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~ wiNTHROP

b Dick Cavalli
TOMORF20N, IM ~INq TO WORRY '
ABOUT UNDERW~, UMSRf:LLA5.iAND L:.IP51DE-DCMINCAKS.
·.
.

TI:.JE~Y,

IT'LL 6E VANDA LI5M,. -

. VACONA11Q-.15,.
,· ANDVARICDeE V51N5 •..

'

e
at y
,Coal burning bill
making progress
has slowed the action with proceduWASIUNGTON (AP) -A Clean
Act proposal by an Ohio law- . ral maneuvers, Introducing numerous ttrne-consumlng amendments.
maker that would lower auto emisThe subcommittee started consion standards and make It easier
for utlllties to burn Ohio coal is_· sidering the bW 11 days ago.
Rep. Clarence J . Brown, R:Ohlo,
making its way through a House
a member of the subcommittee,
subcommittee despite opposition
supports the Luken bW, which he
from the committee chairman.
calls "a prettY good compromise."
After one week, the health and
Brown, whose staff helped wcrk
environment subcommittee acting
on the legislation, said it would help
on the bill by Rep. Thomas A.
by changing procedures "where
Luken, 0 -0hlo , had worked
there is a tilt against Ohio."
through ~ss than one-fourth of the
77-page bill.
A member of Brown's staff, MarSupporters or the bill are expected to prevall in the subcommit- garet Hostetler, sald the changes
tee eventually, since they have 12 would help Ohio's coal Industry by
modifying requirements to permit
votes to eight for the opposlllon.
However, the panel chairman, new coal-burning plants to use coalRep. Henry A. Waxman, 0-Callf., cleaning equipment that would

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•
•.•
•

,...

=·Priscilla's Po

Ed Sullivan
TI4E EXERCISE AT
EACH STATION 15
NO PUSHOVER,
THOUGH.'
.
.

I'LL SAY.'

_Two banks cut prime lending rates
NEW YORK (AP) -Two of the nation's largest banks cut !heir
prlme lending rate today by one-half percentage point to 16 percent,
raising the possibility of a broader drop in the Interest rate lilharged
to commercial borrowers.
Chase Manhattan Bank, third-largest U.S. bank, acted first and
was followed moments later by Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., the
flfth-largest. Neither commented on the reasons for Its action.
Economists have said, however, that the Federal Reserve Board
appears to be loosening Its grip on money and credit In the banking
system. That could lead to widespread declines In Interest rates
affecti!lg aU kinds or borrowers.

Father sought in shooting deaths
EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio -A woman who found her three sons
dEoad witli gur)Shot wounds says she finit thOught they were asleep in
their beds when she _a rrived horne fr:om work.
Beverly Brooks, 33, told pollee she discovered her sons when she
returned home around 3:45 p.m. Saturday from her job at an Insurance agency In downtown Cleveland.
Each.boy had sustained a single gunshot wound to the head, pollee
said.
Pollee said they believed the boys, Reginald Jr., 17; Vaughn, 15;
and Nlarchos, 11, were killed about 8:30a.m. Saturday. A neighbor
told pollee she heard what she thought was a car backfiring at that
time.
Pollee saki tl!ey have been searching since Saturday for Reginald
Brooks Sr., 36, to question him.
·

OH, GOOD.'

Child dies from cardiac arrest
WADSWORTH, Ohio- CecU and Joyce Vaughn saw their strug·
gle to save their small child end during the weekend. when 2~ -year­
old Clartssa "Rosie" Vaughn suffered a cardiac arrest.
The c!IIUd underwent surgery In Buffalo last December in an at·
tempt to treat congenital heart disease. After the surgery, perfopned at Buffalo ChUdren's Hospital, Clarissa began to make
progress In her recovery, her parents said.

....

-•
•"

.,
,..

PIUNffO IN C ANA O.t.

DUSTY CHAPS
~~T ST~D FOR ~ESE l\61..,UAT\O~?l
o--7'

ABOuT ME I BI0SKY...

Art &amp; Chi
PEOPLE CALL\U' W:, CORRUPT
~p \~MR. MCDUFF'S f\X.\&lt;ET!

Sansom

.t..a.usn~ ME. a: ABUSI~

:ar.-

iHE ~

~e.
Jl..'( ~-==-~__;_-fOS't· ·y.JH\L6

Weather forecast
'
Cloudy with a chance of snow late tonight and Tuesday morning.
Lows tonight near 30. Becoming partly cloudy Tuesday afternoon.
Highs In low to mld-40s. Chance of snow 40 percent tonight and 30 '
percent Tuesday. Winds westerly to southwesterly 5-15 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Foreeut
W..........,ay lhroucb Fttday:
Fllr Wedneaday aad 'lburoday. Chance of showers Friday. Highs
In mld-40!! to low 1108 W..tneaday and Thursday and upper tOs and 1108
Fttday. Lows In the 2011 Wednellday aad mld-208tomld-308 '111ursclay
and Friday.

00\1·~---.

ceRr~tJ

'F"'/OfiiS

meet a,lr quallty standards without
importing low-sulfur C'lal.
Brown said the Lukfn bill also
would take pressure off Ohio on the
acid rain issue.
However. even lf the bill clears
the subcommittee, the full Energy
and Commerce Committee and Is
passed by the House, the revisions
may face trouble In the Senate.
Legislation has been offel'eQ in
the Senate by Sen. George J_ Mitchell, O.Malne, that would require
utilities In Ohio and other Midwest
states to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions. Canada and several states
east of Ohio say airborne pollution
from Ohio utilities causes acldtc
rain and snow that damages their
lakes and trees.
The Mitchell bill would require
' .ates east of the Mississippi to reduce sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide emissions by 10 million tons by
1990.
Ms. Hostetler said Ohio would
bear a lot of the burden, with the
state's utilities being forced to cut
their sulfur dloxlde emissions 70
percent. The cost would be devastating, she said .
The Reagan administration has
come out in support of all the revisions In the ·Luken bill. Envlronm~ntallsts have attacked the
revisions, saying they would gut the
Clean A:lr Act.

VOCAL- Ed Harkless seated at plano, is pictured
with six of his Meigs High School vocal music sludealll
who look part in the annual Ohio Music Educators
Association sponsored solo and ensemble coolest at_
Ohio University. From the left are Aadrea Batey, mezzo soprano, good rating ; Susan Danner, alto, good

Deputies
check
...
theft reports
Meigs Coul)ty sheriff's deputies •
are lnves~atlng a breaking and
entering of the Rutland American
Legion Post bulkllng.
The Incident occurred around
1: 45 a.m. Monday.
A neighbor heard glass breaking
and called one of the post officers
who notified the sheriff's
department.
The glass In the Iron! window was
broken. However, entry was made
by bl'l!llking out a rear window. A
cement block is believed to have
been used. Once Inside, the Intruder
ate food in the concession area then
ned from a side door as legion officers entered the buUding.
A carton of cigarettes and some
food items was all that was
missing.
BAND - These Meigs High School students com· rutin~; Brenda Fry, hom solo, superior ruling ; Linda
The sheriff's department is also
peted In the annual Ohio Music Educators Association Noel and baek, I to r, Jell Na•h, Dan Riggs and
investigating a report from Lottie
sponoord solo aod enoemble contest at Ohio University. Vaughan Spencer, the lour of whom made up a !romLawson, Reedsville, who stated
Ph•tured with their director. Douglas Hill, at the back, bon•• quartet whleh received a rating 111 good.
that someone In a red pickup truck
are, front I to r, Cbarlotte Lyons, flute solo, excellent
with a white topper threw a bottle
through the living room window of
the Lawson home at about 12: ll
a.m. Slinday. The Incident is being
Investigated.
Meanwhile, Middleport firemen
patrol cited Folden for DWI.
day when his vehicle struck _and
A Rt. 2, Gallipolis resident was
answered a call to Arnold's Body
The patrol cited Marcus T. Simkilled a deer crossing the road. His
hospitalized
with
a
broken
leg
Col·
Shop oil Page St., at 8:50 p.m .
mons, 24, Gallipolis, for assured
vehicle was moderately damaged.
lowing
a
one-vehicle
accident
late
Saturday.
clear distance after a two-vehicle
The patrol said Perry A. Reed,
Sunday
afternoon.
Four trucks and 25 rhen ansscollision on Ohio 7, two-tenths of a
23, Rt. 1, ReedsviUe, was eastbound
The
Gallla-Melgs
Post
of
the
wered the calls. A' !Ire started
mile north of Ohio 218 on Saturday
at 8:40p.m . Saturday when his auto
state highway patrol said Elmer N.
arbund a wooden work bench In the
night.
struck and kUied a deer on Ohio 124.
Folden,
46,
Rt.
2,
Bidwell,
was
westrear downstairs of the building.
According to the report, Sim- Reed wasn't lnj ured In the accident
The fire was contained to that bound on Gallla County Rd. 5at5:45
mons was unable to slow doJ..n in
and there was slight damage done
p.m.
when
he
lost
control
or
his
veharea. There was extensive smoke
time whUe northbound at 8:40p.m.
to his vehicle.
icle,
drove
off
the
left
·side
of
the
damage to both.the downstairs and
and struck the rear of a slowing
Jane Hatfield, 50, Rt. 1, Galliporoad
and
Into
a
yard.
upstairs living quarters. The s'truC·
vehicle ahead of him drtven by
lis, was northbound on Gallta·
Once
In
the
yard,
the
car
struck
a
ture is owned by Don Geary. Cause
John V. Jenkins, 65, Rt. 1, Bidwell. County Rd. 3 at 7:15 a .m. Sunday
tree and came to a stop In a creek,
was undetermined and the damage
There was slight damage to Jen- when she lost control of her vehicle
causing
moderate
damage
to
the
estlmaie
not been set.
kins' vehicle and moderate to the on snow-covered road and struck a
vehicle.
renee post, causing no Injury and
Folden was taken by the GaUia Simmons auto.
The patrol also Investigated two moderate damage to her vehicle.
EMS to Hol.7.er Medical center,
Two other accidents were rewhere he was admitted for the deer accidents over the weekend.
WWlam J . Johnson, 28, Rt. 1, ported to have occurred in Meigs
broken leg and a cut to the forehead. He was reported In satisfac- Crown City, was northbound on 7 in County on Sunday, but the reports
GaWa County at 6:45. a.m. Satur- were unavailable at presstlme.
tory condition this morning. The

Man hospitalized, deer killed

Violence

'

I"J5 ALWA'&lt;S \-lAD (bREAT
.RESP6Cf AljD t=€DICI&gt;.TIO\J
FOR 1H6 \c:£AL.'?
OF~'S{-

1!\/6

...
NEW BUS FOR A NEW SCHOOL - 11ds Ito
: pa~~~~eqer bus which will be ulled 10 lniaaport
·YOIIII&amp;IIers aad adultll 10 lbe ~ebool for tbe mealally ·
Ibis
rellonW Ill Po_,..,. will be pal IDle
·week. The bu, whlcb wllltnvel• adlela day, .purdlued by tbe Metp COIIIdy Co~. 'l1le
.ftrst year' a paymeat wu f...n renaae oliartac lullda.

..-.u.

ratiD«; Julie Spencer, mezzo sopraao, superior ratiag;
Fred Young, baritone, excellent rating; Jeff Nash,
tenor, excellent rating, and Craig Dar-.t. tenor, ex·
cellent rating. Not pictured-Is Tammy Black, alto, who
received a good rating.

.

~- H\Ml

3)B

enttne

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 8, 1982

A:~

'i"'HUR6DA'i'S c:iO/Nq- TO BE: .
A FRE r I 'i QUIET DAY ...GNLY
.ONE ITEM ON /11\"'i W5r.

•

BaJa""" ol p~~ymeall wlll colile from a U mOl levy to
be placed oa the Juoe bllllot by the Melp &amp;.rd lor lbe
Meallolly Rellorded. The levy wiiJ aot..., tnYide fila.
diD« lor the bu "Carletoa lkllool" IMt I« ceaeral
operatlaleKpelllll!l loo. 'l1le oew ocllool at 8,-neue t.
expeded to opea la Juoe.
'

en~pts

GUATEMALA CITY (AP) Gunmen wounded three people at a
polling station and three guerrillas
were kllli.'llln a shoot-out Sunday as
tens of thousands of Guatemalan
voters Ignored a leftist call to boycott the national electloils.
Three clvWans and a general,
who range poUtlcaUy from center
right to extreme right, are seeking
the presldetaey.
.
Gen. Angel Anlbal Guevara, candidate of the coolltion that has held
)Xl)Ner for the last 12 years, led In
fragmentary returns from the first
three provinces reporting.
Gustel, the government telet"&gt;mmunications agency In charg" of
:election commlllllcatlons, said Gu·
evara' polled 6111 votes from the
WI!Stern provinces of QuezalteII8Jiill and San Marcos and the central province of Solola.
The three provinces have 16 per-

voter turnout

cent of the country's 2.3 mUiionellglble voters.
Their first returns showed Mario
Sandoval Alarcon of the National·
Liberation Movement with 363
votes; Alejandro Maldonado Aguirre of the coalition Christian Democratic Party and the National
Renovator Party with 266, and Gustavo Anzueto Vlelrnan of the Authentic NationaliBt center, 202.
Polling places closed at 6 p.m.
local time (7 p.m. EST), but results
were delayed because many voters
were stW waiting In line.
PoUce said gunmen opened fire
,at a poUing place on the capital's
·southern edges and Oed In a speed·
lng car shortly before votlng •for a
new president and other offtclalB
opened.

Later, authorities said three ter·
rorists, one with a sack run or
bombs, were kU1ed In a shoot-out

'
with pollee.
At least 36 other people died in
political violence on election ev.e.
Election day security was heavy
throughout the capital. Soldiers
guarded polling places with machine guns mounted on jeeps and
spot car checks were made on the
highways outside the cl ty.
In the town of San Miguel Panan,
M miles southwest of here, pollee
said guerrillas burned the electorlll
registry and all paper ballots before the polls opened _
On the road to Chlchicastenango,
~ miles northwest of Guatemala
Ctty. guerTillas cut down trees and
used them tO block the road, a witness said. Authorities said a bomb
exploded and shOts were heard on
the outskirts of nearby Chlche, but
there were no Injuries or damage.
Three guerrillas were kUled and
three captured In a raid in that area

·'

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1

Page

commentary
The Daily Sentinel
IIIC..rt84nd

r-.-.,.,.._,111

DEVOTFD TO THE lltTERESTOFTHI! MEIGMoWION AREA

Pometoy-Michllepolt, ~
~y. March •• 1982

On the report

Mondcr(. March a; 1982

aame period.
The American Medical
Association, AMPAC's parent
organization, purports to be concerned about i&amp;sues such as better
health care for slwn and rural
areas, imprwed mental health,
r~duc~ medical care costs,
alcoholism and drug depellllenee,
malnutrition and the pollutillll of the
air, water and land.
The matertala subpOenaed dlU'ing
the FEC investiption indicate,
however, that AMPAC has a
markedly different agenda - a set
of priorities that could be characterized as pirochjal at best ·and
selfish at worst.
·AMPAC's internal documents
atreu the organization's CIIIICel1t
about legislation affecting dlelorl'

professional cprorationa, their
retirement benefits, the tax treatment of their incMle and the Cil8l of
their malpractice insurance
pl'eflliwns.
The FEC probe of AMPAC was lnspil'ed by complaints that the

organization routinely cil'cumvented the provision of the
Federal Eection Campaign Act that
places a $5,000 ceiling on the
political contributions made by any
PAC .to any candidate for federal office during a single campaign. .
The statute specifically includes
"anti-proliferation" language to
prevent evuion of the law, for
example, by labor unions or corporatiOIII claiming that each union
local or company plant is an indl!pendent, separate organization.

Oester ·will take charge this season

19e2.NCAA Bllsketball Tournament

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -The Ctnclnnall Reds had the best record In
baseball last year, but second baseman Ron Oester's not bragging
about lt.
"We had the best record In basebaD, .but I lhlrik we should have
done better last year,'' Oester Said.
"I think If everybody hustled ev.ery game last year and gave their
all, we would have made up the two
extra games (that kept the Reds
from the playolts). Takllig the extra base when you can take an extra base ts the dltference In 5-10
ballgames a year," be said.
Oester said being with the club
lor only two years has kept htm
from being more outspoken.
"But It's going to be a Utile bit
dltferent this year," he Said. "I'm
going to try to take charge a llltle
bit more and trytopushsomeollhe
younger players."
.
Oester, a 25-year-old whq grew
up In Clnclnna tl; has gained the confidence of Reds Manager John
McNamara. Last year, the switch
hitter batted eighth. But this year
McNamara Is planning to put hbn
second In the batting order.
"If 1 htt second, 1'11 be seeing a lot
better pitches than I did In the
eighth spot last year," he said. "I'll
see a lot more fast balls to hit with a
man on first base."
In less than two seasons as a se-

AMPAC, However, regularly coordinated its campaign ·contributions
with the PACs maintained by state
medical societies throughout the
country - while Mrs. Elliott and
other AMPAC officials persisted in
claiming that their organization "iJ
not controlled by, nor does it control,
any other organization which has a

~ . NC

Mlwcn 19·2t

-OriMis
_.,., 27 ~----.

PAC. "
SlliUS.Mo

After an exhatLqtive investigation,
the FEC identified more than 200 instances du1ing the four-year period
from 1975 thrOugh lt78 in which AMPAC and the state medical PACs
made $615,000 worth of combined
campaign donations in excess of the
legal limit to candidates for House
and Senate seats.

Mitch 19·21

_
..
--

• .,.!Qt.,....AM
-ch 11·20

'

have a better defense In the out·
fteld, and : we are going to have· ;
more speed aU over this year. I ...
don't see any problems there."
Oester said', "Our pitching is
more expertenced, and I think It's
one of the very best in the league."

"It takes a couple years to prove
to people that you can do the job,"
he said. " It feels good to know you
have a job. I'm relaxed and just
going out to get In shape, Improve
my hitting and work on stealing

DALE HILL

bases.

when an opinion by Attoniey Gen:
eral Wllllam J . Brown said neither
city nor general health!llstricts had
enforcement powers over septic
tanks, seml-publlc sewage disposal
systems or other pollutant discharges which generate 25,000 gal·
Ions or more daUy. ·
Instead. the opinion held that the
Obto Environmental Protection
Agency has the authority under the
Ohio Water Pollution Controll.aw.

The legal snarl created a problem, Hughes said, because It meant
no one regulated the now of sewage
.arourxj the state each day- a now
equal to an amount that would be
generated by a city ol more than
500,(0),
Hughes, whose btll permits the
Ohio EPA to contract with local
health districts to Inspect and regulate the systems, said the state
agency cannot adequately Inspect

all these facilities.
The but directs boards of health
In city and general health districts
to adopt by rule a schedule of fees to
be assessed operators of the lactlltles to pay for the cost ol regulation.
Hughes said the legtslallon does ,
not affect any fee schedules the dts·
·trtcts currently have In place.
Contracts with districts for all or
part of the Ohio EPA's Inspection
and enforcement responslbtllties
would be permitted by the btU.

- seeking to extend for aJ years the

Interior Departlqent's autbortly to
tssue leases on wilderness lands.
Watt's pronouncement left envtr·
onmentaitsts flabbergasted and
grabbed lront-page headlines In
papers aci'088 the country.
Wllllam Turnage, executive dl·
n!Ctor of the Wlldemesa Society,
called the 8IUIOIIIICe!llet a "real
victory lor the American people"
and a "complete turnaround" by
Watt.
But envtronmentallsts were slAglAg a dilferent· tune when the btU
Walt drafted to acrompltsb these
objectives surfaced a few days
later. Conservattonlsts charged

that II was loaded with so many per1ormance backttred, exposing
anll·wtiderneM provlslollll that It "to more people how dupllc1tous he
bore no resemblance to the mea- Is" and further eroding Watt's pollt·
sure Watt described on televtston.
leal support.
Watt's aides see things dltfer"Mr. Watt lied to the American
enlly. They contend that environ, .
people," Turnage said. "What he
mental groups changed their
proclaimed as a wlldenle5s protec·
assessment
of Watt's proposal bet1on btllls actually a wtldemess descause they don't want to 1oee the
truction measure."
Turnage said Watt's tactics re- . secretary as a whipping boy to
minded htm ot the "big lie" media drum up contributions from the
manlpulatioll uad by fOITTII!I' Sen. faithful.
Joseph McCarthy dut1ng the Red
''Their change ot heart and mind
hunts ot the J!liQs - make an out- came trom looking at their bank
landish statement to grab head·
stateml!llts and not from looking at
the bUI," said Douglas Baldwin,
llDes IIJid &lt;bl't worry 1f It later is
Watt's chlel spokesman.
proven falle.
However, Tunlage says Watt's

Can states affort it?_.______R_ob_er_t1_·_wagrrw
__n
new tasks but •rather on whether
they btve the means to do so.
The surwy of 81150 states by the
Bureau of Nltlonal Affairs, a
private Wuhington-based
publisher, concludes lllat 1Imost all
of the states are filing or laying off
personnel because of budget woes at
the same time that their responsibllities •re CJ'OWinc.
The sllrvey found !Not aU 50 states
fiave imposed hlrlnc freezes or other
U..
·
hiring restrictlona. No fewer than 43
So far, much of the debate over the states reduced penonnel either
"New Fetleralilrn" hils centered on through RIFs (reductions in force)
whether the states can be trustad to or suppoaedly temporary layoffs
· administer their new respon- , during ft.callllll, and 44 slates plan
lilll!!!lfe ~IY. 1111,4-!!!e~--~dlu'i!!&amp;,lh!'!!iiiJYe&amp;r.
survey suggeeta tlilt the debate
Moreover, those states that have
should focua nat on whether the not Instituted layoffs or firings are
states have the will to take on the!le cutting personnel through attrition.
has for the put year been expinding
the role of the states in enforcing
federal safety and huith
regulatiOIIII governing the work
place.
OOHA says that it haa entered into
a "partnenhip" with the states in
enforcing these regulations; as a
result, to percent of all work places
are now under state juriadlction. II
ill expected !Not this percentage will
continue to rile tn tha corninc mono

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

PRO LITE

· Baltcastlng Reel

The firings ranged from a low of ·
three workers In Deljlwa.,, to a ~igh.
of 2,000 in West Virginia. Hawaii was
the only state to report no firings or
layoffs in 1911 and no plans for any in
1982.
.'
Anticipated fil'ings in those states
that had made plans for 11112 ranged
from a low of 15 in oil-rich Aluta to
a high of 3,000 in Oregon. Oregon, ·
which has been hard hit by the woes
of its timber industry, will have to
reduce its work force by almost 6
percent by the end of fiscal1912.
Most states have made their sharpest personnel cutbacks in social
services, labor and employment set·vices - the Yel'Y areas Oil which the
" lllew Fede.ralism" will place increased burdens as federal
programs are •hifted to the states.

Today Is Monday, March 8, the 67th day of1982. There are :l!fldays left In
the year.
Today's hlghllght In history:
In 1966, the United States landed 3,500 Marines In VIetnam.
On this date:
In 1917, riots and strikes broke out In St. Petersburg, marklng the
beginning of the Russian Revolution.
In 1m, Northern Irellind violence spread to London, where automoblle
bombs exploded outside the Old BaDey, killing one person 8lld Iiljurlng
many others.

•

Southern
unifo11n.were the return of
Othe1· factors
only two full time starters (Kent
Wolfe and Robert Brown) and the
lack of size.
However, the roles the players accepted prevented this preseason
forecast from materializing, and
Southern wound up the season losing
only one game.
Senior Kent Wolfe, with his arsenal of twisting layups and deadly
long jumpers, played fhe role of high
scorer in most of Southern's games.
However, Kent's ball handling and
spectacular passing abilities were
just as important to Southern's of'
fensive punch when the other team
was able to shut down his scoring.
SeniOI' Tom Roseberry was
designated the defensive specialist.
Roseberi'Y was willing to forego
scoring to concentrate on slopping
the main offensive threat of the opponent. If the opportunity presented
itself, however, he hit the outside
shot or streaked by his man for one
of his patented hook lay ups.
Senior Richard Wolfe was called

Senior Jay
assumed
the ..
leadership
roleRees
and did
whatever
was necessary to win the game. He
took the offensive charge, played the
point man on the full court press,
scored, rebounded, went after the
loose bail, a'nd pressured his man on
defense.
Seniors Scott Frede1ick and Alan
Pape accepted the responsibility of
working as hard as they could in
prac'!ice to force the starters to play
with intensity and when needed,
came off the bench to contribute
both scoring and defensive skill to
the effort.
The sixth man role was dominated
by junior Zane Beegle. Zane's ver·
satility as a bail handler, shooter,
defensive player, and rebounder
required him to learn ·ail five
·positions as he had to be prepa1·ed to
replace any one of the five starters.
The other juniors on the team,
Chris and Nick Bostick, Tyrone
Brinsger, and Rusty Cummins all
accepted the difficult ·role of
stimulating the opposing team's of.
fense ~nd delense in practice. They

t

°

1

6-li

•LIGHTWEIGHT
•MODEL PllOO-NARROW SPOOL
•GEAR RATIO 4.7-1
•180 YARDS CAPACITY
•FOR BASS AND BAIT CASTING

also had to work at developing their
skills to contribute to the team effort
when called u~Jn
southern ass~es the role of undel·dog Tuesday as they battle the
unbeaten Peebles Indians Coach
·
carl Wolfe and his assistant Howie
caldwell have been told Peebles has
the talent to get to the state tournament.
Southern will try to counter this
with their team roles and in.
tangibles.
The game will be played at
Chillicothe High School at 7 p.m.
Tickets an! stiU available at

PRICES EFFECTIVE NOW THRU SAT ., MAR. 13, 1982

·

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615·2918 .
Store Hours. Mon. thru Sat. 9:30a.m. 7 00 p
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=·

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Exhibition games
begin this week

Today in history

I .

on· to play two roles scorer and
il f .
If
had t
1
~nslv~pdaye~. : ea~ if wo
00
g . : : e ts
rs~ t~ e wa~
assign
sop oneeded hm ~r 1
mthore sconbngrdwas nthe his' e 1 utep
e score oa WI
accura
ts'd h I'
.
ouSel e s ~ ~~ 8
the dm~ ~ bo l'~wn ~asho1~~en
u es re un er a
mg
down the other team's "big" man
At 6-3 8
t
. t tw
.
rown wen up agams 0
p1vot men and se~eral 6-5 players
and never gave an mch of ground to
any of them
.

214 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2668

r------------'-1..!=========='=::!

Tornadoes
'p repare for Peebles .
·
,
Southern s advancement to the
district tournament Tuesdsy night
for the sixth straight year has been a
sm'Prise to some area forecasters
and Tornado followers.
. .
Guesses as to th e nwnbe r of Iosses
this year's team would have before
the season started ranged anywhere
from four to eight by several
knowledgeable Southern fans.
Reasons cited for this prediction
were this year's schedule which was
the 'most demanding in southern's
.
historyandthelossofDaleTeaford,
one of the better athletes to wear a

FORD TRACTORS

"I feel good. I just can't walt tor
the games to start," he said.
()ester said he doesn't think off·
season trades have hurt the Reds.
"We are going to be competitive
with everybody," he said. "We

~nderdog

Watt's bombshell startles conservationists

A strange dream

cond baseman, Oester has already
gain some respect. He hit .271 with
42 runs batted tn last season, third
best on the team. He also hit seven
triples. ·
Oester feels his second-base job
is more secure this year.

:{ IilcAA PAIRINGS - This Is the NCAA Men's Dlmloo I Basketball pairings for the 1982 tournament.

Legislator wants·to unravel problem

Letter to editor

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Maladies of AMPACu______R_ob_e,_t~-:-a-lte_rs

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
American Medical Polltical Action
COIIUnjttee "is an independent
~lb
Bm~ ~'--..,...·~d·organization and has no branches or
q:,v
subsidiary corrunlttees," Lee Ann
EUiott' testlfied In mid-1976 before
ROBERT 1.. WINGET!'
the Federal Election Commission.
. .lolb ...
In the ensuing five and a half
BOB HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
years, two events of note have ocGe~tniMIIIII~
••••&amp;.at Pllbllllltr/C..trtl~
CWTed :
•
First, the FEC - after conducting
DALE ROl'IIGEB, JR.
the most extensive investigation In
NnnEdl&amp;.r
its history - concluded that \he
claims of AMPAC independence
A MEMBER tf 'l1w Allftialred P'rftl, llllad O.Uy l"ftu .U.-rilttiaa ... lk
proffel'ed by Mrs. Elliott and other
AIM'ritaa NNI,.,er' hbl~ At.~~« ill.....
,.
officials of the organization were
false and mialeadinc. ·
u:tTEM OF OPINION.,. . .- . Tiley- lw I&lt;M- • · - ..... •n
Second, Mrs. EUiott was honored
'"""' ""
... jiO!Iollo..,.,
.........
-bolo'""
·......._Ill&amp;
""""""'
-bor.
Noo odjc&lt;l .. -~~
wlllw
Lolltr&gt;- -W
look,
by being offered a seat on the FEC.
;;'W 1.
She ill a member of the commission
todsy.
Shortly after she joined the sixmember federal agency, the FEC
considered a request from AMPAC
'
.
in the escalating debBie over El Salvador, one point at leut shGukl be pet~ for 111 advisory opinion about the
propriety of soliciting campaign
fe,.;tl~ clear by now: It is a highly complex Situation. •bout which the
contributions
not only from
An'ierican public needs to be accurately and thonlu!!hly informed.
.
physicians
but
also from their
To that end, F~ House, a New Vort-llued public affairs
spouses.
organization S(lOIISOI'edDy II(O!Jlinenl memben of the political establishOther FEC members who have
ment, has issued a detail-crammed fePI!f!_!Not 1.! both a capsule history of
faced
similar situations in previous
the conflict and a critique of cwerage by the American press.
·
years
have
excuses themselve~~ from
''Ei Salvador: Peaceful Revolution or Armed Struggle?" finds the roots of
in both the debate and
participating
the confllct in El Salvador's long history of undemocratic rule and economic
the
vote
on
issues
that involved the
domination by a tiny elite.
appearance or reality of a conflict of
'it covers the Corrununist uprising of 1932 that claimed thciusands of lives
interest.
and was followed by decades of military rule and widening split in the officer
Although Mrs. Elliott was on the
c&lt;lrpli with one faction pressing for reform. As coup followed coup, the leftist
AMPAC
payroll for 19 years - inOP,POSition proliferated, primarily through a sequence of splits within Com.
eluding
10
yeal'll in the 1970s as its
munist 1·anks. In the I!JIIOs, opposition surfaced as terrorism.
second-ranking
staff member - she
:rhe decade also saw the stealin~ of the 1972 presidential election from
apparently
had
no
similar qualms.
C~rislian Democrat Jose Napoleon Duarte, the creation of ORDEN
She
participated
fully in the corn!Or~anization Replublicana Democratica Nacionalista) as the mililal'Y's
mission
debate,
offered
an amendcounter-ten'OI'ist specialists and. finally , the 1979 coup of ref011n-minded of·
ment
to
enhance
AMPAC's
position
fleers led by Cols. Jaime Abdul Gutiel'l'ez and Adolfo A1110ldo Majano
and
joined
her
colleagues
in a
Ramos that set the sta~e for the current civil war.
·
unanimous
vote
inAMPAC's
favor.
Subsequent event of significance include Dua1te's return from eKile to
In the high-stakes world of camhead the ~overnil)~ junta, the eKcesses of ORDEN and its pl'Os&lt;:l'iption and
paign
finance, AMPAC is a major
the institution of a land-1·efonn pr~ram thr ~&lt;'1·eed01n House sees as the
pal1icipant.
The country's largest
mOst encouraging but under-•·eported asr
'Salvad01·an situation.
business
and
indu~try PAC, it 1·aised
Finally, the report takes the Ame1·ican '"· . ,o task fo1· the inadequacy of
and
spent
more
than $1.7 million
its cove1·age of Ei SalvadOl', Much of that coverage ·has been simplistic,
during
the
1979-30
election cycle
politically biased and poo1·Iy sourced. Some of it has been il'l'esponsible and
while
its
state
affiliates
collected
deliberate misinformation.
almost
$5
million
more
during
the
The indictment is especially serious coming from an organization more
accustomed to defending the liberties of the press, among other free in·
· stitutlons. It would appear to be impressively documented. l.lpon critiacl
cKamination, howeve1·. it also appeal'S to have been selective in its documentation.
There is no mention, f01· example, of the post-coup history of reformist
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Colonel Majano .. As II happens, he was fo1·ced out of the junta a year later Lake County legislator bopes to unand is now in U. S. exile, accusin~ his fo1·me1· mllitai'Y colleagues of "c1·imes ravel a legal problem that substanandcX L'CSSCS.''
tially weakens Ohio's enforcement
The counter-coup p1·ess ure of right-wing office1·s is, in fact, one of the most of water pollution control laws.
significant details of the complex Salvadoran situation. There have been
Rep. Edward J . Hughes, Dfour junta reshuf!lings since 1979, and each time the reform elements have
Mentor, won 82-12 House approval
lost ~ round .
ol the corrective· legislation last
Thel'Cis no mention of this by Freedom House. No1· any llLAJil of Col. Jose week and It now is awaiting assignCuiilcl·mo Ga1·cia, the ha1·d-nosed defense minister sharing 1'1\e 1·eal power in
ment toacommltteeforhearlngsln
the junl;l with a Gutic1Tez who could fit only the loosest definition of a l'efOr· the Senate.
ITICI'.
Hughes said the problem ai'O!!e
Mov i n~ alon~ to land 1·efonn. F1·eedom House Cl'edits it with benefiting
210,000 peasant families, Which. at an average of six pe1· family, "ll·anslatcs
into 1.25 million people."
Tht• figures are, however, put somewhat lower by other sources - such as
the U. S. ~overnment, which currently estimates bencficial·ies at 60,000
families in the fi1·st phase, conversion of large estates into cooperatives. A
WASIDNGTON (AP)- Did the
second phase, cove•·ing tenant fal'lncrs , has bogged down at 25,000 families
wtldemess bombshell James Walt
out of a potential 160,000 and a thi1·d, involving smaller land holdings, has
dropped on national teleytslon sigbeen postponed indefinitely.
nal a public relations breakBut no mention of this, nor of the continuing opposition of landlords and
through or the beginning ol the end
rcl&gt;&lt;lSsession of some lands, nor of public statements by Salvadoral\' in the
for the controversial Interior
p1·ogram that is·not wo1·king.
secretary?
Nor of intimidation, including execution, nf peasant participants by OR·
Was that n!ally an 1akiegree
DEN, which. Freedom House to the contral'Y, has not been liquidatl'l! by only
tum he made on NBC's "Meet the
~nnt• t'X officio. It continues to operate ce1·tainly with the knowledge and
Pre~s" or an attempt to lull his crlt·
probably under the direct control of milil&gt;lry l'ightists.
lcs with an artful He?
Watt stariled comervatlonlsts
during the Sunday Interview show
by saying he would like to bar all
drilling, mining and timber-cutting
unlll the end of the century.
UntO then, Watt bad been proposI had the strangest dream this ?ou'1·e not any better than the
Ing exactly the opposite approach
morning. I dreamed the president Russians. Isn't that what they do
wu making a speech; only it wasn't too? Try to be completely good to
Reapn. It was Jesu.s in a three eve.-yone even as God is completely
piece suit saying :
good.
"Everyone tells you, ' An eye fm·
"Don't get all worried and go
WASHINGTON (NEAl- The~
an eye, and a missile for a missle! around •saying, 'What if they try to
But I say : Don't fight back against cut off your oil?' or, 'What abeut our terpiece of President Reagan's
' 1New Federaltsm" is the turning
the evil Corrununists. If they other vital imports?' These are the
thretlten to destroy your land based very things the godless Conununists over of many federal programs to
the states.
misalles; offer then your sub- worry about.
Vet, a recently published survey·
marines, too. And if they take the
"Listen! Gnd knows what you
has
found that the states are being
Mid-East oil fields, send them !orne . need. You just work on doing Gnd's
forced
by their own financial difcoal, also.
will in this wo1·ld light now. Fill
ficulties
to make deep cutS - ,
"Every one else says, 'LOve your yourselves with God's Jove for
especially
in personnel- in the very
allies and hate the Commies,' but I everyone and fo1·get about
depa~nts
that will have to
am telling you: Love even the eve1'Ything else.
shoulder
these
new
responsibilities. ·
Rl)Siliana. Bless them when tbey
God will take good care of you.
The
administration's
proposal to
publish lying propaganda about you. Don't worry about what will happen
@ive
the
states
more
authority
over
Wish the best- for them even tomorrow or next year. You have
social
programs
has
grabbed
most
though they want to conquer you. In enough to do today!
doin&amp; this you will be Imitating God
"Relax, and adopt as your motto: of the headlines. LAlss attention has
been paid to Its quiet transfer to the
who set the sun In heaven to shine on "In God,We Trust."
states
of other types of progra1111
· both the conun.unists and the
What a strange dream: Pi'esident
that
had
been admlni.!tered f
capitalists, who sends rain to water Jesus in a three piec'e suit saying
Washington,
all the crops no matter who plants such strange things. I wonder if
For eumple, the OccupatiOIIal
them.
Reagan ever reads the fifth and
" Now, if you only send foreign aid sixth chapters of Matthew? - Emy Safely and Health Administration
to countries you want to innuence, Davies

· ...... "r_..,.ldlm

2-The Daily Sentinel

By The Aaaoclaled Preas
made.
This ts a time of the year fUJed
"For them, tt has been outstandwith anllctaptlon for baseball Ing," Houk said . "We haven't had
teams working out In sprtng train- any setbacks at all, and that's lm·
Ing. Exhibition games begtn In portant In early spring. I don't like
earnest this week and for those the fact ·that the hitters don't get a
clubs sttll on the sidelines, 11\e start chance to face llve pitching In game
can't come soon enough.
situations. But at this point, II
"I can't walt to begin, " saki Pat shouldn't reaDy matter that much.
Corrales, new manager of the Phi- Besides, the pitchers are always
ladelphia Phillles. "Everybody's
ahead ol the hitters for the first
thrEe games."
ready."
Corrales' club must walt a couple
Houk would rather have the Red
of more days before beginning exllt- sox playing than sitting right now.
bittnn games with a pair of contests
"But I think If you ask me on July 2
against Toronto Wednesday and
1f missing these two simulated
Thursday. The manager has tined
games hUrt the club," he said, "1
up hts pitchers for those two games, · doubt If I'&lt;! say yes."
opening with a pair of regulars,
Two exhibition games were
Dick Ruthven and Larry
played Sunday. A spilt squad ot
Christenson.
Montreal Expos defeated Balti"We'll also use some ot the other
more 7-5 and the Atlanta Braves
guys out of the bullpen In lhesl: and
shut out the New York Yankees 1.0.
the early spring games," Corrales
Two other games, the Chicago
said. "We've got the numbers In the
White Sox vs. Detroit at Lakeland,
bullpen and we have to get some
Fla., and the remainder of the
answet'!l.'' .
Montreal squad against Los An·
Rain Sunday washed out the PhD·
geles at Vero Beach, were rained
lles' workout at their bale In Clearout.
water, Fla. The same thing
John Mllner hammel'ed a home
· happened at Winter Haven, Fla.,
run
and drove In three runs lor the
where Boston haa toat two straight
against the Orioles. Rookie
'Expos
days ot work. ~ttll, Manager Ralph
Bryan
Ullle also drove In thri!e
Houk remains optlmlatlcs about
runs for Montreal.
the progresa his pitchers have

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�4 The Daily Sentinel

Page

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Scoreboard...

I

Boys scores
tap
a.,. I
.7,..
I

lletn c
tWit
IJen !C h

tt I

*

l..ouiMUe !?, Florida St. 13
Meml)llb St.

.........

N.nunots 7'!1, Blll St. 75. or

Bow1lnc

Otw. Mlflll 58. SbalrL&gt;r HtJ. t6

"

u.

Atlllelk (' ..

8ai

m

I

50, Btolhwie-coolunan t9
N.Carotina AAT 47, flOrida A&amp;.M ~
........,. Cll)' Clllhre.oe

Howard

_

-

ar..n II

II

r ...~ n. Loyola, IlL n

~v.._,c.r....,..

1'ul,.lll ll, DJ1.ncU St. T1
~y_.,.c

':tm

Bellaire Ill, Jeff«JJn Union 61
w)'Of1UIIe 63,
f'IIIM)10Wn ~
(lev@. Benl!dlctioo 85, Cleve. Trl,.!y 56

II"
Middle Tenn. 54, W .KftiiUeky S2

Co.. Br1aJ Ill, Col . Wattt-non 62
!10. TJ1. Valley 4.1
El)rll W. 72, OberUn Sf

"""Alabama t8. Kentucky'"'

London ~ - Jcllathall AJdrr ~
1Udei111 12. On. McNICbOiu 8l
Nbrw1ynt G6, Akron Hot.n 64, OT

Ttnn.-Oaattanaop 18, Devtdmn ~

· an.

a.. II

an.

.,...lln•e"' c

~~ton

Orrville 68,

I

uw

~CIJiW

......,cf!m

.uron Manchellter 44

"'• 5

Steubenvtn. Calh. f7, St. ClalrtvWe e

,

SW Louisiana 81. Telw-AtUngton '15

Urbana 56, Ke-nton ftidce +li
W.ACanal Winchester 63, Nortllmor SJ

~c

Al1tansu 81,

an.. Summit 86, Batavia st

..

C . 'a"M
G!Wtl 86. W.MkNpa 1J

Mt6-l'.all&amp;en

M&amp;nhall

Col . N«W&amp;nd ~. Col. Whltlrone n
EucUd 57, Ea1tla.U&gt; N. ~
Hami.Jton 68, On. Wt'ltem Htlls &amp;l
Ll,ncaiU!I' 71. Mat1ena 69
Mt. IIHIU!y 71, On. ElOO" 63
Pan na Padua !rl, PArmll t9

._ ...

IEWIE

"""-

CN1Uroow 43
Barberton n, Akron EUtt oo
Canton 'b!U! 62, Akron Garndd 58
~.

aew. Sl. lgnaUus 59, CleYe.
Col . M1ftUn n. C roveport -41

n. Vlrwtnta ~h ....,

1116-AmeftcM Cad

a. .uA Tw iWW1IINit

Athena

ru. ~ademy m. ucklna: Hll. ~
GreftllrVIew .a. Bethrl a

r cu:e

Houaion 69

By A.octated l'reM
Top-ranked North Carolina had
just beaten VlrglnJa In the title
game or the Atlantic Coast Conter·
ence basketbaU tournament, and
Coach Dean Smith was unhappy.
The Tar Heels claimed their lOth
ACC IItle with a 47-45 vlcwcy over
No. 3 Vlrglnla Sunday altemoon,
but a North Carolina staU that consumed 7¥., minutes or play was a
major topic or post · game
questioning.
"Isn't It amazing'" Smith asked
rhewrlcaUy. "We just had a great
basketoall game out there unw
eight minutes lett to play, and that's
aU you want w talk about. ''
North Carolina led 4441 with B: 44
tD play with the help otrour buckets
by freshman Michael Jordan. Jet!
Jones put VIrginia within one point
at 7:34, and neither learn scored a

basket unW Cavaliers center Ralph
Sampson hit a slam dunk at the
buzzer.
In the meantime. North Carolina
was In Its four-corner oftense - a
euphemtsm tor stall - and scored
Its final three points !rom the toul
line, aU by Matt Doherty.
"That's one ot our offenses " Tar
Heels torward James Worthy said
ot the tour-corners. "We look tor
Jayups oft back doors, and It we
don't get those, we look for them w
toul us."
Worthy led North Carolina, 27·2,
with 16 points, all In the first half as
the Tar Heels buUt a lead that grew
to as many as 12 points, 24-12. At
that point, WorthyhadhaltotNorth
Carolina's points, but the CavaUers
stortJied back llehlnd Sai1!PSOn,
their Uoot-4 junior.
Both teams. along with No_ 16

Wake Forest and North Caro!Jna
State, received NCAA tournament
bids.

Two other conference titles and NCAA berths - were decided
Sunday. Freshman Keith Lee powered No. 13 Memphis State to a
73-62 vlctocy over Louisville In the
Metro Conference, and North Ca·
roUna A&amp;T beat Howard ti!J.671n the
Mld·Eastern Athletic Conference.
1\lelro C&lt;JodereD!le
Lee, a 6-ll center, scored 27
POints and grabbed 15 rebounds for

Memphis State, 23-4, took a 61-45
lead with 9: 33 lett alter outscoring
Lou!svWe 22-7 In a span of eight
minutes. The Cardinals, who received anNCAAat·Jargebertll, baa
not lost fu the Metro tournament
since 1979.
Tournament titles were decided
In 18 conferences Saturday.

*·

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.., Ud&amp;olo 81. Trimble 511

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Col. Northland 62, UJIP"r AriiJ!itOn

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Col. Wallnlon 66. Col. Mllnln ~
C'uyatqa Flllll ~ AJuon Buchtel M
Defiance ~. Morns. Madilon f7
• E. CleYdand Shaw 12. Oeve. E. Terch

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Offer Gaod At Gino's Of Point Pleasant And Mason

Olrrulfld f'"allt Tl, Lorain DIOt 68
Swanton '15, MWbury IAkt&gt; U
Upptr SalldOIIk)' 43, Bellevue 34

TEAM

1982

ClaiiA.T~

Anna 45. R-. 34
Al'C II~d ... EdiHUm :!3

,.

New 5 pc. WOOd
dinette
Reg. $259.95

Enjoy our new deep dish pan pizza. with the choice of
one topping and save . Large•
~ S5.25

" Evtf'JTftll ~7. Eutwood 43, 01'
~

'

Reg . $319.00

.. Keiterlna Alter 31, Fairmont E. l1
: MaN. Mal.lbar til, Findlay t1
, W.ml ~42, CaJTOI,Itm 29
, ~ 52, SYh•anLa Northvkow 66
Tol. aowa~~er 11.
Cill)' ..

Huron

TO THE 1981-1982 SOUTHERN TORNADO·· BASKETBALL TEAM

NEW BEDROOM

~

~ Fenwick 19, Tr'I-VIUage ~

Ripley

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Memphis State, which just
squeaked Into the Metrotlilal with a
71·70 vlcl()cy the day betore over
Vlrl!lnla Tech.

JOhnltown Northrklge M, nMrr Cath.

l..aktland 62, ln4iarl VaUey S.
MariOtl CaUl. 76, E. Knox: 38

Monday, March 8, 1982

!.T ar Heels claim ACC · ·championship

T

-·llmMI

OMo

Monday, March 8, 1982

STATISTICIAN

&amp;.lllwr Eull'm M , PeebiH 5J
Budceyt CentraJ 51. Collin&amp; W. Rl.&gt;wer~e

CHUCK
HANNAHS

C.rey 49, Vanlue J9
Columbu.l Grove M, Uoco!nv1ew .l l
DPiphOt St. Jolm 57, KaJ14a ~
$1, M~ fO
Indian Valley S. 46, Jewtn-Sclo Z

E. C.nton
\..

LucuvUJ. VidWy ~. Plllnt Valley 56
•: • MaN. St. Prter 56, New 1..a.ton 34
r. • Marl!&gt;• Local67, Ada 61
' 1 • New KnoKvlUe U, Upper Sr:loto Val, ~
'.• N. BIJUmo~ 68, Clbeonblq l1
:.-: Ottawa HUll 60, N, CenlraJ 411
• Rol«r&amp;rll 72. 8~ 67
, ,. WaynNYWt fJ, MkkUetDwn Fenwick 5?
1..

Talk back

__

Bob.....

to

·:· College scores
·,.•· ,.,..
SMwdara
.....,.

4. How would you rate the Daily Sentinel in respect to its news coverage
and treatment of organizations and people?
Fair .... Unfair ...
5. How would you rate the 'overall appearance of The Daily Sentinel?
.
. Dull...: Pleasing .... Very pleasing ....
6. Everythmg bemg cons1dered, what do you think OJf the Daily Sentinel as
a newspaper?
.
Excellent.... Good .... Pa~~ible ..... Not much good.... '

Oan-

,

O.rtmouth 88, Yale Ill

Harvlll'd !16, Brown frl
Pwn 4.'\, Columbia 4.1

7..Would like t? sit d?wn with me and a few other editors for a frank, no
holds barred discuss1on of how we can improve the Sentinel.

-

P'rlnMon 51, Cornell tR
W~an

78, WUllal'TII 76

Marqll(1te

7'.t Stetton 61

:· •
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&amp;OUTH

Yes .... No .... Not now, maybe later ......

Dayton 79, Notr-.. Dai"Tle 72
DIIIIO!t !15, Northwe~~tem 66

Any comments you'd like to make now?

Indiana 74, Mk:tlipn St. !18

Mkhllan 91. WIJconsln IW·

rr.

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Texu-El Puo 66, Utall M

FARWI'ln

Artzonl !16, Oream 78
Arlrona St. 68, ONfon Sl. 10
C.l!lomla 18, SWtford :'J8
HawBJI 7!1, Colorado St. 58
New Mexlcv 67, Br1&amp;Jlam Youna li6

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North Carolina 58. N.Carollna St. "6
Vll"lflnla 51 , Wake F"ore.1 f9, or

;·
1••
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Grorirlaw'n 12, VIllanova 511
1111 Elchl Coni~

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=•

lila 8lo' Collferenu
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ltla ho8!i, Nl'\',·fltonolll

v..... COIII'eN:nelc!
Sl.Joaeph'a 75, Drexel m
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•'

Bob Hoeflich,

IIOC.tC Mecn So.._..

~.

Roben Mon111 ~

General Man"'!"r

Lana bland u . 84

ECAC

Nort1t

~p
NortN!U if!m 82, N~a&amp;ara 59

-·
ECAC 8ou1t1

How about fillirig out this survey for me? AU of us here at The Sentinel try to put out a paper that's infonnative. entertaining and useful to
you. We'd like to knowwhether or not we're succeeding .
T~nk about it for a day or two if you want, although first impressions
sometunes are the best.
When you're ready, drop it in the mail - I'm at lll Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

Old DomlnlOII ~. Jlrnt't Madboft 57

....._
n

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~·

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F..lpt C.O.ereftel!

Pin 79. West Vlr8fnla

Th ~.: IJ:.1il~ S'-.'ntincl
IUSPSI4$-8101
AOlvbilun ul MuiUmor••ll•,lnC'.
' Publi!lhl*tl ~VIlry Hftton~oon, MondMy throu~h
; Jo'rlday, Ill Court Strt.oel. by the Ohlo Valley
, PublishinK Cum~ny · Mullim~dia , Inc.,
' . Potnl!roy, Ohio 4a7119, 992-2166. Set.'Ond cla~
• posWI(t! paid at Pom~roy , Ohio.

..

I. How well does the Daily Sentinel keep you informed?

Extremely Fairly
well
. well

1 1 Metnbrr:

The A&amp;o!Ot:ialt;(rpregs, lnhmd Dai·
ly Pre!UI Auocbttlon 11nd U~ Anwrlt:an

j ,NtWl!l)lptr Pul.dls~n Auocilltlon, NalJonal

, Adverthtln1! Reprtallnl81i ve. Brttnham
• NewsPMpt!r Sall!!l, 733 Third Avcuuc. New
• Yort,New York 10017.

1

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f

(

~· ~TMASTER : Send adllte~~J to The Dally
...ilmt!n~I.JttCourtSt. . Polneroy,Ohlo45789 ,
,

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HOME NATIONAL BANK
RACINE, OHIO ·

Use

Use about
Less same as now

L~ p

I ' -

"'

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Personal items about local people
such as promotions, retirements,
parties, etc.

.tll.udtc Coul Conlnoee

1-'

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Use
More

UCLA 57, WUttnaton St. !if,
Wyomln( 66, Sen Diego St. 6t

:

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If you were I, how would you handle the following kinds of news?

Sool/w.&gt;rn C&amp;l76. Wuhln,a:ton 10
t

O

MIMetOta
Olllo s1. n
Purdue M , Iowa m

I

SVBSCRIPTION RATES

ByC..-nrr«Ho..,.Rtule

CommWJity news
CoWJtynews
State news
World and national news

Poorly

Don't
know

'
'·

Oneweek •.••.••...• •• ..•• •. •. •..•. • J.OO :

Ont.&gt; Moolh ...............• . .. . ,. , •. ft ,to
One Year ......... . .... ......... .. P2.10
SINGLE COPY
.
PRICES

2. How do you rate these areas of coverage in The Daily Sentinel?

•. O.lly .... .. ................... . 15Cen,.

Excellent Good Fair Poor Don't
know

I

nol desirin11 to PlY the carrier
·· may remit In advalice 'dltecl to ~ 0.11)'
. · r' Sentinel on a 3, 8 or 12 month bola. Credit
: will btl ,.:Jven CU"rier each mOndl,
i , SubKrlbetJ

, • No subilcrlptlona by mall permitted In towns

when! home carrler, !it.&gt;rvice II available.

·

MAILSVB8CRIPliON8
ObJ.hdW.,IYII'IIalo

•
• 3 Mtmlh ... ..... ................. . '12.35
•. Six1nonth .... . ... . ... , .. .. . . . .. , . t20.10 ,
; ·I Ve1tr ............ .. ... ·'- . ...... , 139.00
~
Rakl Oulalde Oldo
alld Wnll Vlr&amp;I.Ja
3 Month .......................... $13.00 '
6 Month ..... .•. ... .. ....•..... .. . $23.40
1 v~.,
S44.20

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

Sports news

.

SOcia.l and women's n~
School news
Local government news

"'

3. How would you rate your confidence that the news printed in the Daily
Sentinel is true and accurate?
·
·
Very high.... High....Some.... Little.•..
. j

Court news, lawsuits
Business and financial news
Routine police news such as
accidents, burglaries, etc.
Obituary details
Engagement details
WedQing details
Youth activities
"How-to" stories
Church news
Local sports
National sports
Meeting aiid activity notices
Conswner advice colwnns
Take One
entertainment news
Interpretative or "analysis"
stories and columns
Feature stories
Editorials on local issues
Editorials on national issues
Personal item colwriils

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VILLAGE CUT-RATE

RACINE, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO

. RACINE, OHIO

EBER'SGULF

•tUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

SMITH'S PENNZOIL

SYRACUSE, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO

CODNER'S TEXACO

SYRACUSE DAIRY BAR

MEIGS INN/PIZZA SHACK

SYRACUSE, OHIO

SYRACUSE, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

BANK ONE

POMEROY, OHIO

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

POMEROY-RUTLAND-TUPPERS PLAINS

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
'OHIO

SWISHER·&amp;LOHSE PHARMACY
OHIO

HERITAGE HOUSE OF SHOES
lOCKER 219
OHIO

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
POMEROY OHIO

THE FARMER'S BANK
POMEROY; OHIO

'

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

VALLEY LUMBER

EWING FUNERAL HOME

POMEROY,OHIO

MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

JIM'S GULF

THE DAILY SENTINEL

•

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES.&amp; SERVICE

'
0

,RACINE, OHIO

WAGNER HARDWARE

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

•

OHIO

STAR SUPPLY

POMEROY, oHIO ;

Reports on city council, school
board and other local government
aJ(encies and their meetings .
,_
Black and white pictures
Color pictures
NAME

RACI

RACINE; OHIO

"

DRILLING

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Address ••••••••••••• ••. .... ~ ...........
; .. ,Zip
.

.

Phone .......•.•.•.....................•.•••......
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OHIO

,

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS .

.
•••

• ' ••

0

•••••••••• •

•

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POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

RAWLI
FUNERAL HOME
OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

.

THE CENTRAl TRUST CO.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�Pas•

~The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Meigs spelling bee set ·Tuesday
Representatives from 16 Meigs
COunty schools will battle with words at 7:30p.m. Tuesday attempting
to capture first place In the annual
Meigs County spelling bee.
James Carpenter, assistant
superintendent of the Meigs Local
School District, will pronounce words for the 16 contestants and S.rving
as judges will be Richard Roberts,
superintendent of the Eatern Local
School District; Danny Morris,
superintendent of the Meigs Local
School District, and Daisy Franz,
Southern High School teacher.
Finalists - a cl)amplon and an
alternate - were named during
preliminary events at each of the 16
parllclpating schools. Champions
will represent their respective
schools unless they are unable to attend in which cases the respective
alternates will take part. The champion and the runnerup In Tuesday's
event will receive trophies and the
champion will represent the county
at the annual state spelling contest
· to be held at Fawcett Center in
Colwnbus on Aprill7.
. Champions and alternates,
respe&lt;;tlvely, and their parents, of
each of the participating schools include:
Chester Elementary - Patti
Wood, sixth grade, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Wood, Pomeroy; Amy Mann,
fourth grader, Mr. and Mn. David
Mann, Pomeroy.

Easte~n Junior High - Tammy
Smith, eighth grader, Mr·. and Mrs.
Thomas Smith, Reedsville; Tone
Chapman, eighth grader, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Koblentz, Pomeroy.
Riverview Elementary
Maralyn ,Barton, sixth grader, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Barton, Reedsville; Abigail Cauthorn, sixth
grader, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
Cauthorn, Reedsville.
Tuppers Plains Elem. - David
Rice, fifth grader, Mr. and Mrs.
John Ri ce, Reedsville ; Amy
Berkhimer, sixth grader, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Jackson, Reedsville.
Bradbury Elem. - Elsie Meier,
fifth grader, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Meier, Middleport; Erek Daniels,
sixth graders, Mr. and Mts. Lane
Daniels, Rutland.
Harrisonville Elem. - Jared
Sheets, fifth grader, Mr. and Mrs.
James Sheets, Rutland; Susan
Ward, sixth grader, Mrs. Margaret
Ward, .Pomeory.
Meigs Junior High - Steve
Musser, seventh grader, Mr. and
Mrs. John Musser, Pomeroy; Gary
Coleman, eighth grader, Mr. and
Mrs. Loren Coleman, Pomeroy.
Middleport Elem. - Melissa File,
fourth grader, Mr. and Mrs. William
File, Cheshire; Susanne Cassell,
fourth grader, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Cassell, Middleport.
Pomeroy Elem. '- Lesley Carr,
fifth grader, Ro!U'Id Carr and Donna

Carr, Pomeroy; Toah8 O'Neil, sixth
grader, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
O'Neil, Pomeroy.
Rutland Elem. - Lisa Miller, sixth grader; Mr. and Mrs. John Mlllet',
Rutland; Cathy Blessing, sixth
grader, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Blessing, Middleport.
Salem Center - Ben Bell, fifth
grader, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bell,
Langsville; Elizabel/l Thornton, sixth grader, Ronald Vance and Joyce
mad, Pomeroy.
Letart Elem. - Ricky Sellers, sixth grader, Mr. and Mrs. JonlSellers,
Racine; Donjta Manuel, sixth
grader, Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel,
Racine.
Portland Elem. ~ Kim Stobart,
sixth grader, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Stobart, Racine; Donette Talbott,
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Talboit, Portland.
Racine Elem. - Heather Shuler,
sixth grader, Mr. and Mrs. David
Shuler, Long Bottom; Linda Curtis,
sixth grader, Mr .. and Mrs. Thomas
Curtis, Racine.
Southern Junior High - I..egina
Hart, seventh grader, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Hart, Racine; Karla Smith,
seventh grader, Mr. and Mrs. James
Smith, Portland.
Syracuse Elem. - Todd Lisle, fifth grader, Mr. and Mrs. John Usle,
Syt·acuse; Angie Grueser, sixth
grader, Mr. and Mrs. John Grueser,
Minersville.

Eichingers have golden anniversary
The 50th anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Eichinger, Pomeroy, was
obllerved recently at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church social

rooms.

The reception for the couple was
ltolted by their children, Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Kelly of Hollywood,
Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eichinger,
and Mr. and Mrs. Max Eichinger,
Pomeroy. The grandchildren
assisted on the day of the
celebration. Special mustc was a
. duetsung by Gerald Kelly and Paula
Eichinger, accompanied by June
VanVranken.
Guests and relatives registered by
Becky and Tammy Eichinger included Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wrigh~
HClnler Radford, Clara Sayre, Leroy
Eichinger, Mr. and Mrs. James
Diehl, Dorothy Johnston, Marlon
Ebenbach, Virginia Edwards, Gertrude Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Hoover, Ann R.upe, Leona
Smith, Mr, and Mrs. Robert
Vaughan, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Goegleln, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Moore,
Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Goegleln.
June Van Vranken, Orella Hysell,
Roger W. Hysell, Marie Chapman,
Bertbt Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Russell, the Rev. and Mrs.
Robert McGee, Grace Campbell,
Elizabeth Cutler; Rev. William Middleswarth, Lucllle Leifheit, Mr. and
Mrs. George Nash, Mr. and Mrs.
Kermit Walton, Mr. and. Mrs.
William Swalzel, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Goeglein, Michael and

Mark, Mr. and Mrs. Trell Schoenleb,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth,
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Mora, Ruth
Ebersbach, . Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Frick, Mrs. Della Curtis, Marge
Reuter, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Brown, Mrs. Betty Baronick, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Elberfeld, Ada
Warner, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
M,ora, Jennifer and Jason, Scott Hill,
Becky Eichinger, Max Eichinger,
Jr., Darla Kelly, Tammy Eichinger,
Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Kelly,
Holly\vood, Fla.; Byron Hysell,
Olive Reyer, John Eichinger, Lancaster; Mary K. Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Manning Roush and Kim, Mrs.
Karl Grueser, Mrs. Freda Russell,
Mrs. Bradford Maag, Rae Reynolds,
Minersville; Mr. and Mrs. William
Eichinger, Mrs. Nora Houdashelt,
Marie Houdashelt, Evelyn Lucke,
Thelma Dill, Syracuse.

Mr. and Mrs. Rex O'Brien, Mrs.
Nancy Barnhart, Stewart; Maxine
and Nancy Aldridge, .Langsville;
Linda Bennett, Kathryn Rood,
Letart; Mr. and Mrs. John Fry, New
Haven; Mrs. Linda Boyd and Amanda, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Gibbs, Sr.
and Randy, Parkersburg; the Rev.
and Mrs. Carl Hicks, Racine; Brian
Collins, Opal Eichinger, Barbara
Sargent, Chester; Paula Eichinger,
Pauline Roush, Middleport; Cinda
Roush, Apple Grove, and Doug
sSnds, Addison.
others sending gilts were Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Beasley, Tell City, Ind.;
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest l..eilbeit,
Akron; Mr. and Mrs . Earl
Eichinger, Girard, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. AI Davis, Niles; Mrs. Otho Curtis, Mechanksville, Iowa; Mrs. Edna Wayland, Middleport; Mrs.
Dorothy Woodard, Lal)gsvllle; Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Davis, LaJolla, Calif.

BVOUR
A
GOOD ·
BOOK
't

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:30p.m. Wednesday at
the Meigs Inn.

siory./\.N., will conduct the
cllni;Kt'o.which the public is invited.

HARRISONVILLE - The
Golden Age Club of Harrisonville
will have a free blood pressure
clinic on Tuesday, from IOa.m. to
I p.m. at the townhall. Ferndora

POMEROY - A meeting of
Eastern School District Band
Boosters has been set at 7:30p.m.
Tuest!~y at Easte1·n Hi gh
School's band I'OOm.

, ..... Dapl

243 llast 17 Sl, 11tw Ylll; NY
10011. Pritlt NMIL RDOIESS,

ZIP, Silt,-~ sm.l1UIII£l
S"incs Breakthrouch! Send
now lor NEW SPRING-SUMMER
PATIERN CATAlOG. Sew and aet
mmelous clothes fo&lt; much less.
Free Pattern Coupon - choose
from awr 100 styles. $1.50

AU CIWT -10011$ .• $2.00 oodt
121-l'~low

:•

{"

'·

.

The girls are the daugbters of Mr. and Mrs. Fenlon
Taylor. Tbe dllllilaur ill one of the many whimsical
creatures prepared by Mrs. Walker for the school
balls.

,. ;

" Do you promise to love, hooor
cherish, and not get upset if
earns more thanyoudo~ ..."

The Rev. Mark McClung called
during the day, and another visitor
was Mrs. Loretta Tiemeyer.

cream at the celebration were Mr.
and Mrs. George Nesselroad, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Rought, Mr. and
Mrs. Brian Hamilton and Jessica,
Mr. and Mrs. Neale Knight,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Barnett and J. R., Cheshire.

4505
WAIST
23"-34"

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Ease of pants, flatte'Y of a
skirt! Culottes are the newest,
hvel1est fashion now. Sew lhem

614-992·2182
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel

casual in cotton, dressy in crepe

for very little money, time!
Printed Pattern 4505: MISses
WaiSt Sizes 13. 14, 15. 16\\, 18,
30 , a1, 34 . Size 16\\ takes 2Vo
,ards GO-inch fabric.
$2.25 fo&lt; each ,.ttern. Add 54K
·~o~ mh pattern lor posllp

PRYCEDRIGHT
CALL TODAY!

,----------------------,

II
l

Curb Inflation II
Pay Cash for - lI•
Classlfleds and I
Savelll
II

11

Write your own ad and oraer by mall · with this
coupon . Cantel your ad by phone when you get
resu lts . Money not refundable.

Address__;____________

)Wa nted
l For Sale
)Announcement
)For Rent

17.
18.
19, - -- - - 20. - - - - - 21. - - - - - 22. - - - - - 23 . - - - - - 24.
25.
26. ' _ _ _ _ __

1. - - - - - -

II ·Helpwanled
12· Situation Wanted

33 · F a rm s for Sale
34 Business Bu i ld i ngs
35 Lots &amp; Ac: r e"ge
36 -Re al Es tate Wc'l nted

41 -Houses for Rent

IJ·tnsurance

42 Mobile Hom es for Renf

14· Business Traini ng

43 Farm s for Rent
44 Apartment for Rent
45-Furnish ed Rooms

IS-Schools Instruction
16· Radio, TV &amp; CB Repa ir
17·Misceltaneous·

18-Wanted To do

-· - -piJbTicN.i;C"e ----- -- -·-- -- ..

Vou are hereby -notifiec'
that you have been name&lt;
Defendants in a legal ac·
tion entitled Jonn Becker
and Elizabeth Becker,
Plaintiffs, vs. Arnold J . Oc·
teau and Barbara J. Oc·
teau Defendants. Tnls ac·
-vs.
lion has been assigned case
ARNOLD J . OCTEAU
no. 18085 and Is pending In
11M!
the Court of Common Pleas
BARBARA J. OCTEAU
of Meigs Counlv . Pomeroy,
Defendonts.
Meigs County. Ohio A5169.
Cose No. 18G85
Tne oblec of the Com·
NOTICE BY
plaint Is to quiet the title of
PUBLICATION
tne Plaintiffs aga inst the
To Arnold J. Octeau and
Defendants and to order
Barbara J. Octeau. who&amp;e . forefelture of a land In·
1111 known address was R. stall men! contract between
D.. Racine, Ohio, and tlte Plaintiffs and the
otherwise whose place of
Oefendanls and for other
residence Ia unknown and ; relief.
cannot with reasonable
You are required lo an·
diligence Pe.ascertained;
.swer fhe ' Comclalnt within

IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
JOHN BECKER AND .
ELIZABETH BECKER
Plolntiffs,

Classified pages cover the
71 AutosforSale
7'1· Trucks for Sale
73-Vans&amp;4WD
74-Motorcycles
15· Boats &amp; Motors
u,·Auto Parts &amp; Acc essor ies
77-Auto Repltir
78·Camping Equipment

__ =}i~ b]! ~~!f~e =-=28 days after the last
publication of this notice
which will be published on·
ce each week for six suc cessive weeks. The last
publication will be made on
March 15, 1982, and the 28
da~s will commence on ·
!nat dale.
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respand as reaulred by
Ohio
Rules of Civil

~;l:'jliu':l11 ~~~gW~Jer~

against you for the relief
demanded In the Com·
plaint.
·
Dated : February 5. 1912
Larry E . SJ!!!ncer
Clerk of Courts
·
Meigs County
Common Pleas Court
121 8, 15, 22. !3l 1. a. 15, 6tc

Gallia County
Are.1 Code614

446-Galllpalis
367-Cheshire
J88-Vinton
24s-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dis!.
643-Arabia Oist.
37•- walnut

61 ·Farm Equipment
67 -Wanted ro buv
63 Livestock
6d ·Hay &amp; Grain
65-Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Meigs County
Area Code614
9'12-Middleport
Pomeroy
915-Chester
J43-Porlland
247-Letart Falls
949- Racine
742-Rutland
667-Coolville

Mason Co ., wv

lol. - - - - - - -

Area Code 304

15. - - - - - 16. - -- - - - -

34 . - - - -- 35. - -- - - -

11 .
12 . - - - - - ' - - 13. - -- - - - -

675- Pt. Pleasant
458- Leon
576-Apple Grove
173-Mason
882- New Haven
895- Letart
·
937-Buffalo

..

Up to 15 Words ... One day

insertiOn ............... $4.00

Up to 15 Words ... Six day

insertion .............. $7 .00

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NOTICE OF
SALE
By virtue of an Order of
Sale issued out of the Cam:
men Pleas Court of Meigs
County. Ohio, in the case of
1st F•nanciar savings &amp;
Loan Association, pla fntiff.
vs. Bennie Rose, et at..
defendants ,
upon
a
judgment therem ren·
dered', being Case No.
17/914 in said Court. 1 will
of er1 for Sllle. at the front
door of the Court House in
Pomeroy, Meigs County/
OhiO, on the 27th day o
Marcn, 1~1. ar ren o·c•ocK
a.m .• the following lands
and tenements! to wll:
SITUATED n lite Town·
ship of Salem, County of
Meigs, and Stale of Ohio,
and bounded a:nd described

==

.f~_blic ~O!i~=

as follows , t o wit : Being a
part ol tne NW 1/ 4 of Sec ·
lion 17, Town 8, Range 15,
Salem Townsh ip, Meigs
County, Ohio.
Beglnnln~ at the NW cor·
ner of Secteon 17 Town B.
Range 15, Salem township,
Melg County, Ohio. Thence
with the north line of said
Section 5 82 degrees - 56.5'
E - 792.00 feet to an Iron
pin, sa id pin being the prin·
.cipal pl~ce of beginning
and betng more fully
described as follows·
Thence conttnuinQ with
the north line of sa1d sec·
lion 5 82 degrees - 51&gt;.5' E
- 1882.61 teet to a 1" iron
p 1'pe
1hence 5 7 degrees - 29'
W - 1641 :38 feefto a pin set
in the center of County
Road No.7

Maii"This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

s4 =::- _!iiSC. MerChan~lc.! _:· ·

MID-SPRING

said road

s 79 degrees -

W - 69.3~Jeet

58'

thence with the center of
said road 5 89 degrees - 39'
w - 300.00 teet
thence with the center of
said road N 85 degrees 53' w 574.15 feet
thence with the center of
said road 5 79 degr,e es - 15'
W- 701.36 Jeel
thence with the center of
sa.id road N 82 degrees 19' " - 389 .93 feel lo an
Iron r .n set in the center of
said road
• thence N . 10 degrees 41 ' E - 1946.15 feet to an
lroh Pin said pin being the
princ ipal place of begin ·
nfnq for th is survey. said
surVey containing 79.61
acres more or less .
Based on survey by Paul

Auoust 20. 1977, Registered
Surveyors No. S·S620
The Real Estate was ap·
pra ised at : $50.000.00
Terms of Sale : Sl.OOO.oo
cash at time of sale with
the balance in cash within
thirty 1301 days after date
of sale . Deposit to be
waived 1f sold to plaintift firsr mortgaqe holder
JamesJ . Prolf itt
Sheriff of
Meigs County
. 12) 22. 131 I, a, 3tc

- - - ---·--·-·-Public Notice

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PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
ESTATE OF FLORENCE

B. RHODES, DECEASED
Case No, 23621
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On February 22. 1982 in
the M eigs County Probate
Court, Case No . 23621 , Fred
·E. Bush and Franc is R
Bush , 3325 Westbury Drive·
Columbus, Ohio 43221 anci
Rt. 15. Cherokee Trai l
Crossville, Tennessee 38.555
were
appo i nt ed
Co·
,executors of the estate ot
F.lorence
B.
R~ode s
deceased, late of 341 SouH~
S...::ond , Middtepolt, Oh)o.
Rober:l E . Buc ~
Probate Judge,
(3) 1, 8, 15, 31c
Cl cr~

CARPET
INSTALLED
With Pad
Starting At

$12~q .

Rubberback
CARPET
starting At

--

$499

Sq. Yd.

WE IIRVE ~
LARGE
SEL£trl011 Of,
ROll EIID
lliiNAm

AUTO &amp; TRANS.
REPAIR
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

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BISSEll
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Ca II for free siding
estimates. 949·2801 or
949· 2860 .
No Sunday Calls

Opon !AM. to 5:30P.M.

3·11 ·11C

2-11 ·1 mo.

Scout Camp
Chester, Oh.
.
*short game practice
• Pro Golf lessons
for all ages .
• Repair : cleaning
retinishing,
new

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
largest Radiator.
Radiator Spec.i,ali.st
NATHAN BIGGS
3S Yrs: Experience

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.

grips,
length change, weight
change.
• fast service
2·28 · 1 mo.

Pomeroy. Oh.
Ph. 992-2174
2·26-lfc

•WasM"
eiOrnu

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

eAanves

•• ••• • , .,,. ... ., ,,, .,. ,,r

eDISPGUII I

• Dishwa,l\er•
•Hot Wat•r. hnkl

9 S Ht

Y UNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

ROOFING
All . types of roof work.
new or repair gutter and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2263
,49-2160
2·24·1fc

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
u .s. Rt. SO Eost
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer,
New HOlland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

~dolls

and remodtlln1
-ftooflo1 oncl pller w01l
-(aocrotowodl
-Piumbin1 and
oloctrlulwodl
~r" Eltlm"n)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 s or "2-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-30-llc

SOUTHEAST
CONSTRUCTION
•Roofing &amp; Gutter'
•VinviSidinA
•Carports / Patio

Covers
•Concrete Work
•Room Additions
1nsurance work
Wind, water, or Fire

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

CALL: 992-6323
2·19·1 mo. pd,

1·3·1fC

DABBLE SHOP
POMEROY,
OHIO
PH .
U2 · 2063
STOP and look at our
fine selection of plaster
and ceramics .
-banks
- planters
- statues
- paint
-mirrors
- spray
..._ plaques
- brushes
FREE A $2.0() detail brush,
with the purchase of a
paint kit.
3·5-1 mo. pel.

Headquarters

ANO

CONSTRUCTION
Dozer &amp; bac~ hoe ser·
vice, water , sewer,
ponds ,
foundations ,
reclamation .
licensed &amp; a.onded
Phone '49o229J
or 949· 2417
3·3·1fn

.

14 Years E)Cpericnc e
Lecturer
992-3382
Membership
SJ.50
weekly Cla$S ,
52.50
2·3·1 mo.

H. L WRITESEL

HotJsing

EXCAVATING

•Custom Pole Bldgs.

2· 25-1 mo. pd.

POMEROY - 2 acres,
more or less. building
lot. Panoram ic view of
the river and breath
tak ing .
ON TIME - You can
buy this 2 bedroom full
basement home with lit·
tie down . Nearly one
acre. Only 517 ,500.
COUNTRY - 13 a cres
of land for cattle, pets,
and garden. AU utilit ies
and a 6 room homezon
state road .
COUNTRY - Nice carpeted
3 · bedroom
modern home with bath,
family room, basement
and 2 garages with
storage over one .
OUT OF TOWN - 5 yr .
old 8 room , one floor
home. 2 baths, car·
peting, and 1.88 acr es of
level land near town on
hard road,
INCOME You c an
buy these hoUses and let
one help you pay for
both. 3 bedrooms each
and all ut i lities .
COUNTRY Finish
1his home yourself and
sav e .
Now
b e ing
r enovated, 3 bedroom s,
bath , and over 3 acres
for only $19,500 .
NOW~ IS THE RIGHT
TIME TO SEE US
ABOUT THE SALE OF
YOUR PLACES. CALL
9'H876, BRUCE OR
VIRGIL.

C&amp;M

e Roofing work

PHONE

q~&gt; !HJII

Wate-r-Sewer· Electric
Gas Line·Ditches
Water Line Hook·ups
Septic Tanks
Countv Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367-7560
1·7-1 tfc

tensive remodel·
·na
·
1
e E (ectrical work . ·

992-2490
FOR AN
APPOINTMENT

EAFOR

TRENCHING
SERVICE

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex·

INCOME
. TAX
$,ERVICE

Re11 Eatate - Oenerel

REESE~:··

ROUsH

Gerald Reuter

REALTORS
Henry E .-Cleland, Jr.
GRt
'U·6191
Jean Trussell
949-2660
Dottie Turner
992-S692
Office
•n·i2S'

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

C

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992-2282
2·121mo.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows

z

In Memoriam

Two years are gone since
you passed , across that
river w ide, Our Hearts
were fllleq with sorrow,
end tears filled our eyes.
Somehow it never seems
that long, when you were
called awav. Especially
when we think of you,
every singl e daY . Respectfu f l y
r emembered by
Daughter
Violet
Riggleman and Grandson
Jeffrey
W.
Ca s to .

-·------.--·---- - --- Announcements
. _____ ...,.._ -" -·

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Fishing Li cense on sale.
Come and see ou r new sh ip·
ment of 1982 Fising ROd s,
Reels , &amp; Lu res. Sp r ing
Vall ey Trading Co .. Spring
Va lley Plaza, 446·8025.
Turkey -Ht.irite.rs We have
mouth calls, slate box
calls, camo gear &amp; decoys
in stock . Spring Valley
Trading Co., Sprin g Valley
. Plaza. 446·8025 .
Easter Candy Pric es. $1.60
lb. $1.50 lb . tor full case .
Di's Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza. Call446·2134.

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-----;... , ~

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WE'RE TOGUHER TO
SERVE YOU BEnER

Sires start trom l0x24"

Utility Buildings
Sires from 4 to • and all
wood buildings 24x:J6.
~nsulated· Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Ill. 3, Bo• 54
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614·84NS+!
6·15-lfc

\

Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance
'
.
WIWAM D. CHilDS

~GENTS:

DOIIliiULUII
.f.IIIISSU
CHMl£S I. IW.£11 .
lllaJAEI. L CHilDS

~·

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992-2172
2·11·1 mo.

MARCH
PERM SALE
Mon., March I
thru

Wed., March 31
Reg. S20
Now Sl7 .SO
Reg. US
Now 522.50
Reg. UO
Now 527.50
ns Wa•e Lenth
For Longer Hair
Now 529.50

Kay's 811uty Salon
169 N. 2nd

Middlepoit
Call 992·2725
3·3· 1 mo .

HOME MAINTENANCE
AND REPAIRS

20 Years Experience
Plumbing, Carpentry,
Roofin9 .
Electrica.l,
Cisterns, Cement, Stone
Walls, Chimney Repair.
All Home Repairs
Trailer Roofs and
Underpinning
PH . "2· 3872
3·4· 1 mo.

OHIO VAU.EY
ROOANG
And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
eSidlng
• Remodeling
• Free estjmates
• 20 y rs. eiCperience

TOM HOSKINS
Ph.949·2160 or 949·2412
7·5-tfc.

MAIN STREET
GARAGE
•

IRAKES·TUNE·UPS
OVERHAULS·
01 ESEL· EXHAUST
Open Mon.·SAf. f-5
.
3-5·1 mo.

~"

Rumma ge Sal e Friday
thru Sunday . A-Fra me on
Rt. 248 near Lo ng Bottom.,
on .
.

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--· P ubuCsi te --- -.. ...

n __ ~
_ -~ - ~ AJ,Jctio_

L.E . Nea l Au ctioneer Ser ! ..
vi ce
Estate · F ar rfl ./
Household· Misc. W e se ll HI ,·
License d &amp; bonded Oh io &amp;. r
wva . 367·7101.
·

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9_____W_all_l~d~B..'!'l. __ : ..
WANT TO BUY Old fur·;
nitur e and Antiques of all ,
kinds. c all K enneth Swain,
446·3159 and 256·1967 in me
evenings .
11
CASH PAlO for c le an , la)e.,
mode l used c ars . Sm ith
Buick· Pontiac, Gallipolis,
Ohio. Call 446·2282 .
.,

.

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Buyen g
Gol d,
Selver • •
Platinum , old co ins, scrap
r ing s &amp; silverwar e. Dally'
quotes available . Also
co ins &amp; coin supplies to t ·
sal e .
Spr i ng
Vall ey
Trading , Spring Vall~y,
Plaza , 446·8025 or 446·8026 .
We pay cash f or late model
clea n used cars.
'•'
Frenchtown Car Co . ·1,,
Bill Gene Johnson ,
, 1,

446-0069 .

.

"'

TOP PRICE Scrap Metal ,
auto bOdies , and c ars . Bar- .!
teri es, alumium, brass &amp; . ~
copper. Gall ipoli s Block' ~
Co .. 123 1/2 Pine 51., 4AI.· '
2783.
\t
~·

. - . - .

- -- -···'1

Wanted to buv junk cars or;, 1,
wreck ed cars. Phone 38'·
9303.
',

Land on land contract . 1 to.. ,

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun . starting
at 1 p.m . Factory choke
guns only .
Raci ne F ire Dept . sponsors
a Gun Shoot. Sat . n ights
6 : 30 p.m .. Bashan'. Factory
choke 12 gauge shotgun .

Antiqu e corn er c upboard ~,
other an1ique cupboard lf"' •1
any condition . Call 367·•,:·
OIJB.
.r

____ Givea~w~'(

4

ANY PERSON who has
anyth ing to give away and
do ~ s not offer or attempt fa
ofl er any other thin g tor
sale may pla ce an ad in this
c olumn . Ther e will be no
charg e to th e advertiser .
THREE CATS . One wnite
w i th gray mark ings , one
white
w i th
cali c o
markings, one all calico.
All fe mal e. Call388·8510 .
Female Husky . good with
kids and good wat ch dog,
outside pe t. Call446·8647 .

e wk . old puppies. mixed. 1·
8 mo . old male. Call 245·
5626 .

Male, bl ack Heller dog , 1
112 yr . old. Call446 ·2222.

male pupp ies. Ca II 388·
4 fe male pup s . Part
Shepard, part Irish Sefter
992-6736 a fter 4: 30p.m .

OLD Keiv lna tor dryer , for
part s or scrap , 3/J.4·67S ·S726.

FEMALE dog, 85%
Husky, 1.5% unknown
Fixed at 6 w e~ ks, .5 years
o ld, good with k ids, good
watch dog . L ived Indoors
first 2 years, outsi de last 3
years. Had to put her on
cha in in city . Want home
where she can run fr ee as
she did 'her can run first d
y ears. Hate seei nq her
cha ined . 304·675· 1179.
•

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-··Lost and
.. Found
- -

.

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LOST Tachimine guitar on
Rl . 588. Reward $50. Call
446·3428.

Wanted
to buy
cash ' !
reg ister . Call-446·2240.

-· . . .

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Good used baby furniture .: ,
Caii446·669S evenin gs.
•....
• ; '1

BEDS · I RON , BRASS, Old'
go ld , sliver ~'~ \
dollars, wood ice boxes ,. •·
stone jars, antiques. etc., • ·
complet e
nouseholdo. · '
Write : M .D. Miller, Rt. -4 r ' •
Pomeroy , On . Or992-7760 . • ;
furnltt:~re.

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CHIP WOOD. Poles max .,:.:.
diameter 14" on largest ·
end . 512 .50 per ton. Bundle~ f"
slab . $10 . .50 , per ton .~·:
Delive rd to Ohio Pall et Co .. .. ,
Ro c k
Spring s
Rd .. ~~
Pome roy . 992 ·2689 .
-,.
Gold , s i!ver, s te rlin g,
jewelry , rings , old coi ns &amp;
currenc y . Ed Burkett Barber Snap , Middleport . 992·
3476.

~

OLD FURNITURE, beds,
iron. brass, or wood . Kit·
chen cubbards of all types .
Tabl es, round or square.
WOOd Ice box es. Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy
compl ete household . Gold,
silver, ol d money , pock et ,;
wat ches, chains. rings, ,!jnd
etc. Indi an Artifacts Of all
types . Al so buying basebart•
card s. Osby Martin 992·-6370.
"·l
,I
Will do b aby sit1i ng in IJ'lY
home for pre·schoot c hi ld .
After 5 or before noon. 992 2772.

j

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;~

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GOOD used bat htub, Ph one
304-458· 1042.
JUNKED cars, gl as s,
baseball c ar ds. scrap
melals, aluminum cans,
't ransmissions, m otor s, bat·
teries. r adiators , oi 1 well
dr illinq bits, tungsten car ·
bide. high speed stee l,
wa stt• paper, ca rdb oarCI,
raw Iurs, hides. gl nsin g
and yell ow root . H;uper ·
Halstead Sa lvag e Co. 300
El eventh St .. Pt. Pleasant,
304· 675· 5868 . Al so fl e a
market
open Mo nd a y
thr ouqh F r iday , 1·5 p.m .

''
:·

~

;t

!!

'•
"\

.,

~"

1il

•,1~
''
1
'

!~
''

!:

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LOST Siberian Hu sk ey
(male) mostly dark gray
w ith white markings, one WANT E D·s m oll puppy lor
~
brown eve &amp; one blue eye . childs pe t , 30.. ·675·5123.
answers to 'KeeGee' safe to
approach. REWARD . Cal l - - - -- -- - :::=:Eml~H!'tfl[ent=;:::· -- . i.
446·4998 or 446· 3172.

~

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?Serv~RF=-

Lost full blooded female
beegle. d years old . An ·
11
Help W_anted.
swers to name of susi e. In
Rocksprings area. 992·5815 .
Exp e r ie nc e d
Aut o . •
M ec han ic. Experienced in
eng ine tune·up . Air con· '' 1:
L.OSI : Black nd while collie diti on i ng and he et lnQ . ··'i
type male dog . 5 Po ints or Writ e B ox 743, Pomer oy', , ._,
FlatswOOds ar~a. Reward . Oh . 45769 .
v ..~.
992·3439, 9'12-7382 .

,·,

(formerly Bare Molal) .
271 w. Moln, Pomeroy

owners

-

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10 ac r es in Gallipolis area .;
Ca11446 ·7758 .
· ·
·--·.,. f .. \
Locust fenc e post . Call 379·',)
2436.
· 'CI

'

Rick &amp; Bill COllar

· -Y-a rdsale

.

.·

VERY fri endly , black. 11
month old, · t r ish Setter &amp;
Labrador, male pup. 304·
895· 3508 .

HOZ

7

For bulk deliv ery of
ga sol ine, heat ing oil and
diesel fuel . call LandmMk.
992·2181 , Pomeroy, On .

• New Rooting

8·20·1fc

AI! STEEL
BUILDINGS

~

Reduce safe &amp; fast with
GoBese capsules &amp; E · Vap
' water pills' Fruth Phar
ma cy .

-

Insurance

~

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repa ir , parts , and
suppl ies.
Pick up and
del ivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Cree k Rd . Call
4.46·0294 ..

~-·

We have a full ·
warehouse of good
selections and ex·
tra good prices on
our carpeting.

· - - Public Noii.:e-· -

===:f~}i£_Noii~:=:::.
---------· thence with the center of
Stull and Assoc iates. drtted

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Up to 15 Words .. 'Three day inseneon .............. SJ.OO

( Average 4 wcrds per line)

· -- PUbliC Notice -- ----

27.
28 .
29 .
30 .
31 '
32 . - - - ' - -- 33.

following telephone exchanges.

81 -Home Improvements
82: Piumbing &amp; Heating
83· E xcavaling
84·Eiecrical &amp; RefriQeration
85-General Hauling
86-M . H. Repair
87 Upholstery

46· Spac e lor r e nt
47· Wanted to Rent
48· Equipment for R ~ n t
A9· ~ or Lease

jt~blic ~o:fi~==-

7.
8.
9.
10. -- - - - -

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• • • •· ••• "

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Sl Dl NG

St. Rt. 124
""""'-!. 011.
l Mi. west on
124 lOwlrd Rutland

Phone
1- ( 614 ).992-3325

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' I"

PjlATS AND SE II VI C£
ALL MAKES

2-14-1 mo.

GARAGE

ALREADY " AP ·
PROVED FOR A · VA
LOAN This frame
home has a large l iving
r oor:n, famly room , 2
bedrooms . lind . is neat
and ni ce . $24,200.
CLEARED LAND - 6'h
acres of nice laying land
w ith a driveway and a
drill ed w ell. Close to
town . Askin g $11,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Th is
5 room one floor home
has a dining room , 2
bedrooms , large living
room, gar age and a nice
lot . $19,750.
NICE: LEVEL LOT Over '12 ac re and a
12'x60'
2
bedroom
mob i le home w ith patio
and is close to town.
$12.000 .
.
TUPPERS P~AINS Hecvily
i nsu l ated 3
bedroom home with a
large carpeted atti c,
nice front porch, central
air and other nice
features . $34 .500.
~ARGE CORNER LOT
- With a river view and
a s room, 2 bedroom
home with an equipped
kitchen, and a garden
spa ce. Sl6 ,000. .
NEW
LISTING
POMEROY
Two
bedroom home on a
50' )(368' nice lot. Also
ha s full
basement .
Refrigerator and range
included . S17,500 .

VIRGILB.SR .
216 E . 2nd 51.

Phon•------------------

5.

31 Homes tor Sal e

I
I
I

Nam•-----------------~

PHONE 992-2156

APPUANCE
SERVICE
Call Ken oung
For Fast Service
9115-3561

· Ucensed.&amp;Il§oott. _
PH. 992-7201

Roger Hysell's

'

6, _ _ __ __

32 -Mobile Homes for Sale

SIMMON'S OLDS.CAD.-CHEV ., INC.

POMEROY,O .
992-2259

:

4. - - - -- -

23· Proless ion rt I Ser vices

Equipment

Keep This Ad For
Future Reference

E.M
· oinl. .

3. - - - - - -

51-Household Goods
52 -CB , TV &amp; Rad io Equ ipment
53 -Antiques SA ·Misc. Merchand ise
55 -Bvild ing Supplies
56 · Pets for Sale
57-Musciallnstruments
sa -Fru i ts&amp; Vegetcib les
59 -For Sille or Trade

• backhoe
• excavating
• septic systems
• water, 5ewer
· &amp; gas lines
•dump truck
•limestOne

~----~--

RMI Eotote - Oon•ol

iq

2. - - - - - -

'11 -Bu siness Opportunity
22 Money to Loan

c.,.;

.'

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

1-Card of Thanks (paid in r:~ dvanc e )
2·Ci!rd of Thanks (pa id in Adva nce)
3· Announc ements
4·Giveaway
5·Happy Ads
&amp;·Lost and Found
7·Yard Sale (paid in ~dvan c t • )
&amp;·Public Sa le
&amp; Auction
9·Wanted to Buy

.. ·- . . . With Genuine GM
PariSI _

Ph. 9U· 6614
301 e. Main
Pomeroy,

Dr. James P. Conde is announcing the transfer .of
his practice at 1SO Mill Street jn Middleport, Ohio, effec~
tive March 12, 1982. He is leaving to enter a surgical
residency training program near Cleveland, Ohio.
Holzer Clinic Ltd. has purchased Dr. Conde's facility and physicians from the Department of Family Practice will begin seeing patients there, effective March 15, .
1982. Clinic Pediatricians plan to begin seeing patients
there in April. Any patients requesting an appointment
should call992·7271 . .
Further· care of Dr. Conde's patien» will be
available from . Holzer Clinic physicians at ftle office in
Middleport, or, if requested, records can be transferred
to another physician upon request of the patient.
Dr. Conde wishes to express sincere appreciation
tor the loyalty and friendship of his patients and wishes
them the best of health' and happiness in the future.

'

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT

.Rutland, responds to
the name "G".
Substantial REWARD
for return or leading in·
tormarlon. Ph, 742·2316 .
Weekdays, call after
8 :00p. m.

Books and Catafoc - add 504
each for postace and handline.

NOTICE TO
DR. CONDE'S PATIENTS

oo r- '

~

limp. Last seen near

MOdern Electrical

126-'lllrifiJ ClafiJ Flowtrs

Observe birthday·---------

• •

S.owlffl

. 12~Patii 'Qttilts

.
I

The Daily Sentinel~

Business Services

DOBERMAN
PINCHER
Male, black &amp; rust,
ears unclipped, large
round sear on r ight
rear leg , oCcasional

124-bll Gills 'a' Ontit-11

MIDDLEPORT - The 87th bir- Gwinnie White, Ethel Hughes, Mary
thday of Mrs. B. F. TUrner was Hughes, Rhoda Hall, Mary Brewer,
celebrated recently with a visit from Cathy Riggs and David, Mary Ann
her diiughter, Mrs. Janet Roush, and McClung, and Freda Hood.
her granddaughter, Kathy Rose and
her husband, Randy, Apple Creek.
Members of the Electa Circle of
MIDDLEPORT- The birthday of
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society of the Middleport First Bapo Mrs. George Nesselroad.." was Oblist Church theri surprised her with a served recently with a surprise parparty, serving cake and ice cream . ty at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lanand presenting her with gilts. At- ny Jenkins where she was a dinner
tending were Maxine Tucker, Ullian guest.
Joining them for .cake and ice
Demoskey, Katheryn Metzger,

. ......... .. ·······

LOST DOG

.-

The Daily Sentinel-

Turner celebrates 87th birthday recently

_,, ',,, .•. ,,,.., ... ., , .., ,,r

1 •t 1

llllot . . _

Printed Pauern

RIGHT·~READ WEEK - Sallsbary Elemeotary sludenll Jody aDd Jelllllfer Taylor obviOUJiy enjoy
a wall dllplay prepMed by Tille I teacher, Mrs. Karen
Walker, In conjt111elloo wltb Oblo Right-to-Read Week.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomenty- Middleport, Ohio
.... Qodliil, s.M II:

CuloHes, Yes!

Social Calendar

~

Mcndqy, March 8, 1982

•Mobile
SlfH
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Spring O.velopments .
"Sm. II Jobs A
Specially"

JIM LUCAS
PH. 742··275:1__

LOST· Car keys , Duffs
parking lot, Sll•er Bridge
Plaza . Rewara . Call 304·
675· 1595.

'.

POOL MANA GE R a nd •·
lifeguard appl ica t ions for
Lond on P ool for 1982
season w ill be accepted by
Syracuse V illa ge Clerk
Jani ce L.awson u nfit 7:30 ·
PM Ma r c h 15, 1982.
.. ...

-- .. - --- ... -

.

r•

'"

P~IVATE duty Nursi ng, at,.:.,:
Pmcre st care center. for ~~·..:
male pallent. 304-675-5941 ,, '·
or 6 t 4·4-16·9727 . ·
"•

'J

'

�- -·-

11

---LAYNE'S FURNITURE

lor Rent

Why set tl e for less. Sell the

opening

kitcher" turn, utilities partially
pd ., excellent

IO&lt;ation . Call 675·5104 or
675·7284 .

for

bass
player
in an
established
country -rock

Experience

equipment
necessar,y .
Serious inQuires only , Call

446·0390 .

446-8272.

2nd. floor eff iency apt.
Adults only, no pets. Brad·
bury Apartments, 446-0957 .

Around OHIO Magazine is
looking
for
a
media
representative tor the
Gallia Countv area to han·
die advertising and
edi toria ls . Please write or

ca ll :
Around
OHIO
Magazine, 1033cWalnut St.,
CoshO&lt; Ion, Oh 43812, 614- ·
623-8133 .

GET VALUABLE tra ining

4 bedroom house for sale.
Rt . 325 toward R: io Grande.

as a young business person
a11d earn good money plus

Call 3811-9676.

some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier . Phone

Beautiful brick &amp; frame, 3
bedroom home w/scenic
view,
wood · burning
firep lace, forma l di ning,
central air w/hea t pump.
Lanscaped, 1 acre lot
w/ fenced in back yard,

us r ig ht away a nd get on
the eligibility list at 992·

2156 or 992-2157 .

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 Ml.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 . PHONE 446·3868.
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home . Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas hea t, rural
w a ter, close to town. ·;nan·
cing availabl e. Phone 446·
1294.

$45,000. Call446-3766.
CLAN MILLS needs people
for l ig ht delivery work,
must provide economical
transportation. Apply to
JacKie Carsey, Sco1tish
Inn ~ Mond!!y, Tuesday &amp;
Wednesdav. from 12 to 1 or
5·6 p.m . Room 163 . Equal

Opportunity Employer .

1 acre with mobile home,
water. cellar house, wash
house, utility bu i lding . Wilt
sell with or without mobile
home or visa versa . Call

New Income Limits . It you

earn

betwee n $9,000

to

$15,000. a year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobile home)
for as little as S135. mo. No

367-0218.

down payment. Call 9927034.

l~ ___ _l:.~s &amp; Acre_!ge -·-

18 acres, beautiful building
site, rural water, septic
tank , tobacco ba se. 8 acres

CLAN MILLS has several
immediate openings for
telephon e appointment
clerks . No e&gt;c.perience
necessary, w e train. May
work 9 ll.m . to 1 p.m . or 5

p.m. to 9 p.m. Apply to

Jackie

Carse y,

Scottish

Inn. Monday, Tuesday &amp;
Wednesday from 12 .to 1 or
5-6 p.m . Room 163. Equal
Opportun i ty Employer.

'

-- ·-- -------- --·

1_3 _ _ _1~surance

__

SANDY AND BEAVER In -

surance co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almos t a century .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
availabl e to me et in·
dividual needs . Contact
Foster L ewis. agent. Phone

379-3318 .

Karate the ulti ma te in self
defence all pr ivate lessons,
Men, wom en. 8. chi ldren.
Instruction thru black bel t .
Also availa bl e Karat e
uniform s puch i ng and
kicking bags, and profec- ·
,tiv e equipment. Jerry
Lowery • &amp;
Associates
Karate
Studio, 143
Burlington Rd ., Jackson,

ca ll304-675·3734 .
11

---MisciuiiOeOuS - -

--- ---·---

Nice furni shed Ap t . 446 ·

2731 or 992·2430.
Apar:tments. 675·5548 .

mobi le

h o u ses,
Pt .
and Ga lli polis,

614-446·8221 or 614-245·9o84.

for quick sale. $37.500. Also

LARGE TRACT of land.

Ma in, 304-675-1591

2 bedroom

Dead ent1s on Peacoc k Ave .
Has water and sewag e.
Will finance to respons ible
party at 12 percent. 992 ·

house trail er

$1,800. Call949·2793.
Can be for 1 family or 2
separate
Apartment s.
Near town. Ca ll after 7p.m .

5786.

BAT HROO M
USED
Climatrol

nace, 100,000 BTU . Ph . 992·
'

year old, three bedroom
house. All electric. Jlh 41 ~ ~ ~H ~u~e~[o~ ReO(
baths. Large level lot . Furnishet1 house, 4 roo ms.
Stove, refrigerator and nea r HMC. $200, water
dishwasher (all 2 years paid 1 one child acceptable.
old) stay. Upper end ol Pl. Call446-4416 alter 7PM.

Pleasant. $56,000. 304·6751538.

s

room house, porch,
·basement, S1 50 mo. Call

ONE owner house, 1211
Main St. 6 rooms, 2 story
brick, custom buill by

Everetl
2381 .

Lutton .

675-5104.
2 bdr .• First Ave., historic
home, just redorated. Call

304-675-

Furnished 3 room cotfage
i n town. One lady or a
married couple please .
D ep osit required also
r ef er ences. no pets. Call

New 82 Elcona 70x14, Sl.OOO
olf . 1964 champion 44x20.
DBL -wide, $7,995 . 1978
Hillcrest 70x14, $9,995. 1973
Fleetwood 65x 14 $5,995.
1965 Castle 55x10, $3.&lt;95.
Call 446·9662 or 446-348 .

Unfurn ished 2·3 bed rooms
near Holzer Hospital. S26S
mo. exc lud ing utilities .
D e posit
&amp;
r efer nces
required. Call446·9307 .
H om es f or Rent, L easem or
Land Contract in town, or
country .
Call
Str o ut

after 5.

=

2J38 day and 466-3201 after
8.
W ill do babysitting in my
home on Rt . 35. Call 446-

9457.

For rent or flo r sale. Full y
carpeted 6 rms . &amp; bath. 5
miles from town . Call 446·

1158.

Hill c re s t

Call 446-6566.

Mobi le

Home. 12 by 65 . $3500. 992·
7559 ..

5 r oom house with bath .
Large lot nea r Ra cine . 992·

Ca ll

446·

8191 .
Will babysit in my home for

2 children. Call388·9306.

5858 .

payme nts. 992 -3917 _

3431 .

USED MOBIL E
576·2711 .

2 bedroom house. Call 675 -

HOME . 3 bedroom house, fam i ly

room wi th wooctburning
' fire p lace. central ai r cond ..
MOBILE HOME S MOVED ca rpeted , ref . req uired.'
Licensed &amp; insured. Ca ll Call 304-675·2497 after 5PM.

For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom 1
for Rent
trailers, furnished, with - - ~
Centenary,
2bdr ., private~
a ir. Ca ll304-773-5651 .
lot, r ef . &amp; dep., S160 mo.,

------ - -

LOT CLEARANCE SALE
Sl.OOO to $3,000 off on all

-'---'0'-"p~rlunily

troducing the highest
energy eff ici ent home ever

C:igar ett e

buill, 14x70, 3 bdr .. 1 1/2

Vending

&amp;

Tuning

1972

12X65

Schullr,

3

bedroom, gas neat, par-

Repa lr .Call Bill Ward for tially furn;shed . Call 675·
appointment ,
Ward 's 2907.
Keyboard, 446·4372 .
14x70 ' SKYLINE, two

C &amp; L Bookk eeping. Com·

plete bookkeeping and tax
service for business and In·
dividuals.

Carol Neal446·3862

FIRST

and

second

morgages, land contracts,
and receivables purchased.

614--446·4113.

----·-

-- -- ------

51

Household Goods

GOOD

U SED

AP

PLIANCE S
wdsh er s.
dryers,
refrig er ators.
rang e s .
Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances, Upper River Rd .•
beside Stone Cres t M otel.

446-7398 .
used Furniture 2 so fa s,
Cannonball
maple bed,
Qu ee n mattress and box
springs . Corbi n &amp; Snyder
Furniture, 446, 1171.
late model GE auto .
washer, perfect shape,
$110. Electric ra nge, real

nice SilO . Ca ll 4468181 or
446·2674 .
w es tin ghouse dryer, 3 tem·
peratures. $80 . Kenmore
auto washer. 2 spd., $90,
guaranteed . Ca ll 256· 1207 .

Call256-1207.
Coffee ta ble &amp; end tables .
Must see to apprecia te.
r easonal be. Caii446·39J7.

bedroom, all electric, cen -

trola;r. 304-675-6986.

--------

1981 ALL ELECTRIC 12'
WI DE,
2 ' BEDROOM

Nice 1 bed room furn ished
mobile home. 9 mile from
Pomeroy on R1. 33. Phone
3
Bedroom
furnished
Mobile home wlth washer
and dryer on private tot
Deposit required . No pets .

949·2253 .

- - --- ---For rent 3 bedroom trailer

576·2711.

U' WIDE, 3 bedroom
mobile home, $8'195. Atl
State Modular Homes, 304·
576·2711.

Whirlpool 2 speed washer , 3
temp . Whirlp ool d ry er
look s nearly new. guaran ·

teed . Ca ll256-1207.

I

plus deposit. Call 304-576·
2708 .

--

TWO bedroom trailer for
rent, Hereford Lane, Apple ·
.Grove, 304-576·2103.

()lta..,.HI!A, ...,.

~~=~~~~=:.:==:::=r~=========i
Building Supplie~- .......
Building materials block,
br ick, sewer pipes, windows, li ntels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .

55

-------Hay &amp; Grain

--~-

44

Mixed hay for sale. Call

379·2424.

- - ~-

Transportatfon

---..... -- - ----·

1 female Cocker Spaniel
spaded &amp; housebroken S50.

Call446·6310.

--.-------

___

Auto for Sale

71
__,_

78 Ford Fiesta 45,000M,
exc . cond.. $2,800, 536
Call Judy Taylor at 367· Jackson Pike, Apt. 85B.
7220.
POODLE

GROOMING.

DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow
puppies ,
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 4.46·

3844 after 4 p.m.
HILLCREST KENNEL Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor· outdoor facilities .

Also AKC Reg . · Dobermans . Call446·7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
A K C Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.

FM cassette, wh ite

1963 Ford low mileage,
$1,000, collector item. Call

446·1735.
1965 Mustang automatic,
pony inter ior, 289, new
front shocl&lt;s &amp; air shocks,

Chevrolet

Impala,

446·8310.

-~-·------

446-1124.

For Sa l e Beautiful floor
m odel con so le stero, AM·
FM B·track &amp; r ecord

DOG ·1 year old, registered

For sa le 1967. 10x4J mobile
home, one bdr ., with gas
furnanc e. A lso tru ck cam per sleeps 5 with furnance.
tables wi th wooden fram e
&amp; g lass top . Call ,446· 7525 af ·
ter 5.
Dried waln ut lumber for
sa le. Ca ll 446·2738 .
Firewood
split
an d
de livered. 535 pickup l oad .
A lso taking orders f or next

1 ·· - - - -

Bulldog

with

c•ll614-992·2807 .

1977 Mus tang II . GoOd con992-3771

Kimball electric organ En ·
t e rtain e r
3,
double

1980

keyboa rd . Call446·7230.

~~·AVEY b;s;· ~~;hiif~r
and guitar, like new, both
for SSOO . or will sell

separate, 304-675-3978.
PIANO, upright, call 304576-2569.

after~

Ford

p.m .

Pinto,

16.000

-- --- - -- -----

M assey
F e rgu so n
bulldozer di esel. 7ft. blade,
wench, good cond .. $1.4,000 .
Cal l 446·2522 after 5.

Model

HP

26031Q31Q-4x436046046Q-4X451Q51Q-4x451Q61Q61Q-4X4-

24
$4924 .00
28 5594 .00
28 7072.00
35 6553 .00
41.9. 7353.00
41.99619.00
4857778.00
48 .5- 9886.00
48.5- 8450.00
64
9314.00
64 - 11,304.00

Price

new. $3600 . 992-7892 .
1975 Chevrolet Impala . 2

door . Call

before

lp .m .

Mon . thru Fri. any tim e
weekends. 992-7675.
F br Sale. 1972 Monte Carlo,
a.c .• p.s.• p.b. E&gt;ccellent
cond ition. 667 ·3333 .

Ha'ven West Virgin ia. Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock .

SURPLUS JEEPS $65.,
CARS . $89 ., TRUCK $100.
Similar bargains availab le.
Call for your directory on

how to purchase. 602 -'1980375 Ext. 7965 . Call retun·
dable.
---r- - - - - - - - - - - - -

1977

Monte

mileage,

Carlo,

nice.

low

Contact

Mike at 28th St. AmO&lt;O.
675-9768 .

Sale Date March 13, 1982

CALL NOW!

7360 .
Reduce sa te &amp; fa st with
Gobese Tab lets or Capsules ·
&amp; E ·Vap 'wa ter pills'.
Fruth Pharmacy .

Ha rdwick 36 in . white Gas Oa k firewood. Call675·2757.
rang e. Very good con -

Gravely Tractors. pur chase a new Gravely in
March and get a special
ea rly Spring discount, in
addition to a FREE rotary

plow or tiller. Outdoor
Equipment Sales, Jcl. Rt. 7
&amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph . 446·
3670. Open weekdays 9 to 5,
Saturdays 9 to 1.

--Home

textur.ed ceilings co m·
mercilll and res idential.
free estimates. Ca II 256·

1182.

~11-)0

76 Pinto SW $900.00 or trade
for pickup of equal vai\Je,

304-675·7455.

.....-.,---...R.~llet&lt;'l...
7:30

.::''

([) e ([) F...,llylion
Feud

1

(I) .......... -

~CAMARO,

304-675-6335.

1976 'CHEVY

Nova, ex-

cellent ,ondition, 304-773·

5944.

___

___,
--·
CHEV.Y . Monza,

---

75
262
engine, neW tune-up. new

paint, 56,000 mUes, $1700.
304-675-3514.

!

em

ii------- -T
- rUcFstorSii'e ~
-~--

1977 Ford F· lOO with 1976
811. Coachman camper or

(f) (I) Little Hou .. On
the Pl'lllrla Reaponding ro
a plea from a childhood
friend, Caroline bringo Doc
Baker to a dit-·ridden
mining ca....,. ~ !Tin .)
[Cloud Captioned)
(I) Nlltton.l 0. e qtdc

ANNIE

~VIE:
In Time•

e

creates hts own evil atter

Carpenter
w o rk,
remodeling. &amp; r oof ing . Call

367-0194.

~o. ® 0 - Paofomo·

AILEY OOP
HII&lt;VE ~!! SEEN
ANYTHING LIKE
'EM? ..---i

~'

em

2738 days _

GASOLINE ALLEY

as Pank does!
two .... kick!

F &amp; K Tree Trimming.
stump removal. 675-1331.

RINGLES' S SERVICE ex ·
perienced mason, r oofer ,
carpenter.
electric i an,
9e nera1 repair s and
remodeling. Phone 304·675·

2088 or 675 ·4560.

WINNIE

ARE YOU a~rAII(
WE'RE SPMKIII6 OF

~-

THf~AtAN.?

VMY .••C»wl.JAIIAR .

_

HAS IEtPEP /IC

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

NIISS WINKLE, &gt;OU~

Cor. Fourth and Pine

ASSOC1.41TJON
lH15

al =---= =-e~!a'~~,=;=-=:.

MM

WITH
/MII/f LEAP

A 6RfAT
IH 81JSIINES5/

---·--

11 :00 •

LOOK WHAT
VOUOONE,
TATER!!

Pomeroy. 992·2274.
N A i r condition service,
commercial . industrial.

Phone 882 ·2079 .

135 MF tractor, perk. gas,
excellent condition, 30.t·615·

For sale 79 Ram Charger 4·

NEW Idea hay conditioner,

304-895·3471 .

wheel dr ive . Call 388-9991
or 3811·8623.
1975 Dodge Ramcharger.
Automatic,

63

Livestock

Full

time,

Mileage 50,632. Good con·
dltlon . $1600 . '192·2382. Call
afler 5:p.m.

Dairy 1-!erd. grade
Holsteins . Phone 304-6751978 FORD 4WD. 'h ' ton,
1~'• . after 1 P.M.
SJ.200.00 Needs m inor
repairs, 304·675·3534 or 675·
· 64
Hay &amp; Grain
3506.
Good m;xed hay for sale.
1980 CHEVY Scott.dole, 3.0
Francl~ Andrew 985·3593.
ton. 4·wheel drive. 4 speed,
AM·FM, regul.ar gas, :iO,OOO
MIXED hay, Jack Roush, miles, good shape. 304·773·
304-882·2079.
5150.

§~n!r~.(H~u_!i~g

Hauling limestone or \ •
gravel
by
tons f or
driveway, or misc . hauling.
George Woodyard . Ca11446·

9428.
- ·-~·

--

~--

~-

YOU HAD VOUR
APERN ON

([) lenny HIM 11'•
([) Oulncy Quincy il
c:onwincod that myotorloul
c:ircumatancea ...-round the
death of a newewomon .
IRI (80 min.!
()I MOVIE: 'M...... Gun
McCain'

(I)

Jim Lanier, 304·675·7J97,
Camp Conley .

-'--· ---.- ---. ----·~-- ---- ·

1,? - - ~ ..Y.P'!!&gt;!!~r_y___ TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipol is.

446-7833 or 446· 1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rt. :
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304· _,
675·4154.
'

MOVIE:

Alan :

"~w

.

e
ney'
.
12:30 e (f) Cil1.8te N...... _ ,

PEANUTS

DIMd Lmernwt David Ia
by luthor Juclllll
Viorot. (80 min .)
(I) .hiclt lonny (J) Solid Gold
MOVIE: 'C111Y11... :
Old- F11.loolld MutW
1:00 (I) I Manioool ,_.
1 :30 (J) My IJttlo
I]) MOVIE: 'Die. Die, My

bridge bOOks

see to be camino OIJI by lhe
doren.
" Trump
M&amp;rlagement"
by Aloe
Traub haa
just b"n
published by Barclay 8rldga
Svpplleo. Ttie price Is
which leems enormous for a
papet"back. But II shOws over
300 hands .and discusses
trump play thoroughly .
Totlay's llafMI lllvl1rat1J1 l!lfl
.,_,..nt unaalaty p~ay. _, .
oswald : "Tilt blcldlng Is
typical Of INf sliowft In a
book on play. lf North plays
In notrump, he has I0 top
tricks and will probably
mal&lt;e 11 . l!ut South haa bid four sp.....,; and hu to play
there."
Alan : "1f he wins Ihe hearl
end lets dummy's queen of
apades hc&gt;ld lho second trick
the hand will cllllapoe. Tho
combination of two ~ces In
the East hand and a
singleton heart with West
will give the •tense llioSI
two aces and ' - ruffs."
oswa141: "Now (or lho
unsafely play. South • -Illites the queen of' spades
with his king and cashes the
ace and jack. This would cost
him his contract If spades

OUT IN A MINUTE TO

VOU ~ATTO DO...

e ([)

Mao""

Dering'

CD Now./Sign Off
;1 :46 C1l MOVIE: 'TIIa llunt
Man'

2:00 (I) I llllloi ,.._
()II l•lfno
e~Jtr..w.

•u
\flo

'·

1711
.AJ74

.QIGII

•uo

JUI

lOUTH
.AitJ7U

•Jtu
•Jtu

••

'

Vlllaerlble: Neltber
Dealer: Nortb
WOII

,. .... ,.
Nertll

Pul
INT
" - . Pau

EM&amp;

.....

P..

4.

Pau

Opening le~d: ••

were going to break 3-1 but
brings him home agolnsl
lhe actual 4·2 and woultl let
n1m mal&lt;e SIX It they were 33."
Alan : "For a deClarer
Interested In the best play for
his contract, It Is actually hla
best line. The heart lead Is
likely to have been a
singleton."

•.,,rtf

··.

~,,.,

lty THOMAS JOSEPH
41 Before date
1 Be dlstreued
or room
~CROI!II

5 "Ule upon
DOWN
the tricked '
I Meat jflly
"
ZU,ht cigar
11 Do away wllb 3 ~ cl8atent
II Scottlah loch
U - the way

It Entirely
!Lat. I
15 Anger
II Spelllnc 17 "GWllla -"
IB Boy ICOllt's

t Watdl

5 Most

C11nnln11
I Franchot

(abbr.}

zz W

BHelp•- hand ·
":"

coUectl ve IY

%%Shopping
c:ealel'

%9 Sl

ng1101111
rendition

30 Tennis alar
31 Uterary gleni
Z4 Windflower 30 Spy or11•
Zi In extra
37 Shlnta

•• ~to
.. v . .. . , or
Duck

(abbr.}
Zl Asia

,

oman 1

nlckname
%3 Sue Lyon

t Give 1

need

18 Train atop

Yettterday'a Auwer
II Court
Z7 Nebruka
attendant
river

and others
7Swn total

film

....,.
I. Ab,....

lnnlncs

temple

a Elltentllw
%$Clocked
MP'ormerly
n Pineapple
Zl Willy
of rocketry
Zl~rated

ULIIH

bakin« pit

u Conealned .
34 YeUow bugle

JIOid
TV cartoon
37 Brttlah
carbine

• eor.ecrate
31Rodgen'

Jlll1ner
•a.-tnseut

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'• how to work It:
_ AllYDLB~~J:&amp;
II

LONGJ'BLLOW

One teller llmpb' etandl for anotber. In lhla umple A· Ia
uted for U. lllne L'a, X for tha two O'o, ete. Sln11e letters ,
•-'rophea, tho lenlth and fonnotlon ol the wordo are all
hlnta. Earll daJ tho eode lettel'l are dlllerent.

joined

f'I.IONE'S RI~NS.. Ih

EAST

WElT
10 Ill

m .;s,

'Allerad

lltetoe'
([) Nlglolll,.
([) P88 L8te Nlaht
Clll MOYIE: 'Tho
p l lfttlon vf Joel Dela-

..

JIMS Waf@r Se rvice. Call

1- - - -

IT'S A GOOD THING

joined by comedian Grog
COOper and mualclan Max
Roach . f60 min.)
(I) Anctolher UN
I]) MOVIE: 'Diamolid .
Heed'

eCD Ntu"••
12:00 ( I ) . . _ . Allan

;;- -v.iis&amp;"iw:o-.--

6986.

(JtNliWI
(I) N•hvllle RFD
(I) All ln the Family
1'1 :111 (}I} Hltchc:ock

BARNEY

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
367·0591.

- - - - - - - - --

NliWiwatch

Cll ([) Cil • ([) ()I •

11 :10. (I) (I) ToniptGueat Hoat Bifl Coobv 1e

SEWIN,G Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales- &amp; Servic e Sharpen
Scissors . Fa bri c Shop,

ssooo. 742-2784.

in-

te . .,With 11emmy c-

Elec:trical

8J ~ _

mags. Excellent condition.

which

O'Clock Jump ' and 'Ao
Time Goes By.' (90 mln .l
9:30 •
()) ill Houle c.n.
Charley tries to cut through
hospital red tapa to save a
~ng patient .
10:00 (1) MOVIE: 'Thief
(I) TIS Evlllllng NoM
D ([) ()I lou Orent
10:30 (I) Sing out A....tc.
10:411 ([) And Than I WIO·

®

'IOU INTO Wit)'
WlfKJII/S /.Wirt&amp;(1

Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
bllckhoe wbrk . Special
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446·4440.

~ ~e!_r~!_r~tion

Conc;Jeft

cludes such claseic hite aa
·April
in
Pari1, • " 'One

882 -2079 .
-· ., - - -- - -- - - - .
82 · - · · Plumbing - - -

· - ----- --

cl•••ic

performance

304-895 -3802.

--~!l~a~ng_ -~

Now it is
Bowser&amp; turn!
Come, child!

ate in a three pllf't

Water wel ls. Commercial
and Domes ti c . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Re si dentia l, automotive .
Emergency service. Call

and Alan Sontag

c·

------- .. ---

RON'S Telev ision Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazilr, and ~~
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454.

paimar,

aucceas~

triiVell to South Amerk:a
to recapture hie urty inapiration. (80 min .} [Cioead
Captioned)
Billy Orohtlm Cruaedo
8 :30 8 ([) Privata Benjamin
9:00 D Cll (I) MOVIE: 'The
Boya ln Company
(I) 700 Club
D ([)
M•A•s•H The
4077th becomes involved
with three wounded soldiers who arrive from the
front with unuaual prob-lems . IR)
([) Bennett and .....
Together Two legendary
atars of tM Amerieen m.r·
ate acene , Tony Bennett
and Count 8aole. collabof·
ate m 1 three pen concan
performanco whictl in·
eludes auch
hita at
·April
In Poria,'
·an.
O' Clock Jump ' and ·Aa
Time Goeo By.' (90 min .)
9:, 5 ® Bennett end laolo
Togethar Two legendary
stars of the American mu·
ale scene, Tony Bennett
ond Count 8aale , c - r·

em

Custom
Wood
Work ,
Planing, Moulding, Kni ck
Knacks and some r epai r .
446-3201 after 8p.m. 446-

Tractor
tires,
utility
trailer. 992·7605 or 992·2845.

h . p.

and

Specia l March and April
only . Gene'~ Deep Steam
Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd.
Free estimate . 992·6309

1980 E l Camino super
Hydrostat•c 42 in. mower . sport. Black w ith factory
12

..,ceo 'Brldesheod Revis·
ited.' Eighth · of II pons.
Cha~ ... now a fa~

LOOKIT Tl-l' FUNNY
CL.AWS HE'S GOT!

Fren c h City
Painting
residential &amp; commercial.
interior, e)(terior, paper
hanging,
&amp;
text\Jred
ceilings. Call 367 · 7784 or ·::
367 -1160.
.

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·

Bolens

'""-w-iaN

(J) MOVIE: 'S.by the
R.tn Must Fall'
(J) •
Clll Night of 100
luwa A spectBCldor tribUte
to the Actor' 1 Fund of
America featuring almost
200 of the world 's grOli·
teot performers. (3 hrs.l
·
ICiosod·Captiooodl
(J) Mr. Metll11 Zac: 'o

motor home. 614-256·6244 .
67 Chevrolet PU 283 . Call
446-9219 afler 4.

.

T~

8:00 •

Call446-2107 .

84

· ly oa-.. Jacolly

llhlt1ey
(() BuaiMM R41pon
Rlchwd Slnomona
® Training Doea
•
Ill £ntat .... ,_.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car-

~-

An UIIMfely ploy

.Cil s.ntonl -

pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelf Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.

-

BRIDGE

ll~r~~"
(I) Anctolher UN

&gt;

Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477

trade for 79, 80, or 81 mini

1981

:=..

AlnJT.

Marc1,1m
R oaf 1ng
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years e)(·
perience, specializing i n

....

to

Dlly

(AniWtlfllomortow)
- y · a J ..kunbleo: ANNUL JUMBO UNPACK PYTHON
Anlww: What an honest elevetor man probably ls:-.
ON THE UP l UP

(J)

PAINTING · interior and
exterior. plumbing ,
rooting, some remodeling.

-

Meellrlne

,.

'

-~~Douth
&lt;Ill MacNeii·IANw

~

Improvements

__

P l us Freight
Use d tires. Hanshaws Tires
on Lucas Lane. Call 675-

in old G &amp; J alley . LOW
rates. Call446·9159.

mites, 4 cyl. , 4 speed, like

HARTS Used Cars, New

JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
446-1675
Special Sate on NEW
LO NG TRACTOR!

992-2205 .

dition. For i nformat ion call

Nick al446-0921.

61 __ '=._arm Equ!J?~en!__

Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E .
Main St ., Pomeroy, Ohio.

Call388-9354 .

Micromoog Synthesizer 77
model, 32 note key board,
excellent condition. Call

·--- - --- ---- -

w/oven . Call245-9241 .

367 0632 a fter 2:OOPM .

- -------.--

1977 Chevy Mal10u 305, auto,
PS, PB, very 900d con dition. Call446·8523 .

An t ique wood burning
Home Comfor t cook stove

Locus t Post for se lL Call

-· -

1972 Ford Mustang Mach I.
351 Cleveland engine. auto.
trans., air shocks, $400.

Musical
Instruments

-·-··------~--

57

year. Call388-9823 .

Wedding gown perf ec t con ·
diton, size 9. Ca ll 446·2959
afte r 5 .

15,000 miles, $3,795.00. Call

,.,,.,.werlle,.:( I I XI I tr )

CM1I IIUmett FrleMo
~ Enllltlii•."...
'.,.,,._wnltt Tonllht

buill up roof. Call388·9857.

good condition, $450 . Call

Otwl

I

(J)

BORN~R

20 yrs. exp. Call388-9652.

AKC Registered Beegles.
See Benny Wilson. Rac ine . ·. 1980 Bonnevi l.le d iesel
·20,000 mi., $7 ,400 firm . Call
949·2543 .

English

Duality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Professional custom
paint work. on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, 4.46·1968.

STUCCO PLASTERING

sell . Call245·5841.

v.,..- You

(f) I'.M.

rI J

Now arrongo tho circled lottO&lt;a to
lonn iht OU!prioa . , _ , u 1IUjt
Qelted by the lbove cartoon.

I

Ill AIC Newa

.;

FI&amp;HT.

Aetnei;;be;

For sale 1978 Chrysler Cor doba automatic, AT, PS,
PB, air, cruist;&gt;. leather interior, tow mileage. Must

1972

7:00

Auto Repair

81

367·7822 .

papers, price negotiable,

71

&amp; red,

$1,600. Call446-4408.

Good clean horses for sale
and horse trailer. Call 388 ·

® UIIM.

IN THIS \5rT.UATIO~,
YOU'l..l. SE VI!~Y
C.L.~ETOA

NliWI

(()Dr. Who

(J)

sharp, $4,900 . Ph . 256·6862
or 256-1142.

wormed . $60.00 each. 992 ·
7563.

388·8483 or 1-471 -1472 .

e
e

1981 Dodge 024 PS, PB. AM-

5930, Jackson, Oh . RON
EVA NS E NTERPRI SES

sizes in stock, haul in your
pickup t ruc k . Ca II 614·286·

mobile service available.·
Call-446-1011.

teed automative repair. 35
years experience. Garage
behind Arcade on Court St .

1980 Toyota Corolla Tercel,
AM·FM, air, auto .• rad ials.

ga l. la nk. price $340 . Other

i ; rcas

•••

.

P..tr This c:onc.rt pe!form·
ence futures 21 songa:
'IIQ·o ctMaico plua some of
lhelf . - I t oolo hila .
(J)Oomer~

Auto Parts
&amp; .Accessories
Windshield broken? Call
southern Glass. Insurance
claims welcome, free

I

GRIFIN

I~~lc NliWI
(() uo.ooo l'yrwnid

Ill
1110: liMon e.rfuNlel c - t In the

CHECK US OUT Guaran -

Registered
Br i ttany
Spaniel Puppies. Females .
8 weeks old . Have shots and

Also coffe e tab le a nd 2 end

dition. $50 . 992-5006.

STARKS Tree &amp; Lawn Ser- ready to move into. S8995 .
v ice, a ll types t rimmi ng &amp; 10% down, BANK FINAN - · with 2 car garage/ kitchen
removal, insured. 304·576· CING AVAILABLE , 304· furnished, $250 Per mo.
.

Call 446-8381 or 367-7141 .

•--- ------ - ----

for appointment 992-747'1.

mobile home setting on lot,

2010.

Farm with house, tillabl e
acreage In Gallipolis ar'ea .

2 bdr ., adults only, no pets,
furn ished. 322 3rd. Ave.
Gall ipolis. Call 446·3748 or

bath , with 2&gt;&lt;6 sidewalls,
fully insulated, R·factor 23, nished, no pets. Call 446·
ceiling, 20 in wall 21 in . 4745 or 446-1630.
22
. Money to·Loa_n __ floor . Check anywher no
REFINANCE or purchase other home is insulated this Mobile home for rent . 2
your home . 30 year fixed gOOd. 10%down and low bedroom completelv fur rate. WVa . &amp; Ohio. Leader bank financing . All State nished. Call446·9669.
Mortgage, 11 E . State st., Modul!r Homes.. Half way
between Huntington and
Athens, Oh . 592-3051 .
Pt. Pleasa nt on Sf . Rt. 2. 2 bdr. trail er furnished ,
adults only, Brown Trailer
304·576-271 I.
23
Professional
Park, 992-3324.
Services

-------

SOD bales of hay and 3,000 ft .
of lumber . No chec ks . Call

Singer Sewing Machine in

12X60 2 bedroom, un ·
furni shed , $175 per mo .•
$100 dep.. Gas &amp; water fur -

-

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. Nor th ol pla yer , $300.00 . Ca ll 379·
Pomeroy. La r ge lots. Call 2314 .
992-7479.

cab ine t. 446· 1216.

Business. Call304-773-5651 .

Plano

46 ___S.E_a_£_-:J.Or_R! nt .

adults. Call 614-643·2644.

14ft. wide, 2 bdr ., $9 ,995.
12x55 2bdr., $4,995. Also in- 256-1903.

Business

apt .,

304-5762711.

homes. New 12ft. wide, al l
electric, 2 bdr ., S7,995. New

FlnanEial
21

1976 2 bedroom Hillcres t
mob ile hom e .
Down
payment . Assume loan

'42 - - MObile -HOmes- - -

Housec leani ng .

li ght housekeeping
Park Central H otel.

Re alty , 446-0008.

4 bedroom, centra l air and
hea t, city water , firepl ace,
unfurnished except kit·
chen . $300 month plus
'lfil i ties. Reference and
deposit
r equir ed .
In
Racine. 949· 2293.

Call675· 1553 .
1! _
~anfe~· ~oo ~ ~c.ustom
woodworK ,
ptaning , molding, nic nacs,
a~d some repair . Call 446·

--~

446-2543 .

1970 mobile home Elcona
w ith expando. Large lot in
Mercervil le. Call 446·0827

1970

-------Furnished
Rooms ~
----SLEEPING ROOM S and
45

446·2570 .
Mobile Homes
for Sale

.

Mi sc. Merchandice
-·-Plast ic Sep tic Ta nks. State
and coun ty approved. 1.000

nentals

4'

8623 .
-

992·3592 .

with

Fur· 2973 .

54

1:30

76

Call 388-9790.
si nk

faucetts, $20. phone 30.t·675 ·

MUELLER
Fuel Oil

7815after6p.m .

3 bed . home in Centenary .

Cake
D eco rat i ng .
Specializing in Wedd ings,
Anniversity , a II occassions.

re frig erators , 2 new frost
free refrig . at $275.00. 3
pice liv i ng room su ites
$199.00, 2 piece l iv ing r oom
su ites S140. 00. love sell ts
$70 .00, wood di net set with 4
cap tain cha irs
(new)
275 .00, li noleum rugs 9x12
$10, large ow l lamps $25.00,
padded ma p le rockers
$34 .00, new &amp; used wood
burners from $60 .00 to
$275 .00, sever al chest and
dressers, var iety of silver
stone cook ware, 4 util ity
kitchen cabinet s,
TV's ,
dinet se ts, beds. desk s. and
lots more. Open lOa m to

tillable. Call256-1156.

Oh. Ca ll286·3074.
GUITAR
lesson s,
in·
div idual classes. personal
attention, modest prices.

SWAIN
AUCT ION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 OHve St.,

Oh .

CAPTAIN EASY

Motors for Sale

773-5944.
•

KI) I I

(() 3·2· 1. Conuoct

with lots of extras, in·
eludi ng built in stereo. 30-t·

--- -~

1 Bedroom Apt., utiliti es in·

-

(() &lt;111 • ~Jt

(() AIC NliWI

18 fl. RUNABOUT sk i boat

Open ?am to 7pm , Mon . Call245-5121.
tnru Fri., 9am to Spm, Sat.
-446·0322
2 AKc;;_ R.~g. Collies S75 ea.,

House·27 acres. E a gle
Ridge Road. Price reduced

-- -- - -~----

-- ---·----------

baby
matresses.
$25
$35,
bed lrames
$20$25,
&amp;&amp;
$30.
Elec tr ic firepl a(:e, gun
ca binet, Living room suite,
wood tab le &amp; 4 chairs.
Used ·
' range s.
refrigera t ors, and TV's. 3
miles ou t Bulaville Rd.

1 bedroom Furnished apt . Ga ll ipolis. 3 nice bedroom
992 -5434 . 992-5914 or 30..082· suites, gas &amp; electric
ra n ges.
5
us e d
2566.

hom es,
Pleasant

~·

!! CD •

(() Altlt'f Orillltll

chests , $42. ·Bed

frames, $20 .and $25., 10 gun
- Gun cabinets, SJSO., diflet1e chairs S20. and S25 . Gas
or electr ic ranges. $295. Or·
thopedic su per firm, $95,

3 bedroom
unfurn ished
apartment. 992·5434 or 992·
5914 or 304·882·2566.

APARTMENTS,

·

S99. Mattresses or box
springs, ful l or twin, $58.,
firm , $68 . and $78 . Queen
se ts. $195. 5 dr . ches ts, $-49.

3 bedroom
unfurn ished
apartment. $215.00 m onth,
plus utilities. S100 deposit.
Three cr edi t r efer ences
required . Court St reet . Call
446·0088 for appointment t o
see apartment.

el uded. Mi ddl eport,
$180 . 992·7177 .

75 -;..~-----eDats and

$275. complete. Baby beds.

4 dr.

e:oo

1981 PM 125 Suzuki, $900 .
304-675·6367.

Bunk bed complete

THREE room fu rn ished
apartment, c lea n, private, 5pm, 446-3159.
adults only, r eferences. 703

32

15 _ 2£h_ooJs_l~!!.~~ D_!!_

MN!fi

2

ASSUMABLE 8'h % loan . 2
Have room , board, and
laundry for elderly person
in my home . 992·67&lt;48.

t977 XL Honda 350, goOd
condit ion, $450. Call 614 ·
388·9809 .

with. mattresses, $250. and
up to $350 . Captain's beds,

bedroom, rent start s at
$152. Specia l rates for
Sen ior Citizens. Call 446·
2745 .

MONDAY

3/8/82

$795.

APARTMENTS :

•

5-BPM . Ph . 446-7346 .

maple or pi ne finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak. $675 .• Bassett Cherry,

Furnished apartment 4 rm .
&amp; bath . Ad ults only, ref . &amp;
sec. deposit. Ca ll-446·0444 .

Television
•
•
VIewmg

All used bikes reduced at
Befz Honda. check with us
before you pay to much .

Lamps lrom $18 . to S65. 5

3 room unf,urnlshed apart·
ment, ad ults on l y, no pets,
utilities paid . Call446·3437 .

Call 256-6520 .

DICit TRACY

pc . difettes from S79 .• to
$385. 7 pc ., $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
S219 up to $495. Desk $110.

Hutches. ' $300. and $375.,

bedroom unfurnished
apartment in Crown City .

Motorcycles

1982

Harley parts &amp; accessories
now at Custom Cyc les,
L TO . Rl . 1 North.
Gallipolis. Open evenings ,

beds,$340., queen size, S380 .
Recliners. $175 . to $295.,

- - - - -----

74

March

Call-446·2240.

from $285. to $795. Tables.
$38 and up to $109 . Hide· a·

Apartment for rent. Call

and

by larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

Sofa, chair, rocker, of·
taman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275 .
Sofas and chairs priced

2 bdr . apt . HUD excepted,

best. Sell Avon. For more
information ca 11446·3358 .

band .

---Household
- - -Goods
51

.Apartmemt

44

Help Wanted

•Immediate

' Mor.clay, March 8, 1982

Pomeroy-Middlepc)rt, Ohio

_Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

·- -

ctYi ioctUODI

I UT

Jl':ltOQST

wo

JVLI

X~

I

BULI

BWIU
JUT
WI

KOE

lWPTO

MOIOIT
OOTZ

IK

WD
QT . •,

- JLOS GLSTEH
Yak .., ••

OSZIJr;/ HUSBAND : WHAT IS LEFT OF .·.

THE LOVEJ\
R THE NERVE HAS .BEEN
EX'l'ftACI'ED.-HELEN ROWLAND .

�~all•

10-The Daily Sentinel

I.

e

Area deaths

Mary F. Duddin8

Mary Francis Magdelene Dud·
ding, 62, Mason, dJed Saturday
morning at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
She was born Feb. 28,1920 In Ma·
wn to Robert L. and Minnie F .
(Plunkett) Dudding.
. The dece~ was a member of
Mason United Methodist Church
and the Sunshine Class. She also
belonged to the Rhododendron
Homemakers Club.
Surviving her are one brother,
JWbert P. Dudding, Mason, and
several nieces and nephews.
She IB preceded In death by three
brothers, Dennis, Evert and Davtd
l&gt;Jiddlng and three sisters, Pearl,
Margaret and Alma.
Funeral . services will be held
Wednesday at 1: ll p.m . at the Fogelsong Funeral Horne. Revs. Ben·
nle Stevens and Donald Kelley wW
o!tlclate and burial wW be held at
Graham Cemetery, Letart. .
Friends may call the funeral
borne tomorrow between 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.

Clifford Dem08key
Clltford Oemoskey, 77, 565 North
.Front St., Middleport, dJed Sunday
morning at Charleston General
Hospital.
· Mr. ·Demoskey had rettred as a
ldln operator o! the Ateo nJe Co. In
New Jersey. He and his wife, wbo
'iws fonnerly Ufed In Middleport,
returned to the community followIng his retirement. Mr. Demoekey
Willi a member of the First Baptist
'Church at Manaway, N. J .
· Surviving are his wife, Genevieve; a daughter, Mrs. Glorta
Ramona, Tarlln, N. J .; a half.
brother. siX step- brothers, two
;tep-slsters, his stepmother, Jennie
Dem01key, Pennsylvania, and a
ereat:grandchlld. .Two brothers,
Edward and Harold, who resided In
~rt also preceded hlm In
death.
.: Services will be held at 11 a.m.

.

..

Wednesday at the Gatens Funeral
Home at Poca, W. Va. Burial wUl
be In the Haven of Rest Cemetecy
at Redhouse, W. Va. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

Mrs. LUUan V. Carpenter, 48,
Route 4, Pomeroy, dted unex)X":t·
edly Saturday at O'Bleness Hospl·
tal In Athens.
Mrs. Carpenter wa&amp; born In Ma·
wn County, W. Va., a daugh1er Ql
Pearl Jones, Point Pleasant and
the late Beulah Wrtght Jones.
A housewife, Mrs. Carpenter Is
survived by her husband, Lawrence D. Carpenter; three daughters, Mrs. Anthony (Shella) Meek,
Athens; Mrs. Jerry (Connie)
Warner and Mrs. Larry (Dottle)
Whitt, bothotFortEu5tiB, Va.; two
sons and daughters-In-law, George
and Deborah Rowley, Columbus,
and Dale and Regina RowleY, servIng In the U. s. Army In Germany;
three stepSQns, Robert Carpenter,
Pickerington; Carol Carpenter,
Mansfield, and Jercy Carpenter,
Reynoldsburg; nine grandchlld·
ren, three step-grandchlldren, five
brothers and five sisters. Besides
her mother, she was preceded In
death by three sisters.
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
Wedqesday at the Blgony.Jordan
Funeral Home In Albany wtth the
Rev. James Cundiff otflclatlng.
Burtal wlll be In the Rawlings
Cemetery at Dyesvllle. Friends
may call at thefuneralbomefrom 7
to 9 this evening and !rom 2 to 4 and
7 to 9 p:m. Tuesday.

Fo~tE.

Underwood

Forrest E . Underwood, father of
Eugene E. Underwood, · a Meigs
County minister for the past 23 years, died Monday morning at his
home In Mount Vernon.
Funeral services wUl be held at
the Baughman Funeral Home at
Frazeysburg. Arrangements, bowever, are Incomplete.

County happenings..

'
.
Store accepts bills
: Residents of Racine can now pay

tllelr water and refuse biUs at the
Racine Department Store wtth
Betiy Sajrre now serving as agent.
Depostts tor water on rental property may call be made at the same
location. Any question regarding
bills can be answered by Mrs.
Sayre. Residents wishing to mall
payments can send them to the new
yWage address, P .O. Box 375, Ra·
cine, Ohio

45m.

Meet Tuesday
The Meigs Local School District
Vocal Boosters wUl meet at 7: ll
p.m. Tuesday In the music room of
the high school. AU parents are
uk£d to attend to make plans for a
1111bllc spaghetti supper to be
served.

Marriage license
• A marriage llcense has been
Issued In the Meigs County Probate
&lt;;ourt o Terry J . Hannon, 29, Mid·
_&amp;eport, and Cheryl A. Imboden, 22,
·Middleport.

Hit-skippers sought
Pomeroy pollee are looking ldt
iWo hit and run drtvers. •
· Saturday morning, a vehicle
$lr11Ck a stop sign, a tree and ran
through a fence near the Pomeroy
Church · of the Nazarene, Union
Ave. The drtver fled out Union
Avenue, evading pollee.
Sunday night a car owned by
Paul Hlll, Sr., parked on the Jot of
an Elllit Main St. restaurant, was
sideswiped and the driver o! the
Vehicle talled to stop or report the
accident.

Orden due Thursday
Order for the next Meigs County

Food Co-op dellvecy must be placed
no later than 4 p.m. Thursday.

·· Orders can be mailed to the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen·
ter, Box 7'1l, Pomeroy, Olllo 45769,
or ·placed In person on Thursday
Only at the center.
DeUvecy date tor the next orders
ts'Thursday, March 18, and orders
can be picked up from 3: ll to 4: 45
~.rn. on that date.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Wayne
GUUland, Reedsville; Raymond
Douglas, Pomeroy; VIrginia Fer·
rell, Gallipolis; Lllllan Bumgardner, Pomeroy; Misty Sayre,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges--George
Molden, Marie Roy, James Eisel·
stein, Edwin Burnem, Brian
Ftiend, Donna Sellers.
Sunday Admissions--Fred Larkins, Long Bottom; Donald Plem·
mons, Middleport; Jack Lance,
Coolville.
.
Sunday Discharges--Michael
Hubbard.

Must confine dogs
Racine officials remind residents
of the community that dogs must be
tied or confined. Ordinance ll1
stated that no dog ls to be permitted
to run loose. Offenders are subject
to being fined, officials warned.

Meets Wednesday
The Pomeroy-Middleport LIOns
Club w1U hold a regular meeting at
12 noon Wednesday at the Meigs
Inn.
'

Tuesday meeting .
Middleport Lodge 363, F &amp;AM,
wW meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
temple. Work wUI be In the E.A.
degree and refreshments wlll be
served.

Market report
AIMDIUVtt~S.In

Mllrchl, ltl%

CA1Tl.E PRICES'
·
Feeder steen (Good and Oloice) 30f.600 Ills.
:;&amp;.61; ~7GIIIbo . 41-$1.50.
Feeder Hellen : &lt;Good aM Oloict 1JJO.{I(J(IIbe.
47.-: i00-70G lbo. 40-49.50.
Feede1· B11J11: rGood end Oloicel 300-600 Jba.

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel Stall Writer
Middleport village councu Monday night Initiated
plans tor buDding an addition to the Middleport Flre
Station wtth the placement of a two mill, nve year tax
levy on the June primary election ballOt.
Middleport Fire Chlef Jeff Parst, who discussed
plans tor the addition, pointed out It w1U run between
$85,tXXl and $100,roJ. He also noted that when the pres·
ent structure was bullt the Middleport Fire Depart·
ment had three vehicles and a boat. Wlth a new truck
to be deUvered soon, the department will have seven
vehicles and a boat.
The Increase means that some vehicles will have to
sit out In the weather during winter months, o!flclals ·
sail!.
Council agreed to purchase at a maximum price of
$8,roJ a lot next to the !Ire station owned by Mrs. Cass
Hlndy. The approx(!nate 50 by 50 lot wUl provide

S~tlterBuU.s

TOE TAPPIN' TIME - President allll Nancy Reag•n, joined by
ctlUJitry-weslern singer Merle Haggard, and Beverly Sllls, sealed on hay
bales, clapping their hands, tap their toes to the rhythm of Mark O'Co~

SANTA BARBARA, Callf. IA,P)
- It was an Insiders' joke between
President Reagan and countcy
music singer Merle Haggard and
most of the 500 people In the copcert
audience didn't get lt.
!n what many took to be nothing
more than a smlllng apology for
singing about America's problems,
Haggard joshed to Reagan: "I beg
your pardon one more time."
But Reagan caught Haggard's
double meaning and broke out
laughing. As governor of California
In 1972, Reagan granted an execu-

tlve pardon to Haggard, who had
spent nearly three years In San
Quentin State Prison on burglary
and escape convictions.
R,eagan, his wife Nancy and an
audience studded with Hollywood
celebrltles sat on bales of hay In a
chilly bam Sunday to hear Haggard perform In a Whlte House concert series that, untU now, had
featured opera and classical music
!rom the East Room of the Executive Mansion.
This time the setting was a 1,200:
acre horse and cattlE' ranch In the

Emergency squad has busy weekend
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial and at 2: 53
p.m. tonk Arthur Hoyt from Pomeroy Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial and later to Holzer Medl·
cal Center.
Rutland at 8: 29 a .m. took Lllllan
Carpenter !rom the CarpenterPyesville Road to O'Bieness !Aspl·
tal In Athens and Tuppers Plains at
2:25a.m. took WayneG!Jilandfrom
Owl Hollow Road JJf Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Eight calls were answered by local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
On Sunday at 8: 09 a .m., Kirby
Farms was taken !rom the Lazy
Day Cafe to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Middleport Unit;
the Tuppers Plains Unit at 8: 58
a.m. took Herb Matheny from
Route 681, the scene of an auto accident, to Camden-Clark Hospital In
Parkersburg, and Tuppers Plains
at 4: 11 p.m. tonk Jeriny Adams
!rom her residence to Holzer Medl·
cal Center.
On Saturday at 4:43p.m .. Middleport took Barb Srplth !rom 1117 Park
St. to Veterans Memortal and at
8: 50 p.m. answered a !Ire call to
Arnolds Body Shop. Pomeroy at
7:10 a.m. took Ray Douglas !rom

Santa Ynez Valley near the presl·
dent's own ranch, where he had
been vacationing since Thursday .
No' black tie audience here; It
was cowboy boots, cowboy hats,
leather jackets and goosedown
vests. Reagan sported a•strlng tie
wtth a sUver longhorn slide.
The -president, who was returnIng to Washington tills evening to
face mounting economic problems
and RepupJlcan plans to rewrite hls
budget, dldn'fwant to talk business
as he wound up his vacation .
Asked prior to the concert
whether he WQUld scale back on defense spending when he returned to
Washington, the president replied,
"Let's not even think about things
like that untll we get there."
By concert's end, Reagan told the
audience, o;I .leave here Inspired. I
can't walt to get back on Capitol
Hill."
I
The president .travels to the Capitol Tuesday to confer wtth the 53
Senate Republicans, many of
whom are searching for alternate
budget plans to trim the ·record delicit forecast tor 1983.
·
Reagan has dug In his heels

against cutting defense spending or
trimming the tax cuts already
enacted, but seemingly will have to
give ground somewhere In view of
the widespread GOP unhappiness
with his plan.
·
A top presidential aide, speaking
on the condition that his name not
he used, said Reagan Is returning to
the toughest time he has !aced as
president.
The R.eagans and the rest ot the
audience clapped their hands and
tapped their toes throughout thll .
hour-long perfomiance, whlch also
featured Mark O'Connor, a 2()-yearold who has won the grand national
fiddle championship three consecutive years.
The guest list tor the concert and
a barbecue luncheon - featuring
New York st11p steak cooked over a
wood-fire - InCluded the president's daughters, Maureen, a candidate for the Senate !roin
California, actress Patti Davis, and
celebrities Hugh O'Brien, Robert
Conrad, Michael Landon, Mike
Connors, Buddy Ebsen, Pat Boone,
Don DeFore and Fred
MacMurray.

Eight ·people die on Ohio highways
By 'lbe Auoclated Pre!18
Eight people were killed lnsepar·
ate traffic accidents across OhiO
over the weekend, the Highway Patrol said.
The patrol counts traffic lataHties .!rom 6:30 p.m. Friday to mid·
night Sunday.

To end marriages
Rpbert C. Fife, Belpre, and Me·
IIssa Fife, Route 1, Middleport,
have filed an action for dissolution
of their marriage In the Meigs
_Qlunty Common Pleas Court.
Dissolution petitiOns dismissed In
the court are those of Nora A. Cassady and Raymond C. Cassay and
Jessie Morris and Dorothy J.
Morris.
Granted divorces ln the court
were Hattie Ellen Hall from Marlon August Hall on grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty; Toni Marte Andrew !rom
Joseph Palmer Andrew, gross neglect of duty, and Kimberly Sue Dowell !rom Benjamin Leonard
Dowell on grounds of gross neglect
of duty.

MIDDLETOWN - Lisa A.
Mokry, 22, of Middletown, In a twocar accident on a Middletown city
street.
MANSFIELD - Robert M.
Prtce, 24, of Manstleld, In a one-car
accident on a Mansfield city street.

AVON LAKE - Cheryl L.
Sprouse, 22, of Sheffield Lake, In a
one-car accident on a Avon' Lake
city street.
XENIA - Kenneth S. Owens, 46,
of Dayton, In a one-car accident on
U.S. 42 In Greene County.

~ed~ad:

SUNDAY
CHll.LICO'rnE- Vernon E. Ra·
pole, 48, of Balnbrldge,ln a two-car
accident on U.S. 351n Ross County. .
PAULDING- Augustine Barajas, 17, of Paulding, In a one-car
accident on U.S. 127 In Paulding
County.
SATURDAY
CIRCLEVll.LE - Russell Mollett!, 64, of Columbus, In a one-car
accident on a Plckaway County
. road.
WAVERLY - Michael S.
Barber, 'Z7, of Jackson, In a threecar accident on Ohlo 124 In Pike
County.

ELBERFELD$
THE ROUND-ABOUT

ACCENT
TABLE
.

DECORATE WITH A70-72"
ROUND TABLE COVER

•

S,P RINGFIELD, IJI. - A Columbus, Ohio, man charged wtth the
shooting death of a Huntington, W.Va., pollee officer was turned
over to Huntington pollee Mol)day after a brief extradition healing.
Bobby Dean Stacy, 30, was arrested without Incident at a Springfield motel last month, ending a two-month search. Aut~Wrltles
traced him to Illinois because lie has relatives In the area, the FBI
said.
After his arrest Feb. 7, Stacy refused to waive hls extradition
rtghts, and Sangamon County Judge Eugene 0 . Duban scheduled
the hearing. But Monday, .Duban ruled that Stacy could properly be
returned to West VIrginia .
FBI spokesman Bob Grooms said Stacy was due back In Huntlhgton late Monday .
'

Police probe triple homicide
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Pollee homicide. detectives today were
Investigating the shootings of three people whose bodies were found
In a downtown Columbus bar.
Officers said the three people were found dead this morning, of
gunshot wounds.
Detectives gave no detalls of the.shootlngs. They would say only
that the victims were two men and a woman and that their bodies
were found at Gig's Bar In an alley off Gay Street In downtown
Columbus.

Violent crime figures decrease
CINCINNATI- VIolent crime, whlch decre11sed In every categocy In 19811n Cincinnati, appears to be staying low this year, pollee
say.
Police homicide Investigators report only two deaths so far this
year. That's the lowest end-of-February rate since 1968.
But Sgt. Tom Oberschmldt, a veteran homicide Investigator,
scotts at compartsons of such murder statistics. He said he remembers a ·streak of two months at the end of 1979 and first month of
1980 when there were no kllllngs.
Cincinnati averages 'about 56 homicides each year. In 1981, there
were 47, the lowest ·year-end total in 12 years.

WASIDNGTON - The U.S. mlssUe attack warning system Is
plagued by "severe and potentially catastrophic deficiencies,"
warns a report by the House Government Operations Committee.
The panel, which llled lis 40-page report Monday with House
Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill, D·Mass .. urged that Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinberger give Ills "urgent attention" to the computer
network designed to warn of enemy nuclear attack .
The committee, chaired by Texas Democrat Jack Brooks, also
said Weinberger should "take decisive action to ensure that NORAD
{the North American Aerospace Defense Command) receives the
hlghest priority wtthln the department In Its· modernization plan."

WARSAW, Poland - Sollda11ty leaders still at large met secretly
and called for passive resistance to martial law but offered to negotiate wtth the Communist government I! It allows Lech Walesa and
other Interned union leaders to join the talks.
So1trces whose previous reports have been accurate said the clandestine meeting last week was attended by the lew members of the
Independent union's I117-member national commissiOn who have not
been lilterned.
The sources refused to disclose the exact date of the meeting, Its
slte or the roster ot participants. Tiley revealed what was discussed
on condition they remain anonymous to protect their salety.

Problems wtth duplication ot
work on phases of the Kerrs Run
sewer project by englneertng !lrins
were discussed and straightened
out when Pomeroy VIllage CouncU
met In special session Monday
I\lght.
Solicitor Fred Crow called the
special session to discuss the dupll·
cations with councll. It was reported the village no longer needs
the services of Burgess and Nlple
on phase two of the Kerrs Run pfo;
ject. It was agreed to pay the firm
$5979 tor work done to this point.
The firm was relieved of ahy
further expenses In the project.
Council en!Pred Into a contract
with Englneertr.;. Associates of
Wooster tor redesigning phase two
of the project. The firm was employed for eight weeks with the vU·
lage to pay $7roJ for l'f!des
_
lgnlng ro
be done.
I
Council hired Jim !;ichivinsky of
the Mohlcan Engl!le!!rlng Co. to ·
handle the latef!ll work and easements on phase two of lhii •Proj~t.
SchivlnskY, a construction engineer, was acuve wtth the first
phase of the work.
Easements needed tor phase two
were discussed and It was estl-

CouncU approved the report of Mayor Hottman
showing receipts of $3214 In tines and tees for Febru·
ary and Mayor Hottman reported that tour HUD
grant projects have been approved for 1!132.
Mayor Hottman explained that the Ohio Environmental Ageilcy requires that a water contingency
· plan must be completed by July 1, thls year. This
plan would outline what steps the village would take

In providing a water supply In va rious emergency
situations; The board ot public affairs was authorized
to enter Into a contract with Floyd G. Brown Associates for the study at a cost not to e xceed $4900. The
board was also authorized to sell a 1972 truck no
longer used by the water department.
Mayor Hottman announ~ed that Cableentertalnment will hold a dinner and meeting to dlsc11ss cable
services and rates at the Holiday Inn In Gallla County
at 6:30p.m . on March 10. Four representatives from
Middleport VIllage will attend.
Mayor Hottman also discussed wtth council the
need tor a plan for Improvements In the business
district. He and Klm Shields, village consulta nt, w1U
meet with the Middleport Chamber of Commerce on
March 23 to discuss drawing up such a plan.

!Continued on pa~e 121

1979. 1980. 1981

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A Se·
nate panel Is abouttoQpen hearings
on a plan to prop up OhiO's moneyshort unemployment compensa·
tion program by decreasing some
benefits and raising taxes paid by
employers.
Backers of the proposal before
the Senate Agriculture, Commerce
and Labor Committee hope the
upper chamber can complete work
on the bW by mid -April and send It
to the House.
Sponsofed by Sen. M. Ben Gaeth,
the committee chairman, the measure ls aimed at helping the lund
gain solvency and begin paying
back a debt of nearly $1 bUllon to
the federal government.
"One of the things It will do ls
re-establish the fund, which Is
broke to the tune ot $970 miUion,"
Gaeth, R·Deflance, said.
The measure calls tor permanent

AGES: 6 to 16 Years
CLASSES HELD IN
FIVE LOCATIONS:
Pomeroy, Coolville, Belpre,
Parkersburg and Ripley, w.

Va.

i

· N.B.T.A.
INSTRUCTOR

JUDY RIGGS
CHESTER

985-3595

ENROLL NOW:J

'

CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Monday night In the
OhiO Lottery'S daUy game "The Number" was 21l6.
The lottery reported earnings of $911,269 from the wagering on lts
dally game. The earnings came on sales ·of $1,207.428.50, whlle
holders of wtnnlng tickets are entitled to share $296,lll!l.50, lottery
o!ftclals said.

$1149

Weather forecast

•

•20" DIAMETER- 25" TALL
•EASY TO . ASSEMBLE-NO TOOLS
REQUIRED
•QUALITY WOOD COMPONENTS
•PERFECT FOR ANY ROOM
HOME FURNISHINGS- 1st FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Clear early tonight, becomllig partly cloudy by morning. Lows In
low to mid -~ - Partly cloudy and wanner Wednesday. Hlghalnmkl
to upper 50s. Chance ot precipitation 10 percent tonight and 20 percent Wednesday. Winds southerly to wutheasterly 5-10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio FOfteUt
'l"'lurrda)' tbroacb 8atunla,y:
Fllr 'l1nlnday Uld a c • - ollhowen Friday and 8allaniay.
11111!1 In upper 1011 to
Tbanday,l'llld-lll to mid . . Frida)'
111111 In the . . lo low • lilllurdaJ, ._. IIi rnld4ll lo low •
'lbunday 111111 llllbe ....... 111111 . . Frtday and SMurday.

mid.

Scientists say
doomsday out
By The A880Clated Pre!l8
Scientists say doomsday won't
come Wednesday as predlcled In
"The Jupiter Effect," a book whlch
said eight years ago that the align·
ment of the solar system on March
10, 1982, would trigger a worldwide
wave o't earthquakes.
The planets are forming themselves Into a group within a 90degree angle. All the planets will
tine liP on the same side of the sun
and come the clo~t to each other
for the first time since 9!19 A.D.
And Wednesday marks the closest they wlll be for the next 510 years.

STATE TOURNAMENT BOUND - Ga~ Nakamoto, rtght, senior
wrestler for the Melp Marauders, will rep!'e1lellt Meigs c..nty •• wtllu
Southeutern Oblo Thurlday at St. John Arena ill Columbus, begbui~Da at
4p.m. Nakamoto claimed the dlalrlct championship Saru,day aDd earned
a right to compete In the State heavyweight division. Beoide1 gaining the
dl•lrlct title, Gary claimed champlunshiJIII In three other tournamtnl8.
Pictured wllh Gary IB Meigs Coach Lilrry Grimes, a former all-American
In the NCAA ranks. See story Page 4.

Increases tn amounts paid by the
state's 200,roJ employers and
tightens ellglblllty tor recipients .
It also provides tor a temporary
freeze on benetlts at current levels
and Imposes an emergency tax on
businesses untll the loans are
repaid .
Soaring jobless rates forced Ohio
to borrow $392.7 million from the
U.S. Labor Department ro help tl·
nance the program from January
through March. That was In addl·
tlon to the state's 1981 debt of $600
mllUon.
None of the money has been
repaid .
WIUiam Papler, chief statistician
tor the Bureau of Employment Services, said another loan wlll Ukely
have to be sought.
"We don't know how much more
we're going ro need," he said.
"We're still paying Itout a lotfaster

than It's coming ln ."
Maximum weekly be n e ll t
amounts would be frozen at current
levels as long as the state carries a n
oulslandlng Joan balance. An emergency tax ot one-tenth of 1 percent
on employers contributions to the
fund would remain In effect until
the loans are repaid .
Claimants now may receive as
much as S147 per week If they have
no dependents; up to $223 per week
If they have one or two dependents
and up to $233 per week If they have
three or more dependents.
Although those amounts would
not be deereas¢, they would no
longer be lncrea'sed with changes In
the cost of Jiving .
A permanent Increase In the em·
piQyer contribution r ate schedule,
combined with the emergency tax
and other changes , Is expected to
generate $57.1 mlllloQ annually.

Benefl~ now paid tor the !In!!
week of unemployment would be
eliminated by another sectlono!the ·

measure.

un-

Under current law, a person
employed tor only one week Isn't ·
paid. But It at any tlmeln a yearfhe
Individual sustains three consecutive weeks of joblessn~'Ss, the first
week Is compensable.
Estimates show thar eliminating
compensation tor the waiting week
would cut payments !rom the trust
fund about $27.6 million .
The bill would tighten ellglbUity
by changing requirements that allow a person who worked a s tew as
two or three hours a week !0 qualify
lor benefits. It would also require
the unemployed to be less selective
In the type ot work accepted.
Gaeth said Monday that hearings
on the bUJ are to begin March 18.

Leaders consider proposals
to modify Reagan's budget

Winning Ohio lottery number

Is now accepting new members- No previous training
is required. . ·

HOOPR!CES,
HOIJJ : (No. 1, S.rTOWs and Glltal 200-300 lbs.
47.:D-47.31.
Bul&lt;her8ow117.50-40.10.
Butcher Boln .M.7WUii.
Feeder Pip' !By tile Heod l !t-34 .7S
SHEEP PRICES:
Sla1111hler Limbo 54.7$-11.
Feeder I.Mnbl47-61.

mated that work on the project wUl
be started In about two weeks.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Andrews, ,Crow, Clerk·
Treasurer Jane Walton, and coonell members John Anderson, Betty
Baronlck, Bruce Reed, Larcy Webrung and BUI.Young.

Hearings underway on plan to prop up
unemployment compensation program

"STATE CHAMPIONS"

Veals: jCholcund Pl·lme) - . ..
Blby Clllffl: I By the Headl :10-ito; By the
I'OundiHUO.

,

Shooting suspect in Huntington

Leaders hold secret session

BATON CORP

Spri"'lerCowa, 1BytheHeadi30ihTIS.
CowondC.Ualr" 18ytheUnlll31Htl.

DANNY &amp; DEE BROWN
JIM &amp; GINNY REES

so

neys they have raised through various fu nd raising
activities.
The present system causes a delay In answering
calls and repairs being born by the department are
costly. Mayor Hottman pointed out that In addition to
expenses Involved In the. purchase of equipment. a
small bulldlng tor Jtouslng the two channel , three unit
equipment wW be required as weU as a cooling system, phOne costs and other Incidental costs.

council
corrects sewer
project problems

Deficiencies plague system

..........................
RANGERETTES

andCulter~ll . -...~ . 7$.

I

Mayor Fred Hpttman said soUcltor Beman! Ful!z
had recoqunended the tax levy over a bond Issue
route for the new bulldlng. Chle! Darst said the new
structure wW be constructed as to blend In wtth the
present bulldlng. The tax levy must be certified to the.
Meigs County Board ot Elections by March 24.
PliRCHASE SYSTEM
In another action . councu voted to purchase a new
communication system for the fire department wtth
some $6,roJ ln HUD administrative funds to be used
for that purchase.
Chle! Darst said the system now being used Is old
and_Is owned by the county emergency medical service. Cost of the new set up wtll be some $8368 wtth
firemen to pay the balance over the $6,roJ wtth mo-

nor's music, a Haggard protege. The Reagans hosted the party for 1100, at
the Rancho Sierra Grande, near the Reagans' hllllop ranch. f AP Laserphoto)

(OYer t,ODOibll. 148.7W4.

I

village.

Haggard entertains Reagan at barbecue

Slau11tlter Cows : UtliiUes 38 . ~: Ca11nen

1982 IS AVERY SPECIAL YEAR FOR YOU!
WE'RE BEHIND YOU ALL THE WAY!

space tor the new addiUon which wUl be joined to the
present statlcn; Funds tor the purchase of the lot
have been aJlProved from HUDmonlesgranted to the

Po~eroy

49.5N(U0; -.100 lbr!. 411 .SN0.50: 501).700 lbl. 5260.::.0.

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

.,

en tine

at
,

Po-·

THE
"

I

Lillian V. Carpenter

'·

~Meigs

•

CLASS AA COACH OF 11IE
YEAR - Rick Vu Mlltn, former mldeld Ill MJddlepert aDd
, , _ . . . . . . ., CGIICb at o.JIUI
Academy Hlp 8cbool, 11M ben
cbalea .. the API Clau AA
CGIIda Ill tile year. Vu Maire Ill

ltla lint VUII&amp;y MIIIM +Hl
plded Grte&amp;'leld to • _ltape

····1-lllp
... 2N.record
avtnll.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate ,
GOP leaders are considering an array of proposals to modifY President Reagan's red-Ink-plagued 1983
budget that reportedly IncludeS .
"every conceivable notion" of how
to cut the deficit.
Congressional and White House
o!tlclals, however, were not expectIng an agreement on a compromise
spending plan would be reached
during Reagan's meeting today
with all 53 of his fellow Republicans
In the Senate.
The administration's latest projected deficit tor flscal1983, which
begins Oct. 1, totals $96.4 bWion.
B11t worrted Republicans and Democrats alike are citing Con, '8slonal Budget Office ligures
predicting a $12) bWion deficit next
year and even tarae~ ones In future

years.

'

The Senate, ineanwhlle, continued Its debate over the tate of
Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr. fol·

lowing the New J ersey Democrat's
appeal on Monday not to be
expelled.
·
In other c;pngresslonal business
Monday:
- Five De moc ratic House
members Introduced legislation to
restrict U.S. aid to El Salvador. Republican Sen. Mark 0 . Hatfield of
Oregon also Introduced such a proposal, as did Senate Democratic
leader Robert C. Byrd of West
VIrginia.
Ratfleld also announced plans to
try to halt all U.S. mllltacy aid to El
Salvador unless Its government
makes a good-faith effort to negotiate wtth the leftist opposition or
President Reagan can certify the
rebels refused to negotiate.
-A study commissiOned by the
Senate Rules Committee recom·
mended a major rewrite of presl·
. dentlal campaign !lnanclng
legislation, saying that current
election laws have taUed to llmlt

....

campaign spending.
- Agriculture Secreta cy John
Block told the House Educa Uon and
Labor Committee tha t the Reagan
administration's Increase In school
lunch price• Is not the only reason
lor the 13 percent decline In the
number of children eating the .
meals. "To tell you the truth. 1 just
think there a rc more children who
just want to ea t a t McDona ld 's," he
sa id .
- AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland told the House Budget Committee that hig he r Income taxes
should be Imposed on businesses to
help pay tor Reagan 's proposed detense bulld·up.
- The House Government Opera.
Uons Committee, In a 40-page report, said lop Pentagon officials
need to act quickly and decisively
to upgrade the computer network
that Is designed to warn of enemy
attack.

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