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                  <text>Southem's Beegle
chosen to Class A
District cage team

Old Portland Church
history continues...

Horseshoe pitching
tournament added
Meigs fair program

Page 7

PagelO

Page 14

eVoU1 ,No.218 •Copyrighted 1983

•

•

at y

enttne

Pomero -Middle ort, Ohio, Wednesd

2 Sections, 14 Paget 20 Cents
A M~ltim~ia Inc. Newspaper

, March 9, 1983

Social Security issue solved:
more dedu~tions; less benefits
WASHINGTON (AP) - House offer an amendment to change that
leaders are expressing confidence part of the bill.
that a $165.3 billion plan to refinance
Thus they were trying the difficult
Social Securtty will be approved, parliamentary tactic or winning a
with those who contribute to It vote to scuttle the ground rules, a
paying more and those who receive move that was expected to fall.
benefits getting Jess.
"We will pass this bill," Rep. J.J.
Voting was scheduled today on Pickle, D-Texa.s, declared Tuesday
· the bipartisan package of reform In an appearance bEifore the House
uiat Includes payroll tax hikes, a Rules Committee. "We do not have
curb on benefits, a levy on retirees tlme to go. back to the drawing
benefits and mandatory coverage lx&gt;ard.''
for new federal employees.
Social Security teclmlcaUy has
The House was beginning consld· been broke since late last year. The
-eration . of the legislation this system has borrowed $17.5 bllllon
morning, but eight hours were since October 1982 to keep benefit
alloted ·for debate and a flnar vote checks going out to the ;l6 mllllon
was not antiCipated before tonight. Social Securtty recipients. The
The tlghtest battle was expected borrowed money lsduetorunoutat
aver a move to raise the retirement theendofJune.
age from 65 to 67.
While the . bailout legislation
Acr&lt;iss Capitol Hill, meanwhile, carries the blessings of President
the Senate Finance Conunlttee was Reagan and House Speaker Thostarting work on drafting Its version mas P. O'Neill Jr., D·Mass., and
of the bill, which the lull Senate will strong bipartisan support, It has
consider next week.
been attacked by a variety of
Rules for the House debate denied organizations.
opponents of a provision to extend
"Votedon.separately, very few of
Social Security coverage to all 1he controversial elements of our
federal workers the opportunity to bill can survive," said Rep. Dan
'
Rostenkowsld, D-Ill., chalnnan of
I

OUr Reg. 36.81

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29.97

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97! . .

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our Reg. 6.97

•

4.77
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Attractive · styling In
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'

'

Brand-name Spark
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cars. ~ndarcl or resistor.

7.77

Men•saoot·cut Jeans
In cotton Denim
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•

7. A.,

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Our 16.97.-4-1 Jack ..: 9.97
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erastJc.:~~k

KOdel"' Polvest

~

Kalp&amp;, left. WlcldiDe, wbo .bu aerved aa cblef deputy for Auditor
Boward F'rallk, waa ele cled auditor last November aqd takes oftlce
·
Monday. He Ia a Repabllcaa.

J_J~derground

CETA
funding
frozen

mining project
1
1·
.
d
p ans.out me sta~~~~~"io~fed:f

Llrnlllt,.. Cwlumer

3 57

OA111 - BID Wlcldtne, new Meigs COunty Auditor, wupveu Ills

o.a. of ollkle 'l'uelldaJ b)' Map ~mon Pleai Court Jucl«e Charles

,

tbees or
riels.

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel stall
The Southern Ohio Coal Company, via a letter, has advised Meigs County
commissioners thai Meigs Mine No. 1 has been or plans to be conducting
underground mining opera !Ions under rounty road Sin Salem Township.
Commissioners referred the matter to County engineer, Phil Roberts,
who will contact Southern Ohio Coal Co.
Meeting with the board, Roberts annOunced that Ohio's Outdoor
Advertising law will require all signs, placed along the highway uy
non-profit organlzatons from Five Points north on SR 7, be relocated. It will
also be necessary for organizations placing signs tosecureapermltat a cost
ot $10 per year tor each location.
It was noted that BlueCrossandBlueSh)eldwW be Increasing rates as of
Aprlll. Richard Jones, commissioner, said he was very concerned over the
rate increase.
It was agreed to advertise for bids from other Insurance companies tor
employes hospltalliatlon In the hope of obtaining as much coverage at a
more reduced rate.
Several letters were received by commissioners In opposition to Issuing a
liquor permit to Charles Clinton Calaway for operation of a beer and wine
carryoutln Tuppers Plains.
There has also been verbal opposition to Issuing a liquor permit, beer and
wine, to Charlene·Doclln Salem Township.
Commissioners have until March 22, to ask for a public hearing with lhe
State Liquor.Department to be held ·In Meigs County.
Commissioners requested an ;~dvance withdrawal of $65,00) for the
general fund In anticipatiOn ot the next iax settlement In April.
Following the meeting, commissioners viewed progress at the new
cowity landfill.
Attending were David Koblentz, president, Richard Jones 81\d Manning
Roush, commissioners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk and Martha Chambers.

joiHralnlng programs covered by
the federal Comprehensive Em·
ployment and Training Act until
past contracts and accounts can be
unraveled.
Roberta Steinbacher, admlnls· •
Ira tor of the state Bureau of
Employment Services, said Tues·
day she fears that Ohio might owe
the federal goverrunent mllllons of
dollars because of lmproper allocations of CETA money In previous
years.
The CETA program Is to be
phased out Sept. 30, but $7 million Is
obligated for programs until then,
mostly In 56 rural counties.
"It Is calamitous," she said.
"There are contracts !hat have not
been explored; contracts unsigned
that have been paid out on, and add
to that eight y€ars of
mismanagement"
She was referring to admlnlstra·
t!on of the program under former
Gov. James Rhodes.
The U.S. Department of Labor's
regional of!ice In Chicago said there
could be as much as $12 million In
unspent funds from previous
accounts.

OEA lobbies-for additional funding

- , ,..,.._ .... ,.. ertcotton.

THANK YOU FOR SHOPPING AT K MART
I

COLUMBUS,Ohlo(AP)-Ohlo's
largest school teachers' lobby says
Sl.l billion may not be enough or an
ln.;rease In prlmary and secondary
edueatlon funding over the next two
years.

John Hall, government affairs
director · for the nearly 80,000.
member Ohio Education Assocla·
lion, says a $15 bllllon Increase Is
rw;eded.

Hall was asked to comment
Tuesday on a bill introduced In the
Senate a day earlier which would
hike state lunds. for the public
schools from $3.7 billion this
biennium to $4.8 billion In the next
two-year fiscal . period · starting
starting July 1.
· Introduced by Senate Education
Chairman OUwr Ocasek, D-Akron,
thellllliSIII'I!embodlesmostproposalll which the Ohio Board of
F41catkln Included In a special
report on school tundlng early this

year.

'

Ocasek's bill makes few chanaes
In lhe cuJTellt fonnula. for the
dlstrlbu&amp;n ola'-te flmda In Ohio's

615 school districts. '
Instead, It would Increase perpupil aid to about$1,990ayearfrom
the current S1,6!Kl by the end of the
19841lscal year on June 30, 1985.
Hall said he had . not had the
opportunity to ·study the proposal
· btit that the OEA advocates more ·
state ald other than just an Increase
In the per-pupU allocations.
Hesaldmorefundolareneededfor
special education programs and
those which Identity and assist
students who, tor one reason or
another "are not learning." The
state alsO should do more to help the
schools deal with discipline problems, he said.
Ocasek Is dean of Senllli) perm.
crats arur a longtime ad\&gt;Ocate of
Increase&lt;\ fundil1g for the schools.
But his bill Is moStly a product of the
state board and has nQt been
endorsed liy the administration of, ·
Gov. RlcJtard Celeste.
Aides ln Celeste'sofflce, as well as
in the omce of bu!laet. and.
lllllllllgelnl!t, said they were not
COrlsultAid about the bill.

The budget office said Celeste will
Include his own proposals for school
funding In the' .biennial budget,
which he will submit to the
Legislature no later than March 31. ·
He will make his State or the State
addresstoajolntSenate-Housenext
Tuesday, 'and could disclose all or
part of the plan at that time.
In an austerity package which
accompanied the governor's re- .
cently approved, 90 percent hike In
the state Income tax, Celeste
ordered state spending cuts which
sla$hed about $192 million from the
school budget.
The OEA and other education
groups went along with the cut, but
only after hav1ng been told that they .
could expect a subltantlallncrease
In tundiDi In the next blel!nlwn.
Bud&amp;et ~spokesmen said the
tax Increase should provide from$~
billion to$2.5 tillllon In new revenues
for state serviceS In the next
biE!IIIIIum. Some minority Republl·
cans Who voted aplnst the tax hike
are clalrhtna 1111! new revenue wW
total $3 blllloD to $3.1) l)l)llon,

the Ways and Means Committee.
"But taken together, the sacrifice
they demand Is fairly spread. And
therein lies the strength of the
conunlttee bill."
Recognizing that the legislation
can stand little tinkering on the
House Ooor, the Rules Committee
decided Thesday to allow consideration of only two amendments.
Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla,, the
82-year-old chairman of the Rules
Committee, was offering an amendment to asstire Social Security's
long-term solvency with a 0.53
percentage-point payroll tax increase In the year 2015.
Pickle was offering an amendment to raise the retirement age
from 65 to 67 in two stages over 44
years.
Those born In 1900 - today' s
23-year-ol~ - would be the first to
feel the lull impact, but everyone2S
or younger would be affected to
·some degree. Those now 40 or
younger would have to walt untO
age 66 to draw full Social Securtty
benefits.
Pickle's plan still would allow
people · to qua)lfy for Medicare at

age 65 and to retire early at age 62.
But Instead ofdrawing80percent of
full benefits, newly retired 62-yearoldS would get only 75 percent In 2001
and 70 percent In 'lim.
The National Commission on
Social Security Reform split on the .
Issue and left. it to Congress to
decide. Supporters of raising the
retirement age say it would be a
logical reOection of Increased
longevity. Opponents say It Is only a
further benefit cut.
If neither amendment attracts a
majority, the House's only other
option would be to adopt the
alternative approved by the Ways
and Means Committee last week. It
would solve the rest of the long-term
problem by mixing a 5 percent
bel)efit cut for new retirees25years
·from now with a quarter-point
payroll tax Increase In 2015.
The legisIa tion also carries provisions unrelated to Social Securtty,
Including an emergency extension
of unemployment . benefits for
laid-off workers of up to 10 weeks,
and a change, phased In over three
years, In the way Medicare pays
hospital bills.

Defendant's memory lapse
forces guilty plea decision
well."
Jolmson made his opening stateCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- As
He said someofthemoneywas
ment He said he does not know
a prosecutor was telling a jury
used to pay for three · trucks,
what persuaded them.
embezzle.
$16,000
In jewelry, a recording
"She
talked·
to
her
family.
I
men! In the
session
at a 'Tennessee studio, ·
pointed
out
the
posslbillttes
to
Ohio Treasur·
real
estate
and $90,00&gt; of a
them and they decided to do It ,"
s office, ex$250,000
contract
with a Columthe Springfield lawyer said.
cashier
bus
talent
agency.
A reporter asked Doughty If he
Elizabeth
Yeazell ran an electrtcal
believed all the $1.15 million had
Boerger
in Springfield and the
business
tMlen S!)ent.
.
In anadjaBuddy Young Band,
"I don't know that it was taken.
room deJohnson said he believes the
I
never
saw
any
demonstration
ciding to plead
Is all gone, and that It's
money
of
wealth
in
these
people.
And
Boerger
guilty.
now
up
to bonding companies to
I've known them personally for
It took David Johnson, assist·
decide
whether
to try to recoup
20 years," Doughty said. "We
ant prosecuting attorney,' just
losses.
The
companies
their
pleaded guilty because she
over an hour Tuesday to make
reimbursed
the
state
some $1.4
his opening presentation In the ' · ·couldn't assist me and to avoid
million
in
January,
Including
the multiple sentencing."
case against Ms. Boerger and .
estimated losses In investment
However, Johnson said officcxlefendant Robert Yeazell Jr.
earnings.
cials
believe
Boerger
spent
After a brte( recess, the two
Johnson said he was unsure If
much of the money on an
entered the small Franklin
there
was a specific turning point
entertainment business run by
CoUnty Common Pleas CourIn
trying
to prosecute such cases.
Yeazell, and that they "lived
troom with their attorney,
James Doughty, to change their
Innocent pleas to guilty.
Doughty said he had been
talking about the posslbUitywlth
the two for several weeks.
.
Ms. Boerger left her job as
head cashier In the treasurer's
office In January 1980 after being
hospitalized for what was Ia ter
dlaganosed as hysterical
amnesia.
Doughty said she has · no
memory of her llfe prtor to that
tlme.
"The plea was made on Jane
Boerger because of her tack of
memory, lnabUitYtoasslstme In
'her defense and to avoid the
consequences of the trtal," he
said.
"There was a very, very
strong chance because of the
magnitude of lhe oj'fense that sbe
would be sentenced consecutively on each CQunt. And we
knew that lhe state had an
excellent case on thefalslflcatlon
of the records," he said.
Ms. Boerger, 49, of Fort
•Loramie, pleaded guilty to
charges of theft In office· and
tampering with public records.
She was Immediately sent·
encedtoa2·tolO.year term In the
OhloReformatoryforWomenat
Marysville and fined $5,000. Her
sentence 1s to begin Tuesday.
Yeazell pleaded g\lllty to
charges of falling to file state
Income tax retutns and Is to be
sentenced later. A charge of
DiiiiNiT i'iiBIU't' - Fonner Ohio State Treasurer Gertrode
receiving stolen property was
DDaabey
who WIBICheduJed lo laltlf)' did nat haW! lo take the stand
drqlped.
'~''""" a ._ fermer emplo)oe, ""ra'Bb J - BoerKer enlered a
Doughty said his clients decided to Change their pleas While · pity plea lo emt- hg ILlS million fnm lhe &amp;Ute of Ohio.

�..
Mardl9, 1983

(:ommentary

~1•

2-nte Daily S.ntinel
,.111roy Mid.lpDtt, Ohie
Wedntlby, Maid! 9, 1913

..

.

·Arthur Koes,tler R.I.P _____~w_ill...._ia_m_F_.B_uc_k_ley_J_r..

The ·Daily Sentinel
lllCQ\artSirt!t'l
Pnr!kr~ty,

OhM1

ilf..!m-:151
OF. VOTED TO TilE INTEREST OF THE MEI~MASON AREA

..
.

ROBERT L. WINGETT

'

..

Publl!dwr

!'AT WHITEHEAD
A ~~ isWnl

,.

BOB HOEFLICH

Publlshtr/Cuntrullt&gt;r

DAtE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt&gt;Wfli Editor

A Mf.MBER ul Tt... Assnrialed' Pr~li. ln.land Oallv Pr i!S.~ A~MH' ialiun and tilt'
Amt'rit·l:ln N..-•·spapn Publisht'rll A"s.IC'iatinn.
·

. I.F.TTERS OF OPINION Hl't' welc•umed. They shuuld bt-lt$ti Ullin 300 wc1rds lunJ( . All
lrlkrto Hrt' subjert tn editina; 11nd mu1t lw li ign~ with n.ar11r. add~" and tt'lephmae
numtlt'r. Nn unid~ned letttr'll will bt' publl s ~. ~lien !&gt;fluuld be in,:und l.asl.e,addm.:d,_
i!il!illt'l. nul JWr!tDRHiilir!l .

was suffering tram leukernJa and
from Parkinson's disease. Also that
he was a vice pres&lt;lldent or an
organization called the Voluntary
Euthanasia Society, to whose prln·
clpal publication Koestler had
contributed the Introduction. In It
he made jbe point that It is not the
nature of huinan beings to die
"peacetully and ·without fuss," as
so m11ny animals do, and · that
therefore - he innplled - when the
time came, he would attend to his
own. extinction.
.
We do not know why ·his wife
shared whatever polson did them
ln. Cynthia was 20 years younger
and was not sufferjng, so far as one
knows; from any disabling disease.
I turned to a volume or letters from
otta Co,lOr" -

Of all the Christian command·
ments, surely the most taxing
intellectually Is that which prohibIts suicide. The case against suicide
in certain circwnstances this wrl·
ter accepts only Is an article or
faith . The rationaie bas always
seemed to me·beyollj! the reach or
finite mlnqs: which delivers us to
those areas Christianity promptly
descri.bes as "mysteries." What
brings this on, of course,'ls the joint
suicide of Arthur Koestler and his
wife. Cynthia.
His death was consummated
with extraordinary dignity. He and
his wife were discovered, accord·
lng to the news story, seated In
separate chairs In the living room.
It was known that Koestler, age TT,

HIGH RISK AREAS .

Federal bureaucracy
Cin the private sector

,RING NUCLEAR C:ONFLICT

.
When President Reagan talks about cutting the bureaucracy he
:: generally means cutting the number of government workers. But, It is
: alleged, government bureaucracy has Invaded the private sector also.
Nobody Is more willing to say so than the nation's financial Institutions,
: · now campaigning for repeal of a law that would have them deduct 10
·: percent of dividend and interest payments beginning July 1.
· :. As some of them view their assignment. it is almost forced la!Jor.
. Because of a federal action. it is thejr who wUI have to deal with customer
: complaints and it is they who will have to do the government's
: bookkeeping.
But the bureaucracy seems to have spread into the private sector even
· more widely . as suggested by changes in the size of occupations during the
; 1970s. Accountancy grew twice as fast as total employment, adding 335,001
· jobs.
• Some of this change resulted from an emphasis on financial
: management, following the undiscipllned growth of many companies
; during the ,1900s. But the group also includes income tax advisers, tax
• specialists, and others wh6se sole job is to ferret out and exploit the maze of
: tax and other regulations.
: So involved with tax regulations ha.&lt;&gt; accounting become that a
: nationally recognized C&lt;·r1lfied public accountant recently CO!ll!Tlented
· good naturedly to a businessman that "You're just a businessman,l'm a
financial engineer."
·
He explalhed that because of his understanding of the fine points of law,
finance, accounting and insurance, and how through th.e use of computers
they could be fitted together with little-knOwn aspects of the .tax law, he
could almost manufacture money. "The ·Federal Reserve isn't the only
one," he said.
The legal profession expanded by 70 percent to m,OOJ in the 1970s, and
Carol Boyd Leon, an economist with the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
blames the il)crease in part to ·a prollferation of complex new laws.
Need you be told that the number of economists doubled, to about
140,001? Whlle many of them were employed by securities, Investment and
management consulting firms, manyofthemalsowereused in an attempt
to read government policy.
To be sure, many of the accountants, lawyers, tax specialists and
economists would have fo11nd their jobs no matter what the federal
government did, because all are part of the shlft to white collar and service ·
jobs.
It was a profound shift. Ms. Leon. writing in the Bureau of Labor
Statistics' "Monthly Review," observes that one-half of the 16 million new
jobs created from 1m to 198l were professional, technical or clerical. .
During the same period the number of blue-collar jobs shrank, with
farmworkers decllning by' about 365,o:xJ between 1972 ansd 198l. Few
blue-collar occupations even approached the national average growth
rate. Many declined.

Berry's World

Whittaker Chambers pubUshed morphine. In our time, I think, It
alma;t 15 years ago. Chambers In has become true that thft'e Is no
this letter (addressed to me) was greater love than a man sllare Ills
describing a visit with Koesller at ' polson with his friend."
his Austraian eyrie In Alpbach,
lain Hamilton of Great Brltala
near lnnsbruck, In 1959. One night
Koestler was recounting his expe- bas wrltten a IUe. of Koestlel'
riences on the occasion that be mysteriously Invisible In tile book·
escaped from a Nazi jaU In Fr~ stores, for reasons the MacmlllaJi
Company has never made plaii'L
·during the war.
"He was with Benjamin, the · Koesller was one of the totally
mentor 81ld analyst of Bertolt Interesting men of our age, whose
Brecht (Chambers wrote). Ben· penetration or the communllt mind
jamin planned to walk across the aDd soul broUght forth a master·
·Pyrenees. K would not go through piece. "If you re-read 'Darklless d.
Spain becai,ISf' of his death sentence Noon' at this late hour," Wbl~
during the Civil War. Since neither Chambers wrote me In 1159, ''you
expected to make It, Benjamin will see how true d. It, too, thllls" shared his ma;t precious posses· I.e. that It Is a book d. paetzy. "I
slon with K: a massive dose of re-read It recently. I came to the ·
part where, afteor bls .breakdown;
Rubashov Is pennltted a lew
minutes of air In the prison yard. ·
Beside him trots the Central As1an
peasant who !)as . been. jaDed
~ause, 'at the pricking of the
children,' the pea~~a~~t and bls wife
bad banicaded thenurelves In t11e1r
house and 'wunasked themselves
at reactionaries.' f.no!dn&amp; sidewise
at Rubashov In his sly peasant way,
he says: 'I do not think they have
left much of Your Hooor IBd me.' '
· Then, In the snow of thep~yard
and under the machJne.pn IDwen.
he remembers how It was wben the
snow melted In the liiOU!ltalns of
Asia and flowed In ton-eftts.

-

IAIEFIN6

Koestler and Chambers wen&gt; .
once fellow revolutloblu'les. And
when
Chambers published his book, "Witness," 12 yean
after "Darkness at Nooa,"
Chambers received tram ~
a single line: "You did not relllrn
from Hell with empty hands."
Koestler wrote many boots oo
many subjects. But "Darlmells at
Noon" Ia a permanent part d. ~
patrimony. It might be sail!. It
Chambers was correct. that the
book Is a work or poetry, that m·the ., h,......,
long run communism and "Dar·
kness at Noon" cannot ~.
Unhappily. communism, !Ike bu.
man beings, Is not lll!ely 10 ~
"peacetully and without fuss."

Whittaker

AS W)U CAN SEE, IN.litE CASE OF ASOVIET StRIKE HER&amp;, WE CAN ,
EXPEt1 UlSSES OF SOME 1WENTV10TWENTY·FIVE 1HlNITACKS.:.

'1...

Strongarm. tactics
details are contained in sworn
testimony and supporting docu·
ments obtained by the General
Accounting Office, which bas been
investigating charges or lmpl'()per
White House attempts to rig the
conference. My associate Indy
'B adhwar has seen the astonishing
evidence. Some examples:
-" (A l planned attemp,t at con·
fusing the final plenary session wa5
apparently manipulating the air·
conditioning system," declares a
sworn affidavit. "It became un·
bearably hot '... One or two older
women had to be medically
assisted out of the ballroom
because of the heat."
-One particular panel, known as

WASHINGTON- The Reagan
administration used · strongann
tactics remlni$Cent of an old·
fashioned polltlcal·machlne to keep
the 1981 White House Conference on
Aging from getting out or hand and
embarrassing the president.
They apprently tinkered With the
temperature controls In the auditorium, u$ed fake ba~s to ln!Utrate
committees and plenary sessions,
shouted down legitimate delegates
and even physically obstructed
Rep. Claude Pepper, O.F1a., to
keep him from reaching the
speaker's platform.
The White House efforts to bully
and harass the elderly delegates
were outrageous. The grubby

Jack Anderson
"Committee Two," was regarded
"whips" were appointed tokeeptlie
with deep suspicion bY the pres!· · supposedly dangerous "gray
dent's men. They were afraid It was · panthers" under control. The balld·
going to pass resolutions critical of
picked whips and deputY whips
the administration's Social Secur·
from the conference statt wete
lty proposals. So conference ·assigned to various sailla aad
staffers were oroered to print up gl~n a list of "troublernlllers" in
extra 'Committee Two" badges, tbelr baUlwlcks. 1belr mllllca . . .
put them on and lnfUtrate the
to position themselws behiDd lilt'
committee to manipulate any voice
elderly firebrands aDd se-t tbem
vote.
down If they tried to speak.
-A polltlcal tactician who re-One whip was asslgn!d 10 a
ported directly to White House
particularly dangeus delt!pte:
Pepper, then the Bl·year-old cllatr·
chief of staff James Baker was
assigned to the conference as a sort
man of the House Committee on
of staff commissar "to assure that
Aging. The whip W115 ordeied to
the confereree was not a polltlcal · keep Pepper from the podl~
embarrassment to the president."
during 'one of the debal.ell In the
- i..Jre so many pertonners,
plenary session.
·

_Tomadoottes -Garaway
.have· nlany similarities
,

I

By SCOTl' WOLFE
RACINE - Thursday evening

the Southern Tornadoettes con·
,tinue On the "Tournament Trail" at
Lancaster High School where they
,will meet Garawat.at 9 p.m. In the
,Class "A" Girls' Regional Basket·
ball tournament.
· Southern Is now 22-2 after Its
district championship triumph
aver Chilllcothe Blshop-Fiaget, 51·
4~. In overtime at Chillicothe
. Saturday. Garaway Is now 23-1
· following Its district triumph
.Saturday.
Garaway, located In Sugar
Creek, best known for Its Amish
. specialties, also has · a lflnlling
tradition In both boys' and girls'
.basketball. This Is just Otv;! of many
.similarities sh;lred by Garaway
.·and Southern, as the Tornadoettes
and their male' counterparts have
.been dominant powers In Southern
. Ohio for nearly a derade.
According to scouting reports

I· .
J

"What did you do?
"I said, 'Cohen, the Arab sheiks
have nothing personal against you.
Without oU they would still be
eating sand. I would do the same
thing If I were In their situation.
After all, how long is their wealth
going to last?' "
"And now what do you say when
you drive up to a pump?"
"I don't have as much time to
talk to myself at a gas station any
mroe. But while I'm tilling my tank
I say, 'Cohen, you bad nothlnf: til do
with OPEC falling apart, and If the
oU . producing nations want to
commit fratcrlclde, It's not your
problem.' " ·
"I wish I could see things so

down? ''

II
"What do you mean 'we ought 'to work toward
making our people feel more a part of things'?
What are you, some kind of SISSY!?"
·

Today in. history
Today iS Wednesday. March 9, the 68th day of 1983. There are 297 days
left In the year.
Today's Hlghllght.in History:
On March 9, 1862, the first battle between Ironclad ships was fought
during the Civil War as the Monitor and the Merrimac clashed off the coa ~t
of Hampton Roads, Va.
On this date:
In 1661, Louis XIV began his personal rule of France when his regent,
Cardinal Mazarln, died.
In 1796. Napoleon Bonaparte, married Josephine.
In 1916, Mexicans under Pancho VUla attacked Columbus, N.M.• killing
15 people.
·
.
And, in 1970, the United States declined to recognize the new whlte-njled
republic or Rhodesia.
Ten years ago: It was announced that CIA agent John Downey, held
pnsoner by the Chinese for more than 20 years, woul(j be released. .
Five years ago: Striking ·coal miners went back to work under a
Taft·Hartley i'!ourt injunction.
.
One year ago: The Reagan Administration made public aerial
reconnaissance photogt'aphs It said proved Nicaragua was buDding the
larfii!SI mUitary force ln,Central America with the help of CUba and the
Soviet Union.
Today' s birthdays: Mystery wrlter Mickey SpUiane is 65.
'lbought for Today: "Think wrongly, If yoo please - but In all
think for yourself."- Gotthold Lessing, German dramatist (1729-1781) .

cases'

,,

t

"I'm not happy or unhappy," he
said. "! just take things as they
come. I dln't slash my wrlsts when
the OPEC cartel raised the price to
$34 a barrel, and I'm not going til
dance . in the streets now that
they're cutting their own throats."
"You're the only one I know that
doesn't get emotional about oU."
"I never considered what OPEC
did a personal thing against me.
After all, they had the oU and we
didn't, and In a capitalist society
anyone should be able to get what
he can for his goods. I paid the
going rate when petroleum went up
and now I'll pay the going rate
when It does down. It's strictly
business with me ; nothing
personal."
"But lsn1t there the tiniest bit of
joy in your heart that the cartel Is
on the ropes, after what they did to
the world for 10 years?"
"I never hated· anyone beca~
they ba~ou in the ground. I'm too
big a man for that sort of Uung. The
cartel gave stabiUty to the energy
market during oU shortage, and
now that there Is a glut It's every
' country for Itself. In life there are
peaks and valleys, eVen . tor oil·
producing nations."
"That's beautiful, Cohen. I never
heard anyone talk about OPEC that
· way before. Did you feel that way In
182 when you got your beating

dispassionately," I said.
"! guess It was the way I was
brought up. My lather was the only
person In our neighborhood during
the depression that didn't hate Jolm
D. Rockefeller because be con·
trolled the Standard 011 Company."
"Everyone says we should be
worried lf the price of oU goes down
too far •. because It will wreck the
banks."
'
"The banks are not my worry.
They had a good run loaning he oU •
producing countries money when
they were roUing In petrodollars.
Now they have to live with their bad
loans. It's 'llothlng personal Wlth
file, you understand? But banks are
something I don't spend much time
fretting about. I guess it was the

both teams are quite slmllar In
their style of play and comparable
In stz.e, although Garaway does
hold a slight edge In the latter
category.
Garaway Is primarily a fast
breaking team. Despite taking
advantage ot the break, however,!!
sets up In a controlled offensive
game, utilizing a twQ..guard front.
Sometimes the Silgal' Creek gang
offsets Its offensive allgnment by
glng with ·the one guard front.
Southern's foe Is best known for
Its outstanding quickness both
defensively and offensively. Defen.
slvely the opponents use a full court
man·tQ..man press, whlle also
-setting up In a 2-2·1 press. Basically
the Garaways use a 2-3 defense.
. Coach Enslen's Tornadoettes .
will try to counteract any Garaway
strategies with Its oWII potent three
· on one fast brea)t and fine ball
haDdung skills. When the fast break
isn't there Southern relies upon Its ·
dependable pattern offense.

Four·year player Mel Weese,
who bas enjoyed another tine
season at point guard, leads the
Southern offensive unit. Weese Is
fianked by senior counterpart
Tonja Salser, also a fine shooter
and ballhandler from the other
guard posltlon.
Underneath for the Tornadoettes
junior Amy Uttlefield has an·
chored the Southern llne-up with a
potent offensive attack and driving
abUity. She also handles the boards
tor the Southern as well as being the'
team's leading scorer.
Senior Cindy Evans Is a scoring
threat, but Is mainly known for her
rebounding skills, while junior
Laren Wolfe is a capable shot from
anywhere .as well as a defensive
threat.
1
Others contributing to the SHS
powerhouse are Debbie Michael,
Michelle Johnson, Jenny Bentley,
JuU Houdashelt, and Alana Lyons .
Defending state-champion Za-

nesvllle Rosecrans, currently 22·0,
will meet 19·2 Coal Grove In the

preliminary bout at 7 p.m.

.'

.S nake-bitten Leibrandt .'!Jlnts roster spot
TAMPA, Fla. (AP ) -Asupersti·
tlousmanwouldbeoutlooklngfora
dozen rabbit's feet about now.
Instead, pitcher Charlie Lelbrandt
just jokes about his less- than·
charmed spring training camp.
Asked whether he bad acquired
any more injuries in a recent
workout. the Cincinnati Reds'
left·hander chuckled and responde&lt;l. " No. Today's only a short
~ workout) day. though."
Leibrandt has needed a sense of
humor this spring. when he first

made news as the ballplayer bitten
by a German shepherd during a

workout.
It was an Ironic twist, since
.L elbrandf s family has raised
German shepherds.
"I love dogs. I'm used to being
around big dogs," Le!brandt said.
"Thatwasprobablytheproblem I was a tease, and let the dog gettoo
close to me."
A few days later, Lelbrandt was
struck on therlghthand by a batted
ball - another mihor Injury for

~~ft;!I!!;;;!;Wj;!·iP.~~~r.iiilii~iiiiiiii~
I

someone wh!l's not considered
season with the Reds last year.
accident·prone.
The bottom of the slide came
"l'veneverbadamajorinjuryln when the Reds decided not to carry
my life," Lelbrandt said. "I've bad.&amp;. Lelbrandtontheirwlnterroster.thls
no broken bones, no major strains or'OOij year. They did invite him to camp to
anithlng."
try to earn a spot.
His pitching hasn't been as lucky,
Lelbrandt is trying to downplay
though. Lelbrandt. a rookie wonder · his non·!'OSter status this year.
lnthellrsthalfof198l,flndshimself
"It would be nice to have the
1n the unpromising position of security of being on the roster,"
non·rosti!r pitcher in the Reds' 1983
Lei brandt said. "But I don't think
training camp.
there's any difference between this
Less than twoyearsofftheMiami spring and last spring, even though
(Ohio) University campus, Lei·
I'm not on the roster this year.
brandt won 10 games as a.rookie. He
spent most of the next season with
the Class AM Indianapolis farm
club, then struggled to a 5·7 record
and 5.10earned run average In a full

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.._..,.-e_r_so_n_a_I________A_r_tB_uc_h_wa_kl..
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·for me, Saudi Arabia."
11
YOU seem very happy, Cohen,"
l said. "Would It have anything to
do with the price or oll going

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I believe OPEC tried to shaft tlie
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.
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was probably tbe way I you were
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~~~~~~~~~~~~. Uofl8f~w~~Ee~M~a~tt~~~~k~and~~Ra~~~o~n~d~(~P~~~.J~~~e~a~ted~~·~~~U~nl~~~e~~~ty~.~·~~h~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~u~, · ~~~~
,

that they hold the Mld·Amerlcait from the field and made aU eight of
Conference field-goal accuracy , his tree throws. .
record.
But they also will be watching the
"The thl.ilg I admire a boll tRay ls
rest of the league tournament from . he's a blg-playnuiker," said Miami
ihe sidelines as Ball ·State put Coach Darrell Hedrlc. "He's not a
together a couple of records of lts selllsh player, but he always wants
the ball when the pressure Is on."·
Own Tuesday night to etlmlltate the
~ldns85-79.
·TI)e Redsidns, 13-15,
led by
The Cardinals lace the unenvla- John Marx's 21 points. Ball State,
ble task ol traveling Thursday to 17-11, beatMlamlthreetlmesWJder
BowUng Green, which earned a first-year Coach AI Brown.
first· round bye by claiming the ~
Ohio Coach Danny Nee was
regular·seasoli tltle. The Falcons hjl.ppy wit!) the triJU'!!P.h.'; .over
Mso defeated Ball State 78-75 last Eastern Mlchtgaq;~jh~w:isll'ttoo
.k
lhl'lllj!d with the crpwq.,l;ll 3,1XXlln
":~ · the other seml!inal, Ohio 1~,0$0,-c~paclly l;:tlilxocatlon .,,
University hosts Toledo. ~ floQ- Center.
"Thursd
. ay, we'll need a b'n-r
cats cruised past Eastern Mlthlgan
'66"
crowd
.
,"
Nee said. . "Tonight the
7~ .Tuesday while the Rdckets
overcame Kent State 7~.
place was like a tomb. Studies OK,
· : Miami scorched the nets for 71 classes OK, butl know~ aren't
percent on 32 of 45 field·goal any classes Thursd,ay nillht, so they
attempts, but Ball State made 23of' better be here.
25 free-throw tries for a tournament"I thought we played wlth a Jot oi
recon192 percent.
Cardinal senior Ray McCallum intensity, and that's tournament·
tled his career·hlgh of 32 points and style basketball. We played hard
became the cooference's aU-time defensively. I'm · anxious .for
scoring leader. He now has 2,091 another crack at Toledo (which beat
points, surpassing the 2,071 by the Bobcats 59-56 Satunlay). We
Central Michigan ' s Melvin don't feel we got a real good shake ..
upthereandwe'Ubereadyforthem
McLaughlin.
The game was tied20timesbefore here."

. AI·- - - ·'~

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usallftlnSCQrlng.lnthesecondhalf,
defensive plays and tree throws
helpect us to hang on. Once we were
on top, we got some ke:yrebowlds."
He!'b Johnson. scored a gamehigh 34 potnts as Tulsa crushed
Indiana State 11S89. Gil WUilams
had 20 points to pace New Mexico
State to a 95-8l victory over West
Texas State.
In the Mid-American Conference
VIc Alexander scored 16 points ~
lead Ohio University over Eastern
Michigan 7~. Ray McCaUum,
playlngwhatmaybehlstlnaloome
game for Ball State, tied his career
high of 32 points In becoming the
Mid-American Cooference's all·
tunescorlngleaderastheeafdlnals
dowried Miami ss.79. Ken Epperson
poured 111 26 points as Toledo broke
open a close game In the second half
to down Kent State '1%4.
"The thing I admire about Ray Is
be's a big-play rnalc:er," Miami
Coach Darrell Hedrlc said of
McCallum. "He's not a selfish
player, buthealwayswantsthebaD
when the pressure is on."
Russell Davis scored 19 points
and grabbed 13 rebounds as Long
lsland University defeated Marls!.
74-56 ln .'the ECAC Metro pJaYotfi:
Lou Sclunltt scored 18 points and
JoeSharkeyadded17asSt.Francls

~

'

•

•
PRICI!B
DaJJ.y .... ...... ...... ....... ........ ... " :II

,___

.G IN 841GJ'd·...
,-·.-

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•

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t-----:------

playoffs

___ _____

-

1983

- - -By KB!1i RAPI'OI'OR'l'~w-.each-addetU6 U-Okla,~
· -.l:lSaiUl~ Chipper Jlarrla~aemlftnal8..oUhe Trana..Amei:Iea1 .
APSponaWrtler
homa State blitzed Kansas State eerned a aame-hli!l 22 polllta u
Athletic Conference tournament. ~
Bo Overton wu down, Wa~ 7~.
. RDbert Morris overc&amp;nll! La.YoiJ ol
Tl9dale.wase(f-8Jid01clahomals
.TheBJgEJahtpl.iyoUilwereoneof Baltimore 81-81. Marcus Gaither
out of tlle Big Eight basketball
several toui'nllments as ~ · ~ 'l1 potnls and Greg Foster
. The ~ily Sentinel
playotfs as a l'I!S)Ilt of Jt. .
basketball teamscontlnlied toslxlot added23 toleadFalr~lghDicldnsOn
(UIIPS-)
"Maybe It just wasn't meant Jo for ~ In the NCAA
toa9f.84vlctoryQVerWagner.
"~ -.,
· be," said OkW!oma's, assistant startlrigarowu:J tiM! country March
ln the ECAC North Atlantic
coach, Mike Newell, alter the · 15.
·
division, HolyCrossgottwobaskels
ln the Mlssourt ValleY Confer. fromli'atElzlelnthelast48seconil$
19th· ranked Sooners were bollnCed
outofthl!BJgEightplayQ!ls87·77by ence, Volse Winters scored 15 . to defeat Northeastemll!HiL Tony
Kansas Tuesday night. "You know, points, Including six tree throws In Slmins and Shawn Teague each
theysllottllellghtsout.Thatmakes thelastl~rnlnutes,toleadBradley dropped In two tree throws tO
Member: The Aloodate&lt;l Preis, 1n1an11
thedltferencebetweenwlnnlngand toafi3.53vlctoryoverJ)ralce.
· protect Boston University's lead
Dolly Pres~ Auodatlm and tho AJnor1.
losing." ·
"WeareplaylngweUeuoughnow and ciJnch a 80-75 victory over
can
Publishon -llort. ·
Nauonal Advertlllna Reprelentauve,
Meanwhile, the Sooners couldn't to beat anyone In the conference," Vermont. Rick Townseml hit two
8ranllam New!IPIPOI' SOls, 733 Tldrd
hit the side of the backboard,
said Bradley Coach Dicit Versace, ~ throws W\th.one second left ln
Avenue, New York, New York 10017.
shQotlng a pathetic 39 perc;ent as
team won the National double overtime as Nlagra upset
~: S.nd addreu Ill The
they sUffered a shocking first -round Invilatlon Tournament last year. ·
Maine 'IS-76. RQbln Dbcon SC&lt;&gt;"Id 25
Dolly SOntlnel, Ill COurt St, Pomeroy,
Ohio e,.;,. ·
·
knockout on thelr home court.
.
!&gt;.Jlchael McKenoy's 18.ROints Jed points as .New ~pshlre defeated
0i1e .ol the reasons was the
lJlliwis $tate to a 64-54 win over Canlslus 'nHi4.
S1JJII!CRIP'I'ION ll-\'11!:8 '
By CUtlet or MGior llooM
Ineffectiveness of Tisdl!le. the Southern Dllnols. ISU Coach Bob
Eric Hightower made two tree
One Week .. :.. ... :.. ..... ....... .. ........ . 11.00
freshman senSation who scored a
Donewald said Lou Stefanovk: throwswlthl2seeondsremalnlngto
One Month .... ..... .... ,...........: ....... ...40
sub-par 13 points. The other was the helped the Redbirds In the first half secure Georgia Southern's .58-55
One Year ..... ....... ................ ...... 1!12.80
SINGEiiCOPY
absence of Overton, one of the whenhe"cameollthebenchtoglve victory over HouSton Baptlstl" tl!c

Despite new mark
Redskins beaten;
Bobcats triumph

~-- ---~~ ~

1983'

Ohio

SQoners' starting guards who ~
verely strained his ankle just hOurs
before Tuesday night's game and
had to sit on the sidelines.
Part of the1reasorl was a terrUtc
defense put up by the Jayhawks. ·
Missouri, tbe nation's 12thranked team, was~ flrst·round Big
Eight wlnner, as were Nebraska
and Kansas State,
Mark Dressler scored 24 points
and Steve Stlpanovlch had .21 to lead
Missouri io an 88-73 victory over
Colorado. The Tigers took control
by outscoring the Buffs 12-2 In a
four-minute span to open up a 5846
leaq late In the second half.
IN FOR TWO- Missouri guard Jon Sunvold s-In 101' tWo points
The victory marked the final
despite the elloris of CoiOI'ado guard BIDy HIIWiton In the IJn4 half of
hOme appearance of Stlpanovlch,
Tuesday nlghl acUon at the Heames Center In Colwnbla, Mo.~
Jon Sundvold and Dressler. The trio
won the game 88-'73. (Ai' Laserphoto).
helped lead the Tigers to four
consecutive Btg Elght conference
champlonshlps, and Stlpanovlch
. became the school's aii·tlme scorlng leader. His performance Tiles·
day night gave him 1,782 career
. points.
. David Ponce scored 14 points 1D
lead Nebraska to a M-71 victory
over Iowa State. Ponce was one oi
five . Co~uskers who scored In
double figures as Nebraska pi'D"
duced Its highest point total of the
By PAUL ALEXANDER
McCallum's jumper with 1:09 left conference season.
AssoclatedPressWrlter
putBaUStateaheadlorgood76-75.
LorenzaAnctrewsscoredl8polnts

_________

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$669
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At PCIWIII's

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CHIO&lt;EN NOODLE

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•••••••••••••••

.

:~

:·

I.

'

�Page 6

Wedr.. ldiJf,
, M&amp;ad1 9, 1983

Pomefor-Middlep, Ohio

The

Ohio

_]Jlyleven works in
.Indians' 3-lloss
TIJCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Not since
last May 1 had Bert Blyleven thrown
a pitch with a crowd and an umpire
serving as a ,backdrop.
"I was very anxious," the
Cleveland Indians' right-hander
said Tuesday after pitching three

GOOD GLOVE - Tom ._.,_, DeCmlt · 1nD111« of Tueeday's exhltituon game In ~eland,
'ngers'tNrd"-.t!lvesto-abaaofltbebat . Fla. Broekena was able to get up and tllrow out
of the Boslou Red Sox Gary A l l _ In 1M seooad . ABeD80D to elld the Inning. (AP Laserphoto).

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..

~~==========~============================~~==~==========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
STARTING THURSDAY AND ALL WEEKEND LONG!

Satunlay contest
The lzaak Walton Club wm hold
Its big buck deer horn contest
Sa!un1ay, March 12, at 7 p.m . a t
West Shad!- River Club House.
Allhuntersarewelcometoattend
and bring' their horns. Only paid
entries are eligible for a prize and
must be present to win.

Jay 'LunJtq(.

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COACH OF YEAR -

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LEGAL NOTICE

•'

· The Public Utilities Com· ·
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No. 82·161-El·EFC (Sub·
file A) to review the fuel
procurerrent practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company , the operation
at Its Electric Fuel Com·
. ponrll and ralataJ tllllters.
This hearing is scheduled
to begin at 12:00 p.m.
on March 11 , 1983 at City
Council Office, 218 Cleve·
land Averu~, S.W, Cantm,
Ohio 44702 . .
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
lo be heard . Further infor•
matlon may be obtained
by contacting the Com·
mission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: David M. Polk,
Secretary

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' '"'... ' -1:011 &amp;Ill. te 4:011 p.m.

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6.JOAM

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The Grea t T1arn

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SATURDAY- MARCH 12
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SAO. 011'118 Newlon· '

Do Golden Pond (PG)
Robrf\ Wr~iams

3 40 AM

John In Concert
Raglrmc (PG)

Rich And Famous (R)

!2:10AM

· Soulh91n Comto11 (R)

4boAM

~~;;~;;~~~~;;~;;~~~~

The Movte!ll !NR)
Oh! Hoaw~nly Dog lPG) '

10:00 PM
2:00AM

gv

PICtures (PG)

Robbeoy (?G)

Mo5tow DoeSNot
Beh!Ne In Tear! (NAI

5.25 AM

On Gold81'1 P(J nd (PGJ

Nei ghbor s{~ )

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·----·-----·----------·----·--·-·----·----·--·-·--·----·--------------~----.J
FREE Movie Adventure Weekend. •
Compliments of HBO, CINEMAX and .
.

Nil.

·- ---

.

How can you have fun outdoors, meet nice people. and make money all at the same time? By
becoming a carrier for The Daily Sentinel. We ara
accepting application for walk routes in Middleport, Pomeroy, and Syracuse.

'

.

· HIO &amp; CINEMAX Installation Sale
CALL NOW AND SAVEl
THE PFJlFECT DOUIILE FEATURE ••

'~

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12 NOON HURRY FOR BEST. SELECTION!
·j

667-6485

·

Attlf'no;.

·DELUXE BUNK BED!
~U~rcD~-.

PWSH PIT GROUPING!

S579.95 FULL SET

1

DOORS
OPEN:

TREMENDOUS!

JUST ARRIVED!

S88888

Wincllirror Dresser
Chest Hudboard, Nicht Table

5,\,LE
'

oo-

CoHoe!-

CHAIR
Dnsatr, llirror. Chest.
ltd,
Nicht Table
$399.95 TUB CHAIRS
Blue &amp; Salmon
$2166!661 11252 KINCAID SOLID
$79.95
WOOD ROCKER
$179.95
WOOD ROCKER $
.
DUE TO THE E~lH.a.OAOINA~Y
NATURE Of
THIS EVENT
TH E

$0DII

"8888
''"·"EA.•umc .
•I

Dresser, Mirror, Chest Bed ·
Night Table.

'1620 KINCAID SOLID CHER~Y '

OCCASIONAL

OUTRAGEOUS!

each
$149.95 lA. GLASS TOP
2 He• T1bles,
I

Tuppers Plains

. Lantz. Lant&lt;aslrr; t{('f1 SIOtf'r'. Vln{'('fll
WaiTf'l'l : St£'\'£' Mr AI«', LanciiS1£&gt;r; Roobko
Smith. Mlam\1'ra('('.
PLAYER OF' YF.AR - Si("V{' BNnln~.

Sl49.95 lA.,

lrlllitiMil Rfrtnide

Class AA Co-Coaches of the Year.
The Class A district coaching title
went to Ron Lovely, who guided
ChJIJicothe Flaget to W straight
victories and the No.lO stateWide
ranking.

Old VFW Hall

. All District players
.-noo~ ~·s baW&gt;tbllll all·star !Jt'k!t'IIOrw;,
rnadt&gt; by .a dl~trk•l ptlnf-1 ollllffiJll!o' J11l'l'li&lt;IOd

Wood &amp; !Joss,

r$1099.95 BASSEiT EARLY AMERICAN

~lorgrr~softball.

lroadc'asters:

~518.00 HERCULON

$299.95 VELVET

BEDROOM

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hemlock MIUer.
Three-time aU-district selection
Walke, a 6-1 senior, averaged24.9
. Steve Bruning of Athens is the No.1 points this season. The6-5Lunlng, a
player and VIncent Warren's Dan senior, carried 23.6-polnt and 14.3Settles the top coach this winter In rebound averages.
The Associated Press' Ohlo Sou·
John Eaton o! 18-2 Wheelersburg
theastern District boys all-star and Virgll Grandy of 17 .3
basketball selections.
Nelsonville-York were the area's
Bruning, a 6-toot·5 senior alrmdy
committed to Ohio University,
averaged ~.6 pointS and 10.3
rebounds as a senior, helping
Athens win the Southeastern Ohio
Middleport Youth League will
League championship. Hf' ranks as
a final signup day March 12 at
hold
the school's aU-time single-season
.
Middleport
VIllage Hall from 10
and career scoring leader.
a.m . untO 2 p.m. !Wglstratlon tee is
Settles, in his first yPar as a head
coach, tu~ Warren ·, program $7.
The league is for T·ball, minor
from a 6-15 loser Into a 15-5 winner.
·
league,
pee wee, boys' little league,
And he had only one retUrning
pony
league,
and pee wee and girls'
regular trom the · prior season as
junior
girls softball and
softbalJI,
Warren jumped from Class AA to
Class AAA competition.
For additional InfOrmation can
A district panel of sports writers
made the annual selections, based 992-3326 or 992-5726.
The league wlJI hold thetr monthly
solely on regular season
meeting
March W ai 7 p.m. at
perlonnances.
Middleport
Village Han . All inter·
In Class AA, Brad . Walke of
ested
parents
and coaches are
Wheelersburg was the district's
asked
to
attend.
leading player whlle the Class A
honors went to Jay Luning of

Route 7

"I only threw five or six breaking
balls," he said. "I'm throwing it (the
cuJVe) hard, though. I'm not afraid
to letlt go."
Chris Sando, who caught Blylev·
en's three Innings, came away
satisfied that the veteran is back.

DOLL HOUSE CHEST

Flexsteel Gr1y or Rose
Popcorn Flbric
.

, $900 MODERN QUEEN
Sleeper by Flexsteel

Bulldogs' Bruning, .'Burg's Walke
'top.SEO cage picks; Beegle chosen

$538.00 COLONIAL

l4

$1321 , DUAL TAJ.I.E
4 Ann Chairs, Rust

Ill

MIRACLE!

5':RR88 I

AP's .itll District team named

Sign-up day set

TABLES

VELVET SOFA

Reg. $803.00

Silmon

$399.95 KING SIZE
Stratolounctr

88888
4 Rata n Arm Chal rs
$799.95 F&lt;lRMICA TOP WOOO TABlE
6 Wooden 'Chairs
·
4444

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stilt£
88

VELVET SWIVEL ROCKER!

RECLINERS ·

$799.95 BRJSS
w/GLASS TOP, 4 Chairs

•

BARGAIN!

Str1uloun10r Closeup

w/Matching Recliner

Blue Stripe
Traditional

table.
Rtt, $999.95

DINETTES

Table w/4 Chairs
$319.95

Euty American, .ftoc:k
nylon, wood trim.

5 Pc. BASSETT BEDROOM
Orienltl dresser, mirror,
ches~ heodbord, ni&amp;ht

JRSI SAVEl

'•

99

.

.. COMPARE!

SAVE 10°/o • 20°/o •'30°/o UP TO 60°/o OFF!
toll &amp; Chill.

bloc~.

rM:h cMfry finish.

LIVING ROOM GROUPS- FAMILY ROOM GROUPS - SOFAS· CHAIRS- LOY~·
BEATS. ROCKERS- RECLINERS ·HIDE-AWAY BEDS- BUNK BEDS- MATTRESS
SETS IN All SIZES- TRUNDLE AND MATES BltDS ·DINING ROOM SETSDINETTES - TABLES - LAMPS - ACCESSORIES • SECTIONAL SOFAS • BEDROOM SUITES - MODULAR GROUPS - OPEN STOCK BEDROOMS - DESKS •
CHESTS- WALL UNITS- THOUS4NDS OF ODDS AND ENDS SLASHED TO SELL!
DOZENS OF SPECIAL FACTORY PURCHASES! EVERYTHING ON SALEI

LIVING ROOM
stoneville brass,

iftl illilod chino. Warm,

NO ITEM WILL BE HELD BACK!

•. ~ 1\'"'1'"'1'77

7 PC. DINETTE SET

Tlble. 6 cl'llirs and m•tr:tt-

.
17SU5

EMi liiE FURNITURE'S ENTIRE $3/4 MIWON SS~ Wl1 BE REI)liCFD

By May Company

Pillow Top
.... $799.95 Set

BASSETT DINING ROOM

EMPIRE FU Nl URE
f'OR A DAY OF SAVINGS! PlAN TO SHOP FOR

QUEEN SLEEP SOFA

TO

ITS EASY!

ITS THURSDAY! NOON TO MIDNIGHT AT

BASSETT MIRRORS

Rfl. '169.94 ....... :......................... 198.88
R••· '199.95 .......... .................... s1H.11
Rt~. '69.96 ........... . .................... 138.88

NOON

BASSETT IS PROUD TO SPONSOR AND COORDINATE THIS GIGANTIC
FURNITURE SALE AS AN APPROPRIATE "FINALE" FOR OUR lOTH
·ANNIVERSARY YEAR.
THURIDAY, MARCH 10, HUNDREDS AND HUNDREDS OF AMERICA'S liST RITAIL
STORES WILL OPEN THEIR DOORS TO OFFI!R SI!NSATIONAL RIDUCTIONI ON I!YI!RY
ITEM IN EACH STORE (NOT JUST BASSETT PRODUCTBI) IT'S YDUR CHANCE TO TAKE
PART IN THE GREATEST FURNITURE SALE IN AMERICAN HISTORY! HURRY! DOII'T
MISS OUll

BASSETT 5 Pc. BEDROOM SUITE
Colonial

8~:~

MIDNIGHT

A CHANCE TO OWN THE FURNITURE YOU WANT AS
STORES ACROSS AMERICA . OFFER .THE BIGGEST
SAVINGS EVENT IN HISTORY! HURRY!

BASSETT CURIO

Buitt in lights,

0

12

Innings
In the
Indians'
3-1exhlbltion
loss
to the
Chicago
Cubs.
"You can throw all the batting
practice you want; It's just not the
same as. throwing In a game," he
said. "The biggest thing forme was
all the fans silting In the back·
ground. Usually, you don't even
recognize that . Today, I did."
Blyleven ranks third among aU
pitchers- behind Jlm Palmer and
Tom Seaver - in earned run
average over the past 10 years with
a mark of 2.91. But he undeiWent
su~ry for muscle tears In his right
elbow last May 5 after asking to be
taken out of a May 1 game, and he
sat out the rest of the season.
The inJury was easily the mo5t
serious of. his 12·year major league
career..
"The. arm feels good now," he
said following Tuesday's outing. "I
was happy with it."
The Cubs managed one run on
three singles against Blyleven, who ·
threw 'just .30 pitches during his
three Innings. Twenty-one of the
pitches were strikes.
"I threw strikes, but at times 1
didn't throw good strikes," he said.
"But that's just a matter of getting
my innings ln."
Kriown· for his sharp cuJVeball,
lied
the 32-year-old said here
more
heavily on his fastball Tuesday. ·

ANN'S
CAKE DECORATING

' C 1983 Home Box Ot!ice, Inc . All Ri!lhls Resc~.

180062~
•Retistered tetvl~ marks and " st=noice marks of Home Bo11 Olke. loc.

·Available free 1u ca.ble TV ~ umc 1 i1Jt•rs nnly

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

�i&gt;age---8

Wedne1clay, March 9,

The Daily Sentinel

Correspondence

Carmel News,
By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle,
Mrs. Martha Lee and Florence Clr·

:cle attended the 50th weddtng ann!·
versary of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Smith held at the Methodist Church
ln Chester on Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grlswald
of Utah called on Mr. and Mrs. Dou·
glas Circle recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas ctn:le vi·
sited Mr. and Mrs. Alban Grlswald
of Vienna, W. Va. recently. Mrs.
Grtswald has been very mfor some
time. They also called at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Blazer of
Belpre.
Florence Circle and Elsie Circle
called on Vema and Lula Circle on
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Circle and

baby of Keno Road were at !he
home ol Vema and Lilla Circle on
Sunday, Vema Circle and Lula Clr'
cle were dinner guests ol Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Ctrcle ·and !amlly on
Sunday.
There were 44 present tor Sunday
School on Jan. 30.
Mrs. Martha Lee called at the
home ol Mrs. Ethel OJT on Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
called at the home of Harry Rl·
chards of Bald Knobs and attended
the blrlhday ol Floyd Richards on
Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle Vt·
sited at the home ot Ronnie Klbble
of Leroy, W. Va. recently.

Mrs. Evelyn Holter and Mrs. El·
sie Circle called on Vema and Lilla
Circle recently.

Mrs. Lula Circle and Mrs. Carl

Circle and famlly spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Muttl and famlly at Mansfield.

Fairview
News Notes--.
r

By Mra. Herbert Rou*
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Sand and
son Joey spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Cameron Sand at Ga!Upolls.
Visitors Tuesday .c1 Mrs. Etha
Warren were Mrs. Pearl Norris of
Letar~ Woody and Zella Brown of
Fort Pierce, Fla .. Sunday visitors
were Tom Warn~. Clarence and

Wednesday, Mcmh 9, 1983

1983

Illez Roy and tlaughter Nancy

~Meigs

ot

Ractne.
Michelle Monis ot Bidwell spent
Friday tl!iWgh Sunday with her
aunt, WUda Lawson.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Herbert and Mary Roush and
grandchildren, Kim and Jenny
Roush, called on Russell and
Bernice Roush Monday eventng.

- Wl!eeler ~s an ~nte- ~ -Choaren's Home Roail, !5omeroy, nance speclallst at Shaw Alr Force
and a grandson of Mr. and Mrs:
Norman M. Hysell•. Bashan, and
Base, S.C., with the 363rd Aircraft
Generatlon Squadron.
Mr. and Mrs. Dores Arnold, Rock
The airman's husband, Edward,
Springs Road, Pomeroy.
Is the son of Jack Wheeler of Galli·
A former student ol Meigs High
School. Hysell was an employee of
polls Ferry, W. Va. She Is a 1976
graduate of Tatnpa Bay
Sweet and Eat Shop, lormerly
Vocational·Technical High School,
Pome1py Pastry Shop, tor three
Tampa.
years before enllstlng. He Is
undergoJns basic training.
His address Is Pvt. Hysell, Terry
E., 293-7Q.3312; Platoon 1()112, First
RecrUlt Tralntng Battalion RTR,
MCRD, Parrts Island, S. C. 29900.

Dean birthday

.

·

'' '

H'I9SP

d 0 v 811 15o90

•18m;

-•S

•IIQ u •riKJ

10

'

Hysell
Terry Eugene Hysell, Syracuse,
has enllsted In the United States
Marine Corps. He Is a son of Mr.
and ;drs..Nmman. E. Hysell 33164,

l&gt;t!

I MQI I ~ &lt;hil l l .tll~ l o &lt; 'W ~ Ill M Ch 1\. roye o 510 ft'

l!l C6()1 d ~

~ ,._,18(1 "'

~S60

tt'll5 dd H noe 00 '\.in

~~

o1 an

who complete this course of tnstruc·
tlon are eligible for three hours of
college credit In Physical Education and Hygiene .

.,
-

I

OHice Hours by Appointment ()nly

ADVER TISED ITEM PO LICY
t.t~,_r-

Navyseaman Recrul! Toiw R~
Jewell, son of Raymond F. and
Judy A. Jewell of U5 Kerr St.. Pomery, has completed recrlllt train·
tng at the Naval Training Center.
San Diego.
During the elght·Week tra!ntng
cycle, tratneesstudlesgeneralmll·
I~ subjects designed to prepare
them for further academic and on•
the-job tralntng tn one of the Navy's
85 baslc occupational fields.
Included tn their studies were
seamanship, close order drill, Na·.
val history and first ald. Personnel

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

the
prtce.
ding

tnclu

.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Glenda F. Wheeler, daughter of
Edna Murray of 1713 Julian Lane,
Tampa, Fla., has been promQted tn
the U.S. Alr Force to the rank of
senior airman.

•

,

Page--9

County and ·regional servtcemen s news notes

- , ·-Alrman-First.- Ciass Chrtstopt~er ·
M. Self, son of DlaQe· Troy . of
Mason, W. Va., has graduated !rom
the U.S. Alr Force munitions
.maintenance course at Lowry Alr
-Force Base, Colo.
Graduates of the course learned
how to Inspect, assemble and .
,dispose of explosive munitions, and
~amed credits toward· an associate
degree tn applied science through ·
the Community College or the Air
Force,
Self wm now serve at Nellis Alr
Force Base, Nevada.
He Is a 1982graduate o!Wahama
High School, Mason.

Mrs. Hazel LawSln, Ed and
Diana Lawson were sbJpptng atthe
Mall at Parkersburg Sunday.

.

The Daily Sentinel

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

e
~

l

II

Now's the·Hme lor super savings on VO\Jr ArtCorved 14K
gold elms ring. ArfCaNed bac ks ea ch ring with a Full
Lifetime Warranty. This offer expires May 31. 1983 and "
to be used only lor the ptrchase of 14K gold ArtCorved

Class

Ri~s

~RTrARVED'

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

,1

I~ ~~/· '(,I, ~""'"'.QI
..,,.~,..,.,:..,..,,., ...,

--------•

J·ODOO 212 E. M1ln, Pomeroy

/JY. .

...,11 oHer v ~ ,.ov• CrlOo c t&gt; Ol ~ compcu aDit&gt; otem

rt em

-Nf'

.....-.en

il l&lt; ii+LiiOit'

l @f18(" 1o r.ttJ l h @ Sdme s.J IIIn 'J~ 01 d l il on ( h@IC Jo,

ol'l'tloch w oH tW' Io T~ vou 10 pu rchase
!tdv&amp;'1• secl puce W!lhoro lJ davs

I~

acJvert•sed •tern d l l ht&gt;

COPY RIGHT 1913 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS ANO PRICES
GOO O SUNDAY MAitOol 6 THROUGH SATUIDAV MAICH
l :t l913 tM GAlliPOliS ANO POMEROY .
.
WE RESEIIIVE THE liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLD TO DEAU:RS .

Dean

Kroger
Welcomes Your (
Federal·..
Food

Sarah Beth Dean observed her
second birthday recently with · a

party at the home ot her ·parents,
Mr. arid Mrs. John Walter Dean,
Wolf Pen Road, Pomeroy.
' A Smurfette cake was enjoyed by
Mr. and Mrs. BUI Spaun, JUlia Ann
and Shannon, Pomeroy: Mr. and
'Mrs. Kenneth Marktns, Ractne;
. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Fife, Che.§hlre , and Sarah's
-Jeremy and James. She rec:elv•ed 'I

KROGER

Grade A
Extra Large Eggs

c

Nestle Toll House Cookies Win National
TaSfe Tests!·Nestle " Toll House .,·Cookies are tltr best-tasting
clrip coo_k!es you can bake. 11rat's because tlrcy'rc tltc onlrt

clroco/a~r

01~es

made wrtlr tire Ongmal Renpe and Nest!£;" Toll House " Morsels. flrr
creamiest morsl'ls wi tlr
c 1983 The Nestie Co ., Inc ,
tile riclr, ri•a/
clrocolatt• taste.

,gifts.

1880\&gt;S

·R. oush
birth
•,

Doz.

.•
•
•

16·01.
Loaf

USDA

Polar Pak
Ice Cream

'1

CHOICE

Roush family
Mr. and Mrs. Yancy E . Roush
are announcing the Dec. 7 birth of
their daughter, Amber Ray. Pater·
nal grandparents are Barbara
\fWis of Albany, and James E.
Roush, Chagrin Falls. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ray Grimm, New Haven,
W. Va .. and Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Stobart, · Middleport. Paternai
great,grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Sayre of Racine, and
maternal grea t·gran&lt;!mother is
Mrs. Edith FoJTest. Middleport.

II
Springdale
2% Milk
Gal.

48

Ctn.

12-Gal.
Ctn.

1

Fresh
Green Cabbage

Grangers attend
membership drive

c

Erspotlight
Bean Coffee

a .$
-lb.

lb.

Several Meigs County Grange
leaders were tn Bartlett for a
dlstiict membership drive session
hosted by the district committee
chaiJTnan, Jo Ann Ingram, flora of
the Ohio State Gr~e.

~

aa

Thompson White
Seedless Grapes

Low Prices on quality guaranteed products . doy·in and day·out . Over 1'oo
different items . Products with a name ~ou con trust Of1d a quality grade,
you can count ~n . Products you ~an .d•p•nd on every day and priced .. ,
low or lower than . "no name foods " ot Kroaer you know ~xoctly what
you 're getting when you buY it , not when you open lt. ·And each and
every "Cost Cutter" item is backed by Kroger's Satlsfactio"' GuarantH .

eSERYKE
1t'1 Kroger that serves you with o special "customer·CO'!'et·flrst" pride In
every employee . from cashier to chairman of the boOrd . Our new
•l•ctronlc checlcouts are designed to make your shopping quick I hassle·
free . And In every deportment you'll find courteous I friendly peopt.
•og·er to oulst you .

Thank s t p you , new Sunli ght liqu id
w ith rea l lemon juice is a big
su ccess . So we' re br ing ing you
even mo re Sunlight in a big , new
48·oz . eco nomy size. along w ith
big coupon savi ngs.
If you've tried Sunlight with extra
clea ning p
er. then xou already
know. Ybu ally cant have too
mu ch of good th ing .

Web Justle, regional member·
ship chairman, tn charge of Ohio '
and West VIrginia, brought Ideas
which Included greetings and $Ug·
gestlons from Ohio State Grange
Master, HoWard Caldwell. and
Ohio State Grange Chaplain, !»
nald Elliott.

.

Athens, Meigs, Morgan, and
Washington Counties were repres·
ertted by 40'members. Gotng from
here were Mr. and Mrs. Rolland
Eastman. Hemlock Grove; Mr.
and Mrs. WWiam Radford, Rock ·
Sprtngs Grange, and Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon Barrows, Arthur Crabtree,
Pomona lecturer, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mendal Jordan, Meigs County .
deputies, all ol Columbia Grange.

Bag

•COST CUTTER IRAIIDS

Here's 50(to prove yOU can't
have too much
of a good thing.

r II
•IYIIYIAY,LIW PIKES

Kroger stocks a compl.t• selection Of national and r. .lonol"brandt at
everyday low prices. comparable to ony supermarket In this area .

•SOOPEI cosr cm11s

l•eryday low 'rices on pantry staples. Save up to •o•;. on Soo,•r 'Cost
Cuttero compared to other brands ot Krager. (For oom• Sooper Coot
Cuttero no other comparable brands ore olockecl.) Ch..k the pllow price
list of the o.. r 400 Sooper Colt Cutter pantry otapiM , onlr at Kroger.

• ....S11P.SIIFP.I
You1Jl. flntl a wide oelectlon of houoehold · Items In our general
merchandiM department. No nMtl to make spacial trips to a hat11wa,.
or d - r t - llore.

.•

•JIIAL SAn5FAC1... HAIAml

lET US SHOW YOU HOW..

------ -\

TO Til£ OULfR. 'l'b~

See specially marked packages
for details of mail-in offer.

·.

N~W!

CALL FOR DETAILS.

purchose price.

In Every Deportment. You conoe!..t from over 10.000 It-• .,dover 200
klnda and cuts of mllal,includlng Lomb , v..l. Freoh s.ofoad . .d 7 kind•
of Ground Meot. ,You will aiM lind on•. of the wldftt ..........,. of f...ah
fruits ond ........... plut o DellcatHMn.l--lonal loodl MCtloa .
..urmot and jlot . . . . , lnlllltullonol aiiH and more.

.

MAKE YOUR OWN EASTER CANDY .

Everylhlng JOU bur at Kroger 11 .guaraniHd lor JOUr total ,ootlolactlon
r~ordle11 of' manufacturer. If yau 11ro not ootllfl.,l, Krogar wHI replace
JOur Item with th• oame brand or a comparable brand or refund JOUr

•VAllElY

SAVE IIONEYl

STORE COUPON

..

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
PH. 992-6342

317 J1; 21)d

DISPOSABLE
RAZORS . .

SCHICK DISPOSABLE
RAZORS .. . for maximum
comfort and closeness.

25~

Schiclt

DISPOSABLE
RAZOR PACKAGE

Jo~ o1

too

bur~

) UU 101 100

red~motoon

.i•f ·~t~or i ~G •r, .or.t "~ 011'
ol Jr .; wu~r1o Wo ~" 1r o01
III Jn.·. f iiU IIIIO 01 I 11")11

lilt:~ V~l\1~

pon UIIIIOI II~! mert~IOO• ~ e .,o ~ I•·•'!'!JUI\o yO!I
tor sut~ 1 1~ yood~ Pill&gt; I( Mll!l "~ll p!O~• OI'O 1~ 11
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�Page-:- 10

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Wednntlay,

March 9, 1983 .

Mardt 9, 1983

Beginnings and ·history of Old Portland Church
By GAYLE PRICE
Second of two artl~les
The Old Portland Church was bUUt on land donated by Ellas
Browning. It was located to the east aitd down hill !rom the above
mentioned United Brethren Church. This was In thesouthwestcorner of
lhe VIllage of Old Portland.
Until the new township road was buUt through the village, a big
ravine cut past the church ground on the oouth. This ravine drained all
that section from land that runs along the west side of the road.
Drainage was from near Lock 21 down to the river south of the village.
For years, access to the church from the south was over a foot bridge
near the Browning home. For many years, Mrs. Browning lived In a
little house (!lrectly In front of the church.
Best estimates say that the Old Portland ChUrch was built hi the
early 1880s. The church parsonage was located a few feet to the north.
The c hurch and the parsonage were partially connected by a cement
wa lk.
"James Bell and Ferree Daughtery donated money. and tabor
toward building the church. James Bell gave $300 In money and Ferree
Daughtery gave $150 In cash. Daughtery also boarded the workers tree
while they worked on building the c hurch .
Hiram McDade donated the bell which he obtained ott a boat. This
sa me bell is used in the church now In use In New Portland. The Esky
organ used In the old church was purchased from Edward McDade.
The clock was donated by Goessler's jewelry store of Pomeroy.
Light for after dark occasions was provided by a big wrought Iron
chandelier hanging from the ceiling near the building cenier. It had
cross arms extending out In a circular fashion !rom the ends of which
were located 10 or 12 coal oU lamps. Some more lamps were located on
lhe rostrum a nd along the l]lterlor walls.
Heat was provided by two big burnside stoves. George Thompson
was sexton for many year's and he made those stoves hump with his big
poke r during cold weather. Mr. Thompson was Sunday School
superintendent for 18 years.
Browning brought In a huge Christmas tree at Christmas time to be
decorated and loaded wlth.presents.
William " Bunk" Browning tolled the bell for funerals and other
occasions. He could put a pull on the rope that would Sl;'nd the sound up
a nd down the valley that no p ther person was ever able to equaL
Beautiful a nd tasteful decorations were provided for Children's
Day a nd on other special occasions. Jenny Jones dld these decorations
using native and wild flow.ers. She had a gift ;~nd touch no other person
could duplicate.
.
T
Lizzie Price played the organ In the early days. Later Henrietta
McDade played the organ.
Many burials took place at the church. Jack Boggs, a black man
who was a long-time resident of Portland, wsa burled out of this church
"with full honors." Three members of the same famUy died of typhoid
one, two, three. Their funerals were held one after another In July.
There was no burial preparation available then and a Portland resident
told about tbe dismal ceremonies.
At the time the World War armistice was signed, the firing of guns
in Portland Village could be heard through the night. The next day, our .

'

family went down to the church and I.saw a big pile of shot·gun shells In
the church yard.
A memorial to Clive Price was held In this church after hedledlna
foreign country during World War 1. Dr. McCullough led the services.
Many community functions were held In this church and immense
crowds sometimes gathered. All around In the early days were horse
and buggy riggs and saddle hqrses.
Sometimes after aU the seats were taken, the windows would fill up.
Faces gl1mmered In the Olckerlng lamp light as yoimgpeq~le peered In
sometimes with another person P€1'Ched on their shoulders.
In~· the annual meeting of the Women's Foreign Mlssionary
Society r:ld its annual meeting at this Portland church. The meeting
lasted two days .and there Was accorded aU the honors ol reception
committee and lodging In the Porlland Hotel.
Old timers took their church
serlously and expected you to
do the same. One Ume. a·boy created a distu)'bance dUring services by
striking a match with his foot, making a popping sound. The
congregation cracked down hard. The sherltf caine up and the boy was
threatened with going to jan.
One time, a preacher made It pretty hot lor some transgressorS
who he thought were setting a bad example. Tempers flared and a
bundle of switches was left at the preacher's door.
The'next sermon from the pulpit was long remembered. One of the
Sunday School teachers told her boys not to go ftshlng on Sunday. •
Another told them not to play ball on Sunday or go to games. Another
teacher told his young men \hey ought to wear coats and ties 1o church ·
and Sunday School. He said, '"The church Is nobody's doghouse." .
This old c~urch was tom down about 1928. A person wbo had been a
resident of Portland but had been aw11y for many years can)e baCk and
noted the church was gone. "That old Zion should have been left
standing," was her sad remark.
Some of the preachers who served Old Portland Church follows,
but not In chronological order:
Finney. 1887. He performed the marriage ceremony .for Alvar
Adams and Rosa Price.
Longman, 1002. He was present at the golden wedding of
Henderson and Merlnda Price.
Prior. ·
Matheny. "Left many warm friends. "
Peter S. Butts. 1892. This man was highly regarded. He preached
Martin Adams' funeral. Butts was very out·spoken. This story was told
about hlm. He visited a family who had a chronically smoking
fireplace. The Reverent took a poker and knocked out the back-wall.
"Build It over," he ordered.
W. C. Ferris. 1913. He wrote the deeds for the town lots In New
Portland. He offered great encouragement to his people ,during and
after the 1913 flood .
c. L. Thomas.
Caron.
ScovU.
Holcomb. He was a beauti!ul singer. Delighted his partshloners
when he sang, " Oh, I.Drd, U You Can't Help Me Don't Help That GrizZly

a

sef\1ces

Bear."

SUGCESSFUl
. .BUSINEss··

Kemper. Gus Brewer marrted his daughter.
Clary. Performed inarrlage ceremony for Roy Powell and Alice
Watson. ReVerend Clacy's wUe was active in conununlty affairs. Sbe
was admJred because she drove the famUy car before other women
were. brave enough to do lt. Reverent Clary told a fellow, "It takes a
strong back and a .weak mind to use a mowing scythe."

IS ACINCH

rnt!land.
Callihan. A

Belcher. He often drove a span of m~ hitched to a buggy when he
served his charge. He~goodatswapplnghorsesand mules. When he.
got ready to leave Portland Reverent Belcher built a little house on a
model T chassis (fore-runner of today's camper). Nothing Uke It had
ever bee!! seen here. The dily the Reverend pulled out a crowd watched
from Ben Price's store porch. One wag remarked, "There goes hell on
wheels." ·
·
·
·
Wilson. 1917. He drove a . model T runabout that overturned with
him.
Edward Miller. He was the lastpreachertoservethe old church. At
that time Dell Mlddleswart was Slllldl\y SChool Superintendent. Maxie
. Browning, Earl Willford and Olive WOlford taught the children's
classes. Lucy Gibbs taughttheyoungwornen'sclass. Mattie Henderson
taught the adult women's class. Dell Middleswart taught the men's
class .and P,eny Bl'OWJI!J!g was choir leader.
.
' The above InformatiOn is believed to be authentic and any emri
are unintentional. The peOple who furnished inlormadon Include
Hentletta McDade, Harry .Swan, Annie Adams, Joe Price, LD!s
Browning, Alver Adalns, Kate Mills and G. L. Wlntn!y. .
.

WEDNESDAY

POMEROY - . Pomeroy
Chapter 80 RAM. and Bos·
worth CouncU 46, R and S.M.,
7:30p.m. will meet Wednesday
at the Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Amateur Gardeners will
meet Wednesday at8 p.m. attl)e
home of Mrs. Edward Burkett,
188 North Tht,d Ave., Middleport. Mrs. Harry Da v)s will be
co-hostess and Mrs. Margaret
E lla Lewis wUI present the
program.
~--

POMEROY - Past Counci·
Iars Club of Chester Councll323,
Daughters of America, will
meet Wednesday night at the
home of Mrs. Erma Cleland.
Mrs . Dorothy Myers will be the
co- hostess.

THURSDAY

POMEROY Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F. and A.M. , will hold
a special meeting Thursday at 7
p.m at Pomeroy Masonic Tern·
ple. Work In the master mason
degree will be exempllfted. All
master rruisons are Invited to
a ttend .
POMEROY: Preceptor
Beta Beta will meet Thursday at
7: 40p.m. in the Riverboat Room
at Diamond Savings and Loan.
RACINE - Southern Local
Band Boosters wUI meet Thurs.
day at 7:30 p.m . In the band
room at the high school.

. DORCAS - A spaghetti and
cliicken noodle supper will be
held at Bethany Church In
Dorcas on Thursday with serv·
lng to begin at 4: 30 p.m. The
POMEROY - A Bible prosupper is sponsored by the youth
phecy lecture wfii be presented
at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Porne· · fellowship and everyone Is
welcome.
roy Seven t h·day Adventi st
Church. Topic will be "How
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Near Is the End?" and special
Springs Grange wUI meetat7: 30
music will be presented by Doris
Thursday at the hall with
Green. The public Is Invited.
Hemlock Grange to visit.

.

'

,. /

Astrograph
,
March 10, 1982
Tpe yield you've been hoping for could come Into being between
now and your next birthday. If you plant a lot of seeds the harvest will be
substantial.
.
PISCES (Feb. 00-March 20) Rather than trying to force things to
happen today, It may be wiser to let events run their course. You'll be
luckier when all follows its natural sequence.
ARIES (Mai-ch 21-Aprlll9) ':tour bright ideas regarding what will .
provide the greatest good for the largest number should be acdvated
today. Use your Influence on your peei:S.
TAURUS (April 20-May 2e) U you could see yourself today as
others see you, you'd be pleased with their assessments. Keep doing
what's necessary to enhance your Image.
· GEMINI (May21-JW1e20) Yourchami andbeguillngmannerwill·.
put associates at ease today and could even win you new allies. Others ·
will want to inj::lude you In their plans.
CANCER (JIUie :n-July 22) Don't hesitate to dlscusscareer.matter
with big shots you might encounter socially today. What you have to say
could be helpful to them as well.
·
_
LEO (July 2.'J.Aug. 22) You have the ablllty today to bring diverse
factions together In ways that will be for their general good. Put \hiS
talent to proper uses.
·
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 2) Condll!ons looj( very favorable for you
today, especially 11 you're Involved In something constructive with
persons you cherish and respect.
UBRA (Sept. 23-ru. 23 Although you are Ukely to be well received
by all today, you're apt to enjoy the greatest popularity with members
of the opposite sex.
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your ova-·aU prospects are much
more encoiU1iglng today than they Were yesterday. Use your Ingenuity
to stir up something personally rewarding.
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 2.'J.Dee. :n) You're apt ID be far more fnrtu·
nate today, where big isSIJ!)S are at stake than you will be with the trivial.
Hunt lor large game.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. :1:2-Jaa. 19) There Is material opportunity
around you today, but It may be partially screened trorn your view. It's
. tmperative to leave no stones unturned. •
AQUABRJS (laa. »Feb.lJ) Something gaid which will awaken
· new hopes Is brewing for you at this time. Although others will be
Involved, you're the esaentlal element.
I •

•

'I

Public Notice

Public Notice

NonCE OF
FlUNG OF AN
' APPUCATION
TO MERGE

NOTICE OF
, PUBLIC SALE

1983.

shootlngdownona~newhlchcan

Observance of National Grange
eUmlnate the horizon or sky
Week, Aprtl 24-30, was planned ai
altogether 11 that Is the effect
Satunlay night's meeting of Star
desJ_red.
)
Grange attended by 28 members
Randolph showed slideS' of lands·
and three juvenlles.
capes from the Gennessee River In
An open meeting will be held 01)
New York State, Hawk's Nest In
,Aprfl .ll at 6 p .m . with a potluck West VIrginia, and the Grand
dlnn~. Thepubl1c!sinvlted. Itwas
Canyon.
It was noted that the photo
announced that the annual Meigs
display at the Farmers Bank will
County Grange banquet will be held
on Aprtl 15 at the Salisbury
be changed on March 12 at 11 a.m.
Elementary School.
Members . wltb photos to 'show al_'e
The state baking and national
tohavetheirpicturestherereadytp
sewing contests wUI be held at the
hand.
'Ibe group agi-eed to have a
April meeting. Members were
display ready. for a show at the
encouraged to enter the contests.
Thellteraryprogramcons!stedof
Meigs Inn on Aprfl 17 tot . the .
readings about spring and St. . Arnerlcarl Cancer Society. Next
Patrick's Day. There was a histoiy
show \\'ill ill! at McClure's Three In ·
quiz on Meigs County and Ohio. A One In May.
Next meetfhg will be March 14 at
legislative . report was given on
farming Issues by Ben Rife.
7: 30 p.m . at Meigs Museum at

.. '
..' ·. ' .

· which time there will be an update
. on the slides taken of homes for the
Hlstorieal Society's slide show.
Randolph will have ~Y
discussion on fl1m types • Debbie'
Spencer will be in c
of the
program entitled " Ta _ Action

Pictures:•

j;

A contest will be held at the
March 28. m!etlng Of\ s~ ~
prints on local interest pictures. ,
Programs in Aprt! will be Gil
«!eveloplng film and making prints
by Joe Poole, and pictorials by Pat
Schaekel; and in May ~night
photography by Nick Depoy, and
marine life by Randolph. ;ilune
subjecis will be indoor Ughting and
Indoor portraiture by Randy HOUo.
dashelt, and Dower photography by
Susan Frazier.

was

- WILLING SLAVE
DEAR W.S.:
.. . By developing self-esteem.
Nat·types sharpen their egos on
grateful ·women who would do
anythjng to break out of the "dull as

·oatrneal'' Cocoon.
So sharpen your own ego with

~~Let's

meet somewhere... I break
my neck to be there. Usually I elid
up paying the motel. ThEil the next

theBe tools:

'

1. Admit you UledNatasmuchas
be uaed.you; 10 DOW you've proved
younelf "capable" of ln!rlp!, you
no loniJer aeecl him. ADd tell blm
that, u &amp;hedaelplnat_......ini2. Talllethe"!lull"outafbamelle.
A "IOQCI" 'n'ebe"" .-ID't be .a
boi1Da one. (Polllbly be's bored

time he sees me, Uke as not, he
.Ignores me for another woman ....
who fawns an over him too.
11ds is my flrlt !apE. Amon&amp; our
· friends, I'm COIIIIda ed the aood
Uttle wife. (Which means they
'/

day ol March. 1983 at ten
o'c lockam.
•
. Zennh 20.-· sol ;d state
telev~ ion
Sale of the sscunty hsted
above wdl be held on lhe
prem• ses of T~e C•ty Loan &amp;
Sav•ngs Company. t 25 E Ma•n
Street Pomeroy. Ohoo
Terms of Sale· Cash
Seller reserves the right to
btd and the nQht to reJec t any
d 11 b d P
1h

:~le ." ar;a~ge:;~~ ~~~te ~

made to inspect this merchandose by calling 9g2 -211 1
belween the hours of 9:00a m

and 5 :00 p m

too.)

-

3. See )'Ourself as a whole person,
n&lt;~t a

female who Is only worthwhile
because some charmer notices her.
This last needs ume and much

Exercise clasSes
an

Area W&lt;n'lell !nterested 1n
exercise and weight ti'ainlng class
are lnvtwd to attend an Introductory
sesllon at 7 p.m at Southern High
School March 15. 'Iboee attending
· are asked to Come dressed to

exercise.

Services
RMV. Jaek ~will ipellkatthe
w~ay 7 p.m . lei'Yicel r1

_ ~omeory . Oh1o

Applications lor the scholarship :
annually awarded by. Pomeroy :
High School All!ffiril Association .
are now avaUable.
'
Meeting at the horne of Sue ·
Zirkle, president, the association ·
continued plans for . the annual :
reuillon scheduled for May 28 at
Meigs Hlglt School. El1glble to.
apply for a scholarship from the ·
group Is a child or grandchild of a Pomeroy graduate. The appllca~
tions are av8Uable from Mary Jane" :
Wise, Joan Williams, and Mrs.
Zirkle. Applicants are to submit a
transcript of their grades, a
picture, and a brief description of •
their other activities.
The dinner will be served at 6: 3Q,
p.m. with the dance I() be held form
9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Keith McCall and
Co. will provide the music for the
dance which is open to the public.
Admission 1o the dante only Is $4.
The banquet ticket for alumni and
guests included the dance.

•lnaul8tlon
•Storm Doors ·
•Storm Window•
•RepiMCIIT'I. .t Windowl
Roofing

•"'ew

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH . 992-2772
3-H mo.

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
~ENERAI. ELECTRIC
&amp;HOTPOINT

Ann Davia of RIVerview Place, i
Middleport, Ia recuperating · ~rom :'
lllr&amp;IIIY at Pleas:ant Valley Hospi· ·
t,J In Pulllt Pleasant, W. Va. 'She is · ,
lD room 101. ;
:
"~'

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or
Pomtrey,

STRIP

coAL

· Authorized John Deer,

Hoe·

arm qu pment
Dealer
Farm Equipment ·
Parts &amp; Service
13tfc

104

p .

eoun·• ; .

OH .
~.
·
Open 9;00 to &amp;:00
Mon.-Sirt.
Cloeed 11nn.

.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
:Douc•[S s
81 "" 01
-Dump Trucks
-Lo-BOJ
-Trencher
-Wiler

&amp;
-

·

IA~MARK ·
61~992-2181

SATURDAY-7:00P.M.

Rutland,

OH.

S&amp;K AUCifiO'N

SHERMAN TIWS: Owner
RODNEY HOWERY: Auctioneer
.Terms of Sale: Cash or Check With Positive I.D.

STARTING AT

$12

95 PER YARO

INSTALLED

KITCHEN CARPET
STARTING AT S8.99
BACK
&amp; CARRY $4.99

-Sewer

-Gas Lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

1-12-3 mo . pd.

~s:~
;.:-:...' ·

992-22$0

"Somethinl New"
RAVENSWOOD FABRICS
Now Haofashlon
Outlot Quality
Clothing·
•Jeans
.
'BIOUIII
'Swill Suits
'heninl Gowns
Etc
·Open Jues.·Sat.
··

3-4-lmo.

ANGIE'S
PIZZA

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
· . SIDING
'Sidlnc
'Roofinc
'Gutter &amp; Oown Spouts

Mon.-Thurs. 4:00-11:30
f rt.· Sat . ·4:00-12 :00
CLOSED SUNDAY

'Ramodelinc
20 Years Expenence
·
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES
Call8 43-5425

p·lll.IS-Pizza lllaad

.._ ,.,.

1

D-.. .......

lUI"'" I&gt;I_,_..,..IA
2·11·1 mo.

RACINE
fiRE DEPT.
Bas han Building
EVERY

SAT

Yo~ can make money ntllng

AVON . Cot1448·3368.

PINCH? Eeae the aqueez:e·

..11 Avon. Coli 1114-843·
2982. 614·388' 9045 , or

1 mixed breed fem~lo ha.hod ohoto &amp; opoyed. ·Coli
4411-1112 .

814·992·3890.

12 YEAR old Border Collie
togoodhomotnthtcountry .
Good comll'lnlon for older
people. Call 304· 875 ·
678B.

0494, 9:o.m.·9 p.m. Mon:
dayllhru Friday. Adamo En·

TRUCKING-No experiencneceuary . For. informadon
cell:227·61 t II or 227•
terpriaes. Inc.

'

Earn extra money for Eaeter.

PROGRESSIVE Mid '
woatern Molleoble &amp; Gray
Iron foundry looking lor

676·6702.

agr111ive ulea p•ton. Sand

B
·
rown mole puppy to good
home only. 304·876·97B2.

The Point Pleaunt Register

6

2 18.11,

,

Soli Avon. 304·1175"1429 . .

reaume to Box P8 In Cllre ol

200 Mein St .. Pt. Pletoont,
wv 26660 .

Puppieo. 304· B82·3284.
POPPIES. part Collie. 304 _ .12
67 6182
5·
··

'

H -2- no. pd.

and oolory history to P.O.
Box 313, McArthur, Oh
46661.

INFLATION GOT YOU IN A

1-----

NIGHT
6 : 30 p• M ·
Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns Only

·

nela. financial etatementa.
..,d aupervlaion of ltaff.
College education a plua.
Salary commeneurete with
experienc•. Send rltume

8 mo . old Peeke Poo haa

Two m11a ml•ed breed puppie1. 3 monthl·old, 304-

GUN SHOQif

be reapponalble for all ec ~
counting end g.,naral office
functlone. Re•poneibllltl.lncludlt preperetlon of jour·

11702.

Puppy, 304-.676·3964 after
6.

Rmnswood, W. Va.

ACCOUNTANT Multi ·
location Southern Ohio
vending comP'InY lo •-lng
I oelf·movatled lndlvlduol to ·

Dependable bobyoltter
needed In my home. Mon ·
Fri. Call 446·4385 .

lhota &amp; wormed. Coli 446·
28B7.

10:00 to 5:00
204 W1Shinaton St

Help Wanted

Situation•
Wanted

Happy Ads

TREE TRIMMING &amp; REMO-'
VAL. CALL 814,949-2129
OR 614·992·8040.

Happy 40th Annlvaroary
mom&amp; dod. Nancy, Becky&amp;
Todd.

Will plow or disc gordano In
Racine oroo . Coll949-22n.'

6

Lost and Found

for elderly only. Ae1oneble.'

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

UTILITY BUILDINGS

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.

GHEEN'S

PAINTING INC.

LOST: Gray &amp; white mole
cat. In vicinity of Pat Hill
Ford. Middleport. 814-9492495 or 814·949· 2491 .
Reword .

Industrial, Commerci1l,
Residential, Interior 1nd
Exterior.
Painting
Sandblasting
Mortarblastlrig
Parking Lot Stripping
Spray Pain1lrog
Texture Coating• .
FuiiJ lum-flol Eitillilllll
CAL1614-949-2616

Will core for the elderly in
our home . Trained
expe·

SillS s'-rt from IZ'x16' ,

CENTRAL REALTY
ISIIIIalt

IDBILE HOlE - with laiJI! lldd-oo buildin&amp; also
drJve.
Wiy.l.ocaled on quiet clean !beet ext of high water in Rlcine, The
IMni 1110m is extrllaiJI!. There is acement walt and laiJI! CIMll1ld
pon;lt. also a melal sorage buiklin&amp; You can be in this ooe in two
weeks for only $16,900.

.

IIEW LISfiiG - 4 bedroom home in the counby, vinyl s.dinl!.
sQ11I wildows, on 3 acres, lois of frul trees, plenty of good wlll!r,
IIIUflle loM1 of$18,500 with IT19DihiY paymentof$258oranarwe
1 new loin.

IIEW LlmiiG - 3or4 bedroomspossil*!on !tis one. Trailer with
laiJI! addil!l on nearly an acre lot. Includes stDtliiJI buildinl!. Ltt
filii halll !ICOIId Inlier as em income. Cal lor more d!Dils.

Asltin8 $12,00).

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'136' ,
lnsul1td Doe Houses

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

large white male Angora

veara ••parlance, wants to
return to Pt. Pleasant or

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992·7121

. R1ci~, 011.
PIJ, 614-143-5191

7

Yard Sale

a

rlenced . LPN core given .
1114·992·7314.
MEAT cuttor ormonoger, 20 ·
Golllpolio, OH . Wrlto: 701
North Mapte. Eaton, OH·
46320.

Will plow gardena In Point'·
Sat. Morch 12, 9-4, St. Ple.asant arH. Phone, 304&amp;
loulo Church Holt 4th a. 676-7233 .
State St., Galllpollo. loto of
children'• clothing borgalno. Plowing gardena and doz:ar
work. 304-1176-6912 .
· '
Spon1ored by Rlg~t to lite
Society.
Gigantic Ruinmage Sale

3-24-ttc

10-6-lfo

2-J-2 mo.

cot. 304·676· 1672.

Coil 814·992·6022 .

fL--------ir====::::::::==::;itr========~t===;:::====~
,
THE
"CUT OUT
PRICE
'
. 4 Fomlly
Yard Sole Thurodoy 1 3
Insurance
KOUNTRY KLUB
FOR FUTURE USE"
CONSTRUCTION 10th. Friday 11th, Texao Rd, - - - - , - - - - - -

Real Estate General

VIRGIL B. 51! .
r.. 2nd 51.
. Phone
1-(614 )-992-3325

216

NEW UmNG - Nice 1t1er
home that has car)ll!lin&amp;paMIfl&amp; 2 baths, 2 IDthes; lllkJflll
Ill&gt; furace,liso a coal sfDIIerftr.
nace. 2 car ilBI'¥ with shop,
siJr¥ in basement lafge. lot
ftW'JOUr garden or pm Aslting
$35.000.00.
,
NIW LISTING - RACINE9 rOOII\ 4or 5 bedroom. 2bath
home New kitchen cabilets'
and sin~ nalural gas furnace,
nice car~n&amp; and lar~J~level
lot. Owrer financing at just
$20.!XXl or wil consider tra~er
as 00wn payment

BARGAIN - Will take
$13,!XXl lor tlis 3 bedroom
frame home Has ball\ gas
furnace, carpeting basement,
2 po-ch!li .-.d level lot.

COUNTRY - Nice loo~ng 2
bedrooms, I~ baths, wiJOd.
burner, carpetin&amp; tun basement and buil in 1959. Now
just $Zl,OOO.
·
FARM- 80 ACRES- Alxltrt
hall lays ·real IJOd A rea
handyman's farm. Good . 3
bedroom tann home wrth ball\
· woodburning fl'eplace. Ideal
for clllle and children. Some
timle'. Asking sa&gt;.~ but
l1)ve us 111 offer.
SWIM POOL - You Cill enjoY
the hot summer here. Nice
lilthen, gail fumice, lui

basement, new 2 car garage
and 2 llis next to lhe schod.
Now just $47,500.
IWIGAIN - Wfl!lld yoo gi.'e
$2l,(XX) fur these 2 houses
next to ea:h Iiiier. This ~ a
11100 investment for Jf!Y(fle. 3
liedraoms and balh in each. All
utiliies.

lOW, 1.011 PRIC£ - lou ;a

cill't bell th~ for prlcle or
·corM!!IislCl!. 3.47 acres and a

4 room house Will1 ball\
Le~ing

c.- Water, ~

buming_chimne'f and cella'
neer Middlepcrt lor only

$11,500.
10 UmNG - IlDDLEPORT- I ftoor,S room home,

IIEW Umlll - 19731rlile! in Middleport, 2 bedroom,laund!y
100111, llldti !* lhina, i!sulltion, tu111 electric lloc*W!~· em
be n-s myout~ 111flnllllt presentlocOoo.
value

beina reniOdelld, ld, 111 funnce, new wlrJna, t1IUiPDeil

-

nearthel*i

INn - · price. t6,950.

A TON

.

2_2,il' 11,

PH. 992-~851
349 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, OH.

POMEROY

coiner of Depot &amp; Main

CASH

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992,2174

~~~~~~~==·=-~-t:=====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----------

ALL OTHER APPLIANCES

AUCTION

RU

$3()00
,

PH.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

efln Grlp1
•Retinishin,
•Re-weilhtinl
o'Bal1ncln1
eGolf Trips
For Youna Pooplo -'
•Pre-Susan S.la •
20% &amp;30% OFF
JOHN TEAFORD

'985-3561
All Makes
•Walh•• •DIIh-ohero
R Rangee
• afrlgaratlll'l

~*hen,

2 pordlel Ullill ~

·

Housi; Ill
Headquarft'f s

Gelllpollo. Baby clothu
cycle, couch , miac. 9 to ,__

8dPu bile Sale
8t Auction .

for a~mo1t a century. Farm, ,
home en'd personal proplf'ty
covaregea are available · to ·

the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigment1 of new end

Are you paying to much. for
your hoapital·health lniU· ~ ;
ranee. Call Ca.n-oll ~

meet Individual need1: Con: •
too;t Eugene Holley, ogent.
·
Auc11on every Fri. night •t Phone 388-B890,

742-2324
773-5684
J.4 .J mo.

t - - - - - - - - - - i - - - - ' - - - - - - + - - - - - - - - - 1 uaed merchandiM elwaya
welcome. Richard Reynoldo
Auctlonoer. 2711·3089 .
AUTOMAnC
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
RADIATOR
AUCTION every Seturday
TRANSMISSION CO.
SIDING
SERVICE
night, Mt. Alto, WV. 8 p.m .
271 • • lllit
Ill.
Conelgnmenu welcome .
We cen repair and reEmma Bell auctioneer.
core rwflatuow and haec
tar COtW. We cen also
edd boil end tOd out ...
9 Wanted To Buy
\
"Beautiful, Custom
dlstots. We IIIIo repair
OPEN
9
tl
S"ION.
t1w
SAT.
Built Glrages"
All TyP.s of Auto Rljllir,
WANTEOTOBUY Old fuml·
G• Tarilca.
Brllt1, Tuiii-Ups, ete.
tuN and .Antiques of all
Call for free sidin1 esklndo, coli Kenneth Swain,
timates, 949·2801 Dr
448·3169 or 268·1967 in
992-2196
949-2860.
the
evenlngt .
FWJD CIIAIIG£
Middleport, Ohio
No Sunday Calls
1
ONLY 31.95 ..,,_"
1·13-tlt
Buying Gold, Sllvor, Plati3-ll·tfC '
num. Oold and Sliver pricea
are the hlgheot In .,.o-ro,
check our pricee on gold •
. '
.
' . .
oltvar, ocrop jewelry. Buying
Old colno, acrep ringo a.
ollverwore. Oolly quoteo
2 In Memoriam
avail obit . Aloo colno a. coin
oupptleo lor oote. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring
Some truat in chariota. Valley Plaza, 446·8025 or
Richard Garfield
Lone Bott0111, OH.
end aome in hor...; but we 448-80211.
will remember the n1me of
'Parldnl
Lots
HOME BULDING
Wa pay caah tor lata model
tho lord our God.
•Driveways
clean
ueed cars.
ROOM ADDITIONS
Pnlm 20:7
Frenchtown Car Co.
'Basements
REMODELING
Bllt Gene Johnoon
In loving memory of Purley
'Patios
ROOFING &amp; SIDING
448-0089
Kerr
who
p111ed
aw1y
Reasonable Rites
March 7th, 197,.
"FREE ESTIMATES"
Good u•d pickup truck.
At. 3, Pomeroy, OH.
leyond the aunoet. A gled Call
REFERtNCES
446-4063 .
our
deer
loved
rounlon,
with
PH. 614-985-4464
onao who've gone before:
PH. 985-4141
3-7-1 II'IO.Pd.
2-21-1 mO. pd.·
To that fair hOmeland 40 or 60 HP outboard
motor. Catlll14-258·8640.
know no porting,
~~~-------------i------------------~
Beyond the ounoet, Wanted tobecco poundage
forever more.
Still mlued 10 very much lor 19B3 HalOn . .COli 6 14·
379·28 t B after 6.
by hlo wile Altona, 'Paul •
Horoco Karr ond doughtor
Small utility trailer or boat
Ktt~ryn Moro, gr.,dchHdtroilor. Coli 4411-0196 after
ren l groat-grendchlldron.
6.
New HOlliS, - · Extensive
Remolltllnl- ·
Would like to buy a good
•lnsuilnce Wort
3 Announcements
uoed ' portable dllhw01her.
·.Custom
~ole Bldp.
For ell your wiring
Phone
448-9&amp;28 .
I G111ps
needa: fumace• re"'oofiiJ Wort
Learn to Nve money ex ~ Wontod partl lor John
pair Hrvlce end Inch1nge refund ' forma end ·DHre 2010. Call 814·387~··&amp; vm,t Sililp
stallation.
coupons. Join Fr1n'a R•· 0837.
I~· Y-• bpo&lt;Mnco
fund
Ctub, colt 814·4411·
Realdentlal
OlEO ROUSH
0337 .
BEDS·IRON, BRASS, old
• Commercial
PH. 992·7583
lumlturo. gold. ollvor dol ·
Call 742-319&amp;
or 992·2282
lero. wood Ice bokH, etone
I J.ll·tlt
3·1·11&lt;
jaro. ontlquaa, ate.. Complete houoaholds. Write:
M.D. Mlllor. Rt, 4, Pomeroy,
Oh. Or 992-7780.
Kltc..n Clblntls - RoofIna - Sldlnl· - Concrete

r-ur.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

TRAN~,g~t~huu

PAT HILL FORD

AND

'-.. . .
..
-.................

CEMENT
FINISHE.R

JESCO
BUILDERS

-·n

ROUSH

MILLER

CONSTRUCTION

ELECifRIC
SERVICE

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

618 l. -

,_.,, OH. '

Pallol -

...... .

CHARLES SAYRE

PH. 992-3795

AND SON
Roof'.. &amp; Sidllw Co.

.. Do loalillllllill For
. . . ~~~~~- Catpat...
lull?

ll &amp; l'lilwllllpJ

lolte I
Llllllollotl, OH. 8743
MS-4113 or 992-1017

IIUrC.KEIUII-OIIIER
-~

ltl-lkl -

lltw Construction - Rellllfllllna - Cullo• Pole

1·17·2•

•

·'

aervicae for fire ineurlince

coverage In Golllo County

Remodeling
15 Years Experience
All Work Guaranteed

•-S-tlt

'

alzes 0 to 3, and ta.,age SANDY ANO BEAVER i~
clothing, 360 Hondo motor- 1urarice Co. has otte,;a l ·

Roofing, Spouting
Complete Home

p~~~.:F=~E

2·16-1 mo.

.ALL CARPET
INSTALLED
WITH PAD

ANY PERSON whO hu
l"'1yt!1ing to give owoy ond
d - not offer or anempt to
offer eny olher thing for 11ie
may piece on od In thlo
column. There will be no
cherge to the odvertloer.

MOTORS, ·Inc,

4

Coli

Giveaway

SMITH NELSON

I IAcal-'t
(Fr• lotimatH)

Chester, OH.

· 4.

Hospitalized

~and

•PONDS, HCLAIATION
WOIK
•LAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE W~L-...­
aOED &amp; Mill( - l t t U
PHONE Jll CLIFFORD
992.7201
3·1·11&lt;

Goorgoo Creek Rd .
4411·0294 ..

From he SIRIIlell H11t11
Core to the IJorpst Radii ·
tor.
bdlltllr Specllist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Y11. Experience

--CsuoeiB wMc

SEWER LiliES

U.S. IT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

WE ALSO WORK ON

13) 2. 9, 16. 23. 30. (41 I , 61C

effort. Let your husband help. • . _
Don't wallow In guilt or regret.'·
They · slow down healing - and :
learning from your mistakes . -H. :

Ecclesla Fellowship, 128 Mill St., ·
Middleport. Music will be by The
I:lows and ·the public Is Invited to • ' ·
lltletld. At the Sunday servtcei, ,
Jimmy Evans. will be~ with
Inaplrll to alng.
,• I

•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC $YSTEIIS
•LIMESTONE
. .ATEI, GAS and

Cluner, one h•lf mile up

RADIATOR SEIMCE

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• ". c R *' J IL4
•n,._......,_

•DOZE I

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Mature Quail now being
sold. Eus available with
notice Iller llay I. D1y old
chicks avail1ble with deposit afltr lay 25. l2·l ••.

Athens . Oh10

•

COMPlETE

YOUNG'S

MINE RU--N

' :~~·
~~.rr~- .

- ..
......

happening~ i:

J&amp;F·

CONTRACTING

BOGGS

'

BANK ONE OF
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION

&amp;

SWEEPER and ..wing ma-

emole3mixed
breed
pupploo
montho
old.
8751------~---+--:---------t-....;--.-.-----i-----------if.ebout

LAng Bottom, Oh. ,
Ph. 915-4:US
Clell lalant•, Sr ..OWner

"·•,.

.

. . . .. ..

11

Vacancy In boarding home

S:W.. W~sh;ngton. D.C. 20219

At

I

VINYL &amp;
ALUMI"UM SIDING

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM

W1th1n 2 1 days oft he date of the
las.t publication of th•s not1ce.
The public file IS available for
10Sp0Ct1on in the Reg10nal O f,
ftCe. One EneV1fJIN Plaza. Cleve~
land. Ohio 44114 . dunng
regular business hours.

Pomeroy Alwnni

Meigs County

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Arw oerson des1nng to com-

BANK ONE OF
POMEROY. NA

,

131 9 ltc

ment on thiS apnhcat1on n • o~v
do so by aubm1tt1ng· wmter 1
c omments to: D1rector. Bank
O'rgan 1zatH&gt;n and Structure Drv•s•.tin. Comptroller of the Currency. 490 L'En fant Plaza. Eat.

THURSDAY

She understands those 'so dumb' women
probably think I'm as boring as
oatmeal.) My life
serene,
cpmforlable and untlu'eatened before ~at noticed me .. Each time I
meet him, I swear It will be my last,
and then he stops by my desk, and I
melt.
How do I get over this craziness?

fotlow~rlQ

3 Announcement•

up ond
chine repair.Pickpaito.
end
~;:::::~::::::::::::=~Tr========:;-r.:========;"l;:=======::;~ auppt111.
delivery , Davia Vacuum

1983. and endong March 30.
1983 .

Helen help us
By HELEN BO'lTEL
DEAR HELEN:
I used to think, as I read· your
columo, "How could women be so
dumb?" They~d hook up with
arrogant, selfish charmers, then
take abuse and misery ratherlhan
cut loose.
"Not me! " I said. Ha!
My marriage Is good - and dull.
I didn't realize how dull until I met
Nathania! . He's everything Frank,
my husband, Isn't. Women are his
game.
I ~ow I'm just another experience to hlm, but when he says

T
wlll be offered for publi c sale JO
described
1tem
the he
h1 ghest b•dder
on the 17th

Th1s not1ce 1S published pur su~nt to sect1on 1828(c ) of the
Federal Depos1t Insurance Act
aDd Part 5 of Th e Regul at1ons
of. the Comptroller of the Cur-

•

·-· -·· . .

11

The

Business senices

' - Holllnd, Burh
F
E i

is contemplated that all officeS of the above-named banks
will continue to be operated .

I

Star Grange

Th·e Daily. Sentinel

will appear weekly, o n the same
days, beginn1n9 March 2 ,

Image Seekers

Plans for confirmation to be held
at Sacred Heart Church on the
eveningo!Aprtl 16were madeatthe
recent meeting of the Parish
Council at the rectory.
Bishop OttenwaUer will be• the
celebrant of the sacrament and a
reception will be held in the church
basement alter the services to be
hosted by the Catholic Women 's
Club.
·
·
Rev. Fr. Anthony Giannamore
opened the meeting with prayer.
Leonard Gwiazdowsky, chairman
of the youth committee, discussed a
camping trip to t)\'heldfortheyoung
chlldren In the near future. The
youth of the parish wUI attend a
summer youth gathering at the
Hocking Tech School in Nelsonville
on June 4 from 2 to 8 p.m. with
Gwlazdowsky· to have charge: On
the weekend of July15theteenagers

, n , ~S!"Hl~C' .

re.,ncv (12 CFR 5). Th1s not1ce

ofthepartshwiilattendanoutlngat Memberswereremlndedtotakeoid
Cedar Lakes In Ripley, W. Va.
. eye glasses and used hearing aid
May 14, the teenagers of the batterles and tum them in to Linda
parlshwUihostagroupofteenagers MootgorneraY.
from Portland.
A " pro-life"contact person Is to lie
chosentorepresenttheparishatthe
A ·program entitled ''T""'"w
Dloceslan meetings.
~
Envlrorunental corrurilttee ch3ir·
Landlcapes" was presented by
m an, Fred Morrow, reported that
Janet KoblentzattheMondaynlght
thenew radlatorswouldbelnstalled
meetingoflmageSeekersCalnera
within the next month.
CJ.ub held at the Meigs Museum.
A new bulletin board will be built
In conjunction with her presenta·
for the front of the church. A
tion,Mrs.KoblentzshowedsUdesof
discussion was held on the total
landscapes provided by Roger
ministry program now going on In
Randolph. The guldellnes and
some par,lshes of the diocese. 1Also subjects discussed by the program
an open council mf!!!tlng was chairman Included lighting, tim·
planned lor the near future.
lng, the use of fllters, tones and
Attendingthemeetlngwerethose arrangements, and vertical·
named and Barbara Smith, Diana hortlzmtal format.
Bartels, Rose Sisson, James Diehl,
Mrs. Koblentz noted that the aim
Jr., Ann Blackwood, Phyllis Hack· of most photographers ' of laJids.
ett. president, and youth members, capes In depth or three dlmenslon.
Patty Duffy and Fred Colburn.
She suggested shooting from dUfer·
,,_
Fr
G
viewpoints lor Impressive
P rayer by the n.&lt;N. . tannamore ent
hotogr hs
h
down
closed the meeting.
_ P
ap • ~c as 1ytng
or
kneeling and shooting up, or

Sacred Heart
Parish Council

J h.lt's r i!lht! When you use a colurnll&lt;
onch nr more in n cwsp~ per .1dver tising
be it no&gt;pl.ly or cl.lSsihed you reach·
'
lhous.1nds n l pote ntial buy e r s that
.1re
ea q cr to rcce1ve your money -saving

2~ ,
~ It

' .~·~~- .•I
....~ ;t-Jr~'"'-~
.

.

Easter activities were discussed .
at the recent meeting of the United
Methodist Men of Syracuse Parish
held at Mlnersvllle Chucch.
The men will take part In the
suruise service to be held at the
Minersville Church on Aprtl3at6: .ll
a.m. The Aprtl regular meeting will
be a breakfast at 7 a.m. with
families and friends Invited at the
Forest Run Church. Next m!;'eting
wiii!Je on March 27 at 6: .ll p.m. at
theAsburyChurch.
Kenny Wiggins opened the meeting with prayer. Devotions were
given by. Roy Jenkins from the
UpperRoomwithscrlpture!romSt
Luke. A discussion followed on the
application of the ,Sunday school
lesson and scripture used by fu&gt;v.
Stanley Merrifield in the worship
service.

. ..

Notice tS hereby gtven th at

Meigs County and area organizations gather for meetings, events
Syracuse UMM
.
ar
Ca1end
on
anit
.

.

applicatton has been made to
the Comptroller of the Currency. Wa shi ngton. D. C.
2021 9 for hts consent to a
merger of Bank One of Pome ray. N A_ _ Por')"teroy. Ohio w1th
Bank One of Southeastern
Ohio , Nat1ona l Ass oc1at10n.
Athens. Ohio under the charter
of Bank One of Southeastern
Ohio. NatiOnal Assoc1at1on and
with the title Bank One of Sou ttutastern Ohio. National AssoCIBUon. Th1s appllcat10n was
a.ecepted for f11ing on February

POR'DAND - lbe old Portlaad church was buill In tile early 188tiL

.

IF YOU USE
THE INCH!

Portlan4 boy remarked that Reverend Callihan wore

his collars too tight.

..

Ohio

Wollon Club wll
holre
Big Buck door hom
oontMt let., March 12.at 7
p.m. at Walt lhade Rlvar
Club houoe. All huntoro . .

welcome to . bring their
homo, lut only paid antdH
can win prin • muat be

........

Trophyo, good uoed old . Will
pay t2.110 a. up. Any kind.
Callt14·742 -30011 or 1114·
982·113B .
WANTED to lea... Tobecco
give .11 lb.
Morgt111 Woodlawn Farm,
Pliny 304·1711· 22711, 304813-11843.

quota. wll

12·2Gito

,.

Snowdon, 446·4290 . ·

1--------:-1S

·

Schools·
Instruction . :·.

..
Karete the ultimate Jn·.'oetf
defence all prlvete leooono,
M.,, women. a. c~ltdren.

Instruction thru ble'ck belt.·
AI~ available Kera• ··unl·

form• puchlng end· kicking
bego. end protective equipment. Jerry lowery lo' Aoooclatea Korete Studio,' 143
Burlington

Ad.,

Jac:kson·.

Oh. Coli 1114-2BII·3074 or
614·3B4·8tll0.
. :
Plano laa1ona for beglnneri

end int•medlote. 30+8756924.
.
18 Wanted to ·D.o: ·
General Hauling and l'ralll
removal Service. ReHable
and dependable . Coli 4483'169 after 6PM 2611-i987.
LEMLEY'S DRILLING Water
Wells. Shallow gas and CON
drilling. Myert and Gould
pumps. Sales and Service,

Goo ond oil welloorvk:o. Cotl
814-38B-B643.
'
Lawn Mowing no prd to big

or omoll . Reliable and tlepen·
dable.• For eatimate call

448-3169 or 268· 1987 of.
tor 8PM.
Small engine repair, lawn
mowera. riding mowers, ro.
totillerJ. Raasonablf rates.

3rd. &amp; Olivo St .. Galllpolio,
448·3159 between 9 and&amp;.
Wan~ed to do Hous~ CleanIng. Ref. avolleble. Coli
446-83119 .

Prociolon VCR Sorvlco. We
Mrvice all maltea • modeta
of video rocordero •

dloc
ployoro. can 4411·11111111.

Expellenoad typilt wonting
to do any kind of typing ot
her homo . Pleooe colt'4411·
4327.

21

B~aln•••

Opportunity
WANTED work on clolry
term. ExperianOed. " - ·
dable. non-drlnllar. Wrlta
16• p 211. Pt. Pl.... nt
.Regloter, Pt. Ploannt.

·

�I

..
Page-12
~1

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

8us in!ISS
Opportun ity

46

kn own brandt such •• Jo rd ache, .Chic. Lee, Le vi, Van-

46 Space for Rant

d erb ilt, C alvin . Kle in ,
Wran gler over 200 ot her

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork, Route 33, North of
Pomwoy. Lorge loto. Call
992-7479.

brands. $7 ,900 to $24 ,500
iriclude s beginning inven-

airfare for one to

Fashion

Center.

trai ning.

fi xt ures. grand open ing promot iona. Call Mr. Loughlin

"'7:---::--:-----48
Equipment
for Rent

at (612)888 -6555.

· by Larry Wright

9240 .

~ FRANK ~!&gt;FERN,
.,... UNIVERSlT'I' 1&gt;12.,

22 Money to Loan

TOAAIN@TON ,CT.

HOME LOANS 12% fixed
rate. leader Mortgage. 77E .
State. Athena, Ohio. 1 -614 -

33 Farms• for Sale

592-3051 '
Farm for sale 26 acres
23 Professional
mostly level. good hay
fields, $45 ,000 . Mult sell,
Services
reasonable offer . 3 bdr.
horile . new furnance ,
county water new .Path _
C&amp;L Bookkeeping
new alum . siding
carpeted,
Tax Returns S. bookkeeping
for Individuals Be businesses. coal Sa wood burning stove .
Good barn 8t other out
Short formo $6.00
Long forma $20 .00 and up bldgs, garage. Located on
Carol Neal
446 -3862 old 160 nur Porter . Call
614: 388-9080 .
PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appoint· 207 acre farm, langsville.
ment. Ward's Keyboard , mineral rites included, no
house 812,000 down will
446-4372 .
carry rest. 61 4·388 -9346.
PERMANENT Hair Removal
Profenional Electrolysis
Clinic Professional Building·
Room 1. A.M.A. ond F.C.C. 36 Lots &amp; Acreage
approved. Doctor referrals,
y appOintment, PhOne 304·
876-6688 .
Building lot iri NorthUp on
concrete road. With city
water, 127'x120'. 84800.
446-6254.

..,..

,.,,

31 Homes for Sale
E xc ellen t con d It I on &amp;
locetion ·· allreadyforimmadiate occupancy-- Interest
roteoarodownandprobobly
won't be lo-r.
Home and or rental
Broadway· Middleport.

·---·· ······ ·····- ---···.

Modern businesa bldg . 68
Court St .. Gollipolio.
112+ acres with 2 homes
Gallia County .
C.ll992-3287 or876 -2518
evenings .
3 bedroom 1h: atone up front ,
yellow vinyt siding. 1 mile
out of Reedsville. 1 acre
ground . $3,000 . down.
1150. month lllnd contract.
10 ptt. interest. $16,000.
straight Out. 614-4235967.
'2 or 4 bedroom, 49 acre.,
axe . coild .. rure:l water. Off
byproA 7 &amp; 124. 814-9927082.
HouM, building sfte1 and
acreage. Marshall Allieon,
2400 Lincoln Ave.Pt. Pl.

wv.

HouM. ·avz pet. auumable
loan. 2 ye1r1 old. Warwick
Rd. Pt.PI. 304-876-1458
eftar 6 p.m.
THREE bedroom house.
fenced front &amp; back yards,
BVz a11umable loan, 304~76 -8869 after 4:.30 p.m.
ASSUMABLE 8'h pllrcont
loan, poymonto &amp;276.00
month, 3 bedroom, garage,
full buomont &amp; fenced In
back yord . 304-875 -3030
or 875 -3431 ,
·
NICE 4 room house. new
roof. wall insulated. large
lot , 40' x154' , 304-6753030 or 876-3431 .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI-STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED- CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES .
!:ALL 446-7672.
CLEAN UsED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
• MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
AT 36. PHONE 448-7274.
l97B Schult 14x7,0 wry
. nice. c•Hralair, 2 fult baths,
•13.000 will conoldor
ewner financing with ttown
poyment . Col 448 -1842
!l:30 to 2:30 or after 5
304· 743-3333 .

..

10xl50 New • Moon com"letely turn . One ba~r ,
woodburner. new carpet,
11,900 . . Coli 814-388 8105 . Must ••• to
~pproclote . ·
1874 Arlington 12x00 2
bdr .• already Ht .up on
rlontod lot. Coli 814-2469618 ofter e.
USED MOBILE
1178-2711 '

HOME .

18711 TWO bedroom mobile
homo .,d 411 ocrH loootod
on Thomu Ridge Road. Coli
304·171-3210, and Ilk lor
Ron Hickmon.
Two bedroom, hall l\lr,nhohad. 1873 Hally Park.
~et•naon 100x10Giotwlth
. . .u ohlln link len .. ond
SturdY HouM, In GaiUpollo
Farry•• 14,000. Phorw 3041711·1331.
Mobile home, 3 bodroom,
1 2•10, centro! olr, flbo&lt;·
gl•• lbrcnolt mDior homo.
304-171-3181.

42 Mobile Homos
for Rent
2 bedroom Mobile Home in
Racine . $200 . month,
8100. dep. You poy utilities.
Kitchin smve 8t rvfridgera ·
tor turn ., rest unfurnished.
814-387-0288 .
6 room mobile home for rant
on Rt.338 in Antiquity, Oh .
Phone 614-949-2424.
ONE bedroom mobil a home,
$150 .00 par month , phone
304-675-4154.
43 Farms for Rent
80 acres, with 1 1 tillable.
Bottom lond . Along Shade
Creek. Located 1 Yt miles
well of AKrod on CR 231 .
Call colloct 1-613 -8852060.

PASTURE for rent. phone
10.8 .:res on Bulaville Rd in 304-675-51 1 o.
Gallipolis Township . Asking
839 ,000 . Coli 814-446 - 44
Apartment
4670 otter 5PM .
for Rent
1-:-::::---::--:---::-:--::--'1.17 acres Curtis Hollow, 1 - - -- - - - - - Near Forked Run Lake Dock
&amp; Gun Club. f3.600. 814- 2 bdr. Regency Inc. A~art­
378 -6301 .
ments t200 par mo. or it
income is t1 0,000 or lass
HUD available. A-One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager. Realtor. Coli 304-675·6104 or
36 Real Estate
675-5386
or 676-7786.
Wanted
Furnished apt. ·1 bdr ., 920
4th Avo. Gollipolio. Adults;
Buying houe&amp;s and apan- water S. electric pel, 8200
mants . Need properties with mo . Coli 448-4418 oftar
favorable price and terms. 7PM.
BoK 1109 GaUipolio. Oh.
45631 '
3 rm. and 4 rm. unfurnished
apartments. Utilities paid.
Land with· Mobile Home. no pet1. no children . Call
write to: P.O. Box 633, 448-3437.
Gollipolio, Oh 46631 .
1 - - - - - - - -- Nk:ley fumilh•d mob. home
in city. Adults only. Call
448-0338.
Furnished 3 rms. with private bath, ht. floor. 845
2nd . Ave., Gallpolio. Call
448-2216.
6 ·r m. house &amp; bath . Inquire JACKSON ESTATES 'Equal
at 918 2nd . Ava .• Gallipolis, Housing Opportunity' has
Oh.
one bedroom apanmenta
6 rm . house 2% miles out Rt. rant starting et 8167 per
month and two bedroom
688, carpet thru out, $200 apartments rant 11aning at
mo. Call 448-3045 day, $193 per month . Cal 446446 -2602 ev.,ings.
2746 or ktava me11age.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olivo St., G·ollipollo . King
coal &amp; wood ~eaters with
fan 846:9. set box spring ,&amp;
mattress 1100, firm $120,
aofe-loveseat &amp; chair 8199,
love seats •70. new coal &amp;
wood heaters 11 low as
8399 with bloworo, uoed
coal &amp; wood heaters, new
dinet IIOts S1 00 &amp; up,
refrigerators, ranges, bunk
beds complete $199, bunkiea manres"s •40, chaste.
dre11ers. TV' o. Coli 4483159.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- washers, d.,Y8rs. rafrigera·
tors, ranges. Skaggs AP·
pliancea, Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
448-7398 .
' '

Firewood,
.a
true kl oa d , 1plit.
$3 5 .•30
00 .00
d o Io-

~~·t:o.:;~B(:.1~1e~92"2770

IEfr,Rr

CAP'{'AN EASY
THE'i '~E ' :oJ OIJ~ TRAIL.,
t &amp;WI!AI't. THeRE \ lA~ ON&amp; ·
OVE~ AT TH' ll.IO~TAURAII.Ir
TUI'1NI~' .TH' FCOI,\AIJCE ON
BeVeRLY. SHe WAS CAVIN'
IN LIKI! A SCH001.61&amp;L..

Auto Parts--

59 For Sale or Trade

71

Loader-Ma11ey Fer;uson 1
wk. 356 with forlco. Coli
814-245-5804.
Buo hog in good lhape &amp;
older model International
tractor lneeda work)
11,500. Coli 448-0866
dayo &amp; 448-4267

Buikling materials
block. brick, aewer piJHIS,
wlndow1, lintela , etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0. Call 614-246-6121 .

Tobacco poundage for 83,
will pay 20 conto lb. Coli
814-2611-1146.

=-- -:---:------

1::;:;:=::;:=== = = =
63
Livestock
1- - -- - - - -- Plilmino gelding. Call before
8, 4411-9219 .
1-:~-----:----:Weened pig, Uli. Coll61438B-9830.
•
1-:: -: - --:-: : - Registered Quarter Horae .
Ruth Roevoo. Aloo grodo .
Saddloo, bridloo, winter
horea blankets. Western
booto. 814-898-3290.

Hay &amp; Grain

1976 Buick Electro 2 dr ..
PS, PB. AC, AM-FM otero
•1 ,860 or trade lor cattle,
farm equipment of equal
volue. Call 448-.537 .

1979 Z-28 low mileage.
loaded, ••c. cond . Intertoted buyer call 814-3870678 .
1981 Mercury Capri no
money down, take o'tller
payments 1230.11 per mo.
23,000 miles, ••cellent condition . Coli 448-3438.
One own or 1 978 Dodgo
Magium XE PS, olr cond .,
Cruiee, leather Interior, In
dooh AM -FM redlo with CB.
oxc . cond. Coli 4411 -8289 .
1978 Buick Century 2 dr ..
outo .. PS. AM -FM otero
caadte. ex. cond . Will sell
below wllaloule. Coli 4462133.
78 Chovrolat Cornaro type
LT. h" oil extrn. coli
448-4361 .
1 978 Monzo 4 cyl .. 4 opd.,
30 MPG, ••c•llant cond,.
12,800. Coli 4411-2874.
1967 Ford Muota~g good
reotorable cond . Call 44114410.
1980 Oldo Cutlo11
Brougham. Low mileage.
Exc .condition. Cell 814992-6621 .
1 974 Novo Sl 310 outo ..
good cond.. p.~.. p .b .•
buckot INti . •1.000. 114985-3818 oftor 8 p.m.
1978 Oldo 88 . 4 dr,. p.o..
p.b., i .e., em-fm ~area .
U ,196 . 814-992-8t30.
HARTS Uood Cero. New
Hoven Well Vlrglnlo. Over
20 le11 expenaive can In
stock.
'

.

38 CHEVY oodon, .600.
firm, 304-676-2802 . Coli
only if interested .
82 CHEVROLET Cltlotion,
6,000 mlloo, 86896 .00,
304-1176-3054.•
1971 Comoro, 3110 engine
neoo. 304-6711-2894 .
1978 Malibu 4 door. 305
engine . auto . P . S . &amp;
braku,46.000 mi . t2 ,000.
304-675-1058 '
78 Dodge Rom charger, exc.
con d. ugoo . 304 -87114090 .
79 PLYMOUTH Voloro, olr,
auto....,atic. 4 door sedan.
1880 Oldo, 4 door. Phone
304-8711-2406 .

Mixod hoy. $1 .60 bolo. Cell
1114-379-2817. '
Round baloo of hay lor Iiiio.
Call 446 -6568 , delivery
available .
Hay •z.oo bale, Locuet
pooto. Call 448 -4699 .

72

e. II

Autos for Sale

1973 OLDSMOBILE Cutlua, 304-1711-41118 .
Colveo. Coli oltor 7, 814- 1- - - - - - - - - 843-6186.
1985 CHEVY SS. excellent
ohape, .327 outomotlc, 304Frooh Jersey milk cow . 875-4399 .
1600. 1114-742-2060.
64

lion. 4 :00
304-87~-.1
after
p.m. 839 ,
79 Motors liomes
&amp; Campers

76 28 ft. lmpollo 'c 0 mper
hilly oqulped, with ocreon
arid edd on room, $4,000.
Collll14-367-7238.

BRIDGE

BUY Foctory Direct. Ught·
weight, flborglooa Scamp
t3' &amp; 18' trovol trallero &amp;·
newt 9 ' lth whHI. Coli now
toll lrH t -800-346-4962
for free brochure and uvel

81

~me

Home
Improvements

ANN I E

STUCCO PLASTERING - .
textured ceilinge commer~
cial end reeldentiel. frH
ootlmotao. Coli 814-211111 t82 .

1974 Kirkwood mobile
home 12x80 end ecce11o·
rioo. Coli 4411·4792 .
1982 CHEVY truck, hoovyduty '\4 ton, 4 opeod, V-8 , only
4,000 mlloo. e?,IIOO. 304876-8876 ovonlngo.
79 SR6 Toyota truck , I
opoed,long bed with topper,
304-875-3138 .

.... ... .. . ... . ' ....

HONEYSuM?

1980 Oldo Cutl811
lrouahom ' 21, 000 mloo.
excellent condition. Coli

4411-3112.

TOO SOFT T' 6E U5EFUL
FER ARROWHEI\05 'N'

•TH'/MIIITOU!

Morcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing. 30 yHI'UOllparionco,
apeciallzing in built up root.
Coll814-388-g867.
•

I.

Corpentlll' w(&gt;rk, Ropan or
remodeling, ceiNng tlloo &amp; ·
woll pllneling. RHoronob(o ·
rotn. 8t4· 992-27118.
RON'S Televlolon Service.
Speclollzlng In Zenith end
Motorola, Qua•ar. and
houoe cello. Coli 678-2398
or 4411-2464.

SO I THINK
IT'S A. LOUS'r'

THEN WHAT'RE
Wlii WAI11N ' FOR?
LET'S .GO TliLL.

ARRANGE·

'EMT-

~~A~h

F &amp; K TrH Trimming, otump
removal. Call 8711-1 331 .

MORE!

RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpe rlenced roqflng. including
hot !flr oppllcotlon, corpentar. electrician, ma.on . Call
304 -8711-2088 or 6711 411110.'
Watar W,ello. Commercial
.,d Dom•etic. Teat hoi...
Pumpo &amp;oleo ond SIII'Yioe.
304-888-3802.
Got your korpat In lhlp .
ohopa. Woterromovol, FREE
ESTIMATE&amp;. FURNITURE
CLEANING. -CAPTIAN
STEAMER 814-448-2107.

I knew
he'd
be

STARKS T,_ Trimming &amp;
Removal. Muni-backhoe
•115. hour. lneured. frH
eotimotao, 304· 578-201 D-

He couqhed! Get him
inside! He ma~ have

all

l got t' ride in
a oiq ~alia' car
an' LJOl.l didn!!

riqh~!

_________,._..

,'

'

CARTER'S PLUMBING •
AND HEATING .
Cor. Fourth ond Pine ·
Phone 448-~88 or 4411- ·
4477
84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
Dependable walher-dryer ,.
repair. G~r11nt.ed work. ;
Call 814-2118-81120 or II t 4288-1207.
'
SEWING Moohlno rop~~lro,
oorvlca. Authorized Singer _
Soloo &amp; Sorvlco Sherpen '
Scloooro . Fobrlc Shop , ·
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

e

ED 'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE call City Furniture
304-675-21108 .

116
_____

'

.

Gen,ral Hauling · :
..;._.,
'

'

'

•,

HOW DID TH'

TH' LAST

CARD GAME
GO, PAW?

MADE ME

THEN I DRAWED
THREE ''GJT-WEll"
DS!!

HAND

PLUMB

. SICK- · -

JONESIOYSWATERSE;R · •
VICE. Colloll14-387-74'f ·•
_o_r_ll_·t_4_-3_11_7_-_o_69_t_._ :-.-i·;·-. i;
Nood oo-·thlng
houl'•~ .,
.,_
IWBy Or IOm..hlftg moved,' • ~:
We' ll dolt. Col448-31118'e{'• ."
·'
11 4 -21111· 1 987 a1tor II.

· ~~

NIIW hauling llmutone lor
drive-yo, top oolllor yordo
• 1111 dirt. Call 814-387-· ·::
7101 .
· -G-ol or fill dirt. Dolillored.
C.ll814-892-38118.
.
JIM&amp; WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lanier, 304-117117397.

~::

0 K

Uphol•tary

~

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
I 163 Soc. Ave .. O.Uipollo.
446·1833 or 4411, 1833.

1811 Hondo CM400 ouotom mint oond., f1,100. MOWREYI Uphal~ At.
CIA .a ftor 8:00PM, 448- 1 Ito• 124; Pt. Plea•nt
304-1711-41114.
'
1141.

'

.,

" 1.

0""')

CI40P

CJ.IOP
CllOP

· ~o

.•

·'·

- ...- -'•

e

.

'PEANUTS

Motorcycles

1882 Hondo 4110 cwtom
uc. cond. Coll448·23110.

t,!l~,.. "t.f

.I

E 6 R Tr11 Service, fully ' .;
insured. free eetim8tee:
Phone 81 4· 387-0838, coli,
otterS.

87
74

.9

.:mOUBLE WA5, lliE .GO OC: !lEAF!
.GOUl 1'1115 IN OUR
CLA'H CALLEP
SIICIJE(l PlACE,
UP
Tlf' f1fNJIIS
TH' CAVE 0' TH'
T
PEfiTEU
IT!
CiREAT 5PIRIT!

AlCE5 'N' HUFF...

"

• Autos f~r Sale

~ DIDN'T r.\Ej\N i¥\OCH US
INVIAH5. THOCJ&lt;.1H! CiOL0'5

Trucks for Sale

Good qUality Hay. Never
wet. Contoct Opal Fltzpotrlck, St. Rt. 888 . Phone · 73 . Vena. 4 W.O.
Wilkoovlllo 8.14-11119-37SII.
79 Dodge 4 whHI drlvo
300 boloo hoy. •1 .00 p~~r 211,000 mlloo, auto.. A-1
balo. 1114-187-31131.
dltl
C 1144. ,7 &amp;8
• v '
con on. 1
Good mixed hoy lor solo. 79 Ford Bronco RongerXLT.
II 1 4-982-370fivenlnga.
exc.
cond., prlco U .IIOO ,'
Coll614-367-7238.
Straw. 11.00 bolo. Frank
Dodderer, Coolville, Oh. 71!1 Ford v~r~n cilatomlzed cot
814-8117-31148.
IHts AM-FM radio • atero
good condition. Call 448Mixed hoy •1.110 per hole . 3348.
.
'
814-99211036.
1879 JHp CJ6 . Blue, 8 cyl ..
3 opHd, 4 barrel corb .. com,
811 Saad &amp; Fertilizer
hlodet, duel oxhouot, xood
tlroo. f3.800 . 814 - 821877. ·
Wanted to leaH tobacco
poundogo for 1983. 81 4- 1177 TOYOTA Lond
2111-111134.
Cruiser t hard top, 4 apeed,.e
cyl., ••9BIIent condition,
Ullll. 304-171-20118.
·71

r

' 6.EAR CLA'H '
'A 'flE1160N.

PAINTING · Interior ond
oxtorlor, plumbing, roofing..
oome remodeling. 20 yn ,
.. p. Coli 814-388-88112 .

Plumbing
• Heating

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

amd a game show.

CII Screening Room
rn ESPN SportaCenter
(I) Andy Griffith
(I) Ill (I) family Feud t
(I) Busirieos Report
below average board.
® You Asked For It
It also shows the luc k of ·
® Flight to Survival
duplicate bridge. With. a 25NORTH
H -83
OJ ll2l Entertainment
+A 10 &gt;4
pomt top in the grand ,
Tonight
.K 62
national pairs it was . worth
8 :00 0 (l) ·Real People Toeg
17 points out of 25 to bi~ and ·
night's show feature s the
+AQI0 6 4
make six hearts. : -.o one ·
. political issue of Jell-0 wresmad e se ven· because
WEST .
EAST
tling , an amateur circus in
whether or not diamonds
+QJ
962
+8
7
Peru and a ponable disco .
were bid there was an auto- .4
3
(60 min.)
malic diamond lead against
•
QJ6
tAK10!7
5
I]J MOVIE : ' Quest lor Fire'
the slam.
·
+J 8 2
+9 7 53
(l) MOVIE: ' The Jericho
Translating
this
into
bidMile'
SOUTH
ding
terms
ol
the
26
NorthCll I Spy
+K3
South pairs: 17 bid'the slam (JJ
NCAA
Basketball:
.AQJI0!75
and nme stopped at e ither ,;
Northwestern at Michigan
+43 2
four
of live. 'J'hus, the slam :
State
+K
bidders
scored one point for :.
(I) Up Close
Vulnerable: East-West
each pair they beat and one- '
CIJ
Gl
1D
High
Ilealer : !Iouth .
half point for each pair they
Performance The High Pertied.
formance team must a loWest North East
South
Their unfortunate oppocate a cache of gems in a
Central American country.
nents, who did nothmg
Pass 24
Pass 4•
(60 m•n:)
wrong except to pick up bad
Pass
I NT Pass
5t
(!) Ill (I) Billy Graham
hands, scored only eight
Pass
~
Pass
Pass
Crusode
match points each .·
Pass
(I) Gll National Geographic
The bidding . in the box
Sp~~clel ·s ave lhe Panda .'
shpws one of the many ways
Tonight's program travelS
Opening lead: tQ
stx hearts was reached.
tb .China to look at the giant
S&lt;&gt;ut~·s jump to four hearts
panda bear. (60 m1n .)
showed a solid or nearly sol- · •
!Closed Captionedj
id suit without too much in .
By Oswald Jacoby
® NCAA Basketball:
high cards . • North Blackand James Jacoby
Northwestern at Michigan
wooded and bid the small
State
.
slam
@II 1983 Golden Globe
All roads lead, to a six- ace . after !Iouth showed one ~~
Awards
contract by !Iouth.
Note: ·u !Iouth had shown , .
8 :30 (I)
NBA
·a diamond lead he
two
aces, North would have
Atlanta at Milwaukee
. just six. With any bid five no-trump tb check
9 :00 0 I]J (!) Facts of Life A
other lead he should make for kirigs and suggest a ,._
series of bizarre events
. seven. So, if you bid six grand slam.
make a mess of Mrs . Ger, hearts and /ust make it you
rett 's attempts to entertain
should real y get a slightly
sonia French visitors .
Cl) 700 Club
(I) OJ (j) Fall Guy Colt returns home to . help an exgirlfriend 's son who is
accused of murder. (60
min .)
Ill (I) MOVIE : 'Svengali'
())
Clarence
Darrow.
Starring H811ry Fonda
br THOMAS JOSEPH
® $winging over the
ACROSS
DOWN
Rainbow
9 :30 0 I]J (!) Family Ties Alex
1 Knowledge
l''Danm
and Mallory are selected to
5 Infant
Yankees''
compete in a high school
91&lt;iln
temptress
quiz show.
·
10
Scottish
2 Clear; open
1 0:00 0 (l) (!) Quincy Quincy
and his bride come upon a
lake
3 Do one's best
vengeful killer on their 1% St~~r
4 Terminate
honeymoon . (60 min.)
13
Pop
out
5
Ice cream
I]J George Jones: With a
Uttlo From His Friends 14 Curve
specialty
Tammy Wynette, Waylon 15 Fairy
8 Wood core
Jennings and other country
queen
7 Adjoining ;
18 Bellow
~Head for.
stars join George for this
16
Sire's
mate
infringing
• %1 Absconded
Gretna "
country music:! get-toqether.
(l). MOVIE: 'Red Badge of
17 Symbol of
-8Marriage
2% Beach house
Green
Courage'
'
royal power
23'Former
minded
33 Gennan'
(JJ 2nd Annual legendary
19 COnceit
10 Inclined
24Genn
Pocket Billiard Stars
river
11 Break in
ZOBinge
(I) G (j) Dynasty Blake
ZsSanctify
35 Jujube
trias to lure Steven back to %1 Be peevish
rank·
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Denver and Jeff and Kirby · Z2 Cagney
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76

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l-- -- - - - - - -

2 bedroom house on 3rd.
AVe .. GoUipollo. f2 15 mo . Furniahed opt .. 2 bdr., $175
plus uti . One- bedroom mo .• water paid, 2nd. floor ,
fumiahed efflencv In town, 131 4th Ave .. Gallipolis. Sale Items. 30 in.
7 _P_M_.
range $95, 40 in . electric 66 Pets for Sale
8160 mo. inc. water. Ca11 _ea_1_1_4_4 _6 -_4_4_1_6_a_ft_e_r_
1
range 896, 30 in. gas range 1
r~: ~n Real Eotate. 446- Furnished apt. 807 2r?d .,
$66, 6 piece bedroom sat Two male peek-a -poo pup3
Gallipolis. $236, utilities $1 60, color TV ' cabinet pies. one aprk:ot a. o'na
4 bedroom remodeled home pd.. 1 bdr., adults. Call modoll 160, 6 pleco dlnotte white. After 7, 304-882in Choohiro. Not . g'oo H-W _44
_ 8_ -_4_4..,1_8_•_ft_•_r_7 _P_M_.---' set •66, Whirlpool wa.ahlr 2382 or 773-9155 .
1
$96, GErefrigorotorhlrveat 17.C':':"C:-::'==--:-::-::-:---heat. garage, basement, 2 bdr. apt. unfurnished goldlrootfreeS126,2piece
HILLCREST KENNEL •
S226 mo. Call Wiooman
e.
•13
Reel Eotate, 448-3843.
axcapt refrig. stove.
5 living room ouite $85 , Boarding ell braedo. AKC
mo. Main St, Vinton . Call SJs,aggs U18d Appliance. Reg . Doberman• pupa afd
614-245-5818.
Doberman Stud Service.
House for rent near North 1 - -- - - - - - - - Open 9 to 6, 446 -7398 .
Cell 448· 1795.
Gollia School. 446-1798.
Effiency opt . in Rio Grondo. Living room suite. like new, 1-::::-::-:-::::--::-:-::-:--::-all utilities poid . Coli end drapes for picture win- DRAGONWVND CATTERY
3 bdrm . houaa J,.t 312 fum.
446-0157.
dow. Call 256 -6402 after • KENNEL AKC Chow pupLeGrondo Blvd. 8300 per
pieo, CFA Himoloyan, Permo .. no poto . Call448-0122 I-,-bd-r.-a-p-t. -. .-a-r_H_M_C_
. -C-oli 2:30p.m.
oion ond SiomoM kltteno.
after 4PM .
4,46 -3617.
Hoover washer &amp; rince tub Call 448-3844 oher 4PM .
$226
Lady Kenmore dryer
3 bedroom 1 1/t bath home 1-2-bd-r.- op-t-.-u-n-fu_r_
n _~..- c-o-pt a150 .. All
S326, no checko. AKC Reglltored Cocker
tor rent or sale. Also 1 ref rig. &amp; stove . large yard, Call 614-388-8133.
Spaniol ol• pupploo. ·8 wko.
Admirll refrigerator a. 1 garden epot, Main St., Vinold reody to go, f1 00 ooch.
Toppon gao range. 614- ton . Cal 614-246-6818 .
5 or 7 pioco dinette oet, 2 Cell448-1824 .
992-6309.
occassional chaire . Call 1--::-------- - Apartment 2 r. &amp; both 448 -2976 after 5PM .
Cockatiel &amp; Cage . 3 montho
House for rent or aBle. includes water, electric
old. Will tolk . 175. 814tocoted In Syracu10, Oh . 3 S135 . Coli 4411-4222 be247-2022 .
bedroom with carport. one~ twa., 9 It 6 .
54 Misc. Merchandise I:;; := ::;;==:;::==
third ocre lot. 826,000. Will 1-----,-- --'-- ConsidBr hou1e trailer as part Apt. tor rent. Half double-2
67
Musical
payment. 304-762-8488 . · ,bd.room Apt. Adulto proFor sale lump coal &amp; fire·
Instruments
ALL ole::tric homo on Ohio !erred. No peto. 814-992- wood. linn Coal Co., Inc . 1-::--;---:----:--;;;::-:::-:-2749 .
Currier piano like new. purStr"t for rent . Very rHson- 1-- -- - - - - - - Call 446-1408.
ch01ed locally, e&amp;OO. Coli
ably priced. Call alter 5:00 Elficioncy opt. in Sugar Run
Cut up slabs for firewood· 614-387 -0633 .
p.m .. ·3 04 -8711-671 1.
0100 , Ground floor.. utilities
pick up load. CaU !-=;;:= =:;=;::= = =
&amp; cable paid. Free perking . 815
614-245-6804.
I·
Two bedroom houoo, fur- 614-992-5738.
·
68
Fruit
nlohed, a.c .. 1 chid, no poll, l- - - -- - - -- $160 per month, New 6 rooma &amp; bath upper apt. Practically now bunk bedo.
&amp; Vegetables
Hoven. 304-882-24811.
Sto.ve It refridg8rator turn . Orginally $400 will •II lor
1176 . month. 114-949· f280 . Coli alter 8, 448· POTATOES, 16. for 76 lb.
4737 .
bog, 304-886-3400.
2234.
42 Mobile Homos
for Rent
Furnished apt. No pets.
8t4-992 -6434 or 304OUR BOARDING HOUSE
882-21188 .
Eureka rillor1ront 12x80, 1 - - - - --:--:--. fumllhed , •aomo .. 1 bdr .. Aport menu. 304 -11711 •100 mo. Ref. • dep. 11148.
Aclulto. Coll614-643-2644 . I - - - - - - - - APARTMENTS , mobile
2 bdr. trollerUpperRiverRd. homn, houooo. Pt. Pleuont
Ref. &amp; dopooit, odulto only, ond Gollpollo. 814-448no peto. Coll448-82&amp;2 after 8221.
II 441 -2491 .
I - - - -- -- - UNFURNISHED opertmont
2 Bedroom, fumiahed . 448- for rant. 1 bedroom ,
4480.
1180.00 Coli Automotive
Supply ; 8-11. 304 -117612x15 2 bdr. •160 clop .. 2218, 1176-8753.
Clorlc Chopal Rd. C.M 1114· 1 - - - - -- - - 388-93811.
ONE bedroom o"'rtmonto
·for the elderly. AI utllltiN
Nice 3 bdr. mobile homo paid. :ro1111nto pay 30 permodern furniehed , conve· cent of tholr edjuotad Innlent locotlon on At. 7 . Coli como In thlo HUD oubo~lzod
oportmorrt building . · Twin
1114-2411-1181 B.
RI-o To-r, phone 3042 bedroom In Mollllo homo . 8711·1879. Equol opportunIn Syrocuoo . Furnlohod . Ity houolng.
•110. month. You poy utllltl... Employed cou plo or . FURNISHED oprortrnent, Pt.
omoll lomlly . 8t4-982- Pleonnt, utllhleo ·paid, coli
304-881-3410.
118111 or 814-882-8238.

EVENING

Honda , axe . . cond .
.1200. 304-876-361 '1 . '

TROYBILT ROTOTILLERS
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Diocounto. Avoid April price
Sofa. chair, rocker, otto- Increase. Free Hiller in·
man, 3 tabla•. [extra heavy cluded. Immediate ship- For sale wheat drllla, com
by Frontier), S68G. Solo, ment. Porto, onglnu. 'Trade . plantero8l0&amp;14ft.. whool
choir and loveoeot. $275, in1 accepted. 703-942·
· k
1
Sofaaand chaire priced from 3871 Hickory Hill Nuroery, dll ' · onlllzer oproadora,
$286 . to t895 . Tablao, t45 Rt . 1 Box 390 A, filhersville. balere, rotlry mowers, 1 2 •
3 bottom 3 point plowo,
and up to 8126 . Hida-a - VA 22939 .
front loader, 8N ford troctor
bada.$440 . and up to
iarga hog feeder like new,
$625 ., Recliners. 8176. to Twin bed, with mattreu- 9N
Ford tractor. Farmall H
8350 ., Lampo from t28 . to box. springs, $115. Enter· tractor, · Matthew mower
875 . 6 pc. dinette• from t~dinment center-room di- condit~ner, PTO ...clare.
899 .. to $436 . 7 pc .. $189. v• er shetving unit. $100. hay &amp; grain elevators, all
and up. Wood table with alx 304-876-4668 .
.• -klndo of field Nldy oqulpchairo $426 . to $746 . Deok
Prom
drell.
size
.
.
8110 up to $225. Hutchoo,
9 304 ment. Howe's Farm Machlnory, Rt. 124, Moyhow Ad,
8560 . and up, maple or pine 675 3526
·
·
Jockoon, Oh coli 814-288finish . Bunk bod complete
6944 .
with mottroosao. $260 . and
'.
up to $395 . Baby bedo,
For ulo-10 ft . John Dooro
•110 . Mattresses or bolt
traneport dlac-t700. 4 botapringe, full or twin. 168 .,
firm , $68 . and $78. Queen Beauty ehop. equip, 2 units tom Oliver plow-1800. Hey·
aets. 8196 . 4 ·dr. chests. complete. 2 hyd chalra. 3 round baleJ. 843~6216 .
S42 . 5 dr. chesto, S54 . Bed ~ryw cholro, oupplloo. 304- Farm troctor. Formoll M.
frames, 820 .ond 826 ., 10 676-8083 or 304 -876 gun - Gun cabinets, $350., 4444 .
New paint, good, tiree .
dinette chairs $20 . ond $25 .
11 ,200. 614-986-3888 ofGas or electric ranges, 8325 Trailer wheels. tires. axle &amp; tar 6 p.m.
up to $375 . Boby ma- front hitch. 304-895-3405. Uood Springliold gordon
troono, $25 &amp; S36, bed
fromoa $20, $26, &amp; $30 , New Compuo Ridge Meal tiller for oale. Tupporo
1•_in_•_·_11_1_4 _·11_&amp;_7_·_30_1_3_.__
king frame $60. Good oolec- Roplacomont Diet Pion in _P_
1
tlon of bedroom suite1, three dallcloua flavore . FarmaU auper A ~ plowa.
cedar che"•· rockera, metal Compare to ·the Cambridge disc, . mowing machine •
Diet at Hockenberry blodo. 3 04-875-8530 01
cablneto, owivol rockero.
Uaad Furniture -- bookcooe, Pharmacy.
304-876-3348.
ranges. chairs. end ta~e1, 1-::-:-=--------- 1- - - -- -- - -wllhere. dryers, rafrigera - MATTRESS &amp; box 11nings, Rotary plow for Gr1vely
toro and TV 'o. 3 miles out phone 304-676-5344.
Bulavillo Rd . Oper 9am to
!lactor 1225 . 304 -89!;&amp;pm, Mon . tMu Fri., 9am to LIVING room ouito4 montho _3-:9_7 _4 _· - - - - -- 6pm, S~t .
old, 2 and tobleo &amp; coffee 1 -!OHN , Doore A troctQr,
446-0322
toble, floor model color TV, oxcell8l1t condition, 304304-773-91 4 7 .
8911-3471'.
GE auto washer
in perfect'-;~~=====~===
I-=;;::;====;:==
condition
$110. Coli
448 - I·
1·
8181 .
66 Building Supplies 62 Wanted to Buy
Whirlpool avacado washer
ox. cond. $126 and Whirlpool harvoot gold dryer S95 .
30 doy warranty. Call 614266-1207 .

3/9/~3

78

1980 Dotoun 200-SX, A-1
cond. · 40 mpg. Coli 4484098.

MUST tell .new living room
ouito, 304-676-6182 after
6:30p.m.

WEDN-ESDAY

1981 YAMAHA 660 Speclol, electric otart, 1800
mllu; f11180. firm, 304837 -31119 .

World Book &amp; Child Craft lor 19711 Buick Electra 2 dr:.
oolo. Coll949-2277.
PS, PB. AC, AM-FM otero ·
•1 ,850 or trade lor cettlo,
farm oqulpment of 'quol
voluo. Coli 448-41137.

Frigidaire refrigerator ,
freezer on top, 2 doort.
614-992 -3090.

A COINCIDENCE
A CONSPIA!ACY

78 Kowaoakl 1110 SA Windjammer. Luggoge rack,
mor whoolo, rww battery.
lt4-892-7382 altar 6 p . m ~ :

Salo-troda D7 Cat dozer;
Ford loider. 77 '4 Dodge
~.4. I ctralillo4ra4,11 h107U9108 &amp;
ecr18gl, •
·
·

13

Television
Viewinp:

Motorcycles

1974 TX400L Suzuki. Onoff road BKtra chain
aprockets. Some new parta.
f460 . 814-982-11898.

Backhoe endloitdar diga 8
ft ., lr!rgo bed pick up haula - Moving everything must go.
bla. operate yourself. $90. living room auite, dining
room table, dlehes, dreseer,
per dey. 304-896·3841 .
hope cheet, muchmore. Call
448-8129.

The

DICK T RACY

18&amp;2 Ka-kl 2oo t:c.
ThrH ·whoeeof. f1 .000 .
firm . Aftor II p.m . C.ll
814-8811-4317.

... u11 ... 1'\0W to 1 le~;~.­
WI-\iCI4 ~ i~ 11-\e.
at~; p SHPIKeR ~

bedroom suite complete . Coli 4411· 3348 .

available by manufactur.,r.
Low freight. e.o mpetitive
prices. complete line of .
quality buildings . Earn up to
$ 100'a per year in your own
buaineas . . Call 1-800-525-

74

Ohio
ME, TOO - le

1 c ofloo toblo
47'hx18'-"x111'h ln . oncl 1
ond toblo 211xt8 'hx 20'h
wit!&gt; light wolr\ut flnloh .f30,
oloo light wolnut 7 dro-r
dreuer with ·Iaroe mirror
Still . 32x53- 174 piiiCoo
brown underpinning for a
mobile home uaad juot 1
year came off a 1 4x70
mobile home, long plecea
measure 32 " . ehort piecee
21 " and 10 lnchlo ocron.
enterlock in a metal fr•me.
. wood groin linioh . Colhlter
&amp;PM . 448· 3086.
Mapl~

STEEL building dealerlhip

Wacfnes+y, March 9, 1983

Wedrw"+y, March 9, 1983

Furnished Rooms 64 Miec. Marchaodise KIT 'N' CARLYlE"'

Sleeping r~m •125, utili ·
ties pd. single ·male. s hare
both. 919 2nd Ave., Gollipo·
lis. Cal : '48-4418 ofter
7PM .

Own your ow n JeanSp ortsw ear. Infant -pret een
.o r Ladies Apparel Store.
O f fe ri n g al l ha tio n till y

tory,

Middleport, Ohio

CHOP
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WELL
POSE: HERHUSBANDWILLCLAIMSHEDID.-E.W.HOWE

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Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

March

1983

Horseshoe pitching
added to fair program
A horseshoe pltchlngtoumament
will ·be Incorporated Into the many
ac1Mties of the 1983 Meigs County
Fair, according to plans made
Monday night when the fair board
met In regular session at the
fairgrounds.
MeeUng with the board representing the local horseshoe pitching
group were Harlan Whitlatch, Jeff
TUIIs and Harry Lee Baney.
The group asked for an area to
. establish a horsesl!oe pitching
court and the board set aside a spot
near the Rock Springs Grange Hall
for the permanent court which can
be used throughout the year.
Construction of the court and tbe
operations will be the responsibility
of the horseshoe group and a
· tournament will be a hlghllght ot
the group's activities at fair time.
Lancaster has a permanent court

world's 93,000 Amish Uve In Ohio, notably ln llll'ge communities In
Holmes County and Middlefield In the northeastern part of !be state.
( AP Laserphoto).

'Ibe board agreed to dlslollc!nue
the publishing ot Its premluril book.
This year the book will have a
·tabloid newspaper edition printed
containing an of tbe itltormatlon
prey!ou.sly found In the premium .
book. The board agreed to emplcty
the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. to
print the tabloid.
'Ibe board agreed to discontinue
parking of campers . In the area
between the 4-H building and the
coon hunters buUding during ihe
county fair. This area will be sold as
commercial space for the 1983 fair.
Those who have used the space for
campers In past years will be
moved to what Is known as the
"legion parking lot." EleCtricity
and water facilities to that area will
be Improved tO accommodate· the
campers.

Tourist trade helps
Ohio's Amish citizens
By The Associated Press
Of 93,!XXJ Amish in North &lt;\merica , many live on famliy·run farms
in Ohio, where people in !r.sulated communlles continue-scratching
o~t livings as farmers, quillmakers or in simple businesses.
The Amish Community In Holmes County is ilnd!ng an ever
growing source of revenue in tourist trade. Quilt shops, restaurants,
cheese houses attrac1 a now of tourists while the traditional lifestyle
goes on.
·
Transportation is stlll by horse and buggy, and many of the boys
get a rig as teen-agers. A very plain Amish buggy can be sold for
$1,500, but beyond lhat "it depends on the options," sald buggy
builder Menno Schlabach of Berlin.
Many of the Amish farms in Ohio have a small house for
grandparents beside the main house.
One can s1ill see bent hickory rockers among the simple wooden
furniture of Amish homes. The kitchens are usually large, with
plenty of space for a dining lable, where the old-fashioned country
cooking .ls .served.
Some. homes have 1he additions of bathrooms and furnaces.
The Amish catering to 1ourists are likely to be New Order Amish, a
sizable splirher of the Old Order Amish, which combines puritanism
with more llberal concepts.

Area deaths
Clyde W. Carman
OydeW. Carman, 88,1506Circle,
Apt. I-C, Columbus died Sunday at
Grant Hospital, Columtius.
Mr. Carman was born June 24,
1894 In Meigs County the son of'the
late Wesley and Matilda Toban
Carman. He was also preceded in
death by two brothers and one
sister.
Mr. Carman, a disabled war
ve~ran, served with the U.S. Army
in France during World War L
He Is survived.by his wife, Mynle
HeUman-Carman; two daugh1ers,
Ruth Carman and Mrs. Elias
(Ruby) Rucker, both of Columbus;
one son, Clifford Carman, Columbus; three grandchUdren and seven
great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m . at Ewing
Funeral Home with ttrc Rev.
WUUam H. Middleswarth officia1ing. Burial wUI be In Bunker Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Thursday from 9
a.m. until time of services.

· Institute of Technology with .a B.S.
in mechanical engineering, and an
M.S. In lndustrtal management, in
1974.. He was a former consultant
with Arthur Anderson and Company, Atlanta, Ga., and was vice
presidenl of Duke Cleaners, Inc.,
Point Pleasant, and vice president
and general manager of Varsity,
Inc., Huntingion.
·
Surviving are his wife, Jamie
Middleton Clark; his parents, Mr.
and Mrs.· Forrest D. Clark, Point
Pleasant; a half-sister, Carol Kay
Rutherford, Point Pleasant; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J.C.
Pauley, Melbourne, Fla., and
paternal grandfalher. Stephen M.
Clark. Gallipolis.
Funeral services wUI be condueled at 2 p.m. Thursday at
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point
Pleasan1, with Rev. Paul Daggett
officiating. Burtal wlll follow In
Kirkland Memortal Gardens. Calling hours at the funeral home are
from7to9p.m. Wednesday.

Stephen Clark
Stephen Carl Clark, 32, 5315
Forrest Heights, Huntington, W.
Va. , died Sunday eyening ln
Huntington.
· Born born Sept. 29, 1950, ln Point
Pleasant, W. Va .. he graduated
from Point Pleasant High School in
1968, was a graduate, of Georgia

Five defendants were placed on
probation Tuesday night In the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews.

Granted divorce
Diana L. Tillis has been granted a
divorce from Dennis Tillis on
charges of gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

Page 2

Page 8
Pagq 6

S159
..
1-LB. CRISP-N-SBlVE
SLICED
BACON
..........
~~~·. S1.49 ·
ECKIIIOI
OLD FASHION LOAF ....~~ .. S2J5
HOMEMADE
.
. PKG. Sl 59
•••••••••••••••••• •
·

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' LB.

···········~·

CHOCOlATE MILK.~~!'!.

Voi.31 ,No.219
.Copyrighted 1983

30 CT. FLORIDA

MARGARI NE.............~- 894 CELERY •..•. ~~~~~. 49¢
16 OZ. CEUO PACK
.KRAI'T SINGLE$ 18 Slice 12 0.. PKG.
PROCESSED EESE .. s1.99 CARROTS ....·.~~~. 29~
1·LB. MIDGET

. CHEESE or PEPPERONI PIZZA .. ;~~~Sl.S9
11 OZ. MORTON ar BANQUET ·

REG. TV DINNER ...................... ~~~. 97~

,

~

JUMBO

.

PINEAPPLE JUICE ....c~.N•. Sl.39
10¥4 OZ. CREAt.\ OF MUSHROOM
CAMPBELL'S SOUP ...C.~~5.2/77¢
21 OZ. THANK YOU
.
PEACH PIE FILLING.~~~. s1.39
15 '9Z. DEL MONTE
SPINACH ............. ~~~~.. 2/S1.29
1 OZ. VIENNA
HOT DOG SAUCE .....~~~~ .. 2/8.9'
OZ. DUTCH GIRL
APPLE BUTTER ........ ~~~ .. sl.39
32 OZ. IVORY LIQUID
DISH 'DETERGENT .....ll!~.. s2.09
14 OZ. HUNT'S

KETCHUP ............ ~~·.2JS1.49
12 OZ . .KELLOGGS

The Southern Local Band Boosters will meet Thursday, March 10,
In tbe band room at the high school
at7:llp.m.

. WASHINGTON (~) - In a move that would
affect virtually every American, the House has
passed a $165.3 billion plan to rescue Social Security
by lmppslng higher payroll taxes, curbing benefits
and raising the retirement age from 65.
By a 282-148 vote Wednesday night, the House sent
the measure to the Senate, where the finance
committee was expected to wrap up work on Its
version of the package
today. The full Senate is
•I
expected to vote next Week.
Senate Majority Leader Howard ij. Baker Jr ..
R-Tenn., expressed confidence tnday that the Senate
would quickly p;tss legislation similar to that adopted
by the House.
He was asked If the measure would be identical tn
the House bill and he replied, "I wouldn't say that. "

House Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill Jr., D-Mass.,
predicted Congress will have the ' legislation on
President Reagan's desk by the end of the month.
The House bill follows the bipartisan recommendations. of the National Commission on Social Security
Reform, caUlng for affluent retirees to pay income
tax on half their benefitS; a six-month delay In this
July's cost-of-llvlng Increase; accelerated payroll tax
increases; a boost In the levy on the self-employed,
and mandatory Social Security coverage for new
federal workers.
Those measures are supposed to keep Social
Security solvent through the rest of the decade and
solve two-thirds of the system's long-term, $1.9
trillion deficit.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Anne McGill Burford, yielding to grQwlng
pressure from Congress, has resigned as head of the Envlrorunental
Protection Agency. But congressional investigators of EPA say their work
ls far from over.
"The Investigation will continue. The saga is just going to begin," Rep.
Ell!ott H. Levltas, D.Ca., said Wednesday after President Reagan accepted
the resignation of Mrs. Burford "with great regret."
Mrs. Burford said the furor over the EPA and her direCtion of it had
disabled the agency and sidetracked the president -Reagan called her
departure "an occasion of sorrow for us all."
But the chairmen of the half-dozen congressional panels Investigating
EPA said their probes Into possible wrongdoing and mlsmanag~ment
within the agency will continue unabated.
"Anne Gorsuch-Burford Is not the issue," said Rep. MlkeSynar, D-Okla.,
chairman of the House Government Operations subcommittee on the
enVffiinnlent. ''The issue ls the operation of the Environmental ProteCtion
Agency and the Implementation of oilrenvlronmentallaws."
"We will continue this Investigation until every rock ts overturned and ,
every fact uncovered," sald Rep. James Scheuer, D-N.Y.,chalrman of the
House Science and Technology subcommittee on the envlrorunent. .
Mrs. Burford, who planned to discuss her resignation at a news
conference today, said she could no longer take the pressure of the
Investigations and media attention.
"Shoot, I can't even work anymore," she said in an interview with The
Denver Poot on Wednesday. "All I can do Is read news clips and figure out
bow to get dressed In the morning without 1V camera crews In there."
"That's not right That's not gooil government," she said. "It's killing

Q

Meets Thursday

............. ~~. 89¢

me." .
She said Reagan accepled the resignation after sbe told hlm she belleved
she had done a good job and he "observed that itdidn'tseem to be getting out
in the news media."
.
"I love that guy, I really do, and I'd be proud to serve him any place," she
said.
The subcommittees are Investigating EPA's handling of il$ $1.6 billion
Superfund program to clean up abandoned chemical waste dumps.
Allegations have been made that the fund may have been manipulated for
political purposes and that EPAofflclalsmay have been guilty of conflicts of
Interest tn making decisions.
Much of the investigation has focused on thousands i&gt;f pages of EPA
enforcement files withheld from Congress on a claim of executiveprlvUege.
Ironically, Mrs. Burford's resignation came only minutes after the White
House agreed to let congressional Investigators have full access to those
documents, a position Mrs. Burford has said she unsuccessfully urged upon
the White House 11!st.fall.
.
. ·~
Mrs. Burford had beeb under subpoena to deliver the documents toone of
the House subcOmmittees today. UntU the agreement was reached, she was
bound to honor Reagan's orders to withhold them, although Rep. John
Oingell, D-Mich., the subcommittee's chairman, sald he would movetoclte
her for contempt of Congress if sbe did so.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted-.Okey Kiser, Racine; .
Robert Hysell, Pomeroy; John
Meeks, Shade; Paul Darnell, Pomeroy; Lydia Kendrick, Rutland;
Marjorie Gardner, New Haven;
Lois Cornell. Pomeroy; Pauline
Taylor, Middleport; Martha Roush,
Rutland.
Discharged --John Stewart ,
Jeremy Combs, Benjamin Carroll,
WUtlamGoodnlte, William Weaver,
Robert Hysell.

Weather forecast

VBS LEADERS,
TEACHERS,
and WORKERS

Friday througl1 Sunday:
Falr Friday with a chance of snow DuiTies In tbe ~ast. Fair
and wanner Saturday and Sunday. IUghs ln the 30s Friday but In the
40s~andSunday.LGwsi5-25Fridaynlgbtand25-35Satunlay

and

ELBERFELDS·

You are invited to preview the all-new 1983
Spring is almost here! Achieve a new look
for your home and Sa~ 20%·on the newest
quality wallcoverings in a number · of
original designs and textures.

Standard Vacation Bible School course.
.Come and learn and share!

We have prints, stripes, miniaturt~s, plaids,
sporting events and many other patterns to
select from.

'
PLACE: Middleport Ch.wch cl Christ

.

DATE: Friday,
March 11, 1983
·,
437 Main Street
MiddleiJO!t Ohio 45760

nME: 9:30 A.M.

'·

SPONSOR: Middleport BOok Store
83 Mill Street
Middleport Ohio 45760

SAVE 200/o

PHONE:

614-~2-2641

'

SALE ENDS

Pli-

MAROt 26, 1983

.••

-· -

Plan to ltllnd lhe S1andlrd Publisltl" Vacatioo Bible SchoollfiView. lfs )'011'
opportunity to uamine lhe all-new, all-Bible 1913 course and to discuss all
aspects of VICition Bible School Ylilh 1 Standard Npmentatvt. lfs a great
opportunity to sha• ideas and experiences wilh Others.
b)' AWD. Cl ltiD, l1ll STANW.ID PUILISHINO C9NPANY, CtnQIIIIild. OlliD. Dl¥tlioll rl rTANDIX ll'fTIIlNATIOJoiAL COlPOaA'U~JN ,

qency In Wlllhln&amp;fAln on Feb. 25, 1863. Burford l'lllliped Wednellday as
cldel o1 tbe embllaled agency lhortly after the White llou8e 8llld it was
relec"'ng to ecqre. documeDia It had refuled to turn owr earlier In
.CGfCJ
"'"" lnveiltlpllonB of her agency. In ""d'di'iund, left, Is
Depu&amp;y EPA~ Jolin Bel'llllllde&amp;. who wiD be acting cblef.

IT .:111 Printed lr~ USA

'

(AP Lasei']JIMMo ).

-- -- -

I Section , 12 Pages · 20 Cenh
A Multimedia Inc. Newtpaper

During House consideration, legislators voted
228-202 to accept an amendment by Rep. J.J. Pickle,
.D-Texas, to eliminate the remalnlng third of the
long-term deficit by gradually Increasing the
retirement age from 65 to 67 In the next century.
The Senate package is expected to parallel the
House measure.
"It has taken this House two years to make _the
journey from crisis to compromise," said House
Republican Leader Robert H. Mlchel of llllnols.
"For the last two years, we have watched the fuse
burn on Social Security - paralyzed by partisan
bickering," said Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill.,
chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
"As Washington maneuvered for political advan-

.
1

'I

""----

I

tage. the balance In the retirement fund continued to
fall."

Rep. Bill Frenzel, R-Minn., reflected the feelings of
many of his colleagues when he said the rescue
package "isn't my choice, but It's the only cllolce.... If
the bill falls we will all deserve the chaos ·that will.
result.''

Under the bill, the 116 million Americans paying
Into the Social Security system and the 36 mlillon
people receiving benefl~ will share the burden of
balling out the system.
In addition, people betweel) the ages of 40 and 23
would have to walt until age 66 to draw full Social
Securtty benefits, and people under 23 would have tn
walt until age 67.
(Continued on page 12)

President seeks $110 ·million
aid increase for El Salvador ·

RESIGNS - Cluis Layh,
superintendent of Carleton
. School, Syracuse, has resigned
, his post effective June 3, accord·
lng to Doug Uttle, chalnnan of
the Meigs County Boanl of
Mental Retardation. Layh submitted his resignation at the
February meeting of the 169
board. Layh, superintendent
since 19'78, was Instrumental In
the cOnstruction of the new
Carleton School. The board Is
pn!SCnlly seeking a rep~
ment. Persons qualified are to
contact Doug Uttle, Second
Street, Pomeroy.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
· dept Reagan today asked Congress
· for $110 · million In increased
military and training aid for the
troubled goverunent of El Salvador,
saying the military situation there
"Is not good" and that U.S. security
is at stake.
In a speech expected to touch off a
fierce congressional debate over the
U.S. role ln El Salvador, Reagan
pledged not to send U.S. combat
troops to the embattled Central
American country.
Reagan sald El Salvador "is
under strong pressure from armed
guerrillas controlled by extremists
with Cuban-Soviet support."
In-appealing for- Jullds, Reagan
said that what is at stake In Central
America "is the United States
national securtty."
In his speech, prepared for
delivery at an\eellngofthe National
Association of Manufacturers, Rea. gan made no mention of Increasing.
the number of U.S. rnUitary
advisers in El Salvador above the
current celllng·of 55.
He pledged not to "Amertcanize
the war with a Jot of U.S. combat
adVise'rs" but dld not rule out an
eventual increase in the number of
the advisers.
"We think · the best way is to
provide training outside of El
Salvador, In the U.S. or elsewhere,
but that costs a lot more," Reagan
said. "So the number of U.S.

Reagan proposed that $00 million
trainers in El Salvador wlll depend
of
the increased ald be taken from
on the resources available."
money
allocated for worldwide
Reagan said that throughout
military assistance programs and
Central Amertca, "an aggressive
be spent on military tralnlngfor.the
m!nortty has thrown In its lot with
the communists, lookiitg to the Salvadorans. In addition, he saKI he
would ask Congress to reallocate to
Soviets and their Cuban henchmen
to help them pursue political change El Salvador $50 million from a
supplemental approprtatlon bill
·
through violence.
"N tcaragua has become their already pending on Capitol HUI.
base," he added. "These extremists
Beyond that, Reagan said he
make po secret of their goaL They
preach the doctrine of a 'revolution would seek an addltlonal $20 million
withoutfrontiers'. 'Ibelr first target in regional security assistance
funds to help El Salvador's neighIs El Salvador. "
He said that ln the United States, boring states.
"We have been slow to understand
For Central America as a whole,
that the defense of the Caribbean
Reagan
said !le would ask for $li5
and Central Arflert&lt;;a agai!ISI
million
In
new funds and$103mllllon
Marxlst-Lenlnlst takeoVer ls vital to
In
reprogrammed
money In Inour national securtty In ways weare
creased economic assistance.
not accustomed to thlnktng about.''
Specifically on El . Salvador,
"Central America Is simply too
Reagan posed the question, "How
close,
and the strategic stakes ai:e
bad is themllltarysltuailon? Ills not
too
high,
for us to Ignore the danger
good."
He said the leftlstguerrtllas have of governments seizing power 1here
taken advantage of inadequate with ideological and military ties to
tralillng for government troops, a the Soviet Union." Reagan .
shortage of experienced officers declared.
and supply shortages.
"For the moment, at least, they · On the eve of Reagan's speech,_
have taken the tactical initiative congressional leaders said he would
just when the sharply limited have trouble getting his request
funding Congress has so . far approved if It totaled a$. much as
approved Is running out," Reagan $110 million. House Speaker Thoadded. For thiS year, Congress mas P. O'Neill, D·Mass., said the
appropriated $26 million in military "votes are not there" for House
approval of $110 mUllon in ald.
aid for El Salvador..

Fiiing threats result in additional memberships
CDLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) relieved of dulles Monday.
Threats of more firings In the Ohio
· Minnie Fells Johnson, director of
Department of Mental Retardation the Department of Mental Retardaare resulting in addi tiona! member- tion, told Soforenko on Monday that
ships In the Ohio Civil Service he was being flred and was relieved
Employees Association, says a of duties whileremovalpaperswere
union spokeswoman.
being processed. Tuesday, she
"In the last week we have signed
named an acting director of the
up approximately 45 new center.
members," said Betty Lynds, chief
,Soforenko was among 151 unclassteward of the Ohio Civil Service sified workers of the department
Employees Association·local at the · told last month to submit undated
Mount Vernon Developmental Cen- letters of resignation to Ms. Johnson
ter for the retarded.
for her to act on at her discretion.
Franklin County Common Pleas
Seven of the notices were res·
Judge Tommy L. Thompson IS$Ued
c!nded, and fewer than half the
.. temporary restraining order
workers who were asked for letters
Tuesday ·re!nstaUng A.Z. Sofoof · resignation have submitted
renko, superintendent of the Ortent
them. The resignation letters were
Developmental Center, who . was
re&lt;;~uested as part of an agency-by-

Meigs superintendent resigns

REFRESHMENTS

Most are scrubbable, Pre-pasted and
Strippable.

en tine

Pomeroy-:-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 10, 1983

EPA chief
•
restgns post

BOUNTY TOWELS ............ ~?LL 97¢
OZ. DEL MONTE .

at y

-HOuse passes Soc Sec rescue plan

1-LB. KRAFT PARKAY

Timothy Thomas, ,State St.,
Pomeroy, was placed on six months
probation after being charged with
disturbing the peace and six months
probation after being charged with
assault; Jeanette Thomas, State
St., Pomeroy, was placed on
probation for six months following
her hearing on dlsturt&gt;lng the peace
charges; Sherry Freeman, Pomeroy. was placed on six months
probation following her hearing on
destruction of property charges and
six months probation for !repassIng; BUI Powell, Middleport, was
placed on six months probation,
after his bearing on assault charges.
James Fergusm, Albany, was lined
$63 and costs on a charge of
consuming alcohol In a motor
vehicle and was placed on 90 days
probation.
Others fined ln the court were D
ana McDaniel, Cottageville, W.Va.,
$44 and costs, speeding; Benton
Phillips, Rutland, $513 and costs,
three days ln jail. driving while
Intoxicated; Sterling Bennink,
Athens, $43 and costs, assured clear
dlsiance; Judith Wolfe, Pomeroy,
43 and costs, assuredcleardistance,
and Norman Price, Jr., Pomeroy,
$43 and costs, assured clear
distance.
Fortelt!ng were Donald E . Casto,
Pomeroy, $63, posted on a charge of
consuming alcohol ln a motor
vehicle; Robert GUbreath, POfT!eroy, $513, driving while Intoxicated,
and Richard Bolen, Athens, $51,
speeding.
·

Cloudy and turning colder tonight with a 40 percent chance of
showers changing to snow flurrtes. Low 2!hl0. Winds westerly to
northwesterly less than 10mph. Thursday, cloudy and chilly with a30
percent chance of snow nurrtes. High 3540.
· Extended Ohio Forecast

•

•

Mayor's Court
Slxdefendantswere$250eachand
given three day jaU sentences on
charges of driving while intoxicated
when they appeared In tbe court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
·
The six lncluded Harry E.
Stewart, Cheshire; Daniel Glenn,
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.; Edward
L. James, Route 1, Middleport;
Dennis C. Clark, Sedlersvllle, ·
Tenn.; Jeffrey Proffitt, Racine, and
Charles Lawson, VInton. Clark wa:;
also fined $50 and costs, driving
under suspension, and Lawson was
also fined $100 and costs, possession
of marijuana.
Others fined Tuesday night were
Roger Hoschar, Middleport, $50 and
costs, disorderly conduct, and $100
and costs and resltutkm. destruction
of property; Tim Justis. Mlddle.port, $100 and costs, assault;
Steve Hawk, Pomeroy, $100 and
costs, disorderly conduct, and
$25 and costs, obstructing
highway.
.
Roy J. Neff, Middleport, was
given a 10 day jail sentence on a
charge of fleeing a pollee officer.
Forfeltlng bonds T!lesday night
were Charles Neal, Pomeroy, $43,
posted on a speeding charge, and
Wayne Barnett, Racine, $50, running a stop sign.

Property tranfers

area.

BROUGHTON'S QUARTS

REAL HOilSEPoWER - Led by the family dog, an Amish fann
boy heads for the fields guiding a horse-drawn wagon. Many ol the

Letters to editor

Robert Bowen has resigned as
Meigs County Super!ntendel)t of.
Schools effective Aug. 1.
Bowen, who has held the post
for 17 years, submitted his
resignation to thecountyboardof
education Tuesday night.
·Before going Into the county
office as school supervisor,
Bowen · taught In · Sallsbw)' ·
· Township for 10 years. He taught
one year ln Vinton County before
entering the U. S. Army during .
World War I. He is a native of
Columbus.
The -county board Tuesday
night renewed the contract of ·
Russell Moore as a county school ·
supervisor for five years; gave a
four year contract .to James ·
Rogers, psychologist; a one year
contract to Judy Herbert, also a
psychologist, and Issued a bus
driver's certificate ·to Susan
. Sheppard.

·-

'

'

ROBERT BOWEN
\

agency review by Gov. Richard F.
Celeste's admlnlstr~tion to open
jobs for new appointments.
Robert Zimmerman, supertntendent of the Gallipolis DeveloP'
mental Center, was one of the
officials requested to submit un-.
dated resignation letters.
Zimmerman said he and all other
Ohio developmental center superin-

tendents refused to submit the
letters.
Ms. Lynds said 1hat although her
union usually doest\ 't represent
unclassified workers who do not
have direct civU-servlce job protec.
lion, she is concerneq about Ms.
Johnson's statements that all department jobs will be reviewed In
coming months.

Jury indicts Poh)t physician;
jail incident net~ 15 days
POINT PLEASANf - A Point

slat~

.

Friday morning
Pleasant physician was Indicted
Meanwhile, in Meigs County
Wednesday by a Putnam County · Benton Phillips, 19, Rutland, ha~
grand jury on three counts, includ- been sentenced 1o 15 days in the
Ing a charge of sexual assault In the' Meigs County Jail Counly Court
first degree, according to a spokes- Judge Patrick O'Brien on a charge
person for the Putnam County . ·of attempting to convey marijuana
circuit clerk's office.
·
Into the jaiL
In addition to the sexual assault
The Meigs County shertff's decharge, David L. Carr D.O., 1918 partment reported PhU!ips entered
Marquette Ave., was Indicted on a guilty plea a Iter his apprehension
two counts of armed robbery.
Wednesday for the Tuesday evenCorporal Rudy O'Dell of the Ing attempt. He had been In jall, but
Putnam CountY detachment of the was released Tuesday after appear·
West' Vlrglnla State Pollee sald the _ lng ln Ma_¥or Cla~nce Aru!rews' .
aUeged-Incldent OCClll'l'OO Jan. s-at COurt In Pomeroy.
the hoome of a Frat.ler's Bottom
Following the healing. he went 10
(Putnan County) couple.
a Pomeroy store to pure hase items
In the Indictment handed down for prisoners still In jail. Upon his
Wednesday, Carr ls charged with arrtval at the jall, Phillips was
"employing a deadly weapon to Informed by a deputy that he would
compel (the woman) to submit to check the Items purchased la1er.
·sexual intercourse."
Upon checking the Items la1er,
'J)le second and third counts the deputies noticed that a bag of
charge Carr with the armed cookles appeared to have been
robbery of $26 from the assault resealed. Checking further, the
victim's husband and S4 from the deputy found the bag had been
woman herself. · The Indictment opened and a small baggle contain·
referred tQ the weapon Involved a~ a !ng rnarljana was found among the
firearm.
.
cookles. ·
His Initial ClJUrl appearance is

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