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or.r . .

WINTHROP
WE60T"ANY
. T.E516

GOME i S&lt;E1 CHIP5 ...
I'VE~ f30ME C:06"

TVMORR.ON~

816CUIT5 RIR'YOU.
..

UH -HUH .,,, $:\•··•·'•
.. L.

#

••

ARITHMETIC··.-,:·
AND8Cia.ICE.

, .,.. .

b Dick Cavalli

DID )til 6E~ n-IAT
~R~T MOVIE ON .

rv !JeT NlqHT~

WON!WA~'r·
IT 60i.RY2.!

Tornadpe~ win again;

Judge. Bacon

County Agents

Buckeyes whip Meigs

honored

Corner....

See below

Page 10

\

•

at y
Voi .3T ,No. l96
Copyrighrod 1983

MY DADts c;{OIN~

I HAVET060TO
THE" DENTIST
TllESD\Y. ..YLJK!

MY .DAD

FROMI61:D TO &lt;$-T

TOBWYMEA

M~ CN~1"RX&gt;.

VIDIE'O ~AMI:.

'

qor.ANY

CAVITIEo

b Ed Sullivan

Priscilla•s Po
POp'S TI-IINKING
ABOUT SPRING-.
HOLLYf-OCK l

OVER HERE WE'LL

I CAN HARDLY

WAITID SEE
Fl R5f l=l...CM/ER'S

CROCU&lt;SES, TOO., •

~FFOOI LS

AH, YE&lt;:?"'

AND JONQUILS.'

NARC/9'!71 .

HAVE

enttne
1 Seer ion, 10 Pages
'20 Cents
A Multim,dla Inc, NewJpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 7, 1983

Eight truck ·drivers
charged with violence

YOU ll-IJNK
YOU

•

PEEPII\IG THRDUGH
THE EARTH/
,.

By 'The A!li!Odated Press
Nlnet\len people were apprehended for violence In
the Ohio Independent truckers strike overnight,
Including eight truck drivers near Youngstown;
authOrities said today.
·
·
·
The Incidents were the latest In a wave of violence
that began Tuesday with the start of the strike.
Since then, there have been 117 shooting Incidents,
20 Injuries, SO arrests, 190cases ofwhereobjectswere
thrown. 424 vehicles damaged and six vehicles forced
of( the roadway. according to the Stale · Highway
Patrol.
·
·
In southwestern Ohio, state troopers said they
arrested a striking Independent after a truck was
tlrEd uporrwlthout Injury to Its driver.
Patrol Lt. Eif Witltz said Carl M. Sims, 33, of
Hillsboro, who Identified himself as a striking
trucker, was apprehended shortly after the shOoting.
Waltz said a trooper was nearby when the shOoting
occurred and followed "a suspect vehicle Into
Indiana, a stolen off-the-road four·wheel-drlve
vehicle. After several mlles of tracking, one suspeCt
was apprehended. He had In his possession a loaded
revolver. The other two suspects were not located."
In YOUngstown. 12 men and five women were held
for a short time before being released on $l,!XXJ hond
each, said Sgt. Walter Charko of the Mahonlng
County jail.
Capt. Arland E . Nelson, district commander of the
state patrol tor northeastern Ohio. said the group was
arrested by state troopers and Beaver Township

pollee about 1 a.m.
"A trooper from the Canfield post was following a
semi outfit on State Route 7, south of Gate 16 of the
Ohio Turnpike at North Lima. He observed a rock
about the size of a softball being thrown from the
Interior of a tent shelter used by p!ckl!ts,'' Nelson
said.
Nelson said about six sites are being watched by the ..
patrol. ·He said today's arrests were the first mass
arrests so fa,r In the strike.
.
Six people were arrested and charged with
disorderly conduct at the same location tast
Wednesday, he said.
.
"I don't know about cleaning It out," Nelson said.
' 'They're back there now. There are burning barrels
at several locations around the (northeastern Ohio)
dlstrtct where these people congregate."
Nelson said that aftei' consulting with the Mahonlng
County prosecutor, It Wl!S decided to charge each of
the people arresll!d with rioting, . a first-degree
misdemeanor. They will be arraigned In Mahonlng
County Court at Canfield on Wednesday, Charko said.
Nelson said the rock that hit the truck caused
noticeable damage to the cab, but no lnjurtes. FOIU"
other Incidents where trucks were damaged were
reported in the five-hour · period preceding the
arrests, Nelson said.
Among tile · people arrested, eight gave their
occupation as truck drivers, three as cashiers at
truck stops, two as laborers, one as a cook, one as a
housewUe, and two Usted no occupation.

ATI'ORNEY'S EAR - Anyone wishing to get
the ear of a Melp County attorney should have vilified the Melp Inn Saturday night when the Meigs
Ceunty Bar AMoclatlon staged a dinner homr!ng
.Judge Jolm C. Baeoa, county oonunon pleas judge for
the Past 25 years. Members of the 8SI!lOCIBIIon allend·

lng Include: lront, I to r, Karen Story, Bemard Fultz,
Judge Bacon, Jennifer Sheets, Manning Webster, BUl
Porter; back, I tor, Bob Buck, Steve Srory, Ca.Crow, Rick Crow, Fred Crow, Doug Ultle and Pat
O'Brien.

'

Stolen ·items found in ·Chester _a rea
AN!7 OVER HERE.,.
HYACINTHS.'

.AJ-.t , ' '
HY'A0/1/T#US

WHAT'S THE' lA11N ,
~ 'FORQJTTEN RAKE.

~EN~U.&gt;.

-

PWINTfD 11&lt;1 CANADA

.

DUSTY CHAPS

sentence In Gallla County following
hls plea of guilty to two breaking and
entertngs there.
Potter's arrest resulted from the
coopera tlve efforts of the Meigs and
GaDla County Sherltf's Depart·
ments. The recovery 9fthe property

Saturday was only the latest of a
series In the case, will) Meigs
County Sheriff Investigator making
trtps to Charleston, Pt. Pleasant and
Gallipolis to recover property which
Potter had pawned.
Meanwhile, Warren Rose, Rt. 1,
Racine, notified the sheriff's office
.Sunday morning that he discovered
a small fire In hls barn.
Weather fo~l
The fire was quickly extinguished
Partly cloudy tonight. Lows near
with no damage.
The department Is Investigating
20. Sunny Tuesday. Hlg~ between
damage to a tombstone at the Eden
35 and 40. The chance of snow Is 10
Church Cemetery just north of
percent, tonight and near zero
Tuesday.
Reedsville.
According to the report sometime
Extended Forecast
. Friday evening there was a vehicle
Wedneed"' tllrougtt Friday:
being driven recklessly. The vehicle
MOIItly cloudy through the period
went off the road ln!!J the cemetery
with II chance Of raiD or BilOW In the
knocking over a tombstone.
exlrerne west Wednesclq and a
.
cluulce of SDOW In the norih and rain
or mow In the !IGU&amp;b 'l11UI'IIda,y and
Friday. HlpfrorntheSO.tothelow
4ll&amp; Lows niOIIy In the

by Art &amp; Chi

~~--~-----=~

'•

JUDGES - A number of local and visiting
Judges of couri8 In the area were on hand Saturday
nlghttoaUeod a:dlnnerbeldbytheMelpCountyBar
Aa8oclatlon In honor of Judge John C. Baeoa, who has
serveil as conunon ~J~eas judge for 25 years. 'lbey
lnclucled: front, ljo r, Patrick O'Brien, Melp County
Court Judge; Robert Buck, Melp, probate and Juvenile courts; Richard Roderick, Jr., Gallla County
Common Pleas Court; the honored guest, Judge
Bacon; KeDDeth Ater, I.awreuce Cotmty Conunon

Pleas Couri; Charles Curran, VInton CoUnty, probate ·: •
and juvenUe; ·Manning Webllter, reUreci Melp ·:
County, probate and juvenile; back, !tor, 'lbomasS.
Moulton, Gallia County, probate; Darrell Hottle,
IDghland County Common Pleas Court; James Jleo.
neU, Gallipolis, municipal court; Michael Brame,
Vinton Cotmty Court; Homer C. Abele, Court of Ap.
peals, from McArihur; Earl StepheiiSOD, Court or
Appeals, Polismouth.
,

Consumers' Counsel challenges. C&amp;SOE:

COOLv:rLLE .:... Hailed as a vic·
tory by the rural consumer movement near Coolville, the Office of
_ the Consumers' Counsel (OCC) has
agreed to challenge Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric ' s
(C&amp;SOE's) Hook·up practices.
·
"We're overjoyed that OCC wW
represent liS," remarked Phyllis
Casto, a consumer activist from
Coolv1lle, "We have fought with
C&amp;SOE for
three months, and
they still refuse to make estimates
and payment plans like they are

t

•

•

Several hundred dollars worth of
stolen property, · mainly watches
and jewelry. was recovered Saturday by Capt Robert Beegle Qf the
Meigs County sheriff's department
and Paul Gerard, Investigator for
the pi'06eCutlng attorney, Fred W·
Crow, III.
Gerard reports Steven William
Potter. 21, Pomeroy, had admitted
he threw a largequantltyofjewelry
aut along the .r oadside In the Chester
area.
Gerard and Beegle took Potter, In
handcuffs. to the area were he said
he had thrown the jewelry and
discovered It scattered about, some
on the ground and some hanging on
trees and bushes.
. The property belonged to Glen
and Connee Enslen and was
allegedly stolen by Potter. Last
Thursday, Potter was sentenced to
a term of one to five years In prison
for the break-In and theft. Potter
had earlier received a slmllar

Scinsom

I-lEY, ~t;OOT, I'LL ~T~ IF
'/OJ PUT A f? 61L.L ON~R lVVI''"~
HI-.TONUUS
TA6L.E; ... , •ICN-1 PICK .

supposed to. Now with this case, we
have been hurt by C&amp;SOE practl·
expect the new PUCO to make a lot
ces to add their experience to the
of changes In C&amp;SOE's rural
case. Anyone who wants to join the
Unfairness ."
case, or who would !Ike AOPIC's
"Tills consumer victory Is the
"Fact Sheet on Rural Line Exten·
dawn of the tast day for C&amp;SOE's
slons" can write to AOPIC, Box
rural violations," declared Laura
2612, Athens, Ohio 457ffi , to call
R. Yeomans, Co-Director of the Ap- (614) 593-7490.
palachian Ohio Public Interest
In the official announcement,
Campaign (AOPIC) which discoOCC attorney David &amp;!rgman
vered the regulations prohibiting · stated, "The Governing Board of
C&amp;SOE's " no dough - no juice"
the DCC has authorized us to negohook-up policy.
tiate with C&amp;sOE with regard to its
AOPIC Is still seeking others who
rural line extension policies, and, If

over

necessary, file a formal complaint.
C&amp;SOE's policy has resulted In instances of consumers' being dented
electrtcal service or being forced to
make payments In excess of those
pennttted by the rules. It appears
that C&amp;SOE Is violating"the rules
set forth In the Ohio Administrative ·
Code and Its own tariff."
The next public meeting of those
concerned about C&amp;SOE practices
wW be Mo'lday, Feb. 28, 7 p.m ., at
the Community BuUdlng In Torch.

I')

.. ' IT
'UP WffiiOUT
"'

Budget deficit may force major tax hike-

'

10UCH\t.lb lHE
: HAT~

-·~,...

' CROWNED SOUTBEBN 8WiiB'fHEU't'- Mill aady
· EVANS
Ev-. d•.,..... of Mr.lllld 1111'1. Mllre Bv-. Ptdlllld, -~ ...

f-

aa theiiQIJttwm ~ SchooiSwee"'!'l'iQIIeeadldlcllillfllmecaano·

lllel citlle .-rve pme Ww• .,,.,. . lllld'~llaear­
d&amp;J atp&amp;. Mill! Ev- wu Vlf4ed aa the JJfll cat- bJmemba~ ci the
ltudeat.bod;y 1a &amp;be -~~~ obea
1• elldl )'IIIII' Ulllllld
Dly, Mill~ wu lliCIII'W"' Zue Jleelle, _ .. Mr.
and Mn. Don Beegle, Eut Letart.
.
.

v.. . •.

reooc•

I

'

'

OOUJMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
possible budget deficit of$2.5 billion
In the 1983-85 and the failure of
temporary taxes to solve Ohio's
tlscal problems could leal! to .a 90
percent Increase In !Jiestatelncome ·.
tax.
The House Finance Committee
wW meet Tuesday afternoon for a
possible vote on Gov. Richard
Celeste's blli to raise~ mllUon In
"taxes, which, . along with. a $282
J mllllon spending cilt. Is designed to ·
erase a projected '$528 million
budget deficit.
But ' opposition to the prop~&amp;!
could come from lnlnorlty Republl·
cans In the statehouse, wholearneil
last week that Celeste Wlll1ts to
make the 90pe~cent Increase In the
lncorhe tax pennanent, not just to
keep It untU the CUITE!nt deficit Is
gone.
.
House Speaker Vernal G. Rltfe
Jr., O.New Boston, saki be expects
the biU to get the commtttee's .

In other business, the House final report of the Legislature's
approval, possibly on Tuesday, and
Aging and Housing Conunlttee will Joint Conunlttee on Tax Reforni.
assigned to a fl.oor vote
consider on Tuesday a bill establish- The panel a lso wm hear a report on
Wednesday or Thursday .
lng the rights of tenants Involved In another study, which looked Into the
The speaker, whoSe party con·
taxation of utilities In Ohio.
trois the ltouse~2-37, said at week's . condominium conversion projects:
On.
Wednesday,
the
House
High:
·
end that l)e dill not · know If. the
measure wW garner Republican
waysandHighwaySafetyCommlt· .
tee will take US first look a t a
support.
proposal requiring eye examlna·
Celeste reconunended that the
,
Damages
at $.IX)
tIonseveryelghtyears .orholdersof
th
Itwere
. f estimated
fire
Income tax Increase be written Into
Ohio drivers' licenses.
· as e resu o a
at the Jolm
perrrianent law after the Legtsla·
Also
In
the
House,
the
economic
·
Zurcher,
residence
,
E
.
. Main St.,
tureenacted twoearllerbudgetbllls
·
affairs
imd
federal
relations
com·
Pomeroy,at6:25p.m.Saturday
.
with temporary taxes that faUed to
mlttee will coriS!der a proposal to
Pomeroy Fire Chief ~harles
head off the defiCit.
·
abolish the Ohio Rall Trans pOrta· Legar said the first started when an
tlon Authority. The gOvernor has object fell onto a floor fumtsh 1n the
Cristina Sale, state budget dlrec·
·endorsed
the measure whlclt would living room, A portion of the floor
tor, also adVised Celeste thatOhio's
transfer
the
agency'~ functions to was bu.med away .in tl)e blaze.
economic recovery Is not In sight
other
offices
In a budget-cutting
The Pomeroy department was
and that there could be a budget gap
move.
·
'
.
·
calle&lt;l
to Laurel Cliff at 12:02 a.m.
In the 1983-1985 blenntwn of $2.5
' ()If to a slower start the Senate Sunday where an abandoned house
·billion.
has only one conunltt~ session on' was on fire. Chief Legar said the
While most of the attention will be
blaze h;ld apparent!)! ;been set. .
focused on the budget deficit, Ohio's . tap this
.
The
upjler
chamber's
ways
3nd
llowever.
he s;Jid the house Is of no
lawmakers swing Into a tullroundof
means
conunlttee
wm
convene
value
andwlllbeburnedcompletel&gt;
corrunlttee meetings this .week for
Wednesday mmitlng to hear the In the near future as an exercise for
the first tim!! In the 1983 session. ·
·
·
fire department members.
be

Fire damages set
I

week.

'

y '

�..

•
Moudav,

Commentary

POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

2-The Daily Sentinel
Pon..eoy . AVddleplllf, Ohio
Monday, FebNary 7, 1983

.,

Southent blasts C-.K Wonders--

'.

Pregnant paradoxes

'

T he Daily Sentinel
111 Court&amp;rftl
P11mc-roy. Ohiu

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pll blltdter

' BOB HOEFLICH

A .~sistanl l 'uhlish t' r /Cu n trullt&gt; r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
NrwaEd ltvr

A Mf.MBER uf The As:wdakit Prn11, lnhlnd Dilly
r'!omt"rkan Ne"'s~per Pllblishrrti AliSIH'illion.

Pn.-s~

Al'&gt;ljtlf'ildltta Mod tlw

I.EITERS OF OPINION art Wt:'lr umtd . They 11ohwld ~ let~lllhiUI :J00 Wlmlti hmf(. All
lt·ttt-rs ar\' ~u bj rr t lu t:'ctiiin.: a nd mlllt ~ t1igbtd With n1une, lllddrn111 and Wlqthtinr
numbrr. Nnt.uudg ned ld tcr» will bt- publilhnJ. LrUtn 1huuld be In gi.Mid Lloalc. addrn~illa
i u u~.

Mr. J.,eoCberne, theexecutivedl- protectionism. Walter Mandate
rector ot the Research Institute ot was soundlllg like Smoot-Hawley
few months, thoualb
America and vice chalnnan ol the . there for
·l'rellldent's· Foreign Intelligence lately he has tOned down his tJrlt!
Advisory Board, makes ~81U1Ual talk If only becauae he was ~·
address tn New· York at. which he ally loslng hts tnte1lectual credenbravely predicts wh8t ts to come tials amoog his best trlellds.BQt the
during the followtng year. Given mov~t grows. If the domestic
that he has engaged In this perilous content bill comes up again thiS
exercise for 43 years running, we year {that Is the 1bJbe Goldberg bill
have the measure of ai his fl!llabD- that says you can't buy an automobile unless up to 90 percent of Its
Ity; and b) fils a1,1daclty.
This time aroond he predicted no- · parts are manufactured tn the Unithing startlln&amp;, but madeoneortwo ted States - the cigarettes llgbter
asides worth COIISiderlng and ex- can be made In Japan) Senator
panding on, at his moment ot rela- Kennedy would vote for it. So much
tive drl!t In the formulations ol for liberal devotion to free trade:
And there are noises from the right
economic jJoUcy.
Take, tor . instance,
the matter of too, which Is a pJty, although protec·
. .j

a

II ..HW151
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OFTIIF. MEIGS-MASON AREA

PAT WHITEHEAD

tlonlmlls It course blstorlcaty associated with the r1ght.
Leo Cherne remlDded his audience that .u .s. export of man~
tured goods mw accounts for 20
percent of our Industrial output.
"Even !ewer know that the sales ol
our goods to· the less-developed
world are now ereater than our
sales to all of Europe and Japan
together. One third of l.I.S. corporate prot!!$ come from tnterna·
tlonal trade and OV!!rseas
Investment!' The point should be
obvious; namely, that If others do
to us ~ we propoee to do to them,
we will look back longingly on the
days when we had only 11 percent
unemployed.

\

.,.MI tlRUf i983 SO~lA~
$&amp;CUWIIJIY BAI~ ou,.

President Reagan
as debt-builder
President Reagan, who has Incessantly stressed his commitment to
balancing the (ederal budget, now ts well on his way to addlng more to the
national debt than all ot his predecessors combined.
When Reagan was sworn Into office In January 19111, the national debt
- the dismal heritage ot the federal government's deticlt·spendlng since
the founding of the republic - stood at $934 bllllon.
The White Ho~ now has released {with as little tantare as possible)
figures which show that It the president serves twotullfour-year terms and
It Con&amp;~:ess approves aU of his budget proposals, the national debt will
Incraseby more than $1.2 trillion during Reagan's tenure.
During the current !!seal year alone, "thedeticltwenowestlmate ... Is
well over~ bllllon," admits Office of Management alld Budget Director
David Stockman. That single-year figure exceeds the deficit accumulated
by any prior president during his entire term In office.
Those comparisons are somewhat misleading because they are not
adjusted tor Inflation which has steadily eroded the real value of the dOllar
- but Reagan's deficits are enormous ev.en· after compensating tcir
inflation.
In February 1981, less than a month after he moved Into the White
House, the president unveiled his " Program for Economic Recovery"
which promised a balanced budget by 1984 and surpluses In all subsequent
years.
But when Treasury Secretary Donald Regan was recently asked to
Identity the year In which the Reagan administration now predicts a
balanced budget, he replied: "We're only required to have five-year projections {through 1988) .... It wouldn't happen In that five years." ·
'The devastating admissions on the part of Regan and Stockman came
during a White House news briefing Immediately prior to the president's
State of the Union address - a speech which could have left casual
listeners contused .about Reagan's political atflllatloln and ldeologlcal
orientation.
The.speech was rite with expressions of compassion for groups of citizens usually the subject of Democrats' oratorical concern - steel and auto
• workers, black teenagers, working mothers, single parents, members ·of
minority groups and vlctlms of unemployment.
It covered virtually the entire catalog of traditional Democratic
causes - Including rescuing Soctal Security, expanding employment opportunities, ending discrimination against women and enforcing lair housIng laws.
The words "fair" and "fairness" -which the Democrats have sought
to monopolize as a rhetorical weapon to attack the RepubHcans In recent
months - were used In various forms no less than a ·dozen Urnes tn the
president's address.
But behind tl1at rhetoric lles essentially the same program which has
provoked criticism of the president from Republicans as well as Democrats In recent months .
.
Indeed, after GOP congressional leaders were given a preview of the
president's speech, they emerged from the White House with gratuitous
praise for Reagan and patronizing comments about his ablllty to govern
efiectlvely.
f!W. Robert H. Michel, R-rn., the House Republican leadB", sald he was
"~ressed by the fact that the presldentls living In the world of reallty" a remark suggesting that the congressman Is among those who believe
that untll now Reagan has been residing elsewhere.
.
Especially dtsturbmg to many members of Congress ts the fact that
the presld~ nt ts detennlned to pursue a course requiring _substantial spend·
. lng reductions In domestic social programs whose funding already has
been severely slashed while promoting military spending at extravagant
levels.
'stockman acknowledged that the president's proposed bUdget tor the
next fiscal year, assuming a live percent rate ot lntlatlon, calls tor a 10
percent Increase In defense spending but a three percent cut In all non·
defense programs.
Those priorities hardly comport with the claim, advanced by one of
Stockman's deputies, that the Reagan administration Is coi;Jim!tted to
"focus on the poor, the vlctlms o! dlscrtmtnation and mldine-lncome
fa mllles ....

. William F. Buckley Jr.

,.

nnt Jll!rwr~.~~lll in.

I
Guilt ·o r innocense?
I

And speaJdn&amp;' of protitS, dill you
notice the shocked hilarity of the ·
Democrats when President Reagan aald In Boston that lie really
saw no reuon for a business tax?
We're still nourishing the superstl.
tlon tbst a business tax falls other
than on the slloulders ol the coosu·
mer. The least sophistication
makes plain that business, In order .
In survive In a competitive market,
needs to pass an costs on to consumers: the cost of materials, tlie
cost of labor and the cost of govern.
ment. What happens Is that when
consumers decline to accept " costs, businesses go'broke, and Ul)employment results. People who
laugh at Reagan's poUticalllalvete
Should be laughing Instead at their

own ecoiunlc naivete.

oo

Leo Chefne went
to say that
we have lost our "comparattve ad·
. vantage" In the manufacture ot
machine tools, automoblllis and
steel. "I dQ not 1!xpect International
HarVester to be as resilient as
Chrysler." Reflection: We lmow
that we have an enormous surplus
ol agricultural products. The multlpllcatlon of International Harvesters Increases a glut that ts already
costly. We have nothing, then, to
gain from Increasing their manu·
facture to save ·the jobs created or
maintained. By contrast, the manufacture of planes and tanks and submarines does give us some galn: tn
secw1ty. One would think tbst the
dogmatiC critics of rearm8nl!!nt,
even If their strategic sense ts unrefined, would at least weigh the argument that goyemnient subsidies
to tanks stand at thls point to yield
more than government subsidies
for tractors.
Oh, how the paradoxes abound.

MO·VE OVER - Southern pant Rod UWefleld { 12) appears to be
lelllngMark_Cisco {2:'1) of Ceredo-Kenova to move outolblswaydurtag
llrat quarier action of Saturday's --league pme at Southern. CGach
Carl Wolle's Tornadoes dumped the Welt VJrxlnlau, 81..'19. Lllilefteld
had 20 polnlll. '11m ',rucker pboW.

James

GADS-Portsmouth box

lly.,.n.n:
P&lt;rtamwth

.

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MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lllolcle Olllo
t3 w.. ks .......... ......... ...... ........ . $14.01
26 Weeks .................... ..... ........ .$27.30
52 Weeks ........... ,...... .. ..... ...... ... S51.4i!
O.lolcle Ohio
t3 Weeks ... .. ....... .-.. ......... ........ .. $15.21
26 Weeks .... ................ ..... ......... $29.64
52 Weeks ... ....... .....................•.. $5ti.21

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it
out

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NEEDs PASSING ROOM- Lenny Chafllns (10), a l1lal'd for
Cere®-Keoova, applies po es!lllre on Southern's Nick IIOIIUck durtag
Saturday's 11011-leape enp~ment" at Racine. Booo&amp;lck enJoyed a tiDe
offensive game wUb 16 points. Southern took aa easy, 81-59vlcfory. 'lbri
Tucker photo.
'

Buckeyes dump
Marauders, 73-64

or

.

L1 9 13 14-49
7 9 17 8-41

Galllpolla

Today in. history

•

Spring Valley Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio
Monday thN Saturday
10:00 A.M. 'Til 6:00 P.M.

No &amp;ubscrlp1ions by mall penntned ln
· towns where home carrier service Ls
available.

PORT8MOV'IB (•) -CoiUDs:l-2-12; JaCk·

oon f-6.11; Parker 3-5-11: Miller 2-0-4; WIUI·
oms 2-:0..9. -1i-1~.
OAU.II'OUII (4l) - Madlaon 1.().2; EUces·
oar 1~2; Lane ~~27; Shoe!A 4-IJ.ll; Skldrrore
0-2-2. T - lJ.IWL

a

•

SPRING VAu.EY TRADING CO.

wW be given carrier each month.

A different picture

about

•SILVER CONTACTS

may remit lnadvancedlrect to TheDaUy

.f. Kilpatrick

Waalqton
Mcecow began ·
which aide
mOre aarlous about

U.S. SILVER DOLlARS ...•....• s12.75 ea.

Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 month basis. Credit

secretary

· "It all

SOC ea.

OTHER ITEMS WANTED

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

Letter to the editor

ClAD HALVES

U.S. SILVER COINS

STERLING SILVER ................. .Ib. $160

there Is a "simple explanation"·for
shlnjl!.on, Ftallos had never ex·
pressed any cr!Uclsm or the
his admltled withdrawal of the emSandlnlsta regime's policies.
bassy funds. He was given coded
Instructions, he said, to withdraw
Flallos sald he became "lncreas·
the money because Ntclil'llll\1811 go. - lngly disenchanted" with the revolutionary government last year.
vernment atriclals were worried
Hts disillusionment stemmed, he
that the United States would try to
urreezeu tbe1r aisets. "I was -In·
said, from hts growing realization
structed to protect the money," he
that the Sandlnlstas were becom·
said, adding that he would disclose
lng as oppressive as tilt Sormza regime had been.
where the cash Is located when his
"I was seeing, especially the last
lawyers give him the go-ahead.
year, that the promises they had
A State Department otllcta1 who
made ... to !hi! Nicaraguan people
Investigated Flallos' background
sald he was " convinced that {Ftal- were violated every day," he said.
He Insists he told his co·
los) didn't take the money for his
revolutionaries In Managua that
personal enrlcbment."
"the revolution shouldn't take the
A high otllcta1 ol the Nicaraguan
path of the Olhan one."
Embassy told · my assOciate
Flalios said that the "moilt radiLucette Lagnado he Is convinCed
cal elements In the {Sandlnlsta
that Flallos misappropriated the
party), with Marxist-Leninist, even
money, and he produced documenStalinist, Ideology are 11alnlng
tary evidence to support his asser·
power and are more entrenched evtlon. The oltlclal also noted, with
some asperity, that tn nearly a year eryday." He said "the communists
have taken complete control of the
as the Nicaraguan envoy to \V a·
I
sliuatlon by now."

To the rescue

WANTED
GOLD &amp; .SILVER
s1.75 ea.

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WASHINGTON - Francisco Ft- about looting the treasury ol a let·
ttst regime he had been serving. He
allos Nav~~JTQ made a brief media
grew up as a member ol the Nlca· .
splash last December when he reraguan privileges class and got an
signed abJ'Uptly as Nlcaraguap am·
advanced degree at Harvard Law
ba•sador to the United States and
denounced the Sandlnlsta regime · School. He was even rnanied
briefly to a niece of the late Nlcara·
In Managua. Last month the Nlca·
guan dictator Anastasio Somaza.
raguan government splashed right
Yet he supported the Sandlnlsta reback with the charge that Ftallos
gime for three years after it kicked
had absconded with inore than
Somaza ·out.
·
$600,1m of embassy funds. Ftallos explained the embe:zzleSince then, the dapper 36-year·
ment charge as an attempt by the
old Ftallos has been In seclusion,
prepartng to defend himself In Sandlnlstas to discredit him In retaliation for his dramatic defection,
court agalnst the Nicaraguan go.
which he ·saki damaged the revernrnent's charges and pianntng a
gime's own credlbWty.
llbel suit against his accusers. He
"This ts what happens," he sald.
consented to an exclusive Interview
"Every
single person that has reto give his version of the events
signed In Nicaragua has been acleading to his resignation and the
ensuing controversy.
cused ot mismanagement of funds
... {The charge Is completely false,
Depending on one's personal
prejudices, Ftallos Is either the
and unfortunately I cannot explain
most unlikely candidate for an emIt here to the AmeriCan people ...
because my lawyers have advised
bezzlement charge - or the kind ot
man who wouldn't think twice
me not to tell you." Flallas sald

first lead.
nine second halt field goals, lnclud·
By scqrr WOLFE
In the reserve tUt Southern
Following a C·K goal SHS .unra .
lng seven In a row before missing
RACINE - Despite trailing by
breezed to a ~win . OlachHowte .
his lone two pointer.
an 18-15 margin after the first pe- veled six unanswered points for a
CaldWell's young Funnel Clouds&gt;
In the fourth round , Southern
riod, Southern's Tornadoes came to 2:&gt;-20 edge, but the Wonders rewere led to victory by Darin Roush ::
.
fumed
the
favor
for
a
26·25
swamr
ed the buc ket with 24
ltte with an explosive second halt
with 17, Greg.)'&lt;ease 16, and Todd:
markers, white holding its powerful
performing to steamroll past class comeback.
Adams 10. Bllllps had 13 and Pierce·
As time wound down toward the
toe to just 15.
"AA'' Ceredo-Kenova of West Vir10 tor the young Wonders.
·
. Coach Car l Wolfe said of his tri·
ginia 81·59 here here SatUrday halt C-K tied the score at 28-28, then
South·ern travels to Hannan .
engaged In !I short nip-and-tuck bat·
evening.
wrtphant Tornado crew, "Tonight
Trace Friday and then on to Hun· :
we played very well ... possibly tiKi
The talented trio of Zane ]3eegle, tie that Southern won on a goal by
tinglon St. Joe on SatUrday fora big ~
best game we've had a ll year.
Rod Uttlefleld, and Nick BOstick pi- Dennis Teaford {32-JO) and a three
game In the Huntington · Field :
I pra ise all the kids for their efHouse:
·
:·
loted the Southern offensive flight point play by Littlefie ld giving the
hosts
a
35-30
advantage.
Scott
RieSolllhem
(81)
-Bostick
5-6-16;
Deem
i
·:H;
.
forts
,
but
I
was
extremely
pleased
as It gradually soared higher
Brtnager 1-0-2; Curfman 142; Bootlck 142; ·
del sank an Inside jumper to lock
with Nick Bostick's hard, aggresthrough four periods of play.
Teafonl 2-2-6; lleegle 12428; Co.,..Uy I&gt;I-I ; ·
Littlefield 114-211. II·IHI.
. ..
Beegle led the scoring parade the score In at 35.32 going Into the . slve drives towards the bucket." .
Cen.lo-Kemyo (181 - Ke nnaly ~IO ; Rle·
On the battle of the boards both
with 2801iU'kers, Uttlettetd 20, and half.
del:l-2-8; WUson W 8; R.Morrone;).(H;; Cilco
Second Half
clubs grabbed 'l:T. ~ S had SEiveil
.Bostick 16 as ·the Tornadoes roUed
3-M; Chomns U 10; Lowe 1-0-2; BIUupo ~
Second halt play saw Southern
steals, 16 turnovers, 18 assists led • 0; P . Morrone 2.()4; Chad Pierce 2-1-5. t.tat. '
to their 15th win In 17 starts, white
M-11-Q.
by Brlnager's six, and 13 fouls . C-K
reamlnlngon top in theSVACatS.O. exhibit an awesome ofienslve dis·
Scoreby qu.-.:
had 19 turnovers and 21 personal Soulllem
~ 211'22 24-31
Ceredo-Kenova dropped to 6-6 play and combined staunch deten·
C. K.
lJl 14 12 ll&gt;-59 "
slve stand that held the Wonders
louis.
overall.
Statistically both clubs had super under 15 points !rom the second pegames, however, Southern's lnten· riod on.
Early In the third fr ame SHS
slty and edge on the charts sWayed
went"
up by seven against the much
the momentum towards victory
taller Wonders malntalnlng that
and the 22 point blow 'Out.
•
Southern ripped the cords for 52.5 lead to the three minute mark when
percent from tile field, white shoot· the Whirlwinds reeled off six unans·
lng a bUsterlng 17 of 26 cUp these- wered points for a 55-42 advantage.
When the cuna,ln fell on the conclucond halt for 65 percent.
of the .stanza SHS led 5744.
sion
The We:;t VIrginians n!pped the
Beegle
headed Southern's scor·
nylons at 24 of 57 tor 42 percent,
lng
barrage
by canning eight of
white connecting on 11 of 16 at the
charity stripe. SHS netted 19 of 29
!or a warm 79 percent at the Gratis
The Daily Sentinel
stripe.
1964 and Older
1965-1970
(USPS1IHOO)
. During first half play C·K utlllzed
A Dlvlolon ol Mull~a, Inc.
Half Dollar. ea. $4.50
a balanced attack and pattern or·
·War Nickles
Quarter
..... ea. $2.25
tented offense to establish a strong
Published every afternoo_n, Monday
90'
.
.
through
Frtday,
ill
Court
StrEet.
by
the
Dnne .......... ea.
lnltlal homecom!Jig with the Tor·
Ohio Valley Publishing Company . Mul·
.nado detense.
Umedla, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 9922l!i6. 8econd · .class postage paid at
Forward Mike Kennedy cashed
Pomeroy, Ohio.
In on .the first score of the game
before Beegle knotted the score at
Member: The As.x:l a ted - Press, Inland
1935 and Older
DaUy Press Association a nd the Ameri, 2·2. C·K gradually built a small ad·
can Newspaper Publishers A.s.soclatlon;
vantage thrOughout the remainder
National Advertising Representative ,
Branham Newspaper Sales, T.&gt;J Third
of the frame to lead 18-15.
Avenue , New York, New York 10017.
In the second round Southern
sharpen~ Its aggressive defensive
POSTMASTER: Send address to The
Dally Sentinel;, Ul Court St., Pomeroy,
play for a hard-nosed battle with
Ohio 457W.
the C·K Wonders, while also un8lJ1IS(;RIJ&gt;l10N RATES
tracklng Its potent offensive
By Canier or MOWr Route
machine.
One Week ......... ....... ... ......... ... .. . $1.00
•CLASS RINGS &amp; WEDDING RINGS
Playmaktng guard Llttle!leld
One Month ........ ::.: ........ .. ........... $4.40
One
Yea
r
.....................
.............
$52.80
•STERUNG FLATWARE
canned the first bucket of the frame
SINGELCOPY
to pull the Tornadoes to within one,
•GOLD TEETH
PRICES
Dauy ... .. .. ................ .... ......... 20 Cents
then seconds tater Bostick canned a
•PLATINUM
corner jumper to give Southern Its
Subscribers nol des !ring to pay the e arlier

r------------1

Jack Anderson

ment, Implementation, throughput
"serious crisis" or o~ "new lnltla·
WASHINGTON - Some years
jortties come In sizes like T·Shlrts:
{or thruput), utilize, tacllltate,
lives." Out with other barnacled
ago, In one of those moments ot fansmall, slim, la' rge and
tasy that overcome us now and .Infrastructure.
phrases - final outcome, end .reoverwhelming.
then, I · dreamed a dream: I
The secretary does not propose- suit, future plall$, untimely death.
But It Is risky to complain of
dreamed that the editorial rooms of
small detans, perhaps because
any longer to tolerate the windup,....our great newspapers would be
"small details" would set off the
phrases of . slow·pltch correspon·
When, he InqUires, has there .eve!'
rigged so that a bucket of hogwash
!Ire and smoke. Secretary Bat~
dence- for example, "I regret that
been a timely death?
would hang suspended over the
I cannot be more responsive." He
Some of hts proscriptions seem a
drk'l5'e Is engaged In a n!VOlution·
computer terminal ol every writer. · has banned "subject matter,'"'botary work of large value to the
mite severe. ''Do not use a spilt InThen the computer would be rigged
republic, even U It has small prostom llne" and "It ts my Intention."
ftnltlve,'' he commands; but there
so that vgtenever five words were
pect of success. That ts to saY, the
No one hereafter Is to say ''needless
are times when "to unapologetl·
entered In exact sequence, the
gentleman ts on the right track. He
to say,'' on the 8ound principle that
Cally spilt" sounds better :than "un·
bucket would tltt to ten1bie·effect.
Is on target. He may energize his
If It Is needless to say a thing,- why
apologetically to· spltt" . sounds
The five words were: "It remalns
say lut? By the same token, "at the
better than "unapologetically to ·std. The bottom llne cOuld etfectu.
to be seen."
present time': must yield to "at thls
spilt" ·o r ''to split unapologetlate meaningful alterations In ongoThe dream has come true - not . time" or "now." The computers
cally." Another of his proscriptions
Ing practices and procedures. At
that precise dream, to be sure, but
this point In time, no other functionwill balk at " asyou kno)V" and "as I
would forbid references to the date
sctnethlng,close to lt. At the Departary Is Implementing any program
am sure you are awllle."
of an Incoming letter, but the prac·
ment of Commerce, we see by the
of comparable enhancement to the
This most admirable of Cabinet
tice has the nierlt of precision. The
papers, Secretary Malcolm Balquallty level of federal prose ...
members Intends to abolish certain
objects to "great major·
BAM! PUFF! TILT! .
dridge has rigged the computers
redundancies. Fire arid brlmsione
lty'' on grouDds ol redundancy, but
that handle outgoing corresponawait the wretch who writes of a
as any I(Olttlclan could tell him, rna•
dence, press releases and the like.
Whenever certain words are enThe picture painted by the Sen·
The picture of Pamle Carter
tered, the computers are protinellasf Sunday ot nursing homes
looked very forlorn. I visit her evgrammed - as the secretary
was rather bleak.
ery week, admire her carefully nur· · describes It - to emit volcanic
Since I volunteer a lew hours
lured Abican violets and Usten. She
putts of smoke. and tire.
most weekS at Scenic Hltts, I see a
had a recent loss and her family
This could be the beginning of a
different picture.
was there within minutes. I do not
triumph of teclmology over llltterThe newspeople who visited and
see her as forlorn .
acy. Computers at last might juswrote the article should have noted
We see enough sad stories In our
tlty their existence In an Imperfect
the activities In the activities room.
news today. Let's hear some good
world. It remains only to reflile the
Perhaps taken a moment to giance
or at least both sides when story ts
Baldridge plan, and to Impose It
.told .
at the bingo game In pf&lt;!gress In
upon the whole of the federal
another room.
. .
Phebe Roberts
domaln.
People, relatives and others, visit
· Box 82, RaCine, Ohlo
These are among the torbklden
regularly.
words, phrases and banalities that
llerD:forth will make the computers at Commerce erupt: to optim·
.lze, to Impact, to Interface, to
maxlnilze, to fllialtze al)!l to iarget.
It
II possible, I submit,.·to quarrel
Today IS Monday, Feb. 7, the 38fh day ot1983. Thereare327 days lett In
with
the ban on 'Jto Interfere." This
the year .
has
become
a verb of art In compuToday' s highlight In hiStory:
terland,
along
with "to acce&amp;s" and
On Feb. 7, 1945, President Franklfu Roosevelt, British Prime Mlnlster ·
u•o
ICI"'Ol.
u
As for uto flnalim,, it
Winston Churchlll .and Soviet leader Joseph Stalin met at the Sovlet B~k
~ pined respectability for Its
Sea resort of Yalta to shape the post-war future.
bi'!Mty· It bea!,l "to complete work
On this date:
00 the~ ~0111 ol."
.
.
In 1718, Daniel Boone and 't7 others were captured by Indians at mue
.
Mr.
Baldridge
has
InstruCted
hla
Lick, J{y.
·
atd not to 1111! "affected lmpreIn 1904, tire virtually destroyed doWntown Baltimore.
clle wordll," such·aa viable, Input
"In 196i. tl)ousands ot:screamlng· fans were at New Yor!t's Ke~·
and orient. 1bese are excellent
A.lrjlort to welrome the rock group The Eeaties on their first American .
started when
and
8rgulng
apeclmeail for extlnctloo, but the
tour.
·
·
Iia.t ~be much extended: bnp]e.
W88
a1111 QOIIbol ... "
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The Daily Sentinel- Page 3

~ge

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By KEITH WISECUP
NELSONVILLE - A blistering
Nelsonville· York last break
enabled the host Buckeyes to take
an early 17-polnt lead and the
state's 20th ranked "AA' ' five held
off a late Meigs Marauder charge
to win 7~ here Saturday.
While the Marauders could drop
only three of 15 first quarter shots,
the BuckeYJ!S raced 'to a 23-6 lead.
The lead remained around 20 untlt
the fourth quarter when the local
five rampaged 31 markers and cut
the final margin to nine.
Meigs' Nick Riggs hit tor a
career· high 27 points, giving the &amp;-o
junior 861n his last tour games. The
wiry guard also grabbed seven rebounds In a losing cause.
Rick Edwards, Riggs' running
mate, also tuned In tor 21 points.
N·Y's point" guard, Jon Schentz,
offset the poor-shooting performance of aU·state candidate Tom
Taggart with ~ points. Taggart,
plaYing Into the fourth quarter,
managed only six of 24 s)lots for 12
taWes.
Son of coach VIrgil Grandy, Kirk,
followed Shentz with 14 points and
Randy Grantham added 11.
"We hustled au the way but their
fast break just tore us up In·the first
two quarters," commented Meigs
coach Greg Drummer after the
game •
The Buckeyes, who were·upset In
double overtime at Warren LoCal
Friday night, ici to 14-3 on the year
white Meigs dropped to 2·14 after
the non·Ieague loss.
· ·
' The Marauders canned 23 of 68
sbota for 34 percent and 18 of 29
from the foul 1tne for 62 ·percent.
'rhe Buckeyes hit .on 29 of 66 for 44
·. pen:e11t front the ,Cield while lnak- .
1ng :15 Of 22 free throws tor 68
percent.
.
. Meigs stayed with the taller
Bucks on the boards grabbing 42
. compared toN· Y's 43.• Greg T,aylor ·.

'.

•'

led the Marauders with 14 and Bill
Holcomb added six. Jet! Adams led
N·Y with 12.
Meigs commlt!ed 14 turnovers
and 18 fouls . N·Y. turned the ball
over 20 _times and had 23 personals.
Heaerve11 Lole
.
In much the same m81Uler as the
varsity, the Uttle Marauders ten behind early and never quite caught
up, dropping a 47-34 decision to the
little Buckeyes.
Rick Wise paced coach Mlck
Chllds' reserves with 11 while Scott
Gheen llad nine. Jei-ry Kline and
Pat Boyer led N·Y with 14 apiece.
Meigs Is now 3-13 on the year.
Meigs made 13 of 49 from thet!eJd
tor 27 percent while N-Y sizzled for
22 of 37 {59 percent) . Meigs made
eight of 15 foul shots to three of 10
for the little BuckS.
Next Friday, the Marauders host
theAthe~ Build~, tied for the
SEOAL league lead with Ironton,
and Saturday travel to WahamR.
Box st'Oil!:
(V. . . .)

MDGS (il) - RJas lll-7·27; Edwards 8-:0..
21; Taykl&lt; 2.().4; Clwlcey 1·2-4; Hol&lt;omb 0-22; Eva118 2-lo5; Kenne4y 0-1-1; Hoblon liM.
TOT.USD-1&amp;&amp;
N-Y ('II) - Teuart~l2; Grantham 5-1·
11; Schenlz 7.0.20; Vaoco 1·2-4; Adamo 2-U;
Galentln 1-2-4; Tem!U 1·2-4; Grandy 6-2-U.
TOToU8 . .lJ.'II.

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Meigs

6 14 13 31-

N-Y

23 16 29 ll&gt;-'JJ
(RMel\"ee)

8oKICIWe:

MEIGS (II) -Wile 4-3-11; Cllancey 1.0:2;
Fill&gt;er 1.0,.2; Welker H3; Gheen U9; T!Jo.
mu 1·0-2; Bush l-3-5;o CaueU 11M. 'roT.US
1U&amp;
N-Y (41)- Kline 7~14; Boyer 7~14; Bentley H9; Bullodt 2-IH; SOrreU W4; Ell!·
erttne 0-2-2. 'roT.US IHI-41.

.,_....,

Meigs
N·Y

•

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_Nmn•------~--------~----~----~----------------------------------­
Address · --------------=----~--------------'-City_________________________ State ______.:.________ Zipo____________
Telephone _ ________________________ Account Nwnber

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Mail coupon to: Marketing/Customer Services Dept. • Ohio Power Company
301-305Cl~clal\d Avenue, S.W. • P.O. Box' 400 • Canton, Ohio 44701

I :I I

..

�' ..
Mol)day, February 7, 1983

Pvmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4 The Daily Sentinel

page

Monday, February 7, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Redrilen.take overtime win over Malone

...
..

-

-

..
:

BEEGLE ON 'l1lE MOVE --:- Zane Beegle, Southem's fine shoot: lngguard,moveupthe0oorii8PerryMorrone(l2)aitemptstoprovtde
•: delense lor Cef'edo,Keoova during the fourth quarter of Satunlay's
: ;: 81-59 victory by Southem. Beegle led theTomadooflensewlth28polnts.

. High school
~ ~ cage results
Alaon Cmt ·Hou.:er 61. C1eve. Adamo; H
Akron E . 61. MassWon 00
t\kron E ll~ &amp;!, Walsh Jesuit 52

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Anlwerp 59, Oh10 Clry 56 ·
· Aquinas 69, Akron Hobarl57

Arcanum 66, Day. Oakwood 52
Athens 69, Lancaster Ell
A)"T'svtlle 5.'\, Petll~vme

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Barbenon 104. Mentor- 00
BE'IIefontalne 57, Spring. NortOOastern

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Bt'Uf."V'Ue 9:1. Port Clinton 85
Benjamin Loj;l:an 74, St. Mary s 69
Berlin Hiland 75. Danville 41

BexJt,.· EE. Dublin 51
BIR Walnut !ll, Marysvtlle 46

~

Blanchester 49. Wayne~;viUe 46
Botkins 70, Fairlawn &amp;I
Bradford 61, 1'wtn VallEy s. oJ9

i'l. Lakeland :'8
73. Erie rPa.l Academy 68
Br;,-'311 n, Sllefwood FaLtvtew 61. vr
Buckeye Central €0. Bucyrus 38
Buckeyp TraU 67, GaJdweU 39

B rldfll'pCI"t
Brookf~ ld

Canton Herll&lt;l.':e 74, G&lt;'aul'la Clir. 4J
Canton McKinley 77, Canton ClmOak 58
Canton 1lmkel 71, Zanf'SVllle .ll
canton Trtni1Y !ll, CoL Heritage 53
Cardinal 75, BerkShire 00
Cfdartllie 62. 1'wln Valley N. 55
Center ville !JJ, Day. Behmnt 63
CharOOn !il, Beachwood ffl
Cln. &amp;tcon 60, Cl n. ~m 36
Cln. Performing Arts ~. Fayettf'\.•UJeo 61
Cln. St. Xav1er 7-t, OE&gt;Ve. St IgnatiUs 6:2
Cln. Seven HUI5 t'll, On. C..a.mtry Day :tl
CIE'\'e. Baptlst 73, Yoo~. Christian .jJ
Qc\•e. Bmedlctlne 66, Cleve. Marshall

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Cll'\'t'. E . Tech 72, Young. East m
Cl(&gt;o.·e. Oran~ 72, Bedford 51
Clf'Ye. UnlvPrshy 86. Klskl IPa.J Pret~

42

WINNING CATCH - John Jeffei'IIOD of ihe Green Bay Packers
scoots toto ihe end zone with just 31 seeonds remaiDing SuDday to !live
ihe NFC a 20-19 victory over the AFC In ihe Pro Bowl at Honolulu. Mike
11ayoes of the New England Pairloll!l attempts In vain to bring Jeflenon
down. Dumy WhHeoflbe DaDa&amp; Cowboys~ ihe game-wluner. (AP
Laserpboto).

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ar

Clyde 72, Norwalk St. Paul 69,
Col. WflirtJt Rlt~Re 76. Newark IB

Share the spirit
Share the refreShment

CVCA 66, Mans. Chrlsllart 62, OT
Day. ChristiM 73. Middletown ~hr . 00
Day. Dunbar 91. Dow Cham ..Jul 55
Day. Patterson~ . Coldwate r 53
Day. Wayne ~5 , Tray ~1
E . Canton 68, Fairless 58
Eaton Ell. National Trail &amp;t
Elmwood 79. Ea.stw&lt;Xld 64
Elyria ·97 . Ashland. 67
Fort .knnln25 Tl, Dell)kls Jefferson 51
Gtta&gt;nburj:l Gl, ~ 63
Grandvk.'w 87, N. Unij;n IB

GrdflvUic Gl. Licking Hts. 52

Groenon 92. Tecumseh 6J
Gll!(&gt;Tlv Uie IB, Celina 61

the winners.
''ThiS game will make a better
team of Memphis State.'' said
Fowler. "Every once In a while, a
tealn needs to see the otner side of
thefence."
Memphis State gets a chance at
revenge when theteamsmeetagaln
Saturday. Fowler knows it won't be

Sampson.
.
The Tar Heels are on a tear, with
17 straight victories lmprovlngtbelr
·season's mark to 20-3. All but
forgotten Is their 0-2 start and three
losses In their first six games. The
latest victory, a 78-43 t&lt;.mp ·over
Fu!TIIan behind 13 points apiece
from Michael Jordon and Sam
Perkins, marked Smith's 13th
stralght20-wln season, breaking the
mark of 12 in a roVl! set by Jerry
Tarkanlan of Nevada-Las Vegas.
"I haven't \VOn a game at aU,"
said Smith, whose career coaching
record Is now 488-148. "I've just
happened to be ti]e coach of some
good teams."
Included ln . North Carolina's
current streak Is a 101-95 decision
over Vitglnla three weeks ago. The
Cavaliers, 19-2 for the season, have
not lost since and proved, 111 a 105-84
· romp over Duke, thattheycouldwin
without significant scoring from
Sampson. The big man was limited
to 10 poinis but sophomore Tim

Carolilla game. "I guess you guys
can billltasthegameofthecentury,
again."
·
So with all the excitement in the
ACC, where does that leave
seeond-ranked Nevada,LasVegas?
Unbeaten, that's wbere.
· Tarkanian's Runnln' Rebels are
the only team in the n~tlon which
has .yet to lose this se~n. They
pushed their record to 20-0 with a
70-68 victory over UC-Irvtne as
freshman Eldridge Hudson sank a
pa1r of free throws with 15 seconds
remaining in Saturday night's
game.
While the top three teams
survived the weekend in good
shape,sevenothermembersofThe
Associated Press Top Twenty were
beaten. That group included No. 4
Memphis State, 58-56 losers to
Tulane. Paul Thompson's 18 points
led the Green Wave, and even
though his club had scored a major
upset, Coach Ned Fowler. thought
the losers _:night benefit more than

a cakewalk.
The other ranked losers were No.
ll Villanova, beaten 7&amp;- 70 by Boston
College; No. 13 Iowa, which lost
60-57 to Purdue; No.16IIIinolsState.
beaten by New Mexico State, 66-50:
No.17Mlnnesota, which lost to No. 6
Indiana, 7&amp;-51; No. 18 Washington
State, beaten 56-49 by Southern
alllfornla, and No. 19 Georgia,
which lost to Louisiana State 70-59. .

'"

rnann. "Weweremaklngupplaysin
the NFC's winning drive allve.'The
NFC had fourth-and-7 at the AFC 25 . the huddle. or course J.J. (Jefferwhen the Packers' receiver made son) madeltwork."
his a fingertip grabofWhlte's throw
"The guys really wanted to win,"
for a 14-yard pickup.
said Jefferson, named the game's
On the next play, Jefferson broke co-MVP· with San Diego quarterback Dan Fouts of the AFC. "Now
open momentarily over the middle
wehavebragglngrlghtsforayear."
and White drilled the ball in for the
Moseley, whose field goal misses
touchdown . .
"!twas a llttlellkeplaylngsandl!Jt could have made him the game's
goat, said he wasn't nervous when
baU there at the end," said White,
who completed 14 of26 passes for 162 he lined up for the decisive PAT.
"!would have liked to have had a
yards while splitting quarterback
day," said. the Redsklns
.
better
duties with Washlngton'sJoe Theiskicker, who missed from 'n, 48 and

'

The winners. besides N~dh
Carolina, Nevada-Las Vegas a!ld
Virginia, were No. 5St.John's,l'lP;6
Indlana ,No.7UCLA,No.8Houstpn,
No. 10 Missoun, No. 12 Lou~~·
No·. 14 Georgetown, No. 15 ·~_,.tucey, and No. 20 Syracuse.
~
I..';U's victory over the Bull~
created a six.way tie tor first PlaPe
1n the Soutneastern Confere!~Cf.
Deadlocked at 6-4 are Mississippi,
A burn . Kentucky Tennessee
v ~nderbttt and Geo~a.
'
St John's pu~hed Seton Hall
_ .; as Davl(l Russell scored 21
82 5
points and Chris Mullin hit 18. 'The
victory combined with VIllanova's
loss ~to Boston College, pushed the
Redmen 9-2 overall and 7-2 in the
1
: t fir t lace in the Big
1eague, m 0 s P
East Conference.

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NFC·wins Pro Bowl in .last 31 seconds .
HONOLULU (AP) - The Pro
Bowl, showcase for the National
Football League's elite, wasn't the
most flawlessly played football
game ever, but It had Its moments.
The most decisive was In the final
moment, as . Dallas quarterback
Danny White and Green Bay wide
receiver John Jefferson combined
to puU out a 20-19 victory for the
National Football Confere(lce on
Sunday. ·
Trailing the AFC most of the
game, theNFCmarched65yardsto
the winning touchdown, the score
coming on an 11-yard pass .from Pro
Bowl rookie White to Jefferson with
31 seconds left.
Washington's ~k Moseley,
who had missed three field goals
and had another blocked, kicked the
extra point to give the NFC the
hiumph - but only after his first
attempt was wiped out by a penalty
against the NFC.
A dlylng reception by Jefferson on
the pl!l"y before the touchdown kept

Akron Sl . V·SI. M }II, Camoo C&lt;1th. 59
Anna 100, DeGrarf Riv~l~ 50
Anttxlny Wayne 71, Swalltool.\4

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Allen E . 51, ArUnKton 49
A.ll!an('(' 46, canton Sou1 h 44

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GOOD DURING FEBRUARY ONLY
I
•-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ______ .;....,.I

Carolina's defending national
champions are rumb~ toward
Thurslay nlgiJt's Atlantic Coast
Conference showdown with No. 3
VIr"'"'" led by 7-foot-4 Ralnh

Mullen had 23 and Othell WUson 7'
lt was the 275th career victory In 14
years at Davidson and VIrginia for
.CoachTenyHollandandlncreased
the momentum for Thursday's big
game.
"We're playing well rtgnt now
and they have been playing well,"
said Holland when asked about-the

,..._,

SAVE BIG WITH COUPON ON OUR
3 FOR 2 CLEANING OFFER!

.\kron Gartlelc:l 56. Kerll Rroiel.•elt 33

.-

By JW. BOCK

AP Sports Writer
Coach Dean Smith has an NCAA
record, 'anct top-ranked North

fl78~;perce;;;;n;t;,;;co;m;par;.;ed;;;to;;the;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w

You've g~ what It takes.

Saturday's KesWts

National champions rock Furman, 78-4;l

rebounds. Kent Wolfe chipped In 16,
Ploneers'13 of19 (68.4 percent).
Dan Curry 14 and Jeny Mowery 12. , Rio Grande wt11 be bac~ In action
BrantSkoganpaced Malone with Tuesday when It hosts Mount
24 points, while Charlie Perdue Vernon Nazarene College.
adc:lect·13and SchuttlO. Rio Grande
810 GBANDE (1l) _ WolleU.l6; Mow· .
sbot 24 ol55 from the floor for 43.6· "'Y 1-4-12; Poarodl-1-3; Mallcb6-6-lB; CUny
percent,eomparedtoMalone's3lof
&amp;2-1•: Frttz2.S.7; Sl!awl+a--'11.
•• - 1
MALONIC ('II) - Setalo&lt; ~ SorodDa
53for58.4percent.
•
w.:
IJUo3-3-9; ~1-~ Pordue5-3-13;
'lbecillferencewasatthefoullloe,
~1~2: Sltutt!l.o.l~ Matthewll~2;
Nul&amp;manO.l-2.-U-11-11.
where theRedmen rnad e 28 of 36for
ew . .. _ , Malone 33, RG 30.

.-------------~=-------~--_:=-~---~:_---:-___1_~======~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.• Tucker photo.
:;:·rtm

•

By SC01T D. MD I.ER
titto overttrtle.
Maisch then too~ charge In the
RIO GRANDE - Forward Johrl
Maisch scored nine points In overttrtlesesslon,liltting~drlves,
a free-throw, 'I jumper and two
ov~rtlme Saturday night to lead Rio
Grande to a 7&amp;-75overtlmewlnover more free-throws to create a 7!Hl0
Malone College in Mid-Ohio Coil!er-· Rio Grande lead.
The Redmen never rel!nqulshed
ence action.
The Redrnen appeared to have theleadtheremalnderofthegame,
their 20th victory of the season The win gave the Redmen their
locked up with 1:39 remaining in second straight 20-wln season. and
·regulation play when Rick Fritz
. connected on a pair of free-throws pushed their overall record to 20-7.
They &lt;!l'e 8-1111 the MOC, a game
for a four-po!rit lead, but JimSchu:tt
hit a jumper and a layup to knot the behind undefeated Walsh. Malone
score at 61-61 and send the contest goes to 9-13 overall and 4-5 in the
MOC.
'
"It was a great win for out kids,"
said · .Rio Grande Coach John
Lawhorn. "We did a great job of
Kite, Lopez, winners
fighting back after an early deficit,
but I think the key to the win was the
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP)- Inside play of our post player, Bob
Tom Kite posted a two-stroke Shaw, against their big man, Jim
victory over Rex Caldwe11 and Zeigler.
.
Calvin Peete In the $325,000 Bing
"Shawtotallyshuthimo!f,which
Crosby National Pro-Am.
stopped a major part of their
NORTII MIAMI BEACH, F1a. game,"headded.
:
&lt;APJ - Nancy Lopez posted her
Zeigler, who had QE!en averaging
26th career victory holding off Jo in double figures, managed three of
AnneCarnerbyonestroketowlnthe seven shots from the floor and
$150,COO LPGA Elizabeth Arden finlshedwlthnlnepoin($.Malschlect
GoH Classic.
theRedmen withl8pointsandelght

The Daily Sentinei-,.-Page-:.s

Sold In Sets Only

SPECIAL REDUCTIONS
ON ALL
POSTU8fPIDIC

49 yards and had a 33-yard attempt
blocked. "But all In all, it came out .
fine In the end."
The NFC victory overshadowed a
Pro Bowl record passing performance by Fouts, who completed 17
of ll throws for 'r/4 yards while
sharing the duty with Cincinnati's
Ken Anderson. Both Fouts' passing
yards and his completions were Pro
Bowl records.
1
Fouts, thinking of the losers'
snares of $5,000, half that of the
winners, said, "That's a tough way
·
to lose five grand."

Transactions
BASEBALL

Amerl&lt;.. . . _
. CLEVEI...AND INDIANS-Signed Brofirst baseman-outfteolder.
to a one-year contract.

dB-tck Perkins,

PUT

N.UOMILeape
OitCAGO cuas-Tr11ded Butdl Berlton,

' ratchf'r'. to lht Montreal ExJX)S for Jeny
Manuel, Lnfk&gt;!der. A$1~ MafN('I to
IOwa or the A.merlcan A9&gt;0Ciatlon.

Tell That
Special
Someone

YOUR

NEW YORK MEl'S--Siguf'd Roo Hodca tctler, to a two-~ contrad .

~.

YOU

LOVE
ON THE

PUT ALL
YOUR EGGS
IN ONE

LOVE
THEM!'

LINE ..•

Hamllton Badin 78. Day. Carroll 66
Ham!lton Ross 41. Lockland &lt;10
Heath :'14, Utica 51
Hldr.svlli(&gt; 61. Llbrrty Center 55
Hllltop 55, Wauseon 43
Hubbard ~ . E. Palest ~of 52
Hurflngton 73. Ports. Eas1 ~

, Indian Lake 48. Ridgemont &lt;l.'i
Indian Valley N. &amp;1. Indian Valiey S. 54
Jackson C{'f1!er 53. Wayrn"5!'Jelct.Ca.hffi
17
Jotw10wn 62. H(&gt;bron I...akewood 50
,lon.athAA Allk'r 67. CoL Acad.:•ruy 52
Kalida 81, ColumOOs Grove 7l
Kf&gt;tterlng Alter ~ . Cln. Princeton :II
U&gt;banon 93. Miamisburg 52

r'

Licking Val. 103, Jotrlstown Northridge

S3

Lima Cat h. 77, [)('IIana&gt; &amp;I
Llnc.\:llnvlew 56. Mmmn Union 44
Logan 75. i\l(&gt;Qnder 65
Lorain Cat h. 81. C'lew&gt;. Rho&lt;Es 66

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love You?" Our Happy
Valentine Ads will be publshed February 14th, and oHeryou a
truly unusual way to proclaim your lo~e and best wishes.

Lools\iJie Aquifw Ill. Akron Hoban 57

Lucas !fl, Ashland Crestview 43
Mar~arroa 93, LakesidE&gt; 73
MarUngton -17. W. Brandt -&amp;2

SAY ''I LOVE YOU'' WITH A

MassillOn Chr. $1, zanes. Oirlsllan 40

$1 -.00 SENTIN.EL VALENTINE -AD.

McMechan IW. Va. 1 Donahue 68, Buck!¥' w. 00

Mhtlletown 106, RIChmond. Ind. 64
Mlll!.'r 47. Zanes. Rosecrans 44, OT
MUier City ffl, McComb 1'5
Mlh~· UniOn b7, Brookville 55
Mingo 56, Stanton 55

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Cage
.standings

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Uyou're lllta moattonui tllase ~.you bava a. aa.r loan ,
some mecl1o&amp;l bUla, a. bank -dlt card or two, and thellat goes
on. Tbat'a &amp;lot ofbUla ... &amp;lot of"loans."
YO'U'ldllaan eau•-...taaUMakel =tmaloaa.·
And one monthly ~ent. One that's proba.bly g &gt;inS to be
smaller than the tot&amp;! ofpa.YIJ~eDta you're m•klng now.

-. ·.\......

11111.
Ka.ybe you'lll thinking about a mt,Jor purchase. Let's p~ otr
what you owe now &amp;nd throw in thatextra you need, too. ·
TOR· ---·..U~•-•LOft1ft7.
How muoh you need. depends on how much you ow,a. And
yout oredlt l!mlt wtth ua depends on you, too. Jlor example, J!
you own your home,~ oan loan you up Into the thous•mds
baaed on your eqUity.

W" L P OP

Wheelersburg
14 2 1159 002
Portsmouih
13 3 100 912
Athens
11 6 1066 1m3
GaUipolls
10 6 · 1l60 773
IrontOn
9 8 961 916
Northwest
9 8 976 941
Logan
9 8 1!)43 1&lt;123
Pt. Pleasant
6 6 821 774
Alexander
7 10 1073 1069
Waverly
· 7 10 · 988 1072
Jackson
'6 10 962 0011
Washington CH
3 11 781 886
Meigs
2 14 783 1056
Satunlny'a results:
Portsmouth 49 GaUipolls 41
Logan 7!5 Alexander 65
Athens 69 Lancaster 60
Nelsonvtne. York 73 Meigs 64
Tueaday'a~:

"

Jackson at WeUston
Portsmouth at Hillsboro
Peebles at Northwest
Hurricane at Pt.- Pleasant
Madison Plains at Washington

tH

(makeup)

....,.........-;~~~rvr"'' 70(•

~.

TO MY. WIFE ANN ..

L•rte Homeowner Loans up to·!J01018

'

·

lQ .....................

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your·Health. •
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_'Os

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10 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicotine ai: per cigarette ~y FTC method.

.

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We could't heve picked 1 nlctr ptlr
of pannta In the world. H.v• 1

Htppy Valentina' a Day.
Mlka arid Sua

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BELOW AND BRING IT
OR MAIL IT WI.TH 11.00 BY FEBRUARY lOth TO THE ·
·DAILY SENTINEL, P.O. BOX 729, POMEROY, OHIO
16 WORDS 'l.QO-(ASH WITH ORDER

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2.
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7.

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PHONE 992-2156

In Gallipolis:
.
502 SeCond Street
·Phone 446-4113

.

r---------------------------~--------~--------1

sooner you oan st&amp;rt seeing th1nga "llllllllY aide up"l

'O,...,..Sf-1._......._

)

TO MOM AND DAD ...

After 14 wonderful vttfl of mtrrl. tgt,l'm ttllt Nd-over-hMie in k)YI
with you.
Wah:ar Z.

1o pou. The sooner you gat a.ll your eggs In one be.sket, the

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(Umit 16 Words - Sizes Illustrated Below)

~·~·~·~~

.... _GUll,_, ............

ALLGAMm!

TEAM

(

.THE DAILY SENTINEL

.

�Page

The Daily Sen •

6

Monday, February 7, 1983·"

Prayer, ·self-denial observance ,
at East Letart Methodist Church
The United Methodist Women of
East Letart United Methodist
Ch~h w1ll hold their annual call to
prayer and self-dental observance
at 7: .'ll p.m. on Wednesday night at
thech~.

. The program wt11 Include a quiet
day service and descrtptton of the
types of mission projects for which
a special otfertng Is gtven.
The Wom en's Division of the

General Board ol GlObll Mlnlstrlel
of the Ulllred Metllodlst Church
SjlOII!IQI'S the call to prayer aDd self.
denial. 'Ibis year the olferln&amp; wUl
110 to two areas ol concem - toward a world ol peace wtth Jusdce,
an lntemallonal proJect, aDd the
deaconess aDd lw.lme mlssl(nary
pension fund, a natiOIIal Pl'Oil'8l!l•
Ruth A. Daugherty, president of
the Women's Dlvlston, has written
the quiet day service ' ·~-" I!s

Women's Aglow sets
meeting for Thursday

theme is peace.

people.

About U million women In more
than 25,00) local units of United
MethodJBt Women wtll join In the
observance. Last YeJJT the offering
was ""7,647, an Increase of $19,438
over the previous year.

Daniel, Cereda Risprees ·

Meigs clubs, ·groups meet
abandoned mine land.
Mrs. VIrgil Atkns discussed the
Mary Wayland was the winner of
plans for valentine fri1lt plates for
the weight loss rtbbon at the
resldents of the Meigs County
Monday evening Ftve Points exerInfirmary.
Donatloi!S from
cise class of SltndereUa. .lllx new
members were taken for that
members weretakentntothegroup.
puqxJSe. Mrs. Atkins also reported
At the Tuesday morning ~n
that she had taken a
diet class, Betty James and Betty
arnJD8ement to another meeting.
Smith were the top losers and
Mrs. Dorothy WOodard reported
several new members were welthat trees from the OhloABJC!atlon
comed. Cathy workman lost the
of Garden Clubs had lleen ordered
most weight and Jean Vaughan was
with the Rutland Friendly Gardenrunner-up at the Wednesday morn- ers and shrni.Jd arrtve aroond April
Ing Ftve Points Exercise class. Jo
1. Awordofappreclationforflowers
Ann Newsome Is the director.
sent during her Dlness was received
from Mrs. Co. 0. Olapman;
· Plans were made for tbe club to
work
with Charles Wllllamson on
Jackie Anderson, worthy matron
flowers In the flagpole area
planting
of Mason Chapter 157, Order of the
at
MUes
Cemetery as a new clvlc
Eastern Star, Mason, W. Va., has
project.
Issued an tnvttatton to all OES
For devotions, Mrs. Turner read
members tn the area to attend the
from the011toF8rmer " Out of Step
grand visitation of Annie R
wtth God or Out with the World" and
Meadows, worthy grand M&lt;~tron.
also gave a through! for January.
and Hubert Clark, worthy grand
Mrs. Marvin Wilson presented
patron, at the chapter hall In Mason,
Mrs.
Carl Denison's review of a
'Thursday.
guide
to geraniums by Evelyn
'There w1ll be a potluck and social
She said that some
McDonald.
hour tmmedtately following the
plants
can
be
successfully grown
meeting. A special Invitation from
from seeds. - The orange cascade
Mrs.Andersonhasbeenextendedto
variety was "first . for hanging
OES members In nearby Ohio
baskets. One nursery, she noted,
counties .
.
01entloned 600 vartettes. Healthy
Members of Mason Chapter 157
plants
can be used for cuttings to
aie asked to take dishes of food
start
new
plants, Mrs. Wilson noted,
for the potluck. The ham and frted
and most varieties like much light,
chicken w1ll be provided.
mild moisture, midday shade, and
good.soli.
Ustng a govenunent bulletin,
Dorts WUt hosted a meeting of the
Mrs. Woodard gave Ideas and hints
Chatter Club recently at her
for lnvttlng birds to your home.
Syracuse home.
Plannlng the landscapii.g with
Accepted Into membership was
!brought of trees, shrubs, water
Dorothy McGovern. A bake sale
source, and food can be rewarded
was planned for the Feb.l8 meeting ~ for bird lovers as well as adding
at the home of Dottle Jones.
attractive appearaDq! to a small or
Attending were Lola Hamson, · largeyard.
1
Brenda Bolin, Linda Hubbard,
Ruby Diehl gave sW!ererntnders
I
'
Linda Van Meter , Mary Starcher,
for February such as ;testing lbe
Dottle Jones, Susan Cleland, Allee
fertWty of seeds, sOwing seeds
Jacobs and Ruth Young.
Indoors, caring for bulbs, and
tapping maple trees.
There was a display of ~
'
catalogs.
Mrs. Roy Snowden won
May 28 was set as the date for the
the
travelthg
prize brwght by Mrs.
annualalumntbanquetanddanceof
RObert
Canaday.
Mrs. Chapman
the Pomeroy AlumntAssoclattonat
will
tw-nlsh
the
February
prize for
a meeting held Wednesday night at
the
meeting
to
be
held
at
the
homeof
the home of Sue Zirkle.
Denison.
Mrs.
Nicholson
gave
Mrs.
The banquet and dance wtJl be
a verse to close the meeting.
held In the cafeterta at Meigs High
Refreshments
were served by Mrs.
SchooL Tickets for alumni and
Turnet
and.
Mrs.
Chris Diehl.
guests w1ll be $8 and will go on sale ·
May 1. The dance Is open to the
publiC.
Next planning session was set for
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
March 3 at 7: 30 p.m. at the Zirkle
of the Daugllters of the American
home.
Revolution wtll meet at 1:30 p.m .
Friday at-Meigs Inn. Members
~ to take recipes for the
C.A.R. cookbook. along with some
Robert First of Meigs SoU and
family heirlooms for a display. The
Water Conservation Service, was
Meigs Counly American History
guest speaker at the Monday night
contest winners wtll be announced.
meeting of Rutland Garden Club
Hostesses ,wtll be Miss Eleanor
held at the home of Mrs. Ralph
Smith, Mrs. Thome Cottrill, Mrs.
Turner.
..
Cllnton Fisher, Mrs. Gerald Powell,
Introduced by Mrs. James Nl·
and Miss l,ucUle Smith.
cholson, president, First showed
slides and explained prattces and
Loyal~en,
results of the soli and water
Acknowledgements for contrtbll·
conservation program jn areas of
!Ions
were read from tbe Campus
Meigs Co1.1nty on (arms and

Slinderella

nower

OES

Ministry of Athens, Mt. Healthy
Home of Cincinnati, and the Grundy
Mountain Missions at a recent
meeting of ihe Loyal Men and
Women's Class of the Mlddlep; ort
Church of Christ.
Mildred Riley presided at the
meeting which opened with readIngs from Psalrtls 74 and Proverbs
23 an&lt;l prayer.
For roll call members answered
wtth their favorite bird of the Bible.
Officer's reports were gtven.
Readings for the program Included " A New Year's Meditation"
by Helen Reynolds; "Passing
Years" by Eleanor Lohse; "In 1bls
New Year" by Frances Roush,
"Hopefor '83" byMrs.MaryBatley,
and "Consider This" bY Martha
Refreshmentswereservedbythe
officers.
·

~issionary

Society

Syracuse First Church of tbe
Nazarene Missionary Soctety met
Feb. 2 with 46 people.
It opened wtth songs "In the Service of the King," and "We'll Work
Till Jesus Comes," with Nada Kittle, president.
Responsive reading was by Sis
Cundiff "A Mlsslonary Melody,"

Chatter Club

book on Mocamblque. Kittle gave
the February emphasis on Alabaster offering. Rev. Kittle read Jolm
7: 13 and conunented on eternal life.
Tile meetiJig was dlsmlssed by
Shenn Cundltf. '
· ,

are

Rutland Garden

VVorinen

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Garden Club w1ll meet Monday at 7: 00 p.m. at the horne of
Nellie and hallie Zerkle.
POMEROY Eight and
Forty, Meigs County Salon 710,
home of Mrs. Marjorte Fetty
Monday, 7:30p.m .

--- ··

POMEROY - Meigs Chapter, OrderofDeMolay, 7: 30p.m .
Monday at.the Masonic Temple.

RACINE - !Uctne Chapter

L'M, Order of the Eastern Star,
7: 30p.m. Mooday at the Raclile·
M.aaQnic Temple.

TUESDAY
- CHESTER - Chester Town- ,
ship Trustees, 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester townhall, Tuesday.
. POMEROY - The _
Oillo Eta
Pb.l Sorttlty will meet Tul!lday
at 7: 30 p.m. at_MelliS IDD.

ATHENS Southeastern
Ohio Resldents Association will
meet Tuesday at7 p.m. In Athens
Ctty Building to discuss problems artsing from area gas and
oil drilling.
POMEROY' ~ Harrisonville
Chapter 255, Order of the
Eastern Star, win hold a regular
meeting at 7:00 p.in. Tuesday
with jnltlatory work · to- be
exemplified. Members are to
take baked goods for a sale
follOWing the meet~.
MIDDLEPO~ Middleport YQ\Ith League wOl meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home of
Harold !Stewart, 260 Sycamore
Street.

RACINE - Racine lAlclge 461

F"-AM

wtll meet Tuelda)' at .
7:30 p.ni. All master masons &amp;re
Invited to attend. ·
·

POMEROY - Melia. Vocal
Muilc Boolien, 7: 30 p:m. 'l'uelday at hiP !JCbool

608 E. ~AIN
POMEROY, OHIO
. PH.992·2259 .

ton and are often called on to teach,
stJig, and hcllt on Channel 40 of
PlttslJurilb, Pa.,' and Channel 46 ol
Clarks~Jur&amp;, W. Va • . The Llvtng
W«rd Clu1sUan Center ts tbelr
home chun:h In the Charleston
area. Rtspress has recorded an album and ts worldn!J on amlher ime

who

Members of the quiz team from
Meigs High School who w1ll compete Feb. 11 tn the " Bobcat BuzzIn" at Ohfo University were
announced today by Michael J .
Fergus, the team adviser.
selected to represent Meigs High
are: Charlie Davies, son of Mr. and
MrS. Ernie D avies, 3100!1 S.R. 325,
Langsville; Bret Howard, son ci
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Howard, RR4,
Pomeroy; Shirley McDonald,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Mcilonalcl, 30315 Old Dexter Rd.,
Dexter; Carl Moodlspaugh, son of
Eva Moodlspaugh, l!Jl Park St.,
Middleport; and Vaughan Spence,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Spencer,
174 Mulberry, Pomeroy.
Participants In the Bobcat Buzz.
'
In will answer questions on an ar-

The dinner will begin at 6: .'ll p.m.
and 110 reilervatlons are needed.

RACINE - Trailer lot or building lot with approxmaley I
acre. Has a new 2 car garage, septic, well and public water.
$8,000.00.
.
TRAILER LOT - Approximatey 2-l/3 acres, of which most
are wooded. Has a septic tank. Water arid"electric are available. $5,000.00.

edition of Outstanding Young
Women d. Amertca and wUl be now
. entered In tbe state competition.
Fifty-one state winners Will be
named aild from these the 10 outstanding young women of America
wt11 be chosen wtth those 10 to be
honored at the annual awards luncheon In Washington, D .C.

'

celve a Bobqlt BuzZ-In T-shtrt.
The public Is Invited to view the
eent which w1ll be held In Nelson
Commons on the Ohfo University's
South Green beginning at 9 a.m.

•

'llo

a partn•on and qu1et tnle at11 on.
IN THE
concerfl1ng oil and gas underlyCOMMON PLEAS
•ng the follow•ng de$Cnbed real
COURT.
estate
MEIGS COUNlY. OHIO
S•tLJated 1n Lebanon TownJAMES W. SIJTlLE
ShiP.
·M etqs Countv. Oh•o. In
PlAINTIFF
Sect1 on 36 Town 2. Range 11.
VS
the north part o f NW one
WEST VIRGINIA PULP AND be•ng
quaner conftl•n• nq 78 acres
PAPER COMPANY, E1' AL
more or less
DEFENDANTS
NO. 83CV 3 and the prayer IS that the abovP
NOTICE BY
dP.scrrbed o ~l and gas rrghts be
PUBUCATION
par!itroned and trtle there to be
f a: Fiov· BUSH, H living, qureted
as agarnst all defend·

whooe - . ia uN&lt;nown;

PHONE
992-2156
Of Writ• O.illy StitH
o.,t.
~ifiH

'-

the u'*nown holn. &lt;levi-.
logo-. Mlmlniotrato&lt;o. .....
utorw
ond/ a. oalgn1 of Roy
)kiohif _
_.

, EDWARD BUSH, if living,
~

I'~

.a

-·

It was.voted to sponsor a delegate
to Buckeye Girls State In June at
the Feb. 1 meeting of XI Gamma
Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sor. ortty 'held at the Middleport Fire
Statton. ·
.
Carolyn Grueser presided at the
meeting. It was announced that the
Beta Stgma Phi convention wt11 be
held In Akron, May ~22. Carol
McCullough, social co-ch~.
announced a ''hearts and -~''
meeting to take place at llle'iiext
meeting with the gifts to be
wrapped with white paper with a
red bow. The meeting w1ll take
place at the McCullough home.
Service co-chatnnan, Maurtsha
Nelson thanked the members who
worked on the Mothers March of
,Dimes noting that It was a Dnanclal
S)lccesS.
Carolyn Collins and Debbie Finlaw gave the cultural report on bow ·
inaktng Wtth the group participatIng In a workshop.
Mrs. Nelson and Tun! Redovlan
were hostesses.

ihe -.
UNcnown
hoin, -.....
-·
.
Mlmilllolroton,

Ptin

...

Sunday guests of Mrs. Lana
Gibson, HarrtsonvDle, were Mr.
andMrs.GaryGibson,Mr.andMrs.
Gordon Gibson and family, Athens,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gibson,
Columbus, and Mrs: Don Gibson,
Maryland.

EAST MEIGS - .Eastern Local Band Boollters Tuesday; 7: 30
p.m. at high school; all parents
of band . Personnel asked to
attend.

WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Lo- .
cal Board of Education w1!l
meet In special session Wednesday at 7 p.m. to discuss the fl.
nance budget.
:

.

POMEROY· ..:.. Pomeroy
Chapter Ill Royal Arch Maaona
and Boeworth Council 46 Royal
and Select Maaters will meet
W~ay at 7:30.p.m. Temple
ASIOClatlon meetln8 following
coWIC!l.
.

RACINE -SoUp supper, Ra·
Cine Untied Methodist Church
Woniert, at the c~h Wednesday, 4 to 7 p.m:Vejletable, bean,
chill, cornbread, sandwiches
. and pie to be Mrved.

ond/ or Olllgno of Ed-

Wif'd Bulh. tf IlK IT d.

' - EDRA BUSH. H living,
whOoo - . ia uN&lt;nown;

··.,...............
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..........Gr_
,_..._
. ... . _ to•"-!
•otoolt.,t

4 1 -F., ......... IIfl6m o

NoncE-ro
MOTOR VEHICLE
DEALERS
In accordahce With Secuon

307 .86 ORC. sealed bids w111
be received

by the Metgs
Cou nty Board of Comm•ssion ers. m thetr of1ice. located 1n the
Courthouse, Pom eroy. Ohto.
unt1l 12 noon o n March 1.

1983. and opened al 2 PM on

March 1. 198 3 for the !a ll owing ve h1cle:
1983 4-door sedan. lu ll size.
su!lable tor police use:
Pol•ce Package . _
302 cu. in. engine !or larger)

V-8

Transmtsston .
Heavy Duty. Wate r cooled:
P()YIJer steenng and Power
Brakes
Ti nted Win dshteld
Air Condnioner
Heater / Defroster
Antifreeze
Vi nyl seats (h eavy duty)
Rubber floor mats
Heavy duty altern ator - · 80
am ps
Heavy duty ba ttery
Wh eel Covers
Elect riC door locks
Heavy duty suspension and
shocks
Limited ~slip differential
Gauge package (oil. temp,
amps. etc.) ·
Left hand mirror
Spo tlight
Painted white top w1th b lack

NOTICE OF
PRIVATE SALE

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

ll'!o

"""'--·

IYI

1-

,l U
.,

InJ
U -- - H-

-0.-o...0...• ~ ·

....

,.,.

IM

- Rood. Rocino,
ia 30020
'Vollayllell
Ohio
45771 , if living; tho "'*nown

"""""c;,_

l1eirs.
&lt;levi-.exec:utofs
· -· ...
miniwb•tors,
and/ or llligna of Mav · if
decuud.
" ERNEST BREWER, whooe
.., - - io 30020
·VollOy Bell Road, Recine, Ohio
45771. ~ living; tho unknown

l.,on

tJ1 ··~~··

llOO

14 00

uoo

'heirs. deviaeea. legeteeaadminiatrators. e~~tecutors

\ """'-------~----..;·-~- -----~I

and / assigns of
8"""""'. if :I&amp;
nd.

Curb Inflation lI '
Pay Cash for . I'I .
I
Classlfleds
and It.;.
•
I
_ SaveiJJ .
I·
I
t·;

Not1ce is hereby given that on

February 18. 1983 at I 0;00

AM. a p rivate sale will be held
at the offices of the Cen tral '

Trust Co.. NA ol Moddloport
OH. to sell for cash the following collateral
To Wtt:

On e 11I 1982 'HarleyDavidson MC Md. XLH I 000.
Senal No. I HD l CAH. 24 Y
20022 8
The Central Trus1 Co.. NA,
Middleport. Ohio 'reserves the
right to b1d at th1s sale.

,IILANCHE WINTERS,
is

H

un-

kf¥&gt;wn; tho unknown ........
- · logotoos; Mlministnotoro. exacuton ond/ 0&lt; ~
of; Blanche Winters. if
datnnd .
~RL WINTERS, if living,
whose - . . . io uN&lt;nown;

th9
uni&lt;nOWn
heirs. -exec·
logo-.
Mlminiotroton.
utl&gt;fs. and/ or

aaigns

Wtnters. ifdecened.

of

Ea~

EVERETI MOSIER, ~ liv~ in6,. whoM add,.. is unknown. lhe un1cnown heirs.
· legateos,
1011.-execulut'l
ondadminillro·
oO.igns of

E - Moaio&lt;, ij doo

Nam•--~----------------

1a1 6. 7. 8. 3tc

Ernest

living, whooe -

Write your own ad and order by mall' with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone When you get
results . Money not refundable.

W. H. BERDINE.

d.

if living,

whose ll&lt;ldND io u'*nown.
1114 UNcnown heino, - ·

legil-. adminillnltoro. exocuttta and aaigns of W . H.
Beldine. if M
1.
.
JENNIE BERDINE, if living
wtibee addreu ia unknown;
'the unknown heirs. de\1 ' 11 r s,

~--• .tminiltretors. exeeuton-ond / or aaigna of Jennie

Bertin&amp;, if dec I I I 31.
Y'Du are hereby notd1f'd that
vou have been named delend .:~n t S ,., J leqal act•on entttled
James W Sullie. pla•n ll ff vs .
We t Vrrq1n 1a 'Pulp and Paper
CompanY. et al. d!'!lendants
T hr~ ac t•on has been ass1gnP.d

LAFF·A·DAY

CLJse No 83 CV 3 and •S
pend•ng rn the Common Pleas
CoVrt or Me~gs Co unty. Pome ·

These cash rates

bottom (at bell line)

Th e from of t he enVelope
containi ng the bid must be
marked "Sealed Bid. Police
Vehicle." Bidder to fu m ish their
ow n bKI form . . Th e Board of
County Com m iSstoners may
accept the lowest bid. or select
the best bid for the inten ded
purpose and reserve the right
to reject any o r al l b•ds and /or
any part th e r~of . •

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

.IlK741 ..... "~~

U,.1•"" ....
...

IOoll ..lt

4~FDf lMM

'

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

. .-, _s.. -._,.._,

4 7 . . . . .. . . ......

Public Notice

-.c. .vw
...._C..lCM

••1 c-•
U.••••-•
0.......,_....,
U. • 1 • -·
, ..... ..., ...... _

, ~- · "'•11•"'

Public Notice

A_C .... I U

"' -

4 ) F.,.... IO&lt; ..... I

. .. f...,._

-..c-....,

, ., eto..lw•

lS-Lou • Act....

4 H ·-

1·,,,-·.-··--...·

,_....,

,,·~­
. ._.........
. ........_

heirs, deviaaas,

!lush. if _
_.
. MAY BREWER. whole last

fr•"""''"" /o ·l•·1•ll •m•· ,. n ·ll tm !~!' ' ' ..

r~ -••wo

UI . . N)Wrt

~-. odministralofo. OXOC•
. utoro, and / or aaigns of Edro

t,'J..,.•r'Jio·r/ II!WJU".• o·u n•,. llrr •

......

n .r.-.-....,

.

.... _ ,,

] J . ................ , . . . .

3)., .. _

)'1 .-

l l -CI . 1Y Ill . . . I . , . _ .

1-M-,Aa
1 -l ........ , _....

....,_

the

.,....,_ ~

2)-l'n&gt;..._... .........

A u toma 11 c

Personals

....... ia unknown;

row Oh•o 45 769

inc lude discount

t\?~_Jl~l;

---

!.
2.

3.

MARY H08STETIER.
4.
CLERK " Foreign aid.
,5.
Ia
wben
the
DOO•
in.ll
MEIGS COUNTY
~COMMISSIONERS a rich country llllpPOrt
ina poor~try,"
1217, 14, 2tc
7.

'·

~.....:..,,__

_ __

13. - - - - -·
1• .

15. - - ' - - - - 16, ' - - - - - - -

s-

1'he
of Ohio.
Moigo County
Common PIMa Court
Probi'le DMiion

c- No. 23971

NOTICE OF
HEARING AND
EXAMINATION
In the M.- of the Adoption
of lnlont Doe

.To John Young, addrooa
u.._nown:
You are hereby notlfted that
on the 20th day of Dece mber.
1982. John Doe. Pettt•oner.
res1d1ng m Me1gs County. Oh10
and Jane Doe. Pe t1t1oner. resld tng in Meigs County. Oh1o. l 1Jed
tn th1s Coun a oet1t1on for IP.avA
to adopt Infant Doe. a ne!Nborn
child. and for a ·change of the
surname of sa•d mtnor Child to
the Pet1t1oners· surname. _An
amended Petition t o~ Ad optton
was filed by the P etl tt oner~ on
January 20. 1983. to r leave to
adopt Infant Doe. an d lor a
cha nge o f the surname of satd
m1nor chi ld to the PelttiOf'lers·
surname,
The amended Petition for
Adoplton alleged that you are.
the fa ther of s~1d m inor ch•ld.
and alleged further that you
abandoned the mother of sa1d
mtnor cht ld dunng ·her pregnancy and up to the time of said
mtnor c hild 's placement m the

30.

KAY'S

We can rapair and
niCOf8 radietors and
heater cores. W'e can
alao acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also

BEAUTY SALON

PAT HILL FORD

NOW THRU MARCH 5th

rapair Ges Tanks.

992·2196

169 N. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Middleort. Ohio
1·13-llc

992-2725 1-26·1 mo.

Public Notice .

24. 31 121 7. 3tc

COURT.

MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
JAMES W. SUTTl£
PlAINTIFF

~

w.

Public Notice

whooe -

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MBGS COUNlY, OHIO
PATRICK E. McDOLE, ET AL
Plointlff8,

U.S. Rt. SO East
Guysville, Ohio

Authorized John Deere, ·
New Holl~nd, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

~ENNIE BERDINE. ~ Wing,
whooe oddrou il LWlki10Wft: tho

ouigns
doceeood

54 Misc. Merchandise·

r--------11

WE ALSO WORK ON •
All OTHER APPLIANCES

~

--

POMEROY
lANDMARK

61~992-2181

Barns.

of

J.....,

AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route 1
Bottom, OH. 411743
9811-4193 or 992-3067

Long

,...,.., ....,..,_ ondt o r - .
ot Flem Long. ~ . - -

NONA LONG." living , whooo
-ilunk-.thtunlcnown
"""'· ..,... - - - -

,...,.._ .,.....,_ ond/ o r - .

otNon.alllng. ~""

ooc1

. You MA her(·h~· not111cd lhtll vo~1
havP. hN~r.1 nnmerl rJP.fP. ndnr11s u1 a

YOUNG'S
- Roofing ttnd gutl8f work
- Concnne work

"Beautiful, Custom

Built Garages~&lt;

Call

for

free

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addoni ond rainodollng

siding
or

949· 2860.

No Sundav Calls

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

i

- Plumbing ond
electricol wollt
!Free

I :
I '
J""i
I l
I :

·!

BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
618 E. llain, Pomeroy, OH.

Sizes start from 12'xt6'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'16' Up
to 24'x36'.

PH. 992-3795
We Do Booltllaepin&amp; For
Small, Lalli and Corporate
BusiiiHSI$ &amp; Partnerships
MARY C. KEBLER-OWNER
1-27-2 mo.

V.C. YOUNG Ill

:

I
-------- I
_ .. - - - - I
- .- - ·-· - --I
I

:
'

• 12'x15.7'
~OPPER GLINT

~

.;:$210

'
•

I ~

--' HUNDREDS

1 :
1 :
I :o

;

I' :

TO

.

'

RUTLAND FURNITURE .

7142-2211

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Rt 3. Box ~4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
10-6-tlc

JUnl.lOfV 6. 1983

'

.

SMALL brad puppv . port.'
Dach a h und . hoUse dog , •

11 waeko old, 304-876 6060.

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

6

Also Transmission '·
PH. 992-5682
or 992· 7121
'
3·24-ttc '

.'

Lost and Found

-LOST yellow malo cot. '
Milling in tho Neighbor- ,
Cell 448· 782B or 446- .
6686 ..

8

MANLEY'S

WVe State Champ ion Aucti~
oneer Rick Pearaon . Ettetee, :
antiques. farm , houaeholda . .
licenaed Ohio-WVa. 304- ·_

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Weekly trash pickups in
Middleport, Bradbury,
and -leading Creek Area .
"You Call, We'll Haul."

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
-center. Truckloads of new·'

PH. 992-3194 or

used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Aaynokta .

992-3305
.No Sunday Calls
1-5- 1 m().

merchandiae every week . •~
Consigmants of new and

Auctioneer. 276-3089.

CARPENTER
FOR
RENT
YOU NAME THE PRICE
YOU MIGHT G£T LUCKY

PH. 742-2328
· J.JI-1 roo.

I

\

AUCTION ovary Sot ~ rdoy
night, Mt. Aha. WV. II p.m.
Consignments welcome .
Emma Bell auctioneer.

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old ··
furniture and AnUquet of all :

kinds, call Kenneth Swain, .

446-3169 or 266-1967 in '

the evenings.

------------------'
·
Buying
Silver.
Gold,

Pa.ti~ . r

num. Gold end Silver pri::ea ~
are the highest in two y8ere,
check our prk:as on gold &amp; ',
silver, acrap jewelry. Buying
Old co ina, s crap rings&amp;;
silverware . Dally quote&amp; ..
available . Alto coins&amp;. coin ·
supplies for nle . Spring ''

Volley Trading Co .. Spring ·"
+
t
--tVollov
Ploze, 446-8025 or •··
,.
446-8026.

New Homes -

RACINE
fiRE. DEPT.

exlens ive

rtmlelinl
oEioctric wort
&lt;Cuslom Pole Bldas.

Bashan Bul'ldi· ng

EVERY
SAl. NIGH:r
6:30 P.M.

&amp;Gat1&amp;1S

oAooliflc Work

ollumillllm &amp; Vinyl S~inp
-15 Y•rs Experience
GREG ROUSH
Pit. 992-7~83
Dr

w

GUN SHOOT

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Facto~hoke

992·221!'2

11·11 -Nc

12

ns Only,

Gautll! s

CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•UMESTONE
• WATE R, GA S on d
SEWER UNES
.
•PONDS. RECLAMAnoN WORK
eLAND CLEARING. CONCRETE WORK
IIOfjDm &amp; WORK GUARANTEED
PHONE JAMES CLIFFORD

992·7201 .2-3-froo.

l-3-1 mo.

r-~-------------t------------+---------1
GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.

COMPLETE

"CUT OUT

UTU

RADIATOR
SERVICE"
tlit
Smallest
Heater
cFrom
the
La-'
Ofe to
·•-· RadialOf.
RadiatorSpecillist

Industrial, Commercial,
-Rnidmtial, Interior and
Exterior.

FOR F

Sandblasting
rill I
Wale ast ng
Parkin, Lot Stripping

REUSE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
~

NATHAN BIGGS

Paint_ing

985 _3561
All Makes

35 Yrs. Experience

SMITH unsoN
MOT()RS. INC.

Housing &amp; Urban Development Section 8
program. All utilities included.

Phone

882 ~ 31 i1

.N.e w Haven . WV ·

SWEEPE-R end sewing
m~~chlne

repair, parta. end
auppllea . Pick up lr'!d
delivery , Davis VacUum
Cl••ner. one, half ml(e_up

Clerk of Couns
Me1g's County
Common Pleas Court
(1) 16. 17 . 2.11 . 31 121 7. 14. Btc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
PRIVATE SALE

Netic~ is herebY gi'len that on
February 18. 1983 at 10:00

A.M.

a private sa le wi ll be held

' at the ·off ices of The Central

Old atonewere jars, juga ,' ·
crocks &amp; milk pitchers, also
old wicher baskets . Call - ~

614-367-0138.

Buy raw fur ond beef hideo. •
George Buckley, 614 -684: ·
4761. Weekday a 6 to 9.
woekendo
noon to 9PM.
deer hldOI 12
lnd glnaang ond .
trapping oupplloo. Rt. 2; ·
Athena .. Oh. loll doy to buy .,
Feb.12.
,
Tobacco poundage . Cell '~

614-266-1146.

·.

BEDS -IRON . B(JASS , old
furniture, gold, silve i
doll oro, wood ice bo•ea·
' ..,· ··
atone jora, antlque o, etc
Complete hou oeholds • .

Write; M.D. Miller,
Pomeroy,

7780.

At.

4. :

Oh , Or 992·

-Gold
-.-silver
- -. •ta
-- '
r ling , •
jewelry, rings, old coin• &amp;
currency. Ed B..-kett Barber

Shop. Middleport. 99 23476.

Wanted to buy. Good used '
10 or 12 in c h t e blesaw .
614· 992 · 3110.

Ea r n extra money an~
re c eiv e free household
products everyone Ut e a

Gun ahoot, Racine Oun
Club. E.-y Sunday stening

1 p.m. Factory choked guns

tha.twlllteechyoueveluable

One I 11 197 6 Oldsmobile

college or Vq-Tec educa - '
tlo n1 Ther.e ' s only one
eroundl
echOol sen tors
or
· you may even

1

!

Cutlass·. 2

jjN(ijOj'lii£Aii::e;Uiii
QI.NOEft
Art

:

lob skill. plua help with o

Trust Co.. N.A of Middleport only.
OH. ·1o soli for cash lhe loll ow- ·
in g collateral.
To wit :

r

doily·. su·pply 3 - 6. Call
446 -1988.
Gaorgea Creek Rd . Ci ll I - - - - - - - - - 44$-0294..
LOOKING f!&gt;r o pan limo job
•100 down . reeerves con- that he• good pay , l ife ~
inaurance , retirement pllfn , · i
domlnl~m . Depoalt Ia 100%
.Tarraca. Call 441· 1128.

Public Notice

446-0069

~

refund•ble. Chooae now .

Public -Notic·e

We pay cash for late model ,
.,

clean uMd cera.
. Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene John son

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

s .. John Eckor, Rlvtll'aldo

nm-

larry E SPf!nCP.r

.,

I'•

~be

SEVEN pupa, mixed brood, •
should bo am o ll doga .
304-6711-744 t .

1

demd , aga.nst YOIJ tor the rel1el
de".'Janded 1n the Compla1nt
I

•

.'

1udgmanr by de1atJII w•H

Center ..

Pomeroy, Ohio

rvers •

You &lt;l i P. reQUired to .1nswP-r lhe
Compta1nt w1tH1n twentY·I!•ght days
altP.r tha last pubhcat1on ol th1s
nOtiCe WhiCh Will hF. Plih hShl"d once
each week for S1,. conSf!c.ut•ve
weeks The lost pubhca t1on w1ll be ·
madP. on FP.bruary 24 ,1 1983, and
the twenty €11ght days'for answer w1t1
'commence on that da te.
In casP. of your fa•lure toonswar or
otherw1Sfl respona as reqwed ov
rhe Oh•o Rul9s of CN•I Procedu re.

Leng a vllle ~ Salem

ar•• ·

773 -6786 or 304 -773- ·
91B6.

51. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, Ol't

mme1a1s

':AMBER RUST

old blo ck &amp; ton ·•
Collie. Good w ~h children.

TRASH SERVICE

Roger Hysell
,. GARAGE
AUTO &amp; TRUCK ""
REPAIR .

Insulated Dog-Houses

d~sc11bed oil anl1 qas •nrerP.stS be
parnt• oned. 1ha1 the 1n1erests· hr:
df.IP.rm(ned, thotthA 10\6/P.SIShr. Sr. l
otf or t;&gt;rdP.rP.d sold '' rt cannot be
part 1110n eCl. 1o' an attowance of
ano,My f&amp;s and costs heffttn. and
to Qu•et IItie 10 sa1d mal estalr. and

12'x19'

Elltimaloll

992-6216 or 992·7314

TRI-COUNTY

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

ond the pr&lt;~ve• .rs that thA abov9'

BUCKSKIN

a· month

hood Rd. vincintty . Reward . ;

ncl,on P.ni1I IP.rl JilmP.~ W
Sun le. oLoono•l! " w H B"'"'""· el
dl.dP.1erri:tarr1~ Thrs actronhas heP.n
.....
ilS~rflnPd Cusf! NO '83 cv 2 an;t 1s
Spray Painting
•Wuhen •Dish·
p4•nrlrnq rn thfl Comnlon PIP.ns
Texture Coatings
wuhen •Rangel
I Cuu" nl Moools Cnuno,. Ohoo
FULLY INSURED
Pomefoy, Oh.
..;RelrigeFnotorw
n-,. . obtflc:t o! thf'! comt~\.11nl 1s a .
EE ST •T
Ph. 992·2174
reezers
PMlllt(lfl "' 1,011 cnnr.e rrMfl o1t and
FR E II" ES
· 2·26-tic
PARTS and SERV1il5-Hc
11&lt;ls unric11ymq thP. 1o1towu1(] 111'!&lt;;
CAU. 614-949-2616
Cflt)(!lt IP.al PStaiP.
S1h,,ll•1 l 1n ~*'bant1n tny..T1Shln. t----------+----,..-------11----------~
M r1~S County Oh10 d~ lSC. IIIni il5
tallows OnP. tourth ot th•: 011 ond
qns unrtP.r 65 acrns Sll1111tr.d 1n
'
'.
.. - '
SP-~ : t1on 26. l own 3 .. R&lt;lnnr. 13
1ormf!rly kn own as thP. HP.nry 011rs
farm all n1 the so uth half of lhe
sou the&lt;Js t ' qu&lt;~nAr ol Snci~Cln 266
3 Announcements
Now renting 25 one bedroom apartmem
eJtcflPI 15 ;l(~ rmi ns l'lesr:r•bori rn
units, renting ·for 30 percent of your ad Volume 86 Pil[1fl372 Mfllq s County
Deet1Rec.nrrls. ~'~
,
justed income under the Department of
IF!(lJI

for info_ After 6 p.m .

--~----- -

9

Benline. If

FLEM ilLONG,
K IIYing.
whooo
lddrau
ur*nown;
the unMnown
heiN, deviNe~, legltMI.IIdmN-

.

Had ell shotl . No phone .
Contect - Kimmy Pierce of · 1

'CHARLES SAYRE

3·11 -lfc

"..._
'*"·- -~ldministnt001, •&gt;Uicuton and/ or

CHARLES T. TAYLOR, ET AL
Oefendonta.
No. 17,866
- I\IOTICE BY

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
estimates, 949·28-1

Farm Equipment .
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·1fc

- .logll-.

un1cnown
ldmi,._.,._ oxecuton and/ or
ouigna of w. H. Henline. ~
docee!M!d

Yl .

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp;HOTPOINT ,

'*"·

il unknown; the

~

6 ..

Patios
New Construction - Remodelinc - Custom Pole

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum ..
SIDING

SALES &amp;SERVICE

"o:::~ri~T~ AL

NO. 83CV 2
NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION
To: w. H. BERDINE. ~ tMno.

.

1

614-367-0266.
·
·.
.
.
Port Lob . pu pp y to g lve
owey. 4 moo. old. To goorl -'
home. Col 446-7137 after ·•

female . 4 montho old ;
304-468-1890.

BOGGS

PROBATE COURT OF
LARRY E. Sfl;NCER
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Clerk ol Coun.
ESTATE OF WILBUr!
Me•gs Countv. Oh10
WARNER, DECEASED
11. 3. 10.17. 24.3 11 2)7.61c
Ciao No. 23988
NOTICE OF
Pu bile Notice
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDICUARY
On January 19. 1983. IP the
IN THE
Me•gs County Probate Court,
COMMON PLEAS

Case No. 23968. Joseph •ne
Osborr)e. Box 29. Long Bc•ttorn,
Oh10 46769 , was app) ~ nt ed
Adm•n tstra1m&lt; of the estate of
W1lbur Warner. deceased. late
of long Bottom. Oh10
Robert f.; Buck
Probate Judg e·clerk

1 molo puppv 4.mo. old,port .'
Huskie. g o od h ome . Celt

Male puppy, mixed bread. :

be mad e on February 7. 1983
an d the t \NElnty-eight (28) dayS
tor answer will com mence on
that date.
In case at your fa1lure 1o
answe r or otherw •se r espond
as f OCJUired by the Oh10 Rules of
Ctvtl Procedure. Judgment by
detault w •ll be rendered aga•ns t
'
tor the rel•ef demafl9ed •n
Compla•nt

A.D.. 1983.

11) 24. 31(2)7. 14. 21 .28.

12'xU'

I· :

......-·~-·-·-·--·-··-----------~-

SERVICE

Sl700 .

Deed Records.
The demand of the Complaint ts th at the t1tle to the
above descnbed rea l estate be
qu1eted 1n the names of the
Pla1nt1ffs. Patr1ck E. M c Dole and
Emer3Jn McDole.
Ypu are req Uired to answer
the Complatnt wi1 h1 n twenty -

By: Janet D. Morn s
Ch1ef Deputy Clerk

$75

t·~

~om troy, Oh. U769

DISCONTINUED
PERM. STOCK

REFERENCE DEEO: Vol.

Robert E. Buck
Judge

CANDY STRIPPED
RUBBER BACK

$500

Mali T!lil Coupon with Remittance
Tht Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.

SALE

129. page 516. Me•gs County

seal of sa1d Court th1s 20th day

.r

+ - -- - - - - -- - --+- - - - - - - - - -+Small hou1e dog. 8 weeki
old, ternele to 1 good home · ·
with no amell children. Hal
been wo r med , and had
lnitlol shall. Coli 949-2866
RADIATOR
in&amp; ~

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
'
e•ght 128) days aher !he last . installation.
Residential
45769. on the 1st day ol April. · publ1caton of t hiS notice wh tch 1
will be published once each .
&amp; commercial
I 983 at Ten a· clock AM .
WITNESS my s~gnatu r e and 1Neek fo r si&gt;&lt; (6) con secutiVe
Ca II 742·31
-weeks. The last publicatiOn wtll

(I)

Onlv ' 31.95

RIVER BEND APARTMENTS
HOUSING FGil THE ELDERLY

1- :

26. -------'--'-27. - - - - - 28. -~--,---29.

3S. •

NOTICE OF
HEARING ON
PETITION FOR
ADOPTION
Ohio Rovlood Codo
No. 3107.04

rI ::.

22 .
23.

31.
32.
33.
-, 34.

Public Notice

I l-

25.

10. - - - - - , - -

11110. 17. 24. 311217. 14.6Jc

• Sco!1ie Smith
AI male• and modelo
Am.nne 11!11111atian
Hou• colla end shop
aOIVic&amp;avolleblo
1·5-J -

PH. 992· 2478
l ·t2·3 mo.

Deed Records.
The following described real
estate situated in the County of
M'etgs. township of Lebanon
and State of Ohto. to -wit:
Being a part of SeC!io n 27 ..
Town 3. Range 11 . Ohio
Company's Purchase. bou nded
as fol lows:
Beg• nn•ng in the West line Of
sou1hwes t S.W. German's lot in
the center of Long Run: thence
west alo ng sa •d S. W. German's
west line 37 rods and ten links
to a stake 'at the s6 ut t'least
corner of Mrs. Jones' k&gt;t:
thence south along si d e line of
M rs. Jones' · land 86 rod s 10 a
post: then ce east thirty seven
rods and ten l1n ks to a post:
thence nort h 86 rods to th e
place of begmning co nta1n1ng
t\o\'8ntv acres.

home of the Pet1110ners.
You are hereby 1unher n ot i ~
lied that you may file an
ObJection to the adopti on Wit h
the Metgs County Probate
Court w.thtn th•rty dayS of the
ftlln g o f the Pet•t•on for AdOp tion of sa1d m 1nor chi ld.
The heanng on the Pettt•en
lor Adopt•on. and the examinatiOn. under oath. of all the
part•eS m •nterest who may be
present and to whom lawful
nouce has been g1ven . wi ll be
had before satd Court at the
Me1gs Cbunty Probate Court.
Courthouse. Ppmeroy, Oh tO

~ ~ J a n uary.

OPEN 9 11&gt;- ~ liON. thru SAl
A~ TyPes of Auto Repair.
~- Tune-Ups, elc. .
spr;ci4L
.
TRANSMtSStON FILTER
ANO FLUID CHANGE

\Miiarq;

REFERENCE DEEO. Vol
12.2. Page 476. Me•gs County

Public Notice

L;

U.

1! . _ _ _ _ __

FPbruary 14·:-1983 lind the
twentv-e•gh t days for answer
w~ll comme nce on thi1t da te
In case o f your fa •lure 10
answer o r otherwtse respond
as reqwred by the Oh~o Ru lesol
C1v1l Proce"du1e . JUdgment will
be rendered aga•nst you l or the
re l•ef rlernanded 1n the
Compla•nt
Lar ry E Spencer
ClfHk of Court s
MeiQS Coun ty
Common Pleas Court

I •

21 .

. 8.

12.

17.
18.
19,
20.

---,---'---•

puhhC.111011 will be made on

Oewayne

- Sewer
- Gas lints
- Septic Systems
LARGE or SIIALL JOBS

Company's Pu rchase and des~
cribed as follovvs: Beginning at
th e South East corner of lands
formerly owned by E. H. Slater's
land. thence West INith South
hne of said land ten rods ,
th ence North to the line of
Davtd ,Jones b t. thMce East ten
rods to th e corne r of said E. H.
Sloter and David Jones· land
ten rods . 1hen t e South w rth th e
David Jones Ime to th e pl ace o f
beginning to co ntai n Two (2)
acres of lafld. bet he sarn e more
or tess,

Housing
Headquarters

I
I·
I ,
I :

&lt;· JWanted

&lt; JForSale
&lt; )Announcement
&lt; I For Rent

lJ1e oblf!Ct ol !he cornpla•nt •s

ants. that the 111ter~st be
determ•ned and set all or
ordered sold •' tt canno t be
palt•!lbned. for an allowance ol
~m o rnev fees here1n and costs
'YOu are reowred to answer
the compla•nt wtthm tw~nty
e•Oht davs alter the las t publi caliOn ol th• s not1ce wh• c h wtll be
publ•shec! once each week lor
s1x consecut•ve weeks Th.e last1

- Water

Being in Range 11 1). Town
131. Seclion (27) of lhe Ohio

Pupp lea p•rt Doberm an. ·:

Cell 448 -3797.

Chestw, Ohio
111. 985-4269 or985-t382

described real esta~e. t o~w1t
.. The followi ng de$cribeq real 1-- -- - - - - -estate Situated in Lebano n
Township, in the county o t
-~e ig_~. a_
n d State of Oh•o. to-Wit .

VIEW OF RT. 7- Enjoy the
· traffic from your living room .
Just off Rt 7 at Bradbury. 5
rooms, bath, cellar and gar·
den spaces. 3 acres. Will
take $15,000.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Ill C.• rt SL - . . ,. Ollio 4SIU

~....l.___.

....

NEAR POMEROY- Sunken foyer, upstairs balcony, sewing
room, front &amp; rear porch, &amp; a two car garage makes this 3
year old home with 3 bedrooms, diling area, and large living
room a nice place to live. Approx imately 20 acres, mostly
wooded . $52,000.00.

- Lo~ Boy
- Trencher

You are hereby-not lied Ihat a
Complain1 to Quiet Title has
been til~ on !he Common Pleas
Court of Meigs County. Ohio.
Case No. 17.865 demanding
quoet tille ol the !allowing

.

SERVICE

- Dump rucks

are unknown:

INVEST - Here is 2 houses
that need a handyman. All
utilities, bath in each, base·
ments, garages and level
lots. Only $21,000.

Bates, Shephard wed

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

and assigns. wt&gt;ose addresses

.S&amp;W TV

T

unknown

tees, executors. admi(listrators.

WISE PEOPLE ARE NOW
BUYING AT A BUYERS
IIARKET. FOR YOURS CALL
992-3876. BRUCE, HELEN
OR VIRGIL.

Hospitalized

..... '?"'"''

petil&amp; la!J! rooms. Bricck 3
be(hooms 1n euchoo2 ~ 0rjy
$28,500.

their

spouses. heirs. dwis..,s. lega-

RACINE RURAL - In the
country on good gravel road.
Bus &amp; mail Rts. near. Has a
two bedroom, II! bath
home, full basement, central
heat and lot 223 ft. long.
Asking $23,000 .

.

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.. GRI ............................ 992-6191
Jean Trunell ............................................... 949-2660
DoHie Turner .................................. ....... ...... 992-5692
Offiet ........................................................,992-2259

deceased.

WOODED 3 ACRES - live
in the country, have T.P. water, natural gas, and enjoy
the fresh air and privacy for
· just $500.00 dQwn at 12%
tor 5 yrs. monthly. $88.98,
selling tor $1,500.

,RUTLAND - Sits on a rolling bank and has a nice front sit·
.ling porch. 3 bedrooms, large utility room, 2 baths, set up for
a woodburn er, garage, and storae bu ilding. $28,500.00.

senrtces

DUPLEX - in l-llPf!l Millieport on Rl 7 kxlll Lds cl remo-

deli"e. lai]J! island ldlct1en. car-

ll tNERSVILLE- Approximately 41! acres with an older 4
· roon\ house and an old traier. $5,400.00.

· Karen and David ~tes are announcing the recen~ marriage of
their IJ\()ther, Mary Bates, to WtlUam Shepl!ard. The weddlllg took
McConnelsvWe.
place In Fl!mbroke, Va. The SbeA tournament for the eight high ··
phards are residing on $mlth Road, .
schools wtth the smallest enrol·
Pomeroy.
lments will be Conducted concurrently with a tournament flr the
larger schools. Trophies · wt11 be
Mrs. Dale Nicholson ts a surgical
awarded to the first and second
patient
at Orlando Geoeral Hospl·
pjace teams In each tournament.
All of the students lll!d advtaers par- tal, '7824 Lake Underhill Road, Orlando, Fla. 321m.
ticipating In the program wtll re-

0t.Jf'W~ .;o&lt;O.

Phone
1-(614)-992·3325

.

PRICE REDUCED - POIIEIOY - .Two stroy frame home
·with 4 bedrooms, large living room and a fireplce. Forced air
g~s heat. Now $20,000.00.

now.

The Daily Sentinel

•

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

216 E . 2nd 5!.

'

~Bobcat _ Buzz-Iri'

ray ol subJects tn a fast-paced
contest designed to test Imowledge
and rapid recall abWty.
The Meigs team wt11 compete
against seven Class AM schools
from southeastern Ohio In this one
day, &lt;louble elimination event. The
competing schools InClude: Shertdan of 'Thomvtne; Logan, Jackson,
Cambrtclse, P~th. Logalt
Elm of Circleville and Morgan of

The Daily Sent inei- Page-7 :

PUBLICATION TO ; ChaneslTaylor.George t-~----~~--"T---------...,~---------, ANY PERSON who hu
_Cottle. Cora CoJtle. Charl es A.
anything t o give a wa y end .
Baker. B. A, Lawrence. An~rew
AUTOMATIC
dou not oft.r or attompt to ,
J. Pullins. Luc tnda Pullins. John
off• any o1h..- thing for n li
Pullins. Gilmore D Lawrence.
AND
TJlANSMISSION CO.
may pla ca on ad In t h la
De lilah RV. La.rkiLns. Ben LawdAPPLIANCE
m· .illft
,...,, Otl.
column. There w i ll be no
ren ee. oscoe awrence. a .
- Dozers
Charge t o the edverti•r. •
dr~ses unknoWn if livmg. and if
- Backhoes
.~•

VIRGIL 8 . SR .

NEW USTING - CHESTER AREA - Approximatey 100
Acre farm with an older II! story frame house, With 8 rooms,
4 bed rooms, and bath. Old ba1n, shed, and garden space.
Needs SOI!Ill work. $29,900.00.

XiGamma~u

Calendar
. MONDAY

Saltsman, Middleport.
The Outstanding Young Women
of America Program ts designed to
homr -and encourage exceptional
young women between the ages of .
21 and 36
have dlstbJgulshed
themselves In their ~. their
professionS and their comlllunlttes. .
The four will .be listed In the 1982

Quiz team competes in

Childs.

Psabn 96.
Fannie Alshlre Presented a study

DAR

Four Meigs Counttana have been
named to the 1982 Outstanding
Young Wom en ol America
Program.
'They are Darla Jean Kelly, Mul·
berry Heights, Pomeroy; Shlrtey
Anne Carpenter, Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy; Rebecca Jean Teaford,
Route 3, Pomeroy, and Mitzi Lou

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Public Notice

Residents named outstanding women

two

Alumni·Association

Daniel and Cerecla Rlsprels of .
Charlettlln, W. Va., wiU be speak·
ers at lhe:nwraday nJcbt meeting
of tile Pomeroy Chapter ol
Women's Aglow Fellowship to be
held at Dutl's In GaWpolls.
Ji'Ull·tlme I!YIIJI&amp;ellst!l, they have
a dally five minute radiO program,
publish the Good News paper, mln·
tster In many prisons, seminars,
churches and a mtsslon In Olarles·

The service supporta equaBly and Justice for .a ll.
Christiana, as a community of lovIng people, are tnvtted to deepen
their trust, respect and love for all

n

Monday, FebNCII'f 7, 1983

I

doo r. Seri al No.

3J5?R6M4611 78

The Central Trust Co .. NA.
MiddlepOrt, Ohio reserves the
right to bid et this sale .

1216. 7. B. Jlc

The Ore.t Bend Hunt Club
oprlng fox hound bench and
flatd tr181, Al&gt;rl 11-17. Call
143 -207&amp; for more informallon;

COMPANION to llvo in ,
preferably single femolo, to
ohore expenna. 304-876_______________
.7688
after 6. '

•I
_J

�Page-8 The
. 11

Daily Sentinel

Help Wanted

· A re you seri o us a bou t
w ork ing? Give us a t ry - Tri ~
Cham Craft Oemonstra".1 o n 1 ·. N o I a y o f f s .
i nte r v ie w i ng In t he area .
. Fe b ..1 1 , 12 . Write Tri· Chem.
· P .O. Bo• 2266 , Columb us
Oh 4 3 216 or call Eco no

Pomeroy-

They'll Do It Every Time
JIINIOI?'s

44

Middleport,

Apartment
for Rent

~r

Cdi?P ....

2 bdr. Rag.,cy Inc. Apart·
mant a *200 per mo. or If
Income Ia 11 0 ,000 or lou
HUD ovolloble. A-Ono Rul
Estates , Carol Yeager ,
Realtor. Coli 304· 676&amp;104 or 676 - 6 3 86 or
676 -7786.

' T r a v el 446 - 7 0 71 aft e r
· 11 :OOAM t ho 1 It h. ask lor
' Tri· Chom.

2 bdr. unfurnished apt . in
Crown City. Call 6i4-256·
8520.·
Furnlahed apt. 1 bdr., 920
4th Ava.Goll i pollo. Adulto,
water l!o electric pd. $200
mo. Coli 446-4416 after
7PM.

61

Ohio

A1onckly,

Hou~ehold Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, otto•
ma", 3 tablee, (extra he•vY
by Frontlar). *886 . Sofa .
choir and lovao .. t , U71i .
Sof11 and chain: priced from
*286 . to eB96. Tablet, *45
and up . to t12.6. Hide·• ·
bed a, 1440. and up to
$625 .• Recliners, 117&amp; . to
f350 ., Lompa from 128. to
.,6 . &amp; po. dlnettea from
$99 ., to *436. 7 pc., $189 .
end up. Wood table with six
cholro f426. to e746. Deok
t1 10 up to ·12~ 6" Hutch eo,
$650 ~ and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses. ·~60. and
up to 1395 . Bilby l&gt;.edo.
e110 . Mattresaes or box
springs, lull'or twin, $68 .,
tlrm.
,snd *78 . Queen
leu, e195 . 4 dr. cheota ,
$42 . 6 dr. cheata, $64. Bed
frames , azo. and 126., 10
gun • Gun coblneta, $350. ,
dinette chairs $20. and $26 .
Gas or electric ranges, $326
up to $375 . Baby rna·
ueues, 126 &amp; $36, bed
!romee *20. U6. l!o $30.

Febtuary 7, 1983
Monday, fabNory 7, 1~3

,.
'N ' CARLYLE "'

by Larry Wrlghl

72

TNcka to~ Sale

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Subour PU 11 , 800, 78
Codgo •3.000 only 38,000
mi . Call 448-7322, B &amp; D
Motors.

2/7/83

0

CIIID ~ M:A , Irlc .,

TMRerg . U.I . P&amp;I. a

r~~::;:;~~~::;::~::r--------!"""1
64 Misc. Merchandise -::-:::---:-:---:----:---Livestock
63
For sawe lump coal &amp;
firewood . Zinn Coal Co .,
Inc. Call448·1408 .
Sloba cut-up 816 full length
*1 0 PU load, round wood,
large truck load . Call
81 4-24&amp;-6804 .

Someone to do babysitting

Firewood, e36. truck load.
$65 . a cord. Split end
delivered . 61 4-843·3603.

HAVE FUN paying your
Holiday bills. Sell Avon end

36

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Apt. for rant . Half double-2
bd .room Apt. Adults preferred . No pets. 614-992·
2749 .

Firewood delivered $60 . a
cord . Coal delivered $46 .
ton . Call Tom Hoskins
614-949·2160 or 614 ·
742-2B34.

&amp; 4

Rag . Red Angua breeding
otock for oale. Call 606·
928·4076.
- - - - -- - - - l c Aagi•t•red Quarter Horse .
Ruth Reaves . Also grade.
Saddloa. brldlot. wlntor
horae blanketa. w.. atern
boots. 614-898· 3290.

Cough
(!) Future Spon
Ill Carol Bumett
Cll •Ill
GJ Newo
CZl Newve/Sporu/Weather•
Cll (fi) 3·2·1 ' eo-ct
(II Eyewlmeao N-•
·Ill W!lftder Woman
6 :30 II (1) C!J NBC Nawa
(]) MOVIE: 'City Withou1
Men'
(!) P!Hly' s Peopla In

=

W . O.

Hay

&amp;

Boats and
Motors .for Sale

1978 18' Baje . 197B 110
H P Morcury Motor.. 197B
Tenneaaee tr•iltr . Aaaume
loon. coM onytlmtl 304· 6753137 .
Auto Parts

UHd snow tirea 14 l 115 ln.,

~WHEN 'lOUR FOOT OOT GTUCII
ltl 1l1AT GRATE l WA!1 UIIE-

WHfJT Hill/£
YOU Tffif!l 10
I flONE, ()1, CIMH6E U&amp;I'Y IHTO
WlffiT HIIV£ S&lt;'BEONE YOU COULI1
I /)(}NE?! LOVE, AMIIHDfi - IN5!'EA!1
OF LOVING HEFr FOil
WHAT SHE 15 "'

PAMLYZEP! I NEVEl! 16tiT
TO HIIRM YOU! l
t:'!V
Af1Uif8 THING-

IT's A GAI!.e.T

GAME, 'tOUR
HIGHNI'SS! "tOLl
OI.JGHTA. TRY IT!

By chance !his letter
regardinq your inheritance,
~~~er... met m4 eyer

I come

back
fer

m',bag
an

I can understand now
your shonq desire to

regain the custody of
LjOUr

son,
Rover!

yo~

been . '
snoop1n
in it I

WI NNIE

I'VE CALLED THE
SALVATION ARMY.
THEY'RE COMING TO
TAKE THIS STUFF
AWAY TOMORROW• .

r xxJ "t r I x1"

Beua••

a

1- - - - - - -- - -

e

SHUX··TH' FIRE's

~

lj

GONE OUT AN'
TH'WOODBOX
·IS EMPTY

I

WE NEEDED
US A NEW
WOODBOX

:a

ANVHOW

~

hr-+--+--+--+--+-

~~

a

j

a

a

~ ~--~~~~"'~::...

' PEANUTS

...'

·Dear Valentine, .

a••·

'll

t'$~11• ._, • .,

ze

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

•n.ooo

lGARNALI

Now arrange tho clrclad laneto 1o
lorm the aurpriH answer. as aug·.
N&amp;Y!Ihan Show
(I) News
gesled by the above canoon.
Ill Cll GD CBS News
Cll Cr. Who
(fi) Over Eaoy
G (J2I ABC Newo
(Anawe'" tornonow)
7:00 'I I (1) P.M . Magazine
'
Saturday's!
Jumbles:
RAVEN
MINUS
SHEKEL
FERRET · ·:
(!) ESPN'a tforae Racing
Answer:
What
you
have
to
do
In
order
to
make mone~
Wldy.
lasi- MAKE IT FIRST
Ill Gomer Pyle
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Ju,.._ Book No. 19, conttlnlng 110 puutes, ISI¥11llbltlor $1.95 po~tplld
(!]Ill Charlie~• Angela
from .Jumble, Clo this newspaper, BoiC 34, _
NatWood, N.J. 01848. Include your
n1me, 1ddrts1, zip code •nd make checks p1~1blt lo Ntwl~.
Ill (I) Tic Tac Dough
Cll (jj) MacNeil-Lehrer
Rapon
(II Eyewilnen News
G (J2I People' a Court
7:30 U (1) Ue Detector
(1) Fraggle Rock Visit the
world of Fraggle Rock un·
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
derneath the basement of an
eCcentric inventor.
(!) ESPN SportsCentar
(I) American Prolesoion·
als
·
(I) 0 (I) Family Feud
play."
(I) Business Report
Jim: " None of the plays he
GD You ·Asked For It
suggests
are unethical, bul
NORTH
2-7.aS
IHl Inside Business
they
do
show the expert
+
K
10
4
3
Iii (J2I Entertainment
.J
8
3
makes
it
hard for his
Tonigh1
opponents."
· .
tAQ4
8 :00 II (1) (!] Uttle House: A
+J62
"
Here
is
his
first
Oswald:
New Beginning Charles In· ·
'
hand from the chapter on .
galls discovers that Albert is
WEST
EAST
deceptive finessing. South is ··
addicted to morphine. 12
+AU
+9762
in four hearts because he has
hrs.) (Closed Captioned)
.K4
.A6
bid it without the values to ·
(1)
MOVIE:
'National
tl0753
tJ982
justify it. West leads the 10 ·
Lampoon's Animal House'
+10983
+A&gt;!
of clubs to East's ace and .
(1) MOVIE: 'Tho Last
SOUTH
Hunt'
South is lookin~ at four ace ·
+QJ
and kin~ losers. '
.
II) I Spy
.QIOI7i!
(!) NCAA
Basketball :
Jim:
'There
is
one
ray
of
tK6
Syracu•• a1 Pittsburgh
hope. If he can get the oppo. ·.
+KQ7
(I) MOVIE: 'A Man For All
nent with the ace of spaqes · ·.
Seasons'
Vulnerable: Both
to let him win the first spade ..
(I) 01 (J2I Wlndo of War
trick he can get rid of his ·•
Dealer: South
Part 2 ·
second spade on a diamond." · ·
Wesl
Nortb East
Ill (I)® M•A•s•H Charles
Oswald: ."South should
aims to become Hot Lips·
decide to play West for the ··
Pass 1+
Pass
best friend.
spade ace. He drops the sev- '
Pass · 3•
Pass
Cll ·IHl Frontline 'Chinese
eo
of clubs on Eas1's ace, so ·.
Pass
PasS
Pass
Affair.' Frontline examines
as to encourage a club '.
· the people of Taiwan and
· return. A club comes back ·
how they feet about their fu·
and he wins with 1he ltlng. ,
Opening
lead:
+10
. ture. (60 min.)
Now he leads his jack of
Iii MOVIE: 'Sharon:
spades."
Portrait of a Miatreu'
Jim: " Put yourself in
8 :30 0 (I) ® Newhart Dick
West's
position. He can take .
opens up his dining room to
By Oswald Jacoby
his
ace
. of spades, ~ut he .
a nightclub entenainer.
and James Jacoby
doesn't really imagine that ·
9:00 (]) 700 Club
his partner holds the ace of .
g .(l) ® MOVIE: 'Pecking .,. Oswald: "Max Hardy, who
trumps. West is likely to
It In'
publishes more bridge books duck, whereupon South dis-'
Cll (jj) Great Performances
than aillone, has a new book cards his queen of spades on
' In Regard of Flight ." Actor
by Hu Kelsey, who writes a d1amona and every1hing is
Bill Irwin stars in this produc·
more
Its than anyone. It happ1ness for North and
tion that features Doug Skin·
is
call~ 'The Tric~y Game'
South."
1
ner and Michael 0 Connor.
illustrates
deceptive
and
·
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSI'j.)
!60 min I
10:00 II (1) (!] TV's Greatea1
,
Commaicials Ed McMahon
·and Tim Conway host this
look at some of TV's funniest and most memorable
commerCials. (AI (60 min .)
(1) Simon and Garlunkel:
The Concert In Tlie Park
The . famous duo perform
by THOMAS .IOSIPH
their biggest hits . ·
ACROSS
DOWN
(l) IIIIOVIE: 'Tommy'
1
Wahine's
1
Ex British P.M.
(!) Top Rank Boxing from
Loo Vegas, NV
·
dance
%Work with film
(I) Steps Two women try to
5 Dramatized 3 Nursery
maintain their friendship af·
11~
rhyme
;
tor an accident leaves one of
city
character
them partially paralyzed. (60
min .) ·
1! Unattractive 4 Nabokov novel
IHl .N -awatch
13 Greek river 5 Sacred place
Ill INN News
14 Polluted
6 Poe's" 10:30 (]) Star Time
15
Vietnamese
in Paradise"
Ill TBS Evening N-s
liD Women/Economy
holiday
1 Quantity
•18 Dispatched
%'1 Sicknelm : ~til In Saen:h of....
18 Wrongdoing
(abbr.)
19 Rich earth
Z8 Morespectial
11 :00 D (1) Newscenter
17
Polynesian
8
Begin
early
22
Gun
'c11Brge
30
Sharpenecf ·
(I)IJ (]) 81 GJ Naws
(!) News/Sports/Weather
drink
9 Cricket team -24 U.S.S.R. river 31 Large 1p0oo
Cll Dtrie 1\llen ot Lorgot
18 Greek :
nwnber
25 Friend of
36 Man'sllllllle ·
(II Eyewlmeas News
Surround
10
Source
Athos
37
"The
IHl Sign Off
21
Sierra-,
of
power
Z1
Natural
gift
poet
Ill Benny Hill Show
11 :30
(1) (!] Tonight Show
Africa
(1) MOVIE: 'Neief1bora'
ZZCotton
(I) Another Ule
fabric
(I) MOVIE: 'Act One'
%3Sptee
(I) Benny Hill Show
0 (I) Trapper John M .D . UMaW18 A case of deadly pneumonic 25 Molecule
plague turns up lit the hospt%'1 Civil War
tal . (R) (60 min.)
general
(II All In the Family
liJ Nlghtllne
Z9 "Cry" singer,
Ill Moclame'o Place
Johnnie12:00 (1) MOVIE: 'The Pride of
30Goodluck
the Yankees'
(]) Bumo lo ~lion ·
gift
(!I Top Rll'lk Boxing from •3Z Priest's
Worcester, MA Top Rank
robe
Boxing leatutes Robbie
Palm leaf
Sims and Murry Sutherland
in a ten-round middktweight :U Malayan coin
bout from Worcester, MA. 35 Mercouri
(I) Nlghtllne
37~rated
(I) Sign Off
·
38 Habituated
&lt;iD MOVIE: 'Love Story'
G (J2I Loa1 Word
38 Russian city
eounomoke .
tiUnfaltering
12:30
(1) C!J Late Night with
U Tobe(Fr.) · L....J....J.....L.....I--J-_
Oevid Lot'lennan
(]) Jack Benny Show
I
(I)LaatWord
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to wor•
D (I) MOVIE: ' Columbo:
AXYDLBAAXB
Publlah or Porioh'
, ,1
..
LONGI'BLLOW
1 :00 (1) Stencing " - " Only:
Otlvto · N.wton·Jolln In . . One letter oimpiY .olancbl'for another. ln -thla 11mp~ A 11
Concan • This
Grammy · used for tile three L'a, X for the two O'a, ete. Slncle tetterr.
aWard winner performs all
apoatroph•, the lenllh
formation of the wonk .,.
hat hits.
.
hints. Each &lt;111 the eode hitten are different
·
.
(I) I Married Joan
.
eliJ Nawa
catFJOQVOTEs
Sign Off
1:30
NBC
News
K
NKU
PYUGD
EMQ BOKQ . y D. ,
Overnight
.
,\ . . .
(]) My Utde Mlll'gia
(I) Sign Off
NIKUQ SF
K ' DWYQQYUJ

f--------,.--------- - - - - -.;,

l.ASOLI NF: ALLE Y

I----------

~-

WHY 'THE P'IG WA5
FAILURe. Ot.J 'THAI
TV 'TALl&lt; SHOW.

.

a

- .....

I Kl )

Deceptive and tricky

Grain ·

1-- - - - - - - - -

!=======:;::===

I KI

BRIDGE

Chevy engine . Mlller'o Uood
Good dry oar corn, 12.60 Auto Parts . Evanavllle·
pooplo . Call 614 - 843 ·
bu. Coll614· 246· 6616 :
Horrloburg Rd . Coli 814·
2982 . 614 · 388 · 9 04 5. 31 Homes for Sale
Lot With utlltias in Bidwell.
66
Building
Suppllea
24&amp;-9102 .
614-992-3690.
- - -- -- - - - 1. vno'u $800. Call446·4186
Round bales of hey for aale .
or 448 -8609.
2 bedroom furnished apart·
Waload. Call446· 1878.
The West Virginia Depart· Ex c ellent cond i tion &amp; 1---.....;______
mont. Coli 992 - 6434 or Firewood , split , $30.00 a
77 Auto Repair
Building materials
mem of Health is aeeking a location -- all ready for
304·882·2666.
truckload, $36.00 deli- block. brick, sewer pipe1 , Conditioned hay, ear corn .
full -time Hospital Adminis- immediate oc:cupancy -vered . Ph. 16141 992-2770 windows, lintels, etc. Coli &amp;14-949· 2B70.
trator for its Fairmont lntereat rates are down and
Apartments. 304-676 - or (304) BB2-2 1 94.
Claude Winters, Rio Grandt.
Emergency Hospital, ID · probably won' t be lower.
Byerty end Felts Automatic
6548 .
CORN lor ule. t2 . 60 Tran1mlsJion Repair. NOW
o.
Call614· 246· 6121 .
c aud in Fairmont , Welt
41
For sale - Walnut lumber ,
buahel, 304-876· 2786.
Virginia . Requirements : Home and or rental
OPEN . Corner of Kemper
APARTMENTS , mobile resonable price, at County
Baccalaureate degree plus Broadway· Mid dlaport .
Hollow &amp; K.. r Bethel Rd.
homes, house1. Pt. Pleasant Rd. 19. Phone 814-992 · 66
two years of experience in
Coli 448-6639 .
Small unfurnished hou• In end Gallipolis. 614-4'46 · 5922 at 12:30 p .m .
hospital or health services, Modern bu1inen bldg . 68 town. 2 bdr's . pay own 8221.
or butinesa adminieuation. Court St .. GaUipolia .
utilitiee. No pets~ Oep. req.
REPOSSESSED SIGN '
Thla44 -bod facility provides ...... ...... ··-··· ··-··.· .
$160. mo . Cell 446· 7886,
Nothing down! Taka ova .
long -term skilled nur~ing 1'12+ acres with 2 homes alier 5 call 446-4046 .
plyments $68 .00 monthly.
service- and outpat1ent Gallia County.
4 x 8 flashing arrow sign .
clinic servic es . Applicants
Small 1 bdr. home, Neigh- 45 Furnished Rooms New bulbs, letters . Hale
should submit resumes and Call992-3267 or676·2616 borhood Rd . Raf. l!o Sec.
signa. Call FREE 1-800applications to : L. Clark evenings .
dep. required. Call 446· Sleeping room 1126, utili· 626-7448, anytime.
.
12 pasaenager Ford van
Hansberger, · M.D., Dirvctor
0254 evenlngo .
DRAGONWYND CATTE Ry 1976 modal, outo ., oir .
tiea pd. single male, sh.a re
of Health, 1 BOO Weshlngton 3 bedroom house for sale .
· KENNEL. AKC Chow atero - rodlo, 11 ,996 . Coli STUCCO PLASTERING ·
Street. East. Charleston . New carpeting throughout. 3 bdr. farmhou10 n8W' doxol both. 919 2nd Ave .. Gallipo- SAM Somerville ' • Surpluo pupplea,
CFA Hlmol•yon,
4
tuturad callings commer·
Army
lis
.
"Call
446·4418
after
~lothlng
.
7
milo
a
eoa1
4 1_ 1_· _ _ _ __
Welt VIrginia 26306 , by Located on 8aehan Rd . end gas furnanca, dap. &amp; ref.
Paraian and Siemaoa kit· 44
_ 6_·__
cial and raaidentlel, free
Ravenawood : S .urplua
7PM .
1
December 16. Salary nagot· aiu on 3 acres of land. req. Call 614·246· 53:l9 .
Rental clothing, new U.S .A tona. Coli 446 · 3844 after 1976 Buick Electro 2 bdr .. eotimotas. · Cell 814 -2118·
iable . Equal Opportunity Excellent terms to right
made
lined jackets $13 . up. 4PM .
PS, PB, AC, AM -FM staro 1182.
party. MAKE AN OFFER . 30 Unfumlal\ed houao, 3 bdr.,
Employor-AA Plan·M · F·H
14 oz. denim pants 14 oz .
yea r financing available . $260, Rodney Villoge II. 46 Space for Rent
Airedale Terrier pupa. large $1,960 or trade for cattle, PAINTING · intorlor and
$1 0., coveralls regular $22 ., typo,
Contact Bank One of Pome- Cell 448-4416 eftor 7PM .
12 Situations
AKC. Loyal, protac· farm equipment, or mobile extorlor, plumbing, roofing,
(insulated $28 .60 up), blbt tiva. obedient.
roy. 614-992-2133.
Family pets. home of equal value. Call eoma remodeling . 20 yra.
Wanted
KOUNTRY MOBILE Home $16., unlimited aupply , Call 1 · 61 4 · 592 - 2170, 448 ~4637 .
Very nice 2 bdr . duplex
exp . Cell 614-388-98112.
2 bd .room home In Racine. home, furnished. Main St. Pork, Route 33, North of ltamo prlcea lndafinote . Athena, Oh .
pen 1 ' 00 ' 7 ' 00 p . m .
1971 Ford LTD 1800orbaot
Fully carpeted, gal furnace. Cheshire, Oh. Call 614· Pomeroy , Lorge lou. Cell
Will do babysitting in my with some air-cond ., full
992-7479.
Friday, Saturday &amp; Sunday, Reg . Australian Blue Hoeler offer. 1971 Chevy Malibu Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing. 30 yaaraaexparlence,
ho·mB at anytime. have bas8ment , chain link fence 246 · 5818 .
atotionwogon f3 , 996 . Cell apociollolng
pupo. Coli 446-2109.
In built up r oof.
relemcas. Call446· 8067.
yard , exc·e tlent location . 5 rm . house&amp;. bath . lnqulre - - - - - - -- - . TROVBILT ROTOTILLERS 6142611 -1786.
Coli 1114-388·9867.
Disco.unts
.
Free
hiller
A s king $27 , 500 . Call at 918 2nd . Ava., Gallipolis, 48
Equipment
included. Immediate ship· ,B auett Puppies-ready for Buy owner 1982 Dodge
614·949- 2543 or 843Oh'
Insurance
13
for Rent
ment. Parts , enginea . Valentinaa Day. *60 . 00 . Mirada ex. cond. 13 .000 WIH do redoco,.tlng, point·
4081 .
lng. ponellng &amp; remdallng .
703· 942-3B71 Hickory Hill Phone 614-992-8548 .
mlleo, 318, V-8, crulso,
6 Room HouH just outside
Anything to beoutlly your
Nursery, Rt. 1 Box 390 A.
mony
oxtroa
.
•8,932
.
Coli
6 rooms. carport, bath, brick city limiu. 446-0468 .
Pedigree Rex rabblh. Plulh
home. Call Art Bryant ,
Backhoe ~ndloedar digo 8 Fisharavilla, VA 22939 . velvet fur . Blues. lilacs, 44&amp; -0047.
SANOY AND BEAVER and tile . $30,000 . 31216
4411-8289
.
Insurance Co . has oHered Bowles Rd . Dexter, Ohio . EXECUTIVE HOME-Thit It .. large bed pick up 1 -T'r-•d_•_·_in_•_•_•_••_;P_t_ed:-.- - - : : blacks, chocolates. Excel·
services for fire Insurance Cell 742-2176.
haulabl~.
operate
you
raelf.
1
·
lent quality. 4-H show . 78 Cordobo oxcollent cond ..
contemporary 4 bedroom, 2
HOWARD L. WRITE8EL
10'x30' AWNING. uaed 8 f6.00. 986-4134.
304-B96
coverage in Gallia County
AT. AC, AM· FM , crulu, low ROOFING COMPANY.
bath
home
with
finished
$90
·
par
day·
·
montha.
like
new,
new
price
tor almost a centw-y. Farm, 3 bd .r~m home~· atone half
mileage,
f2,900
.
Cell
41
G u ttara - Downapou~· New·
wet • 1 ,696.00 now eaking
. home and personal property way up front , with yellow family room, attached 38 ·
27
4_1_ · - - - : 8_1 _4 ._3_7_9_._
_
AKC
rogilterad
Cochahund
_
garage
locatBd near PomeRopolr- Gutter P.oln1ing ·
$1 '196 . 00 . 304 - 675 ·
coverages are available to vinyl aiding . Approx. 1 mile roy Is available for lmme.
1
l!o Poodle pupa. No Sunday 1 973 VW Super Baetlo. Coli Storm Cooro &amp; Wlndowo .
4424.
meet individual needs . out of Reedsville by Forked
dlate occupancy . A leaae
Free Eulmatee . Phone
ulaa, no chockt . Phone 814 _2 4&amp;-9238 .
Contact Neal Ina. Agency. Run . $1 5, 00 . or $3 , 000 . and
or option to purchase
614 - 949- 2283 or 614·
AMANA refrigerator, side 304-89&amp;-3968.
agent. Phone 388-8890.
down with $160 . month can be arranged . Cell RCS
992-2791 .
51 Household Goods by aide. $76 . Murray rotoland contract. Sits on 1 acre REALTORS et ·1·614·593·
Raginerad Beagle pupa . 78 Mere. Zopher $1,800,75
tiller,
6
HP
,
new
$200
.
MOBILE HOMES Compere ground. 10 percent Interest. 6671 .
chevy Impala e780. Call
RON'S Teleyleion Service.
Columb ia electric range, Phone 304-B96-3938.
our comprehensive mobile Cell 423· 6957 anytime.
446· 7322, B &amp; C Motoro.
Specializing
in Za.,ith an~
$75
.
Bunk
bod,
$20
.
Saddle
homa coverage with
SWAIN
THREE
bedroom
houoo
for
Motorola,
Quezar
, and
anyone . Foremost Insu- In 'POmeroy, 7 rooms . rent, nice location, 304- AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE $30 . 304-676 · 6768 .
7!1 Plymouth Valiant 3 spd ..
67
Musical
houae coRa. Cell 878- 2398
rance, 448·9340 .
basement. 4 lots, good 676 · 1090.
alent a englno, 47,000 orlg. or 448-24114.
62 Olivo St., Gallipolis. King 1-B-R_O_T_H
_ E_
R_a_ew
- in_g_ m_ac_h_i_na
I natruments
location . Asking *1 7,000 .
mi., very good cond ..
coal &amp; wood heaters with with cabinet a. chair ,
$1.400. Cell 448·2297.
Ceii814-992-72B4 .
THREE bedroom , New fon $469, set box apring &amp; zig-zag , s126 .00 . Cask &amp;
F • K TrH Trimming, atump
Schools
mettroaa
$100,
firm
$120,
16
Haven , close to bank , aofa · loveaeat &amp;. chair $
removal.
Coll676-1331 .
PARK Drive. Oneatory with ac ho ols &amp; stores . New
199 , chair, 8200.00 . Pilot ltereo Mote Rite, solid body guitar 1 97B Pontiac Orand Sofori
Instruction
w~h
herd
aholl
caoo.
$260
.
love
aeats
$70,
new
coal•
with
8-treck
tape
cassette
stationwagon . Ex . cond .
finished garage, 304-676- kitchen, dishwaahe.r , car·
RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
Cell 446-3648 or 448·
4444 after 6 p.m .
peted , 2 car garage, large wood heaters as low 11 player - recorder, AM · FM Phone 614-992-74&amp;3.
rlenCed roofing, including
1399
with
blowers,
uaed
radio,
f300.00
.
304-8764061
.
garden . No pau. t100 .
hot tor oppHCIItlon, •• .,..,.
Kirate the ultimate in self
tor,
olectricion, meoon . Coil
c:Nfence all private lessons. Settling estate. 6 room depoait . $260 month . coall!o wood heetera, new 1_6_8_7_4_._ _ _ _ _ __
68
Fruit
1972 Ford Bronco·302 V-B,
dinet sets $76 &amp; up, refrigerMen , Women , &amp;. children. houao , lot BOx130 , 2122 304-273-961 B.
304 . 676-20BB or 678·
Kelvlnator
electric
range
,
81
Vegetable1
ators , rangaa. bunk· beds
3 spd .. ox. cond .. *3,000.
4660.
Instruction thru black belt . or
Uncoln
Ave. 2924.
304-676 -2671
304-676·
complete e 179 , bunkiea good condition. ~If clean- 1 ~--------­ Call !114·3B8-B713.
Also available Karate
ing
ovan.
call
304-676
mattresaes
840
,
chasti
,
Mobile Homes
Water Walla. Commercial
uniforms puching and
dreaaers, TV's. Call 446 - 3B09 .
POTATOES , 6 _00 100 lb. 1 97&amp; Monte Corio runs
for Rent,.
and Domestic . Test holes.
. kicking begs. and protective ONE aero , 3 bedroom
3169 .
bag No. 1 Wiaconaln Ruaaet. good . Coli 448-7781 after
house, garage, 2 buildings. 1 - - - -- - ; - -- -Pumps Salas and Service.
e&lt;iulpmant. Jerry Lowery l!o phone
895
·3456.
1·
Whirlpool
electric
ttove
.
Call 446· B247 or 67&amp;- 1 _&amp;P_M_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Auoclates Karate Studio,
304·
B811·3802 .
,.
---:-::-:--:-· lc GOOD USED APPLIANCES Kenmore heavy duty 3782
1'43 'Burlington Rd .. Jack· .:_.
1979 Honda LX, hpd., UHI
New tri- level, 3 bedroom 2 bdr, mobile home. extra · washers. dryers, refrigera- Wither, 304·876· 7673 .
Gat your karpu in ohlp
son, Oh . Call 614-286· with den &amp; 1 YJ bath on 'h nice. close to shopping area
tors. ranges. Skaggs ApFITZPATRICK ORCHARD . any gao, gurantoed 30 mileo ihope. Wotarremoval, FREE
3074"' 614·384·6160.
acre, 7 miles from Pt . 8r restaurentt. Pr;voate. ref. &amp; pliances, Upper River Rd. , 636 Rigid n 600. Thread- You Clln atlll buy oppl• ., par gallon . Tlrao like new . ESTIMATES. FU,.NITURE
Plaaaant . Coli altar 4:30, dep. required . Adults. no be1lde Stone Crest Motel . ing machine with attach- our orchard and atorege . _C_•I_I_9_9_2_·6_4_e_o_._ _ __
CLEANING . CAPT IAN
pot a. Call 446-8262, after 6 448·7398.
304-676-5689 .
menta, Homallte pump 100 Located on St . Rt . 1189 . 1•·
STEAMER 614·4411·21 07.
coli 446·2491 .
• 1.8. Wanted to Do
G.P.M . 2 hoan ond occeo- Phono 669-37B6 .
Auto for ule or t~de- 1977
Olda Omago, VII , 4 door,
New 1983 Nicchl sewing aorleo, $344, 1972 Honda
3 rma. &amp; beth, lurniohad , no machine free-arm , dial-o- 350 $280. Phone 304-876·
Homas
32
auto . tran1 . , P . B. , P .S . .
Plumbing
82
pata. no children. Call rne ,;. Equipped to zig zag . 5420 .
A.C .. rear defogger, om-fm
for Sale
69
For Sela or Trade
' General Hauling ·and Tr...h
&amp;
Heating
446·2223.
rodlo.• ollvor end blue, now
monogram, sew on buttons.
:removal Service . Reliable
rodlolo,
1
owner,
38
,000
'and dapandebla . Call 446· CLEAN USED MO' BILE
make button holes . Coat
•
miles. t2 , 700 . Ace apt
2 bdr. mobile home. ref: &amp; new $439 . 96 , year end For Sal a Thompaon and
~ 1 59 aflar &amp;PM 268· 1967.
Francia coal and wood cook 1975 Buick Electro 2 bdr.. trade. 614·667-308!1 .
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· dop. Coll814·268· 1 922.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
clearance
oale
f126
.
Coli
atove modo In Gallipolis in PS, PB, AC, AM · FM otero 1 - - - - - - - - - lTV MOBILE HOME SALES ,
AND HEATING
Would like to do babysitting 4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS , 3bdr. fumlahodtrollar, liml. 814-3B6-8918, oulol town 1918 . Cuatom furniture *1 ,960 or trade for Cottle. 1974 Lincoln Town Coupe.
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
for pre-school child in RT 35 . PHOI\IE 448-7274 .
call collect. Free delivery ·to built to your specification . ferm equipment. or mobile All power, ak. &amp;2.000 miiH ..
from Golllpolla . Chlldr.en your home.
Phono 446-3888 O! 448 · ,
'.crown City area . Call
We al•o plone lumber end home of equal valuua. Coli A-1 ahopo . U,IOO. Phono
welcome. f1 60 mo . Coli
4477
6-14-258-&amp;021
repair furniture. Bidwall' 446-4537.
9B!I-4118.
Mobile home &amp;. .ota for sale, 614-245-9320.
Maytag wringa·r washer Country Furniture, acroasl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
1967 Buddy mobile home
Want to do babysitting in my 14x60. 2 bdr, gu heat, rural
1!10. Whirlpool waaher l!o
FOREMAN'S USED CARS·
1 unfurnished trai~r. Rt. 36 dryer $226, other Wllhare trom poat oftlca Bidwell,
84
Electrical
-homo ony hours . '( 304) water, sat up with 2 or 4
For leoo eicpanolve con . On
Watt. 1 fumiahod troller at • dryers extra nice. Guaran · Oh . Open 9 - 6. tuudoyo
JR6-3668.
&amp;
Refrigeration
Iota. Call 446·1240.
through Saturday.
:::~
SR. 124 in Longovlllo, Oh.
Choahire. Col 446-4229.
..
t -. Coll614-2!16·1207.
Phone
814· 742-2734.
20 gauge Remington 1100 &amp;1
19715 Windsor partially 3 bedroom Mobile Homo .
Farm
Equipment
3
place
sectional
lifeform
outo.
&amp;
dual
wheola
for
i
furn i shed . totalelec. , Approximately I miles from
1973 Oldl ' Cutlass Su·
SEWING M•chine repairs.
service. AuthoriZed Singer
central air . fully skirted , Pomeroy or Middleport. couch, black , 1100 . 00 . Gravely tractor. Call 448od
rk
C.ll
CO
(304)
676-3868
.
preme,
go
wo
r.
s olea &amp; s orvoco
·
Sh orpen
"
4149.
J IV ICE N • S FAR M 814 _949 •2870 .
wuher &amp; dryer. Call 81 4·
~2 Money to Loan
EQUIPMENT
Scittora . Fabric Shop ,
246 ·9143 or 446·0404.
2 . 1arge Mobile Homes on OUR
'
446-187!1
HARTS
Ut1d
Coro,
Now
_P_o:,.m_•
.r_o_;y_._9_9_2_·2_2_8_4_.::-:-::
HOUSE
wllh Major Hoople
1981 Vent ..a Villa 14x64, 2 individual lola near Harrison·
Long tr1cton, VermMr
Haven West' VIrginia. Over. 1
kO.ME LOANS 12% .11xed bd r .. axe . cond .. $13 ,000 ville . Hoot lurnlohed . 1 3
balere &amp; Hoy equipment,
ED'S APPUANCE ~EPAIR ,
20_leu axponolve carl In
b1 I1 f .._.
•·••
SERVICE Cell City Fumituro
..,. 1o movers.
stock..
rui. Leader Mortgage . financing available . Call
bedroom, 2 full batha; other
tob.Cco aottaro, wagona,
304-87!1-2808 .
! - 814-692· 3061 .
814266-1786.
7Qx14, 2 bedroom. 614rotary 1Riaro cuttera,
1 B76 GRAND Prix BJ, good
742· 3033.
8:1.111neea .. . Second Mort- 1978 Schuh 14x70 very
-doro, blodoa, dloc,
clean Cllr, phone 304-67186 General Hauling '
cultlvotoro, plowo
2126 oftor 11:00. •
g,•ge loans . Equity_ R.e ·, nloe. c.-.tAIIiir, 2 full baths.
TWO mobil homao for rent
woodburnera.
1 ours ea . ' I n __ 0 h 1 o
will conaldar
on At . 2 about 6 _minu1es
1 - 800 · 992 - 2361 ,-out of owner financing with down
An uo to got • complete 72 OLOS Colla 88, good &amp;
from town.. Call after 8.
·Ohio 1· &amp;13-268-0112.
poymant . Call448· 1 842 ,304-876-6277. .
llneof!l'ono&amp;oervioel
clea~ condition, ·4 JONES BOYS WATER
":::::---'-,,,...._,_...-·11 UBEC-·IH 79, MF UII; Ford door. eBOO. Cell 304-87&amp;· SERVICE . Colla814- 367· ·
9 :30 to 2 : 30 or ofter 6
880. Ford Jubilee, 1100 22911 or 67&amp;·1304. 7471 or 814-367-0691.
304-743· 3333.
Ford, BN Ford, 10 Muooy Rellablo.
44
Apartment
23 Profeeslo net
Horria Poney, JDheyteddor, 1 - - - - - - - - --, JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Good used 2 bedroom
Service !I
for R•nt
rotary hoe, plowa, doc, JD 1971 MALIBU. 304-87&amp;: · Coli Jim Lanier, 304-671·
moblle' homeJ . Furni•h•d.
monuro aprooder lo.round 4437 or 304·18&amp;-3319.
BroWn•• Trailer Perk, Rt ..
739'1.
hoy baler, corn planter.
1·24 , Mineravllle, Oh . 2 room efficiency apt .
1-304·BB2·2888 or 1-614PIANO TUNING l!o REPAIR 814-992-3324.
Dearborn doublo 14 in.
Col Bill W•d lor appoint• - - -..,-- - -::--:-:: · lc- · 992-7208.
87 Upholstery
Trucke for Sal•
plow,
3 pt. hoo.k up. Coli 72
ment. werd ' l Keyboerd. : 1 971 . · Star 12.&amp;0 . 2
448·4241
.
bd .room with otovo, refrig ..
. 448-4372.
1972 DATSUN truck with
a .c. , LP
porch and
TRISTATE
topper lftd boat rack .
PERMANENT HAIR awning. Very good cond.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Excellont oondltlon.
REMOVAL - Profoooionol Set up on ranted lot.
11 .11110.00 firm. 304-11711- 1 1 113 Sac. Ave .. Golipolia.
El•ctrolyeil Center, Inc. , t6 ,600 . Coli 61'4 -949·
11411 onytlmo.
448·7833 or 448-1833.
A . M . A . Approvod, Dr. 2123"' 614-992·11841 .
Rollrrolo . Qlft Cortlflcotea,
1973 Ford pickup . Solo or MOWREYS Upholotery Rt.
, . . ~ra . Itt appointment, , USED MOBILE HOME.
trade for cottlo, 304·178- 1 Box 124, Pt. Plaount, I'·
·. .
.
'
304-871 -8234. .
. &amp;?1:271 1.
304-8711-4164.
2778.
•
earn good $$$ , meet nice

I

Answer: HE wAs A

&amp; Acce8sorlea

64

e,..,_c...__"'
""':

a

-- - - - - - -- -

76

(1) Newacemer
(1) MOVIE: 'To Ole of

love'
Ill nc·Toc:

197:.1 Ford Bronco , 302·,
Y· B. 3 speed, excel . cond.
13,000. 38.8 -8713.

76

lamps for aale. 1226. Call
446-1055.

Firewood for ••II Split &amp;
delivered 830 pickup load.
Cell 446·2715.

Vans

a

1 :00

78 Ford van 11.350, 78
Ford van *2.600, 79 Ford
van t2,71i0. C.I144B· 7322 ,
B l!o C Motors.

, .. un

Chroma glaaa coffee table &amp;
54 Misc. Merchandise end
tables with matching

in my home . Call fOr inter·
vlow , 446-82B9 .

-

73

rJ......_l ·

EVENING

77 Chevy pick -up, Cuatom
doluxo 10. Auto .• VB, P.B ..
P.S., Radio, hoa&lt;ry duty r111r
bumper. fog lighti, 2 tone
paint, good tireo, 8 foot bad.
11 ,896 . Call 614 · 992 2708 .

•

~~e . 9

Viewi.::~

1977 Chevy ,PU 4x4 , 3&amp;0
anglno. 4 apd .. mochonlcolly
A·1. 17 ft. flatbed troller 7
ft. floor width, uc. cond.
Both for 1 price. Coli
814-388· 9060.

0

Sentinel- .

TelevisiQn

78 Chevy LiN. •1.100. 78

•ea.

king
fr eof
mebedroom
f 6 0 . suites.
Good
selection
c~dor chasta, rockera, metal
cabinets, awlvel rockers.
Used Furniture •• bookcase,
ranges, chairs. end tables,
waahera, dryers. rafrigera·
tora end TV's . 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open Sam to
6pm. Mon. thru Fri .. 9om to
6pm: S•t .
446-0322

The Dclil~

DI C"K TRACY

~=~~~~~L]===~

it::

•!"I

· Jusi a few words .
·to tell you how
much I. ·love you.

I have loved you
since the fir5t day
I saw you. .

Whenever that
was..

e

e

a1f

.

m

Cii Newa/Sian orr

eCDICNN H_.lne News .
1 :4S ([I MOVIE: 'Back From

Etet itY'

2 :00
•••

.

· (I)~ F..._

e Cll s1gn orr
(li'CBS Newa Nlghtwetch

2 :111 (1) MOVIE: . 'Middle-Age
Crazy'

'

.

BOlU

QE

01

0 YD

QTYID

QE

PIIG

XITIKV·'

Y UP K U Q . - Y N E J I U I
.

.

.

•"

·~

.

. Yes~'• Cryptoqaoje: TltE ONLY WAY TO MAKE: SURE:
THAT ci\Da:'DOI!!SN'T PAY IS TO HAVE THE GoVERNMENT TAKE 0\IERAND RUN lT.-ERNEST BEVIN
i

.

pI f'"

.

�Page

10-The Daily Sentinel

Beef producers
hold first session
By JOHN C. RICE
Couoly ~D qent, Apiculture
,
Beet Producers' Meet - The First Annual Meeting o! the Meigs
County Beet Cattle Association was held Monday evening at the Meigs Inn.

A good turnout of 31 persons came tohearMarvtnBerscbetoltheNatlo!W
Caitlenlen's AssoCiation. ·Marvin is a l'elilonal vice president ol the Na· ·
tiona! Cattlemen's Association. He has quite a trackrecordboldlngtorrnei'
titles such as President ot the Ohio Cattlemen's Association, Pr!!sldent ot
the Ohio Beet Marketing Program and a former player for the Washington
Reds~~inS. He played,two years tor the Redsklns.ln the lateliOs. He Is also a
cattle aM hog feeder from near South Clu1.rleston, Ohio.
A short business meeting was conducted with Warren Pic~ and
Ben Slawter being elected as dlrectors to the Meigs County Beet Cattle
Association. They will both serve a two-year term. President of the Associ·
ation Is Jim Meredith and vice president is Uoyd Blackwood. BenSiawter
is secretary-treasurer. Anyone can join the ,association by senclln&amp; $5 to
Mr. Slawter.
Pesticide Training -If your pesticide card expires In 1983 you must be
recertified at the February 15 meeting at our ottlce. Time is 1 to 4 or 7 to lO
p.m. If you card expires In 1984, yoo may attend lhisyearorln1~ Ifyour
card expired In 1982, you wlll have to ake the tests over again. Please can
our office at992-6696Hyoo wish to receive training to be recertified or If you
would like to receive trtanlng and take the tests to be certlfled. Training
and tests wlll be at the Cheshlte-Kyger Elementary School In Cheshire on
Tuesday, March 1, from 1 to 4 or 7 to 10 p.m. You do nOt have to receive
training to Jake the tests but It would probably help, A person from the Ohio
Department of Agrlc111ture will be there on March 1 to give the ,
examinations.
Income Tax - Did you pay anyone who is not an employee $600 or
more this year? If you did, you may have to tile Form 099 by Feb. 15, 1983.
There is a penalty lor not tiling.
Protein Losses Hlgh With Heat Damage ot Forage - The sweet·
smeWng, dark brown or black matet1al that is spmetlmes a result of hlgh
temperature forage treatment is nOt so good.
·
The "caramelized" or heat-dam. material Is not only lndlgestlble
to cows but is alSo sertously deficient In protein. Losses can be as high as 50
percent.
Ideal conditions for this browning reaction are forage at 70 percent dry
matter and 30 percent moisture.
Once heat damage has occurred, you may have to compensate by
feeding additional amounts ot supplemental protein.
Future losses can be prevented by drying hay to tess than 20 percent
moisture for small, square bales, or to less than 17 percent moisture for
large, round bales. If hay must be baled at higher moisture percentages, a
preservative such as propionic acid or anhydrous ammonia wDl be

Corp., the West VIrginia-based selling In the$7to$9range.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hearings scheduled for October on pipeline company, supplies more
Customer protests have led to a
the gas purcha&amp;lng policies of than 90 percent of the gas sold by number ot Investigations by the
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. Columbia Gas of Ohio Inc. and Puhllc UtWtles Commission ot
could be canceled If the Ohio almost 50 percent ot all natural gas Ohio, au of which concluded
Department of Energy is abolished, sold In Ohio.
Columbia's purchases are prudent. ·
department staff members say.
Columbia Transmission's decl·
The PUCO Ms jurisdiction only
Gov. Richard CeleSte proposed ston In thelatel970stopaypremlum over companies that distribute gas
the move last week, which might prices to get gas froni some new, · In Ohio. The Federal Energy
end a seven-year state effort · to unregulated fields In the Southwest Regulatory Commission monitors
monitor the operations of lnterslate cail$ed the sharp Increases In Ohio pipeline prices.
natural gas pJPellne compwlies. · · ·· gas prices since 19111. tltti firm's
In 1976 the Department otEnergy
That move comes despite Ce- critics say.
requested and the Franid!n County
Politicians from both parties Common · Pleas Court agreed to
leste's promises to toughen Ohio
have
called upon the company to require pipeline !Inns to sul)mlt
utWty regulation, Increase the use
of Ohio gas and reduce the sta\e's Increase purchases of Ohio gas tO-year gas supply forecasts each
.,
Which, according to the Ohio 0U and year.
dependence on pipeline gas from
Gas Association,
for between
the so.lth and the southwest.
The Ohio Supreme Court In 1979
The House Finance Committee is S2.:JJand$5.+la thousandcublcfeet. ordered the pipelines to submit data
Columbia Transmission's aver- to the Department of Energy
to get detalls of the proposed
department shutdown on Tuesday.
age price is $3.85a thousand. AboutS because of the agency's responslbil·
Columbia Gas Transmission percent of that Is IIIU'egll)ated, lty for state energy planning, said

sells

l

Pomeroy police - Emergency runs
.check two accidents Fourcallswereansweredbylocal
units over the weekend, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser·
vice reports. At 4:51p.m. Saturday,
the Middleport Unit took James
, I&lt;ennedy, MW St., to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. On Sunday at
7:22 a.m.Pomeroy took Ora Young
from the Pomeroy Health Care
Center to Veterans Memorial;
Racine at 7:33 p.m . took Geraid
Bald, Racine, to Holzer Medical
Center and Pomeroy at 10: 26 p.m.
took Donna Thomas, 242Condor St.,
to Holzer Medical Center.

Two accidents were Investigated
by the Pomeroy Pollee Department

Saturday.
Pollee said at 10:55 p.m., a car
driven by Kbnberly Follrod, ROute
1, Racine, attempted to pass a car
driven by Edward Riffle II,
Reedsville, which had stopped on
the upper parking lot. At Follrod
was passing the Riffle car P'l!led
forward hitting her. vehlcte In the
right
There were moderate
damages. No one was Injured.
Pollee said at 8:.20 p.m., 1 a car
owned by DorisMWer, Racine, was
struck In the left rear door by
another vehicle. There vehicle dld
not stop and pollee are continuing
their Investigation. The Mlller car
was parked on E. Main St.

side.

Meets tonight
Racln!! VWage Council wW meet
this evening at 7 p.m . at !he town
hall. The second reading of the

.:r~:.t~~': a:~~~~

Meet Tuesday
The Eastern Locat School District
Band Boosters wW meet at 7: :JJ
p.m. Tuesday at the band room of
the high school. Parents of all band
members are asked to attend.

HEAD QUARTERS BEAUTY SALON

·.

:·:·

~~~~~==· ==~=======~==~

99
$179
Save $140
on 19,700 BTU
portable·
kerosene
heater

Words of love for
Valentine's Day
~autiful

Hallmark Valentine's ar&lt; the very best
way to tell someone special that you care.
Whatever your message, there's a Hallmark
VaIentine for Mopday, February. 14 that says
exactly what you feel . .

I '

Burna up to 10 hours
on 1.6-gaL of pure kero-

sene. Electronic lgnl·
non. Tip-over switch.
S319.911
. 'OUR LOWEST

Southern Local Band Boosters
will meet Thursday at 7: :JJ p.m. In
the band room at the high school.

MRGAIW MATM'ES SAT &amp; $UH
ALL SlATS SZ.OO
40111'SSIQIII EWRY TUESQ4Y $2.00

~BRUARY
4 thru ~
FRIDAY thru THURSQAY I

IRS offers
•
tax assistance

~
Page 2
8porta ................ , ..................... , ......... , . . . . . . .. ••. . . . . .. .. . Pagea 1-4

·:·--~------------

'

Voi.31,No. l9~

, I

1 Section 12 Pag•a 20 C.nt•
A Multimedia Inc . New~paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 8, 1983

' Copyrighlod 1983

Abandon land purchase idea
By KATIE CROW
Smtlael Sta1f Wrller

Utility denies allegations
c

COLUMBUS - Columbia Gas of Ohio denies allegations by a
coalltlon that, despite a moratorium on utWty shutoffs, It tJJreatened
to cut ott gas supplies to consumers who don't pay their bllls.
1 A coalition called "The Fight, Don't Freeze Conunlttee," alleged
!at a news conference that Columbia employees Intimidated
customers who were unable to pay biDs and threatened to shut ott
their gas supply.
Under the moratorium, utWtles may not disconnect service until
after March 31.
Donn Rooks, a Columbia spokesman, said alter the coalition's
news conference Monday that th~ allegations were false. ·
"That's simply not true. I Imow what our collectors are dblng. We .
have a right and are authorized ... to collect past-due J;!llls, hut we
cannot and will not shut off service," he said.

Pomeroy Council Monday night
agreed to drill for a test water well
onpropertyltownslnSyracusenear
· council's present water wells.
Council, for several months, has
attempted to obtain other land tor a
newwaterwell.Counclldecldedlast
night to abandon the Idea · of
pilrchaslng other property, for the
time being, and drW the test weU.
Cost is not to exceed $2,!m per well.
Council noted Monday night In Its
attempts to purchase additional
property in Syracuse that none of
those contacted had been too
allldous to sell. The area offered left
no room for expansion.
Harold Brown, councllman, announced council was ellglble for a
5().50 funding to repair the slippage
on tJnlonAve.
It was decided to give Engineer·
lng Associates the go ahead to
secure the money from the Ohio
Department of Transportation, providing council Is Informed what
council's 50 peicent would cover.
-Members want to knOw If their part
of the grant woold cover construe·

lion as well as engineering fees
before they proceed with the
project.
John Anderson, councllman; felt
there would be considerable eng!·
n~ expense. Council also
advised a: letter on the issue be
directed to Chuck Mann and Kim
Shields,
·
Larry Wehrung announced the
safety and finance committee had
met with Charles Legar, !Ire chief.
Legar Informed the committee the
!Ire department would like to
purchase a rescue van for the
department at a cost of $28,(0). ·
Legar told the committee the
department had $10,000 to apply
toward the payment. Council
passed a resolution to sell bonds In
·the amount of $~,000 to purchase
the equipment requested.' The
money to pay off the Indebtedness
will come from the fire levy.
'
Wehrung 8J.so sug~:ested since the
cemetery up)reep is so costly to the
village they should get out of the
business and advertise for maintenance of the cemetery. It was
Indicated It would be a big savings-to
the vUlage.lt was suggestedcouncU
study the proposal and decide one

the Issue, one way or another, at a
later date.
A letter from the Department of
Natural Resources was read In
regard to the $39,(0) grant for the
mini park and whether council was
going to proceed by putting money
Into the park. Council agreed to
conlact Kim Shields on the matter.
Bruce Reed announced the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce .
rehabUlatlon committee would like
to meet wtth council within the next
two weeks. The meeting was set for
Feb, 15at7p.m. ThelocatlonwWbe
announced.
A portion ofletter from Consumer
Council was read by BW Youtlg. It
stated "Pomeroy has served as a
pioneer In joint negotatlons and the
gas rate coalition as an example
which conununltles across Colum·
bla Gas Ofilo territory are looking to
as they consider the option of
unlfomi rate group negotatlons.
The lead is being follOwed by &amp;l
communities." Mayor Clarence
Andrews told Young that he
(Young) had been commended tor
his work on the consumer report.
Upon the reconunendatlon of
George Stitt, pollee chief and Mayor

Andrews council hired Jerry
Rought as part tlmepollceofflceron
a probationary basis. Stitt stated
that Rought has the required
schooling for the position. Rought
will be trained . by other officers
before going out on his own.
Meeting with councll was Tom
Goett who asked If he could sell beer
on Sunday. He was advised by
Mayor Andrews that he could sell
beer, hut no mixed drinks.
Stitt Informed council the department made 72 arrests last month
and the majority of arrests were not
for speeding. Some were for open
flasks, DWI and violations on the
parking lot to name of few. Councu
commended the work of the
department
Steve Hartenhach, meterman,
Informed coimcll he bad issued 896
parking tickets during the month of
January.
·
Hartenbach asked counct1 10
purchase a drill blt and adapter to
place parking meter poles at an
approximate cost of $UJ. Councll
approved the request.
Jack Krautter, street superln·
tendent, Informed council Liberty
(Continued on page 12)

Water rates going up

'

Racine Council buys
.new fire-alert system

TOKYO - An aide io fonner Prime Minister Kakuel Tanaka
acknowledgW on nationwide television today that he accepted a$2.1
mllllon "political contribution" tor lils fonner boss that may have
con\e from the Lockheed Corp.
Toshlo Enomoto, 56, told a T.V. Asahllntervtewer that In 1972 and
19'13 he received several cardboard boxes 'stuffed with cash from
Hiroshi Ito, former executive of Marubenl Corp trading c:ompany.

a

~mpromise

RIFLE &amp; SHOTGUN
BROWNING
· 12 Ga. 3" V.R; Pump #BPS .......... $288.99
12 Ga. 3" V.R. Auto.-5 Mag ..... $459.97
22 Auto. #BAR22 ....................... $198.77

$22977

870
20 GA. F

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

SAVAGE

DoulM Barrels F.M.-MIC
'
YOUR 0401CE ONLY
$17333

likely."at Geneva

WASHINGI'ON - U.S. offldals, tecognlzlng that President
Reagan's plan to ellmlnate medium-range nuclear mlssUes from
Europe stands little chance with the Soviets, say a more likely
outcome of !he Geneva aims control Ia1ks is a compromise Interim
. solution.
That outcome, openly favored"by many West European leaders,
would permit the United States to achieve nuclear parity with the
Soviets at levels far below those ·contemplated In the NATO
deploynlent plan.
Thus far, !he administration has said Utile publicly about the
Interim solution, hoping to keep attention focused on Reagan's zero'
option plan that would ban aU land·based, medlum·ran~ weapons
from Europe.
•
,
The Soviets haVe rejected the Reagan plan and'offered Instead to
reduce their arsenal to 162 mlsSUes, the combined number held by
France and Great Brltaln.
·

Mt. SL Helens erupts again
. VANCOUVER, Wash, ..:: Mount St. Helens erupted again
Monday, buUdlng a neW mound ot lava on the 71l).foot·hlgh dome In
the volcano's crater and shooting an ash plume up about 15,(0) feet.
The plume was "Just a puff," and most of the ash fell back In the
vicinity of the moutaln, said U.S. Forest'Servlce spokesman Thorn
Corcoran. 'I1Iere were no reports ot explosions or mudflows.
The Army Corps ot Engineers decided late Monday to evacuate its
slx·member crew at a pumping station at Spirit Lake. about four
· rnlles from the volcano.

TOUGH COMPE'I1TION -In ollsel'\'llllee o1 Nptke•l Vocatloaal
Education Week, compeiiUOII!I are being hekl Ia the various field of
vOt!alloallllltudy this week ld Melp 111gb Scbool Wlnaem wll repre8eal the t!Cbool ld repooal compedtlOa on Marob 5 ld the Pike County
Joint Vocational School. Here, lwo ol the ele :boula~llludmta of Gary
Walker are pictured laking a ~eat wWI halld computemas a pari ql the .
competllloD. Nl!lll'ellllbe camera Is George Hobson. Bill Andel'IIOIIls In
the backgrouad.

RACINE - The Racine VWage
Council, In regular session Monday
evening, vOted to purchase a new
!Ire-alerting system, approved the
resurfacing of state highways
within the vWage, and passed on
· second re\dlng an ordinance rals·
lng water rates.
Emergency squad Chief George
Cummins lnql!ired about recejvtng
funds tor repair and reconditioning
ot the_old e!Jielliency vehicle. It
was noted that the ·vlllage owns the
trucft. The vehicle Is to be used on
fire runs and as a back-up to the
newer unit. Cununlns also asked
about a siren from the squad that is
currently being used on the new pollee cruiser. No action was taken.
Mayor Charles Pyles read a let·
ter from the Oblo Department of
Transportation Involving the resurfacing ot state routes 124 and 338
within the vlllage.lt was noted thai
seven and one-half percent of State
IDghway revenue funds amounting
. to $2,(150 Is to be paid by the village
from the highway. fund , .The

amount covers one and a hall
Inches ot a concrete asphalt surface
and the raising ot man-hole-covers
to the needed height.
'
Council suspended the rules to approve the ordinance authorizing the
mayor to sign a contract with
ODor on the matter. In three read·
lngs, council unanimously approved the measure.
Carroll Teaford and Dan Sayre
were appointed to meet with the
Syracuse-Racine Sewer Distrtct
board concerning costs to raise
man-bole covers along the state
routes.
Mayor Pyles read a letter from .
ODOr concerning used vehicles •
and equipment from the state. A
letter from the 'Consumers Councn
concerning telephone service and .
repairs In the area was also read.
Racine Fire Cble! Hank Johnson
discussed the purchase of a monl·
tor and fire-alerting system to be
set up through the county EMS.
Councll discussed the advantages
(Continued on page 12)

-·

'

'

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Monday night In the
Ohio Lottery's datty game, ''The Number," was 870.
In the ,;Pick 4". game, played five times a week, tile winning
number was 2709.
.

Ohio forecast
Increasing cloodlness tonight. Lows near :JJ. Cloudy Wednesday.

JtmiTlJ!ton;

Highs between &lt;10 and 45. The chance of precipitation Is 10 percent

tonight and 20 percent Wednesday.

Extended forecast
W/4X Scope

.243 Gal. Bolt Actjon

$229.44

. #74QO Automatic 30,.()6 Cal. .... :.... ONLY $310.55
12 Ga. 870 DHr Ban.! .... ;...................... $74.00

Exteoded Ohio Forecast- Thursday through Satuniay: A chance

ot rain or snow ThUrsday. Mostly fair Friday and Satuniay. Highs
thrOugh the period In !he :J)s. Lows between 15 mid 2!1. ·
'

. The

For 7 a:lll. EST
. February 9

Rain~

'

·•

sgggg_EGUIAR'l7U9

Authorizlld C.taloa Merchants
Gregg &amp; Patty Gibbs . .

108 W . MAIN ST .. POMEROY, OH.

HOURS:
.
Mon.-Tuea.-Wed.-Fri. 9:30 to &amp;

PHoNE:

IOhloJ 992·2178

IW.

enttne

at y

PRIQ!S SIECIIVE THRU FEB. 12, 1983

the Ctntlr ol your ....

ISears I

•

.
Aide admits receiving bribe

GUNSREDUaD

. . ONLY

•

e

.

MGM Scout officials plan
. ·new activities...Page 6

8oelety............................... ~ .......... ~ ............................. Page 8

' '•

DETROIT - Chrysler Corp. has called back to work 565
autoworkers In five states because of plans to boost car and truck
production.
In a statement Monday, Chrysler said ~ callbacks affected
plants at Huntsvllle, Ala. : Kokomo, ,Ind.: Detroit; Sterling Heights
and Warren, Mich.; Van Wert, Dayton and Twinsburg, Ohio, and
Hartford, Wis.
It is the third Callbacl\oflald-o!fChryslerworkersln the past three
weeks. The earlier recalls were of 585 and 233 workers, respectively.-

As part of the IRS Outreach Pro-

ANY 9,30().BTU

.P11a- •II tollnCt IIIII IDWds

Thu... 9:30 to 12

Ve.J 773·9577

COME.IN TO SEE OUR
COMPlETE' SB.ECTION...:..All ON SALE

'CLOSING ri'8DooB8·- w.&amp; \'lrPda MrDeeNe Inin CampanJ,
Plllat Pl"'td, wldda U. hiiiiiUIIppd In 'tbe maJdn&amp;' ol malleable

~alleable

EBERSBACH
A
HARDWARE ·· . .•
110

doors.

'•

·

,

He would not say how many
employees will be affected by the
shutdown; wblch becmles effective
Friday, but be did cunment that
there ate "dam, darn few'' workers

W. MAIN St, POMEROY, OH~
PH. 992-2811 .
TO 5:00

~-

•

-··

- -_, - -- --

•

Iron ct..,np lor more thul 80 "~~~'~~• 'wiD ceue operation, effecllve

Frt-.

Iron plant succumbs.to economy·
VIrginia Miillei.ble, announCed
MOnday that the plant Is closing Its

-·-- · --·.I

Colrdm ............................... ,.......................... , ••.••.•.•... Page ll

Chrysler calls 565 ~ck to work

,All STOCK ON HAND OF RIR!S AND St:tOT-

HEATER

''

~-""'+ ......................... ~ ......... :.......................... Pagest-10
. .OOOHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOoouoouooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

'
!131 JACKSON PIIIE · RT.:J6 WEST
Phone 448·4524

PRICE EVER· FOR

REFI.ECnoN

(11112 Hallmark Cwcta. Inc.

Meets Thursday
,.

gram, an IRS representative wW
answl!l'
taxpayers' questions and
ordlance to Increase water rates
Instruct
taxpayers
In the prepara·
wlll be given.
lion of their own tax returns at
Seek foreclosure
Meigs High School Wednesday,
Feb. 16 and Saturday, March 16.
A fonlctosure suit was tiled In
For answers to tax questions or
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
help In preparing forms, the follow·
by Diamond sa vlngs and Loan
lng forms wlll be discussed at time
spectfled: t040EZ, 6 p.m.; 1040A,
against Terry G. Evans, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, et al.
f··' 1_____ 6: 45 p.m.: 1040, 7: ll p.m.
Pleads not_guilty · -·
· Schedule c and Schedule F will
not be prepared at this location.
Richard Julian, 36, Middleport,
Taxpayers are to bring the tax
plead not guilty to a charge of package you received In the mall,
welfare fraud when he appeard your W·2 statement, and other Jn·
Monday before Meigs County formation on your Income and ex·
Common Pleas Court Judge Cha- penses for 1982. U anyone doesn't
rles :H:Knight for arraignment.
have a tax package, thel'e will be
Jullan was released on 11 $1,!XXJ sane f&lt;rmS available at the Out·
personal recognizance bonil. Trtal reach assistance site.
on the welfare fraud was set for 9
A 1ot0tller must also bring a copy
a.m. on Monday, March 21. Jullan ot his 1lm return . •
was ~resented by attorney Karen
Stoiy,
. ·

Imogene R (Jean) Cunningham,
Pomeroy; several nieces and
Cynthia Allee Epple, 81, Spruce
nephew$andseveralgrandchlldren
Ave., Byesville, Oh, died Suixlay at
and gre11t grandchildren.
Guernsey Memorial Hospital, ,
Funeral services wDl be held Veterans Memorial
Cambridge.
Tuesday at2 p,m. at EWing Funeral
Mrs. Epple was born May 4, 1901
Home with burial In Chercy Ridge
Saturday Admissions-None,
In Meigs County the daughter of the
Cemetery. Friends may call at the . Saturday Dlscharges ..John
late Mr. and Mrs. WllllallNicholson.
funeral home this evening from 6 Dean, Shirley Appleby, James
She was also preceded In death by
p.m. to9p.m.
Amsbary, Dustin Brooks, Myhrtle
her husband, Dana Epple, two
Murphy,
WlWamMorris.
NeUieR.H~n
lnlant sons, two brothers, Setli
Sunday
Admlsslons..George
Mrs. NeWe R.~Hanson, 78,
Nicholson and Phil Nicholson, three
Cummins,
Pomeroy;
Roger David·
Mlddleport, died ~Y evening
siSters, Corinna Wood, Lennie
son,
Pomeroy;
Ora
Young,
Pomeat the hom!! ot a cw~ghter' Mary
Bratton and Nina Chase.
roy;
Joseph
Proffitt,
Racine.
.
She was a member of the llrst Ellis, 7ffi S. Fourth St., In
SundayDischarges·-GeneVance,
graduating class at Rutland High Middleport.
Mrs. Hanson was born Aprtl 7, Clarence Napper, Marvin Darst.
School.
She Is survived by one daughter,
1904ln Gallla County, a daughter of ~.~~;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~;;;;:;~
Mrs. Hazel Oliver, Byesville; Qne
son, Kermit Epple, NelsonvUle;
four grandchilren and three great death by her first husband, Frank
grandchildren.
Frazier: her second husband,
ANNOUNCES OUR SWEETHEART SPEOAL
Funeral services will be held Jessie Hanson, twochlldren,asisleli
FEBRUARY 9th - 12th
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the Hunter and a brOther. Mrs. Hanson w.as a
Funeral Home, Rutland, with the ~~~~- of the Middleport Church
COME IN AND HAVE YOUR HAIR STYLED
Rev. Alan Blackwood officiating.
survivtng are five daughters,
AND RECEIVE AFREE ALOE VERA FACIAL
Burial wW be In Carleton Cemetery.
VIrginia
Adrian,
GaWpolls;
Maxine
{
Friends may call at the funeral
Ferguson,
DoWe
Mowery
and
Mary
home Tuesday from 2 to4and7to9.
Ellis, all ot Middleport, and Eileen
.Call Connie or Crystal .
AlmaL Young
McKnight, Pataskala; three SOIJSt
992-6311 For Appointm.-.t
Abna L. Young, 88, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, died Sunday afternoon at
BasU
Darst
and Marvin
1
both of
·Columbus,
and Frazier,
Harold j.Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Frazler, Middleport; 22grandchlldMrs. YoongwasbomFeb.26,1894 ren, 14 great-grandchildren; three
at Hemlock Gro\'e the daughter of
sisters, Frances Preston and Mary
the late George and Nancy Clark
Uttle, both of Cheshire; Goldie
Etwln. She was also preceded In Little, Pomeroy, and three brothdeath by her husband, John H. ers, Wilbur Darst, Anderson, Ind.;
Young on Oct.12, 1959. She was also
Pearlie Darst, Cheshire, and Ernest
pieceded In death by three sons, one Darst, Columbus.
daughter, three sister and one
Funeral services will be held at 2
brOther.
p.m. Thursday at the Rawlings·
She was a housewife and a
Coats-Blower Funeral Home with
member of the Flatwoods Church.
Mr. Ron Moyer otflc!atlng. Burial
She is survived by four sons, .will be lnMlddleportHWCemetery.
Alfred E . "Toby" Young, Pome- Friends may call at the funeral
roy; Harry E. Young, Minersville;
home from 6 to 9 p.m. Tutisday,
Roger C. ·~Bo" Young, Chester, W. from 2to4and7to9p.m. Wednesday
Va.,, and Frank Elll(ene "Bob" and untn time ot services onYoung, Pomeroy; one daughter, Thursday.

Cynthia A. Epple

Lee Wurster, acting energy depart· •
menthead.
''The Indication was that !! we
were a regulatory agency, such as
the PUCO, the ruling would have
gone the other way," Wurster said.
Based on the court decisions, the
Ohio General Assembly last year
told the department to conduct
public hearings on the supply
forecasts and to question pipeline'
companies about future gas supp.
lies and prices.
Wurster says he ' doubts the.
hearings wUI ~ place !! the'
agency Is abolished, even If Its
forecl!i&gt;tlng section is transferred to
thePUCO.
"Our feeling Is that If !he
forecasting !unction is transferred
to .the PUCO, hearings. could be
opposed by the transmission company," he said. Utlgatlon could.
delay the energy department hearIngs by years.
A spokesman for Columbia
Transmission said company lawy.
ers disagree with Wurster. They
90th birthday
think the PUCO could run the
hearings.
Mrs. Margaret (Ma) Clatworthy
will observe her 90th birthday , - - - - - - - - - - - : tomorrow (Tuesday) atherhomeat
764 S. Third Ave., Middleport.

Area deaibi .........-. ....................................................... Page 12

Southern jumps to seventh
in Class A cage ratings••• Page 3

Meigs County happenings

necessary.

Area deaths

Inside today.. .

Columbia Gas hearings may be cancelled

County Ageni's Corner

I

Monc!ay, Febn~ary 7, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

at the plant at present.
"It is with deep regre!'that we
must announce the company's
decision io close tile plant located In
Point Pleasant:" Mcintyre said In a
-statement released this morning.
"The company has been losing
money at this facWty for. several

,years, and while attempts have
been made to turn this situation
around, the losses have continued,"
West VIrginia Malleable, located
on Madison Avenue near Kanawha
and North Main streets, has been
engaged In the making of malleable
,Iron castingS since Its opening.

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