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bv Dick Cavalli

"WINTHROP
WF; 006-!5 DEeERVE; OL.lR.
REPUTATION A.5 ,. .
''MAN~

a ,..,
, Marauderettes win;
Southern triumphs
Marauders beaten

Letters to editor

HONORA5L.E, LOVING",

.. GENne:-,

FE?ARLE65.~

APPeAL-IN~&gt; KIND ...

6E5T FRI~ND!'

Oral cancer hit~
over .40 age group

Page2

Page 7

Page 4

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Vol.31 ,No,206
Copyr;ghtod t983
)

DSVOUy iHOU~TFUL-,
ANTI5EPTIC.~
·
EROSE, e&gt;(TR.l.lDt:D ...

I THINK IT 5TARI ED

~rnVE, 5TY~N,

MI:RETRI aa '5, e:cL.Ecnc,
FUNERS.S.L, ADIFOSE:.. :~?

~TTING-AWAY~

ME SlaCK Ala:&gt;UND

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ANT15ePTIC'!

J!l

Ocasek's vote could decide tax hike

.

~TT?.1 .

COME IN .'

00 YOU HAVE
9JME PATCHING

PLASTER I COJLD

SURE. WHAT
HAPPENED TO

excessive, Ocasek' s vote is the key to passage.
He can't vote by proxy, and the Ohio Constitution
requires a majority ofl7topassa bill ui the:U.member
Senate,
The governor'.s measure, raising the state income
tax 90 percenj to pick up $246 million and cutting
spendlng by $282 million, already has passed the .
House, which Democrats control.
Meshel said plans might have to be alteredifthere is
a change'in Mrs. Ocasek'scondltion.
Although Democrats never have had a reputation
for sticking together. Meshel said they are doing so this

YOJR HEAD?

BORROW?

6E~E~.'

PLA&lt;;TER FI&lt;Otv\

WAS ~MI LY HURl.&lt;'

THEttJVING RX)QM
CEI.LING .1

NO. SHE
WA'SN'T I-()4AE

WHEN IT

Feels congress mus.t help too

HAPPENED.

TOUJ8:t, Ohio- Republican Sen. Robert Dole, R -Kan., told a
Lincoln Day gathering that the nation's eeonomy is bnproving but
that Congress must help speed that along,
"The worst Is over. the best has yet to arrive, To makesureltdoes , ,
we've got to bring the federal deficit down and interest rates down
still more," Dole told an audience of about 500 people Saturday,
He was invited -to Toledo by U.S, Rep. Delbert Latta , R.Ohlo.
Dole also endorsed a program under which farmers would be paid
• in grain for lea ving some of their acreage unplanted.

Unemployment aids mortality rate
COLUNJBUS - Ohio's industrialized cities have the state's
highest infant morta'llty rates and officials say unemployment is
partly to blame.
In Youngstown, where the infant death rate increased from l9f()to
1981, Health Commissioner Nell Altman views It as a dlreet result of
unemployment.
Pregnant women often feed other members of their families first,
he said, foresaking their own nutrition and thus harming the unborn .
child.
·
' Although 1982 mortality figures will not be available until July,
Altman said. he sees no sign of a· change in the pattern,
Mahoning County's Women, Infants and Children Supplemental
feeding program is so popular that new applicants recently had to
walt more than 1 'h months before getting help, .said Linda Canella,
director of the f!'(lerally funded program,

00 l.tOU WMJT

THANKS A t...e::1T; NUTCHELL!
I'LL REPlACE THIS AS

TO 6UY A
TR.AJIAPOLINE '!"

'scx:::N 1&gt;6 :t &lt;AN .

, Sharon ·gets cabinet voice back
.

DUSTY CHAPS
WHE:~~'i~R

l·
1AKEAC1\TE

by Art &amp; Chip Sansom

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t-0 MATTI:~ WHO

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/lLWA'fS
Rt-105.
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HOME, IT'S A
DISA?TER 1

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.$04AETYII-Jb_

t

~T 10 L:li'E

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ASOOT HIM ·.-

JERUSALEM - Opposition poUUcians say the government has
flouted the Beirut massacre commission once.again by reappointing
former Defense Minister Ariel Sharon to a Cabinet committee
guiding policy on Lebanon.
At its weekly meeting Sunday Prbne Minister Menachem Begin's ,
Cabinet reinsiated Sharon to the committee, which Is overseeing
negotiations on the withdrawal of Israeli and other foreign troops
from Lebanon.
Sharon had served on the committee as part of his role as defense,
minister. His reappointment in his new capacity as minister without
portfolio leaves him in a strategiC position from which to promote his
hardline views on Israeli policy In Le,banon. ·

Reward offered for information

~11-Jl:i, ~ODV

t-:-,.-..

JACKSON, Ohio - Relatives .and friends of Wilma Kay Sbnpson,
24, strangled two years ago, have offered a $10,!XXl reward for new
information by March 21 leading to arrest and conviction of her
ldller.
"This Is the only thing left we' could do," said her mother, Marilyn
Forshey. "Time hasn't helped at aiL Shock dulled the bnpact at first.
but it has been worse since then."
The woman's body was found Feb. 20, 1981. about 200yards from
her moblte home.
·

Tribesmen butcher 600 Moslems
'

NEW DELHJ;, India :- )iindu tribesmen flinging spears. hatchets
and machetes butchered at least 6()() . Moslem Bengalis in 17
northeast vUiages near the " River of Sorrow," witnesses reported.
They said most of the victims were women and chlldl'en.
Reports of Friday's massacre filtered out of the hlllyiea-growing
region, almost completely separated troln lndl::l by Bangladesh, on
Sunday. Estimates of the kUllngs varied up to 1,000 and the United
News of lnl!la reported that about 6,!XXl survivors poured lnto three
relief camps.
·
. The agen~y said relief crews piled up fi1 corpses and dug a. mass
grave,

c;ot;~tT'C.HA

~iE~HE:'S

'IOU

,·\'JeRE R~!
DADO{

¥jA$ Cr:AZ.'I

A800T eo.,

time b&lt;icause they do not intend to shirk their
responslbillty.
He said the $511 milllon budget deficit, which the tiill
is designed to ellminate, came about due to
Republican budgets unsuccessfully doctored with
· patchwork taxes. "And We are not goil!g to depend on
. Ronald Reagan to turn this state around," he said,
Meshel and other Democrats denied Republican
claims that the bill is being rushed through too soon
beCause, based on the testbnony of Budget Director
Cristina Sale, the deficit will grow by about$2miliion a
day after March 1 if it Isn't passed,
·

Senate Minority Leader Paul E . Gillmor, R·Port
Clinton, made the point that the question of a
permanent tax increase should be considered next
month along with the state's next two-year budget .
In addition, he said the90 percent lnC'rease is more
than the state needs to cover current obligations. The
GOP caucus sought only for continua non-of 11 50
percent surcharge on the income tax due to expire
March31.
Meshel denied GOP assertions that the bill is beiflg
considered too hastily and he said the so-called public
outcry over the bill is being staged byRepublicansand
special interest groups hit by the spending cuts,

Mondale announces candidacy

GEE, THAT CAN

ACOC7ENT.

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by Ed Sullivan

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~0 Ce~h

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

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Prisci II a's Pop
.

1 Section , 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 21, 1983

COLUMBUS, Ohio · iAP) - The Democrat·
cqntrolled Senate votes Tuesday on Gov, Richard
Celeste's $lXl million tax increase blll, against solid
COP opposition and with no votes to spare.
Senate President Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown,
said Senate Democrats, who ouinumher Republicans
17-16, are all ready to suppart the Democratic
governor,
He said Sen. OUverOcasek. D-Akron, is scheduled to
fly from Florida to cast his vote, Ocasek'·s wife was
critically Injured in an auto accident there Jan, 30.
Without support of Republicans, who admit Ohio
has a budget problem but say· Celeste's,proposal is

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Weather.forecast
Tonight: mostly cloudy. Low 40 to 45, Vaiiable winds less than 10.
mph. Tuesday: eloudy. High 55 to 60. Chance of precipitation: 10
.' percent tonight ·a nd 20 pereent, Tuesday.
Extended FOrecast
Wedr erdQ dtroogh f'rldar: cltance of .OOWers Wednellt!ay. Fair
'fttunllaw and Friday.,IIJ&amp;hlla the 408 lo lower 1111. ._.. In the 30tt
early Wedllcwda¥ and n..r.lq coolbiglo the mid IIIIo mid 301.
early Friday.
'

ST. PAUL, Minn . (APJ -Former Vice President Walter F. Moridale,
declaring "Tam ready to be president of the United States," today entered
the race for the 1984 Democratic presidential nomination with a ll the
advantages and perils of being the early front -runner,
In a speech prepared for delivery ai the Minnesota State Capitol,
Mondale cited his service in state and federal government and said:
"! have the experience , T know where the talent Is. I know the White
House. I know how to shape a government. I know how to manage. I know
the Congress. I know how to defend this country, I know how to search for
peace. I know who our friends
I'm on to our enemies, I know· our
people. And I know myself: I am ready,"
Mondale entered the race after a year of non-stop campaigning,
With a strong staff in place and a soUd fundralslng base, Mondale was
the acknowledged front-runner in a growing Democratic field.
Mondale, durtng a three-day campaign trip through Iowa and New
Hampshire, plans speeches on farm issues and aims control, but his
deelaratlon of candidacy stuck to general principles· rather then specific

are.

proposa~,

"I ask for your mandate to seize the American advantage- to invest In
our values, our talent, our competitiveness, our strength and our
surviVal," he said.
He called on Congress "to chop those deficits down, scale the defense
budget to reality, repeal the scheduled tax cuts for the wealthy, repeal
indexing and keep our tax system progtesslve."
·
On foreign policy, Mondale said the United States should ratify the SALT
II treaty, stand by the ABM treaty and negotiate a comprehensive test ban
agreement.
"We must have a president who masters the arms-control process, does
the hard hargainlng with the Soviets, negotiates a mutual and verifiable
nuclear freeze and, at long last, reverses this mindless. wasteful
madness," he said,
·

After the announcement, Mondale was to launch his three-day
campaign swing with a quick flight to Minnesota's Iron Range. where
unemployment has reached 30 percent in some communities.
An early advocate of legislation designed to curb the adverse impact of
foreign cars on the U.S. automobile industry, Mondale has strong support
within organized labor, which is trying to play a deeisive role in the battle
for the Democratic nomination,
Mondale became the man to beat in the Democratic field when Sen,
Edward M. Komnedy, D·Mass., announced' last Dec. 1, that he wouldn't run
for president in 1984.
Already in thee Democratic race are sens. Alan Cranston of California
and Gary Hart of Colorado. Former Gov. Reubin Askew of Florida will
deelare his presidential candidacy in Washington on Wednesday .
sen. John Glenn of Ohio is expec ted to enter the race in April. Sen.
Ernest F. Hollings of South Carolina also is getting !1'ady to run.
Some national polls have shown both Mandate and Glenn running ahead
of President Reagan.
With Kennedy out of the race, Mondale is given the best chance of any
Democratic contender to get the endorsement of the AFL·CIO, which
could meet as early as October to consider uniting behind one p ndidate.
But while Mondale a nd his aides call themselves ·•very encouraged" b~
his prospects, they are aware of how quickly front -runners like Edmund
Muslde and George Romney faded in earlier campaigns.
"There's a year to go befon'thefirst vote is cast."'l&gt;aid Richard Moe, one ,
of Mondale' s chief political advisers, "We are sobered by the history of
unanticipated developments,"
But the 5,&lt;;-year-old Mondale, the son of a Methodist minister who
switched from Republican to Minnesota's Democratic-Farmer-Labor
Party during the Depression, has put together a strong campaign
organiza tion , the core of which is former staff members from his days as
vice president during the Carter administrat ion,

..

Nigeria's oil decision jeopardizes ~nity
. By The Associated Press
Nigeria's decision to cut its
official oil price by $5,50a barrel has
jeopardized the. unity of OPEC and
confronts other cartel members
with the dilemma of whether to join
In a')&gt;ricewar.
Foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia .and flv11 oil-producing Persian
Gulf nations announced no policy
changes after a weekend meeting to
discuss what they called "joint
visualization" of issues including oil
,
prices,
But the authoritative Saudi Ara·
bian newspaper Asharq-AI-Awsat
said today the Gulf ministers
agreed to cut their prices up to $7 a
barrel from the official $34 bench·
mark price for crude.
Lower prices '\'OUld benefit gasoline consumers In the United States,
as every $1 cut in the price of crude
oil lowers gasoline prices by about

announce price cuts of between ·
$5.50 and $7 per barrel "to maintain
competitive levels after the North
Sea and Nigerian reductions,''
.The newspaper did not say when
the cuts would take effeet.
The 'six countries are Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait. the United Arab
Emirates and Qatar - a U OPEC
members - and Bahrain and the
sultanate of Oman.
"The present (prlcel structure
has been debilitated after Nigeria
violated it in a manner that
surpassed aU expectat ions!' the

newspaper quoted a source as
saying.
ln Los Angeles, CaliL, oil a nalyst
Dan Lundberg said in a telephone
interview that Nigeria's decision
was "a very provocative act" that
cou ld triggt'r a price war among
oil-producing countries .
However, Lundberg said there
was a strong possibility that "the
OPEC nations will realize the
terrible instability that would result
from a n out-and-out price war and
that their greatest security is in.
unity,"

Britain . and Norway are not
OPEC members, but their decisiOn
last week to cut prices of North Sea
crude was denounced by the cartel
as a threa t to market stability,
OP.EC's official benchmark price
is $34 a barl1'1, but actual spot
market prices are lower, a nd oil
industry sources say cartel
embers must cut the base price by
·least $4 a barrel to counter the
ew competitive pressure from
ritain , Norway and Nigeria .
,j Such a cut would be the.flrst in the
'~a ri el's 2~-year history.

t

2~cents.

On Sunday Nigeria broke ranks
with the other 12 countries in the
Organization· of Petroleum Export·
lng Countries and slashed ltsofflcla1
oil price to $ll a barreL
, The cut came two day~ .after
Nigeria's chief rivals for European
'sales, Britain and N0JWay, lowered
their official North Sea crude prices
by $3 to $ll.50 a barrel.
The developments. resulting
from a glutted international petr&lt;r
leummarket, threatenedtounleash
a price"War within. OPEC. which in.
the . past has avoided cartel-wide
price cuts and has kept relatively
firm control over international oil
prices.
.
.
The Saudi newspaper 'report,
attributed to "official sources in the
Gulf," said the six countries in the
Gulf Coordination Council will·

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Replacements needed
Blood replacement Is needed for,
Herbet Dixon. Pomeroy, a patient
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
l'lonors may l!lve replacement
bloOd at the BIOC$n&lt;&gt;blle on
edl)esday'

w

GASOOLINE PRieD DOWN.:.It hall been many
IT100I18

smce psollnecould bepwdut ltd lor underone

dollar per p11on In Melp County. R~er, at least
ooe service l!ltatlon put up a slpl over the weekend

advertising regular gasoline for 1!9.9 cents · a
gaBon-practically one doUar but not quite. The sign
went up at the Certified Station on W. Main St.,
Pomeroy, and the station was doing a hrlo!k huslness.

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. Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, FebNary

21, 1983

£ommeDtary
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· The Daily Sentinel

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Ill Court Slrt!t'l
Purnr rny, Ohi~•

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111-lft·UH
DF.VOTEDTO niE INTEREST OF THfo: MEIGS-MASON AREA

I:

ROBERT L. WINGEIT

II ~~. . ·-····- --··~ ~-···~·- .
=

flAT WHITEHEAD

:•

BOB HOEFLICH

DALE ROTHGEU, JR.

A. MEMBER

1tf

The Alilitwlall'd- Pms, lnblnd Dully Pr~ss Assnd»tlun ~IWI lht&gt;

Amrrw1:1n Nr'll'"paptr Pllblilthen AK~Nil'iMtlun .

ldtt"r,li urr s ubjert lo tditlnl( and muJt lw 11 igned wit• nHme. addresK and tell'ph.me
INmht-r. N11 Ulllli!Cnfd lt!Utft wiU bt&gt; pubiQht-d. Lcllel'llshnuld bt' in )!n•ld blste. atd~l~

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The Dai ly Sentinei- Page-3
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 21 , 1983

··~

-·

Statistical pottage
David Broder of Tbe Washlnglon
Post Is described as "the sober,judlclous Mr. Broder" so regularly
that one comes to think these adjec·
tlves are his first name, as In Honest Abe Lincoln, or Lucky Luciano
In fact, Mr. Bnoder's passion for
economic levellilg .quite overwhelms ·his. powers of reasoning,
You can, with solemn mien dressed
In black robes, read out the Dred
Scott Decision. That does not make
your judgment Solomonlc. DaVId
Broder shows that he has grave difficulties In reading, let alone understanding, Reagan tax pollcles.
The other day he talked about tbe
trillion dollars that would be lost to
the government between 1984 and

1988 as a result of

Willi.am F. Buckley Jr .

th'-e~1=98:1-:-ta-x_c_u-:-ts-.-=-r--=a-=t:-r;:-ill;:-lo::-n-d-;-o-;U-;-a-rs-w-ou~l:-:d~d:-o:-:f:-or-poo-r--::$M-:c-,000c-:-,-,-fo-r-"80-,000-.-.. _Th_e:_c_o_rrec
_t

pause to comment that In the last
people.
Anyway, Mr. Broder talks about
couple of years, big-think commentators have got around to takthe trillion dollars of the 1981 tax cut
lng chronological periods useful to
a nd the wondP1ful things we could
do, like fi ghting polio, e tc., if we
them for making rhetorical points.
It used to be that we spoke of what
hadn't had iha t big giveway - to
would happen In one year. Now It Is
rich people. I quote him now ex·
two, thfl!e,fiveormoreyears,ifthe . acUy: · "The Congressional Budget
resulllsaflgureoflmpetatlvering.
Office estimated that the original
tax bill woui&lt;:J save the $10,1XXJ lam·
A trillion dollars sounds very good,
so you slmply sUde your finger
lly$120in19&amp;.1butthe$80,1XXJ!amily
along the calendar· column until
a nice $15,250. I hope you enjoyed
you come to opposite the figure 1
your share of the toot and what it
trillion. For Instance, I might say:
has brought you. "
"Do you realize that the American
Mr. Broder does not have a gUt
people will spend $1 trUUon on lipfor sarcasm, but he repeats a mi s·
stick In the years 1981-2Gl1?" I
take mad e by NBC News a yPar
would then go on and on about wl)at ago, when they misread "ovf'r

l~1111n. nut prnt~~RMIItin:.

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Letters to editor

~

£ Zimmer supporter_ _~----­
~

In response. to the artlc_le In The
Dally Sentinel, Feb. 11, concerning
the Head Start program, I am a
Polley CouncU member, but more
Important I am a parent!
·I have spent considerable time In
thought and prayer over this
matter .
I personally feel Chris Zimmer Is
Innocent and that the Issue has been
blown out or proportion.

I feel It Is time to settle things and
get on to what Is most Important
and that Is our Head Start program.
Chris has had a good record with
the Head Start program for 7¥, years. I feel the program would be
hurt If the termtn~tlon was allowed
to be passed.
To Chris Zimmer, I say "Keep up
the good work, Chris, I Bill with
you." - Leverna Kautf.

Ben Batey's letter to the editor F~b.
15. I think Mr. Batey should do
~some research Into the subject he ls
: talking about.
~
Mr. Batey stated that )le was told
; that a laborer at Gavin• Plant
11 makes $11 per hour.
• .
I am an equipment operator at
~ Phillip Sporn Plant which Is jointly
~ owned by Appalachian Power and
: Ohio Power.
~ Ohio Power also owns Gavin
; Plant so our pay scales are very
~ similar. The highest paid burly personnet make just over $12 per hour.
This Is for skllled main. tenance, operating, and technical personnel.
The maintenance mechanic has
t to be able to rebuild and repair turh tnes, generators, coal pulverizers,
~boiler feed pumps, fans . and all
.other equipment In the plant
Operating personnel check arid
Eoperate all that equipment neces-

which you take for granted when
you turn on the light to read that
newspaper.
Remember, just because you
dtjve past Gavin Plant andpnly see
one unit In service, that doesn't
mean all those workers are sitting
around playing cards.
I can assure you they are workIng on the equlment so that when
the demand for that electric returns, 1t will be there.
In the reference Mr. Batey
makes to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Power Poston Plant, I feel certain that the company didn't offer
.t hem a position the same as that
presently ·held.
Do you think that the people at
the Conesville plant would appreciate those people ocmlng ln and
taking a position that they had' to
work up to for years? - Paul Darnell Jr., Pomeroy.

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®~ ~ ~ ml~ ~T-· ru.L 1\tlHtu @WIICI\li!J() fl.A1Fc:f&lt;t&lt;1©11t.T
1\tl.flmj ~tlllfflEQi cfcJ.t&gt;~@ ~~ &amp;r@ lO \&lt;lQ(. INi\iA~ 1~®-- -

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Plant worke'r responds _______
•'I I'm Wr:!Ung thls In response to sary to prnduce that electricity

Share the spirit
Share the refreshment

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work??? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

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Navy's new p..__r~o_t_e_c_t_i_o_n__~____I_ac_·k_A_n_de_rs----'on

WASHINGTON -Tbegreatcorporate'scramblefordefensedollars
has produced weapons sYStems
that are designed more for profit
than for defense. The military procurement system has become the
nation's biggest scandal.
~
Contractors sell the Pentagon on
~ Why
fancy muttary gadgetry that Increases their profits but reduces
the combat effectiveness of the
~ In a recent letter to the Editor.
eludes boat and hunting license)
weapons. The costly trimmings
~r. Ben Batey affirmed, that In his
$300; mother-In-law funeral $2,400;
K&gt;plnlon ".no labor Is worth" $11 an
beer and cigarettes, (a fellow has to · help make U.S. weapons to com·
plex that mtlltary personnel can't
get something out of life) $300; sub~our
operate
them but must call in fac·
" The following Is a financial statescription to Dally Sentinel $56; gartory representatives.
!}nent of how a composltve of "John
age bUts to fix car $192; local real
Obviously, new weapons should
:):loes" spent their money, Draw
estate taxes $675; famUy's part of
be
tested under battle conditions.
Jiour own conclusions.
medical bills $300.
Yet
they are accepted after superff.
: Their total Income was about $11
Out of Its $20,000 a year Income
clal
tests that permit the contrac:Jin hour or.$20,000 a year. This Is a
John Doe's famlly has left at the
tors
to take their money and run.
,.1st of how the composite John Doe
end of the year a nest egg of $1,269.
Many
weapons now on the firing
r.&amp; pent his income.
At an average rate of Inflation of
~ Federallncoine tax $3,000; house
only five percenta year he wUJ lose
~ortgage payment $1,620; car pay- $63.45 a year and in 20 years wtien
;tnents $1,300; IRA contributions so
he needs this money he will have
:Jhere will be something to live on
exactly zero dollars.
I walked past the Environmental
~ter social security folds $1 ,000:
The government estimates that
Protection
Agency In Washlngton
!electricity and phone $420; fuel
the average family on welfare,
the
other
day
with another news~sts $!)jj(); clothes lor family $700;
counting taxes, has a yearly Inpaperman,
and
we were both
ood $2,500; Insurance and house come equivalent to $12,000 annuby the stench
nearly
overcome
p-keep $850; dog teed $1~; recrea- ally, and no worry. Why work? coming from the building.
onal and cultural activities (In·
Gayle Price.
"What do you make of that
smell?" I asked my friend .
"I don't know. It could be PCB or
dioxin or some other Industrial
waste. It does have a familiar
odor."
"I can't believe they'd be using
the EPA building to .store toxic
waste," I said. "They may be Incompetent, but they're not stupid."
; COLIJMBUS, Ohio tAP) - A critical Illness, an airline ticket, anjl the
"Let's go In," my friend said.
!OIItlcal &lt;ted'bility of ,a new governor wUl f!g\lre in a drama which Is to
"There could be a story here."
infold at the Statehouse this week.
We went Into the bulldlng and told
1
The Deinocl"at·rontrolled
Ohio Senate votes Tuesday on Gov. R'tchard
the guard that we'd like to talk to
leste·s'~ mUllan tax hike bi!l. against Solid GOP opposition and with
someone about the EPA hazardous
olutely .no votes to spare.
waste program. He handed m e a
Senate President Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, said at week's end that
pass and two gas masks.
trqops, wixl outnumber Republicans 17-16, are aU In 11ne and ready to
When we went to the office he
ve their governor his controversial budget balancing bUL
directed us io, we found a woman
He said Sen. Oliver Ocasek, D-Akro!J, Is scheduled to fly from Florida to
stuffing material · Into a paper
t his vote, despite the fact' thaf his wife remains critically Injured as a
shredder.
ult Qf an auto accident there Jan. 30 .
"What are you doing? " I asked
Without the ·support of Republicans, who admit Ohio has a budget
her.
lslsbut claim Celeste's proposal Is excessive, Ocasek'.s vote Is tbe key to
"I'm shredding material that the
• Qassage.
'
·
congressional committee has sub•· He can't vote by proxy, and the Ohio Constitution requites a majority of
poenaed In regard to our superfund
to pass a bill In the 33-member &amp;!nate.
·
cleanup program."
; , The mvernor's measure, raising the state Income tax 90 percent to pick
"Isn't that dangerous? " my
~p $246 mUllan and cutting spending by $7:1!2 mUIIon, already has passed
friend asked her.
t.e House, also controlled by Democrats.
' "This stuff Is polson and we have
l Meshel conclded that the. plans might have to be altered if there Is a . to get rid of It," she said .
~ange In the condition of Mrs. Ocasek, who Is In a coma with serious
"What's poisonous about It?" I'
~juries and also sufferlng·fl'om pneumonia. "Nothing Is beyond the realm
wanted to know.
cif possibility," he said.
·
.
·
"It could compromise all · the
~ AlthOugh Democrats never have had a reputation for sticking together,
deals we've made with companies
said they are doing so this time because they do not Intend to shirk
who are guilty of dumping toxic
responsibility.
material. If these papers got Into
said tbe $511 mnuori l!Udget deftclt, which tbe bill Is designed to
the wrong hands, many top people
te, carne about due to Republican budgets WISUccessfully doctored · In the EPA could get sick."
flth patchwork taxes. "And we are not going to.depend on Ronald Reagan ·
"But Isn't It against the Jaw to
tp turn this state around," he aald.
·
shred paper that has to do with
~ Meshel and other Democrats denied Republlcan clalrns"thal the blllls
toxic waste?" I asked.
·
rushed through Joo soon because, basEd on the testimOny of Budget
"Ablolutely not. These · papers
r CrlSIIna Sale, tbedeflclt will grow by about$2miDion a day after
are being shredded under execuf If It lsh't passed.
.
\l'•
tive PJ1vllelle.''

=

.e

~
.

figures for 1983: A family of four,
income $10,1XXJ, tax payment under
Carter $550: under Reagan, $439,
for a tax reduction of $111. The
$80.1XXJ ea"ner would have pa id
$19,732 under Ca rter, now pays
$16.058, for a reduction of $3,674.
The percentage reduction for the
fh·st taxpayer Is 20.2 percent, for
the ~eco nd 8.6 percent. So much for
Mr . Broder's . microcos mic
accuracy.
At the macro leyel, he ha a a
wonderful time by suggesting tfiat
a tnllion dollars would all but have
made our de ficit go away, which
makes everything so,und super.
But, of course, our deficit would
also go away if we simply taxed It
away. We would (hypothetically)
do this by a one·tim e tax , payable
tomorrow. But the relevant prot&gt;
lorn has been the Increase of federa l spending as a proportion of the
gross na tiona l product From 1978
1.0 1981, it inched forward, under
Carter, from 19.1 percent to 20.9
percent, or by an average Increase
of thr('(' perce nt per year . Mr. Reagan's 1981 cut was designed to head
back toward the 1978 spending
level. So that in 1982 we had gone
fro m 20.9 percent to 20.4 percent:
and in 1983, it is projec ted the figure
will reduce to 18.7 percent. Except
for the recession, that figure would
have been one point higher, or at
the level Mr. Carter spent In 1979.
So wha t is Mr . Broder going on
about"
Ell! here is what critics of Mr.
Reaga n from the conservative end
are disturbed about. Here Is a para·
graph from Professor Paul Craig
Roberts , during 1981 assistant se. cretary of the Treasury, in The
Wall Sireet J ourna l: "According to
gove rnment estimates, the 1981 tax
cut measured about $960 biUlon (In
sial ic terms) over the 1982-87 period. It was 69 percent repealed before it was passed by scheduled
Soc ia l Security tax increases a nd
bracket creep of $660 billion, leav·
ing a net tax cui of a bout $300 bll·
lion .
·

line would probably be useless In
actual combat.
The latest example Is the Aegis
Cruiser, which Is supposed to pro·
teet navy carrier task forces from
Soviet aircraft a11d missiles. Yet
the cruller may Itself be hopelessly
vulnerable to attack.
The heart of each $1.2 billion Aegls Cruiser Is a super-sophisticated
radar system. It can track attacktng planes and missiles and cut
through the enemy's e lectronic
jamming to tell real missiles from
decoys.
But the r adar has a fatal flaw . It
emits such strong and distinctive
slgoals of Its own that they act as
beacons that give away the exact
location of the Aegis.
The Aegis is also virtu ally un·
tested In anything like realistic bat-

tle conditions. Although the fir st
Aegis 1s scheduled to join the fleet
early this year, no one is sure that it
will work, even if it isn't sunk .
What ha.s the Navy been doing to
tes its new cruiser? "To date , most
Aegis combat system tests have
been computer simulations ra the r
than ·actual exercises aga in st
target vehicles ." said a sec ret Gen·
eral Accounting Office draft report
seen by my associate Don
Goldberg.
Furthermore, the Aegis hasn 't
been tested against the very kind of
low-altitud e m issi le tha t sank the
HMS Sheffield in the F alkland s
war. Yet thi s is the precise threat
the experts fear t11e Aegis is mo st
vulnerable to.
The reason for this fai lure is sim·
pte but appallin g. The Navydoesn 't

have a simulaied mi ssile that can
be used for this kind ot test.
.
It's not that the admirals didn1
think of this. They di~ It was called
Firebrand , and it would hav e given
Aegis defense teams a target just
like the Soviets' dangerous lowaltitude missiles .
But in typical Pentagon fashion,
Firebrand was plagued with delay$
and cost overruns. ln not-so-typical
Pentagon fashion , however , Fir.,:
bra nd was scra pped. The nayy de;
cided it simp ly wasn't worth Its
price.
The Navy is now considering a
less· fancy simulated mi5silefor Ae:
gis ' target pract ice. But it won't
ready until la te neltt year at Me
ear liest.
•
This mea ns the fleet's chief de'
tense ship may get its first realis tic

"Aren't you afraid of being held
In contempt of Congress?"
"I'm only doing my job. If you
want to talk to anyone about the
legal aspects, speak to Mr. Sniff, in
the next office."
Mrs. Sniff was ve!JO nervous
when we walked In, ''I'm not a tlowed to talk to 'the press unless I
have two witnesses with me." He
called In two other lawyers, and
turned on his tape recorder. "Now,
what do you want to know?"
"Why are you shredding papers
about your toxic waste program ?"
"We don't want them to get into
the wrong hands. We have several
cases pending against companies
that have been dumping chemicals,
and we prefer their lawyers didn't
see the evidence."
"But If you shred the papers, how
can you use them In court?"

"We don't intend to go to court.
We prefer to settle with them so
they won't have to stand tria L"
"If they viol aie d the&lt;oia w,
shouldn' t they be brought . to
justice?"
"What would that accomplish?
Our job Is to get companies t ocl~a n
up their acid pits. If we took a ha rd
line, they' d only get mad at us and
dump more waste.' ·
My friend said , " Wha t about th&lt;•
people who have been driven oul of
their homes by dioxin and PCB and
those who are bcil\g poisoned by Ihe
wate r around the dumps?"
"We've done a study on that
problem."
"Can we see it ?"
" No, it's confidentiaL If we pub·
llsh the results we might be reveal·
ing traile secrets of the companies
who did the dum ping."

A sec retary came In and said,:
''Mr. Drum of Titanic Chemical Is:
on the phone."
,
The lawyPr picked up his phone:
"Drum, we just got a report from·
the whistle blower in our Pitts-:
burgh office that your company ,Is;
dumping uranium waste under thehigh school football stadium. Are:
You aware tha t's ~ no·no?· ... Oh,: •
you were? Well, be a good fellow·
and stop it . Tha nks a lot. Wha t Con•:
gress doesn't know won't hurt'
them. " He hung up a nd turned to:
us.

tJt!

Sweet smell of EPA.______ __est f-romA_en~_';YB_i:_~h_wa~ld~

f

l&gt;olitical .drama.
~nfOlding in Ohio
•

f

ti

&lt;' .-.
. .

,· · ~

.\

fr

·' '.
',, '. ·.
,· , .,

\:

.

·.&gt;,. ~·

•

,·

-~

Warning: The Surgeon Gener,al Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking .Is Dangerous to Your Health.

17 .mg. "tal", 1.2 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method.
.

..,; /'

.,

.. ·

,· ·:&gt; ::
. '·

'. ,.

''Now, if you'll excuse me, we've-

got a lot of work to do here."
:.
f left wilh my newspaper pal. We'
handed in our passes and gas
masks to thP guard.
·
Suddenly, m y friend sa id , "l
know what this stench smells like '"
· •
"What?" 1 asked him.
" Waterga te . ll slinks like a·

.

vva tl?rga te. ·•
'I

- r&lt;..:-vo . .

-------·...-.:..

�Pameroy Middleport, Ohio

Walsh claims MOC crown

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

By scoTr D. MUJ .ER
tournament.
CANTON Walsh College
The Cavaliers jumped out to an
clinched the Mid-Ohio CQnterence
early '15'polnt lead against the
basketball championship here Sat- Redmen through stellar shooting by
urday ntghtwltha 73-59vlctoryover
Billy Joe WUllams. Walsh held a
Rio Grande College.
42-31 margin at the half.
The Redlpen cut the margin to
The itJ!!S lef1 the Redrnen 10-3 in
the MOC and 22-9 overall. Rio
seven on two difterent occasions 1!1
Grande wUI close out Its regular
the second half, but JeffSczepanskl
season J'uesday when the Redmen
and WUllnms each connected on
host defending district champion
jumpers to keep the game out of
CedarvUle at Lyne Cj!nter before
re~ch.
Rio Grande was playing shOrthosting Tiffin University in theMOC
tourna ment opener Thursday
handed for the evening. Guam Tino
night.
Richards may be losttotheteam tor
the season with a knee injury, whlle
Walsh warpped liP a 13-0 record
the MOO and 29-Q overall,
guard Rick Penrod did not make the
TheCilval!ers, thlrd: rankedintlle . trip dUe to the flu . It Is not )mown !the
will return In time for the playoffs.
nation, are one ot only two
"Walsh has a very good team,"
undefeated teams In the country.
said
Rlo Grande bead coach John
The, University of Nevada-Las
Lawhorn. "They jUmped out to an
Vegas, first-ranked In the NCAA, Is
early lead and we were forced to
the' only other collegiate team
play catchup the rest of the night.
wltbout a ios5.
We got someoutstandlngplayfrorn
Walsh wm probably host CedarJerry Mowery and John Maisch,
ville In the' llrst round of the MOC

SVAC charilps dump Wildcats
By SCO'IT WOLFE
MERCERVILLE - After trailing 8-2, the SV AC champion Southem Tornadoes tightened up its
defensive belt, while shifting Its of-·
tense into a four-quarter overdrtve
performance, resulting In a hardfo ught 77-51 SV AC triumph over
Hannan Trace here Saturday
evening ,
Southern placed four men in double figures. Rod Littlefield led the
way witp 23, Zane Beegle had 17,
Nic k Bostick 12, and Kevin Curfman 11.
Southern ends regular season
play with a n 18-2 ledger , while
maintaining a perfect 1~ league
slate.
Veteran Southern mentor Carl
Wolfe said, "This weekend we've
had twa really good games. It's a
good sign to play so well at this
point in the season . Everyone
played well tonight." Southern op-

ens tournalll(&gt;nt play in the Rio
Gra nde Colleg&lt;' sectional' this Wednesday, against North following the
Kyg e r Creek vs. E ast ernSouthwestern game at 7 p.m .
After controlling the opening tip,
Coach Mike Jenkins' Hannan
Trace Wildcats roared to Its 8-2
lead.
Baskets by Dennis Teafortl. LlttMield, and a jumper by Bostick
tied the score at 8-8. The Tornadoes
quietly took c harge ·at the 2: 53
mark when Littlefield grabbed a
steal and drove It in for a basket. He
completed a three point play with a
charity toss, giving SHS an 11-8
lead. HT came back to11-10, butfell
off the pace as the pertod closed
2().12 ,
With consistent efforts from Littlefield and Beegle, Southern maintained a 12-point margin through
most of the halt. Ten Tornadoes
saw action the first half, all contri-

butlng to a healthy 39-26 verdict at
the half.
Southern outscored HT 14-4ln the
opening minutes of the. new half
with a barrage of field goal attempts that burned the nets.
SHS went up 53-30 tor Its Qlggest
leatl thus far, then ended the frame
at 57-34. Towards the end of the
frame, southpaw Beegle went out
with an ankle Injury, but came ·
back for a short time In the !lnale. .
Hannan Trace scored four quick
points to start the final round.
So.u thern canned a red-hot34 of 62
field goals for 55 percent and netted
60 percent from the llneonnineof15
attempts •.HT hit 18 ot 58 tries for 31
percent, while zipping 15 of 19 free
throws. Southern had five steals, 16
turn011ers, 20 fouls and 16 assists.
HT had three steals, nine turnovers, 15 fouls, a nd nine assists.
Southern controlled the boartls
with a dominant 40-19 margin. Bas-

tlck, Teaford and Chris Bostick
each had eight caroms.
In the reserve contest Southern,
down by five points, 3$-30, with less
than a minute tied the 8core With
seconds remalnlng to throw the
game Into overtime. Todd Adams
and Steve Teaford sank one free
throw in the extension to give Southern a celebrated 37-36 comeback
Win. Scott Schultz led Coach HoWie
Caldwell' s squad With 18, whlleM.
Davis zipped 14 for Itt,
Southern (77) - Bostick 5'2-12;
Deem 1-2-4; Curfman 4-3-11; Bostick 1-0-2; Teaford2-0-4; BeegleS-117; Connolly 1-0-2; Littlefield'
11-1-23; Hlll1-0-2. Totals 34-l-77.
Hannan Trace ( ~1) - Rossiter 22-6; Barnes 3-9-15; Bailey 3-2-8;
Brumfield 7-2-16; Randolph 1-0-2;
D. Barnes 1-0-2. Totals 18-15-51.
Score by quar-jers:
Southern . 00 .. 00 .. 00 00 20 19 18 20--77
HT oooo .... 00 .... ...... 0012 14 18 17-51

rn

.

Cage
standings
.

AILGAMES
TEAM
.
WLPOP
Wheelersburg ... ..... ............. lB 2 1483 1146
Portsm outh .......... :... ........ .17 3 1371 1142
Ga llipolis ......... : .... ........... 14 6 11!13 959

Athens .........

.. ...... ..... 13 7 1263 UOO

Logan ...................... ...... .. 11

9 1215 1194
Nort hwest .......... _... ....... .. 10 10 U32 1133
Pt. Pleasant .. ..... . .... ' ··· .... 7 9 100. 1031

Ironton .. ... .......................... 9 11 llfl! lOCJ!
Alexander ........... ..... ......... . 8 12 1248 12.'1i
waverly .......... ... ........ ..... ... 8 12 ll\ll 1256

Jackson ·.. ............................ 8 12 1251 l2lJ
Washington CH .................... 6 13 1052 1170
Meigs . ...... .. .................. 2 17 925 U45
Saturday'~ M'!ult"l:

Galli)XIIls 56 Pt . Pleasant 52

Pon smoulh 56 ironton 47

Warren Local 57 Alexander 54 rma keupl
Miami Trace ~ Washington CH 56
(m ake-Up)
'Nheelersburg 76 Chesapeake 54
Nort hwe;;t 62 Port smouth West 60

SEOI\L VARSITY
(Finn} )

w 1. P nP
Athens ................... .......... 10 2 768 660

Te am

.. .... 8 4 688 588
.. ...... 8 4 718 703

Ironton ........ .. ...
LOgan ................
'I

GaUipol!s ..................... ....... 7 5 683 573
Waverly ...... .. ..................... 5 7 na m
Jaskson .
.. ......... .. 4 · 8 7IJ6 704
Meigs ... .............................. 0 12 5ol2 824

ror.u.s

u

42 18tl 4823

.Saturday's n.'Sult:

Jackson 7S Me igs 65 (ma keup )
SEOAL

R~VE.~

( Final}

TEAM

day night to wind up the regular seconds.
ted, nine by the Marauders. Meigs
season for both squads.
J unior Nick Riggs led Meigs With
fouled 14 times to Jackson's 12.
Jackson hit on 10 of 12 shots from 18 while senor JUck Edwards atlded
JackSon went to 8-12 on the year
the field in the fourth qua,rter 16. Both played tremendous floor • and winds up at 4-Bln SEOAL play.
coupled with nine of 11 freE&gt; thmw~ games ih keeptng up with the
Meigs feU to 2-17 in all games imtl
to erase a 56-50 Marauder lead.
finished at 0-12 in their llnalSEOAL
quicker Ironmen.
The Marauders' last lead came
Senior BUI Holcomb made his f!.
season.
with 4:38 remaining at 58· 56 when nal appearance at the Larry MorriReserves Pick Up
the Ironmen drilled three long son Gymnasium his finest of all as
First League Win
jumpers a nd a lay-in to go up 64-58.
the 6-4 center hit for 12 points and a
Coach Mlck Childs' little MaraudMeigs never came closer than four . team-high seven rebounds.
ers outscored the Jackson reserves
from that pojnt.
.
Senior Greg Taylor chipped In 10 13-4 in the final four minutes to post
The SEOAL finale saw no less
for the Marauders.
a 43-22 win.
than eight players hit the double figJackson trailed 38-30 seconds into
Freshman Mike Chancey scored
ure column, four by each tea m.
the second half but rallied bEihlnd
13 of his game-high 14 points in the
Leading Coach Jeff Hodson's Clay's four field goals to take a 46-44
second half to lead the little Malong-range bombers were junior
advantage heading for the final
rauders to their first SEOAL win of
Jon Clay with 19 and senior Al Coleight minutes.
the year. Freshman Rick Wise and
lins with 18. Senior Todd Davis
There were nine ties during the
sophomore Jackie Welker each
added 17 whlle sophomore Pat
added eight. Brian Roseberry led
contest with the lead changing
Stevens hit for 15, including six of
Jackson with eight.
hands eight times. Meigs' 38-30 lead
six free throws in the final 29 . was the largest by either team until
Meigs ended their season at 4-15
the final count when Jackson
overall and 1-11 in league play.
scored the last six points.
Jackson wound up 4-8 in the
"We played very well except for SEOAL.
Sprains righl knee
a three minute span in the third
(Varslly)
JACIISON
(751 - Stevens 4-7-15; Edgingquarter," commented Meigs coach
ton~ ; Davis 7-3-17; COII1ns 9-0-18; Clay 9-1·
TAl'jiPA, Fla. (AP)- Cincinnati
Greg Drummer. Overall, the Iron19. ror.us 11-11-75.
.
Reds"pitcher Charlie Puleo missed
MEIGS (85) - Riggs 8-2-18; Edwards 8-11men hit on 32 of 56 shots for a bUster16; ' Holcomb 44-12; Taylor 5-0;10; Chancey
Sunday's workout because of a
trig 57 percent and 11 of 13 from the'
3-1·7: Evans 1..().2; ~ennedy ().().(); Welker Q.O.
sprained right knee suffered while
foulllne for 77 percent. Meigs fared
0; Thomas 0-0-0. TOTALS S-7-15.
throwing last Thursday.
By quarters:
well from the field, hitting 29 of 64
Jackson
16 14 16 29-75
"I don't think it 's serious," he
for 45 percent but canned only
Meigs
12 25 7 :11-64
said. "I didn't think any thing about
(ll&lt;serveo)
seven of 15 free throws for 46
JACKSON {33 ) - Miller 2.().4; Hammon4
it until it started swelling."
percent.
1-Q-2; Roseberry 3-2-8; Wolfonl ~ J . Smltb
Trainer Larry Starr said Puleo
2-0-4; Poe 2-H); R. Smith 1-().2; Welch 1..().2.
Jackson led in rebounding by a
would miss the workout for pitchers
TOr/U.S !H-:1.'1.
Mlj:IGS (42) - Chancey 4·1&gt;14; Wlse 3-2-8:
35-27 count. Collins led the Ironmen
a nd catchers today and possibly
1bomas 244; Welker 24-8; Ftsher 2-0--4:
With 10 while Davis had nine. Senior
Tuesday as well.
Gheen 2-1).4; Bush 1).()..0; Powell 0-0-0; Shank
0--0-0: Cassell 0-()..(). TOTALS 15-1%-4%.
Rick Chancey followed Holcomb's
Puleo was acquired by the Reds in
ByqUIU1ers;
seven with five of his own.
thetradethat sentTorn Seaverback
Jackson
B 11 4 10-33
Only 19 turnovers were commit- Meigs
to the New York ~liets.
9 6 8 19-42

The Logan Chieftains became · positions to overtake Logan.
the SEOAL wrestling champion tor
Meigs took third, Athens fourth,
1983. Accumulating 184 points, and
while nost Ga!lla Academy carne In
tour Individual champions, the
fifth.
Chieftains were able to overcome a
The most valuable wrestler
strong bid by Ironton to capture the
l!'ophy, voted by the coaches, went
tOurnament. Ironton also had four
to Logan's 138 pound McBride.
Individual champions, but were unTop three' flntshers by weight
able to win enough second and third
class were:

FlRES FROM KEY- Nick Rlgp (21) let8 p wlllt a jump llbo&amp;
near lhe key In Saturcl~Q&lt;'s SEOAL encoun&amp;er against Jaca-. ~end:ing Rills Is JackBon's (34) Jon Clay. Rlgp had 18 polnU In .JllckDI's
7H5 victory, Kellb Wlilecup pbolo.

Waverly
Ironton ....

CINCINNATI (AP) -Str!ppedof
an Impressive regular-season recortl, Mount Healthy High School Is
looking towartl the boys' state
basketbalHournament to salvage a
championship season.
Mount Healthy Cdach John
Grunkemeyer revealed over the
weekend that the 19-1 Owls, ranked
eighth In Class AAA in the latest
Associated Press poll, wlll have to
forfeit 18 of thetr victories because
of an ineligible player. Grunke- •
rneyer broke ihe news to his players
·
Saturday.
"We had an early Saturtlay
meeting and when he told us,
everyone busted out crying and
stuff," said senior guard. Pat
Johnson. "I thought it was a
dream."
The Owls were rated No.I in the
. area . In the Ia test Cincinnati
Enquirer poll. 111ey were 1»
champions In the Ham ilion County
American League with Oak HUts.
"All the conditioning, all the hard
work; and now we won't get
anything we worked so hard for ,"
said junior center Ro~ Benford. "At
the, beglnning of the year, we set
goals ofbeingNo.11n the city, iowln
the league and to go to state. Now
two are abolished. We've only got
one more."
The Owls play Cincinnati Aiken in
their opening game at the Oxford
AM . sectional, where Mount
Healthy Is the top seed.
Mount Healthy's practice Sunday
was somber, even tbough Grunkemeyertrfed tolnject somehumorby
rE!lnlnding his players that they'll be
f~lng a team With a better record in
2-~ Aiken .
·
·
,"I thought we had ·a real nice

. .......7 5 523 450

.............. 7 ~ 423 ~ 413
... ..... 5 7 458 481

Jac kson .... ·........................ .4

8 431 497

BENT our OF SHAPE -Meigs' BW Holcomb (41) jwnpe aad •.

Meigs ................... .. ..... ...... ! U 4&amp;1 ~
-ror /U.S
42 42 1322 :1322

bends backward for a rebound agaln8&amp; Jaclulon Si&amp;Amlay nlabt. Holcomb enjoyed one of his best prnes Ibis seaaon wllb 12 po1a1s aoclseven
rebo,..ds. Also battling for the ball Is Meigs' (31) Grec Taylor &amp;ad
Jackson's Pal Stevelll (28). Jackson took a come-lrom-behlod, '1545.

Sllturday; !!i result:
Meigs 42 Jackson .'n
Tucsdlly'!t game:
She ridan vs. Meigs, Class AA Sectional at

Athens. 7 p.m.
WedneHday's games:
Was h.lngton CH vs. Wellston, Class AA Sectional' a t Unloto, 7 p.m.
Pt . Plea'sa nt at Huntington High
ThurNlay's games:

victory. Keith Whecup photo.

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Ironton vs. Jackson, Oass AA Sectional at
Portsmouth . 7:30p.m.
George Was hlngton ,., at Pt . Pleasa nt
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·
Friday's games:
Northwest \Is. Portsmouth West, Oass AA

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Sectional a t Portsmouth, 6:30p.m .
Athens vs. Marietta, Oass AAA Sectional

at OU. 6 p.m.
Laneasler vs. LOgan. Class AAA Sectiona l
a t OU. 7:45p.m.

Pomeroy BowUng Lanes

Tony's Carl')' Out .. ,...
.. ......... ...... . 36
ZJ.de 's Sport Shop .. , ... ......... ............ ....... :W

193.
• Team series - Eagles Club 3l26.
Team game - Eagles Club 685
SkyUne Bowling Lanes

Morning Glories

TOUCIDNG HANDS- Jenny Meadows, (32) an
AU-8EOAL perfonner, and AleJ&lt;ander's Melody Burion (33) appear lo be touching hands during _a jwnp

ball called In Saturday's Secllonal Tournament.
Meigs advanced w!lh a 48-23 vlclory over lite Spartans. Dave Harris pholo.

Marauderettes defeat
Alexander in sectional

February !i, J9H3

Team

Ms.

Two' s COmpany

139

CUStom Prtnt
Simmons Olds. CadUlac
and Olev.

121
89

The Fabric Shop
'f'l;e Mtlgs l nn
Merrl Amsba ry,

71
68

Hair Designer

64
High individual game - Ann Grover 197:
Jan et pu!ty 183: Ann Grover an:l Barbara
Whittington 178.
High Individual threE&gt;-games- Ann Grover

541: J anet Outfy 486: Barbara Whittington
456.

.

Hi gh team game- Two'S.Company 8~:
Slrnmorjs Olds. Cadillac a nd Otev. 70.1, 788.
!('am

three-~a m es

-Two's Company

2375; Slrr n"kJns Olds, CadDiac a nd Chev. 2'293:
Custom Prtnt ~200.

Sets lwo records
FLORENCE, Ky. (API- Latonia Race Course has set two track
records for money handled.
A single-date track record was set
by Sunday's handle of $796,098,
breaking the previous mar,k of
$736,654 wagered on Feb. 15, 1981.
111e week' s handle of$3.63 mUiion
also set a record, surpassing the
previous mark of $3.52 mUllan set
the week of Sept. 18, l9'78.

ONLY 2
GARMENTS

1
FREE

::
~

Pts.

Debl Hensley 487.
Hi gh game - Russ Carson 210. Helen
P helps 199; Bob Hensley 193, Isatx'IIC' Couch

3

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ROBINSONS LAUNDRY &amp; .
•

· FebruRJ'l' 9, 1983

No. 6 .. .. .. oo.oo ...... ...... ........ ............ .. .... .. JO
Smith-Nelson M otors ....... ...... .... ............ 25
Eagles Clu b . ....... .............. ............. .. ..... 22
Fetty's Tree Service .................. ............ 21
J-Dgh ser:l es - ~ ~TY Dugan 521, Helen
Phelps 505; RU5s Carson 520, SPt ty Smlth and

GET

ATHENS - The Meigs Marau- field for 23 percent and canned !lve
derettes ean'ted the right to face of 16 foul shots for 31 percent.
No. I seeded New Lexington tonight
Meigs turned the ball over 21
at 7 by virtue of a· 48-25 first-round
Urnes compared to Alexander' s 16.
win over Alexander In the " AA"
The Lady Sparians were whistled ·
sectional here Saturday.
for 22 personals to Meigs' 19.
Junior Jenny Meadows conThe Marauderettes will have
tinued her torrid shooting with 19
their hands full against the power- ·
points along . with 11 rebounds to
ful and potential-state champions
pace Meigs,
New Lexington.
Senior Paula Horton added 10 for
The nonherners have an 18-2
Coach Logan·~ Marauderettes,
slate and earlier In the yea_r
now 9-12 on the year.
whipped southeastern Ohio's finest
Cra btree a nd Bartlett each
team, Athens, by 15 points.
~l'Ored six to pace the losers, who
The two-time defending sectional
bowed out with a 3-14 record.
champs were put out .of the tournaThe Marauderettes wiped out a
ment last year by state champion
6-4 Alexander lead after one period
Warsaw River Valley In district
by outscoring the Lady Sparians 17action.
1 in the second stanza.
Box &amp;eore!
ALEXANDER (2111 - BartleU 3~41; MarThe major factor in the Meigs
tin 244; Hawk 2-04: CrabtrEe 2-2-6; Raines
win was a 44-19 dominance on the
l.J-5, TOTAUllt-6-25. •
MEIGS (48) - Crooks 1-1-3: SWbher0-1-l:
boards. Horton grabbed 10 to foUow
Meadows 8-3-19; Stegall 0-5-5; Horton 5-0-10;
Meadows.
Dean 1-Q-2; B. J . Gordon 2-o-4; Reeves 1-Q-2;
· Meigs hit on 18 of 64 shots from
HaddOll 0-1-1; Fry 0-1-1; Lohls ()M; DeLong
().()11. TOTAUli8-U48.
the field for 28 percent and dropped
Brq12 of :ll foul shots for 40 percent. · !\leJwldor
..................... ...... 6 I 6 12-25
Melp .oo .... oo ........ oo ............. -4 17 12 ~
Alexander hlt on 1~of 43 from the

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yqu could get a large loan, too.

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HOW DO YOU APPLY?

Just phone. When you see for yourself hoW fast we say
~ "yes." you'll wond~ why you Wilted so.longl Call to nnct
·: out how low your monthly payment could be.

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ssgggs

ICE MAKER
WHITE
Catalog Merchants
lSea~.l Authorized
Grea &amp; Patty Gibbs·
Mon.-T-.-w.d..frf. 9:30 to 5 PHONE: .
(Oi:'lo) 992·2178
Thun. 9:30 to 12
(W. Vo.) 7731-9S'n

practice," Grunkemeyer saitl.
"The kids worked. hard They want
·
to redeem themselves. I think
they're adjusting."
Grunkemeyer said the Ineligible
player, whom he wouldn't identity,
"averaged three minutes, If that
much " a game 1or the Owls ·
Crunkemeyer dtscovered the p Ia yer' s ineltglbility wben he wentto the
schoo1' soffl ce to camp1e te a co11ege
"""t thepayer.
1
ques tlonnaire .auuu
•
•
Ide
Inside the boY s.o rwasas beet
indicating he had used two semesters of ellglb!llty at a Junior high
prtor . to transferring to Mount
Healthy.
Players are allowed only ·four
·
years to complete e ighI semesters
of eligibility. So the player used up
hlsfouryearsafterlastseason,even
thoug h he part lei pated in sports for
only Iour semesters.
The problem wasn't caught In
fourprev louscbecks ofth epIayer •s
ellglb!llty, Grunkemeyer said.
Mount Healthy players said they 1
supported their . inel!gible teammate, who wasn't aware he was
violat!ng,Oh!o High School Athletic
Assocla.tlon eligibility rules.
"As far as I'm concerned, he's
still part of the team," Benfortlsaid.
"He's pretty down about it. He
thinks It's all his fault. But we're so
proud of him turning his liie around.
· If you had seen him before
basketball oo • . He's just turned
around to a nice person, the kind you
like to hang around with."
Grunkcmeyer said he had twice
rejected requests by the player to
try out for the team, partly because
of the player's attitude. He saitl he
changed his mind to try to help the
boy.

I

ALMOST UNBELIEVABLE!

ONLY

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Ea rly Wednesda} Mixed League

Team

SEND

PAY FOR

GARMENTS

I

Local bowling

Hl ~h

&gt;
!

.. ......... . 10 2 478 425
.. ........... 8 4 545 470

Athens ... .......... .

I

'M ount Healthy must
forfeit 18 victories

'

WLPOP

Gall lJXllls .......
Loga n.....

but It wasn't enough."
Mowery paced the Redmen with
20· points and eight assists, while
Dan Curry chipped In 13, Maisch 12
and Kent Wolfe 10.
Maisch pulled down 11 rebounds.
WUllams topped the Cavaliers with
28 points, and nine rebounds.
Sczepanski slipped In 14 and Rick I
WUllams,.l4.
Walsh shOt 34 of 59 from the Door
for 58 per cent antl were five or eight
at the tree-throw llne for 53 percent.
Rio Grande was 22 of 51 from the
Ooorfor43percent,and13otl7atthe
tree-throw llne for 76 percent.
The Cavaliers had a 33-22 edge on
the board and Rio turned the ball
over 15 times to Walsh's 12.

&lt;•J -

. 1110 GRANDE
MalsCb 5-2·12: Curry
li'l-1; Mowery 11-4-~ Wolle f-210; Fritz 1-Q-2; Furnler 0-1-1. ToiU · -·
WALSH ("II) - R. Wl1IJams H-ll: 8aepanlld 7-(&gt;M; Kow~ 2-U; Crolt ~;
B. J . WD!Iams lf428; no-u 1-0-2; Weir 24
•. , . _ Sl-6-'71
-..o ..,...; Walsh 41. Rlo Grande 32.
5-~13; Sbaw

Meigs takes third in wrestling meet .

lronmen score come-from-behind victory
By KEITH WISECUP
ROCK SPRINGS - In a seesaw
battle, the Jackson lronmen outscored Meigs 25-9 in the final five
and half minutes to take a comefrom-behind 75-65 win here Satur-

The Daily Sentinel . Page--S

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In Gallipolis:
502 Second Street
Phone 446-4113

98 - Cassady IJ.J; Snyder (M), EUls 1(A) .
!Ill - Pavllk iLJ: Fricke IA J: Layne 1)1.
112 - Sturbols IAI: Holtr.apller ill : Bar·
row (L) .
U9-Sturb&lt;U (A) ; Rlchanlson ill: Priddy

MEIGS' DOUG Priddy (lett) and Logan'~ Mark
Vanblbher go at llln 119-pound class during Saturday's SEOAL wrestUng champloll8hlp at GalllpoUs.
Logan won the team crown. Meigs placed third .

IM).

12fi- Weed (AI: Klng IMI; Blythe ILl .
132- Geiger iLl; Bauer IM J: Swisher

&lt;GAl.

'"'

L18- McBride ILl: Mlllesontll : Sinclair

IMJ.
145- WnllonliMI: Walko (Li: Leskovac
(I ).

155 - Lahman (GAJ : Elswick ill: Mcln·
tosb ILl.
167- UDderhlll {!J: Bennett iGAJ: Romlno IMJ.
175 - Lenvlllo ill : Korab iGAJ: Kollar
ILJ .
tllll - Adams ill: Wllalen iLl: Sheets
IGAJ.
Hwt _Ferguson Ill: Febes ILl : Jarrell
iGAJ .

Priddy won this match to place third behind Matt
Sturbols or Athens and Kevin Richardson of lronlon.
- Keilh Wilson phoro.

OU defeats Ball state

By Associated Press
Opponents call Bowllng Green's
David Jenkins trouble, so his coach
h
.k
as come up with a me name
suitable for the 6-ioot-5 junior.
, _ Teom-...
"I call him 'The ·undertaker'
l.otlan 184; Ironton 169; Me"'" 126·, Alhens
98\i: Gallia Academy 9111 . '""
because no man can bury you in as
MVP- McBride, Logan.
many ways as David can," Falcon
Coach John Weinert said after
The deal's off
J enkins did his . job on Miami in
Bowllng Green's 75-63 triumph
Saturday.
LOS ANGELES !API - Major
Jenklnsscored29pointson llof14
league baseball executives can go field-goal shooting, pulled down 14
through half an aspirin bottle in a
rebounds, dished out five assists and
couple of weeks and one of the made two steals as Bowllng Green
reasons is the thing that blocked tbe rnaintaineditsone-gameedgeinthe
trade of catcher Jim Sundberg by league and dropped the Redsklns
the Texas Rangers 10 the Los · into third place, two games back.
Angeles Dodgers.
Ohio University took over sole
The Dodgers spent nearly two possession of second plaCE' by
weeksatthewintermeetingstrylng upending Ball State 62-48. Elseto put together a player-package where in the MAC, Eastern Michi·
that would lure Sundberg; a' man gan nipped Kent State 56-55,
they thought they · needed, from . Northern illinois got by Toledo79-74
Texas.
and Central Michigan whipped
Finally
theY
did.
But
that's
when
•
last-place Western Mic higan 79-59.
they found out about clauses In
Jenkins dltln't do the job a lone.
Sundberg's contract they felt they Three other Falcons scored in
couldn't handle. The deal was doublefigures astheyeraseda54-52
cancelled.
""

deficit witli 9: 09left by running off a
15-2 streak. Craig Tubbs paced
Miami with 15 points.
John Devereaux led a balancE:(!
scoring attack with 13 points for
Ohio, which got 20 points from its
bench antl a solid defensive effort
that held Ball State's Ray McCallum. averaging 20 points a game, to
13.
David Scott scored 20 poltits and
had 11 rebounds for the Cardinals.
"I'm happy with the way we
played. a nd with our positive
a ttitude," said Ohio Coach Danny
Nee. "No one starred, but many
played steady."
No one will he able to convince
Toledo that lightning doesn't strike
twice aft~r Northern Illinois exactly
equaled its school-record s hooting
per centage, which the Huskies set
at T oledo last year.
Northern Illinois ma de 35 of 54
field goal attempts for 61.8 percent,
the same marks they hit Feb. 27,
1982.
Tim Dillon fired in 22 points and
Brad Waller 20 forthe Huskies. John
Green had 23 to lead Toledo.

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

thewholefami.
(Clip and~.)

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Whenever possible, nse a toaster, toasteroven or an electric frypan instead of your
large oven or range.

2.
3•
4
5.
6
7•.
8
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9
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The more you use,
the more energy
you'll save.

Stick these
ideas 01,1 your
refrigerator.

•

Never use the oven as a heater.

Place pans on the surface units of your
range before you turn on the heaL

•

•

10.

If you can, use an electric razpr. It uses
less energy in a year than the hot water
your hand raior uses in a week .

II.

Set your water heater's temperature at a
moderate l40°F or as low as possible to
allow for enough hot water.

12.

Take shorter showers.

Use a small amount of water when boiling
eggs and vegetables. Use tight-fitting lids,
too .

13~

Wash and dry only full loads of clothes .

Place the. most often used items in the front
of your refrigerator shelves so you can get
to them quickly.

14.
15.

Keyp your thermostat at 68° or less in
the winter, at least 78° in rhe summer.

Make'!lll'e refrigerator door seals are tight,

free oftrease.

•

•

0

Don't wash your
_ dishes until you've got a
full load. That's usually after dinner.
•

•

Turn off the lights, radio and TV before
• you leave.
. . , •
Don:t let the hot water run while you' re
shaving. Fill the sink-halfway instead .

.

'

.16.
17•
18•

In winter, open drapes and shades to let
sun heat your home. When sun sets,
close them.
In summer, dose drapes and shad es to
keep your home from gening overheated .
Don't heat or cool unused rooms. C lose
them off.
•
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•

Keep the damper on your fireplace
closed when not iii use.

••

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For dozens of additional ideas, call or visit our office and
ask for our free folder.

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We pweltM'f Jw:at,

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Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~y. ~~21, 1983

Pou~e~uy

'-Monday; February 21' 1983

Yarborough wins 500
with last lap maneuve

YARBOROUGH GEl'S THE FLAG -Cale Ylll'
borough of 'i'lmmonsvllle, S.C. (28) gels lbe check·
ered flag as he becomes the second wlmdngestdrlver

at.the Daytona lntematloaal Speedway wUb tlds win
of the 25th Annual Daytona liOII. (AP I• erp'*o).

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)lt hadn't been Cale Yarborough's
week, and when he saw what
remained of Darrell Waltrip's car
sliding a·cross the track he couldn't
help but wonder If his dream of
another Daytona 500 victory was
about to go up lrl smoke,
·
"I. came very close to hitting hlln
and I made a decision to go by him
on the high side," Yarborough said.
"I dldn 't know If It was the right one,
but I made the move and that was
it."
As it turned out Yarborough
made all the right moves Sunday,
·Including onE' on the final lap that
propelled hlm past Buddy Baker
and Into VIctory CirclE' as a winner
for thE' third time of stock car

Meadows, Horton
on a!l league team
Galllpolls' Nancy Evans and
Athens Angella Mollica were
named "Co-Most Valuable Players" of the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League by girls coaches over
the weekend. Both are seniors.
Mollica guided the Lady Bulldogs
to their second straight undisputed
championship (19-1 overall anq 12-0
In league play) while Evans paced
Galllpolls to Its second straight runnerup spot In the conference. GAHS
was 164 overall and 9-3 In league
play this winter.
Mollica averaged 16.9 points and
five rebounds a game. She averaged 42 percent from the field and
62 percent from the foul line.
Evans averaged 28.1 points a
game. She collected 15.3 rebounds
per outing, and shot 53 percent
from the field and 63 percent from
the foul line.
Ten girls make up the 1982-83 All-

SEOALTeam.
Renee Halley, junior guard from
Galllpolls was named First Team
AU-SEOAL, along with Evans. JunIor Krls Cook received Honorable
Mention.
Meigs' Jenny Meadows. 5-10 junIor forward, made First Team and
Paula Horton received Honorable
Mention.
Final Varslly Standings
Team

w. L

Athens .. ..... .. ... .. .. ......................... ... 12 0

Gall lolls ............. .. ..... ....... ............... 9 3
Wavl"rly ............................................ 7·5
Logan ....................... .... .... ..... ........... 6 6
Ironton ............................................ 5 7
Melgs ........................ ............ ...... .. ... 2 10
Jackson ............................ .. ... ........... 1 ll
FINAL JV Slandlnp
"
Team
W.L
Atllens ........
.. ........... 12 0
Logan ........ _. .
.. ...................10 2
Ironton .. .. . .. .. .. ....
.. .... ..... 7 5
Meigs ......... ..
. ....... .. ....... .. ... 6 6
Waverly .......

SLEIGH PULL- 'l1le8e members of the Rutland Boy 8oout Troop
240 participated In the klondike l!leiP puB held receDtly at the Mclni)Til
Park, Galllpolill. Ia the varlotll Jtldpnp, lbey WOIIIIIlCOIId place In Bag,
and third place In sleigh and troop actlvliles. 1'aldug pari were ltaady
Jllrchlleld, Ja8on Blacli, David CoDins, Joe Elll8, Chrllltopber Hutton,
Kevin Olll!r, Joey Pridemore, Scott Edmonds, '11nuny Wright, Kevin
1boma, Marty Hutton, and Mike Fetty. Tommy Pellllington Is the
sooutmaaler and Ale~t Birchfield, tbe assistant scoutmaster.

Oral cancer hits
over 40-age group

POSTMASTER; Send address to The
.,DaUy Sentinel, Ul Court ·St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 15'1ti9.

Rl\'!'I'll

By s. MICHAEL
PubUc laformatlou chalnnan
Meigs Cancer Unit
Oral cancer strikes approximately 27.00l persons In the United
States each year and causes an estimated 9,150 deaths, said S. Ml·
chael, public lnform(ltlon
chairman of Meigs Cancer Unit.
It Is found mostfrequently In men·
over40yearsofage. It occurs more
than twk:e as often In males than In
females .
Oral cancer accounts for about
ihree percent of all cancers that ()Ccur annually In the nation. It usually can be detected In the early
stages by a physician or dentist.
When discovered early In Its
course, the chances of a cure are

and chronic Irritation such as t~at
caused by jagged teeth, projection
fillings and Ill-fitting dentures.
Oral cancers occur more fre.
que.ntiY among heavy smokers and
drtnkers, and users of chewing
tobacco.
A sore that bleeds easily and
doesn't heal; a lump or thickening;
a reddish or whitish patch that persists; difficulty In chewing, swallowing or moving tongue or jaws
should be reported to your PhYsl·
clan, Immediately.
Ways to protect yourself from
oral cancer are as follows : Have a
dent;ll checkup regularly and have
any jagged teeth or dentures that
Irritate sum:lunding tissue corrected; any lump, scaly area or
white spc.t on the lips or In the
good.
mouth that lasts longer than two
The tongue accounts for about 17
weeks should be seen by a physipercent c1 mouth cancers, the Ups
cian; avoid Irritating the lips and
about 18 percent and the salivary
mouth with a pipe or chewing togland about eight percent. Approxibacco; don't smoke cigarettes or If
mately 28 percent are pharyngeal
you do smoke, stop; avoid pro.cancers which occur between the
louged exposure to strong or direct
mouth and the esophagus. Other
suilllght;
If you must be In the sun,
sites Include the Door of the mouth,
cover your lips with a protective
gums, palate, tonsils, lower jaw,
cream.
and cheeks.
For more Information, call 992·
Altbough scientists do not yet
know what' causes oral cancer, they . 7531 or stop at the clflce on Mulberry Hts. and pick up a free
have Identified many factors that
educational pamphlet.
contributed to Its development.
Among them are poor oral hygiene

By Canier' or Motor Route

One WeEk ........... ..... ............... , .. $1.00
One Mootll .......................... .. ..... $4.40

One Year .............................. ... .SS2.M
SINGELCOPV
PRICES
Dally .... ............. ......... .......... 211 C..ts

Subscribers not desiring to paythecar:1er
may remit In advanct' dl.rect to Tile DaUy
Sentinel on 3, 6 or .l2 month basis. Credit
will be given carrier each month.

No subscrtptions by mall pennlt1ed 1n
t(MI'ns whE!I"l" home canier seiVIce 1s
available.
MAIL SUIISCRIPI10NS.

lillllde Ohio
13 Weeks ...... ........ ........ ... .. ....... $14.04
26 Weeks .. ... ............ ..... ..... .. ..... $7731
!ll Weeks ............... ........ .......... . ll;1.48

-Ohio

13 Weeks ................................. $15.21
26 Weeks .. ... ........ ................ ... 129.64
!ll Wl'eks ......... ............. ... ........ $l!62l

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Test

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1982-83 All·SEOAL Girls' Basketball
Player - Team
Ht. Yr. Pos.
Jan Williams; Ironton .................. .. ........ ... .... ........ .... 5-9 3 F
N~cy Evans, Gallipolis ............. :..... ...... ... ................ 5-11 4 F
Renee Halley. Gallipolis ........... .... ........................ ..... 5-7 3 G
AngeUa Mollica, Athens .. ..... ... : ............. .. ...... ......... .. . 5-S 4 G
Krls Kroner, Athens ..... ...... .... ...................... ............ 5-10 4 F
Cindy Dorsey, Jackson .............................................. 5-7 4 G"
Kim Cotrlll, Logan ............................. .... ............... ,. ,5-2 4 G
JeMy Meadows, Meigs ........ ... ....... .... ...... .. .... ........... 5-10 3 F
Brenda Reed, Waverly ......... ............. .......... ......... .. .... 5-10 4 C
Rhonda Pendleton, Waverly ..... .... .... ......................... 5-8 4 ' F
Honorable ~entlon
Sue . Jackson, Ironton; Krls C09k, Gallipolis; Jill Douglas,
Athens; Sable Cook, Jackson; Krista! Justice, Logan; Paula Horton, Meigs, and Crystal Patrick, Waverly.

,-

P~UlA HORTON
Honorable Meatlon

.JENNIE MEADOWS
FIJl!l Team

Hallberg claims first victory
.'

SAN DIEGO tAP) - Gary
Hallberg, so skinny as a kid that he
played ice hockey to build up his
strength, would like to think he's
come of age on the pro golflour.
Relying on grit and a 50-year-old
putter., Hallberg fired a final rouncj
6-under-par 66 to win the
Isuzu-Andy Williams San Diego

s:m.ooo

Open.
·His eight-foot birdie putt on No.18
gave him the lead for the first time
and a l ·stroke victory over Tom
. Kite, who lost a 4-stroke lead to the
charging Hallberg.
, 'Three strokes back were Ben
CrenshaW and John Cook at 274.
One of the most publicized
amateurs to come out of college,
Hallberg joined the Tour about the
same time Ohio State's Cook and
Bobby 'Clampett of Brigham
Young.
Hallberg's rise began when he
attended an Arnold Palmer golf
academywhenhewasaboutlO. "He .
gave me a few pointers, wished me
well and that's all J, needed (for
Incentive).," said the 5-foot-10,
_155-pound native of Barrtngton, Ill.

as

While attending Wake Forest on a
Palmer-sponsored scholarship, he
was the fl.t:st four-time, first-team
AU-America In history and winner
of the 1979 NCAA champlonshp.
He ranked Sunday's triumph as

the crowning achievement In his
career.
On the 18th, as he sized up his putt,
he said his heart was "pounding like
never before.
His duel with Kite. the second and
third-round leader, stood even at
No. 1J when Hallberg rolled in a
12-foot birdie putt.
With the match stU! tied at 18,
Hallberg ripped his drive Into a
fairway bunker. Kite, down the
fairway In good shape, then elected
to lay up in front of the pond that
protects the 18th hole.
Hallberg then purposely hit short,
laying up behind Kite's ball.
Using a sand wedge from 103
yards, he put his chip shot close
enough for .the birdie while Kite's
approach shot ended up 25 feet from
theDag.
·
Kite's putt just missed the edge of
the cup, leaving a -tap-ln.

•
WALTRIP JUTS THE WALL - Dlll'l'eO Wallrip of Franldln,
Tenn., hltll the wall coking down the lllralght at the Daytona lntemallonal Speedway, Florida Sunday during the :!lith Annual Daytona 1100.
Wallrlp bad ~o be taken from hill wrecked Chevrolet and taken away In
an ambulaoce 1M reporis Indicate his InJuries were not serious. ( AP
Laserphoto ).

,

Ohio State routs
Hawkeyes, 85~69
COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP) -The
shortest players for Wth-ranked
Ohio State, Troy Taylor and Ron
Stokes, provide the biggest headaches for the opposition.
Just ask Iowa's coaches and
players.
"They're definitely the quickest
palr of guards I"ve faced," said
Steve Carlino, 16th-rated Iowa's
6-foot-2 junior guard. Taylor had
just scored 22 points and Stokes 191n
the Buckeyes' 85-69 Big Ten rout of
the Hawkeyes Sa turoay night.
· "It was simply a matter of
quickness," Iowa Coach Lute Olson
said. "They destroyed us at the
guard spots. We haven't had
anybody take us out of the things we
wanted to do the way they did."
The 6-foot Taylor sank 7 of12 Door
shots and So!lO free throws. Hls5-11
sophomore buddy, Stokes, came off
the bench to hit 4 of 6 field goal
attempts and 11 of15 foul shots.
"We hurt all teams," Taylor said
after helping stay Ohio State one
game behind league-leading Indl·ana. "We've got quickness over

every team we play."
The Buckeyes are in second place
with a 9-4 record and stand 17-6
overall. Iowa drops three games
from the lead with a 7-6 mark. The
Hawkeyesare 16-7forallgames.
Mlller called his team's fifth
consecutive vlctory Its best perlormance of the season. "It was
beautiful to watch from a coach's
slandpolnt. It was our most complete game at both ends," he said.
After ties at 12, 14 and 16. the
Buckozyes broke away to a 30-22lead
and buUt a 42-31 halftime cushion. A
run of11 points padded that margin
to53-33intheflrstfourmlnutesofthe
second half. Iowa was never closer
than 10 point~ thereafter.
"We weren't on top of our game.
That has been the trend all year. We
play one good game and then we let
down. We can't put two good games
together," said Iowa's Greg Stokes
following a 28-polnt performance.
"We got a good offensive game
out of Stokes, but he was very
mediocre at the other end." Olson
said

9-1~28:

Jones 1-2-4: SlmpklnJ 3-2-8: Smltll !1410;

s-.

Lambert 1.0.2: Glv..,.O&lt;M. TOT,U.S lt-11-11.
GALLIPOU8 (II)- -·2~; EllcetI!Or ~12: Lane S-5-21;
6-1-13; Skid·
more 2-2..0; Clark ().0.(); Edellllllnn Q.O.O.
'WI'ALSIM-IHI.

.B7qurten:

Pt. Pleawn ........~ ............. If J6 4 Ill-52 .
GaUipolla ...... ........... ....... .. 19 814 1).-:16
-:""'

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Every diet I try, leaves me
hungry for the foods I like.
0 Yes D No

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I keep spending' more money for
12.
I
books, clinics, pills &amp;! powders,

and still carrt keep the weight off.
0 Yes 0 No
.

MONDAY

I need to find a way to help

DEXTER - M~ig~ County
Chun;hes of Christ Men's Ft:'llowship will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Monday at Dexter Church of
Christ.

changed eating habits.
0 Yes
No.

r-----------------·----------1 ·our "Eating Manage-

All 4 ·Sizes

lWIN, FULL, QUEEN &amp; KING

.1 Low Price
$89 9~A.PC.

POMEROY - Bosworth
Council 46 Royal and Select
Masters will meet Monday at 7
p.m.

.

ment" techniques
combined With our
exer-cise plan and
delio,ious recipes will
help you lose weight
and keep it off for
good!

·THIS IS ONE OF OUR BEllER MA

•

MIDDhEPORT - Middleport Business and Professional
Women's Club will meet at 7: ll
p.m. Monday at Middleport ~1brary.
POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club will meet at 7: ll
p.m. Monday at Mellr.l Museum.

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Flonne Marli:

Area Orr&amp;tiOr

SYRACUSE ~ Syracuse
Board of Public A1falrs will
meet Monday at 7 p.m.

'~·

I EXTRA nRM I

POMEROY - Bible Study
Monday from 7 .to 9 p.m. at the
borne of Joan Wolfe

Sold In Sets Only
IP'ICIAL UOUCTIOHS
ONAU
IIIOSTUII"OIC

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Chaptflr Order of DeMolay and
Mothers Club will meet Monday
at7:30 p.m. attheMasonlcTemple, Middleport. All mothers of
DeMolay are welcome to attend
the Mothers Club meeting. '

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~~ 1-800-888-1399
w~~~~~~ w~''·'"'''· '''"'':''''';

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GaDipolb t8 Pt. Pleua:lt 36.

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•.,. WtrQhl Waltntrs lnterniiiOn.ll lnt \!UI3 nwll!:r rJI

·

. CLASS SCHEDULE

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GALLIPOUS
SL Peler'a EpiiCOpll Church
54 t Second Avenue

Tue: 6:30 p.m.
Wed:9am.

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POMEROY - American As·
soclatlon of University Women
will meet Tuesday night at
Meigs Inn.

I

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TIJESDAY

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

Eugene Holllday, Dexter, and Mr.
anc;t Mrs. Lee W. McComas,
Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan
were In Logan on business one evening recently.
Carrol Woodgerd, who Is con·flned to O'Bleness Memorial Hospl\al. Athens, for some time following
a heart attack, Is Improving at his
home. He will go to Doctors North
Hospital, Columbus, In March for
tests and observation.
Mr. and Mrs. Charleds Essex,
Columbus, spent a weekend as guests of her mother, Mrs. Maude
Holcomb and other relatives here.
Friends and relatives here have
received clippings from Armada,
Mich. from Max Crabtree, telling
of the 70th wedding anniversary of
his parents

Calendar

3. I still have the urge to "binge".

'

'

Golden Stansbury accompanied
her son-In-law and daughter, Mr.
' · and Mrs. Harold Oxley to Groveport where they spent the day with
' her son and &lt;laughter-In-law, Mr.
' and Mrs. Clair Stansbury and fam·
' ily. They also called on her other
son and daughter-In-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Stansbury and family
In Reynoldsburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey, local,
•'
along with their son-In-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman, Harrisonville. were 1!J. New
Lexington for the funeral of Mrs.
Starkey's sister, Mrs. Elma Vernon. Mrs. Vernon was reared In this
rommunlty. AlSo attending were a
brother, A. R. (Ben) Caster and
daughter, F:ontelle Spencer, Cha·
rlesotn, W. Va., wbo spent many
years In the community. along with

•'

GAHS-Point box score
I'T. PLEASANT (Ill) - Glboon

Carpenter Personals

1

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POMERO~Y~.--~Mrs. Arno~

Richards wiD speak on Amerlc•

anism at th(' Tuesday night
meeting of the American Legion
Auxiliary of DreW Webster Post
39. Pomeroy, both junior and
senior m('mbers. Members are
asked to take donations for the
emergency fund .
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta
Phi Chaptec of j3rta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Tuesday at
7: ll p.m. at Meigs Inn.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Chamber of Commerce
meeting will be at 12: 15 p.m.
Tuesday at LaSalle Restaurant.
POMEROY - Ladles AuxilIary of Veterans Memorial Haspita! will meet Tuesday atlp.m.
In the conference room:
MIDDLEPORT - OAPSE
Chapter 17 wlll meet Tuesday at
7:ll p.m. at Meigs Juntor High .
School. l'xJ!ddl~port.
POMEROY - Past Matrons,
Pomeroy Chapter, OES, will
have a potluck supper at the
borne of Evei)Ili Lanning, Tuesday at 6: lJ p.m.
POMEROY - All coaches
and those Interested In assisting
with Pomeroy Baseball Youth
League program are asked to attend a meeting Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the home of Mike
Wrtght, 285 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy. Teams Include pony
league, ' little league, pee wee,
minor league, T-baU and girls'

softball.

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By HELEN BOTl'EL

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Gallipolis ............. ...... ............. .......... 1 JJ
Jac kson ..................... ... .......... .... ...... 1 U

.

Woman complains ·of hous~keeper status

Branham Newspaper Sales, 733 'Third
. AvenUP, New York, New York 10017.

SliiiSCRIPI1~

The Daily Sentinel Page 7

Helen Help Us

racing's most cov~ted 'prize.
"It was the only real problem I
had all day, " Yarboroughsaldofthe
aCcident that took Waltrip from the
race as he was attempting to unlap
himself on the 64th of 200 laps over
the 2.5-mlle Daytona International r--'-------~---1
Speedway.
The Daily Sentinel
Waltrip lost control of his Chev(tJSPSI-)
role( Monte Carlo SS when race
A Dlvloleo ol Mull-a, J::c.
leader Dick Brooks slowed to avoid
Lake Speed, who had cut In front of
Published every afternoon, Monday
11\rough Friday. m eo.... street. by the
Brooks In a similar attempt to unlap
Ohio Valley Publishing Company : Mulhimself. Waltrip'scarleft the track,
timedia, Inc •• Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;'J, !In·
hit an Infield retaining wall,
2156. 5econd class i&gt;ostago pald al
Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
ricocheted across the racing surface. struck the outside wall and
Member: 'lbe Associated Press, lnJand
Dally Press Assodatioo. and U!f. Ameli·
came down just' far enough for
can Nowspaper Publisher!&lt; As!lldatlon,
Yarborough to get by.
National AdvertiSing Representative,
Waltrip, the two-time defending
NASCAR Grand National champion, whohasfaUedlnllattemptsto
win this race, was hospitalized for
observation. Doctors planned to
release him today.
The accident was the only mishap
of any consequence In the culmination of a week that began with
Yarborough turnlilg the fastest
qualifying lap in the history of stock
car racing, 200.503 mph. But he lost
control of his Monte Carlo while
traveling more than 200 mph on his
second lap, demolishing the car.
On Thursday, journeyman driver
Bruce Jacobi crashed In a qaullfy'
ing race. He remains in critical
condition with a brain injury.
"YOJ.l just can't think about thQSe
things," Yarborough Said when
asked lf the horrifying crash tbat
cost him the pole position for the
$1-million event was on his mind

Middleport, Ohio

him. - WORKER OR LOVER?
DEARWURL:
I'd say you were a grossly underpaid housekeeper with bedroom
privUeges, and wise to tell Ron,
"Oet yo~lf another girl." Don't
weaken.- H.

was ·no good for me and I should
stop hoping. By the way, t lost the
baby. but heard he made another
woman pregnant during one of our
separations.
I want to believe the first fortune
teller because I can't stop loving
this guy. Bot he's been gone a year.
DEAR HELEN:
What does your ESP say, Helen?I was going with this man for two
S.C.
years. Then he left me for my best
DEARS.:
friend. That was while I was pregMy LCS (Logical Common
nant with his child. Later he came
Sense) says your second ESP lady
back; but now he's gone againhit It right. And my IGAP (I'm
living with a woman who Is eight
Guessing Again Perception) says
years older than he Is.
you can stop loving a no-good If y(&gt;u
I went to a fortune teller and she · start seeing yourself as a worthsaid he would tum over a new leaf while person who doesn't need
and we'd be together happily.
worthless men - or fortune tellers
I got tired of waiting, so went to - in her life. Spend your money
another ESP lady, and she said he Instead on group therapy aimed at

DEAR HELEN:
I have been gnlng with Ron ever
since his divorce tWo years ago. Before that: hls now ex-wife filed five
Urnes on hlm and then took hlm
back after he bought her something
expensive;
She gave him their daughter. I
have been babysitting her, plus doIng the hOusework, washing and
cooking, for $20' a week. Finally I
got tired of this, so now Ron has
arranged with his ex to help out. He
says th~re·s nothing gnlng on, but
she often stays overnight.
Wherr I complain he Implies I
caused the situation and I can stop
It If I take my job back. I11ke being
hls girlfriend but wonder which
part of me Is more Important to

Increasing yotlr self-esteem. - H.
DEAR HELEN:
My husband claims he can't find
suitable work, so he's started selling marijuana . ·He's out till all
timeS of the night. Says he llkes this
because he's his own boss and has .
·no regular hours. If I threatened to
leave him would he change? M.R.
DEARM.:
I don't know. But let's hope you
can charige your husband be-fore
"being his own boss" wins him very
regular hours - In jail. - H.
Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk It over
In her column If you write to Helen
Hottel, care of this newspaper.

Meigs· County organizations hold meetings
Chester··DAR

Letha Wood arid Helen Wolf were
reported .lll. The death of VIrginia
Elizabeth }fayes hosted a recent Lee's grandmother and Mrs. Hoimeetlng of the Past Councilors
ter's aunt were noted, along with
Club of Chester Councll323, Daughthe marrtage of Julie Rose and the
ters of America.
new grandson of JoAnn Baum.
Lora Damewood conducted the
It was noted that Chester Council
meeting reading 112th Psalm
will receive the national and state
which was followed by ihe Lord's
officers at the spring rally. Inzy NePrayer and the pledge to the nag
well, Mrs. Lee Goldie Frederick
Officers' reports were given ~' ,1 and Pauline Ridenour served reMargaret Tuttle, secretary, and
freshrnents. There was a sllentauc. Opal Hollon, treasurer. For roll call
lion by the Good or the Order
members gave commentaries on
committee at the close of the meetValentine's Day., Games were coning with proceeds tolallng $47.~.
dueled by Lora Damewood and
Others attending were Betty
Opal Hollon. Inzy Newell won the
Roush, Lora Damewood, Esther
door prize. Refreshments were
Smith, Darts Grueser, Carolyn Hoiserved by Mrs. Hayes and Goldie
ley, Opal Hollon, Cora Beegle,
Frederick, co-hostess.
Ethel Orr, Zelda Weber, Faye KirkOthers attending were Mae
hart, Alta Ballard, Penny Smith,
McPeek, Ada Neutzllng, Chariotte
Eileen Martin, Ruth Smith, JoAnn
Grant, Leona Hensley, Eflllil CleBaum, Leona Hensley, Charlotte
land, Ethel Orr; Mary K. Holter,
Grant, Everett Grant. Thelma
Betty Roush, Ada Morris, Marcia
White, Margaret Amberger, Margaret Tuttle, Erma Cleland, MarKeller, Thelma White, Cora Beegie, Ada Bissell, and guests, Esther
cia Keller, VIrginia Newlun, and
Smith and Margaret Amberger.
Mae McPeek .
Members were reminded to continue making Items to~ sold at the
~azarene
spring rally of District 13, Aprll30,
when Chester Council 323, DaughCarol Mitchell was named queen
ters of America, met recently at the and Rob Cunningham, king, In the
hall.
. sweetheart couple contest of the
Mary K. Holter, councilor, pre- Snack-n-Yak group of the Syracuse
sided at the meeting attended by 30 Church of the Nazarene. Selection
members.
was made by popular vote.
Dorothy Ritchie, Fern Morris,
The valentine theme was carrted
out In the decorations and refreshments for the party attended by the
sweetheart couple and Mary.
r
Paula and Becky Winebrenner.
"' ';,:•::. · ~
~·
••
I
Regina and Teresa Lee, Shawn
~\
Cunningham, Earl Pickens, Jerry
~\.:.
Grueser, Richard and Raehelle D&amp;·
v\s. Wendy Triplett , Ammle
~-m l
Franko, Lori and Doug Stewart,
Eber Pickens Jr., Joe, Brenda and
Serena Davis, and Linda Stewart.
The refreshments were served by
Sherm and Mickey Cunflff and
j
\
I~ (
!
Charley and Judy Lee.

Syracuse

Nelson birth

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Honor students

A "We Love Our Kids' Activity
Evening" was held by Rutland
PTO · last Monday night In the
school auditorium.
The evening featured movies,
games, cake walks, sweet shop,
dance contests, with To~y Pennlngton, Roger Eblin, Danny Roblnson, and Allen Williams as the ·

judges.
·
Winners In one of the contests
were Lee' a Johnson and Kim Eb!ln. Derek Miller and Tracee Leark
were selected king and queen, Travis Hendricks, prince, and Racquet
Gomez, princess. A cash· donation
from Bank One was divided among
the winners. Other prizes were donated by local merchants.

Astrograph
February 22, 11183
Your sldlls In competitive sports will be considerably enhanced this
coming year. Take serious· measures to build upon the talents you
already possess.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mareh 20) You have good organizational and
managerial qualities today, but you might walt until a pressing situation develops before you'll brtng them Into fuU play.
ABIES (Marcb %1-Aprll 19) Early In the day you could have a poor
sense of direction and go off on tangents. Later, however, you'll become
more effective and finish what you start.
TAURUS (AprD :It-May 20) Place greater emphasis on maintainIng good rela'ttonshlps today than In furthering your material InterESts.
True values are found In friends, not funds.
GEMINI (May %1-Juoe 20) Be self-sufficient today. You can do
more for yourself than others can do for you. Don't tear to go after
Important objectives on your own.
CANCER (June %!-July 22) Conditions will turn rrore favorable for
you today. You should not be able to assume direct control over matters
affecting your self-Interests.
·
·
LEO (Jaly ·:e3-Aug. 22) You could be extremely suc~sful today In
situations where you are prlmarlly concerned about looking out for the
rights or Interests of others. Be helpful.
VIRGO (Aug. 2.'1-Sept. 22) Initially, associates might not see or
understand things as quickly as you will today, so patience will be
required. They'W eventually catch on.
:LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2S) There could be a sudden shift In conditions
today which will present favorable opportunities where your work or
career Is concerned.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Pressure or challenge could cause
others to back off today, but In your case they'll only serve to bring out
your better qualities.
SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You could be In for a pleasant
surprise today when you discover that a situation you thought to be
negative actually has hidden advantages.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) What will make you a successful
salesperson today Is the fact that your prospects wlll recognize you'll
not try to sell things you don't believe ln.
AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You're capable of substantial
achievements today when properly motivated. think of what money
can do for you, and you'll figure out ways to get It!
·

.---------------------------------------------~

The Daily Sentinel

...
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PHONE 992-2156
Dept.
Or Writ~ ~alllr Sentinel Clas.srtit4
Ill Court St. . PoMiror. Ollio 45169

Infant Nelson
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson are announcing the birth of their second
child, a son, Chad Eric, Jan. 31 at
St. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg, .
W.Va.
The Infant weighed eight pounds,
six ounces and was 2l ·lnches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson have a daughter, Nicole Dawn, four.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Epple, Melbourne,
Fla .. and the paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Jim Nelson, .
Pomeroy. Great-grandparentS are
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Rldehour,
Tuppers Plains, Mrs. Elma Epple,
Minersville, and Mrs. Maxine Nelson, Columbus.

,

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LEGAL NOTICE

·~•-•• Opp"'"'"'''

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12 Mn-ft o L.,_

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n.,._......,s.....,.., s..,

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44 A-IIIIMtlet A~nt
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4,.,.....,,. . "'"'

NOTICE TO
MOTOR VEHICLE
DEALERS:

In accmdance w1th Sect1o n

1. One 1983 model dump

tru ck with Peabody Galion or
equivalent dump body 120" x
84" x 30" head and tailgate
w1th center door 1n gate. mm- '
imum gate s•ze 16" ~e 10 " opening. Bed to be of 8 guage steel
or heavier. 1/4" steel floor and
1nterl aced uflderstructure. With
Manual (handle) controls in
cab.
2. Front mounted 16 ton or
larger telescopic hoist.
..
3. 3/4 cab protector 'with 4" .
wingS.
4. Cab lights. 4 corner lighls
and 6 reUectors ..
5. Mud flaps. front and behind rear wheels.
6. Wheel Mae 84 " cab to axle
or suitable for body [10 foot
dump body)
7. 24.000 f.''W or heaVIer.
8. 9:000 ~ . t beam lront

I.

fq"'-"'

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l l·friJUia \1-1-1

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11 F.. ml&lt;l"...,"'"
l:lW., .. dtnl...,
ll l-•lod

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ft

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9. 18 .500"No. 2 speed rear

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7l \l..oi4WO

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14Mooc ,..,....,...,. .
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141

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110., . . . 11....,&lt;1

....... _

IIJI!&lt;II~Wno oh

passengers

10. 5 speed synchromesh
transmiSSion. d1rect 1n f1fth.
11. 366 cu ..in. V-8 gas en,g,ne or larger.
12. Step fuel tank lefl and
nght mounted. mih•mum capacny I 00 gallons.
.
13. 4.000 lb: minimum front
spring ca pacity.
14. 11.000 lc . rear spring

35. Heavy duty fac tory re1n·
forced frame.
36 Color· Omaha Orange

37 . One AM / FM Rad&gt;o.
38. The front of the envelope
enclosing the bjd must be
marked. "Durop Truck B1d.
Propos al No. 1".
1. B1dd er to furn ish the•r own
b•d forms. l1 st• ng b•d prtce as on
l1ne ttem spec1f1cat•ons sheP.t.
capacity.
·
as adver11sed .
15. Aux11iary rear springs.
2. Deltvery must be made by ·
16. C.omb1natJon front and .
the succe ss ful bidder. 120
rear d1rect1onallights.
davs after b1ds are awarded. or
17. TraH1C hazard SWitCh.
b1d is 1101ded.
18. Dual electnc horns
3. The Chesler TownShip
19. Heater and deftoster.
20. Two speed windsh•eld Trust ees may accept the lowest
Qtd . or select the best btd l or the
wipers and washers.
1ntended pur~o se . and re serve
21 . PC~~Ve r steenng
22 . I 0 .00 x 20 12 ply lront the nght to accept or reJect any
O( all b1ds and /o r · any part
mes. h1ghway tread. T nms.
23. 10,00 x 20 12 ply rear thereof .
t1res. on and off road tread . .
24. One additional 7" nm Chester Townsh•p Trustees
'
and ring.
12)16, 2 1. 21c
25. Cas\ spoke wheels.
26. Heaw duly clulch.
2 7. Heaw duty brake boos~ubllc Notice
ter. With r fear br.alc.es.
28. Heavy duty bumper and
fro nt tow hooks.
PUBUl 'lonCE
Sealed bids ~ll'ill be rece1ved
29 . LH . and A.H. Senior west
in the office of the V1llage Clerk.
coast mirrors.
Pomeroy. Ohio unt1l 12 o'clock
30. 7 7 Amp battery. heaw
noon on the 28th day of.februdUI\'.
ary, 1983. lor the following :
31 . 60 Amp or larger
1. 1983 commercial cutalternator .
.
away van for Pomeroy Fire
32. Cab grab handles. l &amp; R.
Oepanment.

11:1 ........
1111} """•ll~ ..· n
H!ltl , ,.,..,,
'1~1 H.. ll.!o,

""'' """'~""' '"'~

r•"~' "" ''""''''"~'

_

...........S"oLo' ....' "'"''~'"
... ......

Public Notice
IndiVIdual

lo~ m

A....,c;,.,.,.

~,.

·~·"'.. " ' '

-

~ .

34

4Mt

. :.... ~ ....

l&lt;t l ~ fl '"'''
llol!t !1..... ...,

Upln l l&gt;-""'
Ufllnl!oW&lt;&gt;&lt;&lt;I'

IIMH l l -1
17U"""'~

,..-..., ....

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

.......,

seat

'

!1'17
!1111!&gt;

axle.

33. V1kinq T-Bar driVer's seat.

A""' t;,...., :m•

r:Nl\IW n

Jl'!

M......,r;,. ,.....,

"'h• 1:...... fit"

Jill .,.,,....

... .,,.,c;,.,...,

., .........., ...........
=~

M,.,... c,... .,,.

c-•••

IIIIi
)II

llH....,~I--1•

Public Notice

8)1;18 .

I ~--------------~--~~

52 Cl. TY a 11-

47W..,IIdtoAono
41 ~ .......................
41 Fo r hu•

DumP T:uck. 1883 Modll)

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
00Ml4188ION OF OIDO
By: David M . Polk,
Secretary.

51 H...,_.,... Coo.rlo

- ·-·- :::.::·::-

l ~ lut.onMo l...!ckn•

lllotoiAorUO!I•
21 lll..lhuww-•11

receiVed by the Chestef Town ·
ship Trustees, Post Off•ce Bo)
13. Chester. Ohio 45720. on
or before Marc h 8th; the b1ds
will be opened at 7:45 p.m,,
March 8th. and read aloud
for the following \leh1c le. Each
b1d to meet the , conditions
and specifications as follows:
Ptopoal No. 1 ISinglo Axle

All Interested parties
wm be given an opportuni\Y to be heard. Further Information may be
obtained ' by oontactlng
the Commtsslon.

s.,.,.., ••

ll ~~--· ...

307 .86 ot the Oh•o ReVIsed
Code. sealed bids Will be

The Publ!c Utilities Commission of Ohio has 's et
for publ!c hearing C&amp;se
No. 82 - 162 · EL - EFC
(Subflle A), to review the
fuel procurement practices and .pol!cles or Col- . _
umbus and So11thern
·ohio Electric Company,
the operation or its Electric Fuel Component and
related matters . This
hearing is scheduled to
begir&gt; at 9:30 a .m . on
March 25. 1983 at the offlees of the Public
Ulllltles Commlsillon of
OhiO, 378 South High
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43216.

·--

......
1I

Public Notice

r~;:::=========:;---1

'

__. ..

C•nloln_,,,....,,~-~•

~

~

,

Public, Notice
2. Rescue van body for the
Pomeroy F•re Oepanment
Spec• f•ca!lons are on hi e rn
the ofhc:e of the VIllage Clerk.

Pomeroy
The V1llage has the rrg ht to

reJect any and all btds
A ce rtil1ed perlo.rma nce
check m th e a mo unt of ten per Cfi!nt (1OJ ol th e btd shou'd ac·
co mpany each btd

Ellen Jane Rought
V1Uage CI F! rk.
Ch~rl es Leg;tr

Pomeroy F-rre Ch1ef

\

121 14. 21. 2tc

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNlY. OHIO
ESTATE OF EMMET McCAS.
KEY. DECEASED

c- No. 24021

·
NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY
On February 16. 1983. "' the
Metgs Coun t)' Pro ba iP Court
Case No 2402 9. Glorrtl Hut ·
ton. Route 3. · AlbAny , Oh,o
4 5710 WJ !&gt; APPOintnrl [ W:PCtJ :
H•)i of thP. r.st.,t e ol Emmm
McC nskr'f . deceased, l:ltr. ol
Route 1 Bow: 25G . Autl.:m d
OhiO 4577 5
.
RoOP.n E Buck

Probate Judflf!!/
(2) 2 1. 2813 1 7. 3tc

CIPrk

�____

_______

.
8 . The

Page

Busin~s

Real Estate General

608£. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

VIRGIL B. SR .
216 E . 2nd St.
Phone

1-(614) -992-3325
JUST USTED - Modern 3 yr.
3 bedroom horre. 2\\
baths, large family room, nice
ln:hen, dining. with glass
dooo to sundeck. Large base·
ment with 2 car garaee. utility
room &amp; one acre. $56,950.
oij,

1974 Schultz,
12x65 with bpout 3 bedrooms.
I 'h baths, mer-com, util(y and
2 level lots out of aK floods.
RACINE -

IIIJTI.AND - This older home
is oo21e118 lots on Rt. 124. Has
3 bedrooms, 1'h baths. natural
gas, city water, chimney for
your wood burner. Front &amp;
back encl~ porches. Aslling
$26.000.
RACINE - Next to store &amp;
schods. Has 21arge bedrooms,
iving 12x24, bath, large eat-in
kitl:hen, front JX)rch and level
klt $18,500.

· BOGGS

New Holllnd, IIQI

TUPPERS PlAINS - Agorgeous two acre totwith aone floor plan
len year old home. Three bedrooms. dining area. full basement
with garage, t:"ltio, and nice cabnets in kitchen. Just $38,500.00.

Farm Equipment
Deller
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

bedrooms, large beautiful living room and dining room, 1\1 baths,
balcony, patio and a wishing well. lots of closel space, new
plumbing and new wiring. $38,000.00.
.

acre. $26.500.

Housing
Headquarters

. ..·

~
- --::--:--::--:-:---:---~

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
HEARING ON
PE Ill ION FOR
ADOPTION
OhloRevloodCode
No. 3107.04
The s... of Ohio •.
Molgo County
Common Plooo Court
PI- Divlllon
c-No. 23971
NOTICE OF
HEARING AND
EXAMINATION
• In 1111 . . _ of 1111 AdoPiion

·"'
!nfont Doe
'To John Young.

..._,,

' in this Coun a petitton for leave

to adopt Infant Doe. a newborn
' chi ld , and for a change of the
surname of satd mt nor ch tld to

the Pettttoners· surname An
Petitton for Adoptton

~ amended

was filed by the Petittoners on

· January 20. 1983. for leave to
· adopt Infant Doe. and for a
change of the sumame of sa td
'• mtnor ch ild to the Petttia ners·

The amended Petttton fo r

-

)
1
I
.I
.I
I
I
I
I
I
I
1

Pole

WIMic

(F111 hlimal11)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

11-26-rtc

Barns.

PIKII

l

Bottom, DH. 45743
915-4193 or 992-3067
12-2·tk

Wife: Thtlmt
Dlupt111: Htltnllld Ietty
Son: Rlchtrd, pandchll·
dnn &amp; &amp;reat-anndchll·
dnn.

TRI-cournv
BOOKKE£PING
SERVICE

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Cynthia AI·
ice Epple uprtsses tlltir
dNp 111tHude for all the
kindnesses shown at the
time of her dt111l. All
those who came to ullat
the fun~r~l home, stnt
cards or brou&amp;ht food,
IIYt lilts of money or
llowtrs, we thanl.

&amp;18 E. lltin, P-ur. OH.

992:3795
We Do Briteepq Far
. PH.

PH. 992·7583
or 992-2282

MARYC. KBliR~ER
1·21·2 liNt.

Adoptton alleged that you are
the father of satd mtnor chdd.
and all eged further that you
aband oned the mother ol sat d
m tnor ch1l d dunng her preg·
nancv and up to the ttme of sa•d
m tnor ctuld's placemen t tn the
home of the Pettttoners
You are hereby further noti fied that you may ftle an

PH. 992-6851
349 N. 2nd St.
Mld~leport, OH .
Mon.-Thurs . 4:00-11:30
Fri.·Sat. 4:00·12:00

CLOSED SUNDAY

Pizzas-Pizza Bread
Italian Bread-Subs

ob)eC tton to the adootta n With
the Meigs County. Probate

2· 11 -1 mo.

Cou rt within t h1n.y days of the
filing of the Petttt on for Mop·
tton of satd mtnor ch tld.
The heanng on the Peutto n
for Adoptt on. and the examtna ·
!ton, under oath of all the
pan •es m inte rest who may be
present and to whom la'Nfu l
nottce has been giVen. wtll be
had before satd Court. at the
Me•gs Counrt Probate Court,
Courthouse. Pomeroy . . Ohio

From he S111lltst Heater
Core to the Llrpst Radii·
tor.
Radiator Spec:iaist
NATHAN BIIIGS
35 Yrs. Experience

SMITH NELSON
~OTORS,

Inc.

Pome,.y, Oh.
"'· "2·2174

2-2&amp;-tfc

We appreciate all offers
of htlp or strYic:e
the
family. We found Mr.
Hunter of the Hunter Funer~l Home to bt excatdin&amp;IY kind. helpfuland·efficient. Those who accompanied us to the 111'1·
veside, we appreci1ted
very much.
Thank You All.
Haul &amp; Ohler Oliver
Kermit Epple &amp; All

to

The Grendchildren.

CARPENTER
FOR
RENT

4 5 769. on the ,1st day of Apn l.
1983 a t Ten o'clock A M .

You Name The Price
You Might Get Lucky

WITNESS my Stgnature and
sea l of satd Court th•s 20th day

of January. A.D .. 1983.
Roben E. Buck

PH. 742-2328

Judge

By. Janet D. MornS
f1 )24. 31(21 7. 14.2 1.2 8. 6tc

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

GHEEN'S

SIDING

PAINTING INC.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Gara&amp;es"
· "Call for tr,. sidin&amp; estimates, 949-2801 or
949-2860.

1·31·1 mo.

C htef Deputy Clerk

. No Sunday Calla
3-ll·tfC

lndustri1l, Commercial.
Rnldtntill, Interior and
Exttrior.
Painting
Sandblaating
Waterblaotlng
Parlolng Lol Stripping
Spray Painting
Textu,. Coalinga
FULLY INSURED
g
FREE ESTIMATES
:;;!
· CAU 614-949-2616 "'

... . " ........
'
......
........
'

'

'

3 Announcements
SWEEPER ond uwlng
m•chine rep~~lr, parte, end
ouppllu . Pick up ond
delivery. Qovlo Vocuum
Cloon11, ono holt milo up
Goorgoo Crook Rd . Coli
448-0294 ..
Gun •hoot , Racine Gun

t-----------t----------+----------1 Club.
Sunday
otortlng
1 p.m.Evwy
FoctOI\'
chokod
guno
only.
------lcGINGER BREAD STUDIO·
AUTOMATIC
RADIATOR

A Real Ch~p!

1

He's a winner, a stuffed toy a
child will adore.
This champion pussycat is
18-inches tall with moveable
·arms and le&amp;s so he can do all
kmtls of exercises. Pattern 7248:
tissue patterns to sew cat of
~lush or lerrycloth.
$2.50 for each pattern. Add
)01 ~ach ~itern for postage
and handl ing. Send to:
Alice Brooks
NHCIIKrlfl Dept.

The Daily Sentinel

.

.

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•.SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAIID CLEARING,
CDNCRElE WORK
IICIIIDlD &amp; GIIMMTEED
PHONE JAMES CLIFFORD
-' 992·7201 2 -~~~.

COMPIITE

RADIATOR SERVICE

Mlu.ER

Baa 163, Old Clllhll 511., ...
Ylll, NY 11113. l'rinl 11-.
Ad.... Zip. Plltn II1111M!.

Yes! I want to see more crafts. send
me your new 1983 NEEOLECRAFT
CATAlOG. 150 designs, 3 free

I

v

•

~

OPEN 9 t1 5 liON. t1ru SAT.
All TJPIS of Atrto lop~ir,
Brtkls, lUll-Ups, IIC.

a.

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

112-Prill AfaUns

lll·fa!J All "
11~15

• • CIOcllll

Jllb . .

101-lllllallf ...,_
107-llllllllt s..illl
I ~lllllllt fiiiiiGa
104-11111111 .._
' 103-15 Qdts .. .,.....,

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
l-24tft

-54

Npltir end nlNdiii\Ji• end .__

Aleohollcl Anonymouo. Coli
448-0278, 304-8711 -31147.

CM

cont

•-.wemnll6o
ec:id bol end lOCI out , .
dlltiWI. We ll6o 1'111*
O.Tiria.

THE Prolooaionol Eloctrolyllo Contw IJo• ofl•lng
permanent heir remowel to

PAT HILL FORD

PULLINS

SPAGHml

EXCAVATING

aooZs

SAT:1 MARCH 5
At 1111 Rutlllld

-lo-loy

Gl'lde Sc:lloal Gym
5:00 P.ll. to toO P.M.
13.00 Adult-'2.00 aJIIdnn

Dinner includes: Silllhltti
Salld, Roll, Drirhldllisseri
The Chllllliers"'
EnlertlinmMt
2·9-t mo.

-Trtnchor
-Water

4

-Gas Lints
-Septic Systems
lARGE or SIALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

1· 12·1 mo. pel.

;::========::;t-----------t----------1-----------~

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT

~

--

POMEROY
lANDMARK

614-992-2181

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDJNGS
Sizes sllrt from

12'116'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sins from 6'16' Up
to 24'136'
lnsulatd Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rlclne, 011.
I'll. 614-143-5191

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Bui1ding
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

6:30P.M.

Choke 12
Gauge Shot&amp;uns Only
Factory

10-6-tlt

2-11-ttn

Giveaway

-Sewer

Miac. Merchandise

All OTHER APPUANCES

include discount

For ell your wiring
needa; fumecea repair service and installation.
Reaidentiel
Commercial
Call 742-3196

n:,-..

W.

SERVICE

Art louono . JONI
CAfiAI!IGTON-898-3290.

tho 1'1. Plo-nt a... llnCI
pattern~ On~ $1.50
1877. Aher Fob1uory wo
All CIAFJ 11001$. .$2.10 udl
will bo offering thooo
SPECIAL
llfYicll In Huntington ond
All ...... ~ dd 50e
TIANSIIISSION FILTER
992~2196
Sauth
Chorlllltan .onl'(. We
AND FLUID CHANGE
Mldcllopart, Ohio
'l rl very aorry to ••v• Pt.
13~ &amp; Clllhll De , ...
ONLY 131.95 I· I~Ht
3-7-ttt
l-13--"e
Pleaaant 11 wa care vary
134-14 Ollck Mldritlo QMII
much obout our Plllonll &amp;
13S.FIIIIlan """' QIHtlnt ·
j-----------t--"----~---t----:---------jthe people horo ond wont
132.0.11~
.
I hom to ,.colvo only tho bolt
131-'N I llicll Qlilts
oxpOrloncod
profootlonol
129-qllcl 'rl E11t Trlllllln
3rd
ANNUAL
CIFI around, 10 WI l r l
128-Emllapt Plld!w\ Quilts
oflorlng our pOtiento In thlo
126-TIIdfiJ Clifty Flllwen
1r11 1 p•manant dlacount
IZI·PIIaw hiHIIfs
In olthor Huntington,
DINNER
-Dozers
111-Cncbot with Squares
304-529 -1922. or Iouth
SponSOIId by lloiD
-llltckhoes
St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.
117-fa!J All Ill Noedlepainl
Chlrluton, 304 -744Vocal
llusic
· 114-(omploll Atpw
-Du111p Trucks
1710. Sheri\' • Judy.

WE ALSO WORK ON

T hese ca sh rates

ELECTRIC
SERVICE

TRANSMISSION CO.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All

Makes
•Wothoro •Diollw..hon
Rongeo
•Rofrlgonton
•DIVIII •Fr_,.
PARTS ond SERVICE

•New Grips

18. - - - 19, - - - - -20.
21.
22.

•Rtfinlllllnc
•Rt-weiptinc

t!t .

•Bal1ncilll
oGolt Trfps ·
for Yo1111 Pooplo _I ·
•Pre-S..son Sale •

23. --'---'----24. -----~25.
26.

20% &amp;30% OFF

ANY PERsON who hu
onythlng to give owoy .,d
dooo not olfw .. ottompt to
offer any other thing for 1111
moy ploco on od In thlo
column. There will bono
charge to 1111advortl•r.
If tho Bon thoro foro oholl
moko you, friO, Yo ohell bo
frllindlld.
John 8:311
FOUND 1 m... dog 30 lbo ..
hauoobrokon, 2-3 y11 . ald.
Coli 448· 13114 ett.r 2 .
Puppl" 'lit Pokenoll • 'lit
Terrier. C•llevenlngt
e 14·2411·1878. ,
2 dogo 1tlt Pokenon • '&gt;(o
Terrier. 3 cote. 2 malo ond 1
tomolo deolawocl &amp; opa~.
Coli 441-2t4t.
'

2 tomolo dor,· 1 Gormon
mlxod br-.
Shophord •
Clllll14·218-1398.
12 YEAR old Border Colllo
to good homo lnthocountoy.
Good comc!':llion for old•
u::~· .
all 3 0 4·1711·
T- mlxodb-dpupploo, 3
mantho·old maloo, 304·
171-5702.

2·16·1 1110

28.

AMBER RUST

~~:£YAR0$500

33.
~-

,

______

35 . . - - - - - - -

12'd5.7'
GLINT

COPPER

$210

Pomero_y , Oh.

45769

SHAG $12.95

RUTLAND FURNITURE

The Dally Sentinel

111 Court St.

8

742-2211

RUTLAND,

Loat end Found

LOBT G11mo'n lhlphord.
br-, l .maa. old. LNITyn
llhaa Rd. If found cell
114-2q.IIBJB.

Ot005E

~II This Coupon with RemiHance

7

oM:

.. ......

•

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

by Larry Wright 72

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

SWAIN
IIUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olivo St .. Golllpollo. King
cool • wood hoatero with
'.4 MILE out Sandhill Rood, fen t4119, 111 bo• oprfng •
304-675-3834. mottre11 1100i firm t120,
oofo-lovooeat • chair 1199,
love teats •10. new coal •
wood heaters as low as
44 Apartment
, •398 with blowero . uoed
for Rent
coal 6 wood heater1, new
dfnot 1011 176 • up, llfrigeratora. ranaea. bunk bed•
comploto *179, bunkiu
mattressea •40, cheata.
dre•Mro. JV' 1. Coli 44831119.

Yerd Sale

MOVING BALE , who.lo
houllhold, everYthing muot
go. Four ploco lriJI'Isilloold
o.ok dinning 100tli toble •
cholra tiiOO. Throe pl11ce
Broylll~ oolid alii q'l•n oi•
bodmam - with mottre•
• box aprlng• e11oo. Twin
olu bod, boby cheot of
drewer~, wlck1r t•ble •
plant 11and, whole kitchen,
dl1h11, gloo111. pol8 pono.
tUvor wore. u•nolla, email
eppHoncoo, ohoeto. towolo,
bodoprood . booko, nlc
n1c:lu, mlac . Saturdey,
Sundoy • Mondoy. February 18th .. 20th., 2 ht ..
1301 Moodawbrook Dr. Pt.
Ploount, 304-875-7921 .

8

·s.

WVa Stote Chomplon Auctl·
oneer Rick P•reon, Elt1tn,
ontiquoo. torm, lal11holclo.
Liconlld Ohlo-WVo. 304773-117811 or 304· 77391815.

Nicley lurnilhld mob . homo
In city. Adultl only . Coli
448-0338 .

Auction every Fri. night 11
tho Hertford Community
Cent•. Trucklooda. af now
merchandi•• every w•ek.

For rent unfurnished ept., 4
rooms and bath. Inquire at

87 Vine St .. Golllpollo.

Conalgmentt of new '•nd
Ulld merchandill IIWIYI

Furnished 3 rma . with

Mobile horne • loll for Ale,
1987 Buddy mobile home
14xBO, 2 bdr. 1111 heat, rural
water. aet up with 2 or 4
loto. Call 446·1240.

-como. Rlch1rd Roynolclo
Auctlo-. 2711·3089.

AUCTION ovory Soturdoy
night, Mt. Alto, WV. 8 p.m.
Conaignm•nta welcome.
Emmo Boll auctlonMr.

WELCOME WAGON. INT
Equal Opportunity

Employer

9

Wanted To

Buy

22 Money to Loan

WANTED TO euy Old
furnltu"' ond AntlqUII of oil
klndo. coli Kenneth Sweln,
44&amp;-31119 01 2118·1987 in
1111~n ...

1972 mobile horne tor Ale,
excellent ahape, reedy to
move into. Muat eee to
appreciate, a real bonua .

can 448-9588.

1974 Kirkwood Mobile
Home. Good cond. Phone
448 ' 24411 or 448-4782.
USED MOBILE HOME.
576-2711 .

Buying Gold. SMv.,., Plotl·
num. Gald ond llllwr price•
ore thohighlllt ln-yooro,
chock our priceo on gold •
tllvor. ICriP jewelry. Buying
Old colno , ocrop rlnoo •
aJiverware. Deily quotes
oveMIIIIIo. A... oolnt • coin
oupplloo for 1111. Sprint
Volley Trodlng Co .. Spring
Volloy Plezo, 441·80211 or
448-8021.

33 Farms for Sale
26 acr•• mostly level.

dr01tl cally roduco d . Woo
154,000 now 1411.000.
M~ot 1111. 3 bdr. home, new
furnence. county water,
new beth. carpeted,
aluminum aiding , coe
wood burning atove, Bern It
other bldgo. Geroge locatod
on okt , eo nMr Porter. Call
6 14-388· 9060.

, Wo poy coolt lor lete modol
cllonulldc...
Fronchtown Cor Co.
BMI Gono Joltnoon
441·0018

207 ecre farm. langiVille .

Collt lor ulld ""'bill honwo
or trovol troll on . Will
coneider dem~ted or burn
ouu. Coli 441-01711.

Mln••l rlghto includod. N'o
houoo . *12,000 down. Will
corry root. 814-388 -9346 .

ATTENTION LOG. PRO·
DUCEIIS : Wo need grodo
loga and veneer. we are
poylng top p - for quolllty
mot11iol dollvored to our
mill, In tho following
epeciea : The oeka. Aah.
Chorl\', Hoid Maple . ond
Wolnut. Blenoy Herdwooclo
of Ohio. Sr. At. 338 North·
Borlow, Oh 114-87a-2880.

34

lrlllt Torrlor .. Welch Terrier
or Lob.. 3 to e month• old.
441-7448.
BEDS·IAON , BRASS, old
fu1n1turo , gold, ollvor
dollars, wood ice boxea,
1ton1 jara. antiquea, etc·.•
Complote houooholdo.
Wrho: M .D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 8827780.

. • Tho Mooon County Board d
Education 11 now occeptlng
, oppllcotlono for tho pooltlon
of conatruction engineer for
. ·t he ochool oyotom. lnte,.lt
. oppllc1nu ohould aubmltt
their epplk::ation and rftume
•by Morch 2. 1883 to tho
Mooon County Boord of
• E'ducotlon Office, 307 8th
Street, Pt. Pleasant. WV
211550 . Appliconu aro to
have expertl.. In the arq of
constructkln men~~gement.
plirnonal\' deolgnlng. writ·
lng ot opeclflculono,
dovoloplng end..reodlng blue
prints • .and eny other
experience related to the
conllruction of focllhin ond
ramo doling of focHhlao.

Gold , ollvor, llerllng ,
jowoiiV. ringo, old colno •
currency. Ed Burkitt Iorber
Shop. Middleport. 9923478.

12

33

Down hill okll1 ledloo or,
reooonobly priced . Coil
304-882-2974.
loby- end d,._ ond-or
choot. 304·115-1011.

....... : -

Can ' t wo1k 9 to ,II. ·soil'
AVON. Work when you
wont. Cell 448·3315B or
448-2111.
•.
,_B_u_i_ld_l_n_c-:o_m_e_t_o_r_y_o_u_r:
fu 't ure . Aloo Vero hu,
opening• lar aggrooolvo•
loocloroln thlu,.e. No lerJII.
lnvoo tmont. unllmltod
oun 1ng potontill. Coli
814-3B7- 7182 wookdoyo.
2 ·4PM.
NEEDED: Ponono In, Gallla
County to provide tompor·
ary c1re In own home to
ln ...vlduolo with cllvtlap·
montol dlooblllty. Rocolvo'
llllf\', room end boftld Ill '
.-.11 "lnoe benofllll. TI'Hilng
provldell . Coil hokoyo ·
Community lorvlooo ot
e 14·2 811 . 1031. £qual '

~op!!pon.~~n~~~y~o~m~p~l~a~w·~·--~
· ~
C...l.Jntorj llerty ..._no '

cllll-iel'tlo ,.uano. Car~
ond phano ftM! 1 U y, trw
kit evoHeblo. booldngpertloo. Cltll botw11n lAM '
ondt2PM:Jdenexeep( •

JOe.• ·HIM.

Insurance

8ANDV AND BEAVER
lnlurance Co . has offered
Hrvicee for fire inaumnce
cov11ago In Golllo County
for almost • century . Farm,
~omo ond poroonol ptDporty
coverages Ire available to
meet lndhlduel needs.
Contect Noel lno. Agency,
ogont. Phone 448-1894.

1

,15

w.d.

probably won't be lower.
Home

and

or

rental

Broadway· Middlepol\1 .
Modern buolnou bldg . 68
Court St., Golipolio.

polo or children, ~ utllltl11
paid. 1175' mo; Coli 446·
3686 . 44 Locuot St . or
448-3310.
Nearly new 1 Btl Apt. with
refrig . • otove. 1169 po1
mo. Water included . •so
clop. No poll. Phone 446·
3817.
Apt. for 111nt. Hell double-2
bd.room Apt. Adu~• profer,.d . No pOll. 814-992·
2749.
Fumlohed Apt. 3 roomt ond
bath, utilities paid. 3'h miles
oouth Middleport R-7 . Coli
367-0811. John Sh11t1.
Aportmentt. 304-875·
11548. -

ond Galllpolio. 614-448·
8221 .

UNFURNISHED apartment
rent, 1 bedroom.
•• 80 .00 Call Automotive
Supply, 8-6. 304-876·
2218 . 8711-6763.

for

ONE bedroom apertmenu

S. Acreage

for the elderly . All utilities

paid. Tenont1 PlY 30 percent of their adjuoted
1-16 Acrelotaand-orhou•. income in this HU D aubsidSeller wiU landscape. . ized apartment building.
Twin Riven Tower. phone
446 -1798.
304-875-8879 . Equol
opportunity houaing .

Gollio Coo,onty.

evening•.

3 bdr . clean &amp; carpeted
unfurnished upltalre apt.
Private entrance. parking off
atreet. down town, dep .
required, adultl ohly. no

APARTMENTS. mobile

For rent or 1ale store
building with upotalro opt .
and 2 renul trllloro. Corner
of At . 180 • Bulovillo Ad .
Call 448-3888 or 448·
4491 .
w

36 Lota

3 bdr. lpt . t160 ino. pluo
t75 dop. Call 614-245·
9316.

homes. houses . Pt. Pteallnt-

112 + ICIII with 2 hotTtotll ~~~~~~~~~~
-----...... ------------Coll982 -3267 or 676· 2516

dominium. Depoolt io100%
refundabla . Choose now.
See John Ecker. Rlvaroido
Torroce. Col 448· 1126.
New 4 bdr brick In Rio
G•ando, •ee.ooo. lond
contract 8% loan. Call
Bt4-246-6439 . .
3 bdr. 1 car garaga, central
air. loceted 1;A, mi . out
Geo rge'o Creek Rd. Owner

mena abe , good cond .•

:.~

Situations
Wanted

mEE Til IMMING. REMO·
VAL. CALL 814·949-2129
OR 814-992-8040.

WANTED to lto11 . Tobocoo
quau . will give . 111 lb.
Morgono Woodlawn Farm.
Pll 'ny 304·8711-2275,
301-1123·11B43.

..

Excellent condition 6
location- - ell ready for
lmmedlltl occupancy -lnteren retea are down and

Furniohed upotalro opt .. 4
rooms a bath, clean, no
peta, adults on~. dep. req.
Coll446-1519.

41

Housea for Rent

N- Hoven 2 bdr. fumllltld
opt .. Utlitloo pd .. t26Q por
mo .. t100 dop. C1ll 614·
446-7628 .

t1 00 down reaerves con-

Buying now I uood comic
booko. e 14-948-24411 oftor
II p.m.

:

31 Homes for Sale

Business
Buildings

prlvoto both, ht. floor. 845
2nd. Avo., Galllpallo. Cell
446-22111.

:

- - - - - - - - --lcf73

Schools
Instruction

karate the ultimate In self
defence all private luaons.

Men, women, • phlldren.
lnltrY,ctlon thru block boh .
At~o available Karate
' unitormo puchlng and
· kicking bogo, ond protoctive
equipment . j,,.v Lowery •
Auoclates Kerate Studio.
143 Burlington Rd., Jock·
oon, Oh. Call 814-288·
" 3074 or 1114·384-BteO.,

Farm house for rent •100

mo. pluodep. Coll814.245·
9316.

8 rm. house. small house.

required.
21141 .

aero of lond, •1 0,500. Call
814-2411-9211 .

Call 814 -742·

Two bedroom unfurniohod.
carpated, ad~lts preferred.
3 bedroom houH for aale . •100 depoolt . Noor
N- CIIJ&gt;oilng throughout. Po'meroy-Muon bridge.
Locotod on Boohon Rd. and Clifton. 304-773-6982 or
1111 on 3 ocre1 of lend . :Z73-11775.
Excellent term I to right
porty. MAKE AN OFFER . 30 SIX room hou10, fulf bue·
VII! financlngovollablo. ment. garage, nice location,
Conlllct Bonk Ono of Pome- U26 month. 304-675·
roy. e 14·99.2 ·2133.
1090.
SALE Or rent: 2 bedroom

An electric home 14th St. •
hoaoe, kitchen, living room, Ohio St., Pt . Ploaunt. 5
both utility room •175.00 rme. a bath, rertt . reasonamonth, c.U 304-875-4388. ble . 304-875·671J ofler
&amp;PM.
8~ PERCENT aooumoblo
loo,n. 2 yoor old bl·level.
Rolling Acree, large lot.
42 Mobile Homes
mony axtroo. 304-6715·
for Rent
8768 .

General Hauling and Trash
romovol lervlco. Rolloblo
ond dopondoble. Call 448·
31118 eftoi IPM 2111-1887.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

LEML!Y'B DRILLING Wotor
Wolle, Shollow goo ond cor6·
drilling. Myero end Gould
pumpo. hloe end Service.
Gu -aNw.ll o.vlco. CoN
114·HII·III4J.

ONLY ONE New 12ft. widl,
2 bedroom .. oil oloctrlc,
mobllo home, only •7 ,915,
bor* ffnonclngavtllolllo. AU
ll8te Modulor Hom•. hoH
woy - n Pt. P""'nt •
Huntington on ST.AT. 2.
304·1171·2711.

20711.

Ooorgo'o Creek Rd. Call
387-7743.
.

2 bedroom house near
Llngaville. Oh. Referencas

-;::;;-:::-;---.,.--;--.=--

J1olt 'o Lock""lth hntlco.
Commuclei-Domootlc·
Au~tatlvo. Coli 304·182·

3 bdr. 1 car garage. central
air , located Yz mi. out

may flnonce, 137,000. Calf
387-7743.

Nice 2 bldroom home, 11tlt
yeoro old, m1111 all FHA •
HUD requirements, l•rge
woodod lot, 80x634. CloA
18 Wanted to Do
to ochoolo ond ., ....: Loan
" - - - - - - - - -··-- 111Um8blo, 304· 8711· 7870.

Ooocl rniGhanlc doolreo ony
kind of moohenlool work.
Floeooneble prior ·. Cell
4"·82152 toll for Jo.hn .

8 rm. houoo I both . Inquire
et918 2nd. Ave .. Gollipolio,
Oh.

8x30 Trill11, t1300.00;
304-1715·4893.

2 bedroom, oil electric
mobile home, FOil RENT
WITH OPTION TO BUY .
Poymonto •186 Pll mo .
304-671-2711 .
2 bedroom In Middleport,
Furniohod, p11f11odulto.
*2211. monthl'(. Pluo dep·
Ollt, utlltl11p11d . 814-882·
11110.
2 bedroom mobile home.

10xli0. Noor A1clno. Coli
114-112·11818.
TWO moblo hom• for ront
an Rt. 2 1bout II ml,.,••
11om town. Coli oftor e.
304-B71·8277.
-mom t ..n. ltlt·
furnlohod, couploo
omoll chUd ItO·
,.f•onoeo, 304·
078 , UIO.OO

46

Furnished Room•

Sleeping

100m

•126. utili ·

ties pd. alngle male, ahare

bath. 919 2nd Ave., Golfipo·
llo. Call 446 -4418 otter
7PM.

48

Space for Rent

614-9811-4358 .

Gu clothes d•yor-$1 00 .
Electric clothu dryor· t85.
Wooher ond dryer -t125.
Call 614-742-23112 .
3 cord seasoned split oak.

t60. cord. 614-992-3895.
Gravel or fill dirt , delivered .
Coli 814-992-3896.

TROYBILT ROTOTILLERS·
Dhcounta . Free hiller
KOUNTRY MOBILE Homo Included. Immediate shipw
Perk, Route 33. North of ment , Parts, engines.
Pomeroy. La1ge Iota . Call 703-942-3871 HickOIV Hllf
Nuroory. Rt. t Box 390 A,
992-7479.
Floherovillo. VA 22939 .
Trade·ina accepted.
48 Equ ipnie nt
Colonial Ceramics. 2919
for Rent
Jackoon Avo. 1'1.PI. Evening
cl•••oo end dolly workthop,
Duncan Afric1n1 6 Meyco
Beck hoe endloeder digs 8 Peinta. Greenware Bisque.
ft., Iorge bid pick up Easter grHnw•re • biaque.
hauleble, operate youraelf. bowll 6 pitchers . Hou'ra:
190. P• day. 304-896· Mon.· Fri. BAM to 4PM,
3841 .
evening• Mon . • Wad. 8
p .m .- 9 p.m . Sot. 9 -12 .
Reglater for free door prizes.
49
For Lease
304-8711-3210.
W1nted to I eat acorn

ground. Coli 814-266 1352.

90,000 BTU Roddy HAter.
9 gel. Kerooone tonk with
thermaotot. Wllf take t326.
304-678-2802.

1--------;..._...__________-1

a. 4 w:o.

1978 CJ-6 Jeep Renogoclo
Western bullet' wheeta,

many eJrtreo. Coli 814-367·
7147 or 446·0498.
1981 Joop CJ6 . Coli Jo'l):l
Seelig ot 614-742-2774.or
814-742 -2308 o!Wr 4 p.m.

.

us Pol ""011

~~~~~~~~=;::,r-;~~~;~;;;;~

1-----------

Kirby sweeper with attachmanti, including ahama
pooer , Excellent condition.
'Jhrow pillows, double knit
comfortera and ruga . Call

Vans

1979 350 V-8 Chev•o~t
otop Von . PS , PB. auto ,
insulated , &amp; penaled. all
aluminum , exc. concf .• like
·new, •10.000. Coli 114·
387 -7182.

I

by F1ontlerl.
t68.5. *276.
Sofa,
· chelr
and lovooeu,
Sofaoandchelropricodfrom
Mt's-. Merchandl'se
*285. to *895. Toblu. t45
~·
and up tor t126 . HidO·I· 1 - - - - - -- - - bodo , e440. end up to
*626 .. RecUnors. t1711. to For •••• lump coal &amp; fire·
*3110., lompo from UB. to wood. Zlnn Coal Co .. Inc .
t76. 6 pc . dinenu trom Cell448-1408 .
•ea .. to t435. 7 pc .• t1 89. 1~-------­
and up. Wood table with tix Fl10wood delivorod t30 PU
cholro t426 . to $746. Dellk lood. Coli 446-2716.
*110 up to t225. Hutchn.l-::----:------t660 . and up. maple or pine Now 1983 White oowlng
flniah . Bunk bed complete machine free arm model
with mattreosoo, U60. ond with built-In otretch otleh.
up to t395. Baby bodo, zig ug--ptliftern•. make•
$110 . Mettreuea or box button holea, monograma.
apringa. full or twin. *1!58.. much more . We ere overfirm . tea. and 178. Queen ttocked with thio model, we
aeu. $196 . 4 dr. che1t1. mutt decree11 our lnvent42 . II dr. cheoto, t64 . Bod tory. Factory 20 yr. guaran·
frameo, t20.and t25 ., 10 toe. Reg. price over *300,
gun ·Gun cabineto. t350.. your coot only *95 . Call
dinette choiro UO. ond $26. 614-386-8918 out oftown
Gaa or electric ranges. $326 call collect. Free delivery to
up to *375. Boby · me· you• home.
treu01. t211 • t36, bed
frameo 120, 825, • 830, Color TV-conoole model,
king freme t&amp;O. Good rug, couch &amp; chair . Call
•election of bid room oultu, 448-7013 .
cedar chaeta. rockers. metal
cabineta, awivel rockera.
Dog kennel for 2 dogo ,
UHd Furniture .. bookceM. 12'x8Y•'x5'. t295. Call
ranges. chairs, end tabln, Bt4-2411·58B4.
waehefl, dryers, 4&amp;frlgera·
tora and TV's. 3 miles out Kenmore washer In A-1
Buloville Rd. Open 9am to cond .• 1110. Whl1lpool
&amp;pm. Mon. thru Fri ., 9amto dryer real nice. $90. Call
6pm, Sat.
446-8181.
448-0322
Lumber: kiln dried walnut.
Refrigeration. washer , red oek, aaasafraa. cherry.
dryere, ranges, dil · maple. Bidwell Count1y
hwaahera, service 6 repair Furniture. Bidwell, Ohio.
of all make &amp; modelo, 9to6.
Call 448-8181 .
1974 Monte Carlo t300.
and 1974 Carner• mobile
Uaed electric dryers 1 white home, t4700 . 258·1497.
Whirlpool, 1 Harveot gold. 2
coppertone. 1 white GE, Magnavox Color T.V. for
Norge. All guaranteed 30 oslo. good cond. ploy• fine.
D11k wood cabnet . ., 00.
deya . Call614-258-1207.
446-4361.
RAY'S USED FURNITURE
2 pc. bodtoom 1~1te 185. Firewood d~llvered •eo . 1
couch *26, chelt It 6, oak cord . Coal delivered •41!5.
office chair *35. gas range ton. Call Tom Hoskins
t86, rofrfg t126, Birdoe'(ll 814-849 -2 t 60 or 614 ·
.
maple droner 185 . Call 142-2834.
614-367-0637.
Firewood , oplft, UO .OO a
truckload, t35 .00 doli ·
vorld. Ph. (6141 992-2770
or 13041 882·2194.
62 CB,TV, Radio
Equipment
luxaire natural gas furnace .
Complete. Excellent condition. Call 614-982 -7810.
RCA coblnet modolllero
AM-FM tope adaptor 1100.
See 2625 Jefforoon AVe ..
66 Building Supplies
1'1. Ploaunt, WV .

64 Misc . Merchandise

t 972 GMC 'h ton PU, 3SO
V-8, auto .. PS. PB. ruftl
good, good tlru, uoo. Cell
446-73117.
. .

.

0

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, ottoman. 3 t.bl.-a. (extra heavy

Trucks for Sale:

t 989 GMC V-6, ~ ton Pl:l,
runs good. body rougl' .
1200. CoM 448·1838 olter
6. .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- washera, dryere. refrigefators. · rangee. Skagge Appliancoo, Upper River Rd .,
booida Stone C111t Motel .
448-7398.

Public · Sele
Auction

trlinod. IIOCid with kldo. Coli
448·811114.

JOHN TEAFORD
Choaltr, OH .

27 .

42 Mobile Homea
for Rent

Daily Sentinel-~

2 bd .tOom tumlohed, 1160.
dopoolt. *1711 . por month
pluo ullltloo and lown caro.
CoH 114-985-3948.

' ·5-tk:

THE
KOUNTRY KLUB

They'll Do It Every Time

Help Wented

The

61 Household Gooda

White moll Cockapoohou•

17. - - - - - -

29 .
30.
31 .
32.

11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.

M. $qui!. . , . F-.1
lllnl. .... - - Clllt
IIIII llllv.lllcMid lalla I •
All ~ your lilhll slnclnly IIIPIICillld.

Lon&amp;

Smlll, i.qlllld CoijiOIIIJt
llusl- &amp; l'lrll•ships

d

S!IICill tllris lo Ponaroy E.

RoofitW &amp; Sidifll Co.

GREG ROUSH

J&amp;F
· CONTRACTING

Monday, February 21 ; 1983

Cllr Dlln

the piiJIII. .,......,
food - diiPir .,....

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

11-ll·r1C:

ANGIE'S
PIZZA

Loat and Found

Gilt.

IEAI.TOI .

Name-------------------Addreu&gt;-----------------Phone------------------

2.

---c.~aallt

--l'lu...... and
oloctolwl woofc

[H'

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

1.

Rtmodelina.
•Insurance Wort
.Custom Pole Bides.
&amp; Gtnces
•Roollnc Work
oAitlniiUII &amp; Villyl Sidinp
15 Years Experience

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

Hemy l Cleland, Jr., GRI ................................. 992-6191
Dottie Turner ...................... ......... .................. 992-5692
Jean Trussell ..................................................949-26&amp;0
Office .............. ...................... ....................... 992-2259

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for .
Clcisslfleds and
Savell I

( }Wonted
( ) For Sole
&lt; 1Announcement
1 )ForRent

llew Homes - Extensin

Add1 a and ..,..,Int.
-~~oa~~,.
woofc

REAlTORS

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

" Surname .

'ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Gf

8

... far .. Ill tilt .......
IIIII IJZif Ill; IIIJIMIIII
........ Gf 011' IIMd

-It-

Routt

992-272~ 1·:16-1 . .

CARPENTER
SERVICE

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Anice corner lot In a good
neighborhood with tour bedrooms, beautifti bath, large living
room, dining room, big pantry, ftil basement and aonecargall!ge.
$50,500.00.
•

addreaa

- You are hereby nOt1f1ed tha t
on the 20th day of December,
1.982. John Doe. Pettttoner.
1
reStdtng tn Metgs County. Ohio
and Jane Doe. Periftoner. restding in Metgs Countv. Ohio. ft led

169 N. 2nd

MIDDLEPORT~ OH.

YOUNG'S

Public Notice

with concrete floor, walks. front
porch, utility and over one

KAY'S .
BEAUTY SALON

l·:J.tfc

~

to lllllk ..
,........ frilnds llld . .

NEW USTNG - POMEROY - A two story home wiltllhree

$21,500.

lar&amp;e ivin&amp; modern ~!chen &amp;
·' nice dining. New wood garage

. NOW THRU lARCH 5th

tlol

nished Including washer and dryer. $29,000.00.

'· MIDDLEPORT - NICe con·
crete bklck. 6 room home. Nat·
ural gas furnace, modern
kitl:hen, basement and level
lot Near swimming pool. Only
FIV£ PTS. - 1976 Sct.Jitz
tr.oier. 2 nice size bedrooms,

n.
IIUIIId ..

$1700

Authorized John DHr.

SYRACUSE - Two lots wrth older home thai hasthree bedrooms.
dining room, part basement and utility room. $11,000.00. ·

services

1 Card of Thanka

DISCONtiNUED
PERM. STOCK

U.S. IT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

_______

. ""!day' FeiHuary 21 , 1983

.SALE

SALIS &amp; SERVICE

NEW LISTING - Bradbury - Mobile home with expando. bay
wmdow, centr.ol air, nice front sitting porch, two car garage with
two rooms, and a beautiful laying I 1/5 acre yard. MosUy fur·

Want just $11,900.

__;_

Pom8roy--Micldl, Ohio

Sentinel

EAFOR

...:__

61

F

arm

E

•
qutpment

International No. 48 hey
baler, new Knottoro. t600.
304-882-2632 or 304· 882· 2274.

2 good studded snow tl~a.

Yearling tenneuee walking
filly. 11 y11r old roglotered
tennessee walking mare due
to foal March 1ot . Call
614-949-2456 or 614 992·3900 .
64

Conditioned hay. ear corn.
Coli 614-949-2870.

Auto Repair

•

Byerly and Felt1 Autom.Jic

Transmission Repeir. NOW
OPEN. Corner of Kemper

Holfow • Kerr Bethel Rd .
Coli 446-6839.

81

Home
Improvements

Hoy for sofa. 614-992-6616
after 6 p.m .

STUCCO PLASTERING .
textured ceilings commercial and reildential . free

TIMOTHY hoy •2 .00 bole. 8
Mile from town. 1st. Qual·
lty, 2nd. crop hoy t2.60 bale
delivered by truck load.
Phone 304-273-3447.

ettlmatoo.
1182 .

MIX hoy ,' clover &amp; alfalfa,

exterior. plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling . 20 yr..

timothy &amp; clover , large bales

12 .00. 304-882 -2422 after
4:30 .

Call 614-2116-

PAINTING · Interior ond
exp. Call

614·38B-9612 ~

Marcum Roofing 8t Spout.
ing . 30 yearaaexperience.
apeclallzlng in built up roof.

Coii814· 38B-9867.

1876 Buick Electra 2 dr ..
PS, PB, AC, AM-FM otero
$1.850 or trade for carile.
farm equipment of equal
value. Cell 446-4637.
1978 Buick Century 2 dr.
auto., Po, AM-FM otero
cassette, ex . cond. Call
448·2133 .
By owner 1982 Dodge
Mlrade ox . cond. 16 ,000
mll01, 31 B. V-8. cruioe.
many extr••· $7,932, will
oacrifice . Coli 448-0047.

1978 Ford Muotong, V-6, 4
opel .. AC. PB, PS. axe. cond.
Call 614-266-8735 .
1975 Plymouth Volient 6
slant engine. 3 spd. trans.
very good cond .. $1,400.
Call 446-2297.
t 969 Pontiac LaMa no
custom S convertible, run1
good, body needs work.
t&amp;OO. Coll614 -268-6620 .

AKC REglotorod beautiful
Cocke• Spaniol. Call 448·
1824.

1978 Chevy Malibu stationwogon, •3.995 . Call 6142118·1786.

AKC Reglltorod Doberman
pupa, 160. Call 446· 7796 .

19SO Toyota Celico . Call
afto1 6, 676· 7438.

*100. Coll304-895-39311.

77

Hay &amp; Grain

DRAGONWYND CAnERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow
puppiOI, CFA Himalayan.
Persian end SiemeH kittoni. Cell 446-3844 after
4PM .

American Eakimo Spitz
puppiea ahote • wormed ,

E78 -14, t25 . coll304-87,.
2468.
.

.2-2 year old Parcheonfillles .

firm.

PHEASANTS . 304-895·
3972.

Auto Parts

-lcRegietered Quarter Horse .
Ruth Reeveo. Also grade .
Saddle•. bridles. winter
hone blankets:. Western
booto. 614 -698-3290.

66

NO IIIII kitteno. grandfother
lowlld Bobcat. Verygontlo•
offectlonlle, block with
whlto feet I marklngo . •76.
or but offer. 304-875·
5894.

1

74 Honda motorcycle 3f10
cc. runogood, ••c . cond. ,
1800 firm . Coll448·3027.
•

S. Accessories

By owner 1973 Dodge
Polara 4 dr .. auto. trans, PS.
P8, 380 V-8 , good cond .,
t600
Coli 675-84111.

HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boarding all breedo. AKC
Rog. Dobormono pupo old
Doberman Stud Service .
Call 448 -7795.

-~-------'-,

76

Building materiels
block. brick, sewer pipes •
windows. li.ntela, etc ,

Pets for Sale

Motorcycle•

Livestock

63

1980 Pinto auto, air, PS,
PB. r &amp; I remote mirrowa.
Rear defroat, Wire wheels.
AM-FM otero. Call 614388·9B11 .

Claude Wlntori, Rio Grande.
0 . Coll614-246-5t21 .

74

1976 Robbit. 4 cyl ., 4 sp ..

HOWAIID L. WRITESEL
ROOFING COMPANY.
Guttei'I·Downspouts·NewRepeir-Gutter PaintingStorm Doors a. Windows.
Free Eatimataa . Phone
814-949 -2263 or 614992-2791 .
Mobile Home Roof Problema? Would you like to ond
roof leaks, roof rumble. roof
coating, ceiling conden•tlon IPOII and liVe 30 'to 40
percent on your headng bill?
Call 992 · 7034 end uk
about our New Roof
Produc;:t.
RON'S Televiolon Service.
Specializing In 2onlth and
Motorola, Ouazar. and
houoe call•. Call 676-2398
or 446-2464.
F • K T,.e Trimming, otump ,
romovol. Call 6711 · 1331. • ·

••po,

RINGLE'S SERVICE
rlenced roofing, Including
hot tar application, carpenter. electrician, maaon. Call
304-676-2088 or 1176- ·
4580 .

----------------~
Water Wellt . CommercJ.I ·,
and Domestic. Taat holes .
Pumps Sales and Service .

304·896·3802.

•

Get your kerpet in lhlp
shape , Waterramoval. FREE

ESTIMATES, FURNITUR~
CLEANING. CAPTIAN
STEAMER 814-448-2107.

STARKS Tree Trimming .. '
Removal. Mini-backhoe
•16. hour. insured, fre'il
ootimatoa, 304-676-2010,

82

Plumbing

&amp; Heating '

am-fm CIISIHe radio. radial

tires, goa. t1,150. 614 ·
992·2736.
FOREMANS USED CARSFor le11 expensive cer1. On
SR.124 in langsville, Oh .
Phone 614-742-2734 .

CARTER'S PLUMBING '
AND HEATING
'
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446 -3888 or 44ti4477

1970 Plymouth. runo good.
body good , muot 1111 .
614-986.-3859 after 6 p.m.

84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

HARTS U10d Can, New

68

a.

Haven West 'lirginia . Ovar
20 less expensive cars In
II:OCk .

Fruit .
Vegetables

Allte,.aln vehicle. 18 HP, 8
wheel drive, good condition.
304 -882-2887 .

Pototoeo, 16. per hundred
lb. bog, U.211; 110 lb. bog,
U . S . No . 1 Whconein
Ru111tt. 304.·676-3762 or
448·8247.

1978 MERCURY Zeyphor
wagon. excellent condition.
low mileage . 1 owner.
$3426.00. phone304·675·
11804.

69 For Sale or Trade

1977 MERCURY Cougor,
black -oliver top , PS , PB,
elec:trilc locko, excellent
condltLon. good tires,
304·89'5-3867.

19711 Buick Electro 2 dr..
AC. AM-FM otero ~
or trade for cattle.
form oq~lpmont ·of oquol
v1lu1. Coli 448-41137.
-- ;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11974 MERCURY Cougor
':
XR7, good running condl·
.. ....... .
lion. 1400.·304-8711· 1117.
-

- -- ·
----··
- .. . .
.,._

a

•

•

""

SEWING Machine

ropoir~.

service. Authoriled Singer

Saleo • Service Sliarp 0 n

Scl1sora . Fabric

Shop~.

Pomeroy . 992-2284 .

•

EO'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE cell City Furniturp
304 -675 -2608.
•

86

General Haulin9

•
'

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Collo814 -387·
7471 or 614 -387 -0691 . ;
JIMS WATER SERVICE!
Coli Jim Lanier, 304-8711;
7397.

'

"

89 VW Bootie AM - FM

'7-:-~--=-----1 coo11tte Pioneer outfit, runa

Farm Equipment

------~--1

131 RIGID t1800. Th,.ld·
lng mochlno with otutch·
monto. Homollto pump 100
G.P.M. 2 haul &amp; ICCIIIG·
rloo, •344.00. 1872 Hondo
350, UIIO. phone 30f&gt;
1711-8420

good. good body, •a&amp;o. Coli
304·87&amp;-31333 .

87

Upholstery

1-:=:::----:::--:----:,.--::--:--

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP l
1163 Sec. Avo., Gollipolli.
446-7833 or 448 ·1833 .

77 Dodg~ Pick-up . Low
mlloego . e3.000. Clll
114-9811·31110 . .

MOWREY&amp; Upholotery Rt.
1 B"'l 124, Pt . Plouont,
304-871-41114.

72

•Trucks for Sale

I

�Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
~ Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Page-10-The Ua11y SentiOAI
'

; DICK TRACY

I

MondGy, February 21, 1983

'

·Television
.Viewing

*MEIG.S MARAUDE.RS

.. *EASTERN
EAGLES
.
.
-*SOUTHERN . TORNADOES

'

.

2/21/Q3
EVEN INO
8:00 Cl Ill N--nter
(])
· MOVIE:
' Human
fNIInga'
(]) Tic Tee Dough
00 Futu!W Sport ·
(I) Carol Bumlll
(I) Ill]) • (D) Newe
Newa/Sporta.iWuthar
(J) (J]) 3-2-1. ConUtct
liJ Eyawlt.,... Nawa
til Wonder Wo11111n
8:30 CJI]) ffi NBC N-a
(I) MOVIE: 'The BJe Tipoff .
I]) Pony'a People In Spcirta
(I) Sob Newhart ShQW
(I) lliawa
. l ] ) &lt;lJ CBS Nawa
(J) Dr. Who
(J]) Over Eeay
• ti2i ABC N-1
7:00 • I ] ) P.M. Magazine
()) ESPN'e lnalde BeNblll
'February Edition.'
(I) Gomer Pyla
(I) Entertelnmentl;onlght
til Chertle'a Angela
CJ l]) Tic Teo Dough
(J) (J])
MacNai~Lehrer
Report
liJ ~ewltneaa N-•
01 (I]) People'a Court
7:30 81]) Lie O.tactor
I]) frlllllle Rock Villi the
world of. Fragglo Rock un·
derneath the baoomant of
an eccentric inventor.
(!) ESPN SporUtCenter
(I) American ProfHalonalo
(I) CJ l]) Family Feud
(J) Bualnau Report
liJ You Aoked For It
(i]) lnolde Buolneaa
Ill ti2I Entertainment
Tonljlhl
8:00 8 C2) Cl) Little HouM: A
New Beginning A llrong
bond grows between Jason Caner and an elderly
woman who has hired him.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned)
Ill MOVIE: 'Thier
I]) MOVIE: 'The Gang That
Couldn't Shoot Straight'
(]) I Spy
(!)
NCAA
Baokatblll:
Connacdcut at Booton
College
(I) MOVIE: 'April Foolo'
Clllll ti2I That'o lncradlblal
II (I) &lt;lD Ctlarlle Brown
Spacial 'Is Thio Goodbye.

A S t 5EE IT,
FOLKS, WE HAVE
NO OTH E ~ CHOI CS.
I THIN!&lt;: WE.V E

THIS 15 MR . TU13&amp;$.
TO fRONT

~E·~ LDOKI~G

A &amp;ID FOR THE MA'IOR'5
RACE. HE JU$T WON THE

FOU ND O UR.
CANDIDAT E .

STAT E LOTTEI':.Y $0
HE'$ GOT MOIJE'H
TO BURl.!:

t'NGUSE , .

iO TAKE .

IENHAVEI

Prtnranawerhere: "

z-11-11

•su
tAQi
•u5z

~54

~ ··

~10

•Ju 5

' i!~OIH

UIS
I"'KQIO
.J8643
SOUTH
.AQU
.AKQH
t K5Z

.A

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

,.

Wnt

Pau
Pus
Pus
Pus

s....

N-

East

2NT

Pus
·
Pass tNT
Pass
Pass.

5t
Pass

,.,
~

s•

Opening lead: +K
By Oowald Jacolly
ud Jam.. Jacolly

pularity when a friend goes
run

hitting

Jim: "South took his ace of
clubs and played his ace and

streak:

9:00

Pablo's got him
in \~ecar!
9:30

II I]) Cl)

kine of trumps. ·West
chucked a spade and a nice
slam contract appeared to
be In trouble. Not only wu
there a sure trump loser, but
obviously spad.. were going
to break badly."
Oswald: "South could find

MOVIE: 'Sidney
Sheldon's Rage of Angell'
Port 2
(]) 700 Club
(I) Ill (D) MOVIE: '13raco
Kelly'
D Cll &lt;1J M"A"S"H Tho
4077th searches for ltomo
to put in a time capaule.
(J) (J]) Great Pertormanou
'Wagner's Ring : Die Walk·
ure Act 1.' Purtued by hia
enemies. Siegmund teaks
shelter in the home of Sieglinda and Hunding. (90
min .)
(I) @ Newhart

I]) MOVIE: 'force 10 From
Navarone·
ilJ NFL ThMtre: Beol Ever
Quarterblcka
.
(I) TIS Evening N-o
Ill]) &lt;lD Cagney &amp; !Acoy
The dignity of a rape victim
is violated when the police
question her motives. (60
min.)
.INN Nawo
10:30 (]) SUtr Time
(J) ~Nn Life and O..th
Tonight' I progr1m profiles
victims of Alzheimer'a disease. a progressive '~rm .
of senility.
(J]) Newawllch
llllln S..rch of....
11:00.8 Ill New-nllr
I]) ESPN SporUtCenter
,
(I) All In the Family
(I) CJ l]) • (JJ Newa
Newa/SporUt/WMthlr
(I] Dave Allan at Lerge
liJ Eyawhnoaa Newa
(J]) Sign Off
Senn_LHill Show
11130 Cl I]) CZJ Tonleht Show
Johnny's guesu ·•re Angie
Dickinson, Melisse Manchester and Charles Nelson
Reilly. (R) (60 min.)
ill Another Uf.e
,--:(~) MOVIE: 'The Luotv

rn

device
I PonUflcal
1i Sufficient
U Habituate
13 Compact
U Jewish month
15 -generis
11 Negative
18 Destiny
18 Skill
zt Roo Zl O'Neill play
ZZ Bernhardt's
rival
H Maple genus
Z5 Newspapers
as a whole
Z7 Ballot-box

e

Men•
(I) Benny Hill Show
II Cll Trapper John M.D.
Gonzo is enraged when
·friend's illness le traced to

CIJIIIgn Off
liJ All in thefamlly
•

g

(D) Ntehtllne

Medalllll'a Placo

11:46 (l) Not N-oaarlly The

..
PF:ANUTS

'

.

1 HAVE ALSO HEAIW,
HOWEVER, TIW LAU6HTER
15 THE 8€5T .MEDICINE ...

-?.

Newa This show promises
to be everything tho cur·
rent news is not.
12:00 I]) MOVIE: 'The King of
Marvin Gerdene'
ill Burna • Allan
I])
NCAA
Baokelboll:
Connectlout 11 Soatcn
C"'lege ,
(J) Nlllhtllna
9 MOVIE: 'Dirty Mary,

cr•q Llrry'

IIIIIIQhlne' _ _ ·
1Z::io. (I)

i 1:00

e!DNewt

.

.•·

PAT HILL FORD INC.

992-2196

-,

"' S. Jnl AV., MlllOlEPOIIT , 0 .

,.-

GAWPOLIS
Sat., Feb. 26-7:00 p.m.

&lt;!'!'!~

INIURAN&lt;I
ClAIM I
WElCOME

--BANK ONE.

.

HARDWARE

OF POMEROY NA

"Your Buildina l1tori1l lorktl Pl1co"

CHESTER, OH.

WHEEL HORSE
Lawn &amp; Garden
TRACTORS.

I·

.
FIBERGLASS &amp; FOAM
INSULATION

SATURDAY,

BB.PRE ,
--------------~.
·TuesdCJY, Feb. 22

-

WALK-UP &amp; DRIVE IN
WINDOW SERVICE
CORNER Of E. COU RT&amp; 2nd ST

MARCH 5, 1983

POMEROY

992-2133 .. .

· 8~30 p.m.

RUTLAND BRAM CH

NEW LEXINGTON

742-2888
TUPPER S PLAINS BRANCH

SaturdCJY, Feb. 26-8:30 p.m.

985-3385

,,NB.SONVILLE-YORK

•

RIJ

....

SOUth tiUe

v..terday's Answer

17 Viva matador!. 31 French ~
Z3 Welsh river
painter :
H
Wholly
33
Hire
•,
1 Insignificant
7 Chemistry
Z5 Introduce
:M Bearded;
suffix
211 Daydream
as grain ·
Vox
populi
Z7
Closing
39
Burrows: .
8
.I Small region
substance
tl Sault
5 Quality
of an apple

IO Missives

29 Method

RESIDENTIAL ·
COMMERCIAL
INDUSTRIAL
"It You Wont o Plumber Bod
You Wont Him Good"

Ste.

ElECTRIC Ell SEWER ClEANER

I

openings
Z8Heed,

old style
Z8 Servants
311 Mldianite

I

DIAt

61
A P h o r~ e Coli B· .•q .

Prom pt Courh•ou\ 5t•rw . , .

king

31 Extinct bird
3Z Rhodesian

232 E 2n rl

PomNoy , 0

dialect
.

SEE US FOR'
WE WILL
TAKE CARE .OF .ALL YOUR GULF
·PRODUCTS
ALL YOUR '
I'NSURANCE I AN.D YOUR .
QUICK STOP \
NEEDS
GROCERY·
'
DOWNING-CHILDS
' NEEDS
, ..
AND

2·2 1

.Iiil
.

.

(

lHQUV

VD

EKAHUMVQKAW!CC
VIH

IQKA

VD

PDKPHWSH,
VD

·,

•

~·

caYnOQUOTBS

VIH

al~

A WUii'i&gt;v :

• YIHi

·POMEROY
CALL 992-3381 OR
992-2342

•
j

-

I

I

. YllferdaY'I ~: HE IS SO FULL OF HIMSELF :
• •

~

.

t

i

I

•

,

1547 NYE AVE.
992-6225
,.,

EWING
FUNERAl

FOR

;HOME

"COME ·GROW

WITH US."

'

PEOPLE~'

HOME·

Member FDIC

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"
ESTABLISHED 1913

... ,

JIM'S GULF
.

113 SECOND ~VE.

QKA!·

HTHP,EVH . - BEKWEM

.

MULLEN INSURANCE

"HOME BANK

'

_)

AXTDLBAAXa
LONGPBLLOW

THATdiSQUITEpPI'Y.-OLDSAYING

(I) I Mlllllall Jean

,

ru.m t•ootdOS•camo

800YW()IIt(

TuesdCJY, Feb. 22
·7:00p.m.

Saturday
7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

apootrophea, the lenl(ll anjl formation of the wordo. art
hlato. EKh doy the elide !etten •re dllreronl
.

e ([)
. lhortF.....

•II)ST

SHERIDAN

BAUM .

One letter aimpl,y etonda for 111other. In ihia oomple A
used lor tbe three L'o, X for the two O's, etc. Sin1le lettaro,,

Lata Night with
O.vld u - n Davld'a
guest to Howard H*•••
man. (10 min.)
(J) Jeok Benny Shew
()) Laat Word
MOVIE: 'Columbo:

fORO TRUCKS

• [ tMU'ft U(UIC. ~MO
•IMIJIIPAm
• coMNn wt11t AlDMII
IMLAIIJG
.

BOYS' AA SECTIONAL Al ATHENS

HOURS:
Mon. thru Fri
7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Z Love (Fr. )
3 Boxing n!SIIlt
• Man's name

..

.

C!J

SOUTHERN

MBGS

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTB- Here's how to work

(IJ 1.181 Word •
Gunamokl
· 12:111 (l)
MOVIE:
'Shlrky'a

""
INO CAli
, !tum

(subdued)
DOWN
1 Old Deep

,

I

,. ""'

·8 :30· p.m.

.

INSTALLMENT LOANS
992-3007

-

35 Hill (Fr.) ·
31Symbol
of wisdom
37 Untried
310faGreat
Lake
tOOne kind
offiu
4ZQueen
of Thebes

a ,weight reduction pro~am . (R) (60 min.)

...

IISfO CARS

.I

by THOMAS JOSE'"
ACROSS
43 Snare
1 Electrical
M Principle
amplifying
45 - down

G

(To Chillicothe)

Wed., Feb. 23

992-6661

...

li•l;i•l

NORTH GAliiA

97 N. 2ND STREET
MIDDLEPORT

985-3301

REALIOR

- ..,.

7:30p.m.

•· "YOUR FINANCIAL
CENTER"

tlec.u• "t tf

10:00 I]) MOVIE: 'Dragonolayer

1 HAD A CALL
FROM THEM
YESTERDAY.

trick."

~

FRIDAY, FEB. 25

COMPANY

a simple way to·put pressure
on West. He would continue
with the queen of trumps
and a small one to give East
an immediate trump trick . .
West would have to make
two more discards and
might well ·chuck anotlier
spade, in which case South
would score his slam."
Jim: "Tbat play would
work against most West
players, but there Is no reason to try to get the OPJX&gt;nents to make a mistake
when some real. study will
give you a surefire play."
Oswald: "This play will be
to force East lo use his
trump trick to ruff your low
spade. Only a 6-0 spade
break can hurt."
Jim: ."South must not play
his third high trump .
Instead, he leaas a spade to
dummy's king and a .spade
back toward his hand. If
East trumll". South gets to
play his low spade and
claims. If East discards
South wins returns to dum·
my· with a hlgh diamond and
leads dummy's -last low
spade. Again tbe best East
1:an do ia to discard."
Oswald: "His best isn't
IOOd enough. South ·takes his
rut high spade and leads his
remaining low one to ruff In
dummy: East can over-ruff
or discard again, but the
only trick for tbe defense
will be that one trump

rn

A

.

TRUST

South bests East's best
NORTH

I

KYGER CREEK

THE
CENTRAL

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

•Ku

Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
GRI .......................... 992·6191
Dottie Turner .............992-5692
Jean Trussell ...... .........949-2660
Office .:........................ 992·2259

Wed., Feb. 23-7:00 p.m.

BRIDGE

Tiffany's'
8:30 CJ (I) liJ Square Poga
Patty end Lauren seek pohome

]"

(.Anaw8.. lomorrow)

fJI MOVIE: 'B,..kfaat at

a

xI

Setuntay'sl J . -: NOISE AUGUR FAS\ EN ,f!ECKON
" " -' Sounda like a musician might eat ·hls food
wit~ this- A TUNING FORR -. :·

min .)

on

[I] r r

'

Lucy move away, creatin~
chaos in 'Peanutland.' (R)
(I) (i]) Frontline 'Pentagon.
Inc.' As military expenditure! increase. businesses
of all sizes compete for
their share of the pie. (80

NOSEGUAAD ~

MondCJY, Feb. 21
7:30 .p.m.
.
EASTERN

WHAi SOME EXTE~DED
GOOP·&amp;YES 5EEM

I I I _tJ

REALTORS

SOUTHWESTERN
.
'

"Your Athletic
Shoe ·Headquarters"

tJ

J 1I

Charlie Brown?' linus and

THEY'RE !&gt;. LI TTLE LI&gt;.TE , FOLKS, BUT HERE'S lHE
LEMMIAN TEI&gt;.M ,CAPT"-INED SY NI KNIK, WITH
LUMMOX "-5 L\NES"-CKER , "-ND LIN K IN Al

608 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH .

QASS A SECTIONAL AT RIO GRAN

I I I ·)

rn

AL LFY OOP .

.

PH. 992-2259

rn

Ci\f"l'AN FASY

.

Ben H. Ewin1-Director

PH. 992-2121 .

SYRACUSe OFFICE

992-6333

108 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

RACINE OFFICE .

949-2210

.

Fs

.
•

FARMERS

BANK
&amp; SAVINGS CO.

• FRIDA'f' 9,00 • B,OQ
SATUJIDAY ~~ - 6,00

CLOSED S ' DAY

SENIOR CITIZEN
DISCOUNT
Wl flU out l'tl!o{ltiPIION~
lltCUIOIICi - 10 fOI Ht ~OlD
W~ttl

"MS( II:Plii)M

• MEDtMET • !IICS

POMEROY. OH.

PH.2136

(

'
1,

I•

'

'~

..

~

. ~-

-

• 'lfttt .WS ADM
1111Al ((W,M ~Wft
IH\UIIIMC.l Ct .w.l~

~·

I

'

�Page

12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Glenn campaigns in New llitmpshire
Q)NCORD, N.H. (AP) - Precisely 21 years after his historic trip
throogh space, Sen. John Glenn
visited New Hampshire, home of
the earliest presidential primary,
and said his presidential campaign
Is on schedule.
"Now Is the timewhen-wewant to .
start organizing and getting ready, "
Glenn, D.Qhio, said Sunday after a
40-mlnute talk to 60 state Democrats. "Our organization Is In place
now. We're moving. "
On his first visit to the state since
August, Glenn, theflrstAmerlcan to
orbit the earth, dismissed suggeStions that his still-unofficial campaign was off to a late start In New
Hampshire and Iowa, the first
caucus state.
' "I don't think the American
people or the people In New
Hampshire really want four-year
presidential campaigns," said
Glenn, 62. ''We're marching to our
own drummer on this thing."
Glenn's two-day swing through
seven receptions In as many

Eight die
in traffic.
accidents
By The Associated Press
At leaJ~teight people were killed In
weekend traffic accidents In Ohio,
according to the Highway Patrol.
The Patrol counts weekend
traffic fatals'from 6 p.m. Friday to
midnight Sunday.
The dead:
SATURDAY
COLUMBUS- Ovle Smithers, 17,
and Randy Slone, 18, both of
Columbus, In a one-car accident on
a city street.
DELAWARE- Berton L. Harrah, 69, of Larue, In a one-car
accident on Ohio 371n Union County.
BEREA ~ Thelma R. Schafer,
64, of Solon, In a car-truck accident
on the Ohio Turnpike In Trumbull
County.
AKRON -_ Richard Kitchen, 18,
of Akron, In a truck-train collision on
an Akron road.
FRIDAY
CLEVELAND - Brian Glenn, :ll,
of Garfield Heights, and Gregory
Ruby, 4, of Cleveland, In a two-car
accident on Ohio 17 In Cuyahoga
County.
DAYTON- Tanuya M. Griffith,
21, of Beaver Creek, In a two-car
accident on a city street.

.Patrol cites
Meigs youth
A 17-year-old Pomeroy youth was
cited after a single-car wreck on
Ohio 143 Saturday morning.
The Gallia-Melgs post of the State
Highway P11trolcited PaulM. Riggs
for execesslve speed for conditions.
Riggs was northbound on Ohlo143
about three miles north of CR 14
when he reportedly lost control in a
curve, went off the left sjde of the
road and struck a tree.
His car sustained moderate
damage.
A car driven by James E. Counts,
29, Racine, was slightly damaged In
a mishap on Ohio 124 just east of CR

34.
According to the patrol, Counts
was westbound at 8 p.m. Sunday
when the rear windshield of the car
was jarred loose when he droved
over a bump In the road.
Troopers also Investigated a
single-car accident on Ohio 124 at
1:25a.m. Sunday.
Katherine A. Dean, 17, Middleport, was westbQund when she
reportedly went off the right side of
the road and struck a guardrail.
Her car was slightly damaged.

communities followed a fund-raiser economy. He urged canceling the
In Columbus, Ohio, on Friday night,
third year of a scheduled federal tax
which he said was the most . cut and dropping pJ:WOsals for tax
successful In . the state's history. Indexing.
Glenn said he raised $9Xl,&lt;XXJ.
Glenn criticized President ReaGlenn said he opposes curbing gan's appointment of Kenneth
acid rain by halving limits on Adehnan- "a man who has talked
emissions from Industrial plants, about the ridiculousness of nuclear
and called Instead for more study. arms negotiating" - to head arms
Air pollution from the Midwest has control talks.
been blamed for acid rain In the
He safd talks on limiting nuclear
Northeast. Glenn said car exhaust weapons should Include countries
also may contribute.
other than the United States and the
· Soviet Union.
,
"It
will
do
us
blessed
little
good to
"I want todoY(hatever Is possible
get
control
of
the
existing
superpowtoclearlydeflnewhattheproblemls
so w.e can cut back on those ers' nuclear stockpiles If In the
meantime we find that nuclear
sources," he said.
have spread to 20 more
weapons
Glenn said he fears the governnations
around
the world,'' he said.
ment would require expensive new
Glenn,
who
said he combines
emission contrOls, forcing Industraditional
values
with progressive
tries to close, "and then flndoutthat
policies,
faulted
Reagan
for "harreaDy didn't solve the problem."
kening
back
to
days
of
yore."
Though he favors a bill to create
"You can't unrlng that bell,"
jobs now, GlennalsosaldunemployGlenn
said. "You can't wind the
ment ultimately must be solved by
.
clock
back
to those times. We've got
lowering federal deficits to cut
In
the
future."
to
live
Interest rates and sttmutate the .

Area deaths
'

DISPlAY-An excellent display of fall and winter
scenes taken by members of the Meigs County Image
Seekers Camera Club Is being featured In the lobby of
The }?anners Bank and Savbtgs Club. The display will

Maintenance Department at the
Foote Mineral Corporation, veteran
of the U.S. Army, member of the
Blanche R. Winters, 96, Rio
New Haven American Legion Post
Grande, died Sunday In Jo-Linn
140, V.F.W. 9926 of Mason, New
CLEVELAND (AP)-Resldents
Nursing Horne, Ironton.
Haven Town Council for two years
of
the Buckeye-Woodland area say
Born April20, 1886, at East Letart
and St. Joseph Catholic Church.
they
aren't safe In their own homes
In Meigs County, daughter of the
. Surviving are his wife, Linda S.,
·
and
are
asking the Ohio National
late Alonzo and Victoria Cummins
New Haven; three daughters,
Guard
to
patrol the area.
Norris, she was a member of
Katherine L. Swafford, Oklahoma
At
a
weekend
meeting, members
Calvary . Baptist Church, Rio
City, Okla., Shirley A. Livingston,
of the Buckeye-Woodland CommunGrande.
Leon and Judith E. Young, New
ity Congress on Cleveland's East
She was also preceded In death by
Haven; three sons, RobertE.,Leon,
Side
told city and state officials they
her husband, Earl Winters Sr., In
Jack L., Point Pleasant and
also
want
their neighborhood desig1962.
Christopher S., New Haven; one
nated
an
anti-crime
demonstration
Surviving are five sons, Herschel
stepson, Rick L. Siders, Clearwater,
project.
and Carl, both of Rio Grande, Earl
Fla.; two sisters, Dottle Ann
In addition, the congress wants a
of Gallipolis, Claude of Rodney and
VanMeter and Agnes A. Roush,
task
force set up to study crime, and
Elmer of Grove City; a daughter,
Mas~n and seven grandchildren.
it wants emergency aid for highMrs. Victoria Jones of Okeechobee,
Funeral services will be held
crime
areas.
Fla., 16 grandchildren and seven
Wednesday, 11 a.m. at the St.
A
93-year-old
woman told the
great-grandchildren.
Joseph'citholic Church, Mason
meeting
·
of
about
200 people
She was also preceded In death by
with Father Raymond _Jablinske
a -son, daughter, six brothers and six
Saturday
that
she
had
been terroofficiating. Burial wUI be at the
•
rized
In
her
home.
A
teacher
said
sisters.
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Calendangered
while
children
were
Funeral services will be tield at 1
ling hours are 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. on
p.m. Wednesday In McCoy-Moore
Tuesday at Foglesong Funeral going to and from schools.
Funeral Home, Vinton, with Rev.
One woman said she was tied up In
Home.
·
her
home and stepped on during a
William Clark officiating. Burial
There will be rosary services at 7
will be In Calvary Cemetery, Rio
robbery,
while other residents said
p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral
Grande. Friends may call at the
were
victims of burglaries,
they
home. There will also be graveside
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
beatings
and
robberies. Others
military rites.
'
complained about a high number of
Tuesday.
rapes and murders.
Carl T. Clark
Mayor George V. Volnovich told
Walter E. Jones
Cart' T . Clark, 76, Letart, died
the group that an unpubliclzed Task
Saturday at Pleasant Valley
Force on Violent Crime had been
Funeral services for · Walter
Hospital.
operating for more than a year. He
Emerson Jones, 68, 370 Grant St.,
Born Jan. 23, 1907, ~raham
said the congress could join the task
Middleport, whd died Friday In
Station, he was the son of the late
force, which Is headed by Cuyahoga
Morristown, N.J., will be held atl
William W. and Bertha E. Hoffman
County
Common Pleas Court Judge
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Clark ..
Burt
W.
Griffin.
Funeral Home In Pomeroy.
. He was a construction worker and
Volnovlch
also said It might be
Mr. Jones was born Feb. 24,1914
belonged to' Laborers Local 543 of
up an anti-crime
possible
to
set
at Burlingham, a son of the late
Huntington.
demonstration project In the
Emett and Bessie Blackwell Jones.
Surviving are his wife, Fannie L.,
Buckeye-Woodland area.
Besides his parents, he was
Letart; !Wo daughters, Erma J .
Ellen Wood, representing· Gov.
preceded In death by his Wife, ·
Jones, Mason and Linda L. Arthur,
Richard
Celeste, said she could not
Beulah Burdette Jones on July 14,
New Haven; one son, Clyde T.
promise
that the National Guard
1982.
Clark, Letart; three sisters, Eliza
would
patrol
the streets.
An electrician, Mr. Jones was a
Roush and Helen Grinstead, Letart
However,
she
said Celeste probamember of Heath United Methodist
and Theresa Ohlinger, New Haven;
bly
would
send
the' guard's top
Church, Middleport, and Middlefive brothers, Hoyt, Kanauga, Ohio,
official, state Adjutant Gen. Rayport Masonic Lodge 363, Free and
Leo, Letart, William, Hurricane,
mond R. Galloway, to Cleveland to
Accepted Maspns.
·
Harry, Bear Creek, Ala. and
meet with city officials.
Surviving are two sons-In-Jaw and
Franklin, Kirkland, lll.; seven
Ohio Attorney General Anthony
daughters, Sharon and Lee A.
grandchildren and two greatDavidson, Morristown; Barbara
. Pickup date changed
grandchildren.
and James F. Hegler, Columbia, S.
Funeral services will be held on
C.; four grandchildren, Matthew
RACINE--Trash collection In RaTuesday, 1::ll p.m. at Foglesong
Samuel Hegler, Columbia, S. C.,
cine
this week will be held on
Funeral Home with Rev. Charles
and Anne Elizabeth Davidson, John
Tuesday
and Wednesday rather
~ush officiating. Burial will be at
Andrew Davidson and Charles
than
on
Monday
due to the closing of
the Broad Run Cemetery. Friends
Philip Davidson, all of Morristown;
may call the funeral hometoday,24 I the county landfill on Monday In
two sisters, Dorothy Dandakls,
obServance of Presidents' Day.
and7-9p.m.
Athens, and Pearl Russell, Racine.
Officiating at the Wednesday
service . will be the Rev. Robert
Robinson.
Burial will be In
Burlingham Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home at
anytime.
·

BlancheR. Winters

be In the lobby for two weelaiafterwliiC!htmeasecond
group of photos by club members wiD be featured.
Shown movbtg the display btto the lobby area
Satunlay are Nick Depoy, left, and Joe Poole. Randy
Houdashelt Is In charge of the display.

Residents ~eek National Guard h~lp
J. Celebrezze said he supported a
battle against crime, and would
meet with Celeste.
·
Volnovlch said the entire city has
a crime problem. Figures posted at
the meeting said Cleveland had the
highest crime rate per 100,&lt;XXJ
population In Ohio, and was very
high ·among cities with more than

300,000 population.
Grlfftri; who attended the meetIng, said his task force has been
gathering Information and trying to
develop ways to fight crime more
effectively. So far, the task force has
managed to Increase communlca.
'
tion among different agencies, he
said.

'

.,
"

,,......

14

I

.
,

..

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'~~
.

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,,.

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•

\

PANTY HOSE·
3 POPUlAR STYLES
•FIT TO BE SHEER
*BASIC SHEER TO WAIST
•FIT TO BE SHEER (control top)
Superb fit- reinforced cotton panel. Super Toe (sandal foot
w/additional wearlife)

BASIC AND FASHION COLORS

Frank Young, Jr.

Emergency runs
Five emergency runs and two fire
runs were made over the weekend
by local units !he Meigs County
Emergency Service reported.
On Saturday at 5:23p.m. Rutland
was summoned forSharon Coughey
who was taken to Veterans MemorIal Hospital; at 7:41 p.m. the
Pomeroy Fire Department was
called to !he First Baptist Church,
County Road 25.
According to Tom WeiTy a water
heater used In the water for baptism
became overheated due to lack of
water IJI the unit. There was smoke
damage and light damage · to the
heater. At 9:39p.m. TuppersPlalns
was called for Burl Putman who
was treated by the squad. ·
On Sunday at 1: 29 p.m. Pomeroy
was called to an auto accident on SR
124 for Kathy Dean was taken to
Veterans Memorial; at 12: 47 p.m.
Puneroy was called for June
VanVranken who was taken to
Veterans; at 7:06p.m. Rutland Fire
Department was . called to the
Maxine Dyer residence, Jesse
Creek Road for a chimney fire; at
9:06p.m. Rutland was called for
Jim Thomas who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
•I

'

FrankYoung,Jr.,51,NewHaven,
died Sunday at Holzer Medical
Center.
.
Born May 30, 1931, Mason, he was
the son of the late Frank E. Young ·
Sr. and Juanita M. (Vance)
Rayburn.
He was a general foreman In the

During FFA Week
.
February -19 thru 26; 1983

Meets Tue8day
MIDDLEPORT--A special meet,
lngofMiddleport Lodge363, F&amp;AM,
will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday with
work In the E.A:Degree. Refreshments will be served following the
meeting.

.
Veterans Memorial
.

ADMISSIONS SATURDAY: ..
Oscar Imboden, Middleport. '
DISCHARGES SATURDAY--Andrew Lambert, Sandra Luckey:
doo, Cheryl Hysell.
ADMISSIONS SUNDAY--Catherine Dean, Middleport;
Hari)'Swlsher, Vinton; June VanVranken, Pomeroy; DUstin Diddle,
Racine; Herbert · Seth, Pomeroy;
Donald Grimm, New Haven; Mark
Proffitt, Racine. .
.
DISHCARGES SUNDAY --- ·
Herbert Gllkey, Velma Luckeydoo.

farn1ers

BaDk·
Member IDIC

·Your Communih Owned Bank
\

. '

\

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