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Inside today :

Times-Sentinel

Weather ·

DWI, aggravated burglary cases ·d ominate .c ourt docket ·
GALLIPOLIS - Daniel I. Jones
Jt., 22, Point Pleasant, and Harold

18, Rt. 2, VInton, DWI, case
continued to Tuesday.
Joseph R. Bennett, 00, 1811
Chestnut St., DWI, not gullty plea,
Aprll 2 pretrjal; Anthony D.
Burnhelmer, 39'h Court St.. dlsor·
derly conduct and assault, notgullty
plea. AprU 2 pretrial.

D. Rainey, 41, Letart, W.Va., were
each fined $lXJ, sentenced to three
days In jall, given a 6().day driver's
license suspension and 18 months
probation for DWI Thursday In
GaUipolls Municipal Court.
Jones was also fined costs for
speeding and Rainey was assessed
In traffic cases, Everett H. Carey.
costs for left of center.
75, 35 Henkle Ave., forfelted$40bond
A DWI charge against Debra L. for fallure to control; Jeffrey L.
Luzadder, 31, Point Pleasant. was Golden, 23, Rt. 2, Bidwell, forfeited
reduced to reckless operation and $40 bond for improper backing;
she was fined $100. An additional Charles D. Spetnagel, 00, ChUUcharge of left of center was cothe, forfeited $40 bond for passing
dismlssed.
on the right; Thomas G. Denney, 31,
A DWI charge against Gary A. Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was fined $15 for
Warren, 28, 412 Smith Drive, was speeding; John C. Stevens Jr., 21,
dismlssed by the complaining Rt. 1, Gallipolis, was fined $11 for
witness at pretrial.
speeding; Ted W. Stoney, 56,
Also dismissed at pretrial was a Kanauga, was fined costs for
domestic violence charge against drlvlngundersuspenslon; JamesE.
Gary E . Adkins, Rt. 3, Gallipolis. An Kessinger, 2l: Rt. 1, Oak Hill,
assault charge against Wetzel forfeited $40 bond for failure to stop
Kingery, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was also
for a stop sign; Bruce D. Henson, 21,
dropped.
Gallipolis, was fined $50, received a
Judy Bennett, Rt. 1, Northup, suspended six-month jaU sentence
forfeited $aJ bond for fallure to pay and six months probation for driving
·parking tickets, and John R.
under suspension.
Caldwell, 21, Cheshire, was flned$12
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
for fishing without a license.
Matthew A. Tipton, 00, Joliet, ill.,
Cases slated for continuation $36; Garrett R. Gorrell, 68, Parkerswere Brent D. Blake, 24, Point burg, W.Va. , $38; David W. WilePleasant, driving under suspension, man, 27, Canton,$38; KerryE.Ours,
continued untll Wednesday; Ed- 21, Rt. 2, Cro)VIIClty,$39; Charles E.
ward L. Kirby, 47, 45 Lincoln Ave., Wood, 40, South Charleston, W.Va.,
faUure to stop for a stop sign, AprU 5 $39; Terry J . Peck, 34, Brainerd,
trlal; Elizabeth A. Underwood, 19,
Minn., $40.
1
Rio Grande, speeding, case conTimothy L. Petrie. 23, Rt. l ,
tinued toAprU 4; BrtanL. Marcum, Ewlngion, $40; Irene M. Mclntosh,

50, Hamilton, $41; Eldon R. Thoance bond and scheduled for AprU 4
mas, 00, 425 Lower River Road, $42;
.
pretrial.
George M. Evans, 32, Bassett, Va .• . In traffic cases p~ through
$43; Shirley A. Neff, 58, Pinehurst, court, Robert L. Bates, 21, 2189
S.C.,$43; DarrellC.StoneJr.,37,Rt.
Eastern Ave., was tined $12 on
2, Point Pleasant, $44.

o

$1195

.

Roger E . Pace, ill, Rt. 2, Patriot,

temporarUy laid off, and Julie A.
Roach, 28, Rt. l, Northup, courier.
Albert Buck, 74, Ravenswood,
W.Va., retired, and Martha W.

'

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here fo~r.
_,

1982 FTSOO ASCOT'"

Simil1r uvincs on other non-current models in stock.
MARCH 1'1 TII ROUGII APRIL 16, 19114

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"'ffil ~

1114

l

UPPER ROUTE 7 JUST SOUTH
OF THE HOLIDAY INN.
433 UPPER RIVER ROAD
SALES
.PHONE 446-2240

SERVICE &amp; PARTS
PHONE 446-2648

___________iii:ij_____;;;;;;;;;;;i

.

·

In The s·tore
-Is Reduced

By WILLIAM KRONHOI.M
Auoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- The recent announcement
of $29 bllUon In oll company mergers Is prompting
Senate consideration of a halt to more petroleum
Industry takeovers whlle Congress studies their
economic impact.
Sen. Bennett Johnston, D-La., hoped thls week to
win Senate approval of a six-month moratorium on
mergers among the 50 largest oU companies. The ban
" wlilllit'be"llttached to a ·blll providing additional U.S·.
atil to El &amp;ivador.
Johnston ordlnarUy Is an aUy oftheoU Industry. But
with three of the biggest corporate mergers In history
announced In the last month, Johnston said, some
study is In order to determine what effeet the mergers
have on oU explotatlon and on the economy In general.
1n recent weeks, Standard OU Co. of Caltfornla
announced It will pay $13.2 bllUon for Gulf Corp.;
Mobil Corp. said It plans to pay $5.7 billion for Superior
OU Co., and Texaco Inc. has said It will pay $10.1
billion for Getty OU Co.
Johnston agreed last week to drop an effort to block
the Socal.Culf and Mobil-Superior mergers.
But he cited Wall Street estimates that $44 bllllon to
$51 bUUon In additional mergers "walt In the wings ...
unless the U.S. Senate steps In and does something
about it."
Johnston, who is the senior Democrat on the Senate

~3.00

r

85.00

STORE
342 SECOND AVE. ·
GALLIPOLIS.

FREE

PARKING

and Joyce WoDenberg, lOth dlstrlct coordinator for

Walter Mondale.

Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said
every dollar devoted to the takeovers is a dollar not
used for oU exploration.
Johnston's rider would be attached to a
multlmiUlon-dollar aid package for El Salvador that
is likely to be controversial In Its own right.
Majority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn ..
said last week the Senate will vote Tuesday or
Wednesday on a plan to provide an additional $61.7
rnWion for El Salvador In the current fiscal year.
1lle admlnlstrattoil 'riiquested IRJPI)Iemental aid or
$1~ 7 m1lUon on top of $64.8 million approved last fall.
The amount has been whittled down to $61.7 miUion.
1n other action this week, the House Is scheduled to
vote on legislation designed to ease the rt'.-lew process
tor people receiving disability benefits. Hundreds of
thousands have been thrown off the dlsabUlty rolls In
the past three years.
Under the legislation, the Social Security Administration, with some exceptions, would have to
demonstrate a medical improvement In the condition
of recipients In order to remove them from the
disability rolls.
The Socal Security Administration announced late
last week that Health and Human Services Secretary
Margaret M. Heckler was considering an 18-month
moratorium on dlsablUty review~ whlle a panel of
medical experts clarifies the medical-improvement
standard.

Meigs fund raiser draws 175
Approxlma tely 175 people attended the Meigs County fund
raising bean dinner held at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center
Saturday night.
Principal speaker was Mary
Ellen Withrow, state treasurer.
Withrow told about the invest·
ment program of Ohio tax dollars.

~

Others on hand were Jolynn Boster.
94th District Representative to the
House: John Kulewitz, Gary Hart's
campaign director In Ohio, and
Joyce Wollenberg, New Lexington,
lOth district coordinator for Walter
Mondale.
Local candidates attending were:
Sheriff James J . Proffitt; Joe Sayre

and Dan Mullen, candidates for
county commissioner; Peggy
Brickles. candidate for county
recorder; Mary Swain , candidate
for county treasurer and Dr. James
Witerall, candidate for county
coroner.
Henry Hunter Is Meigs County
chairman for the Democratic party.

Ohio lawmakers ready
for annual spring break
By ROBERT E. MILLER
A!l!ioclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Legislators are expected to take up
numerous pet bills and then adjourn
late thls week untll after the May 8
prtmary.

For the most part, majority
Democrats in both houses have
stayed away from controversy this
year, .and that' s unlikely to change
with legislative elections about six
weeks down the road .

Senate President Harry Meshel,
D- Youngstown. and House Speaker

Vern Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
expect to adjourn Thursday or
Friday.
All99 House seats are up for grabs
this year. while 16 of the 33 Senate
seats are at stake. Most of the
incumbents are seeking ~lection
and will be campaigning.
Much of this week's action will be
In committees. The House scheduled hearings on 82 bills at 23

commlttee sessions, and senators
will consider 52 measures at nine
meetings. Only those proposals
already approved by one house have
a chance of final passage this week.
The House Judiciary and Crtminal Justice Committee wUI open
hearings on some Senate measures
designed to help crtmevlctims. One
bill would waive certain statute-oflimitation restrictions for assault
victims who are delayed In learning
the identity of their attackers.

dismantle the Department of Education, fight for school-sanctioned
classroom prayer and seek tax
breaks for parents of private school
chUdren.
He has managed to deliver on
none of those promises.
The Senate has rebuffed his

Education. which Bell had the
foresight to set up in late 1981,
Reagan has succeeded in placing
himself In the lead of a crusade to
raise school standards. He and Bell
speak with pride of "the grassroots
revolution" that Is taking place in
state houses and school boards
across America .
There Is no disputing that In the
wake of the excellence commission's report entitled "A Nation At
Risk" and similar studies from a
host of ot her blue ribbon panels, the
American school system is in
ferment. Educators relish the

attention they are getting, even if so
much of It Is critical.
And Reagan , instead of having to
admit his fallure to achieve any of
his major educational policies, is in
position to take credit for these
developments.
Opinion polls have shown the
public generally regards Democrats as more concerned about the
schools and more likely to providE'
quality educallon.
But polls also Indicate that
Reagan has polished what was once
a tattered image on educational
issues.

Without spending an extra dime,
Reagan has moved to the head or the
excellence parade.
In a recent assessment of Reagan's education record, Denis P.
Doyle, director of education policy
studies for the American Enterprise
Institute, and Terry W. Hartle, a
research scientist for the Educational Testing Service. said it was
ironic that despite its commitment
"to diminishing the federal presence In education. the Reagan
admlnlstra tion has succeeded in
making education a national concern ofthe highest priority."

By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER
AleoclateciPress·Wrlter
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP) -Officials suspended ballot
counting lli El Salvador's presldentlalelectlon after a dispute about the
impartlailty of those handling the
count, c;applng a day In -which
bureaucracy did more than bullels
to prev€11! thousands from voting.

The first results from Sunday's
eight-way election. were not expeeled to be avaUable untll this
afternoon, according to officials of
the Central Elections Council which
oversaw the voting.
Officials predicted there would be
fewerballotstocountlhanexpected.
'lbousaruls were prevented from
voting In the Central American

nation's first presldentlal election
slnce1977byashortageorabsence
ofballots,ballotboxes,reglstrations
lists and election oftlclals at
hundreds of precincts.
Gueri1Ua activity was Ught,
however, and ~edmore aimed
at harassment than preventing the
v0te. Tile leftist rebels had given .
confllctlng .advance signals about

whether they would try to disrupt
the elections, which they called a
farce.
Roberto d'Aubulsson or the far
right Republican Nationalist AIllance and Jose Napoleon Duarte, a
moderate Christian Democrat,
werethetwotopcontendersamong
the eight candidates.
It no candidate gets more than 50

percentofthe votetotal,arunoffwlll
beheldlnonemonthbetweenthetop
twoflnlshers.
The vote tabulation was suspended Sunday night after the chief
technician at the national election
computer center was accused of
favoring d'Aubuisson and ordered
orr the job.
.
The accusation was made by

Roberto Meza Delgado. the Christian Democratic Party representative on the Central Election Council ,
which Is made up of one representative of each of the eight parties
competing In the election.
Meza Delgado. vice president of
the election council. ordered the
technician, Morgan Bojorques. out
of the computer center

News analysis

20o/o
'

-v~te Jabulatioit suspended following confusing election day

Seven Bell ·System compan-ies ·turning to AT&amp;T competitors
.. . •

(

District Representative to the House: WWuow, Henry
HIDUr, county chalnnan for the Democrat party:
John Kulewllz, Gary Hart's campaign director In Ohio

is seeking a record $15.5 bUHon
budget for the agency, which his
counselor, Edwin Meese Ill, once
dismlssed as "a ridiculous bureaucratic joke."
And Reagan, who never set foot
Inside a School during his first two
years In office, scarcely lets a week
go by without visiting a school,
Inviting educators to the White
House or Inveighing In his Saturday
radio addresses about the poor
condition of America's $215 bUUon
educational system.
With help from the National
Commlsslon on Excellence In

·By NORMAN BlACK

.

MAIN SPEAKER - State Treasurer Mary Ellen
WltJuwo, second from left, was the principal speaker
at the Meigs Coway Democrat Fund raising bean
dinner Saturday night held at the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center. Pictured are, 1-r, Jolytm Boster, Mth

andDonMulea,c!!!MidatesforcountycorruniMioner;

Pegy llrll*leB. cendldate for county recorder and
Mary Swain, candidate for county treasurer. RearHenry HIDUr, county cllalnnan for the Democratic

educa tlon policies twice In recent
months. killing a tuition tax credit
bill last November and last week
defeating a constitutional amendment to allow spoken prayer In
schools.
Reagan and Education Secretary
T.H. Bell never ev€11 mustered
enough support for their plan to
downgrade the Educa tlon Department to a foundation to put a bill In
the hopper. They were rebuffed In
1982 when they sought to cut most
federal school aid programs by a
third.
Now, In an election year, Reagan

55 ~ 00
L

\
I Settion , 10 Pog"
20 Cents
A Mult imedia Inc . Newtpaper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 26, 1984

ByCHimTOPHER CONNElL
A.oolatecl Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - When
Ronald Reagan campaigned for
president In 19!ll he promised to

'

110.00
55.00

en tine

•

After slow start, Reagan getting high marks for education

~Item

I

5Q.OO

66.00
55.00

aily

Consider oil merger halt

....... . .

SAVE -&lt;lN NEW SPRING CLOTHING FOR THE
ENTI. ~E FAMILY AND FURNITURE FOR ,
YO-UR .HOME

66.00
105.00.
83.00
115.50
88.00
55.00
55.00
77.$0
72.00
55.00
72.00
83.00

The final four...Page 4

paaty.

__

~

AllociMed fl'el1il Witter .

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Like wayward children who sever a.U ties
' with hOme the seV€11 Bell System comp8llles may 80011 be tutning
• ' their ba~ on Ma Bell and her belt known product -long-distance
. phoJI!! aervlce.
.
.
; Two of the seven Bell companies crea\fd by the breakup of the
, American Telephone &amp;t Telegraph Co. are alre8dy experimenting
·with Uslni Jona-dlstance circuits flun ATI/r's cOmpetltora for their
, cu po1ate business calls. 'lbole two are Amerttech and Nynex.
Four of !lie other t1ve - BeUSouth. Bell Atlantic, PecUic Telesis
Sllllthwestem Bell- say~'~actlvelyexplorlngtheklea. Tile

:and

.JL

,f/. .·

'I!'

'\

'

Canton McKinley
wins first state

The Honda Open House. It won't be

Every

FIGURINES

SISTER
THOUGHTFUL
POSTMAN
LITTLE BOOKEEPER
MOTHER'S DARLING
LITTLE SHOPPER
SOLOIST
HELLO
BOOTS
HAPPINESS
BAKER
FOR FATHER
LET'S SING
MICHIEF MAKER
LITTLE SWEEPER
APPLE TREE GIRL
SURPRISE
SCHOOL BOY
JUST RESTING
$WEET GREETINGS

Honor 4-H students..•Page 5

Continues Thru SATURDAY, MARCH 31

HUMMEL
We heve just received the following Hummel Figurines. Recejve a new edition Collector's. Guide for
$~ . 00. with each purchase of figurines. Regular
pnce, $10.95

be

LOCAL CANDIDATE'i - Local candldalell at lhe
Melp Coway Desnoa·at fund raising bean dinner
Saturday, night held at lhe Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center, were,l-r, SherUf JamesJ. Proflltt; Joe Sayre

SUPER SPRING SALE

Anderson, 54, Charleston, W.Va.,
unemplayed.
Ricky D. Patterson, 27, Rt. 4,
Galllpolls, unemployed, and KStherine M. Boggess, 23, Rt. 1, Crown
City, unemployed.
Keith E . WWlams, 32, 1111 Mabelene Drive, therapeutic progniin
worker,andDeloresJ.WWlams,27,
Rt. 3, Gallipolis, Ucensed practlcal
nurse.
Troy D. Mealge, 23, GaUipolls,
deck hand, and Melinda L. Wright,
19, Pizza Hut emplayee.

Clear this ev€11lng with increasing ciOudlnesa by Ia te
tonight. Low 37-41 Light easterly to northeasterly · winds.
Tuesday, rain likely. High 52-5'7.
Chance of precipitation aJ percent tonight and 60 percent
Tuesday.

-.

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

AwelcorilewlllbeglvenbyJarnes
E. Schneider ,)'rfarletta, president of
the Washington County Bar Assoclatlon which is hosting the meeting.
OSBA represents some 17,&lt;XXJ attarneys throughout Ohio.

. Couples fite for marriage
GALLIPOLIS - The following
· couples file!l for marriage licenses
thls past week In Gallla County
Probate Court.
Eugene C. Hoffman, 26, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis , substitute school
teacher, and Kathy A. Allen, 24, 1000
Second Ave., bank employee.

WAS
12195

Recent Civil Decisions of the Ohio JosephAttWtto,Munn'sattorney.
SupremeCourt"followedbyRobert
However, he added, "!twas more
B. Barnett, Jr., Colwnbus, of thanconsensual.Itwasencouraged,
Carllle, Patchen,Murphy&amp;AIUson, provoked."
who will discuss, "Recent Changes
The woman has charged that her
Marietta.
In the Ohio Estate Tax Laws."
friends had alrelldy left the bar and
District 17 represents some 150
A legislative update will be sbe was getting her coat when she
attorneys from Athens, Morgan, provided by WUUam K. Welsen- was accosted, pushed onto the pool
Hocking, Washington, Meigs and berg, Columbus, OSBA Director of table and sexually assaulted. ·
Noble counties.
Government Atfalrs, an an update
Christopher E. Veldt, Logan, In the Ohio Bar Llablllty Insurance r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;,::;;;;;;;;;;jjjij~M;iiiiiiii
OSBAdistrtctexecutlvecommittee- Company will beprovldedbyJarnes II
man, will preside over the late R. Burchfield, Columbus.
"
afternoon meeting which will Inelude the election of one member to
the OSBA Councll of Delegates.
R. Douglas Wrtghlsel, Columbus,
of Knepper, Whlte,Arter&amp; Hadden,
will give a "Summary of Significant

Here it comes again.
The Honda Open House.
Bigger and better
than ever.
Play Honda's Sl50000
Grand Prix Game. It's a
chance to win a 17-da.y European
holiday for twn A VI P
view of the 1984 San
Marino Grand Prix. And
520000 cash.
Other prizes include four·country
Alpine 1burs for two aboard new Honda
touring motorcycles,' plus $2,000 in cash.
Sony' Wai.Chman· personal portable
TVs. Kodak Disc Cameras. And Special
Ed ition Honda Grand Prix Tshin.s.
5.555 pri7..es in ai L
If your FREE Honda Gafll(&gt; Puzzle
mai.Ches one of ou r d isplay photos. you
win - INSTANTLY '
Collll' in and set• the hot new 1984
Hondas. Or make a great deal on
selected models. While they last.

a

~~:='~'o~:=.~~t~ 1d

POMEROY -JohnA.Carhahan,
Colwnbus, president of the Ohio
State Bar Association will address
theannualmeetlngofOSBADistrlct
17 Friday at Ramada Inn North,

Comlm-TV
Delltha
8port.l

Papa ll-6
Pall!l 6-1-11
Pap9
PapJO
Pages 8-4

Yol.32, No.243
Copyrlfhtod 1984

encouraged"bythewoman.
Indicted bar manager Scott F.
The slmllar contention- that the Bradley, 25, and bartenders Frank
woman voluntarily participated Decker, ~. and James H. Munn, ill,
had been raised by some defense on charges of aggravated sexual
lawYers In Fail River, Mass., ln the assault.
trlalsofsixrilenaccusedofraplnga
Tile defendants aU treeon$7500
womanonthepooltableatBigDan's bail pending arr~gnment, ~led
bar In March 1983. Four of those sexually assaulting the women
defendantswereconvlctedofaggra- wh€11 they were questioned by
vated rape, the last two on pollee, WanaquepoUceChlefDavld
Thursday.
Sisco said Frtday.
1n theNewJerseycase a Passaic
According to court papers the
County grand jury on 'Thursday .!ll€11offeredtotakelle-detector'tests
•
}
to support their contentions that the

•
ed
OSHA dIstrict
meetmg s at

separate charges of no muffler and
failure to display valid license
plates.
Jennings D. Marcum, 4(), Rt. 1,
VInton, forfeited $40 bond for failu~

GALLIPOLIS - ARt.l,Scottowri
man charged with aggravated
burglary will face a preUmlnary
hearing Tuesday In GaUipolls Municipal Court.
Twenty-year-old Ted A. Thacker
was arrested by the GaUia County
Sheriff's Department Frtday for
allegedly breaking Into the Dorothy
Beaver residence In Mercerville.
The department Indicated In Its
charges that Thacker allegedly
carried a weapon when the Incident
occurred.
Judge James A. Bennett placed
Thacker on $15,&lt;XXJ bond.
Tile court also accepted a not
guilty plea to a charge of moving a
moblle home without authorization
of the Public Utlltles Commlsslon of
Ohio. The charge was brought
against John P. Swain, aJ13 Eastern
Ave.
Swain's case was continued untll
March 00 for a hearing.
Entering lnoocent pleas to DWI
and slated for AprU 2 pretrials were
David K. Mink, 22, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
and Charles L. Whitt, 51, Rt. 1,
GaUipolls. Whitt was also cited for
speeding.
Kay N. Tackett, 21, Rt. 2, VInton,
also charged with DWI, pleaded not
guUty, was placedon$500recognlz-

Two indicted in separate rape case
PATERSON, N.J. (AP)-Onthe
day a Massac~usells jury found two
men gullty of a barroom gang rape,
a tavern manager and two·bartenders were Indicted on charges of
sexually assaulting a 20-year-old
woman on~ barroom pool table In
Ne:w Jersey·
An attorney for one.. of the
~ders said Friday ,an lncldent did occur at Conrad s Bar In
Wanaquelntheearlymomlnghours
ofFeb.2,buthelnslstedthat"ltwas

By lhe Bend
Cl•"""ed'

one exception is US West. But ev€11 there. spokeswoman Barbara
Srhlth says "It's not something we would ever rule out."
.
"We are definitely looking at It," says Pete Hoffman, spokesman
for Bel. Atlantic. "We (Bell Atlantic employees) all received a memo
recently noting we have to pay our own long-distance telephone bUis
mw and urging that .we be judicious with our calling. Our Internal
telecommunications bill is pretty high and it's only natural we would
look to ootslde COOlpetltors."
"We're kloldng at our poone costs just ~ M.Y other business
does," added Bill Hensley, a .spokesman for Arnetltech,.whlch is now
U81ng ~circuits from AT&amp;T arch-foe MCI Communications.
-"And that means actively Jooldng at other earners besides AT&amp;T."

a

..Jo

Whlle the amount of telephone traffic at stake appears relatively
small at this point, few competitors of the old AT&amp;T ever thought
they'd see the day when local Bell companies would consider
abandoning AT&amp;T. Not surprisingly, they like the Idea.
"I think you could characteriZe us as eager to serve them," said
MCI spokesman Gary Tobin.
AT&amp;T is not thrilled.
"We offer a gOOd, high-quality service and would like for all of our
customers to stay with us," said AT&amp;T spokesman Pic Wagner. "But
obviously they're looking around."
. Wagner blames the possibility of defection on the fact that untll
federal regulators resolve a tight over telephone "access fees," the
competitors don't face the same level of expenses as AT&amp;T .

\

�Commenta•'Y

Monday, Ma!Ch 26, 1914

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Page 2-The Dally Sentinel '.

':::roy M~leport, Ohio
;~~~NaY• Ma!Ch 26, ~914
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The Daily Sentinel

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The preceding dispatch demon·
strated that the loose rhetortc about
making up the deficit by taking
more In taxes from the rtch yields
great rhetorical satisfaction to the
loose-minded, but does very llttle to
reduce $200 billion deficits.
The Democratic Party has a
considerable challenge. It will lind
Itself running against the detlclt,
but has not really come up with
plausible means of handling such a
deficit. The notion that the country

lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO 'mE INTEREST OF 'mE MEIGS-MASON AREA

Allb

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'qlv

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
A01lstant Publis her/ Controller

General Manarer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

can just send the bill to the Chase
Manhatten Bank or to the oil
Interests Is shopworn. It simply
does not engage Informed opinion.
U you were to take all the Income
declared under the law to be
taxable - every penny of It - and
ask: How much of that Income Is
generated by tile tlrst $15,&lt;XXl made
by Arnertcans? You would lind the
figure at 63 percent. And then II you
raise the figure to $30,&lt;XXl per year
and ask the same question, you lind

News Editor
E'~@·~u ~ wo11n1S'IIIt~t£(.r....,..

A MEMBER ol The Associated Pre01, Inland Dally Press Associ&amp;·
lion and tbe American Newspaper Publisher Association.

,

l-lut.Me J· o

"He'd really like to get Into some abstract stuff like tax reform, but by
now everybody knows there's no such animal."

access to portions ot a Senate
investigation fUe. Here are the
highlights:
- "Mr. Meese was selected not
on the basts of his past military
perfonnance but rather on the
basis ot national prominence. ...
Mr. Meese, despite his disclaimer,
was accorded special treatment
and consideration that far transcended that which might be
considered reasonable."
- Meese's proi'J!otlon was expedited by Maj. Gen. William Berk·
man, the Army Reserve chief, who
nonnally would have given up his
post In February 1983. But the very
day that Meese because a colonel,
Berkman was confirmed for an
additional four·year tenn. He also
happens to be an old California
buddy of Meese, attended the same
law school and served In the same
reserve unit.
- A special job was re-created
for Meese, with less demanding
training requirements. The post
was among those abolished In 1969
because "those positions served
merely as a haven for Individuals
seeking an extension of their

Kemp keeping a
lower profile
For the first time since 1978, Jack Kemp Is not being touted tor
president, vice president, senator or governor. The congressman who
. helped draft President Reagan's tax cut policy Is just running lor
re-election to a seat from western New York.
"I'm glad I didn't run for governor. I'm much more comfortable with the
national and International Issues ... I have no regrets."
Kemp has kept a lower profile since colleagues approved the Kemp-Roth
tax cuts three years ago and gave him a standing ovation on the House
Door. The sc-:e~-•Prm representative still vociferously defends
l'b!aganomlcs, but his attention shifted to foreign affairs.
"I'm going to be the chairman of the platfonn committee on foreign
policy at the (GOP national) convention," said Kemp, a 48-year-old
conservative Republican who Is ranking mlnortty member on the House
Foreign Operations Approprtatlons subcommittee.
Last week, Kemp went to El Salvador as a State Department observer of
Sunday's national elections. He was a counselor to the recent Kissinger
Commission on Central Arnertca and endorsed Its recommendations tor
bicreased military and economic ald.
Kemp had a certain celebrity when he came to Congress In 1970 as the
former quarterback lor the Buffalo Bills. He became a national political
ttg~~re by tirelessly promoting tax cuts and by his early support of Reagan
tor president.
His legislative achievements outside of tax cuts have been modest, but
his continuing prominence Is attested to by his election to chairman of the
House Republican Conference and by the demand tor him as a fund-raiser
and speaker.
While he'd like to br.mch out Into other areas, Kemp gets drawn back to
economics, as opponents link tax cuts with the soaring federal deficit and ·
clamor lor tax Increases.
Kemp's response Is Ideological as much as economic: Reagan sbould
tgnore any thought of tax Increases and focus on economic growth. TI!at
trrttates colleagues wbo also are skeptical of his endorsement of a return to_
the gold standard to achieve monetary stability.
,
"Quackery - quack, quack, quackery," Is what Sen. · Daniel P. ·
Moynihan, O.N.Y., a member ot the Sehate Finance Committee, calls '
"supply side" thlnktng.
.
Kemp blames the deficits on the recession of 1981. and 19112, which he says
was bi'OUght oh by the tight money policy of the FedeTal Reserve Board. He
fn\quenUY lashes out at Fed QJaJnnan Paul Volcker and the chalnnan of
the Council of Economic Advisers, Martin Feldstein.
At home, Kemp laces little opposition to an eighth tenn. He coasted to
vtc'tory against a county·Jeglslata' In the 19112 election, and already has
amassed enough contributions to ward ott. a primary challenger and
JrQbablY ove!Wllebn :my opponent.
He hal wm 70 percent ot the vote or better In the last six elections. No ooe ·
has announced against him._
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mandatory retirement date or less
stringent military education
i:equlrements. "
- The same day Meese was
assigned to the resurrected reserve
slot at Selective Service headquarlers, President Reagan announced
his Intention to appoint Maj . Gen.
Thomas Turnage director of Selec·
tlve Service. Turnage Is another ot
Meese's buddies !rom California.
He was also the one who waived the
education requirements for
Meese's promotion. Then at Berkman's request, Turnage "dlrectfd
that Meese be transferred to the
Ready Reserve and assigned to the
Selective Service System,"· Pentagon officials reported to Senate
Investigators.
- The Investigators ·were also
Informed by the Pentagon that
Meese had skipped certain educational requirements In his earlier
promotion from major to lieutenant

colonel.
Ed Meese Is an amiable fellow,
with a soft voice, quiet manners and
general gentility that rt:ake him
seem too mild lor the rough·and·
tumble of politics. He obviously
wanted to become a colonel, which
will Increase his military pension
by 18 percent. But his Pentagon
frtends appear to have wanted his
promotion even more, hoping
perhaps to butter up an Influential
'
White House otllclal.
ON THE WARPATH: Jamake
Hlghwater, one of Arnertca's most
celebrated Indt;m personalities though his claim to being an Indian
Is disputed by some famous native
Amertcans - has taken me
severely to task lor reporting last
month that he had !abrtcated much
of hts background.
In a letter wrttten In collaboration
with his lawyer, Hlghwater chrged
me with being unfair, erroneous,

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ncr ~ lralnitl cwnp.
DliROrr TJCERS-Rt'k.'IUil'd fUd"
Lnt'h. tiJ"'I buei'TIM. Moqulrl&gt;d WIIU.•
Hc.&gt;rnandrl.. pUchPr, and Oeve Bfra:rn;tn,
lnnt'kk'r. from the&gt; Phlladtlphta PhUIN&gt;s

USFL results

tn c•uilltll_. for C lmn W\lllon, outfk&gt;ldl&gt;r,

U. . . Hu&amp;8P'Oithal~

and Jotrl Work'" fu ll. ca1rtw&gt;r.

MUunk.Y• G.,._

TI..'XAS RANGER.~! Vin&lt;W frw .
Mlki&gt; Grttrln, RM Muut'lman and Tom·
ri1Y ~ . ptlt•hen, and Tommy Dunhar
and Nrtc. C1pra. outt\ektcrl .

San Antc.No 14, Oakland m
Phl'-delpNI Z\, PIHibui'J(tliO

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AJ11.ono 49. Okllhoma 7

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Omv1'r' II, Mempt\11 M
Nt-w Ork&gt;aru 41 . Chk'-ao :1'1, or
Nrw .fi&gt;J'V'Y .:I. Walhln,wfon 6
Jaclt.oimvlllt' 13, l.o5 Ar\flC'k't 7

J aya.

HOUSTON

ASTRM-Acqulrrd

Alan

Blnnlslf'f. inl'k'tdrr-outflf'ld(&gt;r. from ttv•
Ckovrland lncl&amp;nJ for an undbrkll«l

Mk'hijcan at Hwllon

amount of &lt;'ilh.

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PHILADE LPHIA

-·-·
-.-1

Hoolton at Oklahoma

P HIU. IES-Al'

quln'll

ChiraRO 11 1 Washlnaton

DHw fHIVfW', lnt\t&gt;kkor, from tht' San
F'ranctlro Glantl i'l f"l«"hMRt' for A1f'Jandro Sinctrl. oud\ridrf.
ST. LOUIS CAROINAlS-Arqulmt Tiro
I.Jandnim. outftfokk'r. from lhr BaltlrTJ:Jrr
Orlok'l i'l rllt'han~ b' JOIC' Brito, pltr h·
rr. and an ~ amounl of cuh

Jid.'!MV IUt• I I Mi'mphls

Ar1lona at Drnvf'l'
Tamps Bay 11 Ptllladl&gt;lphla
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Tlorn·

Ccrmack. r atcl!er. trorn lhf&gt; TmlntD HIIM'

BlrminRham a t Taml)il Day

ClMiand

BRAVl~ R«lalmtd

ATI.ANTA

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PtMsbu!'Kh

San AniMiO 11 Mk'hlp~
Ntow J (&gt;IV)' II loa Anatb

SAN Dlim PADfU~Aikrd wal\••on
on Juan BoniUa . IPCOnd bum\M.

Nfw OrkW\I a t RirminRhlm

Eastern girls open
season on March 31
lene Ritchie, Amy Young and Angle
Young.
Coach Douthit continued, "We
should be decent offensively. We
have some speed .. . much more
than we have had the past two
years. We plan on running a lot . Our
girls are looking really good with
the bat at this point Including Lea
Ann Gaul, Angle Spencer, Tanya
Savoy and Krlstl Gaddis." With
seventeen girls on the team, and
seven returning Eastern lacks a lot
of varsity expertence. but does have
the talent.
In closing Douthit said, "We have
some girls that could become real
good ball players. It we play up to
our potential, with everyone giving
100 percent we'll win some ballgames. With a lot of these girls
being underclassmen, we have a lol
of potential for the future."

EAST MEIGS - With seven
veterans !rom last year's squad
returning, the Eastern Eaglettes
girls' softball team ot third year
coach Pam Douthitt will open their
1!184 season Saturday, March 31, at
home In a doubleheader with
Federal Hocking at noon on the
Tuppers Plains field .
Returning !rom last year's 5-9
club are senior Lort Rltc'hle; juniors
Lea Ann Gaul, Krtstl Gaddis, Angle
Spencer, Beth Berkhlmer, and Lort
Hudson: and sophomore Kim Den I.
Coach Douthitt said, "I will be
looking for leadership !rom these
seven girls. During pre-season
practice our Plght returning players
have shown a great deal of
leadership for our younger
players."
Gone from last year's squad are
four graduates, all of which were
starters. Geon are all-SVAC out·
!Ieider Melissa Thomas, outfielder
Rhonda Riebel, outtlelder Becky
Eichinger, and catcher Linda
Thoma. Besides several gaps to !Ill
In lhe outfield, Mell88a Thomas will
be missed offensively as she led the
team In steals and batting average.
Eastern has Improved In the
pitching area as three girls are
· currently vying lor the startln11 nod.
At the present time 17 girls are
competing for starting roles, much
of whlc~ Is made up of
underclassmen.
Heading the list of pitchers Is
senior Lort Ritchie, followed by
junior Krtstl Gaddis and freshman
Tonya Savoy. Only Ritchie has
much expertence at that position,
doing a fine job lor last year's team.
Freshman Le$8 RuckerorTonya
Savoy will be behind the plate,
whUe other players looking for
starting roles In the Infield are Lea
Ann Gaul, Gaddis, Dent. Beverly
Wigal, and Sandra Oatley. &lt;lluttleld
prospects Include Beth Berkhlmer,
Dawna Grueser, Lisa Henderson,
Lori Hudson. Melissa Nutter, Ar-

.

President Reagan, serving as his ..
rtght-hand man while he was ,
governor of California. Before that :
his only public oftlce was as an ,
assistant prosecutor In a Caltfomta ·
county who spent more time rtdlng •
In pollee cars and listening to pollee ,
radio than he did prosecuting cases. _
Just what there Is In his past to J
qualify him tor the high office of ;
Attorney General Is apparent only l
to Ronald Reagan.
It might be well tor ·the public to
remember that they had the same '
blind trust In Richard Nixon and his ·
appointees 12 years- ago.

\

Pla,yeO'

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Kim o.n: .................

..·''

...... to

Krtsll Goddls . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

. .... 11

Leoa Ann Gaul ...
................... ......... 11
Dauna GnK'5('f .
.. ................... 10
LL&lt;aH .....,....
... 10
Lort Hudson .. ... .
. .... ..... .. ... ...... ....... 11
MPilssa Nultf'r ....... .. . .. .. .. . .. .. .. ........ 9
Arlent&gt; Rlt&lt;'hk' . . .. . . .. .
. .. .. .............. . 9
Lort Rllch:. ... ...................................... 12
LRsa RUC'k£&gt;r ... ... ....
.. .. .................... 9
Ton.va Savoy
... .... .. ... ... .... . ........... 9
Alljllo ~r
... . 11
flrv(&gt;rly M~tal. .....
.. .. ...... .............. 9
Amy You~ ..
.. ................ 10
Angk&gt; YOUJ1I&lt; ... .......................... .......... . 10
-SofthaiS..-

IIolo-Toom

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Marct\ :11 F("dpral Hockin~ 1D.H. 1 .... Hom('
April2 Southwt'Sif'm .................... .. . Hom('
April :1 Wahama ....
.. . .. .. ..... HoiTK'
Aprtl j Soulhom .. . ... . .
. ..... A..ay
April 7 Watrrford .. .. ... . . .. .. .. .. . .. .. Homt'
April 9 North Gallla .... .
.. ..... HoiTK'
Apt1111 Hannan Tral"'f' .. ................. Awa.v
.......... Hom('
April14 Tr1mbiC' tD.H.I
April 1fi K~r Crt'('k ..
.. Hom('
Aprtl 17 Wahama
.... .. .. .. .. Away
April 18 Southw~l('m ..
. .......... Away
April 19 Wa!f.&gt;rlord
....... .. .. Away
April21 Mlll('r ID.H. I
............... HomP
Aprtl Z1 Soulhom .. ... ..... .................. Hom&lt;'
April 24 Fort Fl)'(' 1D.H.J ................. Away
April 2'\ North Gallla .. .. ....... ........... .. Away
Aprtl 28 For1 Fryt&gt; IO.H. I .. ... .... ....... Hom&lt;'
Aplill&gt; Hannan Tra('(' .. ....

. ..... HollX'

May 2 Kylt('r C1'£'E'k .

.. ........... Away

x·D.H. - Doubk&gt; H('adM'.

I

Weekend sports briefs...

with a 68 and a 275 total, andDoug
Tewell matched par with a 72, tied
forthlrdatmwtthJohnAdamsand
John Mahaffey·
SKATING
MOSCOW (AP) -East Gennan
Andrea Schoene set three world
speed skating records In theanQual
Soviet Union-East Germany competition at the Medeo rtnk Saturday.
Schoene won the 5,00).meter
event In 7 minutes, :W.52 seconds,
breaklngtheoldmarko!7:39.44.She
also set a record at 1,500 meters,
skating the distance In 2: 03.:W.
SKDNG
OSLO, No!Way (AP) - Ertka
Hess of Switzerland clinched the
women's World CUp ski overall title
.and Tamara McKinney ot Squaw
Valley,Calif.andMarcGirardelUof
Luxemllourg won the slalom
crowns In the season's tina! races
·Satlllllay.

· GOLF
NEWORLEANS(AP)-After13
long years of struggle and trustra·
tton, Bob Eastwood scored his tlrst
PGA Tour victory Sunday, a
front-running, three-stroke trtumph
In the USF'&amp;G Classic.

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Both Berkhlmer .... ...... ..... ........ ........ ... 11

~onals

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Sandra Bailey

BASKETBALL
SEATTLE (AP) - Houston,
Geprgetown, VIrginia and Ken·
tucky &lt;l(lvanced to the NCAA Final
Four men's basketball champion·
ships at Seattle.
On Sunday; Patrtck Ewing
sparked Georgetown to a 6149
victory over Dayton tn the champtonshlp gameoftheWestReglonal,
andAkeem0lajuwon's29potntsled
Houston over 19th-ranked Wake
Forest 68-63 In the Midwest
Regional.
VIrginia upset Indiana 5048, and
thlr&lt;l'ranked Kentucky defeated
No 6 Illlriols 54-51 In Saturday's

,.

Berry's World

REO ~- Tradfd l.ubi
AJQ\It'. pllrhrr. to lht' Clew&gt;land Indian•
lor Mlk.r Poindexter and Paul PMTy,
ptlrhrn. and ~ thKn to tht.V ml

a-.u

-

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Mlkt"
~

JUrTON

U..A
Motr'Ol'\'llif' 66, Col. Wehrle• 62 '

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jobs to people responsible tor
lending him money.
Meese has been serving as a
counselor to the president since the
Reagan administration took office
In 1981 and Is classed as one of the
three most powerful aides In the
White House. Reagan has been
defending him every step of the
way. If 'Meese does succeed In being
conllm)ed, I thl!lk he Is a likely
candidate to follow one ot his
predecessors, John Mitchell, Into
obscurtty. The public can only be
.fooled so long!
Meese Is a long time associate of

~for

Akron Sf V·SI .M 7!'1, WM•k'nbull! 71

,
business and the assailants are tree
as birds: The case had caused
widespread protest In the Gaines·
ville community but the dlstrtct
attorney, who has jurtsdlctlon over
several Flortda counties has announced the case Is not prosecutable because the girl's reputation Is
not good.
In this case as In Fall River the
victim's reputation Is beside the
point. The legal question Is whether
or not a rape has been committed.
Rape Is a felony whether It Is
committed on the sacred premises
of a Flortda University fraternity or
on a pool table In a Massachusetts
bar. It Is an obligation of a dtstrtct
attorney or a judge to protect the
victim. That has not been done In
either case and Is not likely to be
done In the future. As long as we
elect chauvinistic males as our
officials, women will get the dirty
end of the stick. The Fall River case
has produced so much unfavorable
publicity lor a woman that rape
victims are more llkely than not to
hide the crtme to protect themselves. Although two ot the men In
Fall River ()ave been found guiltY
and lace either deportation or long
prtson terms, It must be bitter
solace to the woman In the case.
The women's vote Is the answer.
USE IT!
Changln~ the subject, the heartng
on the appointment ot Edwin Meese ·
to the' office ot Attorney General of
the United States by the Senate
Judlclacy , Committee haa been
postpcini!d w~ t)!e Justice Departm~t conducts an lnveltlgatlonlnto
Meese's tlnanctal affairs. Since the
department has already IBBued a
white waslled report on the Carter
Brtettng Papers, I don't expect
anything else In this case unless a
speciBl proaecutor Ia approved.
Ohio . SeJiator Howard • M~­
baum; a meJJ:Iber ot the Colnmlttee,
has been leedlng the ba~ against
the Meese conflmiatlon as our chief
law enforcement otttcer. There has
been .unquesttoll!ld proof that
Meese has been giving government

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Top news ____________L_owe_l_l_W_ing...;;...e_tt :·
Cable television did Irreparable
damage to women by the nation- .
wide publicity they gave the trtal of
six men In -Fall River, Mass. tor
forcibly raping a woman on a pool
table In a bar In that city. As a
result, women over Amerjca will be
lair game lor any male or group of
males Intent on assault. They will
!eel certain the victim will not
complain knowing her name will be
dragged through the mud of public
ridicule. We don't have cable where ,
we live so we were spared most of
the grtsly details but enough was
shown on newscasts to make me
ashamed of a legal system that
allows such a public trtal to take
place.
A battery of defense attorneys
justified their actions by claiming
they were only doing their job of
defending their clients. They were
attempting to make the jury believe
that a 22·year-old mother of two
was the goUty aggressor and not the
victim ot a vicious assault. rn spite
ot testimony that the woman
pleaded lor help while onlookers
cheered, the judge condoned the
assault on the woman's character
which was not In question but
whether she was forcibly raped or
not.
Regardless of whether or not the
victim has a poor reputation or Is
pure as the drtven snow, a woman
In this supposedly enlightened
century has the rtght to privacy.
She should be able to enter a public
. place without fear of molestation. It
she Is attacked, she abouJd have the
full protection of the law and not be
treated like a criminal Instead of a
victim . .
We had a slmtlar case at the
Unlverslt: ot Flortda last !all. A
17-year-old freshman gtrl told'
autborltles she waa forcibly raped
by a ' group of men students at : a
tra~rnlty house. She and her lather
reported the assault to the pollee,
the unlvi!rsity offtclais and the
public prosecutor. It ts ilow 'several
montlis Into the lnvestlptlOII and
the tratenilty hou!e Is sUD 4&lt;itng

BALTIMORE ORJOl.ES-Sm t
Drown. pllchtr. 10 lht&gt;lr minor

Canton Mr Klnlto)o 79, 08)'. O...nbar ~.

the University ot Chicago with ·
research on Indians In Amertca. •
The university said It had no record
ot a Ph.D. or any other degree given •
to either Hlghwater or toJ Marks, a ,
name he had used previously.
Nor could the University of '
California at Berkeley lind any '
record of the bachelor's and · ;
master's degrees he claimed tO ·
have earned there.
I
Confronted with evidence of these r
arill other h"Oppets, Hlgltwatet"l
acknowledged that he had ·"
"fudged" on some things and that ·•
some ot his statements were
"apocryphal." The dictionary de- ·•
fines the ferb "fudge" to mean to ·
cheat, welsh or be dishonest; ..
"apocryphal" means spurtous or
false.
If Hlghwater-Marks can produce "
convincing proof of his claimed
background and ancestry, I'm '
prepared to prtnt lt.

false and outrageous, among other
things.
For example, Hightower notes In
his letter that his voluminous
wrttlngs on Indian culture have
been praised for thetr "originality."
Yet page after page of his books
show strtklng stmllartty to earlier
wrttlngs by other authors. Sometimes It's almost word-lor-word, as
In his 1978 ollservatlon ot an Indian
named Tsat'oke:
"Music was Important to Tsatoke; he loved to sing and, for many
years, he was head-singer at Kiowa
Powwows." But 10 years earlier,
Jeanne Snodgrass had wrttten ot
Tsatoke that "music was also
Important to him; he loved to sing
and, lor many years, was chief
singer at Kiowa dances."
Perhaps by "ortglnallty" Highwater meant his supposed conversation with Margaret Mead about
his plans to follow up his Ph.D. !rom

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Meese's promotion __________________J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n ,
WASIDNGTON - Last December, I reported that presidential counselor Edwin M;eese, a bird
colonel In the Anny Reserves, had
been boosted up the military ladder
by pals In the Pentagon. Educational requirements were waived,
and the promotion was rushed
through just before his mandatory
retirement date.
The odd circumstances attached
to his sudden rtse In rank were laid
before the Senate Judiciary Committee, which was debating
Meese's nomination as attorney
general. Those heartngs have now
been suspended pending a Justice
Department Investigation.
Meese had assured the commit.
tee that he did not seek special
treatment. He was merely "the
victim of bad judgment within the
Army," he said.
The Army's Inspector general
also cleared Meese of any personal
tmproprtety. But strangely, the
Army has refused to release the GI
report. Key excerpts from the
suppressed document have now
been reviewed by my associate
John Dillon, who has also had

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Net apprent Improvement In
disposable Income happens because altbough Inflation durtngthat
pertod rose by a !actor of U ,
Income went up by a !aCtor ot 7.6.
But now look at this: Olsl:retlon·
'
ary Income,
which Is detlned aa
what the Arnertcan has left after
paying taxes and necessities, has
ll!llen lor anyone earning between :
$20,&lt;XXl and $50,&lt;XXl, fallen by about 25 percen, durtng that ~year.
pertod.
•
Examples: U In 1948 you earned
$20,&lt;XXl, your discretionary after.tax Income came to $7,266. (We are·:
not using constant, 1983 dollars.)
U In 1983 you earned $20,&lt;XXl, your
discretionary alter-tax tncoml!
came to
U In 1948 you earned $50,&lt;XXl, your '
discretionary lifter-tax Income "
came to $28,681. Today, It ls$21,:m . .
That Is what happens when you .:
have a) lnfiatlon, and b) bracket ,
creep. You don't notice It overtly . .
But suddenly things you used to be
able to alford - you can no longer
alford.

ss.n.

Transactiom

- H.I. IIol)'ol•• TJoo

30.7.

Today in history
Today Is Monday, March 26, the !lith day of 1984. There are 28l days left
In the year.
Today' s Highlight In History:
On March 26, 1953, Dr. Jonas Salk announced a new vaccine to Immunize
against polio.
On this date:
In llll4, the Louisiana Purchase was divided Into the Tern tory of Orleans
and the Dlstrtct of Louisiana.
In 1816, America's flrst savings bank, the Baank for Savings In the City of
New York, was chartered.
In 1877, composer Ludwig van Beethoven died In Vienna.
In 1875, poet Robert Frost was born In San Francisco.
In l.lei, the Eastman Dry Plate and F1lm Company of Rochester, N.Y.,
manufactured the flrst commercial motion picture tum.
In 1892, poet Walt Whitman died In Camden, N.J .
Ten years ago: In a second day of meetings at the Kremlin, Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev discussed
approaches to a Mideast settlement.
Five years ago: A peace treaty between Egypt and Israel was signed at
the White House by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, Israeli Prtme
Minister Menachem Begin and President Jtmm.v Carter.

Toutney scores

that 71 percent ot all taxable Income Amertca was $3,187. The word
Is earned at that relatively modest "median," recall, means that as
tlgure of $30,&lt;XXl. That Is where the many Arnertcans were earning
more than that much money aa less
money Is.
But now the staff pt J. Peter than that much money. In 1983, the
Grace - whose commission's median Income was $24,&lt;XXl.
In 1948, the median-Income
'findings have, Incredibly, not been
sertously quarreled wtth. attesting Amertcan paid a tax of $9. TI!at's
to the etflctency ot the work done - . right, $9. In 1983, he paid a tax of
comes along with some Interesting $2,218. Income (we are not here
figures, If you are In the mood to be taking Inflation Into account) went
up In 35 years by a !actor ot 7.6.
dismayed.
Taxes
Increased by a !actor ot
In 1984, the median Income In
$246.4. As a percentage ot the
median-American's Income, the
rate of taxation l'Oiie by a factor of

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed. Tbey oboold be looalbao Ill wordl
1.., . Alllellero are eubJecllo edlllllcaad mllll be elped wllb oame, oddre11 ODd
leleplloee aumber. N~ UDII(Ded Iellen wUI be publlobed. Lellero lbould be lo
pod tute, addre~IIDIIIIUe., aot penonaUtlee.

By GEORGE STRODE

I I I

AP Sporta Writer

Willinm F. Buckley Jr. '

COLUMBUS, Ohio iAPl - For
personal, school and community
reasons, Canton McKinley basket·
ball Coach Mike Riley Is more
relaxed today.
"The pressure has been unbelievable at McKinley this year. Maybe
this will take II off. Future Canton
teams won't keep heartng about
never winning the big one," RUey
said Saturday night.
RUey' s Bulldogs shed their Image
as losers with a 79-75 overtime
decision over Dayton Dunbar for the
Class AAA hoys state Ulle. It
marked the first time In eight
attempts that the school had won the
championship trophy.
McKinley first started lis string of
runner·up roles In the 1928 state
tournament. Every time In recent
years the school reached lhe final
tour, tpe players and coaches kepi
heartng about the jinx.
Although McKinley 127-1) was
forced Into an extra threemlnutes tn
the finale, Riley said, "There was
never a moment tonight I doubted
we wouldn't wln. "
Nevertheless, RUey conceded he
and his team went through some
anxious moments.
"When Dunbar's shot went In just
before the (regulation) buzzer,
there was high anxiety. I was scared
to death. Our players' faces seemed
like we had just lost. We were
searching for some way to keep
them bellevlng In themselves for
another three minutes," he said.
Riley, of course, had coached
Elyria to the state semifinals In 1973
and 19TI and lost both games.
McKinley had been to the final four
14 previous times without a winner.
Anthony Robinson's two free
throws with 1:48 left In overtime
gave McKlnlev the lead tor good

.''I,,

,fA SAD ENDING - Wheelersburg players stand
on the court Saturday after being defeated 71· 75 by
Akron St. VIncent-St. Marys for tho! Class AA title.
Holding their second-place trophies are Scott May
74-73. The Bulldogs ran off seven
slralght points.
Losing was a new experience for
Mike Haley, and the Dunbar coach
did nolllke it. He had won played on
or coached nine consecutive
winners In the state tournament.
"ll's the most dlsapplnttng experience I've had," Haley said upon
leaving the sullen Dunbar lockerroom. "Tears were running down
their faces. They were stretched out
on the Doors, benches. It was the
mosl honible feeling In my coachIng career."
Akron Sl. Vlncent-SI. Mary (234).

Don Brown ( 14), .James Willis ( 13), Steve
Duncan (:W) and Denver Marshall (33). AP

(15) ,

Laserphoto).

the O ass AA champion, and
Monroeville (Z7 -1), the Class A
victor, also went through torturous
times In the closing moments.
St. Vincent -St. Mary. the 1929
Class B state champion as St. Mary,
watched a fourth-quarter 15-polnt
lead shrtvel to 73-71 with 32 seconds
left against Wheelersburg.
However, Jerome Lane, the Class
AA tournament 's Most Valuable
Player, sank two free throws with
four seconds left to cllnch the 75-71
triumph, ending the Pirates' season
at 23-5. Lane had 23 points, ~
rebounds. fivp shot blocks and two

steals against Wheelersburg.
Monroeville watched a 5647 lead
with less than four minutes left slip
10 ~2 with 11 seconds to play. Don ·
Beck's two foul shots with tO seconds
to play assured the Golden Eagles
their 66-62 decision over Wehlre
121-6).
Gary Grant of McKinley, who had
25 points In the tltiP game, was
chosen as the MoSt Valuable Player
In the Class AAA playoffs. Chris Ott
of Monroeville, with 17polntsand10
rebounds In the tina I game, earned
the same tllle in the Class A
lournament .

Cedeno says he is 'on the ball' this year
TAMPA. Fla. !API -A sevenweek stress-managemenl course
and an 18-pound weight-reduclion
program weren'l the only ways
Cincinnati Reds outfielder Cesar
Cedeno has made improvements
since lasl season. His swing Is
different . too.
Although batting jusl .225 lhls
spring, he's been hiltlng the ball
hard. Cedeno rapped a home run
and went 3-for4 Sunday In a 7-41oss
to the Pittsburgh Pirates In
Bradenton.
Cedeno thinks his swing Is better
because he's made an adjustmenl
with his hands.
"Thai 's where it is, " he said. "I
am on the ball ."
Early In camp, Reds Manager
Vern Rapp and hilling Instructors
Tommy Helms and Joe Sparks
noticed a hitch In Cedeno's swing.

From a cocked position, the bat
back, Cedeno was moving his hands
forward as the pitcher began his
windup and then back again before
he started his swing.
"You could see the kind of
problems that would cause," Rapp
said.
"Now, I'm keeping the bat closer
to my face, taking It back and then
I'm ready," Cedeno said. "It makes
a big dltrerence In my timing. 1
haven't hit the ball has hard and as
consistently In quite a while."
Rapp and his staff have nolhing
bul praise for Cedeno, who came to
camp without astartlngjobafterthe
Reds signed free agent Dave Parker
to play right field .
Cedeno has played all three
outfield positions as well as third
base this sprtng, but Isn't complain-

anolher posilion, as long as it's on a
lng thai he hasn'l yet cracked the
regular basis. If lhat doesn't
slarting lineup.
happen. he thinks a lrade would be
" I haven'texpectedanythingtobe
handed lo me." Cedeno said. " I
best for all concerned.
came Into sprtng training thinking
lhat I had 10 prove myself again and r - - - - - - - - - - - to continue to prove myself. I
haven't had a great spring, but I'm
proud of what I've done."
Cedeno Is careful not to criticize
the play of starting center fielder
Eddie Milner, bul makes It clear
he'd like to start U\e!'e. He said he
came to Cincinnati figuring that
MAnNEES So4T &amp; SUN
would be his position.
ALL SEATS $2.00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESG4r 12.00
"Not to take anything away from
Eddie's ability, but I still think that is
where I belong. That's my best
posilion;" Cedeno said. "Basically.
center field was taken away from
me and that's whe"' I would like to
play."
Cedeno said he'd be willing to play

California rookie shines Sunday
In a home plate collision with
Philadelphia's Joe Lefebvre In the
staff, which Includes such old- second Inning.
Detroit's Howard Johnson belted
timers as Tommy John (40). Ken
Forsch (37) and Geoff Zahn (37), a two-run homer to help the Tigers
may be cracked by a spring chicken beat the Sl. Louis Cardinals 9-2.
named Ron Romanick.
The Toronto Blue Jays beal the
The Angels dropped an 8-3
world champion Baltimore Orioles
exhibition decision to the Milwaukee
forthe secondday In a row, lhL&lt;time
Brewers on Sunday, but It wasn't the
5-4 on Mitch Webster's lOih-lnning
fault of the 23-year-old Romanlck, a
homer.
6-foot4 right-hander who was only
Pitcher BUI Gullickson's two-run
9-12 with a 4.!fi earned run average
double gave Montreal a 3-2 lead In
at Nashua of the Class AA Eastern
the sixth Inning, Jim Wohlford
League In 1983. The Angels had a 3-1
lashed a two-run double in the
lead when Romanlck left after
seventh and the Expos held on to
allowing one run - unearned - In
edge the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-4.
six Innings. He has hurled 21lnntngs
Home runs by Doug Frobel,
this spring with a 1.29 ERA.
Ruppert Jones and Lee Lacy
After Romantck left, the Brewers
powered I he Pittsburgh' Pirates to
jumped on Steve Brown and Angel
74 victory over the Clnctnna tl Reds.
Morenoforthreeruns In the seventh ·
Dale Murphy broke a scoreless-tie
and four In the eighth.
with a solo homer In lhe eighth
• Meanwhile, Glenn Wilson, ac· Inning to lead the Atlanta Braves to a
qutred from Detroit on Saturday,
3-0 victory over the punchless New
reported to the Philadelphia Ph lilies
York Yankees.
and was handed an every-day
Randy Bush snapped a lie with a
outfield job- probably In left - by
ninth-Inning home run off But
Manager Paul Owens. In his first
Dawley and the Minnesota Twins
at-bat In a Philadelphia uniform,
went on to defeat the Astros 7-5.
Wilson expressed his gratitude by
Greg Walker belted a three-run
doubling home a tie-breaking run In
homer and Vance Law added a
the seventh. The Phlllles beat the two-run shot, powering the Chicago
New York Mets 4-3.
White Sox to a 54 victory over the
The Mets lost catcher John Boston Red Sox.
Gibbons lor up to six weeks when he
Orlando Sanchez doubled home
suffered a fractured left cheekbone the tyinl! run and scored the winner
By The Associated Press
The California Angels' pitching

in the boltom of I he ninlh Inning to
lead the Kansas City Royals to a 4-3
victory over thP Texas Rangers.
Max Venable hit an inside-thepark home run and a triple and Joel
Youngblood alsO homered to lead
the San Francisco Glanls over the
Chicago Cubs 4-3. II was the ninth
straighl loss for Chicago and left
nPw Manager Jim Frey's club with
a 3-16 record.
The Seattle Mariners edged the
San Diego Padres 5-4 on Bob
Kearney's lie-breaking single in the
ninlh Inning off Rich Gossage.

C.!.iiii!~~!f!!.

RICE'S

TENNIS

DAllAS (AP) - Hana Mandllk·

ova of Czechoslovakia snapped a
The victory was worth $72,&lt;XXlthree-match losing streak to Katb,y
more than he had won In 10 of his 12
Jordan
and took her fourth title ot
previous seasons as a touring prothe
year
with a 7-6, \l-6, 6-1 VIrginia
!rom the tolal purse of $01,001.
LallY, Rinker was second, closing · Slims of Dallas victory on Sunday.

·•t

. REG. 1249.95

$}249ZPc.
SAVE S124.98
SETS ONLY

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MARY C. KFNB, E. .A.
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they 'uld something

"POLITICS AGAIN/ WINM
about ·a non-binding beluty contsst,
thOIIght.... "
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3

Canton·McKinley claims first state title

Scoreboard ...

I
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The Daily Sentinel Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DISHES

.....

Fiber&amp;lls

Aluminum

8Ft to 20 Fl

�\I

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

I

The final four: Georgetown,
Kentucky, Virginia, Houston

II

I

Monday, Man:h 26, 1984

Pomen~y-Middleport, Ohio

By JOHN NEI110N

SIX111 GRADE CHAMPS - The sixth grade
basketball team at Syracuse Elementary, with a 7-1
season record, was the tournament champs. Pictured
are, llrst row, 1-r, Jolm Barton, Kevin Burgess, Chad

Taylor, Chris Stewart, Petie Hendricks, Jolm
McClintock and Jerod Moore; back, Jon VanMeter,
Doug Lavender, Brent Shuler, Doug Stewart, Cbuck
Buckley, Brad Maynard and B8J Baer, coach.

with a perfect~ mark. First row, 1-r, LeRoy Barton,
Mark Taylor, Mlcliael Russell, Jamie Andei'!IOII;
back, Eric Lawson, Andy Baer, Chris Wolfe, Travis
Nease and coach BW Baer.

F1F111 GRADE CHAMPS - The fifth gTade
basketball team at Syr.tCuse Elementary was
tournament champs. The squad ended the season

.

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F1F111 GRADE CHEERLEADERS at Syracuse
Elementary are, 1-r, front, Amber Ohlinger, mascot;
11rst row: Cheryl Pape, Joetta Picino, Andrea Theiss,

Tonya Ingels; back: Mica Jones, Robyn Stout,
Heather Roush, Mendy Lenley.

Patrick Ewing stood dripping wet
under the hot lights of the television
cameras, searching for the right
word to express himself.
Second-ranked Georgetown fi nally had ended thesweetdreamsof
Roosevelt Chapman and upstart
Dayton.
"I told the guards just to stop
hlm," Ewing said of Chapman. "I
told them to ... I can't think of the
right word." A smile split Ewing's
sweat&lt;OVered face. "I just told
them to stop him, and I'd help out."
Ewing, a 7-foot ·junior, did more
than help. He intimidated. He
dominated. He scored when he
needed to. He blocked a few shots.
He rebounded. And when It was
over, the Hoyas were in the NCAA
basketball tournament's Final Four
next weekend in Seattle.
Chapman, who had averaged :ll. 7
points in the tournament, had just 13
points, while Ewing scored a
game-hlgh 15 as Georgetown defeated Dayton 61-49 to win the West
Regional championship at Los
Angeles.
The Midwest Regional title also
was decided Sunday, going in favor
of fifth-ranked Houston and Akeem
Olajuwon, the only college center
who can contest Ewing's claim to
best In the country. Olajuwonscored
29 points, connecting on 14-{}f-16
shots, as theCougarsdefea ted No.l9
Wake Forest 6S-63 at St. Louis.
Georgetown, 32-3, will play thirdranked Kentucky, 29-4, in the
national semifinals Saturday, while
Houston, 31-4, takes on unranked
VIrginia, 21-11. VIrginia upset Indiana 50-481n the East, and Kentucky
defeated 16th-ranked Illinois 54-51 in
the Mideast in Saturday's regtonal
finals.
WEST
To get to the regtonal final,
Chapman had led Dayton to upsets
of Louisiana Slate, Oklahoma and
Washington. He had a tournamenthigh 41 points In the Oklahoma
game, but all that ended Sunday.
"We felt that we had to play great
defense against them because
they're so small and quick,'' Ewing
said. "I think we contained them
very well."
In addition to his 15 points, Ewing
had seven rebounds and dominated
under the basket as Georgetown
pulled away with a 15-5 spurt that
gave the Hoyas a 51-371ead wlth3: 43
to play. Ewing had a three-point
play in the spurt, and freshman
Michael Graham hlt three baskets.
Against Kentucky, the 7-foot
Ewing will not enjoy the height
advantage he did against Dayton,
whose tallest player was 6-7.
Kentucky has one of the biggest
teams in college basketball, anchored bY the twin towersof7-1Sam
Bowie and 6-11 Melvin Turpin.

\
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INDIAN LAKE - Meigs High
School wrestling coach Larry
Grimes reported today that Doug
Priddy and James Snyder both
placed In a recent two-day wrestling tournament at Indian Lake,
Ohio.
Priddy had a good day to place
second, losing only to a wrestler
from Ontario, Canada In the last 20
seconds. Snyder placed fifth overall
as he lost to a wrestler from Indian
Lake and lost to Priddy, his
teammate.
Butch Stiles also competed, but
lost two matches, then won another
match by a fall. Stiles, despite a
good effort was unable to place.
During their travels the young
wrestlers were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Heard, Coach Grimes'
sister and brother-in-law. After the
stay at Indian Lake the local
gTapplers traveled to Columbus
Bishop Ready, where they had a
much better showing.
Butch again did not place, but
defeated a very good Jeff Cobyrn of
Grove City before losing to Mike
Stephens of Lancaster and Rick
Wright of Worthington.
Doug Priddy placed second
behind his own teammate James
Snyder at the Columbus event.
Priddy defeated Jolm Mandry of
Groveport, Gary Porter of Parkersburg, and Eric Dlsabath. of Bishop
Watterson, all by pins before
meeting up with Snyder.
Snyder went on to claim the first
place win ahead of Prl(ldy and
Dtsabath of Watterson. James

first half of NCAA Western Regional Championship action In Los
Angeles Sunday. (AP Laserphoto)

N_ _ . . , _

Subda.Y• GM'Mii
WashlnJffon 4, PlnstlurJh 3
Edmon!on 3. Wlnnl~ 2
Qut"bK' 6, Hartford 6, tk&gt;
N.Y. Jslandl&gt;rl !i, Buffalo 3
F'tlllack'lphla 4. Nf'W Jersey 1
N.Y. Ranll:ft'S 3, Montlt'aJ 2
Cllkago !1, Toronlo 4

....,..o...

CaiRafY ~. VancouYPr 4. tk&gt;
St Louil II

Mlnnete~a

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&amp;.101'1 II QuPbf'C

Jlltfato al Hartb'd
MonlrN! II N.Y. lslanderl

(USPSIU·. . )
A. Division of Multimedia, lac.

Start tonight

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SWEENEY, MJ).

.

2924 Jackson Ave.
Poiat PIIMint, W. Y1.
Weekday and Saturday Hours
•

Call 304-675-6971 for an Appoint~ent

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Retail Merchants Association
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
at the Meigs Inn. Ron Ash will be
the speaker.

Member: Th e Associated Press. In·
land Dally Press Assriclaton and the
American Newspal)('r Publishers As·
soclatlon, National Advertising Repre·
sentatlve. Branham Newspaper Sa les,
733 Third Avenue, New York , New
York 101/17.

MIDDLEPORT The
OAPSE Chapter 17 will meet
Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
Meigs Junior High School.

POSTMASTER: Send address to The
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St ., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

POMEORY - The ladles
auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will meet Tuesday at 1
p.m. There wUI ba silent auction.
Persons Interested In joining the
auxiliary are invited to attend.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week .................................. $1.00
One Month ....................... .. ....... $4.40
One Year ............................ .. $."12.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
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Subscribers not deslrlnR to pay the ca rrier may remit In advance direct to
Tht&gt; Dally S&lt;&gt;nttnel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basts. Credit will be given ca rrier each
month.

County Junior Fair Queen.
Napier Is the son of Christine
Napier of Route 1, Bidwell. He Is a
junior at Kyger Creek High School
and has been In 4-H for eight years.
He has represented Meigs County
at the Ohlo State Fair for three
vears. In 1981 he received a clock

the best "Texas Slyle" dance
Instructors In the country.
The workshop will be held
Saturday, April 28. Instruction wUI
be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. with a
lunch break. Dinner wiD follow
from 5-7 p.m. A dance-party will be
held from 7-9 p.m. The fee for the
entire day Is S25 per couple.
For more Information or to
register, contact the O.U. Office of
Continuing Education, Conferences
and Workshops, Memorial Auditorium, Athens, Ohio 45701, (614)
594-6876.

POMEROY - The American
Association of University
Women will meet Tuesday at
7::ll p.m. at the LaSalle Hotel. A
silent auction will be held.
MIDDLEPORT - A parent·
ing program will be held at the
Middleport Library Tuesday at 1
p.m. bY Lorraine Newsome,
Cris!sllne coordinator.
Mrs. Newsome wlll share
material with parents on problems arising when raising children. The film, "Parenthood-·
Training Before Trouble" wiD
also be shown.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs
· County · Women's Republican
Club wll meet at the Meigs Inn
Wednesday for a 6: :ll potluck
dinner. All Republican women
are invited to attend.

Happenings

No subscrtpllons by mall permitted In
towns where homE' car rier service Is
ava llabl£&gt;.

Benefit game
CHESHIRE - The Kyger
Creek Athletic Boosters are
sponsoring a basketball game
between the WKEE Jox Sox and
the faculty on Thursday, 8 p.m.
at the Kyger Creek High School.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Ins ide Ohio
13 Weeks ..........
.. .. .. ....... $14.114
26 Weeks ............
.. ............ $27.30
52 Weeks ............................... S.'i t.48
OutMide Ohio
13 Weeks
.......................... $!~ . 21
26 Weeks ............................... $29.64
52 Weeks
..... l'\6.21

lho

at

Franklin J. Ebersbach, Helen L.
Ebersbach to Marvin K. Wlseeup,
Teresa L. Wisecup, Easement and
Right of Way, Rutland.
Thomas K. Woods, Mary L.
Woods to Big Bend Properties, Lot,

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LOCAL4-H HONOREES- Kevin Napier and Pam !Uebel have been
choeen to aUend the Older 4-H Members Conference In JuJ;y at
Jacbln's MW, Their aelecUon was baaed on the National 4-H Report
form they each completed In J1111uary, and they were competlnJ with
atudenta from throughout the state.

Garden club '
to meet Wednesday
POMEROY - The WUdwood
Garden Club wUI meet at the
home of Evelyn HoUon at 7: :ll
p.m. on Wednesday. Rosetta
Redovlan of the Columbus and
Southern Ohlo Electric Co. will ·
be the speaker.

Meigs property. transfers

SIX111 GRADE CHEERLEADERS at Syracu8e E~ are,
left to right, Christl Bnanlleld, Michelle Harris and Cindy Foley.
Advisor for the cheerleaden Is Pam 'l1lels8.

FAMILY MEDICINE

TIJESDAY

Published every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, Ill Court Street, by the
Ohio Valley Publis hing Company . Mul·
tlmedia. Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. 9922156. Second class pootage paid at Po·
meroy. Ohio.

NEW YORK (AP) -Michigan
Coach Bill Frieder Is hoping Ills
team doesn't get a look at the
game-by-game results of Virginia
Tech, the Wolverines' opponent In
tonight's semifinals of the 47th
National Invitation Tournament.
"I'm not going to tell my kids that
VIrginia Tech beat VIrginia, Louisville twice and Memphis Slate,"
Frieder said. "They'll choke right
up. They don't want tohearthat.I'm
going to leU them they're a good
team, but I'm not going to tell them
who they beat, I thlnktheymlghtget
scared.''
Michigan, 21-10, shouldn't be that
scared of the Hokles, 21-12. After all,
the Big 10 team beat Indiana, Illinois
and Dayton during the regular
season.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds trimmed the
number of players in their training
camp to 32 Sunday by sending
outfielder Eric Davis to their
minor -league complex for
reassignment.

of hu office in

COLUMBUS- The Ohlo VIllage,
the Ohlo Historical Society's recon-

Calendar

POMEORY Pomeroy
Lodge 164 will hold practice for
Its annuallnspectk&gt;n Monday at
7 p.m. at Masonic Temple. All
officers and members are urged
to attend.

The Daily ~nlinel

Reds trim 1984
roster to 32 men

NHL results

MONDAY

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BEST EQUIPMENT ',,
the ·aEST PRICES

Dean's list named
Thirty-six area students have
been named to the Washington
.Technical CoUege President's list
:and 82 students have been named ~o
,:the Dean's llsf for ,the winter

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54641 S.R.'el1 ,

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: • Sludents from the area named to
'the Preslderit's list with a 4.0 grade
yolnt average weJ:e Steven Bunce,
.¥1ddJeport; John Dlllko, Rawns'woqct; Ernest Vineyard, Reedlvllle.
• Bobby Sheets of Cooivllle wu
~ to the J;)ean'alllt with a 3.25

SIU'ERIIIIID .
,

Reedlvillt, Ohio 45772

-~-

4'

(

'

5,

Ohio Historical Village opening
for lOth season on Wednesday

Two Meigs County 4-H members
have been recognized at the stat.e
level for their accomplishments In
the 4-H program . They are Pam
Riebel and Kevin Napier.
Riebel Is the recipient of a trip to
the West VIrginia 4-H Older
Members Conferance at Jackson's
Mill In mid-July. She Is also an
alternate In the Leadership
category.
Napier was selected as an
alternate to West Vlrglnla01der4-H
Members Conference and he was
also selected as an alternate to
Kentucky State 4-H Week.
These two members were selected on the basis of their National
4-H Report Form which they filled
out In January. They competed
with other 4-H members from all
over the state of Ohio for these
awards.
Riebel Is the daughter of John and
Glenna Riebel ofRoute3, Pomeroy.
She Is a senior at Eastern High
School and has been In 4-H for nine
years. She was the 1!&amp;1 Meigs

FLYERS ALL AROUND- Oeoiptbwn's Plltl1ek Ewlnl' (33)
finds himself surrounded by University of Dayton playen Ed Y011111
(30) left,SedricToney (3) and Damon Goodwin (23) rlght,durtnJthe

"I really haven't been thinking
about that," Ewing said. "I'm
happy we won this game. I'll start
thinking about that tomorrow or
next day."
The Hoyas' last trip to the Final
Four was in 1982 when they lost to
North Carolina in the championship
game.

u plea1ed to announce the .QP,en~!'R

Local4-H
students
honored

Don't be left out when that
"boot-scootln" music starts!
A new one-day Communlverslty
workshop this spring will gtve area
residents the opportunity to learn
the latest "Texas Style" countrywestern dance teclmlques in a
fun-filled day and then strut their
stuff at the evening dance.
An outdoor chuck wagon supper
Is planned for those Interested In
bringing a covered dish to share.
Western attire Is suggested for this
foot-stompln ' workshop.
Instructor Gerald Powell has
attended teachers' workshops with

NJT Seffil•£•ffia IS

Monday, Man:h 26, 1984
Page

trophy as the state winner In
electricity; In 1982 he received a
silver tray as an award with his All
American Foods project: and In
1983 he was selected as Outstanding
of the Day a t the slate fair In Foods
With An International Flavor.

Texas style dance session
slated at Ohio University

Priddy, Snyder place in
qualifying wrestling tourney
defeated Drew Keslg of Grove City
12-0, and then scored the win over
Priddy. Snyder then lost one match
in a referee's decision to Eric
Dlsabath In overtime.
Coach Grimes announced that
a ny Interested in wrestling during
the summer or rest of this school
year should contact Contact
Grimes at 992-56221n the evening or
come to the high school cafeteria
between 3: 30 and 5: 30 p.m. ·on
Tuesday, Wednesday or Thut'Sday
evenings.
The tournaments mentioned are
open to anyone who Is three years
old to a senior In high school and are
grouped by age and weight . The
next such tournament was held
March 24.
Grimes also announced that
numerous wrestling camps are
available to go to with the closest
being at Ohio University and
Greater Columbus wrestling camp
at Delaware, Ohio or the Soqtheastern Ohio Camp at Logan High
School.

By The Bend

lng," Lewis said of the Cavaliers.
"They're very well coached, and
they're on a roll."
MIDEAST
Bowie had a plan In mind as he led
Kentucky over IJllnoiS. "I wanted to
put myself in a situation where I
could be the hei'Oorthegoat," Bowie
said.
After the first half, Bowie looked
Uke a goat. He hadn't scored a point,
and he had only four rebounds. But
after intermission, Bowie scored 11
points and upped Ills rebound total to
14 as Kentucky held off a physical
squad from Illinois.
Bowie hlt a pair of free throws
with 4: 28 to play gave the Wildcats a
4944 lead, and, with 2: 36 left, he
blocked an lillnols shot that could
have cut the Kentucky lead to one
point. Turpin had 13 points for
Kentucky.
"That might have been the
biggest play of the game when
Bowie went to~freethrowllneand
hlt two when they were ahead bY
three," Illinois Coach Lou Henson
said.

MIDWEST
Houston Is making Its third
.straight trip to the Final Four. The
Cougars lost In the semifinals to
North Carolina in 1982, and North
Carolina Slate upset Houston last
year in the title game.
Cougars Coach Guy Lewis said
this trip couldn't be compared with
the others.
"It's such a thrill tome to be going
back, It's just as thrilling as It was
two years ago," Lewis said. "I'm so
proud of this team,'' he said, adding:
"This team Is tired of being
compared tolast year's team."
Wake Forest trailed by only two
points, S7-55, with 5:24 left, but
Michael Young and Olajuwon hlt
consecutive baskets as Houston took
control61-55.
"I think they're a much!mproved
team over a year ago,'' Wake Forest
Coach Carl Tacy said of Houston.
Lewis hoped Tacy was right, since
the Cougars lost to Final Four
opponent VIrginia 72-63 late last
season.
"They've got very fine guards.
They've got good perimeter shoot-

AP Sports Wli&amp;er

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Vlllage.
Richard Eblin, Reta Eblin to
Grover C. Klein, Irene L. Klein,
Parcels, Salisbury.
Evelyn B.~Thomas to Arthur A.
Hess, Jane A. Hess, Easement,
Salisbury.
Richard Jones, Geraldine Jones
to John P . Gibboney, Parcels,
Bedford.
Esta Dean, deceased, Earold
Dean, Afflc!avit, Scipio.
Nellie Price bY Rule of Atty.,
Oavtd L. Boyd, Janice M. Boyd,
Parcels, Middleport Vlllll(l!.
David L. Bumgardner, Shirley J.
Bumgardner to David L. Bumgardner, Shirley J. Buingardner,
Tracts, Rutland .
Evert! o. Parker, deceased,
Veda E. Parker, Esther B. Landon,
Cert. of trans., Olive.

struction of a mid-19th century
rural village, opens Wednesday
March 28 for Its lOth season.
Located at I-71 and 17th Avenue in
Columbus adjacent to the Ohlo
Historical Center, the Ohlo VUlage
will be open Wednesdays through
Sundays 9 a .m. to 5 p.m.
The village Is staffed by craftspeople and Interpreters who perform their tasks costumed in 1850's
style clothing. An additional 19th
century craft Is represented in the
Ohio Village this season with the

gunsmith's shop, doctor's home
and office, and a fanners' market.
Reasonably priced luncheons are
served in the Colonel Crawford Inn
from 11: 30 a. m. to 2:30 p.m.
Wednesday through Saturday and a
buffet Is served noon to 3 p.m. on
Sunday. Horse-drawn buggy and
wagon rides are avaUable on
weekends.
The only admission charge to the·
Ohio VIUage Is a parking fee of S2
per car which admits all occupants
to both the Ohio Village and the
Ohio Historical Center.

opening of a broommaker's shop.
The 17 buildings of the Ohio
VUiage represent several of the
architectural styles popular in the
mld-UOls such as Federal, Greek
Revival, and Itallamite. Linked by
a wooden boardwalk, the buildings
Include a one-room schoolhouse,
town hall, printer's shop, general
store and masonic lodge, hotel, two
residences, a tinsmith's shop and
bank, photogTaphlc studio and
museum, blacksmith's shop, livery
stable, harnessmaker's and weaver's shops and lawyer's office.

Shade Valley Council meeting conducted
Plans for the development of a
park near the site of the old feed mill
at the bridge in Chester were
detailed bY Martie Baum and Betty
Dean, co-chairmen, at a meeting of
the Shade Valley CouncU of Floral
Arts at the home of Theresa
Drummer.
It was noted that Juanita Lodwick, local artist , volunteered to
paint a picture of the old feed mUI
which will be combined with a
hlstoryolthemlllandthevlllageand
erected at the site under glass. The
location of Dower beds, plantings of
shrubbery, and the use of picnic
tables was discussed with further
details of the public beautification
project to be planned later.

Drummer and for roll call members
told what plants are up in their
gardens. Jo Ann Francis gave the
program entitled "Help! My Flowers are Falling." She gave a
demonstra lion on how to keep
!lowers in an arrangement in place
while transporting them. She suggested wrapping the oasis in foil to
provide a more stable base, tou!'E'a
needlepoint holder, to tap in place
over the vase, to cut a hole in
cardboard and Insert the vase, or to
get someone to ride along and hold
the arrangement .
Allee Thompson, Mr. Baum,
Sheila Curtis, Mrs. Drummer and
Mrs. Dean displayed modern arrangements showing motion.
Refreshments were served .

Janet Koblentz presided at the
meeting with Pat Holter announcIng the April 24 open meeting to be
held at the Chester United Methodist
Church at 7::llp.m. An international
themewtlbecarrledoutwlthMadhu
Mahotra, a native of India, as the
speaker.
Mrs. Koblentz announced the
Open Gate Garden Club meeting to
be held April 28 and 29 at Yale HaU at
Rio Grande. The program wlll be
"Melodies of Spring."
Also announced was the May 2
meeting of the Garden Clubs ofOhio
Jackson district meeting to be held
at Chillicothe. Doris Dyer will be the
guest speaker.
Devotions were given by Mrs.

Grange contest slated to begin
Judy Bibbee

Returns from
conference
J udy Bibbee of Coolville has
returned from three days of
education, training and motivation
at the annual Mary Kay Cosmetics
Leader's Conference held recently
at the Georgia World Congress
Center in Atlanta.
Ms. Bibbee, an independent
beauty consultant with the Dallasbased cosmetics finn , participated
In dally workshops and meetings
conducted by leading sales directors
and corporate executives focusing
on business management, goal
setting, customer service, product
knowledge and time management.
Ms. Bibbee joined Mary Kay
Cosmetics in April1981 and became
a team leader in May, 1982.

Classes start
MARIETTA - Evening classes
begin this week (March 26) at
Washington Technical College.
Registration will be conducted
prior to the beginning of classes
each evening. Most classes begin at
7 p.m.; however, a few do begin
earlier.
For additional Information concerning the class schedule and
regtslration, contact the Washington Tech Student Sesrvice Office at
374-8716.
Late registration for day classes
will also be conducted through
Friday, March 30.

CAL:~
II YHE
ADS}

Entry blanks are now avaUable
for the 1984 Natk&gt;nal Grange stuffed
toy contest sponsored in Meigs
County bY the Star Grange.
Mrs. Linda Montgomery of
Langsville, women's activities
chairman, said the contest Is open to
bothmembersandnon-membersof
the gTange. Entry blanks, copies of
the contest rules and list of awards
may be obtained bY contacting Mrs.
Montgomery at 6ffi.4245 after 6 p.m.
All toys made ane dona ted to
hospitals and-or chlldi-en's homes.
The classes of competition are toys
madebychlldren,ages5.14; entries
made bY persons ages 15-21, and

those over 21 years of age.

National awards are U.S. savings
bonds and ribbons. State awards
are merchandise from Fairfield
Processing Corp. , national cosponsor of the contest, and ribbons.
Entry blanks are also available for
the 1984 National Grange Needlework Contest. This contest Is also
open to both members oltheGrange
and those who are not members.
The forms, along with a copy of the
contest rules and list of awards may
be obtained by contacting Mrs.
Montgomery.
This year's needlework contest
features classes in crocheting,

knitting. embroidery and needlework crafts using Coats and Clark
Products. Cash and ribbon awards
are given at the state and national
levels of judging, with three grand
prize awards of $500 to be presented
at the National Grange Convention
in Maine in November 1984.

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

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR
Your Farm

Equipment

Furniture seminar
MARIETTA - The Campus
Martlus Museum will hold a
seminar on furniture of the early
statehood period Saturday, April 7.
Open to the public, the three-hour
seminar begtns at 9: :ll a.m.
Larry Nelson, manager of the
Ohio Historical Society's Forst
Meigs, wiU be the seminar leader.
Nelson, who holds a master's
degree In history from The Ohlo
State Unlverslty, teaches courses in
Amerian Decorative Arts at the
University of Toledo and at the
Department of Continuing Education of Bowling Green State
University.
The seminar will cover the major
styles of furniture such as Empire,
Federalist, and Regency used In
Ohio during the period from 1790 to
1840. Using slides and examples of
the furniture to Illustrate the
discussion, Nelson will point out the
technical and decora tlve aspects of
each style and provide Insight Into
how the several furniture styles
fitted Into the political and social
fabric of the times.
Advance registration Is required
for the seminar and there Is a fee of
$6. To regtster, call the Campus
Martlus Museum at (614) 373-3750
or the Scheduling Office of the Ohlo
Historical Society at (614) 466-1500
extension 206.
Campus Martlus, operated by the
Ohio Historical Society, Is located at

Store
992-2668

fo meory, Oh.

the corner of Washington and
Second Streets In Marietta.

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126 Main St. ·

Pomeroy

1312 Eastern Ave.......... 446-4113
(Next door to Pizza Hut)

992-6674

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

I

I'

�Page-~The

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio .Lutheran Church Women
plan: spring meeting.in Logan

indergarten registration
RACINE - Kindergarten registration tor Southern Local School
District will be held Thursday. Aprtl
5.-tromSa.m. tolla.m .,andlp.m. to
2; :ll p.m. In the kindergarten room
next to Southern Junior High Jean
Alklre announced.
· . Parents are to bring a record or
lnununlzation and chlld's blrth
rertlt!cate.
A chlld must be five by Septell)eber :ll to enroU. A chlld entering

kindergarten this year must have
OPT series and booster, poUo series
and booster. MMR vaccine, and
recent skin test as requled by law.
There will be no kindergarten
classes the day of registration on
AprU5.
It Is lnnperatlve that your chlld be
registered at this time to enable bus
drivers to plan routes more
efficiently.

More than 250 women represent·
lng 32 congregations In Southern
Ohio, Kentucky and West VIrginia
are expected to attend the annual
convention of the Tri-State Converence of the Ohio District American
Lutheran Church Women to be held
Thursday, AprU 5, at St. Matthew
Lutheran Church, Logan.
The theme of the convention
program Is: "He Is the Light - we
are the Light," Acts 13:47. The Rev.
Paul D. Koehler, pastor of St.
Matthew Lutheran Church, wUl
give the opening devotions. Mrs.
Janet Grueser, president of the
Tri-State ALCW and a member of
St. Matthew Lutheran Church,
Logan, will preside at the
convention.
Keynote speaker wiU be Miss
Nancy Knutsen, Director tor Witness, ALC Women, Minneapolis,
Minn. Nancy Knutsen was born and
raised In Brooklyn, N.Y.; she
graduated summa cum laude In
1976 form Wagner College, Staten
Island, N.Y., with a Bachelor of
Science In Education and received

:: ichinger birth announced
Mr. and Mrs. Scott A. Eichinger,
Racine, are announcing the birth of
a daughter, Delana Jo, Jan. Watthe
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital,
'J\\hens. The Infant weighed seven
·J;i&gt;unds, 13 ounces.
. · Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. George McDaniel, Pome:J'Oli, maternal great-grandparents
-are Mr. and Mrs. Glenn McDaniel,
-Glouster, and Mrs. Hazel Hazle·ti;tpve, Bollver Tenn., and the
maternal great - greatgrandparents are Carl Antle, Glous-

ter and Mrs. Mary Morris, The
Plains, making five generations on
both sides of Mrs. Eichinger's
family.
Paternal grandparents are 01anneM.HIU,OrangePark,Fia.,and
Mr. and Mrs. Max A. Eichinger,
Pomeroy, and the paternal great·
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Eichinger, Pomeroy, Mr. and
Mrs. John Fry, New Haven, W.Va.;
and Mrs. Thelnna McCasklU, Jacksonville, Fla.

USAA PAR'DCIPANT- Maral;yn Banon hu been named a
l98t United S&amp;ate8 National
Awanl wWier In malhematlcs
by the United S&amp;ate8 Achievement Academy. She attends
Eulem ,lfllb Scbool 111111 was
nominated by Mrs. Nancy J..ar.
ldns, maUiematics leacber. Her
pldure and a resume wiD appear
In the U. S. Achievement
Academy Olftdal Yearbook. She
Is the c!aupter of Mr. and Mrs.
IUcbard S. Banon, and recent
winDer of the Melp County
spelling bee.

•

r;ancer Society helps
patients) recovery
As part of Its comprehensive
efforts In cancer control, the
~erlcan Cancer Society extends a
&lt;'warm hand of service" to aU
cancer patients and their famUles.
• - In 1983, 52 patients were helped
-With services offered In Meigs
Cbunty, according to S. Michael,
'Public lnformatlon Chairman.
. Among the different kinds ot help
l&gt;rovlded by the ACS Unit are:
;tl.P-to-date cancer Information and
!ihtdance for patients and their
families so they will know what to
,rt}qlect and where to tum for help In
.their community; home care services, providing loans and gifts of
:Sickroom supplies and special
'comfort Items for the homebound
patient, such as hospital beds and
iVheel•:halrs, dressings, wigs and
walk• rs;
. ; Transportation for cancer pa-

Scholarship fund
to be awarded

Dye, Murl Galaway and
Madge Dye, local, accompanied
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Walker,
:rhurman, to Coshocton where they
joined other family members for a
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Chester
J;laumgardner. While there they
11"ended a musical, Sound of
•Music, at Roscoe VIllage Opera
House. They also celebrated the ·
birthdays of Dawn Dye Walker and
of a 90-year-Qld friend of the Dye
'famutes, Frankie Hooker.
; ·,Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan and
Sarah Faye have returned home
after spending a week In Satsuma,
fla. with Mrs. Jordan's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. WIUiam Culwell. Mr.
:tulwell has been Ill and confined to
a hospital there but Is lnnprovlng.
..; Mr. and Mrs. Clair Stansbury and
son, Groveport, visited his mother,
GOlden Stansbury. recently.
Mrs. Arthur Crabtree was hos•tess tor the March meeting of the
·temple Church United Methodist
Women. The theme ott he evening's
'•

.

program was Drug Use by Women.
Leah Crabtree led the devotions. .
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Devine,
Columbus, were recent weekend
guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsey Jordan and Ralph.
Mrs. Harold GUlogly flew here.
from her home In Webster, Fla., for
the wedding of her daughter, Vicky
Gillogly to Scott Allen, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Allen, Athens. The
GUloglys are spending the winter at
their home In Florida.
Relatives here have learned of
the birth of a son, Jacob Reed, to
Mr. and Mrs. John Carl Dunham of
New Boston, Dl. John Carl Is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. John Dunham
(Janet Jeffers), New Boston, Ill.,
formerly of this community and a
great-grandfather Is Reed Jeffers,
local.
Edith Lyons. who was taken to
O' Bieness Memorial Hospital,
Athens, by the emergency after
suffering a heart attack, Is reported
to be Improving.

=JAurel Cliff news notes

\

;:";Attendance at the Free Methodist
Qlurch Feb. 26 was 8'7. Choirs
members present were 2.
""Attendance at the local church
$.;arch 4 was 118. Choir members
present were 14. The small children
·gave a nice program.
_Mrs. Bertha Parker has received ·
·word from her son, Cedrtc Parker,
San Antonio, that his son, Eric S.
J'~.rker, who Is In service In
~ntucky, has been promoted to
t'lrst Lieutenant.
Mrs. Bertha Parker's daughter,
Mrs. Jeraldine Ferguson, remains

very Ill In Mt. Carmel Hospital.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs Is Improving
from her recent Ulness.
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church Sunday morning, March 11,
was 111. Choir members present
were 15.
Bob Barton gave the morning
sermon due to the Ulness of pastor
Robert Miller who was a patient In
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Jeraldine Ferguson, Columbus, daughter of Mrs. Bertha
Parker, remains very Ill In a rest
home.

I

Area honor rolls
\"The rounn stx weeks grading perkld honor

roll d the

Metp High School has

been

announced. Maldnll a pde ct B or abo,.. In
aH thetr subJectJ to be named to the roD Wl're:
Nllith III'Ode - Donna Bowen, Sandra
.Bailey, SUsan Arnold. Jeffrey Arnold, Rhonda
Andreoni. Erin Andenon, Kim Deem, Marty
Qlne1 Jennifer Couch, . Tim C..oeU, Tim
'DI\rlt, Hubert Eason, Lois Eblin, Melissa
FO.~. KrlsUna Haynes, Carol. Hendrix,
Shannon Hlndy, Dare! HyseU, Julie ll,yseU,
~I Kloel, Eddie Kitchen, SUsan •King,
'\,WI1II King, Dawn-· PhiUip Klrw. Judi

- · JeMI!er MUier, Deborah MuJllhy,
'Mic'helle Petenon, Larry PoweU, Teresa
Rathburn, Cindy Rlllle, Jeffrey Nellon,
-Tnocy
Katrina
Sexton,
Jilndalr,Marte·
Smith;
Melinda
"Smith,Brenda
Klmdlorly St.ewlrt, Dawn Stewart, Jennifer
' 9wartz. Brian , Tannehill, Denzil Wellh,
l"iidenck Werry.

_ Teat11 IIJ'IIde - CArole ' Bailey, lloci\Y
IIJ:urp!leld, Cobb, Gory Coleman.
Dip. DIQanl, Todd Doczl, Kendi Donollue,
Davlll J)wllde, Owll!l GUia!rloa, Rcchy
~ Dairen illyiB, Bryan Holley,
tqlbor Kamedy, RDdnoy KletJI, Parlo!r Lq,

-· Howarcl, Qu1s.
. f.W!
Mallr, 11m MuiiiDI, Clwlolte Patter-

PriJnmer, Laura Sn!ith.

..
• ~~~~ . . . . - Paulllle Amodio. Ka!IIY
~ Llll ~. MaJ'!I AWI1on, OlerYi
-"'!. -

Burrts. Melissa cDmns, Damn Cremeans.
PeaKY Cremeans, Sandra Deem, cathy
Delong, Katrina Donohue, James Eblin, Kim

Ebltn, Tim GUkey, KeUy Ginther, Frances

Hollman, Usa Hollman, David Hoover.
Sandy Hoyt, Joe Humphrey, Dennis HyseU,

Brlxn Jacobs, Randy Jewell, Brenda Jones,
CAthy Jones, Greg Lathey, Tim Lemaster,
Earl McKinley, Gayla Owens, Anna Patrtck,
Jack Pl!terson, Teresa Pratt, Ani!JI Reed,

..... \.-'...~.l..i,.,;~.. -~ ... ...: .t.L!....:!. ....~ .. .

In the hospital
Victor Wolfe, Racine Is a patient
at University Hospital, Room ~.
Rhodes HaU, Columbus, Ohio, 4.'Wl.
Cards may be sent to him In care of
the hospital.

0

SUPERIOR
SIDING GO.

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum
Complete Gutter Wort
Complete Remodelln&amp;
Roofin1 of 111 Typu
Worked In home trtt
20 yetrl
"Free btimatu"

EUGENE LONG
Ph.

(614) 843·5425
3-8-2 mo. d.

ALL STEEL &amp;
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Sizes Sttrt From 12'116'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'136'
lnsul1ted Doc Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rlcine, Oh.
Ph. 614·143·5191
10-6-tfc

PHONE
992-2156
Or .... Dollr- CloulfiH
E. M•in

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1 ·11- ...

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Columbia
Grange meet
conducted

JJ ........ " - - . . ....

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ta.u...-

_.......""~

rrt and Row!

Printed l'attern

FINANCIAl REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
. For Fiocoll vEndlna o-nbor
Jf, 1983
2&amp;238 t..g1on Ru.l
IM!gNie, OtWo

Man:h 19, 1984
I cert• ly the lollowmg report
to be correct
Bon n•e Scan
Townsh1p Clerk
Tel No

6 I 4-669-390 1

Schedule!

s 3.75656

Oepos•I Ory Balan ces
lAc t•ve and lnac -

tovel .

117.10'174

Less Checks Out·
stand mg
8.939 29
Nr.t Funds on
Depos• t
108.167 95
Toral Assets
I I I 924 &lt;; I

Pool survey
begins in Meigs

LIABI LITIE S
fund Balances

I I 2. I 78 90

Total
l •a bd t!les

11 2. 178 90

SCHEDULE II
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AN
EXPENDITURES
IWence
Jan. 1. 1983

The Meigs County Recreation
Committee will be conducting a
telephone surveJ.f to determine how
many pupils are In favor of a
county-wide recreation center
which consists of a tennis court,
Indoor tract, swimming pool, basketball court and game room.
The survey wUl be conducted by
members of the Meigs Chrtstlan
Athletes, Clvltan Club, Lions Club
and the Meigs County Jaycees.
1f you are not contacted by Aprll9
and wish to voice your opinion In
this matter, do so by calling one of
the following: Pat O'Brien at
992-2509; Bruce Reed at 992-6723 or
Yoniece Miller at 992-5656.

General fund

I 1.896 24

Motor Veh•cle
L•cense Tax
Fund
Gasoline Tax
Fund
Road and B r t d~e
Fund
Federal Revenue
Shar.ng Fund
Total

14.8 I 3.88

.....

........

Literary Club
reviews Baker

0

-·l

The Daily Sentinel

35.443 97

General fund .
Motor Veh•cle
L•ce nse Tax

1•-v....,
,... _'"- .......

fund ...

26.255.57

Ga soli ne Tax
Fund

33.7 31.61

0

BooN llld C.lllol - ldd 504
each for PGitilt llld hlndlinc.

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

..

0..--

u.····-·
· -·-·"'""'1
'"-..., ~-

e........-

Gene•al fund

23.4 72 80

Mo10r Veh•cle
L•cense Tax
Fund
Ga sohne Tax
Fund
Road and Br•dge
Fund
Federal Revenue
ShannQ Fund
Total

3 Announcement•
MGM FARM CITY, INC.
· S.rvlnc llelp·Gallil·llnon

ORDER &amp; TAKE
DELIVERY Of
YOUR SPRING
FERTILIZER,
SPRING SEED &amp;
SEED CORN

5.101 83
26.54247
23. I 23 5 I

...._

9.4 30 39
87.67 I 00

Dec. 31, 1183
'
GeM1al fund .
29.288 45

Low, Low Prices

Motor Vehtcle

T311.

fund

Federal Revenue
Shanng Fund ·
T01at

Don't Be Mislead
We Will Not- Be
Underoold
CALL CHARLIE TODAY
614-992-2181

2 I 153

53.7 I 5

~

831 8 1
I I 2.178 90

_

MGM FARM
CITY,INC.
JKI

131 26. I tc

W:CiriiJ. llf.

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Clasilflecls and
Savell
I Willi IIIIa ·
· Wrltwt yllur
ad - oroer by
..,.II

coupon. Cancel vuur ail by phone when yuu
, reaui1S. Moneynot~le.

oet

Nam•-------------------

AddNI~--------------~·

Phon•------------------

I lW8fllld
1 !Far S.le

I )Announcement

( lFarRtnt

19, _ _ _ __
I.

20. --....:....-_,;_

2.
3.

~5.

21. - - - - - 22. - - --- 22. - - - - - 24.

6.

25. - - - - - -

.

I. L "W' llc8HEE
lrobr-AICtlolltiYtct

ChlrJI IAtlltJ,

12.
13.

1~.
15.
w.
•

ltlp CaiJtlty Alloclltt .
, Phone 742·3171

17.
11.

~-------

7.

'

R•l E~ General

Breadl White, Conotanco wm, Kyle Woodl.
Joy Soutm, R,yu - · ·Amy - .
Chrjltl Eltep, 1'arnn1' l'anllnl, Patricia
Noutzlllll, Jeff MIDer, l;llce Mullb!l, Mlcllael.
Moumln(, Kendi Mohler.

1 11 ~

J Q - 111......

v·------~

21. .- - - - : - - 29,

I

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

New Holiila-Ext111alve
Rllllodlll!ll
lnauranct Wo,_
CUIIQIII Poll 8ld11.
• Ualllll
Rooflnl wo,_
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sldlnp
111 Yetrl Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-71583
or 992-2282
11·1·1fc

NEW LISTING - Middleport
- Vacant double lot Apflroxi·
mately I00 x 95' with garage.
Utilities avatla!Xe.
NEW LISTING - PRICE RE·
DUCED - AI lite lllge of Middleport. Fanlasllc home with a
~ganlic famtly 1oom with a
beautiful fireplace, large livmg
room, 3 bedrooms. 2 ~ baths.
full basement swimming pool
and approxunalely I acre of
ground. $69.000.00.
NEW LISTING - Urnon Ave.
- Appmxrmately 21.,75 acres
land with small fou1 1oom
house and storage buildmg_ L
C.C.O. waler lap and well. Only
$10.500.00.
IIINI FARII- Chestet' - Ap!Jl!Ximately 4 acres with 3
bedroom home, full basement
gas I.a. hea~ drilled well, bam.
crib, outbuifdines; 2 garages.
' Only $23.500.00.
IIIDDUPOIIT - Leiding
Creel! Road - Aneal 3 bedroom ranch, fire~Qce with heatilator. full basement. deck. allached ga&lt;age. Owner needs 1o
sem
REALTORS
Henry Cltllnd, Jr.
992·6191
Dottie Turner 992·5692
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Jo Hill 985·4466

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS
35185 Oak Hill Road
Lonc Bottom, OH. 45743

PH. (614) 985··4212
We Use Von Schrader
Equipment Rtcommtndld
by Ludinc C1rpet llanu·
f1cturera.
'FREE ESTIMATES"
2-27-1 mo.

-~

.... ... . ...

..... ,. _

.

~

.,

.

...

..

-· --~

..

4635St~Y.~~~~~
Rd.
'l~~tall£. Ohio

Ph. 98o-4289
It No Answtr, Clll 1"15·4312
Wt Service All
Makea &amp; Models
Antenn. lnat.lllltion
Hopst Clll1 1nd Shop
Stl'liCt Avtlltblt
"Strvtce that Towers -bovt
The Rtst"

•lnauletion
•Storm Doora

•Storm Windows

•Replacement Windows

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

Wanted To Buy

Wanted old pianos. Paying
120. and 140. tach. Firat
floor only. Write giving
dlrectiona. Witten Pianoa.

Clifton. W.V. 304·773·
11873.

Box 188, 8ardl1 Oh 4314&amp;.
Call &amp;14·483·1805.

Wanhld Information dn Ruf·
lcorn family of Meigs Co.
Reply to Dorrell Ruffcorn,
1&amp;19 Avo. J ., Co Bluffo.
Iowa 111&amp;01 .

Would like to buy pull golf
cart. can 114-992·&amp;1&amp;4
afttr &amp;:30 p.m.

Attending Mock l n~ 'ochnl·
cal Colll(ltl7 local 11aidont
ht1 atudtnt housing for glrta
in Nolaonvlllt. Now taking
appllca11onalor aummer and
fall quarters. Call814·892·
11742 or 992·2094.
1100.00 Rowerd lor return

Windshield for 1972
Chrylotr . Coli &amp;14·9492053.
Cash paid for IIIRCY iron or
heavy Iron bada. t1 SO and
up lor certain Meigs Co.
atone jaro. Old time cupboard . · call 1· 304-882 2711

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-985-3307

312311 mo

-o-n
*'-lluot)l 'ruc:b
-to-eo,
0

_....,

-Trllldolr

- S..

lAIGI or SMAU JOBS
,H , 992-2478
3-22-I mo. pd .

a good watch dog. &amp;14·
2411-9&amp;97.

•TRENCHING
•lACK HOE •OOZER
•END LOAOER
•OUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•WATER. GAS, SEWER
RAIN UN~I .
County Cortlllod
SEI'TIC TANKS INSTALLED
fill HTIMA TIS

367-7560-367-767
CHESHIRE. OHIO

Antennas Start At
1

Need A Special Cake?

-VAUGHAi~~L BAKERY

'Full F1ctory
Wtrrtnties
'Free Delivery
'Site Checks
'Coll)plete Systems
&amp; lnst1ll1tion

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorizld John Dnrt,
New Holl1nd, Bush Ho1
Fum Equipment
Deller
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1-3-tlc

CHIMNEY KING
CHIMNEY SWEEP

-- ,... Art .., Spocialt,..
W~ng

MillER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

Downapouts
Gutters Cleaned

&amp; Painted
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

949-2263 .

For 11~ your wirin&amp;
nHds; furnaces repair
service 1nd installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

Call 742-3195
Or

992-5875

and

delivery , Devia V1cuum

· CJeaner. one half mile up

Georgoa Creek Rd .
814-448-0294.

4

Call

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Real Eatate General

- Addont and remodeling
- Roofing end gutter work

- Concreta work

FOR SALE
(I) HOUSE IN CHESTER:
Three acres with a nicely
constructed concrete
block home 26x30, 3
bedrooms. one blth,
12115 livin&amp; 1oom 1nd
24x24 family room. Ptrtially carpeted, fuel oil
furnace with facilities
for woodburner. 12x15
block stor~ae buildin&amp;.
20x30 block aar~ae.
Ri&amp;ht off Rt. 248, country settina. Yt mile 11st
of Chester, Ohio. (2)
TWO STORY HOUSE IN
RACINE: downstairs
equipped with kitchen,
livina room, dininaroom
and den; upstairs has
two bedrooms 1nd one
bath: house also has
basement. lot size approx. 48'x308'. Needs ·
work. (3) 1971 SAL~M
MOBILE HOME, 12'x55',
two bedrooms, kitchen,
dinina room, family
room: needs work. (4) 40
ACRES in Chester Twp.
Unimproved. On Township R01d 83. If inter-'
•sted conttct the ·Home
N1lion11 B1nk in R1cine,
949-2210.

- Plumbing tnd electrical
WOfk

(FrH Eo1lma1tll
REDUCED WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd Ilks to inlroduco you to
EnPCt·A-Cir. tho modern WIY
to drive tht vehicle of your

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING •

BISSELL

SIDING CO.
"Beautiful. Custom
Built Gara.Qes"
Call for free sidil!ltStimates~ 949-2801 or

949-28110

No Sunday Calla
3-11-lfc

KELLER'S

CUSTOM

No Down P1yment
Lowtr Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326 ·
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Faster S.l'llct
Call 614-992-6m

-

3·23-Hn

Wolfe
Investigations,
Inc.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

614-992· 7626
PRIVATE
INVESTIGATION
OF ALL TYPES

3123

JIM C-LIFFORD .
PH. 992·720\.u.tf

=====::::

KEN'$
APPLIANCE
SERViCE
915•3561

-111'1111 CIWJII I wltlll . . .lttMc:e
11il Dllllf It II' tl ·

All Mek..

,.....,.,,a.,.,

•WuheneDIIh.........a

111c:..tlt.,

•Rtn(ltll
•f!effl(ltlrllcln

•Dryer~

I.

.N\11

AGTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also

Trans~ission

PH.

992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-tfc

•Pi Ill I Fl

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

llalhan tvllcllng

EVERY

SAT. ~IGHT

6:30 P..M.
flctory Choke
12 Gllllf Shotpns
OnlY·

ductive health needs in
education. counseling and
medlcel aervicea. Accurete
record keeping required .
Training aveilable for mature
person who Ia eble to take

TRI-STATE MOBII,E
HOMES . USED- CAR8
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLii:
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
814-44&amp;-71172 .

other odd jobs. FrH eatlmatto. CaN 304-876-8024
anytime after S.
Will do babysitting In my

Will give piano &amp; organ
le11ona in my home to

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEl'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SAU1l.
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOUS.
RT 36. PHONE 814..44&amp;7274.
.

denta, also teach chording &amp;

72 mobile home. 1 '12 acrea

home in the Bidwell Seu..ge

Plant area. Call 44&amp;-8046.

baginnero &amp; advanced atu-

0

and bu~ding , 14,600. Call
446-0083 .
•

Bayview oxpando 12x4o

2 older pupa, 112 German

and evening• to be ••·

Border Collies. mostly

int~

Shepherd, 8 youn(ltlr pupa 'h

448-9416 .

pocted. Send reoume includ· 1- - - -B-u- -i-ne-- - - two employment refer-

21

11

1

enceo by April 8. 19B4 to:
Opportunity
Planned P•renthood_ol Sou- 1- - - - - -- - - Part Gorman Shepherd and thoaat Ohio. B N. Court St.
I NOTICE I
Border Collie pup "Somo- Athena, Oh 46701. PPSEO
oneen dropped oH at my is an Equal Opportunity THE OHIO VALLEY PUBEmployer.
LISHING CO. recommends
house" 304·BB2-2882.
mal01. 24&amp;-6&amp;83 .

Someone

6

to live-in with

that you do butlnen with

people you know. and NOT
olderly couple. Chorolotte to aend money through the
Danner. 614-246·9643.
mail until you have invel1i-

Lost and Found

LOST gray male cat, Ka neuga vicinity. Rewerd . Cell

448-9762 .

Wented: Pan-time UcenMd

Practical Nurse f4 ·8PM, M·

for en lntermediatl ure
facility for the mentally
f)

LOST: pair of lavender retarded in Bidwoll. Ohio.
tinted gl81181 &amp; CAM . Re- Current Ohio LPN Ucenaa
ward offered. Cell814-992 - and Phamacology or Napnea
7342 .
Certificate required : ea:peLOST; 32nd. degree Ma- rlence In the fiold of mental
retardation -developmental
diNbilitiea or in 1 human
MfVice setting preferred.
Contact Dave Weber, Rt. 3

Auct . lonnie Neal. Youth

Center Bldg .. CamdHn St .
614-387-7101 .
Peerson

AuctionHr

Service. Estate, Ferm, An-

~

Hourly Patient Servicll Asliatent to work with clients.
Mult be Mnaitive to reproductive health needa in
education. counseling and

medical aervicea. Accurate
record keeping required .
Training available for mature

tiquo • Uquidation aaloa. peraon who ia able to take
UconMd &amp; bonded In Ohio &amp; responsibility. High school
WYo . 304· 773-6786 or diploma or equivalency required; additional education
304-773-9186.
preferred. Reliable transpor-

Auction every Fri. night et
the Hertford Community

gated the offering.

For Sale or Le11e. Country
Carryout &amp;. DeU. Upper River

Rd. Gallipolio, Ohio. Call
614-44&amp;-2 192 or 614-4469171 .
--~---- -lcLOCA~ ROUT~ FOR SALE.
No aeiHng, collection only.

Will net approx. t300. per

week . Requires 3-4 hours

porweok. Willtake112 ,600
caah. WrlloP.O. Box69247,
Birmingham, AL 36269 9247 . Phone 206 -879 7388.

Center. Truckloeda of new

merchandise every week.
Conaigmenta of new and
used merchendiae elweya
welcome. Rich1rd Reynolds

tation neceltary : must
pected. Send resume includ-

ing two employment refer-

ences by April 8. 1984 to :
Planned Parenthood of Sou -

Auctioneer . 304-276 - thoaat Ohio. B N. Court St ..
Athena, Oh 46701. PPSEO
3069.
uia an Equel Opportunity
FlEA MARKET ; Moiga Employer.
County

feirgrounda .
Rockopringo. 33 &amp; 7 bypau.

For more informetion or

reservation call or write to

Hourty Patient• Services Aasistant to work with clients .
Mult be sensitive to reproductive health needs in
education, counseling and
medical services. Accurete
record keeping required.
Training available for mature
person who is able to take

tho following: 61 4-992 ·
8300. 986·4396. P.O. lx
742, Pomeroy, Oh .

1517 S. Court ~nut toCourthoust)

Mt. Alto Auction. Every reoponaibility. High school
Saturday 8 p.m. Consign - diploma or equivalency rementa accepted 1:00 tillaale quired; additional education

Will rod your entlrt lilt witho•t
u•inf Hy questions: &amp;ives advice
on 11 1H1irs of lite such ll love
1nd busintu. sickntn and hulth.

ATHINS

2nd Floor. Off. 9: CIJJ 593-5415

10 a.m.-6 p . m . - A~tr 6:30p.m.
CIA be ftlthtd II 16 Plains
Rd. Rt . 612-6:30-11 p.m.

Readin&amp; 15 With
This Ad

l-22 I mo

·DOZER
AND

time. Emme Belleuctioneer.

4288177 Uc. 429-84.
9

Wanted To Buy

We pay c11h for late model

clean used cera.

JEWELL'S -

P~UMBING
and

HEATING

3B8·9906 or 614-JBB9617.

Want to leaaa tobacco baaa,
will pay 3&amp; conta now or 30
cents now ond glvo 26% of

WORK GUARANTEED

bacco aold minua 30 centa
already paid. II lntoroated
cell 448-23114.

992-6030
A1111 1111111: 1'1111'111.1

completed in late Augult. in

limo lor tho fall school term.
High School Juniors and
Saniora can join now and
begin earning pay for
monthly meetings imme-

diately. Coli 304-&amp;76-39110
or 1-800-642-3619.

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

1onytlmo wookonda, 614- 12
or

Jobs ~ Bia or ~mall
MINE11SVILLE, 11HIO
: Experience~

. Reasonable

1429.

Guard is currently filling

6

poundege rented after to-

Situations
Wanted

Will care lor the'oldorlyln my
home. lots of references.

Mon or women. Call 614·
&amp;87-3402. ·

22 Money to Loan

bdr..

range,

ref .,

Cent . eir. underpinned. totel
electric, redwood porch .

Call 446-7487 after 6:00.
HOME

LOANS FIXED

RATES Below market rates.

Fixed conventional FHA·

VA . Leodor Mortgage,
Athena, collect 614-6923061 .

1970 Elcona Mobile Hom~
12x70 with 4x10 tip-out ·in
living rm. Excellent cond .

Call 446-7761 .
Used

2 bedroom

mobile

homeo, lumlohed. 1Ox&amp;O

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING

L~wor

priced regular tun. u diacounts to Senior Citi .....ll.
Churches &amp; Schools. Ward's

Keyboard. 304-676-3824.

Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardi Music Co .• 446·

0687. Skill and integrity our

and 12•62 sizes . Your
chance to own a comfort•
ble home. Browns treiler
Court . Minersville. Oh. 814-

992-3324.
1Ox66 Now Moon, 2 bodmf,
appliances, washer &amp; dryer.
vinyl underpinning. porctl
included. Good clean condi·

tion. t3860. Coli 304·882'·
3673 after 8 p.m.
··
1Ox62 1964 Richardton
trailor. 2 bedrm. new furniture, porch, underpinning.

Daniela.

oc. t6000 . Coli 614-742·
2267.

THOMPSON BOOKKEEPING Monthly end Quarterly

73 12x60 Camero 2 br w·tip
out lot of extroa. 304-675-8484 after 6 anytime w_.,

trademartc .

Laine

614-742-2961 .

accounts welcome . 428 Se-

cond Ave. CaH 448-1136.
THOMPSON BOOKKEEPING. Monthly and Quertorly
accounts welcome. 428 Se-

Owner will give hottelt deal
in town! Some beautiful

furniture tool Coll614-9926941 .
114 acre farm . Will contider
trading for house in Kyger

Creek achool diltrict. Call
614-3B8-8526 .
4 bedrooms 3 baths, lomil1

dining. double gerage, air.
ltone, riverview, low $60's.

ends.

1976 Manohon mobile
home 12x66, wood stove,

much aa t4,000 par homo.
No reaaonable offer refused .
Liberal bank financing, 10
pet. down monthly payment
lese than rent . This ia YCMW
only chance to buy new
homes at these prices. 0Hn
Sunday afternoon . Halfwa',
betwetpn Huntington It ~­
Pleasant on St . Rt. 2 .

304-576 -2711

Call 446-0781 .

33

Wiee Investment!! Don ' t
miss out on apring special

108 form of the late Reip~

uvingol Super DeaiJJ Middleport 614·992-6941 .

Farms for Sale ·

Reynolds, 664 one mile erit

of Eno. Call 448·3746, 'Qf
614-367-061B .

Baum Addition. 3 bedrm,

brick, 1'h bath. lull ball·
ment, family room . carport·

34

patio, t&amp;7,000. Adjoining 'h
aero lot available. Call S149B6-4201 .

Business
Buildings

-..
\

t

24x24 2 room w·bath, ce.

2 ltory. 1 0 rm . house. front
&amp; back porch. alum. siding.
ltorm windowe, gas furnace, wood bumer. carport.

be moved in 2 12 ~
sections. 446-7698 or 614-

tor, OW. microwave. Call

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

446-2776 .

.workshop. range, refrigera614-992-7286.

Owner transfered· must sell

beautiful 3 bdrm brick
homo. Fireplace, deck,

For sale 1 0 ac. Rio Grand8.

privacy,sunthine,

Centerpoint Rd . Call 614,·
262-6916 .
. ·.

privacy. t83.$00. Call &amp;14992·6420.

Fairgrounds. Home site• or

woods.
Mercer'• Riverview Personlll Cal"' Home has vacan-

Wanted to- ,buy or l•a• cies lor tldorly poraono.
tobacco poundage. Coli Betty Mercer owner. 304773·&amp;882.
&amp;14-2&amp;&amp;·1812.

Wanted to buy. New, uMd &amp;
furniture. ·Wllllluy 1
3 . Announcement• . antique
piece or complete hoiiM·
holds. Al10 complete Auctl·
'ortd'o Llr(ltlat blngopme, oNerlng eenrlce. c.p
... herok_.,, North Ctrqllne. Rodllll\' Howery 814·891·
For bualnformlitlon &amp; ,...,. 7231.
vttlon ceil 814·344-3218 1 - - - - - - - - or 814·882·8310.
Buyln• dtily gold. lilvtr
ccilna, rlnp,Jtwelry,mrttng
There's a new Poole Peotllll · ·· old colne, ltrge curStore coming In April. Por ,_,-. Top prl-. Ed; .Burohemlctl &amp; pocil netde IIMI'Berber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
the Pool People. Call 441- Middleport, Oh. 814-882·
3011 . . .
.
3478.

2

Going o~t of busineas ulel
Due to ill health tremendoua
aavings. Only 7 new homee
to choose from . Save H

vacancies for the1984 baeic

after

1974 Shultz 14x86 with tip

Homes for Sale

treining buddy platoon .
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS ! Training.
Dix. NJ , will
FURNITURE. Beda, iron. begin onat9Ft.June
and be
wood. cupboerda. chairs,

Call

anytime.

31

Used Mobile Homes &amp; , West Virginia Buddy PiaCampers. Travel Trailers. toon . The Army National

timber.

also . Call 446 · 2974

Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Ohio, 8 N . Coun

676-1246.

Wanted to buy standing

1977 Naahua mobile home,
12x66, one owner, excellent
condition, all e'-ctric, ceittral air conditioning, kitchen
appliances included, porcb

wohoer and dryer, dlapoaaf.

COl by April 6, 1984 to:

Pan time to full time Audiol -

silver . Write - M . O .

LR. mull sell, 18.600. Call
448-2930 .

1972 12x70 Kingwood on
60x134 ft . lot. 304-87,66163 after 6.

Wanted to buy aquare denc- ogiat needed in Doctors
ing clothes. Size 10, eny office. 304·876-1244 or

Miller, Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio
46789 or call 814·992·
7780.

1972 12x66 Concorde 2
bdr .• steeple ceiling, 12x20

Rea l Eslale

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;.

614-446-0176.

ground 'M ·L. near Eureka
dam. IB,900 firm . C.U
614-266-8409 .

air cond. t6600. 304-896.3983.

Easter is coming . Stan
saving money. Earn $6.00
hour spare time . 304-676 -

typo. Call 448-4637.

1971 12x60, 2bdr .. p1
heat. ul)derpinned . acr•

cond Ave. Call 448· 1138.

St .. Athena, Ohio 45701.
PPSEO is on EOE.

wood haeters. Swain Furni&amp;

1979 14x70 mobile home
C'ell
614 - 388-9967 aft·••
6:30PM.

on appro. 'h acre lot.

preferred. Reliable transpor·
tation necessary ; must
travel regularly . Saturdays
and evenings to be ••·
pected. Send resume including 2 employment referen·

Jim Mink Chov.-Oido Inc.
Bill Gone Johnaon
448-3672

ture. 446-3169, 3rd.
Oliue St .. Gallipolis, Oh.

·,

1972 12xS6 Kirkwuod M..,
bile Home. Waahor &amp; D..,e;:
Air Cond. t8300. Call 24119297 or448-1312.

out

travel regularty. Saturdays
and evenings to be ex-

MARCO
PALM &amp;
'
PSYCHE READING

' - - - - - - 3-26· 1 mo.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

25. _________

MISS THERESA

We Have the
Lowest Rttes

GARAGE

Will do painting interior or

·

excellent cond ., like brend
new, lots of extraa. Call

night, Pt. Pleo10nt. WVa .

PH. 949-3046

742-2328

Rt. I24,POJillfOJ Ohio

for Sale

quired; additional education

and

'DOZER · aj~CKHOE
' 'RECLAMATION loi(ORK
•01L FIELD SERVICES
•OUMP TRUCK IERVlCE
'CONCRETE WORK
•cUSTOM IUILT HOMES
'WATER. GAl.
OIL LINES

32 Mobile Home• · _

3 mo. old, can hold and pat preferred. Reliable tranaportatlon neceatary; muat
them. Call 448-268B.

Auction every Tuesday

AL TROMM

Roger Hysell

Hourly Patient Services At·
work with clients.
Mutt be Mnlitive to repro-

304-&amp;711-11047 afltr &amp;:00:

36 y11. txp. Call 448-3394
anytime.

tranopoaing. Call 814-992reoponaibiHty. High Bchool 6403.

Giveaway

cheau, beskete. dishes.
stone jera, antiques. gold

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

blltemente, done by job or

aaaumable loiR.

percent

hour. Free 111 . re11 . rates .

equel opportunity employer.

BACKHOE
WORK

ld.

Block &amp; Concreto work
patios. sidowalko. gara(ltle.

Two male golden hematert,

Rick

WRIT£SEL
ROOFING CO.

parta.

Pick up and tJttant to

mond . REWARD . ,Call
James Clatworthy, 992 3603.
Box 676 . Bidwell. Oh
46614, or cell 814-3B88196. Deadline for appli8
Public Sale
canta: 3-28·84. Buckeye
Community Service• is an
&amp; Auction

birthdeyt. enniverurilt,

Hours 8 to 6

repair.

supplies.

sonic ring , with smell die -

Middleport, OH.

PH. 992-5546

Help Wanted

Hom•• for Sele •

Remodeled 2 bedro-.
largo kltchtn. dining -~
Oenerel Heuting end Treah
room. bath. removal lorvico. Rollablo liuing
utility. All dropot tnd eu\oand dtpondoblt. Can 448- hllno. Front poroh end loC
31118 bat- 9 and &amp;.
aizo 411'x20S'. Well ~
Ia1ed end n- roof. ~
Koith'l Lawn Mowing • &amp;76-&amp;0110 or 8711·3431 . '
Trimming Service. Rollablo
and dependable. Rnoon•· Houaa u - Maoon. W. Ve..
blo rat01. Cen 44&amp;-31 &amp;9 or aix roome and bath, lot H !
211&amp;-&amp;2111 .
by 177', 1- 20'1. ~
304-773-&amp;90&amp; or 304-~
Work: Eloctrlcal, Remodel·
ing, Plumbing, • odd jobs. 6918 .
No matter how amall. Cell Sevon .,.ar old home . . . .
Mon -Thuro .. 1:00 -6:30, bedroom•. garden apoJ~
44&amp;-4&amp;09.
28011 Uncoln Auo., B~

trevel regularty . Saturdays

BOGGS

We do caket, piea. cookie•. for 1ny occeaion.

Cakn Topt end
Novelty Ceke Item• Are On
.
Dltplay

11

31

diploma or equivaltlncy re-

holldaya.

1,395.00

chine

18 Wanted to Do

exterior. Roof riJNiring and

SWEEPER and sowing ma-

3 1

'

ELLIS WELDING
&amp;SATELLITE
SERVICE
PH. 742-2534

Sl!rVILI",

queltlone aaked. Alao want

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

f lilpillyllll 'il l

300 Sava(ltl rifle stolen from
Henry Reaidonce. Tick Rid(ltl
Jld. Thurman. Ohio. No

Pomeroy, Oh. April 6, 7, &amp;
B. Special w-ond rates.

31. - - - - - 22. - - - - - '33.
34,

VINYL &amp;

ALUMINUM SIDING

RADIATOR

--'"'lines
-Stptic Systems

311. - - - - - - -

------.J''

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

316 7 mo

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

4·5-tft
'-!. ··

APPLIANCE

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN IAUNDIY
•GilSON REFRIGEIATOI
AIID OTHER IIWOII BIIMDS
We Htve A Full Time
Shop Technlcitn
Oil Duty

PARTS end 'II!RVICE
\

AND

-~..;._-

11.

-a

··Ill--...,_
~
,.,_.......
_......,

IU- ,..,..,.
Ul - l _ , . . .

141 - ~~~-­

Public Notice

'·
10.

Tamml Tlylor, Kenny Sue Tllomu, Terri
Tllornl, UW'l Vllllllfeler,
Ward,

-~

IM- c . -

IM - Uollf!
,,,,.,.,...,.
....... ...,.__.. ,.,_..,_Goo,
1 11 - .....W.
n•-•111 - c - .
:t:::.::t~~....... - 1-------- - - - - --l
.......
"
u,,.
,,_.. II••• - 1100
14 00
.....
" ~~­
U,. II IIWit•
11 00
'"'',..._,
JM - 0..,.. 0.

. . 52.761 .25

re-:

.

IPI - I't , . _ ,

andlltllonceo

243 Wilt 17 ~ ......,
Road and Br•dge
10011. l'rltlt
MIIIE$S,
76.839 27
fund ..
ZIP, SIZE, ltMI
Federal Reve nue
Easy chemises, dlllliniii)OIII- " Shanng fund .... 10.262.20
"Growing Up" by Russell Baker, wear-see 1nd sew 111 the Total .................... ,. 199.849.90
newest flllljons, lltld fol NEW
a Pultlzer prize winner tor dlstln· . SPRING-SUMMER
CAT~OG; O\Ier
gulshed commentary, was
100 styles plus Free Pottem
viewed by Mrs. Forrest Bachtel at Coupon. Send $2 for~~ now.
...
Wednesday'smeetlngoftheMlddJe. MI. CUff IDOlS_..
131-~ I W Qlilll
port Literary Club held at the hlme
UI·~~"-' of Mrs. Marvin Wilson
125-Nil121~~

111- ...........

IIJ - Ct~Mf~irl

10.91I 65

Ve h•ciP.
long se~ms shape a new fit Motor
Ltcense Tax
and flow fol Ihe one dress that
Fund .
11.441 69
can 1111Ioe a SN19f1. Pure flatlefY Gasoli ne Tax
in crepe, linen 111 1 knit-pictu&lt;e
Fund
22.8 19 96
it in white, black, 1 potent PIS!el. Road and Br•dge
Printed Pattern 4940: Misses
fund
. 4 I.395.30
Siies 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. 20. Federal Revenue
Size 12 (bust 34) takes 3 118
Shanng fund
7.911 .00
p&lt;ds 4~mch f1bric.
Total
.. 124.432.96
$2.75 ..... jlllllni.IW4 50$
TotalReceiptl

-~
An11 AMI PlllilfiU 1

..._ca.....,.

OMI.

2.351 20
75.4 16 94
Total Roceipta
General fund
40.865 OJ

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

•-c. ,..'"'

..._...
n -•- "-t•c-...•....-

Fund
GasohnP.
Tax Fund
Road and Bndge

Ca sh on

Hand

f ullu w.lnJit'lf'lllwn•• f',u ·hnn,.•• ..

7J.¥••••wo

LICP.OSA

Cuhllolence
Sheet. Decenobet
31 , 1983
ASSETS

__

7J,f""'tfllrW.

Public Notice

Salom Townohip
Melgo County

Two applications for membership were accepted when Columbia
Grange No. 2435 held Its March
meeting.
·
A membership · -drive meeting ·
was discussed. The community
service project was also discussed,
and baked goods wUl be furnished
for a sale planned by the Columbia .
Township Fire Department AuxilIary on March 24.
Seventeen members and guests
had potluck supper preceding the
business meeting. The All-County
Grange banquet wUl be held at
Salisbury School near Pomeroy on
AprU 13 and tickets are being sold
by Grange Masters In the county.

71·--··

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

011nlfi t' fl IN/If'' rm'1~r lh ,.

··. _ .. ··",..·.-............
··II·CI. Y¥111 .... 1.._.,.

........ '*."'

,,........
........_,.o...

All

~.,.,..,

•

S&amp;WTV

Mercer Conveleecence
Home. 11 y11r1 ••perien~ .

9

or Information on Model 89

...

,,u ..........
.................
,,......,.L_
...................." .......................
................
..._...__,
._.. .........
,,........... ...
,
....
,,.,_,.,
.... .....................,....
,..._..,...,.
,

The Daily Sentinel , Pag1 7.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

---------------~--,_lL__· l_~___ii_l__l .____~~__~__~-~---~--Jr"\T
_____ii__~--~--~~-----------------4;~~~:~;;::;;;;~~

~­

I ·CoNI • IT_o..,... IR - -1
'"""..._
._. ... _ _ l

•

Monday, Ma~ 26, 1984

Ill c:..t ll. ' -· 01111417H

In her review, Mrs. Bachtel noted
that Baker Was a reporter tor the
Usa Rider, Regina Smith. Gary RUe, Sherry
Ritchie, Llrlda Stewart, Marvin Slllel. Alllon Baltimore Sun and the New York !
Tromm, Hay TryaU, Robyn Venoy, BW
Weaver, Brian Wlllla, Paul Will, James Times. She said 1n hiB book he 1
\VhlltlngtOQ.
shared memories ot growing up J
Twellth IIJ'IIde - Sherry Arnold, Dana
with a very determined mother ,
Bentz, TamfiiY Black, VIcki Bowen, Moran ·
cale, Rollin CampbeU, !&gt;aula car~ Monte . who's p i wu to lnstDl "gUmption"
Chapman, Charles Coyle, Damy Dovis,
In her son. and the expel lencei or a ·
catherine Deon, Pl!nny Dewf1w'll, Kelly variety ot relatives living together,
Clark,. MeUndl Goble, Tracy llennan,
ae.rp - . Maly JIICOI&gt;o, Jay Evllll, Mrs. DwlghtWall!lce~the
John Follrod, 11m ~. Todd ~.
reviewer.
Kalth Klmol, Charles KDapp, ~ Knapp,

--

. I. •. ..Jt:..t..

Stewardship secretary, will have a
display of Lutheran World ReUet
projects and quilts. Each auxiliary
Is to bring a completed L.W.R.
Sewing Kit.
Other officers of the Trt·state
ALCW are: president, Mrs. Janet
Grueser, Logan; vice president,
Mrs. Nancy Hoffman, North
Berne; secretary, Mrs. Brenda
Wilkins, Circleville; treasurer,
Mrs. Janice Barrett, Thornville.
Luncheon reservations are due
March 29 through each "local"
church reservation chairperson.
Adults are $3.50 and nursery·
preschool children $2. Registration
and coffee hour begins at 9:15a.m .
Convention sessions are 10 a.m. to 3
p.m.

a Master of Divinity degree trom
Luther Theological ·Seminary, St.
Paul, Minn. In 1981.
The Rev. Sharon Hlltlger, a 1m
graduate of Trinity Lutheran Semi·
nary and former pastor of New
Lebanon Lutheran Church, June·
tlon City, wUl bring the message
and be the celebrant at the
community service In the
afternoon.
Other participants for the day
will Include Mrs. Neva Korn of
Anna, Ohio, District ALCW president; Rev. Nelson Meyer ot
Columbus, Lutheran Social Service
Representative; Mrs. Margaret
Primmer ot Logan, president of the
Tri-State Conference of Ohio Dis·
trtct of the American Lutheran
Church. Special music · will be
tumlshed by Mrs. Barbara Koehler
and Mrs. MUda Meyer wUI serve as
organist.
Mrs. Georgia Dore, Tri-State
Education Secretary, wUI have a
display of books and other supplies
from Augsburg Publishing House.
Mrs. Sue Ellen Stnunons, Tri-State

The Daily Sentinel

tients, provided by volunteers who
take them to and from doctors'
offices, clinics and hospitals for
POMEROY - An academic
diagnosis, treatment and rehabUI· scholarship will be 'awarded to the
tatlon; VIsitor rehabUltatlon pro- , son or daughter or grandchlld of a
grams that offer patients a one-to- Pomeroy High School graduate
one relationship with someone who again this year by the Pomeroy
has been through and coped
Alumni Association.
successfully with their specltlc kind
Applicants are to send a resume
of cancer;
which Is to Include grades, activiRehabilitation through self-help ties, nannes of parents, a picture,
and support groups that serve a and Information on where they plan
variety of special needs of cancer
to attend school. Deadline for
patients and their families; and
receipt of applications Is May 12.
Patient-family education through
Send thenn to the Pomeroy Alumni
organized programs that bring Association, Box 2m, Pomeroy.
health professionals Into direct
Ohio, 45700.
contact with patients and their
families In small groups, and
through a variety of educational
materials.
1f ACS can help you, call 992-?104
and ask for Teresa Contos.

Carpenter happenings
~ . :Qale

Monday, March 26, 1984

2 atory houM on large lot.
Broad Run Road. 7 room
bath ' . 'h 132.000. 304·
Interior and exterior paint- BB2·2407.
ing. undblaatlng, water·
blaatlng, paper .hanging and 6 room. good location. nice
dryw•ll flniahlng. Free tati- yerd, full baoemont, 8 pet.
ma1tl, fully lnaured. Call anum. Farmora Home Ad·
S14·949-2SBS .
mlnlatratlon loan to qualified
buyer. Homeatnd Realty.
Botrd, room. &amp; laundry for 304·8B2-2406 or 304·&amp;711·
eldorty In my home. Call &amp;o40 or 304·BB2·2447.
&amp;14·992-&amp;022.
Owntr- tr•naftrred, must
Harper'a Adult Care Home aell, excellent condition
. has a vtcency for another tas,ooo.- 11 1.000 down.
reoldont, eldorfy poraon. Call Aaaumt 8\7 Pc1. loan. 304·
304·&amp;71·1293.
&amp;76·11129 after &amp;:00.

36 acreo off Rt. 688. bahl~jl
farm . t37,000 llrm. C.all
446-215B.

For aale or trade 1 0 act"

with 2 mobile homes. Ill
Cheater area . Coli &amp;14·9~4174.
.

36

Real Estate
Wanted

...

~- :

.

...
House tht1 nHdl rtptir '1ft
City of Gtllipolia or Tolflj!F
ahlpa of City, Green , Of
Gallipolis. Write to P.O. Box
&amp;33. Gallipolis, Oh 411831 .
~

..

�. '
Page-8- The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

54 Mite. Merchandl•e

They'll Do It Every Time

Knouff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12" -22" atockod
In yord . HEAP vender.
prompt delivery. e 1 4-2588245.

Small 4 roomo &amp; both.
furnished. loc. 736 roar 3rd.
Avo.. Golllpollo. Call 4483870 or 448-1340.

Fruit
Vegetablee

2 bdr. house, full buement.
car peted . gas furnance ,
adults, no pets \ Call 446·

v. horse-.mot or and grinder
mounted on table , Fatso
stove, Hi barn sash win·

2 or 3 bdr. house, S260 rent ,

outlot, 18' wood boot red wood and fur new, turning
plow good as new. Call

814-211 8-1661 .
Case 310 front endloadftr

secluded. $260. mth . Call
614 -692-4624 . evenings.
day1imo. 814-692-4471 .

dozer. $4,000. Call 814268-1427.

Small house
for rent.
Refer- r'-----------,.----------~
onceo
&amp; Adults.
304-8761385.
44
51 Household Goods
Apartment

once Required . 304-6761962.

Two bedroom cottage, new
carpet, good location in
town. 304-676-7634 after
5.
Charming 2 otory. 2 bed rooms, 1 112 baths house,
fireplace. river view. garage,
$200 . month , 304-BB22836.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. trailers. no city tlxea.
beautiful river view in kanauga. Fosters Trailer Park.
Call446 -1802.
2 &amp; 4 bdr. mobile home. Coli
446-060B or 448-1809 .

One bedroom, trailer, Eureka.
Ref. and Dop.
614-266-1629.
Vary nice, 1 bdr. mobile
home, completely turn ..
new gas fumance 8t air

cond ., patio with awning
and off ltreet parking . Excellent location. in Golllpolio
city. Muot have dap. &amp; ref.
Call448-4169 .
For rent mobile home. Call

448-0768.
12x80, 2 bdr. mobile home.
dryer

hookup. On Rt. 3&amp;, rof. &amp;
dop. Coli 876-9780 or 4484389 .
2 bdr. mobile home 6 mi.

from town, adults, no pets.
Call448 -1168.
2 bdr. trailer on priv1te lot,
gordon opot, •176 mo. Call
448-9384.

for Rent
---------

stoning at $167 for one $399. bunk bedo complete
bedroom end $193 per with bunkieo $199. 2 piece
month for two bedroom, antron livingroom

with '200 depoait located $199. antron recliners $99,
near Foodland and Spring other recliners 880. mapte
Velley Plaza. pool and TV dinette oeto $179. box
ant . Call 446· 2745 or leave springs It mattre11 twin or
moosaga.
full $100 10.1 regular-firm

$120. maple dinette chalro
Furnished apt .. 1 bdr .• 920 $36, woah otondo U4.
4th Ave.. Gallipolis. e226 maple rockoro $69. 7 piece
utilitieo pd. . Adulto. Call chrome dinette oat $149, 6
piece dinette set 899, used
448-4418 after 7 PM .
Small efficiency apart., central air 8t heat, 1 profeasional

bedroom suites, refrigera·
tors, ranges, cheat. drenera.
wringer washers, TV's, dry-

2 bdr. apts.. newly decorated, utilities part. paid.
exc. location. Medium income families. A· One Real
Estate. Carol Yaeger Broker.

Howard L. Yeager Ill oalaomon. Call 304-876-5104 or
304-876-5388.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker. otto·
man, 3 tables. lextra heavy

by Frontier!. $886. Sofa.
choir and lovoaaot. $276 .
Sofas and chairs priced from

$286. to $896. Tables. $46
and up to •126. Hide-abedo, $440. and up to
Unfurniahttd 2 BR in Crown .$626 .. Recliners. $176. to
$375 .. Lampo from $28 . to
City. 268 - ~620 .
$76 .5 pc. dinettes from
·New 2 bdr. apts .. unfur .• $99 .. to 436. 7 pc . $189
equip. kitchen . 5 miles out and up. Wood table with si•
Rt. 141 . $226. Call 448- choiro $425 to $745: Deok
$110 up to $226. Hutchoo.
4477 or 448-388B .
$560. end up, maple or pine
61 3'h Third AVo .. Gollipolis. flnioh . Bunk bed complete
3 rm . apt .. $135 mo. plus with mattreaua, 8250. and
utilitiao, dep. req . Call 448- up to $396. Baby bedo.
4222,9AM -5PM .
1 10. Mattresses or box

*
springs, full or twin, 858.,

1 bdr. turn. apt .• no children .
no pets. 6 mos. lease, 8 50

dep., $190 mo.. utilities
paid. Call 448-3887 after 6.
1 · family unfurn.. 3 bdr .,
stove, refrig.. 8250 mo.,

plus 1 mo. dop. no pall. Call
446-3786.

nice, ground floor , with
covered patio, has range and
washer·dryer hookup. See

firm. UB. and $78 . Queen
oeto. $195. 4 dr . cheoto.
•42 . 6 dr. cheota, $64. Bad ·
!romeo, $20.and $26., 10
gun • Gun cabinets, *360.
Gas or electric ranges 8375.

Boby mottreooes. $26 &amp;
$35, bed !romeo $20. $26,
&amp; $30, king frame $60.
Good selection of bedroom
suites. cedar cheats .
rockers, metal cabinets ,
swivel rockers .
Used Furniture · • Bar It 2
stools. ranges. chairs. d,Y·
era. refrigerators and TV's. 3
miles out Bulaville Rd . Open
9am to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri.,

home. approximately 5 mile

Earl Tope, 448-0332 days.
448-0181 avo. &amp; Sun.

9am to 5pm, Sat.
614-448-0322

from Middleport or Pomeroy . Call 992-6B68.

Furn . efficiency opt. •186

TV &amp; Applianceo. 827 Third

12x80 2 bedroom mobile

occauorioo. Call 814-2469248 .
Slender Cycle by Vita molter
$80.00. 2 Buoott Early
American end tabloo $30.00
each. . 2 Early American
Iampo $16 each. 246-9252 .
Mobile home suppliea: non toxic antifraez•-• 6 .50 per

gollon. Woter hooting olementa. water heater. tteps.
windows, doors, faucets,
breakers. etc . HotPoint
heavy-duty electric dryers.

thio month only

$279 .

AcCOIIOry Store. 900. Eoot
Main St.. old Bookmobile

Approximately 300 ft. walnut lumber. 304-876-3091 .

55

Building Supplies

·Building materials
block. brick. sewer pipes,
windows . lintels . etc .
Claude Winters , Rio Grande,

0 . Call814 -246-6121 .
Shipped Direct - lowest
Cost, You build it or we will ,
24x48 garage or barn

•1 .860. 2 bdr. wllderne11
home $3,960. See our
model. 1-814-888-7311 .
Now

open

for

buaineu.

Mountain State Block. Rt.
33, Now Hoven. Complete
masonry auppliea, 4 ' '. 8 ' '.
12" block. Delivery 11rvico.
Phone dey 304-882-2222.
evening 882-3239.

56

Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities .

AKC Doberman puppioo:
Stud Service. Call814-4487796.

Englloh Cocker Spaniel pupploo. Call 614-388&amp;790.

12x80

2

home.

Racine area. Call

including utilities. Equal
Housing Opportunity. Con·

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Dragonwynd

pliances, Upper River Rd.

WITH OPTION TO BUY. 14'
all electric mobile
home, HHing on lot ready to

wide

move Into. $200.00 down
.176 .00 MONTH . 304 &amp;78-2711 .

46

Furnished Rooms

For rant Sleeping Rooms
and

light

house

keeping

2 bedroom unfurnished, pri vate lot. in Burdette Addn.

rooms. Perf&lt; Central Hotel.
Call 814-448-0766.

$176 pluo utilities. dopoo~
and roforencoo . 304-8762484.

Sleeping room $116. utili-

Mobile homo for rent. 3
bedroom, unfurnished,
C:lmp Conley t220. per
month. 304-876-1371 or
876-3812 .

43

Farms for Rent

ties paid. Share bath, male

only. Range &amp; rofrig . 919
2nd. Avo.. Gallipolio. Call
448-4418 after 7 PM .

46

I

I

boolde Stone Croat Motel.
814-448-7398.

53

Antiques

1- - - - - - - - - Oak bed. setof chairs. wash

stond. old cupboard. child's
deok, stone jar. 814-2469446.

54

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Perf&lt;. Route 33. North of

Chairs. plus many more
more antique•. misc. Paul

47

Wanted to Rent

Conkel, Rt. 7. Tupper Ploino.
267 Roberts Mauser action
rifle ;includea scope and

oling; UOO. or boot offer.
Coli. 814-986-3688.

1989 Volkawogon. *250.
Coli 448-2354.

Ferguson

baler.

Livestock

Sove 1 0% on Chlcko. Food.
Supplloo. Order by Morch
31 . Booo Agri-Center. Inc.
Call 448-2483.
large section of aggressive
rugged Duroc boara. Roger

Bently. Sobino. Oh 513684-2398.
Stud colt. 1 yr. old In Moy.
Port quortor horoo &amp; oppolooso. Coll814-742 ·2287.
9yr. old gelding pony. •100
or B.D .. gentle with children . 1 polr of boorded
turf&lt;oya $30 for polr. Homo
Ute EZ choln OIW, 1 e ln. bor,
aoklng •1 00 or BoO. Coli
814-843-5288 or 8436231 .
23 largo AI Bred Colfhood
vaccinetion. HolattHn heHera

freohen loto April. 304-2732848.

64

Hay

8t

Grain

Northup King com. olfolfo &amp;
other farm

oHdo. Coli Voughn Toylor.
814-245-6084 or 814-2415816 after 8PM.
- - - - - - - -leFor oole. Good condition
hay. •1 ,60 a bolo. Coli
814-992•7201 .
Ground ear corn $8.50 por
304-876-3308. No Sundoy

Kannelo. AKC Chow pupplea, CFA Himalayan. Per-

sales.

alan and Slameae kittens.

Mixed Hay, $1 .50 bole,
304-876-5678.

Coli 814-448-3B44 after 8.
Regioterod female Pit Bull.

For oala 700 buohelaorcorn.
304-B82-2882.

Pit Bull. Call 448-3252.
Black Labrodor puppies. 6
wko. old, 3 mole. 8 female.
mother AKC Labrador. father mixed. $20 ea. Call
814-268-1379.
2'h yr .. house broken.
448-4678.

•as.

----~--- lc -

Roglotored blonde femole
Cocker Spaniol puppy .
Ready 4-18-84. Depooit
holdo. No chacko. Coli 814992-2807.

1979 Cougor XR7.
448-3709.

Trans~urlaltun
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH pold ior laio
model uoed cora. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eutorn Ave.. Galllpollo. Coli
814-448-2282.

72

truck• for Sele

1974 0100 Dodge, 8 cyl .. 3
apd., axe. con. No rult.
Aoklng •en. Con 814-88237118 or 814-742-2143.

1988 Chevrolet hell ton
pickup truck. good oond ..
•no.oo. 304-878-8304.

1982 Ford EXP. outo .. PI,
AM -FM rodlo, tope dock
•4.998. Coli 448-3831.
1878 Ch-tto PS. Pl. 4
opd. trona. good cond ..
•1.995 . Coli 814-318 9905 or 814-387-7524.
1971 vw 8oedo. good
cond .. •sse. Coli 814-3189905 or 814-387-7524.
1878 Monzo 2 plua 2, oxc.
cond .. v-e engine, Pl. Pl.
AM -FM radio . • 1.715. Cell
814-388-8905 orB14-3877624.
1977 Mercury Monorch PS.
P8, olr cQnd .. 302 V-8. good
goo mlloogo, nc. cond.
•1.885 . Coli 814- 3889905 or 814-387' 7524.

73

Vent

8t 4

W .O .

1910 Chevy lcotldolo 4x4.
41.000 mlfoe. ahort bod,
te.700. Cell 448-2107 or
814-387-0107.
1989 VW window von, low
mlfn. •8oo. CoR 814-387nllo.
1151 Wllly'o Jeep. oxcollont
llhopo, 38' gumbo monitor
muddor tlroa. Nko n -.
•1 .000. Coli 814-448 0319.
1979 Joop Ronogodo CJ -7 .
Chertoo Wildermuth. Coli
814-882-5821 .
19711 Ford 4 WD 24.000
mMn. loaded. mull 111 to
opprrocloto. •8.000 firm .
448 -1387 or 814-448 1084.

74

1977 Pontioc Venturo PS.
PI, olr cond .. good cond ..
V-8" onalno. n,780. Coli
814-386-9905 or 814-3877524.

Brondo now flborglo11 motoroycfo 11ckllo ~·· Olillng
ohoep. Coli 441-•411.

1974 Ford Oren Tortno EHto,
PS. PI, outo .. rune good.
Con bo-ot 141 Gorfiold
Ext. oftor 5 p.m.

ceeeette . crulae, new

Wonted to Trede; 1973
Chevy PU. 3 quortor ton. 4
opd .. for omollor outo PU or
cor of equol vofuo or will toke
$8110 cooh. 379-2379.

1981 Hondo CM 400 .Jotom. IIIIa n~w . 8000 mllea.
Coli 448-4408 oftor 8 :00.

rubber. low mlloo, oxcollont
condition. Col 448-4408
oftor 1 :00.

•eoo.

19n T-Bird, om-fm radio,
pa, pb, now tlroa, croll wire
apoko rtma. Exc. ohepo .
$2300 or 8.0 . Coif 814982-8922.
'80 Chevy Chovotto 4-door
hotchbock white. 4 opnd,
cloon.. 0111 or trodo. 3048711-8218.

Ridden clnly • f - tlmoa.
1982 Kow11okl KOBO.
•480.; 18n Kowulkl400,
atroot bike. 1.1100 mlloa.
•100. or boot offer on both
bikoo. Col 892-5188 or
814-1188-3588.
o
. t981 Yomohl VIrgo 780.
Beers dune cort 5 hp, roor
windows Louver to fit '82 or
'84 Comoro or Flroblrd.
Novor uood . 304.- 1782119.

76

1974 DodgoChorgor, S.E, 1
Owner. 304-875-2192.
1971 Ford atotlon $7110.
good cond. 1910 Hondo
motorcycle·•no. 304-8781293.
.

Boateand
Motort for Sale

Apartment
for Rent

Rivoroide Apto. Middiaport.
rates for Senior
Cltrzono. •130. Equal Houolng Opportunltioo . 814992-7721 .
S~:»ecial

2 room efflclancy oportmant
Middleport. coll304-8822688.
i~

c..,.ft

Chrto
cobln cruloor 38
ft. with troHor, •12.1100
Coli Bt4-245-5032 or 304878-1731 oftor BPM.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homoa. houooo. Pt. Plouont
end · Golllpolia. 814-4488221 .

AKC Englioh Springer Spochampion bloodline. Ready·
now. $160. Ripley 304372-2173.

76 · ·Auto Part•
8t Acce11orl81

·

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Aportmonto now ovellollto to
oldorty • dioobled with on
Income of lou then
· n 2.300. Rontlnt for 30
porcont of odjuotod income.
Phon• 304-875-8171.
·Furnlahoct oportmont, u1HItloo pold. No pota. Clooo to
hOIIPitol: 304-875-2217.

'

Fumlohod oportmont, utHItioo pold. Adulto only, no
peto. Clooo to hoopltol,
304-875-2257.

lilly Loo'a Tlroo end f!ettory
loin, N- end uoocl tlroa,
oleo, tjro ropotro. 1503 Jof·
f - n Avo. Point Plee11n1.
304·1711·5405. N- open
24 hra. 1 doy, .mochonlc on
duty.

For Lease

Land for leaoe, 80 ecru,
currently hay field •. reason•·

ble. CoH evanlngo, 814-5924624; daytime, 814-6924471 .

72

Uood Bot'kflno oofo end
chelr. ~nd ond.coffoa tobleo.
304-875-1371. .
Cuotom drapn 1" venotio!l
bNnda, ...,..col bUndo, Ro·
men · oh•deo. lomploo
ohown et your homo. Froo

oottmoto. P. A. Soyro. 304'
458-1018. .

6fd buffet with toblo end 4
cholro, otorogo coblnot, poll
bolt mo111eor. 304·812·
2882.
'

'

Wurtltzor funmokor. two

cuetom dlgltel.muaic eYatMn

orglin. Nko now, 11011, good
buy. 304-875-1882.

..
,.

Truc!lt for Sale.

N- !nick t.ncloro • doors.

'POLITICIANS Seve up to
40% on Union Modo Advertlalng Spocioltln. H. D.
61 Household G0od1 "Som" Somerville falnco
1984} Phone 875-3334 Pt.
Borgolno Trode Center. Plao11nt. Olopfey Army SurFurn. • oppf. outlot. Ko· . pluo, Eoot - Rovenowood,
nougo•. Ohio.
Wootcanda .•

1

Motorola . Ouezar . and ,

houoo cello. Coli 304-178- •
2381 or 814-448-24114.

Four 14" Chevy rolloy
whoolo •80 .. '0ne 011 aupor
;port hub cope. 304-8713135.

Chevy fondero . . 4'.15.
C'*!Y cloori · t1 711. Ford
fenclora •11. Col 814-218-

71

1210.

E • V Body I hop .Cullom

Auto Ritpelr

RINGLE 'S SERVICE expertoncod taoflng. Including
hot tor oppllcotlon, corpon tor, oloctrlclon. muon. Coli
304-8711 -2088 or 875 4580.

ANNIE

.. \'£'~ A60UT
DONE PULLIN'

5!1E 00£5 SEEM
INTEIIES TEl? IN THE
DEGTIIUCTION OF
RUNE'S COTTAOE.

Wotor Wollo. Commorclol
end Domootlc. Teat hot..·.
Pumpo Soloo end S..,lco.
304-895-3B02.

topper,/.

·a -

J8

IGALUPEj
rxr

IPAMENDI

WHAi 5HE WAS
ALWAYS Lee~ OF
WHEN !SHE "AiEP
!HAT COP.

1

(]

Now anange the circled letters to
fonn the surprise answer. as sug·
gosted by the aboVe cartoon

(I) Dr. Souoo on tho Loose
An animated tale about
(Answers torno&lt;row)
snobbery,
stubbornness
Jumbles: MOUND WHINE GARISH FUTURE
and prejudice.
Saturday'•
Answer: What a shotgun wedding is a case of(J) Here Come tho llridOI
WIFE OR DEATH
(]) SportoContor
(J) Hogon'o Heron
(I) Entertainment Tonight
(I) Chorllo'o Antolo
Jo6nth1Jurnbll Loletl Fenaub.,.,,_.. llaeWII.won:Jkller ~...,mont\.
Few tr. aamp6H wrt1t to: .lutnbee I.Olfllf"' Fan eaub. cJo thh newap~pw, 101: 5241 ,
D (I) Wheel of Fortune
0r1ndCentr1l Station. N. . Yoril, N.Y. 10113. 1~ ,ourntrnt, ICkhM 1nddpcode.
(I) 1Dl Mec:Neii/Lehrar
Newahour
®Newa
• !lJ People' a Court
• Jefferson•
7:30 • Cll Tic Toe Dough
Cll Froggle Rock
(!) lnoldo llnebell
(J) Sanford and Son
(I) D (I) FamilY Feud
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
® Wheel of Fortune
•
!lJ Entertainment
Tonight
• One Day ot o Time
8:00 • Cll (I) TV' o Blooporo
and Proc:ticlf Jokn Dick
defended as West. South
Clarf&lt; and Ed McMahon host
must have been a no-trumthis look at scenes never in·
pcmaniac because be didn't
tended for viewing by an aubother to show his spades.
dience . (60 min.)
NORTH
Probably he was afraid that
(I) Not Necaoaarily The
+H3 2
a two-spade bid would get
Nowa
his partner to bid no-trump.
(I) MOVIE: 'Oh, Godl'
tAJI0 7S4
So South just jumped to
(J) I Spy
+Q4
three no-trump. I didn't
(]) USFL Footboll: BlrWEST
EAST
choose the best lead. I simmlnghlm It Tampo Boy
+10 4
+Q6S
ply opened my f~·best
(J) MOVIE: 'The Beguiled'
• A 106
.97S4
club. Declarer hopped up
(I) • (jJ Au1omln Autotu
tK98
with dummy's queen, led a
man's programming is
+KJIS32
+1076
influenced by watching
spade to his ace and led his
SOUTH
'Nasty Eddie' movies leadqueen of diamonds for a
+AK87
ing him to believe he is the
finesse. My partner, who
.KQJ8 3
·meanest cop in the workt .·
also bappe~ to be my
tQ%
(60 min .}
father, followed with his
(I) ® Scorecrow and
+A9
lowest diamond."
Mrs. King
Oswald: " That was an
Vulnerable:
Both
(I)IDJ Frontline 'The Mind
automatic play. It just could
Dealer:
South
of a Murderer. Pan II .· Tanot lose. In fact if I bad held
night's program raises serw..t Nort~ Eut
only two diamonds, I would
ious questions about the use
have ducked and gambled.
of psychiatric evidence in
z+
2t
Pass
Anyway, declarer repo:ated
criminal proceedings. (60
Pass
Pass
Pass
the
finesse. I was in w1th rriy
min.}]Ciosed Captioned]
king and had no problem
18 MOVIE: 'Dummy'
leading a second club. Now
Opening lead: +s
8:30 (I) MOVIE: 'True ConfesSouth cashed his king of
siona'
spades to try to drop the
9 :00 D (I) (I) MOVIE: 'Only
queen. When that play
When I Laugh'
failed, he led his king of
(J) 700 Club
By Olwlld Jocoby
hearts."
(I) • (jJ MOVIE; 'Best
aDd Jomeo Jecoby
Jim: " Naturally enough, I
Kept Secreta'
(I) ® Keto • Allie EmOswald: "One of the most took my ace and my clubs to
ma· s school project about
important principles of set declarer two tricks."
how divorce has changed
Oswald: "As I said at the
bridge Is that when you have
her family l~e " throws the
start,
don't ever overlook
spades, you should try to bid
household into an uproar.
the spade suit."
them."
(I) ® Shokoopooro Ploya
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
Jim: "Here is a hand that I
'Coriolanus.' Alan Howard
and Irene Worth star in this
presentation of Shakespeare· s
most
political
drama. (2 hrs.. 30 min.}
(Closed Captioned]
9:30 D Cll ® Newllan When
some beauty contestants
come to the Inn, Stephanie
by THOMAS JOSEPH
turns green with envy.
10:00 (I) MOVIE: 'The Deep'
ACROSS
4 Attempt
D (I) ® Cegnoy &amp; Lacey
1 For fear that 5 Tourist's
A patrolman's strike forces
5 Headwear
neckwear
Chris and Mary Beth back
8
Incessant
6
Lessen
into uniform . (60 min.}
9 Early
7 Barrie's
IBINN Newa
calculator
Peter
10 :111 (I) TBS Evening News
13 Extreme!y
10 Role for
10:30 (I) H80 Comint Attroc tiono
14 Peggy Lee
Errol Flynn
(J) Shirley &amp; Pat Boone
. recording
11 Plagued
18 Love Amertcon Style
15 Work unit
by doubts
11 :00 D Cll Cll D Cll
G2l
Yesterday's Answers
16
Vietnamese
12
New Orleans
Newa
24 Region
30 Stocking
holiday
pro team
'Tender
(I)
MOVIE:
o!Spain
17 Greek letter 16 British
thread
Mercies'
(J) Another Ufe
31 Take up
18 Unseemly sight conservative 25 FHther,
(]) SportoConter
in France
membership
20 Cask
19 Faction
(J) All In tho Family
21 Grass genus 2Z Malay vessel 27 Type of bet 36 Mercator's ..
(I) Nawa/Sporto/Woother
29 Harbor
guide
2Z Sunder
23 Chiquita's
• Benny Hill Show
or Bailey 37 Hasten
23 Game like
offering
1 1:1 5 (]) ESPN't SportoLook
hockey
11 :30 D (I) (I) Tonight Show
(J) Best of Groucho
25 Snoops
(I) Cottlns
26 Commedia
(I) Bonny Hill Show
deU'D (I) Hart to Hart Jennifer
27
Mexican
discovers that her father is a
laborer
government · agent who is
28 No vote
targeted for murder. (Rl (60
29 Allegory
min.}
(I) Latenight Americo
32 Past
® All In the Family
33 Before
D !lJ Nlghtline
34 Author
• Twilight Zone·
35 Typical
11 :45 (]) USFL Football: 8ir37 Innkeeper
mlnghlm at Tampo Bey
12:00 (I) Scondolo This adult var38 Turkish city
iety show is named for its
39 Myth. princess
wild fictional after-hours
40 Use a skill
1--1----1club featuring music, magic
41 Gennan river
and comedy spiced with a
DOWN
dash of the erotic . Hosted.
I Embankment
by comic magician Harry
Anderson .
2Ail
(J) Buma Allen
3 Role lor
(I) Portrait of Amerlco:
Gary Cooper
New Mexico
(I) Nlghdlne
® MOVIE: 'Tho Odd
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ~ Here's how to work It:·
C!luplo'
AXYDLBAAXR
. •
D !lJ Eye on Hollywood
•ounomolce
II LONGFELLOW
12:30
(I) we Night with
One letter simply atands for another In this sample A io .
Devkl Lottormon
used for the three L 's, X for lhe two
r tc. Single letters . . Cll Oti Locotlon: Cortin It
apostrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are all ·
Comoglo
hinll. Eoch day the code letters are d1f!errnt.
(J) Jeclt Benny Show
(I) E_ye on Hollywood
CRYPTOQUOTES
D (I) Columbo ·An E•erci•• In Fatality.' A physical
Q
ATPGF
QKV
QGFPA
fitness zealot murders his
YQ
business associate when
the friend is close to revealQV
ATPGF :
QHBQO - V MP
QOP
Ing his fraudulent business
practi&lt;:os. (R} (90 min.l
QV
OPGH
GMVQOPH
GMS
D()INewa
·~ ~
1 :00 (J) I Merrlod·Jolln
OPMHU
SGIYS
QOVHPGB
(J) MOVIE: 'Birds Do It'
(I) Enteruinmont Tonight
Yesterdly's Cryploqaole: I DON'T MAKE JOKES. I JUST ~
.()ICNN Heedllno N_.
WATCH THE- - GOVERNMENT AND REPORT Tllf-:;
t :15 (J) MOVIE: 'Tho Heppy
FACl'S.-WlLLROOERS
·•
Hooker'

•z

001'/N THAT

HOUGE.

SAHie&gt; •.

GET your corpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Wotor romovol.
fumlturo cloonlng. !roe ootl motu. 304-8711-2295.

a

Storf&lt;'a Tree &amp; Lawn Core.
landiCiping potlo. owning
end undorponnlng. Bockhoo
wcrf&lt;. For complete lown
core. Coli 304-578 -2010.
lnourad.
WHI'-1 D''IOU SUPPOSE
HAPPENED TO OOOLA,
WI ZER?

Plumbing
Heating

8t

a

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Golllpollo. Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 or
e 14-44&amp;-44 77
GASOLINE ALLEY
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Rt. 1, Box 3511. Golll- ,
polio. Coif 814-387-0578 .

83

And brouqht They need
retired evenJbodY in a bunch help! That's
of younq why they
with any brains!
nincompoops! cal,.,"!.~
Ph~llis;they've

Excavating

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

~~.,.,..

'

DOZER WORK By Tod .:
Henne, pondo. dltchoa. "
booomonto. etc. Coli 814- '
448-4907. Corter &amp; Evono
Tronoportotlon.
Good-1 Excovotlng. bootmenta, footers, drtveweye.

1

11ptlc tonka. fondocoplng .
Coli onytlme 814 -448 4537. Jomoo L. Dovlaon. Jr. •
owner.

WINNIE

Water Linee , Footers ,

EXCUSE ME, MR5.
YOUR HU5!MND'5
TO 5EE YOU. SHE
1/RGENr/

Drolno. All klndo of Ditching.
Rutlond, Oh . e 14-7 42 2£"13.
Dotaon'a Tree Service. In·
aured - Free Eotlmoto. 304578-2897.

_______
8t

Electrical
Refrigeration

.,

Puqualo Electric Co. all"•·-·
phooea of electric work, all
guaranteed.

Aerlel

SEWING Mochlno rapolro,
11rvlca. Authorized &amp;Ingar
Soleo &amp;' Service Shorpon
Sci'uoro . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 814-992-2284.

BARNEY

0 . Day Rofrlgtrotlon Sa leo Profo11ionol oervlco for opplloncu. halting, cooling ·
end electric. Sell end lnotafl '
Amono, Glboon. Kitchen
Ald. Reoldentlol, C.ommerclol. lnduotrlol. 304-8764B18:

86

"* g(

®.

------------------~
J .A.R . Conotructlon Co .

a.

General Hauling •

Nood oomethlng houlod
owoy or aomothlng moved? '
Wo'fl do It, Coli 448-3159 _;
between 8 end e.

•Ill

o·;.

Jomoo Boyo Woter Sorvico. '·
Coli 814-2118-1141 or 814448-1178 . or 814-448 7911 .
...._
,.

PEANt:TS

__ ___

--~
' - ...1......._ _......._ ,1pointing, • A·C woldlnl.
1811 C-tO Cllovy,P!Obp I
Crook lid, 44 bod, with
ovl., 8304.
·
oxc. oond., CeU ·e1 -241·
JfMI . WATER SERIIICE.
55511.
. .
C~ll Jim Lenior, 304-575-:
Motort H0rn,1
7397.
.
.
'
1974 Ford MOOY.ton 302
8t
C.mpet'e
.
.
AT. Pl. Pi. t1,boo. 'Coli
. '
814·251-11111-..lgno til '
87 Upholttery
.
IURDUTE CAIIiiPI!II
7:30.
,
.
. IAUI • IIIIVICI, U.l.
1979 Ford F-tOO Lortot PI, .Rt. 10, Coallllllo; C)h 11"'
Till iTATI
'
Pl. llroond .. AM·fM rodlo, '117-1118.
. UPHOLITIIIY I HOP ;
o10. oond. 13,485. Coli
'
, 1113 leo. A.... Golllll'llflel
114-381·81105orl14-317- 1872,....., 22ft.• eloope
114-441-7133 or~14·441·l'
7524.
· ··a, A· 1 001111. Coll441·9111.
1\133.

ft.

t I I ....

tJ

Missing the boat

Fetty Troe Trtmmlng. otump •
romovof . Coil 304-875 1331 .

82

() I

BRIDGE

..- uDw:,_, I A&lt;!. I

':--C::~rr:

RON'S Tolovlolon llorvlce. ·
lpocloNzlng In Zenith end ,

work

niel puppies, liver and white.

Truck Crop Land for rent.
Coll814-843-6186. ofter 9
p.m.

Froe oltlmotoo. Coli 814892-2752 .

truck rentof. 814 -448 4088.
.

Rural 3 bdr. house to rent or
option. Working couple with
family good renters. farm

49

HURT ... 'lt'IJ
AAI£W T ~THAT
Bt0&lt; l t:A'Vf?- '(OU

Concrete work • Driveway, ,
sldewalk,ba11ments. ect .

84

preferably. Call 448-7492.

1 44

I~ lERRII!L'(
1

1979 Gofdwlng GL 1000
full droooocl. AM -FM atoroo

19711 Honda Howil Cl 400
T2. oxcotlent condition, low
1977 Chevy 4 door. outo- .mllooft. nao. Col &amp;14metlc trens.. chNp trana- 2411-11"504.
portotlcn. •9oo. Coli B141911 Kow1111d 280 lt...t
9811-43B7.
billa,
Coli 448-4803.
'75 Oldo Cutl111 Supremo Loto of odroo - good con. 1975 Hortoy Dovldoon 1 200
Aoklng •1 175 0.1.0. Coli CC, fuU drno. $3,000. Coli
814-245-9370.
814-949-2181.
1978 Ootoon 210Z 2&amp;2.
GLP option, now tim. Hko
now condition, •11100 firm.
eon 814-815-31185 or e 14448-1079.

,.tea.

Gone Smith. 892-8309 .

Remodeling, aiding. plootorlng. ropolro. textured coot.
rocked chipped willa. ceil Ing. 8ponloh otyio otucco.
304-875-1880.

Motorcycle•

!lJ

I

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
C A R P E T C L E A N • ..
ocotchguord -wotor extroc tion. deodortzoro. FREE ootlRnsonable

(I) ()I •

Micro
7:00 • (J) PM Magozlno

F c;ontroctoro. Coli 4483313 oftor 3PM .

nwtea.

'78 Chevy 'II 4x4. - Low
mll11, fully equip. with extroo. axe. con. CoM 814949 -2181 .

11174 Joop J 10 PU, .800.
11170 GMC PU •400. Coli
Coli , _
4 4_1_-2_3_11_4_.- - - - ,.

63

12

100. Bring own cont.iner.
Cattery ·

Reg. male min. Oauechund,

Misc. Merchandise

Space for Rent

Pomeroy. large lots. Call

Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·
cilltio~.

10 weeks old. One non
registered male, 4 mo. old

COUNTRY OAK FURNI TURE; Cupboards. Pie
Safeo, Round Tablao.

814-992-7479.
1:0 pluo ocrea of bottom land
along Shade Croak. Located
w, mlleo Welt of Alfred on
Southoide of Co. Rd. 231 .
Call collect. 1-613-2050.

tors. rongoo. Skeggo Ap-

alonil All -bread grooming.

1970 CediNoc ombulonco,
good cond .. good tiroo. n bottory. 411,000 mlloo.
.1 ,450. Coll448-2803.

$2,000. 304-45B-1808.

No.

grass seed,

Briarpatch Kennell PrQfes-

1982 Amorlcon Motoro
Spfrtt deluxe, outo, olr.
AM-FM, aport rlmo, .4. 115.
1980 2 dr .. Ford Fairmont,
outo, olr, wlro rlmo, -1
ohorp. u . 985. 2 -1981
Chovottn outo, olr, $3,195
eo. John'o Auto Soloa, lull·
ville Rd. Golllpolla, Oh. Coli
448-4782. Opt~ til dorf&lt;.

1989 Comoro 350, 4 IIPd ..
•1oe ond 1974 Joop PU.
4x4, e cyt.. 3 IIPd. Coli
814-245-8098.

HILLCREST KENNELS

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
814-387-7220.

Washers, dryers, refrigera-

onywhor• olao or - both
looe. Sldera Equipment Co.
304-875-7421 . .

2 white face halforo. 1 yeor
old. 304-882-3106 .

electric dryers. auto
washers, gas 8t electric
ranges. refrigerators, TV
sets.

teet Village Manor Apto.
814-992-7787.

tractors this
month. Call uo boforo buying

Alum. vlnyt aiding. otorm
dooro, wlndowo. guttoro,
roofing end room eddltlon. ·
•
Coli et4-387-0409.

monte.
Corpontry-Piumblng
~~~=~==~~~::r·~o~~~~·~~~~~~~ end
Dick Fulfer
Home Improve- •
Eloctrlcol. Formerly 0 • '
Auto• for Sale

'~ (I) •

Ageln'
(J) Now T,_re Hunt
(I) Art6y Griffith
(I) N-/~/Woather
(JJ Dr. Who
IDJ3-2· 1. Conllct
•swTtok
5:30 • (J) (I) NBC N_.
(J) Rlflomln
(]) ESPN'o SportoLook
(I) Corol Bumott
Cll • !lJ ABC N_.
D .(I) ()I CBS N_.
Cll Buelnole Report
IDl Maldnt Most of tho

CAPTAIN EASY

compoctora, dlohwoohoro.
mlcrowovu . Helling •
Cooling, 8heot Metol Worf&lt; .
Golllo Rofrlgerotlon Co .
814-448-4088 .
.

71

I GRAWE I

(J) MOVIE: '!Mt'o Do It

waahera. dryers, rangea,

...

Unterlmblo thoM four J u -.
one loHoriO ooch oquoro, lo form
four ordlnlty wordl.

EVENING

8:00

9.

~

'6~28/84

Appllonco lorvlco oil mokoai: '
&amp; modelo rofrlgertoro ,

Deutz

Pets for Sale

quired. Call 448 -4807 or
448-2802.

814-992-6B68 .

We oro moklng wild doolo on
new

3 Hereford• for oole. 304882-2915.

12x80 2 bedrooms. furniohed. in Syracuoa. $200.
mth, pluo utilities. 99278BO .
mobile

Farm equipment for aale,
650 Oliver· troctor with or
without bruah-hog. 304B95-3677.

992 -6687.

Ave .• Gallipolio, 814-4481899. Spin washers. gao &amp;

bedrm

Muoio Farguoon 30 w / 5 ft.
bruoh hog. e ft. blodo •
utility trailer, all axe. cond.
*2800. 379-2802 ofter e
p.m.

YELLS.

'

Troy-BIIt tllloro. Chock our
opoclol price before you buy
any tllloro. Swlohor Implement Co. St. Rt.7 N, Golllpollo,OH . Coli 814-448-

VW bus·van and Ford tree·
tor. both In good condition.
Coll814-388-9909 .

THE .sECOND," T~Y

.,
,.,

Morcum Roofing • 8pout- •
lng. Now lnotolling rubber'~
root.. 30 yooro oxporlonco. •
opoclollzlng In built up roof.
Coli 814-381 -11157.

Farm Equipment

0475.
Grou Mad end tobacco
ouppliao. Bidwell mlllo, 8143B8-9888.

Home
Improvement•

''

liVI',IIII ~

building in Pomeroy or call

mo. city services included.
deposit &amp; reference re-

1 bedroom Apt. $198. mo.

61

• TH~T F166UII!I .$
OPININCii ~~~ 8V

PLAIT!IIING • Now end ,
ropolr commorclof end rooldlntlol, froo oatlmotoo. Coli "I
814-258-1182.
'

Supplt&gt;:,

Kingsbury Homes Pans and

typo gentleman only. 448- oro. &amp; ohoeo. Call814-4483169.
0338.

2 bdr. unfum. in city, very

Ohio. Coli 304-773-6B82 .

suites

bed box

springs &amp; mattreas with
matching sheets and beds·
pread. 2 chrome bar stools,
parakeet with cage and

Housing Opponunity) has 6 piece wood living room
one and two bedrooms, rint suite with 6 inch flat arms

2 bedrm mobile home for

nice lot. Cheshire,

Maple double

SWAIN

I

Racine . Coil 614 - 387 714B .

rent,

I

Firewood cut up slabs 81 5

pickup
6804. load . Call 814-2411-------Size 3 Prom dreaa never
worn . Coli 814-245-927B.

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
J A C K S 0 N E STAT E S 82 Olivo St .. Galli polio. Now
APARTMENTS (Equal &amp;uoodwood&amp;coalotovao.

Furniohod garoge apt. 1 bdr ..
$226. Utilit~o pd. 29'h Neil
Ave.. Gallipolis. Call 448.4418 after 7 PM .

Mobile home for rent, in

1\

~...

Daily Sentinel-Page

i}f)~~fi}~ ~ THATICRAMILIOWOIIOOAMI
1,!::11 ~~ ·
by HoM Arnold end Bob Loo

Television
Viewing

1

_____ r:

cycle made by Jeeger 1"V•"

Newer 3 bedroom
farm
house, Chester twp. re cently remodeled . Quiet ' &amp;

2 or 3 br. excellent condi tion , full dry basement.
upper lincoln Ave . Refer-

l.ttll l

dowo 29x30. oubmoralblo
pump heavy duty one third
horoe- 1 1 5 liolto- 5 ampo 80

/ S200 deposit . Largo yard.
water &amp; traah paid. references. Call after 6. 448-1364.

1

The

Ohio

26, 1984

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

Horrlo Formo • Groen
Houoeo, Rt. 124, Pol-tlond,
Oh. Now opon 10 --duok.

5 room houoe 6B Mill Croak,
f1.26 per. mo .. 875 depooit .
Call 448-1340 or 4483B70.

washer •

~y.

1984 ·.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE®

Umeotona, Send. Grovel.
Dalhiirod In Muon, Melga.
Gall Ia or pick up at Rlchordo ' - - - - - - - - - - - &amp; Son. Coli 448-7786.
For oole or trodo, EngNoh
Will cut end dollvar fire- Sheppard pupplot. Coli 814wood. Coli e 14-2BB-1112B. 985-4295.

095B .

\

68

8t

Houses for Rent

unfurn.,

Mat:efl 26,

TR~CY

Renl.tl s
41

Mor,day,

.._,.....

TOMORROW?! ARE
'IOU OUT OF
VOUl MINI)?!!

MATURITV IS WHAT V9U
SHOULD STRIVE FOR.
CHARLIE S'ROWN ...

.

,,
I

t

......

~ · ·""·

..... . .. ...... ~ ...

~~

.... -

..... .....:.0.-..1 .. ......... ':' . ...

..

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.,."1"-............ ..... ...... ....._ ...... - · ...... ..._..... - . -- ··~· ... ....~ ........ ~· ... ......... ... '

�..

·.

•

.,.

Page

IG-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Mardi 26, I

'

'

ProbeB&amp;E

Local briefs:

Sheriff James J . Proflltt

a breaking and

Squads answer 12 calls

I

the Martha Rowland mldenoe,
1, Ewlngton on SuQday'
OR.l
Items taken were a 8Uitar "'"f
amplification equipment.
,
Persons with any lnfonnatlon IJt,
regard to the theft ~ uked to call
the sheriff's office at 992-3371.
,

Twelve calls were answered by local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
Sunday calls included: 1: 00 a.m., the transfer unit· took HaZel
Dunigan from Veterans Memorla!Hospital to Holzer Medical Center;
11: 29 a.m., Tuppers Plains for Freda Muter, to Holzer Medlclil
Center: 11: 32 a.m., Pomeroy. to Route 143 for Everett McDaniel, to
Holzer Medical Center: 12: ~ p.m., Middleport, to Fairlane Drive
where a car owned by Bernard Fultz was on fire; 4:07p.m., Pomeroy
to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Susie Edwards, to Veterans
Memorlal Hospital; 7:35 p.m., Syracuse, to Bridgeman St., tor a
chimney fire at the John Hobbs horne: 9:58 p.m., Pomeroy to Spring
Ave., for Darlene Curry, to Veterans Memorlal Hospital.
Saturday calls Included: 12:50 p.m., Tuppers Plains to Reedsv!Ue
tor Franklin Jones. treated: 3:03 p.m., Pomeroy to 16111 Uncoln
Heights for Sandra McDaniel, to Holzer Medical Center; 5 p.m.,
Rutland to Dexteer for Ralph Swan, to Holzer Medical Center; 9: 24
p.m., Tuppers Plains; Tuppers Plains at 9:24 p.m. to Success Road to
treat Addle Baker: 11: 27 p.m., Rutland to county road 1 for Hazel
Dunigan, to Veterans Memorial.

j

'

•"•

Maniagelicense

r

Issued marriage UcellleSinMetp
County Probate Court were Siler~
man Keith Kisner, 22, Ewlngton and
Melissa Dawn Rfas, 17, Rt. 1,
LangsvWe: Ricky Joe MoiTis, 32,
Pomeroy, and Dottle Marie Whitt,
33, Pomeroy.

The good life

littlefield selection

See leUer oo Page 2

Story 011 Pap! 4

Baseball roundup

Elementary operetta

SeePa&amp;e3

Story 011 Page 5

.

he

Seeks divorce
Vot .32, No.244

I

Two Ohio counties
big population losers
NEW YORK (AP) - Texas
claims five of the nation's six fastest
groWing counties, while Michigan
has two of the top three In population
loss, according to a new study by
Dun &amp; Bradstreet Corp.
Mahonlng and Cuyahoga counties
In Ohio were among the 25 counties
who lost the most population during
the time period studied.
The report issued Sunday showed
counties bt the Sunbelt experiencing
the . greatest population gain IJe.
tween 1981 and 1983, while those In
the lndustrtal Midwest and Nor·
theast were the biggest losers.
Previous U.S. Census figures have
shown the same trend.
The fastest growing county In the
study was Montgomery County.
Texas, near Houston, where the
population jumped 50 percent In first
three years of the decade, from
128,487 to an estimated 193,(173.
On the other end of the sale was
Wayne County, Mich., an auto
manufacturing center that Includes
Detroit. Its population declined 5.5
percent, from 2,337,891 to an
estimated 2,:nl,992, the report said.
-· ~ "'fiie- mlgratlon of workers and
their families Is closely associated
wiih job avallabUity and patterns of
regional economic growth and
decline," the company's chief
statistician, Joseph W. Duncan, said
In a thrre-page summary of the
report, whichclted50blgcountles25 of them fast -growing and 25
fast-shrinking.
The company said It arrived at Its
estimates using direct marketing
data that "Identify the characterts·
tics of U.S. households and track
their movements," plus other
Information It did not specify.
"Heavy development" of the
Texas oil industry fueled the growth
of five counties there. After Montgo.
mery, the three fastest growing
counties In the nation were Fort
Bend, Ector and Denton, all In
Texas.
The report said Gwinnett County.
Ga., a suburb of Atlanta, was the
nation's fifth fastest·growingcounty
of more than 100,1XXJ people, and
another Texas county, Coutn, was
sixth.
Madison County, Ind., near Mun·

I

Homer (Bob) Graham, 67, Route
2, Racine, died Saturday morning at
the Pomeroy Health Care Center.
A crane operator, Mr. Graham
was born Aug. 31, 1916, at Mt. Alto,
W. Va ., son of the late Jerry and
Clara Snyder Graham. He was also
preceded In death by a sister.
Surviving are his wife, Darlene
Stobart Graham: three daughters,
Lois Allen, Linda Turley and Leah
Brown, aU of Racine: two sons,
Robert Graham, Rock Springs, and
David Graham, Racine; four broth·
ers, John Graham, Atlanta, Ga.:
DoUglas Graham, Louisiana; Allen
Graham, Illinois, and Jerry Gra·
ham, Parkersburg, W. Va. Eight
grandchildren, one great ·
grandchild and several nieces and
nephews also survive.
ServtceswUI beheldatr10:30a.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Lloyd Grtnun
officiating. Burlal wUI be In the
Letart ·Falls Funeral Home.
Friends may .call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
today.

Gladys Wines
Mrs. Gladys M. Wines, 75, 572
Hlgn St., Middleport, died Sunday
. evening at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs. Wines was born March 10,
1900, at Spiller, daughter of the late
J. J. and M~ Boyd Ours. Mrs.
WineS was a home~r and was a
member of the United Methodist
Cturch.
\
.
Preceding her In death besides
· lier ·parents. were a soli, Clyde

&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
fate of new lottery games In other
states could help shape what Ohio
lottery players wUI be seeing In the
future.
. New York state soon wUI have a
. legal sports-betting system, and
video lottery machines are being
Introduced In Illinois.
Ohio Lottery Director Thomas V.
Chema says he wiU study the
promise of the Innovations before
making any recommendation on
Introducing either In Ohio.
New York lottery officials plan to
Introduce a $1-a-card bet this year In
which players attempt to pick
winners of a dozen or more pro
football games each week, Cherna
said.
"It wW be sort of like our lotto
game," he said, polntlngtotheuseof
computer cards similar to the order
blanks fed Into Ohio lottery
terminals.
Payotfs, based on Las Vegas odds
'and the parimutuel pool of players,
wiU be In the range of $5 to $100,
Instead of the multimillion-dollar
pots possible In a lotto game.
Cash prizes wUI be awarded for
correctly picking eight or more
games, with larger prizes going to
those with the. most correct picks.
Top winners each week wUI be
entered In an end-of-the-season
bonus drawing for large prizes.
· John Quinn. New York lottery
director, expects tile game to draw
money from private sports pools
Instead of competing with the state's
existing lottery games, Chema said.
Chema said Quinn predicts the
game could draw as much as $100
mUUon In new ·revenue to the New
York lottery In Its first year. Quinn
also expects to branch later Into
basketball and baseball betting.

Club meel8 Tuesday
The Big Bend Clvltan Qub wol
meet Tuesday at 7:00 p.m. at the·
LaSalle Restaurallf.
·
Committe functions wiU be dlsl:
cussed and charter night plans wW:
be announced.

Taking candy onle1'8

By JOHN RICE

Meigs County
Extension Agent
POMEROY -Researchers have
discovered an endophytic fungus In
tall fescue. An endophyte Is a plant
that grows within an0.ther plant. In
this case, It Is a fungu~ growing
within the fescue plant. The fungus
is associated with the occurrence of
all&lt;alolds In this species. These
alkaloids are toxins that appear to
be related to the summer slump
syndrome and fescue toxiclosls,
which means that this condition
affects animal performance.
On tall fescue that· Is fungal
endophyte free. cattle birth weights
and weaning weights are Increased
and animal gains are nearly
doubled.
The endophytic fungus . grows
between the plant cells and overwinters In the lower perennial plant
parts. In the spring, the fungal
growth closely parallels tiller
growth, advancing to the flower
and seed head where Infested seed
are produced. The primary method
of transmitting the fungus Is
through Infected seed. Experts
speculate that tall fescue was
established In the United States
from Infected seed. To establish
fescue, consider the fdllowlng
recommendations:
1.) Make a major effort to
Incorporate legqnies In the fesque:
the more the better: Even small
amounts of legumes fncrease livestock ~aiDS and ,c,onceptlon rates,
even with ~ fescue stands. ·
2.) Ma;xlmlze the use of fescue .
pastures during the cOOler periods
of the year - early spring, tau and
early wln'er.
3:) During the ·summer, avoid
grazing fescue as much as possible.
When It 1s lleCessary to gra7.e 1r1
~er, graze only .for, short
periods of seven to 10 days and then '
move Uvestock ti&gt; other. non-fescue

I

Wines, Jr., In 1976, and several
brothers and sisters.
Surviving are her husband, Clyde
H. Wines: two daughters, Mrs. ·
David (Eileen) Grueser, Minford,
and Mrs. Dana (Kathleen) Holter,
CoolvUie, and a sister, Myrtle
Harrison, Middleport. Eight grand·
children and 10great-grandchUdren
also survive.
Services wUI be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with bw1al to be In the Letart
FalisCernetery.Frtendsmaycallat
the funeral homefrom2to4and7to9
p.m ..Tuesday.

MedaMitch
Meda M. Mitch, 85,1200 Niles St.,
S. W., MassUion, died this morning
at Massillon Community Hospital
following a brief Wness.
Mrs. Mitch was bornJn Pomeroy
July 10, 1898, daugbter of the late
Charles and Allee White slnlth. Her
husband, Arthur A. Mitch died In
September,1970.
She had resided In Massillon for
thepast50years.Shewasamember
of · the Chlrst .United Methodist
Church aitd VFW 3124 Auxiliary.
She ls survived by onedauighter,
Mrs. Lewis (Dora) Selmetz, with
whom she resided; five grandchlld· ·
ren and 12 great llfiUidchlldren: one
brother, Melvin Sinltll, Pomeroy.
Funeral services wUI be held
Wednesday at 10:00 am. at the

Fun;

eral Home, Massillon with the Rev. ·
JanetStenaelofllclatlng. Burial will .
be In Gilmore Ceme!ecy, Pomeroy. pastures.
Friends may call . at the fUneral'. . 4.) Never- permit Uvestock to·
graze
home one hour prior to services.
. fescue. seed heads. Har\&gt;est

Moratorium on
reviews possible
CANDIDATEFORcountycoroner,Dr.JamesWIIhereU,leftattended
the Meigs Couaty Democrat lund raising bean dinner Saturday nlgbt at
the Pomeroy Setdor Cltbens Center. With WllhereU Is Henry Hunter,
county chairman.

Hospital news
Veterans Memortalllospllal

Saturday Admission - Irene
Russell, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges - Reva
Simms, Edith Salser. Robert Salts·
man, Margaret Martin, Florence
Barber, Media Watkins, Donald
Eblin, Fran~ Tope, Dorothy
Greathouse.
Sunday Admissions - Susie
Edwards, Pomeroy: Darlene
Curry, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges - Lawrence
Ritchie, Jr., Amber Hankla, David
Davis.

CLEVELAND (APl -The next
Ohio Lotto jackpot will reach an
estimated $5.9 m!Ulon after Satlir·
day's drawing produced no six·
number winner, says lottery spokes·
man BW Jennings.
The six winning numbers were 13,
20, 30, 31, 32 and 39.
' JeMings said sales for the latest
weekly game totaled $5,026,301.
The number of four-and fivenumber Lotto winners and their
prizes were not Immediately
announced.

sears·

fescue for hay prior to heading.
Remember that the fungus tends to
concentrate near the seed head and
on the seed.
5.) Supplement the diet ot the
animals with pasture and hay of
other species so that tall fescue Is
not the primary forage of the
animals during the entire year.
6.) Infected fields may need to be
destroyed and reseeded with endophyte free fescue seed or with other
species.
•
Treatment of ·plants with sys.
temlc fungicides has Dot been
successful with materials tested to
date. Research Is being continued
In foliar and seed treatment areas
In several states.
Seed produced from endophytefree plants are f11ngus free.· Ad·
vancements have been made In
breeding ·and sele&lt;!tidn of fungus.
free plants. Thus, sewral varieties
have been tested and are being
labeled for endophyte content and
are being sold as low endophyte
seed.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov.
Richard Celeste says he's happy to :
see that the Reagan administration
Is considering an JS.month monjto- .
rium on Social Security dlsabUity ·
benefit reviews.
But the moratorium should not
sidetrack elforts before Congress to :
reform -the dlsabUity program.
Celeste said Satun!ay.
•.
Congress required the reviews 1li
1981, and as a result hundreds of
thou.sands of peuple lost their.
benefits. Last October; Celeste
lmposedastatemoratorlumonsuch
reviews and recently renewed that
action.
·
The announcement of a possible
moratorium came Friday nigh
from the U.S. Department of Health:
and Human Services.

Lottery winners

LG25537

RUGGED 11 H.P.

LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR

99
$999

'

Additional tall fescue varieties
will be tested and labeled for
endophyte content ·In the future.
Low endophyte· varieties that ·are
now or wlu soon be available
·Include Kenhy, Forager, Johnstone
and MQ.96.
Calenclilr of
VJICIIIIIDI E11eala .
Junior l-elldenhip Meeting '"7
Tuesday, March 27, at 6:45p.m. at ,
the Extension Offtce.
OH·~ Valley Loafng Safety
Workshop- Monday, ,March 26,.at
6: 00 p.m. at l)uft'a Restaurant,
Gallipolis, Ohio.
_ Pesticide :J'ralld!w - T)unday,
March 29,from'l to4 and 7fo10p.m ..
iii the PCA Bldldlllr In Gallla
County. • · ·
Junior ' fair .Board MeeUng Tuesday evening, April 3, at. 7 p.m . . .:
In the vo!aa room of Metp High
School ..
Datry Baftquet - Tllanday, .
April 5, at .St. Paul'• Lutlleran
Churcli In Pdrneroy.

CUT

$250

35 IN. MOWING DECK
r

IN. STOCK READY TO PicK·UP

GREGG .. P~TTY GIBBS

.

·

. MIDDLEPORT, OH.

PH ..(Ohio) 992~2178 ·.
(W. Va.) 773-9577
j

..

-HOUR$: ~on.·Tu•!··Wed.·fri,
9.30 to 5.00
Tllurs. 9:30 to 12:00
Sat. 9:30 to 2:00

·

.

.

.

,

.•

~
· ~.
/" 1.1111!
-

:.J:.-;, ~ 1 1 ~ ,;,_._
- ,-~
1

gatedbytheGallla·MelgsPostofth~

Ohio Highway Patrol M,onday on
Meigs County roada.
·
A Racine man claimed Injury In a
single-vehicle 6 a.m. accident on
Ohio 124 but did not require
treatment at the scene. Tile driver
was Larry E. Spencer, :rt.

Speilcer was heading west on the
state highway whl!ll a deer CI'088ecl
hll paUL 1be animal was stnlek and
·ldlled. Spencer'a car suatalnec! light

'darnaae·
I

A car driven by Brian J. Denny;
161 ~tland, ~lved inoderate
damage In a 2: 15 p.m. wreck on
County Road 16 north of Ohio 124.
· • Denny lost control of his car
causing It to. go off the road and
strike a tree. The driver was
uninjured.
A car windshield slistallied light
damagetromgravelwhichfellfrom
an unknoWn !ruck on Ohio 338. .
The car was driven by Cheryl A.
King, 25,:PtmerOY. The driver Will!
travellngnortpon tile road when tile
;8: 10 a:m.tncldent occurred.
-.1

ATHENS - The Appalachian
Ohio Public Interest Campaign
(AOPIC) Is conducting an Invest!·
gat!on into tile health effects of the
spraying of sta,te, highways by the
Ohio Department of
Transportation.
ODOT District 10 has announced
plans to spray nine counties this
spring to kill weeds around guard
raUs and drainage ditches.
After researching the herbicide
to be used, Banvel-720, AOPIC
toxics organizer Marty Zlnn stated,
"We are alanned about the effects
the spraytng could have on the
health of residents and the environment. We think tbe community has
a right to know exactly what will
happen so people can take action to
prevent harm to themselves and
their families, their pets and farm
animals, and to plants and trees on
their property.
"Our concerns arise from the
. chemical 2,4·D, the main active
Ingredient In Banvel· 720," saki
Zlnn. 2,4-D Is one of the most widely
W:OO herbicides In the U.S., avalla·
ble since the 1940s. In situations of
direct exposure, 2.4·D Is absorbed
rapidly through 'the skin, lungs and
digestive tract. Immedla te effects
Include headache, weakness, nau·
sea, diarrhea, and burning of the
eyes, sklri and throat. Residual
effects, reported to last for years In
cases of by-stander as well as user
exposure, Include numbness and
pain In limbs, chronic respiratory
problems, bleeding tendency and
co ncentration and memory
problems.
"These acute toxic effects from
A SWW START- While the
direct exposure are the usual focus
cold wet weatber has slowed
of studies done by ttie herbicide
progress on the constnJction of
manufacturers and used by governthe senior dtizens housing
mental agencies," noted ZIM.
complex on Mulberry Hetpts,
Defenders of the use of 2,4-D
there was !101111! lno!INttlon
claim these effects can be avoided
by proper application of tile
Monday that things are readyw
herbicide.
roD. 1be excavadng has begun
"We beUeve these studies have
and supplies aild e4,dpment for
little relevance to our biggest
the fOWtdati!ln are being moved
concern," Zlnn continued, "which Is
ln. Inside the old children's home
the chronic health effects to people
which wiD be a part of the
from longterm, low-level exposure
. $1,488,000 project lnost ol the
occuring with 2,4·D Is widely
distributed In the environment
rough framing Is In plaee 011 both
through roadside and forest spraythe first and secoad Doors of the
Ing,
agricultural use and utility
brick building. KRAG Construcrights-of-way maintenance."
tl011 which has the cooll'act for
According to genetic toxicology
that phase of the Interior work,
consultant, Dr. Ruth Shearer,
expect w complete aD the
"Injuries which accumulate with
framing In another two weeks.
time from low-level chronic poison·
lng may reduce the level of human
At boUom left, Charles Mash
physical and mental functioning;
and Jolm Hayes work oo the
Irreversible
cellular injuries can
rough framing for one of the first
lead to cancer. mutations , sterility,
floor apartments.·
or birth defects ."
-----------.1~ Zlnn noted that Shearer's writ ·
lngs are well-documented . "She
convinces us the dangers of 2.4-D
are greater than the manufacturers
and the government are telling us."
"We want to share Information
stimulate private Investment In tile with residents In the designated
million for the highway program
region.
through the Federal Highway
counties about what they can do to
The Appalachian program was
Administration. However, that re(Continued on page 10)
quest also calls for no funding of developed under Presidents
non-highway projects and stipulates
Kenne(ly and Johnson to help the
dlscontlnua tlon of the commlss)on peopieofaregionthatwasvlewedas
being Isolated from the mainstream •
as of Sept. ~. 1984.
of American economic growth.
"Appalachia can no longer be
The region Includes West Virginia
looked upon as America's poor and parts of Ohio, Pennsylvania, stepchild," said Ms. Pizzano. "Sue· New York, Maryland, VIrginia,
cessful education an!l health pro- Kentucky, North and South Carol·
Home delivery price of The Dally
grams lnltitated In the region are lna, Tennessee,Geo~a.AJabama Sentinel and Sunday Times-Senti·
now held up as shining examples of and Mississippi.
nel will Increase 10 cents per week
what can be accomplished for tile
In reviewing the panel's 1982 effective A(:iril 1. The single copy
rest of the nation.
budget, Congress asked the com· 'ne\vsstand (:irice of The Dally Senti·
"Please don't mlsundersland me. mission to submit recommends· nel will be adjusted from 20 cents to
We stW have some problems. But I t!ons for a thrre-toflve-yearwrapup 25 cents and the Sunday Times-Senprogram.
respectfuUy submit that they ~not
tinel to 50 cents.
Under a revf$ed wrapup plan, a
soverydlf!erentfromthosefacedby
This Is the first price Increase In
the people of other rural regloris of mrnUe highway project from
over four years and Is n.ecessary
the U.S .. "
Cincinnati to Bridgeport, W.Va.,
because of higher production and
• Ms. Pizzano said the Appalachian· would be98percentcornplete, and a newsprint costs. Carriers, motor
route .drivers and newsstand deal·
Foundation, made up of Appalach· ZlS-rnlle highway from Portsmouth,
Ohio, toAsheviUe, N.C., wouldtie84 ers will ~hare In Income generated
Ian ·governors and ooslness leaders,
by the price Increase.
has been estabUshed to continue to ·percent complete,

·Weather
slows
rogress

Firefighters
• • •
mitiate survey

Three accidents were lnvestl·

N. 2N,D AVE. .

Highway
•
spraytng
effects
sought

GAU.IPOLIS - Judge Richard C. Roderick has declined to step down
frompresldlngoverthecrlmlnaltrtalinGalllaCountyCommonPieasCourt
of Maxine Plummer, former executive director of the Gauta-Jackson·
Meigs 648 Mental Health Board.
Roderick denied that he Is biased against Piunu:ner. as alleged In an
affidavit of prejudice filed last week by Mrs. Plummer.
Her affidavit against Roderick wW now be considered by the Ohio
Supreme Court. And since a decision from Chief Justice Frank Celebrezze
couldtake20or00days,RoderickcontlnuedMrs.Piummer'strtaltoMay14.
The trial was.originally scheduled for Aprtl9.
In her affidavit, Mrs. Plummer cited several reasons shelelt justified ber
claim Roderick would not preside In a "fair and impartlal manner,"
Including charges c1 poUtical pressure. previous contact during Roderick's
term on the mental health board and Roderick's previous legal partnership
with ProSecutor Joseph L . Cain.
Roderick filed a response to the Plummer affidavit this morning In court,
providing a point ·by·polnt rebuttal of her claims.
Roderick said he removed himself from the civil suit Mrs. Plummer filed
to expedite the case. An Interview he conducted with Investigators for tile
state-appointed review group that criticized Mrs. Plummer's activities
"lasted less than five minutes."
"Your affiant was not personally aware of the allegations that form the
basis of the crtmlnallndlctment agllinst the defendant.. .at the time of the
Interview," Roderick said, "and those allegations were never made known
to your affiant at the time of the Interview ... "
Roderick said he attended only one mental health center board meeting
and he could not recall "any Ins lance arising from that meeting that would
cause him to have either a positive or negative reaction" to Mrs. Plummer.
Roderick added that his partnership with Cain had been terminated two
years prior to his election as judge In 1981, andslncethen he said he'smade
"numenJIIS rulings which were adverse" to Cain's position.
"Your affiant does not feel that he Is biased or prejudiced In any way,
either for or against the defendant," Roderick said.
. PI~, who~ t:lred 8!1 the board's execuUve director last Sept.
19, waaJeqetly Indicted In December for theft In offlceanduslngherofflce
to Influence a pubUc contract.

air suliPiy for aU of the fire
departn\ents In Meigs and Mason
Counties. Chief Darst said MiddleThe Middleport Fire Department port firemen provide the alf supply
wUI undertake a project of survey· service to all of the departments
lng Middleport business buildings as without charge and pointed out that
a step In helping tile department It Is a time consuming situation. The
combat fires, Fire Chief Jeff Darst present air compressor has been In
use for some eight years, Darst
reported Monday night. .
Chief Darst meeting with Middle- stated, and needs to be replaced.
port VIllage Council outlined plans Cost wW be about Sll,IXXJ.
Chief Darst said the Middleport
for the survey of the business
section: Department members wUI Department Is not complaining
Inspect aU business buildings and about the chore of providing the air
drawings of each wiU be completed supply and wants to continue the
showing the Interior IaYQllt,location service to aU departments. ·
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
of utUitles, the exterior, openings
onto roofs and other factors which that Middleport HUI, the scene of a
might aid the fire department In sUp last November, has been
case of fire. Darst stressed that the repaired and was opened to two-way
visits to the buildings Lsln noway an trafllc Monday night. There Is stW
illspectlon to report any safety work to be done by Holley Brothers
violations. He Indicated the survey on the hillside near the sUp, the
and completion of the drawings wUI mayor stated.
At therequestofMayorHoffman,
take a considerable amount of time ·
and that later surveys will be made council placed two pollee officers,
of buildings such as churches and Brian Bissell and BW Browning, on
schools. The department alsowtlldo full time employe status. The
private homes Uhomeowners make resignation of Milford Hysell from
a request to the department for the the pollee department was an·
service, Darst said. Darst said the nounced and council agreed to send
reCent Empire Furniture Store fire Hysell a letter of commendation for
stressed the need for the fire his faithful service to the village:
CouncU discussed the estabUsh·
department to have more lnforma·
tlon on the layout of buildings In the ment of an assislant pollee chief
town.
·
post, which, they said, should aid the
pollee chief In th~ work load and
Approve reqllellt
At the request of Chief Darst. would provide a proper pattern for
council agreed to contact th!! Meigs someone to take over as pollee chief
County Commissioners requesting when the chief Is not 'present. The
the commissioners purchase'a new matter was referred to the safety
compressor for use by the Middle- committee which will bring a
(Continued on page 10)
port Fire Depa~nt In preparing

'oe"

1 Section , 10
20 Cents
A MuhimtMia Inc. Newspaper

Judge declines
to step down

Man hurt in deer-car accident
AUTHORIZED CATALO.G MERCHANT

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 27, 1984

Copy•lthtod 1984

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel staff

OUR LOWEST
PRICE IN 4 YEARS

'
''

,.

The ladles auxUiary of the Orange:
Volunteer · Fire Department;
Tuppers Plalnsafetaklngordersfor:
·
Easter Candy.
.The auxutary wut be semng
Easter eggs, chocolate bunnies and
suckers. For additional lnfonna·
tion, call ~ 667.J288 or:
667-3933.

Tall fescue fungus

The PTO at M~ddleport Elemen·
tary wtll meet this ·evening at 7:30
p.m. Loraine Newsome of Wood·
land Center will be guest speaker.

IJ

tile Melp Couuty Democrit fuDd raiUir bean dinner
Sat! .....,aiP*atthePomeroySenlorCIIDeDICenler.

County Agent's Comer

Middleport PTO to .
meet this evening

Atldnson·Fellcht~

W

Sports betting
being considered

cle, was ranked second In population
loss, with a drop of 5.28 percent,
followed by Barrien County, Mich.,
with a 4.4 percent drop, and the
Bronx, which Is both a county and a
borough of New York City, with a 4.3
percent loss.
Arlington, Va., was No. 5 In
population loss with a 3.7 percent
loss.
Overall, of the fastest-shrinking
counties, states noted more than
once Included Michigan with six
counties, New York with four, and
Ohio, Indiana and New .Jersey, all
with two, the study said. Of the
fastest-growing, multiple lisllngs
were eight In F1orida, six In Texas,
two In Louisiana, two In Virginia and
two In Callfornla.
Here Is a list ofthetop25est!mated
population gainers and losers, by
percentage, among counties with
more than 100,1XXJ people In 198):
Gainers, with biggest gainer
listed first: Montgomery, Texas:
Fort Bend, Texas: Ector, Texas:
Denton, Texas: Gwinnett, Ga.;
Collin, Texas: ·Arapahoe, Colo.:
Lee, Fla.; St. Tammany, La.;
Pasco, Fla.; Lafayette, La.; Mar·
ion, Fla.; Semino1e, Fla.; Palm
Beach, F1a.: Harris, Texas: Cleveland, Okla.; Manatee, F1a.; Clark,
Nev.: Volusla, Fla.; Davis, Utah;
Prince W!Ulam, Va.; Sarasota,
Fla.; San Bernardino, Calif.; Solano, Ciillf., and ylrglnla Beach, Va.
Losers, with top loser listed first:
Wayne, Mich.; Madison, Ind.;
Benien, Mich.; Bronx, N.Y.: Ar·
Ungton, Va.: Kings, N.Y.; New
York, N.Y.; Washtenaw, Mich.;
Lane, Ore.; Delaware, lnd.; Cam·
brta, Pa.; St. Louis, Minn.:· Queens,
N.Y.; 1',1ahonlng, Ohio; St. Louis,
Mo.: Berkshire, Mass.: Jackson,
Mich.; Hudson, N.J .; District of
Columbia; Calhoun, Mich.: La·
SaUe,IU.; Genesee,Mich.; PhUadel·
phia, Pa.; Essex, N.J., and Cuya·
hoga,Ohio.

Area deaths

Homer Graham

I 'I

W~G~Wffi - ._w~mbWbe

llel'Ved are several of the .RIUIY people wbo att

Donald Shatter, Racine filed sulf
for divorce In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against Shlr··
ley Shaffer, Racine.

aily

•

ARC p~nel defends requests
WASHINGTON (AP) - Saying
the panel stW has work to do,
officials of the Appalachian Regional Commission have defended
their budget requests before a
House subcomrnlttee.
"There has been progress, but
there's still a ways to go," Mary,land
Gov. Harry Hughes told the House
Apprbprtatiors subcommittee on
energy and water development
Monday.
Hughes Is co-chairman of lhe
.commission, which Is made up of a
federal appointee and governors of
the 13 states In the Appalachian
region.
The governors are requesting
$319.5 million for flscal1!e. Mcisl of
that money - $215 rnUUon - Is
earmarked for the Appalachian
Development Highway System.
Winifred Pizzano, federal cochairJnan of the commission, test!·
fled In · support of the Reagan
administration's ·request for $IKl

Sentinel price
mcrease
announced

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