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                  <text>Parents, educators
invited to handicap
conference in Athens

Meigs cage teams,
Eaglett~ etiminated

Livest.ock
reports ....

Page 3

Pagt' 16

Page 16

e
Vol.31 ,No.l08
Copyr;ghted 1983

•

at

----Lollon

YOP-Ipnly
7-GL. aerOIOI '

Kmarl" lkln care
lotion ot savtnga.

.......

holr aproy.

'A.O&amp;.

24-oz.'u.t.llne"

Modulars

Fights bod bfeoth.
helps kill germs.
'R. ot.

arrive!
Sole Price

2 $ .

For

COMPLETED - Two
modular ciassrooins at tile
Salem Center School, the
first such units In Meigs
County, are completed and
being used by students. While
they, perhaps, are not as attraclJve from lbe exterlor as

3

a more pennanent addition
to the school might have
been, students are enjoying
the new facUlties. students
enter the classrooms from a
ramp from the audltorlmn of
the matn bulldllig. At bottom
left, fourth grade students at
Salem Center are enjoying
their new facUlties.

CouponGoodltwuFeb. 26.

2 Secfions 1 16 Pages

20 Cenh
A Multimedia Inc. Newspape•

Senate .approves
income tax· hike

96!

,

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 23, 1983

Sole Price

__ ______________ _

•

Irate. Fragrant.
Net WI.

I
~

C~Good nw Feb. ae, wul

-------------·

.--..

The Saving Place®

........... c.eVolellne• lotion
for dly lkln. Save.

1
I

COIJCOf'l Good nw Feb. 26, 1913

I

'R. oz.

"'--IVW. /

OJr lirm lntenlion Is to haYa &amp;.~ery ad\ler -

lrsed item in stock on our shelves . If an
advertised item is not a\lallable lor pur-

chase due to anv unforeseen reason .
K mart will Issue a Rain Chedc en request
lor the merchandise (one item or reasonable family quantity) to be purchased at the
sale price whenevt!!r evarlable or will sell

you a comparable quality ttem at a compa rable reduction in priCe.

--------·
We

Two modular classrooms
•
arrive at Salem Center
By BOB HOEFLICH
The first two modular class-

rooms ever used In Meigs
County are In operation at the
Salem Cente~ Elementary
School. Two classrooms are IJe.
lng used for students of the
fourth and fttth grades thereby
providing more srmce for other
students of the school In · the
main part of the buUdlng. ·
Administrator Charles Holll·
day, teachers and students lndl·
cate they are pleased with the
two modular rooms wtllch provide an additional space o! 'rT by
72 feet For a time, the class·
rooms were a controversial
Issue In the Meigs Local School
· District of which the Salem Center School Is a part.
Dlstrlct Supt. Dp.n Moms had
suggested transferring two
· Classes from the Salem Center
School to the Rutland bull!tin&amp; to
relieve a crowded situation.
However, parenta fA' children

attending the school, organized
and demanded the two modular
classrooms which, they
'charged, had been promised by
former superintendent, David
L. Gleason, when the $1 mUllon
dollar "no tax Increase" bond
jssue was passed In thf dlstrtct.
The board agreed to pUrchaSe
the mod11lar claS&amp;rooms to fulft1l
the promise of the former ad·
mlnlstrator. However, parents
Insisted that they be given agua.
rantee that the modular class·
rooms would not be moved from
the Salem Centt&gt;r site. That's
where the board of education
drew the line, offering no such
guaiantee.
During the pertod o! dlssen·
slon, patrons of the Salem Center School threatened to join
'another sclJOOI dlstrlct or reor.
ganlze the former Northwestern
School District which exlated be·
fore consolldaUoo Into tile Melga
Local School District
However, with the arrival of

)

the new. modular units and students apparently satisfied with
their new classroom, patrons
have lodged no further
complaints.
The new rooms are selfcontained, each wllh Its own controlled he a ling and cooling
system . and new lurnlture has
been purchased and Is on use In
the classrooms. The gymnasium, which had been used for
many purposes at the Salem
Center school, I! returning to
fewer purposes.
The contract on the modular
classrooms \vas awarded to the
Flck Construction Co. with a bid
- of $79,691 and the firm secured
the units through Kingsbury
Homes'- Pomeroy. .
The bid was awarded In Oc·
Iober; classrooms arTivlng In
December were assembled,
completed, and approved by
state. The bo8rd accepted them
from the con~r last week.

COLUMBUS, Ohio . (AP I Legislailve approval of Gov. Richard Celeste's plan to nearly
double the state Income tax was
virtually assured with Senate
passage on a 17-16 party·llne vote.
The $lJO mllllon tax increase
passed In theSenateTuesdayafiera
Democratic lawmaker flew from
his wife's hospital bedside In Florida ·
to vote for lt. It had passed In the
House, also without an iota of
Republican support.
The Senate returned the bUt with
amendments to the House, where
swift approval was near certain.
Republican senators said the
measure, with Its permanent, 90
~rcent Increase in thestate inrome
tax, Is more than the state needs to
solve Its budget dilemma.
Celeste, a first~term Democrat, ·
said the bill is needed to help offset a
state government budget deficit of
$51llllllllon.
Celes'le won his Senate victory
alter Sen. Oliver Ocasek, D·Akron,
· left his critically Injured wife's
bedside to fly back from Florida;for
the roll call.
Ocasek 's wire, Virginia, was in a
.. coma and sufferlng "'om .pneumo,
nla In a Hallwood, Fla.,hospital, as a
result of a Jan. 30 traffic accident.
Ocasek, looking pale and tired
from his bedside vigil, waited in his
office during about three hours of
debate on the bill and cameoutonly
when the roll call started.
He returned to Florida in late
afternoon , declining public
comment.
Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Concord,
offered one of nearly a dozen
Republican amendments to delete
Celeste's permanent tax increase.
His amendment would have
continued untll the end of the fiscal
year on June 30 a 50 percent income
tax surcharge, scheduled to expire
·
March31.
With cuts and other adjustments,
Speck said the state could make It

through the fiscal year and review budget," he said.
long-term revenue needs in an
Although Ocasek' s vote was
upcoming two-year 'budget
considered the tiebreaker, due to
Speck accused Celeste of bringing · earlier uncertainty about his being
foJWard Into this fiscal year about able to be present, another Dem(}.
$150 million In bllls 'that won't corrie
crat caused anxiety in his party.
due untU next fiscal year. He said
Sen. Steven Mauer, D-Botkins;
the governor has created "a fig leal
who squeaked to victory two years
of a crisis."
ago by less than 100 votes, was Ihe
Senate President Harry Meshel, targeto(a GOP media campaign in
0- Youngstown, reminded Republi· his district against the tax increase.
cans- as did Celeste later at a news
He announced last week and
conference - that they tried and reiterated In a floor speech that he
failed three times with temporary was going along with the bill rather
taxes to solve the state budgel than yielding " to political
crunch, when they were in P!'Wer.
expediency."
He said the governor's bill, which
In addition to the 90 percent
also anticipates about $282rnllllon In
income tax boos I , the bill imposes a
spending cuts, slgnl!ies "Ho\ldlnl· temporary, four-month increase of
style solutions to our economic
0.5 percent on the utility excise tax
problems are a thing of the past."
and slipulates that it may not be
Celeste, at the news conference he passed along to consumers.
called to thank Democratic senaThe income tax is being counted
tors, said ''they (Republicans 1tried on to yield an additional $246 million
three times. They falled. Three
in the remainder of the fiscal year
strikes, and you are out."
which ends June 30. The additional
Celeste said his tw(}.year budgel revenue from the utility tax is
blll, which he plans to submit In
estimated at~ million.
March, wlll address tax refonn.
Coupled With $282 million In
"Tilis was not a final victory today. spending cuts either in the iegislaThat ~as tD be a fac!IS .otthe biennial
(Continued on page 12)
·-·ctt.~• ~-

~ ~

·;

0100 TAX INCJ'EASES - Tax Increases approved by the Ohio
Senate on Tue8M)' wiD af(ect taxpayers as shown In the above chart.
. The figures were supplied by the Ohio Department of Taxation. (AP

Laseprhoto).

Gallia-Meigs CAA to receive
18 tons· of surplus cheese
By KATIE CROW
form. For the elderly, Golden
landfill will be made by Day and the
Eighteen tons of government Buckeye cards and welfare medical
commissioners to make sure everysurplus cheese forGaUia and Meigs . cards will be acceptable.
thing is In order.
Counties will ariive between March
Members of the Outreach staff · Manning Roush, commissioner
1-16
Ha7.el McKelvey, acting wUI be In charge of distribution at reported thai gutters and down
executive director of the Commun- each location with the exception of spouting wUI be replaced on the
ity Action Agency and Letha theSeniorCitlzensCenter.
courthouse and jail by James
Proffitt of the CAA told the Meigs
To be eligible for · the sUJlllus Keesee, Middleport. Work on the
County Commissioners Tuesday.
cheese the lollowlng Income guide- project is to begin right away.
McKelvey said Meigs County's llne8 must apply: one pen10n with
Jones reponed the ceiling in the
portion will he transported to four
Income up to $7,a; two pel'IMIS office of the recorder has been
different county sites, Tuppers with btcome up to $9,330; three repaired.
·
Plains, Rutland, Racine and one for
persons with Income up to SU,840;
Phil Rober1 s, county engineer
Pomeroy and Middleport . for
rOar persons with Income up to and Ted Warner of the county
dlstrlbu tton.
$13,9150; llvepei'!IOIISwWtbtcomeup
highway department discussed
She noted that the CAA was In the to $16,200 and six persons with highway operations and work being
process of obtaining volunteers to Income up to $18,370.
dorie on the road to the la,ndfi!L
transport the cheese, but if urtsuc·
Richard Jones, commissioner,
Roberts said I he contract teniacessful, she requested the use of a reported that Oqn Day of the Ohio lively agreed upon by the Meigs
coupty-owned truck.
EPA spent Tuesday morning with County Highway Department is
CommiSsioners · Informed .her the commissioners at the landfill presently under st:)ldy and Will be
that pennlsslon to use a county site area. '
. presented to the commissioners in
vehicle would have to be obtained
· Day . expressed his satisfaction · the.nearfuture,
!rom PhuRoberts,countyengineer. with the landfill progress and steps
· CoUnty highway department emPersons must show proof of taken at this point in the new
ployes tentatively agreed to a new
· Income to receive the cheese. -development.
·
two-year contract. The 2l!employes
Income proof could be taken from
It Is hoped the new landfill will be . • are members of the American
·unemployment records, a check open by mldAprU. Two~ksprlor
FederationStaleand CountyM unic·stub !rom their employment or W-2· to the opening, a review of the
. (Continued oil page n 1

Middleport chamber elects officers
OHlcers were elected when the · whlcll did seweral months study on
Middleport Chamber of Commerce the renovation rA the busbtess dismet at noon Tuesday at the LaSalle Islet of Middleport spoke.
Restaurant. ·
Pam Callahan and Reiser of the
'Elected to serve for a year were firm and Kim Shields, grant consul·
Yvonne Scally, president; Craig tant o! the village, outlined aspects
Mathews, vice president; Alwllda at the study and displayed a booklet
Warner, tteasurer, bel Janet Slg. .CIII1\plled In CCHijunctlon with the
man. secretary.
proJect
Representatives of David Reiser
1be chamber made plans to have
and Associates, architects, Athen!!, · a representative at the Ohio

Chamber of Commerce convention
In comunctlon with other chambers
of the area.
The Idea o! the combined effort Is
to encourage early development of
a road from Rook Springs to the
new brldp at Ravenswood, w.va:
The ch8mber also planned for a
St. Patrlck's Day promotion, with
detaUs to be announced later. ·

�•

.
.·

·comnte~tary
111 Cuur iS I ~t' l
Pnmt'r i&gt;v. Ohl11 ,

114-992-2156
II E VOTF. O TO TH E INTE R EST OF Til E ME IGS.MASON AR EA

ROBERT L. WIN(;ETT
Pub H~ Ih-..-

J'.AT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

,h~i~ ltl n J I'ubl i~ h t&gt;r/ C un lru lli• r

Grnt-ml ManaKt'f

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
N~ws

Editor

A M E MBER ur T hr l'm.,.. iaLt'd- Pn-ss. lnla llll D~:~ i l y P rt' :- ~ A s~ nd ill i un l:l nd thr
i\nh ·rio'an !'11 1·&gt;1 Sp&amp;IJ)\' T Publishl' ni AliSUdH iiHrl .

LFTIF.RS ~ r OPI N I ~ N lift' \H•Ir·umcd . Thr y ~ hoold bt· less lh11n 300 wurds Inn~ . All
h•Urn. :u •· ~ uhJ_t'( ' l ' " edtlin ~ _a nd must bt- sil(nnl with tiHme, &lt;tdl.l t t'!'i !l and lrlt"l)hum~
~lumht- r . Nu un ~ t ~ n~d_ lettwt Will bt· puhllHht'd. I..NIIc rs shuuld bt- in gund LHs k . itddrt"S!IiftJ'
l li~ UI' S, n o( pt•rwn ulllft'S.

Wednetday,

Concerning the vote of conllctr.nce given to Mr. Begin by the
Knesset, a few observations.
1). The armor of Israel was
resonantly defended by the trtbunal
that returned a verdict that was
polltlcally cpnwlslve. There are
probably · fewer than ' a · dozen
countries tn the world about which
one mtght confldr!ntly say that a
chief executive could appoint a
coinmlss lon to · explore charges
against him, which commission
would proceed toflndhlm,lneffect,
.
guilty.
Having sald this, the punishment
meted out to Mr. Sharon - hts
forced , es!gnatlon - hardly satisfies the commission's findings . The
decision against Mr. Sharon was to
the effect that he was morally
Irresponsible In permitting the
Phalanglsts to move Into the .
Palestine camps with genocide 1n

my time. I'm doing It for my kids as
well as the other klds at the center.
If 2-4 adults are .in chargoe oflS-20
chlldren for four and one-half hours
they do not have the time to spend It
wtth only one child. Could you handle that many kids and stlll give
extra t!me to one chtld, Mrs. Goodwin? Would you wantyourchtldsacrlflced so someone else's child can
have special attention? Don' t you
think some of the other parents
would have felt this waytfyourchild
had been given the special attention
when he starts grade school?
The program was changed this
year so that parent Involvement ls
re&lt;iulred. This was done to weed out
the ones who were In fact using Head
Start as a babysitter. If the parents
didn't care enough to participate
during the home vtslts then Head
Start didn 't want towastetimewith
them. It would be defeating the purpose of Head Start and not doing the
Jdd&lt;; much good either.
I am also sure your child did not
stand In the corner all of the time.
The teachers try to Include the kids
·&lt;arouniJ strangers.
1n the activities but they won't force
':': My daughter is learning mt to be
them. Thai would do more harm
r..so possessive and she ls rea lly
than good And I have yet to see
'•: tlckled that she can go to school wlth
them abuse them in the manner you
· her older brother. Also my two and
described.
;: one-half year old has learned a lot
Also you stated You failed to see
•:s mce he attends when I do. He ls
where
the money was spent that the
;learning the rolltlne and being used
parents raised. Didn't )'lurchild reother kids.
ceive a Chrlsirruis present? Almost
:: : Head Start gives the kids oppor$2 was spent on each lndtvldualchlld
:: tun!t!es to Jearn different things that
lor Chrlstmas. Remember there
.-;,to us seem ordinary such as learnare
791dds at the Meigs Head Start
'.-Jng to do things bythemseives, such
They were given things tor
center.
•::as spreading peanut butter, tying
Easter
also.
Where were you, Mrs.
-::their own shoes, a nd making their
Goodwin when the Easter candy
:. own chOices.
··
was being made and sold? I can tell
· The guidelines that Head Start
you the names of the five or slx par:.adopted t his year s tates that one
ents who dld help. If you really care
,; nutritional project wUl he done evio see where the money was spent,
· ~ ery month . This way the kids learn
the treasurer has a complete re•.·what goes Into certain foods and
cord.
Don't pUt down the parents
:·how to make them. Our homevlsltor
who
dtd
try to raise money so the
· has asked to use certain Items from
ld
d&lt;;
could
be given something
" my kitchen such as measuring cups,
extra.
: spoon, bowl, etc . and she has yet to
Some of the teachers havetoltve
: " slop" In m y kitchen.
on
that $6,000 or so for a whole year.
;. 1am glad my kids are lear ning to
Do
you know what lt'sliketo have no
· be self sufficient. My kids can do
more
than that to Jtve on? You al::things for themselves that may
ready
stated that }Uu made too
::seem like so Utile to us but at their
much
money
for yow- child ID be
·:age It makes them think they are
enrolled. So while you are worrying
; doing something really big. I also do
how to pay your hUls they areworry~: not want my kids to become so delnghow to pot food on the table.
: pendent upon me thatthey can't be
I'm sorry you didn't give Head
- out of my sight.
Start
the chance tt ctr.serves, espe~ My kids, who once objected to be- .
cially
after Y9U fought~ hard to get
~ lngleft with their grandmotherfor a
your
child
Into lt. I just wonder what
•;few hours, are now telling me .that
your son thinks about tt
: they want toridetbevanaloneandi
I'm fighting for the program be:. can follow behind in my car. Graducause I know enough about tt to be.· '
: ally they are getting used to the
lleve in it. A lot of chlldren would be
·,school rout!neand this will makethe
hurting
lf Head Start ls closed for
:;transitiOn to kindergarten easier lor
even
a
whUe. Anyone. who cares
:·htem. ·
can
Jearn the same things I
enough
;: Thereare somanythlngsthatyou
did
and
I
wasn't
pushed into lt. 1
·:can overlook or don't realize unless
:·you care enough to get really ln- CARE!
Sharon Card, Racine
:-volved which takes so few hours of

::a

:.w

.
..·

A big (hank you

.
.-.
.

We all take the men and women

.
. •,

-: on tliese departments of Meigs
'

County for granted, but remember
these people get no pay for the publ!c service they perform.
They go when we call, rain, sleet
or snow, all hours. A big thanks to
Meigs County Fire and Emergency
Squads. ~ Woodrow T. Zwilling,
First Southern Baptist Church.

.,••

·.

:~ Today

in history

Today is Wednesday, Feb. 23, the 54th day ofl983. There are 311 days ieft
-: In the year.
:: Today's highlight in history:
'. On February 23, 1954; the first mass Inoculation of children wlth Salk
:: antt-pollo vaccine began in Pittsburgh.
· .; On this date:
·
' In 1573, the Irish rebellion was effectively crushed wtth the .surrender of
: James Fitzmaurice.
'

.

·'

,.

By KEITH ~ECUP

1~.

$170,000 which has been funded for
this purpose to a conservative outfit
called the Mid-America Committee
for International Business and
Government CooperatiOn.
USIA oflclals, who said they were
unaware of MacKeilzle's background, Insisted that the purpose qf
the seminars ls to see that the
Amertcan public is given balanced
reporting about counu:tes that are
Important to U.S. forelgn-pol!cy
goals.
They described the program as
an effort to educate foreign officials
In the unfamiliar workings o( a free
press, and said the chief beneficiarIes would be American reporters,
who hilve often complained to the
agency about the unresponsiveness
of suppo s edly friendly
governments. ·
As an example, USIA sald the
government of El Salvador ls

And Arata! appean to hallie
come out of the Palestine Natlon81
Council meeting with llll endD
ment, however tentative. Aratat's
humtllatlon tn Lebanon has, evldently, taught him a lesson. Thar
Jesson is that lt lsunltkelyth~tin.his
·lifetime :he will ama~ a lnllttary
force sufficient to ovetrrun Israel,
and that under the circumstances,
other than warlike means f1
establishing a homeland for the
Palestinians now commend
themselves .
However, 3) at exactly tbls palill
where we find a COIIfluence f1
re~oon auil . moderation, J.srael'a
position Is assymetrlcally hard.
Reasonable men sympatblze with
Israel's Invasion of Lebaron Iaiit
summer, on tbe ~ of sell·
defense. But the same reasotiable
men come reasona.bly w the
conclusion thai' Mr.. Begin ls
interested at this point In rnakiJ1g at
least southern Lebanort a kind f1
protectorate. Southern Leba11011
would be to Israel as South-West
Africa ls to South A.!rtca.
Meanwhile on the :Nest Bank
front, the beetle ~ton ol
settlements a11111es plain and simple the design of Mr. Begtn s!mpty
to Incorporate the West !lank. He
will tell you that nelgbR' !lesolutlan
242 of 1967, or Camp ~of 1J!I,
absolutely commttted.IJI'!I"l to liVe
up the West Bank, but lasay!JII this
he argues agalm;t !he witness not
only of other countr1es directly
Interested, but also fll the cbllf
negotiator of all these omders~
lngs, namely the Unl~ !ltate11. We
have the public wonl f1 H!llry
Kissinger, Richard Nlmn, Glrald
Ford and Jlrnrny carter that llld1
precisely was the undentand1J11,
namely that Israel's lettgatlllt
Interest ln the West Baak had to ltl
exclusively wlth the ·~tl!!laDCe
of Its oim' sec~ty.

Shouting at
My_wlfe and I were watching the
evening news on television In the
other night, when she said, "I feel
sorry for President Reagan."
"How's that? " I asked.
"Every tlme he leaves lhe White
House to go som&lt;Where the reporters shout questions at him.'
''Well, It's their job to ferret out
news, and .they hope he'll say
something earth-shattering as he's
leaving lor Camp David."
"All he does ls shout back one or
two words to their questions. How
much news can you feJTet out of
that?"
·
"It depengs on how you phrase
the questions. Suppose you shout,
'Mr. President, have you made up
your mlnd about Dense Pack?' and
he shouts back, 'No.' - then that's
a news story. If he shouts back,
'Yes, ' that's .also a news story. If he
just smiles. shrugs hls shoulders,
and puts hls arm around Nancy, it
may not be a n&lt;Ws story, but at
least It's something to go wtth the

" afraid" of the Amertcanpressand
Is not as adept at giving Its side of
the civil-war story as are the leftist
guertllas. The officials satd the
same ts true of Arab governments
wlth which the Reagan admtnlstratlon !s trying to maintain good
relations .
The $170,100 contract calls for the
committee to conduct two 15-day
seminars for "media officials"
from Latin America lind the Middle
East.
The first seminar was held ln
Washington last December. Of the14 government !lacks who got
all-expense-paid trips here, tour
were from El Salvador. They
Included spkesmen for the Salvadoran armed forces and the mtnlstry
of defense, as well as one prlva te
Individual, the !nfortlon director of
the extreme right -wing Arena
party.

a

could probably use stock footage
from their files aod save a Jot of ·
money."
" You don't understand how the
White House communications people work . This !s what ls known as a
photo opportunity. lt shows off the
president at his best. He's usually
wearing a coyboy outfit and boots
and he doesn't look as lf he has a
care In the world. That's the Image
of RDnald Reagan they want to
project. And frankly I believe that's
the Image the Amertcan people
want to see. Would you feel any
better If he came out of the White
House to board the helicopter
scowling and refusing ID talk to

anyone?
" I guess not," she-admitted. "But
I don't 'know why . the networks

.

Marauder comeback as the junior
guard scored 10 of the MaraUders'

secon and put each back In the
hoop for a 65-59lead.
The winners then made seven of
eight foul shots 1n the final minute
to wrap up the victory.
Meigs ' Nick Riggs led the

18 during the comeback attemRt.
Riggs led the locals on the evening
wlth 22.
Sheridan's all-dtstrtct center 6-3
Dean Miller, was tbe Gene;als'
hero as the · sentor popped 1n 27
points and grabbed 16 rebounds .
Seniors Rick Chancey and·Greg
Taylor cl.osed out their prep
careers · in' fine fashion wlth 14
apiece.
,..., __· · G.reg
..__,...,,cey
had kept Coach
0 rummer'screwlnthegameinthe
fir
st half with five two-pointers
from long range. Taylor also added
10 rebounds to lead the losers. who
bowed out wlth a 2-18 slate.
Tu
rntng point In the contest
seemed to come midway Into the
second quarter when Riggs
' picked
.
.
hls
JP
third foul and sat out the

remamder of the half.
While the Meigs' ace was on tbe
bench, Sheridan's lead grew from
21-20 to 34-27 at the half. ·
. When Riggs picked up hls fourth
'foul forcing him to sit on the bench
most of the third period, the .
Ge
ls
nera Upped their-margin from
· 42-33 to 51-39 after three periods.
Sheridan, who now plays GaUipolis Saturday at 7 p.m .. sank 28 of 55
from the field for 51 percent and 16
of 25 •oul shots ·1 64
· 1
M •·l
d 25orf 56 fpercen .
e gsma e o
or45percent
from th fi Jd
d 3 11
e e an
o 6 from the
foul line 1 81
t
or outrebounded
percen .
Sheridan
the Marauders 34-29. The Generals were
·
guilty of 22 turnovers compared to
20 for the Marauders In the
fast-paced end-to-end game.
DJ ...
th
' a~.ng elr final · game as

Marauders were Seniors Rick
· Edwards, who had an excellent ·
noor game, and Bill Holcomb, who
was rough under the boards, along
with-Taylor and Chancey.
Second Game
New Leldngton, winning only for
the sixth time this year. upset
Belpre easUy 74-50 to advance to
sl.turday's second game against
number one seeded NelsonvilleYork.
. A pair of seniors, George Pappas
and Pat Wycinsld , cornblned for 50
points. Pappas had 24 and Wyclnskl
26 for the winning Panthers.
Scott Dever led Belpre wlth 17.
Belpre ended their year at 12-9
while N&lt;W Lexington went to G-15,
By quarters:
MEIGS (63)- Rim 9-4-22; Edwa rds J-J-5·

New Lexington·whips Marauderettes
Tlie New Lex-

THE PLAINS -

picture wlth an 82-40 win here
Monday.
The (.ady Panthers applied a
tight press ~ugllout most of the
game and shot 67 percent from the
floor (33 of 50) to raise their record

litgton Panthers, llvlng up to their
btlllng as one of the finest teams In
the state, knocked the Meigs ~a­
rauderettes from the tournament

High school scores..•

GO FOR THE BALL- TwoSJMirldan Geaeral players, (U) Shawn
Shwnalrer aad ( 10) Rod Pallller go up as Melp' Rick Challcey lela fty
wllll a jlunp Rbot during aclloa from 'l'lle8dQ'a a- AA Sedloaal
Tournameal IIi Albefts Sheridan advanced with a 'IUS vlctary. The
General&amp; lace Gallla Academy Wgh Sebool SaturdiiJ. Keith Wisecup
photo.

GAU.IPOLIS - During girls'
sectional tournament play atGaUta
Academy Htgb School Tuesday
evening, Southern and Federal
Hocking posted wins and wt1l meet
in the tournament championship
Thuf!llay at 7 p.m. .
Southern ls now 1.8-2 after Its n-20
victory over Hannan Trace, while
Federal Hocking edged Eastern ln
the second game 32-31.
Southern rolled to a IG-4 flrst
perkxl lead, then coasted to a
·halftlme advantage. Southern spot·
ted liT 1!Hi ln the third round for a
53-18 lead, then racked ·up 24 points
ln the last round tor a n-20
advantage.
· Amy Uttlefleld totaled 28 points,
Tonja Salser added 13.
Southern hit 30 of73f!eld goals for
41 percent and hit 17 or 24 from the
line for 71 percent.
·
· Hannan Trace hit seven of 50
attempts whtle canning slx of 13
lree throws.
Southern had 40 rebounds led by
Laren Wolfe wlth nlne. SHS had 18
turnovers. 5 steals and 11 assists
while cemmlttlng 17 fouls.
In the second contest, Eastern
suffered a 13 of 16 night from the
foul line. losing by one point, 32-31 to
Federal Hocking's Lancers. In a
game that saw 63 fouls called,
Federal Hocking took the advan·
tage with a better pe1 centage from
the line (eight of 20) for .the win , ·
Eastern jumped ID a 14-9 lead,
althoUgh Federal Hocking stayed
clsoe most qf the way.
In the second round, Federal
Hocking focused Its shooting eye
tor 12 points In the frame to claim a
21-20 halftime lead. Federal HockIng took the lead at the 3: &lt;Y.! mark
and never gave lt up untU the final

m

The aim of the tint !l@ln!nar.
according to one memo. MIS ID gm.
"media assistance to I!IM'mmelrt'
o!Dclals and their armed forol!l m'
Latin Amerlc'a (to) Jtrengthen
their effectiveness Ill the 'War ol
Ideas.' ' '
The memo continues: "In El
Salvador. the go•&gt;ernmelit and
armed forces have consistently
failed to tal&lt;!! the otfftllve In tile
propaganda war. Oil 1M Qlller
hand, ~rxtst guerrtlllls .. U'l! on
the record as fully .-derstandb\g
the Importance of wlllnlng over
American opinion through the U$.
media .. "
In strictly educa1lollal ten1l&amp;,
M;lcKenzle's Latin Amertcan leminar . was a lltt» one-ll*d
pollttcally. The traineeS' ooJy meetIngs on capttal Hlll were wlth iJh
aide to Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C..
and a member ol the RepubUean
Polley Committee.'

CIMII A Townarnmm

..

can't just say he went to "Camp
David and leave lt at that."
·
"That's okay forlbe print people.
But the electronic media can't Just
say tt. They ha~ to have the
pictures to go along with the story:
If they showed Sam DonaldSon of
Leslie Stahl or Chris W~
standing ln front of a darkened
Whlie House saying, "l'he prestdeat
ls not here tonight, • you'be worried
slck."
"Maybe you're rtght. What are
they yelling at hlm mw?"
"They'want to mwlfhe'sgolngiD
fire Ann Gorsuch ·of the EPA."
"Does the press I'Nily npect
him to answer that when he's
leaving for camp David?"
"Not ,-eaUy. But If you have ID
stand out In the cold for anhour,!\'s
WOrth '8. try.''

"Why can't he go to camp David
on the weekeod without us having
to watch tt on the evening news?"
· "Because the American people
should know where their president
ls at all times. The White House
doesn't need the med!acoverlnghls
dr!parture when he ls going to
camp David because he's usually
In a good mood.' He's ln an even
better mood when he comes back .
But you can't eX(l€Ct the press
corps to just stand there like ·
dummies when Reagan Is getting
on and of the helicopter. They owe It
to the public to lind out what ls
really on hls mind. That's why they
shout thos!! questions at him."
"I think It's a very dangerous
way to gather news. Halt the time,
with the helicopter motors whirring, he can't even hear the
questions,'' she satd.
' 'I don't think the president

Kalida 6ti. van Bllftfl !'i2
uma· Calh. Rfl, Elldw 47
Mans . Madison ?n, Mart.•flrld ti9
Mo!ll'an If(, Ma.vsvlll£o ~1

~ln. Anl:k&gt;~

T.l, Amelia 21'
CIMM AA Tournwnenbl
Nonh Bend Taylol· '!1. Ocrmon1 NE '4~
n... AM Tourrwnenlll
Cin . Ml."Nk'holas 6'1 , Ctn. Tall' 44
C'- A 1'ournarnenbl
W!Wamsllur~: !D, Fa)'l'ftl'\•Uk&gt; -IS tffi'l

OtlovUk&gt; 70.

o-.uA-

o•(,6, RI\'&lt;'I"Sldl' 40

SOU'I'IImN ('17)- w~ 4 - 1 ~ ; Salser
6-Hl lltllcfleld 1M~; Wolfr 1-2-1: E\•am
1-ll-2: lll'nll~ 2-2-6: .Jvhnsoo ~ : Mkh..-1
~:1-9. TIII'Aili :19-17-n.
HANNAN TRAfE (10) - Ra;o 0-!Hl:
Rankin fl.O.O; 1'rlplelt ft-2-12; Dillon t -2~:
Hat'l'isM 0..2-2; Whitll"'o' 0..0..0. L . Whll\p.o 1-0-2·

·

·

ByqUIU't~

CIM! AM. Toun.mmt.IJ
SprlnJ:. NOMh !1!. Piqua fl2

Lwls\·Uko :11. MauiUon 1.1
nmn Cok.lmbl.an n. Ct&gt;Una .fl
McKkt~·

fl'('!;lvk'\1.· ~

M('('hQJ11C1;burji~

VrrmllkJn 47, Marlon HaJ"dlnl{ 45
Sht&gt;l~ ~ • .Uhland 41
nndlay 74, [)(of!IIIC'(' -12
W0011t£&gt;r 46, Canloo

C'qnv~

Mans . Malabar Ill, Ashland 6.'i
0.. A.AA 'l'ounwnentl!
Sprinlt Nor1h fiR. Piqua ~
Day. Meadowdak&gt; 00, Troy .aM

1111)'. S!ebbln!llt , Sltt'l~ :2fl

Da.\'. Ml'adowdako 116, 'fro\· :18
n-.u.~
NPW IA&gt;Kln$ltm it BdPf'C" ~

fl

a..M. ..... ~
GM.'1111e&amp;d McClain 64, Zanr Trare !i.1

rt-A.~bl

MrehM~

. WIHard !II. BucyN!I 32
J(('I'IIWI 66, Van W('l1 .11
f:'lMI "~1M

fl. DE'Gr&amp;ff Rl\' ~ «1

m. Tot.

Anna &lt;19, BIYidfonl :z2 ·

Stan m
T'?l Whltml'l"
Tot WaiT£&gt; -1:2
Mlllbur,· l..ak~ 71.' WOOO'nor'f' ti2

Dclp~

Glt.ionburR" fll. l.aklllk:ko hi

St.

JOhn ' ~

Whll&lt;'fard. Mich.

m.

84, Unroiii\IIM.' :0

Forf'JmniD$1!11 !IIi. ColumbUs Gm••&lt;&gt; -14
U~ldt&gt; 41 , Ashliind Crc;oslvkww :u
B!rl:cyt- Crntral fl .· WVnfOrd 2A
M11lw City 61. Pam.t:&gt;ra.CUOOu 'l7
Ru.!a 49, Jad!.soo Cm!N' 47

'7'l. N. Cmtral 70
flaHM AM 1'ournlunfWI.oi

AntOOny Wayn(l 411, Tal . Noll'\' Dam&lt;&gt; -H
Tal. Llllbc'y !'10, Tol,. I)('VIIbt!oi.~ :t1

n- .u Twrnaune.&amp;H

Paul~ ."R Drlta :!fl

Piqua M . Trotwotld·Madison -1 ~
C'IMft 1\ Tow WCH

Ml«&lt;k1own F'('flwldt

~.

~ Semnd Game)
FEDERAL IIOCIIING l:t=) - Ru&amp;'&lt;'ll
1-1-3; Matlock 4·2·10; BmnA1 ().().(); Ja!ZQ

1-2-4: Hal1 l&lt;l-2: Ftazl&lt;r ~l-1: A. JaRO 0-1-1:
-MJUer 2Vi: Burdettt 3-Q.ti. TOJ',o\U; 12-8-32.
EASTERN (31) - Amlrn&lt;t' 11-2-2: Rl"""1
1.0.2: !;pm('("f 1-0-2: Whl!krk .1-3-9: Dallrv

3-5-11: Mankin 1-1-.1: Horner Q-2-2. Tai'AL.~
ll-13-Jl.
By Q10ll1en&lt;
F -Hoddn~

F.aSif'l'n .

... .... .... .9 12 7 4-:t!
.\ .. .... ... .. .. H

ti li

5--.TI

report by
Wednesday.
The first
official
workout
ls Thursday.
The
rest of team must check In Feb. 28,
wlththefirstworkoutMarchl.
Third-base coach John Gory 1,
former m~er of the Minnesota
Twins, is In charge of the workouts
until Ferraro returns to active duty.

,

~eigs ......... ..... .. .' .. . , .. .........14 13 12 21-61
"'ldan .. .. ....... ..... ........... .to 24 11 21-'1'2

~1

JACKSON PIKE· RT.3$ WEST
Phone 448· 452·

&amp;VfCIAM IIATNE!'S SAT. SUN
AU SEATS 12.00
ADfiiSSION EVERY rUESD.4Y U .OO

, M9Qriey 4-2·10: A. Mooney 7-4-ll!: Able 3-0-6:
Crook 3-8-14; Carpenter 1..().2; Jorgenson 7·2·
16. TOI'AL'i 33-1&amp;&amp;.
By qaal1en:

MelgS .......... ....... .. ....... ....... 9 12 8 1)-40

New Lex ...... .... .. ................ 20 23 24 15--82

·

Oak Harbor M, F'05torill 27
Sl.!.·anton !'il . Tol. st. Ursula l1
Huron Rl. Pon Clinton 19

Cedarvllk- :t!

Twin Vallf&gt;:\1 Nonh 26. F'ranklln·MOIU'Ol'

Mary ¥1. Clydr&gt; .T1
F'airvll'W 55. w~ wron :1'1
Wa\l('rl;.r ~ - HUlslxlro 44

Sandus~ St .

~·ood

11
Rull.~ &lt;• 4!1, .ladt'iM Cmti"'" ~7
Anna, tel, 8 radfonl 22
T.w ........
Cln. Markmont 72, f'1nll('VIIM'n tfl
North Collqrc HU118. N.:W Rlcilmond 64
Ctn. Wyom!nR WI. Wf'St&lt;'!'n Brown !IT

WNnfall

(,_ ..u

W'Ktln !'i7. Col. ln~dmC't' :n
VBI . ."Wi , F'olrtk'ld Un.lon Jo1
lk'Kk':&gt;' ~\. UUc•a 42
.
Mar,·svUir 00. Spans HI,R'hland .l \
N . Union 4-1'7 , Plra'lant ~1
· Thays Val. J.t Clrri!VIIk' :8
(~ J\'1'owwnmu.
~lfl:at r ~. Onawa HIILq

cln~ ~2

:rr

Grand Rl\'t'r Aradml.v !1R, E~' riiJ Ktnll''s
Nadr&gt;mv 2R
Hudscin WRA Ri, l,.urhe'ran F.ust :tl
&lt;"- AAA Tournllrntonbi
J\kron C"...a!'lk'ld 71, RaV1.11nD -l'i
Mli!ISIUon 8R. N. Canton -1R

Tl!fln Calwrt !iii. Gib;onbUilf .TI
f'rmlorlt ~ . •k16rph ~ . l3(&gt;tt.'N\Iko 17
All~ ll6. Clhlo C'ltv :li
Ada 411. Rh'Ct'dak' .'II .

Uppcor Sc-IOTo Vol.

n-.U.Tml~

. et.tAT~lll

F'f'(k&gt;l"dl HOC'k!nt:t

Mt&lt;' omb .U, Vanlw&gt; -10
Carey Q . lltrl1r &amp;n1on 5j
MA ~ Toumumrnt
cu.v-o~ho~ F'a ll.'l. 74. Huci.Q l :!:1
Hubbard ~. Ashlobula Ed~110d -11

n_.

~

!VI, Buci&lt;(')'t' N. .W
~~.

Li111'1am

•

~~P~o~~v~~MAfh\~S ··..L~~ · 99¢

F..d~oo,r;!l. Sft:Ykl'r ~l

&amp;-a\'f'r Easlr m ~7 . L~a.'l\11ll • Va l. :c,
R~ 7R. Bot'lc"Yl' W. .17
C'htlllrothr f1!lRPI It!, 1At114• 1'nlct• ~
NNI BMTnn

.11

Holj!:Dir ~. Ottuwu H!I L~ .n
Lilrrty Crnl('f -17, Pw&gt;ttbrw\1(' :N
l.IJra.~ fi:!. Man.~ . C'hrlsllan :n
TiriOf'a ~. F:OOn :t!

ShrrldLin j',!, Mr4:1 h.1
W. MuskinJtUm $ . 1'rWalk':-· .W

M1n~

~1. R~t

s . C('fl!ral 19. Nf&gt;w LonOOn .lJ

Sand).· Val. ~7. Waodri4tt' t!
Om111&lt;' fi1, Alu'on Hoban ~

7~ .

Col. Wrhrlt' 41

Uctl~

a- 1\J\A Toun.n1entli
Cln. Moont Hf'attJ:.· 61. Cln. Alltrn ~
Cll'W . Bapl. ChristliUl Ill, Fulrjx&gt;r1 Ha r·

\ rooit&lt;!\.'UI('

~.

Dublin 47, 0..11. CmtmnJW 42

W~!tom,..;

Paln(Vii\'Uil' Rtvl'n&lt;idt&gt; !i..1, Wickliff&lt;'

~1

Lolllipop play

Giveaways pay ~ff

PHll.ADELPHIA lAP) - Julie
Sorlero, the coach of tne women's
basketball squad at Phlladelphla
Textlle.employsunusualnamesfor
h&lt;?r complicated plays designed to
take the ball down·court and Into the
hoop.
.
She put In a new play during a
practice session and one of her
players asked Its name.
· "Let's call lt Lollipop,'' Sortero
satd. "lfweruntheplayrlght,lt'llbe
llke taking candy from a baby.''

EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J.
lAP) - The Meadowlands race
track goes tn heavUy for special
programs and. souvenir giveaway
nights, and It paid off In the fall of
1982.
The track was up better than 5
percenHn atten!lance and almost 9
percent In betting. The handle for98
ntghts and a few afternoons of
racing was $204,330,278. The total
attendance was 1,501,475.

r----r===·==·::::::::::::::::::::~:---l

PLUMBING MADE EASYI.

SLICED BACON .•• ~ .•.... r~~;$1.43
·
HAM SAlAD ..•...•..•... JP·. $1.59

HOMEMADE

COllAGE CHEESE ... 1.39
1-LB. BLUE BONNET QUARTERS
MARGARINE ....... .LB. 7~
CUAiiFIBD OtD &amp; SHARP

CHEESE ............ LB.. '2.39

.......... ~~: 39'

11 OZ. MORTON OR BANQUET

T.V. DINNERS ..•........ :.~£~ 89'
12 OZ. WB.CHES

GRAPE JUICE ...•..•.....•g~~. 99¢
LUNCH MEAT ...•..••... ~~. $1.59
1S OZ. DELMONTE

SPINACH ....•........•~~.2/$1.29

Fights pain
DELWAY, Fla. (AP) -Carole
CharboMier ls one-up on the rest or
the golfers on the LPGA Tour In one
respect. She ls the only pta}'!!r the
tour born ln the Congo.
After two years of attempting to
play despite rheumatiC arthrttls in
her leftfoot, she began to move up Ill
1982, earning over $40,000 In prize
montes.

140Z.

MINUTE RITE .••...•....~~.. $1.29
3 OZ. REGULAR
J
JELLO •................•.~~.E?. 2/69¢

on

GAU.ONS OF RICH-N-READY

.ORANGE DRINK ..••• ~~~~~. $1.29
2 ROUPACKSOFTWEAVE

.SPECIAL OF ·THE WEEK
-

HAMBURGER

64&lt;: ·.

"'

~

;~

I

WITH FRIE$.....S1 JJfi

,

PLASTIC
SEWER PIPE

AND FITTINGS
1/2" II TO 2"

ii!·
(! '

DAIRY VALlEY

Pickens Hardware
liASbN, W. VA.

lridae"
fl
....
~
...ao_.v.OH_....... .....-.....'".-·~---2-ss.a. . . ..
-.:At Tho Enol of.the "'""",.,.,.,_

•

t

.

TOILET TISSUE ...: .••...•. !'!'~·. 73¢
1O'lz OZ. CAMPBBJ.'S

VEG. BEEF
SOUP ......~~ 2/99¢
.
-

.

46 OZ. SWEETBRIER

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ...~~. $1.19
APPLE SAUCE ............. ~~. 87¢
28 OZ. OlD VIRGINA

APPLE BUTTER .•••••.•••••Je_. 99'

'

''
v

·

25 OZ. WO&lt;Y LEAF

':~

ADOLPH'S

. •

B)' Quarters:

NEW LEI' t821 - K. Moooey IW-16: E.

Edon M. HamilTon. Ind. ~
Arl'hb&gt;ld

Day. S!f'bblnAA .ll. SJ~ 'J'I
~J:. South ~ F'alrOOrn 19

2-04. Tm'AL'i 211-11).12.

MEIGS (10)- Crool&lt;.s tlM; SWbher 1-0-2:
Meadows 12.~29; stegall2·1·5; Horton 1·2-4;
Gordon().().(); Reeves~ DeLong(~.{}.(~: Lof·
tts G-OO: Fry tlM. TOI'AL'IIil3-40.

Ottawa Hill!! !'iR, Maui'I'K'(' Val. 52

&lt;lltltAAA~

to 19-2. New Lex Is rated among the
top 10 In the final girls' ."AA" poll.
Jenny Meadows grabbed gamescoring hqoors though as the allSEOAL junlpr drtlled 29 points and
led ln rebounding with 15.
New Lex placed five In double flgw-es with Ann Mooney leading the
pack with 18. Shelly Jorgenson and
Katy Mooney added 16 each.
The wtliners now face Sheridan
(12-9) at 3 p.m. Saturday tn the sectional championship.
Coach Ron Logan's ladles end
their seasoq at 9-13. The Marauderetles, wlth several girls graduated from the last year's squad,
were picked eary In the year to
have a rebuilding season.
Meigs coMected on 16 of 41 shots
' for 39 percent and mad!! eight of 15
from the foul line for 60 percent.
New Lex made 18 of 24 from the
tree throw strtpe. New Lex outrebounded Meigs 43-37.

Holoombl·l-3: TaylorG-2·14; Chancey 6-2_14 :

Eva.ns 1.0.2; Kennedy H -3: Hotx;on ~
Weiker 0.0.0. TOI'AUi 25-ll-«J.
•
SHERIDAN t7%) - D. Miller IJ-1-27·
Fble- 2-2-6: S. MUier 2-J -7: Reichl.,_. 2·2-6:
CooPEftider 4-6-14; PaJnter J.2-8· Shumake-

Box..sc.ore:

fteop!IU' lWMon

Southern .. ... .... .... ..... ........ ..}~ l:l 15 :u-77
H. Trat&lt;' .. .... ..... ......... ....... .4 6 6 2 -~

Ferraro joins Indians
TUCSON, Ariz. &lt;APl - Cleveland Indians Manager Mike Ferraro arrived at the American
League team's training camp In
Tucson on Tuesday, just 12 clays
after he undetwent s11rgery In Fort
Lauderdale for ihe removal of a
cancerous kidney.
He was In goodsprtts, hutwasstUl
shOWing effects from the operation.
The· 38-year-old Ferraro was assisted by his wlfe, Mary.
He satd he wW observe the early
practiceS frOm thestadlum seats at
.Ht Corbett Field. He sald he hasn't
}'!!t decided on when he will resume
fieldwork.
"I'm convinced the baUphj.yers
want to see their manager here,"
Ferraro satd.
·
Pitchers and catchers must

ar,;uw Se.-on

Geor~IM'n !18, C1n. Summit 17
(.,_ """ 'l'oanwnellbl

moments of the last frame when
Eastern went ahead 29-28.
After three rounds FH led 28-26 in
a slow third period pace as Eastern
fought back tn the final round.
Eastern lost three starters via fouls
while FH lost two ln crucial points
ln the game.
Usa Miller htt the first of a one
and one bonus to provide the
wtlining deflclf with seconds remaining, although Kelly Wllttlatch
went to the line tor the Eagles with
a chance to tte as time ran out.
Fectr.ral Hocking held on lor the
32-31 win.
Eastern hit a dismal jUne of 49
from the field for 19 perce11t while
Federal Hocking sank 12 of 41.
Eastern hit just 19 of 36 from the
llne while FH hit etght ol 20.
Eastern .won the battle of the
.boards 50-36 while collecting seven
steals, I7 turnovers. and ntne
assists. Dailey and Ambrose led the
team wlth 10 aod nine respectively .
Dee Dalley led Eastern with 1
points.
Vickie Matlack had 10 for FH.

Co;.t _O-O-O. rorALS 7-6-a.

N. J\dams 76. ManchcostA' 6.1
Pt&gt;c&gt;bi£'S 61. W. UrOOn .17
UnkllO 47. LY rl&lt;'hb.\rJ!&gt; Oa~ · .f4

C1~M~oAAb~

Cln . Our Lady d. Anaets !Ill, Madt&gt;ira .17

Eaglettes eliminated;
·( Tornadoettes in finals

Reag~~a_n~______
Ar_t_Buc_h_wa_~

objects. Frankly, I think he prefers
that type of questioning to press
conference. I know his staff does."
"But suppose someone yells a
question and he says 'Yes' Instead
of 'No.' Isn't that scary?"
"Not really. Because tf he gives
the wrong answer, the press
secretary can always say he didn't
.)lnderstand the question. What you
have to realize Is that Ronald
Reagan, before he went Into
politics, attended an awful lot of
movie premieres, so he's used to
reporters shouting at htrn. He's an
old pro when tt comes to running a
press gauntlet. Look at the way he
waves his arm as he approaches
the helicopter. He's a natural when
lt comes to saying goodbye.' •
" But the TV networks show the
same scene every weekend. They

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

THE PLA1NS - The Sheridan
Generals survived a dramatlc
Meigs Marauder fourth quarter
comeback
post a 72-6-lvk:tory
and dv bid tosecond
round action
a ancelo
In the "AA" SI!Ct!onal held here
Tuesday.
.
Leading comfortably 57-41 wlth
tx min
s
Ute$ to go, Sheridan fell
vtctlm !o ,;ome good Meigs defense
and was . outscored 184 over the
next five minutes to .put the
Mar.auil.ers back In lt at 61-59. ·
The Generals, now 10-11 0·n t~""
vear, rebounded their own missed
'
lou,! shots
twice ln the next 30
ds

p .R. aid to the rigo.. . .!:_h-..,.t______I_ac_k_An_d_erso__n
WASIDNGTON - The U.S.
Information Agency, which ls
supposed to seek favorable publicIty abroad for the United States, Is
npw helping foreign governments
get favorable coverage In thls
country.
The agency Is teaching Latin
American and Arab officials how to
handle American newspaper and
television reporters. This dellcate
Indoctrination Is dl~ted by Ian
MacKenzie, who used to be a
registered agent and publtclty man
for the late Nicaraguan dictator
Anastasio Somoza .
Despite MacKenzie's best efforts , poor Somoza never did
overome hls public-relations .problems. Now other right-wtng regimes wlU be able to learn the
MacKenzie methods.
The publtc-relatlons training will
cost the American taxpayers

Middleport, Ohio

Sheridan. ousts M~igs from AA tourney

L-~------~~~--~~--~----------­
solutions.

thetr eyes. Tb _remove. him, In been like to remove Gen . Douglas
conseq11ence of that dereltctlon , MacArthur as secretary of defense
from his portfolio as defense and keep him on as a .cabinet
minister and to accept him as a full
member without portfolio.
Cabinet member without portfolio
2) The situation invoMng Israel
Is an ertstic act of moral halr·
is In high flux, and failure to press
spllttlng that does not satisfy the opportunities for crltlcal stabtllzahlgh demand of Israeli conscience. tion would be a most awful It ls as tf a plumber .who 0pened a
historical dereliction.
dam intending to wlpe out a village
What We find, for w~at may
were to be found guilty and prove a breathless moment In
punished_by removing his plumb- Mideast hiStory, is that Hussein Is
lng loots. Mr. Sharon Is.no longer ln · wavering and Arafat ls wavering.
charge of the armed forces of Thls coincidence ls entlrely novel.
Israel. but lf his character is There are reasons to believe that
Impeached , which ls what the Hussein Inclined to accept the
commission found, then wlth or Reagen tntttatlve of last summer,
without an army he ought not be that is, to move in the dlrectlon of
participant ln the councils of state. Egypt, toward a confectr.ration wlth
A human elephant must here be the Palestinians lh west Jordan and
weighed, namely that some people on the West Bank. For Hussein to
by the force of their personallty do give these signals suggests that the
not easily fill subordinate positions. Saudis recognize that the time has
fue can im agine that It would l)ave come at least to explore reasdnable

I,
. v

Puil6i0,

19Q .

film."

.; We, the people of First SOuthern
:.Baptist Church, would like tothilnk
:;the.Pomeroy Fire Department and
:· Emergency Squad for the prompt
-: and efflctent way they answered
::our call Saturday night.
:·

r.lxvary 23,

Willwm F. fluckley

Cares about program

: : This Is in response to Mrs. Good·
;win' s letter. I res(l€Ct her right to an
·opinion, eve ryone has one. I'm
:sorry she has the attitude that she
. :does toward Head Sta rt
. First of all, you cannot begin to
-understand a ll that Head Start does
:just by a ttending several days In a
_year's time. I speak from
experience.
: • Last year , ! only attended the center on several days. Thls was bec;mse I ha d two smaller children at
home and I didn 't have the time or
energy to a ttend more often. I have
learned so much more this year
since I've attel)dr!d every center day
!hat my two children attended except for two days.
: I Ice! rriy children have gained a
lot during the time they have been In
Head Start. My oldest one ln Hea d
Star! Is In hls second year of the
p_rogra m . At the time he entered he
wasn't talking much. He was shy
and reserved. It took time, but he
ilas progresed to where he's talking
bt more to us and not as shy

1983

Pomeioy Middleport, Ohio

._:Letters to editor
..

r-.btuart 23,

PaiJe--2-The Daily Senlinel

Begin at hay
The Daily Sentinel

Wcdn.nta,,

"

'

�"f
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 23, 1983

.

Pomeroy- Middle port, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Bilardello vying for Reds' /c atching job .
.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Catcher
terrible spring and nobody liked
. Dann BUardello !I&lt;IYS he's more . him. The plan is to go with tlln'e

played in Class AAA .
He hlt .2391n 1979and .:nlln 198lin
Class A and M . Last "season be hit

'LADY
VICTORIA

.
one-year contract with the Reds,
leaving only three members of the
.team's 40-man major league roster

relaxed nowthathe'svyingforajob
catchers."
~lgned.
'
.
with the Clnclnnatl Reds instead of
Slrice Johnny Bench is now a thiJ:d .~ wlth-ClassAASan Antonio and
stW struggling In the Los Angeles
baseman, there are only four had 17 home runs.
· . The'.Reds released no detaUs of
[)rogers organization.
.
. catchers carrip,
BUardeJlo's aldhefelt theDodgers Householder's contract. .
The Reds picked up the 22·year·
One is Alex Trevino, the incum· were not vecyinterested in him, but . . . - - - - - - - - - - old catcher froth the Dodgers' farm
bent. One is Dave Van GOrder, the Bend!!~ said that wasn't neceSsarUy
system for $25,&lt;XXl. But they must
challenger. BUardeUo is apparently the case.
T he Doily Se ntinel
keep him on their major league
competingwlthSteveChrlstmasfor
"Our information Is that there .
(USPS I- )
roster or offer him back for $12,500, .the No.3 job.
was some support among the
.\ lllvWon of Mul!lmeda. Inc.
ac~rdlng to baseball regulations.
"I know they want to work Alex Dodgers toward pi'QteCtlng him ' ~
Published every afternoon; Monday.
through Friday, m Court Street, by the '
. I talked with Mr. (Reds Pres!· . into the starting role to catch over from the draft, Berider said.
Ohio Valley Publishing Compa ny . Mul·
" All our reports indicate that
dent Dick) Wagner .the other day 100 games," BUardeUo said. "But I
tlmedla, Inc .. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, 992·
think the catching job'swlde open. defensively BUardello is capable of
and I told him, I ,hope your
2156. SeCond class postage pa.kl at
Pomeroy, Ohto.
·
investment works out. Hopefully •.~ Any catcher has got a chance to get catching in the major leagues. He
has
the
arm
and
hands,
plus
he
can
·
the No.1 job. Who knows? If Steve
can make it a nice move,
Member: TilE! Associated Press. Inland
swing the bat. 'The only question is
DaUy Press ~latloo and the Amerl·
B~:n-dello~ldTu~ay.
, . (Christmas) or i hlt .400 In spring
can Newspaper Publishers Assc;Jclatlon.
. I wouldn t say he sgotit made,
tranlng, hlt homer after homer and .Jack of Triple A ·experience,"
NatJona l Advert ls lng Repre~ta tlve,
Belider said.
sa1d Sheldon Bend:;· ~ pl~yer . throW_everybody out, we could win
Branham Newspaper Saleo, T.l3 Third
personnel dlr!JC!or. Let ssay it s in
the job ..
Avenue, New York, NE."W Yo rk 10017.
In other tralnlng notes, outfielder
Paul Householder has agreed to a
hls favor. the situ~tion that he's ·
BU.U:dello however has never
POS'I"MASTER: Send address to The
Dally Sentinel , Ill Court St .. P&lt;meroy ,
under. The only thmg that could r-;;;::;::;;:;;';::;;~:;::;·~;:;;::;;::;;;;;;;;;:;;;:a:o:;;::;;:;;::;;;:;;:;;;J Ohio
45769.
change that would be if he l)ad a

m

state Division of WUdlife has
withdrawn Its proposal to raise the
number of deer Ohio hunters may
kUi ln one year from one to two.
Wlldllfe Chief Steven H. Cole said
Tuesday . the proposal wUl not be
· presented to the O,hio w uoure
Council when it reviews 1983-~
hunting regulations.
·
The Wildlife Division presented
for public consideration a proposal
to allow hunters to kill one deer
during ~n season and one during
the archery season. The division
said there was heavy opposition to .
the proposal.

MANAGER ON THE MOUND - Cincinnati Reds' manager Rl1SS
Nixon llnlshes through as he pitches batdng practice lor pitchers and

catchers at the team' s spring training headqnarters ln Tampa, Fla.
Tuesday. ( AP Laserphoto).

,

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0..
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEBRUARY 26. 1983

pne Month ...... .. .......... ... .... ,..'..... $4.40
.. ..... ... ............. ........... :152.80
SINGI!L COPY

FAMILY PORTRAIT

COLUMBUS, Ohjo (AP ) - The

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

. SUIISCRIPJ10N RATES
By Cari1er 1or Motor~
One Week .......... .. .... .......... ...... :. $1.00

'
10xl3 COLOR

Withdraws proposal

FINE
CRYSTAL
STEMWARE
IMPORTED
FROM
FRANCE.

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-~ 8 am-10 pm

9ne Year

WITH YOUR CHOICE OF 3 FRAMES

PRICES
Dally ............ .... .............. .... :. 20 Cents

Only $79 5

SubsCrtbers not desiring to pay the carrier
may rfmlt In advance direct to The DaUy
Sent lntl on !1, 6 or 12 month basls. Credit
will-be given can1er Neh month.

$40 RET AIL VAWE .

PORTRAIT WILL BE TAKEN SATURDAY, MARCH 5 FROM
10-8 AT
POMERoY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

So subscriptions by m all pennlt1ed In
TOWN where home carrier servtce ls
uvaUable.

USDA CHOICE

M.UL SVBSCR11'110NS
lnllde Ohio

FOR APPOINTMENT CAll 992-5117, 992-7582
Or Any Member of

t3 Weeks ...... ...... .. .................... $14.01
;!&lt;; Weelo; ............................. ..... $27.30

52 Weeks .................................. ~1.48
· IJullllde Ohlo
lJ Weeks .. ................................ $1!1.21
26 Weeks ... ....................... ... ..... 129.64
52 Weeks ............ ...................... sr.G.21

OHIO ETA PHI SORORITY .
SPONSORED BY OHIO ETA PHI SORORITY

··.

·

· .

$

39·
Chuck Roast.. :~· ..
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
$ ·69
'

LB

Chuck Roast ... ~ ...

--------- SUPER VALU
AT POWELL'S

I
I

u ·ml

VALUABLE COUPON .

HOMEMADE

GRADE A WHOLE
'

SAVORY SLICED

Bacon .......,..........L~

TOTAL SAVINGS·

VALUABLE COUPON

VALUABLE COUPON

'

•Any manufacturer's coupon greater
than 51 ( will be redeemed at face
value only.
"

'

eOnly one manufacturer's coupon per
item.

.

¢
.•

•This offer excludes .cigareHes, or any
other items prohibited by law.
.

.

, Super Valu Coupons, free .coupons, or
any competitor's coupon!..
'

'

0nIOnS ................ .

eoffer is only good for product on
hand. No Rainchecks.

'

'

3 LB. BAG

~~• ~tr

0 ,\llfftl lft PltCla'li"Q
0 Ootiii10C:~ 1• 11IIOIIIty

SAVE OVER

40%

¢

Over the coming weeks.
we will be offering this fine
European crystal on a sim·
pie, convenient item-aweek program at savings
of over 40%. Each week of
the program a set of four
place setting glasses, or a
tabletop accessory item,
will be featured at a special
sale price With coupon.
During non-feature weeks,
items will be available at
their regular prices. All
items in the Lady Victoria
Fine Crystal line are carried
in open stock. so you can
add or. replace pieces long
after the promotion has
ended.
·

FLAVORITE .

•There is no limit as to the number of
manufacturer's coupons you may
redeem.

ZESTA

Cra ckers.......... ;~-~
.

¢

FLAVORITE

Homo. M· ~·~

kPIASIIC GAllON$

298 SECOND ST.
PCitEROY, 0.

79

•••••••••••

EXTRA TOPPING

09
Lunch Meat..!~~~
Jeno's Pl·zza· •••••••••
•

GOLD

TIDE DETERGENT

ROUR
5 LB. BAG

79¢ ·

Limit Oue Per CustOfllef
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Fib.

84
Limit Four Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's .
Offer Expires Feb. 26, 1983

oz. '

$299

RAVORITE

PINTO BEANS
LB: BAG

19¢

Limit Four Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
Feb. 26, 1983

Sa.ve the valuable coupon
below, and start today on
your very own collection of
genuine fine European
crystal .

··
·,

.,
::
..
:•
~
~

::
:;
·;
~

·-.•

¢

,
••
~
~

~

.·•. '•
'
.,'

SAVE
OVER4QO/o

'

LARGE 15 OZ.

STOlt£ HOURS:
Man.·Sit. 8 1111·10 pm
.
, SundaJ 10 Mn·lO pm

..

'• '

Margarine ....... ~~-

'

··

,,

'

TREET

.

·~T.his offer does not apply to ~owell~s

5-~ '"IITU iy lfl lllll
~""" · ~,... ,...,,, , or

eOIIII!VC!tOII

Your table set with elegant
European crystal stemware doesn't have to be a
mere dream anymore. Because now, for a limited
time only, we are offering
genuine Lady Victoria Fine
·.•·
Crystal Stemware ... an ale- ·.
gant French crystal that
will bring the beauty,
charm and romance of the
Old World to your table at
prices that will easily fit
your weekly budget.

··

.

•The total value of the doubled manufacturer's coupon cannot .. exceed .
the purchase price of the item. ~oney
will not be refunded.

" it:l'll~ ~11«1 ~ .....

• W~IIIIItllo ~~

. 01..,......., .. ,,

¢

•

•The total value of the doubled coupon .'may not exceed $1.00.

•

• t -reO 11)1 Owrlbllll¥
1110 . . ,. , ,

$ 29
Pork Steak/Roast... .t!~ .•

FRESH BUTT

•

POWEU'S

¢ Sandwich Spread .·•... ~B~.

Whole Fryers.... ~ ..

THURSDAY, FEB. 24th
FRIDAY, FEB. 25th
SATURDAY, FEB. 26th

I

• !1/nogtn $f'4et" ttml
• ~. cap.e111..

• E&lt;~rtotc~..,.,.,

POMEROY I OHI9

I'

E ~lft

r~~oec..,.r61

M)rltm.,..,~

ORKS••.
MANUFACTURER'S COUPON

• a.n..oow

and bring the beauty
&amp; elegance Of genuine
European Crystal to
your table with ...

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Page--6--The Daily Sentinel
~Ullllll ~l

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S.1t . M.H .

3-3 card from the floor. Guard Tino
Richards iS stilllistedasdoubtfullor
the playoffs with a knee Injury.
John Maisch paced the Redmen
with 19 points and nine rebounds.
Jerry Mowery popped In 18 points
and Dan Cuny 13. Tom Pryor paced
the Yellow Jackets w!th ·22 points,
while Dave Carr added 18. ·Pryor
andcarreachhad 11 rebounds.
TheRedmenshot33of63fromthe
' 52
fl oor .or
percent, compared to the
Yellow Jackets' 30of87 card for 34
percent. Rio shot 12 of 21 at the
free-throw line to Cedarville's 11 of
21.

l? :i"ll'l

photo8.

The Yellow Jackets held a 41..34
advantage on II¥' boards a11dtumed
the ball over 21 times to tbe
Redmen's15.,
The g~.rne marked Ohio Valley
Bank night, with caSh awards being
given In a drawing at halftime. · ·

Tuc.

'~1r .

!'nn~o l.1 t

l'l n r: ., r..c

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND

MULLEN INSURANCE

CEDARVILLE 1'111 -Carr 1&gt;2·18 : Da·
nube2.J.7:G,..,.. ~,aorman~, PJyor
~22; Ftrnls W-4; Falrlllrst 1-6-~ Walter
1.0.2. Taiaii:IIHHL

RIOGIL\NDE('II!J -Curry!).J.13: Maisch
!1-H!J: Shaw 1.o.2; MOW&lt;!I')'B-2·18; Wolfe2·!&gt;9;
Furnler2.(H: Penrod~; FrttzJ.J.J: McNI·
cllols W-4. Taiall ~U:Il

IIMR I SO NY I l. l.f'

S;t l · ' l.or . '&gt; , 1 :00
t:fl!l'\nt.AT l MI 1~\ ~U.

IIMUIIIJR\' llflOI•

Elementary tournament
The Meigs Athletic Boosters are sponsoring a sixth grade and
fourth and fifth grade tourn~ment beginning this evening. Trophies
wm be awarded to the first , second, third and fourth place teams.
individual trophies will be given to members of the first and
second place teams.
WW be $1 for adults and 50 cents for
AdmiSsion
.
' students.

Bengals take lawyer to court
CINCINNATI (API -The Cin·
cinnati Bengals have asked aoourt
ro bar Pete JohnSO]l's lawyer from
advising the fullback to not report to
the team next season.
The lawyer. Jack Childers of
Skokie. Ill .. in a letter tot he Bengals.
said Johnson could not play next
season unless his contract for
$125.000 Is renegotiated.

Mike Brown, Bengals assistant
genera I manager, said the team
wants to make sure that Childers
doesn't convince Jolmson to hold
out.
.
"What we're saying is to refuse to
fulfill Ithe contract) Is not one of
thosenot
options
and
if he is advisng
him
tofulfUI,
it'sinterferingwith
that contract." said Brown.

A hearing on the Ben gals' request
for a preliminary injunction is
scheduled Friday in Hamilton
County Common Pleas Court.

Brown said Johnson has one more
year on his present contract plus an
option year with Cincinnati.

Childers said prior to the Bengals
suit Tuesda y he did not fear such a
action.

The Middleport Youth League
will hold an umpire clinic Sunday,
Feb. 'rl, at 1: ~p.m. at the Middleport Fire Station,
All persons Interested In the
A·.S.A. rule changes, new manager
and umpires are Invited to attend.
A representative of the A.S.A.
will be present. He will be testing aU
persons Interested In becoming
sanctioned umpires.

. "It's groundless," said Childers.
"l don't make the decisions ... I give
them (the players ) all the options
available to them and tell them . 'It's
up to you to make adecision .' That 's
basically how I operate."

Umpiring clinic set

REGULAR ...... $7~~95

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

' 55-50 71·50 16-50 . .50

,._.._. o.:o ,__,a

'

EAR, N.OSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
OHice Hours by Appointment Only

r~;Rt'AINIING

DAVID DUNN
7-11 NIGHRY

MEIGS INN
POMEROY

126 MAIN ST.
•

MR.
'

$}4!

......

-~----

0,.,1 ot me worst tr11ng1 thet c1n. nagpen to vou on a
col&lt;t w1nter motrllllg 11 thlt ypur old bettery 11 dtiCI .

Before trouote sm~es. see ul and save.

The never·add·wllttr no-worrf Delco Freecll,m 11can
oe a true toui-WHt~r 1nena. So bet to ua I"'w betore

f"ot'r S'" 19 ygu gng "X'

. G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
POMEROY
119 w. 2nd

GALLIPOLIS
240 Thinf AVe.

992·m9

446.1813

CALL (614) 992-2104

44«204

or (304) 675-1244

••

MASON

1704 blltm Ave.

Routt 33
773-5511

.... lflolrts- · - -··.

,.

~··---~

50 MONTH
GUARANTEE
Ac.o..lco II the way to go

.

ONE GROUP LADIES' ISOTONER

HARTLEY SHOES

THIS

WEDNESDAY, FEBRt,JARY 23 THRU
SATURDAY,-FEBRUARY 26

TAX

I

OFF All Men's Insulated
BOOTS AND CHUKKAS
20% OFF ALL WOMEN'S
DRESS BOOTS
20% OFF

IFREQUIRED.

'Ille NCAA said its Division III
Basketball Conunlttee had named
• three teama to at-large \lerths,
including ~ranked Scranton. Pa.
Also winning berths in Division II
were CbeyDey State, Pa., 22-3;
Wrl&amp;ttt State, Ohio, 20-3; Phlladephla TextUe, Pa., 2H; Kentucky
Wesleyan, lS-6; and West Georgia,

Mr. Goodwrench gfves • compltrte front·tnd
alignment job ·lor o - i l l prlco. He ldjul1a
Cl..,, Climber and to•in to fiCtOry lpeCifice·
11o ... Thl1 lpicl81 il for Ill Amlrieli"' cara
. . . Chhll ..und CORipiiCI wllh flvnt·• drlvo/and,.or Mac-oon ouapenalon/ lllghlly
higher. 4-...,..ollgnmonuvolllblllar J. K. ond
X body _, ond oome lrnporto.
Truolol - '20.00.
Our moclom ollctronlc lfont-.lllg.-rt Ia by Yl- Knlghl who
hoa 20 _ . •-leiiOI lnd to 1
. . - of leer Alignment School.
Call lor your •PIIOintinent todoy .

IUIP

~.

Hampton Institute, Va., 1%, and
· St. Augustine's, N.C., 20-4, earned
autmlatlc bids after winning the
north and liOUth divisions of the
Central Intercollegiate Athletic

THAT GIIIAT GM RILING WITH,IIIIIVIHI 11M PAIITS.

'

AlsO, havl a 111111 hladliafll aim Wttll i lube. oil chanae and
filter on all cars and 'It ton trucks.
Thtle Special• Expire March 1, 19•3

POINT Pl.WANT
AUTO PARI'S

Division II at large berths filled

.VBS LEADERS,

NOW DELCO QUAUTY FRONI'-ENDAU
COSTS LESS.
5"'~'~um•
PAR'!' NUMBERS:
tll-!0 550 lt·SO 1117·50

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
:v·ETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL'

Walker investigation continues

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15
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Ohio
Sportlight

•

Yank~ t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~;;;;;;;;~~~~~

SAVE $25.00

make the club.''
him $!0),000 annua lly. He Hopes to
COCOA, Fla. (API -There were
CANDY MAKING WORKSHOP
few volunteer hitters when Houston
earn it.
LEARN HOW TO MAKE YOUR
''I'm not worrying abou t a ny of
Lillis says .the 32-:year-old right·
pitcher J.R. Richard took the
OWN EASTER CANOY . .
m&lt;;~und to pitch batting practice last
bander wm pitch In some exhibition that now," Richard said. "I want to
.GIVJNG THE BALL TO GRANVILLE- Ohio state center Gran·
CAll FOR DETAILS.
games and will have to improve his do whatever the club asks to fit into
l'ille.Walten (13) catChes a pBs8 between two MlchlgBD delenden in . . September - and those who did
control and his slider before being spring training. I don· I have a
approached tbe plate as If tip-toeing
U. JanUIU')' rue photo. Walters IS scoring better thiUI ever In his
considered ready for a comeback in · timetable. I've just put my life in
through a mine field.
oolleglale· career, helping the Buckeyes lo a 17~ reeord. (AP
God's hands . My only goals are to
the majors.
Richard. trymg io come back
I...!rpboto).
The slider Is the key, Lillis said. make the club a nd bring a~ many
from a near ·fa tal stroke he suffered
PH. 992-6342
"That was his big pitch. It' s notnear . people to Christ as possible.
on July 30, 191:ll, had no control over
Middleport
317
N.
2nd
what it was before the s troke. But
" And. I would like to catch me a
his once blazing fast ball.
he 's throwing the slider a whole lot
"We couldn't even let him throw
20-pound fish.''
batting practice In September
better now than in September."
.-------------L---.,----+----..;.
unless we could find enough
Richard Is so confident that he will
•
volunteers to bat against him, "
return, he's already started casting
for a proposed movie of his life .
Astros Manager Bob LilliS said.
••
ABC·TV has the rights to the film.
That was last season .
~
A slimmer Richard reported to ·Former Astros Manager Bill VirBy George Strode
~
•
camp this season In much better . don would be played by Robin
'
Williams and Richard will play
form and with a determined plan for
himself."Who besides me could
•
By GEORGE STRODE
, pitching again in the major leagl!es.
play It so good, unless It's the second
AP Sports Writer
·"I kept myself in good condition all
me," he said.
· ·
winter and I kept my mind on
• COLUMBUS, Ohio &lt;API - A Columbus disc jockey likes to spin the
~ record ·'Give the ball to Granville. "
Richard still has one year
baseball.'' .he said. " I believe I can
remaiiling on' a contract that pays
•
Players for 15th-ranked Ohio State are heedtDg that advice this season, . make this c lub. I'm planning to
'
7 throwing the basketball Inside to GranvUie Waiter s.
.,. As a result, the 6-foot-11 senior center iS scoring better than ever in his
•. colleglate.career, helping the Buckeyes to a 17-6 record and second place in
• the Big Te n race, one game behind Indiana.
Chuck Fairbanks, president and
MISSION, Kan. (AP) - With
• Walters, a hometown product, averages 11.2 points and S.Orebounds. He
coach
of the New Je'r sey club, said,
everyone
promiSing
cooperation,
• leads the team In field goal accuracy (.581 ) and blocked shots (55).W!th at
"Sure,
we will cooperate.''
.
the
Investigation
of
Herschel
.least five games left, his totals of 258 points and 185 rebounds already have
Asked
how long the pro~ might
Walker's
dealings
with
the
United
surpassed his figures for hi!; junior season.
'
NEW SPRING SHOES ARRIVING DAILY
take, Berst said, "We'D try to
States Football League moves
, Ill hiS last nine games, seven of them Ohio State victories. Waiters has
accomplish that as quickly as
forward .
,· rttl9sed only 24 of 76 field goal attempts. He ranks among the Big Ten
possible. To me, that means in about
The
NCAA,
as
expected,
is
. le8ders in srooting accuracy, shot blocks and rebounds.
·
a
week. To everyone else, that
Into
published
reports
that
looking
Such performances are being noticed by friend and foe alike.
means by 7 p.m . tonight."
probably
the
Georgia
All·Amer!can
and
STORE HOURS
"He's a man," Northwestern Coach Rich Faik said of Waiters after a
He
said
results of the probe
Helsman
Trophy
winner
signed
a
~ 71{i51oss in Columbus Thursday. "In my mind, he's a tremendous inside
POMEROY, OHIO
Mon.-Thurs.-Sat. 9-5
probably will be released by
contract with the New Jersey
player. He can tum, jump shoot over people. He has the power to move to
Friday
9-8
·
PH. 992-5272
Georgia.
Generals and then exercised a
the basket and he can dunk well.''
24-hourescape clause.
HiS coach, Eldon Miller, evaulated his starting center for the last 54
Walker and Georgia officials
games this way: "In Waiters, we have a complete team player who can
deny
he put his name to the con! rae!,
play at either end of the floor. I've never had captains do a better job of
an
act
that would render him
leading a team than Larry Huggins and Granville have done thts year."
ineligible
for his senior season. The
Waiters believeS he knows why Ohio State will carry a five-game
NCAA
confirmed
Tuesday it w!ll
· wiMing 'Streak to Michigan State Thursday night. a surge that has lifted
make an effort to find oo t exactly
the Buckeyes Into contention for an NCAA Tournament berth.
what
happened.
"We're playing more together as a team," he said Tuesday. "Things are
USFL
and Generals officials say
starting· to jell. We're playing harder defensively and the guards are
they'll
cooperate.
David Berst, the
playing a Jot better. "
.
NCAA'senforcement
director, conWalters sees lmprovemen t In his own game since the first of the season.
finned
Tuesday
his
office
will look
"I've lmproved at both ends of the floor," he said. "On defense, It's ·
Into
the
repqrts.
bask:ally my feet, I 'm keeping tbem moving. Sometimes they used to get
"The fact iS, (Georgia Coach )
locked up."
Vince
Dooley has been In constant
· Walters has scored as many as 2I points this winter, a career high.
contact
with us on thls ·matter and
;'Tiley're looking for me more on offense. Last year It was Clark Kellogg
us to satiSfy ourselves
has
invited
(now with the Indiana Pacers). I would have looked for the ball more on
that
we
have
the complete facts, in
otfense this year whether Clark had been here or not. J felt it was
order
to
make
a judgment," Berst
something I had to do," he said.
told the Associated Press. "We do
intend to talk to the various
. principals Involved, collect Information a!ld make a judgment.''
MISSION, Kan. (AP I - D!st.rict -Association.
The commiSsioner of the USFL,
of Columbia, defending champion
Regional competition In DiviSion
Chet
Simmons, learned of the
In Division II, was among six teams II was to be played March 10-12, and
NCAA
probe In Florida at the
selected today for at-large berths In quarterfinal games were scheduled
training camp in Or-,
Generals'
the National Collegiate Athletic March 18 or 19. American Interna·
lando,
Fla.,
and said, "Obviously,
AS!Odation tournament.
t!Oiial College and Springfield
we
will
COOIJ(!rate.
We're looking
Tile Flreblrds, ranked first in College were named hosts for tbe
Into
au
aspects
of
it.
I'm prepared,
Dlvll!on II with a 24-2 record, will . semifinals and championship game
we're
finished
doing what
once
llOII! a South Atlantic Regional
March 2426 at Springfield, Mass.
':"e're doing, to make a statement."
game on March 11.

.•

~

When Rick Cerone won a $440,000 arbitration suit two6'ears ago.
owner George Steinbrenner was livid, accusing his catcher of lacking
loyalty.
"These cases are not unusual," says Peter Rose. a former associate
general counsel for the Players Association. who now, as an attorney.
represents players at arbitration hearings. ''I'veseenclubowners literally
denigrate their players, rip them .apart at such hearings .
Neutral arbitration has been a part of baseball business life since 1974,
coinciding with the advent of free agency. Days are gone when guys like
Babe Ruth simply walked into owner Jake Ruppert 's office and hammered
out salary head-to-head.
Now negotiating is done by lawyers and agents. That iai!ing, tbe case Is
taken to arbitration~ the club submitting a figure it feels the player Is
worth, the player countering with h!s own appraisal of his value.

hack

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

11 3· SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CAll 992-3381

992·2342
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Tha !' s not too far as I ray from some of the arbitration meetings that take
place between representatives of major league baseball owners a n\)
players who can't agree on a contract.
Calvin Griffith, owner of the Minnesota .Twins, emerged from such a
session recently at which the arbitrator awarded relief pitcher Ron Davis
$475,000 for the 19&amp;3 season, a nd you would have thought DaviS spat In his
face.
"''m so sick ," said the chubby TwinS boss, " I almost wanted to vomit.' '
The club had offered Davis $m,OOO.
A week la ter, after a slmilar hearing, the New York Mets' Mookie Wilson
was awarded a salary of $325,000, more than tripling his $100,000 paycheck
the year before, and thiS time it was General Manager Frank Cashen's time
to hit the roof.
"I'm shocked," said the Mets executive. "I'm disappointed. Mookle hit
.279 and tripled his salary ... If you take Into account the strike season that
was only 92 games or so he's played only two years."

emotion despite the situation.
Without a doubt , lthink ·he!s thebest
player in t he Sout heas terp
Conference."
Auburn Coach Sonny Smith:
"Boy, Ellis is a great player. We did
a better job defending him In the
second half. but we couldn' t even
stop him in the first half. ..
Others
.
Elsewhere, John Paxson a nd Jim
Dolan scored 16pointsapiece to!ead
Notre Dame past Hol$rra 61·50:
Steve Burtt scored 27 points as lona
routed Fai rfield 85·71; Guy Minni·
fi eld had 19 points as Morehead
Stale defea ted Cent ral State (OhiQI
89-80; Mitchel! Wiggins and Tony
William combined for 52 points ~
Florida Sta te defeated New Mexioo
79·77; Butch Graves scored a
game-high 31 points a nd gra bbed 12
rebounds as Yale belli Manhattan
81-67; Roosevelt Dav ison and
Booker J ohnson scored baskets t":P
seconds apart early in theove11 ime
periOd a nd Bradley held on to beat
Drake 56·52: Bnan E llerbe h't a
20·foot jump shot with (!ve seconds
left to give Rut gers a 78-73 victory
over Duquesne a nd F elipe de la.s
Pozas scored 18 point s as ThE
Citadel whipped Co !lege ofCharle!·
ton 6G.52.
•

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AP Corrttpoadeol

"Charge!"

I, H: lfl

"I didn't think we would be real
spectacular tonight and we wer·
en't.'' Louisville · Coach Denny
Crumsald.
He added that the Cardinals' 24
turnovers showed they weren't
mentally ready for Wright State.
John Plnone scored 20 points as
Villanova defeated intra-city rival
St. ' Joseph's to win the Big Five
championship of Philadelphia. The
Wildcats , 204, led from theoutset on
baskets by Dwayne McClain and
Pirione. Alter building a 33-26
haift!me, VIllanova never led by
less than seven points.
Second Ten
Senior Dale Ellis, playing his last
regular-season home-court game.
scored 35 points to help Tennessee
defeat Auburn.
E llis, a 6-foot-7 forward, was
mobbed by fans and congratulated
by Tennessee and Auburn player s
after a second half which saw the
Tigers move from a 15-po!nt deficit
with 8: 55 to tra il78-73 with2: 05togo.
Along with E llis, Tennessee got20
points from Michael Brooks and 15
points from Dan Federmann to hold
off Auburn's final rally.
"Dale Ellis was just great inside
ail night, " said Tennessee Coach
Don DeVoe. "He never shows any

-S limmer Richard determined to fight

Imagine a' general, preparing to storm an enemy bastion, calling his
troops together for a rallying speech.
"We've got a big job a head of us, men. " he bellows. " I wishyouwereequa!
to the job. But you're just average soldiers. You 're not worth what the
government is paying you. But we'll have to take our chances, anyhow.

1 - - - - -,

I.OII CT tr&gt; tht ltolr&lt;: h \

•

IIDale aplnM vlsWD1 Cedarville. Mowery t..,.ed In
18 poilU lor the wlanlag Bellmen. Yelow lacket
delencler Is George Goreman (31 ), - Keith Wlloon

By WW Grlllllley

~:11'1

CILII'tr!ONSII t r r.M if.

n,

puard

IQO GRANDE
Jert')' Mowery (15) who
paced the Redmen lit nearly all offenllve categories
during the 19SU3 campaign, looks lor Bll open man
Inside while driving down court In 'l'Ue8day'sleague

Sports World

rnt:ru

&lt;;~ t . ~· ch.

jumper from the corner with 12
By KEN RAPPOPORT
minutes left to play.McCloud and
AP Sportil Writer
Jus(goes to show you can't lnlst fteslunan Ricky Burton, who
scored 14 points, each had four
any of these Big East ~ams:
As balanced a basketball league points during the 12-4 spurt that
as there Is In the country, the Big erased a five-point deficit and put
East had another of Its twisty nights the Pirates up 4543.
Clyde Vaughan, who led the
Tue$day as lightly-regarded Seton
Panthers with 18 points, tied the
Hall took the measure of Pitt 7468.
It was Seton HaD's first Big East score at 47, before McCloud hit two
victory in 18 games, dating back to more jumpers to give the Pirates a
last season . . The hapless Pirates lead they never reliflquished.
In gameS Involving the nation's
were ().13 In . the · conference this
season before Tuesday night's win ranked teams, No. 5 LouiSville beat
Wright State 71-55; No. 7 Villanova
in South Orange, N.l
·
.· The triumph, only the fifth In 24 stopped St. Joseph's (Pa.) 70.62and
No. 20 Tennessee tripped Auburn
games overall !pr Seton Hall, was
all the more lmpresslve because It 82-74.
Top Ten
came against one of the hottest
Lancaster Gordon scored 16
teams in the league. The Panthers
points and Charles Jones had a
had won six of their last seven Big
career -high 10 blocked shots to lead
East games, including victories this
Louisville to a sluggl.&lt;; h victory over
month .over St. John's, Georgetown
and Syracuse, all Top Twenty
Wright State.
Louisville, 23-3, was unable to
teams.
break the game open aga inst the
Freshm a n Andre McCloud
NCAA Division II visitors from.
poured In 20 points and Ken Powell,
Oayton, Ohio, ·and the !Ina! 1(\.point
who was out when Seion Hall lost to
margin ·was Louisville's largest of
Pitt earlier In the season, sank eight
the game.
free throws In the second half to lead
the Pirate cause.
The Pirates took tbeir first lead of
Louisville native Fred Moore led
the second half on McCloud's Wright State, 20-4, with 19 points.

,-----------------------~
Today!s

..
I'O Hr~ny

BySCOTI'D. MDJ.ER
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande's
Redmen built up an 18-polnt lead In
one stretch of the first half Tuesday
night and coasted to a 'Is. vlciory
over Cedarville's Yellow Jackets In
Mid.Ohlo Conference action.
The win pushed the R.edmen to
23-9 overall and 11-3. on the MOC.
Cedarville dropped at 16-12 overall ·
and 7-7 in league play.
The Redmen will bat.tle Tiffin
University at 7: llp.m. Thursday at
Lyne Center In t)le first game of the
MOC tournament. Top-seeded
Walsh will take ~neither CedarvUle
or Malone.
Wltll the Redmen uopendlng
Cedarville. and Tiffin notclilng a
victory over Malone last night, the
Yellow Jackets and Pioneers are
tied for the fourth and.flnal playoff
spot. A COin toss will be held today In
Canton to determine the final
playoff entrant.
Tuesday night, the Redmen retied
on · some deadly shooting In the
opening stanza. Rio built a37·191ead
with just · under. five minutes
remaining in the first half before the
visitors cut it to 42·32 at the half.
The lead remained in the 10 to 15
Point range until the final five
minutes when the YeUow Jackets
began to foul to get the ball. Some
deadeye free-throw shooting by
Kent Wolfe ' In the final three
minutes cinched the win. "This v,:as a big win for us, " said
Rio Grande Coach Jolm Lawhorn.
"We bu!!t some momentum going
into the playoffs and we were able to
try some new things, With injuries
and Illness, it's been rough lately,
but tonight we were able to work
some personnel a t different
positions."
Guard Rick Penrod, listed as
questionable because of a bout with
the flu, contributed to a 60 (iercent
first half Rio shooting spree with a

The Daily Sentinei-Page--7

Seton Hall defeats Pitt, 7 4-68

Rio Redmen coast to 78-71MOC victQry
n

ll , ~: l'l

Thur . '1.1r .

rn•II'ROY

(lt ' /&lt;-

;g Q rnd e

nr:111~

Ulr.I I I\II U

Wedrwsday, ~Miry 23, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WORKERS

,,

You are invited to preview the all-new 1983
Standard·Vacation Bible School course.
Come and learn and share!

DA.ILY SPECIALS ·

THURSDAY-Beef Stew
, FRIDAY-Barbecued Ribs
SATURDAY-Kraut&amp; Franks
SUNDAY:.....Meat Loaf
.
MONDAY-Spaghetti
TUESDAY-R.oest Beef Sandwich. Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
WEDNESDAY-Creamed Baked Chicken
HOURS:
M!lnday jhn.o Saturday-5:30a.m. to 8:00p.m.
Sundoy- 8:00 o.m. to 4:00 p.m.

DATE: Friday, March 11, 1983

PLACE: Middleport Church of Christ
437 Main Street ·
Middleport, Ohio 45760
REFRESHMENTS
SPONSOR: Middleport Book Store
83 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760

PH. 992-6614

515 lllln St
67S.1520

'

OLDS.-CAD.-OIEVY, INC.
308 E. MAIN ST.

hilltilllty Alnoon, (I l91J, 1llt STANDARD PUBLI51iiNO COMPAt-IY. CirKinnMI, Ohio. l)ivia.on oiSTANOEH !NTUN ATIONAL COIPORAriON,

POMEROY, OH.

'''
\1

PHONE: 614-992·2641

Plan to ~nd the Standard Publishing Vacation Bible ~hool preview.lt's your
opportunity to examine the all-new, all-Bible 1983 course and to discuss all
aspects of Vacation Bible School l!ith a Standard rtptlsentatve, It's a great
opportunity to shm ideas and experiences with others.

SIMMONS

2611 .11cbor! Avt.
675-2731

TIME: 9:30A.M.

')

-·

•
'·

•

;.

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Wedne11lay, February 23, 1983

v

've

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

-

It

'

Wednesday, February 23, 1983
-Page-9

He/en help us

.

.

Baton spring session enrollment open

When is a hoax not ~eally a
hoax? Let me count t})e ways~··

Eight-year-old Joy Black of
New Haven, W.Va ., a competitive baton twirler for just over
two years, npw holds five sta te
titles In West Virginia, and has
. accumulated 272 trophies and 47
medals including 21 queen titles,
.ll first plac~ troph!E'S in solo, 22
firsts in fancy strut, 21ln parade
majorette and 10 In higl) point.

he'll get a lot more.
By HELEN BOTI'EL
"for ·real."
These spankings are for disciDEAR READERS:
What's worse, she continues this
pline only, though I suspect my
Y ciu ltequently ask, "With truth a couplE&gt; of times a month, for
husband gets some kind ol odd
' stranger than fiction these days, . discipline. I'm terrified of her;
arousement thinking about them. I
. how can you spot a hoax?"
can't sit down right for a day. Pain
make them so painful he crles ... I
Let me count the ways ___
far overshadows the arousement.
like to dominate, and hE' does try to
Poonles reveal themselves by How can I stop this? -HENRY M .
follow
my orders .
their subjecis (often not original);
SuspE&gt;Ctlng Tom - (well then,
Sometimes I give hlm a locking
by their obsessions (often scatalogl·
Henry) foolery, I put thls lE&gt;tter
for minor transgressions when I
cal) ; by their far-out humor (these
aside. Sure enough, several months
am out of sorts.
I print); sometimes by their later camE&gt; a next missivE', same
Let me assure you · this ls all
neatness (II a doubtful letter reads
handwriting and postmark, slrnlar
factual. I recommend husband"
like the final draft of an essay- no · wording, bUt ((supposedly) composed by a wile. Sa in " .&lt;hi&gt;·•·. _
spanking to other women who
· cross-outs, no errors - it may not
enjoy
assertltig themselves.
be written from .the hea rt); but
DISCIPLINARIAN
'
m\Jst ol aU by the fact that tliey DEAR HELEN:
seldom siop at one attempt.
You didn't believE&gt; the guy who
DEAR HENRY-DIS:
Example:
told you he spanked his wife with a
So much for your fantasies,
About a year ago came this belt. Let me assure you such things
which have jotned other of yo\lr
letter:
happen; bUt I play a switch rolE&gt; (no
soft-core S-M letters In my "Hoax
pun Intended) . I frE'&lt;)uE&gt;ntly wallop
flle." Now, what's the real probDEAR HELEN:
my husband wiht an old razor strop
lem.
-H.
My wifE&gt; and I are 55. Our sex litE' on his bare. bottom. Each time It's
has been okay but loses a littlE&gt; each
about 25 good solid hits and he
year. To Jazz lt up, I asked her to
doesn't sit down righ for a day.
G_ot a problE&gt;m ? An adult subject
· give mE&gt; a spanking. I expecti!d a
TwO reasons he doesn't trytostop
for discussion? You can talk it over
fE&gt;w swats, but shE' got an old razor
me are: I'm as blg as he ls (almost
strop and hit me about 25 times on
six feet, 165 pounds and very . in her column lf you writE' to Helen
Boltel, care Of this newspaper.
my bare bottom, saying it should be - a~hletlc) and he knows II hE&gt; resists,

A student of Peggy Gillespie

and a member of the Stylettes
Twirling Corps, Black is the 19&amp;l
West VIrginia state advanced
queen champion. thE' state ad vanced fancy strut champion,
thE' state advanced military
strut champion, sta te military
. best appearing champion, and
the state paradl' majorette
champion. ThE&gt; latter two titles
she has- held for the past _
t wo
years.

TWIRLER- Joy Black, eight, of New Haven, W.Va. , holds five
st11te titles In West VIrginia and has aecumlllaled 2'l2 trophies and 47
medals In her two years as a competl&amp;fve baron twirler.

She also placl'd second in
advanced sta te solo w hich entitles her to compctl' in the
National .Juvl'nilc Maj orett e
Championship fin als at Orlando,
Fla. in May. She is the daughter
of Joyce and Lynn Black.
Enrollment ·for the spring
session of classes to llC' offered
by Gillespie, 304-675-1999, at
Rutland Civic Center is underway. The classes wil l bP held
every Sa turday begin nin g
March 5 with each student to bE'
instructed in parade corps,
dance twirl. aerobics and j azz
dancing. The classes ar edividl'd
accordi n g to age a nd
exPf&gt;rience.
Gillespie has been a twirling
instrucior for E&gt;ight years and is
a membE'r of the National Bilton
Twirling A.ssocia tion, the U.S.
Twirling Association, the International Academy of Twlrlirig
Teachers, and a registered
instructor with Twirlin g
Unlimited.
ThE' Stylettes have won several first place awards in
twirling contests and parades,
the most recE&gt;nl bE'ing the :982
Pomeroy-Middlepori Christmas
_ parade. Her privat e students
haVE' won severa l WE&gt;st Virginia
slate championships.

•

Meigs County area organizations gather · for meettngs, events
Daily Bread. Plans wE're mad(' to
prepare Easter trays for S('VrE'al
shut ins.
Frances Roush, Mrs. Butcher
and M~s- Reynolds senoed ice cr am
and cookies.

• Loyal Class

Ark&gt;ne Spurlot·k. on furlough
from her work as a missionary
nurse in South Africa. was guest
. SPf'aker at a recent meeting of thE'
Loyal Men and Women's Class of
the Middleport Chu rch of Christ.
Miss Spurlot'k told of her work In
The Daughters of the American
the dispensary taking medicine to
Revolution. sponsor of February as
American History Month. reminds
the sick. somet imes in remote
places traveling by fooL She is also . citizens that this year marks the
translatlhg thl' bOOks of the Bible 200th anniversary of the Treaty of
Into different languages.
Parts of 1783 which ended thl'
ThE&gt; Lord's Prayer and dE&gt;Votlons American RE&gt;Volutionary. War.
by MargarE&gt;t Butcher from Matt. 28
In citing the qbsenoance, Mrs.
opened thl' mE&gt;eting.
Members · Clyde Ingels, regent of thE' Return
named plants of the Bible inreponse
Jonathan ME&gt;igs Chapter. DAR.
to roll call. Officers' reports were
commented on the British evacuagiven by Lula Mae Quivey and Rose
tion or the AmE&gt;rlcan territory ' the
Reynolds. and severa l members
terms of the treaty whic;h acknowlWE're reported Ul.
edged the United States as free,
HE&gt;len Reynolds had a reading
sovE&gt;reign ;md indePf&gt;ndE'nt. and
entiiled "Sa v ing LivE's" from The
gave th(' Americans the lands west

Share the spirit.
Share the refreshment

DAR

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Calendar
Diamond Savin~ and Loan Co.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Wildwood
Gardl'n Club, 7: :lO p.m. Wednesday at th(' home of Darts
Grueser. -

11-IURSDAY
PO¥EROY RlvenoiE&gt;w
GardE'n Clujb wlU meet at 7: .ll
p.m. Thursday at thE' homE&gt; oi
Mrs, Ronald Cowdery-

POMEROY PrE&gt;Ceptor
BE'ta Beta Chapter Thursday,
7:45 p.m . Riverboat Room of

POMEROY - Meigs County
Women 's FeUowship, Churchi'S
of Christ at Bradbury Church.
7: :lO Thursday night with BE'tty
De;m to bE' gu!'st dE&gt;monstrator.

to the Mississippi River.
Mrs. Ingels quoted BE'njamln
Franklin who said when explaining
the American characler to EuroPf&gt;ans, "Do not inquire concerning a
stranger, whallshe, but what can he
do."
She called for all Americans to
join in the obsE&gt;rvance of history
month and to honor those who
sacrificed for their own feedom and
ours in the RE&gt;Volutionary War.

Bashan Auxiliary
Plans for a bake sate· to bE' held
April I at Krogers in Pomeroy and
Vaughans in Middleport were made
when the Bashan Auxiliary met
rE&gt;Cently at the firehouse.
Becky PuUlns presided at the
meeiing which OPf&gt;ned wit h the
Lord's Prayer and pledge to the
flag. Officers' reports were given.
Those who can donate to thE' bake
sa le are asked to telf&gt;Phone 99~
2478. 94~2900. or 94~2825.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. PuUlns and Kathleen ~orris.

Syracuse Youth
The Snack ·n Yak group ot the
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
~et Sunday !'Vming following the

service tor a fellowship hou r and
rareshrnents.
Youth attending
Were Mary, Becky and Paula
Winebrennt&gt;r. RobbiE&gt; and Shawn
Cunningham, Chris Grindley, Regina Lee. Lori Stewart, Carol
Mitchell, Wendy Triplett, Serena
Davis, arid Chris Guinther. Others
therC' were Linda Stewart, Linda
Grindley. DE'bbi0 Musser and
ehildren, the Rev. and Mrs. James
Kittle. Jeff and Brenda Davis.
Refreshments were ' senoed by
Willie and Bev G uinther and Gladys
and Norman Presley. ME&gt;etlngs a!'l'
held evE&gt;ry Sunday 1evenlng followIng the worship service .

Evangeline Chapter
Recognition of Evelyn Lewis, 70
year member of Evangeline ChaptE&gt;r, Order of the Eastern Star. was a
fE&gt;atuJ'E' of thE' meet ingoft he chaptE&gt;r
held Thursday night at thE' Middle!
port Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Lewis Is now confinl'd to the
PomE&gt;roy Health Centf?r and
membE'rs W('ro urged to send cards
to her.
Katherine Mit chell, worthy matron , and James Buchanan, worthy
patron, presided at themeetingw ith
pro tern officers, Betty Van Maire

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Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous.to Your Health:

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17 rRg. "tar", 1.2 mg. nicotine ai. per cigarette by FTC method.

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Middleport CCL
Husband 's night was set for the
March 19 ml'ellng when I he

Middleport Child Conseno~ I ion
League fll('l Thursday night at the
GraCE&gt; Episcopal Parish House.
Susi&lt;' Soulsby presided at lh&lt;'
meeting and Installed her daughterin-law, Carla Soulsby, into mem bership of lhE&gt;club. Shewas presented a ·
flower and all of the m embers
r ePf&gt;aled I he club mott o.
II was announced that the dis\rict
Ohio _ConSI'JVation League spr ing
confE&gt;rencc will be held on May 14 at
the Mcintyre Park in -Gallipol is.
A va lentine gift certificate w as
given to a needy child and a gift w as
also presE&gt;nled to Amanda Soulsby
infanf daugh&lt;'r of Car la and Pat
Soulsby.

Mary Pow~Jl of Top of the Stairs
Fitni'Ss Salon talked to thc group on
E'XC'rds0 and its valu&lt;' in ix'tler
health and weight con i rol. T he
traveling prize donated by .Janl'l
Duffy was won by P0ggy HoudashE'li and Ann Colburn won th0
hostess prizC'. Mrs. Houda sh&lt;'li a Iso
had the devotions using a poem ,
"February", from lhl' Id eals
magazinE',
II dessert cours0 was sl'tvl'd by
Mrs. Soulsby and Peggy Harris.

--Names in the news---------w

FIUDAY

Toootsie' hospital counterpart m Ohio

RUTLAND - Revival services. Churoch of God 1;, Rutland .
through Sunda_
v evening, 7 each
evening. Special singing, Ed
Bowling. Portsmouth. evangelist. Pastor John Evans invites
the public.

MIDDLEBURG HEIGHTS. Ohio (API -Actor I;&gt;uslin Hoffman was
pleaso:l to learn that Southwl'st General. the name of the hospita l in his
moviE&gt; "Tootsie,'' has a real -life counterpart. here.
The administrator of the reai Southwest General. L. .Jon Schurmeier
had writt en to the actor. IE&gt;lllng him of differences bE'twE&gt;en his hospit al
and the one in "Tootsie," nominated for 10 Academy Awards .
Hoffman, who in the movie plays an out-of-work actor who dons
women's garb and wins thl' soap opera role of hospital administrator
Dorothy MichaE&gt;is, signed the letter " Dorothy Michaels_ •·
And ht&gt; used one of " her" favorite lines in hls reply to Schurmeier:
"You' re a dear."

Astrograph

•,

as associate conductress, Sandy
Starr ·as warder·. and Adria Wilcox
as sent lneL
Reported ill were
RobE'rt King and Jack Bechtle with
heart attacks, and Doris Karshner,
improvl'd fo llowing l aser
treatment.
Mts. VanMatre for the ways and
means committee announced an
Easter bazaar and luncheon, March
25and26, a spaghettldinneronApril
22. First aid kits have been ordered
for resale at $4 a kit.
A special collE&gt;Ction of $121.58was
taken for the Heat! Foundation . At
thE' March 3 meeting an auction will
be held for lhe Cancer fund.
ME&gt;mbE'rs are to take articles or
send them if I hey are unable to
attend for the projE&gt;Ct .
BE'a Kuhn gave a report on the
star point station. Electa. Initiation
for three candidates was set for the
March .l mE&gt;et lng.
Refreshments of cherry pie and
ice cream wcr£' servl'd byBea Kuhn
and Rosemary Lyons.
James
C!atworthy had table graC!'.

Febnaary ~. 1983
You could make an Important .career change this coming year
which wlll open up new doors to opportunities. If you're dissatisfied with
your present IJOSltlon, begin looking around now.
PISCES (Feb. 211'March 28) In joint ventures today'you are likely to
get what you want. bUt there is a posslbllity your counterparts won't bE'
satisfied and may' even resent your gains.
ARIES (March 21-Aprlll9) If you have a domestic problem today,
try not to bring ln outsiders or relatives to arbitrate lt. They might only
Introduce new complications.
TAURUS (April ~May 28) Should things ln the workaday world
not go as you hopE&gt; today, leave your troubles at your desk. RathE&gt;r than
Involve the famlly, solvE&gt; them yourself tomorrow.
. GEMINI (May 21-June 28) BE' sure you know exactly what you
want today before purchasing a large· ticket ltef!l. Buyer ~s remorse ls
likely lf you make an -Impulsive selection.
CANCER (June 2J,July 22) Unless you and your mate are ln
completE&gt; accord today o~ the ways monies should he spE&gt;nt, It's bE'st
that neither of you makE&gt; 11n Independent transaction.
,
~ (July 23-Aug. 22) You may be Involved in somE&gt;thlng today
which you rnlght fE&gt;el another ls not handling properly. However, before you takE' over he surE&gt; you can manage lt.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Steer clear of aC&lt;]~atntances today who,
experiE'nce has taught you, are famous for taking and never gtving
anything ln return. You don't!IE'ed them .
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A business associate usually supportive of
you may not lie In the position to do so today. Don't put thts person on the
spot with your reqtiE'st .
sroRPJO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You're pretty good today at sizing up
situations for what 'thE&gt;y are, yet you might act against your better
judgment and create avoidable problems for yourself.
SAGrri'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Part of your enchantment Is your
curiosity_and Inquisitive nature which frlends usually find apPf&gt;allng,
but today you won't make points probing their secrets.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) 11 possible today, try to function
indePf&gt;ndently, espeCially ln career matters. Associates: alms might
not be in harmony with yo(lrs.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :.Feb. 11) Your Ideas wUI makE' sense to you
today, but they might noi hold equal appeal for others. Pressuring for
approval wUI stlffE&gt;n !heir rejections.

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Princess avoids 'day of action'
Hoffman

Onassis

Interest in NY's, streets
NEW YORK tAP 1 - JacquE&gt;line Kennedy Onassis may be an
intE&gt;rnationa l jetSE'tler, but sh!''s stlll got roots- and plenty of interest
- in thE' concrE&gt;te streets o(N·ew York:
The former first lady is trying with others to save the 30-year-old,
24-story LE'ver HouSE&gt; on Park A. vE&gt;nue . .
ShE' met Tuesday with C~mptroller HarrL~on J. Goldin, whose two
votes with the ciiy's Board of Estimate are needed lf the glass ,__
structurE', described as the first post-World War II building of Its kind, is
to hE' presenoed.
_ ..
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"I grew up In New York City . I think it's important for anyone who
lives here to not jUst tE&gt;ar E&gt;verythlng down. What Is it going to be llke In
~he future?" Mrs. Onassis, 5:1, told reporters.
Several years ago she andot hers successfully fought to save the city's
Grand CE&gt;ntral TerminaL

SmOI&lt;ey Rbbinson in .Walk of Fame'
HOLLYWOOD tAP) -Another·star has-been added to Hollywood's
famous Walk of Fame, this one honoring singE&gt;r William "Smokey"
Robinson.
.
This month marks Robinson· s 26th year in the recording industry and
thE' star was presented ln a ceremony TUesday.
Robinson, 43, began with Smokey Robinson and the Miracles in 1958
but stopped Pf&gt;r!orming ln 1972 to spend more time with his family .
HowE&gt;Vk his wife, Claudette, encouraged him t.o return to the bUsiness
thE' next.year.
Last year his album and single "Betng With You" was a top hlt. His
latest album is "Touch the Sky, "

,,

LONDON I API - Prlnce5s Anne. the.12-year-old daughtPJ' ofQu£'Cn
Elizabeth II, postponed a visit today to a London col10ge because of a
· planned demonstration.
Students at Queen Mary College called for a " day of action"
protesting government. plans to scrap slate subsislcnC(' grants to
college student s.
Britain's National Union of Students said d0monstrations wc·rc
scheduled at more than 100 colleges thfoughout the countty.
Prime MinistE&gt;r Margaret Thatcher's Cons!'rvatiV&lt;' gov0r nm 0n1
plans to replacE&gt; state grants to coUege student s with loa ns. whi t!' thl'
union seeks a minimum grant of2~ pounds ($381 a W('('k for all students
age 16 and older.

Exhibit entries· to be eaten
CUMBERlAND. Md. I API -Visitors to a sculpt u1 · &lt;·x hilll t 1!1•1'&lt;'
Friday night will be encouraged to show up with fork :u hand.
After judging of entries ln thE' second annual t-: i11 ir0ly Escul&lt; •nt
Sculpture Exhibit at Allegany COmmu nity Collpgc·. llw •·ntliPs will ix'
eaten.
"'The exhibit ls sculpture pieces mad!' entiJ'E'ly of food . so it has to h&lt; ·
entirely' edible." except for the base or tray, said Ann&lt;' South of t h&lt;'
Allegany Arts Council, which is sponsoring the' unu sual exhibit.
"Everything has to be pretty, too." she said. '"I'll&lt;' pil'&lt;-'l's a 1'1' j udg"l
and then the people who come to see the exhibit and the Pxhlbitol&gt;i !'a t
the eXhibit_"
·
·
Last year, 24 entries ·included fares carved out of bn•&lt;~d and &lt;'hC!'SP.
sculptured vegetable flower arrangc1111'nts. a port win&lt;• cht'CSI' bust and
liver patE&gt; nudes reclining around a cream cheese fish pond tilll'd w it h a

sauce.

Ms. South cautioned that the exhibits need not he as 1&lt;~st~' as 1h&lt;')' "r-6

~atchlng.

'"nney arE&gt; not Judged on their IJlSte, they are judi'(I'Cl on 1h0ir look.s, ..
she said, "so how they taste ls truly coincidentaL"

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�Page-- 1G- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday,

Wednesday, FebNary 23, 1983

Meigs County area happenings
To chair bike-a-thon

Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, Japan.
Staff Sgt. Theiss was also
recently deployed to Clark Air
Base, Philippines for Ca pe
Thunder-Combat Sage exercises
83-2. He joined the Air Force In
May, 1917.
His wife Carol a nd chUdren
Stacey and Matthew are residing In
Syracuse until he returns to the
States.

Mrs . J ohn Philson will se1ve as
chailw oman of St. Jude Children 's
Research Hospita l bike-a -thon in
Syracuse.
The hospital wa s founded by enterta in e r Dann y Thomas a nd
opened its doors to the public in 1962
10 combat catastrophic diseases
which afflict children. It is nonsecta ria n, non-discriminatory and
provides total medical care to over
Anthony Scott Kennedy, Tuppers
UOO pa tients .
Pialns, has enlisted in th United
Fu nds raised in the bike-a-than ·
States ·Marine Corps Delayed
this spring will be used to continue
Entry Program.
1hP work of the hospital ocated ln
This program enables Kennedy
New Albany, Ind.
to enlist now, reserve an opening in
the field of his choice and delay
training until graduating from
school.
Sgt . Barry Theiss, son of Betty
Kennedy enlisted In the aviation
Theiss and Roger Theiss of Racine, e lectronics field and will report to
was recently promoted to Staff
the Marine Corps Recruit Depot,
Sergea nt. He is stationed with the
Parris Island. S.C., on May 3, lor
18th Aircraft Generation Squad,
boot camp.

Service nores

Lifelong Meigs
residents .
will observe
58th year of

He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Kennedy.
Army Pic. Tony R. Chapell, son
of Carolyn S. Van Meter of Mason,
W. Va., has participated in exercise
Team Spirit, a joint and combined
U.S. and Republic of Korea milltary exercise to train command·
ers, staff and forces in the
execution of joint and combined
ground, air and se~ operations.
U.S. Army, Air Force, Navy and
Marine ·forces joined with their
Republic of Korea counterparts lor
these maneuvers .
Chapell Is an air defense gunnery
crewman with the 25\h Infantry
Division at Schofield Barracks,
Hawaii.
He is a 1981 graduate of Southern
High School, Racine.
His wile, Wilma, is t.he daughter
of Charles B. and Sylvia V, Cook of
Syracuse.

Meigs County and regional correspondence
rothy Badgley and Gretta Simpson. visited recently with Mrs. Della
Blythe Theiss returned home Stahl.
from Tampa, l"la. after visiting his
Mrs. Kathy Pullins has been
daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. reported very ill.
Vernon Harrison and Sherrie.
Mrs. Robert Miller was returned
While there he attended the wed- home Tuesday from Riverside
ding of his granddaughter, Sherrie. Hos pital in Columbus, feeling
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace and much better.
Mrs . Edison Johnson visited Mr.
Attendance at the Free Methoand Mrs. Fred Brace at Parkers- dist Church Jan. 30 was 75. Choir
burg recently . .
members present were 10.
All the family of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs is a patient In
Albert Hlll, Jr. were present for a
HOlzer Medical Center.
dinner to celebrate their mother's
Ivan Diehl of Texas, formerly of
birthday.
this community, reports that he is
Mrs. Sheryl Stemple and daugh- very ill with cancer.
ter, Stephanie, of Dayton spent a
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jacobs, Columweek with her parents, Mr. and
bus, visited Mr. and Mrs. James
Mrs . Gerald Simpson.
Gilmore and visited Mrs. Jacobs'
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace, Edi- mother, Mrs . Tina Jacobs, a pason Jolmson and Pearl Adams vi- . tlent in Holzer Medical Center.
sited Mrs. James Brace and family
Mrs. Iva Pearl Powell was hosat Crown City.
tess recently to the Laurel Cliff
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Prater and Health Club. Games were played
J as an of Hamden spent a Wednes- and refreshments were served.
day evening with her mother, Mrs.
Mi-. and Mrs. Raymond Eddy,
Edison Johnson.
Middleport, visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs . George Wolfe of Mr. and Mrs . Norman Schaefer.
Ravenswood, W. Va. spent a SunAttendance at the Free Methoday afternoon with his mother, dist Church Feb. 6 was 73. Choir
Mrs. Sylvia M. Wolfe.
members present were 12. A speRev. a nd Mrs. Don Walker cial song was sung, "1 Have a Manmoved into their new home, just sion Just Over the Hilltop" by Mr.
across the street from the parson- and Mrs. Bob Barton and Mrs. Shirage. They had open house .Jan. 30,2 ley Friend.
to 4 p.m. with about 75 persons
Mrs. Tina Jacobs and Mrs.
attending.
Kathy Pu!lens were unable to attend church services Sunday.
Laurel Cliff
John Story, who attends Bell and
Howell
school ln Columbus, spent
Attendance at all services Sunday, ,Jan. 2, was 113. Choir the weekend with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Vern Story.
members present were 12 and a
The Pomeroy Fire Company was
duet by Mr. and Mrs. Bob Barton.
Mrs . Della Stahi spent New called to the Laurel Cliff road SaturYear's Day with Mr. and Mrs . day at 12 o'clock. An unoccupied
house was on flre , the kitchen was
Pearl GUkey. In the afternoon they
burned. The fire was distinguished.
visited lYir. and Mrs. Richard
Gilkey, Mason, W. Va.
Attendance at the morning serviMrs. Audry Hayes and daughter
ces Feb. 13 at the Free Methodist

Birth· and birthday recorded
Smith

Smith

Mr. a nd Mrs. Danny Smith of
South Point, are announcing thf'
birth of a daughter. Kathryn Lynn,
F eb. 10, at the Cabei-Huntington
Hospital in Huntington. W.Va . The
jnfant weighed nine pounds , four
ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Smith had a
daughter, Mandy. five.
Mr. and Mrs. Thea Kaspar.
Rossville. Ill, are maternal grandparents. and Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Smith. Pomeroy, are paternal
grandparent s. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Arnold. Minersville are foster
grandparents.

Mr. and Mrs. Danny Smith,
South Point, entertained recently
with a party honoring their daughter, Mandy, on her fifth birthday.
An E.T. themewascarrledoutwith
balloons and pink and whlte streamers featured In the decorations.
The cake also carried out the party
theme, and was served with Ice
cream and punch.
Attending were her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arnold, and 10
neighborhood children. Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Smith sent a gift.

.

First Southern Baptist Church holds annual sweetheart banquet.

,

Donna

A love theme was 'c arried out for
the First SoulhernBaptistChurch's
annual sweetheart banquet held at
the Riverboat Room oft he Diamond
Savings and Loan Co. Members enjoyed a potluck

men. Door prizes were awarded
Attending were Cheryl Miller,
during !he evening, and there was
Sue King, Ed King, Brian Carr, Dick
special music by the Rev. and Mrs. Owen, Sara Owen, Rhojean
David Hunt. The Rev. Qlfford . McClure, Hershel McClure, JeanColellYU1 was guest speaker at the
nie Owen, Dick Owen II, Julia,
banquel
'
Karen,' and Eric Spencer, Scott

dinner.
WUson was emcee
for the program which featured the
crowning of the king, Scott Stout,
and qlleen, Cheryl Miller. 'There
were several skits Including a
shotgun wedding presented by the

Make 'dean's list
A number of Meigs Countians attending Hocking Technical College
in Neisonvllle have been named to
the dean's list for the fall -quarter.
Coming through with perteet four
point averages for thequarterwere
Connie Bailey, Elinor Burke, June
S. Kloes, all of Middleport; John D.
Beaver. Constance L. Ka rschnlk,
Nan C. White, all of Pomeory;
Linda J . O'Brien. Racine; John D.
Jacobs, Rutland . ·
Others making a three point or
better to be named to the list were
Kenneth Newell, Chester; Wald R
Spencer, Roger L. Bissell, both of
Long Bottom ; GeraldAult, Shari A.
Drehel, Tina M. East, Angela Houchins, Dave A. Hysell , Lynn M.
KLoes, Anthony Scott, all of Middleport ; Vicky L. DeBord, Melanie
Dillard. Vicky L. Hood, Charles
Hossler, Dfcky J . King, Rochelle
McDaniel, Laura L. Provence,
Jolm D. Riebel, John L. Warner, a ll
of Pomeroy; Richard Teaford, Portland; Tamara Ervin, O)&lt;ey E.
~r. Rita S. Slater, all of Racine; ~
!Qia A. Collins, Brian K. Connolly,
Rebecca Dre1.ner, Michael
~-'tuber, Scott A. VanMeter, Ranctall VanMeter, all of Reedsville;
J(&amp;Pe A. Flagg, Tod S. Morrow, both
o1 t!yracuse.

Mr. and Mrs. Carl G. BalJey,
Route 4, Pomeroy, will observe
their 58th wedding anJIIversary on
· Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bailey, the former
Dorothy Buck, are .iifelimg restdents of Meigs County. They haw
three children, Robert C. of Po-.
"roy, William K. of Route 1, Mldd~
port, and Mrs. James (Darlene)
Emmitt, Columbus. They also ha\Pe
six grandchldren.
The couple attends Laurel Cltlf
Free Methodist Church. Bailey It!
an avid gardener, llurne repair.
man, and sports fan, ..t his Wife
enjoys flower gardeniJI&amp; cook!JII,
canning, making aflllans', aJICI
reading Christian literature.

SAVE10~T040~

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ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

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Pinto

COPYitCHT Ita • THI MIOOII CO. fTEMS AND 'IICES

GOOC lUNDAY , 'II· 20, THIOUGH SATUIDAY, 'II. 26,
Itt) , IN SILVII lltDGI &amp; POMIIOY. WI IISEIVI THI
liGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIII . NONE SOLD TO DIALERS .

NO AGE LIMIT
COSTCUTIER

White
Bread

GIFT FOR YOU! ...
',

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ALL AGES

Babies. Children, and AduHs

,.~.33c

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picture.

FILL YOUR FREEZER
DURING KROGER'S

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C~rn MuHin

IN OIL 011 SPRINGWATER

BEEF SALE

"

Clip and bring this coupon. Present it to the
photographer. Save $5.00 on an 8 x 10
Wood Plaque.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE. BEEF CHUCK
ARM BONEL~SS

Star-Kist
Tuna

·6'1.·01.

C!ln

59 c

"Diamond Giveaway"
1983

'

'

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U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE.
BONELESS

38

8

"Any jewelry purchase between now and March 15th automatically makes you eligible ·for our diamond giveaway.
Come in, look around, and possibly win that diamond you've
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UCENSED AS MANAGER Carla Rife of Route 1, M)ddleport,
has successluUy passed thl\ examJ..
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H.S. CLASS RINGS

Lee and Rachael Lefebre, Myron
Elrick, Ernest and Sadie Carr,
Cindy and Dennis Wolfe, Daisy and
Pat Patterson, Mike Patterson,
Eva Mae Christian, and Louie
Christian, and Sylvia and Troy
Zwtlllng.

Eleh of . . . • •
tllmt II requirtd 10 be
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'

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Stout, Marcy Spangler, Denise and'
Charmele Turner, Paullne Ritchie,
Tammy Adkins, Roger Adkins,
Deb! Close, Doris Coleman, Cliff
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Dareene Neece, Dawn Thomas,

r-~------­
FRI., FEB. 25-10:00 to 8:00

Church was 73. Choir members
present were 14. A special song was
sung by Pastor Miller. Rev. Carl
Hicks visited the Sunday morning
services.
Thirty-three young people of the
local church had their Sweetheart
dinner at Duff's in Gallipolis
recently.
Mrs. Betty Ann Jacobs, Columbus, spent the weekend with her
mother, Mrs. Tina Jacobs. Mrs.
Jacobs is much improved !rom her
recent illness.
Mrs. Grace Richardson, Athens,
and Mrs. Audrey Hayes, Sbade, visited Mrs. Della Stahl Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. William Perry,
Athens, Mr. and Mrs. Vern Story
and son, John, had Sunday dinner
recently with Mr. and Mrs .
Norman.

The Daily Sentinei- Page---11

'

.

Pak

Smith

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.

their marriage

Mr. and Mrs. Bailey

RACINE
By Mrs. Fmncis Moms
The Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
Society of the Racine First Baptist
Chu rch was held in the Fellowship
nioms, hosted by the Ruth Circle
witti"a 6 p.m. supper which 20 enjOyed. The meeting followed with
Mrs . Barbara Gheen. president.
presiding. The h~d devotions and
· c'Onducted the business. "Our Gift
of Love" was the title· of the Love
Gift program by Mrs . Martha Lou
Beegle. The offerings of the circles
presented were $208.37. Mrs. Beegle closed with a dedication prayer.
A.patriotic program was next presented, a lso a humorous reading,
"F ind Your Valentine by following
customs." A Valentine theme was
carried out for table decorations .
Mrs. Gheen a nnounced the Bible
book of F'ebruary is Esther and
closed the meeting.
Mrs. Lillian .Hayman was hostess
at the home of her mother, Mrs.
Grella Simpson for the Esther Cir'
cle. Devotions entitled, "She Hath
Done What She Could" by Florence
Adams opened the meeting. Mrs.
Simpson. vice chairman, conducted the business session. It was
reported two boxes of clothing had
been sent to Bacone. A shut-in was
remembered on Valentine's Day.
Plans were made for Easter. Mrs .
Dorothy Badgley presented a program, topic, "A Meditation of
. Peace and Justice" with Bible
readings. "Sweet Peace, the Gift of
God's Love" was · sung by the
group. Mrs. Badgley closed with a
rea ding of an Indian Prayer. Refreshments were served by the hostess using a Valentine motif.
Ladies attending Lenten break~•st at Tr inity Church, Pomeroy,
Included, Gamet Ervine, Florence
Ada ms, Martha Lou 'Beegle, Do-

F.bruc.y 23, 1913

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�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Februa'Y 23, 1983

Wednesday, FebNary 23, 1983

Columbus.police, firefighte.r s
•
remain home over pay Issue
•

THANKS SUPPORTERS - iJ.S.' Rep. Harold
Washington th~ crowd ol supporters In Chicago

primary. At left Is Washington's llanree, Mary
Smith. (AP Laserphoto).

early Wednesday alterwlnDingtheclty's DeiJI()Cratlc

Overwhelming blac~ support ·
helps Washington pull upset
CHICAGO (AP) - With over· to concede 1n the three-way race. He
whelming-black support, U.S. Rep. pledged to support Washington
Harold Washington upset well- against Republican Bernard Epton
financed lncwnbent Jane M. Byrne in the Aprill2 general eleCtion.
In the Democratic primary to move
only a step away from becoming the
Mrs. Byrne told her supporters
first black mayor of America 's early today thai the vote was "t.oo
second largest city.
close to ca ll" and went home to bed.
"By today's vote, the Democratic
Widespread charges of vote fraud
Party has been J;eturned to the marred the election, and U.S.
people," the beaming Washington marshals were ordered to impound
told chanting supporters as the last the ballots as they were countedvotes from Tuesday's election were for safekeeping and as possible
evidence in criminal prosecutions.
being counted.
The OO.year-old two-term conWith 2,859 of 2,'914 precincts
gressman overcame a paltry cam- reported, the results were: Wapalgn war chest, a 1974 conviction shlngton, 410.~ votes , or 34.5
for fa!llng to file U.S. income taxes percent; Mrs. Byrne, 3ffi,840 or 32
and subtle appeals to racism to beat percent; and Daley, 339,277, or 29.2
Mrs. Byrne by a slim margin of · percent. The other votes were split
about 29,900votesoutofarecordl.19 among minor candidates.
million counted by early today.
According ·to an Associated
Richard M. Daley, son of Chtca- Press-WMAQ TV poll, Washington

votes cast by blacks, whose power
was enhanced by an aggressive
registration drive last fall.
Washington's showing in the
black community - with an
estimated 600,1XXl to GSo,IXXlvotersdeprtved Mrs. Byrne of votes thai
were instrumental in her own upset
victory four years earlier.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Dozens of pollee officers and
llreflghters, angered overth!'dty's
failure to raise.their pay, phOned In
sick today. The City CowicU
president said they were threatenIng the safety of Columbus
residents.
"The stckout has begun," police
. Capt. FUcbard Hartman said as
pollee officials reported that 114
officers of -the 00 scheduled to
report bY 7: ll a.m . ·had called In
, sick.
·
Firefighters were not due for shift
changes unto later in the morning.
Fire department officials declined
to disclose the number of men who
called In sick, but a union spokes·
man .said more than two-thirds of
the firefighters had stayed home.
City Safety Director Bernard
· Cbupkasaidpollceofftcersfromthe
overnight shlfl were held late and
firefighters from TUesday's shift
were kept on the job today. ·
Pollee and fire officials said
supervisors would handle strikers'
duties.
"We're goingtodowhat we can to
see tbat the safety of all our citizens
is looked after the best we can,"
Chupka said.
After meeting with Fire Chief
Raymond Fadley, Chupka urged
the city's nearly600,00lresiclents to
"be extremely careful as far as
potential !Ires."
"Right now, we've got people
(firefighters) available. Butl'mnot
sureabouttomorrowornextweek," '
Cbupka said.
Pollee and firefighters . had
worked without a contract since
Oct.. 1. Pollee officers staged a
one-day sickout in November before city officials agreed to create a
special fund to grant them pay
raises.
But negotiations stalled. Dewey ·
Stokes, president of the Fraternal

The GOP hasn't won the mayoralty in 50years, but Washington has
said he Is not taking the general
election for granted. Epton ran
unopposed . for the Republican
nomination.
If elected, Washington would join
the ranks ofbig-city black mayors
that include Tom Bradley In Los
Angeles , Andrew Young In Atlanta,
Coleman Young in Detroit, Kenneth
Gibson in Newark, N.J., MilliOn
Barry in washington, D.C., and

Order of Pollee, and !Wbert Shields,
local president of the International
Association of Fire Fighters, said
their members wanted a 5 percent
raise, relroactlve to Oct.l.
City Council J;!relsdent M.D.
Portman said he would Introduce
legislation today to give a 4 percent
raise to the city's !lX) flfenghters,
1,200 pollee officers and 4,1XXl
non-uniformed employees. The
non-uniformed workers had agreed
to a lO.month wage freeze.
Portman said be wanted to
finance the raises froma$3.3 ml!llon
fund the counctl had creallld for
pollee and firefighter raises, and
Stokes said all the$3.3mllllonshould
go to uniformed forces . •'1bemoney
is definitely set up for safety forces '
raises," he said.
The stckout anli!i'rm Portman, .
who told a newspaper: "We're In an
economic recession, and here we
are.qutbbllng over a 5 percent raise
when ·people are unemployed and
begging for jobs, when people don't
have enough to eat, and some don't
have anything to eat.
"And these people (strtklng
safety forces) are threatening the
lives and safety of 600,!XXJ people
over that? I thinK It's disgraceful, "
Portman said.
Portman said his proposal could
go into effect Saturday if approved
bY the council.
Pollee Chief Earl Burden said be
expected his department's ~
supervisors to report to work. And
Fadley said he expected ' the fire
department's 100 supervisors to do
likeWise.
bn Tuesday, Burden said the
department had several options.
Including canceling all leaves and
days off for supervisors, ordering
non-strtklngofficers toworkl2-hour
shifts and reducing police service to
cases that Involved the threat of
bodily harm.

Dailey, 36, was jailed Jan. 28 on
contempt of court charges after
refusing to tum over financial
records sought ·by the Columbus
Production Credit Association.
The farmer owes th~ PCA more

than $400,1XXl. His land was sold to
the Federal Land Bank, which held
llrst mortgage on the property.
Oatley's lawyer, Ed Harter. said
he had made an offer to the PCA last
week that could
result In Dalley's release. He
wouldn 'Iinse lose details of the offer
and said the PCA hasn't yet
responded.
Harter admitted Dalley probably
could get out of jail by fUing for
bankruptcy, but said Dalley 1s
trying to hold onto his house, on

S.ntiltl
lll Court St. Po~~troy , Oflio 4576~

I\ut Ginty said a private WISconsin company could provide guards
and firefighters within 24 hours.
The last·mlnute negotiations before the. strike spUied onto a local
television station, which aired a
live, 75-mlnute meeting between
Mayor Tom Moody, six council
members and thetwounlon leaders.
During the session, Moody
strongly disagreed with the unions'
contentions that he had backed out
of an agreement on their raises.
"It Is very clear to me they have
misrepresented a .reneging, and
there was no such reneging. On the
altar of God, I defy both of you to
prove differently,'' Moody said.
But tbe FOP's Stokes said Moody
had been vague during much of the
negotiations, .and he Insisted that
had created misunderstandings.
" On the altar of God ... I was
recently told the mayor talks In
subtleties and subterfuge, and
subtlety and subterfuge have no
place at the bargaining . table,"
Stokes said.

•

which the PCA has a second
mortgage.
The first mortgage Is held bY a
commercial bank "which is not
giving us any trOuble," the lawyer
said.
Dalley said he was keeping busy
In jail. receiving telephone calls and
mail from sympathetic farmers
across the country. Some 5(X)
farmers showed up at thE; auction
last month, trying to shout down the
sale.

S~bc~;~i;;;~~~;~~'"";;;;i;.. G.ov~rn~ent off~rs to_~uy

·
s
·
·
1
S
.
to rescue OCia . ecurt1y
WASHINGTON (APi-AHouse
subcommittee tentatively agreed
Tuesday to raise payroll taxes, curb
benefits and force new federal
employees to join the Social
Securtty system as it pieced
together a rescue plan for the giant
' retirement system.
The actions by the House Ways
and Means panel would yield $165.1
billion In savings or new revenue
through the end of the decade and
substantially embrace the blparti·
san recommendations of the Na·
tiona! Commission on Social Secur·
ityR.eform.
Without recorded vote, the subcommltt€E;tentatively agreed to:

members of Congress, President
Reagan and Vice President Georg&lt;;'
Bush to join the Social Security
system in 1984. The plan ~tes that
it is Congress' intention that
supple mental pension system be
added for new civil servants In
addition to Social Securtty.
-Delay the Juhe cost-o!-llving
adjustment for six months.
-Impose a levy , on retirees
benefits whose adjusted , gross
mcome combined with 50 percent of
their benefits exceeds $2:1,500 for an
individual and $31,500 for a couple.
-Accelerate payroll tax increases in 1984, 1988 and l!lro. ·
The actions by the House Ways
~nd Means panel are Its first steps
-Force fed eral employees, em- as it moved to put together a rescue
ployees of non-profit organizations, · package to ball out the troubled

a

dtoxtn-tatnted Mtssourt .town

retirement program.
While the actions are tentative,
the subcommittee is expected to
approve them when It completes
work on the package later this week.
Conservative Republicans on the
panel trted to modify or strike the
provisions, but their efforts were
turned aside by the Democratic
majority.
Meanwhile. House Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill, who previously has
opposed raising the retirement age,
held private meetings with leaders
of the Ways and Means Committee .
and Rep. Claude Pepper,D·Fla., an
adamant foe of changing the age.
Asked 1f any decision had been
made on J!le age issue, O'Ne!U
refused to discuss it, saying only,
"We'll' talk about that later."

Pledge could involve U.S. troops
WASHINGTON (AP l - President Reagan's pledge to take all
measures necessary to guarantee
the security of Israel's northern
borders could involve use of U.S.
troops, probably as part of a
multinational force, according to
his spokesman.
But as Reagan delivered his
pledge In a speech to the American
Legion on Tu:!Sday, the WhiteHouse
made it clear the use of U.S. troops
was only one of ''many. many
options."
Currently, 1,~ American Ma·
rlnes are stationed in Beirut as part
of an International peacekeeping
force. Talks aimed at getting Israel,
as well as Syria and the PLO, to
agree to a timetable for withdrawal
are deadlocked.
A State Department official,
speaking on thecondlt!bn that he not
be Identified further, said Reagan's
statement "shows that we want to
break the.logjam (in the talks) and
to do that we'll .do whatever 1s

resistance If It means a large tiated agreements, not solutions
commitment of Amer-ican troops." imposed by force. "
DeConcinl, who recently spent
Reagan called on all nations to
nearly twoweeks in Lebanon,Israel withdraw their forces from Leand Jordan , called Reagan's state- . banon "In the · shortest possible
ment "an awfully big comrilitment time." Similar pleas over the past
for us to make."
months have gone unheeded.
In his speech Reagan said: "This
After a. meeting at the White
admlnlstratton is prepared to .take House on an unrelated matter, Sen.
all necesS&lt;Iry measures to guaran- Charles Percy, R·Ill., chillrman of
tee the security of Israel's northern the Senate Foreign Relations Comborders In .t he aftermath of the mittee, told reporters Congress
complete withdrawal of the Israeli probably would approve a plan to
army.''
.
use American troops to help
But he added, "True peace can guarantee the securtty of the
only evolve through freely nego- · Israeli·Lebanese border.
.,

.

unclear.
The o!ferto relocateTirnesBeach
residents Is the first federal buyout
of a contaminated town. although
the federal government and New
York state s(lent about $7.5 mtlllon
each to buy 660 homes In a l().block
area around the former LoveCana1
chemical dump In Niagara Falls.
Mrs. Burford said tl)e money for
the Times Beach cleanup would
come from the EPA "superfund,''
collected from a special tax on
·
hazardolli..
waste compan1es and
earmar• to clean up cont;unlnated sites. .
I
Residents can accept the offerbasedonvaluesbeforethecontamlnation was found ,;., or continue
Uvlng 1n the town, she said.
"It's not over. It's just beginning,:' said Penny Capstick, who

moved out of the town two weeks
ago after living there for the past 14
years. "My husband Joe and I
decided .to get an attorney."
The Capst!cks fear they won't be
compensatect .for $4,!XXJ they invested In their home after. ~
cember floods submerged the town.
"We'd never leave If 1t weren't for
our little girl," Mrs. Capstick said.
"But the place is a ghost tow'n, and
we didn't want totakechancesw!th
her health."
"I'm 75 percent pleased," said
Rose Elliott, whoaddedthatsheand
her husband James would probably
accept \he buyout.
.
Mrs. Elliott's neighbor, Carolyn
O'Leary. a 19·year Tlnnes Beach
resident. said she would walt to see
what the government offers for her
home.

CO&lt;do!l,...., J~•n•uno:e o

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(Continued from page 1)

(Continued from Iiage 1)

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::::;:=•"-·.

:!~;.::;:':~:::."''

9

:;·:.:::..!:! ~a R..-M

f

tlon or already ordered by the
governor, the package IS designed
to overcome the budget deficit and
apparently provide a CUShion of
about $71 mlllJon going Into the next
biennium July 1.
Celeste's fiscal advisers said they
felt confident that the legt.slatlon wtU
solve Ohio's fiscal problems for tbe

However, 111e proposal has some
contlngmc~. It gives tbe governor
temporary, new powers to doae
selected state agencies and lay off
employees.
Celeste's aides Sl\kl he probably
will sign the measure IOOIIII!erthe
Hciuse acta onSenatearilettclrnents.

;

I
0

~ ....... ,. ~.MidW.,.$ba&amp;~~ftmdiiWGUld

... ..tlur tllellnUimetebaJatheelillrelllwll,1'1mer l 5 s•, Mo., to .
protect lla 1 IL* from 11ox1a OlllllllllniDMI. (API a· plloio).

&amp;) Fi omEquipmenl

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

du •

&amp;

65 · &amp;.t~tu.. ,o~....

..

.

Oft

.
CENT.RAL REALTY

SATURDAY-7:00P.M.

At corner of Depot

&amp; Main

MOBILE HOME- wrth large add-on building alsoasphattdriveway. Located on quiet clean street out of high water in Racine.The.
living room is extra ~rge. There is a cement walk and large covered
porch, also a.metal sciage building. You can be inthis one in two

Rutland, OH.

S&amp;KAUCTION
SHER,AN TILLIS: Owner
RODNEY HOWERY: Auctioneer
Terms of Sale: ~shor Check with

weeks for

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6-.30 p M

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE·
II
..

MINE RUN

STRIP

COAL

Giveaway

11 mo . old mile 1..1 Hutkey
needs good home In coun·
try . Good.watch dog. l011e1
kids. Cal! 614·367·0288.
Hompotar. Cal! 446·8632. :
tarv Snalto . Colt :

For a your Wtrtng
needs; furnaces re·
pat'r servl'ce and In-

$3()00

oo~ $16,900.

CA.RPENTER
fOR
RENT

Positive I.D

NEW L!SIING - 3or 4 bedrooms possible on this one. Trailerwrth
large add-on on nearly an acre lot Includes stnrage building. lot
can have second trailer as extra income. Call for more detail~
Ask1ng $12,00l

MAIN

NEW liSTING - 1973 trailer in Middleport, 2 bedroom, ~undry
room, underpinning, insulati01'1 , total electnc hookup included, can
be moved tn your lot or rental at present locatioo. AppraiS€&lt;1 value
more than asking price. $6,950.

POMERuY, OHIO

PH.992·2259

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
NANCY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 843-5)75

NEW u)'TING - Bradbury - Mobi~ home with e•pando, bay
window, central atr, nice fronl sitting porc h, two car garage with
two rooms, and a beautifl!l ~ying I 1/5 acre yard. Mostly fur·
nished including washer and dl"fer. $29,000.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Agorgeous two acre Jot wrth a one floor plan
tl!n year oid home. Three bedroom~ dining area, full basement
with garage. patio. and nice cabnets in krtchen. Just $38,500.00.

Public Notice
Sewer D1 s1nct
Sullen Twp . OH. EffectiVe

date021 18/ B3

Aece1v1ng wa te rs · Oh!O A•ver

SYRACUSE - Two lots wrth ~der home that has three bedroom~
dining room. part basement and utilrty room. $11,000.00.

Public Notice

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savel
I
I
'·wi th
and

·NEW liSTING ,;,_ MIDDLEPORT - Anice corner ~tin a good
n~~borhood with four bedrooms. beautiilAbath, large living
room, dimng room, btg pan!l"f, full basement and a one car garage.
$50.500.00.
REALTORS
Heory E. Cleland, Jr .. GR! ...... ........................... 992-6191
Dottie Tumer .... ............................................. 992·5692
Jean Trussell .: ............................. ,.................. 949-2660
Office .. ....... ... ............ ............. ... ................... 992-2259

Pornemy, OH.

TRAN1,~&amp;J~f.LTF.R

742-2328
1.31 .1 mo.

Kitchen Cabhiets- Roofing - Siding - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeling - Custom Pole
Barns.
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp;Siding Co.
Route 1
Long Bottom. OH. 45743
985·4193 or 992-3067
12·20.tlc

AND FLUID CHANGE
ONLY , 31 95
·
t·""'

ANGIE'S

~-te wort&lt;
-Plumbing •01'1
otoclri&lt;al wort.
(Free Eolimat••)

V.

C. YOUNG Ill
992-62t 5 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
,.,..,,

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

PIZZA

PH . 992-6851
.349 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, OH .
Mon .-Thurs. 4:00-1) :30
Fri.-Sat. 4:00-12:00

CLOSED SUNDAY.

Pizzas-Pizza Bread
Italian Bread-Subs

2-1 1·1 mo.

rlli~ed

SERVICE

: ::::-..::::: ;.::::':~
OPEN 9 to 5 MON. tltru SAT.
All Types of Auto Repa ir.
Brakes. Tuna-Ups , etc.

Two
breed puppies, 3
&amp;;;.t;c,~d males. 304·

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimates, 949-2801 or

949-2860.
No Sunday Cafis

Puppies to good home .
304·675 -9782.
TWO puppies . y, Cottle.
304-773-5688 .
MALE 4 month old pupplo.
Col,ie. Y2 Terrier. to good
homo 304-676 -6424.
V2

PART

English Pointer. part '1

9 month old female , to good

home 304-458·1836 .

6

Lost a·nd Found

LOST in Bidwell area. Black
tan Doberman wearing a
red collar. Call 614-3889989.

&amp;

FOUND Tiger Cat. female ,
half grownm, well cered tor,·
17t Chillicothe Rd . Call
446-7783.
LOST Dog Terrier black &amp; .
gray. 30 lb~;, on George• ...
Creek Rd. name Jammer . ~"
Call 446·6206.
'

Thts !mal act1 on n01 pre - 1----------+---------f-----------1 -;::--::-:-::--;;-;--ceded
by proposed actoon and
8
Public Sala
os appealable to EBA
&amp; Auction
12123 Ire
ALL STEEL &amp;
ANNUAL

Perm •t No 0503-BD
-( ------------~--·-----

NEW USTNG - POMEROY - A two story home with three
bedrooms, large beautilulliving room and dining room, I \7 baths,
balcony, patio and a wishing well. lots of closet space, new
· plumbing and new wiring. $38,000.00.

278 W. Main

6"

PH.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER

TRA AUTOMATIC
NS MIss ION CO.

You Name The Price
You Mi""'t Get Lucky

' NEW LISTNG -4 bedroom home in the counttY. 1tinyl sKiing
storm windows, on 3 acres, Jots offrurttreeqjenty of good water,
assume loan of $18,500 wrth monthly paymentof$258or arrange
a new klan.

Real Estate General

608 E.

8 h 8 'ld'
as an . uI rng

4

.-

Black 7 wka: old lf.t Cocker
1971
~:-:::,·.,•:.·:~":c..-- ~ c_..,
..... vo co..... ,
,.... c .. w¥
Spaniel. C• 11446 ·
·
11·111""'"......
... ... Codtl14
• ·•• Coclt ll4
-"'•ooCaa~)IJf
n c--.,[..- · •
.
6-8 week old puppiea. Black '
;:; ~:::::':
"',..:::,:.""""
:~ ~...:.........
.
A TON
stallation .
wi1h wgite spOt oncheatand .:
~= ~:·c~. . o.
;~ ~~~~d
~;; ~':'.!:,0 " 1 ""
•
•
•
Residential
feet. Border Collie type . can ~
· ;::_,
'"
"'
'"""""'
·'"
,
.•
,....
.
Factory
Choke
12
PH.
992.
D. Commercl'ai
6t4·742-2ti7o
after 6 p.m.:
1141 '··~''"
2280
•••blooD,.,
91Y ~~~&lt;"'"
N!l!&gt; .l r'""
Gauge· Sh 0 t guns. OhIy
"'
1
3
11 11
,,·:~""'.-~:::::::.;·
"" Wolnul
!:~ ~~~:::..
" "'"
Call742-3195
.-. .......~
-...
.
12 YEA~ old Border Collie ·
IJ ·Ib c:.wollng
4--,..---~-~---~~ --~~-11
2·18·tlo
2·23 ·ttc
togoodhomeinthecountry. ·'
14 E...,, .., ... p, .. ....,.,_ 1
..·G. ..,"'H""""''
Up t.o l r . - •
o ... ...,,,,, ..,""'
tloo
..__ _ _ _ _ _ ___,
Good companion for older
e1u~.,...,
Uptolt.w
..
n
,.,.c~o~
.
.
·....
1100
. Call 304 -675t•MH .,.., ,
UIIIDH&gt;-do
lho'l•dtrmMt~...,
1 400
n::=======~t.~=======:::;-t:========:;l people
1111 -' -"'"' 1 '"~!
6768 .
i·•lluu·iu!ll•·l··t•'UIII I' ''""'""'#!'''.

,. •• _ , _

:::::;:::;:~A~U~IK,~N~=lt~~~~~~~~
THURSDAY

GUN SHOOT .

1-3

'Ill

aa...,..,,. .. ,oewv
l•-..•••~,.,,·
a&amp;34 •· .._,
60

::::-~.:;."''"'A'"'

••w.,.,.,ooa

3rd

POLE BULDINGS
Sizes start from· I2'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'~6' Up
to 24'x36'
lnsulatd Dog Houses

P&amp;S

BUILDI~GS

R · Oh
acme, ·
Pl1. 614-843-5191

·
I0-6.tlc

SPAGHml
DINNER
Sponsored by Mei15
Vocal Music Boosters
SAT., MARCH 5
At the Rutiand

5 .Jl,ra~~~~!:PM

13.00 Adult :....s2.0o Chitdien
Dinner includes~ Sp&amp;ghetti,
Salad, Roll, Orinkand Dessert
Entertainment '-·
"'
The Chora!iers
2-9-1 mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

New Homes - Extensive

Remodeling.
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole B!dgs.
&amp; Garages
•Roofing Work
•Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282

11 ·11 ·"'

.·

WVa State Champion Auctioneer Rick Pearaon. Eatatea.
antiques. farm, houaeholda. ·
Licensed Ohlo-WVo . 304·
773-5786 or 304-773·
9186.

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchsndise every week .
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always .
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 276-3069 .

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

1--'--------~---------+----------j AUCTION ovary Saturday
night, Mt. Ako, WV, 6 p.m.
Consignments welcome .
"CUT
OUT
J&amp;F
RADIATOR
:
Emma Bell auctioneer.
Name ____________________
FOR FUTURE USE"
CONTRACTING
SERVICE
•DOZER
KEN'S .
We can repair and nt9 Wantad To Buy
•BACKHOE
coro
radiators
and
hea•SEPTIC
SYSTEMS
Address--------------REAlrOR
APPLIANCE
WANTED TO BUY Old
•LIMESTONE
ter cores. We can a!.O
Phone _________________
•WATER, GAS and .
SERVICE
acid boil and rod out ra-. · furniture end Antiquea of all ·
kinds. call Kenneth Swain•.
SEWER LINES
diators. We also repair
Public·Notice
985-3561
446-3159 or 268-1987 in
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
Gae Tanks.
the evenings.
'
AU Makes
WORK
non -lrnal act• on wrthrn ~0 days
•Washers •Diahwaahera
of the da te 1ndrcat ed "Actron."
•LAND CLEARING,
Gold. Silver, Plati- ·'
HILL FORD Quying
Ranges
as used above does not mdude
CONCRETE
WORK
num . Gold and Silver pricea ·
•Refrigerators
992-2196
rec e1p1 of a venfred com pla rnt
BIIID£0 &amp; MlRK WARANT££0
are the highest in two veara. :
•Dryers
•Freezers
Middleport, Ohio
H srq ntfrcant pubhc ••nterest ex PHONE JAMES CLIFFORD
check our prices on gold &amp; •
PARTS and SERVICE
1·13-tt c
rsts. i:l p u h~'C meeting may be
silver, scrap jewelry. Buying ~ ·
992-720
I
H I rno
H ·ttc
held As to any act,on. rnctudrng
Old coins, scrap ringa &amp;
rece1 pt of venf red compt a•nts.
silverware. Daily quotes
any person may abram notr(;e
available. Also coin a &amp; coin
of further actrons. and addr ·
supplies for sala. Spring .,.
trona I •nformatto n Unless oth·
Valley Trading Co., Spring
TRI-COUNTY
erwse proVtded" rn not re es of
Valley Plaza. 448·8026 or
oart rcu tar actrons. all commu nl 446-8026.
BOOKKEEPING
ca trans shall be sent to · HecH•ng
SALES &amp; SERVICE
cash rates
-Dozers
Clerk. OEPA. P0 Bo&lt; I 049.
include discount
We pay cash for late model ,·
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
SERVICE
Columbus. OH. 432 16 Ph
-Backhoes
clean
used cars.
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
(6 t 41 466·6037 Consu lt ORC
-Dump Trucks
Frenchtown Car Co .
618
E.
Main,
Pomeroy,
OH.
)Wanted
·
Chap 31 45 and 01\C Ch aps
,-Lo-Boy
SUI Gene Johnaon
) For Sale
Authorized John Deer, ·
3745 -47 and 37 46 -5 leo
PH. 992·3795
446·0069
-Trencher
)Announcemen
t
requrremen ts
17.
New Holland, Bush Hog
- Water
) For Rent
We Do Bookkeeping For
Frnal rss uance of not rce of
Cash for used mobile homes
18.
Farm Equipment
-Sewer
re q1stratron
Small, !Jtrge and Corporate
or travel turd lara . Will •·
-Gas
Lines
t9,
Dealer
Sou th ern Oh ro Coal
consider damaged or bum ·
Businesses &amp; Partnerships
-Septic Systems
Company
I.
20.
outs. Call 446-0176.
Farm
Equipment
5 A 124
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
2.
MARY
C
.
KESLER-OWNER
21.
Parts &amp; Service
Near Langsv~le OH . Effective
PH. 992·2478
ATTENTION LOG PRO .
1-27-2 mo .
3.
da le 02 / 18 / 83
I·J.tlc
1-12·3 mo. pd
22 . - - - - - - DUCERS : We need grade
Appl rca t •on No ls)
4,
logs and veneer, we are
23.
0653000050 POO I P002
paying top prices for quaiUty,
5.
Frnal rssuance of renewal ol
24. ------------ma1erial deli..,ered to our
·
·
·
·
·
...
ou
.
_.
••
._
......
NPO ES perm1t
6.
mill , in the following·
25.
-------~
Syracuse- Rac,ne Ae gron al
I
species : The oaks, A1h.
I.
26.
THE
Cherry, Har,d Mapl•. and
8.
21 .
54 Misc. Merchandise
Walnut. Blaney Hardwoods
3 Announcements
KOUNTRY KLUB
9.
of Ohio, Sr. Rt. 339 North28. - - - - - Bartow, Oh 6t4-678-2960.
10.
•New Grips
, .
29 .
.H."·
.. , ,\;J
•Refinishinc
St.
Rt.
124,
Pomeroy,
OH.
II .
'
1
&gt;11'
•
30.
SWEEPER and sew ing Irish TerrktrorWelchTerrier
AUTHORIZED
i.' ·~
•He-weighting
machine repair, parts, and or Lab., 3 to 6 months okl .
12.
31.
/,
supplies . Pick up and 446 -7446 .
FACTORY SERVICE
•Balancing
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
13. - - -- -·- ·- - ·32.
deli..,ery, Davi1 Vacuum ~--:--~---­
•Golf Trips
GENERAL ELECTRIC
REPAIR
Cleaner, one half mile up Wan1ed .to buy wench for
14. - ~--~-~-~ - - 33. - - - ·- --- ·For
Youn1
People
_:
&amp; HOTPQINT
Georgn Creek Rd . Call 3'60 John Deere . Call -.,
34. -- ---~- •Pre-Season Sale '
I 15. - - -~-- - .. - -448 -0294..
614-388 -968t .
'
Also
Transmission
I t6. _ _ - - - - - 35. __ ~ __ -~ _
20% &amp;30% OFF
PH . 992-5682
Gun shoot. Racine Gu ~~~-----------WE ALSO WORK ON
8EOS -IRON , BRASS , old ~
JOHN TEAFORD
Club.
Every
Sunday
sta•rtinal
I
ALL OTHER APPLIANCES
or 992-7121
furniture , gold, 1ilver
Chester, OH.
1 p.m. Factory choked
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
J-2ttfc
dollars , wood ice boxea,
'2 ·16·1 1J1G.
only.
s1one
jars, antiques. etc. ,
t
The Daily Sentinel
- - - - - - - - · lc- Complete
POMEROY
: -.
1 - - - - - - - - - - - t - - - ' - - - - - - - - i GINGER BREAD STUDIO- Write : M.D. households
111CourtSt.
Miller.
R
.t.
4,
lANDMARK
1
Art lessons . JONI Pomeroy , Oh . Or 9921
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
I
614-992-2181
CARRINGTON-698·3290. 7780 .
~·· ·
COMPlETE
GHEEN'S
----------.~
Alcoholics Anonymous. Call ~G::-o-1:-d:-,-,-:1-tv_a_r-.-.-t-e-rl_i_n_g. RADIATOR SERVIa
PAINTING INC.
446·0276,
j04·676·3647.. Jewelry, rings. old coins &amp;
Industrial, Commercial,
From he . Smallest Heater
Ed Burkett Barber
Residential. Interior and
Core to the !Jtrcest RadiaTHE Profe11ionol Electroly- currency.
, Middleport. 992 ·
Exterior.
tor.
sis Center has been offering Shop
Radiator Specials!
permanent hair removal to 3476 .
Painting
1'3"
the Pt. Pleasant area· since
NATHAN BIGGS
Sandblasting
WANTED to lease. Tobacco
1977. After Februory we quota
RUBBER BACK
CANDY STRIPPED
35
Yrs.
Experience
, will give . 15 lb .
Wate~lasting
will be offering theaa
KITCHEN PRINT
RUBBER 'BACK
service-a in Huntington and ~ic::rln04~;~~~~';&amp;.F~~r:;:
Parking LDt Stripping
DAMAGED
South Charleston only. We
Spray Painting
are very aorry to leaVe Pt. 623·6843 .
Texture
Coating's
Pleesan.1 11 we care·
12'x4'
12'xU'
Baby bed and dreiser and-or
FULLY
INSURED
~
Pomeroy,
Oh.
much
about our patient•
RUBBER BACK
chest. 304-676-6086.
BUCKSKIN
FREE
ESTIMATES
"'
Ph.
992.2t74
,
the
people
here
and
. JUTE BACK
CALL 614·949-2686 ;Z
thern to receive only ttl&amp;
2-26-Uc
eJiperienced profenional
t---------1"f--"---------J care around, ao' we are
offering our patients In this
12'x19'
12'd4.4'
area
a permanent discount
BURNISH BROWN
. AMBER~RUST
In
either
Huntington. 304- 11 Help Wanted
SALE '
. SAVE
$
629-1922, or South ChaSAVE
$500
P£R YARD 600
DISCONTINUED
rtenon , 304 -744 · 1710.
P£R YARD
Sherry
&amp; Judy ,
PERM. STOCK
Can ' t Work 9 to 6 . Sell
12'xl5.7'
AVON . Work when you
COPPER GLINT
wont . Call 446 ·3368 or
4
.G iveaway
446-2166 .
NOW THRU MARCH 5th

m

Public No.tice
COUNTY: MEIGS
PUBUC NOTICE
Th e followtng were rece1ved ·
/ prepared by TJ'le Oh1 0 En vn ·
onmen tal Prorect1on Ag ency
lOEPAI last week Effec t've
da tes of !mal act10n s and ISSuance dates of proposed acHons
are stated hnal actions may be
apPealed. •n wr111n g. Wllhm 30
days ul the date ol1h1 S not1Ce.
to The E1'1wonrTiemal Board of

R"'"ew. Am I 01 . 250 E Tqwn

St . Columb us. OH 4321 5 No·
11 ce of anv appeal shall be f1led
w1th the D1rec tor w1th1n 3 d ay s
Prop osed act10ns w 111 becomP
ftnal unles s a wntten adJI.ldlca-

t•on heanng .request •s subm•t·
ted V~Ath tn 30 days of the
1ssuance dare. or' the Dne ctor
revises / wrthdraws the pr o.
posed ac t•on Any per son may
subm•t cornment s and /or re quest a meet1ng regardmg any

EAFOR
VIRGIL B. SR.

216 E. 2nd St.

IEALIOI

Phone
H 614 )-992-3325
JUST L!ST~D - Modern 3 yr.
old, 3 bedroom home. 2~
baths, large lamily room. nice
kitl:hen, dining, with glass
doors to sundec~ Large basement with 2 car garage, utility
room &amp; one acre. $56,950.

FIVE PTS. - 1976 Schulll
1!11ier. 2 nice ~ze bedrooms,
large living modern ~!chen &amp;
nice dining. New wood garage
with concrete floor, walk~ front
' porch, utility alii over ooe. ,
am. $26,500.

Housing
Headquarters
'I

PAT

1

BOGGS

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

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

$21,500.

A.- Burfn, admiiiWntor o1 the

1
fiHa.:.s•'*"' ''""

47 W... IIdo o A...,

MIDDLEPORT - Nice con·
crete bloc~ 6 room i'~Jme. Nat·
ural gas furnace', modern
kik:hen, basement and level
lot Near swimming pool. Only

~ IRJY«JT-

p,.., 1

4•· -"'P"•~&lt;nonotc, ll•n•

· RACINE - Ne.t to store &amp;
schools. Has 2 ~r!J! bedrooms,
~ving 12x24, bath, large e.atin
kitchen, front porch and level
klt $18,500.

time being.

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

I(Oi fltWOnlo~

41Mobilt Horn .. !orflitnl

•J · "'""'""w•~• •&lt;t

ll.....,••nc•

RUTLAND - This older home
is 111121eve1 ~Is on Rt. 124. Has
3 bedrooms, I\\ baths, natural
gas, city water, chimney for
your' wood burner .. Fron! &amp;
back enclosed porches. Asking
S26,1XXl.

Senate approves tax

~ ···-··

~;r.,;t ....[:._""'
41 H""•" ' "'""" '

RACiNE ' - 1974 Schulll,
12x65 with tipout 3 bed moms.
117 bath~ inter-com, utilrty and
2 level lots out ol all floods.
want JUSt $11,900.

'

:~:~~.:! """'E~............ ~~ ~=.·~-=-~

l! MolllleH....... .... hl•

·

(:/,.,._~ifimll!"ll''·~ , ..,,.., ,

11 ............ ,...

. ... .

11 ;..;;;:;. .... •••

I Pu-St'-

11- Hc . . -• Dooclt

!! =::::.::.::.c;-;.....:..
e··.....
-·_o
~

'-

Ipal Employe Union. Their present {
contract expires March 31.
Roberts reported be wru be going
to
~k!" he'd be suJi&gt;rtsed 1f · Columbus Wednesday to look at
anyone In government envisioned a state highway surplus equipment.
Jar&amp;e movement of American He 1s Interested In air compressors,
drills etc. Counties and cities may
troop~ Into 1011thern Lebanon.
Sen. DeDnls DeConclnt, O.Anz., purchase: eq!pment before It is
saki Reagan "may run Into some auctioned Roberts noted.

..

EUREKA, Mo. (APJ - Rest- •
dents of dioxin-tainted Tim~ Beach
responded with satisfaction, but
some regrets, to the government's
$33.1 million p)an for buying out the
riverside hamlet that has become a
ghost town.
About 150residentsoUheSt. Louts
suburb met here· Tuesday, where
Environmental Protection Agency
administrator Anne M. Burford
announced the federal plan to buy
out the entire town of Times Beach
and help reloca te its 2,400
Inhabitants.
" I was one of the most obstinate
oppon~nts of .a buyout from the
beginning,;: said actlngMayor Sid
Hammer after the spontaneous
residents' meeting. "Hell, I'm 43
years old. I wish I didn't have to go
anywhere else. But if! have to start
all over a(lain I'll do it.' "
"I'm absolutely elated,'' said
Charles F . Stone, who owns two
Times Beach trailer parks he said
were valued at $3.5 million. He said
he would lake his portion of the
government settlement and go
"someplace where It's high and dry
and warm and nq dioxin."
Mrs. Burford said the EPA wUI
· pay for the Immediate relocation of
the town'sresldentsandbuslnesses,
,with the state of Missouri paying 10
percent of the cost.
.
The dioxin was mixed with waste
oil and sprayed on the town's
unpaved roads and other towns to
control dust a decade ago. The
chemical, a byproduci of herbicide ·
production, causes kidney, spleen
arid liver · ailments In laboratory
animals. Its effect 011 humans Is

I

Business services

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wtite Dailly
Classified Dept

•

Debt-ridden fanner still in jail
LONDON, Ohio (AP) - Doug
Dailey, the debt-ridden farmer who
unsuccessfully fought to keep his 191
acres from being sold at shertff's
auction last month, remains In jail
while his lawyer and a lender
negotiate.

The Daily Sentinel

Fadley said the fire department
has fewer supervisors than the
pollee department.
."If we lose our fire protection
(entirely), I would advise everybody in the city to lX!verycareful,".he
said.
Aslckout could temporarily close
Port Columbus International Airport, said airport superintendent
Daniel Ginty.
He said federal regula tlons require an armed officer at the
airport's single security checkpoint. The airport has ~ public
safety officers, covered by the
pollee contract, to protect the
airport.
Thel'€ are nine firefighters at the
faclllty's fire station, and that must
be malnlained for the ·airport to
operate, he said.

The

Ohio

Roger Hysell

GARAGE

.

1

I

~·

!-·-----$58

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

$75

-·· $98

Sl700

$210

HUNDIED$

SAMPLES fO 040051! FROM

. RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-2211

RUTLAND, OH.

KAYS
BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd

MIDDLEPORT~ OH.

992-272:1

· me.

ANY PERSON who h..
anything to give away end
doea not offer or attempt tO
off.,. any other th'ng for uta
may place an ad In thla .
column. There will be no
cha•·ge to the adveni~er .

BuHd income for your ''
future . Aloe Vera has
openings for aggreaaive ·
leaders in thia area. No large
inveatment. unlimited
earning .potential. C•ll
814-367 -7682 weekdays
2-4PM . '
' .,

�february

Wedlle$Ciay,

~~~ag~e~1~4~;The~~~~~nt~ine~I-:=-~~:-~:----::-----~~::::::::::::::~:::::Oh::io:::::::1----~----~--------------~=t:r~~~~~~1~98~3 ,
11

They'll Do It Every Time

Help Wanted

42 Mobile Homea

48

, for Rent

Patient Services Aaaletant

KIT 'N' CARLYLETM

Equipment

r-..-------...--------,;__;_,

I

for Rent

to msnage Oallia County
family plonnlng offlco . Mull
hove H.S. cliplomo Of oqui·
valency, additional educe ·
tion preferred ; bo subobiilty
to work accurately Wi th
figur es ; be dependab l e;
highly organized; willing to
.w t ake responaibility; and
en 'ergetic

and

1

Jelf-

mo t i lla l ed . Must have
reliablfll transportation and

be willing to traveL Evening
aOd S1turday hours are to be
e•pected . Send resume,
in cluding two reference• to
Planned Parenthood of
South&amp;ast Ohio, 8 North

TELEPHONE LIAISON
interesting opportunity ten
someone who has per80na ble manner , likes dealing
with the public and needs
short hours. Late aft•noon
and earlY evenings . Pleasant
working conditions . Salary
plus bonus. An Equal
Opportunity Employer. Call
Mr. Tyler at 446-4367.
GBC

INFLATION GOT YOU IN A
PINCH? Ease the squeezeoall ·Avon. Call 614 -B43 2982. 614 · 388 - 9046 . or
' 614-992 -3690.

Part time baby sitter needed
in my home in Pomeroytor2
girls . 614-992 ·7694.
The West Virginia Department of Heahh is teeking a
full-time Hospital Administrator for its Fairmont
Emergency Hospital. located jn Feiri'T'!ont , Wast
Virg~nia . Requirements:
Baccalaureate degree plus
two yean of eM.perience in
hoapital or health services ,
or business administration .
This 44 -bed facility provides
long-term skilled nursing
services and outpatient
clinic services . Applicants
should submit resumes and
applications to : L. Clark
Hansbarger. M. D.. Director
of Health, 1 BOO Washington
Street, East , Charleston ,
West"Virginia, 253 06. by
December 1 6 . Salary negotiable . Equal Opportunity
Employer·AA Plan-M-f·H
LOOKING for 1 psrt time.job
thet has good pay. life
insurance, retirement plan,
that willteachyou evaluable
job skill, plus help with a
co liege or Vo:Ta~ educa ·
tion? There's only one
around! High tchool seniors
or graduates, .you mey even
qualify for a cash bonus .
Contact the West Virginia
Army Netional Guard . For
more information call
Sergeant Sergeant Lutton at
304-675-3960 or coli toll
free 1-800-842-3619 . .

Cameo Lingerl Peny Plan no
deliveries n9 quotas. Car
and phone neceasary, free
kit available, now boo~i~g
parti ... Cilll between 9AM
and 12PM any days eJC:cept
Wed. 304·882-2954.
EXPERIENCED, permanent
legal secretary wanted,
typing &amp;. shorthand required . Send resume to BoJC:
P22. The Point . Pleasant
Regiator. 200 Main St. Pt.
Pleeaant. WV 25660 .
12'

Own your own Jean
Sportswear, lnfant-Pretee"n
or Ladies apparel atore .
Oftering nationally known
brands auch a1 Jordache,
Chic. Lee, Levi, Vanderbilt,
Wrangler over 200 other
bran do . $7,900 to $16,900
includes b.tginnlng inventory . airfare for one 10
Fashion Center, training,
fiJC:tuf"aa, gr_a nd opening
promotions. Call Mr. Dickoon (501} 882-5164 or
(601} 268-1381 .
22 Money to .Loan

Business 8t Second Mongage loans. Equity ResourSes. in Ohio
1 - 800-992-2351. out of
Ohio 1-513-268·0112 .
HOME LOANS 12% fixed
rate. Leeder Mortgage,
1-614-592-3061.
23

Professional
Services

C&amp; L Bookkeeping
TaJC: Returns &amp; bookkeeping
for Individuals &amp; businesses.

Short forma 85 .00
Long forms $20 .00 and up
Carol Neal
446-3862
PIANO TUNING Ill REPAIR
Call Bill , Ward for appoint·
ment. Ward's ~·yboard ,
446-4372.

.... . ·- ... ,
W •'

·-

&gt; .~

H

~~

31 Homes for Sale

Excellent condition &amp;
location-·al\ ready to
immediate occupancy -Interest rates are down and
probably won't be lower.
Home and or rental
Broadway-Middleport .

Gellla County .
TREE TRIM-MING Ill REMO·
VAL. CALL 614·949-2129
OR 614-992-8040.

Coli 992-3267 or876 -2616
evenings.

Have vacancy in boarding
homo lor elderly . 614-992·
6022 .

$100 down reserves con dominium. Deposit is 100%
refundable. Choose now.
See John Ecker. Aiveraide
Terrace. CoN 446· 1126.

1·3

Insurance

S'ANOY AND BEAVER
lrisurance Co . has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
fOr almost a century . Farm,
home and personal property
coVeragea are available to
rrieet Individual needs .
Coinact Neal Ins . Agency.
Phone 446-1694.

"9"""
15

Schools
Instruction

the ultimate in self
defence all private le ..ons,
Men, women , &amp; children .
lnitruction thru bleck belt .
Also available· Karate
uniforms puching and
kicking bags. and protective
equipment . Jerry Lowery 8t
AIIOCiltBI Karate Studio ,\
143 Burlington Rd .. Jock·
' oon. Oh . Coli. 614-286·
3074 or 61 4-384· 51 eo.

3 bedroom houoo ior solo.
New carpeting throughout .
located on Bash an Rd. and
sits on 3 acres of land.
Excellent tarm1 to right
party. MAKE AN OFFER. 30
year financing available.
Contact Bank One of Pome ·
roy. 614-992·2133.

1 971 Star · 12x60, 2
bd.room·wiih stove, refrig.,
a . c. , LP gas, porch and
awning . Vary good condition. Set up on rented lot .
$6,600 . Coli 814 -9493023.
1974 Freedom, 12x66.
&amp;61500 . Appointment only.
Coli 614-742-2065. .

6 71

~~ ~f ~ 0 Bl ~ E 1;1 OME.
ONLY ONE Now 12ft. wide,
2 bedroom .• all electric,
mobile home. only $7.996,
. bank financing available. All
State Modular Homeo. half
way between Pt. Pleaunt &amp;
Huntington on ST.RT. 2.
304-676-2711 .
8x30 Trailer. $1300 .00.
'304· 675·4B93 .

3 rm . and 4 rm . unfurnished
apartments. Utilities paid.
no pets , no children . Call
446-3437.

For rent or sale store
building with upstairt apt.
and 2 rental trailers. Comer
of 1!1. 180 a. Buleviila Rd.
Calf 446-3888 or 446·
4491 .
35 Lats

&amp; Acreage

1 · 16 Acre lots and-or house.
Seller will landscape .
446-1798.

Farm house for rent $100
mo. piusdep . Call614-246 ·
9315 .

45

2 bedroom home in the 1--~-------­
Pomeroy area . Nice yard . 2 bedroom house near
89,600 . Phono 614-992· Longovllle, Oh. Refarencao
1!846.
required. Call 614 -742 ·
21541 .
SALE or rent: 2 bedroom
house, .kitcher\, living room. Two bedroom unfurniahed,
bath utility room *176 .00 carpeted, adults preferred .
month, col 304-676-4369 . 8 1 0 0 de p o 1 it . No a i
meroy- Mason .bridge ,
8'12 PERCENT ouumoble Clifton. 304-773-5962 or
loan. 2 yaor old bHovel, 773-15776.
Rolling Acres. large lot .
many ek tras, 304·876 6758 .

Furnished Rooms

SWAIN
AUCTION Ill FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. King
coal &amp; wood heater• with
tan 8469, oat box .opring a.
sofa-loveooat
a. choir
8199,
mattress
tirm coal&amp;
e120.
love
seats•1oo.
870, new
wood · heaters a a low aa
t399 with blower•. used
coal 8r. wood heaters. new
dinat seta $76 &amp; up, refriger.tors. ranges, bunk bedo
complete 8179 , bunkies
mat)rosses 840 . cheats,
dressers. TV's:' Call 4463159.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
· washers. dryers, r..rigera·
tors, rengea. Skaggs Ap·
pliances. Upper River Rd .•
beside Stone Crest Motel .
446·7398 .

r~~~======:l~"~'='"~' :' ":'=-~=-·~·=""="=-"~":':'":"':'~
54 Misc. Merchandise

1----,.-------Magnavox Color T .V
sa· 1e. good cond. p1ays
Dark wood cabnet.
446·.4361 .

For sale lump c~utl a. firewood. Zinn Coal Co .. Inc .
Call 446· 1408 .
New 1983 White sewing
machine tree arm model
with built -in stretch stlch .
zig z:ag patterns , makes
button holes. monograms,
much more . We are over·
stocked with this model. we
must decrease' our inven·
tory . Factorease y 20 yr.
guarantee . Reg. price over
$300. your coot .only 896.
Coli 614-386-8918 out of
town call collect. Fre•
delivery to your home.

62 Wanted to

1·---------w·ante d

goo d use d couc h .
a,.dalsocabinettypestento.
304-876-5060 .

Carpal for Mlo . Coil 81 4 ·
246-9687.

*

Firewood delivered 80 . a
cord . Coal delivered 845.
ton . Call Tom Hoskina
614-949-2160 or 614·
742· 2834.

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNEL·
Boarding oil breedo . AKC
Reg . Oobermans pups afd
Doberman Stud Service .
Coli 446· 7796 . ,
DRAGONWYNO CATTERY
· K'ENNEL ; AKC Chow
puppieo. CFA Himalayan,
Persian and Siamen lcit tano . Call 446 -3844 after
4PM .
4 month old mole Reg .
Gorman Shepherd . Call
614 · 367 · 77·12 or 446·
4472.
PHEASANTS.
3972.

304-B96 ·

-lcRegistered Quarter Horse .
Ruth Reeves . Also grade .
Saddles, bridles, winter
horse blankets . ,W estern
boola. 1114 · 6~8-3290.

PIGS. $36 . each. lawrence
Rice . 10 Milo Creak Rd . •
Loon. WV. ·
REGISTEREO
bull (polled),
3308 .
64

Hay

&amp;

Grain

M ixod hoy. Sl . 60 bolo.
614-379-2617.

Conditioned hay, ear
Call 614-949-2870.
Hay for Mlo. 614-992-56
after 6 p.m .

1976 Buick Electra 2 dr ..
PS, Pl. AC. AM · FM storo
•1 .850 or trade for cattle,
farm equipment of equal
value . Cali 446-4637.
By owner 1982 Dodge
Mirada ex. cond . 16,000
mil ea. 31 B.
cruise.
many extras. e7 .932. will
oocrifice. Cell 446 -0047 .

v.a.

By owner 1973 Dodge
Polara 4 dr., auto. trans. PS.
PB. 360 V-8. good co,no .• l
$600 firm. Call 675· 6416 .

1978 Ford Mustang, V-6. 4
opd .. AC , PB, PS, oxc . cond .
Cell 614 - 26~·6736 .

1975 Plymouth Valiant 6
slant engine. 3 spd : trans.
very good cond ., S1,400 .
Call 448-2297.- ·
1969 Pontiac LaMans
custom S convertible. runs
good. body needs work,
8600. Coli 814-266-6620.
1978 Chevy Molibu llation·
wagon. $3,996 . Coil 814·
266-1786.·
1980 Toyota Celice . Coil
after 5 . 875-7438.
77 Comaro 360 4 opd ..
82,600. Ceil 446-4602 .
For ule or trade 1978
Plymouth Voleire 6 cyl ..
auto ., PS.. Pl. new paint .
Call 614-379·2726.
Fpr sale or trade 1978
Plymouth Fury 318 auto ..
PS, PB . Coli 614 -379·
2726.

·!

AT THe

lJNIVER,iT Y. ..

Musical
Instruments

Opi080
1975 Dodge Dart Swingor
ONE Genie Magic Quartz good cond .. t976 . Call
orgon, 1650. Phono 304-· 614-266-6058 .
675-3238 .
---~~~~-5$ For Sale or Trade

Boats end

ROR"\ LOSF:fl.

M'l 14WR~SkJI,I q: ALL605H u. 1'5
IHAT THE: ?rv[;'E;WT ~ CDN?I-:&gt;Ts

Auto Repair

Bye~y ond Folts Automatic
Tnnsmi11ion Repair. NOW
OPEN . Corner of Kemper
Hollow a. Kerr Bethel Rd.
Coli 446-6639 .

"'1 f"MViiFur~ro1

WIIILH ,UH ... FO$JnOIJ
DID?!\~

PL/&gt;8 '?

FOOTBALL PLA'if;R"7

AND COED'7 WITII

Home
·Improvements

... f\N' THIS FELL
OUT OF IT! ... IJ(JT
I DON'T KNOW
l'itii\T IT MEIIIIG.'

PAINTING · interior end
exterior. plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling . 20 yro.
oxp. Coli 614-388-91152'.

YES? ~ Oti, THIS15
HONEYtwl( 511)(011,
ANNIE, MY 5UPEI1ItffENDENT'5 l'iiFE !
SHE'LL BE COOHINI'.i

FO~

US!

r--=c~

·.

HOWARD L. WRITESEL
ROOFING COMPANY .
Guttera-OoWnapouta· New·
Repair - Gutter Pointing Storm Dooro a. Wlndowo .
Free Estimates .· Phone
614 · 949 - 2263 or 614·
992-2791 .

.

Mobilo Homo Roof Prob·
lemo7 Would you like to and
roof leeks. roof rumble. roof
coating. ceiling condenaa·
tion apots and uve 30 to 40
percent on your heating bll7
Call 992-7034 ond uk
about our New Roof

.

Produ~t .

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola. Ouazar, and
house colla. Call 676-2398
0&lt; 446-2464 .

.'.

·'

F &amp; ,K TrH Trimr:g.jng. stump
remove! . Cell 875 · 1 3~1 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rienced roofing. including
hot tar appHcation , cerpen·
tar. electrician. maaon. Call
304 -675-2088 or 675·
4660.

·'

( ;A~OLI !'\E ALL EY

Pablo! WE'll ta
throuqh
the dump!

'

Don't worry! I know
s~.~t, sen orB,
rt is this dump like a book ·have you ever
.a bad
read a boo~t,?
road,
senora!

Turn here,
a 6hortcut

Water Wells . Commercial
and Dom8stic . Test holes .
Punips Sales and Service .
304-896-3802 .

, Get your kerpet in ship
shape. Weter removal, FREE
ESTIMATES. FU~NITURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN
STEAMER 614-446-2107.
STARKS Tree Trimming Ill
Removal. Mini ·_backhoo
• 15. hour , inaured, free
eotimatoo. 304-576-2010 .

I WA5 ~~~NT."
THERE /S SOME

E a. R Tree Service, fully
in sure d . free eui mates .
Home phone 614 -388·
8860. call otter 5.

i. ':

IF ANY ONE OF THEM GET6

I

SORT Of

BEEN

COMPETITION
GOING ON

BRINGING

SKETCHES

AROUND HERE/

TO

THAT'LL MEAN A VACANCY
BETTER GET BUSY.-..

BE PREPARED/

THE

B055,M155
WINKLE.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

m

CARTER' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 448·38BB or 446 · ,
4477 .
'
Electrical

FEED A COLD AN'
STARVE A FEVER,
I ALWAVS SAY

service . Authorized Singer
Sale• &amp; Seryice Sh,a rpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy. 992-2284 . .

John Deere A Oliver 70,
excelle"t condition . Roger HARTS Uood Con , New
Toytor, 304·896-3471.
Haven Weat Virginia. Over
20 lea• expenalve cars in
THIB woaks term equipment otock.
opaclals. 19114 NAA Ford
tre~tor. excellent rubber. 1878 MERCURY Ztiyphor
engtno ovolhaulad. f2 .000. wagon. ••cellent con-ition,
~......,.-, . 1977 U11d Alllo Chillmoro low mileage . 1 oWner ,
40 HP dloool, live PTO, PS. f3426.00. phone 304· 875dlfforentlol lock, 1 owner, 151104.
e~c .ellent ·condition ,
fi.IOO.OO. Ailia Chalmers 88 VW Bootie AM-FM
19.0 xT 1QO HP. dlelll, cab, c..Mttl Pioneer outfit. rune
new rubber, very good goOd, - d body. t8150. Coli
condition. f7,1100.00. Now 304-871-3133.
model 110·60 Allh
Chalmoro. 10 HP, dleoel, 11181 VW Aabblt.,304·8715·
lnd.;.ncllnt PTO, dllforen. 11113.
.
.
.
del IDGit, Pl. '111.1x21 _,
tl,.l, eplnout rllflo, opeolal 1t72 Mercury' Morqula.
110,900. Kaefaro larvltie 71:000 mllu. excellent
Center, St. At. 87, Leon, condition, 4 now llroo.
304·B91-3874.
fiOO. 304-882·2834.

wv.

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE cell City Furniture
3o4-876 -26oa .
I
85

General !'fauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Cello814· 367· ;'l
7411 Of 814-367-Q591 . •- .~

Need IOmethlng hauled
eway or something moVed?
We'll do it. Coil448-3159 or
614-266·1!"67 after 6.
.,

.

JIMS WATER SERVICE'. ' :
Coli Jim Lanier. 304-876· ~ •
7397.
'
,/
87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
,1113 Soc Avo., Gallijlolil.
448 · 783~ "'4411·1833.

~"'"~

tribe

SEWI~G Machine repairs ,

1970 Plymouth. runs goOd,
body good, muat aell.
614·986·3859 otter 6 p.m ..

BRIDGE

..

Marcum Roofing a. Spout·
ing. 30 yearuexperience,
apecializing In built up roof.
Call614-388-9867 .

"

1974 ,Monte Carlo $300,
and 1974 Camera· mobile
homo, 8 4 700. 258-1497.

IPRYSATj
t) r

.A

&amp; Refrigeration

kiln dried walnut.
red oak. sassafras. cherry.
maple . Bidwell Country
Furniture, Bidwell, Ohio.

KX]

Handwriting analysis

STUCCO PLASTERING·
textured ·ceilings comm8r·
ciaf and residential ,. free
eotin&gt;oteo. Coli 61 4-21511·
1182.
.

84

BLACE

I K .J
Answer: A"( XXI }{ XXI XX]":

a.

For ule or trade 1968
Camoro . Cell 614-379·
2726.

C&lt;IUI_,___,,_ ...
~--

'RAMMEr .

Motorcycle•

Soaro12 fl. olum. boat with
trailer. 3 spd . trolling
battery, want 1460. Call
448-28415 .

82
57

FEBIT ~

@ Pick The .Pros
(I) Carol Burnen
(I) 0 CD) Ql il}l News
News/Sports/Weather
II) (fl} 3-2· 1, Contact
® Eyewitness News
Wonder Woman
ODDLY Ei'JOLIGH, EVEN
6:30 8 &lt;ll CD NBC News
A ·FEMA LE CR:OOt&lt;
CD MOVIE: 'Fast and
Furious' .
WOULD !JE THI$.
(!) Fiahin' Hole
CIJ Bob Newhart Show
Now arrange the circled l etter~ to
(]) Cll lill ABC News
form the surprise ansWer, as sug·
0 II)® CBS News
gested by the above cartoon.
II) Dr. Who
'
liD Over Easy
7:00 8 (lJ P.M. Magazine
(!) ESPN SportsCentar
(Answers tomorrow)
CIJ Gomer Pyle .
Cil Entertainment Tonight
Yest erd~y· sl Jumbles: SHEE P JU LE P . CRAYON _NIPPLE
aJ @I Charlie's Angels
.
Answer What the boxe r turn ed jokeSmit h was not!;ld
0 CD) Tic Tee Dough
for-HIS PUNCH LINES
II) (fl}
MacNaii-Lahrar
Report
Jumble Book No.' 19, c ontaining 110 puzzles, is available tor $1 .95 postpaid
from Jumble, e/o this newspaper, 8011 34, Norwood, N.J. ()7648. Include y~r
® ~awitness News
neme, address , zip code and make checks payl!lble to Newspaperboolr.s.
Q!l W People's Court
7:30 8 (lJ Lie Detector
Cil HBO Magazine
@
NCAA
Basketball:
Virginia at Clemson
(I) And_y Griffith
/]) 0 CD) Family Feud
II) Business ~eport
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
··
@I You Askad For It
I]]) Were You There7 'The
Black West.' A cowboy, rodeo star and frontierswoman sha re the1r experiusing a spray can .
ence,s of being black in the
South felt th at most openwild west. [Closed Caping bids in the North hand
tiOned]
NORTH
2·23-83
w ould give him a good pia{
(I)
(]}!
Entertainment
lor
four hearts, so he bid i .
•
J
10
52
Tonla!'t
Despite the overcall ol one
8:00 .8 W aJ Real People 'l'o·
t A Q 10 8 4
spade by East , the, opening
night's show features the
'+KJ6
l ead was t he nine of
Stuntmen' s Rodeo. a Best
,
d
iamonds Properly readmg
. Chest 1n the West contest
WEST
EAST
that card for a singleton,
and a look at a woman wh o
+94 3
+AQ 876
· declarer rose with - the ace.
deli\lers dead flowers (6 0
.K64
•2
Now . how to proceed?
min J
t9
tK63
(jJ MOVIE ; 'Chane! SoliObviously, if the hearts
+Q l09842
.A 753
taire'
are two-tw o, South can play
SOUTH
Cil MOVIE: 'The Lady In
the heart ace, trump a club
+K
Red'
and lead the heart queen .
•QJ109!753
CD I Spy
The defense will take a
• J 7 52
ill NCAA Basketball:
hea rt , a spa de and a
+--- .
Arkansas at Texas
diamond . But W est has t hree
Cil Cll lill AU-Star Family
hear ts to the king. Now after
Vulnerable: East -West
Feud ·
winnin g the heart king, West
Dealer: North
0 /]) @) 25th Annual
will play a spad e to
West
North East
So uth
Grari1mv Awards John
partner's ace_ The king of
It
1+
4• .
Denver hosts this year's
dia monds and a diamond
Pass
Pass
Pass
show honoring achieveruff will set the contract.
ments in the music indusDeclarer dec ided there
~ - (3 hrs .) ·
was nothing to lose by trying
Opening
lead:
f9
(JJ Horror of it All The rich
to disrupt communicatoons.
film tradition that brought
At trick two he l ed the club
fear to so many millions of
kin g from dummy.. This was ·'
.. r;
mov1egoers IS eMammed.
covered by the ace from
..,
(60 min.)
East. South trumped. and led
il]) Blues and Gone
'
By Oswald Jacoby
a hear t to dummy How he
.,.
Ell MOVIE: ' Coogan's Bluff'
and James Jacoby
led the club jack. East fol9:00 8 (lJ Cil Facts of Lifo Conlow ed and the king of spades
. ;
clusion. Blair tries to conWhen you don 'l like the
was discarded. West . won
-. ·''
vince her half sister and Jp
.r
handwriting you see on the with the queen, but no longer
not to become nuns.
wall, you try to change it. If had any way to put his part·
[Closed-Captioned]
'"
your opponents won 't let you ner on l ead before trumps
ffi 700 Club
use a paint brush, they may were drawn.
Cil Clllill Fall Guy
•' •'
(NEWSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
not be able to stop .you from
II) Soundstage 'Doo Wopl
Ooo Wopl' The roots of
rock and roll are high lighted in performances of
five of the top groups of the f.,--~-----,----~------..- ·· ,&lt;
50s. (60 min .}
(jJ) Fundi: The Ella Baker
Story This program profjles the little-known civil
by THOMAS JOSEPH
rights activist, founder of
the Young Negro CooperaACROSS
DOWN
tive league and first ExecuI
"South
·
I
Uhlan's
tive Director of the SCLC.
Pacific" role
weapon
(60 min.)
' ·
9:30 8 CIJ (1) Family Ties Alex
5 City on
2 With all
tries to be a big brother to a
the Nile
respect
Vietnamese boy.
3 N .Z.
Cil MOVIE: ' Death Wish II' 10 Italian poet
11 Banal
4 Fra gr ant
@
NCAA
Basketball:
Purdue at Illinois
12 - rubber .
flower
10:00 8 (jJ Cil Quincy Conclu'13 Tenth part
5 - boy!
2"
sion . Quincy unearths a
14 Hole in one
6 Title in Delhi
Yesterday 's Answer
new c l ue in the case of a
wife who murdered he r
15 Brown kiwi
7 Speaking of ' 20 Watchful
29 Young pig · ·:·
husband . (60 min.)
.
17
Common
8
Nonbeliever 23 Tea servi ce 30 Fatigue
~ '·
Cil MOVIE: ' Cannery Row'
contraction
9 Goad
piece
32 " Spanish -- "
CIJ TBS Evening News
(]) Q!l il}l Dynasty Blake
18 Kept wearing 10 Phone ··face' ' 24 Football pass
11966 song
struggles against Alexis
20 Seedcoatmg 16 United
25 Declare
35 Slower(mU&amp;·J
and Dan Cassidy flies to
21 Gaelic
19 Walk
26 Bee secr eti on 37 Yoko S mgapore to identify the
22 - majesty
oil rig survivor. (60 min . ~
~i Fire Season ThiS docu·
23 Manitoba
mentary on the California
Indian
Conservation Corps fol 24
Fearing that
·lows a group of young recruits . (90 min .}
25 Field
{j]) Newswatch
26 Distort
fl) INN News
27
Tran~mit
10:30
Star Til)' a
28
Swear
by
@ .Tony Brown's Journal
Ell In Search of.. ..
31 '- and Fox
11 :00 8 (lJ Newscenter
32 English
Cil MOVIE: 'H .O.T.S.'
river
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OBVIOUS.- ALFRED NORTII WHITEHEAD
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·m

-~----"'--~-Motors for S.ale

81

(lJ Nawsc•ntar

CD Tic Toe Dough

m

~NTIRa'{ ~

19711 Ford wogon. A. C. p.o.,
p.b .. tilt Whe81. p. wlndowa,
cruioe. HOO . Cei1614· 742·
2264
before 4 .p.m.
,

SIX room houoo. 'full bose·
ment, garage, nice location.
t228 month, 304 -676·
1090.

75

77

Nice 2 bedroom home, 1112
yMrs old. mMts ell FHA &amp;.
HUD requirementa~ l•rge
wooded lot, 60x634. Ciooo
to IChools "a nd .torea. loan
..oumoble. 304-876· 7670.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

.1967 Chevy % ton truck.
Cab and ch..lio only. 327 '
engine. 4 speed tr•n•. can :
614· 986-4363 .

74 Honda motorcycle. 3150
CC, runs good. eJC:c. cOnd ..
1800 firm. Cali 446·3027 :

-

8

8:QO

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these tour Jumbfes,
one lenar to each square, to form
four ordinary wordS.

EVENING

Dodge pickup 19711, D1 OO,c
LWB, V. ton. AT. PS , Pl.
Coil 614-258-86511.

74

L~mber:

KOUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy, Large lots . Call
992-7479 .

Trucks for Sale

Sentinei-Page--1 !1.

ftftl}~ fii)1} ~THAt SCIWIIILEQ WORD GAME

2t Z3/83

•'

Siaeping room $126, utili· 1 -----~---­
ties pd. single male. share Kenmore washer in A · 1
bath . 9192ndAve .. Gailipo· cond .. $110 . Whirlpool
lis. Call 446 - 4416 after dryer real nice , t90 . Coli
7PM.
446-8181 .
46 Space for Rant

72

Daily

~ ~ ~~ "

WEDNESLJAY .

C,\PT,\1\ EASY

51 Household Goods

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

ONE bedroom apartment.
efficiency apartment, 3301
Jackson Ave, cell 304·6753000.

88 CHEV.Y 2 dOOr Badon. ,
hoo rebuilt motor. body in
good ohope, ooking UOO . •
304-1178-2802.

Merphwndlea

ONE bedroom apartments JVC tur'\ table . Sony
for the elderly . All utilities cauette. d1acoustic speak·
paid. Tenants pay 30 per- ers. Call 304-675· 1513.
cent of their adjusted
income in this HUD aubsid · ONE Paevy CS · 400 AMP
ized ·IJp&amp;rtment· building . $300 .00 304-875-1393.
Twin Rivers Tower, phone
304 876 6879
"
" housing.' Equal I -54 Mo'sc. Merchandt' se
opportunity

6 rm . house a. bath . Inquire
at 918 2nd . Ave .. Gallipolis,
Oh.

Television
VieWing

----- _:___-;_

~~- _:_~_

Autoa for Sale

The

Ohio

llln; Tl :.\C\'
--~

FOR-O pickup. Ranger.
304-675-3064.

56

Furnished Apt. 3 rooms and
bath. utilittes paid. 3% miles
south Middleport R-7. Call
367-0811 . Jo~n Sheets.

41

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

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

52 ·CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

Apt. for rent. Half double-2
bd.room Apt. Adults .pre·
!erred . No peto. 614-992·
2749.

ONE bedroom unfurnished,
$176. month, all utilities
paid, eJC:cept electric,
304·675-1371 or 675 ·
3812 .

Houses for Rent

f'Ut~.

UNFURNISHED apartment
for rent, 1 bedroo_'l' .
S 180.00 Call Automotrve
Supply, 8 · 6. 304-675·
2218. 676-6753.

Nearly now 1 BR Apt. with
refrlg . &amp;. stove ; $169 per
mo. Water included. $50
dep. No psts. Phono 446·
3617 .

buildingo. Price $12,500 .
Call 614-388-9783.

1-"-----------

· ~F'Ai~

Building materials
block , brick. seV~ter pipes.
windows, lintels , etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
0 . Coll614-245-6121.

3 bdr . apt. $160 mo . pluo
$75· dep. Coil 614-245 ·
9316 .

New Haven 2 bdr. furnished
apt., Utilities pd., $260 per
mo .. $100 dep. Call 614448 -7526.

8 acres of land rural water
and well. septi:, barn and 2

toR AseN~

Ou"e en size Early American
style hide-e - bad couch , 3
mo. old . 8250. Call 4467766 .

Furnished 3 rms . with
private bath, 1st. floor. 845
2nd. Ave., Gallipolis. Call
446-2216.

26 acres mostly level,
drastically reduced. Was

Business
Buildings

BeeN Nl:ll"el&gt;

For Lease

APARTMENTS . mobile
homtts. houses . Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614-4468221 ..

For rent unfurnished apt .. 4
rooms and bath. Inquire at
87 Vine St .. Gallipolis.

6 rm . fum. apt .. no kids. no
pets . $176 mo. water 8t
sewer furnished. Call
446·1607.

34

~IIHe.~&amp;

Aportm'anh . 304 - 675 ·
5648.

Nicley fu mished mob. home
in city. Adults only . Call
446-.0338 .

33 Farms for Sale

207 acre firm . Langsville.
Mineral rights induded. No
house. $12.000 down. Will
corry root. 614·388 ·9346 .

'Krl"'feKS

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair. rocker, o«o·
man. 3 tables, (extra heavy
by Frontier), 8886 , Sofa. Firewood. oplit, 'u o :oo a
chair end loveseet, $276. trucklood. f36 .00 dellSof.as and chai~s priced from vera~ . Ph. (814) 992-2770
$285 . to· $896. Tablao, $46 or (304} 882·2194.
and up to S1Z6 . Hide·•·
beds . 8440 .. e'nd up to "luJC:aire neturalgasfurnace.
8525 ., Recliners. $176. to Complete. EJC:ceUent condi 8350., Lompa ·from $28. to tion. Cail814-992-7810 .
$76 . 5 pc . dinettes from
S99 ., to $436 . 7 pc ., 8189. Onie y, K•r•t Solitaire
and up. Wood table wtth IIJC: diamond pendant 388 chairo $425 . to $745 . Deok 8801.
8110 up to 8225. Hutcheo. 1 ~:-:---------:-­
$660. and up, maple or pine Swimming Pool for sale .
finish. Bunk bed complete Abovo ground typo. 18x33
with mattresses, $260. and ft . Complete. Like new. Call
up to 8396 . Baby bedo . 614-992·6949.
$110 . Mattreues ·or box
springs, full or twin. $58.. TROYBILT ROTOTILLERS ·
firm, 868 : and $78 . Queen Dilcounu. Free hiller
sets, $196 . 4 dr . chests . included . lmmediat• ship·
$42 . 6 dr . cheots. 854 . Bod mont . Porto. englneo.
frames, $20 .and 826 .. 10 703-942-3871 Hickory Hill
gun · Gun cebinets. 8350.. Nuroory, Rt. 1 Box 390 A.
dlnene chairs f20. end 825 . Fishenviile. VA 22 9 39 .
Gas or electric ranges, $325 Trade-ins accepted.
up to 8376 . Baby mo treuea . $26 a. 836. bod Colonial Ceromics. 2919
frames 820. 825 , a. 830, Jackson Ave. Pt. Pl. Evening
king frame $50 . Good clall81 and daily workshop.
selection of bedroom surtes. Duncan Africana • Mayco
cedar cheata, rockers. metal Paints. Greenware Bisque.
cabinets. swivel rockefs.
Ea1ter greenware a. bisque.
Uad Furniture -- bookcase. bowls &amp; pit~hers . Hours :
rangeS. chairs. end tables, Mon .- Fri . SAM to 4PM.
washers. dryers, refrigera- evenings Mon . &amp; Wed . 6
tors and TV's. 3 miles out p.m.-9 p .m . Sat . 9-12 .
Bulaville Rd. Open Sam to Regiatertorfreedoorpri•es.
6pm, Mon . lhru Fri .. 9em to 304·676-321 0 .
6pm . .Sat .
446·0322
Oven and range. 304 -675·
4048 .
Used electric dryers 1 white
Whi~pool. 1 Horveotgold • 2·
coppertone. 1 •white GE, 55 Building Supplies
Norge . All guaranteed 30
deyo. Coil 614-266; 1207.

3 rm. Unfurnished apt. on
ground floor. At122 Fourth
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 446 ·
2876 .

T R I · S T A T E M 0 B I L E 1=;4;2;:::;;=:;:::::;H;::=::::::=
HOMES . USED · ' CARS.
Mobile ames
TRUCKS. GALliPOLIS.
for Rent
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446-7572.
12x60 2 bdr. furniJhed, gAs
CLEAN USED MOBILE a water pd . 8286 ino .•
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· 1100 dep . Call 448-8583 .
Good mochlnic doslreo any )TY MOBILE HOME SALES.
kind of mochonicol ·work. 4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS. 2 bedroom mobile home .
A . . oonobll prlcoo. Coli RT 31. PHONE 448· 7274.
1 Oxl50. Naor Aocino. Coli
441-8212 elk for John.
1114·992•118118. :
Mobile 110- a. loto tor oola.
JoGit'o LOGkemit'h ••rvlce. 1181 Iuddy mobile home TWO mobMo homoo fOr rent
c om'merciai·Domutic· 14x10. 2 bdr.lllll hilt. ou•l on At. 2 about" S minute•
Au-otive. Coli 304-882· wlitor. 111 up with. 2 or 4 from town. Call after &amp; ~
207t:
lou, Coli 448·1240.
304-8715-6277.

I

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished apt. 1 bdr .. 920
4th Ave. Gallipolis . Adults.
water &amp; electric pd, $200
mo . Call 446-4416 after
7PM .

LEMLEY'S DRILLING Water
Wallo, Shallow gao ond core
drilling. Myoro ond Gould
pumps. Sale• end Service.
Gao ond ol wolloorvlce . Coil
614-388·8643 .

I

'
2 bdr . unfurnished apt .
ovarlool&lt;ing city park. $176
par mo. Cell 446-1819 .

1974 Liberty mobile home.
14JC:70. 2 rooms buitt on. On
19 acr-es of ground. With
Tuppers Plains water .
Outside cellar",
out
buildings. Ten minutet
Ravenswood bridge. Letart
on CR 28 . Call 247-3676 .

18 Wante!:l to Do

General Hauling and Trash
remove! Service . Reliable
-.,d dopondoblo. Cell 446·
3159 otter 6PM 266·1967 .

2 bedrCfom, ell electric
mobile home, FOR RENT
WITH OPTION TO BUY .
Paym•nts 8186 per rno .
304-676-2711 .

2 bdr . unfurnished apt . in
Crown City . Cell 614-266·
3520 .

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

~arate

49

1 974 Kirkwood Mobile
Home. Good cond. Phone
446 -2446 or 446-4792 .

&amp;54,000 now $'46,000 .
PERMANENT HAIR Must
sell, 3 bdr. home, new
RE-MOVAl- Profeuional ·turnilnca ; county water,
Electrolysis Center. Inc ., new bath , carpeted, new
A . M . A . Approved. Or .
siding, coal&amp;.
Referrals . Gift Certificates, alumln'um
wood burning stove. Barn 6.
new hours. By appointment, other bldga. Garage located
304·675-8234.
on old 160 near Porter. Call
614-388-9060 .

1 1 2 + acres with 2 homes

Someone to care for elderly
g8ntlemen daily. Phone
304-882 · 2810 .

'A MILE out Sondhiil Road,
304-675-3834.

44

Modern businou bldg . 58
Court St .. GaHipoiis.

Situations
Wanted

Bockhoe ondlood• dlgo B
ft .. largo bod pick up
heuleblo. operate yourself.
$90 . per dey. 304-8915·
3841 .

THREE bedroom furnished
all·electric trailer. built on
family room. co~tl-wood
burning stove, on acre ,
garden plot. 9utbuilding,
Jerry• Run Road , referen·
cas, $276 month . plus
depooit . ·3 04·6 76-2366 .

Court Street, Athens, Ohio
45701, by Fabruory 28,
1983. PPSEO is an Equal
Opportunity Employer.

Lead ctuitar plyar needed for
well established country &amp;
western band. Must be 20 or
older . Those serious only
apply. Cell 614-246· 9316.
ask for Cathy .

TWO bedroom ir,llor kit·
ch•n furnl•h•d. couple•
only, one omall child ac·
cepted. .r eference•. 304·
676 · 1076 , f180 . 00
month.

by Larry wri..,.,l 71

1~983

23,

",'

•

PEANUTS

•

HE~'S TI-lE 1/JC/{LD FA.\11005
St:RiEANT-MAJOR LEADIH6
J.IIS 1100P5 TO NEEDLES 10

WE'LL .HAVE TO HURRY.
MEN ! WE DON'T KNOW
HOW LONG POOR SPIKE

5AVi 1115 BRO'ItiER.WI-lOlS
~~~~

CAN HOLP

BY covon:s ...

our ...

SPIKE WON'T 61VE UP
WITI-IOUT A FI6~T, T14006H ..
HE'LL TAKE WHATEVER
. THROW AT HIM!

NO FAIR SHOOTING
RUBBER SANDS!

.
.

m

c

..

.

·•

s.

' .
~·

'i't-t'l'l

MOWR.EVS Upholotery lit, -·' .,
.1 Box '1 24 : Pt. Pleosant,
304-8lll·41ls4.

.(

.

~-

'

. I

..

---

..

TilE ·;·.

. (

,,

..

�••

I

'

Wednesday, FebNGry 23, 1913

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

..--Local· briefs-

Parents, educators
invited to conference

Pomeroy motorist hospitalized
A Pomeroy, Route~. man is a patient at a Parkersburg hospital as
the result of an auto accident on W. Main St., Pomeroy, at 1:52 a.m.
Wednesday.
Police said an eastbound car driven by Gregory Taylor, 20, was
traveling east on West Main when it went out of control, striking a
stone waiL Damage to the vehicle was heavy and Taylor received a
head injury.
He was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital and about3a.m. was
transferred to St. Joseph Hospital In Parkersburg. Taylor was
charged with reckless operation, police said. Middleport police report
that two cars parked on the parking lot of the former IGA store were
struck by another vehicle early Wednesday morning.

ATHENS - Parents and educators concenied with the education
of handicapped children In southeastern Ohio are urged to attend
a Practitioners' Conference on the
Least Restrictive Environment
Placement of Handicapped Children to be held Friday, Feb. 25, at the
Ohio University Inn here.
The conference, sponsored by the
Southeastern Ohio Voluntary Education Cooperative (SEOVEC) In
Athens, will 'begin with registration
at 8:'30 a.m. and conclude at ·3:30
p.m.
Kathy Schindler, ed11cat1onai
consultant for the Division of Special Education, Ohio Dept. of Edu-

Area squads have busy day
Several calls were answered by local units Tuesday and
Wednesday morning, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
reports.
The Racine Fire Department at 11:56a.m. Tuesday was called to
the area near the Greenwood Cemetery to extinguish a brush fire and ·
was assisted by the Syracuse Fire Department. At 6: ~p.m., Racine
firemen extinguished another brush fire on the Perry Run Road. The
Rutland Emergency Unit at 7:51p.m. took Radle Hatfield from Side
Hill Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital and the Racine Squad at
9:16p.m. took Reba Greene to Veterans MemoriaL
Wednesday morning at 1:38 a.m .. Tupt\ers Plains took Ruth
Stethem to St. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg, and at 1:56 a.m.
Pomeroy went to the scene of an accident on W. Main St. Gregory
Taylor, Route~. Pomeroy, was taken to VeteransMemorlaiHospltal
and then to St. .Joseph Hospital. Pomeroy at 2:19a.m. tOOk Clyde
Hen~rson from Wehe Terrace to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Couples applyfor licenses
Marriages licenses were issued In Meigs County Probate Court to
Timothy Alan Workman, 22, Rt.l, Rutland and Cindy Sue Ellis, 22, Rt.
!,Rutland; PauiRogerMontgomery,47,GalllpollsandEvelynMarle
Montgome1y, 46, Middleport.
A marriage license was issued in Meigs County Probate Court to
John William Woodward, 63, North Fort Myers, Fla., and Inez May,
60, North Fort Myers, Fla.

Divorce actions, dissolutions filed
Two suits for divorce and an action fordlssolutionofmarrtagehave
been flied In Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Filing for divorce were Nancy S. Harrison, Rt. l , Middleport,
against Clyde Harrison, Rt. 1, Middleport, and Guy E. Bing,
Pomeroy, against Linda Gail Bing, Salem Center.,
James D. McDougal, Pomeroy and Pamela J. McDougal,
Hallsville, Oh., filed for diSsolution of marriage.
In other court action, Joseph E. Rife Was granted a divorce from
Darlene K. Rife.

Veterans Hospital information
Admitted--Ralph Kern, Shade; Helen Augustine, Middleport ;
James Turley, South Point; Robert .-Hysell, Pomeroy; Pamela
Proffitt. Portland; Rodie Hatfield, Rutland; Reba Greene, Racine.
Dischargect.. Prlcey Tackett, Katherine Felter, Evelyn Mains,
Angela Van Coopey.

CONSULTANT
Kathy
Schindler, educational cousultant for the Division ol Special
Education, Ohio Dept. of Edocatlon, will be a featured speaker
at the Practitioners' Conference
on Least Restrictive Environment Placement of Handicapped ChUdren on Friday, Feb.
25, at the Ohio University Inn,
Athens. Parents and edocators
.throughout southeastern Ohio
are Invited to attend the daylong conference. Ms. Schindler
will describe the crincept of
'1east re!ilrlctlve environment"
as It relatei to Ohio schools.

The Meigs County Sheriff's Department ttxlay transported Russell
19, CoolvUle. to Mansfield State Reformatory to begin
serving his sentence of six months to five years.
·
Cremeans was sentenced by Meigs County Common Pleas Judge
Charles Knight on charges of breaking and entering a residence on
Jan. 12.

further. A communication was
received from the cemetery boa~d
advising that cost of mowing a lot at
Greenwood Cemetery will no be$10
and that the board is considering
Increasing the prices charged for
opening and closing graves.
Council members expressed their
disagreement with a plan· to pay
one-half the cost for raising sewer
district manholes. a process necessary before repaving can be done.
Council agreed to investigate
further the one-half cost it is being
asked jo pay.
Council will meet at 7 this evening
· with representatives ot the Farm
Home Administration to discuss a
low interest loan available in
conjunction with water service. A
contract with James Jennings and
Associates, Columbus, as grant
consultants was extended.

Nine defendants were fined and
one other forfeited a bond in Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Douglas Raines, Racine,
speed, $10 and costs; Yancy Roush,
Pomeroy, failed to display valid
license plates, $10 and costs; Scott

Feeder Hrifcrs: U~ood and chOlrel 250 to

:JJO It&gt;&lt;. 51·64, :JJO to 400 lbs. 53 to 61. 400 to 500
lbs. !i0-61.!i0. 500 to 100 lbs. 48-5,;.!i0. 600 to 700
lb&amp;. 47-56, 700 to IJX&gt; Ill&gt;. 46.50-55. ~. 8Xl to over
45-57.
Feeder Bull~; : (go00 and cOOicel Bllo :m
lbs. ~7 . :JJO to 400 lbs. 57.50-64.ro. 400 to 500
lb&amp;. $-61, 500 to600 lbs. 5.&gt;.50-QI,IOOto 700 lbs.
51.00. 700 lo 600 lbs: 47.50-5.&gt;.ro, llXl to over
4J.~~ .

Holstei n Ste-ers and Bulls :JX) to 800 lbs.

47-52.ro. Bulls I.OOJibs. and up 48-ro.oo

~
WESTBENth .

Slaughter Cows: utilitieS 37.50-43, can ners
and cutters lJ.35.50:
Veal Calves, cOO!ce and pri!TIC'. 190 to :r.ill

I

~

·FlavoDrip®

ATHENS Uvefltoc:k Sale8
Sa&amp;urdQ, Feb. 18, 1983
CP.TILE PRICES:
Feeder Steers: tGood and Choice! 1)0.500

~to

10Cup
Automatic

lbs. 63-65.!il; 500-700 lbs. 52-62.
Feeder Heifers: (Go00 and Chotce) ])().500

lbs. 53.S0.00.50; 500-700 lbs. 45-54.25.
Feeder Buns: (Good and CMkei :J&gt;0.500
lb&amp; . 5.'H4.25· 500-700 lbs. 50-61.25.
Slaughter Bulls: cover l.IXlllbs.l 41 . ~7.
Slaughter cows: Utilities 38-42 .50; CaMers
and Cutters 31.50-37.

Drip Coffeemaker ·

Sprtnger Cows: (By the Head) :m-m.
Cow and Calf Pairs: (By the Unit) m

442.50. .

Velils:· /Choice and Prilllf'l 78-82.
Baby Calves: IBy th&lt;' Head\ D-70.
BabY calves: 1By tile Poundl 00.74.
HOG PRICES:
H~s:

!No. l. Barrows and GUts! m.m

lbs. 56-57.25.
Butcher Sows 47 .2$.52.fi0.
Butcher Boars 45.50-53.50. ·
Feeder Pigs: cBy the Head\ »59.
SHEEP PRICES:
Slaughter Lambs ~i.:Jl.60.
Feeder Lambs 5().6).

Area death

I

Lols Gandee Circle.
Mr. Circle was a retired farm~r .
He is survived by one daughter,
Mrs. Joyce Davis, Lir.tle Hocking;
one grandson, David Davis, Jr., U.
S. Navy; ·one brother, Milton Circle,
Canton; two sisters, Faye Newhouse and Lucille Duke, Salem,
Ohlo, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funera,l services will be held
Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home. Burial wUI ' lie In
Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home alter7
p.m. Thursday.

·Joseph C. C~le
Joseph C. Circle, 75, Little
Hocking, died Tuesday at St. Joseph
Hospital. Parkersburg.
Mr. Circle was bomOct.30,19(Ylin
Ohio the son of the.late Charles and

Weather forecast
Mostly cloudy tonight and Thursday. Low tonight 33-38. High
Thursday 43-48. Wind westerly to northwesterly 5,15 mph tonight.
Extended forecast
Friday through Sunday:
.
Fair on Friday and Saturday and a chance of showers Sunday.
Morning iows In upper teens to low 20s Friday, In the 20s Saturday
and In the 30s Sunday. IDghs In the mld-20s oorth to mld-OOs south
Friday, In 30s north to mid-44ls south Satunlay and mostly In the tOs
Sunday.

Brews delicious coifee
FAST .. 10 cupa ih
about tO minu!es.
And the disposable
paper fit ter traps
grounds and bittertasting oils.

NEW
from

Hush
Pupei~.,-

~------------------------------,I

I.

~
Rumer

Designed for speedy
little feet Cqiorful
canvas and
cushioned
comfort, these
Hush Puppies·
Children's
• · Shoes offer
detailed styling made
to endure
tots of
mileage.

CheF

BREAKFAST
SAVE 59¢ SPECIALS

--------------~------------------~1I .

ANNOUNCING

I
I
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M·ERRI AULT AMSBARY

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992-3751
SATURDAYS AND MONDAY .EVENINGS

Felll'llaey 19, 1!11\1
Feeder Steers: (good andcholcel ~ tonl
It&gt;&lt;. 57,73, DJ to 400 lb&amp;. :;8.8).70. 400 to500 lb&amp;.
59&lt;lll, 500 to 100 lb&amp;. 57.so.ro. 100 to '700 lb&amp;.
57-62.15. 700 to 8XJ lbs. 53-{)1, !m to over
52.:&gt;1-611

Eleven defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
in taking a deer from a motor
Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday
vehicle with a gun and spotlight,
night, eight of them on speeding
$200 and costs; James Pierce,
charges.
Middleport, disobeyed traffic sig·
Forfeiting bonds on speeding
nal. $10 and costs; Michael HaUer,
were Gregory Johnson , Pomeroy,
Chillicothe, assault,lOdaysconfine$!XI; Cynthia Bennick. Connecticut,
ment. $100 and costs, two years
$45; James Wamsley. Point Plea·
probation; Arlie Malone, Racine,
sant, $46; Roberta Smith, Middlepassing bad checks, restitution and
port, $46; Charlotte Marcinko. Long
costs;
.Nelson Morrison, MiddleBottom, $44; John Calandorf, Point
port, four charges of assault and
Pleasant, $47; Dean Hill. Racine,
resisting arrest. 30 days confine$49; Catherine Blaettnar:Pomeroy,
ment, two years probation and
$46. Others. forfeiting were David
costs, disorderly ·conduct, costs
Bates. Pomeroy, .$43, making a
u-turn; John Higgenbottom, Pome- . only; Jimmie Morrison. assault and
obstJ;11cting official business, costs,
roy, $50, violation of the leash law,
30 days confinement and one years
and Otis James, Tuppers Plains,
probation.
failure to yield.
·
Forfeiting a bond was Daniel
Fined in the court were William
Heise, Gahanna , speed, $46.!ll.
Thoma, Pomeroy, $63 and costs,
consuming beer In a motor vehicle,
and Ricky Lunsford, Pomeroy, $46
and costs, speeding.

I

WELCOMES ALL HE~
. CUSTOMERS TO
PRATT'S BEAUTY SALON

OIUOV VALLEY UVESJ'OCK ro.

IllS. 82·94.!'il.
Baby Calves 3.")-100. Sprlnjrer Cows 32l410,
Cows and CalVE'S Comb!naUon ~5-~.
Top HoJe; 210 to :m lbs. 57.!10·58.50, Ban;
Kimes, Reedsville, speed, $~ and .;o.00-42.50. Sows 400 lbs. and up53.:&gt;1-5.&gt;. Plf&lt;S
costs: Mark Rathburn, Rutland, aid . ~the head 27.J0.48.

Rf!cine council gives
appointment approval
Meeting in recessed session
Monday night, Racine VIllage
Council approved the appointment
of Betty Sayre to the town's board of
public a!fairs.
Sayre replaces Randy,Pyles, who
resigned recently.
Council gave the final reading
increasing water rates in the town.
Two loads of slag were purchased
from Vanadium Corp. at New
Haven. Council agreed to purchase
parking tickets as requested by the
town marshal and a discussion was
held on insurance coverage and
costs for the village. It was agreed to
request the agent to meet with
council on March 7 to discuss the
insurance on equipment and
buildings.
A discussion was held on the
possibility of malting Fourth St. one
way where It intersects with Elm St.
and the matter will be studied

SPEAKER NAMED ~ Dan
Johnson, •altomey for the Ohio
Dept_ of Education, will speak
on the puhUc schools' "Burden of
Proof" at the Practitioners' Conference on Least Restrictive Environment Placement of
Handicapped ChUdren on Friday, Feb. 25, at the Ohio UniversitY Inn, Athens. The day-long
conference, sponsored by the
Southeastun 011\o Vohmtary
Education Cooperative (SEOVEC); will begin with registration at 8:30 a.m.

Terminate court cases

Deputies tranfer prisoner
Cremea~.

·Market
reports

cation, and Dan Johnson, attorneY
for the Ohio Dept. of Education, wW
be the featured spealrers at the conferen~ In the mornlhg.
During the afternoon, participants wtl1 have the opportunity to
meet In srn~ groups to raise questions ·anct discuss Issues generated
from the morning presentatlonl.
The placement r1 handicapped
chUdren in the "least restiictlve environment" for public education Is
required by the Education tor AU
Handicapped Children Act of 1975
(Public Law 94-142). The speatcers .
at this con!~renC'9 wUI descrtbe the
concept of least resttlctlve environ·
ment ·as It appUes to Ohio schools ·
and review the clocwnentatlon
which schoOl districts are required
· to matce to prepare for heartnis or
Utlgatlon related to the placement
of handicapped children: Other top.
lcs of discussion wtl1 bethedevelopment of alternative school
programs In public education and
the placement of . handicapped
children In separate educational
facilities.
,
For further Information concernIng the conference or the concept of
least restrictive environment, parents or educators may contact
Georgia Trakas, Instructional Resource Center coonllnator at SEQ.
VEC, at 594-42.li.

2

BISCUIT AND
SAUSAGE SANDWICHES
ONLY

I

$} 29

BREAKFAST HOURS ONLY
Coupon Expires March Ill, lll83

.

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

!

.SANDW,ICH
I
SAVE 89¢ SPECIALS

A real value,
'

SPECIAL. OFFER
FREE "MATCHBOX"' Car with purchase of
any patr of Hush Puppies · .RACERs~.
Good at participating Hush Puppies • Shoes .
reta1l11r only: While• .-:::!111!1•~
supply lasts.
~

2 ONLY 2.29

MUSHROOM BURGER
SANDWICHES
.
,

5

t

Present 1his coupon when ofderln1 ·at any
. panicipaling Burser CheP restaurant.
One coupon per customer per visit.

Pratt's Beauty Salon
Race St.

·

Middleport
992-3751

~
Bu~er

Nowhere else (Jief
Coupon Expires March Ill, l8ss .

.

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

' CHAPMAN SHOES·
NEXT TO B.BJIB.DSIN POMEIOY

I

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FUTURE SITE

adv~ce;

·Walker turns pro

KC Bobcats up8et

CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE
SYRACUSE. OHIO
, fo' l

iht """""" !\.~~ ~ .,-.,,.,j

NlY. JAMES

lo• htl"

s.KIT'n E t.~..

~

•

drive begins
Nazarene Church

99;l'3Sii'

Page4

e
Vol.3 1,No.209

•

at ·y

entine
I Se-ction , 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 24, 1983

Copyoighted 1983

20 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Gov. Celeste ready .to ·sign permanent tax hill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - The state income tax
wll) be raised permanently Tuesday for the first time
since the· tax was enacted Jan. 1, 1972, after Gov.
Richard Celeste signs a bill to raise the tax today.
90 percent Increase, absorbing and boosting a
50 percent surcharge added last July, results from a
recession-riddled economy which has drained state
revenue co!fers and threatened services.
The final vote of 61-36 came in the House on
Wedesday when majority Democrats voted to go
along with comparatively mlnor Senate
amendments.
One freshman Republican, Rep. Robert W. Clark,
Chardon. voted for the Senate amendments because
they improved services for the elderly arid not
because he favors the overall bill, he said. ·

Jl1e

He said !Ie voted against the proposal when tt first
carnE&gt; before the House on Feb. 10.
The House :vote, which came without debate at the
Insistence of SpeakerVernal G. Riffe Jr .. D-New
Boston, sent the btU to Celeste, whose aides said he
planned to sign It today. rt would takee!fectTuesday.
Tax officials said that because tax bills take
inunedlate effect under the Ohio Constitution, they
would begin immediately to prepare the new
withholding tables for employers. They said the
higher rates will be assessed In pay checks issued
March 1.
The b!U, opposed by Republicans who sa id the
lncreaS!! was excessive and should not have been
made permanent, comes close to doubling the

income tax rates which currently run from 0.5
percent to 5 percent.
, Last July, the Legislature imposed the surcharge
which still .is being collected. It was to have expired
March 3L However, the picture changed after
Celeste's fiscal advisers warned of an upcoming
budget deficit of $511 million.
Under the bill, a taxpayer who had taxable income
of $15,001 and paid $2188.75 in 1982 will pay $320.78 in
1983. Had the surcharge been allowed to expire and no
increase approved, the liability of that taxpayer in
1983 would have been $175.
In the case of a $30.[XXJ taxable income, the liability
this year wlll be $1,099.80, compared with a 1982 figure
of $750. The taxable income is arrived at after

exemptions and other deductions.
Assistant House Minority Leader Waldo Ben nett
Rose, RLirrta, objected to lack of. debate on the bill.
He said two minority members were standing to seek
recognition from the .chair )lut were ignored by the
speaker. Riffe said he did not see ttre mi nority
members.
Rose, along wlth Republicans In both chambc&gt;rs.
said the tax was too much and that Celeste and the
Democrats are trying to build surpluses which 111U
increase spending.
Celeste said Republicans , unable to ba lance the
bu(jget three times with temporary taxes when they
were in power, refused to support the bill for I'Casons
of political expediency.

Proposed s~les
tax hike gaining
support in Gallia

Soc Sec
package
approved

WASHINGTON (AP I - A. $16.'i
billion
.rescue package fo r Social
By Jeff Grabmeler
Security
has won approval from a
OVP staff
House
panel,
but the plan that
GALLIPOLIS (0VP) - Gallla County commissioners say the proposed
includes reducing beneilts and
.5 (one-half) percent county sales tax hike may be gaining popular support
increasing taxes is a I ready drawing
because of the decision to borrow $1.3 millton to finance a new courthouse
fire from all sides.
wing.
.
. "This is the first step of a long
"! feel the sales tax is gaining momentum," commissioner James
process,"
sa id Rep. J.J. Pickle,
Saunders said Wednesday. "! think people are beglnliing to seett would be
D~Texas,
chairman
of the House
a mistake to vote down the tax and pay Interest for 10 or 20 years."
Ways
and
Means
subcommittee
on
The commissioners signed agreeements Tuesday with three local banks
Social
Security.
to borrow $1.3 mtlllon at ~ 6.9 percent Interest rate to build a $2.4 million
"There is significant support lor
four-story courthouse addition.
other approaches, but we have tried
Over 20 years, the county would owe about $1.1 million interest on the
to reach an agreement on someloans.
that will move this process
thing
CountY officials had hoped to pay for the project by raising the sales tax
along,"
he said Wednesday evening
.5 percent. However. local merchants organized a referendum petition
after
the
Democratically-controlled
drive which gathered enough signatures to place the issue on the
panel approved the measure in a 74
November ballot.
vote along party lines.
While the rommlsstoners previously said they did not think voters would
The package now goes to the full
approve a tax hike to fund the courthouse. they seem to feel differently
Ways
and Means Committee, which
now.
will consider th~ measure next
"We've had more and more people encourage us to leave (the sales tax
week.
lssuef on the ballot," Commissioner Paul Niday said.
Meanwhile, the Senate Finance
He noted that people are concerned that the county spend its money
Committee was continuing hearwisely on the project.
Ings today on recommendations
Saunders sald more people would support a sales tax hike lf they
from the National Commission on
realized the money the county could save in Interest by paying off the loan
Social Security Reform .
early.
The House panel's bill includes a
The commissioners have committed themselves to paying o!f the loans
provision,
also approved by a 74
within 20 years, but said they would like to pay them off sooner to reduce
margin,
to
ensu.r e Social Security's
the.interest charges.
lo~·term
solvency by reducing
An additional .5 sales tax would generate aboui $400,000 a year, and
strike over a pay dispute with the city. About 90
SUPERVISORS
ON
THE
SCENE
Columbus
lmhal benefits for new retirees by
more If the economy improves, county officials estimate.
PoUce supervl-.. oversee an accident scene perc.ent of the uniformed officers failed to show for
abou.t 5 percent over eight years
With the additional tax, the county could "almost pay off the loans In
Tuesday after unUonned patrol officers went on work. (AP Lilsemhntn \
starting in the year 2001 and to
three years," Saunders sald.
·
"
increase the payroll tax by 0.2-1
He said It would be difficult to estimate how much the county could save
percentage points in the year 2015.
because the loans are renegotiated each year and the interest rate will
The subcommitteealsodecided to
fluctuate. The county could also convert Its loan notes to bonds if officials
make
the retirement system "fall·
feel they would get a hetter Interest rate.
safe" by allowing it to bon·ow from
According to an OVP analysis, the bank loans will cost each person in
the Treasury with .congressional
Gallla County $8) over the proposed 20 years of the loan. This Is assuming a ·
approval if there are economic
courity population of 30,001 and assuming the county will pay $1.1 million in
emergencies in this decade. A.ny
Interest.
loans would have to be repaid with
If the county raised the sales tax, each person would have to buy $16,001
campaign to warn neighbors to
minor traffic citations issued and
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - A
interest within two years . .
leave on their lights.
in taxable goods to pay $80 a~ditlonal tax.
other crimes that did not Involve
sickout by safety forces entered Its
The package generally embraces
Some area merchants feel an additional sales tax would hurt thecbunty,
Officials said the city's 600,001
second day today, leaving only
injuries, he said.
the
bipartisa n recommendations of
residents were protected .
even if it saves money on the loan.
skeleton crews of police and
Saiety officials warned residents
Ja9k Hudson, owner of Carl's Shoe Store, said area residents showed
"I have confidence we wlll be able the reform commission, which
firefighters to protect 600.00J res!·
to keep a close eye on fire hazards to
. they were opposed to the sales tax by signing the referendum petition.
to
meet the demands placed upon . sur;gested increased payroll taxes.
dents, but supervisors say they're
help ease the load on tiring
a freeze on cost-of-liv ing increases.
"People feel they are helng taxed to death," Hudson said.
Burden said, adding thatpollce
us,"
firefighters. who were kept over
coping with long shifts and
levy · on reti rees' benefit's and
a
Hudson said the county should pay the interest rather than tax residents
be
asked
to
work
longer
would
not
from their Tuesday shifts and
overtime.
mandatory
coverage for new fl&gt;d·
than 12 hours In a row.
-more.
,Officials shifted police sergeants,
moved Into their third straight
era!
employees.
"It's a heck of a Jot of money, there's no doubt about it," he said of the
"After 12 hours, it starts getting
24-hour tour today. Lt. James
lieutenants and other supervisors
Although P resident Rcag;m and
risky,"
Burden said. "People are .·
(Continued on page 12)
Kerwin said late Wednesday that
from behind desks to cruisers when
House Speaker Thomas P. O'NPill
getting tired and you don't want
more than 90 percent · of the
the fire department had a normal
Jr.,
D-Mass .. supportcei ttw comthem
ha
ndling
emergency
sltua·
uniformed police officers and about
day, which usually consists of:mto
mission's
package, bipartis;mship
lions.
And
obviously,
the
longer
we
95 percent of the firefighters
2.'i0 runs.
cracked
during
the two davs of
go,
the
more
tired
our
people
will
Inste.a d of ·normal · eight-hour
scheduled to work caUed In sick
subcommittec
work
.
··
get. "
.
shifts, police started working 12ffiLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) . act appears Ukely to be challenged. Wednesday.
Democrats
used
their
majori
ty
"These guys don't sleep as well
hour stretches starting at 6 p.m.
Police spokesman Sgt. John
Columbia Gas of Ohio satdWednes·
"Until this issue. Is resolved,
strength
to
muscle
the
package
here as they do at home, so fatigue's
Wednesday. The goal was to boost
Shawkey said 113 of the 140
day it won't assesscustomers the0.5
however·, Columbia wJll voluntarUy
through in a form thl'v favon:'d and
going
to catch up 'to them before
the number of cruisers from221I] the
uniformed officers · scheduled for
perCent excise tax Increase written
agree not to attempt recovery of this
repeated ·GOP effon s to·
scuttle
long,"
said
Harmorr
Dutko,
assist·
·
afternoon
to
46
by
evening.
The
the 11 p.m . shift Wednesday night
Into the tax bill passed by the
tax increase from Its customers,
raise
the
retirement age, make
ant
fire
chief
at
Station
No.2.
normal daytime complement is 70.
called in sick.
Legislature on· Tuesday until a
Including those under home rule
deeper
benefit
cut s and ciiminit tf'
Firefighter
John
om
sa
id,
There usqally are 95 at night.
Pollee limited their efforts to calls
quesUon of Its legality is settled.
ordinances."
tax
increases."There's'no
one
here
who
won't
do
Citizens were.told to go to police
involving assaults, sex crimes,
A company spokesman also
Pickle tried 10 plav down the
their best, but if you get tired, you
headquarters
to fill out reports In
robberies
and
traffic
accidents
with
Indicated the legality of the tempor·
problems,
saying, "The minor itv
get ·slower and injury rates go way
traffic accidents that didn't Involve
injuries. Police Chief Earl Burden
ary tax provision may go to court.
was simply expressing preff'I'C~·
up."
. ,
injuries. Many showed up a11d some
said response time to those lncl·
The &gt;i legislation provides · that
ces,
some ·of which I cou ld ·agree
/
Union
memberS
SllY
the
slckout
Is
disagreed on details as they wrote
dents was about the same as
utilities may oot pass the higher tax
Colder tonight with 70 percent
with."
at
hitting
the
city
In
the
aimed
reports.
normal.
.
along to customers. But utDitles
chance of snow flurries. Low around
But there was no denyi nr: Ihc
to the tune of
Air traffic was' nat affected. · pocketbook There
was
no
Special
Weapons
contend their contracis with home
28. · Winds . northerly 1().20 mph.
·
difficulties
ahmd.
$100,®$200,001
a
day
in
overtime.
Pollee and . firefighters at Port
and Tactics team and no narcotics
rule cit~ allow such a passtl!rpugh
Becoming partly ,ploudy and cold
The
reform
commission left it to
It's the same pocketbook . that
Columbus International Alrport
officers Wednesday.
and take precedence over the tax
Friday. High ll-35.
Congress
to
decide
11ow tnrlimi nah•
Mayor Tom Moody says is tcio lean
were kept on overtime to meet
Shawkey said no unusual rise In
legislation.
,.
Extended forecast
the
one·thtrd
of
So&lt;'iat
S&lt;.'curit,·'s
to afford the 5 percent raises pollee
federal regulations and two police
'c rime was reported, except for six
''Columbia Gas of Ohio Is of the
Saturday through Monday:
long-term
defici
t
not
covered
bv· its
and firefighters seek. They also
officers from the Columbus Zoo
opinion that theJ;e Is no existing legal
Fair on SatUrday. Chance of armed robberies between 8:30 p.m.
recommendations.
·
want the raises retroactive to the
were transferred there.
and10p.m .
precedent as to the ability of the
!lhowets S!JIIday and fair Monday.
For years, Pick if' ha·s prcsSC&lt;I tor
Oct 1 expiration of their old
Residents of the Clintonville area,
He said that number would be'
General Assertlbly to ban recovery
IDgha Ia ml~ to rnJd.40s Saturraising
the r:etirrml'nt Age a net Rrp.
contract .
north of the Ohio State University
normalfor.a 24-hour period. Noone
of the excise tax Increase," the
day and In mid-408 to mld-lltlll
Dan.
Roste
nkOII''ki , D·lll.. chair·
City Councli President M.D.
campus, met Wednesday night to
was Injured In any of the.incidents,
canpany said In a statemenr.
Sunday and Monday. Lows 15-211
man
of
the
full Ways a nd Mean'
Portman had drawn legislation
step up foot and car patrols in a
''This Is the first time the General
Saturday morning and In upper 1!18. he said.
Committee
appeared
sympa th(•t ic
giving all city employees a 4 percent
neighborhood crime watch proThe only decUne In Incidents
A.Ssmbly has attempted this kind or' to ~Sunday and Monday.
.
to
Pickle's
position.
gra~p and mounted a telephone
•reported carne In the number ·of
raise. '
action. The constitutionality of the

Skeleton crews protect city
as sickotit enters second day

Must settle legality question first

Weather forecast

iV'

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