "The Family of
God." All members took part wlth
readings and discussion. The program closed with group read~ of
the prayer, "The Household of
Faith."
Hostesses served sandwiches,
chips and cheesecake to those
named and Anna Thompson, Osle
Mae Follrod, and Martha Poole.
Next meeting will be March a&gt; at
the church. The program will be on
prayer and members are asked to
take readings on tJ:le prayer theme.

Included, 1,036 (1,539 birth and
death) and ~ burial permits.
Permits Issued were sewage, 55;
food service, 111; Inspection of food
service operations, 120; vending
service operations, three; trailer
parks, licenses seven wlth seven
Inspections; school Inspection, 21;
public swimming pools, two. The
depat;tment received 76 complaints
with 67 Inspections and consultations; Immunized 160 dogs and
cats; checked 71 bite reports, with
10 animal heads transported to the
Ohio Department of Health's lab,
none were positive.
Under nursing statistics there
were 140 pediculosis checkups, 91
uline screenings; two PKU babies
screened and referred; 37 venerea l
disease screenings, and 76 screen·
lngs lor allergies.
Other activities Included: ThreE-

A regular feature prepared bY the lever, night sweats, nausea and
cells anywhere In the body. The
American Ca ncer Society to help vomiting. Any symptom should be targeting a bility or these anti·
checked by a physician.
save your life from cancer.
bodies Is being used to deliver
QUESTION: Is Hodgkin's dis·
QUESTION: Is cancer In child· anti-cancer drugs directly to tum·
ren rare?
ease a form of leukemia?
ors, destroying cancer cells wlth
ANSWERIIne: Yes, only about little or no damage to healthy
ANSWERIIne: No, the diseases
are two different forms of cancer, 6,1XXl new cases of childhood cancer surrounding tissues. Monoclona I
but both Involve the spread of are reported yearly. However. antibodies also hold promise as an
abnormal white blood cells Into the cancer Is the chief cause of death bY early detection tool for cancer.
circulatory systep~ . Hodgkin's dis- disease In children between three pinpointing cancer cells before
ease affects the body's lymphatic and 14. Cancers In children tend to clinical signs appear.
system. the network which trans· develop more quickly than adult
QUESTION: What Is prophylacports lnfectlo fighting white blood cancers because body tissues are tic mastectomy?
cells through
uld called lymph. growing rapidly and the cancer
ANSWE Rilne: Prophylac tic
As the disease spreads. abnormal grows light along with them. mastectomy Is the surgical remowhite blood cells multiply and Leukemia accounts lor almost half val or a breast In the absence or
crowd out normal ones, leaving of all cancers In children. Cancers known breast cancer, but In
patients susceptible to a number of or the bone, kidneys, brain and anticipation or It occurling. This
Infections. Leukemia Is a cancer of nervous system are also common. procedure Is sometimes advised lor
QUESTION: What are monoclo- women at a very high rtsk of breast
blood-forming tissues, mainly bone
marrow •. lymph nodes, and spleen. nal antibodies and how are they cancer. Hlgh-lisk candidates In·
There are several types of leuke- being used to light cancer?
elude women who have had cancer
ANSWER!Ine: Through a pro- or one breast or have a strong
mia, depending on the type or white
'c ells Involved and their rate of cess called genetic englneeling, family history or breast cancer In
scientists can fuse cancer cells to the maternal side, or women who
'growth.
The most common fi rst sign of produce specific disease-lighting have had biopsies revealing cell
Hodgkin's disease Is a swollen antibodies. These antibodies can be changes In the breast that might
lymph gland, usually In the neck. custom-made to home In on cancer Indicate eventual cancer.
.which lasts lor three weeks or npc:IICICM~CM::M:IICICM::M:IoODC~CM::M:IOCM::M:IoODCIICICM:::ICft
longer. Other symptoms Include
FURNITUI'!
STORE HOURS
'persistent fatigue, weight loss.
9:30-5:00
854 Second
6.
523
44 9
.
OH .
Clol@d Thurs.

Homebuilders class·meets

Chester council meets
:The District 13 spring rally to be
hfld May 12 at Junction City wlth
~ Councll to be host, was
planned durtng a meeting of deputy
state councilors and members of the
ci&gt;nventlon commlttee held Saturday at the home of Mrs. Esther
Smith, Chester, district deputy.
It was noted that a practice for the
rally wU be held on May 6 at 1: ll
p.m . at the school building In
Junction City. Members were asked
to provide Items for the rally,
cl&gt;untry store, district dePUty's
project, guess what, national ways
and means, and good of the order
tables.
Durtng the meeting money maklng projects were discussed and
planned by the convention committee to be held by Dlstlict 13 In 198i.
Dorothy Ritchie will be Installed as
state councilor In Aug.1985 for a one
year term. Mrs. Ritchie will be the

The Slsson FMtuy

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Heart diseases leading death cause: Health Dept.

The Rio Grande &lt;;:ollege and
Community Center-Holzer School
of Nursing wUI . be hosting two
Information days for the purpose of
presenting the newly approved
"Polley for Licensed Practical
Nurses (L.P.N.). Admission to the
school of nursing with external
testing program results." Information on the ACT-PEP test (the
required external proficiency test)
wlll also be available.

Revival slated in Rutland

Calendar
TifURSDAY

Thursday, March 1, 1984

Information
D~ys at Rio

advanced to the boy scout rank. and one year pln; Jerry Lightfoot,
Each received a sCout knife from one year pin; Jlminy Parker, one
McDaniel, the webelo leader. In the , year pin; WU!le Adams, one yellow
group were Tom Hunter, Jared head for wolf and one year pin;
Spencer, Donnie Spencer, Riehle VIncent Reiber, one year pin;
Hunt, Jean-Paul LaBonte. Each Wayne Ritchie, one year; J.R.
scout presented hls mother wlth a Ridgeway, bobcat badge; Matt
special scout pin before crossing Michael, wolfebadgeandthreeyear
.
over the bridge from the webelo beads.
level to the Chester Scout Troop 235.
Tiger cubs receiving certificates
were Jeremy Raymond, Joey
Other awards received were Coates, Andy Wolfe, and Jerrod Van
Jean-Paul LaBonte, athlete, crafts- Inwagen.
man, naturalist, and one year;
Leaders receiving certlflcates
JaredSpencer,athelete,craftsman, and year pins were Jo Ann
Rev. R.G. Humble
naturalist, and scholar badges and Newsome, five years; Frank New~
oneyearpln; Riehle Hunt, aquanaut some, Cathy Workman, Elob Workand athlete badges and two year man, four years; Mary Hunt, Henry
pin; Tom Hunter, athlete, artist, Hunter, Gale Osborne, Blll Slrn,
citizen, craftsman, naturalist and three years; Luke McDaniel, Kathy
Tile 21st annual Indoor camp
traveler badges and three year pin; McDaniel, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hlll,
meeting Qf the Meigs Area Holiness
Mike Hoffman, athlete, craftsman, Terry Newsome and Mike Slm, den
Association will be held March !&gt;-11
and engineer badges and three year ·chiefs, two year; Gregg Hibbs,
at 7: ll each evening at the Rutland
pin; Donnie Spencer, athlete badge Glenda Hunt, Georgia Ritchie,
of the Nazarene.
Church
and three year pin.
Roger Starcher, Pauline LaBonte,
for this year's camp wlll
Speaker
Bear ranked scouts received the Jenny Parker, and Melissa Ritchie,
be
the Rev. R.G. Humble, a
following awards: Tony Grate, one year pins.
promlnant speaker at revivals,
three silver aiTOWs and two year
Certificates went to den aides, camp meetlrlgs and conventions. He
pins; Keith Hunt, five silver arrows
Betty Jo Hunt, Arlene and April
and twoyearpln; James McDaniel, Ritchie, and Mila Raymond, and has served the Church of Clu1st In
Christian Union as general superintwo sliver aiTOWS and two year pin;
certificate and two year pin to Rod tendent, been a college president,
Matt Ridenour, two silver aiTOWS Newsome as tiger cub assistant.
pastor and evangelist. His mlnlstry
and two year pin; and Rod
A certlflcate and donation was . has taken hlm across the United
Newsome, two sliver arrows and presented to Klrk Chevalier for the
States and Into several other
twoyearpln.
ChesterFireDepartrnentfortheuse countries.
!
'
Other awards went to Jeremy of the building.
The Holiness Aplclatlon was
Buckley, wolfbadge,onegoldarrow

I

GROUP OF

'WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S
.

Free chic Work-Out Suit
With the purchase of any chic
clothing through the month of
March you will receive FREE from
chic a blue striped two-piece
Work-Out Suit.

SHOES
. $200PAIR

GROUP OF

TENNIS

SHO~S

$1 ooo

l~~~~~J

300 TITLES IN STOCK T()
BUY OR
•

INGELS ~FURNITURE ·
'
AND J~EWELRY
.
..

·CREDI.T TERMS ~ VISA - MA$TER CARD

s--

.. ' OHIO

·~----

THIS PRINT WAS DRAW~ LOCALLY BY JOE CLARK OF
CLARK'S JEWELRY AND IS NOW AVAILABLE TO THE I?UBLIC.

'

TH E PRINT CAN BE PURCHASED 3 WAYS:

I.

PRINT - 15.00
..MA TIED PRINT - •1 0.00
M~TIED~ FRAMED .PJliNT -::-:- 1J?LOO

I
I

·,.

I . L-~------------~---------------r~,~----------------------------~ ~ .____
I

- LL.... -

'" :n si•••·

iHZfl

.

On The 'T' In Middleport
STORE HOURS:
MON .-tNI. 9:30 TO 6:00
SATUROAY 9:00 TO 6:00

OUR
I

�Flage

8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 1, 1984

- r ·'"1

r----Local briefs:---. Pay incr~as~ approved by Ohio House
Human relations day set
· Human relations day w1ll be obseiVed at the Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport, during the morning worship hour
Sunday.
Nan Moore wUI present information about human relations day
and the youth choir w1ll be featured .
At the 6 p.m. seiVices there will be a carry-In dinner and a program
on crime alert w1ll be presented by Sheriff James J . Proffitt.
ChaJnnan for the evening seiVIce Is Mary Wise.
(

Couples to end marriage
Two suits for divorce and two actions for dissolution of marriage
have been filed In Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Kathy Fife, Middleport filed suit for divorce against Gary Fife.
Poqteroy.
Filing for dissolution of marriage were Clair Reed, CoolvUie and
Janeen Reed, Coolville, and Douglas C. Grover, Rt.1, Middleport and
Glorta D. Grover, Middleport.
.. Mary Haning' was granted a divorce from James Haning on
.charges of gross neglect of duty.

.Squads answer four calls
. Four calls were answered by ljlcal units Wednesday according to
.. the Meigs County Emergency Medical SeiVices reports.
• Pomeroy took Carolyn Chapman from 506 E. Main St., to Veterans
Mernortal Hospital and at 3:34a.m., Middleport took Cheryl Kropke,
:.s. Second Ave., to Veterans Memorial. Raclneatll: 20a.m. to Charles
·Bissell from County Road 28 to Veterans Mememorial and at 8:09
:p.m., Syracuse took BUiy Jo Halley from Second St., to Veterans
Memorial.

·,Two forfeit bonds in court
.. Two defendants forfeited bonds and another was fined In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Wednesday night.
Rpnald Jones, Syracuse, forfeited $450 posted on a chargeof driving
' while Intoxicated; Slro, deStruction of propertY; WI, fieelng a police
officer and $:nl, reckless operation. Glen Fields, Hartford, W. Va.,
forfeited a $43 bond posted on speeding charges.
' Fined $50 and costs on a disorderly manner charge was Howle
,; Ferguston, Pomeroy.

r

Fire damage set at $6,000
•'.

· · Damages were set at $6,!XXl as the result of a fire which struck the
:Keith Day residence on Welshtown Hill Wednesday evening.
Pomeroy's Assistant Fire Chief said that 20 Pomeroy firemen were
on the scene from 6:29 to 9: 33 p.m. Aiding Pomeroy firemen were
tankers from Middleport and Syracuse.
. Cause of the blaze has not beeh determined. The one story frame
residence was completely gutted and damage to the house and the loss
at' contents was set at $6,!XXl.
. The house Is owned by Emma Imboden of the Long Bottom and
··there Is Insurance coverage, Werry reported.

.

Area deaths
Esther M. Gress
J::sther M. Gress, Leesburg, F1a.,
forrnerlyofNewHaven,diedFeb.27
In Leesburg Regional Medical
Ceilier Hospital.
She was born In Pad, W.Va.,
dauRbter of the late James Howard
and ..)annie Amanda Rohm Lough.
She was employed as a nurse for
many years for the late Dr. R.F.
Bryant In New Haven.
Sluvlv1ng are her husband, Kermit; three sisters, Mrs. Wllllam
('lbi!Ima) Gress and Mrs. Douglas
(Pauline) Miller, both of New
Hawn, and Mrs. Charles (Hope)
LaRueofTucson,Arlz.; andseveral
nieces and nephews.
She was preceded In death by
thrEe brothers and four sisters.
Fimeral seiVices w1ll be held
Sunday at 1: :lJ p.m. In Foglesong
F\lneral Home In Mason with the
Rev. John Campbell officiating.
Blirtai w1ll follow In Suncrest
Memorial Park In Point Pleasant.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from G-9 p.m. Saturday.

J, Wayne Russell
J. Wayne Russell, 75, Loulsvllle,
Ky., formerly of Pomeroy, died in
Loulsvllle Wednesday.
He was a retired general manager
of the Cleveland Territory of the
Norfolk and Western Rallroad, a
~berof the St. Matthews Baptist
Church, the Transportation Club,
the Rusty Wheels and SCORE.
Jle is SUIViVed by his wife, Alice
Spitzer Russell, sons, David Russell,
Loulsvllle, Ky., and Ned Russell,
KnOlcvllle, Tenn.; a daughter, April
Mogls, St. Petersburg, Fla. and
tow grandchildren.
Funeral seiVices wUI be held
Friday at 11 a.m. at the Ratterman
Brothers Funeral Home In Louis·
ville with burial there.

Syracuse Asbury United Methodist
Church and the Syracuse Homemakers Club.
SeiVices w1ll be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Steve Nelson
officiating. Burial wlll be In StiversvUie Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 7 to 9 this
evenlngandfrom2to4and7to9p.m.
Friday.

Group to meet
Men In Missions w1ll meet
Saturday, March 3, at 8 a.m. at the
fellowship hall at Syracuse Nazarene Church. President Is Jim
MUier.
At the 6 p.m. Sunday services a
singing group, the Heirs of Chrtst
from Galllppolls Christian Union
Church will be featured In concert.

Announce bond sales
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Meigs
County Savings Bond Chairman,
reported purchases of $7,375 In
United States Savings Bonds for the
month of December, 1983. Total
sales for the county were $93,506.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -With
Chaplain Kenneth Grimes setting
the stage In his opening prayer, the
Ohio House OK'd its version of a
Senate-passed pay raise for 86,!XXl
government workers.
Grimes focused Wednesday on
the severe snowstorm that closed
highways and shortened the legislative work week.
"Lord, this House Is deliberating
about raises for state employees. I
wonder what they were worth
yesterday and last night," hesald.
Moments later the House without debate or dissent - voted'

~ to raise the salaries of state

government, county welfare and
university blue-collar workers.
The bW Is shB.rply different than
the version passed by the Senate. As
a result, It probably w1ll wind up In a
conference committee to hammer
out a compromise.
The House bill calls for raises of50
cents ait hour or 5 percent,
whichever was greater for an
Individual worker, effective March
4.
· Politically appointed state
workers would be excluded from the
pay raise.
The bill also contains $5.3 million

In cuts recommended by Gov.
Richard Celeste In the disability
leave pi'ogram and authorizes
spending $2.8 mllllon to cover
operating costs of the new State
Employment Relations Board.That
is the panel created to handle
collective bargaining and labor
relations for the state under the
public employee collective bargain-

:Th:~:~·~~y~,~~Aa~rch~~1,:1:~;:------------~=---~;-~-------;~--~~~n~~~ro;,~·~M~idd~~~·~Oh~io~-----r;=:;:;::~::::~::::::::::~nw~Da~il~y=Sen==~~M~I==~:a~•==9~~

lng~w.

Public employee labor unions
op~ the disability reductions
and earlier won their removal from
the Senste version of the bW. The
Senate proposal provided a nat
Increase of 43 cents an hour for all

REVENUE IHARING
PUIUC NOTICE
The Boa rd ol TruSiees ol
Columbta Town sh1 p. Metqs
County, has subm•lled •t s Fo,·m
OH-3 to the Aud•tor ol State
A copy of the report and the
support •ng docurnen tat•on are
ava •lable for ou bhc •n spect•on
at the home of the townsh•o
clerk. Glona Hullon. At 3 Bo11
82. Albany. Ohto February ') 1
lhrough Mar ch I 0. 1984
131 1. ltc

Put-lie Notice

~Utto

mont

-

) ! . .._..,., ....

~

No. B3·CV·202
In pw su .:tnc.•· ol an AUAS
Order ol S(lle '" thr· ahovP
entitled acl •on f. wrll o fl(&gt;r to•
sale a1 puhl• c ;tiJI"! oon a1 th·
front &lt;;!Pps ol thf' Coun H o u c; t·
•n Pomflfov on ltll'• .thrN'
named Countv on Sdti!HI.ly
the 24th clav ol M.u ( h 1984 .11
10 00 o'dor:k A M thf' tnllnw
1ng descr•bP.d ret~l f&gt; Sii.ll f' 'oo ltt
me 10 lhf&gt; Coun tv rJ I MP oqS d fld
Stale of Qh,o ;-.r1d .n th"
Townsh1p ol LPI.lfl !n &lt;,1!
PARCEL NO. 1: l3~&gt;onq on U 11
No 249. Town 2 RanfJ" 12 '''
the Oh•o Corn nanv s Pur r ha s1•
commenconq at ,, swkr on th"
l1ne between Sart•P Chaprnnn 'i
lol 1n the county r o.:~r1 ru nnulq
fr om Aar•ne to Lrt.1 rt drvt
runn•no -;outh alonq '&gt;·l•tl HMd
13 2 fef'l w Ella OlliiiPn c; tanr J
lhCnCP. WP.'il 2 7 fOdS 10 rl &lt;, l.:lkP
10 John B10wn s 1.1nft lhflll(.f'
north al1 JflQ s.t•rl l•nt&gt; of Br own o;
tancl 2551r:f't l o Jonas Roush o;
l1ne. I~O C f' '!dSt alonq c;aorll•n•·
204 1/ J IP.f'l !hr&gt;nr r• SfltJih 1 2 1',
feet alonq Sari•" Ch,tpman o;
l1ne 10 ,J c;takP ttwnr:r r&gt;J'il
atonfl c;;w t 111v~ ?41 ''J IPel to thP
pttbhc •o.lf l ttw pi,J( , . n l
bP.f11nn1nq rQn la orionq 2 olUfl'o"
more or IP&lt;;S
PARCE(, NO. 2: The lnllow
10q fP.c-tl P.SIJIP ..;!ftJoll f' on th~&gt;
Counly ol Me•q s S to~t• · nt Oholl
Townsh•p ot I ror.l ft Hr&gt;mq •n Lot
No 249 1r)wn 2 R;mrw ')
Oh•O Compilny •; Pur eh J '&gt;e Of'
91nnrnq .lllhf" Northw-P&lt;;I CO rfll'l
of thP tot l rJ rm~rlv rlePt1f'rl to
Crl•c•a Rotr&lt;;h ,u\rl MorCja n l
Rou&lt;;h by Jon.1s Ro11c; h anclwoiP
by cleffi rl.ttM Novr&gt;rnhm ?
1907 rerordPc1•n Volume ~7
PaqP 443 Me1qc; Coun tv 0Pnr1
RecOtds rhr ·ncro f'.:J&lt;;I illonq lhP
sou th hnr&gt; nt John Sayrf• C'l ldlr·
12 3 ' fP.•'l In ,J PU'll thf'nt fl
south 10 2 I~Pt to a stakP anet to
the nonh l•nP ot Maqrw• f
Savre·s lot. rh~n cf' wes! 123' 1
fP.et al onq the north l1nP ot
Mil()fllf' E SayrP s tot 10 ttw
nonhwest corner of her 101. and
to a stake thence nonh nlono
the east hne of lhP. tn nds of
Chas N WarJnf!r I 02 IPm to
th!' place ot IJCq•nn.nq co nrau1
!Of! 12 597 'iQLJ.lffl if!f'!
PrPmtSf''&gt; IOC.l1Pr1 on lr&gt;t.lll
Falls on wf'st s•dr• ot SA 338
Property anpr .lr'lP.rl at
521 . 16600 and cannor he
soh1 tor lf'SS than two th,rt1 c; of
that amount
TPrms C.tsh tn ham!
JAME S J PROFF!TI
ShProlf
Me•fl S Coun tv
121 23 131 1 8 Jtc

....

~. TV. C IIfloto.o•

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

_

·-·--···

__
··-

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

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

.., ~ c.......

., . ~

· - · - · -~

Batllrtc:O

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Tommy simmons,
Middleport; Dennis Hart, Middleport; Sarah Congo, Racine.
Discharged - Steven Morris,
Beatrtce Rairden.

Jon. 1, 19B3
General Fund
5 94 7 52
Motor Veh •cle
L•c ense Tax
Fund
4.533 66
Gasohne Ta -.;
Fund •
12.538 72
Road and 81 •dqe
Fund
·
2.809 35
Cemetery Fund
75000

KING SIZE, COMPLETE HEATED
(ALL SYSTEMS IN STOCK &amp; ON DISPLAY)

General Fund
Motor Veh•cle
l•cense Tax
Fund
Gasohne Tax
Fund
Road and Bndge
Fund
Ce ~ ery Fund
Fedefar'Reveiilit
Shanng Fund

.

27 .908 57

10.401 65
24.584 67
6.07 4 08
75000
1 . 1 6~

14

Fund
Road and Bndqe
Fund
Cemetery Fund
F•re Protect•on
Fund ·
Federal Revenue
Shar•no Funr1
Total
131 I. I tc

.. ....
.
..

...

~,,,.

10.334 86
8.49 6 18
40000
26.270 40
378 86
53.75450

lor mlormal corlerences mfly
be sent to the D•v•s•on of
Reclamation. Founta•n Square.
Bu•ld1ng B· 3 Columbus. Oh10
43224. w• th•n thtrty 130) days
of the last dflte of publ•catron of ;·
th•s not•ce
'·'·
121 16 23!3!1 . 8 4tc

I

Wayside Furniture

241 Thnd Ave.
Gallipolis
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9 to 8; Tues., Wed. Thur., Sat. 9 to 5

•
•••
~

~
r,

r,

QUEEN SIZE
COMPLETE

OR
QUEEN SIZE
COMPLETE

L

~

KING OR

KING

-:o.
,,

.~

$349

•'

WHALEY'S
GROCERY

~;cs;~~~.....$289

Everyone Welcome

...•
KING OR
QUEEN SIZE'
COMPLETE
$349

KING OR
QUEEN SIZE
COMPLETE .
$199

OR QUEEN SiZE
COMPLElE WITH
REGULAR PEDESTAL
$399 .

'I

,.,,

, .·

-

·

0

PH. 992-2725

Hou se Colis ond Shop

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
•W11hers •Diahwathers
•Range• '
•Refrigerator~

Factory Choke

PAT HILL FORD

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'x16'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doa Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843·5191
10·6·tlc

for Foster Service

Call 614-992-6737

742-2328 4-21 -lk

G&amp;W PLASTICS

&amp; SUPPLY .

MEIGS INN

PDQ SATELLITE SYSTEMS

36 CLEAN, SAFE, MODERN
ROOMS, CABLE TV, STEAM
HEAT, AIR COND. Rates as
lowu:
110 A Night or
140 Weekly

Rt. 329

Ph.

Gas 8t Water Pipe
Regulators 8t
Fittings
Volume Drips
Sewage Pipe
Gas Appliances

Guysville, Ohio
614-662-5311

•Full Factory Warranties
•Free Delivery
•Site Checks
•Complete Systems &amp;
•Installation

I!EIING lOOIS FilE 10
NON PROFIT OIGANIIAIIONS
Wt AccoMIIOdalt vp to 250 PfOPII
lor Plf1its end ctlnces.

CALL 992-3629
for Rtsesrvations

MEIGS INN

POMEROY. OHIO

Bus. Ph. 985-3813
Res. Ph. 985-3837
Long Bottom, Oh.
m

212011 mo.

I
-------------------- -·-

col·

~

~li

l

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell!

· Write vour own ad and oraer bV mail with "'is

It
II
II
I1

coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get 1
. resui!S. Money not refundable.
t

I

Nam•--------------------1t

Addre~~---------------

v,.,.

These cash rates
Include discount

1. _ _ _ __

· 2. - - - - - -

_______

3.
-_
-_
-_
-4. '
_
__

,s. _ _ _ __

______

.,··-----11
.
12
· ·

446·2

17. - - - - - -

18. - - - - - -

19,-------

21.------

22. _ _ _ __

23 . ....;._ _ _ __
2•. -_
-_
-25.
__
_

13.

II

I
I
1

·· -

·

32.'
33.

'Pens

'Wooden Nickels

'Matches 'Ball Caps
'Pencils 'Scr1tch Pads
'Balloons 'Decals .
'"Hard Hat" Decals
'Bumper Sticken
2·10·1 mo.

Announcemenl s
3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing machine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleener, one half mile up
Goorgos Crook Rd . Call
614-446-0294.

Giueaway

1

34.

I

.16.

35.

1·
1

lOSTorStroyedslnco2-22·
B4 . . Groy 1!1 block Garmon
Shophotrd mete dog. Cotl
4411-87SO.

I

I
MeiiTtllaCouponwlthRemlttlnCI
I
..
The Dally lllitfnel
- ,f---·o···: - .• ......-... .--, -.· .
I
1·•1 ~· 5•.

...________,..___.........

:1

.

P. omeroy;.Qh, 45769

.

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleasant. WVa.
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg .• Camden St .
614-367 -7101 .
Rick Pearton Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm, An ·
tique • liquidation ulea.
Uconoed • bonded In Ohio •
WVa . 304 -773 - 67B6 or
304-773-91B6.
Auction e\lltry Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Trucklo1d1 of new
merchendiae every week .
Conligments of new and
uted merchandise alwayt
welcome . Richard Reynold•
Auctioneer . 304 - 276 ·
3069 .

Flao Morkot, Morch 3 1!1 4 ,
9 :00·4 :00. Tabto rontalo .
omall toblo 12.: Iorge. 13.
Racine Fire House. For more
info, contact Racine Ladiea
Aux . 949 -2970, 949 -2946.
949-2719 .
Mt . Alto Auction, reopen
March 3, 6pm. Conoignmenta accepted every Sat .•
One till tale time . Firat Sat.
each month. all new merchandite. Emma Bellauctio·
neer, 4288177 . Licente
429 -B4.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean uted cart .
Jim Mink Chov.·Oido Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson
446-3672
Wanted to buy uted coal &amp;.
wood heatert. Swain Furniture. 446·3159. 3rd . •
Olive St .. Gallipolio. Oh.
Standing timber will pay top
priced for red • white oak .
Caii614 -3B8 -9906 or 614·
3BB· 9617alter 6 .
Wanted to buy square dancing clothes . Size 1 0. any
type. Call 446 ·4637 .

Want to lease Hunting righta
on approx. 600 acral in
Mason or Jackson Co.,
wva. J .H. Statto &amp; Aoso·
ciateo. Resid . 304-676 ·
3313. Bus. 614-446 -9340.
Wanted to buy. New. uaed&amp;
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete house·
holda. Alao complete Aucti oneering tervice . Call
Rodney Howery 614 -69B·

7231 .
Buying daily gold, silver
coins, rings, jewelry, tterling
ware. old coint, large cur rency . Top prices. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave .
Middleport. Oh . 614 -992 ·
3476 .
Cash paid to~ fancy iron or
heavy iron beds. S160 and
up for certain Meigt Co .
stone jars. Old time cup board . call 1 -304 -BB2 ·
2711

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bodo. iron.
wood. cupboards, chairs,
chesu, baskets, diahes.
stone jars. antiquea, gold
and silver . Write - M . D .
Miller, Rt .2 , Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 or call 614-992 7760.

Emplo ymRnl
Sl~fV I CI!S

11

Help Wanted

Avon representative wanted
for Harrison Twp • Jackson
Pike. Call 446-336B.

'

· ~ · 15.

I

Public Sale
8t Auction

flegiatered Pharmaciat Revo
Drug is aeekin'g career
minded indlviduela to join
our proflltion•l pharm1cy
3 pupplao. Call 446-3797.
program. We offer our pharmaciat 1 profe11ional work
.To give away Toy collie, invironment end 1mple opgood with oldar chiktron, 6 portunlty to porticlpoto in
yro. old. Coli 992-3229.
monogemant. We oloo offer
on oxcottant benollt pock·
.Famale puppy, 4 montho l(le. monagemont pooltlono
old, 'h oirdolo, 'h pill bull. ore ovollobto in tho following
Coli 814-742-2450.
oreoo Golllpotlo ond Jockoon
Ohio. tl you orelnterootod in
.. Mota pupploo. Mother lib· becoming oooociot.O. with
odor rotriever ond border A
1
t
d
h 1
callla mix. Colt 814-882mer coo lrgeot rug c 1 n
......, or • . -_ . _ • 6.... --. Plltlll.. ..u.rtd r.~lllm• tQ
1
&amp;
v 1 4 9 92 3 v "
Rovco Drugs, 58115 E. Moln
- - - - - - - - - St, , Columbus, Oh 43213
or colt 1114 -B81-fi880 .
L

6

I

.J

=======

27.
26. _ _ _ ___.
21.
29. _ _ _ _ __
30•

a.

Puppy-Border Collie. Call
814-266-1623.

20. _ _;..,...__ _

31

1•.

-,· t' •

vernon

4

10.------

V«LT!;I£MtlltiS~F\JS!S

lro,er-Auclion $trvice
. CIMIYI Le1t1lty, .
•• ltlp Codnty Associate
- Phone 742-3171

~ ~~:~~~p~i:7~~2

( !Wanted
( l Announcement
( I For Rent

B1ked gooda and c1ndy Nle
Thura.
Fri. at Krogera.
Sponoer8d by tho Apootollc
Church. Proceeds go for
She1vea for Chritt .

B

1.
I
I
1

I

-. ~-~----·

oat and Found

E o E·_ _ _ __
_·_·_

1

Help Wentld

Phoylcol Th~t~plot 8 doyo
per wolk. Port limo. Good
hourty woge. Contoct Pomo·
roy Hoohh Coro Contar.
1114-882-1111011.

1------- - -

Yerd Sele Bedroom sue.
pool tobla. ployor plono.
c1p1, men clothing, wooden
otrollor, golf clubo bogo •
cart . Jeck a.. nda, glellwere, stone jere. miac .
itemo. 1122 Jay Or. 9 :AM ·
6:PM, March 2 1!1 3 .

Racine Gun Club has dil·
continued Gun shoota until
. September.

1 IFor.Sate

Experience

I. L."Bud" McGHEE ·

DICK
ROBERTS

Vacancy : Julia'• Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer ConValetcence
Home. 18 years experience.
Clifton, W . V . 304 -773 ·
6B73.

New H9mes-htensive
Remodel ina
Insurance Work
C
. usto.m Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Gar11es
Roofinc Work
·
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

11

Uaed Mobile Homes &amp;.
Campara, Travel Trailers.
614 -446 -0175.

Water Problema? Ask our ·
expert on March 7th during
our water treatment clinic .
Only at Seart, Silver Bridge
Ptau .

IUCIItC 101111 I I'll.. IIIPAIR
.' !lfClltC 101111 SAI.IS

~

J.J .flc

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

10/20/ Un

GALUPOI.IS ELECTRIC
SERVICE, INC.
~IM WCIIIC.It. IID'AIR
AI.IEIIIIA!QIIl SIMIIIS I lllliiiG

Station ·

Authorized John Deere.
New Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

We'd lilt to introdutt you lo
Ent'le·A·Car. lhe modern woy
to dtive the vehicle of your
choict .

742-2328

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

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

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

AL TROMM

""fl 1)11

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tlc

GRAVEL
HAUl ED

'Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

I i] I

992-2196

Only

Avatlable

BOGGS

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

4·5·tlc

Se~1 ce

RADIATOR
SERVICE

12 Gauge Shotguns

•Dryert •Freezert
PARTS end SERVICE

s.1e

For oettero or buyoro. Come
to tho targoot Ftoo Morkotln
3 IIUttoo, opoco lor 800
dooloro. 3,800 oduh ottandence, h1ve your garege .....
boko uleo, or ony lund
r1iling event for sure succooo. Sot. • Sun. Pride
Tobocco Floo Morkat. N.
26th St .. Huntington, WV.
304-523· 2131 .

AntennJ Installation

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

Bashan Building

985-3561
All Makea

a.

2·6·1 mo.

. ·I

7." _ _ _ _ __

"G.t(££

·.

Pomeroy, Ohio

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683
or 992-2282
11-1-tfc

Pomeroy

'RM'tM-- -

If No Answet . Coli 985·4382
Deweyne William•
Scottie Smith

Middleport, OH.

57 Pine St. .

1

Ph. 9B6-4269

169 N. 2nd

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Landmark
Service

8

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

992-6215 or 992-7314

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

16

.

Ex pi res March 17

3·24-tfc

·u.r11RIA~ ~'614•H2·9932

~·

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester. Ohio

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

AT

·~

Addons end remodeling
Roofing and gutter w01k
Concrete work
Plumbing end .. ectric ..
work
(free Eotimoteo)

AND

Also Transmission

Pomeroy Landmark
Service St,tlon

No Payment Til May
90 Day ·same As Ca·sh
r--~·- · ·-No ' Interest
· ~.c
.
....., . '·

FOR 10% OFF
ANY SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

3-ll·tlc

S&amp;W TV

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

TIRE
SALE

"\I
,,,,

Bring This Coupon In

Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio

UNBELIEVABLE

"".

No Sunday Calla

Or 992-5875

GARAGE

15'4 Mlec. Merchandise
KING

949-2801 or
949-28o0

All loles ond Models

Roger Hysell

I '

Elva Dailey

timates~

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.JONES. BAR
West Columbia, W. Va.

SIDING CO.

"Beeutiful, Cultom
Built Gare.o.ee"
Call for free sidil!l es-

CHESTER--985-3307

I

AT

~

BISSELL

SIDING

REDUCED WINTER RATES

PH. 949-3046

MARCH 2, 1984

~
~

-

ector means dustleu
leaning
•Wire brushes for creosote
emoval

COUNTRY
CONNECTION
BAND

~

•

*ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

•Powo~t

St. Rt. 681
Darwin, OH.
(Formerly Dune~n's Grocery)
Now Acceptina Food
Stamps &amp; WIC Coupons.
Gene Whlley-Owner
Carla Harder.-Manaaer

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum .

'

YOUNG'S

vard

··· --·oaiiipoiii····--···

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

OWNERS•
Rodney &amp; Roger Keller

~']l'

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

•.,•

Rt. 7, Pomeroy, Oh.
"Cuttom Exheusts "

CHIMNEY KING

3 Announcements
::
r'
r•
,,
•·
::

I 'h lilies South of Cherttr

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.

Eddie Moody Turloy ond Unda

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Dec·
rylng the "almost labortous and
childish" Democratic preSidential
,_
c_,,,_,,,,..,
• ..,..,.._,,
Jl •• _ ... , ...
11-llloo...........
prtmary system, Senate President
o •.• ijll'd P"ll"' rot"''""
,..,......_
,_
,
, ........_,,
U ·CI. f'IIA-.Ie""U · T.....U. o ... ....
U -A......
fu l/nk i t~ tt l o• l rfi ,Ht n r f'trll • n.l"• ..
Harry Meshel said today he would
u
.v.. •••wo
4-Gio•WII'f
1
&lt;1-llll
.....
fCIM
...1-l••. _,..,.,_...
............ .
seek to make Ohio's primary the
"-"
,Jt,.,_
........
, ...
-,. c•• ""'
a.-c-"
...,.,...,
,
..........
...
,
J, ....... ..._,.....
At N C-" IU
..... c:-•••
first In the nation.
Ja.c_.,..,,...,_..
u ........... ....
:~:t::=·
a Awe....
J • ....._..,.....,..
,, _... ,..._,
ueo..-o
tu-.._..,
M......,..,
,.,_c
.,_..,.,
, .. l . . . . . . .. . .
Meshel said he would ask other
. .._u...
u.-... ..... ,._.
...
,.
_.
.
,
.
,
..
.,
••-c
...
•••
t ?t - ....,.. o....
U l - 11,. 0•"""
JU - ........
states to hold their presidential
7n - ""l M- o...... o..
1n - u..,.,.,..
Ul - l i i _ " _
,.,_..,,.
,
.
.o.
.
.
'"-"••.,.
IM - UI
..,
41 ·Mw-'-&lt;ll•ll
prtmarles' on the same day to
,,_
...,.._
.
,.,_
.......,..
11 ·" - '- J 1't ............
741 - '11011' II-"-'!'"-"
4I·M.W...__I•II.,.,
11-l
n ....,.w.....,.
u.......................
. , , _ ... tleool
,,.,
,
.
u
.w
..
'""'"'
counter the lnfiuence of balloting In
U ·I.M.I...
. .... _ 1 ... 11.. 1
.•...._,,_,..
........ o,•.uo
:u:::-::t"~·-·- 1--- - - - -- - - - --1
u.,_,.....lil_o
New Hampshire - now the first
........ ... tleool
:c:::-:.:.~
u, •• " -·· Go&gt;. - - · · ...
47WIIIIMI · v,wu-4o '~---•.,.
...._ ...
......
ll-1111..-_
u, o. u w.... ..... , ..""_
prtmary In the country.
.,_,.,l_
l .. w .. w41 o (IOI
0 11 -- · -· - ~
"NewHampshlreslrnplydoesnot
refiect the demographics of the
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
nation. It's predominantly Republican. Democrats haven't had anyFINANCIAL REPORT
Adclondum to Port
F~re Protect•on
thing up there but grocery stores for
LAFF-A-OAY
OF TOWNSHIPS
1, Item E(6)
lund
3361590
the past 40 years," Meshel told a
For Aoc:.t vSouthern Ohio
FPderal Revenue
Ending o-nbor
Cool Compony Sharrng Fund
1.548 00
news conference.
31, 19113
Melgl Mine No. 1
Total
61.7 43 15
"(They) have a state with an
Columbia Townthip
A~tAreo
Tow! R-pta
election that brtngs tothepollsfewer
Meigs County
lEGAL NOnCE
GenPral Fund
26 187 76
Rt. 2 Boo 82
Pur suant to Ohto Rev• sed
people than we do In a state Senate
Motor Veh•cle
Albony, Ohio
Code Sectoon 151 3 07 181121111
Lrcensp Ta-.;
district," Meshel, Q-Youngstown,
46710·
not•ce •s hereby goven of
Fund
9 515 49
said.
Februory 22, 1984
apphcat•on lor a ··Adtacem Area
Gasoline Tax
I certify the following NpOfl
"That is notaputdownon the state
Permtt" at the st te olthe M e•gs
Fund
22.380 8 I
No 1 Mone. OONR Appltcatoon
Road and Budg e
of New Hampshire. We're just to bo coerect. · •
No 0257 · 1 owned by South·
Gloria Hutton
Fund
II 760 91
talking about It being vrry small ...
ern Ohoo Coal Company. P 0
Townthip Clerk Cemetery Fund
40000
not refiectiveofthe nation," he said.
Bo-.; 490. Athens Ohoo 457 0 1
Tel. No. Fu e Protec tron
.... . ___ ..., _,._)' The
614-69B-6204
73.367 89 . .
s11e •s located 1 6 m1les
Fund
Meshel said he would introduce a
"While you 're at it , see what's east of Salem Center ad,aoent
Sched&lt;HI
Federal HevPnue
bUI requiring Ohio's presidential CMh a.tance
S'-t
Shar•nq Fund
5.999 00 playing at the drive-in tonight. .. (on a northerly d•reCt•on) to
prtmary In 1988 to be held two weeks
December 31. 1983
State RQute 124 m Meogs
Total
149.611 85
ASSETS
Counrv Oh10 More spec•f• before any other state's election.
TotaiR-pta
Balances
1------------1 callv. the Sl iP occup•es porllons
and Batonc:eo
He said he would ask legislative Depository
(Acttve and
Genetal Fund ·
32 135 27
of Sect•on 16 and Fr act•on 4 5
leaders In Missouri, Iitdiana, llll·
lnachvel
S63.003 68 Mo10r Veh•cle
and 12 •n Salem Townshrp
Public
Notice
nois, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Less Checks Ou tsta nd Lrcense Ta-.;
T 8N R 15W 10 the hollow ot
9.249 18
Fund
14.0491 5
Parker Run and the unnamed
New York, Callfornla, Texas and NetIngFund s on
Gasol.ne Ta-.;
tr•buta11es The descrrbed area
perhaps other states to adopt
Depos11
53.754 50
Fund
34.91953
•s coma•ned on th e W•tkesvllle
F11 e PIOteCt•on
l1 ~.8 \ LITI ES
slmllar changes.
and Rutland U S Geolog•cal
Road and Br •dge
Fund
80.71339
Fund
14.570 26
Survey 7 5 m•nu te qlradranqle
Total
His goal is to force the Democratic Fund
157.600
50
Balances
53 75 4 50 Cemetery Fund
maps A copy of thP- appllcat•on
1 150 00
Balance
National Committee to revise lis Total
•s available lor public •nspec ·
F•re Protectton
Ooc. 31, 19B3
L•a bil!l•es
53. 754 50
timetable for presidential prtmarles
loon at the office ol the Me•gs
Fund
106.983 79
General Fund
4.2 26 70
Schodutoll
Federal Revenue
County Re co rde r. M e•Qs
and caucuses which allows Iowa and
Motor VehrciP.
Summary of Cash
7.5 4 700
Shar•ng Fund
Counrv Cou rt House. Second
L•cen se Tax
New Hampshire to precede the rest
Balanceo, R-pta
Total
21 1.35500
Street. Pomer oy Oh10 4 5 769
Fund
3.64 7 50
and Expondlturea
of the nation.
Wn l!en comments or requests
Expenditures
Gasoltne Ta11

__
.......... -..

We ttse Von Schrader
Equipment Recommended
by Leadina Carpet Manu·
facturers.
'FREE ESTIMATES"
2·27·1 mo.

1

&amp; Vicinity

AND OTH(R MAJOR BRANDS
Wo Havo A Full Tlmo
Shop Technician
on Duly

PH. (614) 985-4212

TNChen Retire·

T~

Ot .. ". DoiiiJ ........ ......
Ill Ctwt St.. , _ ,, atilt 457H

CUSTOM
BE.N

35185 Oak Hill Road
Lone Bottom. OH. 45743

lloaod of Ohio

...

PHONE 992-2156

KELLER'S

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Plo!lntlfl

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Legis- auto-theft losses cost Ohioans more permitted to share information they oW!ler present In court.
lation giving pollee and prosecutors than $178 mlillon last year.
gather with the companies.
Not included In thebW but pending
a new arsenal of weapons to battle
His measure would Increase
The measure would clarify and In a separate measure Is a provision
the multlmllllon-dollar crime of penalties for Insurance fraUd and expand state law deallng with for warrantless InspectiOns to detect
auto theft has cleared aHousepanel. making false reports of auto thefts to tampering of vehicle Identification auto theft.
The House Il\surance Committee law etlforcernent agencies or lnsu· numbers for the purpose of conceal"We are going to go for warrant·
recommended the bill for passage. ranee companies.
lng or. destroying the Identity of a less Inspections next session but we
vehicle or parts.
A vote by the full House Is expected
just don't have enough time
sometime In March.
The bill would require Insurers to
It would allow courts to use remaining In this session to get
Sponsoring Rep. Mike Stlnzlano, give prosecutors and police any certlllcates of title· as 11rtma facia anything controversial enacted,"
0-Columbus, said the measure Information they obtain from their evidence of auto theft, a method of Stinzlano said.
contains a series of Important own Investigations of claims. Law proving a vehicle's ownership In a
House approval would send the
provisions to deal with a crime that enforcement agencies also would be criminal case without having the blll to the Senate.
. hasbecomeblgbuslnesslnthestate. , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - He said FBI records show that

Meshel
upset

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
The IIWit of Ohio. Maigl

Thieves face tougher penalties in Ohio

The .Daily Sentinel

Business Services

Public Notlc•

state employees.
House Finance Chairman WOllam Hlnlg, D-New Philadelphia,
said the extra money needed for the
higher salary boost came from
savings In the dlsabWty chanaes,
exclusion of appointed officials and
transfer of unused bond retirement
funds for a proposed state office
tower.
"It does not require any additional
appropriation," Hlnlg said.
The House bill carries an all-funds
price tag of$128.8mllllon, compared
to the $106 mlillon cost of the Senate
version.

Uvo ln. lldy to otay .with
etderty couple, room on ·
board, ptuo utory, Chortotto
Donnor. Colt 614-245 ·
.
·
9 543 ·
'_ I&amp;I.I.C_o_oJLHo.u nd•. mootiy
·.
·
whlto. WHring trolnlng cot: :RN -LPN for ofilfi or u...in .
tor. Anyone with info p!Hu work. Coli 4411-4421 otter
cotl4411-358'7.
BPM or weekondo.

Trainee for 1m1ll buainell
Ieiding to mono gar pooltlon .
Contoct Job Sorvlco In
poroon, 225 lith Street.
Point Pleeaant.
Full or part time for Point
PleeMnt and surrounding
1re1. Exc. eernlngs. For
Information coli 304 -676·
251B .

23

•

PIANO TUNING lower
priced reguler tuning• ·
ditcounu to Senior Cltlzer\1.
Churchu • Schoolo. Word'o
Keyboard. 304-675 -3824.

-

~

••
'•
'

•

Permanent hair remov1l.
Profeulonal Electrolyale
Clinic. Monday through Frtday 9am -4pm . (eveninga by
appo i ntment) A . M . A ..
F.O.A. and F.C.C. approved.
Doctor referralt . BonDe
Handley , Electrologist .
Phone 304 -676 -66118 .

Perton to do general house
cleaning one day a week .
304 -45B -1889.
Appalilnce repair man, e• perienced on servicing re frigerators, wether and dry· .
era . Good pay, hosp .
insurance paid. We will help
train you . Send retuma to
BoJt S-29, care of Point
Pleasant Regitter.

Profe11ionel
Service•

31

..

..
:
..
"'
'•

Real Eslal e

"
•

Homes for Sale

,,"

Middleport. Real cutehomel
Some furniture, tool Priced ~
to Soli. Call614 -992 -11941 . "

"

2 ttory frame home, 300
block. 3td Avo .. GollipoWo.
Feature• 4 bdrt.. 2 batha,
formal entry, living room,
formal diing room . kitchen
with eating nook. (utility
room) all decoated in ch1rming Colonial style. New 911
furnace . large backyard
(with carport &amp; outbuild inga). very convenient to
school• &amp; downtown . c•u
446 · 1171 01 446 -1B18.

:
•
,.
...
~

Will care for the etderly in my
home. Loti of referencea .
Men or women . Call 614 667-3402 .

Rustic home, 3 'h acres, 2
garages, Several outbuild·
ings, Rural Water, Kyger
Creek. 826.600. Call 614 367 -7609 .

"
•.

Mercer' a Riverview Per tone! C1re Home hll vacanciea for elderly per10ns.
Betty Morcor owner. 304·
773-5BB2 .

Houte for sale reasonable. ~
Gallipolis City area. Call ..
4:46 -9301 .
'

WANTED permanent part
time medical tranacription ett for local Doctors office in
Point Ple11ant. Medical ter·
minology required . Send
retume to Box C-29 Point
Ple11ant Regitter.

12

Situations
Wanted

Interior and exterior paint·
ing, sandblasting, waterblasting, paper hanging and
drywall finithing . Free eati·
matea, fully inaured. Call
614-949·26B6.

' NOTICE: Need a opociot
cekol Call Vaughan ' o Bak·
ery. We do caket. pie a.
cookiea. for any occasion,
birthday, annivertary, holi daya. Wedding• are our
opocialty. Call uo at 992·
5646. houro B-6 .
Babytitter for Tuppers
Plaint-Pomeroy area. Call
614 · 896· 1213 botwaon
4 : 30 - 10 :00 p .m . Ruby
Marcum .
Vacancy for elderly per10n .
Room , board, and care . Call
614-992·6022 .
Harper's Adult Care Home
has a vacancy for another
resident, elderly person. Can
304-675 -12B3.
Uke to take care of one or
two elderly perona, 3 or 6
dayt a week or nights in their
home. Have ten years expe rience call after &amp;pm . 304675 -4467.

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
aervices for fire inturance
coverage in Galli• County
for almott a century. Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needs. Con·
tact Neal Insurance Agency.
agent . Phone 614-446 ·
1691 .
18

Wanted to Do

Will do babysitting in my
home. Call 446-002B .
Will babysit $35 per week .
Mother of one, full time .
Ages 2 and up. Meals and
snacks. Call446-2615 .

Financ;al
21

Business
Opportunity

! NOTICE!
THE OHIO VAllEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommend•
that you do busine11 with
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have inveati·
gated the offering .
Cigarette or VIDEO Diotrib·
utorahipa. Routea available.
We provide money for ••·
pension, alllocationa, trainIng • a BONDED stall to
atsist you in aetting up your
own part or full time buainooo . From $3,960 to
$60.00. Winston-Salem Kools . 1·B00-241-226B.
Restaurant and Ice Cream
parlor, price reduced for
quick sale, . $66,000 .00 .
Buildit:'lg and equipment .
Mason. W. Va. Phone 3D4BB2·2400 or BB2-2169 .
Own your own Jean aportswtar. Ladies 1pparel,
or children's store. 300
brand nemes. •~s.&amp;oo in cludes $9,000 inventory.
atore fixtures, tr1inlng end
much more. Mr. Toto 704763·473B .

22 Money to loan '
HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES Botow market roteo.
Fixed conventionel FHA VA . loodor Mortgage.
Athano, collect 614-692·
3061.

"~

~

..
~

..
~

:

•
..

'•

Mobile home. 21arge bdrm.,
furnished . carpet. nice flat
2 .66 acres land. Garage,
patio. cellar . 2 miles from
Rt. 7, Grover Rd. Cheshita.
Caii614-387·7B70.

.·
,.
··
'·

3 bdr. houae Southwestern ,·
District. 20 acrea, 30x36 ••
garage , 20x40 storage
building, pond, wood ttove.
fuel oil furnance. central air,
low 160' o. Call 614·379·
•·
26BO or 614 -643-2136.

By owner, 604 4th Ave .,
city. Three bdr., one bath.
modern kitchen , new carpet,
central air, carport, near
Wethington School . Nice
back yatd . $45,000. Call
446·0B2B anytime.
Beahan, 3 bedroom, 2 stoiy:
garaga, chain link fence,
natural gas furnace . reducod to S29.000 . call
814·949 -2639 .
_____,_,
.

_____

::
,.
•·
'
'
'
:
•·
::

:

5 room house on acre loti~ ·•
Pomeroy. S3500 . or best
oflot. Call 614·693-3269.
after 6 p.m .

Four bedroom all electric
brick home. 2 baths, large·
living room with fireplace,
di, •g room , 2 car garage,
on
acre, 1 mile North ~of
Chaste•
Rt.7 . Twenty··
minutes from Belpre .
865.000 . call 304 -773 - 5319 or304·773 -6421 .

3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 8'h
acres. pond, 3 miles out fJt., _
2, BV. usumoble. 304 -6752BB5 .
7 rooms and bath by owner
in Watt Columbia, W. Ve.
Having work in other state
will sale at re11onable price. ·
Will be in on weekends or
can be contacted at 412452 -446B . Owner John'·
Albright .
Newly remodeled hou11.
five room• and bath. 250_~
Uncoln Avenue . Priced to
sell. $22,000.00. 304-875'2B66 .

·
:
'
•

3 bedroom electric honie ··
with extra lot, exc. location ··
in Point Pleasant ,
$49.900 .00 . 614 - 44];. '
03B2 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBilE ·
HOMES . USEO- CAR'S,
TRUCKS . GAlltPOLLS ..
CHECK OUR PRICES . CAll
614·446-7572 .
.
NEW AND USEO MOBIL~
HOMES KESSEl'S QUAL· .
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS, · .
RT 35 . PHONE 614-446- ·

7274.

-

1 917 12x60 mobile homo. 2'
bdr., furnished. good cond :,
$6,300. Coli alter 4 and on
weekends. 614 -256-661B·. •
197B Shultz 14x70 cent•at
air, all new furniture. ex .
cond.- on rented lot . Cpjl.,
aven~ngs 446·2075 .
-·
Windsor 1 4x70, totel el~t­
ric . central air. 22 ' livin groom. like new . Shown bY ·
appointment . Call614 ·245- •
9326 .
1971 Schultz mobile hom-.::
12x60, axe . cond.. luUy.-.
furnished with washM , ·
dryer, AC , underpinned, lo - .
cated Quail Creek Park: ·
Rodney. Oh . *7.200. Coil
446 - 15B3 or 814 -245 - •
6443 alter &amp;PM.

- - - - -- · ··
Holley Patk 1973, 14x60: 2"
bdr .• skirting &amp; storage .
building, e~~:callent condt• .
.lion . French City Brokoro9~ ­
Sa;vlces. Call 448-9340: c ·

19B2 Clayton, like ne,.., .
14x70. 2 bdr., fireplace,
central air, dlahwaah81': . ,
French City Brokerage Setvices. Call 446·9340.

...

4

bedrooms 14xll5 ptal

1 2x20 room, fireplace, ce'fi..""'•

N .L. Stevano 1!1 Aooocloteo
lllWNII Htate-toonawlthe
interoot roto. Cotl Jeri
IIIIo 111114-379-2789 .

11%

trel air, storage bldg., pOrch ;
&amp; awning, excellent cori~J~
tion. French City Brokorogo
Sarvicoio. Call 441 -9340.

'

�Page- I0- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

They'll Do It Every Time

32 Mobile• Homes
for Sale

61 Hou1ehold Good1
30 1
..
n. electric range. f811:
glt cloth11 dryer, f811;
eloctrlcclotheedryer,t100;
cht~t typo freezer. filii;
Moytog wringer woeher.
, t 85; Kenmore Wither •
dryor 111, f1711 . aoll 814742-2352.

14x70 new dlaplay model
'mutt Hll' 3 bdr., 2 batha,
cathedral coiling 'unbaliovt·
blo price' . French City Brok·
erago Sorvlcea. Coli 448·
9340 .
.
80 Footer, now 14x80
Schult-Muat IH. French
City Brokerage Services.
Coli 446-9340.

62 CB.TV, Radio
Fquipment

1974 Community mobile
home. refrig.. atove. trash
maaher. AC. all carpeted,
must Mil now. Call after
5PM Ill woekenda 446-7519
or 448-4434 .

.. Reconditioned TV'a; 18
ln. block end white portoble,
17 ln.block Ill white porto·
ble. Coll814 -742·22&amp;7

Mobile home set up in trailer
park. fully carpeted. awning

63

Ill dock. If lntoroated coli

Antique•

614-245-5863.
3 bdr. 14x70 mobile homo
and lot, land contract with
small

down payment, In

Evorgloen. Coli 446-1339.
1979 fully underpinned .
14x70 3 bdr .. 2 full botha.
approx. 'h acre, wollahodod
lot. Mid $20'a. Coli 614· r
388-9857 after 5:30PM.

'--.---...,.--o...-r----------1

Used 2 bedroom mobile
homea, furniahed . 1 O~t60

Court. Mineraville, Oh. 614·
992-3324.
1976 Bayview 14 x 70
mobile home, den. air condi·

tionlng;f1 1.000. Coli 9927380.
.. Older model B x 36 Groot
Llkee mobile home. Com-

pletely furnished, t1500.
Call 814-949-2328 .
1964 model trailer 10•56,
$1 .900.00. Phone 304·
89&amp;-3415.

House trailer 322 3rd. Ave.
Adulll only, no pota. Coli
446-3648 or 814-258·
1903.
2 Bedroom Mobile Homo.
Ref. and Deposit. 2561922.

2 Bedroom Treiler. Ye mile
from College in Rio Grondo.
245-9170.

33

rooms, dining room. built in
room, and 2 full baths. 5
miles from Rio Grande end 1

mi. off Rt. 35 . Price
$79. 900. Call 614-2459570.
34

lnveatment property in Rio
Grlnde. apartment building.
1 yr. old, 3-2 bdr. apt'a.
Good monthly income .
t42,500. Call 446-8038.
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 YJ acres landscaped aita.
water &amp; electric, Garage,
outbuilding•. Kyger Crook
Schoola f6000 . Call 614387-7809 .

4 acrea with small trailer

U,OOO or ll'ode for mobile
hPmt. Kyger Cr11k Dlatrict.
Cllll814-367-7609.
Corner lot in Jackaon, Ohio.

Haa eewer, water. and gas
iop, t3,600. Call 614-2455515 .
One- Third of an acre lot in
VIllage of Vinton, •1 .200.
e.II&amp;14-256-16BO.

.. Home eite'a; 1 to 7 acres.
t "2oOO. down, monthly poy·
manti. 992-2571 .

Rental s
4.1

WITH OPTION TO BUY, 14'
wide oil electric mobile
home, aetting on Jot ready to
move into. t200.00 down
'175.00 MONTH . 304 ·
578-2711 .

Two bedroom, 'A mile out
Sond Hill Road. Phone 304675-3834.
2 bedroom unfurnished. private lot, In Burdette Addn.
•200 plua utilities. depoah
ond roferonceo. 304-6752464.

Business
Buildings

Houses for Rent

1 bdr. opt. f175 . 2 bdr.
houao, 1 bdr. opt., 1 bdr. opt.
2 bdr. apt. Utilitl11 portioly
fum . Call 304-675-5104 or
304-675-5386.
. 2 bdr. unfumiehod, newly
decorated. adulta only, no
. pelt, aoc. dep. 547 4th Ave ..
Galllpolia. •200 mo. Coli
446-2300.

3 bdr. in country near Rio
Orondo. $236 mo. plue doc.
dop .. no pets. Cell614-245·
5439.
:2 bdr. in city full basement,
gas furnance. carpeted, no
poll. Call 446-0958.
Near Waterloo tram house, 6
rme .. both, garden, f125
mo. Rot. Ill dop .. 1 child. Call
:,:614-643-2644.
·Very nlco 2 bdr. duplex
'house, Jurn., water paid,
Main St.. Cheshire. Call
614-245-5818.
furn . 2 bdr .. 2 both, amoll
Jloull. near K-Mort. f200
mo., 1 school age child, no
iinokera. rent•• i pay gas &amp;
electric. Caii448-1B22.
2 bdr. in city, adults Ill 1
amoll child. t1 00 4ep .. rot.
required. Call 448·3204.
2 bdr. house Upper Second
Avo.. Gollipollo. Got fur·
rience. gorego. 1 child, no
pots. Coli 814-388-B28e
baforo 12 Noon.
Nlae 2 bdr~home, tir9leao,
nitw kitchen, city achool
dlatrlat. Coli Jim Cochron 11
the Wiseman Agency, 448·
3843.

Slooping room for rent. Call
446-21596.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Lorge lots. Coli
614-992-7479.

Mobile home tor rent. in
Racine . Coli 814-387 7148 .

kitchen with appliances, util.

Furnished Rooms

'}6 Space for Rent

2 bdr. trailers, no city taxea.
beautiful river view in Kanauga. Fosters Trailer Park.
Call 446-1 602.

70 ac. more or le11 with bllrn
and rural water. Houee le11
thon 1 yeor old with family
room, living· room, 3 bed-

46

12x60 2 bdr. modorn furnished trailer. convenient
location, Upper River Rd.
depoait req . Call 814-4468558 .

66x12 Elcona· front livingroom. gee, two bedroom,
fumiahed, financing available. f6.996.00 . D. and W.
Estotll, 304-875-4424.

Farms for Sale

1--------44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished efficiency. •146.
Utilitioa paid. Shore both.
607 2nd, Golllpolio. Call
446-4416 after 7 PM .
JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal
Housing Opportunity) hot
one and two bedrooms, rent
atarting It •167 for one
bedroom and •193 por
month for two bedroom,
whh t200 dopoeh located
near Foodland and Spring
Volley Plaza, pool ond TV
ant. Call 446-2745 or loovo
message.
Attic opt. fumiohod f175.
Utilitioa paid. Shore both,
men only, 919 2nd. Avo.
Gollipolia. Call 446-4416
otter 7 PM .
1 bedroom Apt. •196. mo.
including utllltloa. Equal
Housing Opportunity. Con·
tact Village Manor Apta.
614-992-7787.
Riveraldo Aptl. Middleport.
Special r1te1 for Senior
Cltizena. $130. Equal Houaing Opportunities . 614992-7721 .
2 bedroom opt .• f150. por
month. · f50. depotlt. You
pay utilities. Racine area.
Call 614-949-2271 .

.. Furnished apartment for
rent in Syracuae. Call after
5:30p.m. 992-7888.
In Middleport, 2 room off.
apt. Coli 1·304-8S2-2668.
.. For rent, fumiehod 1 bod·
room apart. utilitiea paid.
Near Pomeroy Bridge. Call
992-6948.

. 1 bedroom unfurniahed
garage apartment; atove •
regrigerator fum. washer &amp;
dryer hook-up. t175. plus
utilitioa. Dopoah required.
Page St. Middleport. Coli
992-6271 .
.. New 1 bedroom furniahod
oportment In Middleport.
Coli 614-982-5304.
APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houHs. Pt. Ple11ant
ond Gollipolia. 614-4488221 .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartments now available to
elderly Ill dlaobled with on
Income of le11 than
t12.300. Renting for 30
porcent of odjulled Income.Phone 304-87&amp;·8878.
Nice one end two bedroom
aptl., unfumlehed. phone
304-875-2218, a till e.

.'
46 ' f:urnlehed Roome

Umastone. Sand, Gravel.
Delivered In Moaon, Mliga,
Gollle or pick up at Richerde
Ill Son. Coli 448-77S&amp;.

1---------

TV Ill Applioncoe. 827 Third
Avo., Golllpolio, 814-448·
1888. Spin woahero. gu Ill
elect·rlc dr·yero. auto
wlthen, go• • electric
rong11. refrlgerotore, ·TV
1111.

GOOD USEDAPPUANCES
Wtlhtre. dryero, r~rl-ro•• ~
tora, rongee. Ikons Ap·
U
R
pllencee,
pper lver Rd.
baelde Stone Crall Motel.
&amp;14-448-7388.
U11d Vl(othlrl Ill Drytrl,
Bevorol to choo11 from. One
Horvnt Oold Matched polr.
Coll814- 258~ 1207.

Amono side by side ;efrlg.&amp; ·
fr11zer combo. 22 cubic
foot, nice condition. Guorenttecl 30 doya. Coli 814·
2118·1207.

uiod

partible dryer llore

Kenmore, A-1 condition.
Hordly, been ulod. Cell 4482S31 or 448;01117. · ·- . •:
..Worm mornlnt pil clrcu·
hNt,.., 85,000 ITU.
hcellent ' condition. Coli
882· 21118.
~tlng·

182~21171 .

Mobile home euppllet: nontoxic ontIfrHz,.fll.50 por
gollon. Water h11tlng ale- .
mente. woter heoter, atepe,
wlndowe, doort, faucets,
brookera, etc. Ho\Polnt
h11vy-dUty electric dryers,
thil month only f278.
Klng1bury Homes Porta ond
Accollory Store. 800 East
Main St.. old Bookmobile
building In Pomeroy or coli
BB2· 5 5a7.

77

81

~-====~=··:::":·:··:..:·:· .:,. ·::;:========:J

Building moterlolo
block, brick, se-r plpoo.
wlndowe. lintels, etc .
Cloud• Wlntoro, Rio Grenda,
0 . Coli 814-245-5121 .
LUMBER - Rough cut, ook.
poplor, 2•4. 21e. 2xB, 1x4.
118, 1x8. length evolleble, 8
foot through 14 foot. Hogg
Ill Zuepon. · 304-n3-5554
daytime.
Now open for bullneu,
Mountoln Stott Block. Rt.
33, N- Haven. Complete
mltonry eupplllt, 4". 8",
12" block. Delivery oet'Vfce.
Phone doy 304·882-2222.
evening 882-3239.

Liveeto~k

Reg. Quorter horee gelding,
3 yr. old. aired' by Iuper
Chi•. 4 yr. old Reg. Quorter
horee boy more. Reg. Paint
gelding. 2 yr. old. Reg. black
filly, 2 yr. old. Cell 448·
3252.
Reg. Cluorter horee more.
Cell814-2411-11118.
.. Purebred Nublon Buck, 2
wka. old, dlebudded. t38.
Popero ovoHeble. Coli 814·
742-2708.
PIGI f30.00, 2 mMH off Rt.
82. Ten MMe. Firat hou11
poll Yauger Church. Keith
Rice.
64

Hey

&amp; Grain

Pet• for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boordlng oil breode. H11ted
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Cell 814-44e77815.
Judy Toylor Grooming. Cell
814-387-7220.
Brlorpotch Kennels Profit·
lionel All-breod grooming.
IndoOr-outdoor boordlng focilitleo. Engllth Cocker Sponlol puppl11. Coi1814-3B8·
8780.
Drlgonwynd Cottery ·
Kennett. AKC Chow puppill, CFA Hlmoloyon, Perlien and Si1m1M klnena.
Coli 614-448-3844 efter e.
AKC Reglatered Lh1to-Ap10
puppiH, 8 wko. old. wormed
Ill ohotl, 1 mole. 1 femele.
f150 eo. 448-0708.

.. Good condition hoy for
Hit. Coli e 14-848· 2870.
Large round or oquore bale1.
Good quality. Opol Fl1zpo·
trick. 814·8i8·4378.
.. Hoy. elfelfe, Glover • or·
chord greao t1 .110 o bale.
814-742-212&amp;.
.. MI1ed Hey, 40-4111b. bale.
100 bale lote, t1.110. Coli
e14-8811-311S1 .
Ground tor corn tii.IIO per
100. Bring own container.
304-8711·3308. No lundoy
IIIII.

Ml•ld Hoy. t1 .110 bale.
304-875-5578.

!1 diiSpllrl.illilll

Alredole Terrier pupo. Loyal,
protective. Intelligent. tom- 71
Auto1 for Sale
ily peta. Good atock, AKC, - - - - - - - - t175, includes ohoto. Cell
814-582-2170.
TOP CASH pold for late
model used cera. Bmith
Bulck-Pontloc. 1811 Eott·
67
Musical
ern Ave., GolllpoHo. Cell
Instrument•
814-448-2282.
'78 D-18 Martin with H. S.C.
good cond . Coli otter
5:00pm. 304-875 - 3S82.
f550. firm.
Electric guitor f4&amp;0 volue,
mutt eell for t200. 304875-5004.

f o1r111 S;;pplii"
&amp; [111/~:illli.k

Farm Equipment

Troy-Bi!t tlllera. Check our
apociol price before you buy
ony tlllere. Swisher lmplo·
ment Co. St. Rt. 7 N, Golllpolia.OH . Cell 814-448·
0475.
1 8&amp; Mo11ey Ferguson, 130
Formell with cuitlvetore. 216 in. plowe, troneport dltc,
tobacco litter. cultlpocker
and harrow all in exc. cond.
Coli 448· 7838 or 814-258·
8325.
11&amp;0 caee dozer. 1883
1580D. 4 WD bockhoe. 30488&amp;-38154.
Now Ideo hoy conditl·
304-882·
2888.

o~ot300.00 .

62 Wanted to Buy

Wanted · tobacco poundoge
for FFA project. Alfred
Fouver. 304-8911 -3878.
Wonted tobocco pound•~•
to leose. John Rou·•. Goll·
"''
poll• Forry 304-8711-11911&amp;.

with Major Hoople ;.,

3/1/84
EVENING

8:00 • (I) (I) • (I) (ll • (jJ
News
(I)
MOVIE:
'Twilight
Time'
(I) MOVIE: ' A Family
Upelde Down'
(J) N - Tr-ure Hunt
(]) E8PN' o lportolook

Auto Rep1lr

Cll Andy Griffith
Cll Newa/8porte/WIIIther

CAPTAIN EASY

(I) Or. Who
(JII 3-2-1. Contoct

12

Truck• for S1le

83 Ford F-1 00 pickup,
auto .. V-8. eun roof, vinyl
coverod bed. t8 , g85.
John'• Auto lola, lulevllle
. Rd. Cd 448-4 782 GeiHpo·
lla. Open till dark.
1877 Ford pickup F-100
with to-. one owner.
n.ooo. Cell 814· 3SI·
8408 after 4PM.
N- tNck fendera • dooio .
Chevy fender• t84 .811 .
Chevy dooro f1711 . . Ford
fendtrl t711. lod lin1r1
t2311. Cell814-2118· 1280.
.. 1878 Ford 1 ton truck with
dump. LHt thin 30.000
mH111 . .200. CoM 882·
'2201 .
1880 Ford truck, good
cond .. f400.00; 1881 Ford
truck t400.00. Phone 304·
888-34111 .
'13 Ford Renger. loaded.
ttlll under worronty, must
toll, ...700.00. 304-87810311 ond 8711-41181.
73

Vena

&amp; 4 W.O.

1878 Plymouth Trell Dutter
auto.. radio, good tlree•
priced to toll. C.H 4488340.
197e Chevrolet 30 cube
von. H~te'l8'x12'box,duel
rur wheela. a new auto.,
trenoml11lon • bottery.
Roll-up reor door. 42.800
miles. Clll 448·0840 after
5:30PM .
1811 ChevyG-1)ven.ecyl ..
ltlndord. radio, t4,4811 .
John'• Auto BeiH. lulovllle
Rd.. GeNipolio. Cell 446·
47S2. Opon tl~ dirk.
1878 Chevy 4 wheel drive
ond llg Truck com per.
t1,eOO.OO. CeH weekends
only, 304-8711·8801 .
187S Chevy liner. 4•4.
PS. PB. AT, V·l 3150, good
cond.. t4,000.00. 304·
882-2188.

1878 Uncoln Mork V neor .77 Ford 11ml conv. von. AC.
new cond., extrae, aunroof, Crui11, 1- mileage, •••·
low mlleoge, 1 owner. cond. through out. Phone
tS.IIOO firm. Coli 441· 304· 87&amp;·2815 after llpm.
0813.
1877 Blozer, outo., 48,500
1888 Chevy Coprlce 2 dr .. mll11 , exc. cond . •
hardtop. 283 engine. outo u.8oo.oo . 304 - 875 trono., rune good .. Coli 814· 3011 .
245-11081.
'78 Dodge, 4 wh11l drive
81 Amoricon Motor Spirit 4 truck. 380 engine, PS. P8,
epct. t2, 715. 81 . Chevy edventura · packega, axc .
Chlvettl 4 dr. auto • elr cond., priced on lnapoctlon.
t3,1815. 81 ChevyCheVIttl 304-8711-11424.
2 dr. auto t3,185. 78 Chevy
Chevetti 4 dr. 4 apd.
t2,0815. 80 Renoult La Cor4 .7 4 Motorcyclee
tpd. olr fulleun roof t2,4815., - - - - - - - - 78 Chevy .Nove outo
t2,1811. John's A~to Bole, leo·Roy CNillr 1978 22ft.
8ulovllle Rd. Coll44e-4782 with trollor, 228 HP. oneGelllpoNa. Opon till dark.
owner, ttareo, ewlm pllt·
form, eutometic ..,...,.,
1!177 Mercury M'onerch low houra, f12.1100 . Coli
auto.. AC. good ehope. 814·11112·11058.
neede, vinyl top. Coli 4484307 otter 5PM.
1878 2110cc MX4 CAM .AM
dirt bike, very good condl·
1878 Ford Pinto ••· cond. tlon, t4815.1878 2110ccWR
Cell4!48·1214 otter &amp;PM.
Hutky dirt bike. ••cellent
condition f7150. Coli 4481977 Ford Muatong Cobro S878·efter 5:00PM.
302 engine, 4 opd .. PS. PB.
AM-FM coso. body perfect .. 1888 Harley Dovldoon
cond.. t2,800. Can 814· eloctrogllde. baoket co11.
388-8880 or 814-38S· t1.00. 811 Doc Few. 81
8271.
203 Sidehlll Rd.. Rutlond,
For ule or trode 78 Ford Oh.
Pinto good cond.. 4 cyl., 1881 10180 Kowou•lt400.
•
IU t 0., 43 •000 mile 1. c011
304· 773-11830.
814· 245-5015.
1877 Honda 550 Four·K.
1874 Ford 4 door, good very
good cond., new tires
Nnnlng cond .. low mHNge. ond tune-up, hllder plpn,
448
7337
Coli
•
·
wind jomor end more oxtree.
1881 Chevette 21 ,000 mi.. Will sell for tBOO.OO. Coli
like new, t3,BOO. 1878 304· 875· 31170or304-8811F-250 Ford 7800 Gvw, ·I _3_3_18-•ft_•_r_6_pm_._ __
I I 31 000
camper lpoc •
•
mi., • 7 3 H o n do C L 3 15 0 .
d
d til 000 c 11
goo con ·
•
· •
f3110.00. Nice cleon bike.
"
304-8711-1780 otter 5:00.
e 14-258-8244 ·.
18511 chevy, 2 door lldon,
new pelnt, f1,200. Cell
e14-3e7-01 84.
..1878 AMC GremHn Auto ..
*400. ~oll8t4-742-2708.
.. ,1172 Multling fiB&amp;. Cell
814-1182·2380.
.
11180 . Olde Cutlou lu·
...-. olr-conll.. Pl. AM·
FM ceUittl, t4.100. Will
conlkf111 trede. 304-878·
2181 .

1878 H ~ D
eney ovldoon clot·
tic; low mlleoge, mony
••tr••·
3048711-12158 . .

•e.ooo.oo:

·u Hondi.xLBo. t575.00.
304
75

·l7l5·

3031

a

Improvement•
- - - -- -- - -

po-.

1178 Malibu, 4 door. outo ..
PI, Ill; fiO,O.OO, 304-878•
4437 or 878-:13154.

, , 0111•

cut~ou

304-871· 7421.

7:30

..

RON'B Tellvlalon lervlce.
~pecleHzlng In Zenith ond
"'l91orolo, Quuor. ond
house cell1. CoN 304-878·
2388 or 814·448-2484.

. 0 (Q

'

S:OO

'

Fetty Tr11 Trimming, stump
removol . Coli 304-8711 ·
1331 .
RINGLE 'S BERVICE expo·
rloncod roofing. Including
hot tor oppllcotlon, corpenter. eloctrlclon. moaon. Coli
304-8711 · 2018 or 87114&amp;80.

REMEMI!.at, FOOZY.

AND HERE COMES
THE FINAL ENTRY IN
THE SNAKE TOSS!
Ll&gt;.otES I&gt;.ND GENTS .. .

Stork'• T,.. • Lawn Core.
lendiCiping potlo, awning
end underpennlng. lockhoe
work. For complete lewn
care. Coli 304-1178-2010,
lnaured.
·

lid lu·

Plumbing

422·2387.

.

(I) Cll Glmme • Break
Nell hits the roof when Katie
announces she warits to forego college to open a clothing boutique.
(I) MOVIE: '48 Hours'
(I) MOVIE: 'The Wilder·
neu Family'
(J) Somebody Help Me
(I) NCAA llollunblll:
Mlululppi
St.te
at
Auburn
(I)
&lt;D Ali-Ster Fernlly
Feud
D (I) IB Magnum P.l.
Magnum is caught in a cur-

m

8HULAW'8 Plumbing ond
Heotlng. Rt. 2 N11l Rood,
Point Pleoaont, W. Vo. 3048711-11420. Ucenaod ond
Insured.

a

1

r

1

a
a

Excavating

DOZER WORK By Ted
Henno, ponds. dltchu.
btHmente. etc. Cell 814·
44e-4807. Certor Ill Evene
Treneportetion.
Cot 215 hoe, dozera, crena,
loodere. dump tNck. Coil
e14·448-1142 betw11n
7 :00AM • 5:00PM.
Good-1 E•covotlng, boll·
menta, footere, drlvew1ya.
ltptlc tenke. lond~t~plng .
Coli onytlme 814-4484537, Jamal L. Davison, Jr.
owner.
J.A.R. Construction Co.
Wotor Lin11, Footera,
Drolna. All kinds of DltchlniJ.
Rutland , Oh. 814-742 :
2803.
Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

BARNEY·

Pooquolo Electric Co. ell
ph1111 of electric work, oil
work gueranteed . Aerial
truck rontel . 814 -4484018 .

HE JUST
LOVES TO
CURL UP

··AN'GIT ALL
TH' LATEST

SNOOZE

WITH THAT

PAPER··

SEWING Mochlne repolro.
Hrvlc•·· Authorized Singer
Sol11 Ill •Service lherpon
Scluon. Fobrlc Bhop,
Pomeroy. 814-882-2284. '
General Hauling ·

J

Prklt answer here: (

goaled by llle above cartoon

I I I ][ l I I I )
(AniMrO IOmorrOW)

festerday·s

I

Jumbles AWARD EXTOL COOKIE SEXTON
Answer· What happened when thai body builder pul 1
light T-shlrt on his torso?- IT TORE SO

......... ,._. ......... Ho. 2l,~110puaiN. ........ fori1.NpUe
.
. _.... _ . . _ _ ....... _
....... - . J.07141.

.,.... , . . , _ , ........ «* lftd ,.... cftlcb peytblil to

N•• f

p

t

I

•

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

4 plus score for four

NORTH
.. 10 8 73
.QJ92
+A4
+JU

opP.?,nents didn't.
'Here is Edgar Kaplan at
work on one of those
contracts.
" At trick two he ruffed a
club and made the normal
play of cashing one high
spade. Then he led a heart to
dummy's queen and East's
king. Back came another
club. Edgar ruffed and
cashed two spades to pluck
West's trumps. Then he led
another heart and stuck in
dummy's nine. East took his
I 0 and shifted to a low
diamond. A club lead would
have been be.tter, but the
diamond lead liave Edgar a
real problem. "Who had the
queen of diamonds? With his
usual skill in locating
honors, Edgar had no problem. He played West for
either a doubleton or a
tripleton queen. So he let the
diamond ride to dummy's
ace and cashed his king,
ruffed a third diamond to
pick up West's queen, and his
Jack of diamonds became
the contract trick.
" How did the other South
go wrong? He didn't. Bill
Root and Dick Pavlicek
competed to five clu!&gt;s. They
went down one, so needless
to say our team won the
board."

WEST

S-1-14

EAST

+HS

+···

+Ql07
+K432

.AK108
+96S2
+AQ1088

•u4

SOUTH
+AKQ642
.7 3

+KJ 8 3
+7

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Weal

Nort~

Eut

Soli"

Pass
Pass

2+
Pass

DbL
Pass

4+

Opening lwd:

~·N

+2

By Olwald Jacoby
ud Jamet Jacoby
Jim: "It seems that a
large part of our team's victory in the Reisinger came
from four-spade contracts
that they made while their

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

ti,u.~tul''
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
7 Mythical
1 As ol now
being
I Scatter
8 Capek play
U Lonesome
9 Famous
1% Lop twigs
Siamese
fnm
twin
U Brltisll
10 Minuscule
statesman

horseman
%1 Make an
entrance
U Fanner ol

statesman

%8 Asian river
Z9Widen

a

a

34 Woman's

1B I'U In the Fomlly

JONE8 BOYI WATEII IER·
VICE. Coli 814-387-7471
or 814-317-0881 .

• &lt;D Nlghtllne

a

Twilight Zone
11 :45 '(I) MOVIE: 'Rocky Ill'
12:00 (J) Buml • Allen
.
(I) MOVIE: 'The $outhem

"''l&gt;EANUTS

""'

Yesterday's Alllwer
26 Verbatim
36 Joe Palooka's
19 Stock
27 - Khan
wife
exchange
Z9 Terrible
37 Tea varietY
membership 31 Wheat
38 To what
%0 Hurtful
variety
degree
%1 Mine
3Z Oak tree
39 Frankie's
entrance
34 ~ "Fatha"
second mate
%% Boundary
Hines
40 Medieval •
Z3 Priggish
35 Early violin
French poem
novel

India
%5 Took the risk
%0 Teus

.Rashness

a

14 Equipment

17 Laughing
. 11 Scoundrel
sound
17 Like Irving's 18 Jane Austen
15 Make lace

33 "Mondo

Cane'' song

name
37 Oturchill 's

predecessor
41Shack

UHomerun
name
43 Cognizant
44 French city
DOWN
1 Sodiwn
cbt'oride

ZSpanish jar
3 -the bill
tSOme
5 Verdon
BrOadway

musical
I Celerity

DAILY CR\'I'l'OQUOTE- Here's

Cli lateltl\l'lil Ari.enca

how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFBI.LOW

II

AND A!RtAtrlRETIME

1 TIIOU61lT CLASSICAL
MUSiC WAS 80RIN6 .. .I
MARCIE AN AfOL06V:.. .

MA~CIE.!!

..Cil..Nlg_~lne
. &lt;II MOVIE: 'The

Spirit Ia

WHIIntl'

a

&lt;D Eye on Hollywood

aGunamoke

12:30 ())Jack Benny Show
(I) Eye on Hollywood
laUI Night whh OtMd

m

·lAltwn..,

~.~ ~W!OVIE: 'To Find My

· ·, •·()I

TRISTATE

Newa
·
' 12:41 Cl)lllly Cryatoi·A Comic'•

.

. ,,

..

· Una

u:

One letter limply etandt for another. In this sompl · A Is.
UMd for the three L'o, X for the two O's, etc. Sin;:le • . l ters;
apoetrophel, the lencth and formation of lhe wordt ere an:
1111111. l!!ech day the code !etten are dilerent.
..
caYnoQUOTBS

Sir

Upholatery

114·448·7133 or814-~.!:
1133. '
....

Now arrenge llle CirCled lettora 10
lorm llle IUIP'ise ana-. oi aug·

m

Cll Cheerl
(J) 700 Club
(I) • &lt;D lottery!
D (I) IB Simon • Simon
A .J. and Rick 's easy missing
husband case evolves into a
potentially lethal spy mis·
sion. 160 min.)
(I) (JII Myateryl 'Reilly: Ace
of Spies.' Reilly becomes
determined to convince the ··
many factions in Russia to
aid his purpose of over·
throwing the Bolsheviks.
160 min.) !Closed Captioned!
9:3o
Cll m auffelo a1n
10:00
(I) (l) Hill Street 81uH
Joyce witnesses 1 vengeful
man· s slaying of another
and the new mayor criticizes
Furillo for publicly ridiculing
his sweep of a drug 'super·
meri&lt;,et.' 160 min.)
(I) On Locetion: Corlln It
Cemegle
(I)
MOVIE:
'1 0
to
Midnight'
(I) TBS Evening Ne(1) • &lt;D 20/20
II Cll 1B Knott l..tlndlng
(I) Avengere
(JII Newswetch
INN Newa
10:30 (J) Blondle
(JII Tony Brown'• Journal
Love American Style
11 :00. (I) ( I ) . (I) ( l l . &lt;D
Ne(1) MOVIE: "That Chom·
plonahlp Seaton'
(J) Another Ufe
(]) NCAA ...ketbell:
Washington It UCLA !This
911me is subject to blackout)
(I) All In the Family
(l) Newa/Sporte/WMther
(I) Not the Nine O'Clock
Newa
Benny Hill Show
11 :30 D (I) NCAA lolkotbell:
Mlllleolppl It Kerttucky
(I) Belt of Groucho
(I) Cottlna
(I) Benny Hill Show
(l) Tonight Show
II(() Trapper John. M .D.
Things 9o a.little crazy auhe
hospital when Jockpot and
Slocum are distracted from
their duties by a woman . (RI
(60 min.)
.
_
9:oo

JIM'S PLUMBING. HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1, Bo• 31115, Galli·
polle. Cell 814·387-01178.

B7

WHAT THE MAD
CHEF WAS.

(JII N- Tech Tlm11

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Golllpolle, Ohio
•
Phone e14·448-3888 or
114·448·4477

·UPHOLITI!IIY•.IHOP
...-. """" llil ~ .. t tU·
Bic ..,.,.ve.~IIIHII~" - NIIW a-uiH;-1'1.-rtiiUII,

tleo.oo. wv 304-422-14:1:1 of 304-

tENTHIZ±

D

a

.JUST THROW 'IM LIKE
Y'WOULD !&gt;. SPEil&lt;fl.!

&amp; He1ting

Coli Jim Lanier, 304·87157387.

Correct Creft •

I SAlLEY
I (]
(l]

a &lt;D Entor18inment
Tonight
a One Doy at o Time

a

'ALtEYOOP

. N11d ·~methlng houled
owey or aomethlng moved?
We'll do lt. Coif 448-3151
, bat .. lln 8 ond 11.

1110 111ft. ...,..,., wltiiiO
HP Mwwry engine, .. IIIIa
._ equiP,IMnt tnaludld ~ Mult
lei.C.JI44f-l:lll.
.

(I) Tic Tee Dough
(]) NFL'• · GI'Mtllt Mornento NFL's Greatest Momenta presents 'Upseta and
Underdogs. Hotdogs and
fieroes .' 160 min.)
(I) S..forcl ond Son
(I)
(I) Family Feud
1B Wheel of Fortune

results . IRII60 min.)
(I) (JII SnNk Previewa Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons take a look at
what's happening at the
mOvies.
NCAA llollunblll:
Temple at Penn St.
Cll Family Tin Jen·
a:30
niter begins to hove flash·
bocks of her past after she is
admitted to tho hospital for
a .tonsillectomy.
(]) Top II-* Boxing from
Atlantic City, NJ Top Rank
Boxing presents a 10-round
Jr. Middleweight bout tea·
turing Sean Mannk&gt;n vs.
Rooseveh Green.
(I) Good Neighbors

·

Bo1t1 and
Motors for Sale

I AOWNC I
(J'J I I
I TEBE1j
I I

a

rent when his surf ski is capsized with near-disastrous

GET your carpet IHII'
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
8TEAMER 1 Wetor removal.
fumiture cleonlng, free Mtl·
motH. 304-e711-2288.

86

lour ordlnory wordl.

a

Wetor Welle. Commerclol
end Domlltlc. Test ho"'Pumpo lolet ond Service.
304-88&amp;-3102.
•

84

one letter 10 Itch ~quare . 10 lorm

aJeffersona

a

Dick FuHer Home Improve·
manto. Corpentry-Piumblng
and Electrlcel. Formerly D.
F Contrectorl. Cell 448·
3313.

by Hen&lt;i Arnold and Sob Lee

Unterambll lhell lour Jumbles,

p_..·.

Wll6~ TI16 PLA'/6R WHO~, -rn~
~~~t%r '5C.OR£ t..();€6 ~

WT '100 ~T THAI 51Lt..'/
lW~ I~~~ reAD OF WINT!:.R ~

Appllonce Bervlce ell mokH
• modela refrlgertore.
waahar1, dryere, r~ngaa.
compoctore. dlehwlthero.
mlcrowov11. Heotlng •
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work.
Gellle Refrlgerotlon Co.
814-448-4088.

83

a

a

Morcum Roofing • Spout&lt;
lng. 30 veer1 ••perlenoe.
apoclolizlng In buMt up roof.
Coli 814-381-8157.

1il THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

ftfl~~ ID1t

~ ~ ~~ s

Olloctlce

a

PLASTERING • N- enll
repolr commertlol end 1'111·
dentlel. free eatlmltH. Coli
e14-2118-1112.

82

a

~

(I) (l) NBC News
(J) RltletNn
(]) E8f!N'a 8porteWMk
(I) C8rol Burnett
(I)
()J ABC News
(I) &lt;II CBS News
Cll llualneu Report
(JII Newton'o Apple
7:00
(I) PM Megulne
(J) Aa. Smith ond Jones
(]) 8portsCenter
(J) Hoeon'• Horoes
(I) Entertlliri!TIIM Tonlght
Cll Charlie'1 Angell
(I) Wheel of Fortune
(I) (JII MacNeil/Lehrer
Newahour
&lt;II News
• &lt;D
Court

8:30

Home

Jl~l WATER iiERVICE.
1173 Cedlloi: DeVIlle, 2
exa. COf!d.,
door, oil
f1, 7115.00. Phorio 304·.
878·81512 •

•

GUARAN'fEED
fOR U/&gt;10
40 &amp;ELOW.

S1•1 Vll.l'o,

66 Building Suppllee

61

THURSDAY

THI!&gt; PARI&lt;A 1!7

Sa1ton1d wood f211 .00
truck loed' 304-8811-38011.

66

Television
Viewm,i

Auto P1rt1
&amp; Acc1110rl11

Auto pointing. t1110-t2110.
pelnt end meterlell In · ·
eluded, bodywork ••tre, ·
448-8213.

II':=======:.:..l:=======~
OUR BOARDING HOUSE ®

711

lilly LH'I Tlret end lottery
Solei. New ond•ulld tlrH1
o11o. tire repolre. 180:1 Jet·
flraon Ave. Point Pleeunt.
304· 8711·11401. N- Optll
24 hre. o dey, mochenla 011
dUty.

B. Ill R. WOOD BHOP. Polio
fumlture, picnic tobl11 ond
noveltl11. Coli 304-8711&amp;40&amp;.

887-3973.
64 Miec. Merchandise

The Daily Sentinei-Page--11 :

by Larry Wright

Firewood delivered. 304·
8711-207&amp; or 8711-2088.

Firewood. pick -up loed.
t30.00 delivered. 304-8711·
&amp;983.

Knouff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12" · 22"1tocked
In yard. HEAP vendor,
prompt delivery. e14-2588245.

'N' CARLYLE ®

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

White mote'a bad. Metch11
S11re Hom11teod collet·
ilon. Alao baby bad. com·
plate. 304· 773·1111111.

Bin. Creftemon teblo uw.
Phone 304-8711-4004.

1---------

WCillit" Blifiljf, llliit
n-. UOO. · Poul Simon, .

1

KIT

Loauet po111, atokeo end
firewood. Cell 814·2118·
127 1
___ _
· - - -- - Hond toola. welding mochlno, torah end gougll.
Plow1, roll hog wire, 2
electric tena11. Lota more
mlac .. Rt. 218. Coli 814·
2&amp;8-11111 .

.. COUNTRY OAK FURNITUR E; Cupboerde, Pie
S.f11, Round hbl11,
Cholre. plua mony more
more ontlque1. mlec. 814·

Bulldora Surplue An
Solvoge.
Interior prehung door's Legacy oak and w1lnut and
Two t,.ilar lots, sewer and birch f39.95 IBI gredee
water fumiahed, ona email t20.00.
child occoptod. 304-875- Exterior prahung steal
1078.
door's omballld 6 or 8
ponol f109.8&amp; IBI grades
f89 .9&amp;.
47 Wanted to Rent
'h ln. tharmel pene glase
211&amp;8 dlomond docoroted
n.oo ...
Physician and epouae mov- 4x8 wood or maeonlta peIng into aree in June. Unfur· nollng good Hloctlon t5.98.
nished hou·H or ·lpartment . 421n. or 38 in. merble vonity
needed cloae to Holzer top'a 181 gred11 f39 .85.
Vinyl cooted well poper
Clinic. Coli 448-15187.
double roll t1 .99. ·
Elec. ba11boord heotera 220
volt 14·2800)15-3300118·
4000118·48110) 8 pc. or
Mereh~rHii se
mora 15% extra discount.
Commercial aluminum double entrance door's com61 Household Goods plete t589.95.
5 pc. ocrylic tub woll kill
with ahelvoa f48 .95.
Rangea hood' a verioua sizes
SWAIN
ond colora t25.
AUCTION Ill FURNITURE Penn'• Worehou11, Well·
62 Olivo St .. Golllpolle. New oton, Oh. 814-3S4-3845.
Ill u11d wood Ill coolotovoa,
8 piece wood living room Firewood cut up slobs t1 &amp;
auito with 8 Inch flot erma pickup lood. Coli 614-245t398. bunk bods complete 11804.
with bunkie• f199, 2 piece
ontron living room oultll METAL CULVERT PIPE 81n.
f198, ontron recllnera f89, thru eo in. dlometerln ltock.
other rocllnera tao. maple RON EVANS, Jockeon, Oh.
dinette 1111 t179. box 814-2S8-15830.
aprlngo Ill mettreu twin or - - - - - - - - full f100 111 regulor-flrm PLASTIC SEPTIC TANK
f120. mople dinette chelra Houl In your pickup truck.
f3&amp;, woeh stonda f34, RON EVANS. Jockoon, Oh.
moplo rockora t58, 7 piece 814-288-5930.
chrome dinette 111 f148, 5
piece dinette 11t f98, ulld PLASTIC CISTERNS Ap·
bedroom suitee, refrigera - proved for drinking water.
tora, rongee, cheat, dreuoro, RON EVANS, Jockaon, Oh.
wringer w~thora, TV'e, dry· 814-288-5930.
ora, Ill shoes. Cell814-4463169.
PLASTIC CULVERT PIPES .
8 in. thru 18 ln. Stoll
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
opprovod, guorontood. RON
Solo, choir, rocker. otto· EVANS, Jeckaon, Oh. 614man, 3 tobl11, lextre hllvy 288-&amp;830.
by Frontier), f8B6. Solo,
choir ond love111t, t275. Will cut and deliver fireSoflt ond choira priced from wood. Coll814·258-1528.
f286 . t«&gt; t895. Toblea, t45
and up to •125 . Hide·• · Built on you lot inew home
bod a, f440 . ond up to you con offord. over 1,100
t52&amp; .. Rocllnera, t175. to oq.ft.. 8 room1 • bath,
t375., Lempa from US. to corpoted, reedy to move
$75.6 pc. dlnettll from Into. t28,500. Aleo gerogoo
•99 .. lo 435. 7 pc. t1S8 Ill bosementl. Coli Potrlot
and up. Wood toblo with six Hom•• Bulldera 44B-S038.
chalra t425 to f745. Dotk Will consider mobile home
f11 0 up to f225 . Hutchea, aa tr1de ln.
$660. ond up, mople or pine 1---~----­
finilh . Bunk bod complete lldroom euht· white 3 pc.
with mattre11es, •2&amp;0. and dreaser-IT!irror-cheet, excelup to $395. Baby bada. len1 condition. Coli 875f11 0. MottreOHI or box 8888.
aprlngo, full or twin, $58 ..
flrm, •ea. and f7B. Ou11n Office dook-30•60 top good
1111. t196. 4 dr. chelta, condition. Coli 448-8340.
f42. 5 dr. cheats. $54.JI~d
fremea, f20 .ond Ull .. 10 Movipg Sole- Mite. mobile
gun · Gun cabinets. •350. home parte end accesaoriet.
G11 or electric reng11 t375. Stop ond - ot French city
Boby mettro1111, f25 Ill Mobile Homee. Coli 446f35, bod from11 UO, t26, 9340.
Ill f30, king frame f50 .
Good eelitctlon of bedroom
suitet , cedar cheue. Meyera 7 ft. enow plow for
rockers. metal cabinets. aolo. Fully eutomotlc. ••eel·
swivel rockers.
lent aldellne butlneu. Coli
Und Furniture -- bookcase. 44e-2974.
rangea. chairs, dryera, refrlgoretora ond TV' e. 3 miloa
out Bulovllle Rd. Open 9am 3 n - Mobile homo axles,
,;reo. wheels end
to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9om complete
f300.
Call 814·
eprlnge.
to 6pm, Set.
268-8244.
814-448-0322

.. Refrlgeretor for sele, furnl·
ture · end opplleiiCII. Cell
114-848-3024. Green·
wood Rd., Rllclne.

•

64 Ml1c. Merchandl1e

63
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

and 12x62 aizet . Your
chance to own a comforta·
ble home. Browns trailer

March 1' 1984

Ohio

VXIliB'A

EM

OWWMDEVNEP

VOAVBA,

OA

VXB

QXBE

AMYBFMHZ

AME

QOA

LMRNWB .

QMYOE
VMRH

QOEVBH

u.

L.

XBI

F Z

UMI
AONH .
XBI

V X

8'

OHOYA

Y•tenlay'i Crjplijqliole: THE WONDERFUL THING ABOUT·
THIS CITY (SAN FRANCISCO) IS 'mAT WHEN YOU GE'r'
~YOUCANALWAYSlEANAGAit:(STIT. -ANON .

�Page

12

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 1, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Couple file law suit
in Mason Court

I
Weekly sennonette

Buckeyes lose 8gain

See page5

Story 011 Pap 3

WE NOW HAVE NEW
SPRING MERCHANDISE
IN STOCK

Eaglettes eliminated

Handling convulsions

Story, phoCo 011 Page 3

Story 011 Page 7

aily

he
Vol .32, No.227

•

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport,' Ohio, Friday, March 2, 1984

(opyrlthtod 1914

I Sections, I 2 Poges 20 C:.ntt
A Multimedia In c. N.wspa,.,

Federal snow removal aid unlikely
TWO DAYS OF SAVINGS-MARCH 2ND &amp; 3RD
Take advantage of our
Bird Sale Prices
save on famous Uoyd Fibercraft summer furniture.

EARLY BIRD SPECIAL .

CUSTOM MADE

SUMMER FURNITURE

DRAPERY SALE

Reg. 186.65 Lo-Back
.
Spring Base chair ............... Sale 169.00
Reg. '101.30 Hi-Back
Spring Base Chair ............... Sale 179.00
Reg. '197.20
SpriJig Base Lounger. ........ Sale 1147.00
Reg. '200.00
2-Seat Glider.................... Sale 1149.00
Reg. 1266.65
3-Seat Glider .................. Sale 1200.00
Reg. '280.00
Canopy Swing .................. Sale 1210.00

40°/o OFF
Quality Decorama Drapes
anCI Bedspreads
SALE ENDS MARCH 31

Ohio ...
(Continued !rom page 1)
Some bene!!t checks !rom the
Department of Public Wel!are
might be delayed slightly In the
mall, but load stamps should be on
time, Ms. Matthews said.
. State officials said some 650
national. guardsmen were being
deactivated as they !lnlshed dealing
with the snowstorm that stranded
motorists statewide.
Statewide, the guard has completed 78i missions, Including 6451n
the northeastern section, said Brian
Kvasnicka, an Ohio National Guard
spokesman.
Mlsslons ranged from clearing
streetS and helping stranded travel·
ers to transporting patients, doctors
and nurses to hospitals, he said.
The State Highway Patrol was
supervising removal of the largP
number of abandoned vec!hles
hampering snow removal e!torts.
In Lorain, hospital rescue
workers had touseasled to get toone
Injured man.
The extra snow helped at least a
few businesses, Including J)elghbor·
hood gi'ocery stores. Ed Mantln,
managerofaConvenlentFoodMart
In Lorain, said he was out o!m!lk !or
two hours Tuesday and ran low on
bread, eggs and luncheon meats.
Because of the storm, officials In
Kent allowed free admission to the
Western Michigan-Kent State basketball game Wednesday night. A
total of 5,003 people took advantage
of the offer to see Kent State defeat
Western Michigan TI.flJ.
Along a stretch of Lake Erie
shoreline between Cleveland and
Port Clinton, the only serious
activity was a few snowmobile
riders taking advantage of the deep
snow.
•

Schools remain
closed today
Schools of the MeigS Local and
Southern Local School · District
remained closed today for · the
second consecutive day due to Icy
roads caused by Tuesday's snow.
Schools of the Eastern Local
District were operating today on a
one hour delay. All districts of the
county are over the live days
allowed without makeup Un\e being
required as calamity days.
·-·
.

keys found
An Improvised key ring of wire
holding three keys, one possibly to a
treezer, was found Wednesday
morning In the snow on Pomeroy's
Court St. The owner may claim the
!!M_~t1beJ?aUiSenttnelOff!ce, lll
Court St.

MECHANJC ST. WAREHOUSE

While You Wait

LADIES'

SALE

SPORT SOCKS

BABY BLANKETS

Heavy woven sport socks in sweatshirt grey
or white with striped tops in assorted colors.
Sizes 9 to 11.

Boxed co.mforters, heavy zippered quilts, quilted
blankets w/pillows and baby blankets.

...REG. s2.00 ......... SALE ll.39
REG. l2.25 ......... SALE ll.59
REG. '2.75 ....... SALE ll.89

Computer Portraits
SALE!

Hallmark Party Goods
Napkins- table covers- centerpieces - luncheon and dinner sizeplates. Discontinued
patterns and colors in all occasion - birthday- juvenile -wedding. lim~ed Quantities.

Reg. 19.00 Baby Blankets ......... Sale '7.19
Reg. $18.00 Baby Blankets .... Sale '14.39·
Reg. 122.00 Baby Blankets ...... Sale '17.59
Reg. 130.00 Baby Blankets ...... Sale '23.99

JUNIOR WRANGLER

Sweatsuit Sale

Reg. '8.00

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

~

Shirt or Pants .......... Sale '8.50
Reg. 117.00 Zip Front
Hooded Jacket ........ Sale '14.45

'17.00 .... SALE
*28.00 .... SALE
139.00 .....SALE
S48.00 .... SALE

SALE!

I Men's Fashion Jeans
Includes regular sizes 28 to 42 and
extra sizes 44 to 50- slim and full cut
styles. Pre-washed 100% cotton and
cotton polyester.

Sl3.59
S22.39
*31.19
'38.39

2nd FLOOR-JEWELRY DEPT.

MISSES

MEN'S. &amp; BOYS'

Wrangler

TUBE

18.

SOCKS
to

J

J

REG. 110.00 to 131.00

$849

Red Heart '1.69

Wintuk Knitting Yam
SALE $}l9

Stock up now. Many
school colors in this selection.

Solid and variegated colors. 5 ply .
machme washable and dryable.
Save Fnday and Saturday.

LADIES'

Panty

Great Values on RCA TVs l'lus Quality,SeMce After the Sale
RCA 25" diagonal XL-100
Color TV with
C~anneLock Digital
Keyboard Control

REG. 11.50 ......................... SALE *1.29
'
REG. 12.25 .........................SALE 'L89
REG. 13.50 ......................... SALE '2.99
REG. 14.25 ......................... SALe '3.59
REG. '5.50 ..........................SALE '4.69

$63900.

.PIN£, MAPLE OR
.PECAN FINISH

· •. .....,..
........,.. SPECIAL
.....,...........................,....,....,................
1499 95
REG.
' 19" RCA Colortrak .
Digital Tuner
SPECIAL S43~.
_,..._.._.._
.,...
_.. ............. ...' _... .........,....,..._
REG. s549 _g5 1~" XL-100 Color P~rtablt 1 .
.
W1th Remote·cont[ol SPECiAL
.......__._.......,.........____ ....,.. .........,._
. REG 1799 95 25·~ n- 1oo console-,:,
· ~- s72goo
·
. . With Remote Control ·SPECIAL

--· __

·-----_......._....

OPEN FRIDAY.
EVENING 'lll 8 .

__

-

·

S48goo
·

S~le

Week-end sale prices on lorraine, Marion Rohr and lux·
uray Panties.
Briefs, hip hu~gers, bikinis, long legs style and band ·
leg styles. Wh1te. beige, pastels and prints.
Sizes 4 thru 11.

8ri11iint coiQr perlormance plus the tooc.tl·button
conven ience of Ch1nneloek Digital Keyboard Con·
trol.
•

__

1ST FLOOR

'1. 59 White with
Color Tops ... siJg
11.89 Grey with
Color Tops ... 11.49

T.V. SPECIALS

___ __ --·

All Sales Final

The~tyyam

Men's ~zes 9 15. Boys' 7
to 11. Made by Springfoot

.

~:~ed

FREE PORTRAIT
With the purchue of eny Computer Trensftr.

MEN'S AND BOYS WEAR -

New. Spring shorts, knit tops
blouses, pants and skirts.
Denims, twills, stripes and solids.
Complete range of misses sizes 6 to

Men's 19.95
Fashion Jeans ....... :.'14.90
Men's '22;95
Fashion Jeans ......... 117.20
Men's 124.95
Fashion Jeans ......... '18.70
Men's '29.95
Fashion Jeans ......... '22.50

RECEIVE A

Limited quantities -

Spor-~swear

1

Transfers onto T-shirts, calendars, puules
and posters.

MEN'S &amp; BOYS' WINTER JACKETS
BOYS' LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS
MEN'S SWEATERS
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS
MEN'S &amp;BOYS' CORDUROY JEANS

Special week-end sale prices on our
oew spring dresses! New styles and
colors.
Misses sizes 6 to 20.
Half sizes 10\-2 to 26 1h.

Sweatsuit Shorts ... Sale 15.95
Reg. 110.00 Long Sl.eeve

Price

son".

SAVE 60°/o ON

Spring Dresses

Reg. 17.00

"Flash Dance" Shirt ... Sale '6.80

¥2

2 DAY SALE

Pink, red, grey or y;hite in jr. sizes,
small, medium, large and X-large.

Taken from your photoaraph or "in per-

LOADED 'wnk·THESE FEATURES:.
- AM/FM/SW1 /SW2
-6 Spnker Sytem
- Mata! Tape Capability
- ALC and AFC
~ Full Auto Stop

REG. '184.95

Spec~al-$

-

'0•UO,, C»&gt;IO
.. Uitfi·JtPI

~~CAID

•

1

'

Two Day Sale/

Men's Dress Slacks
.·
'
.
ytaist sizes·30 to 42 arid extra large
~1zes 44 to 50. Excellent selection of
solid colors in light and dark shades.

"16

e:u,,,,~,

,.

Digital T•P• Counter
PauH
LED Stereo lndlcet11r
PA Capability
AC/DC OJ!llretlon

-.· IMEN'S '15.95
.
,bRESS SLACKS ......... '12.76
MEl'S '19.95 '
DAES$ SLACKS ......·... '15.96
MEN'S '29.95
DRESS SLACKS ......... '2U6
MEN'S *34.95
DRESS. SLACKS ..·....~.T'27.90"

LAY-BYS
'

WELCOME

. .
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Ohioapparentlywlllget
llttie, 11 any, te&amp;,-al money to help pay tor snow
removal during the near bll7zard that roared In this
week and burled large areas of the state under more
than 16 Inches of now.
"The Impression I got !rom them Is that It was
marginal," Davida Matthews, spokeswOOUIII !or the
Ohio Disaster Services Agency, said after meeting
Thursday with members of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
"I think the key words were, 'rtght now we see no
Immediate needs tor the state beYond the resources of

Raid nets
12 arrests
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va .
1\velve Jackson Coljnty, W.Va.
residents were arrested earlier this
week and six more remained at
large following a sweep by local
authorities of persons suspected of
drug deliveries.
The arrests were authorlzed after
Ravenswood pollee presented evidence ·to a grand jury In Ripley
Tuesday. The jury returned 21
Indictments ;~galnst 18 people.
Of11cers !rom the sherl!fs department and Ravenswood and Ripley
pollee departments went Into action
and by 9 p.m. Tuesday, 12 suspects
had been brought Into custOdy.
Those arrested were Kerry Meadows, 21, Ravenswood· Gary Hou·
chen; 33;-CottaaevUJe; k;tth Sands,
28, Sherman; Wllllam Stanley, 18,
Ravenswood; Kenneth Lake, 25,
Ravenswood; Raymond Johnson,
18, Ravenswood; Mike Harrah, 29,
Ravenswood; Adora McFall, li,
Ravenswood; Benny McKinney, 28,
Ravenswood; Andy Walker, 25.
Sandyville; Eddie Withrow. 25,
Sandyville. A juvenile was taken to
the Parkersburg Detention Center.
· Meadows, cited on three counts of
delivery of a controlled substance,
was put on $3,(XX) bond, while the
others were Individually placed on
$1,(XX) bond.
Remaining to be apprehended
were Argyle Deeter, 52, Athens
County, Ohio; Bill Archer, 'l/,
Coolville, Ohio; Debbie Sell, Ravenswood; Wenda! Johnson, Fairplain; aild Donald and Ronald
Carmichael, both of Ravenswood.
The arrests were the result of five
months of Investigative work by
Ravenswood pollee, who employed
Donald Venatter, a former drug
Investigator !or the Gallla County
(Ohio) Sheriff's Department who
served !or a brief period In ~ as
Cheshire village marshal.
Vanetter, who told local news
media that he has been Involved In
more than ·a 1,(XX) drug Investigations, was sent undercover Into the
county ·!all last September when
several of the suspects were being
held there.

Trailer destroyed
A trailer home owned by the late
Bertha Proffitt was destroyed by
!Ire Thursday morning at 9:50a.m.
Doug Rees, Racine Fireman
reported.
.
The !Ire of undetermined origin
caused an estimated $15,(XX)
damage

.

Racine had 14 men and three
trucks and a tanker !rom · the
~Uvenswood Fire Department.

the state and the local communities,' " she sald.
Gov. Richard Celeste was expected to announce
today whether he would seek a federal snow
en.eijiEIIC.I:' declaration. U the application Is
approved, the federal govemment could pay for up to
halt of certain snow-removal cos!$ In certain areas.
Ms. Matthews described the emergency program
as very llmlted and said probably only al percent of
nortlie8st Ohio highways could be considered.
Thedejltll toll stood atalThursday. Authorlties sald
malt of the victims died of heart attacks while
shaveling snow or trying to tree trapped vehicles.

Celeste had called It the worst snowstorm In Ohio
since the blizzard of 1978 claimed 55 lives.
E ight of the victims were In Cuyahoga County.
where the storm dumped more than 16 1nches. Three
were recorded In Mahonlng County, two In Summlt
County and one each In Allen, Huron, Richland and
Sandusky counties.
Paulding, Musklngum and Wayne counties each
recorded one storm-related traffic death.
A death In Hancock County was tentatively listed as
weather related. But the Coroner Wllllam Kose sald
the deceased, a 73-year-old woman, had died of

natural causes and no autopsy would be perlonned.
Celeste has removed the state of emergency order
issued when the storm struck Tuesday. but sane
National Guardsmen remained on duty Thursday
removing snow and providing emergency medical
service.
AU Interstates were reported open Thursday, with
the driving lane clear and patches of Ice on the
passing lanes.
The Ohio Turnpike was reported dry In the west,
wet In the mlddle but snow covered In the east.
SecondarY routes were mostly snow-rovered and
icy In sections.

Oil, gas drilling could revive
prosperity in Meigs County
By BOB BOEFUCH
Meigs County's prosperity at
one point In time came !rom
under the ground. The county
appears to be on the brink a!
better times, and, again the
economic boost lies under
ground.
At one time, communities a!
the county !lourtshed vta underground coal mines which eventu·
ally bec!lllle exhausted. Today,
the drilling business - a search
for o~t and gas - may well
pi'QV!de ~uch needed economic shiirtit the arm.
·
One of the county's most
prominent operations In the
development of oil and gas wells
.at the present t!Tne Is J . D.
Drilling Co., Racine, which Is
operating primarily In Meigs,
Gailla and Athens Counties.
A look at the company's
record Is Impressive. In 1982 It
drilled 122 wells and 102 In 1983.
Not only that, but none of the
wells were "dry" although
admittedly, some were better
than others.
This year, the company will be
Involved In drilling from 400 to
500 wells In the three county
area.
The spark behind the succeSs
of J . D. Drtlltng Co., Is ~year­
old James E. Diddle, who
traveled to well sites a number
of years ago on his grandfather's
knee. His grandfather Is Roy
Proffitt, Racine, long In the
drilling business.
Diddle apparently learned the
business well. Personable and,
In today's vernacular "laid
back" Diddle appears to take on
the many responsibilities and
problems o! his expanding business In stride. He re!lects
confidence, enthusiasm and
know-how.
Well drilling Is big business !or
Diddle and his company.
He has five rotary drilling rigs
operating. These can cost !rom
one to two million dollars each.
There are two service machines
running at maximum cap1c1ty
dally. This year's drilling program should total In excess of
$50 million.
In 1983, J. D. Drilling laid out
some ~.OOlln payroll to.more
than 100 employes. With the
ambitious prog!'81!1 planned for
1984, the number of employes
should double by s1,11'1111ler and

Guinther
restgns
e

Wlllle Guinther resigned as president of Syracuse VlllageCouncUand
Oris Hubbard was elected to the post
when council met Thursday night.
Resignlng duetoh!semployrnent,
Guinther said he would be unable to
devote the necessary time to the
position that Is needed.
Councll,ln other action, agreed to
direct a letter toJolynn Boster, state
representative concerning high gas
bills residents are receiving.
Council named Sampson Hall to
maintain the ballfield and autiJo.
r1zed Mayor Eber Pickens to enter
Into a contract with Phil Roberts,
county engineer In preparation !or
the proposed marina.
Esther Harden and Linda Hubbard met with council regarding
people violating the stop sign at the
Intersection of Worchester and
Second Streets.
Council agreed to place a speed
bump at the Intersection.
Also meeting with council was
John Foreman concerning a gas
leak. Foreman reported h!smeterls
locatedonanelghbor'spropertyand
he doesn't want to go on another's
property to dig up the line. Mayor
Eber Pickens advised Foreman to
contact Herb Gibson, owner of
Syracuse Home Utilities to work out
(Continued on page 8)

Man faces
OWl charge

WELL- 'Ibis ts.one of the tlve J. D. Drllltng Co.,
rigs working at a site In Antlqwty. The company has
naturally, up goes the payroll quite Impressive for a "depressed" county.
A comfortable suite of offices
Is malntalried by the company at
the entrance of what Is known as
the business section of Racine.
Employes - practically all of
them - are !rom the RacineSyracuse area.
In addltimi to the payroll's
e(tect there are other economic
side effects. Subcontractors are
Involved and . Pomeroy attorneys are given lois of legal work
since Diddle leases blocks of
land !or drilling operations.
Some 20,(Xl) acres are under

drilled 47 wells this year and has a goal of between tOO

and 1100 wells for the year.

lease now.
Joe Stobart of Racine handles
leases !or the company and this,
undoubtedly: keeps him on the
move. Landowners. who go
under lease to J . D. Drilling not
only receive one-eighth of the
take from the well - and that's
before expenses - but also
receive enough free gas to keep
them more than warm over the
winter. Free gas, of course, Is
given only during the life of a
well, but this can stretch to 10 or
20 years or longer. The property
owher also receives a land lease
fee until drilling takes place.
Pleased with the progress that

has been made in drilling
processes over the past years,
Diddle reports that today with
modern equipment, a 4,(XX) foot
well can be sunk In three days or
even less. He contrasts this to
1970 when It took three months to
do a comparable well.
With J . D. Drilling, four
workers are with a rig on shift
work around the clock once a
drilling operation gets underway. A fifth employe, known as
a "took pusher" Is head of the ·
particular project and he Is not
relieved but remains on call 24
hours a day until the project Is
(Continued on page 8)

A Coolville area was cited on two
charges by the state highway patrol
following a one-car accident on Ohio
681 Thursday.
The patrol said Kermit E. Clark,
49. was eastbound, one mile west of
Ohio 7, at 2:15p.m. when his vehicle
\vent off the left side of the road and
struck a tree.
The patrol cited Clark for DWI
and !allure to control.
The patrol Investigated a two-car
accident on Bedford Township Road
alA Thursday morning.
A vehicle driven by Donna J .
Young, 47, Pomeroy, collided with a
car drtven by Bradley B. Johnson,
43, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, when both were
reportedly left or centeronacurve at
11:55a.m.
There were no Injuries and slight
damage was reported to Young's
vehicle. Johnson's auto was moderately damaged. No citation was
Issued.
A vehicle driven by Larry F .
Engle, 32, Athens, was moderately
damaged alter It struck a deer on
U.S. 33at 7:33p.m. Thursday.

Crackdown coming on welfare fraud cases
· co

agreements with neJahbo~ states to compare
~Ill\· probably' ot.'cii1'B In cities neat the bp_rdel'l .p.f. , records and catch people · who are !alsltylng
~ states, and a crackdOwn miy lie ln'tl)t! · · ~ and Incomes~
w.lru, ·~ Rep; M:tcbael stlnzlaqf:i; ~· : • . . J1e ~ this 1s one
the ma~t Important
He. said 'lblll'!lday.he. belli)Veelllli~ ~~~e··ol tl¥l· ~turel,$ttbi1J/W,hesa!!j, although tlleii\a!JI.tl!rUStls
.-tniild, whJcll State Auditor ~·E. ~tila JO~t the ailcUtor to run crpss ~ks of statewide
· .estimated ~t involving 3 percent to 4 ~t ~811- · ~,welfare rolls and Income tax records to sort out
wel!are recipients, 18 In clttes 11 Uke Younpt~l(
'Toledo, aDd Cincinnati. We think It Is a caee of people
F'eliiiJOn said he believes the measure can save the
wbollveandworktnonestateandcolll!ct (wel!are)!n
state SilO mWion a year.
.anotbl!r."
· : ·'
He said hlustlmate was pegged "basically on the
The Oilumbua lawmaker 18 IIJOPIOI'!ni a bill, ,· · computer croa cbtcks we've already done although
Jll.8ll8d .s:J.O by tile HOUle earlier tllli week, which we ~w been aQmewhat limited." .
.
autlmtt.el 1he:"'
auditor
to
enter
Into
n!CJixocal
·
.
UMBUS Ohio (All) -Most ol Ohio's welfare

ot

.ts...

.

.

,,

Last summer, the Legislature authorized cross said, by opposition tram former GOP Gov. James A.
checks of wel!are rolls with the records of some state Rhodes and a taxation department that claimed Its
agencies that have data on the Incomes of Individual hands were tied by prohibitions against disclosure of
Ohioans. These Include the state retirement systems Internal Revenue Service Information.
"That was just a smokescreen," Ferguson said,
and the bureaus of unemployment compensation,
adding that he recetvoo a Tetter from IRS offerlitg Its
workers compensation, and employment services.
Stlnztano's bill, which he called "the last step" In cOOperation. · '1'hey. even sent us the list of federal
.the state's crackdown on fraud, !or the first time employees (In Ohio)," he said .
The auditor saki Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste
permits the auditor to compare taxpayer and welfare
rolls to seek out people whose Income exceeds the · ~ Indicated his $Upport of the pending bill. The
taxation and wel!are departments also are backing It
amount allowed for welfare ellg!bWty.
Ferguson, a DemQcrat, has been seeking this and are optimistic about favorable action by the
authority for six years, but had ·been thwarted, he Democrat&lt;"Ontrolled Senate this year, Stlnztano said.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="128">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2703">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41971">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41970">
              <text>March 1, 1984</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1390">
      <name>dailey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3800">
      <name>gress</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5727">
      <name>lough</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
