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                  <text>Wednesday, February 2; 1983

Pomeroy-Middl4!port, Ohio

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

DWI cases highlight two mayor courts
Three of the six people appearing
in the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred HoHman Tuesday night were
there on charges of driving while
intoxicated.
KeMeth S. Mitchell, Langsville,
Gregory K. Cwtdlff, Middleport,
and Trena Caruthers, Middleport,
were all fined $250 and costs and
sentenced to three days injatlon the
charge.
Cundiff was also fined $50 and
costs on a charge of drlvtng under
suspension, wh)le Caruthers was

also fined $25 and costs on the
charge of no operator's license.
Also appearing in the court w~
James K. Ables, RaCine, $10 and
costs, running a stop,sign; Kenneth
C. Jones, Middleport, $100andcosts
forobsttuctingjustlce; and FredE.
Kuhn, Middleport, $10 and costs for
failure to maintain control.
Forfeiting bonds were Hobart B.
Goggins, $375, driving while intoxl·
cated; Larry M. Wright, Lapgsvllle, $40 and Clifton H. MoleS.
Chestllre, $50, both on speeding

charges.

Block grants•••

~
,

....

. ~

·'1

...

EARLY SPRING??? - l'wlxsulawney Phil, the famous weather
forecasting groundhog failed to see his shadow this morning giving
weather observers an optimistic outlook (or an early spring.
Meanwhile, although he arose wearily from his nestle of straw, l)le
groundhog who makes his borne at Bob Evam Fanns near Rio Grande
soon searched lor signs of his shadow Monday afternoon.

Punxsutawney Phil
fails to see shadow
PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa.
(API - Punxsutawney Phil the
groundhog emerged from his
heated bw-row on Gobbler's
Knob in a downpour today and
failed to see his shadow, thus
predicting an early spring.
The groundhog's 97th moment
in the sun - or out .of it on this
dreary, rainy day - came at
dawn when folklore says he
"whispered" his prediction to
James H. Means, a contractor
who is president of the Punxsutawrey Groundhog Club, ·
"Better days are on the way,"
said the 59-year-old Means. who,
as club president, is said to be
the only human able to translate
for the woodchuck.
About 300 people, mostly
college students, watched as the
wriggling and sniffling Phil
emerged from his hole and was
1

Emergency runs
Twocallswereanswered by units
of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Tuesday. At noon
unit went
to Meigs
the
No. Rutland
1 for John
Nlclnsky
whoMine
was
transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At4: 29 the TUppers Plains
took Art Spencer from Route 681 to
the 'Camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg. The Pomeroy unit
answered a call to the Route 143
home of Clay Eblin, deadonarrtval,
at 3:01a.m. Wednesday.

ScentWith·
Love.~

Here's a wonderful way to let
your Valentine know she's very

special. An exquis ite crystal pefume bottle with a hearr-shaped
stopper chat's delivered with lovely Valentine-flowers.

- ~sD~ .

~&amp;lruary14

POMEROY
FLOWER
.
SHOP
'

Way America
ISe,nds Love.:'.
Butternut
IPomtriiY. OH.
992-2039
992-5721

accept all majOr c!ldit Clrds,
we wire ·flowers everywhere.

met by a wet 336-degree temper·
ature at a ceremony outside thls
mountain town.
Punxsutawney's groundhog
has failed to see his shadow only
five times since the tradition
began in 1887. He most recently
predicted an early spring In 1975.
Folklore dictates that If he
saw his shadow - even through
miserable winter weather then six more weeks of cold
weather would follow.
The ceremony is all In fun, of
course. The prediction was
secretly decided by the club's
12-member "Inner Circle" well
in advance.
For th(! record, the National .
Weather Service Issued a !lH!ay
forecast last week calling for
unusually cold, wet weather for
much of the nation through
APrU ·

M

•
ed
eetmg postpon .

The Missionary meeting to be
held this evening- at .Syracuse
Nazarene Church has been postponed until Saturday, Feb. 5, at 6: ll
p.m.

(Contlnuedfrompage1)

communities 3nd rural areas without local development corporations. 'The
SBA 503 Loan Program is designed to make available long-term, fixed rate
financing for viable small-to medium sized businesses.·
Ron Ash, manager otohio Power Co., Pomeroy, upon introducing Wise
and Allen and distributed booklets entitled Prospectus on the Community
of P&lt;;&gt;meroy, for business and Industry.
Attending the meeting were Joe Clark, president, Carol Cundiff,
secretary, Scott Lucas, Leo Vaughan, John Anderson, Gerg Gibbs, Dave
liarrts, Tlmn HalStead, Dave Mann, Bruce Reed, Bll)y Joe Spencer, Paul
Bar!tett, Ron Ash, YvoMe Scally, Tom Reed, Glen E;nslen, Richard Jo!les,
• MaMing Roush, Hank Cleland, Bruce Teaford, Jeff Warner, and Fred
Crow. introduced as guests were Glen Enslen, ~- Murphy from Rlo Grande College, Bob Young, P . D. Meadows, YvoMe Scally, and Jim
Ga·rrts of Ohio Power Co.

I

Clay Eblin

charges

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND (AP) - Thewlnnlngnumberdra\vn Tuesday night
in the Ohio Lottery's dally game, ''The Number," was 412.
,
In the "Pick 4" game, played three times a week, the winning
number was 4872.
The lottery reported a loss of $222,236.50 from the wagering on Its
dally game. The loss resulted from sales of $1,078,00, whtle holders
of wlnrilng tickets were entitled to share $l,lXl,319.50, officials said.
In the parimutuel "Pick 4" game, sales totaled$248,532. Holders o(
winning tickets were entitled to 45 percent, or Sl12,167. Any winning
$1 straight ticket earned $5,112, and any w!IUling $1 boxed ticket
earned $213.

Area deaths

Clay Eblin, 63, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
died early this morning at his
residence.
Mr. Eblin was born Jan. 19,1920in
Ohio the son of the late Mahion and
VIrginia Hinkle Eblin. He was also
preceded in death by one brother,
Allen Eblin. Mr. Eblin was a coal
miner.
He Is survived byhiswlfe, Thelma
Eblin, Rt. 2, Pomeroy; two daughters, Helen Icenhower and Betty
Triplett, Pomeroy; one son, Rl·
chard C. Eblin, Pomeroy; three
borthers, Donald Eblin, Syracuse;
Mahion Eblin and Claude Eblin,
both of Pomeroy; 11 grandchll~n
and four great gran&lt;;lchlldren, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services Will he held
Friday at 1 p.m. at Ewlni ChapeL
Burial wlll be in Rock Springs
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening.

Meigs County and Vinton County
Grange.
She is survived by two daughters,
Mrs. 'Beulah Hlll, Lancaster, and
Mrs. Thelma Riggs, Rosevllle; two
sons, Merrill C. Cottrill and Jon R.
Cottrill both of Lancaster; 13
grandchildren, 'tl greatgrandchtldren and three great great grandchlldren; one cousin, Vale Grover,
Lancaster.
Funeral services wlll he held
· Saturday at 1: ill p.m. at the Salem
Center Church with the Rev. Ken
Cole officiating. Burtat wtll be in
Salem Center Cemetery. Friends
may call at the Frank E. Smith
Funeral Home in Lancaster Thursday from 7 to9andFridayfrorn2 to4
and 7to9.

MARGUERITE SHOES IS
CELEBRATING THEIR

11TH ~r~I~ERSARI 1 ~
-...:

~ptl)d
. av

~(
I

,::::::::

THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT.
FEBRUARY 3, 4 &amp; 5

""'

:,..--

~

"""
a

Veterans Memorial ·
Admitted: KathrYO Oliver, ·
Pomeroy; WUllam Richmond, Middleport John Nlclnsky, Jr., Rutland; Goldie Heltmlre, Pomeroy.
Discharged: WilllaJh Searls,
Clarence McDaniel, Jr.

EXCLUDING SALE ITEMS

Mary C. Cottrill

Fire destroys car

Mary C. Cottrill, 88, Lancaster,
died this morning at Lancaster
Hospital.
Mrs. Cottrill was the daughter of
the late UptonandAllceGroverHlll.
She was also preceded in death by
two brothers.
She was a housewife, member of
Pine Grove Christian Church In

A 1973 auto owned by Beverly
A
McLaughlin, Butternut
ve.,
"The Middle Shoe Store In the Middle Bock."
Pomeroy, was considered a total
loss following a motor fire· which
POMEROY, OH.
occurred Tuesday at 9:10 p.m. on
West Main St., Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles f---___;-------------~----Legar reported that 'tl firemen with
two trucks responded to the call.

MARGUERITE-SHOES

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::;:;:;===:·;!===;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1

RIFLE &amp; SHOTGUN

CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES
QUANTITIES LIMITED - ALL SALES FINAL

SAVE ·1 /2 ON
CHILDREN'S WINTER TOPS
CHILDREN'S COATS
CHILDREN'S CURDOROYS
CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR
WOMEN'S WINTER SLEEPWEAR
WOMEN'S SWEATERS
WOMEN'S DRESSES
WOMEN'S COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR
WOMEN'S BLOUSES
WOMEN'S COATS
JUNIOR COATS
JVNIOR SWEATERS
JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR
JUNIOR SLACKS
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
MEN'S SWEATERS
MEN'S VELOUR SHIRTS
MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
MEN'S CORDUROY JEANS
BOYS' SHIRTS
.· VAN HEUSEN ·DRESS SHIRTS
MEN'S FLANNEL PAJAMAS
MENS COATS AND JACKETS
BOYS'. WINTER JACKETS
.MEN'S AND BOYS' VESTS
MEN!S FLANNEL WORK SHIRTS
BOYS'S ·CORDUROY JEANS·

SAVE ·1I 2

_SAVE 1I 2

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

-Second place on
line in SVAC.. ;
Meigs faces two
formidable foes

Robert L. Crouse. Hartford, w. va ..
Three persons cited to the court
c~ with petty theft, forfeited
of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
$263; Tanuny Swick and Robert
Andrews were fined whlle 12
Rltfle, hflth of Pomeroy, $88 on an
others forfeited bonds.
open flask charge; · MaWJew
Kim McCallen, Pomeroy, Weaver, Middleport, and keith
charged with petty theft, was fined Pearson, Gallipolis, both (orfelted
$313 and costs and placed .on six $63 bonds on
of passing on a
months pi'Qbation; James A. Tho- double yellow line; Rickie Icenmas, Mld(lleport, $53 and costs, on hower, Middleport and Donald
fa !lure to register his motor vehicle, Yost, Rutland, $513 bonds forfeited
and Gregory Davis, Syracuse, ~ on charges of driving while intoxiand costs, on a speeding charge.
cated; Alan K Partlow, Pomeroy,
Forfeiting bonds · on speeding $63, tr~lc light violation; and Tim
ch~ were Tom Walters, ~; . Lee Crttes, Pomeroy, $313 bond on
James !Oarge, Langsvl)le, $46; and possession of a concealed wea·pon,
Patrick JohnSon, Racine, $46.
and $162 on an old fine.

BROWNI~G
12 Ga. 3" V.R. Pump #BPS .......... '288.99
12 Ga. 3" V.R. Auto.-5 Mag..... $459.97
22 Auto. #BAR22 ....................... $198.77

20GA. F

Nutritious brawn
bag lunches ...

Republicans eye
emergency programs

Page 5

Page8

Page 3

••

e

aty

Vol-31 ,No.194
Copyrighted 1983

•

enttne
3 Section, 16 Page•
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 3, 1983

Village renovation plans given
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff

Complete plans for the redevelopment and renovation of the Middleport
business district, as prepared by David HeLser and Associates, architects,
Athens, were unveiled at a meetlngWednesdaynlghtat the Middleport Fire
Station.
Pam Callahan, project manager for the fum which did the study and
planning through a grant from the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, pointed out that the tone of the project has been hlstoric
restoration of the business distrtct.
Business people and others attending the meeting were given a complete
look at the project, not only through maps which were on display, but
photography displays which show each of the present buildings as they are
today plus additional photos showing what can be done to each structure to
"provide the histortcallook which is emphasized in the study.
·
Sbmeofthephotos showed little would need to be done togoalo~~gwlththe
study--the addition of an a wring, a change In the exterior palntblg.
Kim Shields, director of community development In Middleport,
commented at last night's meeting that much of the recommended
restoration can be done with a little paint and much work. He commended
the Reiser fum for the study indl(!atlng that it should be helpfUl to the
business people of the 10wn. He also suggested that"there might be financial
help available for merchants who want to make the suggested
Improvements in thetr buildings.
Mayor Fred Hoffman alter welcoming the group attending, pointed out
that !lie study does provide a type of plan for merchants to follow in
Improving the business district sothatalllmprovementswlll "go together".
Reiser, head of 1he architectural firm involved, said he .sees changes
coming in the river corrtdor of this section of Ohio and predicted things wlll
he quite dlft'erent In the fUture. He stressed that thestudymean&amp;nooft'ense
to any bulldlng owner but was prepared to generate spirit and enthusiasm
and a. tool to get local buslnesspeoplelnvestinginthetowraswetlasoutslde
interests. ·

Celeste's.hudget

Ohio (AP) ~
Majority House Democrats apparentlywlll make few changes in Gov.
Rlchard .Celeste's proposals to
erase a $528 llllllion state budget
deficit.
House Finance Chairman Wllllam E . Hlnlg, D·New Phlledelphia,
intro:l.uced a bill containing Ce· ll!ste's proposals on Wednesday,
less than 24 hours alter Celeste
outllned It in a speech to the
Legislature.
,
Hinlg, whose committee ·held a
three-hour hearing pn the tax
increase and spending cut measure,
said he expects a commlttee vote
TUesday and avotebythetul!House
Thursday.
The blll then would go to the
Senate whicll, also controlled by
Democrats but by only a 17-16
margin, could present a stumbling
block. Celeste wants the package
enacted by March 1.
Hlnlg said he plans to give his

that center and get information on materials needed even dowr to paint
color chips.
1J
The project manager pointed out that the study should prove helpfUl to
Middleport in Its attempts to secure federal and state aid since the study
does Include information on land use, housing data, property evaluation and
other data. She said no effort is being made to force "the suggested
Improvements uppn the merchants and pointed out that there might easily
be other solutions which merchants might want to follow in Improvement of
their bulldings. HoWever, the emphasis of the study does stress historic
restoration which, according to the photos, do give the bulldings a look of
yesteryear.
Calahan spoke on the role of the town in helping carry out project studies
In providing regulations for"slgn control and parking areas.
She cornmen ted that the architectural posslbUitles of the MiddlePOrt
business dlstrtct "are wonderful" and said with the p)an the section can be
not "just nice," but, "enticing". She spoke on the role of street fUrnishings
and how they can be used in controllng loitering.
.
Calahan stressed the value of the river pointing out that the study
suggests the development of a park and a drawing of the proposed park in
the area of the abandoned railroad depot is featured lri the study book. Both
DISCUS8-Davld Reiser, left, of Reiser and Associates, Athens,
she and Shields suggested that business people secure aid from
which
did the redevelopment and renovation study of the Middleport
experienced professionals In making a positive contribution to good
business
district, and the Rev. James Keesee, also a Middleport
design,
·
bu~iness buDding owner, discuss a8pects of the study which was
Reiser told the group to contact hls Athens office anytime they wish tO' · [
unveUed at a meeting held Wednesday night at the Middleport Fire
proceed· with carrying out Improvement projects and need advice or
Station.
·
assistance lri direction.
·

Separate incidents
net four arrests

Democrats plan
few changes on
1 COLUMBUS,

Ms. Calahan explained aspects of a book which was prepared in
conjunction with the study, The book also shows bulldings as they appear at
the present time along with an "after" photo showing what can be done to
Improve the exterior of each building in conjunction with the restoration
study. She pointed out that a community resourcedevelopmentcenter has
been established at Middleport VIllage Hall and merchants Interested in
following through with the recommendations on their buildings can go to

committee ample opportunity to
consider the bill but that he hopes to
avoid lengthy testimony andnumerousamendments.
Speaker Vernal G. Rifle Jr.,
D-New Boston, who has a 62-37
Democratic majority in the House,
said that 11 there is any delay on the
proposal, It wlll occur in the Senate.
SenatePresldent Harry Meshel,
D- Youngstown, could have a prot&gt;!em with his Democratic margin
because of the absence of Sen.
Oliver Ocasek,, D-Akron, whose
wife was critically injured in an auto
aq:ldent and rernalrui in a coma in a
Hollywood, F1a., hospital.
No Senate Republican hassaldhe
wlll support the blll although some
say they want 10 see what changes
might be made by the House.
Celeste calls .for a permanent, 90
percent Increase in the state income
tax and spending cuts totaling $282
mllllon.

Two Pomeroy area men are
lodged In Meigs County Jail on
chargEl§ of breaking and entering
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reported.
Name ofthemen,werenotbelng
revealed because It is believed
others are involved, according to
the sheriff's department
According to the report, deputies
received a call at 2:27 a.m. that a
breaking and entering was in
progress at Salisbury Elementary
SchooL
Sgt. Randy Forbes was dispatched to the scene whlle a call of
assistance was requested.to Pomeroy, MiddlePOrt and Rutland Pollee
to proceed to the area to help In the
search.
The department received an
additional call that a green van
carrying two men was headed south
onSR 7.
At 2:40a.m. Sgt. John King was
NO BOMB FOUND- A Columbus Pollee bomb squad oHicerchecks a headed north on SR 7and spotted the
~ Weclnellday after It was recovered following aa armed hijack·. van heading up Children's Home
log In ()olumbus. Police checked the truck for a !J1181M!Cted bomb but nothing Road.
was found ud lhe driver was allowed lo codlnue his deliveries. (AP
Sgt. Forbes who was driving up
~rphoto)
Mulberry Ave., met the van at the

intersection of Mulberry and Union
Ave. Forbes blocked the road
causing the van to stop.
All other units were dispatched to
scene for assistance. Two suspects
were apprehened.withln 19 minutes
after the first call was received.
In other,:ii@on, Tammy Mash, 21,
R(. 1, MiclaJeport,andRobertRlffle,
28, Pomeroy were arrested Wednesday night by the Ohio State PatroL
Several charges will he flied against
Mash and Rlffle, one of which is
stealing a truck.
They. were also charged with
unauthorized use of a motor vehicle.
According to the sheriff's department, Ray Riggs, Chester, reported
Wednesday that a male and female
subject had purchased a truck a this
car lot on Monday.
The two presented a check and
had Riggs contact the Athens
County Bank to verily that the check
was good.
Yesterday, Riggs was informed
by the Athens County Bank that the
check had been forged.
Using the name given on .tre
(Continued on page 12) ·

870 12 Ga. Deer Slayer .............. $240. 19
1100 12 Ga. F Auto................... $324.17

Four drivers wounded in Ohio .during truckers' strike

SAVAGe,

By The Associated PrEss

Doubl8 Banels F.M.-MIC
YOUR OtOICE ONLY $17333

1#788 W/4X Scope .

·..243 Gal. Bolt Adion

$229.44

#7400 Automatic ~Cal; ......... ONLY $310.55

12 Ga. 870

DMr Barrel ..........................,$74.00

All STOCK
'

ON

HAND OF RJR!S .AND SHOT~

GUNS REDUaD .
PRICES
SIECIIVE
THRU FEB. 12,
1983
. .
.
.

COME IN TO SEE OUR
COMPLETE ~ION-Ali ON SALE

EBERSBACH -.
-HARDWARE " •
110 W. MAIN ST., POMBIOY, OH.
PH. 992-2811 '
TO S:OO

One truck was hijacked, the
driver of another was beaten and
Ohio produce dealers said deliverIes were slipping because of a
nationwide strike by Independent
, . truckers. The Highway Patrol said
nalls were scattered along highways in two sections of the state.
Hundreds of Independents kept
driving In Ohio, where violence has
been reported statewide and four
drivers have been wounded by
gunllre. '

The leader of the Ohio Independellt Truckers Assoclatlon, MarVIn
Hlckman,deplored the.,iolenceand
blamed It on troublerr .ters outside
t1Je truc!¢1&amp; industry.
The Highway Patrol saldWednes·
· day night that nalls were 'scattered
over a six:mue stretch of Interstate
70 in Llcldng County, but were
rerrtoved before they caused dam·
age. Nalls also were spread on a
roadway in Stark County, but
caused no damage, the patrol r· · l.
The Highway Patrol, she• .fs
departnients and poUce reported at
least 71 lricidents directed agaln$t
truckers since the strike began at
12:01a.m. Tuesday. Most occurred
without Injury to driVers.
Across the slate, -truckers reported being the target of gunfire or
rock-throwing. In Canton, six trucks
we~ set on tire, police said. ·

dusky County, and during the day in
said.
Shortly before noon Wednesday in deliveries continued. "As far as I Scioto-Pike county line.
Holmes,
Trumbull,
Mahonlng
and
Truckers who were fired upon
"V\'hlle he was inside the resColumbus, two gun-wielding men know, they are still running," said
Columbiana
counties,
troopers
and wounded either late Tuesday
troom, he was approached by two
hijacked a Lawson Co. food delivery Kroger spokesman Paul Bernlsh.
said.
nl!jht or early Wednesday are Oble
Ross
Lombardy,
executive
vice
·
strikers
who
Inquired
If
It
was
his
truck that pollee later found
-Trooper
John
Lenkey
said
E.
Parmle~, 42, of Miamisburg,
president
of
American
Se;~way
truck
.parked
outside.
When
he
abandoned.
.
in
Mahonseveral
trucks
were
shot
fired
on m Guernsey, County;
Foods
Inc.
in
Bedford
Heights,
said
replied
yes,
they
began
beating
him
"A man jumped upon the running
ing
County
about
7
p.m.
Wednesday
Wllllam
West, 27, of Arlington
his
firm,
which
supplies
1,:Dl
Ohio
up,"
said
Lt.
Dean
Conklin.
board on the driver's side. He swore
on
Interstate
76.
No
one
was
hurt,
he
Heights,
DL, shot on the Ohio
grocery
stores,
has
enough
food-Truck
driver
Edward
Piles,
55,
atmealot.Hestuckagunlnmyface
said.
Turnpike
in Sandusky County;
of Goshen, Ohio, reported to the
and said that Lawson's and Krog- stuffs 10 last two weeks to a month.
·
-Patrol
Lt.
Charles
Nlshwitz
Jackie
Britten,
an Indiana trucker,
Cleveland produce house opera- Highway Patrol that the left front
er'sweren'tgoingtorun here," said
said
a
shooting
was
reported
about
shot on Interstate 75 near Franklin
the driver, Verne F. DeVenny, 41, of tor Frank Cavalier said he trans- tire on his truck was shot out by two
.7:
ill
p.m.
Wednesday
just
north
of
In Warren County; and Harry
!erred
much
of
·)lis
business
to
men
In
a
car
around
6
p.in.
on
Barberton.
the
Ashtabula-Trumbull
county
llne
Mescher, 35, of Maineville, shot In
ratlroads
but
needed
trucks
to
haul
·
Interstate
7lin
Fayette
County.
At a lXJ..drlver meeting in
on
State
Route.ll.
A
truck
radiator
Preble
County.
food
from
the
rallyard.
He
said
he
-The
Hamllton
Post
of
the
Fremont, strikers tried and failed to
he
and
bumper
were
damaged,
two
truckers
recelvedjustoneshipmentWednesHighway
Patrol
said
convince truck stop operators
Wednesday· to shut off diesel fUel day and that the strike could take its reported being fired uponabout3: :Jl
pumps.
,.
· toll next week.
p.m. on Ohio 127 north of Hamilton.
About 150 truckers gathered
-In Canfield Wednesday evenH!cianan said the Fremont group
Snow !lurrtes and much colder tonight. Low in the upper 1eens.
and Its tactics weren't (lndorsed by WednesdaynlghtattheGrangehall. ing, Highway Patrolman James
Snow
flumes and cold Friday, High 20 to 25. -The chance ·of
in
W~gton
.
Brundag~
said
he
saw.
a
commer.
the ITA.
precipitation
is near 100 percent tonight afld ~ perce._nt Friday.
Nancy
Yood,
an
aide.
to
U.S
..
Rep.
_
cia!
truck
flagged
down
by
pickets
• · Brian Daw, manageroftheBin,a
Ohio
Extended
Forecast .
·
Donald
·Pease,
and
Ladd
Anthoey,
·,
on
Ohio
7
near
North
Lima
In
sma1i fruit and vegetableoperatton
For
Saturday
through
Monday
A chance of snow SatUrday.
an
aide
to
U.S.
Sen.
Howard
MahoningCounty.
Whenthedrlver·
1
• in Lakewood, said perishables were
Fair
Sunday
and
Monday.
Cold
through
the period, hut
at least a day late because l1'\lii1Y • Metzenbaum, gave out copies of a .stopped the truck bi ·the curb lane,
temperatw1l5
moderatbtg
by
Monday.
IUghs
In the 20s Saturday,
six-pap summary of the tax act . two people climbed onto the cab,
trucks aren't TUIUling at night.
lroni
the
tnld-209
lo
tnld-308
Sunday
and
in
the
30s Monday. Lows·5
truckers ai'e . protesting and ac- · Brundagesald.Hesaldhecalledfor
. Prlvers say It's safer during the
to 15 early Saturday and Sunday, and 10 to 20 Monday. .
· cepted petitions objecting to the act
help and that six pickets were
day . .
· Getting rid of.the act "might take . arrested for disorderly eonduct.
"PotatoeS at wholesale · ihi!Ve
-In Steubenv!IIE', .truck drlirer
. already gone up20percent since last a taXrevolttheywon'tbelleve," said
Daryl
Duncan,
54,
of
Bowling
Bill
Caldwell. 50, told pollee his
Friday, and before that, fanners
CLEVELAND (AP) - The winning number drawn Wednesday
Green.
"WI!at
are
you
going
to
do,
truck
was fired upon. The bullets
were i:ryltlg to give them away," he
·
night
in the Ohio-Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 957.
sald.Hesaldnoonecouldguarantee !lght or lay down'!''' Several men In missed him, butatleastonecracked
.
The
lottery reported earnln~ of $8'79,681 from the wagering on the
the windshield o! his truck, he said.
delivery of oranges and that · the crowd responded, ''Fight''
.
game.
Other Incidents Wednesday: ·
"It was real fast, bang-bang-bang"Nothing Is moving out .o! the
T):.e
earnings·
came
on
sales
of
$1,166,154,
whtle
holders
of
winning
-State tioopers at Portsinouth bang," Caldwell said.
Southwest."
tickets are entitled to share $286,473, lottery officials said.
-Rocks were reported thrown at ·
'Ibe Lawson Co. in Cleveland and · said a trucker was beaten at a rest
stop
along
U.S.
23
neat
the
trucks
Wednesday
night
in
San. the ·Kroger In Cincinnati said food

Weather forecast

Winning Ohio lottery number

.,
'

'

�Thursday, February 3, 1983

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
l11 Court Slrt!rl
Pum~ruy , Ohlu
114-9tZ-%l51

OEVOTEDTO'IliE INTEREST Of' THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publit~lwr

BOB HOEFLICH

fiAT WHITEHEAD
Ass isLanl Publisher/Cuntrulll' r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Bditur

Ghost of Smoot-Hawley
WASHINGTON - Before the
opportunity passes, one kind word
should be said for last month's
lame duck session of Congress: The
·Senate quietly killed the "domestic
content" bill that the House had '
passed on Dec. 10. Horray for the ·
Senate.
Only In legislative halls Is death a
temporary condition . .The bill will
be born again' In the new 98th
Congress, and such Is the liberal
shift In the f!ouse that the House
almost certainly wtl1 pass this
miserable measure once more.
Raspberries for the Bouse.

A MF.MRER otf The ASljudllt~ Press. JnhmcrDIIiiY ~l'SS ASSIK' ialion aUld lht"
Am~rit · ill rL

Nr'"·sj)apt&lt;r Publishen; AsstK"iallun.

¥n" "n~l~umed. Thry should~ l~li lhlln 300 wunis lung , All
subjt!C't ht edHinjil •nd mulit bt s la:~ with nume, addr~li and ttlt!phtiiU!
numhrr. Nuullliii'(Jkd lrtk'rs will bto fl'lbli!lbed. LettrnsbriUkl twin guud task . •ddn.otilj~

I.F.TTERS OF OPINION

lt'ttt&gt;rs

Hr"

iss\Jl's, nul pt'rW~Wiili~

Pressure for publi~
works program grows
President Reagan Is adamant in his opposition to public works jobs as an
antidote to unemployment, but there Is growing support In Congress for
precisely the kind of program he calls a dead end.
And that support Is not all Democratic - some ·conservative
Republicans are pushing government jobs, too.
That points to the first major collision on the new federal budget, since
Reagan's own version of a jobs plan Is going to have to go to Congress soon.
It includes a contlinu~t!on of extended unemployment benefits that will
expire on March 31 unless Congress acts.
Advocates of public works jobs for the unemployed are virtually certalfi
to make the Reagan bill a vehicle for their proposals, or try. Should they
succeed, Reagan could be faced with a choice between vetoing hls oi.vn
proposals or swallowing part of theirs.
,
·
Reagan's budget doesn't leave much room for compromise on this.
House Speaker Thomas R. O'Neill Jr. said he told Reagan Monday that
there needs to be an emergency program to put people to work. O'Neill
wants a $5 to $7 billion public works employment program this year.
He said Reagan told.h!m "I don 't think we're that far apart."
No farther apart than yes and no.
· With unemployment at 10.8 percent, pressure for government job
creation Is becoming a bipartisan campaign. "The question Is nat whether
you're going to have a jobs program," said Sen. Dan Quayle, R-Ind., who is
sponsoring a $2 billion jobs plan. "Tbe question Is what It Is going to look
like."

Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, chairman of the Labor and Human
Resources Committee, is a co-sponsor. He says he hopes Reagan will
compromise. " You can't afford to Just reject out of hand Republican
proposals, Democratic proposals or bipartisan proposals," he said.
Senate Republican Leader Howard H. Baker Jr. says he believes
Congress wU! pass a jobs bill. He said he hopes it will be of reasonable size,
and wUI take effect quickly.
In the budget message, Reagan said that the economy' is on the path to
recovery. And he counts Democratic job creation bills of the past 2il years
among wrongful.remedies for the economy.
But it would be far easier to withstand a repeat performance by the
Democrats, who have been demanding a jobs bill for months, !hap a new
movement among the GOP to take a smaller step in the same direction.
It Is beginning to sound as though Reagan 's GOP colleagues are not
going to be satisfied with his program of extended unemployment benefits,
tax credits for employers who hire tlie long-term jobless, and $240 million
for job training.
·
The reason Is written into the budget, too. The administration's
economic projections are that unemployment Will average 10.7 percent
this year, a barely perceptible decline. The rate anticipated for 19ll4 is 9.9
percent, down a bit but a major problem in an election year, and not only
for the Republican presidential ticket. Nineteen Senate seats now held by
Republicans will be at stake, too.

Deficit leaves _nation's
·credit markets edgy
Beneath the seemin!flY calm acceptance of more big budget deficits lies
a frightened, jumpy credit market.
Some home mortgage rates have turned a bit higher. Earlier this week
the yield on Treasury borrowings rose. And so, as a consequence, did the
rate that savings banks can pay on six-month certificates.
Dealers in money and credit link such actMty directly to the realization
that In just two fiscal years, 1983 and 1981, the federal budget deficit Is
likely to total about $400 billion.
Mammoth federal deficits can sop up most of fhe money In the credit
pool, leaving little for others. And if the others insist on a share, the pticeof
· money can go only higher.
It Is such fears, money people say, that leave credit markets so edgey, no
matter what the economic seers say about a continued fall of inflation and
interest rates.
Most of these forecasts, Including that of the administration, are based
on a disturbing assumption - that the recovery will be weak or, more
euphemistically stated, modest.
Students of credit say a weak demand for money - that is, a weak
recovery in the consumer and business sector - might allow the
government t&lt;;&gt; have the credit pool mostly for itself. Like an elephant in the
water hole.
But what If the other credlt-uslng creatures also seek to takea dip? With
the government planning to take a huge portion of the credit pool, the
demand for money could be greater than tbe supply.
·
"Projections now indicate that the federal government wtll pre-empt
nearly three-fourths of new private savlr)g.for theyearl983," says a report
from the Center for the Study of American Business at Washington
University, St. Louis.
The ,~:enter, headed by Murray We!denbaurn, recent chairman of
President Reagan's Council of Eeonomic Advisers, concludes that
"precious Iitle" Is left with which to finance an enduring private-sector
recovery.
_
At least three conclusions can be drawn tram this predicament. Many
already have been.
'
1. The·recovery Isn't likely to·expand very far or fast.
2. If by some set of circwnstances It tries to do so, higher interest rates_
might intervene.
'
·
·
. 3. If lnter~t and Inflation rates eontinue to decline, in spite of big federal
deficits, the explanation would lie in the weakness of the private sector
economy.

Today ._i_. history
Today is Thursday, Feb. 3, the 34th day of 1983. There are331 days left ln
the year.
.
Today'$ highlight In history:
.
On Feb. 3, 1917, the United States broke diplomatic relations 1Nlth
Gennany after the Germans announced a policy of. unrestricted
submarine warfare during World War I.
On this date:
In 18l9, the 1-!!rritory of IDlnols was created.

Page-2-.The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy_:Middleport, Ohio
Thursclc!y, February 3, 1983

-1

411

Bribes for Thurmond?..__ ____J_ac_k_A_nd_er.__so_n
WASHINGTON- Ex-CIA agent
Edwin P. Wilson Is a preternatu·
rally suspicious man. He let his
guard down once, was tricked Into
the FBI's hands and Is now In jallconvlcted of smuggling arms to
Libya.
But when Wilson was still wheel·
lng and dealing In the murky world
of International Intrigue, he never
trusted any of his employees or busIness partners to do what they were
supposed to do. And that Is why,
after a lapse of several years, a
· former WUson hireling has
emerged to claim that he personally saw brlbes passed to Sen.
Strom Thurmond, R-S.C. The witness was assigned, he avows, to
make sure the alleged brtbe wsa
passed.

The Justice Department's inVes·
tlgatlon of these 'astonishing
charges might understandably be a
bit gingerly. Thurmond Is the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee; with awesome power over
tlie department. But fortunately,
the Investigation Is being handled
by assistant U.S. Attorney E. Lawrence Barcella, who has earned a
reputation as a tough, honeit prosecutor. Thurmond vigorously denies accepting any brtbe.
The new wllness said he was assigned by Wilson to spy on other
Wilson associates, Including the
middleman who a.\legedly passed
the brtbe money to Thurmond. The
witness said he hadn't come for·
ward earlier because he was wary
of Wilson, who had threatened him

SVAC's second place
at stake Friday night

]ames]. Kilpatrick

many as o"-n~e-m=ill~lo~n~n~e~W~jo~bs::-,-;ln~--;:h:::lg:::h~po=n"'uc::cal:;-:co=ur::ag=e-=o=n•K7.e:::m::p;:;':;-s
reversion to protectionism, pure, the warped view of the United Auto
part to oppose the measure. 'l'hl5
simple and untained by the slight- Workers. The theory Is bogus. For was also true of J . William Stanton,
est" trace of statesmanship or every job that might be created In
R-Ohlo, who comes from the very
common sense. The Idea Is to the domestic parts industry, heart of UAW country. He refused
proteCt the' domeStic automobile' another job would be lost ln.· to head ."dOwn tl\e protectionist
Industry by requiring foreign ma- Industries that rely upon export
route." Joel , Pritchard of Seattle
nufacturers to meet certain "con· trade. In the course of the House was another who stood on'princ!ple
tent" requirements for cars sold In , debate, Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., put against the bUI.
the United States. Toyota and the matter bluntly: "This is not a
The bill passed the House 215-188,
Nlssan, for example, by 1985 wojjld jobs blll; this Is .going to destroy but not before a dozen amendments
have to have 70 percent to 75 jobs."
had been .debated. Sam Gibbons of
percent of their cars assembled
Kemp comes from Buffalo, Florida compared the amendfrom American-made components. where the depressed steel and auto rnents to "putting a Band:Aid on a
In theory this would create ,new industties presumably \vould be- ra tilesnake," There's not much you
jobs for American workers - as ·neflt from the bUl. It was an act of can do to Improve a rattlesJ1al!:e, he
said, "and there Is no way you can
improve this bill."
One prOosed amendment, however, would have been a distinct
improvement. 1t was offered In
scorn and derision O)r WUlam E.
Dannemeyer of California. He
wanted to provide a substitute title
and a new statement of purpose:
"This Act may be cited as the
Smoot-Hawley Trade Barriers Act
of 1982. The purpose of this Act Is to
reduce competition in the automobile Industry, protect jobs In .one
industry to the dettiment of jooo in
other industrles, and to Increase the
pric e of automobiles to
consumers.''
The Dannemeyer amendment
had the perfection of good cast
irony, It precisely stated \he case.
The Infamous Smoot-Hawley Act of
19ll was Intended to protect
Midwestern agriculture and Northeastern Industry by drastic Increases in the tariffs charged to
) ....
Imported conunodlttes and manufactures. The act Immediately
provoked retaliatory measures by
our trading partners.
Tile domestic content blll Is a

and who seemed to he operating
with the CIA's blessing.
He has told his' story to Justice
Department Investigators. Here
are excerpts from a sworn statement obtained by by associate Dale
VanAtta:
"I do swear I was tn the employ of
Edwin Paul Wlison. Wilson casually Introduced me to (the middleman~ at . (Wilson's office In ·
Washington, D.C.~.
"The middleman) would regu·
larly come to (the Arlington, Va.)
office of Delex Inrernatlonal Inc., a
Wilson-sponsored company. On
three separate occasions (a Delex
employee) handed (the middle·
man~ thick manUa envelopes
stuffed with 'money. It was a specific procedure thai these enve-

CQrporate tax .bait

lopes, No. .IO size, were not marked
ln any way •..
"I witnesses (the empl~
countling the money out OJI a (t!~
table ... They w~re J)artlcularly.
memorable episodes, because
Delex had to have money In RJggs
Bank on the same days to cover
checks, and cash was counted out
for that as weU. To the best of my
recollection, the amount I witnesses on each of these three occasions ws $10,(XX) even ...
... I followed him tn my own car."
The first time the middleman left
with tlie boodle, the witness lost
him in traffic. But the next two
times, lie tailed him to the Capitol
Hill Club, where the middleman
met Thurmond, ''wbom I know by
sight," the witness stated. ·

Second place Is at stake Friday
night when Coach Keith Carter's
Kyger Creek Bobcats travel to
MercervUle for a head-on clash
against Coach Mike Jenkins'
WUdcats.
.
Kyger Creek, 1J.3 overall, holds
second place now with a 5-2 record
while Hannan Trace, •3 in the
league has ·a hold on third place.
Overall, the WUdcats own a 9-7 record following Tuesday's, 72-GIIoss
at Fairland.
Kyger Creek used a balanced
scoring attack to post a 70.50 nonconference win over Wahama ·
Tuesday.
Roger Stroud and Brent Love led
the way with 14 points; Keith Clark
added 13 and J.D. Bradbury had 12.
Despite U&gt;ve !llld Bradbury fouling
out, KC received some extra scorIng punch tram Ron and David

\

Martin.

Meanwhile, the foul bug also bit
H;uman Trace as the Wildcats'
. leading point producer junior Jeff
Sames and Robbie Brumfield were
each forced to the bench In the Fair. land. Barnes led the WUdcats with
17 points while Brumfield dumped
In eight.
Kyger Creek defeated Hannan

HEY, WAIT!:.. I

thlrtt

Trace handlly on Its home court ln landers. Eastern Is winless at 0.16
December and again at Hannan and().71n the league, while SouthwTrace In the Holiday tournament. ,estern Is 4-11. overall and 3-5 ln
Both Southern and Eastern battle league play. Southwestern won
. league opponents Friday night as four. of Its first five games, but has
Southern takes liS act on the road td remained winless since Its early
North Gallla, while Easrern re- season fortune,
Eastern suffered a disappointing
turns home to face Southwestern.
loss
to Alexander Tuesday while
Southern Is currently 14-2 overall
Southwestern
remained Idle. Both
and heads the!\IVACwitha 7-0slate.
clubs
should
be
up tor this one as
The Tornadoes of Coach Carl Wolfe
both
crews
are
hungry for a
dropped to ntnth In Ohio's class "A"
victory.
poll after a loss tD class "AAA" Logan, 68-58, last Saturday.
.-----------Southern's foe North Gallta Is
now 6-9, coming off a 68-33 triumph
over the Hannan, W. Va. Wtldcats
on Tuesday. In league play Coach
Bruce Wilson's Pirates are 2-5.
A complete .team effort has
&amp;31 JACKSON' PIKE · Rt 35 WEST
Phone 448-W..
keyed many Southern victories this
BARQA.W MATWEf$ SAT 5 SUN
season, however, senior guard
ALL SEAl'S 12.00
4DMISSIOH EVERY ruE.WY S2.00
Zane Beegle and junior playmaker
Rod Llttleneld have been the main
offensive spark plugs. Big Matt
~N 28 thru FEB~
FRIOAV fhtu THtiRSOAY ! :
Ke'rnper, a S.5 junior, leads the
Pirates.
Southern returns home Saturday
to ·race Ceredo-Kenova, w, Va, at
Charles V(. Hayman gymnasium.
The Eastern Eagles will be seek·
. lng their first win of the season
against the Southwestern High-

Scoreboard ...
IAJOSE BALL -

Basketball

Warren Mal1ln (51) durlng first baH action at ClemLuerpholo)

Cle0111011's M111'11'8y Jannan

Nauoa.l 8 Mkdbe! A....."'on
.. , The .. ...,.... ..... PnMa
FASTERN OONFERENCE
At.ndc DMIH
W L Pet. GB
Phlladelptia
396
.~36 10 .783 lY,
.1) 1'1
.&amp;.II 10
New Jei'M'y

11011. (AP

(25) defteds the baD away from Nort'b carolina's

Meigs faces Waverly,
20th ranked Buckeyes

I

t

By KEITH WISECUP

Up and dpwn Waverly Invades
Liln-y Monison Gy.mnaslum on the
upswing Friday agatDst the Meigs
Marauders In Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League hardwood action.
Saturday , Coach Greg
Drummer's crew travels to Nelsonville to take a crack at the state's
20th ranked "AA" Buckeyes.
Wavetry, once synonymous with
winning basketball, has lost five
straight SEOAL games for a ~
• loop slate and S-10 overall.
In the midst of the losing streak,
however, Coach Willie Hobbs' Tigers defeated then top-ten ranked
Circleville 58-57.
The path of the pendulwn went
down tollowlng the Circleville upset
as four players, Including the
league's second and third leading
scorers, Jerry Mlller ( 18.4~ and
· Robbie Lewis (17.9), were suspended for disciplinary reasons.
Both are slated to go against the
• Marauders, but another starter,
Tom Thompson, Is listed as doubtful due to flu. Thompson has not
practiced this week and missed

Lowell Wingett

The trlal balloon the president re- "Sure, repeal !t-lfyou are Alice in
I must admit that I .was wrong ln talked the aging actor Into acting
leased in Boston last week to abol- Wonderland. This president, who thinking that at least he had recog· his age and leaving the cares of the
Ish the corporate Income tax should
appeared to be Mr. Nice Guy on the nlzect reality. He promised things presidency to spend his sunset yebe the final proof that the Reagan TV tube In his State of the Union that no president could achieve ln ars In comparative peace. I wsa _....
administration is the se~ant of big message talks one day later ahout eight years of the best of economic wrong again!
money. Presidents should not repealing the corporate income circumstances. With a third of the
Afrer listening to his pitch Janumake $58 bWion statements lightly. tax. Thlscomesatthesametlmehe nation either unemployed or In an ary 25 to all the segments of the
The story the White House staff re- Is discussing a new tax on conswnp- uncertain financial condition, some population he has so far ignored, I
leased that It was merely an of- tlon - which would be mainly on of the Reagan famous one-liners think he will be a candidate for reefhand remark not tD be taken
low and middle income people-, a wtl1 come home like chickens to lection In 1984. To scare off any poseriously was apj!arently not be- tax on unernploy~rent ·compensa- roost.
tential Republican opposition, the
lieved on Wall Street where the tion, a tax on ~alth insurance. This
Ever\ while he was creating un- ·National Republlcan Committee
stock market went up 25 points the Indicates the kind of callousness employment to control inflation, last week endorsed him for reelecnext day.
and insensitivity that Is just unbe- .Ronald Reagan quipped with thinly tion. Vice President 'George Bush
The Office of Management and lievable." Comments in the same disguised contempt, ''Unemploy- was endorsed as his running mate
Budget has estimated the corpo- veln were echoed all across the ment .insurance is a prepaid vacain payment for faithful adherence
rate lncome tax will bring in $58.3 nation.
tion for free-loaders." That Is one of to Reagan policies although he had
billion ln the fiscal1983 year, a ninth
The president's comment on the the famous one-liners which will
termed them vO!Hloo economics ln
ot the total U. S. receipts for the corporate tax came while the pub- haunt him as he seeks a second 19110. Bush has never been so tight
year. The picture which the White lic was sttll trying todli;:esihisram- term In 1984. I had thought before
before or sinCe! '
House subordinates have .been bllng address on the Slate of the he gave his State of the Union adBy naming his close !tiend, Sena·
painting ot a chief executive · Union Q&gt;e .eventng before. In it he, dress that he had a belly full of tj1e
tor Paul Laxalt, to head the Repubthoughtlessly musing before an . In true Reagan fashion, promised presidency and was ready to retire
lican National Committee,
open microphone on natlonaltelevl- something for every one. I taped his to his California mountain top on a
President Reagan assured himself
sion is ridiculous! The statement address and have played It over handsome presidential pension, a
an early endorsement anci by danhad been well rehearsed, even to and over and still can't decide California governor's pension and
gling the bait of a corporate taxless
the coy smile and the deprecating whether the man Is an honest drea- social secutity. I had .thought that
future, he has Insured plenty of
remark, 'I'D kick myself ln the mer or an Inept polltictan. In view his wlfewouldhavetalkedthe I had
campaign money!
morning." The quick White House of the present economic conditions, thought that his wUe would have
burtal of the idea was too sudden to
IIJ'IIII!Ii"' .......,,.,.,.
· be convincing. :Ibe yes-men In the
White House do not openly accuse
....-::::: their boss of though!lessness unless
that accusation Is part of a carefully planned scheme for deception.
If the administration would spend -~/ • •
as much t1nne considering ways to
help the people rather than deceivIng them, something might be
accompljshed.
The president said the Idea of ab• • , .~~r:::-l!7.
ollshlng the corporate tax should be ~ ., •
s tudled , that It Is unfair to business .P
and "there really lsn'tany justlflca· ~ ­
tlon for it." lD·fact, there are 58.3 -'~
bUIIon Justifications for that Is the
~wnber ol. dollars this paJ1Icular
tax keeps off the ever Increasing
deflcll AS to his suggestion that It
should be "studied," It has been stu·
died by big buslness.forY,ears, wept
over in countless board rooms and
scrutinized by the llnest accountants and economiSts money , can
buy. Now that the president has openly sympathized with Its abolish·
ll)ellt, don't thluk the Idea will
return.quletly to Its gl'llve. You wW
· hear more of It In the next .two
years!
·,~ ··
·
Ohlo~s Senator Howard Metzen"I'd lllca you to gat rid of the faderal daflcll, male Social Seoorlty
bauni had this to say about the BUg·
haven't gotten m ,my
wish yeti"
aestlon to repeal the corporate tax. solvent again, and

The Daily Sentinei-Pa~3

Pwneroy-Middleport, Ohio

Colleg~
Mo't*l&amp;id~'s

scores

IWkethMll ~

,

EAST
Ek:.Jston Call. T.l. Prod&lt;k.&gt;lltt Coli . 711
8ll('k001 ~1 . Colgal&lt;' ."0
Dl~ln.wn $ , Muhlf'l'\bl&gt;r~ oU
A~· ~1
G«tr~ w~ shlnJ!!on R7, Na,-y

fordham !12.

..

79
l...ilfaw ttf' 76. LA&gt;hhzh tifl
Lon~ I sland (T.)JJ, Martsr 'nt
Manh.anan 77, Hotstru m
Mal') 'lillld 8'7. O!d Domin!nn hi
Ma.'isachusctts 1\.t. Pmn Sl. 62
~· Haml)6hlrf' TI. VC'f'fT'IOOI 69
Rldrr ~ . Morunourh ~
Sl . Mictlwl' !i !11. S1. J os(&gt;ph'O'l
SL Pt' lel''!i G9. F'alr&amp;&gt;ld ffi. O'f'

st. Francts. NY 71. Fairleigh DICkinson
Sima Dl, ~ola :r1
SyracuiP lB. C£ll'lllf'C11rur m

Tue~ay's

60-56 loss to Minford.

During Miller's and Lewis' absenee, the Tigers lost handily to
Ironton (67-42) and Gallipolis (70.
35). Waverly defeated Meigs earlier in the year 74-ro.
E:&lt;l Sharfenaker, Waverly's S-4
junior center, has miSsed the last
twco games with a concussion but Is
slated to start.
Saturday's game pits the Marauders against a fine Buckeye
fivE·, now 13-2 on the year.
Nelsonville-York has one of the
purest shooters in the state ln S-3
senior Tom Taggart. Although apparently favoring football for his
eollege future, Taggart would fit
into most coUeg!ate cage progra.ms. Taggart was the quarterbaclk on Nelsonville-York's state
cha.mplon squad in 1~1.
Two weeks ago, the Buckeyes
slipped In the ranklngs by virtue of
a stunning 61-58 loss to A!exanMr.
N-Y defeated Meigs in the first
. match-up, 72-53.
On the local side of the ledger, the
Marauders came off their best performance of the year, a 00.52 win
ovet Federal Hocking.
If the Marauders play as consistent and shoot well, they have a legitImate chance at either opponent
OVE'r the weekend.
Starting for the Marauders wtl1
be Nick Riggs and Rick Edwards,
guatrds, Greg Taylor and Rick
-Chancey, forwards, and Bill Holcornb, center, with a sixth man Jay
Ev.ans, the first man off the bench.

Mike Kennedy
13 57
George Hobson
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TOrAlii
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Mike Chancey
14 74
Rlck Wise
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Scott Gheen
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Dan Thomas
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14 . 18
Jackie Welker
Dave Fisher
14 15
Nick Bush
12
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ThUtSday, Feb~ry 3, 1983

Thursday, February 3, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

lf l8-3 equals No. l. howcome 7-14
does n't equal1·A?
Don't ask North Carolina Coach
Dean Smilh .
"ll you look at the way Clemson
played, they should be r ight behind
us." Smith sa id Wednesday night
after his defending national champion Tar Heels "eelebrated" their
return to the No.I position in The
AsSoci ated Press poll by coming
from behind to nip Atlantic Coast
Conference rtval Clems on 84-81.
Six other members of the Top
Twenty were In action and three of
· them also struggled. Tenth-ranked
Missouri nipped Colorado 68-65 in a
two-overtime Big Eight game,
No.12 Louisville staved off a late
Cincinnati rally to post a 79-73Metro
Conference victory and No.17
Minnesota needed two overtlmes to
tum back OhloState89-SOinBigTen

Clemson to a 69-&amp;4 lead before
vlch added 17 as Missouri edged
Perkins and Micbael Jordan, wbo
Colorado. Colorado led bye!ghtwlth
had 24 poir\ts, paced ~orth Caroll- 5:2il reina!nlngbutMlssouricaught
na's rally.
up on two tree throws by Stlpano"We'vestJUgotalotofworktodo,
vlch with 1:14 left. In the first
overtime, Missouri bull! a fourbut we're a pretty good team,"
Smith sal d.
point lead, but Colorado's KeVin
Top Teo
Cornish tied It with a tip-in at. the
At Houston, Clyde Drexler scored
buzzer.
Second Teo
29 points, hitting 13 of 16 from the
At Cincinnati, Mlit . Wagner
floor, to lead the Cougars, 17-2
overall and ~ in SWC play, over scored 22 points and Rodney
Baylor for their 12th straight McCray added 18 to lead Louslv1lle ·
triumph. Drexler hjt his first 11 over the Bearcats. Loulsvllle, 6-0 in
the Metro Conference and 17-3
shots and the · Cougars used a
overaU, took a 42-~ halftime lead.
full-court pressdurlng afive-minute
But anclnnatl, winless in six
stretch to sprint to a 42-31 halftime
lead. Substitute Benny Anders conferel)ce games, was led by
Dwight" Jelly" Jones wlth16 points
added a sea$on-high 15 points, while
and reserve Marty Campbell with
Houston's shot-blocking specialist,
Akeem Abdul Oiajuwon, rejected 15.
Louisville stretched Its lead to
nine shots.
67-47
midway through the second ·
Drexler told Coach Guy Lewis
haH. But Cincinnati trtrnmed the
before the game that he was ready
for a big night. Besides his sharp deficit to 75-72 before Louisville's ·
shooting, he grablled 12 rebounds Charlie Jones sank two free throws
and Lancaster Gordon scored on a
and dished out two assists.
"He was ready to start playing slam dunk as time ran out to
complete Louisville's 14th straight
well, he told me that theother day,"
victory over the Bearcats.
Lewis said.
~t Columbus, Roland Brook$'
At Fayetteville, Ark., Darrell
Walker led a balanced Arkansas four points starling the second
attack with 14 points, while Joe overtime gave Minnesota the lead
Kleine had 13 and Leroy Sutton and and the Gophers, paced by 7-foot -3
Alvin Robertson 10 apiece. The Randy Breuer's26 points, went on to
Razorbacks jumped to a 23-9lead in take over the Big Ten lead with a
the first nine minutes and booSted it controversial viCtory over Ohio
to 3S-19 at the haH.It was 63-30with State. Tommy Davis sank two free
throws with no time left on the clock
6: 19left.
Arkansas improved its record to after the first overtime to pull the
1S.1 and remained in second place in Gophers even at 72-72.Minnesota,
' the SWC at 7-1. The Razoi'backs' 6-2 in the Big Ten and 14-3 overall,
broke a first-place tie with 5·2
only loss was to Houston.
At Boulder, Colo., Jon Sundvold Indiana.
scored 25 points and Ste\&gt;e Stipano-

A surprising brown ·bag ·. lunch

'

Meigs junior high
ba~ketball roundup
.

Mancini has hard time concentrating

By Dale M. SloB
meat salad recipes, add seedless or
alumlnwn .toll. At lunchtime, the
Metp Counly Extemlon
seeded grapes or pineapple chunks. .broWn bagger Is treated to hot soup
Home EcooornW
Tuck a plastic with a few nuts into
and a hot hot dog!
Savory vegetable soup, crunchy the lunch box so the brown-bagger
Crunchy vegetables are great for
lalsed salad with marinated veget- can toss these with the salad right
a packed lunch and tossed salads
ables and hearty apple cake aU
before eating. A plastic bag tulJ of
are a .real treat. For an extra specomblile for an unusual and nutri- shredded lettuCe is nice to add to
cial lalsed salad, try placing thin
tious lunch. The surprtsing part of the salad to add crunch and to add
slices of cucumber, radishes, car·this lunch is thatltlsa "brown bag"
volume.
rots, cei.ery and chunks of tomato,
lunch!
·
With meat salads, a whole grain
broccoli, green pepper In a small
Toling a bag from home tilled
bread or dessert Is great. The folamount of French dressing. These
with these delicious foods may
lOWing recipe Is for a cake that has
veggtes could be packaged In a
make yolir lunchtime take on new
an unusual topping baked on it.
smaU jar, plastic bag pr ptastlc conmeaning: Gone are the plain, borCrunchy Apple Cake
. . tainer. Prepare tom lettuce and
Jng bologna·sandwiches, the empty
For The Topping:
package It in a plastic bag. Include
calorte snacky' foods and the fattenl4 cup uncooked oatmeal (quick a disposable bowl or plate. At lunchIng can of pop. The brown bag or old fashioned)
time, pour the Jtlarlnated vegetaluncher can enjoy health!ul, inter113 cup firmly packed brown
bles over the lettuce for a· super
esting (and even low-ealorle! ) sugar
salad. Thin strips of cheese, meat
foods by adding a little creative
2 tablespoons melted 'butter or
or egg could be packaged separtwist to the traditional lunch paD . margarine
ately 1D add at lunChtime. Here is a
foods.
2 tablespoons chopped nuts
quick and easy recipe for French
When planning a lunch for your·
~ teaspoon cinnamon
dressing that makes a good base for
self or another family member,
Combine topping ingredients and
the. marinated veggtes:·
begin by planning the main J)&lt;!rt of
mix well.
~ cup salad oU
the lunch. UsuaUy a protein-rich
For The Cake:
·2 T. lemon juice
food, this broW-n-bag food can be the
1 cup brown sugar, packed
2 T. vinegar
!tiling for a sandwich, a soup, or
~ cup butter or margarine,
2 tsp. sugar
stew or cheese.
softened
~ tsp. paprika
Candidates of senior girls were selected· by their
For sandwich varieties, try dif1 cup unpeeled apples, diced
BASKETBALL SWEETHEART CANDI~ tsp. dry mustard
classmates. They are,lelt to right, Tracy Riffle, Kbn
ferent types of breads. Whole
DATES - Soulhem IDglt School's basketball swee~ cup cold coffee
Salt and pepper
wheat, cracked wheat, oatmeal or
Morrow, Lori Warden, and Uncia O'Brien. Candidate
~ cup walnuts
theart wiD be announced during the haHtlrne ol the
Combine aU Ingredients in a Jar.
raisin bread are good choices. Also
Cindy Evans was not present for the picture.
~ cup raisins
reserve basketball game !iattJrdey night at Soulhem.
Cover and shake until well mixed.
try pita bread for a change. Pita
'4 cup whOle wheat nour
Store in the refrigerator.
bread Is bread from the Mideast
"4 cup all purpose fiour
All of these foods combine to
that Is round and fiat. There Is a
1 tsp. soda
create super lunches. The only
space Inside the little load where
~ tsp. baking powder
thing to watch is that all foods conyou can put fltlings.
An alumni basketball tournaalong with plans for sponsortng the
the high school.
'4 tsp. salt
taining meat, milk or egg he kept
ment
wa,s
planned
for
March
19
at
One of my favorite lunch-box
~ tsp. cloves
Meigs Elementary basketball tourhot or cold. To inake yQur own Ice,
the
Feb.
1
meeting
of
the
Meigs
nament toward the end of
sandwiches Is halt of a round pita
~ tsp. nutmeg
till a small plastic container about
.
Athletic
Boosters
held
at
the
high
thismonth.
bread filled with mashed beans,
~ tsp. cinnamon
three-fourths full of water. Freeze
MEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S
school.
Named to nominating committee
taco sauce, shredded cheese and
1 egg
the container and tucK It in with a
were Gordon Fisher, Cinda Harrt.s·
Gene Wise will be coordinator for
lettuce or sprouts. Include a bag of
Cream butter and sugar. Add ap- lunch a lunch to keep It cold. Insuthe
games
and
any
Meigs
alumnus
and Marla Grimes. The committee
chopped tomatoes too. Add to the
ples and cold coffee. Combine dry lated lunch bag and bucket are
will report at the April meeting with
interested
in
playing
in
an
oversandwich right before Ws eaten. Toingredients and coat nuts and raJ- avaUable but you can make a lunch
•LEE
matoes added to a sandwich too sins in the Dour before adding. Add sack out of quOted fabric to help thirty game, an under-thirty game, the new officers to beinstalledatthe
•WRANGLER
May sports banquet.
or a girls' game is asked to advise
long before it's eaten wlll make the
this and dry Ingredients to creamed keep your lunch cold. If you would
•MAVERICK
Wise
before
March
1.
The winter sports banquet for
bread soggy. Other bread choices
mlxblre. Add egg, beating well. tlke directions for making a qullted
•MR. LEGGS
high school athletes will be held on
It was declded that the pizzas for
might Include French rolls, baked
Pour into greased 8" X 8" pan. lunch bag, contact Dale Stoll at Box
orders
have
been
taken
wlll
which
March14
.
.dlruler rolls, bagels or English
Sprinkle crunch topping evenly 32, Pomeroy, Ohio or call!m-6ffi6. I
Meigs High School Principal
be prepared and ready for delivery
muffins.
over the top of the batter. Bake for will also send your more Ideas for
Miller talked with the group about
Ot course sandwiches ren't the 4045 minutes in preheated 350 de- brown bag lunches If you wlll con- at 2 p.m. on Feb. 12.
the Feb. 7 meeting regarding drugs
A
parents
night
for
wrestling
and
only choices. A pre-buttered whOle
gree oven.
tact me.
MIOOaPOIH OHIO
and
alcohol and related problems at
junior
high
night
were
discussed
a
wheat muffin, crackers or bread
Hot foods can easUy be a part of a
sticks are reaDy good with a variety
packed lunch If you have .an insu- r------...:....---------------------~-------....JL----------ot other lunch box foods.
lated container or vacuum bottle.
Sandwich tlllings can be j82Zed
Heat soup or other foods to piping
up, too. Try combining peanut buthot and add to a pre-heated conter with ground raw carrots or . tainer. Foods prepared in this
chopped oranges. Leftover meamanner wlll stay hot for ·several
tloa!, sliced chicken, turkey or ham
bours. Try vegetable soup, chill, or
or egg salad are aU excellent sanda thin soup tlke chicken and rtce.
wich fillings.
For an extra surprise, cook a bot
A different twist to the usual
dog, tie a string aroUnd It and add It
chicken, turkey or tuna salad sandto the thermos bottle of piping hot
wich fUllngs Is to tum these foods
soup. Secure the top well. Spread a
into salads instead. To your basic
hot dog bun with mustard or ketchup and wrap In plastic wrap or

Meigs Boosters plan basketball tourney

GETDNG BY - ~ota forward Zebedee Howell (33) drives
past Oblo Slate foward Tony Campbell during llrsl half action In Columbus Tuesday ulpt. Mlnnllil&gt;l'.a won In dOuble-overilme, 11&amp;-80. (AP
Laserphoto)
'-'
.

Blair feels tarnished football image unjustified
participates in USO tours overseas.
HONOLULU tAP ) -The image
His pet project is a summer
of pro football players has suffered
football camp he conducts for kids.
in recent years. and Matt Blair of
Blair, 32, finds time for all the
the Minnesota Vikings feels it's
activities despite owning a trucking
unjustified.
firm and doing television broadcast
While stories of Isolated drug
abuse may grab national headlines, .work in Minneapolis.
"I find a lot of things to do," he
the good deeds -done 6y ma~~y
said, smiling. "I used to get kind of
National Football League players
bored in theo!f-season, and I started
are largely overlooked, says the
with the Heart Fund, and now I've
Vikings' linebacker, who will be
appearing in his sixth Pro Bowl · worked my way up to just about any
organization that wants me.
game next Sunday.
"It makes me feel bad to know all
the · good things that players
NOTRE DAME VS. LA SAlLE (Philadelphia) - Notre Dame's
Transactions
contribute
are not talked about very
guard Jolm Paxson Dghts his way to the basket agalust three La Salle
BASEBAll
much, " he said. "But if one
defenders during first half action Wednesday night. (AP Laserpholo)
Amf!f'k•~
wrongdoing comes up, it gets wide
DETROIT TIGERS-Announced
that
exposure all across the country."
Tom Brookms. inf\eldPr. ap:r£«1 to tenns
Blair Is a walklngtestainent to the
on a Ol'o(";.'('aT contract.
MINNESOTA
TWINS- SI ~ned
type of positive social roles many
Rkh
players assume off the field,
'i&lt;'ll, pitehrr. 01nd Gr(1i!: Gagne. stDr1stop,
10 O(l(lo-V(&gt;ar oomracu:.
Back in Minneapolis, he does
TORONTO BLUE JA Y~Sifoll'll'd WI liN'&gt;
fund-raising work for multiple
Upshaw, first Da.Seman, to a ont--)'('ar
ro ntract.
sclerosis, the Kidney Foundation,
NIUbud l.elWJt&gt;
United Way and Big Brothers. He
MOvrREAL EXPOS-stfm{'d JCff WU ·
. .
por1. catCher. !lobby Cm&lt; .Jr .. Shortstop;
also is active in the African
and BllW' Katk'h . wtftcldff. Traded
American · Cultural Center and
Cbrls Smllh. inf.k&gt;lder-outflc\der. to the
tn. recent Meigs Junior High bas- loss to Athens. Billy Brothers paced Minnesota
San F'rlmctsro r.tants tor Jim WotllfOJ'd ,
Association for . ReMarauders
with
six
while
the
little
ketball action, the boys' eighth
~tnPider.
,
tarded
Citizens,
and
he
frequently
Michael Bartrum had five. Others
grade defeated Federal Hocking
59-41 and Athens 50-27, the seventh , scor(ng were Scott Wtlllams and
Paul Melton, four each, Don Dorst,
grade lost to Athens 45-25, and the
three, and James Norman, two.
girls defeated Athens 24-14.
Thoden
and Jones led Athens with
EIGHTH GRADE
WARREN, Ohio (AP) -World
drinking poisonous chemiCals.
J. R. Kitchen led Meigs with 18 12 apiece.
Boxing
Association
lightweight
Mancini, of Youngstown, talked
Gffii.S'
points In their win over Federal
Ray
"Boom
Boom"
champion
to
the Warren newspaper Tuesday
Rhonda Zirkle's 11 points paced
Hocking. Huey Eason added 14
Mancini
says
he
Is
trying
·
to.
by
telephOne fron'l Italy, where he is
the little Meigs lasses as they
markers and 14 rebounds while
concentrate
on
an
upcoming
non·
preparing
for a Sunday fight with
hailded Athens their second loss of
Steve Musser Chipped In 10 tallies.
title
bout,
but
is
being
sidetracked.
George
Feeney
of Britain. He said
the yMr, both by Meigs. Coach
Other little Marauder scof1!rS
"Everyone wants to bring me
he felt sorry for Kim's family but
Kenda Wtlllams' girls are now 10-2
were Donnie Becker, six, Jesse
back to November 13," Mancini
wanted to concentrate on the
on
the
year.
Howard, four, Phil King, Todd Hysaid
in
.
an
intervieW
with
The
Feeney fight.
Other scorers were Marla
sell and Tim Cassell with two each,
(Warren)
Tribune
Chronicle.
"I feel very bad for the family, but
Musser, nine, and Julie Miller and
and Rex Haggy had one. Russell
On
that
date,
Mancini
knocked
out
I
don't
know what happened and
Jermlfer Couch, two each. Gertg led
led Federal with 15.
Korean
boxer
Duk-Koo
Kim
'
South
!don't
want
to know," Manclnlsald.
Athens with 10.
In the win over Athens, Eason
in
a
WBA
title
bout
in
Las
Vegas.
"I
don't
know
what this woman
In upcoming play, the boys play
topped aU scorers with 15 and had
Kim
died
four
days
later
of
brain
dld.She
could
have
been unstable.
at Logan this Saturday beginning
nine rebounds. Kitchen scored 13,
Earlier
this
week,
reports
injuries.
Whal happened is anyone's guess."
King, seven, Becker, six, Musser, . atlla.m. The8thgradeplaysinthe
from Seoul, South Korea, indicated
The Sunday bout isManclnl' sflrst
Federal
Hocking
Invitational
Tourthree, Howard and Marty Cline,
Kim's 66-year-old mother, Sun-Yo
since
Kim's death,
nament
Monday
at
.
?
:
15
against
the
two each, and Haggy and Hysell
had
committed
suicide
by
Yang,
Federal Hoci&lt;Ing - Southern
had one apiece. Coach Rusty Bookman's crew is nowl2-lon the year.
Is Wednewirmer.
say, Feb.Championship
9th at 7: 15. The games
are
Ball topped Athens with seven.
played
at
Federal
Hocking
High
SEVENTH GRADE
School.
Meigs dropped to 4-8 with their

"About the only time I say no is
when my schedule won't permit: it. "
Blair said his status ru; a
"so-called celebrity: ' gives him the
opportunity to be very active.
"The fame gives ·you more
chances to participate in good
works," he said. "People ask you a
lot to help out."
Blair, a soft-spoken, articulate
man who does not flaunt his
charll&lt;!ble work, takes great pride
in his football camp.
"When I was young,.! didn't have
the opportunity to 'be exposed to
so-called celebrities," he said. "So, I
thought lt would be niCe If I muld
help kids meet some professionals.
"I invite some guys from th&lt;! Pro
Bowl to come, and It's just fabulous
for the kids to meet them. The kids
get really excited.

"We include talks. on education,
with each protelllngthemwhatthey
sbould do as students," Blair said.
Blair said being with the kids is Its
own reward.
"I really get a kick out of it," he
said. "It's just Ukeplaying in a game
for me. I love football , and to have
those kids out there practicing and
throwing the ball around. have
them get ling excited aboutfootbaU,
It's just something worthwhile.
"We had 156 kids last year and I
hope someday to have 300," he said.

The DBily Sentinel
(USPS 1 -)
A DMsion of Multimedia. Inc.

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BLUE JEANS

BAILEY'S SHOES

PUT

92.1

Bobcats stop Eastern

...

TOLEDO (AP) - Offense usually gets the headlines, but defense
carne to the · forefront in the
Mid· AmeriCan Conference on Wednesday night.
Toledo Coach Bobby Nichols
credited his tearn'·s ''defensive·
Intensity" for holding Western
Michigan to 16 points in the first baH
en route to an 80-62 victory.
John Devereaux. blocked five
shots in Ohio University's 72-57
triumph over Eastern Michigan.
MJaml shot only 24 percent and had
no !&gt;layers in double flg~~res as the
Redskins fell to Northern IUinols

664!1.
Although the 99-83scoremlghtnot
sound llke much defense was in
evidence, Kent State was happy
a,bout winning - and holding Ball
~tate's Ray McCallum, the league's
.all-time leading scorer' to 12 points,
eight -below his season average. ·
Bowling Green held on to first
place ·in the MAC by downing
Central Michigan 78-69 •and is one
game in front of Ohio and two ailead
ofMlamt.
·
Toledo forced 15 turnovers in the
first halt and outrebouitded Western
Michigan 52-39.

AND
.CORDUROY JEANS
MEN'S, lADIES', BOYS' and GIRLS' .

50o/o OFF

Thle year you're faced with qver 100 chenaea In the tax
lawe arid forma. Old you know thllt woildng m.-rled
• couples may iledyct up to $1, &amp;00 for the first time 7
There's even :a new ilntry for charitable dedu~/o1:rs o"
the 1040A ahort form.- And that' a juet the beglnnlngl
Wa know every change on every.torm.

LOVE
THEM!

milk.
Friday - Cook's Choice.

School menu

. In accordance IIIIth the uniform
menu in schools of the Meigs Local
'
School District, the menu for next
week, Feb. 7-11, atalllocatlonswas
announced today. It includes:
~tor Beta Beta Chapter of
Monday - Chicken pa ttle on bun, . Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet
buttered corn, fruit, brownie, mtlk. at 7: 45 p:m. on Feb . . 10 at the
Tuesday - Cheese dog on bun, Rlverboat Room of Diamond Savonion chips celery stick, fruit, ings and Loan Co.
·milk.
Wednesday - Spahgettl In ~~---;===:==:---~----1
sauce, tossed salad, fruit Jello, hot
rolls and butter, milk.
Thursday - Chill with crackers,
-one-baH butter and one-hal! peanut
butter sandwich, cheese slice, fruit,

Preceptor Beta Beta
sets meenng

w..

WM~FM

YOU

LOVE .
ON THE
LINE ...

Meigs happenings

MAIL SUBSCRIPI'IONS
Inside Ohio
13 WeekS .. .. .............................. $14.01
26
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52 WeekS ....... ... .... ... .... ..... ..... ... $51.48
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13 Weeks ........... ........... ..... ....... 115.21
26 Weeks ........................ .~ ....... S29.G4
52 Weeks ... .... ... .... .. :...... ........ .. . S56.21

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The new tax laws.
This year's No. 1
reason to go to
H&amp;R Block.

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

What's cookin'?

Tar Heels ·nip Clemson; Buckeyes lose
action.
Meanwhile , in Southwest Conference routs, eighth-ranked· Houston
trounced Baylor 86-69 and No.9
Arkansas whipped Rice 70-43, while
No.W Syracuse wiped out Connecticut 89-Ji9 in a Big East contest.
In winning Its 15th consecu live
ga,me, North Carolina eriised a
three-point deficit at Clemson with
less than· five minutes remaining.
Sam Perkins, the game's high
scorer with 30points, led a rally that
took the Tar Heels from a 75-72
deficit to a 79-75 lead with one
minute left. Clemson had erased a
49-41 halftime deficit and led by up to
five points in the second.haH.
North pu:ollna boosted its ACC
record to 7.0, while Clemson is 1-7.
Murray Jarman kept the Tigers in
the game in the .first half and
finished with 19pointsbefore foullng
out.J arm an and freshman Warren
Wallace, who had 18 poilits, led .

Pomeroy-Middleport, .Ohio

Searching for the clever way to say "I love You?" Our Happy
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truly unusual way to proclaim your love and best wishes.

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i

THE DAILY. SENTINEL
,,

�Thursdoy, Febtvary 3, 1983
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 6-The Daily .Sentinel

Thursdoy, February 3, 1983

Russell

Should a one-nighter be groundS fOr reprisal?
I pretended I understood: but 1
keep wondering. will there be a
next time? What was It like? Does
he compare? Etc.
My girlfriend says I'm just uJl$et
because Bill had an experience
while I remained true. and If 1
"even the score" we'll be all
straight again.
Would an afternoon Interlude
wlthacooperativemalebethetherapy I need? - RITA
DEAR RITA:
More likely it might be the geteven ploy that could start the finish

riage. Then one night we played
"Truth" and my husband Blll confessed that two years ago he'd been
u nfait h f u l a t a c omp a n y
convention.
He said It was a combination of
being the youngest man there and
getting egged on with r'.rlnks and
kidding .by the more-experienced
fellows. And It Will never happen
a ga in, he Insisted.
Helen, I can't stop brooding
a bout this.

ofagoodmarrtage.
Believe BUI when he says,
" Never again!" Would a repeater
confess to a long-past, " conven- .
tiona!" happening?
(Note to Blll and other regreUul
one-timers: Don't play "truth" unless you want the consequences.)H.
DEAR HELEN:
Booze plli.ys dirtY tricks. It takes
away a woman's Inhibitions but
.often suppresses a man's libido.
When he's got her to a stage where

there'snothingshe won'tdo, he, untack. But a tubal ligation m~y
fortuna!,ely, has reached the point
cause complications too. Which
where there's nothing he CAN do. · should my husband and 1 chocise?
I'm here to say the old "Uquor Is
- UNDECIDED MOfHER OF
quicker " advice doesn't always
ENOUGH
work! - MOURNING AFTER
DEAR UN:
DEAR MOURNING:.
Both procedures are relatively
Moral: Don't drink for drive.
safe and simple:
... And It serves you right for tryWhile laboratory monkeys who
lng to drink a lady under the covers. . have undergone vasectomies show
- H.
,.
a hlgherlncldenceofheartdlsease,
a new study &lt;1t Kalser-Permanente
DEAR HELEN:
Medical Center, Oakland, Calif., InI have heard that a vasectomy dlcates the Increased risk does not
can Increase the riSk of heart a textend to human males.

Several parties honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Russell of Racine,
who observed birthdays on Jan. 26
and Jan. 'IT, were held.
On Jan. 23, the coup)e was
surprlzed by the delivery of a
complete Chinese dinner. Including
oriental teas and a decorated cake,
by friends of their son, Captain Karl
Russell, who with his family are
·now residing . the Kailua U. .S.
Marine Base In Hawall.
Mr. arid Mrs. Roy 0 . Smith and
granddaughter, Sabrina Dawn
Sm!Ul, Rock Springs ROOd, and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Arnold, Forest

Tulia! Jlgatloln no longer requires
major surgery, and with the m!'w
"plug" method, will soon be no operation at all.
Either stertllzatlon Is sometimes
reversible, but don't count onlt.
The choice? Let the mate who
least wants another child be the
candidate. - H.
Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talkltover
In her column If you write to Helen
BOttel, care of thl~pewspaper . .

Correspondence

Family medicine
'

_Bundle up kids to avoid injury, . death from
to prevent serious Injury or death
By EdwRrd Schreck, D.O.
should'
they unexpectedly be ex•
Assistant Profe&gt;;I!Or
posed to low temperatures for exof FamUy Medicine
' tended periods of time. A winter
Ohlo University College
day that starts with mild temperaof Osteopalhlc Medicine
QUESTION: It has been such a . tures can quickly tum Into a blus•
mild winter that I have a difficult tery, bone-c!Jlller. Both children
time persuading my children to and adults are, therefore, wise to
dress properly when they go out- carry protective clothing with them
whenever they might have to be out
side. Should I be
In
the elements, even for short periconcerned?
ods of time.
ANSWER: As
a parent, I can
sympathize with
QUESTION: What's the best wy
you. It is difficult
to dress In winter?
to convince childANSWER: In cold weather, heat
ren io bundle up In mild Wiiltll'r
loss from an uncovered head can
weather. However, they should
easily amount to 20-25 percent of all
learn to be ready for -cold weather
the heat produced by the body In

Calendar
1HURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172, Middleport,
will meet Thursday at 7: J:l p.m .
In i !latory work will be
exemplified . .
POMEROY - Missionary
meeting at Hysell Run Holiness
Church Thursday at 7: 30 p.m .
Speaker will be Rev. Okey Carl.
Pastor Theron Durham Invites
the public to attend.
POMEROY - MARC will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Guest speaker will be Rhonda
Stockwell who will speak on nutrition. All Interested persons
are Invited to attend.
CHESHIRE - Galla-Meigs
Community Action Agency
Board of Directors will hold a
board meeting Thursday at 7
p.m. In the lobby of Guiding
Hand School, Cheshire.

FRIDAY
POMERY - Meigs County
Fox Chasers will meet Friday at
7:30 p.m . at cabin on Eagle
Ridge.
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
Friday at 7 p.m. at the home of
Wanda Eblin, '4100! Laurel Cliff
Road. All meetings are open to
the public.
POMEROY -Senior Citizens
square dance Friday tram 8
p.m. to 11 p.m. Music by String
Dusters. Public Invited.

one hour. A warm stocking cap or
hat Is an essential piece of protection. Dressing In several layers of
clothing retains body heat better
than just one heavy outfit by trapping heat In dead-air spaces. between the layers. Because wet clothing speeds up heat loss from
the body at least fourfold, a waterrepellent outer garment Is highly
recommended. Hands and feet are
especially susceptible to frostbite
Injury. so partiCUlar care should be
taken to protect them from exposure. Gloves allow a greater heat
loss than mittens because of the
much greater surface area from
which heat can escape because
each finger Is lndlvldually exposed
to the cold. Shoes or boots should be
as waterproof as posSible and not
be too tight, because that will lm·
to the toes, making
pede blood
frostbite more likely, as many hikers and skiers have sadly found out.
QUESTION: How can I tell If

now

RUTI.AND - Dance Saturday, 8 to 11 p.m. at Rutland Civic
Center; single, $2; couple, $3.
Music Unlimited providing
music.
SYRACUSE - Rev. Robert
Hudson will he speaker at
Syracuse Church of the Naza·
rene at 6: :lJ Saturday eventni.
Rev. James Kittle Invites the
public.

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 41l F&amp;AM will
meet at .t he temple Saturday at
7: 30 p.m . to work In fellowcraft
degree. All master masons
welcome.
. MIDDLEPORT - Miles
Trout will be at Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church, Middleport,
Saturday at 7: 30 p.m . Public
Invited.
SYRACUSE - Missionary at
Syracuse Nazarene Church will
meet Saturday a) 6: 30 p.m.

SUNDAY
RUTI.AND - Skating Sunday, 2 to 4 p.m. at Rutland Civic
Center; children, Sl; adults, $2;
bring your own skates.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Garden Club will meet Monday at 7: :lJ p.m. at the home .of
Nellie and)lallle Zerkle. ·

SATURDAY

1UESDAY

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP
Trustees meeting, 5 p.m. Saturday at home of clerk to appropriate funds for 1983 with regular
meetlrig to follow at6 p.m .; public Invited.

POMEROY - The Ohio Eta
Phi Sorority will meet Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. at Meigs Inn. Jill
Llzon and Dinah Gryszka will
have the program.

exposure to cold

skin has been frostbitten?
ANSWER: Frostbite makes the·
skin white or bluish-white, hard and
Insensitive when It Is touched.
Frostbite n'iliy appear relatively
mild or conilned to a small area
when first discovered. Often It
takes two or three days for the full
extent of lnj urles to be determined.
QUESTION: How Is frostbite
treated?
ANSWER: Although the Injury
may not seem slgrutlcant at first,
frostbite should always he treated
by trained medical people to minImize the risk of pel'l'!lllnent Injury.
Treating frostbite means thawing
the frozen skin and Injuries are
made worse If thawing Is done inCOJTeetly. The skin should be
·thawed fairly rapklly In water
about 105-110 degrees Fahrenheit.
Also, people with frostbite should
have their body temperature taken
to check for hypothennla (low body
temperature) , a condition that lses-

.f;\strograph ·

peclally life-threatening If the
temperature drops to 90 degrees F .

or lower. Again, this condition requires prompt medical attention.

Meigs County 4-H club notes
Sharon Drain, cUrector ot EducaUon at Gallipolis Business College, haS announced the
honor roU for the fall quarter whkh ended
Dec. 17, 1982.
To qualify far the honor roll a student must
be full-Ume (taldng at least three cl..,..) and
make at least a B In every Class.
The following students bad A's in all classes
taken.
GenJa Bechtle, Carlottta Boyer, K1m Bumgardner, TI-act Casto. RhoJXIa Clorx:h, Keith
Dye, BtU Exltne, Erma Finley, Birgit Fisher,
Mary f1oyd, Jan Harl:recht, RJta Herrera,
Jesse Hicks, LuAnne Layne, Laddes Maldo&gt;
nado, JeaMette 'Moss, Joseph Nott, Owen
Plants, Karen Reynolds , Mwvtn Roble, Carol
Staats, Darren Swingle, Usa Thomas, carla
Tucker, Greg VanMeter, Kathy Wllfong,Kon- ·
n!e Zlnn.
The followlng stllients had at least a B In

every class taken.

Cbarles Allensworth, Roberta Benthall,
Deldre Blake Rlclvnond, Patsy Boggo, Med·
Ina Bry/lfl, Nancy Burns, Pam Camden. Paul
Card, Kim Carpent&lt;or, Regina Clary, Rlloemary Colley, DreOOa Cook, lUndy Crabb'ee,
Barbara Davis, Belinda Deem, Dorlnda
Deem. Carlisle Dewitt, Debra Estep, Karen
Gilliand, Bruce Gilmore, Carolyn Grlllln,
Harriet Haye, Gary Hollman. Latnnya Kincaid, Nina Latr, MaJ;i Lewis, Penny Lusk.
Gary Michel, Cliarles MWer, Kathy Mitchell,
Steve Morris, Donna NUtter, Pat Porter, All·
Richard
cia RJdenour, Ken

J oey Roush, Annette ~n,

Carol

Smtl.tl,

Lesa Stevens, Ruth Stover, Darlene Taylor,
Leora Thaxton, Melinda 1bomas !Jo1!na 'J'ho.
rouglunan, Angela White Terrt 'Zirkle Pam

Button.

'

•

The Eight Is Enough4-H Club.metonJan.
ll at the Chester United Metb:xllst Church
with six mP.mbers and one adv1Jor In attendance. The club decided to sell "Happy Ei!P"
as a money-making project Heather Flnlaw
gave a dermnstrattoo on latch hook trcm. her
Prepare F or Launch 4-H project. Susan Wott
served refreshments ci brownies and ,..,.,n

,

pops.

The next meeting will be Feb. B. Everyone
Is to bring a photograph that they would Uketn

matte. -Susan Wolf, Reporter..
The Hill~ 4~H Club met oo Jan.16at the
home of Ruby Rife with nine members and
three advisors attending. The group dtscussecl money-mattlni projects andthedll!erenl f..H proJects that were availa!Mf. For
ll'creatlon the memben played~.
Mrs. Ruby RUe, advisor, served refreshments of ham salad sandwiches, cbips, cooIdes, tea and p:&gt;p.
The next meeting o1 the club wW be at the
~ of Ruby Rile on Feb. &amp;at 3 p.m.

I
i

Your .. Extr1 Touch"
Florist Sinn 1957

February 4, 1983
1llls coming year you may become Involved In two unrelated
enterprises. Both are likely to be small, but each will have profitable
potential.
·
AQUARIUS (Jan. ~Feb. 19) Your dignity and reputation could
suffer today if you lose your cool around the wrong people. Should
something sticky develop, keep your head at all costs.
PlSCFB (Feb. ~March 20) It's best to have well-thought-out plans
today.lf.not. you couldlaterflnd yourself In a pickle, trylngtosortouta
disorganized mess.
.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Even though you may he presently
making progress In an Important situation, keep your hopes and expectations within reasonable bounds. Don't jump the gun.
TAURUS (April ~May 20) It won'tcontrtbutetoyourreputatlon If
you behave too stubbornly today. Falling to see the other person's point
of view could be your downfall,
_
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) Don't try to spread yoilrseH too thin
today by attempting too many tasks at one time. This could result In
more aggravation than accomplishment.
CANCER (.Jwae 2l.July 22) Today, beware of tendencies to be
wasteful with resources entrusted to you. Treat their funds or possessions as prudently as you would your own.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) 1f conditions at home aren' t as harmonious
as they should be today. ask yourself honestly If you could I&gt;(' the
primary cause. The answer might surprise you!
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Social Interests could be uppermost In
your mind today. 1llls might cause you to perform poorly where your
work Is concerned. You can't do both.
LIB~A (Sept. 23-Qd, 23) You have good earning potential today,
but theresa possibility you will wastemorethanyou accumulate. Try
to reverse this Procedure.
·
SCORPIO (Od. 2H~ov. 22) Feellngs are likely to he rather Intense
at home today. It will be Wiser to give !non minor points. Avoid locking
horns with a member of the family.
SAGrrr~s (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Normally you're not the type
who holds things In, but today you could do so and become moody. It
may be better to voice what's bothering you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jaa. 19) 1f your friends are planning something expensive today with which you are not In accord, don't hesitate to
speak up or you could regret it.

~U., .

FLORIST

PH. 992~2644

All LADIES' WINTER
SHIRTS, BLOUSES .&amp; ·swEATERS

30°/o OFF

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ONLY

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LADIES

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STRAIGHT LEG DENIM .·

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I

DATE:

FRI., FEBRUARY 4
SAT., FEBRUARY 5

PHOTOGRAPHERS'
HOURS~

.

PLACE:

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
POMIIOY, .OH.

PHOTO! IY

On Monday, February 14. Remember your special
Valentines with a gift of Russell Stover Candies. We
' have a wide variety of traditiorlal heart boxes, as well as
your favorite boxed assonmenrs, specially decora red
for rhe holiday. Foil, Satin or Velvet Hearts help you
•express yourself to friends, relatives and thaupecia/ _
Valentine. Have a heart -give the finest in chocolates
·'
and butter bans· gualiry you've known and leved for
over 55 years..
'

rrom~
· QQ. c ....... ~G'---j,: .
. ~ ().tB\'Vto UIJU.UU) .

.

FRI. 11 A.M. TIL 7 P.M. .
SAT. 10 A.M. TIL 4:30P.M.

•

Middleport, Ohio
,.

\

•No Age Liinit
•Limit 1·Per Person
.One Special Per Family
~Singli or Group taken

SUPER STRAIGHTS, ETC.
Values Up To 132.00

Run RDad , visited the Russells on
Jan. 'lT'presentlng gifts to them and·
providing a di rated cake and Ice
cream.
They also received calls from
their soit, Capt. Russell, arid the ir
daughters, Aleta Lynn Burton,
Orlando, Fla. Kenda Chapman and
family, Pickerington.
Sunday joining the Russells for
dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Chapman and Shelley, Pickerington . and a. friend, Rob Fregett. ·
Reynoldsburg; Dorothy Dandakls
Athtins.
Gifts and cards were also
l'llCeived from other relatives and
frlends. Mrs. Eura Largent of
Syracuse gave a cake to the couple
and Mrs. Russell presented one to
her hUsband. ·

APPLE GROVE
By Mn. Herbert Rou81t
Emmet Pickens and wife of
Toledo, Eller and Mary l'!ckens of
Syracuse, Mrs. Edith Hubbard and
Nancy Anderson of Mason, W.Va.
were guests over the weekend of
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Pickens.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush visited
Mr. and MrS. Howard Roush Sunday· at RaCine. Mrs. Roush was returned home Sunday after being a
patient at Veterans Memorial Hospital several days.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Walter McDade at Troy, Ohio. Mrs.
McDade Is a patient . at Stouder
Memorial Hospital; Dayton.
Mr. and. Mrs. Ted Wilford and
children, J,.lsa and Kim, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Anderson, Brenda and Lori.
.
Mrs. Judy• Pickett wid .Mrs.
Christy Roush were visitors at Bel·
pre Monday.
Mrs. Mabel Shields of Racine Is a
·patient at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of Clifton and David Roush of Kentucky
spent the weekend· with Mr, and
Mrs. Russell Roush and Edward.
Mr. arid Mrs. Eddie Hupp,
Jeremy and Jamie, of Portland,
spent Sunday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush .
. Cbrtstmas guestso!Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Manuel were Sid and Denjse
Manuel of Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
. Harry Roush of Mlnersvllle. Recent visitors were Marvin and
Betty McGuire and Ernest and
Flcesle Bush.
ROnald and Nancy Russell,
children Michael and Mandy. were
guests Sunday of Robert Russell at
Wolf Pen.
Herbert and Mary Roush, Dana
' and Roberta Lewis dined at
Shoney's Restaurant at Pt. Plea:.. sant T,uesday In observanceoftheir ·
. wedding annlversarles.
• Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Lawson and
baby of Alabama are visiting his
• parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
• Lawson and Mr. and Mrs . Charles
: Lawson arid family.
New Year's Day guests of Mr.
: and Mrs. Ronald Russell, Mandy
:and Michael, were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Russell, Mr. and Mrs ..Steve
Hagy and children, Mr. and Mrs,
Dorsa Parsons, Douglas, Cindy and
Joey Sands, r1 Racine; Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Racine; Mr.
and Mrs: Dana Lewis, Clifton, W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp,
Jeremy and Jamie, Ed RoUsh, Mr . .
and Mrs. Russell Roush.
M."S. Pearl Norris was a dinner
guest Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Norris. Tracy and., Ryan, of
' East Letart.
Sunday guess of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Ables, VIcki and Michael.
were Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Ables
' and Angle of Columbus. Recent
guests were Carroll and Maxine
Balser of Mansfield.

NONri POiftU•TS_ _ _ _. .

SWISHER LOHSE
P h ormucy
Ktflfletll McC:UIIOiflll, .......

Chlrln Riffle. R.Ph.

IONidttanlfti,I . Ph.

Moll . ttaru Sll.l:•un. tot p.in .

SUnday li :JOto n :•aftct s to• ·'"·
.. RI!5CRIP.TIONS
PH. ft2 ·ttSS
Pritnclly lenlce

I

Page- 7

a nd games were hls llrother 'l)rson
and Donna Norrts. Grant Circle
a~ J ason E rwin won the prize. A
party honoring Travis was a ~
held at the kindergarten.

Travis Mugrage, son of Charles
and Peach Mugrage, Racine, celebrated his sixth birlhday recently
with a party at the home of his ·
patents.
A Dukes of Hazard theme was
Mr. and Mrs. Jetf Circle Sr., the
~ out with games being
played. Guests Included Charles . for mer Sonia White. are announcBissell, Grant Circle, Shawn Dal- Ing the birth of their second child,
ley, Clay Enslen, Jason Erwin, Jetfrey Wayne Jr., born on Dec.17..
Shannan Morartty, Kendra Norris, He weighed seven pounds. six ounDanny Sayre, Adam Triplett, Mel- ces and was 20 Inches long. Mr. and
ody Weaver, his paternal grandpar- Mrs. Circle have a daughter.
. ents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Christa Nlchole, age two.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
Mugrage, an uncle, Todd Scott
and Mrs. Grover White, Jr., of Long
Ransom and his brother, Tyson.
Others presenting ~ w~re Bottom, imd the paternal grandparKevin Dtle, maternal grandpar- ents are Mr. and Mrs ; Harold CirE!!Its, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bow- cle, Racine. Great-grandparents
ers , Mr. and Mrs . Charles are Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow FortChapman and family, Mr. and Mrs. ney, Long Bottom, Mrs . Lula Circle, Racine, and Mrs. Roxie
Roy Bowers and family.
· Assisting with the refreshments Shockey, Huntington, W. Va. ·

Circle ·.

.

Mugrage

Circle

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February 14, 1983.

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• 2 wash/rinse temps built
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• Self-Balancing Inner Baskel
• Heavy-duty motor and
pump
• Automatic Sell-leveling
rear l~gs

Relatives here received word of
the death of Blanche Woodyard
'- Caster, wife of Carl Caster, Dayton.
. Mrs:- Caster was reared In this
:community and was a former
school teacher here.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Crabtree
. have returned home af~r spending
·a vacation In Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley and
.Anna, Edison, were recent guests
·of her mother, Freda Smith and hls
mother, Mrs. 'Eugene Stanley of .
near Albany.
. Mr. and Mrs. Duane Baldwin
. who are now at Fort Rucker, Ala.,
• spent several days here with her
mothet, Madge Dye.
• Those from this area attending a
family gathertng at a Lancaster
· church camp ground Included the
' following member!~ Ql ::-.c D j'9
' famlly-MadgeDye,Mr. andMrs.
• Thad Dye.,and family, Dale Dye
wid Murl Galaway. The Duane
• Baldwlns also attended.
- Christmas auests of Mr. and Mrs.
' Harold GUlogly, VIcky and Bruce,
Included Lincoln Russell and Mr . .
and Mrs. franklin R11ssell, Mtlldle- .
port; Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
who were here for the holidays
trom Webster, Fla.; Karen Gilkey,
A-thens; Mr. and Mr Walter
Jordan. Joshua and Je~.local;
Mr. and Mrs. Tad GOkey and
Cryatal, Albany; aJid Scott Allen,

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I

k-_..:..------·-- - -··· . ..... - .

The Daily Sentinel

•

·CARPENTER

8INXLIVING10

WINTER CLEARANCE

Mugrage

Meigs births, ·birthdays

Helen help us

By HELEN BOTI'EL
I thought we had the perfect ma r-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

. .,. " '

•'

'

OVER 46 ·YEARS
OF. SERVICE!

'

WE .HAVE A COMPLETE
SERVICE DEPARTMENT
'

•

�Page

8-.The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, FebNC!ry 3, 1983

.

FebNcary 3, 1983

.

Snowstorm leaves
.children stranded
By Associated Press
.
A storm thatdwnped two feet of soow onSou\hern Callfomlamountalns
left 42 schoolchllclren stranded today, while afoot of new snow was forecast
tor parts of the Midwest, where 21 people have already died In the region's ·
worst blizzard of Winter.
In Florida, thousangs of people Iosi power temporarily after a reiX)rd
string of tornadoes swept the state and left three people deao.
As the Midwest stortn moved east, winds gusting to 74 q~ph Wednesday
In Pennsylvania toppled trees and overturned two tractor-trailers In Erie.
The National Weather Service urgecl local residents to stay Indoors.
Heavy rain was forecast today In the north Atlantic states, and the
weather service issued a flash flood watch for southern New England.
Streets were already flooded in Mobile, Ala .. and western North Carolina.
The weather service predicted another 6 to 151nches ofsnow would fall
today in parts of Michigan, Minnesota and Iowa.
Meanwhile, a new Pacific storm hit waterlogged Southern California
with rain, gusty Wind and -t;OOW.
In eastern San Diego County, . nearly 100 pupils were temporarily
stranded at their junior high school in Pine Valley after buses were unable
to get through two feet of snow to take them home, the county Disaster
Preparedness office said. All were picked up Wednesday night by their
parents after roads were sufficiently cleared, said duty officer Carolyn
Harshman.
Another 30 children were staying at a community center In Alpine, also
in the mountains east of San Diego.
·
At Acton, about 30 miles north of Los Angeles, 25 teachers and 12 pupils
were stranded early today at a schoolhouse that was without heat because
of the storm. The children were kept at thE' school after two buses skidded
off roads Wednesday. ·
·
·
Gale-force winds capsized four boatS in Lower ·Otay Lake near San
Diego as the fishing season opened Wednesday. No injuries were reported.
About 40,00) San Diego residents were without power durtng the storm,
but "no major areas were blacked out," said Tom Larimore, a
spokesmanfor San Diego Gas and Electric ..
Forecasters warned of mudslides in coastal areas battered by four
storms last week, but said the latest storm had less punch.
Florida was hit by 26 tornadoes on '1\lesday and Wed!lesday, scouring
the state and overturning cars and mobile homes before heading out over
the Atlantic·. The previous December record for Florida twisters was set in
1975, when 10 struck in one month.
A\ least lO,OOll:mmes in the Orlando area and 6,0CWJ irt Jacksonville were
left without power Wednesday, but electricity was restored today.
About two dozen people were injured, including eight hurt when a'
twister slammed Into an apartment complex in Orlando. At least 200
people were left homeless, the Red Cross said.
A 64-year-old man was killed in Hawthorne when his log cabin collapsed .
during a tornado. In Dover, a tornado tore homes from their foundations,
Injuring two Women, and a man was hospitalized In Ne\v Hlp'l'llony for
Injuries suffered when a twister flip!JI'Q over his trailer and left hii'r\ pinned
beneath a refrigerator.
A Miami Beach. woman was electrocuted when l!ghtnlng struck ·a
high-tension pole, causing a 4,00J.volt power line to drop Into a puddle she
was crossing, police said.
Walter L. McCurdy, 77, was electrocuted in Jay, in western Florida,
when he became entangled in a downed power line while trying to cut
limbs from a tree felled in the storm, a Santa RDsa .County sheriff's
dispatcher said.
The Midwest storm has been blamed for 21 deaths since Monday.
Kansas, Missouri, Michigan anti Iowa each reported two deaths in traffic ·
accidents. in Oklahoma, one woman died 1in a traffic accident and a
76-year-old man was killed when a road grader rolled over him. The
machine' s operator had been about to climb down to help a stranded
motorist.
·Five people died In accidents in Texas and four died of heart attacks
while shovel!ng snow in Kansas. In Nebraska, an 82-year-old woman died
of exposure and an 13-year-old youth died in a traffic accident.
Forecasters said Ill!! bltz.zard was the worst of the winter for parts of thE'
Midwest because the storm came in from the southwest, Instead of losing
moiSture in the Rockies.
·
In Iowa, a second blast of snow and high winds hit Wednesday afternoon.
Winds up to 40 mph ~?Iew snow back onto roads as fast plows had cleaned
them. A foot or more of snilw feU on Nebraska, and winds gust!ngto40 mph
made the temperatures feel like 20 below zero.
Snowdrifts and blowing snow made driving hazardous in Minnesota, and
police reported 160 accidents in MinneapOlis and St. Paul.
·
In Omaha, Neb.,'high winds and icy roads caused asemi-trailertruck to
plunge 70 feet off a bridge on Interstate 80. The driver was hospitalized in
fair condition with a possible con~ssion .
Troopers closed all state and federal highways into Wichita, Kan., on
Wednesday, and roads remained Impassable in the Teicas Panhandle
though sunshine melted down the ·Snowdrifts.
In western Oklahoma, motels were booked.solid as !JOOpers shut down
all roads because of nine-foot drifts and Winds caused by the state's worst
blizzard in 26 years.

as

The Daily Sentinel

I ·C - 11 li.Matlpoodol'adw....,ef

..
·-~

,.~'
.

.

&lt;'

smllei dutlnl the Con!!story ceremoll)' at the V.aUcaa Auclleoce Ball
wec~De.day. (AP fe·erp~) .. .
·
··

...........

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

~

~1 · H!N . . IIOI

1J . . . . . . . . . ...

,..

111111

II"'""'" ' - ' lo, Ront

......,.,y,.,,.~

1$• k'-"'1

~~';8=1gr,~

2()0 E. Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
February 2, 1983
Rutil Po....,.;
Clertc.-TreMurw
Ubrlry Boord

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Two
consumer groups are supporting .
legisla~ion to prohibit utilities from
charging consumers for construction of generating plants before the
plants are completed.
The "Ohio Consumers' Counsel
and the Ohio Public Interest
Cam palgn seek passage of a
measure by Sens. Michael Schwarz·
walder, D-Columbus, and Eugene
Branstool, D-Utlca.
It would repeal a Ia w allowing
electric ut!lities to pass costs of
. building new generating plants to
customers before the facilities are
operating.
Consumers' Counsel William
Spratley said that sinceJan.1, 1977,
customers- of Ohio ut!litles paid

$649.3 mllllon in higher rates as a
result of construction allowances in
82 separate rate cases.
"We've seen electric rates in thE'
past year alone go up four times the
Consumer Price Index," Spratley
said. "I think if we want to do
something to hold down utlllty rate
Increases then what we can say to
the utility companies is 'You build
thai plant; the investors take the
risk; and when you've got it
operating then you . charge thE'
consumers for it.'' '
Deborah Archie, associate director of the Public Interest Campaign,
. said, "The bottom line is thatCWIP
(construction work in progress) is
far and &lt;!Way the single most

Total

WASHINGTON (AP ) - Sen.
John Glenn's presidential campaign orgarilza lion ts expanding
rapidly as his staff prepares for a
major effort in states \vithearly 1984
Democratic primaries.
"There will be a big push in
February and March," said M1chael Colopy, assistant chjef of staff
on the campaign commitlee.
The Ohio Democrat, w)lo still has
not formally announced hjs candidacy, plans several appearances In
Iowa, and preparations are under
way to set up a Glenn state
organization there.
OthQj; early primary states being

given attention Include Florida,
Illinois, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire and New York.
The campaign staff now numbers
about 40 and will reach 60 within a
couple of weeks, Colopy said. More
thail twice that many will be on the
campaign payroll by the end of thE'
year, he said.
The romrnittee has leased 5,024
square feet in an office building just
off Capitol Hill and is considering
additional space there for future
·
expansion.
William R. White, who has been
Glenn's administrative assistant

therearen'tthingsthafneeddoing."
The most likely jobs program
would involved federal projects
already planned like ·repair of
federal buildings, highWays,
bridges or water projects already
planned but lacking money.
House Democrats led by Speaker
Thomas P , O'Neill are planning an
emergency package of their own,
expected to cost at least $5 billion.
O'Neill, of Massachusetts, said
although the administration's most
recent economic report . issued
Wednesday "rejects the need for
jobs legislation, its dismal employment forecast is Itself the best
argument for a Democratic jobs
blll."
O;Nelll said Senate Republicans
are .. ''already eyeing the next
election" and predicted they woold
not only back a jobs bill, but would ·
attempt "to sell th~ president .. ,
they're ·the one's who have to tum
the president around."
Senate leader Baker has asked
Republican ooinnilf;tee chairmen to
assemble a program designed to
show congressional conceru for the
more ihan 12 million
out of
work. ,
' In testimony before the Sen01te
Budget Committee, Budget Olrec'
tor David Stookman Indicated some
wlllingnesstoaddrecesskinrelleftb
·the president's program.
"If this committee romestipwlth
"What we are striving for is to get something that Is reasonable In Its
.the ecoi)Omy movl!lg again," said · cost and Is targeted (to hard hit
Treasury Secretary Donald T. · partsofthecountry),l'msurethere
Regan.
lsl'oom.in thebuclgetfor lt,"flesald.
. ' .. The pt:tjSldent said on Tuesday he
Stocknwl was also publlcly
opposes a federal publiC works. concillatorytocrtt!Csurgtng1deeper_ · ·
program, but witbout elaboration cuts In Reagan's $238.6 billion
added: ''That dOOsii't mean that mU!tary budget for next year.

I

•

At. 3, Box 54

••"1'

Oned••lfl"'!h"".
4

AJd

Total Revenue
Receipts

Ser~ces

Tran sporta tion
Operat1011 of

L1braiy

Ma1ntenance d f

GUN SHOOT

L1brary

·FIRE DEPT.

3.42200
66.911 .00

32.266 00
3.097 .00
6.00

13.477.00
2 082.00
130 00
55.,8 95.00

Exces s of Reve nue

.HOF-

ONE OF POMERY. NA

February

RIVER BEND APARTMENTS
HOUSING FOR THE ELDERLY

POMEROY
• LANDMARK

Now renting 25 one bedroom apartment
uni1s. renting for 30 percent of your ad justed income under the Departmen1 of
Housing &amp; Urban Development Section 8
program. All utilities included .

614·992-2181

No Sunday Calls
· 15·1

,

I-3J.I

QOGGS · .·
SALES &amp; SERVICE

BISSELL

Guysville, Ohio

SIDI"G CO.

· u.s . Rt. so East

model1'ng - Custom Pale

'CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp;Siding Co .
Route 1

Long Bot1om. OH. 45743
985,4193 or 992-3067

mo .

Farm Equipment
, Parts &amp;Service

1-J·Ifc

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
. 618 E. Main, Pomeroy, OK.

PH. 992·3795
We Do Bookkeeping FOf
Small, l.afle and Corporate
Businesses &amp; Partnerships
MARY C. KEBLER-OWNER
1·27-2 mo.

Call lor lree siding
estimates, 949·2801 or
•

:'

949-2860.

No Sunday catts

.. ,

!:
11

AUTOMATIC .
TRANSMISSION CO.
271'W. ll!in
""""""'· OH.

·-

REWARD FOR THE RETURN OF THIS
TRUCK OR $500.00 REWARD FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO THE ARREST
AND CONVICTION OF PERSON OR PERSONS
WHO TOOK THIS TRUCK FROM THE LOT OF
W.VA. SAUSAGE CO. ON SATURDAY
EVENING JAN . 29, 1983. IF YOU HAVE SEEN
THIS TRUCK
A 1979 2574 DIESEL IN·
TERNAT.IONAL, YELLOW CAB WITH 24'
ELBY II:LUMINUM BED

$500 .00

.

OPEN 9 lo5 MON. tlvu SAT.
AI TyPOs of Auto Repair,
ll!lk•· Tune-Ups, etc ..
sPECIAL
'
. ·
TRANSMISSION ALTER
·
AND FLUIO CHANGE
Only •31.96

CALL

.

W.VA. SAUSAGE CO.

~

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Collect

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

2. _ __ _ __

3. - - - - - -

A. - - - - -5.. _ _ _ __ _
6. -~-~--

21, _ _ _ _ __
22. - - - - --

I
29. ------------ I
I
30;
11. . - , - - - - I
12.
31 .
I
13.
32.
I
lA.
. 33 . .
I
15· --~--- . 34. c__, - - ' - ' - I
35. - _ __::__ _ __ I
16. · --~-~I
I
.Mail This t:ouppn 'wlth Reml.ttanci
I
Thi Dally S.e ntlnel
I
I,
111 Court St.

tion ..

,·~~.

614-367·0138,

fur

Buy raw

and beat hides .

George 8u!'kley, 614-6644761 . Weekdays 5 to 9 ,

weekends 12 noon to 9PM .
deer hides and gin~&amp;ng and '
trapping supplies. At. 2 ,

red oak,

SERVICE
We can repair and
racora radiators and
heater ca,as. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT HILL FORD
992-219&amp;
M iddleort, Ohio .
. 1·13-tfc

.A

OOA

•" 000~"00&amp;&gt;

•.

S&amp;WTV

AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382
Dewayoa Wilhtrre

a.' Scottie Smith

All mak• and mOdels
. Arrtennolnatahti&gt;n

amount . . Call 614·3889906.
8EOS -IRON. BRASS, old

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and aewing
machine repair. parts. and
supplies. ' P"ick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum

Cleaner, one half mile up

Georgeo Creek Rd. Call
446-0294 ..
Gun shoot, · Racine Gun

INCOME TAX SERVICE .

Federal and State income

furniture, go _
l d. silver.
dollars. wood ice boxes.
storie jars. antiques. etc.,
Complete houaeholds . ·

Write: M, D. Miller, Rt. 4. ,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 9927760.
Gol"c:'L silver.• iterling.~ ·:·
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;: •:
currency . Ed Burkett Barbe .. •',

Shop. Middlepor! . 992-'::·
3476.
. ··:

---~-- "

=
--=~= · •..~.,·

...... ..
-. ,•.

11

taxes . QUarterly reports~
W-2 forfns. Done by ap-

pointment. 614-992-2272
extra money and
or see Wanda Eblin at 41000 Earn
receive free household
Laural Cliff Rd .. Pomeroy.
products everyone use a
- - - - - - - - l c - daily
. Supply 3·6 . Call
GINGER BREAD STUDIOArt lesaonS. JONI 446·1988.
CA,RRIN GTO N-698~3290. Are you serious about
GRUESER: Has anyone

House calla and shop

dona or begun a geneelogy

aervic:aeyaillble

study of the Grueaar f•mily?

1·5·,1 mo~ pd."

J-~~--.,.-'-_..:;.'-t

s

DISCONTINUED
PERM. STOCK

$1700

-Addona and nimOdeling

NOW TH RU MARCH 5th

KAY'S

BEAUTY SALON
169 N, Znd
MIDDLEPORT, OK.

. 992-2725

CARPENTER
SERVICE

1·26·1 mo.

- Roofing and gutter work
-Conc!WIIj wolll

-Plumbing and
·wc&gt;tll
(Frea Elllimatea)

V.

...

'

working? Give us a try-Ttri Chem Cra•t Demonstra-

Welding cia•••· Basic ere 8t

Contact Dr. Star Gruesar

1 Oemetrlon,

Volley College. 701 South

Acet. Sterling Feb.8. Call

Twin City Machine at

614-992,3768 .

NOW avallablo for
and cake decorating .

304-876-7B79 . .
4

Giveaway

C. YOUNG Ill

P.O . ilox 2266 . Columbua

11 :OOAM the 11th, ask for
HA.VE · FUN pay.ing your

Holiday bills. Sell Avon and
earn good $8$, meet nice

people. Cat!&gt; 814·8432982. 614-388 ·9045 ,
61 4-992.3690.'

Bar maid . Must b~ 21 ., Send
resume .to. Sox 729·¥ . C·O
The Daily , Sentinel. Pomeroy. Oh . ·

982-6216 or B92-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
.
. 11

~

AUTHORIZED
FACTORYSERVICE
.GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp;HOTPOINT .

. REALTORS
.
Henry .E. Cleland, Jr., GRI ............................ 992-6191
Dottie Turner ........................................ ;...... 992-5692
· Jean Trussell ................................... ;........... 949-2660
Office' ................... :................. .:.................. 9~2-2259

WE ALSO WORK ON ....
ALL OlliER APPUANCES

-~·

I
I·

~

··-··········'· ······-··

a • AAA~

RADIATOR

SALE

-------~----111111!1----------~

.

Old stone~ere )errs, juga.
crocks &amp; milk pitchers, also
old wicher basketS . Calf '

Tri-Cher'n.

RENTAL INVESTMENT - Duplex house. One bedroom
apartment up and 1·2 bedroom down. Good condition. $350 ·
potential incoome. Just $23,000.00.

----~

;

446 -0069

dino, CA. 92403.

PORTLAND FARM- Owners want an offer.on .this fantastic
182 acre farm ..Beautiful house, double car garage, barn, im·
plemenl shed, grain stprage, Approximately .35 acres .botto.m
land. Balance wooded acreage. All minerals. Call for informa-

I

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

Pol'iliroy, Oh. 45769 .

late

clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co .
Bill Gene JohnsOn

~-'----------1--"--------1 Mt. Vernon, Sen Bernar-

EXCELLENT HORSE FARM! Co'mpie'tely fenced! Approxima·
!ely 21 acres. 3 bedroom modern ranch home with free gas!
Large barn for. stable, fr~it trees, garden space. Asking
$6S:OOO.OO.
.
.
·

' 23. - - -- - 24. - - - - -- -

28. -

-------We P!lY ·c ash for
model

Oh 43216 or call Econo
Travel 446 -'7071. after

NEW LISTING- MIDDLEPORT - ~ewly remodeled home
on a corner lot. Great location, great price. Want $36,500.00.

26.
1. - - ' -- - , - -II
. .B. -----'-.,-,- --'- . 27. --:-- - - - ' - - I,
.9
I .

. ---'---10. - ' - - - - - , --

' Volley Plaza. 446-8026 or
446-8026.

San Bernardino

NEW LISTING -IN POMEROY - Neighborhood restaurant
&amp; bar · bldg., land and business. Priced to sell. Only serious
· inquiries.
'

17. - - - -- 18. - -- - - 19,
20. - - -- --

25. - - -- - - - -

Buying Gold, Silver. Platinum. Gold and Silver pri:es
are the highest in two years, ·
check our prices on gold &amp;
S;ilvei', scrap jewelry. Buying ·
Old coins, scrap rings &amp; ·
silverware . Daily quotes
availab,e. Also coins S. coin ·
supp.liet for sale. Spring
· Valley Trading Co .. SprinQ.

tions . No layoffs.
interviewing in the a.r ea,
Feb.11,12. WriteTri-Cham ,

!·12-3 mo.

NEW LISTING- RUTLAND- L~story frame.home with 2·
3 bedrooms, .aluminum siding, woodburner set up and gar·
age. $22,000.00.

These cash rates
Include discount

11. - - - - - - -

446·3169 or 256·1967 .in

Athens .. Oh.

1 p.m.Every
Factory
choked
guns
~====~~~~f.~~~~~~~~~ Club.
Sunday
stoning
only.
·

.

r--

WANTED TO BUY Old
furniture and Antiques of all · ·
k·inds. call Kenneth Swain, ·

walnut. poplar_ Any

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

( ) For Ren_~

Wanted To Buv

Standing timber. White oa k.

304-812-2023

( )Wanted
I I For Sale
I I A.nnouncement

9

t~ evenings .

Barns.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages'.'

Dealer

New Haven, W.Va.

-· '·

lr&lt;l.

Auciionear. 275-3069.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

New Holland, Bu~h Hog
Farm Equipment

Collect

·I

PH. 992-3194 or
992-3305

Authorized John D"eere, ,

Write .your ow'rt ad and order by mall t With this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results . Money not refundable.

I

Auction every Fri. night at
the HartfOrd Community
Canter. Truckloads of new
merchandiae. ervery weak·.
Conllgments of" .new and
used merch·andlaa· always
welcome. Ri.chard Reynolds

11·----------1f-----------+-----,-----t

New Haven, WV

304·822·3194 Aller 5 p.m.

,...

Middleport, Bradbury,
and Leading Creek Area.
"You Call, We'll Haul."

Prices Start At

Aller 5 p.m.

.

· Weekly trash pic. kup_s in

$}99.95 .

COLLECT
Between Ba.m. and 5 p.m.

Laai!rpboto)

YOU NAME THE PRICE
YOU MIGHT GET LUCKY

'

30,000 BTU
90,000 BTU
lSO,OOO BTU

Phone 882-31 ~1

Curb ln'f latlon ·
Pay Cash
for .
.
Classifleds and
Savell I
..

'.

Licenaed Ohio-WVa. 304·
773 -6786 or 304-7739186.

,-----~------~--·-------.

i

·

RENT
PH. 742-2328 .

311-ttc

persons

WVa State Champ ton Aucti·

caurt.ir==~iii=~~==jf!==:;;~:;;==lm~~~~~~~if.=11
Sea'
1
SAL£ ON
MANLEY'S
ing- Siding- Concrete
SPACE HEATERS
TRASH SERVICE Patios
- Sidewalks New Construction - Re·

rles. Rt. t, Bradb ury Rd . Middleport . Oh&lt;o 45760, was
appo1nted Executr1x of the estNelson M otdr~ . 500 E. Main St.
ate ol Peggy Hollma n. deo n SatUiday.
5th. ceased. late ·ol Rt. 3. Pomerov.
1983 at I 0 :30 AM. Terms Ohio.
cash Seller reserves th e nghtto
.
Charles H. Kn1ght.
re1ect any and all btds
Acting Judge
1213. 4. 2tc
121 3. 10. l7. 3tc

·

was

LBI'ENING- ....... DlrtictGr David stoclmianltltbla .-.lYe .
, _ •110!! lllteallo ~ W8dn-diQ' d!a'IDIIda app8arjmce before
the Se• 'e Jluda8 Comnilltee on CllplloiiDI.IIIockmaa.IGid the.JIIIIIel,
"'f you CM find tldnp In lhl!re (the llilll&amp;ft) IIIII&amp; yoU C8ll penuade the
·.lllmlldiU'aUon · aren't ne 1ed, l'nl lUre . people will ~. (AP

REPAIR

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

FOR

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
Also Transmissiofi,
. PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121
. 3·2HI&lt;;

8

oneer Rick Pearson . Esut11:s.
antiques, farm, househokls .

Meigs
Case No. 23407Probate
. Carolyn

1981 Cadt llac Devt ll'e 4 dr.
1981 Ford Bronco
Sale w tll be held at Smith-

brou&amp;frt him here

CARPENTER

51. t;ll. 124 Pomeroy, 011

OF
. Ph. 992' 2174
APPOINTMENT
I
2·21&gt;rti I
FIDUCIARY
"On January 26. 1983. '"the IL...:....-----'--'~J 1

county

City limits.

PARTS and SERVICE

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

pomeroy, Oh .

Ill OTICE

The f ollowt ng ve htc les will be
offered for publ1c sale by BANK

614·992-6302 or contact

4-5-tlc

SMITH NELSON
MOTOR.S, IN.. c.'·

Cue No. 23407
.

NOTICE OF
PUBUC SALE

Washen •Ranges
• • Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

or 992-2282

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest Heater
COfe to the lafltSt Radiator.
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 YrS. Experience

6·3.4&amp;9.00

ESTATE
OF
FMAN, DECEASED

man. 6 yr8 . old . Middlep·o rt
area . last sean WearinQ
black spike coller . ·call

•Dish~ ·

· l.'r--------'-1
~========::t--======::::;=~-::=::======~

Oh1o 45779.

Publi·c Notice

•Washers

1·3·1 rrio.

5 00

4.83700

985-3561
All Makes

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992'75$3

Gauge Shotgun~ Only.

Had told him He would
leld the ..y.
So he is In the Heavenly
· Hoine alxM!
Waitina to "Welcome''
those he IOYed. .

I

them 46
a good
61
6246 home . Coli
4-2 .
.
Mother Bordinline Collie
and 3·6 week old pYppieo .
Mixed breed. Phone 614992· 7713 •
Male puppy. e.leven weeki
old. Mixed. 304-676 -6863 .
·
Puppies.' to go o d_ home .
304·676· 9782.

Nor!hup Bridge area . Call
44.6-1672.'
LOST yellow male .c at.
Missing in the Neighbor hood Rd . vincinlty. Reword .
Call 446-7820 or 446 6686
LOST: l\llale black Dob~r·

KEN'S
.APPLIANCE
'SERVICE

extensive

oflooling W&lt;Xk
oAiuminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
15 Y•r&gt; Exporience

Factory Choke 12

l.ate of 1 Frog Blvd .. SyracUse. n

Public Notice

.
o£1ectric Mlrt
.Custom Pole Bldgs.
· &amp;Garages

6;30 P.M,

Jr .. 1 4Frpg
Blvd
.. Syra
Ohio
5779.
was
ap.--

FOR FUTU RE USE"

~tmodotinc

SAT. NIGHT

. On Ja.nuary 26. 1983. in the
Me.igs County Pro~a te Cou rt
Case. No. 23995. Fred W.

~~;!~~~~~~~~ Crow.
cuse.

New Homes . -

Bashan Building
EVERY

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

Total E)(pend1 ture Dt sbu ~_se menr s

a

ROUSH
.CONSTRUCTION

RACINE

pointed
Executor
of deceased.
the es tate
of
Eleanor
K. .Crow,

Cap1tal Outlay

Coatin

·p uppies
enyorie wt'!o will
.give · ;

, . - - - . . . ; ._ _ _ _....,

c... NQ. 23996

Ltbtary Servtc e

Matenals

Texture

~~'\TRE~NESGAS and
•PONDS, RECLAMA ·
n0111 WORt&lt;
•LAND CLEARING-; CON··
CRETE WORK
ri
·

Gemari Shephe.r(t

U flO

- d • - h.. •J

PROBATE COURT
OF MEI08 COUNTY,
OHIO .
ESTATE OF ELEANOR K.
C!IOW, DECEASED

outsttetched hind .
~ whispril of "An Unknown Land".
He was not afrlid to ao .
For He wllo safely had

I'

P&amp;S BUitDtNGS'

Notice

IN LOVING MEMORY OF
GEORGE PICKENS WHO
WAS KILLED 25 YEARS
AGO ~Y. FEB. 3, 1958. ·
Death beckoned him Willi .

tor, Glenn's National Finance
since 1974 and directed the unofficial
Committee.'
Ms. DeSist! is a former
presidential campaign for the past
exeCutive ·director of the Derner
two years, is thE' campaign chief of
crat!c Hoilse and Senat~ Council. ·
staff.
-Paul L. Rosenberg, finance
Other key people in the campaign,
director. RDsenberg, a former
include: ,
special assistant to Massachusetts .
-Regiliakl E . Gilll&lt;lm Jr.. chairGov. Michael Dukakis, is on leave
man of Glenn's National Advisory
from Ill!! New York financial
Committee. Gilllaril, a former
consuiting
flrrri of McKinsey and
legislative aide to Glenn, was
Co .. Inc.
appointed to the Interstate Com·
.-Greg Schneiders, press secremerce Commission by President
tarY. Sc})nelders was a campaign
Jtmmy Carter In l!l!ll - only the
aide to Carter in 1976 and bec&lt;lffie
second black ever tO serve on the
.
Carter's
director of communlca·
ICC.
.
lions
in
the
White House.
-RDbert A. Farmer, treasurer.
-Louise
Swartzwalder, deputy
Farmer, a Boston publisher, helped
press
secretary.
Ms, Swartzwalder
on John Anderson's 1900 presidenhas worked on the· Des Moines
tial campaign and
slated to be
Register and Detroit Free Press
tJ-:· of Ted Kennedy's campaign before the senator tfom . and is a former press secretary to
Rep. Tom RaUsback, R-Ill.
Massachusetts withdrew from Ill!!
-Michael Colopy, deputy chief of
race for the Democratic presidenstaff.
Colopy is a former special
tial nomination. He presently is
assistant
to New York Gov. Hugh
finance chalnnan . for MassachuCarey and worked . on the 198)
setts Gov. Michael Dukakis.
campaign of Sen. Alan Dixon, P·l11.
· -Judy DeSist!, executive dlrec·

Mo.oon

""""'na

,~ -G

Granls-ln -

Admwl istra \ton
Persona·I

11 .016.00
Total
1 t.016.00
COMBINED
STATEMENT OF
CASH RECEIPTS,
DISBURSEMENTS,
ANO CHANGES IN
FUND CASH
BAlANCES
All GOVERNMENTAL
AND ADUCIARY
FUND TYPES
FOR THE ASCAL
YEAR ENDED

.

111.!

Geoeql Fund•
Rocalpii/Disbur10ment
Oeaaiption ·

General Fund

Senator
Glenn's political staff growing
.
'

11 .0 16.00

Food Cath
B,ola11C81 By Fund
Clallffication

Typesc

•

.

l ocal Sources

Governmental Fund

.

3 43

R111G,.....

61,592.00

Refu nds (Non . Revenue)
Totftl Recetpis From

S1 0.952 .00
50.00
14.00

.

246

•"···-

Ad1ustmen ts and

Q-.ober 31 , 1982

billion Zimmer nuclear power plant
near Cincinnati. Customers of the
three utilities owning the facility,
law."
·
which has yet to produceelectric!ty,
"This bill will save m1lllons of . have already paid $169.4 million in
consumers' dollars while giving
higher rates for Its construction. •
utilities the Incentive to complete.
The plarit Is owned by the
power plants on tlme and within
Cincinnati Gas and Electric, Colum·
budget," she said.
·
bus and Central Ohio Electric and
Schwanwalder said Wednesday
Dayton Power and Light
· that consumers shouldn't have to
companies.
.pay ior utlllty plants before ihey are
Schwarzwalder said the current
rate plan discourages efforts to curb
able to use what thE' plants produce.
"The rtsk Involved In building a
construction costs ahd ·encourages
nuclear plant or any other eleCtrical
Inflating rates through ·excessive
genera ttng plant I ~llev'i' ought to
construction.
"In short, It allows utilities to
be on the company and on the
collect money from ratepayers for
stockholders rathE'r than on the
electricity that is .not being proratepayers,'' Schwanwalder said.
Schwarzwalder cited the $1.7
vided," he said.

!':..~-·

Local Sources

Balance

Important reason for rate hikes. It Is
time to remove the single most
expensive two sentences In Ohio

::

ments
Othe.r"
Receipts From

Q...,.,..;bor 31 , 1982
(Net)
Peny Cash
Change Fund

992~~., -

WOr&lt;h

Donations
FLnes
·an9 Rermburse- 405 00

. 4aof

Consumer groups -support ~tility bills

''a...,

63 · U.,...roc~

Investment
556· 00
Rentals
30.00
Bequests. Contributroils.

814 992-6813
COMBINED
STATEMENT OF
CASH, INVESTMENTS
AND FUND
. CASH 114LANCESAll FUND TYPES

Cash 1n Bank! s)"

A-CO&lt;I•Il~

•DOZER
o8ACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
oUMESTONE

Giveaway

:: :,-;:~::!: ~!: ~~:::_:••'- ::7 ~~:.."···~
Racine, Oh,
Fully lnsured~free
B0 DID &amp;WOitK GUARANTEED
:::;.::.~;:::"~=·
J7.9 w..-...,
~:~ ~~~7:.
9l
.........,
Ph. 614-843-2591
EStimates
PHONE JAMES ·CLIFFORD
992·72ql 2-3·1 mo. 6 Lost and Fou11d ·
:::::;:,:;:;: ••·-·•"" 1--~-,-~-.,--------1
'
IO·S·ttc
CALL 614-949-2686
.
DII· M.tt "-.......
•··
Uptu)D....-do
Th,.. ,.,;n~nie&gt;n'
uoo
FOUND Small bla•k
lemalflt
8!&amp;,a-....
U~I015
~~=========+===~~~====--'====::::===~~~ .F()ijjNo'~;;iibl.~t;~
87-U"""IOI...,
Upto15Woo!t• . SooN, in-hcm .
. UOO
...
1..,.-:r-:~-----"1' ,......--------11 wired- hair T&amp;rrier. 'Fo"'nd in
':CUT OUT
vincinity of Lincol.n Pike,

111 . ,;,.,.,Equip ....... .
12 •.,...,,.d

Sources
Taxes
Earn1ngs on

Si'"tolr2~\"x366'!.6 ' Up
•
Insulated Do1 Housos

W'rl

J&amp;f
CONTRACTING

Industrial, Commercial,
Residential, Interior and
.
Pain1ingExterior. ·
Sandblasting
M
Ortarblasting
'
""rlci
r:-• ng Lot Stri_pptng
Spray Painting

UJILITY BUILDINGS

~: ~::::

,. &lt;M'"

GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDI.NG.S
Sizes start tram 12'!16'

"""--c•.
A•••Codel04

Aeceipis From Local

Meiga County

conummlty was among tholie ~ hit by recent snowfalls. (t\P
Laaerpboto)

. .. ,.c.,....,,

DECEMBER 31, 11182
Govemmental
F\lftd TVPOJ
Rocalpll/l&gt;'!li:ription
Gonerol

PIJBUC U8RARY

_:...j

,., ..,,r •h••

Public Notice

RN4NCIAL

CLEARING SNOW - SUa&amp; Cinnamon, of Vlcl, clears snow from
the driveway of the CcHlp servfoo staUon. The northwestern Oldalloma

71J.co""""'"""-

ll·fCIUillnMnr lot llonr ·
4' forlNM

Public l\lotice

&lt;)'""

v.,....... .

~;::========;Tr===;;;.;;;=::::;-r;:::::::::;;:::::::;16to

/HIIIIII'ffl #, l&lt;·lr•,rhum • 1',\.-/llmpo•.• ••,•

. 1l· V..,t.4WD
11· M&lt;&gt;r.,....,.,..,
15·101._ .. .,.,_,
16 AV..,P-6 ............,.,
17-A.u ld R.,oir ,

47-w ... r.dt e&gt; Ao~t

u1

n .w..... o~r.oo ;

'·

t:t,u~ ifi t•tl 1'"1!' '~

121nac:rrows.-

6]·AR1011W..
14-M i l&lt;l lol•o~• .... i 5&amp;-B .. ~di"t &amp;uppli•
!i&amp;. Polofo,Stll
5 .,. . ........... . . . _... .
lll· ffL.oilt.
51-for·SIII a&lt; Ttlcll

G4 · H..-• Grorn
15 · Sorod. hflil ....

45-futnioJ,od Ramo"
15·5t&gt;Oe&lt;o lot "ur

1 ... RMio. TV.CIII.,..lo

____.:______
,.. •••••

42·Mobilo Homa r,;; llrnl
4l·h•molor ll..,t

1J.IMur-.o

11-Miou•

.

.. ,., 9 ...,

c-.sified

Dept.
··lllCou.rtSt.,Sentinel
P~ . Oiti0457~9

11 - Au-kN~

l _!i· l&lt;&gt;l' ............
21-AMI E ...... w ..n..d.

12-_&amp; ; , - - -....

.'

. 61 •H011.-.,_d .GI&gt;Odo
U ·CI. TW' Aadiofq.,;-.,,

·
J2- Mol&gt;~•l;'oon.. '"' Salo
::Jl - ~ oomo ' '" Sal 4
34-lu•iner.• 8 wilo!i~!ll

I ·PI.llloo: Sale

'

· WASHINGTON (AP) -At the
urging of Republican congressienal
leaders, President Reagan's top
advisers are co115idering a fecleral
jobs programandemergencyrellef
for . hOmeless victims of the
recession.
White House Chief of Staff James
Baker held . preliminary meetings
with members of the White House
staff earlier this week, but no
specific'proposaishavebeenagreed
on, Republican sources say.
, .
Senate Majority Leader Howard .
Baker of Tennessee and Sen. Paul
Laxalt, R-Nev., chairman of the
Republican National Committee,
also talked about proposals for
dealing quickly with the ~slon
with presklentlal counselor Edwin ,
Meese III, according to the sources,
who spoke on condition that they not
be·ldentlfled. ,
The discussions reportedly took
place with · Reagan's · blessing,
despite the president's continued
public opposition to any large scale
public works projects lritended. to
reduce the 10.8 ger cent u,nemployment rate.
·
The president' seconomic.spokesman testified on thE' ad!hlnistra· ·
tion 1s1984hudgetblueprtntagalnon
· Wednescjay, and said the quickest
way to reduce unemployment was
.to reduce the federal deficit by
enacting Reagan's program.

.\

J• - ~~_,

n r ...-s~'~"'adlo•nool
, .~

Republicans eye
emergency·relief

PAPAL.SMILE ,_ J!JIIef Card. Benlardln, AJ'chblabop ot Chicago,

• -~-v-...

·• 1-Lo.I.,.OII;Jouncl

-

"'

2~· M!),..W 10 lo6&lt;1

2] .p,.,... _ .... , .......

4-qo...... ,

..

2 1 luolnno Ollf'oltu..;r,

Or Write Dlil y

4 ··

:Business senices

PHONE 992~2156

~ --=~~~======~~===~~=~!~~=:::::...
t
J, ......
_ _ _ 1-ii'Mw•nc•f
,
... ,........,..

The Daily

Ohio

.

,'J •
.'

..;

PIIMEROY

lANDMARK
. 6i4-992-2181

MILLER.
·,
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all YO!Ir wi&lt;rinl! \1
needs; furnaces
repair service ilnd
installation .
Residentia 1.
&amp; C!lmmerc'ial
Call742·31

.\

8rn11ll !&gt;read puppy abc&gt;ut 4
montha old ,. ·very lovable
fe.m,ale t·o _g ood ~ome .

304-676·6146.

•

j

.&lt;

�10--The

Sentinel

•

3; 1983

Ohio

Thursday,
11

They'll Do It Every Time

Help Wanted

Lad lea needed for very
temporarv good paying

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. portlolly lu rnlahld
nowly ,., ·.dolod, goo hoot.
riverfront J"itw, water paid.
1176 mo . Co11448-3119.

office like work, No expe ·

rlence nec·eaaary . Also need
lad les w ith car for light

delivery wotl&lt;. G81 olio·
wance . Apply · in parton

6 1 HouMhold GOode

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sole. chllr. raekor,
mon, 3 tlblee, loxtra heoovy I

by Larry Wright

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

. •en.

to
Mod•n 1 bdr. apartmlnt In and up to
Of'!ly . " No phone calla", to
quiet location, -cloae to boda •• 440 . 1
Mrll . Carter room 106 ,
town, no pota, ucurlty dep. 11:1,11.. Rocllnora.
to
Meigalnn, Monday Feb .7-9
Coli 448-2016 .
· 13110 .. Llmpo from '28 . to
a.m. to 9 :30a.m. only.
1711 . li pc . dlnottoa from
Clean &amp; cozy convenient 199•. to f431S . 7 pc .. t1B9.
LOOKING fora part time job
lo01tlon . UtiiHioa pold, dep ond up. Wood loblo with olx
that hal good pay, life
l!o ref. roq. n 96 mo. Coli cholra f4215. to t746. O.ak
insurance, retirement plan .
448-74B2.
f1 10 up to 1226. Hutchoo,
· that will te.chyou tt valuable
1660. ond up , moploorplno
jo b skill , plus h81p with a ·
Nlcloy fumlahld mali. homo · flnlah. Bunk bod complete
college or Vo-Tec educa In city. Adulta only. Cell with mottrea-. t260. one!
tion? Thera ' s only one
446-0338.
·
up to 1388. 8oby bitds,
around' High achool aenion
.
t11 0. Mettreaeea or box
or graduatet, you may even
EFFICIENCY APARTMENT oprlnga. full or twin, fiB ..
quality for a cash bonus .
500 block of Third Avo .. firm, 16B. end 17B. Quun
Contact .-the West VIrginia
Gollpolls. 2 nna. ond both, aoto, t1911 . 4 dr. cheoto,
Army National Guard . For
1125. plua utllitloa . Call •42 . 5 dr. chettl, 164. Bod
more information call
446-4222 between 9 ond fro moo, f20.ond Ul .. 10
Sergeant Sergeant Lutton at
&amp;PM.
gun · Gun cabin.,., f310 .•
304 -676 -3960 or call toll
dinette cholrw 120. ond 1211.
•
!roo 1-B00-642 -3819 . '
POMEROY-2 bedroom Gooorlloctricrong8s,l326 .~
unfurnlohod opt., f160. 2 up to f371S . Boby mo- lf.l1!!jf(
bedroom houoo t186 . troaus, 1215 &amp; 131, bod
Situations
12
Wanted
Depoait •100. Cell 814· frames
*20, •21.
t30,II"~o:-::":-::"":· :w:"":·:"·:
''"~':w:""::;:=========1
992-2288:
king fnme
1110 .• Good
•election of bedrOOm 1uttea.
41 House&amp; for Rent
Apt. for rent. HoH doublo-2 codor chuto, rockon, metal
31 Homes for Sale
Oump truck for hire . Will
bd.room Apt. Adults pre- cabinets, awlwl rockere.
haul gravel or moat any·
fer•d. No pats. 614-992· Usod Furniture-- bookcaao,
3 b8droom houM for IBie.
thing . Coll614-992-3869 .
3 bdr . ranch. 2749.
ranges. ah•in, and tablet, 54 Misc. Merchandise 61 Farm Equipment
New corpetlng throughout. Modern
·
R d · 1-:-------:--:---'-- waahan, dryera, Nfrlger~~Loceted on Beahan Rd. and garage,
carpet, · 0 ney 2 bedroom furni1hed epan- tara and TV' a. 3 ' miles out
sits
on
3
acrea
of
land
.
oreo. Depot~ &amp; references mont. Coli 992-6434 or Bulovlllo Ad. Open hm to Dlnotto, 6 ploco sot. 304 • Want to trade·John Deere
Insurance
13
EKcallent terms to r ight raquirod . 8286 per mo. 304-882-2586.
310 Backhoe, good condi porty. MAKE AN OFFER. 30 Strout Roolty. coli 446- !--------:--:-:-:: 8pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9omto· 1-8-711_·_3_2_7_1_.- - - - - -, tion, for 1 680 Case. Call
8
year financing avallabl~ . ·
.
2 bd.room Apt. with 2 full ::~:o~~~
GRAND OPENING SALE. 992-2818 .
SANDY AND BEAVER Contact Bank One af Pome- 000 ,
both a. 86 South Third St..
Now lngoooii-Rond pumpa
Insurance Co. hae offered roy. 614-992-2133.
Smell unfurnilhad
hou• in Middleport . Available AvecedoNorgewllher20 6 compr&amp;IIOrl with full
services for fire insurance
2
town .
bdr'a, pay own immediately. Phone 814· lb . capacity very good warranty . 5 HP reclp . l-;;:=---;-;-:-:-::-::-;:--coverage In Qallia County
PARK Drive. Onootory wijh
condition 1110 end olao GE compr..oor 11,199,.,42710H7P
livestock
for almost a cent11y . Farm, finiahod goroge, 304-675- ut811161t0ioa. NoCpalllt4.406op7.Bre88q. 992-2879.
. o
. •
• '-------=-::-:-=::compreoaor
•
..
home and personal property 4444 after 6 p.m .
after 6 mo
call446-4046.
'
dryer 8100. Coli 814-2811· IICtew
&gt;&lt; HP
P 1240 Dryo&amp;
Aportmontl . 304-876- 1207.
n
pum
·
••
-lecover,.gu are available to
6648 . .
acc.eaaorlas . All in atock . Reglatered Quaner Horae.
meet individual needs . .
6
rma 4. &amp;h AV
beth
. I-Ai::\iA";Mi!';T"S-:-;;;;bil. .Tw 1n lize vux
"- apringa. Call Ropolr focllltiea. Total R-uth Aeavea. AI 10 gre da .
room Houaa 6 11
Contact Neal Ins . Agency. Settling estate.
8
houu, lot 80x130, 2122 Loco ted11 0 t
APA
S. mobile 448-4179.
Equipment Company. 304- Saddlu , brldloa , winter
"
agent . Phone 388-8690.
g
a
UncolnAvo.304-676-2671 Galllpo8. 17 6· Good
r:Pn
homos.
.
Pt.Pioooont
1"::::-:--:------,--_7_6_11_-8_2_4_1_
. -:---:---:--:- horae blonketa . Woatorn
0 8 65
1
MOBILE HOMES Compare or 304-675-2924.
0
6 387
· 8
o 2nd21 _Gollip 1io. 81 4·448- with
Childbuilt
renoInwhite
bod LEVI aklrta, 1 ,...
-lr corduroy
ohelf l!otwin
drowora.
our comprehensive mobile
114
ACRES
.
born.
now
1
:
:
good
.cond.
Coil
814-388cheono
alacka,
polyaator
home coverage with
1
2 room offi clen cy apt. 9036 .
alacko. blouaos &amp; etc. . tlzo
Hay 8t
anyone. Foremost Insu- houto, mlnerol rlghta. Juot Sbmohll00 dbRdrd. hRomfe,&amp;NoSigohc0
9
11
miloo
from
town
.
Coli
or
•
·
·
1-304-882-2566
or
1-6141----:--:------~
14
&amp;
16,
304-676-41
8.
rance, 446-9340 .
304-676-3030 or 876- dep. required. Coli 446 " 992-7206.
Now 1983 Nicchlaowlng
3431
0264 evenings.
1--:----:-::-:::-::---.,----: mochlno froe-orm, dial-a• JUNIOR ain clothoo. oil
Good dry oar corn. f2 , 60
.
UNFURNISHED opartment mo ti c. Equpp
1 ed ~
1 zog, lypoa,
excellent
condition
~ zg
Alao twa
· alzo 18
winter. bu. Coll614-246-6616.
ONE acre . 3 bedroom 3 bdr. formhouoe nawdoxol
Schools
15
f for rant, 1 bedroom, monogram • ..wonburiona,
house. garage. 2 buildings. 9•• furnance , dep . &amp; ra · 1180 .00 Call Automotive make button hblea . Coat coati. 304·8 75 ·30~ 9 Instruction
9
phona 896 -3466.
Hoy. f1 .00 bolo. 614-742roq. Coll614-246-&amp;32 Supply, 8 -8 . 304-875- now f439 . 96 . year end
-lc2121 .
'I
clooronco solo t125 . Colll·
Building Supplies
New trl- level, 3 bedroom Remodeled 7 rm . ho~ao. 2218.876-6713 .
814-386-8918. out of town 66
Karate the ultimate In s~lf with den &amp; 1 VI bath on 1h con walk to town. city
Hoy. t1 .66 o bolo. 814·
defence all private lessons. acre . 7 miles from Pt . water. gea. 8200 mo. , e250 . Unfumiahld upatairaapt for cell collect. Free delivery to
9811-3949 .
tumished.
Call
814·245rent,
good
locetion
,
304your
home
.
Men , women , &amp; children . Pleaaant . Call after 4 :30,
material•
lnatruction thru black belt . 304-675-56B9.
9320.
676-1302.
!~;:;;::~~~~~ blockBuilding
Hoy. 2nd .
. brick, oowor plpoa, Conditional
cutting . Clover,Timothy A
Also
available
Karate
Unlumiahod
hou•.
3
bdr..
FOR
rent.
lurniahod
apart54
Misc.
l\llerchandiM
windows.
lintels,
etc.
uniform1 puching and
Alfalfa , Never wet . e2 .00
1260, Rodney Villa~• 11. mont, 304-676-1302.
Claude Winterl, Rio Grande. bolo. 814-742-2873.
kicking 'baga, ond protective 32 Mobile Homes
0 . Coli 814-246-6121 .
equipment. Jerry Lowery &amp;
for Sale
C.,l l446-44 16 after 7 M.
FOUR room upotoira apart- For uwo lump cool &amp;
Aaaocietu Karate Studio ,
Hoy for ulo. ,, .&amp;Opor bolo.
Vary nice 2 bdr . duplex menta, Hendanon Trailer firewood . Zlnn Coal Co .. BUILDING MATERIAL. Flot Phone 814-992-8793.
143 Burlington Rd .• Jackhome,
furnished,
Main
St.
Perk,
8126
month.
Trailer
Inc.
Call446·1408.
metal
aheeu
porcelan
·
ton, Oh Call 614 -286·
TRI - STATE MOBILE Chothi.,, Oh. Call 614- l;poc:ea. Phone 304-876- I----:---::---- onomol coated, 4ft. by Bft.
3074 or 614-384-8160.
HAY. 304 - 468-1858 or
HOMES . USED - CARS , 246-581B.
2948.
·
·
Firewood apllt , ocut to thru 4 ft . by 12ft. H .OO to 304-675-7641
.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOL IS .
length ; you pick up. We 19.80, odd alzoo f3 .00 to
ONE
bedroom
apartmant
in
CHECK OUR PRICES. 6 rm. hou.se &amp; bath. Inquire
deliver. We accept HEAP as.oo. &amp;14-867-3086.
1 8 Wanted to Do
CORN for aolo, f2 . 60
CALL 446-7572.
ot 918 2nd. Avo .. GoiHpolia, Hendoraon, 304-676-1972. corda. Coli 814-266-8246.
buohol, 304-876-27B8.
Oh.
FUR N IS HE 0 oportniont. 3 Slaba cut-up •16 full length 66 Pets for Sale
CLEAN USED MOBILE
General Hauling and Truh HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· 6 room Lrlfurniahed Apt. in room• and bath . utilities •10 PU load. round wood,
removal Service . Reliable ITY MOBILE HOME SALES •. Middleport. Equipped paid : A~ultl preferred. large truck load . Call
. .' .. . . .. .. ' .
end dependable . Coli 446· 4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS. Kitchen. 8150 . month. Call 304-875-4361 .
814-246-6804.
HILLCREST KENNEL - ~~~=::;==~~~
31 69 alter 6PM 258-1967 . RT 36. PHONE 446-7274 .
614-992-6692.
· Boarding oil broeda . AKC 71
Autos for Sale
New coal burning furnance Atl!g. Oobermena pup1 afd
1would like todo'ba byaitting 1-:-M:-o-:-bl::lo-:-ho-mo-::&amp;-:1-ot-a-:fo:-r-,-.~le,
For Mnt·3 bd . room house, 46
Furnished Roonis hoota 2500 oqh. Will oell for Doberman Stud Service .
in my homo. ony thift. Call 1967 Buddy mobile home Eoatlm Locol SchooiDio:
,. prlco . Call 814-218- Call 448-7796.
12 paaaeneger Ford van
448-7781 .
14x80. 2 bdr. gas heat, ru~&amp;l trict. Tuppers Plains Water Sleeping -room $125, utili· 1216.
1978
model, auto . . air ,
water. set up with 2 or 4 Dittrlct . 10 mlhutaa from ties pd, single male, shire
DRAGONWYND CATTERY storo -rodio, t1. 995. Cell
lot.. Clll446.-1 240.
Pom•oy. t176 . por month. bath. 919 2nd Avo .. Golllpo· Livingroom aiut1. beige - KENNEL . AKC Chow
security deposit required. 111. Coli 448 - 441&amp; after background with blue pupplao. CFA Hlmeloyon. 448-4141 .
i2x60 mobilo homo, would Coli G . Wo~on, 614·992- 7PM.
flowora, .1 37&amp;. Coli 814- Persian and Siemue kit- 1976 Buick Electro 2 bdr .• .
conalder aelllng on lond 3646 after 7 p.m.
·
367-0636 .
Business
tona . Coli 448·3B44 ofter PS, PB, AC. AM · FM atoro
21
contract . Call446-1157
4PM.
Opportunity
f1. 910 or trade for cattle,
after 8, 614-24&amp;-6830 .
THREE bedroom houoo for 46 Space for Rent
Chrome glau coff.. tab.. a
farm eq.u ipment, or mobile
----------1
ffllnt , nice location, 304·
end tobloo "'!ith matching Reg. Blue Hoolor puppy for home of equal value. Call
1971 Elcona 12x38 676-1090.
Iampo for oelo. 1226. Coli ulo. Coil 448·0370.
448-4537.
Own your own Jean - 84,000 . 1964 Champion
KOUNTRY MOBILE Homo 448-1056.
Sportawur. Infant-Preteen 20x44 87,600 . 1974 THREE bedroom . Now Park, Route 33, North of
or Ladlu apparel store . Shamrock 24x64 $18,600. Haven. cloae to bank , Pomeroy , Lorge lots . Coli 6x8 utility troller t300, Airedale Terrier pupa; large 1971 Ford LTD UOOorbeot
type, AKC. Loyol. protec- offer. 1978 Chevy Mollbu
Offering nationally known 1980 Liberty 14x60 echoola &amp; ltorea . New 992-7479.
Homollto chain uw 18' tive, obedient. Family peta. ototlonwagon 13, 996 . Coli
brands tuch 11 J 'ordache, t8.996 . 1971 Freedom kitchen, diahwaahor, cor·
•126. boys 20' blcyclol311,
1 - 814 - 692 - 2170, 814266·1786.
Chic. Lea. Levi. Vanderbitt. 14•66 t7,99&amp; . 1983 Men- poted. 2 cor goroge, Iorge Trailer space fo~r rent in an ow mobile engine 115 0 . Cell
Athona,
Oh.
Wrangler over 200 other aion 14x70 *13 , 500 . garden. No pall . $100 . Mason . Located on Horton Coli 446:4428 .
'
Buy owner 1982 Dodgo
bronda . t7,900 to 816,900 K•nauga Mobile Home deposit . 1260 month . St. C.ll onvtime 304-7738aasett Pupplea·ready for Mirad1 ea . cond . 13,000
include• beginning inven- So loa. Konougo. OH. 446· 304-273-951 B.
Uaed
Norge
refrigerator
6160.
Volontinoo Day. t&amp;O .OO. milu , 318. V·B . crui1e.
tory . airfare for one to 9662 .
t15, Polariod camera
Phone 614-992-6548.
many eatra1. *8,932 . Cell
Faahin Center, training , 1----:-::---:----:-:-::-- complete fondue •t $6, cer
448-0047 .
flxtures, grand opening 1980 Nashua with 2 expiln· 42 Mobile Homes .
Equipment
48
oHt f3. Coli 448-4680.
SIX month old rod Dober- - - - - - - - - - : promotions. Call Ptt'r. Dick· doa. Sell on land contract or
for Rent
for
Rent
men. earl dipped • ahote. 78 COt'dobe excellent cond .•
aon (601) BB2 - 61 64 or toke over payments. t500
Firewood, •36. truck laid. Mull 1111, phone 304·876- AT. AC, AM-FM , cruiao,low
(601 1268-1361 .
down . Muat bo moved. Coli
t86. a cord . Sp lit and 4873or614-448· 1735.
mihogo, 12,900 . Coli
2 bdr . mobile home, extra
814-266-9302.
dollvorod. 814-843-3803.
nice
,
cto
..
to
shopping
area
Backhoe
endloodor
dlga
8
614 -379-2741 .
MUFFLER SHOP Profitablol-:--:-:-:-::-:---:-----:;-7."
It reataur1nt1. Private, ref. &amp; ·ft . • large bed pick up
muffler
doolorahip
ovailsblo
.
1
976
Wlndaor
portlolly
f'lrewood delivered t80 . 1
1
Musical
19BO C~ovette. Call 441·
High _career income. Buai- furnished . totalelac .• dep. required. Adults. no haulable, operate youraalf. cord. Coal delivered 146 . 67
poll.
Coli
446-8262,
after
5
890.
per
day
.
304-896Instruments
4179 .
neas includae equipment. central air, fully skirted.
.
Call
Tom
Ho1kin1
·ton
3B41 .
1tock. warranty program , washer &amp; dryer. Call 614- coli 446 -2491 .
814-949-2180 or 6141973 VW Super 8oedo. Coli
foctory trsining, sdvortlalng 246-9143 or 446-0404 .
rmo
.
a.
bath,
furniahod,
no
742-2834.
3
Moae Ri1e. solid body guitar 814-246-9239 '
aupport. Total price
hild
c 11
ron . a
• 4,995.00. Over300aho~ 1981 Vonto.. VIIIo14x64,2 poto , no c
Firewood. spilt. 130 .001 with herd aholl call. t260 . 1970 vw. Coli 614-241448-2223.
coast to coaat. For mora bdr. , exc. cond.,_ • 13 •000 l-----:-:---:-:-truckload, 135 .00 deli- Phone 814-992-7453.
9322.
lnformation call toll -fro•• I 'financing available . Call 3 -bedroom Mobile Home . 61 Household Goods vered. Ph. 18141992-2770
1 -800-336-6014 .
814268-1786.
Approxlmatoly 6 miloa from
or (304)882 -2194.
78 Pontiac 1tationwagon.
68
Fruit
SWAIN
1978 Schult 14x70 very Pomeroy or Middleport . AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE FOR SALE· 866. 40 ln .
new Mlchlin tirea. loaded
&amp; V egata blae
with oxtraa. C.ll 446-3648
nioo, contrololr. 2 fuM botha. 614-992-5858.
22 Money to Loan
62 Olive St .. Galllpolla. King electric rlnge~•e&amp;. Electric
or 448-4062.
t13.000 will conaldor
coal a. wood heaters with dryor-t86. G. E. woohor8wner financing wtth down 2 bedroom f~Wniahld troller. ton 8469. tot box spring &amp; haovy duty-t100. Wo- POTATOES f8 .00 100 lb .
t1 60. dopoalt. $175 rent mottrou f100. fi!m 1120.
19711 Plymouth Rood
HOME LOANS 12% fixed payment. Call446-1 842 plua
utllltlea
&amp;. lawn care. sofa-lovoaoat &amp; choir 1199, ahor&amp;Dryor tot· 1126 . bog No.1 Wlaconoln Ruaoet. Runnor 440-8 pock. outo.
9:30
to
2
:
30
or
otter
6
rata . Leader Mortgage.
742-2362 .
Coli 446-8247 · or 676- trana. 8 • M. Heddmen.
814-9e6-3949.
304-743-3333.
love aeats $70. new cOli &amp;
1 -614-592-3061 .
3782.
TRW, Creger, occol, engle,
wood hellen a a low 11 New, heavy-duty Re111
TWO
mobil
homH
for
rent
Now uhouat oyotom &amp;
oct.
Good
uaad
2
bedroom
Buainell Ia Second Mort·
on Rt. 2 about 6 minutes $399 with blowers. used hitch. Fits any Ford plclcup. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
gogo loana . Equity Re- mobile hom ea . Furnished. from town . Call after 6 . coal S. wood heaters, new l..ong John five antennae You can otlll buy opplol ot rodllla. Muot 1811. Beot offor
Brown' a Trailer Park, At .
dlnet uta 176 &amp; up. rofrlgor- Beam . Mark II A watt meter. our Orchard and storage . over n.ooo. Homo 304soursaa . in Ohi
124, 'Minorovillo, Oh. 304·6r277.
aton, rangaa, bunk bella Motk VII pre-omp. Slltronlx Locotod on St. At . 8B9 . 8711-311118. - " ' 81 4-2411·
1 -800 -992 · 2361 , out
9119 oak lor Randy .
81 4-992-3324.
complete *179. bunklea VFO model 90. Coli 992- Phone 889-37811.
Ohio 1-513-2&amp;B-01 12.
- - - - - - - : · l c- 43 Farms for Rent
mattrenea •40, cheats. 7349.
78 Mere. Zopher t1.800. 76
1 971 Star 12x60. 2
droaaora. TV ' a. Call 448chevy lmpolo •1110 . Coli
atove,
refrig.,
bd.room
with
3169
.
.
Professional
23
Warm Morning Gu heater
69 For Sale or Trade 448-7322. B &amp; 0 Motora.
a.c. , LP v••· porch and
LP or , Natural ga1. Stove
Services
awning. Very good cond. THREE bodroom formhouu GOOD USED APPLIANCES pipe Inc. 81.000 BTU
1 978 Hondo LX, hpd .. Ulll
Set up on ranted lot. with garden plot. t260.00 · wa1hara, dryer~. refrigerll· output. Sliding gluo ~otlo
$6,600 . Coli 614-94!1· month. Coli 304-676-3030 tore. ranges. Skagga Ap- door, lnelde door and ott.r 1976 Buick Eloctro 2 bdr., any goo. gurontold 30 miloa
por gollon. Tlroo llko now.
PS, PB. AC, AM-FM
or 676·3431.
pliances, Upper River Ad .• mite. Coli 814-992-7294.
... 814-992-6841 .
11
,960
or
trode
for
.......
con
892·11480.
Tax Returns
bealde Stone Crest Motel,
equipment, or mobile --:-=-----:---:forlndlvldualo
USED MOBILE HOME .
446-7398.
Settling estate. Frigidaire firm
homo of equal voluo. Cell 11174 Mollbu, 4 door. good
44
Apartment
6 7 8 27 1 1
ref . 14 cu . ft. Llko now . 448-4137.
·tlrot. f300 . Phone 387for Ra11,t
Whirtpoof auto. washer A·1
448·3862 : : : :": : :
Corol Nool
304-871-2871 or 3040881 .
890.
Caii448·
B181
.
cond.
876-2924.
-P-IA_N_O_T_U_N-IN-G-::&amp;-:R::E::P-:-AI::R 33 Farms for Sale
72 DODGE Doman, good--------:--:-:-:Cell Bill Ward tor appoint·
condition, 72 Mercury For nle or tnde -82 VW
2 bdr. Reg .. cy Inc. Apart·
mant, Ward' a Keyboard ,
Comet, folr condition, for Robblt Dleool, 4 door. 6
207 ocre form. Langa~Hio . ment1 *200 per mo . or if OUR BOARDING HOUSE
. 44 6-4.372'
good pickup. Phone 304- opoed, 1-c. oun root. block
Mlnorol .rlghta Included. No Income Ia t1 0.000 or lou
671-7849 .
lie pockogo, om-fm atoreo.
PERMANENT HAIR houao. 112,000 down, Will HUD avillloblo. A-Ono Reel
16 , 000 milll·osking
Estetea, Carol Yeeger.REMOVAL- Profoaalonal corry root. 814-388-9346 .
17991. Cell 814-992-3117
Rooltor.
Coli
304-8
76Electrolytll Center. Inc ..
after I p.m :
1104 or 871 - 6386 or
A.M.A . Approved. Or .
876-7788.
Business
Roforrola. Gift Cortlllcatoa. 34
...... ' ..
HARTS Uood Con, New
new hours. By •ppointment ,
Buildings
Haven Weat VIrginia. Over
304-675-8234.
Farm Equipment 20 lou aaponalve con In
stock.
MID -10WN Profoulonol
"J ,I VIDE N· ' 8 FARM 1 - - - ' - - - - - : - - E:tectrotyele Clinic. PermanEQUIPMENT
·1974 MERCURY ,Cougor
ent hair ramov•r. A, M.. A.
· ·.
448·1876
XA7, good condition,
approved . Ooctorrat.rral•.
Long troctoro, Vorm..r
304-6711-1 1 1 7.
'
By oppolnt,.nt. Titlephone 8uslno11 for uloln ' Middlobelen a .HIY equipment.
· 304-671-81188 .. Bon no port. Corouoel Confectionbelofeerlona.....-a.
Hondloy, Electrologlot.
72 Tn4cks for Sale
ery. C:oke docorotlng end
toblcco
w-no.
condy auppllee. Col 814rotary tiMoro • cuttera,
992-6342 or 614 -992·
-dero, bloclee, dloc.
1987 OMC tilt cob &amp; chla·
8501 . '
cuhlvotora, plowo a
111. . .00. Coli 448·1.900.
,_'
' .,
woodburnera. , ·
An - ua to get 1 complete 1177: Ford Explore&lt; pickup.
31 Homes for Sale
36 loti Acreage
302 engine. good cond. Cell
llno of porto a oervlcol
1 bedroom Apartment for
UIED--IH 79, MF 131, Pord '-.111_4_-2:_
· 1_1_-8_1_32_.-:-::-:-:-:::
tent. G:ol 44··0310.
180. Ford Jubilee. 800 1·
IN TOWN 3 bdr. 1-c with SIX ocree of lone! on 11 mNo ·
Chovy Luv . 1110. 78
Ford, IN Ford. 1(! Meaoey
pr.... quiet locotlon. Low crttlc. Maaon County.
HanloPoney,JDheytldcler, ~ur PU S1,100, 71
melnMIWnco. 148,000 with .13.000. Carl DOw. 304rot8ry hoe, plowa, doe, JD
11.000 only 38,000
11% FHA toquolllflld ltuyor. 678-2383.
monure opraoder round
oil 441-7322. I
D
C.ll 448-4431 oher I .
ftey baler, com plil"'*.
Motora.

~~·::.. •

°

=

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~========::..1.;=========~

--.
- - -..

Hit-.

.... ' ·- ...
.. ..

a.

a

a

February

3, 1983

Pameroy:_Middleport, Ohio

72
1972 DATSUN truck with
topper and boat reck .
Excellent 'condition •
11 ,110.00 flrm . 304-8711 1411 onytlmo.

·Television
Yiewillg

VES-WIT!-1 THI!!SS PI..ASTIC:
4TTAC:HMENTS, rT~ S!ml F=&gt;LE

GO D
e. D
GUY-

TO Cf.IAN(!IE A

GUY

The Daily Sentinei-Pa!Jii-11

INTo A

THURSDAY

1976 Ford pickup, euto ..
with power. foncy whoelo.
ex c. tire a, topper, extre
wlllela. UOOO . 304-675·
2316.

~ftl}f.\fl fii)ft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAlli;
~ 1,!!) ~~·
byHon~AmoldondBobleo
Unactambie lhloe!olir Jumbles,

''

2i'J/83
EVENING

U (]) Nawocemer ·
(]) MOVIE: ' The Great

8:00

pno loner to each sq~ore, to form
tour ordinary WO&lt;do.

I LYBER .I
I ( J .... I I
·~~.,_..

I

.CUIJY

Caruao'

I

CIJ Tic Tee Dough
(!) F. A. Soccer: Road' to

Wembiey
ill Carol Bumett
(I) D Cll Ill liJ Nowo
CD NewatSP&lt;J!ta/Woothor
(I) (fJ) 3 -2-1, Contact
tiD EyoWitneao News
I!ID Wonder Woman
8:30 U (]) CZl NBC News .
CIJ
MOVIE:
'KanPocific'
. .
ill Bob Nawhan Show
(I)
&lt;DI ABC News.
Cl (I) ® CBS. News
(I) Dr. Who
llll Over Eaoy
7:00 U (]) P .M. Magazine
(!) ESPN'a Sportaforum
ill Gomer Py(o
·
(I) Entertainment Tonlght
(l) Ill Charlie's Angola
0 (I) Tic Tac DOugh
(I) (jj) MacNeil-Lehrer
Repqrt
® Eyewhnesa News
lllliJ People's Coun
7:30 U (I) Ue Detector
(I) Inside the NFL Lon
Dawson and Nick Buoniconti
analyze this week ·s NFL action and look ahead to next

73
CAPTAN EASY
78 Ford van 11 , 360. 78
Ford van t2,600, 79 Ford
von 82,760. C.ll446· 7322,
B &amp; D Motors.

76

CAROL ~Et-/T THE COAr TO THE
CLeANERS WITH THE KID£;. WE
GOTTA GET THERE !!EFORE
THEY. DO! '

Auto Parts
• Acceasorl9
' 1

••o

2 H78-16 rocap, reg . trod
sit.
tiree, never uaed.
Coli 448·01149 after 6.
Auto Rapalr

Byerly ond Folto Automotlc
Tronamloalon Repolr. NOW
OPEN . Cornor of Kemper
Hollow &amp; Kerr Bathol Rd .
Coli 448-8839.

78

\..0011!'7 L.l~ WE'R~ AAIJ~ WAT

.WEWAATE0 1

Cain ping
Equipment

week's games.

(!) ESPN SportoCemer

ill

N BA
Basketboil:
Denver at Atlanta
(I) D Cll Family Faud
(I) Bualneoo Aopon
® You Aoked For It
(jj) Loot Chance Garage
G (jJ Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 8 (I) (lJ 'Shogun' Part 4
Fourth of five parts. Blackthorne finds the' survivors of
his crew while Toranaga be·

FOA SALE- 1972 Contlnontal camper-treiler In good ·
condition. f1 ,200 for quick
ule . .c.u Chotles J. Ohlinger It 992-64111 . ·
ANNIE

81

.. IT'S ~y GUE55 lHAT IT
1'11\5 NO llCCIOfNT Tli'IT

Home
Improvements

STUCCO ,PLASTERING ·
textured ceillnga commercial and reeldential, free
o,atlmotla. Coli 814-2681182.

YOU 1'1ERE CL05E-&amp;Y ,
l'IHEN lliE CAR ffOU.EII
flACK ON ANNIE, ~R.
FEER ...

NO-I'D 5EEN
LIWI SNII/5
AM HIE'~
5HIP-ROPE-

.• AHO LOC/1 HER IN T11E

FOI'i WHICH I

CELLIIR. QillOISIII'I!AifiG

AA FOf!EVER
GRATERJL ..

PERliWS-BUT Ef'f()U(iH
MAKE filE ~-~==:::j

m

WATCHFUL~

- SO Y' 010 Tl10SE YOU ~OtJLPN'T
THINGS T' ME T'
ViANT IllY ~OTHER
SH0\'1 YllUR
TO BE UNH~PPY.
IIIOTHER YOU
tiOtLI7 YOU, ANNIE'?
COOLOBE57

ME?

PAINTING · lntorlor ond
exterior, plumbing, roofing.
some remodeling. 20 yra .
.. p. Coii614-38B-9812.
Marcum Roofing &amp; SpoutIng. 30 yeeraaexperlence.
apociollzlng in built up roof .
Collll14-388-9817.
GENE'S CARPET CLEAN·
lNG. Deep ot•m clooning,
Scotchgaurd. Free eatlmltOI. Low rateo. 814-9928309 .

ALLEY OOP
WHATCHA MEAN, "LEMMIAN
1ERRI'IORY"1'1'! THIS IS

MOOVIAN GROUND, '10lJ

""'AT'S WHAT YOU
THINK , SEAN BRAIN!

...THERE'S THE BOUNDARY
MARKER RIGHT OVER THERE!

CROAk- HEAD .'

HOWARD L. WRITESEL
ROOFING COMPANY .
Gutter•Downapouti·New·

Repair-Gutter Painting ·

a

Storm Door~
Wlndowa.
Free E1tlmate1. Phone

614 -1149 - 2283 or 1114992-2791'
RON'S Tofeviolon Sorvlca.
Spociollzlng In Zenith end
Motorola, Quazar, an,d
house collo. Cell 678-2398
or 448-2464 .

..

F &amp; K Tree Trlmmlng •.,ump
romovol. Coil8711-1331.
RINGLE'S SERVICE expo,
rlenced roofing, Including
hot tar application. carpenter, electrician, mason . CaU
304 -875-208B or 6764610.
.

I sa4r

I'll assist:
you to
Ljour
carl

The poor
qriefstricken
woman left
her baq!

Water Walla . Commercial
end Dome1tic . Teet holea.
Pumpl Sales and Service.
304-891;3802.

I

Get yo-~r karpet In ahlp
ahopo. Water removol, FREf
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAPTIAN
STEAMER 614-448·2107.
M&amp; 8 Septic tonk clooning
service. Reeaon1ble r1t11,
Call any day attar 1 p_. m .,
304-876-4B43.

82

Plumbing

a. Heating

•

'

CARTER'S PLUMBING.,,
AND HEATING
:'):
Cor. Founh ond Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446
4477
84

Electricel

&amp; Refrigeration

..••

SEWING Mochlno ropolra 1
service. Authorized Singer
Soloa &amp; Service Sharpe~
Sclaaora . Fabric Shop~
Pomeroy. 992·2284.

SOMEBODV.'S GOIIN' TO
TRIP OVER 0~ BULLET
AN' BREAK THEIR
NECK·- UH ···

ED'S APPLiANCE REPAIR
SERVICE coli City Furniture
304-875-2608.
.

85

;

JONES BOYS WATER'
SERVICE. Colla614·387 7471 or 814-387-01191 .

Upholstery

outraged

when

Blackthorne asks that lady
Mariko be given a divorce .
IRl (2 hrs.)
(I) MOVIE: 'The Night the
Ughta Went Out in
Georgia'
(I) I Spy
(!) NFL Theatre: 'Bast
Ever Professionals'
[I) Rhoda
0 [I) ® Magnum, P.l.
[I) illl Sneak Previews Co,
hosts Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons take a look· at
\Ill hat's happening at the
movies.
Ill ~ Greatest American
Hero Ralph battles forces
that threaten to sh,ih the
world' s balance of power.
160 min.)
Ill MOVIE: 'Tho Dirty
Dozen'
8:30 (I) Not Necessarily The
News This s~oY:J promises
to be everything the current
news is not.
[I) NCAA Baakotball:
Mioolaaippi at Tennessee
(I) Good Nolghbora
(llJ Entorprioo 'Buy-Out.'
Enterprise tracks the progress of 1200 workers at
General Motors who bought
their unprofitable bUsiness.
[Closed Captioned!
9:00 (I) MOVIE: 'Star Wart'
CIJ 700 Club I])
NCAA Baoketball:
Wake forest at Virginia
0 (I) ® Simon &amp; Simon
()) llll Mystery 'Sergeant
Cribb: Murder Old Boy.' Sergeant Cribb is called in when
Inspector Jowett's class
reunion ends in mUrder. {60
min.) !Closed Captioned[
01 (jJ Too Close For
Comfort Sara poses for a
· 11::11
.,agazine.
9:30 ..., ll&lt;/lt Takoo Two
9:45 ill TBS Evening News
10:00 U (I) (lJ Hill Street Blues
Second of throe pans.
Renko saves three people
from a burning building and
Joyce's interview in Wash~
ington Opens lhe door for a
now girl in Funllo' s life . (60
min.I
(I) MOVIE: 'Nightwing'
0 [I) CiD Knots Landing
(I) Avengers
llll Newswatch
'
Ql ~ 20/20
1!1D INN News
10:30 CIJ Star Time
[I) 20/20
llll Alpine Ski School
flilln Search of....
11:00.11 (I) Newa~entor
(I) On Location: Carlin at
Carnegie This famous comedian shares his offbeat
perceptions of the absurdities of everyday living.
•(!) NCAA Baoketbell:
Wuhington State et
UCLA
ill All In the Family
(I) 0 Cll • llJ News
(l) News/Sports/Weather
(I) Dave Allen 81 Largo
tiD Eyewltneso Nowo
(fJ) Sign Off ·
Banny Hill Show
11 :30 U (I) CD Tonight Show
Johnny is joined by Buddy
Hacket a~d Martina Arroyo .
160 min.)
(I) Another Ule · .
[I) MOVIE: 'Assault on a

au..n·

[I) Banny Hill Show
0 (I) Quincy Quincy inves-

Need somoth'lng houlod
away or something mowtll.1
We'll ~o lt. Con 4411-31 &amp;8or
.814-258-1987 after e.

87

comes

e

General Hauling '

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim Lenior. 304-17117397.

HE~E'i5A P IECE OF
NEWS-COUL.PIT 6E

TIME)'-FQ~ EDITING-.

e

---"'-------

77

t) I I

'

;

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.

..

'

' PEANUTS

tigates a newswoman's
death only tQ have her show
up at his prE)ss c.onfetenC!=~ .

~

(AI (60

mi~ . J

(I) Sign Off

~ELP H

· G 1D Nlgh~lno

·e

ARE TilER£ AtN SELFIMPROVEMENT 8001&lt;5 THAT
'(OU WOULP RECOMMEND?

Modllmo'a Place
'11 :45 ()) MOVIE: 'Man of ~
Mancha'
·
.12:00 (I) MOVIE: 'Liaf'o Moon'
CIJ Burne &amp; Allan
·
(I) Nlghtllne ·
(!D MOVIE: 'Day of the Evil
Oun'
. e!D 1..ut Word
. :Gunemol&lt;e
12:30
[I) (lJ Ltlle Night With
o..ld Letterman David is
joined by Coroi Loifor and Alvin Elcoff. 180 min.)
(IJ -*k Benny Show

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183. leo. Avo .. Gollipolla.
448-7833. or441-1833.

'

..
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I

'

i. ~

I

.

-- ·

J '

~~--)

Jumble 10011: No. 20, conlllnlrig t10 puafel,l• •••il•bft for $1.i5 poe,tpekl
!ram Juml&gt;lo, clo~-per. Box 34, N~!""· N.J. 07&amp;18. Include~
name, .ckhu. .rip coM •nd m•b check• PIIJI~t 10 NMwa
•·

I

BRIDGE .
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Opening lead tells all
Today's hand shows how
an alert declarer can come
up with a bushel of overtr.icks by using information
NORTH
2-3-IS
lrom the opening lead.
+iO 8 ~
The game is duplicate and
•10 91
East-West
lead the middle
t A 10 8 4
card ·from three small. The
+KQ 10
six of hearts is led and
WEST
EAST
East's queen forces your
+176431
+J
ace . You note that the lead
.863
.KQ542
could not have been lourth
·7~3
tK6
best, and lead a club at trick
+A
+J 6 ~ 43
two.
SOUTH
West wins and leads the
+AKQ
eight of hearts, which is
.AJ
allowed to run to your jack.
+QH2
You cash dummy's clubs and
+9 8 7 2
note th'!t West held the singleton ace. Now you play out
Vulnerable: Neither
your top spades. East disDealer: South
cards first a club and then
West
North East South
lhe six of diamonds. You
I NT
have a perfect count of his
Pass
3 NT Pass
Pass
hand and know that he
Pass
retains three good hearts,
the jack of clubs and one
diamond
.
Opening lead:
Did he unguard lhe diamond king to avoid being
end played with a club? He
is good enough to make that
By Oswald Jacoby
play . He also would have
and James Jacoby
made the same discard from
two small. West was dealt
Another new Devyn book six little spades and the ace
is " Modern Ideas in of clubs. Wouldn't he have ·
Bidding" by George Rosen- opened h~s own suit with two
.krant and Alan Truscott: probable re-entries ?
George's team, including
Sure he would' You lead a
.Jim Jacoby, is the current diamond to dummy's ace
holder of the Vanderbilt drop the king and make five
·Cup. Alan is bridge editor of ·odd for a top score.
the New York Times.

•6

~HIMwd
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

DOWN

1 Elegant
1 ~ucato~
5 Pulverize
Angelo
10 Brazilian · 2 "Barry Lyndon"
tapir
star
11 Glossiness 3 Ability to act
13 RiP,
4 Moss 14 Stick to
5 Uproar
IS Cagney film 6 More sullen
17 Yard grass 7 Aetas usher (sl. )
18 O'Neill play a Me'811S of
19 B.r ightest

advancement
star
9 Distaff
211- aller
film role
(poor
12 Justification
substitute l 16 Sacred picture
2llnferior
%2 "Notre,"
23 Italian
translated

man's name

Yesterday's Allswer

23 Clangor
24 Begin again
~ illustrious
26 Actress
Montez
28 Tallchief 's
art

30 Une of cliffs
32 Gennan city
33 Mountain
nymph
36 U.S. Treasury
agent
38 Doctor Dooley

24 Much seen
TV fare
26,Sheeting 1
27 Wife of
Cuchulain
28 Ringing

SOWJd
!9 Little lady
30Maglie
ol baseball
31 Shinto temple
34 One (Fr.)
35 Noise
37 lniA!Jiectual
39 Additional
tO Repeat
perfonnance

41 "-

J,;,-+-+--1-

1;;;-t-+--+-+--t-

Christie''
U Entice

C3 Require

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Jlere's

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how
A .XYDLBAAX ·B ·
LONGFELL .O· W

to work tt:

'

One letter ·almply ·atancis for another. In this 01mple A. fa
used for the three L's, X for the lw_o O's, etc. Si ngle letters.
apootrophea, the length and formatton of the words are · all
hlnta. Eac_h day the rode letters are dllferent.

C8YPTOQUOTES
GPXXPN

•

MOWREYI Upholatery Rt . ·
1 Box 1,24, Pt. Pleeaont,
304-871-4154.

"X AI ·I )"

Voslerday'ol Jumbloo: PUTTY. CHAFE WEEviL . HARROW
. Answer: What lhe absenl-mlndod elevator man forgol
UP
-WHICH WAY WAS
.
.

'

tlD All In the Family •

I WANT
iO ASK '1'011

Prlntanswerhere:

VWSFH

G P.

. WYYWNXSCOXU

OA

XIP

V P '. H
HW

JFF

YWNFH

FPX
XIP

. RCWQROCT. - DWSNQP
SCRCWVC
Yesterday't Cryplequole: ~ LIFE WITHOtrr FEsTIVITIES IS
AWNG ROAD WITHOtrr INNS.-DEMOCIUTUS

-

·..,i. .
'

�Page-12-The

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local briefs.•. Racine motor is~ faces two charges
The Gallla-Meigs post of the State Highway Patrol Investigated a
slngle-carwreck In Meigs County Wednesday morning.
AcQJrdlng to the patrol, Arthur N. Mengon, 23, Pomeroy, was
driving southbound on Bedford Twp. Rd. 247 at 7: lB a.m. when the
accident occurred.
Mengon reportedly swerved to avoid hitting a dog and went off the
side of the road and down a hlll, overturning his pickup truck.
There were no injuries and no citations. His truck received
moderate damage.
Troopers cited a Rt. 1, Racine man after an accident on Gallla
County Rd. 2at 12:20a.m. Wednesday.
Ronald D. Reynolds, 38, was cited for drunken driving and no
driver's license.
Reynolds was northbound when he reportedly went off the right
side of the road and struck a fence.
His car received moderate damage.

Veterans Memorial information
Admitted: Herben Dixon, Pomeroy.
Discharged: Nonnan Grueser, Orpha Rouse, Minnie Harris,
Edgar Taylor, Clara Gilkey, Edward Owens, Alban Taylor, Rex
Thornton and Sandra Evans.

Firefighters answer false alarm
Two fire calls, one a false alarm, were answered by the Middleport
Fire Department Wednesday night. At 6:55 p.m. the department
responded to a call at Impertal Electric, a false alarm, and at 8:45
p.m. went to the Broadway Street residence of J.J. Cremeans for a
clothes dryer fire.
The Meigs County Emer gency Medical Service also reported that
the Rutland unit anser.ed a caU at12: 44p.m. totheCharles Williamson
residence to tra nspol1 Lucille Lambert to the Holzer Medical Center.

SR 124 to be closed for repair
Route 124 at the 47.3 milepost, approximately one mile below Long
Bottom, will be closed from 8:30 a .m- to 3: 30 p_m_ Monday for the
Installation of a drain pipe, Bernard Gilkey, superintendent of the
Ohio Department of Highways In Meigs County, announced today . '

February ADC funds total $177,127
State Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson's office announced the Felr
ruary , 1!1!3, distribution of $51,400,327 in Aid to Dependent Children
to 600,736 recipients In 88 Ohio counties, Meigs County received
$177,127 for 2,177 recipients.

Gallia-Meigs CAA will get cheese
CHESHIRE - The GaU!a·Meigs Community Action Agency will
be receiving U.S,D.A. cheese for distribution In the month of March.
The exact dates and locations for distribution will be annoucned by
the C. A.A . through the local news media when the final.details are
known.
To be ellgible for the cheese program, Individuals must meet
poverty guidelines and must show proof of Income ellglblllty at the
time they pick up the cheese.
Area residents must have one of the following proofs of Income In
order to receive the cheese: Food Stamp Card, AFDC Card or award
letter, SSI award letter, general welfare card, unemployment book
or application letter, Golden Buckeye Card or IRS Tax information
(W-2 Form).
Cheese cannot be given out without proof of .Income.

Property transfers
Michael C. Williams, Vicki L.
Williams to William David
Swisher, Sandra Swisher, Lot,
Middleport.
K. R. Keesee, Ada M. Keesee to
Royal Petroleum Prop. Inc., Right
of Way, Rutland.
Charles D- Kennedy, Margaret
L. Kennedy to Royal Petroleum
Prop. Inc-, Right of Way, Rutland.
· Arthur K Hood, Donna J..Hood
to Royal Petroleum ·Prop. Inc.;
Right of Way, Salisbury.
WUI!am A- Gibbs, Sarah W.
Gibbs to ~oyal Petrol!!Uffi Prop.
Inc., Right of Way, Salisbury.
Dana K Welch, deceased, Elsie
Allee, Welch, Affidavit, Scipio.
Roger Epple et al by Sheriff
James Proffitt to Jackson Production Credit Assoc., Chester.
Luella Hysell, deceased, to Nar·

ley Hysell, Faye Fry, Dale Hysell,
Affidavit, Salisbury.
Narley Hysell to Faye Fry, Dale
Hysell, Parcels, Salisbury.
Kevin Styer, Melinda Styer to
John J. Evans, Teresa A. Evans,
Parcels, Lebanon.
Catherine A. Starcher to Terry L.
Starcher, Parcel, Chester.
Phyllis Bailey, deceased, LOis
Bailey, Teddy Joe Bailey, Cert. of
transfer, Lebanon·Sutton.
Sherwood L- Meredltli, Mildred
L. Meredith to John B. Meredith,
Sarah Allee Meredith, Parcels,
Chester_
Thomas D- Kirkham, Stephanie
Gall Kirkham t&lt;i Patrick . H .
O'Brien, Lot 96, Middleport.
Delton L. Garnes, Erika Games
to Curtis Homes, 5 acres, Salem.

Thu!Sday, Febn,10ry 3, 1983
·l

Cracks developing
in SocSec package
By CLIFF HAAS
Assodated Press Writer
WASH.INGTON (AP) - The
fragile support for a bipartisan
Social Security rescue plan Is
threatened by a dlsputeoverralslng
the · r;etirement age, with a key
congressman saying he will oppose
the entire package If that Is &lt;)one. .
That Issue and other problems
facing a$168bllUon package drafted
by the National Commission on
Social Security Reform have
cropped up during House Ways and
Means Committee hearings which
began Tuesday.
Outgoing Health and Human
Services Secretary Richard S.
Schwelker and Social Security
Commissioner John A. Svahn were
testifying today on the rettrement
system's financing crisis, which the
administration has said will leave
Social Secunty without enough
money to cover benefit checks after
June.
.·
The reform commission's proposalcallsforpayroUtaxincreases,a
six-month delay 1n July's cost~!living Increase, a levy on benefits
going to middle-and upper-income
retirees and other steps to produce
$168bUUonoversevenyears,asweU
as wipe out two-thirds of · the
system's·tong-term deficit.
However, the commission was
divided on how to close the
remalnderofthefinancinggap.A
Republican majority on the 15member panel recommended rais·
lng the retirement age from 65 to 66
by 2015 then indexing it to longevity.
But five liberal Democrats urged
Instead an Increase In the payroll
tax In the next century.
The dispute flared Wednesday at
theWays and Means Committee as
Rep_ Claude Pepper vowed to drop
his suppol1 for the compromise plan
If Congress adds a provision to raise
the retirement age In the next
century.
"Raising the
of eligibility .Is

Area death·s
Frtends may call the funeral home
on Saturday, 24 and 7-9 p:m.

Hilda French

Funeral services for Mrs. Hilda
M. French, who died Jan. 6 In
Clearwater, Fla., wereheldJan. ll
nothing but a cut In benefits," the
at the Woodyard East Chapel, 2:DJ
82-year-old Florida Democrat told
Livingston Ave., Columbus.
the tax writers.
Mrs, French was formerlY of
"If you put one Item ui there
Middleport. She was a daugher of
cutting benefits I cannot support
the late Charles and Mary Yost,
this bill," declared Pepper, the
Middleport · Surviving are Iter
chalrnian of the House Rules
brother, Elwyn R, Yast', MiddleCommittee and a key member of
port; sisters, Mrs. Gladys Mowery,
the reform conunlsslon.
Point Pleasant, W. Va., and Mrs.
Vera Gibert, New Lexington; a
Col!gl'esslonal leaders consider
daughter, Bet1e Thurber: son, KenPepper's support essential to passIng a Social Secunty bailout plan · neth French, Palm Harbor, Fla., a
granddaul!htet, two grandsons, a
because he has been such a vigorous
grea!·grandson, two great . grand·
advocate for the system.
daughters, two sisters-In-law, Mrs.
Elizabeth Yost and Mrs. Grace
Senate Finance Committee
French,
Middleport, and sevttal
Chalrnian Bob Dole, R-Kan., apo
coustns,
nieces
and nephews.
peared before the House committee
She
was
preceded
In death by her
Wednesday saying; · "People live
husband, Earl French and three
longer, there's not much question
brothers.
about that." Dole and other senators
Bur1al was In Forest Lawn
have Introduced separate leglsla·
Cemetery,
Columbus.
tion to raise the retirement age.
·

Cl,ayEblin
An additional survivor of Clay '
Eblin, 63, Rt. 2, J;&gt;omeroy, who died
Wednesday morning, Is a _sister,
Elva Grueser, Rl. 2, Pomeroy.
Funeral services wUI be .con·
dueled at 1 p.m. Friday from the
Ewing Funeral Chl!pel with burlal
following in Rock Springs Cemetery. VIsitation will be held at the ~
~neral home anytime today.

Herbert Pea:ry
Herbert Hamilton Perry, 79, 2!1(ll
Lincoln Ave., Point Pll!asant, died
Thursday mornl.og In Pleasant
Valley Hospital after a long Ulness.
Funeral services wlll be at 1::ll
p.m. Saturday In the Heights United
Methodist Church with the Rev_
Ralph Sager and the Rev . James
Lewis officiating. Burial will follow
In Suncrest Cemetery, Point
Pleasaflt.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
,Funeral Home, Point Pleasant,
a!ter7p.m. Friday. Thebodywillbe
tal&lt;en to the church one hour prior to
services.

· Mack Howard .
Meanwhile, other legislators
have said during the hearings that
they are uncomfortable with varlous provisions· of the bipartisan
plan, Including the higher taxes,
benefit freeze and a plan to Include
newly hired federal workers under .
Social Security. ·

Mack D. Howard, 77, Hartford
died Wednesday at Holzer Medical
Center.
Funeral services will be held on
Sunaay, 1: :ll p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with Rev. Hex
Young o!flciatlng. Bur1al will be at

SUPPLEMENT TO

;,

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CLEARANCE· SA. LE

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ON QUALITY WINTER QOTHING

FOR YOUR ·FAMILY

age

Separ~te...

.

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-··i.i
g~

(Continued fro~ page 1)
check, deputies learned that the
owner of the check's p&lt;ieketbook
andcheckbookwerestolenfromher
unlocked car parked In Pomeroy,
Sunday afternoon.
The Ohio St.ate Patrol recovered

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We realize that when "new car fever" strikes, it strikes hard. We at The Farmers
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Y.OU MAKE TilE DEAL AND LET OUR EXPERTS TAKE CARE OF
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the apprehensions.
The department Is also Investigating an act of vandalism to a vehicle
owned by Jeff Elliott, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy.
According tv the report Elliott's
vehicle had broken down on the Rt. 7
Bypass on Monday. When he
retuned to get it on Tuesday
morning It was dJsl:overed that
someone had broken out all the
windows with clnderblocks.

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