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•

.

:salem students may be transferred
!

BJ IIOB BoDuca
8 " I still Writer
~ Accordlaa to a proposal made by
· Supt. Dan · Morris at Tliellday's
•March meetlllg or the Meigs Local
of Education, fourth, lltth
~and sixth grade students at the
:overcrowded Salem Center School
• may be alte""'ne classes In Ruitland beil'nntna DeXt year.
I
A deleptlon from the Salj!m Ceil·
iter School, headed by Gary Aspln,
, appeared before the board. AspiD
~Bald patroaa of the Salem Center

thexe Is room fOI' them.

Monts Bald he could not recommend an exp!lldlture _ of over
$70,CXXI for any addltbls to the Sa·
lem Center Scllool In view of the
economic llltuatlan, pal1lcularl,y
with 110111e $3'10,&lt;MXI belli&amp; cut from
the state funds recelYed In the district In a year's time. He aJsg noted
that enrollment Is decreasing and
that klnderprten pupils and others
are already being transported from
the Salem Center areil to Rutland
tor classes. He agreec! to meet with
any eroup at anytime ib discuss his
proposal and to hear points that Sa·
!em Center School patronS wish to
make.
Supt. Morris asked board
members to think over his proposal
of moving the students to Rutland
so that act1o11 can be taken at the
April board meetlllg.

:Board

~Scblol bad beell ~ add!·
: tloaal classroom space If the tax
·free bood Issue was apjnv.oed last
!year. The Issue was approved but
• DOthlDg has happened, Aspln

Quality
Parts
Service
Tires, Battery
And servlc.e
Available
Or\lyln
Stores
With .
Service
Bays

, pointed OUL
: Morris said the Salem . Center
' Scblolls overcrowded and pointed
. out the problems o1 COIIductlllg six
. erade leYels and other classes In
~ the live classroom bulldlJig. How·
· ever, he sald, contrary to earlier
: l\lilll!ltiOnl of additional class~ rooms at the 8alem Center School,
'· he Is proposing that the some 56
:children of the fourth, tlfth and
, sixth grades be lral)sported to the
:, Rutland Elementary SchOOl where

·4·ply
~lyester
Cord Bla~kwalls
our Reg. 35.97 Eo.- • 600x12
·

26 97
•

PIUS ·

Meanwlllle, Meigs Local School
D!stilct studenls who were scheduled to end this year's classes on

May 28 will f1JKI themselves In
classes throueh June 4. according
to a revised calendar adopted 'I'!Misday night.
Supt.Morrls reported dlstrtct stu·
dents had missed 10 days of school

I

1.43 Ea.

tor 11 a.m. Friday tocoaslder a per·
manent 1982 11,pproprtattons
reaolutloll.
AOOEPr KI!BIGNA'DONS
The reslpatloo of Janies Diehl,
high school principal, WllS acCepted
and the board rna~ plans to present him with a Plaque or certUicate.
Also l'l!slgniDg were Mi's. Olive
Page, Salem Center Elementary,
and Mrs. Lucy White, Middleport
Elementary, Both teachers are retlrlnll. It was reported. The reslgna·
tlon of Mrs. NeDie Borgan as a rook
at the Harrlaonvllle SchOOl was accepted along with the resipatlon of
John Arnott as heed teacher of the

Middleport Elemetltary School.
The board wueci administrative
contracts to Doug Bahnke, Rutland

principal, one year; Donald Han·
nlllg, Bradbury principal. two
ars: Charles Holliday, Salein

"'e-

•

tnar, and Darjene Husell and

McCall, Harrlaonvllle principal.
one year, llld FenlOn Taylor, assistant bJe11 IIChool prtndpal, two
years. All were unan1moua with the
exception ot Taylor who received
his eontract with a 3-~ vote,
Snowden and Richard vauehiiD castlllg the dlsaenllng votes.
Ronald Wood was employe;i as a.
regl!lar bus driver and Paul E.

BeckY Triplett with the board ap-

Kautr as a maiDtenance person,

provlne a trlp to the World's Fair
tor the Pame:ey School Patrol to be
he8lled by Ms. Bussell and Ms.
Triplett.
A service agreement with the
Metes County Board of Mental Retardation was approved and approval was etven for the Pomeroy
Youth League to uae baseball field
tac!Utles near the high schOOl. Insu·

both effl!ctlve March 17.
ranee wtth the Downlne-Chllds
Hired on supplemental or parap- . Agency on the bJe11 school was aprofessional contracts were David
proved and plans were made for
Warga, varsity boys track coach; several representstlves to attend
Karen Facemyer, reserve girls'
the Ohio SchOOl Boards ASsociation
softbaU coach; Paul Lucktenberg,
spring conference In Athens on
tisslstant baseball · coach, and T. March.,_
Edwin Harkless, drama coach.
The board then moved Into exec·
Added to the substitute teachers list
utlve session to consider personnel,
for the remainder ol this year were . finances and negotiations as well as
Deborah Arnold and Mary Durst.
a complaint rued by Mr. and Mrs.
Substitute custodians hlred tor the Walter Baggy on the "boarding" of
remainder of this year are Darrell their son at the junior hlgh school.
Gene Jenkins, PhWp M. Ohlinger,
The Haggys had requested the sl·
Roy R. Peck and Donald Ray
tuatlon be discussed In open ses·
Richmond.
ston, hut the board felt the matter
Given professional leaves were should be ' an executive session
Nancy Radosevlc, Charles matter.
Frecker, Ben Slawter, Gordon
AttendlngthemeetlnilwereSupt.
Fisher, Mlck Childs, J . W. Blaet· .
(Continued on page 14)

RETIRING-Jamri Diehl,·
who has ~erved 18

yean u a

hlp IIChool pdnclpa1 In lhe
Pomeroy Exempted Vllap
Schools and Melp Local hllh
aanounced hla Mlremeld ...,_
day nlpt. Diehl baa '-tMelp'
only prlnc!pal since the ICbool.
dllb1d wu consollcled In 1987. ·

•

enttne

at y

Out' Reg. 56.97 Ea.-P165/80RI3

Tri Valley Conference bound

42.97 ~~!l·Ea.

Marauders will leave SEOAL:.

Mountt~"~g

.

Included· No Trade-In Required

Happy
.St. Patrick's

Front End Wheel Alignment Available

Day

The Meigs Local Hlgh School Is apparently going to drop from the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League.
This was the Indication Tuesday nlght when the Meigs Local Board of
Education voted 4-1 to petition the 'frl Valley Conference by AprlllS for

admission to that league.
Meeting with the board, which bad asked for public Input on the subject
of leavllw: the Southeastern Ohio Athlet1c League, were Gordon Fisher,
Meigs athl..tle director, and James·Oiehi, Mei8S principal.
·The pair told the bdard that WellSton had left the league, Waverly Is
plaDnlne to leave, thus leaving only five other opponents for Meigs teams If
Waverly decides to withdraw.
Fisher said teams of the SEOAL are CODJidered city schools and do not
have the same problems as Meigs Hlgh School In transportation of
members of teams ~me following practice lll!lllons..He said that teams of

the Tl1 Valley Conference are, like Meigs, rural schoolS with the !lllnJI!
problems.
They reported that even though Meigs petitions for entrance In the Trl
Valley Conference, and this was agreed to last Dlght, Meigs wUl he com-

mitted to continue ptsyJng In the SEOAL for one more year, 1982-83. Thli
SEOAL must be notified by June 20 of Meigs' Intention of leaving or ~hi!'
district wUl he committed for two years.
.
Casting the dlslentl!lg vote on the agreement to petition for entrance tp
the Tl1 Valley Conference was board member Robert Snowden. Snowden
said he failed to see bOw leaving the SEOAL would help financiallY.:
provide for shor!J\r trips to games and stated that he was not aware thal·
Meigs teams had encountered difficulties In getting opponents.
'"lllls Is not the answer to the real problem which Is the fact that we don't
win", Snowden remarked.

Rhodes seeks help for unemployment
program
.

"llmlt•d J Month free
R.placem•nl: Llmlt•d
.oh • 60th Month
'Pro rata Adjultm•nt
Warranty"

Sove •14

The board aet a special meeting

Center prtnclpal, one year; Grea

March 17 1982

AI Tires Plus F.E.l Each

il111ll1"1 I I

up.

e

.F.E.T.

Steel BeHed
Radial
Whitewalls

" WIIfllllf . . . 1111

this year due to weathercondltlolls.
The State Department of Educa·
tloll l1lowl live day. without time
havlne tO be made up. 1bls left ftve
days to be m8de up and the board
voted to exiii!Dd claues thrclllgh
June 4110 that the time will be made

'

aJLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - GQv.
James A. Rhodes' administration
baa appealed to CoJII!I'eSS for help
In solving a fl,2 bWion eap In Its
unemployment compensation

. . . . ... .-.._~

With Exchange

54 88

94.88~~a.

0urReg.

•
' 68.88
6o-mo. llattery Installed .

DIIC/Drum lrake Special
For many U.S.-made cars.
trucks.
higher.

Fits many U:S. cars, light
trucks. Top or side terminals. .

36 88

program.

Sole Price
4Cyllnder
lleclronlc lgnlllon Tune Up •'
For many U.S. cars. AdditiOnal parts. services extra.

B~ Director Howard Colller
asked the state's congressloDal
delegation for help In waiving requirements that force the stste to
pay Interest on federal loans
neEded to keep Its Jobless benefits
progrlll'(l solvent.
"The new federalism Is spelling
economic disaster for Ohlo and
Ohioans," Collier said In a tele-

•

gram Tuelday.

"In the name of ~~~~employed
Ohioans and tbe1r tamnles, I 'ask
you to rethink the leglalatlon paued
last year putting Ohio and Its unem·
played workers In this Intolerable
situation," he said.
Meanwhile, leglststlve le!lders
met with Robert Howarth, Rhodes'
executive assistant, to explore possible IIOIUtlons.
"It Is a heck of a problem,"
House Spesker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
D-New Boston, said after the session Tuesday. "Wedon'tknowwhat
we are aQIDa.tD do.''
·
Ohio, hit b)' doubie-dlgtt unem·
ployment aa a result of the national

receulon, !las already bQnvwed
about $1 bllllon to keep jobless be-

flnwlne,
'Ibolle federal funds , to he repaid

nelltl

by the employers who finance the
stste system, carried no Interest

charges.
But the 1981 federal budget bill
require! new loans, stsrtiDg In
April, to be repaid with · Interest.
The Interest cannot he pald from

the unemployment compensation

loans II needs from the federal
.
government.
Rhodes cited an attorney aener·
al's opinion which said he does not
have authorlty to request the fed.
era! advancement unless there Is
an appropriation of $730
In
place.

million

"This amount equals the total
amount of Interest which Ohio wUl
be required to pay over the life of

the advancements necessary dur·
That means Ohio, already tng the current biennium of $1.1&amp;'1
saddled with a projected budget &lt;ie- blllton," Rhodes sald In a letter
flclt ot $1 bi!Uon, must pay Interest '..~to ~nate President Piiu '
E . GWmor.
of 1735 million for the $1.18 billion In
fund.

.

Two levies given -approval for June 8 primary
Sands lwnorary parade marshal

19 97

Our Reg.

•

88.88 -·
AM/PM Stereo, tape Player
Get S-track or casSette. Save.
Our 44.88-49.88, 3-way
s• k p
3997

· Carburetor Cleaner

.

Helps clean and Improve
engine performance. 12-fl. oz.

Eo,
OUr Reg.

28.88

Halogen Light Kits
Rectqngular amber or clear
lights. switch 9omeCJions. wire.

4 97
•

5.97-6.97 Pr.

All-rubber·lplash Guards
Deluxe, no-drill guards In
colors to complement cor.

Thank You For Shopping At K mart
5(1-12)

Pr.

·our Reg:

NEW YORK -'lbeSL Patrlck'sDayParadecommlttee, naming
Bobby Sands as Its honorary IIJ'&amp;nd manhal, has dedicated this
·year' a para&amp; to the theme, "England Get OUt of Ireland.''
The namblg of Sands, the ftrst of the Irlah h\111&amp;8' atrlken to die
laat year In the Maze Prison In North Ireland, Is an UDpiecedented

move. ,

fill pActure and thole of Dine other deceaaed hUJJ&amp;I!I' strlken were
he canied In the parade today. s.Ms' brother, Sean, was to march
with tbe Irlah NOI'them Aid Qlmmlttee.
Abo11t 100,000 marchers, IDcludlne 194 bands, were expected take
about llll hours to. parade In theannual"grand hurrah" of Ireland In
America, In the 2nh year ot the parade that 111111 up New York
aly'i Fifth Avenue.

Quality control said inadequate
LOS ANGEr.ES - Quality control was Inadequate and lncooslst·
ent dw1D&amp; much of the dellp work at the troubled Diablo Canyoo
nuclear power plant; a consultant has COIIClucled.
Tile raport by Rater Reedy Inc., hired by Pacific Gas • ElectriC
Co. to reYieW the quality,~ pJ.'OIII'&amp;I11at the fl,4lllllloll plant,
waacltal 'l'llelday by oppcmentswhocalled It "an exberuel,y.slgnlft·
cant documenL"

Winning Ohio lottery number
'

cLEVELAND - The wiDIIIne number drawn n-Jay night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally eame "The Nlllllber'' was 587.
ID tbe ~~!~~~~weekly "Pick 4" pme, the wiDIIIna munber was 5141.

'1b!! lottery reported earniDp of -,134 Olllb dally pme. The
een11ne1 came on sales ol $1,&lt;MX!,721BI, wblle holders of wlnn1lle
t1c1re11 are ent1Ue4 to lhan! $&amp;98,587.SI,Iottery otaclals lllld.

Weather forecast
1nc1! lnaoo!dtn= with a ebanceotlblJ ::e••IOIII&amp;IItand'lbumflllllalbt 6-50.lfllba Tblll'ldaY .ar 'IU. Chance of 1'1111_,
pescent tonlilrt and 40 percent 'lllwwlay. Wlndllllbt and V&amp;l1ahle

clay. ~

toaiPL

......, .............,
I'IIIIIIJ.•
til.• I ..,_...,IP................. '; .._Ill
........... 1\IP
E'

,

lafAw . .

.....

1

P'IYitf'ud'' illrl ...

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

r,ll . . . . . . . . . '

1? . . . . . . . . .

5

would provide lUnda for operatlni
the new Meigs Community SchOOl,
now under construcUoo.

regular weekly session.

At the request of the Meigs
Coonty Department of Health, the
cornrnlsaloners approved placement of a .5 of one mW leYy before
voters on June 8 for operations of
the health dJatrlct pi'Oil'8lll.

At the request of the 1&amp;9 Board of
Mental Retardation, the commlss!onen approved a resolull.oll to
place a· 1.5 mlll operating levy before voterj on _June 8. The levy

Southern board will
request cash analysis
MeetJne In regular set8loll Tuesday nllbt. the Southern Local
School District Board of Education
agreed lo requelt a cub analysll

the State Auditor's Otlk:e
to determine u the district has
1!11011111 lllllll!y to remain In.
lltudy by

q~er&amp;tlon. ''

Rep! ea! 1tstlvea from the stste ·
otlk:e wW conduct the lltudy and
111ue a report when It Is completed.
Three additional days ot claslel
were added to this year's schoolca·
lendar In the Southern Local School
D1ltrlct. The dlltrlct II three days
over the live calamity day. allowed
by the State DepartrneDt of Educa·
tloll without makeup time 'b!elne requlred. Accordlne to 'the reviled
ca)eder edo'l'fed 1aat n1abt, students wW atteDd cl• e tllroulh
JUDe 3. 1bey were have beell dJI.
milled May 211 had tbe clbtr1ct not

,,.

,.

' ,W&amp;SOI'-

sui

I .. . .

! I . . fi'UD . .

exceeded the five allowed calamity
daya. Students will attend claues
on Good Friday.
The board hired Jayce Manuel as
a IUilltllute cook and IUilltltufe Cll&amp;todlan. Tile treasurer was authorbl!d to advertl8e for bkll on two
new 65 pasaenaer bURs.
A leave of ablence was eranted
to teacber, Domla Sayre, and a 111!1'vlee qreement was appnM!d with
the Me5p County Board of Mental
Retardall.oll for the current school
year. The board approved the use
ot the eymnutum for the alumni
dance, Hours will be 9 to mldnl&amp;llt. I
The fiDancta1 lltatement was apJII'IM(! as were bills for paymenL
Attendln&amp; the meetJne were Supt.
Bob Ord, Treuun!l' Dennie HID
and board memben, ftotler B. H11l,

Don Smlkth, S1* GIWRI', Cha·
riel Pyles and ~Evans.
!

Wllbum given prison sentence

bH... F••CMI
'

a

The Meigs County Commission·
ers approved placement of two tax
levlea before Melp County voters
at the June 8 primary at Tuesday's

cart WUbum, 26, J&gt;«tamouth.
four to 2!1 )'8&amp;I' prllon
lelltell:e Wedllelday DIOI'IIIn&amp;
wileD he ..,..and bllfln Judie
Jobn BatlOIIIn tbe Me5p Coullty
Comrnm Pleu Court to face
cbaralel rl. theft rl. drup wttll-of

·was pen a

c.

• areann.

Wllbum entered a pleas of eulltY
to an lnd5ctJMat returned by the
DecurilNI jrallt liD'Y· He was
a ~ u a NIUit ot the Nov.12.
1181 rllb:B)' at the NelloD Dnlc
Store In Pouoeroy.

'*

Georee Colllnll, county treasurer,
met with the board to discuss anew
law concernlni the deposit of active
county tunc11 In area banks. The
commlsalonl1rs will notify area
banks and m8ke a detennlnatlon of
each bank's ellglbWty as a deposl·
tory for county fundi for the next
two years.
Bob Bailey, coordinator of the

Meigs County Emereency MediCal

Service, met to cllscuss an applfca·
tlon for a federal grant to obtaiD 811
emergency power generator for the
EMS communications system.
The commlsslonerslnatructed ~­
ley to obtain a teeal opinion from
the proiecutlng attorney, Freder·
1ck Crow m, as to how to proceia
the application.
•:
All members were on hand tot
the Tuesday sesalon.
'

&lt;r
'

�Wednesday, March 17, 1982

Commentary

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, March 17, 1982

·.·.
..·.
·..

Mr. Richard de Mille of Santa Bar·
bara, whose training is in science
and philosophy, has written an ex·
cellent short ~Y in the current
issue of Natiorial Review on the
squabble over teaching in the public
schools, which he aptly caiiB, "And
God .Created Evolution." the l~d
sentence is, "There is not a sllre4 of
scientific evidence nor any 'Scriptural authority for the popular belief ·
that the cosmos was created by Carl
Sagan." Mr. de Mille, whose lather
(Cecil B.) directed and produced the
greatest biblical extravaganza · in
Hollywood history, does not set out
merely to disparage Sagan. He is, as
a man of disciplined mind, talking to
both sides of the controversy, and
asking that each behave.
Religion simply isn't a science,
and pace Mary Baker Eddy,
"Christian Science" is something ci
an oxymoron. You may believe that
God Himself was instrumental in
causing you suddenly to wake just as
the uaby in the next room was about
to suffocate. And maybe God WAS
instrumental in this act of intervention. But we are talking of
religion here, not science. Science
asks factual questions, and then
presents theories, but is careful to
avoid certitude.
Galilee, attempting an interesting
reconciliation, upheld · his
cosmological theories by saying that
that which was scientifically
verifiable we knew as certainly as if
God had revealed it to us. But we
know that scientific theories asserted as fmal are like palimpsests:
One scientific generation writes
right over what the preceding
generation asserted. That is the kind
of sin being committed by Carl
Sagan. Not in asseriing that
evolution in fact happened (in fact is
.happenlng) ; but In insisting that the
Darwinian thesis of natural selec- •
tion accounts for the movements of
evolution.
Now Mr. de Mille believes that the

"/presume, If this federal spending freeze goes
Into effect, you 'II be leaving me tor someone In
the private sector."

(:oncession bargaining

: The self-congratulatory sounds coming out of Detroit In the wake of the
coritract settlement with Ford are muted, as well they ought to be.
·: In the usual jargon of labor negotiations, the union's acceptance of a
scBled-down wages and benefits package in return for a tentative
mat&gt;agement commitment to job security is being hailed as a breakthrough.
U so it's certainly not on the same front industry negotiators have been
contesting for the last half-century. [tl fact, to a union rank and file accustomed to more of everything every three years, it may look more like a
breakthrough to the rear.
But little choice Of direction was involved. The auto workers were faced
with the necessity of easing the financial strain for the troubled automaker
or accepting the loss of large numbers of jobs as plants closed and other and
cheaper sources of parts were found for the assembly lines of those
remaining open.
,
If breakthrough isn't quite the tenn to describe what went on at Ford,
there is one that does. It's concession bargaining, and there's going to be a
lot more of it going on. Still in the auto industry, General Motors workers, _af·
ter some initial balking, now appear ready to at least talk about followmg
suit.
Rubber workers, who have just begun negotiations with major manufacturers, say they aren't. They are, however, offering a more modest package
of demands than in previous years.
The recession has a lot to do with the trend. There is, however, much
more to it than that.
What is in effect under way is a restructuring of the nation's traditional
heavy industries. Beset by soaring costs, slack domestic ~~kets and increasing foreign competition, th~y must adpt to changed conditions or go un·
der.
The auto industry - in the midlit of a well-publicized multi·biltion dollar
conversion to the fuel-efficient compact models the Japanese and Europeans
· pioneered - is a prime example.
Steel is a better one, possibly already beyond being helped murh by ~uch
first-aid measures as concessions bargaining. Its plant is obsolete, closmgs
and layoffs are widespread, imports are flooding _the home market, the U.~.
product is priced above foreign steel and there IS a world glut, much of 1t
coming from developing countries subsidizing developments of natiOnal
NEW YORK (AP)- The trouble
steel industries.
with
the supply side e':OIIomic polRestructuring an industry is a painful process. Ideally, it would be an oricy
as
currently practiced, it apderly effort that would anticipate and minimize the pain. It i~ to an exten~ in
pears.
is
that It )liSt Isn't supplying.
Japan where the Ministry of Trade and Industry on the baSIS of its reading
"Too
much
money goes into in·
of ec;nomic trends encourages expansion in fields where pr~pects are
terest
expense
- and not enough
brightest for Japanese producers and guides the gradual scaling down or
Into
new
cars.
new
homes, new facliquidation of enterprises that are no longer sufficiently productive or comtories that create Jobs, and needed
petitive.
There is nothing comparable in the United States, or Europe. Industries ·public works," said James Ste- ·
wart, chairman of Lone Star
·facing the challenge of survival are left largely to their own devices. . .
Such as concession bargaining, which is a eupherrusm for negotiahnl Industries.
Stewart said it In advertisements
reductions in the cost of labor and the size of the labor force. II is presented
placed
in 21 newspapers. "Like
as a give-and-take proposition for both management and labor, but the
you," he said, "we support the fight
meaningful giving falls almost entirely to the latter.
.
.
The job security corrunitment such as Gord workers got 1n return 1s not against inflation - but not by desgoing to deliver what it appears to promise. If Ford does succeed in over· troying the economy wtth hlgh, er·
coming its problems and restructuring itself as a profitable competitor in ratlc Interests rates."
He isn't the only one to advertise
the national and world anto markets, it will be as a much leaner and more
his feelings. Real estate and homelabor-efficient operation. There will be farfewer jobs to secure.
The same can be said for any other enterprise and industry caught up in bullder groups, both of which have
been devastated by high Interest
this painful process.
.
.
. rates, have also lake out ads to
Considering the price paid in reduced benefits and ultimately lost jobs m
the renovated industries, concession bargaining may appear to be a poor screech their anger and opposition.
Increasingly, business' displeabargain,
sure
with hlgh Interest is turning
But it's better than the most obvious alternative - no jobs at all.
Into hostility. In speeches,
Inter.

prideful intellectual disciplinarians
wbo· go out and testify, correctly,
that "religion" is not a science and
therefore does -not belong under the
name of "creationi$m" is a science
curriculum of a university have
talked themselves into their current
difficulty by being as silly, at one extreme, as the fundarnenll!lists have
been at another. To say that reciting
a COI)lJJIOn prayer at the outset of a
day's schoolwork is banned because
it is the equivalent of the establishment of religion is as silly as to say
that the universe was created 6,000
years ago in six days. And yet the
same people who will smirk at the
fundamentalists will nod their heads
approvingly when such voodoo as
that the Founding Fathers intended
to make Christmas trees unconstitutional is extruded by the
Supreme Courl.

De Mille reminds us that Darwin
himself was a reluctant Darwinian,
even as Keynes was a reluctllnt·
Keynesian. If adaptation is the
tropism for natural selection, how
did the human eye develop? The pur·
pose of the eye is to see. But without
vision, there was nothing that led to
vision: no organic impulse. Such
problelll8 with the theory of natural
selection have made Darwin just a
little un-chlc, this side of Carl
Sagan; not because of the truth of
what he said, but because of the
auspices under whicli it has been
held that evolution happened. De
Mille quotes Tom BeL'Iell writing in
Harper's (February 1976) to beef·
feet that Darwin is being discarded
but "it is being done as discreetly
and gently as possible, with a
mlnimwn of publicity."
The scientists have a right, in the

RACINE - Thursday evening at 9
p.m. the Southern Tornadoes will invade Ohio University's Convocation
Center against Old Waahington
Buckeye Trail's Warriors in first
l'OUnd actiOn of the regional tour.
nament.
.
For the rampaging Tornadoes, It
will be the third time in four years
they have reached the regionals as
one of Ohio's "Sweet Sixteen." Of
course, lhiB feat is quite an accomplishment considering there are
278Class "A" schools in Ohio.
Perhaps a good omen for the Tornadoes is the fact that two years ago
in another first round game,
Southern devastated another group
of Warriors from Frankfort Adena.
That was just the beginning of an
heroic effort that sent Southern to
the slate tournament,
Early in the season, the rornadoes
were labeled by many to Have only a
"good" season, but time has told the
true story as the proven Tornadoes
have ridden through a truly "great"
season. The Tornadoes have made
believers of many, especially opponents It has faced.
·
Southern lost its lone bout with
Class "AA" Nelsonville-York, while
the Warriors' single loss was to
Class "A" powerhouse ZanesvilleRosecrans.
In some ways both teams are dif·
ferent, but in many ways they are
much alike. Buckeye Trail has
scored 1,438 points in 21 games,
while allOWing 1,015 points this
season. The Warriors are averaging
69 points per clip offensively, while
giving up 48 points an outing.
In comparison, Southern has
scored 1,408 points in 20 games for a
70.4 average, while racking up 1,675
points for a 70 point average In 24
games. Defensively Southern has
allowed 1,033 in 20 games; 1,266 in 24
games for a 51.6 average.
The Warriors will be led into battle

schools, to uphold the discipline of
science. That which happens needs
to be examined by scientific
methods. But the "motives" of
science are finally Inscrutable. Enter religion, which aCCO$ts all of
reality, seeking an explanation. To
suggest that religion, whether as
sociology or as advocacy, )las- no
place in school is, quite simply,
special pleading.
If the secularists are out to
illegalize religion - in the public
schools, in our coinage, in our public
oaths of office, in our congresllional
liturgy - they ought to say that, and
ought not to say that they are committing the will of Madison, Jef.
ferson and Adams; even as the fun.
damenlalists have no right to design
the prisms of educational
microscopes, claiming the authority
of the will of God.

E

• supply side just ·not sJ,Jpplying
con0 m1c

Today in history

In the Reagan scenario, tax cuts
would put more money Into corporate treasuries for modernizing
and expanding plants, whlch then

Truer words may never have l!een counting in the larger cities, where
spoken on the subject than those ut- opposition strength is concentrated,
tered by the apparent winner in and quick returns from rural areas
Guatemala's presidential election.
under anny c&lt;introl.
"In Latin America," observed
But of greater interest is the likely
Gen. Anlbal Guevara, defense biggest loser ln the electon: U.S.
minister in the military regime and policy in Central America.
its endorsed candidate, "the losers
As far as Washington is con·
always speak of fraud."
cemed, who wins the election is
With excellent reason, he might secondary. AU four candidates are
have added. True, there have been to the right of center and pro-United
exceptions. For years Chile and States. Of primary importance has
Uruguay provided good examples been a reasonably fair election that
for the entire region. But the rule would legitimize the new governhas been otherwise. Latin elections . men! and make it politically easier
are usually determined not by the to provide aid in a guerrilla war that
ability of candidates to attract has received less attention in the
popular support but by who controls United Slates but could turn out to be
the ballot boxes:
a much bigger deal than the conflict
And in Guevara's own Central lnneighboringElSalvador.
American neighborhood, only Costa
As it is, the perfonnance of the
Rica has anything remotely resem- Guatemalan generals has been a bit
' bling a democratic tradition.
much even for a Reagan ad·
It is of some Interest that Guevara ministration that has made such a
was replying to allegations of fraud point of improving relations with
not only from bla moderate-- by - avthoritarian -t'el!imes throughout
Guatemalan standards- opposition Latin America. Ita human rights
but from the extreme right. The record is one of the worst. Amnesty
complaints are of delays In vote

Wl!uld:be able to turn out products
at ~ iowei-:per-unlt cost. But what
tax cu~ gtve, hlgh bol'I'OwtnC costs
appear to take away.

Why the change?

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Cwrt Strtel
Pumt&gt;ruy, bhill
114-ttt-ZIM
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-1\'IASON AREA

~~ .

~L--rlr""'T"'aad·~

~v

International has charged the gover·
nment with running a program of
murder and torture from the
National Palace "under the direct
control of (outgoing) President
Romeo Lucas Garcia.''
The Carter administratioh had cut
of! ali aid to Guatemala. The
generals celebrated the Reagan victory with pubtic fireworks, ex·
peeling that ;decision to be reversed
To their dismay, it wasn't. Only
recently and quietly has Washington
begun to supply limited aid in anticipation of an election result that
would justify a rapid increase.
At the moment, it would appear
that justll:tcatlon will be a difficult
case to make to a skeptical
Congress. In addition to the fraud
problem, there is a disappointingly
low voter turnout that may or may
not be largely the result Of the leftist
guerrillas' efforts to discredit the
election. Whichever, administration
plans still suffer.
And not only In Guatemala. The
Guatemalan election is a portent of
what may be expected in El

dicln't have to call Dr. Pickens,
however, the sheriff's office notified
Dr. Pickens and he came right
away. The nurses in the emergency
rom refused to help Dr. Pickens with
the exception of Ann Johnson.
My son required some stitches which Dr. Pickens attended to'alone.
We may have a hospital in Meigs
Coimty, but what good is it when
you're not allowed to use the doctor
of your cboice - even when he's on
the hospital staff. After all we have
to pay the bill. I'm sure others feel
as I do. - Pauline Wolfe, Racine,
Ohio.

Salvador's March 28 voting in which
the administration has much more
at slake. It has publicly and
energetically pushed for elections as
a decisive means of streng1hening
the Salvadoran government and
gaining the upper hand in the civil
war.
An outcome similar to
Guatemala's would accomplish
neither. Worse, it would further
discredit the democratic process ill
Latin America.
Elections such as those in
Guatemala and El Salvador, in
which aU political elementa are not
included and which are actively opposed for whatever reasons by
some, solve nothing. 11le fighting
will not end in either country. In
fact, it may intelisify. ·
And the options open to U.S. policy
will not become any greater or
easier. In fact, by further
discrediting democracy and linking
American Interests more tightly to
one faction, they are more IQI:ely to
be narrowed.

DOONESiiURY

ltOBERTL. WINGE'IT
BOBHOEFUCH

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S488
TO THE
1982 SOUTHERN
TORNADO
. BASKETBALL
TEAM
. '
.
DistriCt champiOns"

\

REGIONALS

10 AM til9 PM ·

•

~:

I

THE

FINAL DAY

~

.I

Pttblilher!CAJIItl'\llltr

eluding three key jumpers down
the stretch.
The Aggtes had two players foul ·
out late In the game, and Coach
Shelby Metcalf promised his team
would prepare ht'tter for Purdue.
"One more win and we go to the
Garden," he said.
,
Metcalf's sentiments were
echoed byBradleyCoachDickVersace. ~r hJs Braves knqcked off
Syracuse he said, "Just one more
game and we're In New York. I've
always liked New York."
Bradley's opponent, TUlane, wtll
be, playing for the third straight ·
game on the road, a situation not to
the liking of Coach Ned Fowler.
"It's a shame we have to play
three tough games In a row In very
hostlle environments, Instead of
getting to play maybe one game In
the Louisiana Superdorne, where
we'd have an advantage," Fowler
said after his team's 5&amp;51 second·
round win at Nevada-Las Vegas.
Dayton, wtth the best season record of the surviving teams, has the
unenviable task of playing at Okla·
hoina, where the crowd acted like a
sixth man as the Sooners edged Cal·
Irvine Ill-T7 In the second round.
"I've never seen a Cl'OY!'I as good
.in college basketball," said Okla·
homa Coach Billy Tubbs. ''They
were awesome."
Dayton has a trump card of its
own with the return of sparkplll&amp;'
guard Kevin Conrad who came
back from a case of mononucleosis
to key the Flyers' 6Hi8 w1n over
Dllnols.
·
Georgia, like Purdue, wUl have
the homecourt advantage for the
third time In the tourney when lt

i

CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE
DISTRICT CHAMPION
SOUTHERN TORNADOES

St. Patrick'S
Day

•

t,

during the last lew gamea. 'l1lb
Another aaet in lhiB week's tllt Wllrk has paid off for them. Their
group has always been e clceely Ialit will be the retum of speecly Tom victories have been good for the
team, but the last two gamea have a.-berry, who is returning from kids, the school, and the enUre Commade us closer. Whenever one per- straiPed ligaments in his ankle. munity. "
1
son gets down, someone always sCott Frederick and Nick Bostick
In closing Southern's Tornadoes
seems to pick us up." 'l1lele com- help anchor a strong bench of hope to touch down in Athena on
ments are exemplified by the great capable Soulhemers.
Thurllday then foliow the "Buclf;eYQ
effort the Tornadoes produce(I In the
Coach Wolfe said on conclusion, "I Trail" through the regiOnal 8i'la
distrlc:ts. In the first game four men just can't say enough about lhiB towards Columbus. Tickets ere still
hit double figures, while Saturday group of yowig men. 111ey are all on sale for the game at Southern·
five men broke into double digits.
good kids ,.. full of detennination HighSchool. In the preliminary mat&gt;
Both times Robert Brown came and desire. Nobody works harder f!l'
ch Ross-Southeastern (:111-3 J will through with a great game, scoring what they get than lhiB group. The face Lakeland (14-10) at 7:30p.m,
17 and 18 points respectively. The
agile big man is just now reaching r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·
his peak along the tournament ,tnUI.
The sparkplug for the "Big purple
machine" is point guard Kent Wolfe,
who has more than proven himself
as an all-district selection. Besides a
potent outside artillery, Wolfe maintains a llghtning'qulck iNide attack,
and executes the SHS playbook with
great finesse. Wolfe has been
shooting at a 21 point clip over the
entire season.
Seniors Jay Rees and Richard
Wolfe are also lntegr!ll parts of the
GOOD LUCK IN
.Tornad!l line-up. ~ is a great out•
side shooter and belps ·stabilize the
Southern offense, while fieet-footed
Richard WoUe carries a variety of
offensive weapons as well as defenPresented by the
sive secrets.
MBGS COUNTY JAYCEES
Junior Zane Beegle has come off
the bench to add offensive punch.

pressure and side liressure, and
a 1-3-1 or 1-2,-2 zone as a
secondary defense. It runs a trap 2,-2·
1 and when behind it goes to its
sticky man press.
Overall, lh!!y play aggressive
defensive ball as the 48 points per
game by its opponents suggests.
Mul Control Tempo
Offensively both clubs measure up
evenly, but defensively Southern
holds a narrow edge with Its determined play &gt;&amp;nd aggressive attitude.
Southern's own fasl break and
defensive.press also will prove to be
underlying factors. Southern's out·
side game almollt matches up with
Buckeye Trail while SHS has the
ecigMn the iNide.
Buckeye Trail gets the advantage
In re~, thus setting the stage
foranothergreatgame.
Coach Wolfe analyzed the scouting
report saying, "Whoever controls
the tempo of the game will win. The
quicker the tempo is the better we
will play." Wolfe i:ontinued, "The
key to our winning will be whether or
not we play with the intensity we
have played with all year. With the
intensity these kids played with in
the district" they could have beaten
anyone. If we are intense, we
automatically will play good offense
and good defense."
"We've become more of a team
·r - - lllllllel

faces Virginia Tech.

Publl•bt!r

PAT WHITEHEAD

handler. Jerry Jones, 6-4, a hlgh and
low post man with good rebounding
credentials, and 5-6 Steve Kasper
round out the top live. Kasper is
noted for his fine defensive play as
he and Jones average 3.5 and 5.3
· points offensively. Trail's sixth and
seventh men are f&gt;-10 Daren Roe and
&amp;-I Rudy Barnfield, who get most of
the work coming off the Warrior
bench.
Although the Warriors have a
proven team record and worthy
credentials, they are basically a two
man shooting team, depending on
Smith and Starr. This duo is the
main spark from the outside, while
Hall is the main ~ide scorer. When
trailing or in the opening minutes of
play the Warriors like to go to the
proven Mike Smith, who is a complete player with "no weaknesses."
The Warriora do not shoot much
out front, but depend greatly on
shooting from th!! wings and inside.
Its zone offense works from a oneguard offense while Its llll!n offense
is a 1·2-2 alignment. It makes a lot of
back door cuts, and likes to go one on
one with Smith and Starr.
One weakness is the fact that the
Warriors don't do too well against
pressing teams, espectaliy against
half court presses. Also they are not
very strong on its iNide game.
Defensively, they like the man-t~&gt;­
man defense with a lot of ball

field bad a worse record than
Purdue's U-13. Yet the Bollermak·
ers are still allve lor the third round
of the National Invitation Tourna·
ment and seem to be getting
stronger.
Acoupleoftactorsareworklngln
their tavor as tl1ey prepare to host
Texas A&amp;M Friday night.
First, they're coining off an tm·
presslve ~ romp over Rutgers.
Second, they have a strongpostsea·
son tradition, having finished second in the NIT In 1979, thlrd In the
NCAA In 19110 and third In the NIT
last year. ·
"We want to get this next game
and get to Ne\v York City," said
sophomore guard Ricky Hall.
"This is our seniors' last year.
They've been in three Flhal Fours
and they've never won. so we deli·
nltely want to go this year and send
them out right."
·
The Boilermakers are ted by•seJ
nlor. guard Keith Edmonson, the
Big Ten Conference leading scorer,
who bad 29 points in the Rutgers
blowout.
The game between Purdue and
Texas A&amp;M, ZO.lO, wtllcapthe third
round, which begins Thursday
night with Vlrglnla Tech, 2().10, at
Georgia, JS.ll; 1\ilane, 1~. at
Bradley, 23-10; andDayton,21.S,at
Oklahoma, 21·10.
Wlnilers of those games wtll con·
verge on New York's MadiSOn
Square Garden lor Monday night's
seml!lnals.
·
TeXas A&amp;M is coming ott a 69-ll5
Win over Washington In whlch
Claude Riley scored 17 points In-

.

Letter to the~' eaitor
Why when someone goes to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment, and request their own
family doctor, they are refused? By
this I mean the hospital tells you that
you must take the doctor on call this is a new hospital rule!
My son was injured when .the car
he was driving overturned while he
was working on the robbery of Bank·
One at Tuppers Plains. The
Emergency Squad ·took my son to
the hospital - the squad had notified
the hospital that Dr. Pickens was
requested. The hospital said they

Quick, versatile Tony Starr at 1).10
is BT's second best shooter, warrning the nets at a steady 13.5 clip.
Starr is also a very good ball-

By Tbe .4Moo'e1ed l're88
Nobody In the orlg!nal 32-team

Discrediting democracy..______n_on_c_ra_iff

Today is Wednesday. March 17. the 76th &lt;!ay of1982, There are 28!l days
left In the year. This is St. Patrick's Day.
Today's highlight In history:
In 1776, American revolutionaries forced the British to evacuate Boston.
On this date:
In 1921, the Polish Constitution was established.
In 1962, the Soviet Union accused the Unlted States of lighting an "undeclared war" In VIetnam. and demanded the removal of U.S. m!iitary
lorces there.
In 1970 the United States used Its first veto In the United Nations, joining
Britain ht rejecting a resolution calling on U.N. members to cut all com. munlcatlons with Rhodesia.
,
In 1979. Israel said Egypt's published text of the Mideast Peace Treaty
was "lull of inaccuracies" as U.S. officials made a futlle effort to sell the
pact to other Arab nations.
.
- Ten years ago: President Nixon asked Congress to place a moratorium
on all court orders that would require busing to achieve school
degregatlon.
Five years ago: Sources reported Zaire's major copper mining center of
Kolwezi had been captured by rebel forces from Angola.

~m~

views, newsletters, letters to Congressmen, advisories to clients
and, above all, in a wholesale reluc·
lance to Invest. President Reagan
hlmself has revealed hJs lrrlta tlon
about ' the high rates, although
prornlslng a sharp decline by )ater
this year.
Business people, lenders especially, seem far less convinced of
that outcome, and that very attitude may be part of the problem.,
Because of uncertainty, lenders
now seek prernlums on loans they
make, premiums that are refiected
in the huge spread between Inflation and interest rates, now more
than 6 percentage points, the highest In many decades.
Those high rates are generally regarded as a major, and probably
primary, reason for a rare decline
In plant and equipment spending
plans, which were among the economic goals most desired by
Reagan.

. .4

by alkllstrlct player of the ye'ar
Mike Sn!lth, a 6-2 man wtth a 27 point
average. Smith is marked as the
Warriors' best shooter and driver, a
complete ball player. Joining Smith
inside Is 6-4 Wayne Hall, who works
both the high and tow post for a 9.5
shooting clip. Hall, Is. dubbed as
Buckeye Trail's best rebounder.

Purdue still alive
in NIT ·tournament

~ -·

.

3

Southern faces tough opposition in regionals j

God created evolution ?.____w_u_Lia_m_F_.B_uc_kl_ey_J_r.

Berry's World

The Daily Sentinel-Pope

Pomeroy Middlepott, Ohio

"

�flle~p•

4 The Dcaily Sentinel

PonMIIOf

17 1982

Weclruictcy, Motd:J7, 1912 ·

Milidl•pi.rt. Ohio

Scoreboard

.Weese leads SVAt::
all leagUe selectio~s

Boys scores
....... ,.. . ,

....
-·a.m.
.............
._

01ll6t lllplltMII..,. • • • •

CHESHIRE - ~ at a pionshlp as weJ1 as loop crown.
OVersll. nine Melp , CCIUIItianll
~ ol SVAC glrla' buketball
were
named to 111""•1 ...._ IJI.
CCI!ICMI, Mel Weese who led the
cluding
Elaine Smllb ol !!c!td"'m;
Southern Tomadoettel to another
and
Sarlh
Goebel and T811111l)' 1Ju4.
undisputed SVAC balketball cbaJno
.
son
of
~aatenr,
who"""' flnt team
pionslup was voted as the SVAC'i
selectlOIIS.
·
Incldenta11y,
~
MOlt Vllluable Player for the second
a1lo.
claimed
the
II4ICIIona1
chiJD.
year In a row. Weese Is a ~harp­
plonship
and
ruJIIIel'4lllillot
In the
shooting junior guard and a talented
SVAC.
ballhandier for the Tornadoett.es,
Following Is a Clllllp!et«, SVAC
whO claimed the sectiQOal cham-

Sign-up date set
The MJddleport Youth League will
ELAINE 11M1'111

SARAH GOEBEL

TAMMYmm&amp;ON

SoatbmJJr.

EasteraSr.

EuteraSr.

have Its • up for bueball and sof·
tba1l on Saturday, March 20, and
Saturday, March 27, from 10 a.m. to
1 p.m.
Middleport Vlllage Hall.
~tlon fee Is $'7. Anyone with
quest!OIIS may ca119,92-7873.

a'

Will meet Sunday
lo meeting ol coache$ and parents
of the partlclpanta In the Middleport

Day . Roth ID, HamliiDD Bdn '72
Urbana 6&amp;, Whlteba1l 61

_.__
-·It

Kulas City 2. Montreal 1, 11 lnntr.p
Atlanta 15, Blltlmott 0
Lol Anadet 6. Deuol1 2, 10 irutDp
Pltt.t.up 10, MJruaota l
Tmmto 1, Bolton l
1ftas 5, New York tAL) 2
Cblcqo (NLI 12. Seattle (SS' 3

ANGIE SPENCER

TONJA SAUJER

Hourable Meotloa

SecoadTeam

CINDY EVANS

IARENWOLFE
SecoadTeam

HOIIOI'IIble MelltloD

0...-

.,....,...oam.

New Ycrt (NL) w. ClnclMai It Tam·
pe, Fla.
Atlanta VI, Lot ~ at Vern Brach,

11a.
8oeton vs. Houston at Cocoa. Fla.
New York jAL) VI . MontrN.I 11 West
Palm Beach, Fla.
Chlcqo lAL) VI. P1tt1Wtgtt at Brederlton, fla .

Toronto VI. St.Lools at St.hlenbur'l,
Fla.
Phlla~ptda "'· Detroit at Lllkellnd,

Vorl!, New Yorll HI017.

Smith got support from senior
guard Mike Carton, who added 22

(!allipolis' Sarah Evans, first team.All Ohio
vtously high per-game average or
By GEORGE STRODE
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Her 42.1 for a single season.
Her unprecedented 74 points
co4ch, Dale Shennan, says or
Joanne Ineman, The Associated came against Medina Buckeye.
. Press' Class AA State Girls Player Shana Robertson of Cincinnati
of the Year: ''She's Just not a girls Country Day, former pro great Oscar Robertson's daughter, held the
~ketball player. She Is a basket·
previous sll!gle game record or 56.
baU player."
Ineman edged another two-time
ineman's figures support him.
'The ~foot·7 senior guard ranks as first-team All-Ohloan, .Caroline
the all·tlme scoring champion, boy Mast of Wanaw River VIew, for
or iirl, for Ohio. She averaged 4.'1 the No. 1 player honors. Like In·
points In her last prep season and eman, the ~11 senior Is being recruIted by 100 or more colleges.
32.11n her 93-game career.
Mast, a 69 percent shooter !rom
She scored a state girls record 74
points In one game against Medina the floor, hsd scored almost 1,700
Buckeye and was never under 30 points beading Into tournament
points In a single contest In 1981·82. play this winter. She also had col·
"Her shooting IS what sets her lectedmore than l,rul rebounds In
apart. Her range Is usually 20 feet, • her career.
She averaged 29.7 points In leadbut sometlmeB It's out to 30 feet.
Ing
the Black Bears Into the state
She's a complete player, however.
semifinals
Thursday night against
She's very unselfish," said
Chagrin
Falls.
Sherman.
Sarah Evans of GaWpoUs and
The AP's ClassAAStateCoach of
Jenoy
G1111gan of Reading, both
the Year Is Larry Phillips, who hss
secoild·team
all-staters In 1981,
guided ClnclMatl Reading Into the
moved
up
to
the
ftrst team to join
state semlllnsls for the second
Ineman
and
Mast.
Evans, a 11,1~
stralgl)t season. Phillips led the un·
senior,
averaged
28.4
points and
beaten Blue Devils to 20 straight
18.4
rebounds
In
her
last
prep sea·
regular season triumphs.
son.
GWigan,
a
5-5
senior,
directed
'The selections are made with the
· recommendations of a statwlde Reading's attack as a point guard
panel of sports writers and and still ~ound time to score 20
points per game.
broadcasters.
'
Ineman's 2,!1l8 career polpts. - Completing the No. 1 unit were
rank her as the all-time Ohio scor- ~9 Lori Hartis of Defiance Tlnora
Ing leader. Rex Leach of VIenna Is 5-8 Kay RudsW of Columbus Cen:
the boys scoring king with 2.~ tennlal and ~8 Darcy Hultman or
points. She also beat Leach's pre- Massillon Tuslaw. Harrts and Rud·

sill are seniors and Huffman a JunIor . . Harris averaged 25.5 points,
Huffman 23.3 and Rudsill 20.5.
Second-team · selections were
Barbara Straker or Steubenville '
Catholic, DanlelleCarsonofPetersburg Springfield, Dee Turner of
Wheelersburg, Toni Roesch of ColumbJis Hartley, Polly Weaver of

points.
Hamnton Badin, 20-S, was led by
Jeff Eyl with 20 points.

Bryan, Lilla George of Bellefon·
Iaine and Diane Davis of

c - . r.llllliJnedla,

Pomeroy,
OI1IG
- · tn-2151.
P'JOIII!•
paid
ot ..........,.,
ONG. -

_ ,,.-tool

Fla .

-

DOWNING.cHILDS
INSURANCE
AGENCY

were Lisa BarcusofBrUllantBuck·
eye North, Sarah Starling of Kinsman Badger, Molly McCaugherty
Qf Sunbury Big Walnut, and Lilla
Bradley of Lima Bath.

115 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Off.

COLUMBUS, Ohk:l (API - The AIIOd·
aled Pteu' 111:2 Clau AA All-Ottlo IIIah
ldlool

111'11

bulcftblll JMc.oUonl, mlde

011 tblt NtOIM'Ieldatlona

ot

1 atatewkle

p.,..el cl aporta wrtttn and br'odcutl!'n:
~ nJI8T 'I'ZAM - J&lt;Ur~t lnfman. Ol·

INl8d Falh, ~11 Sr., UO polntl per
pme; C&amp;roUnt Malt. waruw Rlwr
VIew, &amp;.11 Sr., 211.7; Lori
Defiance
'nnon, 5-9 Sr., ZJ; Kay RudiW. Cdwnbw; Cn.ll!nnlal. fl.8 Sr., ID; Jenny GLIII·
pn, anctnnad Redq, ~!I Sr., :10.0; ...
rU Ev.... G...... f.l%; Sr., IU; Darey Huffman, M&amp;IIWorl 1\Waw, s.8 Jr.,

ly ..,_ - t i o n and the Amorlatn
N.....,.perPublilllei'I-Uon,NaUonal
AdverUJing 1\eprnentatlvt. Br~nham
Ne.npopor Salet, 723 '111inl A..,..., New

......
Indiana

,..,.._, -

Nardi,

""""""
""'""'
Kansas

Clnclnn.~ti

Lata,.... ..,_,.. w.. _
Wftl

IIP100IAL JIIEN'IION - Pat Lutn, BellvWe Dear Fork;

·

, JJaftY """"'·

lie: ?alii Plllllo,
llwwl. S p o - C&amp;llloll&lt;: -

C&amp;111C&gt;

Fry,

Oty; Anna Pan1ll, SpobSbawnee; MonJca GrUIJol, Well MlHOn

Tlpp

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

Atlanta at Boa10n

Loa Al1ples ik Utah
Denver at Pboenix

-·-

K.a.... C1ty at Goldi!n State

Golden Stall&gt; at Pnrtland
N...... _ . . _

p--

w.a.c

x-NY Islanders 41 11 I! :wo :21
NY Rangen
33 11 13 H 2611

Phlladl!lphla
Plttsbw'Jh
W&amp;ablngtOII

Whole fryers ...~~-"

3C II 8 286 28l
71 3.1 ll 2&amp;6 291
~ 3'T 1D 3ll 2!15

ur.z

•.

$

99

Sa"usage............~ •.
FRENCH CITY
.
'
W,teners ................
·

m

J

GRADE A

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

•......,..Gamel

3 MOII(b ...... ... ................. 111.111
IM- .......... ................ IZJ.It
!Year .................. ...... .. . ~•

12 OZ. PKG.

79
76
ti&amp;
!'i6

Mamo-

u

17 .JZII 19.\ 101
10 :II) 117 116
3!1 'll 15 261 226 frl
31 26 H 31.8 :ll6 76
42

.'

3li

'

.
'

..........

'I

-_. _

:o;

~

32 19 :II 311 Z6

1M

211 2t 1J 280 .D)

88

:11 l'T e m lll
2&amp; 1\ 1(1 2!15 322
17 l8 16 261 l16
L8 u ~ ... 3U

62

4.1 17 13 316 27t
2tl J&gt; 16 Dl n

es

Vancouver

24 3.1

14 ll.l llil

62

Lol A114Jelel

:U :M l5 710 ll4
11 f.1 11 :n&amp; 311

~1

Clolc...
Toronto
Jleuooil

X•Eclmonton

a.tpry

,,

:H

!l(l 34 16 2.16
CUnpbe1l C ' cau

Wlnnlper
S&lt;.Looil

.."

"-

qo&amp;ora6o

-·-

m
M)

48

FLORIDA

99

tiS

Strawberries ..... ~~-

x-d lnched ftr11 place In dlvsloo.
' Hartlonl1, Ql.ebec 5

• Bolton .3, ButfUo 3, tSe
• WI...... 7,

•

St."""'
,.,..

3

w1

GMnts

Philadelptlll 11 NY Ringen
, VattcouYer at Waallift«(on
, ~ at Toronto
•\YlMIPfl It MitlnHoU.
•NY lllandrn 11 Colorado

FLAVORITE

P!ttabw'Jh al Edmonlon

..........,..o......

Calpcy at U.
j

~

Spread•••••••••••••••••
32 OZ. TUB

,St.lollll 11 Detroit
, Butlato at Hartford

Odcqoll~

vucouver at M011trPal

NCAA pairings

.,

.

ICAI'I' IUEOIONAL
....
h ... ,.....
Mardi . . . D

AI-N.C.

·'•

. ~ 61'121 ..
• .. 3/89'

Keep warm by the light
of the Moonlighter.:-

•

• Memphla Sta~ (:M-41 vt. VLUanova flJ..o.
7)

MIHAI1'I' aBGIONAL
. . . . . . . . Pial

-..:1111 . . .
t rn, All.

'!

"' . .

Loo1JYt1ll!l (%1-li

...--·

_,to
'&gt;ilt Rated ate. 700 BTIJI

per hout

glow Cfllll. . . prwtty pri1111
, Hundnldl ol UNti*lau~elt'a

...••
COCONUT CUSTARD PI£ ...... •2•· ...••
-fiUII."
11 ••
'DINNER ROLLS • • • • • • 121'1 ,.••,.
flESH
••
. ~ 3/';Jll ••
·fiLLED ECLAIRS
"
I

•

- '

I •

ti

'
'

; f

·

portable. 119.9% fullllltclency

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASOII, W. VA.
\I

•

I

..

I

I

I

I

,. fiUIIWU

I '
' I

( 3:)..6)

FLAVORITE

......-

....... a

MluoUJ1 (l'l-3)
w . Kanaaa St.

--AL
..........
..............

(ieoqE1own.

&lt;n-91

t _,,..,

7.250Z.

Mac. &amp;ch·eese..

oz.
lzza ••••••••••
13.5

D.C. {2'7-6} YL Frelno St.

(2'1·l)

ldatlo {21·2)

'YL

Ori¥Jn Sl

lal-4) '

"

Transactions

FLAVORITE .

GOLD MEDAL

PINTO BEANS

FLOUR

~a . 4f$}OO

pK. or LT. BROwN

.

LB. BOX

2/$1:

Limit One Per Customer
Good Qnlv at Powell's
Offer expires Mar. 20, 1982

Limit One Per Customer

.,
I'

''f

••

$

t:M-51 vs. Vlr-

'il:itmWmwllUIIII UlGION.U.
Aa; I ab.-J,.,..

... a

Lilli

Dl

..... fliJ)

l;t:&gt;7l

emtrgenclel. And throughout lhe
)'ell, IIJe UL' Hlted Moonlighter II il
su,.
cut dawn on )'Dilr fuel

MJm!lota

~·JIIrmlnC!'Iam

Bolton ~

GLAZED DONUTS ••••

24

7

YL

1 Houlon {2:).1) YL

on camPina IIP.IO ~tlon IPOI~
6r IIHp'll'li tlilety lfleuurw ln

HAWTHORNE MELLODY

29 Cottage Cheese ....

North CaroUIUI (:JI.l) VI. Alat.ml (If·

Ooemn up to 3e hou,. on:-.7
loons of kat'Diene. The Moon

I

Jll)

um, Phlladfiptl11 91

Phoenbc llt, Houltoft )[8
Denver 15&amp;, Utatl 1311
Ia Ana*ll2), Por1.1al:d 1tll

''
''

huter WIH give It to you, UghL heat,
c:ooltlng turf-. eco~ Takt It

.

8\!

w....._
"'· ar
DWau

Mflwa~

You can ask a lot from the Kllro·Sun•
Moonlighter-and lh'- versatile

PHONE tn-M2f

.547

ll

Detrdt 114, San

lYellr . . ......... .. . ... •.•. ..•... tat.ID
RalaO.Io... Oiola

HEARING TESTS SET

1

1\!

•lJ

a.-. !II\

SlltnoA\h . . .. ,,, ,,,, r, ,, ,,,,., ,.,, fJO...

• •

who has trouble hearing Is welcome to hove a tea;ln tes
using modern electronic e&lt;JUipment to determine If his loss ~ on t
wlhllcnedhmav be helped. Some Of the CBU!Iel Of hearing loss will be ex~
Pa
and diagram• Of how the •ar works will be shown
·
We Aloo Service anCI Rtpalr All Makeo Of Hurlni Aids
Ba"trles And Supplies For All Mak" l'or Stlt
.
IF YOU CANNOT COME IN'
CALL THE HOTEL I'OR A HOME APPOINTMENT ·

"~

San Anlt'IIIO llt, New York tl
Indiana liB, SN.Itle 96

,,••I

!'nvone

·"'

.m
.ra

1\!

POrtland

I}

BELTONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
MEIGS INN-: POMEROY, OHIO

18~

Son 01&lt;10

a

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By
Mr. H. W. Mattlllgly

.1311

&lt;l

l'hoelllx
GoklenStau-

.
1
3 Mun&lt;h ' ........... ..... , ........ flU!

CINCINNATI (AP) - Green Yankees as free agenl Knight
shirts that fonner Cincinnati Reds · was traded to the Houston Astros.
players wore In past St. Patrick's
Ruhl said the Reds began wearDay games are a hot-seWng Item In Ing green unllorms on St. Patrick's
Cincinnati this year.
Day five years ago.
Two men waited all night Tues"'The first year we did It, we kept
day_ for_ the Reds downtown gttt It a secret from the players untlllt
shop to open so they could pay $00 was time to dress' for the game. I
for one of the shirts. Jerseys with was down for that one. It was a tun
the name of George Foster, Dave
thing," he said.
Coillns, Ken Grllfey, Ray Knight
The team started seWng the Jerand nine other former players went
seys last year to rid Itself or "quite a
on sale this morning.
collection" of shirts . or former
During the winter, Foster was players.
traded to the New York Mets, Grif"We think It's tun to get things
fey was traded to the New York like that back In the hands of the
Yankees and Collins left for the fan,' \ Ruhl said.

THURSDAY
MARCH 18
9 a.m. to noon

.
".

.

·~
'll

l8

...l.oo.,.,
.., "" ·"' .,. ..." .. .
.......,..Gum. ·""

IIA0.8IIIIICIUPTIONI

Green shirts hot selling items

For Pomeroy, Ohio

-

:J)

12
12

Padlk21
42 12

No .-npllooa by mall pormltt.d In tow..
when! home c•rrler RrVice ll•v•llable.

MII..,_Unloo: AJny Ilk...,, Bealarnln l4M.

Ute

&gt;I\!

.C':I

21

40

City

sUbacnbtr1 nol dalrinol to pay the catTier
II'IIJ mnU in alvance dinct to 1be DaUy
Sentinel (II • 3, • (W 12 month tuil. Credit
willbtlliv"'carri«""""montll.

Failure of Ashland 011 to grant Jim and Bev lower
gas prices so we can compete willl ·our compelllors
and make a fair profll, we will not sell any gasoline
after the following date: March 17, 1982.
We will be open for all other phases of our
business from 10:00 a . m. to 8:00 p.m. We are sorry
for this inconvenience. We thank you for your
patronage.
JIM &amp; BEVERLY BAILEY

Doni"""""·
U.. Cline,

"""" Kim - . -

RHdJna.

·"'
....
., ....
....

Jl

Ul4h

In Tuppers Plains, Ohio

w- ,_

.... OoOoma. Sl ~

14\1
17\!

WLTGFOAr.

=..~=--~·=
-,_,..W_.M_

Molly McCiuPert)', Sunbury BIJ Walnut,
s.6 !ir., IH; LIA Bncnty, Uml S.UI, 5.9
Jr., X.O; KrlRI G~. SprtftlbOI'C., H
Jr.. 16.0: Janr Pbend, Cbi1J1n Fall, 51
Jr., Zl6.
PlAYER OF YEAR - JoaMt Ineman,
Olmtted Falll.
OOACII OF \'IWI - Larry P,..lpo.

13~

14

29

Dllli..

, . . _ -th;

t8lt Wamm; l:lllbl» ~. fkdr: HOI;
S\lal\ DillOw, COil GJOW; 'l'flrellSwlf..

t-root Sr., tu: s.rat.

-.

San Antoruo

.

-

WD'I'EitN OONirERENc&amp;

TO OASOLINI CUSTOMIRS 0,
8 &amp; J SIRVICI STATION

-Habt,~-WoaUall: Both Bamo1t. VO&gt;

Starl.lna". Klntman Blldaer. ~ Jr., 19.0;

..
38

••

21

HOIUtorlat Atlanta
Stattit It [)relrtJit

Jdf IrwiR.

.... - - J&lt;lm Krapr, Falrland: ..... Lanllo -

"~~
17

·"'
..406.

36

IC

Clevelanl

Tawil Noll, l..ancallr Fatrtllld Uftklrl;

'l1fiiW T8AM - Ula Batall, BtUiialU

33

.,
"

""""'

/ NOTICE

O&gt;loan*--

Onlb - !dorral. CarruD;

3~

.lfMl

.lm

C!tic'lijo alllJ!IW ' '

M-.. . . _.

.114

...

21

Clolc ...

'

lloy1&lt;lo ......, J ..l:i Colo. ~ Hamlim ~ SaNty Kntbl, a.wmu.

....

.
.," .,

Unlly ~ c.Md; Joy

BrtoP; , _
Wes1fall; Mary"'-

GB

31
·"'
.439
._...,_
"

Mllwa-

h

S&amp;roND ftA.M - Bl..rbarl Straker,
StalbalvWe catholic, 5-1 Jr., 17.9; l)u..
le~ Carlon. Petenbw'l SprindeJd, H
Sr.. 1~.0; Dee 1\lmer. WheelentiurJ, 5-10
Sr., lfU; Toni RoNcll, Cdumblll Hanley,
H Sr., 14.3; Pcily WNwr, Bryan, ~
Sr.• Z .O; ~ Ceoqe, BeOdonta!ne, 5-10
Sr., 25.3; Diane Davia. AllltalNll, ~ Jr ..

32
32
3'1

Saa ~ at New .Ieney
Wuhlnalm at PhlladeJph.la
Saa Q!!n at C1eYeland

err-

·"'

18

New Yon

.

Pd.

13

Wuhfrwtori

~ASTER , Send- ton.. O.Hy
Sentind.lll C.UotSI., Punerc&gt;y,Ohlot:i'le.

L

I&gt;

NewJmoey

""""'
Bftnda Vlmbl.
can ~·~
·
..._ 'Ia·
IIIII ........ B•
I (, Bllcty, 8nn.

1'!.3. ..

w

&amp;wodo W1llltmu, Cllotoo: .....
Lautli.Sl-...:Mlcbolle-lfumn; Pat tc.dtr, s.r.uky 1t. Mary;

O
y -11Qllpp&lt;Wa:
NwoL111
• BtlellyStadfr, Ntw La·
"'"""" Pa.,. s..lbor1ond. Kllll Millo

Harril:

&amp;.ac~ceye

PH. 992-2342

LaRM ..... ~­

Olmy, H""""

ltA8TEKN CONFERENCE

l'hlladolphia

ow. ... watVIqblilll

1981-82 Girls ¢
Class AA All-Ohio Team

--..

NatiQul • shOd ,....,....• .._

....

Pnoo, lnlond [)oj.

OnoYeor .. . ....... .. .. .. ........ • IIUII
SINGLBCOPY
PRICF.II
Dolly ........... .. ............. !ICenll

Ashtabula.
Making the third ieam all-state

WAFER THIN BONEtESS

Pro standings

claa

One~~~~~-·-.~.~.
Ono MoniL ....................... lUI

$ ·99
Pork Chops....... ~~ ..
.
$ 29
Ground Beef......L~~

at Miami

Cle\lt'laOO vs. Chicaao fNL) at Mesa,
Arb.
MUwaukee vs, San FrandJco at Scoltldale. Arb.
San Dleio w . SeanM&gt; at Tempe, AriL
cattromla w. Qaldand at Plloenlx

Jne.,

I!IJBICRIPTlON IIATD

'II . Bal~

Kansas City

Texas vs. Mtnnesola at OrlaiKio. Fta.

1: • t.r.

night.

l'ulllllhln!l

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH MARCH 20, 1982

Calllomla 6, San Franc&amp;cc. z
San Diego ll, MUwaukee 4.
OUiaNI ~
I
Meldoo Clty Redl 6, S..ttle (SS ) 2

,.

Pullliol'&lt;d every ~~~e..-., Moncloy tllr&lt;lulh
Friday, Ill Court street. lw the Ohio Valley

298 SECOND ST.
-. POMEROY, 0.

anctnnau 3, HOill10ft 1

Youth League has been set for 6::.1
p.m. Sunday at Mlddlepprt Vlllage
Hall. Election of officers will be
held.
,---------

·DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Sophomore Steve Smith fired In 23 points
to lead defending Class AAA high
school boys state basketball cham·
pion Dayton Roth to ana).72 victory
over Hamnton Badin in the Class
AA regional semlDnals Tuesday

SuldiJ 10 am·10 pm

.....

New York (NLI 6, Olkqo (ALl 0

Second Team .
Nikki Thaxton, North Gallla;
Loretta GIII11Pf'"· Kvoer Creek;
Laren Wolfe, Southern ; Karen Sfltt,
Hannan Trace ; Taoja Salser,
Southern.
Honorable Mention
CindV Evans. SOUthern; Deanna
Cline, Southwestern; Angl• Spenc:er,
Easlern; Tona Georg.,, North
Gallla; CathV Morrison, North
Gallia; Amy Roush, Kyger ,.c reek;
Hope Baird, Kyger CreeW; Lisa
Triplett, Hannan Trace; Debby
Montgomery, Hannan Trace; Cassie
Sheets, Eastern.

ADI..W. .. Ihld

Mon..s.t. • 1111·10 pm

su...... 13. l'blladeloll1a •

western.

Dayton Roth wins

51\IR£ HOURS:

Exhibition
scores

~raster:.
"'
First Tum
Elaine Smllh, SOUthern; Sarah
Goebel, Eastern; Barb Edwards,
southwestern ; Tamrnv r Hudson,
Eastern: Tonva McNeal, SOUth-

The lhily Sentinel
fuilnJ. ., · ·

I

~·: j
,,

•
•
•

: 5-LB. BAG

89¢

Limit One Per customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Mar. 20, 1982

••••••••

�Wedneiday, March 17, 1982

WedneSday. Marth 17, 1982

Pomeroy Middlepor!, Ohio

It The Daily Sentinel

. Page

By A18oclated Press
It had been a year of great optimIsm for DePaul basketball Coach
Ray Meyer.
Behind him was the season of his
greatest discontent. The playerS he
brought to practice last Oct. 15 In
Chicago was mlnus a pair of superstars - Mark Aguirre and Clyde
Bradshaw - who sometimes detracted from his team's performance more than they contrtbuted.
The coach had characterized the
1980-81 Blue Demons as having
been selfish and lackadaisical.
They seemed sluggish and dlstnterested, almost, when they took their
No. 1 national ranklng btto the
NCAA tournament and lost In the
flrst round for the second season In
a row.
"This Is a much easier group to
coach," the 68-year-old dean of college coaches said earlier this sea·
son. "Last year, we had two
superstars. These kids play more
llke a team."
The past two seasons, DePaul
had gone Into the tournament
ranked No. 1 bt the nation, and
Meyer Joked that this year's No. 2
ranklng might he a good omen.
"Now that we're not ranked No.
1, we'll wln ln the first round,' ' he
Joked.
,
Meyer, the wlnnlngest active
coach In major college, ended his

By George Strode
-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The people who should know, lhe competing
coaches, predict Columbus Northland, Warsaw River VIew and Anna wtll
wln the high school glrls basketball tournament titles thls weekend.
In the annual Associated Press pre-tournament poll, Northland edged
East Cleveland Shaw for the favorite's role In Class AAA, River VIew was
.a sUm pick over Cbtclnnatl Readbtg ln Class AA and Anna was a solid
choice to win Its second straight Class A crown.
The coaches of the three favorites reacted bt different ways.
"We take It as a compliment," said Northland's Elaine Boltz, "but the
proof ls bt the pudding. At this pobtt, any of the four teams can win lt. It
takes a little hick."
•
Northland, which faces Clnclnnatl Oak Hills bt theClassAAAsemlfbtals
Friday In St.John Arena, was named on slx ballots to five for Shaw. Oak
Hllls drew one vote and Hubbard, which plays Shaw In the allier semlflnal
Friday, was not selected by one coach.
"I don't thlnk It means a thing. The regions are so different. I've noticed
that bt scouting all the other teams except the team we play," said River
V""' Coach D11-ve Mast.
"U there's gobtg to be a poll, I'd rather be picked as the favorite," Mast
said. "I don't thbtk It's a detriment at all. Everybody realizes you stlll have
to win It on the noor."
The 19T7 Class AA state champions take on Chagrtn Falls ln a semlflnal.
game Thursday night. River VIew was selected by five coaches while
~adlng drew four first-place votes.
• Reading, a state semifinalist for the second straight season. will face
O_pper Sandusky In the other Class AA semifinal Thursday night. Upper
Sa,nctusky was picked to wln the title by two coaches and Chagrtn Falls was
tnrntloned once.
J , Coach Jane Jones of· Anna views her team's favoritism as a minus,
·4a¥ing, "It adds a little pressure. But these kids have tuid pressure all
~son. I usually don't mention It (belng the favorite) to the kids. We've got
100 many other thbtgs to worry about."
. -: The Rockets, who play Zanesville Rosecrans In a Class A semlflnal
Fliday night, were lhe championship choice of eight coaches. Rosecrans
:frp:! New Washington Buckeye Central, playing Archbold In the semlfltlals, were selected twice each. Archbold failed to draw a vote.

40th season at DePa)ll, and perhaps
his last before retiring, with yet
another NCAA flrst·round dlsappolntment, losing 82-75 to Boston
College last Sunday. He called It a
" bitter pW to swallow," but said
that this year, at least, his team had
gone down fighting.
DePaul, by the way, was not
alone among upset victims ln the
NCAA Midwest Region, No. 10
Tulsa and No. 12 Arkansas also
were upset. Only fifth-ranked Mlssouri advanced, leavlllg 'Missourl,
HoustOn, K!lnsas State and Boston
College to fight It out ln that region.
The .top four seeds In the other three
regions all advanced to the round of
16.
Last week, The Associated Press
prognosticator picked 20 of the 32
winners for a percentage of .625.
The picks this week: East at Raleigh, N.C.
No. 1 North Carolina vs. No. 13
Alabama - Both ·teams rely on
frontcourt play. Alabama Is brulsbtg, but the Tar Heels have Perklns
and Worthy. North Carolina by
four.
·
VIllanova vs. No. 9 Memphis
State- Memphis State's Keith Lee
won't be stopped Just yet. The Tigers by three.
In the regional flnal, North Carolbta by two. Midwest at St. Louis
Boston College vs. Kllnsas State

_Boston College won't sneak up on
Jack Hartman's crew. Kansas
State by one.
Houston vs. Missouri- Steve Stlpano!'lch &amp; eo., have had time to
recuperate from minor lnjurles.
Mlssourl by four.
Kansas Sate beat Missouri In the
TJgers' last game of the regular
season. This time, MissOuri by
three ln the Midwest final.
No. 3 VIrginia vs. AlabamaBirmingham - Coach Gene Bartow brtngs the Blazers home to
meet VIrginia but comes up one
pobtt short.
No. 20 LoulsvUie vs. No. 7 Mlnn~
sota _ Denny Crum has Louisville
moving, but when they run lnto
Mlnnesota, It's the Gophers by four.

the exciting Spring

Connie

WHAT IS THE
SUNBURST AMERICAN
CLUB?
It is an
exciting
• .. ,~oc:tor safe"
.
concept in
indoor tannin
Ava
le
only
to
members. We make' it
possible for you to enjoy a
year 'round tan in one of
our Sun Tan Centers.

HOTKNOTnr.:;

~fled

lilac ApiiCOt Blue

Everythrng yOu buy II Kroger 1'1 gUI18f11118d for VOlJI 10.. 1
ui~Ktron rlg8rdlela ol m~nullc:turer II y0u ,11e not Sllll ·
fied . Kroget" wr it ,~ ~· rtetn ft'llh the ume brlnd Of 1
comptrlb'e bflnd Of reiuna vour ourcl\ue prrce

Pomeror, OH.
"localedallheEndoflhe
PomtJoy-Mason Bridge."

tr;;2~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~;;;~

CHAPMAN SHOES

Save the tree5
for summer shade.
Naturalizer's new Spring
polyurethane bottoms look
as good as wood , and walk
vvth a lightness and Aex no
wood-bottom ever dreamed of.
Jeans 'em. Skirt 'em. Take 'em
on vacation. You've never
owned shoes that travel so light
and go so many Fun places.

CAMEL

::wtnner.

LEGAL NOTICE
- '
The Public Ulililies Com·' mission of Ohio has set
:. for public hearing Case
;: No. 81-302-EL-EFC (sub.; file A) to review the fuel
'. procurement practices and
·~ policies of Ohio Power
;1 Company, the operation
,, ol its Electric Fuel Com:: ponent Clause, and related
.• matters. This hearing Is
:: scheduled to begin at 1:00
·: p.m . on Monday , March
:; ·22, 1982, attheCityCoun'• ell Chambers, 218 Cleve·, land Ave., S.W., Canton,
Ohio 44702 .
_. All interested parties will
·:: . be given an opportunity
;,. ·to be heard. Further inter;: •matlon may be oblained
; ' by contacting the Com,· mission.
.
• , THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
'

POMEROY, OHIO
992-5272

r-----------L----------------------:---1

AMERICAN MOTORS

presents the Used Car
Retlr,ment Plan.
AMC wW pay you direct
UP

The Reds scored again In the
as Wayne Krenchlcki scored

TO

CASH
TRADI·IN
BONUS.

The older your car. lhe more you
geLand lhis extra cash Is on top o1
your AMC/ ,Jeep/Renault Dec;:ller's
best deal and highesl trade-in
allowances. No trade-in? You'll
sllll get d $600 cash bonus when
you buy a new AMC car.
Trade in your gas guzzler on a

-~

COMMISSION OF OHIO

By: Oavld M. Polk,
• • .. ·
Secretary

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

.... . . . . ,....ggc

~·····

~

Cocktail ... ~=·

J

n ....
Stach
r ...... c..

Potted
Meat ..... .. ~-=~·

Shampoo . 1~-· ·

16 · 01 .

costcun11.a

IHimftiiiOll

Air

lath
Tlssue ...... Uoll
....

FrtShwaen ~:::

ROLL. , . S2.77)
B~EF

~unnc•e's

Country Sausage .I

CHUCK

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Roast ·

ti .S.D .A. PRIME FRESH MILK· FED
SHOULDER CUT

Roast .. .. .. .. .. lb.

WHOLE FRESH BOSTON BUTT
$LICED INTO

$129

Pork Steaks.. .. .. .. lb.

I

KIOGEI SKIM. HI NU 2-._
LOWFAf . CHOCOLATE 01

Homogenized Springdale ·
Milk ·
2% Milk

aac $JIB

APPLES •.•. ~ , .s~g. 99•

TO HAVE A NEW CAR.

I

• • • • • • •

B•ISCUI'tS .. .. .. .. . .. ..

24 oz. Armour

KRAFT SINGLES

I

I

•

•

•

•

I

I

I

I

NESTEA

•

•

•

.

•

i

•

•

I

PIE FILLINGS

Jar
•

'

• • • •

•

49~

Phone 446-9100

Can
• • • • • 99~

12 oz. Armour Canned Treet

LUNCHEON MEAl

1

·

$} ·49
• •

Can

• • • • •

3"
Grapefruit .. .. ... .. .
INDIAN RIVER 27 SIZE

JUMIO WHITE

2
Batteries ... .. .. .. .. ..

'

.

S1

For

FRESH

Asparagus. .......... lb.

$129

Salad Tomatoes ....... lb. 69

MilADY "C" 01 "D" SIZE

-·'
.
..-··''

15 c

Delicious Apples .. Each

$159

l·Ct.
Pka.

ggc :

g·gc

WASHINGTON STATE , EXTRA FANCY
Ul SIZE , liD OR GOLDEN

28

NO NONSIN$1 COMFORT $TIIOE

• • • • • • • •

Pkg .
Beef Wieners ...... 12-oa.

each

Sprite, Tab ·
or Coca Cola

Pantyhose .. _........

PINEAPPLE JUICE '· •

~~e:t~loupes ._.

PINT RETURNABLE BOnLES

ss

2 59

5

36SIZE

89 C

KROGER MEAT OR

89 c. ,

SJ89
SJ19

1-1b.
Pka.

Meat Bologna ..... . lb.

Mixed Fryer ·
Part•

S399

VACPAK

46 oz. Del Monte Unsweetened

1'5 Upper River Road

iub••

FARMS ,
INSPECTED

Kroger
'3~~ ssee,~
sPECIAL
~~
C0 He e .. •.. .. con
'&gt; WEEK
Kroger
NICE 'N' EASY
2
White Bread
•
C
I'
•·oz.
Ha1r o or .. ... ... .. .. atl•.
TAIUTS
·
·
25·CI. $119
Alka Seltzer ..........,.

79'

I

lO'I2 oz. Ploch's

SQUEEZE MUSTARD • •

5-oa.

American Cheese. ':i.;~-

• • • • • •

I

Boneless Pot Roast.1b.

lltOWN 'N' SERVE

2 Pack Soft Weve

I

u.s. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE BEEF CHUCK

2
$119
Kroger Rolls. .... . ~~;::

SJ.49

• • • • • • • • •

TOILET TISSUE •

Rib Eye Steak ...... lb.

3

IN THE DAIRY DEPT . . PILLSIURYt,Pock

BEEF STEW.

u.s. GOV'T CHOICE , BONELESS

SJ09

'

1

IDF LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY • • ·
I CDIPI! lOOt II!. IIICIIIII!IIIAI. lliC! II. 1111 II .• I
IIIIECI 10 ll'ftiClllE IIIIE I liCll IIIII
• .

Any Size Pkg. tb_$129
Ground Beef ...

Kroger
Cottage Ch•ese~~-:~·
FROZEN IANQUET
•
$1 09
•
B
...
oz.
Coo k1n ags...... Pks•-

21 oz. Thank You

RIVERSIDE AMC/ JEEP /RENAULT

.

I

-················
$;c,i;crPi~nics .. ..- lb. ·79c ·

51•1ced Baeon ... .. ..

$1.99 .·

Can

LIMIT 3 POUNDS WITH COUPON

I

OLE CAROLINA

l,oz. Instant

WE WANT YOU

GAl. CTN •

.

17 oz. Golden Isle

• • • •

12

IN rHE PIECE. KROGER

Lb. Bag

• • • • • • •

~~.

I

·H&lt;llLT

I

Pkg.

•·lb~~ag i

I

89

Lamb Loin Chops .

1 Lb. Booth

TOMATOES

Au Gratin
Potatoes '' ......
.
P'kg .

Cost Cutter
Peas .
"•·

Kroaer 100-Ct.
A. ,lri" ' . .. Ill.

FRESH ICELANDIC

New Green

PERCH FILLETS

KIOQU

fiiOUN

IAMII YPIIDI

MOMI ,_.OJ SOLID

1.89 CABBAGE .•••... 1-.b-33;

CHEESE • • • ••.

-

Q;IYPIIDI $149

S1.

Aaparaaus'"t.-:··

s,.,

25C

Cast
Cutter.... .
.....,_
Gl1111m
..... ..1.

99c

t 6Wf' .~· Perch
~~Fillets ....
.
~ eal

KIOOII

Juice

100-Ct.

$1 09

Cream ... 'let~ ·

CELERY •.•.•. ~·~c.h 69'

Kratt 16 Slice
12 01. Pimento Single Sliced
P~~ · 1

FOAM CUPS

brand
new
Spirit. ~-c:::::::==:::~~~~~,~~ir!:j~~·
~~
Concord.
or AMC
Eagle...
_
and collecl your
bonus today!

OH.

Tto

Cut

Food.. .. ~:..-.~

JD Count Call itlornia

Quarters
1

Fruit

I

so count 9 oz.

.

:;

I

COITCU'nll

110011 YIGIT AIll

Cheese

SLICED
BACON • • • • • • • $}.19 .
Superior
Lb.
BOILED HAM
$2.39
Loaf
Lb.
LUNCH
MEAT
• • • • • • • • $2.29
Homemade
• .:b. S}.J9
HAM SALAD

10-oo.

... c...

KIOOII IAMII YPilot

COif CUTTD INDtVIOUAll 'I
WIAmDSLICIS IMITATION .

Lb.

MARGARINE • • • 2/ 1.19

onanerrorbyAstrosflrstbaseman
Harry Spillman to give the win to
pitcher Brad Lesley.

.

Plua

Topping .. ~;

Con

:

1 lb. Cris-n-Serve Vacuum Packed

CHOCOLATE MILK . • . 69'

,.

Jlfnth-lnnlng, run-scortng sbtgle to
gl\le the Clncbtnatl Reds a 3·1 victory Tuesday over lhe Houston As·
tros bt a National League exhibition
baseball game. ·
· Barranca's hit scored Ron Oester, who opened the final Inning
with a walk off Astros losbtg pitcher
Randy Moffitt. Duane Walker
punted to send Oester to second,
~ and Dan Driessen was lntentlonally
: walked to set up Barranca's game

COm .. ......

COST CUTTIII

'Ia -GAl. CTN.

··- _B arranca's hit sinks Astros
~ German Barranca rapped a

IIMIIIOOID

WI IISIIVI THI IIGH1 TO LIMIT QUANTITIU. NONE SOlO
TO DIAUIS.

•

CUTTII

'.

... .

POMEROY AND GALLIPOLIS STORE~

:,...... ~~-.~

I Jtl1

DeTerGenT

COSTCtmll

Cost Cutter17-oa .

U.S.D.A. CHOICE FRESH AMERICAN

S~turd~Y- M~r c ll

Pme s Effective Thru

1 Lb. Teen Queen

7: 30p.m.

LIQUID

......
Ml I ....... .. Ca"

;r

Phone 742-2100

I

The Hedge family will also be
singing at the service to be held
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at
10 :30 a.m . and Sunday evening at

,.... .

Hon~y

11

~ - ;COCOA, Fla. (API- Pinch hit-

Ml1 .... .....

WHOUKIINIL

99
::~ ... .~t.· ·
c

DEPARTMENT
STORE

I

Rev. PauiHedgeofMorehead, Ky.
will be the evangelist at services to
be held at the Racine First Church of
'the Nazarene this weekend.

COSTCUTTII

KIOOII

KUTLAND

I

The Racine American Legion
Auxiliary will have a soup dinner
and supper, March 24 at the Racine
Firehouse with serving to begin at II
a.m. Those wanting taklHlut orders
are ' asked to take their own containers. Chill, vegetable soup, heans
and cornbread, chicken salad sandwiches, hot dogs, pie, cake, pop and
cof(ee are included on the menu.

FlourWe
TOOihpa~t~'r!:; ·

1ti21N

~~~";';;;;;;;;;::;;;;:=!:;;:;;:;~:;;;;;~~~;!

New from Naturallzer:
Polly Woods

St. Jude Children's Research
Hospital was founded by entertainer
Danny Thomas. The institution
opened its doors to the public in l962
to combat catastrophic diseases
which affect our children. St. Jude's
is non-sectarian, non-discriminatory
and provides total medical care to
over 4,200 patients.

Com
Fla...es ...... 11-o•.
...

COI'YI~T 1912- THE ICIOGEI CO . niMS AND IIJIICIS
GOOD SUNDAY MAICH 1~ THIU SATUIOAY MAICH 20 .

Examinations
by Apt.
PH. 992-6545

WED.
1-S

Special services

lrow11ie

KIOGII

443-C Locust St., Middleport
~~~VISION EXAMINATIONS
THURS.
CONTACT LENSES ·
FRI.
9• 12
CHILDREN'S VISION
1-S

PH. 99!-2556

$
Apple
. ...111..... . 119
Ju1ce......

COST CUTTII

pta Wlthn'l XI dlvs.

JAMES L. SCHMOLL, O.D.
Doctor ot Optometry

Adolph's Dairy Valley
SJO w. Main

-"-

rtqutred 10 be
tleiT\1
lor ..- tn eectl Kroger Stor1 . ••cept n

. TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

in Pomeroy"
PH . 992-6720

With Fries •••••••• 94•

Auxiliary dinner

SAVE 10 TO 40% 'WITH SOOPER COST CUTTERS•
•foR SOME COST CUMRS NO OTHER BRANDS
ARE STOCKED

~ I'IOt..:i , N ad " ~ do N1'1 OLA ot .,.. ~
rteln. we vvlil ott• ~ yOur choice of a com!»&gt;'lbNI 1ttm.
when IV.... reflecting the Nmt S1Yff'191 Of I fllntheck
wh"h Will tnt1t1t 'tOIJ IO purcn.. the tdvertllld tltm II the

TOP OF THE STAIRS
Fitness &amp; Beauty Studio

. ..

The Centnil Regional office of St.
Jude Children's Research Hospital
annoWlced today that Mrs. Nancy
Yoacham has agreed to the chairmanship of the St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital Bike-A-Thon in
Racine. The !Wlds raised In this
year's event will go to support the
hospital's programs of research,

patient care, and education.

COST CUTTER BRA D
loin The
SOOPER COST CUTT
FAMILY

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
._
••

r~ ~~~

.'\ .*

e..":.:~r!=~~s

Donations to the center operations
also can be made through Mrs. Kennedy .

Eoch ol

N11IICI Elberfeldsln Pomlfo,

TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- He doesn't
and threw out 45
look much like a catcher. He's
sbbrt, slender and overshadowed
The Reds .~ot Trevino !rom the
bY most of his teammates.
Mets In the trade for George
But looks are deceiving. Alex Foster.
· 'l'revlno has established himself as
"They (the Mets) didn't care If 1
a: tine defensive catcher bt a posiwas
goodTrevino
defensively.
needed
hitting,"
said.They
"Here,
they
tion that usually Is reserved for
IJrawny players .
have
!It
.: "I love catching," said Trevbto, In
on hitting.
a good Sometlmes
team when you
you can
didn't
:who Is given the btslde track at wln'
flt In on another team. That's what
:rung the Clnclnnatl Reds' startbtg
happened with the Mets. They
:iob this sprtng. "There .are •more needed hitting so bad that they
jhbtgs to do. You're more excited."
didn't count on me."
' The team's press guide lists TreThe Reds have batting Instructor
:Vino as standbtg 5-foot-10 and Ted Kluszewski working with Tre:welghlng 165 pounds. At that size,
vino on his hitting. Trevino has a
-lle might seem unsuitable for the .26111fetlme major league average,
~ally punishment of foul tips and
He hit .294 with the Mets' Tidewater
' home plate colllslons. But Trevino Tides farm club In the Class AAA
•laid that he's never had a serious Intel'l)atlonal League In 1978, his
:lnJury since startbtg to play semipbest minor league season.
:rofesslonal baseball at age 16.
"I think he has been concentrat·
:~ ~'The bigger you are, the bigger
lng on his catching. He's adequate
:the btJurtes," he said. "I thank Gnd
as far as his hitting Is concerned," .
I've never had a serious lnjury."
, Kluszewski said. "He makes conHe was made a catcher bt Little tact with the ball. He just doesn't
League baseball and adapted to the get the most otit of his swing. He
position despite his size.
doesn't have good mechanics."
"Usually (bt Little League). they
Trevino's said, When you are a
need somebody behbtd the plate
catcher with my weight, you worry
who's aggressive, can catch and
about your defense more than your
throw the ball," he said. "My abUIhitting."
tles have made me a catcher. I've
He doesn't plan to make a dragot a good arm and I'm quick.': · matic change In prtortttes.now that
.. ,. ~ He relied on his defensive ablll- he's with the Reds.
', : :Jtes to carry him btto the maJor
"My job Is to try to cut down base
......,._.,agues with the New York Mets
runners, to blqck balls, to play de• Qrganlzatlon. Durtng the 1900 sea- fense, and to try to get a couple of
~· - jOn, Trevlno started 62 of the Mets'
hits once In a while," he said.

The center is the former Rutland
Gy1nnasiwn and has been improved

Yoacham to chair

-~

"Over Dollar General Store

Trevino's
build
-_
.
:.n ot like a catcher

Ru.tiand Village Council is extending an . invitation for all interested persons - whether or not
they live in Rutland - to hecome involved in the Rutland Civic Center.

and taken over l!y the village.
Residents having any constructive
suggestions or those w))o would like
to he a part of the group which
organizes functions at the center are
asked to contact Lilly Kennedy,
Route I, Mi&lt;ldleport.

Extends invitation

,-------------1

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7 .•

County happenings, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;....__ _

Latest DePaul loss bitter pill for Meyer

Ohio
Sportlight

Ponneroy-Middleport, Ohio

$189

2
-ct

SJ

°

"LEAN AND TASTY" TOP ROUND
SLICED TO ORDER

S499 Roast
Beef
.....
.
:
..
lb.
REGULAR OR PIPrEIED
lb. S449
Corned
Beef
...
....
.
SWEET 01 CREAMY
c
Cole Slaw ...... ..... . lb. 99
WITH WHt .... ED TOPPING, FRESH MADE
$399
Strawberry
Pie .. _ ~l:h $
FRESH lAKED
• ............ 22·oa.
149
APPIe P1e
Pie
9

�Page--8-The Daily Sentinel

WedneSday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mardl 17, 1982

Meigs County and area. groups hold meetings
Uruted
Methodist
.

M~nistries

A t!Ounty·wide network lor dlstrl·
butlim of government surplus
cheeSe was announced by Rev. Robert" lWbinson at the recent meet·
tng br the Meigs United Methodist
Couirty Council on Ministries held
at tlJI! Asbury Church In Syracuse.
It¢'· Robinson, noting that the
ch~ will be available free of
Chal'JI' to needy perSons within the
next.tew weeks, announced that It
w1U \le distributed from seven loca·
tlons; the Heath United Methodist
Church In Middleport, St. Paul's
Lut~an Church In Pomeroy;
,.

Kerr, owner, addressing the group
across the county. He said tha\ loregandlng recent changes. He said
cal food banks now exist In five lothat he Jell Meigs County needs a
cations, Heath Church In
program featurtng reUglous music
Middleport, Enterprise, Racine
and
also expressed a desire to
Wesleyan, Tuppers Plains, and the
with
Meigs County Mlnlsterlal As·
Syracuse charge.
soclatlon
to discuss reviving the
The minister also noted that the
meditations broadcast
morning
food co-op continues to grow. Two
which
was
discontinued In 1981.
vehicles are now needed to deliver
Reporting
for the missions com·
grocery and food lte!J1S to Pomemlttee, Rev. Richard Rothemlch
roy. The most recent order totaled
141 orders with bulk ,Items totaling · will coordinate Friday mor'nlng religious sehrlces at Pomeroy Healt.b
$2,000. Approval is now official for
Care Center. These w1U feature
receiving food stamps for food coprtmarily music and singing which
op orders with Rev. Robinson serv·
convey the message of Chrtst
ing as agent for the stamps.
\t was noted that Meigs County
Religious programming at
will take part tn the Green Thumb
WMPO was dlscucssed with John
Gardening program again this
year. courtesy of Jackson Area
Mlnlstrtes. Seeds and plants for 50
gardens wUI be provided. Senior cl·
ttzens and needy families will be
elglblle for this through the Social
Concerns Committee of Meigs
Cooperative Parish. Further infor·
matlon may be obtained by con·
tactlng Rev. Robinson at 992·3039,
of Rev. Florence Smith, 247·3444 ."
Rev. Richard Thomas, reporting
for the communications commit·
tee, "~ted that March231s the dead·
line lor the April Issue, April 'n for
the May Issue of Contact. Approval
was given to the commitee to secure a fair booth for the Coopera·
tlve Parish at Meigs County Fair In
August.
Vernon Nease reported for Meigs
United Methodist Men, noting that
they are sponsoring a sausage and
pancake supper on March 26 at the
senior citizens bulldtng in Pomeroy
from &lt;t~.m. Proceeds w1U be
dlvlded equally between the senior
citizens and the UMW.wlth the cost
for tickets being $2.25 for· adults,
and $1.50 for children under 12. Cer·
Uflcates of appreciation will be
presented to Allee Wamsley and
the Senior Citizens for dlstln·
gulshed service to the Food Co-op
ministry. A certificate of merit will
' be presented to Nease In honor of
his untiring labors for the parish.
remarks, N.::ase was
Following
and Asa HoskiDS, both World War I veterallll, and
given
a
standing
ovation by the
Loretta Tiemeyer, president of the American legion
19
churches
repres·
members
of
the
Auxiliary.
ented at the meeting.
Rev. Robert McGee reported on
the new job descriptions for palish
director-coordinator and assistant.
New structures were outlined to
streamline the parish's mnlnlstry
and these were outlined at the meet·
tng. New committee cha irmen

First United Presbyterian Church
In Syracuse; Wesleyan United
Methodist Church In Racine; Apple
Grove United Methodist Church at
Apple Grove, Rutland United Methodldst Church, and St. Paul Uni·
ted Methodist Church In Tuppers
Plains. Announcement of the schedule for dlstrtbutlon w1U be made
by Rev. Robinson once It has been
confirmed through the Community
Action Agency which Is handling
the preliminaries of getllng t he
cheese for Meigs and Gallla County
resldent.5.
.,
The social concerns committee
representative a,lso reported on the
growih of the food bank ministry

,.

FUN mAT FOLLOWED - .Armand Turley was at

the organ for a social time which foUowed the
recop!Uon meeUog. Here with Turley are E. J. HIU

Arnerican "Legion holds birthday
party, presents members awards
Presentation of the 1981 Legionnaire of the Year trophy and the 1981
Citizens of the Year Plaque
highlighted the American Legion
birthday party staged Tuesday night
by Drew Webster Post 39, at the
Pomeroy Post home.
George Nesselroad was the
reclp(~nt of the Legionnaire of the
Year tr opliy In recognition of his
leadership in youth programs and
particularly his role in the American
Legion sports program. Pre:Jenting
· the trophy to Nesseiroad was Paul
Casci, past post commander.
Receiving the 1981 Citizens of the
Year Plaque was Bill Willford ,of
Rutland. Gerald Rought, commander, gave a resume of Willford's
role In summer baseball programs,
the Meigs Local athletic program,
and the Booster Club, before presenting him with the plaque. Both
Nesselroad and Willford received
standing ovations from the large
crowd attending the celebration.
Four World War I veterans attending were recognized by Rought.
They were Homer Willard, Frank
Clark, E. J . Hill and Asa Hoskins.
Commander Rought noted that the
post has 21 World War I veterans In
its membership.
A report was given on post membership and stars were presented by,
Casci, post membership chairman,
to Elza Gilmore, Lennie J ewell and
Joe Zwilling, bronze for five members: Jewell and Zwilling, silver for
10 members. A gold star and the
national commander's pin was
presented to Case!, the post champion in securing 25 or more members, by Commander Rought.
A gift was presented to the Legion
by Loretta Tiemeyer on behalf of the
Auxiliary. Mrs. Tiemeyer in·
traduced past Auxlllary presidents,
Veda Davis, Catherine Welsh, Pearl
Knapp, Faye Wildermuth, Erma
Smith and Iva Powell. Eight junior
members were recognized, along
with the Poppy royalty and Anita
Smith, a national award winner in
the junior scrapbook contest.
Miss Smith was introduced and
announced that Susan Lightfoot had
been selected as the Buckeye Girls
State delegate. Anna Wiles was

sergeant at arms.
Armand Turley was at the organ
A dinner preceded the recognition a nd ent er tained informally
meeting which opened with Dorothy following a program of music by the
Jenkins at the piano for patriotic Meigs High School Choraliers direcselections. The birthday of George ted by Ed Harkless.
Freeland was noted and the com· . A bouquet of flowers in memory of
rnander gave special recognition to Drew Webster, for whom the post
several who have assisted with some was named, was given by the Crow
remodeling at the hall.
family .

meet

FOR All OCCASIONS

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
l'h. 992·6342 -

1

orr~~:ers

were Installed and two
at the recent
meeting ot .the Past Councilors
Club of ChestEr Council 323, Daugh·
ters of America, held at the home of
Mrs. Ellzabeth Hayes.
Installed by Mrs. Marcta Keller,
president, were Betty Roush, secretary, and Lora Damewood, treas·
urer. Reinstated were Ethel Orr
and Opal Elc)llnger.
It was noted that Mae McPeek Is
confined to Veterans Memorial
Hospital with a broken hlp. She sent
word of thanks to the ,club for a gift
and cards.
Devotlops were taken from
Psalms 1l8 by Mrs. Keller followed
by the Lord's Prayer and a pledge
to the flag. For roll can members
answered by naming a shade of
green. Erma Cleland conducted
games with prizes being awarded
to the winners. Esther Smith and
Ethel Orr received door prizes.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Hayes, Mrs. Goldie Freder·
lck, Laura Mae Nice and Opal
Eichinger.
Others a ttendtng were Ada Bls·
sell, Leona Hensley, Betty Roush,
Charlotte Grant, Mae Spencer, Sa·
die Trussell, Thelma White, Mary
K. Holter, Ada Morris, Letha Wood
Lora Damewood, Erma Cleutnd:
and guests, Mrs. Smith, Margaret
Amberger, and Leota Ferren of
Dayton.
mem~rs· reinstated

, cost is $4 for adults, and $3 for '
children under 12. The banquet will
be held at the Salisbury school on
Apri123.

United Pentecostal
Auxiliary
Plans for the annual chicken
noodle dinner to be hel~ in early
April were made during a recent
meeting of the United. Pel!tecostal
Church Auxiliary held at the church.
Mrs. Bonnie Baker, wife of the
pastor, presided at the business
meeting during which time members signed cards to be sent to shut·
inS. Prayer by Marjorie Douglas
opened the meeting with a luncheon
being served at · noon. Mabel Pier·
man and Frsnces Luikart won the
door prizes.
Others attending were Mrs. Judy
Manspaugh, Connie Moodispaugh,
Sharon Wilt, Rachel Hutton, Alice
Priddy, Gay Shaeffer, Manda Eastman, Mary Nottingham, Carla Not·
tingham, Clecllth King, Pam Hoffman, Mae Mason, Virginia Hartley,
Robin Moodispaugh, Joyce Sauters,
and ,Jean Kelly.

PHOIE

$10!

5

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$

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'•'
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Phone ~ -4524

tiARGAfN MATINEES ON SAT a SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S 1..50
ADMI~/ON

EVERT TUESOAr $1.80

..
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UDIES
TWO PIECE
TERRI
Till TOP

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~ba~n~qu~e~t~ar~e~a~v~ai~la~b~le~f~ro~m~W~il~li~am~~~~~~~~=~i~.

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ROYAL
CREST

$156

Till April lOth

Selection

UDIES'
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UDIES'
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UDIES'
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Enter the
space aQe
. 1 style

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

Isn't It time you experienced
the high technology of a
Clravelle Quartz watch?
Imaglnll. Accuracy to within
a minute a year. And day·
date dleplay tool So, go In
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CALL (614)-992-2104
or (304)-675-1244

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FLIPSTO
SPUD FLAKES
CORII BREAD

OUID BEEF

·~"65~

. NEW '82

BJU. WILLFORD, In recog_,tltlon of his work in the summer
baseball and school athletic programs, received the 1981 Citizen of the
Year Award. A plaque was presented to him by Legion Commander
Gerald Rought.

Ill Ill

&gt;

The baking and sewing contests
will be held at the April15 meeting of
the Rock Springs Grange, .it was arr
nounced at Thursday night 's
meeting.
It was noted that the time of
meeting will change at that meeting
from 7:30p.m. to 8 p.m. The -Grange
bowling team will go to Columbus
Saturday to participate in the state
tournament. Members of the team
are William Radford, Roy Grueser,
Roy Holter, Robert Bowen, Harold
Blackston, and Robert Haggerty.
Reported ill was Mary Shaeffer.
Mrs. Ethel Grueser, lecturer used
a question box in her program ;,.hich
also included a St. Patrick's Day
quiz and a Grange quiz. There was a
reading by Lucille Leifheit.
Refreshments were served by Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Holter, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Grueser, and Ethel Gruesel'.
Tickets for the annual Grange

'350
'350

IIRTHA
WHITE

FRESH I LEAl

·DIIIIIERS

.

112~63&amp;6

73% LEAII

8AIQUET
. FROZEI

•

Rock S .
G
pnngs range

municatlons;
named were Rev.
Rev. James
McGee, Clark,
com· Radford, subordinate member. The
education; Rev. Richard Thomas,
evangelism; Rev. Rothemlch, mis·
slons; Rev. Smith and Mr. Robin·
son, social concerns, and Rev.
Mark Flynn, youth.
Rev. Flynn noted that the county
youth are planning a skating party
and are also working on the Bible
' Sprtngs
bowl for March 28 at Roc~
United Methodist Church, 2 p.m.
The youth will also provide pa rtial
scholarships to youth who want to
attend church camp. ·
Cars &amp;Trucks
Rev. McGee noted that Pomeroy·
Gas or Diesel
Chureh and Trinity Congregational
Church have agreed to hire a
summer youth minister.
A task force for legislative action
to promote the concerns of the rural
'
churches which number 64 percent
of a ll united Methodists was
elected. On the committee are Rev.
Flynn, Southern Cluster II, Mrs.
Fay Sauer, Rutla nd charge; Rev.
Thomas, Northeast Cluster; Ker·
.., Offer Good
mit Walton, Pomeroy United Meth·
odlst and Thelma DIU, Pomeroy
United Methodist.
The next meeting will be held on
Aprtl 12 at Heath Church. County
youth wUI meet for leadership ·
training at that time also. Vernon
Nease had devotions to open the
meeting.
Refreshments were served by
the host church.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
CAKES

Chester D of A

,.

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BUIS

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*109

IELIIm

PIIUPPLE
llftiiiT

••••

:7St

HHLMANNS
~~~'I~N,NAr ' 1

�'

/

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Potneroy- Middlepc!l't, Ohio

WedMtday, Maid! 17, 1982

March

Meigs County happeni.Qgs••
Probes minor wreck

Heads fairboard

Emergency runs

The

· Officers of the Meigs County
Jliolor Fair aoaro were el~ ~~ .
the lint nieetlng of the group held ·a t
the county extenaiop «iffce.
Officers are Nick Leonard,
president; Usa Collins, vice ,
~• .._.; Robyn Pltzer,,secretary; - '-.
..,..~...
-ooi...l
1
Dave Billiard, treasurer, .. ;..
Dawnette Norris, news reporter.
Committees for the. annual .junior
fair were appointed and the next
meeting was set for April 13 at the
Melga High School..

Three ernel'KetlCY call$ were.ans-

Gallla-Melgs Post of the
state highway patrol Investigated a
mln()r one-car accident In Meigs
County Tuesday afternoon.
Tile patrol sald,an eastbound vehld.; drlven by Renedllb MUla, 25,
Syracuse, travelling on Ohio 124 at
2:06p.m., was forced off the road
by an unknown westbound vehicle
which went left of center. · •
Milia' vehicle went to the right
slde,.of the road, sutfertng sUght
damage, and the unknown vehicle
· continued on, the report sald.

weR(! by local until Tuesday.

The
8yracuR Unmlt at 6; !!8 a.m. took
Gary Hart from Racble to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 7; 10
p.m. took Allen Wl!aoD, 'lblrd St., to
Veterans Memorial, and at 8: 3l
p.m., the Pomeroy Ul)lt took
'Amanda Hawk, Wolf Pen Road, to
Holzer Medical Center.

Velel'IU18 Memorial

•i

\

I
Slar Graqe ol Melp county took four1b place
booon In tbe recent Regl01111l RlluaU.Uc Coolest held
In ClrclevtUe. Tbe team was required to driU )a aod
oot, epeoaod close tbe IIJ'BJIIe 8Dd drape lbe charter.
Tbe leam received a •core of 987 oot ol a poulble 1,100
polnll to receive fourth place. Members of tile team
pictured lndude,Jeft to right, Pauline Rife, Opal Dyer,
Unda Monlf!omery and Ray Mldklff. Olber leam mem·
ben were Wald Nlcbolaoo, Bernice Midkiff, RUby
Lambert, KeviD and CbrtaUne Napier, Bill and MulDe
Dyer, Catherine Sheoefleld. Deao Colwell, John

Holliday and Lany Mootgomery. Kellb A1bley wu
plalllat for tbe group wlllcb edeoded thaakl to 111m 8Dd
F.mma Ashley ~or lbelr Ume 8Dd effort At • regular
meeiiD£ ol the grange, II wu aiiiiiiUIICed that lillY
member IDierested Ill doaaiiD£ lteiDI for the older
cblldren Ia lbe bOOipllal mould lake the lleDJI to the
April meellllg. A lOOp 1upper W81 beld 8Dd game.
played foUowlug the meeiiD£. Aayone lntere.ted In
jolnlng tbe grange Is uked to cnlact one ol tbe memben of lbe team.

'

Mayors end 12 cases

Correction

Five defendants forfeited bonds
and one was fined In the court of

Middleport Mayor Fred Hortman
Tuesday night. ·
Forfeiting were Jerry E.
Burdette, Coolville, $40, speeding
charge; Gene Anns, Rutland, $100,
menacing threats, and $100, dlsor·
derly conduct; Melvin Duff, Rutland, $100, harassment; Delores
Sheets, Chester, $100 disorderly
manner; Glorta Alexander, Galllpolls1$40, speeding.
Fined $25 and costs on a disorderly conduct charge was Thelma
Johnson, Middleport.·

Seven defendants forfeited
bends--five on them on speeding
charges--In the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews Tues·
day night.
Forfeiting on speeding charges
were Ira Roach, Racine, $48; [)().
nald Bumgardner, New Haven,
$48; Douglas Beach, Huntington,
W. Va., $46; Eddie Smith, Racine,
$46 and Richard Butcher, Middleport, $45. Forfeiting on stop sign
violation charges were Robert Taylor. Racine, $43, and Ida Holter, MInersville, $43.

Omitted from a recent listing of
guests attending a birthday party
for David Michael Fetty II were Jen.nifer Couch, Lesa and Jim Simms,
and Frankie Fetty.

WEDNESDAY'
WEDNESDAY MORNING
Homemaker.s Club, 10 a.m. Wednesday at Syracuse Municipal
Building ; take I l'z yards of
material, three yards rickrack
and own scissors to make table
mats; potluck at noon.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club, Wednesday, I : 15 p.m.-home
of Mrs. Harold Blackston with
Mrs. Hugh Bearha to have the
program, and Mrs. A:rlee Abbott,
the contest.

not renew the contract of Virginia
Strong, EMR-LD supervisor.
It was agreed that as many members as possible wiD attend tbe_
spring conference of the Ohio School
Boards Association to be held March
30 in Athens. Attending the meeilng
were board members, Robert Bur·
dette, Oris Smith and Harold Roush
and County Supt. Robert Bowen.

LONG BOITOM Community
Assn. bake sale on St. Patrick's
Day, beginning 10 a.m. at Long
Bottom Community Building.
MEIGS AREA Volunteer Fire
and Emergency Assn. meeting,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Syracuse
Fire Station.

Candidates to speak
Two speakers will be present when
Meigs County Democrats meet at 7
p.m. Thursday at Carpenters Hall,
E. Main. St., Pomeroy. They are
Mark Malone, Lawrence County,
candidate for senate from the 17th
district; and Jolynn Boster, Gallia
County, candidate for districl
representative. The public is invited.

Robert Moore, Shade; Ira Roach,
Racine; Richard Hysell, Jr., Middleport; Pearl Uttle, Middleport;
Allen w11aon, Racine; Harold Bran-

nan, Reedsville.

Dtscbarged-Jodeena Hysell, ~
na1d Covert, Glenn Tucker, VIrgi-

Funds distributed
State

Auditor Thomas E .
reported the March
distribution of $28,514,062.94 In local
government fund money to Ohio's 88
counties and 442 cities and villages
levying !ol:al income taxes. Meigs
County received '18,750.

MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
CLUB, Wednesday, 2 p.m. at ~he
home of Mrs. Robert Fisher with
the book review to be given by
Mrs. Marvin Wilson.

Fergt~son

Not employed

employed in the prograin.

1HURSDAY

J oh n C. Bacon,
Acting Judge

Public Notice

Tuppers Plains, Ohio on the
Bankdaone
Pomeroy
23rd
y ofofMarch.
1982NA,
at
l ~a . m .

,.
I'

S~

MEIGS COUNTY Fox Chasers
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday
at the cabin on Eagle Ridge
Road. All interested persons are
Invited.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

FRIDAY
MUSIC WILL BE by "Music
Unlimited" when a teen dance is

deed Book 197. Pa ge 65.
Deed

Records of Meigs
Ohio .

Count~,

PROPERTY ADORESS :
Laurel Street, Middlepor1, Ohio 45760

Failure t o ..respond to the
complaint will resu lt in an
En t ry
of
Defau l t ,
Judgment and De~;:ree In
Foreclosure, sa l e of tne
mor t ga~ed property and
extingu•shment of all in ·
terests 1n sa id property .
John 0 . Holschuh
District
Judge
United States

3

3.

10. 17, 24, 31 (4) 7. 6tc

$499

$}2 ~q. Yd.;

Sq. Yd.

talll-n-tllfJ

. ;

PH. 742·2753
35tfn

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

ROll END
REMNANTS

u .s. Ill . so East
Authorized John Deer,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

A DANCE CUNIC will be held
Saturday morning at the Melga High
School cafeteria, 10 a.m. to noon, llllder sponsorship of the Meiss TAG
Aalloclatlon. there will be a 46
minute demonstration on ballroom
dance · followed by group participation. The clinic Is open to not
only students of the area, but also to
adults. Questions concernli1g the
cUnic may be telephoned to 992-7141
between 10:30 and 11 a.m. any

morenlng.

:~ ~~~hPg;~h.k~t~~e3~~ s~at io
~ REDUCED -

TICKETS for the spaghetti dinner

to be served by the Meigs Vocal
Music Boosters Saturday night at
the Rutland Elementary School
gymnasium will be avaUable at the
door. Currently both Booster members and vocal music students are
selling the tickets which are $2.50 for
adults, and t1.5q for thcJee 2 and llllder. Entertainment wiD be provided
by the Choraliers.

DUE TO LACK of attendance the

.

\' WILL TALK - On t his
: edge of tow n property .
~ Has 3 bedrooms, ba th,
"' woodburner. basement,
furn ace, st ove and
· r ef rigerator on level lot .
; Low 30's.
,1 REDUCED Thi s ni ce
~ p~o pert.Y is now below
· market price for a qu ick
~ s a l e. 3 far ge bed r ooms,
, attlc for storage, w r ap·
·· around l arge porch, full
~ basem ent and gas fir ed
; hot water heat . M idJO'S.
" ON TIME - What have
hou for a down pa yment
Jon thi s one. Sma ll gar·
t den space, vi ew of the
~ rive r, 6 rooms . modern

LOVELY 3 BR br1ck home, has wood burning
f irep l11ce in liv ing r oom . 1111 bath , wel l constr ucted
&amp; insu lated. One fl oor pla n. Askin g $35,000.
OWNE'R SA'YS SELL - We have r ed uced th is home
fr om $17 ,000 to $12,900. Owner wil l work terms. 2 or
3 B.R. home, kitchen with breakfast b ar, stove &amp;
r efr iqer ator, laundry rnom off kitchen . L orqe li v 1ng
r oom has fireplace . New fur nace and cell ar
UNUSUAL HOME - Call &amp; qet detai ls on t his
lovely 3 BR. 21J:o bath , A·frame, on 6 plus acres.
L arqe work ~ara!-jc, root cella r , loca ted close to
fork ed Run State Park . Ask inq$73.)()0.
N E W LISTING - 2 BR trailer on very ni ce lot on
qui et st ree t . K rtchen has stov ~, refriqera tor ~ din~ tte
se t , cor ner dish d isplay cab tnct &amp; easy v•ew tnto
spacious L R. This place cou ld be very nice l1vinq
for you or ju st as investm ent property . N(lW r ents
for $175 . Ask in9 $12,000.
.
JUST LIST ED - New doll type 3 BR home, cozy tS
th e key word here . K itchen co mes co mplete wi t 1l .l
year old scl t cl eaninq oven, refr ige r at or &amp; 6 c:hit tr
wooden di nette set. This home is about 1 Smiles out
of M iddleport on 2 plus acres . It has outbuild ings f or
storaqe . Rental in come fr om a traiiN Sl7S . All ttHs

Call Ken Young
For Fast Service
985·3561
PAR TS AND SER VICE
ALL MAII:E S
t 'l'i:"l hen

• or¥,

eAo\ngu
e Oispou ls
• Oisnw.utlll!n
eHol W11te-r T .Ulhl

Iii S tic

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS
Sizes start from l0x24 "

downspou•~ .

~utter

Cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Esti mates
Reasonable Prices
Ca ll Howard

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949 ·2293
or949-24 17
3·3· ttn

949·2263
949 -2160

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Window s
• New Roofing

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992-2772

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

• Dozers
• Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
• Lo· Boy
• Trencher
a water
eSewer
eGas Lines
• Septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs

PH . 992·2478
J.ll ·l mo ·pd

2-15·1 mo.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

For all vour wiring
needs; furnaces
.
.
repatr serv1ce and
installalion.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Caii742-319S
H ·ttc

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
S 1OJ NG

BISSELl
SIDING CO

'
" Beautiful, Custom

Turkey Hunters We have
mouth calls, slate box
cal ls, camo gear ·&amp; decoys
in stock . Spr ing Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley

Plaza . 446·8025.

Oi 's cr all Supplv. Spring
Vo lley Plaza. Call 446 · 213~ .

Gun Repair &amp;

~ot

Bl uing.

We stoCk modern r ifles,
shotguns. &amp; hand guns . All
munle l oading guns &amp; ac·
cessories . Best prices in
the area. Rivers ide Gun

Shop, Rt . 7, Athalia, Oh ..
61Hil6·5194.

773·5785. 773·9185.

Wa.1ted f o- Bu ~·--.-

f

~

WANT TO BUY Old lur·
niture and AntiQues ot all
kinds, ca ll Kenneth Swain·,

&lt;IA6·3159 and 256·1967 in the
evenings .
CASH PAID for clean, late
model used car.s . Smith
Bui c!&lt; ·Pontiac , Gall ipolis ,
OJ&gt;io. Call &lt;IA6·22B2 .
·

Buving

..... . .. . .

,

..,

0 • "' .1' . I

I ·Crtrd of Thanks (paid in adva nce)
2 CMd of Thanks (paid in ildvrmcel
J·Announcements
4·Gfveaway

11· Business Opportunity
22·Money to Loan
23· ProfessionM Ser-vice!&gt;

5·Happv Ads

6·Lost and Found
1 Yar d Sa le (paid in advancC')
8·Publ ic Sa le
&amp; Auction
9·Wanted to Buy

ll ·Help Wan ted
11·Situation Wanted
13 Insurance
14· Business Tr ai ning
15·Schools Instruct ion
16· Radio, TV &amp; C ~ Repair
17·M iscel laneous
18·Wanted To do

Pubtlli Notice

31 Homes tor Sa le
32 ·Mobil e Homes for Sa l e
33 Farms for Sale
34 Business Bui ld ings
JS Lots &amp; Acrea ge
36· Real Estate Wanted

4l ·Houses for Rent
42·M obile Homes tor Rent
43· Farms for Rent
'
44·Apartment for Rent
45·Furnlshed Rooms
46·SPace for r ent
47·Wanted to Rent
48·Equlpment for Rent
49· For Lease
n

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
lilies In bidding.
Bids will be received at formaFred
Hoffman, Mayor
1M Middleport Mayor's Of·
of Mlddloport
flee, 237 Race 51. unlit 4:00 MarchVIlla,
10, 1
P.M. March 26, 1912 for ·
uluf II» following :
Public Notice
1972 GMC.., ton -pickup

truck ......

This vehicle may be in·
tii•:Nc! 81 the vii'U.rege, Perk St.
The Vlllegt reMrVes the
rlllht to relect ..Y or au
bldtl
end
.
. . to Wllive
. .... •nv ln~

'" ,

I- 0

0

II . I '

Sl ·Household Goods
52·CB, TV &amp; Radio Equipment
53 -Antiques -·
54·M isc . Merchandise
55· Bu il di ng Supplies
56· Pets tor Sa le
57 ·Musci a ltnstruments
58 · Fruits &amp; Vegetables
S9·For Sa le or Trad e

.1

Trad ing . Spri ng .Valley
Plaza , '\~· 8025 or «6·8026.

Gun
Racin
e Gun
Club. snoot
Every Sun
. startin
g

WarUed to buy junk cars or
wrecked cars. Phone 388·

Racin e Fire Dept . sponsors
Gun Shoot. Saf . ni ghts
6 :30p .m ., Bashan . Factory
choke 12 gauge shotgun.

AntiQue furniture , old cup·
'bOards, stone jar s with blue
writing, &amp; old egg baskets.

REDUCE e•cess flu ids
with F luidex tablets, now
available at Tow ne Ph ar ·
mac; .

BEOS· IRON . BRASS. old

446·0069.

~~n~t.il';' Factory choke 9303.

-'- =-=

i::;::::: ::-:-:: :::" :::::-::4 -'--· -~_!!!_a__W!'t__ _ _

ANY PERSON who has
anyth ing t o give away and
does no.t offer or attempt to

colu mn. There will be no
charge to lhe advertiser.

1 ca t and 3 kittens to give
away . Ca ll446 -o4243 .
Mixed puppi es . Call 245·

5626
Maple. Caii67S·5495.

Call 367·01 38 .

--.---·- --·----

furniture , go ld , · si lver
dollars, wood ice bO)(CS,
stone jars, antiques, etc: ..
Complet e
hou se hold s.
Wr ite : M .D . M i ll er. Rt . o4·,

61·Farm Equ ipment

62-Wanted to buv

63 ·Li'llestock
64·H ay &amp; Grain
65-Seed &amp; Fertilizer

,

Classified pages cover the

Free hor se m anu re . 949·

2455.

~ .;...-

Gold. si lv er, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coin s &amp;
currency . Ed Burk ett Bar·
ber Shop , Middleport . 992·

3416.

OLD FURN ITU RE , beds,
iron, brass. or wood . Kit·
chen cu bbards o~ all types.
Tabl es, rou nd or square.
Wood i ce boxes. Old desks
and bookcases. Wilt buy
compl ete household. Golq,
silver. old m oney, pocket
watches. chai ns. rings, and
etc . Indi a n Artifacts of all
types . A lso buyi ng baseba ll
cards. Osby M art in 992·

Doub le bottom 12 in . plow,
6 tt. pick up disc. I or 2 row
cult iva tor &amp; lime spreader .

992·7275.

w ant ed to buy : good used
console pi ano . Call 992·3546

Small cem ent m hcer. 949 ·

2163.

3 pupp ies, Coll ie· Shepherd .

Ca ll 304·458 ·1163 .

6

SOUTHEAST
CONSTRUCTION
•Roofing &amp; Gutter
•Vinyl Sid in~
•Carpor.ts I Pati o
Covers
•Concrete work
•Room Addition s
Insurance work
Wind, w ater. or Fire

Wr ite your own ad and order by ma ll with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you get

C. R. MASH
CARPENTER
SERVICE

CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms , r emodeling,
plumbing, elec tric:. and
heating .

-Addons 1nd r1111odel in1
- Roofinrand cutter wor~

-concrete wor~

- Piumbin&amp;lftd
lledrital WOI.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH . 992·6011

,jfftt Estimatn~

V. 't. YOUNG Ill

Lost and Found
-------

LOST Siberi an Huskey
( mal e) mos t ly dark gray
with wP1j te m arkings, one
brown eye &amp; one blu e eye ,
answers to' KeeGee' safe t o

approa ch. REWARD. Ca ll
446·4998 or 446·3172.

FOUND Male Sheepdog .
Call to identify and pay ad .

Ca II 388·9306.

LOST pair of prescription
gl asses in bla ck case,
si lv er ri ms wit h da r k 9ray
tint . lost ncar Wamsley's
at Add ison or at Gino's.

Call446·9704.

resu lts . Money nor refundable.

81 ·. Home Improvements
82· Plumbing &amp; Heating

Area Code 30 4
67s-Pt. Pleasant
451-Leon

Pomuoy

"s-CIIesler
343-Porttand
247-Lelarl Folts
'49-Ricine

742-Rutland
"7- COGivilte

576-Apple' Grove

77),-Moson
812- New Haven
19s-Letorl
937- Buflalo

84·Eiecrlcal &amp; Ftefri1=1erati on
8S·General Hauling
•
86· M .H . Repair

81-Upholstery

\Jp to 15 Words ... Three day

InserTIOn ............... SJ .OU

Up to 15 Words ... Onedav
Up to 15 Words ... Six da ~

insertion .... ......... .. l..-.00

Public Notice

Naflonal Bank, Pomeroyi
Ohio1 _against Roger ~lebo
and Mazllee Riebel, upon a
judgment therein ren·
dered, being Case No. 1747'1
In said Court, 1 will offer
for sale, al the front door of
I he Courthouse 1n
Pomeroy, Meigs Counrr,
Ohio on the 17th day ot
April, 1982, at 10:00 o'clock
A.M., the following Iancia
ana tenements, ro-wll:
. Pnctl No. I: The
following described
. .

situated In the
Township of Chesler! Coun·
IY of Meigs, and S ale of
Ohio, and In Section No. 6,
and bOunded and ctesc:rlbed
as follows : Beginning at a
point on the IJashan·Keno
Road at the Northeast cor·
ner of a certeil'l 11h acre
tract conveyed to Hobert
end Enzle Newell by Ezra
and Ellen Ne-ll by dted
deled April 24, 19&lt;46, and
reeorded In Deed Book lSI,
Page ~ ~ _!henc~ following

the West side of said road
In a northerly direction 330
feet; lltence In a southwesterly direction 333 feel
to the northwest corner of'
said Hobart and Enzle.
Newell1'h acre tract; thence east to the place of
beginning contalnf119 abOut
Oft&amp;" half acre, more or Ina.
Being pari of the same real
estate transferred by Eua
P. Newell bY transfer
rec:orded In .Volume 1",
Page 542, Meigs County

~remises ,

~RecordS.

)leal,

deck

.fireplace .

11

Help

Notice

Public Notice

Insertion .............. $7.00

~-.!P:~u'!!b!!liC~_!!N!!OI[!:IC~o

.
E

Two lots in town ater and gas, taps and
ewer . Good trail er site.
's7.000.

P RICE REDUCED ~ pprox .

37 acres near
p ple
Gro'Ye .
Two
edroo m home. also

--+--

.

CL~S.S.IFICD ~DS

)Announcement
) For Rent

1. - - - - - 2. - - - - - -

21.

34.. _
- -- - __ _ __

22.

5, _ _ _ _ __

·

26. -- - - - 27. - - - - - - I
28. - - - - - - 1

Ootti·e Turner

Dlllce

10. -- - - - - 11. - - - - - 12. - - - - - 13. - - - - - 15.
16.

29.

30.

Am

SKATE·A·WAY

1

I
1I
33. - - , - - - - - - 1
34. - -- - - - - 1

Chester, Oh.

31.

32.

35. - - - -- -

992· 5•92

9t2-2259

I

Oh.

-·--·---- -· -··---.

• short gam e prac tice
• Pro Golf lessons
for all ages.
• Repa ir: clean ing
ref inis h i ng,
new
grips,
l ength change, weight
change.
*fa st service 2·28· 1 m o.
• free

LOST · blll ck &amp; white pup . 4·

6 weeks Old , 304·675·6128.

Mail This Coupon with Rem ~Hance
The· Dally SentineL
111 court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Play Million
Dollar Skating
Game ,
Stop In For Card
I
Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.
1
7: 30to10 :00
1
Sun. 2:00 to 4:30
I Availa b le f or
I Private Parties ·
II'
PH. 985-3929 or

1

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

ll:.....:!!!!:!~L__:3~·1~2::;·1~~

Gerald Reuter

1
NCQM E
.
.

TAX

SERVICE
PHONE
_
992 2490
FOR AN
APPOINTMENT
2_2"&lt; 1 mo.· pd

J_L._ _ _ _ __ _.;_._l

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.

LOST Black &amp; tan, ma le
Foxhound . Last seen on

Pomeroy , Oh .

please call H .O. Wine
M iller, Riple-; , WVa. 304·

Ph. 992-2174
2·26·tfc

11----------1------------l 1

u . _ _ _ _ __

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.,
· GAl
992-6191
Jeari Trussell 949-2660

2-14·1 mo

'

7.

9. - - - - - -

now $39,9001

PH. 992-7201

25. - - - - - -

8.

bedrooms, fam il y r oom
&amp; garage. In exce llent
condition. Wa s· $44,000.

Ucenud &amp; 119ndtd. _

6.

tRanch
home
Syrac.u se w i th

thr ee

2~ .

Che~ler,

* ell:c:avating
• septic !lystems
• water, sewer
&amp; gas lines
•dump truck
•limestone

23.

50 14.

Scout Camp

•b.ckhoe

17 . - - - - - - 18. - - - - - 19, - - - - - 20.

jPRICE REDUCED .

•n
full

Found : red bone hound,
male , 1 year or younger .
Hemlock Grove area . 992 ·

)Wanted
) For Sale

~24,500 .

!garage on a 200' lC l00'
liot. S20,500 .

county, Ohio.
Appraised Value :
Slq,JOO.oo.
rerms of Sate : Cash
JamosJ. Prolflll
Shorlff of
·
10, 17, 24, J~lgs County
.

lots.

P OMEROY CITY LOTS

!b asement.

Publi~

~ant!d__ _

Do you enjoy fashi on,
make up , jewelry? TP1en
you' re a natura l for se l ling
Avon. Ca ll 446 -3358 .

SALES PERSONELL ·
Do to new Audio· VI sua I
prog ra m
rapidly
ex ·
pand ing, firm has several
ope nings in It s outs ide sale5
dept. If you are amb itious
and well g room ed, we m ay
have a job for you. We Qf·
ter :
~
l. Paid vacation .
2. Profit sharin g.
3. Pay hospitalization.
4. Flexible hours.
Ca r
&amp;
h i g.h sc hoo~.
education required. 0~
portunit ies of $1.000 pel
mo. and up . For interview

between 1PM·IPNt

,

Beauti cians for the Halt''
Happe ni ng . Taking ap ~
pl ic:a f ions 9AM ti ll SPM
M On . t hr u Sat .
•
Prin ce ss House Crystai ·
Home Party Plan. No ex·
peri ence necessar y . For
more information cal l 6l4·'

890308.

•

-

.

-·

~

GET VALUABLE lra i nin ~
as a young business person'l
and earn gOOd m oney plu~
somE.' gr ea t gifh as a Sen · ~
t ine l route ca rrier . Phane:1
us r ight away and ge t on~
the eligibi lity list ar 992 ·:

a nd

Four

~ome .
Three to fiv e
~droomS, central air,

!Average4 words per line)

Public Notice

In

~6YRACUSE
ental house . $21 ,900.
- l'h storv

. 83·Excavating

Public Notlct

.

4411--Gattlpotis
367-Cheshire
3-VInlon
24s-Rio Grande
256-Guyan DIS!.
643- Arobia Dist.
379- Walnur

Lost : Doberman Pi ncher.
male, blac k and ru st, un ·
clipped ear~. scar on rear
leg, lost near Rutland .
Responds to nam e G .
Reward for return or in ·
forma11o n. 742·23 16. Week ·
day s af ter 8 p.m .

'f'J' own - A very ne-a t
't hr ee bed r oom home.
-..ecen tly remOdeled, ex·
tepti ona(ly nice kitchen
,. d in ing area . half
basement , N .G . F . A .

Mason Co., wv

Meigs County
Area Code 614
992-Middteporl

-~-----··-

or 992·2049.

F UL L blooded German
Shepherd, 2 years old , had
shot s, Hender son , bcP1 in d
Silver Dollar, green &amp;
white trailer.

608
f . . Mt~onl...r.llll

;NEW LISTING -

following telephof.Je· exchanges • .•
Galha County
Are.1 Code•14

.

Pom eroy , Oh . Or 991-7760.:
.
.
...

the 21st 991-6598 after S . 6370.

p.m 992·6598 . Must be good
home.

pup. 992·3379.

Points , Pi ne Grove
Road. Two buildi ng lots,
pppr'ox . one acre e&lt;~c h .
Electric and wa t er
'avail able . $6,500 Each .

... . .. .... ."
............
. . ......
71·Au tosfor Sale
12· Trucks for Sa le
73· Vans &amp; 4 WO ·
74·Motorcvc tes
75· Boats &amp; Motors
76· Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
77 ·Auto Repair
78·Camping Equipment

Si lver ,

·- ------+--·--,-· - -

4 baby ham st ers. Ready on

; POMEROY,O.
·.
992-n59
'NEW LISTING - Five
_.

Go ld,

Platinum. ol(.1 coi ns, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes ava i labl e . Also
coins &amp; coin supp lies for
sa l e .
Spring
Vll ll ey

only , 6 14·4,.6· 2096.

1

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

Ex ·

Estates, antiques , farm ,
housenold . L icensed Ohio·
WV. Buying antiques . 304·

ca ll
Or Write Daily Sentinel Classifiect Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio45769

_,

Pearson,

We pay cash tor l ate mOdel
cl ea n used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co .
Bill Gene Joh nson.

estim ates, 949·2801 or
949·2860 .
No Sundav Ca lls
3· 11 ttc

I Formerly Bare Metal)
278 w. Mai n, Pomeroy

Rick

perien ced AUCTtQNEER .

For bulk de l ivery of
gasoline , heating oil and
diese l fu el, call Landmark,
992·2181. Pomeroy, Oh .

2 stan ding t rees Locust &amp;

MAIN STREET
GARAGE

wva . 367 ·7101 .

Vallev Trading co .• Spr ing
Valley Plaza, 446·8025.

Built Garages"
ror free !iiding

Ca ll

Public Sale
__ - ~~~cu~ -­
L .E . Ne('l Auctioneer Ser ·
vice
Est!ftte · Farm ·
Household · Misc. we sell it!
Licensed &amp; bOnt;ied Ohio &amp;

Fishing License on sale .
Come and see our new ship·
ment ot 1982 F ising Rods ,
Reels, &amp; lures . Spring

1ft

lor on lv S35,000.
CALL FOR INFORMATION
ON RENTALS

Housing
Headquarters

PHONE 992-2156

All rype s of roof work,
new or re pair qutter and

8

..

1 m ale. 8 week old brown

- WE HAVE PLANS FOR
( NEW HOMES. DROP
l iN AND GET YOURS.
; TELE. 992-3816 FOR
. DETAILS.

,~ Reel Eatete - Generel

eep
Future Reference

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Excellent
~ built 3200 sq. ft . of liv ing
•space . J bedroo m s,
211'1
ba th s ,
: bri c k.
1 ceram ic
ti le.
fam il y
1r oom. 3 ca r garage (a t
J ta ched ), disposal, dish·
:r washer , etc . Mi d 60's.
11 HANOYMAN - .4 room
$ house t hat needs lots of
-\ work , but has over J
-.. ac res of wood s . $5,000.

.

446 · 029~

L------=====t=========t.=========~ offer
any. other tning for
sale m ay pIa ce an ad i n t h Is

CENTRAL REALTY

VIRGIL B. 511.
t 216 E. 2nd Sl.

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Dozer &amp; backhoe service, water, sewer,
ponds,
found ations,
rec lama tion.

I Insula tion

Guy!lville, Ohio

i jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I

~

.

CONSTRUCTION

JIM LUC4S

Real Eat1te - General

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

INO

•SpringDevel,opnoen,ls
"Small
A
Specially"

R111 E.-te - General

Racine Volunteer Fire. Department
_Is canceWng Its Saturday shooting
matchel for the season. The matches will • r~wne next fa,U •. The
Racine Volunteers wish to thank its
patrons for their support.

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING

Farm Equipment
Parls &amp; Service
13·tt c

i'TEAFOR

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mtle up
Georges Creek Rd . Call

candy Prices, S1 .60
~::=========if=====3·:t:7·:1:m:o:.==~~========:J Easter
lb. $1.50 lb. tor lull case.

PRICED,RIGHT
CALL TODAY!

secutive tenns.

Greg Roush
Ph . 992· 7583
or 992·2282
3·t7·1mo.

--==========;-t";::-:;:;;:;:::;,;::;;;~:;;:;:=::::;-t=::;~;:;::::::==:::;-1

starting At

9

• RoOflng work
14 Years Experience

PH. H2-U43 or H2-238•

WE HAVE A
LARGE
SELECTION OF

CARPET

Starting At

New Homes - e~­
tensive remodeling
• Electrical wof-k
• custom Pole Bldgs.

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
ANP EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN:

·r

Rubberback

With Pad

~

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

New Construction
and Remodeling.

160

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

CARPET
INSTALLED

614·992·2182
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Healing Oil.

my family and everything else.'' ·
Rhodes Is !lnlsldng an unprecedented fourth, four-year tenn as
governor. He cannot, under the state Constl~tlon, serve three con-

SA'l1JRDAY
CHESTER Youth baseball
program ·..m have slgn.up day
Saturday, 10 a.m. W noon at the
Chester firehouse. Children must be
five years old before May 1 And not
13 before Aug. I to participate. The
registration fee Is ttO payable on
registration. T-baU, Peewee and UtIle league are included in the
baseball program.

EPISCOPAL Church women,
Thursday, 12:30 p.m. at the
Parish House. A party will be
held for the Meigs Community
School children.

CAN HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!

CALL

'

m

BAKE SALE, Forest Run
Methodist Church, Friday, at
Dale C. Warner Insurance
building In Pomeroy, begiimlng
at 9 a.m. with proceeds to go
toward the cost of stonn windows
for.the church.

MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League will meet
Thursday at 8:30 p.m. at the
Poll)eroy American Legion hall.
Husbands' night will be observed
with a potluck dinner. Members
are to take a covered dish and
their own table service.

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

--Ailf\OUMeMents -

3

Business Senices

~~~~~~~~~~g~~~~~~~~~~

Misc. Merchandice

,

Public Notice

Si tui!lted
in
Lower
Pomeroy ,
now
In ·
corporated in the Village of t.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Middleport. Vill~ge of M id ·
dteport, Sal isbury Town· r"
ship. Meigs Cou nty , Onio :
Be1ng all of Lot No. A4l and
being a part of the same
rea l estate conveyed by
James R. Eads to James H .
Allen by deed recorded in

Nancy l . Pope, whose
last known address iS 170
Laurel Street, Middleport,
Ohio 45760 and
the
Unknown Spouse. Heirs.
Devisees,
legatees.
Executors,
Ad ·
ministrators, Successors or
Assigns of Nancy L. Pope,
if any , have been ordered
to appear or plead by May
20, 1982 to a complaint filed
in Civil ActiOJ1 No. C2·82·59
in t he Un i ted States
District Court for the
Southern District of Oh io,
Eastern Division, United
States of Amer ica, Plain·
tiff, v . Nancy L . Pope, et.
at.. Defendants, P.raying
for forec Iasure of if mort·
gage deed recorded in
Volume 124 , Paqe 151 of the
mortgage record s of M eigs
County, Ohio, which mor·
tgage deed is a lien on the
follow ing described real
property ~ituated in the
City of Middleport, Cou nty
at Meigs, and State of Ohio,
and described as follows :

1980 Volkswagen
Terms of sale : cash .
Se ller s reserve the right
t.o bid and reject any ai'ld
all bids.
m 15, 16, 11

COLUMBUS, Ohio- Gov. James A. Rhodes confirmed Tuesday
night that he wU1 retire from poUUcs and enter an undisclosed business venture when his term expires In January 1983.
It had been widely speculated In recent weeks that Rhodes, the
nation's oldest governor, mlgbt make a bid for his old job ot state
auditor, wlllch Is up for grabs this year In Ohio's statewide elections.
Rhodes said that at thiS point his ll!e, he Is more IntereSted "In

staged at the Rlltland Community Center from 8 to 11:30
p.m. Friday. Only teens from
seventh grade up may attend.
The dance will be well
chaperoned and there will be a
dance contest. llefreahments will
be sold. Tickets are S3 per couple
or $2 single.

MIDDLEPORT PTO, card par·
ty at the Middleport Elementary
School, Thursday, 7:30 to 10 p.m.
The ~.50 charge includes food
and prizes.

The Daily Sentinel

2!1083, Janea jie Johnson.
Route 2', Pomeroy, Oh io
45769 was appo inted
Executrix ot the esta te of
W-illiam
C.
Johnson,
deceased. late of Route 2,
Pomerov. Ohio45769.

Rhodes will retire from politics

A St. Patrick's Day dinner will be
held at the Middleport Masonic
Temple Thlll'llday wtth serving
from 5 to 6 p.m. The pubUc dinner Is
being sponsored by EvangeUne
Chapter, Order of Eastern Star. En·
tertalnment wU1 be provide by A:r·
mand Turley at the organ.
Reservations are to be made wtth
Kathryn Mitchell, Euvetta Bechtle
. or Bessie King.

Cou,ty

The following described
item{sl will be offered tor
public. sale to th e highest
bidder on the premises of

given to three MeigS County senior
.girls by Return Jonathan Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution, and not by the Daughters oC
America as Indicated In Tuesday's
edition ot The Dally Sentinel.

A news release from the Green

Meigs

(3) 17, 24, 31, 3tc

Gooci · Citizens Awards were

Thumb program announced that
Sylvia Cannen was among the employes of the program In thla area.
Mrs. Cannen reports that she Ia not

the

PUBLIC NOTICE

I

'

I

torreeljon
. .,

nia Ferrell.

St. Patrick's dinner

" In

'l'llo8e who have placed orpers
with the Meigs County Food Co-QP
are to piCkup lbelr grocery and
bulk Items at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center after 3 p.m.
Thlll'llday.

Calendar

Board renews one contract
Three employe contracts were
COil8idered Saturday when the Meigs
County Board of Education met in
regular session. The board gave
Mrs. Mary Bacon, work study coordinator, a two year contract; did not
renew the contract of Mrs. Greta
Suttle, a county school supervisor,
since Mrs. Suttle indicated that •he
will retire effective July 31, and did

Charging gross neglect ot duty
and extreme cruelty, Cheryl L.
Kropka, Middleport, has flied sult
for divorce from Joseph E. Kropka, ·
Middleport, In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. The plalntlft
asks custody of one minor cblld.
Dismissed In the court were a sult
by The Fanners Bank and Savings
Co., against James L . Mash, et al,
and a sult by Franklin E. Sisson
against the Department ot IndUstrial Relations ot the State ot Ohio,
et al.

LEGAL NOTICE

May pick-up orders

Admitted- Judy Finney' Dexter;

To end marriage

PR O.BATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF WILLIAM C.
JOHNSON. DECEASED
C~se No. 23083
NOTIC E OF
APPOINTMENT
"• OF FIDUCIARY
Prob.a te Court, Case No.

The

Ohio

-__-__,_
-P_,_ub_li~ Notice-.::._

-~- -------

' '

"

17 1982

· - - -Public Notice- - -

·-

.

'

Red Mud Ridge. If seen

372-6232.
7

Card of Thanks

I wish to e•press my
sincere gratitude to my

---

FLEA

Yard S ale.

----

Market·Open ·air

f lea
market at the
Chillicothe M a ll Shopping

2156 or 992·2157.

'

Exp e r ie n c ed
A ut o .:
Mec hanic . Experi enc:eo in)
engi ne tu nc·up. Air con·f
diT ioninq and heating .!
Wr i te Box 743, Pomeroy ~

0h . 45769 .

.,

Laborator.,. ,
Ja c kson :
Genera l Hospita l. Ripley1
W.V.A . ha s an Immedia t e~
open ing for a fu lf'ti m e lllb .'l
Tech . Wi ll accept ap·).
plica t ion from Certified!

CLA, MLT , or MT . Ex·

cel len t benefits . Contac t t
personnel assis tant at 1 ·~
304 372·2731 Mon . thru Fri.:

E.O.E. M·F·H.
•,
center.
Chillicothe
Ohio.
neighbors who contri buted
so generously food &amp; the euv ers
and
s.e ll erS Someone to p ia'; piano or
lovely basket of flower in wel come. Low rates. Satur· guit ar for Gospel Singers.
rne recent death of our day. March 20. 8 to 8.
Call 615-5 123 .
brother Paut Shato. Mav
God bless each &amp; every one Garage Sale 10712nd. Ave .. DRIV ERS wanted, light
ot vou .
Gall ipoli s. Thurs. &amp; Fri . pickup and delivery. ca l(
Por ch carpet, shades, Gene, 304-675-7 491 .
Ethel Roush
clothing,
curta ins, more
2
In Memoria m Items.
EVE NIN G telephone sa les,
call Gene , 304-675·7491.
F
in lo1ving memorv of Heten
ar ey who passed awav s Big carport sale. Wed.,
vears ago March 14. sad tv Thu rs ., and Fri. On in·
ELOERL Y woman to live
missed by her husband, tersectlon of 143 · and 7. In
for room &amp; bOard. 30~ ·
Variety
,
Deep
freeze
also.
daughters, son, sisters,
675·5034
or 675·4389.
992 - 7~53 .
and friends .
....·------ -. '

-

�..
-

.
DICK TRACY

Television

Part Interest In 19' Bola Ski_ ~
bOat. 175 HP Mercory, all -,
ski accessories, $700 down
plus $31 . per mo. payment.
446-7265.

•

VIewmg
WEDNESDAY

For sale or trade : 1979 Star •:
Craft18 ft. Fish and ski 1-40 .,...
Hp. Mercury .. out board ...1.....
Mercury Thurster Trolling •,
Motor . 992·3083.
~·

' 3/17/82

.

76

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PL.IANCES · washers,
drye:rs,
refrigerators,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap 2 beoroom unfurnished pliances, Upper River Rd.,
apart men~ in Crown City . 1 beside Stone crest Motel.
Call 256·6520 .
. 446·7398 .

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In ·
surance Co. has offer ed
services for f ire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in ·
dhddua I needs. Contact
Foster Lewis, agent. Phone
379-3318.

31

Homes l'or Sale

4 bedroom house by owner.
7/10 mile from Shadle
bridge . Rt. 35, $37,500. Call
675·1325.

Karate the ultimate in self
defence all private lessons,
year old, new sub·
Men. women, &amp; children .
81!2 % assumable
Instruction thru black belt.
304 · 675· 1~29
Also available Karate
uniforms puching and
kicking bags, and protec·
five equipment . Jerry
owner house, 1211
Lowery &amp;
Associates
St. 6 rooms. 2 story
Karate
Studio , 143(!.'~.~c; • . cu stambuil t. 304-675·
Burlington Rd .. Jackson,
Oh. Call286·3074.
L :;:==;::=.:=.=;:;::::=== =
Mobile Homes
for Sate
fiH18EI31
TRI · STATE
MOBI L E
HOMES . Gallipoli s. Price
r edu ce d. used mo bile
21
Business
homes . CALL 446·7572 .
Opportunity
Cigarette
Vending
Business. Call304·773·5651.
22

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
rate. wva. &amp; Ohio . Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . State Sf. ,
Athens, Oh. 592·3051.
23

Professional
Services

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUAL I TY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST , GALL I POLIS. RT
35 . PHONE 446·3868 .

Call446 ~ 3547 .

1972 Concord Mobile Home,
12x65. Call 446·7015 after
5: 30p.m .
Beautiful brick I. frame, 3
bedroom home w/ scenic
view ,
wood - burning
fireplace, formal dining,
central air w/heat pump
Lansceped, 1 acre lot
w/fenced In bock yard.
$45,900. 11% financing,
small dawn payment. Call
446·3766.
For sale by owner . In Rod
ney 11, new carpet, large
kitchen llo L R, 3 bdr .. 1 car
garage, assumable loan 8
1/ 4%
Farmers
Home
Financing available, ·rn
teres! credit subsidy may
reduce payments . Call 256
125A after 5:00.
6 rm . house attached
ga•age, good condition . 345
EaJI Broadway, (RI. 35).
Jackson , Price only
$12,000. 286-6305.

NiCe 3 bedroom home on .65
acre, easy to heat, with fuel
ol l, :wood or coal furnance
FHA &amp; VA approved
S26 1500 or take aver
payments at 13% interest
Would consider mobile
home on trade. Phone 388
8370.
NICE well kept home with
full basement on 1.2 acres
in rural setting. 5 min
from Gallipolis. Includes 2
sta~y garage. Caii446·B.285.
House for sale In Gallipolis
near Holzer, city schools, 3
bdr ., all brick.
10%
assumable interest on
$53.000. Call446·7080 or 675 ~
2990.
3 bedroom. large garage. 2
bedroom rental. 2 acres
ground . Mason.
John
Sheets, 3'12 south of Mid
dleporton SR7.
VIctorian style house,
beautiful oak carved wood·
work, 4 bedrooms. Must
see to appreciate. 992-7723 .
5-room house on 1-acre·lct
Garden space, oas heat,
Pomeroy . $6,000. 593·3269.
NEW INCOME LIMITS. If
you earn be-n $9000 to
115,000 a year, you may be
able . to buy o 3 bedroom
house (nat a mobile home)
tor as llnle as $135 a mdnth.
No down poyment. Call992·
. 7034.

41

Houses for Rent

5 room house, pore h,
basement, $150 mo. Call
675 -5104.

1979 Winsor 14x70. 3 bdr.,
microwav e, ster o, wOOd
floor in kit chen. full bay
window, furniture, $14,995.

Homes for Sale

One hundred acres .with
frontage on SR35 west of
Jackson .
Beautifully
wooded and adjac.e nt to
fully
developed
recreational facilities ( Le.
swimming, c anoeing,
hiking,
mu c h
more) .
Several exciting financing
plans available to meet In·
di vidual . needs. A rare op·
partunity. Call us today af
992·6696 or 614·286·2177.
Evenings call614·286·4058.

------·----

C llo 'L Bookkeeping. In·
come tax returns for in·
dividuals&amp; businesses.
Carol Neal446·3862

31

Forty acres va cant land
with water, lots and pines.
Call379·2603 . Price d to sell.

5 room house. 2 bdr ., $200.
One child acceptable.
Red ecorated, range &amp;
refrigerator turn . 446 -4416
after7PM .

For sal e 2 bdr . trailer . For
more information call 446·
4316.

FIRST
and
second
morgages, land contracts,
and receivables purchased .
614-446-4113.

1979 3 bedroom, l4x70
mobile home with 7x24 expanda. Also with 22x8 front
porch, rUral water and
FREE GAS on 6/ lO of an
acre. W i ll take 12x60
mobile home as trade in .
$26,900. 367·0576 .

12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mob ile home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan·
cing available. Phone 446·
1294.

Piano
Tuning
&amp;
Repalr.Call Bill Ward far
appo i ntment,
Ward's
Keyboard, 4Ado4372.

STARKS Tree &amp; Lawn Service, all types trimming &amp;
removal. insured, 304-576·
:MllO.

l5
lots &amp; Acreage
Farm for Sale by owner . AO
acres on St. Rt. 218, Only 7
112 miles from town . Call
245 9222 It r 6
·
a e ·

2 bdr., First Ave ., historic
home. just redorated . Call
446·2570.
5 rm . house in Gall ipolis .
Call446·3945 after 5PM .

1970 H i ll cr es f
Mobil e
Home . 12 by 65 . $3500. 992·
1559 ..

S ro om house with bath .
Large lot near Racine. 9925858 .

1970 Gregory · l2x65
2
bedroom, equip. kitchen .
Gas heat. Also 10 acr es in
the country for r ent . Has
good water well -free gas.
In the Pomeroy area .
Financing terms ava ilable.
992-6093 ..

bedroom, central air and
heat, city water, fireplace ,
unfurn ished except kit chen . $300 month plus
util iti es. Reference and
deposit
required .
In
Rac ine. 949 ~ 2293 .

12 x 60 trail er , excel lent
condition . Call 446· 1552.
Furni shed, air conditioned,
underpinning , set up on lot
In Middlepor t .
USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

HOME .

--·-···-~---

MOBILE HOME S MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured . Call
304·576-2711 .

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

For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
tra i lers. furni shed, with
air . Call 304·773-5651 .
1981 A L L ELECTRIC 12 '
WIDE .
2 BEDROOM
mobile home sett ing on lot,
ready to move into. $8995 .
10% dOII(n, BANK FINAN ·
CING AVAILABLE, 304576·2711 .
14' WIDE. 3 bedroom
mobile home. $8995. All
State Modular Homes, 304·
576·2711 .

4

Ni ce 2 bedroom home in
Pomeroy for rent . Stove,
r ef r i gator fur n is hed . $185
plus ut ilities and security
deposit.
Adults,
no
children , no pets . Available
about April 2. Phone 992 5292 after 5 p.m .

APARTMENTS o
bedroom , . rent starts at
1152 per mo. &amp; 2 bedroom
starts at $188 per . mo.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens . Ca ll446·2745.

--.....be;;;:;~~~~:;;i;J;dl

3 bedroom u
i
apartment. S215.00 month,
Plus utilities. $100 deposit.
Three credit references
required. Court Street. Call
446·0088 far appointment to
see apartment.

2 bdr . apt. HUD excepted,
kitchen furn , utilities par·
tlally
pd ., excellent
location . Call 67S·S10A or
675·7284 .

2 apartments on Main St.,
VInton, Dh. 2 bdr. , clean,
large yard &amp; garden spot,
sec . dep. Call245·5818.
Furnisheo apt. 2 bdr., S230 .
Utilities pd ., one child acceptable. Call446·4416 after
7PM .
Furnished upstairs apr1., 4
1
rms. &amp; bath . Clean, no pets,
adults, dep. &amp; ref . req. Call
446· 1519.

3 bedroom unfurnished
apartment . 992·5434 or 992·
5914 or 304·882-2566.
1 bedroom 'furnished apt.
992·5434. 992·5914 or 304-8822566.
3 room furnished apt.
Uti lities pa id. 356 N. 4th . St.
Middleport, Ohio.
Apartments. 675·5548 .
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes ,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221 or 614·245-9484.
2 bedroom furnished apt .,
efficiency apt. Call675-3000
10-5PM, after 5446 ·0682 .
MT . vernon Ave. small
furnished
apartment,
adults, $170 month, call304·
675·1902.
TWo apartments,
nished, 304·675·4378.

NEWLY decorated, 2
bedroom apartment, close
to Hospital, deposit and
reference required, 304·675·
1962 .
4:.:5c__F
:....u
" 'r"n'"'is::::h,e,_
d-"R,_,o00
o"m"'~'-­
SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel.
46

2 bedroom hOuse . Call 6753431 .
FOUR
bedroom,
2618
Madison Ave ., large gar ·
den &amp; yard, 5275. per mQn ·
th . F irst &amp; last months rent
in advance plu s $200 .
deposit, lease &amp; r eference s.
304-863·5995. No collect
calls.
ALMOST new. 3 bedroom
house. Fully/ carpeted, air
conditioned, family room
with firep lace, one and onehalf baths . References
required . call 304·675·2497
after 5:00p .m .
.:;2;==:;=
M;:o:;:b:;;
il=_:
ec;:H
. ;:o::
m::e:=:s= =
4
for Rent

fur ·

Sp~ce

for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992·7479.

A8erebandlse

1972 (lUDDY , $3500.
bedroom, 304-895·3562 .

2

19811NDEPENDENCE, by
Detroit. 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2
bath, aU electri c; lived in 2
months, $14,900. phone 30~ 458·1825.

Centenary, 2bdr., private
lot, ref . llo dep., S160 mo.,
adults . Caii61H43·2644.
Mobile home for rent. 2
beoroom completely fur nished. Call446·9669.
Two·2bdr. mobile homes.
Dep. &amp; ref. required . Call
256·1922.

twin size
bedroom suite with 2 beds,
$300. Ca 11446·0696 after 5.

Electr ic stove, white, e)( .
cand . Call 446·3945 after
5PM.
19 cu . ft. Kenmore, gold,
automatic ice maker, frost
free, extended warranty ,
$350. firm. Less than 2
years old. JQ.j · ~75 · 3769 .

1972 Schultz tra iler, 14x68, 3
bedroom . Call675·3868.

2 mobile homes for rent. 2
bdr . each, fully furn., CHROME &amp; glass table
adu lts only . Call446·4110.
with4chairs. Sound Design
stereo. 304·675·7337.

1979 L IBERTY mobile
home, 14x60, 304·675-7337.

All electric mobile home, 2
bdr .• adults only, no pets.
Call367·7438.

+z,

1972 12x65 SHUL
3
bedroom, gas heal. par·
tlally furnished . Call 304·
675-2907 .
33

Farms for Sale

For sale or rent. 3 trailers·
1 w/ lamlly rm . &amp; fireplace.
House on REt. 7 above
Eureka on River. Call 388·
8683 for information .

2 bdr . trailer furnished.
Farm 76 acres. Goad adults only, Brown Trailer
house. barn, work shop, Park , 992-3324.
small chicken house. 1 mile
west Of Langsville on Sr.
Mobi le home. No pets or
124. 742-2860after4p.m.
drunks. John Sheets, 3'12
mile south Of M iddleport on
Farm . '1.7 acres, 3 bedroom SR7.
house, tat'al electric, hea
pump, central air. all car·
peted, new 12 x 36 metal au TWO bedroom trailer.
building, pond, all new fen · Ashton·Uplond Road. $150.
c;es, all mineral rights. City plus deposit &amp; utilities.
. water and spring water. Phone 304-675-4088 .
Wood. good hunting . Close
to new Megls mines TWO bedroom, un ·
opening up . Beautiful furnished. One bedroom ef·
location for family. Asking ficiency. 304·675-2722.
35,500. Must sell, will
negotiate. 1mmedlate oc· MOBILE home, '14 mile out
cupancy . 414-9A9·2793.
Sandhill Rd . 30A·675·383A.

· Pets for Safe
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY • KENNEL.. AKC
Chow puppies,
CFA
Himalayan, Persian a·•
•N
Siamese kittens. Call 44&lt;1·
3844 -after 4 p.m .
I

c-

'II:

rn

54

Misc . Marchand ice

For Sale Beautiful floor
model console stero, AM·
FM &amp;·track &amp; record
·player. $300.00. Call 379·
2314 .
Massey
Ferguson
bulldozer diesel, 7 fl. blade,
wench, good cond ., SlA,OOO.
Call446·2522 after 5.
Plastic Septic Tanks . State
and county approved. 1,000
gal. tank , price S340. Other
sizes in stock, haul in your
pickup truck. Call 614·286·
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES
Suba tank Olmyplc 400
regulator, complete suba
out gear and 18 11. Gator
boat trailer. Call 446-1642,
ext . 332 or 367-7292.
2 PULL..ING Ponies, 44&lt;1·
9604 .
1978 Jeep Renegade, good
cond . 1980 Harley Davison
SLT, fully dressed, ex.
cand . Caii67H5A5.
Franklin woodburner
stave, S200. Call245·5201 .
Excelsior 011 Co .• 636 E.
Main St ., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992 ·2205.

WEIGHTS and bench w ith
leg extension, phone 304·
675·4634.
55

Building Supplies

Building materials block,
brick. sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters. Ria Grande, o .
Call245·5121 .
LUMBER ' l"x6" • and
l"X8"x6' thru 16' Poplar
sheathing, air dried. Mill
WOOd Inc . Yard near Intersection US 33 ond WV 2.
30 ~ . 273 . 2522 . M · F B· ~ : JO,
5 1 d 81

~.:;:.:;:.:;:~.:;:.:;:.:;::::::..J..;;a;:u;:r;;;;a;:y;;;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_j
=·

(I)

PONTIAC Astra, no
rust. 304-675-3144.
POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367 ·
7220.
YORKSHIRE
Terrier
pups, A months old. all
shots, reasonable price,
call304·675·3638 .

1975 vw Rabbit, goOd condition, 35 plus MPG,
$1895.00. Call, 304-675·4327
. after 7 p.m.

7:30

57

72 CHEVROLET, good con·
dition, 30A-675-1402.

Musical
Instruments

condition, $250.00. Call 388980'1.

. .....
.......
.--·......
-.. ' ....

304-675·5162 .

TWO 10 speed bicycles.
boys &amp; girls. 7A Buick Cen·
fury, automatic, PS, PB,
air, 304-576-2173 .

'

61

Farm Equipment

SURPLUS JEEPS $65,
CARS $89, TRUCK SlilO.
Si miiar bargains available.
Call for your directory on
how to purchase. 602·998·
0575 Ext. 7965 Call Refundable.

Gravely Tractors, pur·
chase a new Gravely in
March and get a special ;:,c==:;=::,=.=.=~::;::=;==
early Spring discount, in 12
Truck'sJor Sale
addition to a FREE rotary
plow or tiller. Outdoor 1977 Ford pickup, good
Equipment Sales. Jet. Rt. 7 cond. 6 cyl. Call446·4554.
&amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph. 446·
3670. Open weekdays 9 to 5, ·1978, Ford 3/4 Ton pickup.
Saturdays 9 to 1.
1973 Plymouth in exc. cond.
Morris
Blazer,
Sand
Hay round &amp; square bales, Hollow Rd.
3000 lb . cattle scales, I mea
HD 5 ft. bush hog . Call245· 1975 Ford
pick up with
5047.
flat bed. 50,000 miles. S1400.
949·2890.
.
Gravely
tractor
and
mower. completely rebuilt 1979 International dump. 6
motor and new c luthes, cylinder. DT 466. Single
$800.00. Phone 446·4198 af· axle; 2 speed with air pick
ter4:00PM.
up cheeter . 14ft dump. All
steel belted radial tires,
good condition·. 10.00 by 20
6,2_ ___,W
= an
" 't"'e"'-d-"lo:,.B
=.u
,_y'--tires, 8 new extra tires.
Goat Header tO live on 65,000 actual miles. 742·
farm &amp; care for goats.
2505.
want to buy. goats &amp; sheep.
Call256·6642 after 12 noon .
302 FORD truck, wrecked,
304-675-6597 .
63
Livestock

'I'

16 pure bred polled
Hereford cows. 985-3882.

73

Vans&amp;4W.D.

·-=--......:.==-="'-'-="-Jeep CJ5, 6 cyl., 3 spd .,

lock·in hubs. high back
64
Hay &amp; Grain
bucket seats, AM· FM 8·
track, roll bar, 12x15 fires
Hay far sale. Call 256· 1922.
with white spoke rims, runs
good &amp; easy on gas. Looks
2,000 bales of good, clean, ' sharp, priced to sell. Call
wired straw. $1.25 per bale. 367·7671 or 367-7560.
Call614·896·2250.
79 Ram Charger, 4·wheel
drive. Call 388·9991 or 3888623.

16

Autos for Sale

1974 Jeep CJ -5, ex . cond.
Call367·7804.

For sale 1972 Ford Galaxie,

ssoo. Call 446·3766.

1980 CHEVY Scottsdale, 31•
ton, 4-wheel drive, 4 speed,
1980 Toyota Tercel AM· AM·FM. regular gas, 30,000
FM, air, autOmatic, red miles, good shape. 304-773with black Interior, 16,000 15150.
miles, $3,695. Caii-446·172A.
74 BLAZER, V·8, auto, PS,
7~ Vega
station wagon, Pll, lack aut hubs, 15)(38
good condition . Call 388· motor, lift kit, headers, roll
9167.
bar, AM-FM30H75·521A .
74 Buick Century, 4 dr.,
good shape, $650. Call 446·
2439.
74 Dodge Coronet, 4 door,
upholstery &amp; bOdy good
condition
ter 4PM. . Call 44&lt;1·A703 af·
1975 Cutlass Supreme 350,
auto .. PS. PB. air, AM· FM.
ex. cond . Priced right. Call
446·0515.

1982 Plymouth Reliant.
A .T .,
AM· FM
stereo,
digital clock, 35 mpg, under
warranty , $7000 f irm . 992·
5628.
1960 Chevy, 3 speed, 6 cyl ,
50,000 actual miles. Un·
believable shape, asking
S1000. .1981
Plymouth
Horizon. 4 dr .• low mileage,
automatic, PS, PB, stereo.
992·3798after 5 p.m .
1977 DOdge Aspen, 6 cyl ,
11900 will negotiate, good
condition. 992·5544.

7._4:_,__...:M
= ot:..:o:c
r&lt;
=.Y&lt;..:C"1e
', s' -All used bikes reduced at
Betz Hdnd.§. check with us
before "ffOl pay to much .
Call446·2240.

(])Women' a OymiiMtlca:
11182

Plllooce

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter , electrician,
gen~ral
repaf.rs and
remodeling . Phbne 30'4-6752088 or 675·4560.
Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-895·3802 .

())Newo
(J) NMhvllle RFD
(!) MOVIE: 'Tribute'
(J) All In the F..,.lly
Cll Dick C.VIIt Polnlcian

0

sleeps
3,
lricler.ator. stove &amp; mi&amp;e .,

IS~THI~ .
~~rrn
~ ~5'f,.;

~

I. MlJ'ST''Je ~

llliN

OIDI-\'T

PLA'iltJ6 M'i

'P\J

~

~12.
W~f.li

•

CAL~D

,.

,.

'bu:?'

-~~- . -..;
1977 Stareraft fold out cam·
per, sleeps 6, ex . cond,
S1,400. Call446·3040.

81
~fl\i
ANNIE?
COfo\1'1\NY?

WHO'S TltAT

16UE% 50, YOO'KE MY
1&gt;\R . OATES,. 6RAHDFIITIIER,
CX..D !loAtl!
TH!G 61RL
SAYS THAT
Yflli 7 ~F lifR

ITALCOEt

Yesterday's

..

ALLEYOOP

French City Painting . '
residential &amp; commercial,~ ~ ·
interior, exterior, paper .. :
hanging,
&amp;
textured' , ,
ceilings. Call 367-778A or I
367·7160 .
• •
10

~

a

Special March and April
only. Gene's Deep Steam
Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd.
Free estimate. 99;!·630'1
GASOUNE ALLEY
RON'S Television Service.
specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
hOuse ·calls. Phone 576-2398
or 446·245A .

WINNIE

11 :30

SO JABAR 1'5 A
C/i'COI( ANP A
MUI('PEilEK! I~
~ORRY

1 EVER
GOT INVOtVEP

WHEN 1 THI~K OF WHAT MI6HT
HAVE HAPPENfD ... WHEN 1 WAS

ALONE WITH HIM ON HIS
YACHT ..

MEANWHILE ...

Z'AFER/WHAT
ARE YOU POING ltJ
MISS WINI&lt;LE~
OFFICE'!'

~NA~

,¥0 61/SINESS

,£1116

711£~/

84

"·.·

~&gt;-.. ·

BARNEY

WHAR'S
ELVINEV?

'

'

SHE SAID SHE'D

MEET ME AT TH'
GOSSIP FENCE
AFTER LUNCH

,.
'

)

-.
l

'

IS

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Coli 367·7471 or
367-0591 ,

()Ill Bell2:30 (J) IJhr of Riley
2 :41 (!) SAO: 81..-

THEIR NAME5 ARE?

Upholstery-

.,

TRISTATE
, ·• :
UPHOLSTERY SHOP .J •
1163 Sec . Ave.; Gallipolis. ·: ·:
44&lt;1·7833 or 446·1833.
• ,,

·--..- ~ .

MOWREYS UPholstery RtJ ''
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, JQ.j. ·~·

615·A15A .

·

------- --

'·l'

'

,-.

3:00

'

3:30

~:00

4:11

P•rk Thil concfrt performonce featLI'OI 2 I aongo:
'60' a clalalca plua ~ of
their recent aolo hlto.
(J) ........ Allen
.
MOVIIO: 'Chub nco'

I

Jec:lt ...WI¥ 8how

I Married .._,

(!)MOVIE: ''-I lloob:cc:'

4:30 (J) My Uttle ,...,.

tAKJI

+un
WEST

••u

EAST

tu
.,01

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H7

.,

tQ!oau
.Q IOU
SOUTH

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...

~,..ltJ ,I

71

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l

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Deal~

North

'
Nortlr
But
INT , p...

w..t

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Soo"

.••a• .

P• ' ~·

p. .

p. .

P•
P•

.

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p. .

~

Pua
Pua
Pua
Pa..
Pua

M

••II+
7+

Pa..

Opeainelead:

•2

'

and 'the klnl and ace of

llearta. Then he ruffs bla lut

low beartj comeo to his hand
· with a c ub, pulls the last
·.tl'1jlllp and claims.
j (!IIWIPAPKII ENTERPRIBE ASSN.)
·~u.

t·

"

'

.i

a,,.. _,.J.t

A~~t!:OMA~ ::ktiBce
I Kenya river
(Gr.),
5 lmpallllive
I Everlutlns
ID Borodln's
4 Alder tree (Scot.)
"Prince -" 5 E1111Ualr
II Meaneasaylat

"

.'

tempered one 8 Dance

IS One kind

7 Boundary

of meeting

(prefix)

It Jaolate
li Hoor (It.)
' 1e Barrel
· 11 Sip

8 Daredevil's

Vesterday'o Auwer
motto
2% Met's
27 Spot
9 ''The Tempest " ballpark
29 Ex-Red head
role
23 Cavalry's
:10 Threadbare

18 JtaUan
1% QlmpiBin
boy's name te Deborah
ZO Kimono sash or Walter
Zl Drastic
It - Carlo
Z2 Trumpeter
Menottl

34 Genesis name

weaporur

24 lllew

31 Ending
the acenery
for hero
. Z5 Wine's
37 Cameroons
tlellcacy (Fr . 1

'tribe

23 At. of now
Z5 Shed light
ZC

E1111Uah river

Z7 Caribou
· !8 Ending for

fib or rob
29 Noted Oscar
31 Before
:12 French

--

:UEpoch

15 Narrow valley

hrt-t-

· 3'7 Athlnt
'

•

31Picturaque
31 Greek letter
41

'

EnBUah river

U Utah city
DOWN
1 Baritone

GObbl
I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how to

work It:

AXVDLBAAXR
II

LONGFELLOW

..
.....

One letter limply otandl for another. In lhls oample A Ia
UHd for tbe tbrH L 's, X for the two O' s, etc. Single lettera,
apootrophel, the lencth and formation of the worda are oil
hinll. Each day the code letten are dlll'erent.

OlVn"OQUOT£8
GNW

Olffu,.el Con..n In the

... __ " 'r

-:--.....::-=-:----- "·""~

....t

..

J.l!.ft

•u

.•
1 k

Julion Bond ia tha gueot.
(f) (D Tonight Show
(f) Another UN
(J) MOVIE: 'The Beven
Uttle Foya'
(J) Benny Hill Show
D (J) MOVIE: 'The Laot

a!31Newo

I-lOW DO I KNOW WAAT
17

North baa a very lood \'
notrump, but reaponds two ,
dlamonila to bll partner•a
Staymaa two clulrl because· '
he doesn't hold four carcla In '
either major suit.
. South hu a very cood :•
band and undoubtedly bas ..
planned to 10 to a slam after , i
the notrump o.penlng. Hll . 1
thn!e spade Jum~ ll a force, '
showa at least five apadel '·~
and uta more Information 1 1
from partner.
North doesn't know how
stron1 the South' band ll, but
he bu m11llimum spade ~1-·
ues and aboWI It b_y bla fllur~
diamond cue bid. The rat of
the blddlnf lhowa expert&amp; at
their m01 ·aclentlflc. South
Intended to bid lix. Afte~
Nortlt's abow of alrenlth he
tries for seven and finally
bids it.
A little care Ia neceuary
In the play . South should
take two rounda of trumps

a

1:30 (f) My Uttle Mqle
(I) MOVIE: 'The Greet
O'M811ey'
(DNewi/SignOH
2:00 (J) llachllor Falher

'·

NORTH
.AQIO

•

a rn rn

:I SHORE
DON'T AIM TO
STAND HERE
ALL DAV

....

...

Jumbles : DOWNY SO,~RV ELDEST PASTRY
Anawer: What 1 dictiOnary nut 11 never likely to beAT A LOSS FOR WORDS

The North blind 111 taken
from "Modern Bridge
Conventions." It ll a Root-Pavlicek example of the use
of a cue bid after a Stayman
respo111e and strong IM!Cond ,
bid by partner.
I,

a

...."'

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N Air condition service
commercial, industrial:
Phone882·2079.

em

(I) C.,.tloued ABC Newa
MOVIE: 'A Talent for
Loving'
&lt;lJI Nlghtllne
1 2:00 (f) Bum• • Alen
(J) Nlgtrtllne
(I) PBS Lite Night
&lt;lJI L.ove Bo.t Two
couples have one thing In
common, a men pave for
hia trip by chaotlng 11
carda and Doc io trul!ad
wnh the protection of o
young woman 'a virtue. (R)
(60 min.)
12:30
Lite Night with
DtMd Lettermen David II
joinad by COble t ...VIIion
magnate Ted Turner . (60
min.)
(J) Jeck Benny 8how
(I) Love lloet Two coupl11
have one thing In common,
a man paya for hio trip by
ChaOting It Clfdl lind Doc
is truoted w«h lh&lt;l protection of a young woman 'a
vlnue. (R) (60 min.j
1 :00 (f) I Married .._,
(]) MOVIE: 'Amerloen
Pop'

: "":'

.,

(An--.lomorrow)

By Olwald Jacttlly

a

Gallipolis Diversified Const. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Sperial ·
farm rates . Call us for free
estimates. 446·4440.

}

ud AIID Soata1

!II

8"~2;===;P;;:I;::u:::
m:;:b:;:ln=g===

a.,~~:---==
E,_xc,a,_,v"'a~ti!!!nl!.g_-'-

-

More conventipn•

TYcoon'

WITH HIM .'

1 Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446·4477

XI I I J

] 1-) (

I'

e

•,

I

(

aug·

I ,

em

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

CARPENTRY,
home
building &amp; remodling,
plumbing, electri.cal ,
masonary , 304-675-2440.

form ,.,IIHpriM an-•· ••
ge~!l' the above cartoon.

BRigGE

a

•

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential , automotive.
Emergency service. Call ..
882 ·2079.

Now I(!~ the ciiCiod lettere to

_,..

a

Marcum
Roofing ·&amp;
Spo_
u tlng. 30 years ex ·
per•ence, specializing In . 1
built up roof . Call388-9857. _

Bell Contracting General ·
plumbing service, home
remodeling &amp; repairs. Free
estimates. Call446·4002.

I

ON IT,

., i

Print answer ~~ere:

rn

PAINTING · interior ond
exterior , plumbing,
roofing, same remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call 388·9652.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featureo by
Haffelt Braslhers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call446·2107 . ·

,

a

BORN LOSER

·.•.

()

. I I I 1)

(J) Bull- Report
ilJ Richerd Slmmone
(l]l Trolnlng Dogs
llt Entemtnment
Tonight
8:00 8 Cil (D Reel People To nighfa show features fem·
ale 1ock climbon, a blind
boxing coach and a look at
the preppy va. anti-preppy
controveray. 160 min.l
(I) Nlltlonll1 Geogrephlc
Special
(J)
•
llt Greetnt
American HotrO A mobater
seeks revenge on Ralph.
(60 min.)
.
Ill (I) ilJ Herbie, the
Lova Bug (PREMIERE)
Jim and Herbie stumble
onto an attempted bank
holdup. '(60 min.)
(J) (ID The Couat-.u
OdyaMy
'The
Warm
Blooded Sea Mammals of
tho Deep.' Captain Couateau trace• the evolution of
sea mammala and axplorea
the paraonafltios ..d habits
of the warm-btooded aaa
animois. 160 min.)
8:30 (])MOVIE: 'l.oo1 Horizon'
9:oo • Cll
Feet~ of IJhr
Blair writes some ember·
assing thinga about Natalia.
(J) 700 Club
(J)
&lt;lJI The Flit Guy
Ill (I) (lJ WKRP In
Clncl11netl A fi1o in the
building cbuld lead to devootetlng reoulto .
(J) Klngaton Trio ..,d
Frlendo: Reunion Tho original KlnQoton Trio--Bob
Shane. Nick Reynolds and
Dove Guard- pelfa1m togelhOI for the first time In
more than 20 years. (90
min .j
9 :16 (]))
Ughtlt
Camerel
Annlel 'The Milking of •
Major Hollywood MUaicol.'
Film Clipo oro combinad·
with intervlawa In thia fut~
paced look at director John
HuatoJl'• afton to bring the
hit muoical Annie to tha
ICittn. (60 min .)
9:30 • (f) (!) L.ove. Sidney
(J)
~~e~cer· Donn
(PREMIERE) Thio comedy
seriea concerns a pair df
undercover
New
Yolk
cope.
9:46 (I) TBS Evening News
10:00
(f) (!) Quincy Quincy
wolka with e retired Nazi
hunler to uock down the
murderer of a aurvlvor of
the holoc:auot. (60 min.) ·
(I) • &lt;lJI ()yMoty
II (I)
Shannon S.hannon finda hlmaalf on 1ha
trail of an arsonist. (60
min.I
10:1 !I (l]l NeWlOwotch
10:30 (f) Sing out AmeriCII
(]) MONEY Mlltere
1 0 :4!1 (])) Hltch&lt;;oc:k
11 :00
CI1 (J) CD 8 (J) !II II

1974 Handa 360 in A· I cono.
Will sell cheap. Call 446·
4395.

79 HONDA Custom 500 CX,
excellent condition, full
faring, new tires, S2, 100.
1977 Ford Thunderbird, · 304--4511-1763.
white with blue Interior,
AC, PB, PS, AM -FM 8 , .1975 YAMAHA 350 sir@&lt;!!
rrack stereo. Excellent bike, excellent condition.
condition. $3500. 992·7735.
r.easonable, 30H73·5018.

c-ur.

rn u.v..... ....t shlrtev

,,,,

COMES UNPE"

P'A.!l!5~U~E WHeN
A C!III!IVE~ 6TEP6

Anolher IJhr

a

SEWING Mach ine rep'lirs,
service . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Sc i ssors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992-2274.

1981 HARLEY Davidson,
low rider, 80 cu . in. 1.~c.
2500 miles, 304·675·6138
doy , or 675·6071 after 6 p.m.

J I I

()I M\lppet Show
(J) You Alked For It

1nvltltlon.t
Julianna
McNamara, Tracee Talavera and Gina Stallone compete with othera for titles
in this Invitational.
(I)
NBA
lleeketbell:
Atlanta at lloeton
(I)
(I) F111nlly Feud

Harley parts &amp; accessories
now at Custom Cycles,
LTD . Rt.
7 Nprth,
Gal lipolis. Open evenings,
5·8PM. Ph . 44&lt;1·7346.

1973 Harley Davidson .
Recently overhauled. S500.
949·2163 .

a

.8

(I)

7455 .

65 MUSTANG , very sharp,

MICNIII·Lehnr

(ID

ilJ Newa

WHO I.IVE;. THE~E ~
IN\Y&amp;E THE:Y KNOW
!!00METH IN6 ABOUr
WHERE: EAI!&gt;Y

STUCCO PLASTERING
1975 CHEVROLET 350 textured ceilings com automatic, good running mercial and residential,
estimates. Call 256condition, $650.00, 304·675· . free
1182.

REGISTERED female, tri ·
color Basset Hound , good
with children, good pet,
male Offer. 304·675-6777.

.

Report

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock.

19~5

H.,., o.va

8 (J) Tic TIIC: Dough

Auto for Sale

GOVERNMENT
HILLCREST KENNEL
PLUS
CARS
Boarding all breeds, clean ·TRUCKS
many, sold
in~oor· outdoor
fac i lities. lthrough local sales, under
Also AKC Reg . Dober· $300.00. Call 1-7U·569·0241
mans. Call 446-7795.
·for your directory on how
to purchase. Open 24 hours.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
A K c Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call 388·9790.

lit (]) P.M . MagaziM
(I) Bible a.ftle
(I)
Bumeft 8nd
Friendo
(I) Enterminment Tonl9ht

For sale two Chevy motors.
327 for $50, 292 for $75. Coli
245·9578.

SiGMA Guitar, like new

Household Goods

5 pc . white
1973 2 bedroom mobile
home on 2 acres, Jerry's
Run
Rd ..
2 stor age
buildings, 304·576·2637 .

LAYNE'S F.URNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
I' chair
taman, 31ables, $500 . SOfa,
and loveseat, $275.
' Sal
d h 1
I d
as an
c;: a rs pr ce ·
from $285 to $795 Tables
$38 and up· to $109.· Hide·a·'
beds,S340., queen size, $380.
Recliners, $175. t&lt;i $295 .•
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5
pc . dinettes from $79 .• to
~85 . 7 pc ., $189. and up. ,
Wood table with 4 chairs,
S219 up to S495. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and $375.,
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Cherry, 1795.
Bunk bed
complete with ma"resses,
S250. and up to $350. Captain's beds, $275. complete .
Baby beds, $99 . Mattresses
or box springs, full or twin,
$58., firm, $68. and $78.
Queen sets, .$195. 5 dr.
chests, $49. 4 dr. chests,
S42 . Bed frames, S20.and
. $25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350., dinette chairs S20 .
and S25. Gas or electric
ranges. S295. Orthopedic
super firm , S95, baby
matresses, 525 &amp; $35, bed
frames S20, S25, &amp; S30. Used
Furn iture· bookcase, s pc .
dinett set, Living room
suite. Used· ranges and
TV's. 3 miles out Bulaville
Rd . Open 9am to 7pm , Mon.
thru Fri., 9am toSpm, Sat.
446·0322

Reduce safe &amp; fast w ith
GoBese Tablets or Cap·
.sules &amp; E ·Vap •water pills•
Frig idaire" .nO vent, dryer, Nelson Drug .
S65. Kenmore wahser real
nice, S110. Call446·8181.
2 pr. Sears leans. Worn and
washed once. 33 x 30. SlO
G . E . washer
large each. 949-2163 .
capacity . G. E . dryer 3 tern·
perature' s, clean, ni ce, TELEPHONE poles, 304 ~
guaranteed . .SlOO each. Call 675-6918.
256· 1207.
.
51

7:00

Windshield broken? Call
SOUthern Glass. Insurance
claims welcome , free
mobile service available.
CalloW!· lOll.

3 room unfurnished apart·
ment. adults only, no pets,
utilities paid . Call-446·3437 .

13

Auto PArts
1 Accessories

•

tl
ONE

QUR

ONE

QFPGUCW
RWAWL

RWAWL
FP

HEWP

Q

u cw·p

GNW
URMGNFRT . -

GNWEHELW
LEEPWAWVG
Yl I dll)"l ~: A GREAT CITY ·IS TIIAT WHICH

HAS THE G
MAN

MEN AND WOMEN.-WALT WHIT-

.,,

''•
' ""

�.

Page :'l~The Dally

Sentinel ;

Potft.oy

Wedrniday,

Middleport, Ohio

Mard. 17, 19t2

Good luck Southern

I "'

Von Bulow faces up to 40 years in jail

Area deaths
Ralph S1acy
FWieral services for. Ralph Stacy,
60, Payette, Ore., who died March 3
at an Ontario, Ore., hoepital were
held March 5 at the Payette Church
of the Nazarene with the Rev. James
Cunningham officiating.
Mr. Stacy was born Dl!c. 8, 1921ln
Toler, Ky. He moved with his parents to Ohio in 1928. He served in the U.
S. Anny during World War II. In
11157, he moved to California. He
married the former Blllle Barnes on
Sept. 13, 1970 in Las Vegas, Nev. He
was a bus driver and maintenance
·person for the Payette School
District.
Surviving are his wile; two sons,
Vaughn, Akron, Ohio, and Paul of
California; three daughters, Peggy

Bishop, Akron; Janet Schwindel,
By JEFF BARNARD
Carson City, Nev., and Lori Stacy,
AMoclated Preu Writer
FruiUand; a step-eon, Daryl WoodNEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Claus
bury, California ; three step- von Bulow left behind the lunch·
daughters, Carolyn Confiff, Payette, hour throng that chanted he was
and Andrea Woodwon and Jackie Innocent, the la\vyers Who attacked
Shorrow, both of California; six and defended him and the Jury that
brothers, John, Tom and Roy, found he tried to kW his wife, and
Ravenna; Ernest of Buclujnan, Va.; sadly went home to his luxury
Bill, payette, and Anderson of apartment.
Ewing, Va.; four sistem, MaeHlnes,
The Jury decided Tuesday that•
Springfield, Ohio; Lutchie Riggs, von Bulow had twice tried to kW
Pomeroy, who attended services; Martha von Bulow by secretely in·
Annabelle Dl!bout, McConnelSville, jectlng her with Insulin so he could
and Virginia Kauffman, Ravenna, · Inherit $14 mlllton ot her fortune
and five grandchildren. A brother and many hts ex-actress lover. In·
and two sisters preceded him in
death.
Burial was ln Riverside Cemetery,
Payette, Ore. His parents were the
late Mr. and Mrs. Anderson Stacy of
Harrisonville.

all board members, Snowden,

Vaughan, Arland King, Larry Powell and Bob Barton, president.

·'Twister' hits Vinton County
McARTHUR - "Some type of
twister" tore through the southeast
· edge of VInton County around 4: 00
'· p.m. Tuesday, heavUy damaging
several structures and overturning
a tractor traUer.
No major Injuries were reported,
the VInton County Sheriff's Depart·
· ment said this morning.
A department spokesman said
. winds hit two houses along Ohio 93
"north or Hamden, damaging the
&gt;root, windows and garage at one
and destroying a C/lrport at the
other. It also ripped the roof oil
from the latter house.
East of there, the spokesman
said the twister touched down on a
large farmhouse, severely damag·
tng It and totalling four smaller
buUdll)gs on the property.

The sher111's department went to
the tractor traUer accident shortly

after It was reported, but the spokesman said It was handled by the
state highway patrol. Winds appar·
enUy forced the vehicle to turn over
on Its side, and It wasn't Immediately known If the driver, who
was Injured In the accident, was
treated.
"I talked to some people outthere
who said they saw a tunnel cloud,"
the spokesman said. "One feUow
saw It, didn't think much of It, and
then a few minutes later, It hlt his
house.' '

Another tunnel cloud was spotted
on the Ross-VInton county Une
around 9:00p.m., but It apparently
disappeared, the spokesman
reported.

Veteran firefighter testifies
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - The
Beverly HU)s ftre developed faster
than any fire that Capt. Peter Sa·
·btno had ever seen, Sabino tola Ju·
rors In the last trial of companies
which made products !or the
supper club. ·
The 26-year veteran of the Clncln·
nat! Fire Department testified
Tuesday that he had to crawl out of
lhe supper club's north-south corrl·
dar because smoke filled It tn
seconds.
Sabino's story of rapid flreexpan·
sian supports the victims' theory
that a superheated blaze In the Zebra Room flashed Into the Cabaret

Room and left too Uttle time for gu·
ests to escape. The May 1977 fire
killed 165 people and Injured 116
others.
Sabino was.the only witness ofthe
day. Judge John A. Diskin sent the
jur'; home early so attorneys lor
both sides could examine and process documents before presenting
. them as evidence.
A chair manufacturer, a urethane foam maker and an air condl·
tionlng Installer are the three
remaining primary defendants In
the trial. Three other firms are In
the trial as third party defendants.

By The Asooctated Pl'l!!lll
The damage toll from this week's

flooding contlnued 'to mount as wa·
ters continued to fall across northw·
estern Ohio today. But oHtctals also
were waiting for high Maumee
River levels In Indiana to reach
Ohio.
The flooding swamped parts of
six counties, killed two people,
drove 200 more from their homes
and prompted Gov. James A.
Rhodes to ask President Reagan to
declare the region a disaster area.
State Disaster Services Agency
spokeswoman Davida Matthews
said the prellminary damage fig·
ure for live of the six counties hard·
est hit by the flooding now total!;
$10.8 mllllon, with a higher final fig·
ure expected.
"It's dttflcult to get a complete
figure until the water has gone
down more and we can evaluate the
damage to roads and bridges," Ms.
Matthews said. "But we do expect a
higher total once evaluations can
be made."
She said a Federal Emergency
Management team toured the re-&gt;
glon by helicopter on Tuesday and
would continue evaluating the des·
tructlon from near-record flooding
on the ground today.
More than 30 National Guard
troops and 10 vehicles stationed In
Grand Rapids since Sunday were to
be withdrawn about noon, said Sgt.

Marc:h 3, 1HZ
CA.Trl.E PRICES :
Feeder Steers: (Good and Choice) J00.600 Jbs.

~ . 25;

m.700ibs . IIUG-58.
Feeder Hellen : IGood and ChCJiL~l3CJO.OOO IW..
4!1.50-5:1.00; 001).700 lb8. ~3 .50-54.
Feeder Buill: !GOOd and Choice ) :J00.600 lbs 1
63 . ~1; 500-700lbs. 46-i9.50.
•
SlauKhter Bulb : rOver 1,000 lbs.) 4~1 . 50.
Slaughter Cows: Utilities ~ .50-U ; Ca nncrll
and CUttenl1.~ . 10 .
Sprlntter Cows : (By the Head 1310.385.
Cowallll Calf P~:~it'lJ : IDytheUnll)J~ .
Veals: {Choice and PrimeJ 69-74.
Bab' Calvts: I By the Head) 2.8-80; By the
PoundtHII.
HOG PRICES o
Hop: {No. I, Barrows and Gil t.1 1 ~ lbs.
11.50~ .

Butcher Sews 40-49.83.
Butcher Boars 39-37 .&amp;1.
Feeder Pigs: {By the Head) 6-30.
SHEEP PRICES o
Slaushter LBmbl'l
Feeder Lambs5J.60.

f&gt;5 . ~7 .60 .

AUIEN8 UVES'I'OCk SALE

Albaay, Olllo

Marebt, 1112
HOG PRICES: 211).230 F11t Hogs &amp;1.4!i , ~
down U!!:ht Sows 14-42, 2515-down J.lght 8081'8 3336,50, 480-up Bit~ Sows 44-46, :JOO.up Big Board!
1'1.50.

Taste our T-Bone
Dinner just $3.69 ·

lbs. 50-67.76; llO to 400 lbl. 50-67; 4oo to OOC!Ibs. 41J.
5!1.541; 500 to 1100 lba. 111-66.71; 1100 to 700 lba. 1•
53.5G; 700 to 1m lbs. 4&amp;-62:.50; ldt and over 47.50r;J.
Feeder Bulls: Good and Choice, 250 to 300 lba.
~ ; 300to 100 lbs. SI&lt;J:I ; 100 to5CIIIIba. ~1.541;
500 to 800 lbl!l. 50-aD: 600 tD700 lbs. U-55.76; 700 to
800 lbl. 46-61 ~ IOOand over 44 .~ .

4at.Siow

Coolzer

A T-bone steak, cooked the way yoia like it Plus our Ally au-Can-Eat Salad Bar, roll "**I butter, and baked polatD,
all for one low price! Or choose:
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Sirloin Strip Steak Dinner $3.49

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I T~ Steak Dinner I
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I
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I
$3.49
1
$3.49 . I
I includes our Salad Bar, roll l&gt;ith I Includes our Salad Bar, roU "**I I
1 butter, anct baked po!alo.
butter, and baked potato.
1
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. ~3121182... ~-. I ~'e!f!2~7 ~&amp;~ I
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Not~ I
.~ ~..,
~nol:iflduiW.Nat,......
u Ullh. s..
to
1
when reo
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reI .-J.
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;r.::t:.::I
1-Siuldoouoio.
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~Good For Alii...,., Sire. ~
Good V.. Mil.....,-.
T•Bone Steak Ulmer

br- ..

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Includes otr Salad Bar, ro11 ..t~t butt£r,
and baked polllln. Available 11 a;m.·
4 p.m. Monda)-Friday only.

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Nor. rtdf.mablt
""w.~. ""' "' _.....
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'LUNCH COUPON

•

·

UPPER RIVER
·ROAD
Across From
The Airport

AGRICULTURE DAY
THURSDAY-. MARCH 18

Boars~.

KIDDIE SHOPPE
Pomeroy, Oh.
1ll w. 2nd

AGRICULTURE:
IT'S VOUR HEAR i¥AT, AMERICA
Mail to u• the proof of purch111e from the bottom of a pack of Union
Workman Chewing Tobacco and t3.96 for your original reproduction
of 1ha Spitting Target. Include your name, address, cttv. state &amp; z:ip ,
Bo~

·786,

-------------------------·-

Galllpolla, OH 46631.

I

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On

UNION WORKMAN CHEWING TOBACCO

I

WITH THIS COUPON
SPECIAL OFFER, EXPIRES APRIL 30, 1982 -ACT IIOWI ·

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purchase of a pack of premium

I

Agriculture In the united states had
total assets In 1981 of $1.1 trillionor eQual to 88 percent of all u.s.
manufacturing. corporations'
assets.
.
Join us in salUting
'

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.I .

Aeteller, vou trl euthorlled to ect ae,our egent for redemption ot thit Union
Workm11n Coupon . We wiN refund you 10¢: plue 7¢ for handling thit Union
W01km1n Large Size chewklg toblccocoupon. Void wl'lere prohlbh~. ••••d or
otherwise restricted bv lew . Cuttomer paye lflY aa'" tu. Caeh value 1126¢ .
Mill to: Sconen·DIIkm Tobacco Co., Inc:: ., P.O. BoJil 805, Genlpoflt, OH 45831 .

I

.

will

.
D

.

MANSFIELD, Ohio - Congressman John Ashbrook, a Republican
U.S. Senate candidate, was hospitalized in fair condition today after
collapsing at a Mansfield restaurant aboul11:30 p.m. Wednesday, officials said.
Authorities said Ashbrook, 53, Johnstown, had lost consciousness
and appeared to have a weak pulse when a resuce squad arrived at the
restaurant. He was taken to Mansfield General Hospital by ambulance.
Rick Hill, an Ashbrook aide, said the congressman had been dining
with several members of his campaign·staff. "I have no Idea what's
wrong ," Hill said.
Rescue workers had given Ashbrook oxygen. The hospital said Ashbrook was admitted early today.

Orders DOT to continue projects
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Gov. James Rhodes has ordered the state transportation director to continue funding interstate highway projects
despite a court decision freeing municipalities from sharing the cost.
David L. Weir, transportatiqn director, ordered a freeze last week
on new contracts for highway work within municipalities. Rhodes told
Weir to appeal a Franklin County Common Pleas Court decision that
the state no longer could forc e large cities to pay 5 percent of highway
contstruction costs.

COLUMBUS, Ohio - · Farmers in more than a dozen Ohio COWities
who suffered property damage or severe crop losses due to had
weather last year may IJt; eligible for federal emergency assistance
loans, Ohio Agriculture Director John W. Brown says.
Brown said Wednesday the loans from the Farmers Home Administration will help farmers who suffered losses from rainfall,
floods, hail, liigh·winds and tornados between April! and Nov . 30 last
year.
Farmers are eligible in Ashland, Champaign, Coshocton, Crawford,
Erie, Harrison, Holmes, Huron , Muskingum, Ottawa, Richland, Sandusky, Seneca, Tuscarawas, Wayne and Wyandot counttes.

'

EPA reinstates liquid ban ·
wASIDNGTON - Reacting to a firestorm of criticism, the Environmental Protection Agency is reinstating a ban on dumping liquid
hazardous wastes in landfills.
In a decision praised by environmentalists, the agency announced
Wednesday that it was putting a modified ban into effect.
The old rule, which the agency announced it was suspending Feb. 25,
had prohibited dwnping any liquid hazardous wastes in lanQlills, no
matter how small an amount.

Battalion on peacekeeping duty

©1981 , AgrtcuiiUr. COUncil oiAmltlel

and mall to: Scotten-Dillon Tobacco Co., Inc., P.O.

above the flood waters. Her daughter was later pulled
from the vehicle.
A 71-year-old Cloverdale woman and a 9-year-old
Grand Rapids boy died during the weekend flooding.
Weather experts, meanwhile, have made an encouraging prediction for northwestern Ohio.
The National Weather Service said Wednesday that
water headed to the region from the FOI1 Wayne, Ind.,
area wasn't expected to be a problem.
"It would take more than that " to produce water
levels as high as .\hose that drenched Defiance and
Grand Rapids on Sunday and Monday, said National
Weather Service meteorologist AI Ringo in Oeveland.
"By the time that water reaches Defiance it
have flattened considerably," Ringo said. " It will not
have the same effect." ·
Ringo said flooding in northwestern Ohio earlier this
week was caused by runoff from streams and rivers

Farmers suffer crop damage

-

Hobtein steers and bulls JOOtoeoo lbs. 44-00.00.
Bulla 1,000 lbs. and up «.5G-48.
Slaughter COW3 - utJIIUea 3,..... ~ canne111 and
cutb!:rs 3!1 down.
Veal calvet - chol ce and prime 71-92.
Baby calves51).106.
TopHoga210to230 lbl!l. 48-60.
Sowa400 lbl. and up 46.50-49.50.
PillA by the heid 17.50-.11.
Special Sprint!: Feeder CaiUe Sale Tuesday,
March 18, ~nd Tuesday, April 8. All consiQnmenta welcome.

·

POMEROY

nuurs:
llon.·Sat. 9:30-5:00

By The Associated Press
.\ third death related to the flooding In northwestern
Ohio was reported today after a 3-year-old Delphos girl
was killed in an aulo accident on a water-eovered state
road in Pu!nam CoWity.
The Putnam County sheriff's office said the Cathy
Bish was riding with her mother, Mrs. Iva Bish, 24,
Delphos, and two other people when the car
hydroplaned on the water, slid into a ditch and sank under eight to 10 feet of water from the flood-swollen
Auglaize River.
A sheriff's dispatcher said the victims were found by
ottawa County sheriff's deputy shortly before midnight.
.
The deputy, Tim Meyer, rescued two men who had
been in the car, Gregory Redman, 34, and his son
James Redman, 13, both of Delphos. They had been
hanging onto a tree limb.
Mrs. Bish was pulled from a section of riverbank just

. I

~-----~·---~----~

1 Sec tions, 12 Page s

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 18, 1982

Ashbrook in fair condition

IN

Large Shipment
of Spring
Merchandise
Just Arrived!

Vot .JO,No.236
Copyrighted 1912

lS Cents

A MiJitimeCiia Inc. Newspaper

throughout the Maumee River system, which includes
the St. Joseph, Auglaize and Tiffin rivers and
numerous streams.
"It would take all those, not just one element like the
water from Fort Wayne, to reproduce the water levels
over the weekend," Ringo said.
He said the weather service expects water levels in
northwestern Ohio to continue to fall .
The damage estimate reached nearly $11 million
Wednesday. Federal and state task forces continue to
evaluate destruction in six counties.
In Worthington , state Disaster Services
spokeswoJJIBn D~vida Matthews said the prelimlnary
damage figure for five of the six counties hardest hit by
the flooding was $10,872,500.
" It's difficult to get a complete figure Wltil the water
has gone down more and we can evaluate the damage
to roads and bridges," Ms. Matthews said. "But we do ·

•

expect a higher total once evaluations ~an be made."
President Reagan has been asked to declare six northwestern Ohio COWities as disaster areas. Ms. Matthews said that declaration wou~d be based on the
evaluations made by disaster relief teams.
She said individual county d~mage totals Include
Defiance, residences and businesses, $4,390,000 and
public buildings, bridges or roads, $3,574,000 ; Paulding
County, $871,000 and $1,033,000; Fulton, $59,000 and
$64,000; Putnam, pubUc only, $24,000 ; Sandusky,
$100,000, public only; Williams, $20,000 and $30,000;
Wood County, limited to the community of Grand
Rapids, $122,800, private residences and businesses.
In Grand Rapids, · she Said, 100 homes and 43
businesses were damaged. ·
. No estimates were available for Henry , Lucas and
Hancock counties but dama ge was minimal , Ms. Matthewssajd.

Columbia Transmission under gun

a
·with
SilverStone(~
premium non-stick
cooking surface

•

•

at
e
enttne
Delphos chlld becomes latest flood vic

'

ELBERFELDS

50°/o OFF

Feeder Helfen1 : Good and Choice, 250 to 300

Judge Thomas H. Needham was
to rule today on a defense motion.
for a judgment of ac(uittal filed
during the course of the nJne.week
trial. The action marks von BuJ.
ow's flrst step tOward an appeal of
his conviction on two counts of assault with -Intent to murder.

tonight's Class A regionals

•

ELBERFELDS

· • Slow cooking brings out
the lull flavor of meats
and vegetables
• Separate cooking pot is
immersible and dishwashersale.
• Handsome almond and
brown exterior.
• "See-thru" cover lets you
· watch food cooking.

WINTER
MERCHANDISE

Feeder Steers: Ooodal'kl Choice, z:K)toJOO Jbs.
!'6-M; lOO to400 lbl. 56-66.50; 400 to50D 1118. ~ ;
500 toiiOO lbo. ~.541; 1100 to 700 Ills. K-611.50; 700
tOlD) JbfJ. !H-98; 800 and over 50-67.

COWI\ry, considering his Inter!$·
tiona! contacts and fluency In foUr
languages.

tu appliutM

Marriage Ucenses have been
Issued In the Meigs County Probate
Court to Jackie Lee Henry, 37, Columbus, and Doris Lynn Wtulams,
24, Route 1, Long Bottom; David
Lee Weimer, 31, and Hazel Darlene
Weimer, 24, llOth·ofRaclne, and Jet·
frey Allan Jones, 27, Pomeroy, and
Tamela Kay Bradford, 21, Racine.

Sale e\'el")l Saturday at I p.m. Price! taken
Crom the audioo of Saturday, March 8, 1982.
Trends : Veal calves steady, reec~ucattle $4 to sa
hi~her. Cows t2 to Sf higher.

Farnlgllettl's arguments he might
l1nd It "trreslstable" to flee the

Fahringer said earller that von
Bulow "was obviously sadd!?ned
but he took it Uke a man:"
Von Btilow, a financial consul·
tant, rematos free on $100,000 bond

price

Ohio Valley Uvetllock Co.
Mlirkd Report

and stripped of his panlsh passport, despite prosecutor Stepb&lt;!n R.

von Bqlow was feellng " sad."

Nancy Oevenger.
They may be reassigned to
Grand Raplds, oneofthecommunl· ·
ties struck hardest by the !loads, If
Mayor ' Harry Jeffers asks Gov.
James Rhodes lor additional help,
she said. The guard has been p&lt;illcJng the area and monitoring traffic
· Into Grand Rapids.

Marriage licenses

Market report
Atbeu Llvft.tock S.lc-1

buDding with wrought Iron doors on
Manhattan's Ft!th Avenue, where
the von Btilows have an apartment.
Von Bulow arrived there In a van
TueMay evening al)d two doormen
grasped his arms and eased him
through the crowd of reportel'!l
waiting outside. He said nothing,
but his lawyer, Herald P. Fahrln·
ger, stayed Inside the van and said

Flood damage toll
continues upward

Salem students••
(Continued from page I)
.
Morris, Asst. Supt. James Carpen·
ter; Treasurer Jane Wagner and

stead, Mrs. von Bulow feU Into two
comas.
On each of the two counts he fa·
ces from two to 20 years behind the
stone waUs of the century-old state
prison, which stands 00 ffilles from
the stone mansion In Newport
where 'be and "Sunny" von Bulow
spent vacations and where, the jury
found, he Injected 'her.
Mrs. von Bulow, who with her
husband once breezed through a
high-society world .ol. blg money
and exclusive dubs, lies comatose
on a hospital bed In New York City.
Her hospital Is not far from the

•
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SHARM EL-SHEIKH, lsraeli.OCcupied Sinai - An American
paratroop battaUon is taking up peacekeeping duties between Israel
and Egypt in the deserts of the StnaJ Pemnsula.
.
.
The 670 troops 01 the 82nd Airborne Division, armed w1th automat~c
rifles, entered their uncompleted base overlookmg the strategic
Straits of Tiran after a march in 80 degree temperatures Wednesday.
The paratroopers, who left cool, rainy weather in Fort Bragg, N.C.,
marched non-stop for over three hol\rs along a highway to reach thetr
new base.
The force, which will number about 2,650 men, 1,200 Of them
Americans, will patrol eastern Sinai and monitor observance of
demililarization provisions of the Egypt-Israel peace treaty.

Winning Ohio lotte~ n~•mber
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnher drawn Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was267.
.
.
The lottery reported earnings of $627,813 from the wage~ng on 1ts
daily game. The earnings came on sales of $1,075,263.50, while holders
of winning tickets are entitled to share $«7,450.50, lottery officials
said.

Weather forecast
Inereasing cloudiness with a chance of rain late tonight. LOws 50-55.
Showers or thunderstorms Friday. Highs in the low to mid-70s. Chance
of rain 40 percent tonight and 80 percent Friday. Winds southeasterly
1(}.15 mph tonight.
.
: .
Esteoded Oblo Forecast- Saturday through Moaday; Sbowen Saturday, eadiDg SUDday aod fair Moaday. TundDg colder. flllhs Ill tbe lei
to low . . S.turday, falllDg to 1M 3011 DOi1b te 4111 . .111 SaDday aad
Moaday. Lows ID the to. S.turday, the mld-2011 to mloWii Saaday aad
in the 1!81 Mooday.

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - A U.S.
senator, a congressman and Ohio's
attorney general all critici2ed the
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.
at a · hearing before the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission
today .
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, DOhio, said a recent 23 percent increase in natural gas rates to Columbia Transmission customers was
due to the company's "wasteful and
abusive'' price practices.
The major cause of the pri ce increases has been the high-priced gas
Columbia has been buying over the
past two years, he said.
Metzenbawn said Colwnbia ranks
second amorig ;;:, pipeline companies
analyzed in the volwne of gas purchased, and he said the purchases of
high-cost gas also was secondhighest among pipelines.
"Consumers should not be forced
to subsidize the imprudent"
management practices of Columbia,
Metzenbaum said.
Rep. Clarence Brown, R.Ohio,
said Colwnba's purchasing practices ~re "completely crazy to any
sensible businessmen."
Brown said Colwnbia's purchase
of WICOntrolled gas was "almost
double the industry average, fourthhighest among all pipelines."
In remarks prepared for the
hearing, Ohio Attorney General
William J . Brown said that last year,
customers of Columbia Tran-

smission experienced a 40 percent
increase in gas rates.
"Much of this increase is due to
the introduction ol high-prlced,
deregulated gas at a cost. far exceeding current market levels,"
Brown said·.
The rare FERC field hearing attracted more than 100 people who
had requested to testify , according
to the Ohio Public Interest Cam·
paign.
·
·'The requests are from individual
consumers and people who
represent organizations," said Lucie
AudetteofOPIC.
At issue were complaints about
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.,
which passed along a 23 percent rate
increase to customers of Colwnbia
Gas of Ohio Inc. last September.
Under the Gas Cost Recovery Act,
utilities can pass through gas costs
on a dollar-for-dollar basis.
"This is the first time that anyone

from Washington, from FERC, have
come to Columbus for a hearing, "
said Usa Kirk, chief investigator lor
the state's Office of Conswners'
Counsel. "We see it as a chance for
customers of Columbia and the
citizens of Ohio to tell federal Of·
ficials how those high gas prices are
affecting them. The GCR increase
represents more than 80 percent of
the customers's bill."
The monthly bills Of Colwnbia
customers increased an additional
10 percerit March I under the act,
Ms. Kirk said.
The FERC has been conducting
similar hearings in Washington sin·
ce Feb. 16.
"At least 46 people have pre-filed
their testimony," Ms. Kirk said.
"However, we expect many more
people to show up to testify."
Sen. Howard Metzenbawn, DOhio, was among several elected officials to testily, she said.

ts.
'Herbert D. Brum, director of
school finance for the Education
Dl!partment; said the aliOclltion
reflects a 3 percent spending cut ordered by Gov. James A. Rhodes ln
January and a I percent cut
auulori1.ed by the General Assembly
that took effect Tuesday.

EXAMINED
Dr.
Henry Croci, Athens optomologlst, eumines fiveyear-old Jamie Parsons at
a diagnostic ocular
pediatrics clinic beld
Tuesday by the Meigs
County Department of
Health. Tbe cllolc Is one of
three beld eacb year with
some 45 to 60 patients DDder 21 examined at eacb
cllolc. At bottom rigbt,
Norma Torres, R.N.,
rlgbt, -explains aspects of
an ~ye examination given
at a Meigs Couuty Healtb
Department diagnostic
oeular pediatrics cllolc
Tuesday to a patlenl, Sandy Wamsley, 13. At sucb
cllolcs yowag people under
Zl are examined bavUig
been referred from visual
ricreeoiog In schools or
referred by a pbyslclan~
Tbe cllolcs are fumled by
the Bureau for Crippled
CbBch'en.

I

,,

OPIC official~ say they want
FERC to "remove every penny of
high cost gas !rom Colwnbia's purchased gas cost charge."
The hearing was divided into three
sessions - 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; 2 p.m.4:30p.m.; and6:30p.m.-8:30p.m.
Ms. Audette characterized the
sessons as a test of efforts by the
Reagan administration and the oU
industry to accelerate the decontrol
of natural gas prices throu~h F'ERC.

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

Borrowing
approval
received
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Controlling Board has approved
Welfare Department plans to
borrow from next year's budget to
make April benefit payments to
Ohioans on general relief.
Controllers also on Wednesday
released March sub!lidies for schools
that are 4 percent below what they
had been scheduled to receive.
Both actions stem from the state's
chronic fiscal woes, in which it is
projected to record a $1 billion
budget deficit by June 30, 1983.
Members of the legislatordominated board OK 'd a Welfare
Departmept request to transfer
about $10 million from its fiscall983
appropriation to insure that 92,000
general relief recipients will get
their checks next month.
Welfare officials originally had
sought a $30 million advance to
cover general relief payments to
cOWities for April, May and JWie.
Their request was trirnnied to
cover one morith after Sen. Stanley
J . Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, and Rep.
Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura, objected to the procedure in the face of
the state's worsening cash now
problem.
Budget analysts predict the state
will run out of cash this surruner.
Netzley viewed the request as an
ll,ttempt by the administration to rorce legislative . action on a tax increase proposal.
Controllers approved release of
$152 million in school foundation subsidles lor March to 615 local distric-

Also expected at the hearing were
U.S. Rep. Clarence Brown of Ur·
bana, a Republican, as well as Ohio
Attorney General William J . Brown
and state Sen. Micha el Schwarzwalder of ColwnbWl.
The Office of Consumers' Counsel,
OPIC and Metzenbaum spearheaded
eliorts to persuade FERC Administrative Law Judge Michael
Levant to hold a hearing in Columbus, Ms. Audette said.

,

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43898">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43897">
              <text>March 17, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2622">
      <name>stacy</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
