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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

----------------$3.69

I T~ Steak Dinner I
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~3.69
I
I Sirloin Strip Steak Dinner 1 Sirloin Strip Steak Dinner
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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~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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where Jt~redb)'llw. Al~

-.- •

'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

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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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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

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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.

,

�The Daily sentinel- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-Commentary

The child beatera..S___----,-_w_,_·uia_m_F_._Buc_k_ley_Jr.

The Daily Sentinel

I,

Ill CourtStrtel
Pumen•y, Ohio
114-M-215e
DI-~ VOTED 1U THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lib

.

~m~ r-rL....JL--..~d·t:=:~~

~v

~OBERT L .

WINGE'IT

Publl1btor

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Allbililnt Publh1be rJ Cur~truU t r

Geoenll Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
· New• Editor
A MEMBER l)f Tilt AllliUCilted Prtllll, Jaland Dally ~ A.111odalloa 11nd tlu:
Nt!W"IJMP'!r Publl11hen Anod.utltm.

Am~rican

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are wtlc~Jmtd . 'J'hf'y 1hoold be lt11M tlwo 300 wurda luog. All
llrt~ 11ubjtct to editing lllld mulll be 11lped wUh aame. 1ddren 11Dd k lepllont
numbt!r. Nu ua•l8ned ldterw wUI be publl!lhed. LrtWn ahould be In good ta•~.wddre~~•lnt:
IIIIUH, lUI penooallthell.

!etten

ll L

Bad GOP omens

'

The article in Penthouse mag is
called "Have You Whipped Your
Child Today?" which claims to have
been a bumper-sticker fonnal urged
by one Rev. Greg Dixon of the Indianapolis Baptist Temple, national
secretary of the Moral Majority.
Personally I doubt that the Rev.
Dixon can have been qUite that
stupid, although if ooe-half of what
the author, Michael Disend, says
about him is correct, I'd rather see
him, than even the naughtiest
children, at the receiving end of a
lash.
The story begins as an Investigation of the resistance put up
by the Moral Majority crowd to child
abuse laws. The suggestion is that
child abuse agencies are designed to
usurp parental authority, and the
Rev. Dixon and others are quoted in
heated denunciation of such
authorities. One or two cases are
cited of what would appear clearly
to have been child abuse- victious
beatings of six- and eight-year-olds
- that went to court, but resulted in
acquittals, because the children
didn't testify, rendering difficult the
job of the prosecution, since it simply isn't easy for a jury to believe
that ordained ministers would
brutalize children, and the jurors
cannot be preswned to know that
this was entirely routine in 19thcentury Britain.
To the extent that there is
anything to be said of the protesters,
no doul!t it is true that progressive
impulses in American education,
having spotted the Great Middle
Way, will one day introduce
legislation of' the kind passed in
Sweden, which forbids any corporal
chastisement of any children even
by a parent. As someone with a good
nose for social trends recently observed, in Sweden it is now legal for
a father to sleep with his daughter,
but noUo smack his son.
To the extent the Moral Majority
types associate themselves with the
notion that in no circwnstances does
the state have the right to intervene
between psrent and child, they will
lose their moral authority. It is
sometimes difficult to draw the line,
but a llne simply.can and must be
drawn between domestic discipline
and domestic savagery, and if we

The potential Republican candidates widely perceived to be the most for. midable challengers .to Democrats seeking re-election to Congress are
· backing away from those contests in states aU across the nation.
Despite the public claims and private hopes of Republican party leaders
that their prospects for success in this year's elections will be enhanced if
the economy improves in the coming months, tbe current trend does not
bode well for the party's chances in November's House.and Senate contests.
Although the general election is more than seven months distant, filing
deadlines for participation in primary elections are rapidly approaching in
· many states and the crucial candidate-recruitment phase of the 1982
· political campaign has been virtually concluded.
In Ohio, Gov. James A. Rhodes, arguably the state's most successful and
popular politiCian in recent decades, is barred by a constitutional provision
from seeking re-election to the post he has held for an unprecedented four
tenns.
: Rhodes has resisted, however, the blandislunents of Repulilican party
· leaders seeking to convince him to oppose Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum.
: In Michigan, equally propuiar Gov. William G, Milliken has decided not to
seek re-election - and has rebuffed GOP leaders who importuned him to run
against Sen. Donald W. Riegle Jr.
In Washington, fanner Gov. Dan Evans, held in extraordinarily high
regard by politicians throughout the country, has resisted efforts to convince
him to retur:n to politics by challenging Democratic Sen. Henry M. Jackson.
. In North Dakota, House Speaker Earl Strinden, one of the state's most
: powerful and influential politicians, has disappointed those who sought to induce him to file as the GOP candidate in opposition to Sen. Quentin N. Burdick.
In four other states, Republicans now holding House seats were generally
believed to be among the party's strongest candidates in races against
Democrats seeking re-election to the Senate.
But Rep. Jack Kemp declined to make the race against Sen. Daniel P.
'
Moynihan
in New York, Rep. Trent Loti decided not to challenge Sen. John
C. Stennis in Mississippi and Rep. Marjorie S. Holt rejected the idea of running against Sen. PaulS. Sarbanes in Maryland.
In FlOrida, Reps. L. A. "Skip" Bafaiis and C. W. Bill Young both hacked
away from a possible race against. Democratic Sen. Lawton M. Chiles Jr,
'
(Bafalis is, however, challenging Gov. Robert Graham.)
· In Texas, a statewide poll commissioned by Republican leaders identified
three potential candidates who might have a chance to defeat Sen. Uoyd
Benfsen.
COLUMBUS, 'Ohio (AP) - The
They were James A. Baker III, the White House chief of staff; Anne Arstate's
consumer counsel is
mstrong, a highly respected.veteran party activist; and Rep. Phil Gramm, a ,
afraid" that utility com"deathly
Democrat who has been a leading proponent of President Reagan's budget
panies
would
manipulate the elecinitiatives and is a likely prospect to switch to the Republican Party.
toral
process
if members of the
All three declined, however, as did Roger Staubach, the nationally known
Public
Utilities
Cornrnissionof Ohio
fanner quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys.
were elected.
"We're afraid that the system
would become more political than
it already is," said William Spratley, who heads of the Office of Con'

need federal prosecutors to guard

against reversing that line wl\y, let
us have them, in such abundance as
necessary.
But the author goes on, and before
long we find that, really, the entire
ethos of what they call the New
Right ministry is being challenged.
The reason children are negularly
beaten in their schools, we are told,
is because "this crushing of the free
hwnan intellect is much harder to
achieve in adults. After all, other
than cult members, what educated
grown-up would willingly give up the
right to think, the right to one's own
mind, and the right to choose?" Gee
whiz. Well, Ignatius LoyOla comes to
mind; or~ for that matter, any
Catholic. Or members of the British
civil service.
Granted, one is free, in a free
SOCiety, to withdraw allegiance,
whether to God, to his putative
representative on earth or to the
crown. A3 far as that goes, one is

free to renounce one's citizenship.
But the critics of the Moral Majority
simply can't stand the fact that
there are schools out there that
preach enduring truths, or at least
that is how they dominate them. It
. isn't that Penthouse doesn't believe
in enduring truths, it doe&amp;: the right,
for instance, to undifferentiated
sexual gratification is one of their
enduring truths, and God knows
they'll try hard to tell you how to do
it.
' The author's zeal to' prosecute the
Moral Majority goes to lengths that
would embarrass the John Birch
Society. "But spsnking is just part of
·the New Christian Right's wellfinanced program on education ...
They are also engaged in a smear ·
campsjgn against public schools and
teachers; lobbying for privateschool tuition tax credits that' will
undermine already cut-back
f~eral, state and local aid to

education, eventually resulting in
the public schools going bankrupt."
So we have it: To lobby for tuition
tax credits is to lobby for the
bankruptcy of the public schools. To
which there is opposition? And w~
not? There are objective and ~
grounds for such opposition, if OW II
careful not to gener~ too
prehensively: There -ere
magnificent public schools in
America, but on average they are
delinquent. Once again we have the
effort, made without any sense of
measure, to argue against the ··
Christian dissidents.
It is a superb irony that the last
one-third of the Penthouse story
needs to share the space with advertisements for books, artifacts,
movies, designed to perfect the art
and practice of seduction. I like best
the' 'Subliminal Seduction Tapes" " Put more on their mind than just
good music .. , " Just don't them get
near the Moral Majority.

Letters to the editor

Not new problem
•

''

•

"We are against the Idea. We favor the merit selection process."

I
ing utility Interests for two years
after leaving office.
Included in the bill is a ratemaking provision which would forbid utilities from charging
customers for certain promotional
advertisi ng and charitable
contributions.
The proposal could get a faceilfting in the House.
Rep. Ronald H. J.ames, DProctorviile, believes that a PUCO
reform bill should be limited only to

the restructuring of the commission. C)ther provisions ·should be
contained in seilarate legislation,
James said.
Spratley said the real issue Is determining what is right lor Ohio
when It comes to reforming the
PUCO.
"Would we have a more accountable, professional, responsible
public utilities commission If It
,.;ere elected? I think from theargu·
ments we have heard - we would
not," Spratley said.

Broadcast issue prompted debate

places for the river road. A trip from
Pomeroy to Minersville, in a motor
boat, wi.li show this wail in many
places has given away and has large
WASHINGTON tAP) - It
holes eroded in it.
wasn't the big economic and forIn the upper end of Minersville a eign policy issues that prompted
large section of Route 124 is settling the liveliest debate at last weeinto the river. Ill front of my proper- kend's Tidewater Republican conty most of the river bank is a cinder
ference In Easton, Md. It was
fill (from a salt furnace in past whether radio and television should
times). The river is fast eroding this be pennltted In the Senate.
bank away. This erosion has greatly
Participsnts at the annual GOP
increased in recent years as the
number of towboats has increased in,
number and speed. As waves from
these boats come ashore you can
watch large trees tremble and shake
and become uprooted taking with
LOS ANGELES - As many people
them vast chunks of river hank. may have been aware the end of the
Each winter means a loss of more world was to have taken place last
river bank depen.ding upon the rise Wednesday, March 10.'
and fail of the river and the length of
The prediction was based on the
time it stays up. The entire bank ln so-called "Jupiter Effect," when all
Minersville, is in great danger the planets lined up on one slde'of the
unless action is taken at once.
sun and were supposed to cause earThere used to be a street car track thquakes and volcano disruptions.
along the outside of the river road in
I happen~ to be in L.A. on March
Minersville. Today one could hardly 10, which is the best place to be if the
believe it existed because in most world is going to come to an .end,
places the place that used to be its because Southern Californians seem
base has in by-gone years gone down to take things like this more in stride
the river because of erosion.
than any people I know.
· VicBrown
All the stuff about them being laid
back does happen to be true.
On the morning of March 10, I
started making my farewell
telephone calis to dear friends. I
called
up Newcome first:
We send to all out of town Alumni,
"Well,
NewCCllllbe, I guess you
so anyone can help by calling me if
they know of anyone that has moved,
married, or have passed away.
Phone 9411-2374.
Everyone that is returned is 25
cents wasted.
Besides there are some we qon't
have·an address for, especially the
last six years. And if anyone wants
to update their class II would be appreciated, I have been working on
addreses for two weeks now and get
done what I can, for· they go out the
first part of Aril. By the way, the
banquet is May 29.
Barbara Pierce
Racine

policy session were pretty evenly
divided, although those favoring
broadcasting Senate proceedings
eventuaUy won by a three-vote
margin.
Sen. Larry Pressler, R-S.D.,
complained that Senate Majority
Leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn.,
was having a hard time persuading

the Senate to aUow TV cameras in
the chamber, as the House has done
lor the past three years.
"There are enough votes in the
Senate to stop radio and television
coverage," Pressler told the Republican gathering. He asked the
conference to help.
But Rep. Joel Prttchard, R-

Wash., said senators already talk
too much. House members are II·
mlted by House rules but the Senate
doesn't llmlt the length of speeches,
he observed.
"How do you know that you senators aren't going to talk even more
If you get TV?" Pritchard asked.

know what day this is.".
"Wednesday?" he said, taking a
wild guess.
"It's the day the world is coming
to an end.''

"You mean the L.A. Dodgers
haven't signed Fernando Valenzuela
yet1"
"It's worse than that. We can expect a Jupiter Effect and we're all
gOing to be, swallowed into the
ground."

"That happened to me a couple of
months ago during a mudslide at my
house. I was sucked in iight where
my Jacuzzi was. But it always sounds much worse than it is. The. trick is
to take a deep breath and fight your
way to the top of the muck."
"Goodbye, Rick. You made my
stay on Earth worthwhile."
My next call was to Bernheim:

rr----==::;;,

PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP) Two factors - the unknown demaiJ·
ds of a new and potentiallycontroversial course and the failure
of the pro golf tour to produce a
dominant figure this season - contributed to the absence of a clear-cut
favorite in the $500,000 Tournament
Players Championship.
"We're stili learning the golf course. Everyone - even the officials are still learning the golf course,"
said Ray Floyd, the defending
titleholder in this, the annual championship of goif's touring players.
"We still don't know, the officials
don't know, if the course will play
easier or harder if its set up this way
of another way," said Floyd, who
won last season a few hundred yards
away at the Sawgrass links.
This time, he -and the other 146
men face the tests and demands of a
brand-new course, the Players Club,
owned by the touring players themselves and a permanent site for the
event that is growing annually. in
prestige and importance.
It was designed by Pete Dye, who
said the underlying thought was "to
create a golf course to bring out ali

the shots, aU the great shots . the
professional players are capable of
playing."
There have been suggestions,
however, that the penaiities for a
misSed shot are too severe.
Hall Of Fame players Jack
Nicklaus and Arnold Pabner, both of
whom also are professionals in the
field of golf course design and construction, have lauded the course,
however.
"To be able to play this course,
you have to have all the shots," Arnold said, and listed Nicklaus, Tom
Kite anil possibly Tom Watson as
~ntial challengers for the $90,000
first prize.
Kite, who has finished ,lOth or better in 26 of his last 33 sta~, has ·won
once and finished second twice this
season, probably the tour's best
record. With 10 tournaments played
this season, no one has won twic_e.
Nicklaus has won not at all. But
he's been in contention in five of six
starts. '
Portions of the final two rounds
Saturday and Sunday will be
televised nationally by CBS.

The Hoyas' 7-footer rejected 112
sbots in the regular season and
figures to block a few more in
tonight's action at Brigham Young
University's 22,7IJO.seat Marriott
Center.
The game will be the nightcap of a
West Regional semifinal
doubleheader. In the other contest,
Idaho faces Oregon State.
In other action tonight, Louisville
plays . Minneso~&amp; and Alabama- ·
Birmingham faces Virginia in the
Mideast Regionals at Binningbam,
Ala.
F,riday night, Memphis State, 2~,
plays Villanova, 23-7, and North
Carolina, 28-2, meets Alabama, 24-6,
in the East Regional at Raleigh,
N.C. In the Midwest at St. Louis, it's
Boston College, 21-9, vs. Kansas
State, 23-7, and Houston, 23-7, against MisSo11ri, 27-3.
Finals in the West and Mideast
will be played Saturday and in the
East and Midwest on Sunday. The
winners of the regional tournaments
will advance to the Final Four in
New Orleans March 27-29.
The West Regional features some
of the toughest defenses in the country, including Fresno Sta.te's
statistical country - leaders. The
chanipions of the Pacific Coast
Athletic Association have surrended
a mere 46.7 points a game, using a
combination of presses and zones
and man-to-man defense.
The 11th-ranked Bulldogs, 27-2, ad-

and ours was a more experienced
that we
December
at thatintime,"
Monteam
thanplayed
theirs them
son says.
Fourth-ranked oregon state, 24-4,
beat Pepperdine 7~1 and Idaho

"Alain," I sa;d, "I called to say au

Wbat do you mean, au revoir?"
he said. "We're giving a dinner for
you Sunday night."
"There is no Sunday nigh!. The
world is going to end.today."
"But what about the caterer? He's
already ordered the avocado dip and
potato chips."
"rm sorry you went to aU that
trouble, but our fate is in the stars.
The planets are against us."
"You want me to tell that to a Los
Angeles caterer•"
" Don't leU him anything. Wben
the earthquake comes, he'll disappear with his avocado dip and never
be the wiser.''
I then called my nell friend, Angie
Dickinson:
11

of the world. Would you like to come
over to the hotel for a final drink?''
"Oh, my God. I'm glad you called.
I read about It yesterday and made a
3 o'clock appointment with my hair-

FRONT-END ALIGNMENT

~~~r~~~:~:.

in overtime in
In the Mideast Regional,
Alabama~Binningham will · face
another tall problem in Cavalier
center Ralph Sampson. The twotime Ail-America is the main reason
for Virginia's fancy 3().3 record and
No.3 national ranking.
Virginia guard Jeff Jones says he
expects UAB to run and press in an
effort to neutralize the board advantage afforded by the 7-4 Sampson.
"They'll want to run the whole 40
minutes," Jones predicts. "We've
faced some teams recently that wanted to run, but not for the whole 40
minutes- five minutes, then slow it
down and get it under control.
"I think we've shown with what we
have coming off the bench that if any
team wants to run with us, we'D '
wear them out."
The game will be played at the
Civic Center, UAB' s home court,

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COLUMBUS, Ol)io (AP) - Steve
Yoder of Ball State has been named
the Coach of the Year in the MidAmerican Conference for the second
straight time after guiding the Cardinals to the regular-season basketMelvin
bali
title. McLaughlin of Central
Michigan was selected as the
league's Player of the Year, while
Ken Epperson of Toledo was named
as the conference Freshman of the
Year.
The selections were made by sports writers and sportscasters who
cover the conference.
Yoder guided Ball State to a 12-1
league record and a 17-11 overall
mark. In his five seasons with the
Cardinals, he has a 7Hi2 record and
of .554.
leading

scorer, became the first Chippewa
since Dan Roundfield in 1975 to win
the award. The S-foot junior from
Grand Rapids, Mich., averaged 23.2
points per game for hist-ptace Centrai MichiJlan.

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• •

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CARB

Booster

DALE HILL
fORD TRACTOR

dresser."

Before I could make the next call,
e,phone rang.
·~ name is Peterson and I'm
with the B&amp;H Real Estate Company.
As you know the world is gOing to
come to an end today so I'm happy to .
announce one of my clienis in the
San Fernando Valley is willing to
sacrifice his $6-miilion, twobedroom ranchhouse for $5 million."
"Suppose the world comes to an
end before I get to look at the

SEE MR. GOODWRENCH FOR A

r-------;--:;;::;;;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::=:;--

Art Buchwald
revoir."

j~th~e~sc:h:oo:l's~bas:k:e~t:ba~ll~p:ro:g:r:a:m~.l~~~~~~~~:~~~

Ball State's Yoder top mentor

,,
'

Virginia in sub-regional play, while school has fielded a basketball team.
sixth-ranked Georgetown, 27~, the UAB Is JG-1 at home over the past
Big East champion, defeated two seasons. .
Wyoming51-43.
Virginia Coach Terry Holland said
Etghth-ranked Idaho, 27-2, the .Big he was less concerned abOut UAB's
Sky champion, uses a tough mat- home court advantage than UAB's
chup zone which Coach Don Monson fine otitside shooter, Oliver Robindescribes as "man for man on the son, who averaged 21 points a game
ball, with zone concepts of the other . this season.
four players." Washington State
Considering that UAB will try to
Coach George Raveling calls il one deny Sampson the ball, Holland says
ofthebestinthecountry.
i1e doesn't want his guards to comThe Vandals stunned Oregon State pletely quit trying to get it to Sam71-49 in the Far West Classic last pson inside.
"We don't want to get into that
December and Beaver Coach Ralph
Mill~r says his PaNO champions
syndrome,'' he said.
UAB, 24-5, is bidding for a Final
are eager for a rematch.
"The biggest thing that I see is Four berth in only the fourth year of

GET $1.25 BACK ON

The Jupiter Effect

Planning already
1 am writing this letter to try to put
a point across. A person said to me
Saturday 'well, it won't be long
before Alwmd time.' I answered, we
are already working on it and then
she sald, 'What are you doing now?'
Pres. Gary Willford had a meeting
ai his home March I, hut had alrady
long before this been in touch with
officers Jeff Thornton, Brenda Johnson, Julia Thorne and myself about
hiring a band and getting a speaker.
A person doesn't realize how hard
1 work on addresses and need help.
One out of seven people move every
year and then there are over 2,000
Racine Alumni and you work on addresses I 'believe it.

sumers' Counsel.

SPffiiT- Commuulty spirit prevalla in lbe Soulbern Local !kbool
District thaw to lbe success of lbe 1118Z butelball team. Prevaleut in
•the Raclue commuuity are uumei'GIII sips polled 011 utility poles,
hulidlugs BDd other locat10111 lll'IIIDg tbe Torud- lo vlclory 1D
regional tourney P.i&amp;Y lonlght. Tbls "tornado hmDel" IICD IIIII beeD
plilced on the front of tbe Southern Hlgb School DOting wltb a star 1be
accomplishments of the team as SV AC cbamps, seettooal BDd dlslrlct
lournameol wiJIIlen. Residents bope they can add stan ID tbe uext two
categories, dhitrlct and state tournameut. 1be slga earrylug out the
school colon was made by Mr. aud Mn. Charles Mathews.

where the Blazers have recorded a

su record in the four years that the

50-46 victory over No. 14 West

defense."

TPC has no favorite

Spratley said he has seen studies
showing that the quality of regillatlon is not as high in states that have
election commissions.
"There's no Industrial state that
has an elected commission," he
said.
Legislation approved in late February by the Ohio Senate would expsnd the PUCO from three to five
members, cr~&gt;ate a 12-member
nomina tlng council to recommend
members and restrict former
PUCO members from represent-

vanced to the West Regionals with a

By Associated Press
Georgetown will present some tall
probl~ tonight for Fresno State in
the NCAA's West Regional basketball playoffs at Provo, Utah.
The tallest is Pat Ewing.
"I think Ewing's presence creates
more problems on defense than he
does on offell$f," says Fresno State
Coach Boyd Grant. "John Thompson
is a good coach and he has Ewing
play so alertly in the middle of his

a-.n-

Counsel fears utility_voter manipulation

In Sunday's Times-Sentinel Mr.
Hoeflich mentioned the railroad
track in front of Kroger's on East
Main Street being under-mined by
river bank erosion. The date on the
following letter will show that this
problem was brought to attention 10
years ago and has not come on suddenly.
At that time the Meigs Soil and
Conservation sent out questionnaires on river bank erosion. The
following letter at that time was my
answer on this problem.
, May 15, 1972
To the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation Service:
The river bank ali along Route 124
in the lower and upper end of Minersville, is fast eroding away. This
past swruner the Ohio Power Company moved their poles from the
river bank side of the highway to the
hillside because of river bank
erosion.
Beginning at ,the junction of
Welchtown Road and 124 starts a
rock wall that extends most all along
the river road to the business section
of Pomeroy. Behind this wail in most
place~~ is filled with cinders (the byproduct of salt furnaces in the
1800's). This fonns a base in various_

Fresno State faces
tall problem tonight

Pag~2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 18, 1982

.. -...

... Partl
• ~ Plu.
Sale Ends 3-20-82

�Page--4-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 18, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 18, 1982

·Tulane battles Bradley in tonight's NIT action
By AIIIO&lt;'Iated Preu
If it's Thursday,lt must be Peoria,
Ill., for the Tulane basketball team.
"I don't know what they (NIT of.
ficials) are thinktng," says Coach
Ned FoWler. "We have had to play
three games in a row in hostile enVironments.''
Of the eight teams remaining in
the NIT field, only Tulane hasn't

played at home. And tonight,
Fowler's piayers find themselves
facing another unsympathetic
audience in Bradley's Robertson
Field House.
It's one of three NIT games
tonight. Elsewhere, Dayton plays at
Oklahoma and Virginia Tech visits
Georgia. In another third-round
game Friday night, Purdue en-

tertalns Texas A&amp;M.
The winners tonight and Friday
night will advance to the semifinals
at New York's Madison Square Gar·
den next Monday night. The championship' will be decided Wednesday
night.
Tulane has been the surprise team
In this year's NIT. In its first-ever
postseason bid, the Green Wave has
beaten Louisiana State 83-72 and
Nevada-Las Vegas ~I en route to
the quarter-final round.
Bradley, meanwhile, has sur·
prised few people, Including Coach
Dick Versace. The Braves' coach
was critical Of the NCAA's tourney
selection committee for Inviting four
Big East teams while ignoring his
club.

r-

Bradley took out its frustration
Monday night with a 9S-81 trouncing
of Big East team Syracuse in the Big
Orange's own arena. Bradley's
other victory was a 7~ decision
over American University.
The Braves may have to play
tonight's game without the services
of junior guard Willie Scott, who is
suffering from _a pulled groin
muscle.
"this is our 34th game and Willie
has been playing really-hard," Ver·
sace says. "He was in the whirlpool
when I last saw him, and he may
heal. But Eddie Matthews (a junior
guard) and Eddie Harris (a freshman) are bOth healthy."
About Tulane, Versace said:
_"They have a style that gives

Caponi seeks third title

everybody trouble. I! you get behind ,....--------------~----~--­
a team like this, you got trouble.
They're difficult to pressure."
Tulane doesn't run like Syracuse,
noted Versace. "Syracuse wanted to
run and we ran them out of the
gym," he said.
Oklahoma has bounced back from
large deficits in bOth Of its earlier_
Long-lasting, good looking Red Wing
games.
Pecos pull-on boots are mad e for fun
or work . You can depend on them for
the kind of heel' huggin', easy wea rin'
fit that makes long , hard days
Con~tulations
seem shorter. Pick a pair of
Pecos and feel fit .

Look good!
Feel fit!

r-------------1

SOUTHERN

Larg e select 1on a!
s1ze an d w 1d !h s

Red Wi•lii'"":~

and

GOOD LUCK

n::. .

DAN'S BOOT SHOP
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Donna
Inn Country Club which had been
to Caponi when Caponi birdied L!:~~~~~=~~~~~L--~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:_
Caponi was seeking a third straight rebuilt just a few months earlier. shot
the 17th hole of the final round and
title while Nancy Lope2-Melton was Course officials say the greens have Lopez-Mellon bogeyed it. Last year,
- -··
·-·
hoping to get back on the winning matured and should hold better for she led for three rounds, but finished
track in the noo,ooo J&amp;B Scotch Pro- this year's tournament.
fourth when she soared to a final·
Am women's golf tournament.
Lopez-Mellon, despite two third· round 76 while Caponi charged to
The event, which began today, place finishes this year, hasn't won a victory.
also . featured the return Of Jan tournament in eight months and is
A local favorite will be Patty
OUR
Stephenson, playing for the first hungry for a victory.
Sheehan, last year's rookie of the •
time slnce suffering a broken foot
" I just can't seem to put four good year and a native of Reno, Nev.
bone last year.
•
rounds together," she said. "I have Sheehan returned to action last week
Caponi, who came from 12 shots had a little problem with my putter, in the Olympia Gold ·in Los Angeles
back after two rounds last year to but I'm striking the ball well and my after sitting out three tournaments
capture the $30,000 first prize, also putting Is corning around. I just have with a sprained ankle.
.
.
won the tournament in 1980, each to play a little more consistently and
The field will be split for the first
·lime with a 2-under-par 286 tolal.
avoid having that one bad round two days of the tournament between
· But Caponi, who points to the ever week.''
the par 72, 6,237-yard Desert Inn
· event as the beginning Of her serious
Lopez-Mellon has played well at course and the 6,087-yard Las Vegas
tournament schedule, predicted the Desert Inn the past two years, Country Club, which plays to a par
lower scores this year among the only to be frustrated In the final 73. The final two days will be played
. field of 88 pros that includes the round. In 1980, she lost by a single at the Desert Inn,
'
.biggest names in women's golf.
· " You're going to see some very, ~----~-------------------1
'very low scores," Caponi said. "The
·scores are going to be lower this
year because the greens will hold
better.''
Last year, the women pros complained they couldn't hold a shot on
·the hard, fast greens at the Desert

-

__

, Lifestyle FuRNITURE sHowcAsE
GIGANTIC
FIRST ANNIVERSARY

SALE

SAVINGS IN DEPARTMENTS

Own a small business?

The Uuily Sc nlin cl
IUSPSI41-1Mi'

.4. Olvl•loa tJf MultlmedLI, Joe.
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Publishln" ComPIRY • Multimedix, Inc.,
PCirseroy, Ohio 4S769, 992-21:;&amp;. &amp;!c.'Ond cla&amp;ti
posLage paid yt Pomeroy, Ohio.

You'll appreciate the
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H&amp;R Block can give
your tax returns.

•HIDE-A-BEDS
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N~ W!I Jl!IJ1l!r &amp;tit!!! , 7JJ Third Avenllt!, New

York , New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: St!llllll&amp;.lrell!! to The Dally
Sentinel, 111 Court St. Pomeroy , Oh1045769.

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SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C•rrit!r or Mot•r Root~!
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Subscribers not desJrlng to pay the ca rrier
JI\IIY remit In .advance direcl to The Daily
~ ntlnt!l on a 3, 8 or 12 month llasis. Credit
will bt! ~iven carrier each month.

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3 Month . . ....................... SIJ.OO
6 Month .. .. . .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .... $2-.HO
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....... ........ S44.Zfl

ATIIENS, Ohio (AP ) - Wheelersburg's Paul Newman scored 19
points and matched' that with 19
rebounds as his team defeated War·
saw River View 64-58 Wednesday
night in a Class AA regional
semifinal boys baSketball game.
River View, which trailed 36-25 at
the half, came within two points
I · the f urth
'od t 4" '7 ·
ear Y on
pen a ""'. ·
But _Wheelersburg then scored SIX
straight poonts to put the_game out of
reach.
.
Brad Walke also scored 19 poonts
for Wheelersburg, now 24-1.
hi h 1· · hed t-he
Ri
V.
.
ver lew, w c lOIS
sbeaBsollnDat22-~, ~as palt~ed8 mscotsrongd*
y ' . auge y w I pom an
Jeff Wolson w1th 15.
· 1
In Wedn esd ay 's I'orst reg1ona
·
·
th
c
·
game m e onvocatoon Center at
Ohio University, Bruce Woods and

°

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Savings on every one.

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TOP QUALI TY

Anthony Davis each converted oneand-oile free throw opportunities in
the final 20 seconds as Martins
Ferry defeated Portsmouth 61-56 in
ClassAAaction.
Coach Tom Smith's Trojans led 1614 after one period. The score was
tied 31 .31 during the halftime intennission. Martins Ferry led 44-39
· · th f. 1 'od
gOing onto e ma pen ·
Chris Gent'!' and . Gerald Clay
scored 15 poonts apiece for Por·
lsm?'Jth. Lee Cobb add~d 12· The
TrOJans bowed out w;th a 211-4
record. Martins Ferry, now20-4, will
batt! Wheel bur f th
· 1
e .
.e'7 g or e regoona
_chamhipiOnship mta 7F:30~.mT~ontest
at 0 .o Umverso y n y. e wmner woll advance to the 1982 Class AA
·
state tournament, scheduled ID
Columbus next week

By Associated press
The Big Red Machine is wearing a
big red face.
The embarrassment came courtesy of ~x-teammate George Foster,
who got involved in a salary squabble with the Cincinnati Reds and was
subsequently dealt to the New York
Mets last month.
The veteran slugger slammed his
first two home runs of the spring
Wednesday in the Mets' 5·1
exhibition victory over the Reds.
Foster unloaded bOth times against
Mario Solo, a two-run blast in the fir·
st inning and a solo shot in the
second.
Elsewhere, the Atlanta Braves
won for the ninth time in 10 games,
snapping a 2·2 tie on Brook Jacoby's
RBI single in the seventh inning and
beating the Los Angeles Dodgers 6-2.
Juan Berenguer, Mark Bomback
and Roy Lee Jackson combine&lt;\ on a
five-hitter and Buck Martinez
homered as the Toronto Blue Jays
won their fifth game in a row,
defeating the St. Louis Cardinals 3- L
Rickey Henderson, who reached
base all six times he batted, doubled
home the tying run in the ninth inning and singled home the winner in

dis~~=i~o::~~edto~=~n~~~

~~';;:~e~~:~:~r~d 7:~~!gs'~v~
points led Youngstown Rayen 79-66
over Cleveland Central Catholic ;
and Stuart Sims scored 31 points as
Swanton downed Columbus St.
Charles , 67·54.
Around The State
If Cincinnati Moeller is the Cin-

the lith to give the Oakland A's a 7-6 Bulling's two-run single keyed a
victory over the California Angels.
four-run sixth inning as the Seattle
California's Rod Carew drove- in Mariners defeated .the San Diego
four nir\s with a homer and single Padres 4-2.
before a near..,apacity crowd Of
Jack Clark homered in the first in7,324 in Phoenix. The game was ning and singled home two runs in a
played [or the benefit of the Ken six-run seventh that lilted the San
Boyer Fund and almost $15,000 was Francisco Giants over the
raised for the fanner Cardinals Milwaukee Brewers 8-li. The Boston
manager, who is in Me~ co un- Red Sox took advantage of three
dergoing cancer treaiment.
Houston errors, two in one inning by
Home runs by rookies Csl Ripken shortstop Craig Reynolds, to score
and Bob Bonner highlighted a seven·
run first inning and the Baltimore
Orioles crushed the Kansas City
Royals 14-3.
ROTTERDAM, Netherlands
The Montreal Expos pounded Ron
Guidry for four runs in the first in- (AP) - 'Jimmy Connors scored an
ning, including Dave Hostetler's easy 6-1, 6-2 victory over South Afri·
three-run homer, and beat the New ca's Kevin Curren to advance to the
third round of the $250,&lt;XXJ Rotter·
York Yankees 6-4.
Tom Paciorek's three-run homer dam Grand Prix Tournament.
In other action, Gene Mayer deand Leo Sutherland's solo shot
helped the Chicago White Sox turn feated Britain's John Lloyd 6-4, 6-3;
back the Pittsburgh Pirates 9-5. Pat GuUlermo Vilas of Argentina
Putnam and Bob Johnson homered topped John Austin 6-2, 6-1; John
in an 18-hit attack as the Texas Sadri bea t Sweden's Matts WIRangers hammered the Minnesota . lander 6-2, 6-3; Pavel Slozil of Cze.
Twins12-4.
Mike Moore , the nation's No.I pick
,
in last June's free agent draft, pit·
ched five scoreless innings and Bud
TAMPA, Fla. (AP ) - Righthander Bill Bonham will start for the
Cincinnati Reds against the Los
Angeles Dodgers in an exhibition
Harne today in Tampa .
Bonham, making a tw&lt;&gt;-year
comeback bid from shoulder
surgery, struck out four batters in
three innings in his first appearance
this spring and later said that his
shoulder felt fine.
Bonham will be followed by Bruce
Berenyi. The Dodgers will start Bob
Welch ..

Martins Ferry

16 15

8 17- 56
14 17 13 17-61

WHEELERSBURG l~ l
Newman , 8·3-19; Walke, 7-5-19;
DeCamp, 0 -11 ; Staker, 2·0·4;

F isher, 2·0·4; Brown , 0·4-4; Perry, 1-

1·3. TOTALS 24-16· 64 • .

ALL IN STOCK ·
STONE _
RINGS

choslovakla upset Australia ·s
Mark Edmundson 7·6, 6-4; Chip
Hooper topped Tim Gulllkson 6-3,
3-6, 7-5; Brtan Gottfried defeated
BUI Scanlon 6-7, 6-4, 7-6; .Tomas
Smld of Czechoslovakia heat Jnachlm Nystrom of Sweden 6-1, 6-1;
John Alexander of AustraUa topped
Rod Frawley 6-0, 6-1; and Harold
&amp;&gt;loman beat Fritz Buehnlng 6-4,
2-6. 6-1.

20%
'
OFF
BECAUSE
GOLD WE
INGS ON
TAGE OF
TODAY.

tlons

OF THE LOW PRICE OF
ARE PASSING THE SAVTO YOU. TAKE ADVANTHESE GREAT PRICES

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

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VI SINE

Before people knew what to call them, we
made shoes with shock-absorbing cushioned
crepe soles. And total!y supportive steel
shanks. And Breathin Brushed Plgskon ~
uppers to flex when a walking foot flexes.
And~ called them Hush Puppies... And we
priced them affordably. And we still do.
We knew what you wanted all along.

can be placed and you may
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for the rest a your Nlel

RUSSELL STOVER

•

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SWIIPSTAKES!

E, GALLI

qua r ters:

' ~•

5

,..--~.,

THIRDATO

Score~

The Public Utilities Com·
mission ol Ohio ha s set
lor public hearing Case
No. 81 ·302-EL-EFC (sublile A) to review Ihe luel
procurement practices and
policies of Ohio Power
company . the operation
ol its Electric Fuel Component Clause. and related
matlers . This hearing is
scheduled lo begin al1 :00
p.m. on Mond ay , March
22. 1982. atlhe Cily Coun·
cil Chambers . 218 Cleve·
land Ave., S.W., Canlon .
Oh io 44702 .
All interested parties will
be given an oppor(unlly
lobe heard. Further inlor·
mation may be oblained·
by contacling lhe Commission .
THE PUBLI C UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF Otila
By : David M. Polk.
Sec relary

0

IN HEAVY DU TY
1982 FABRICS

•

Pomeroy 125 E. Main St. . 992-2171

Voytecek, 2·0·4; Scarfpin , 1-2·4;
Swearingen, 6-2-U ; Haidin, 2·2·6 .

LEGAL NOTI CE

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MONDAY. MARCH 22nd

Come iri and enter
LIFESTYLE FURNITURE and

Lifesty
·. le· SHOWCASE
FURNITu~E

FIRST GAME
PORTSMOUTH (S6) - Gentry, 6 ·
3·15; Parker, 0·6·6: Clay, 7-1·15;
Barrett, 1·0·2; Cobb. 6-0·12 ; Jackson,
1·0·2; Collins. 1-0-2; Johnson, 1·02;
Kev Parker, 0·0·0. TOTALS 23·10·56.
MARTINS FERRY (61) - Allen,
5·0·10; WoodS, 3·4·10;_Davis, 3-7-13;

Portsmouth

Bonham starts today

'111E OLD DOUBLE DIP
Dale Berra of tile Pittsburgh·
Pirates avoids sliding Chicago White So• runner Jim Morrison as be
guns tile ball to first base lor a first Inning double play In Wedne...
day's exhlbltlon game at McKechnie Field In Bradenton, Fla. Mary
Foley was oulatflrst base. (AP Laserphoto)

@I!) a Control !l.\ta CO!rf-Wl)l

·

Astros 8-1.
The Chicago Cubs scored four
times in the bottom of the ninth inning to tie the game and nipped the
Cleveland Indians !().9 on Scot
Thompson's RBI single In the lith.
Kirk Gibson's three-run homer
and four-hit pitching by George Cappuzzello, Augie Rulz and Mark Lee
paced the Detroit Tigers to a ~vic­
tory over the Philadelphia Phillies.

Wilson, 7-1-15; Vickers, 2-H ;
NelSon, 1. 1. 3, McCIIlsler, s-0·10;
~ec k, 2-2-6; Allen, 0-0-0. TOTALS 25:
8 ~core by quarlers:
wneelersbu rg
19 11 13 1&gt;-'River View
16 9 20 1 3- ~ _

0

....:~'
'• I

arv_I.Q\N
&amp;.SAVINGS

rom

TOTALS 22·17·61 .

Q.~·

0\J'

.

8+ 18 ;

. Mt. Healthy outscored Bacon 211-12
m the third quarter to take a 48-4~
lead, but ~con. came back by hi_t
ting all10 of 1ts foeld goal attempts on
the fourth quarter.
,
In other Class AAA regional
seinifinal action Wednesday night,
Columbus Mifflin, uslng an intense
defense, upset No. &lt;!-ranked Newark,
31·Mif
29 · n·n got basket!rom Troy Hit·
1
a
chcock with 1:22 roke a tie to give
Barberton a 49-47 decision over
Warren Western Reserve .

six unearned runs and trounce the

ONLY

You might need money for a lot of good reasons-to
take care of unexpet:ted bills, to fix up your home,
or perhaps to take a well-deserved
--· .
vacation. WltatE:ver the cause, City Loan
and Savings has the money to meet it.
So stop by one of our offices, or call
us. Find out how quickly we can supply
EST.191l
money for your favorite cause. Because
robody knows you like we do.

games. ,
.
scored
Bacon s Gn:g Schildmeyer
21 points agaonst Mt. Healthy Wed~esda:e~:~~ !::t~~d to come

Connors advances to third round play

SOFAS
Reg . $629

d~rella team of the 1982 Ohio boys
high school basketball to~nt,
1t may well be Byron Larkin who
keefu the clock from striking rniilmg · .
~rkin, a sophomore, ~red 25
poonts W~esday n}ght 1D the
Crus~ders SU7 v1~tory o~er
Hamilton + only the sixth varsity
game he has played all season. He
has averaged mcire than 20 points.
How much of a difference Larkin
makes in the Moeller llttack may
become apparent in Saturday's
Dayt Cl
AAA
·
li
. ont G asst Ci ~giOnet
' 1Lena 1s
agaons rea er ncmna • ague
opponent Cincinnati Roger Bacon.
Moeller and Roger ·Bacon have
met three times this season and
R
Ba
ha
'th
con
a 11 · ree
t' oger
t La k's won •t
the
unes. 8 l'n
u
r foon wasn
Moell
n of onthose
.
er I eup r a Y

In other Class AA regoonal
semifinals, No. !-ranked Willard
beat Coldwater~ behind the 211point game of sophomore Rex
Adams, whose sconng oncluded two
free throws with one second to play.
Adams' free throws came after
Coldwater's Todd Dues,missed ·two
free throws with 10 seconds
remaining· .

Foster slams two ·homers in 5-1 win

SHOWN Three
piece dining se t,
wrought iron in
vanilla finish. Glass
top and cushioned
chairs. Reg. $180.

2nd &amp; BROWN STS.
MASON, W. VA.

Sentinei - Pag~S

..

Wheelersburg ~dvances to regional.,!~,!!~!~

Heavy duty - Will
not blow ·away and
will give years of
summer comfort Sofas and Easy
Chairs,
Tables,
Dining Groups.

Member: The Al110cl11ted Pi-eu, Inland DaJ.
ly Press As8oc_latlon and the American
N.:wspaper Publishers AJsOt·lt~ U on , Natlo11.11l
Advcrtlsln~ Representative , BranhHm

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.

�Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Calendar
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTO, card party at the Middleport Elementary
School, Thursday, 1:30 to 10 p.m.
The $2.50 charge includes fOOd
and prizes.
MEIGS COUNTY Fox Chasers
will meet at 1:30 p.m. Thursday
at the cabin on Eagle Ridge
Road. All interested persons are
invited.

FRIDAY
MUSIC WILL BE by "Music
Unlimited" when a teen dance is
staged at the Rutland 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. Refreshments will
be sold. Tickets are $3 per couple
. or $2 single.
BAKE SALE, Forest Run
MethOdist Church, Friday, at
Dale C. Warner Insurance
building in Pomeroy, beginning
at 9 a.m. with proceeds to go
toward the cost of storm windows
for the church.

Tuppers Plains school
observes reading week

MEIGS VOCAL Music Boosters
will sponsor a spaghetti dinner at
the Rutland grade school Satur·
day, with serving from 5 to 8 p.m.
Tickets will be available at the
school with the menu to include
spaghetti, salad, rolls, pie and
beverage. Cost will be $2.50 for
adults, and $1.50 for those under
12. FOOd donations are to be at the
school Jiy 9 a.m. Saturday morning. For pickup service, donors
may call992-3686 or 992-2377.

MIDDLEPORT Child Con- INSPECTION or Meigs Chapter,
servation League will meet Order or DeMolay, will be held
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Saturday, 7:30 p.m. at the MidPomeroy American Legion 'hall . dleport Masonic Temple. J;leMolay
Husbands' night will be observed and Masons are invited to attend.
with a potluck dinner. Members
are to take a covered dish and
CHESTER Youth baseball
their own table service.
program will have sign-up day
Saturday, 10 a.m. ttl noon at the
' --EPISCOPAL Church women, Chester firehouse . Children must be
Thursday, 12:30 p.m. at the five years old before May I and not
Parish House. A party will be 13 before Aug. 1 to participate. The
held ·for the Meigs Corrununity registration fee is $10 payable on
School children.
registration. T·ball , peewee and little league are included in the
MEIGS County Fox Chasers baseball program.
meeting 7:30p.m. this evenng at
cabin on Eagle Ridge; all inDUE TO LACK of attendance the
terested persons invited.
Racine Volunteer Fire Department
MEIGS COUNTY Democrat is cancelling its Saturday shooting
meeting, 7 p.m. this evening at matches for the season, The matCarpenter's Hall, E. Main St., ches will resume next fall. The
Pomeroy; several speakers; Racine Volunteers wish to thank its
patrons for their support.
public invited.
A DANCE CUNIC will be held
Saturday morning at the Meigs High
School cafeteria, 10 a.m. to noon, under sponsorship of the Meigs TAG
Association . there will be a 45
minute demonstration on ballroom
dance followed by group par·
ticipation. The clinic is open to not
only students or the area, but also to
adults. Questions concerning the
clinic may be telephoned to 992-7141
between 10:30 and 11 a.m. any
morening.

TJ CKETS for the spaghetti dinner
to be served by the Meigs Vocal
Music Boosters Saturday night at
the Rutland Elementary School
THE WILUNG Workers Class gymnasium will be available at the
of the Enterpri se United door. Currently both Booster memMethodist Church will meet at bers and vocal music students are
7:30 Friday at the home of Mrs. selling the tickets which are $2.00 for
Agnes Dixon.
adults, and $1.50 for those 2 and unffiEN DANCE, 8 to 11 :30 p.m. der. Entertainment will be provided
Friday at Rutland Community by the Choraliers.
Center; only teens from seventh
. grade up may attend, music by
SUNDAY
"Music Unlimited." Dance will
MEETING Sunday, 6:30 p.m.
be well chaperoned and refreshat
Middleport Village Hall for
ments will be sold. The price will
coaches
and parents or Midbe $2 for singles and $3 for
dleport
Youth
League; election or
couples.
officers.

Thursday, March 18, 1982

Mr. and Mrs. Heck, 50th
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Heck or
Route I, Portland, will observe their
50th wedding anniversary with an
open house from 12 noon to 2 p.m.
Sunday at the Uons Club in Belpre.
The reception will be hosted by their
children.
Mr. and Mrs. Heck were married
on March 23, 1932 at Parkersburg,
W. Va. Sbe is the daughter or the late
Alfred and Retta Meek, and he is the
son of the late Alva and Minnie
Heck. ·
The couple have three children,

Daniel Heck, Belpre, Mrs. Richard
(Janet) McKee, Route I, Portland,
and Mrs. Jl!ichael DePue (Wilda ),
Route 2, Belpre. They have seven
grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren .
Mr. Heck is a retired railroader,
and both Mr. and Mrs. Heck are former members of the Coolville
Grange.
Friends and relatives of the couple
are invited to attend the open recep- ·
lion. It is requested that gifts be
omitted.

The Tuppers Plains Elementary
School recenUy participated in the
Right-t().Read week. All students of
the school were involved in silent
reading for 15minuteaafter lunch.
The school theme winner was
"Read Your Way to a Happy Day"
by Adam Calaway.
,
Runners-up were: Jason Meier
"Reading is a Man's Best Friend,"
(third grade); Jenny Meier "Open a
Book and Open a Door to
Anywhere," (fourth grade) ; Chris
Spencer "Keep American Smart Read a Book" and Tammy Kennedy
" You will save a lot more gas and
cash if you travel with a book," (!if·
th grade); and Allen Tripp "Race to
read a Book," (sixth grade).
Each class participated in making
bookmarkers. The winners had their
bookmark distributed to their class
members. They were: Lori Burke,
Amy Berkhimer, and Amy Connolly
(sixth grade l; Chris Spencer, Violet
Viola, and David Riee (fifth grade);
Crystal Reed, Carrie Bernard,
Robin White, and Kevin Damewood
(fourth grade ) ; Lorrie Baker, Kevin
Goff, Mary Kibble (third grade);
Brad Powell, Jenny Masters, Tim
Bisse ll and Kristina Connolly

(second gra~) ; Nancy Nally,
Carrie Fortney, Charles Bryant (fir- .
st grade).
~-----------

HEAR THE REDS ALL
SEASON LONG ON

WMPO 92FM

A bridal shower was held March 12
at Syracuse Asbury Methodist Church for Vicki Rizer, bride-elect of
Roger C. Tolley, given by Mary
Pickens, Kathy Rizer, Debbie Rizer,
Joann Adkins, and Lenore Wills.
Prizes were won by Pam Imboden, Donna Bartram, Wendy
Triplett and Edi.e Lavender .
Refreshments or cake, ice cream,
chips, mints, nuts and punch were
served to Yolanda Tolley, Elaine
Tolley, Lenore Wills, Pauline Fletcher, Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Rizer, Mr. and Mrs. William P .
Rizer, Kristy and Amy, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Rizer, Kenny, James,
Michael, Zelma Hawley, Kenda
Rizer, Donna Bartram and Jeremy ,
Paula Winebrenner, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Lavender, Becki and Doug,
Debbie Triplett, Wendy and Adam,
Mary Pickens, · Thelma Miller,
Elladene Watson, Gladys Presley,
Mary Winebrenner, Nada Kittle,

Mary Jane Armes, Fannie Aleshire,
Elizabeth Cundiff, Alberta Hubbard,
Debbie Powell, Kathy Lehew and
Melissa, Minnie Rizer, Stephanie
Sayre, Eileen Clark, Mary Janet
McDermitt, Margaret Rizer ,
Thelma Hawley, Edna Grimm and
Tina , Addie Mae Bush, Elizabeth
Rice, Suzan Gilmore and Jerod,
Gina Nance, Edie Lavender,
Melissa Hubbard and Stacey, Pam
Imboden, Stephanie E. Herdman,
Joann Adkins and Eugene Jr.
Sending gifts were Helen Baer,
Wanda Imboden, Wanda Rizer, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Saunders, Jean Kloes,
Mary K. Roush, Velma Parsons,
Gertie Rizer, Unda Hubbard, Donna
Clay, Oma Hysell, Ada Titus, Lee
Codner, Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Cundiff and Benjamin, Carolyn Roush,
Mary Adkins and Beckie, Kathy
Halstead, Carolyn Sayre, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Hubbard, Mary Donna
Simms and·Beverly Guinther.

RECOGNIZED - A plaque In recognition of volunteer library service at the Salisbury Elementary
School was presented by John Usle to Yvonne Young,
Martha King and Karen Sloan, pictured left to right,

Reduced Up To

50% OFF

Band PW

Tuesday night at the church.
The group will send Easter greet ·
lngs to shutin members of the
church and a l5o place a lily In the
sa nctuary of the church. Mrs.
Marie Hauck presided a t the meet·
tng during which time the group
was given access. to Petition 2493
concerning proposed removal of ra·
dto or television programs designed to show faith In God.

offering was received by Miss
Mary E . Chapma n. Otfcratory
prayer was by Miss F lck and a unl·
son prayer closed the meeting.
A salad "'urse was served to nine
members by Mrs. Hauck and Mrs.
Pauline Mayer. A St. Patrick's
motif was carried out In the table
decorations. Favors were ha nd·
crafted napkin rings made by Mrs.
Hauck.

Mrs. Hauck, chairman, reported
on plans for the hospitality hour fo l·
lowing the Lenten service at Trinity
Church on March 25. A thank you
from Mrs. Eva Dessauer was read
and tt was noted that a basket order
has been completed.

l'11ur " F.:lttr• Touch"

~~rloiSin&lt;tlt$7

FLORIST
PH. 992· 2644

Mtss Elizabeth Flck presented
the program, "Prepare for Easter"
using scripture from Matt. 28. The

Ml11ord Hysel), Middleport pollee
officer, spoke on highway safety at
the Monday ntght meeting of the
Middleport Business and Professional Women's Club. Alwtlda
Werner presided at the meeting
held at the Ml&amp;lleport Library. A
report was given on the spring conference and the young careertst
competition. The local careerls t,
Trudy Roush. was Ill and unable to
participate. Winner was the con·
testant from Athens. Marjorie
Fetty, president. Linda Lambert,
chairman of the contest committee, and Mrs. Robson attended ,
along with Mrs. Iva Powell, a
guest.
It was noted that the club needs
one more member to equalize for
the year. The state conventl.on was.
announced for May In Cincinnati.
Freddie Houdashelt won the attendance award of four sliver dollars .
Kathryn Werner was a guest. Refreshments of cookies and punch
were served.

VILLAGE PHARMACY
' ' Midd

HARMONY GOSPEL Singers will be at the Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church In Middleport Saturday
at 7:30p.m. ThHe public Is invited to attend.

Former Meigs resident
receives youth award

·Spread the Word on·Agricutture Day ••• EVery Day!
Agricultur.e Day- March 18, 1982-is much more
than another one-day observance.
Agriculture Day is a nationwide, coordinated ef·
fort of volunteers from agriculture and agribusiness to
remind other Americans of the strength of their heart·
beat. It os an occasion for sharing with them the facts
about working in an industry that shares with only a
very few ot~er enterprises ttiis one c haracteristic ; it is
absolutely votal to our survival.
Agricu.lture Day is also your opportunity- part of
the extensov~ complex of 23 million Americans that is
modern agnculturt'-to join with, to inspire and to
lead voluntem-s _from all segments of the food chain:
from farm suppioers to retail grocers.

afternoon by the three volunteers. The plaque will hang
In the library.

,352 E , Main , Pomeroy
'tour FTO Fto~ist

'

We Also Have A Good Selection of Easter Candy.

. N. 2nd

during Tuesday night's meeting of the Salisbury PrO.
The library at the school Is kept open every weekday

Organizations' meetings
New otftcers were elected at a
recent meeting of the Racine Elementary .PTO.
They are Maxine Rose, pres!·
dent; J udy Harrison, vtce presl·
dent; Ruth Shain, secretary;
Barbara Dugan, treasurer. Plans
were made tor the PTO do buy the
elementary school a copy machine.
It was reported that the ham and
turkey cllnner held recently was a
success.
The PTO Is going to donate $1 per
student In the sixth grade for the
annual trip.
Spea ker for the meetl ng was
Carol G!eke, nutritionist. Cook·
books which the PTO Is seUing
should be ready In about two weeks,
It was reported.

strograp

. . .BANK ONE,._

Editor's note : Dr. Schreck has realize there is no one 11 best"
about the ground swell or changing
attitudes concerning alcohol ab\ISf.
asked Dr. A~~~.~ Tenoglia to an- method. Every individual and
swer this
If we as a society begin to accept
family affected by alcoholism, must
Tenoglia is an
responsibility for our attitude and
seek help from many sources. It is
associate professthe influence it has on the use of
not wise to depend solely on a single
or of family
person, place or thing.
alcohol, then we can begin to change
medicine at the
our attitude. Our approach needa to
In general, AA has an excellent
Ohio University
record for those · who diligently
be one of "tough" loving concern
College
·of
rather than avoidance or moralistic
follow the program. In fact, AA's
Osteopathic Medisuccess rate is hard to match from a · accusations. Only then can we
cine. His special
general point or view; and, in my
achieve better more long lasting
area or interest is
estimiltion, is the method of choice
results.
the treatment of ..
for long term recovery.
Fortunately our populace is finally
becoming aware that we have a
alcoholism. l
TENOGLIA
Still, it is important to note that
major epidemic on our hands - one
QUESTION: Is becoming a mem- AA is not the only method that
that spreads throughout every level .
ber of Alcoholics Anonymous the works. There are other optionil such
best way to kick a serious drinking as the Salvation Anny, counselling,
and age group from eight-year-olds
habit?
church, psychiatry, psychology,
to octogenarians.
ANSWER: Alcoholics Anonymous friends, neighbors, a loving spouse · It is my belief that the outcome &lt;i
( AA) is one very important resource and so on. In fact, if you know of
this disease can only change if we
learn to recognize it early and treat
for people who have decided they another program that is working for
it vigorously . To treat alcoholism in
want to stop their alcohol depen- you or for someone you care about, I
its early stages, we must be willing
dency. However, it is important to would like to hear from you so f can
to recognize it as a disease and to
understand that alcoholism has no share your experience and success
provide appropriate treatment.
relationship whatsoever to the with some of my piltients.
presence or' absence or a habit.
QUESTION: Are there any new
facilities.
Prevention, early diagnosis and a
Habits and excessive use or alcohol treatment methods for alcoholism
sensible,
informed attitude remain
that
seem
to
work
better
with
more
are as sltnilar as liver paste and
lasting results?
the oldest and the newest form of
orange juice.
treatment. With consistent apANSWER : Interestingly, the
Many people who choose to go to
plication, it is hoped such treatment
newest
form
of
treatment
is
not
AA and follow its program, find sue·
will provide better, more lasting
cess and enter into lifelong sobriety something that has just been
help and, hope to the afflicted and
and recovery. However, perhaps the developed but rather an old idea
theirfamilies.
best approach to treatment is to " whose time has come. I am speaking

EASTER BASKETS
EASTER TOYS
ODDS-N-ENDS

'

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Family Medicine

Racine PTO

COUNTY-WIDE
Prayer
Meeting, Sunday, 2 p.m. at the
Chester Nazarene Church. Glen
Bissell, class leader.

March 19, 1982
Over-all conditions look extremely promising for you this coming
year, if you seek knowledge and equip yourself well before embarking on
any new enterprise. Don't go off ill-prepared.
PISCES (Feb. ~March 20) Rather than going along with the crowd
tOday, investigate your individual alternatives. Chances are you'll find a
road paved with potential that everyone else miSsed.
ARIES (March 21·April19) The less visible you make yourself tOday,
the better your chances are for peace and quiet. Someone looking for a
scapegoat will choose you, if you happen to be around him!
TAURUS (April ~May 20) If you're too stubborn today, you may
tum a deaf ear to good advice and continue trying to hammer square pegs
into round hole8.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Worthwhile opportunities are around you
tOday. Unfortunately, however, you go after the quick and easy "blue
sky" promotions, thus gaining nothing.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) An old but abrasive domestic issue should
not be resurrected tOday. It'tl only cause turmoil on the home front.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Normally you're extremely courteous in
dealing with people from aU walks of life. Todsy, however, you may treat
those not in your inner circle with disdain.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You know all the right things to say to bring
about opportunity for yourself todsy, but chances are you'll go after the
same thing that Incurred losses in the past.
LmRA (Sept. 23-0et. 23) Consideration, diplomacy and fact are your
traditional tools, yet todsy you may forget this, and fail by using hardnosed tactics.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov: %2) Even if someone wrongs you, your
greateat weapon todsy agaonst the affront is to tum the other cheek.
You'll be amazed how everyone will side with you.
SAGJTJ'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Quit knocking your head against a
brick wall. ·If something is not bringing in the promised returns, look
elsewhere for better results.
CAPRICORN (Dee, 22-JaD.19) Don't attempt to champion unJIOilular
causes tOday, no matter how dedicated you are to them. Your acceptance
lies In going a1ong wtth the majority.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ~Feb. 19) Something may be wrong with your
judgment if you continually come up empty. Try todsy lo change din:ctions and have faith in your decisions.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh io

Bridal shower for Rizer

SATURDAY

A HYMN SING will be held
Saturday night at 7:30p.m. at the
Flatwoods Methodist Church.
The public is invited to attend.

Thur.s day, March 18,1982 ·

I~ !s your opportunity, with your c olleagues, to
then 101n hands woth the customers who are dependent
on vo_u r for the food they eat ... but may not know just
what ot takes to provide that food .
In so doing, we can help to bring about a better
understandmg of modern agriculture on the part of the
over~he':".ling majority of the U . S. populatio"n, who
love ·~ cotoes and suburbs, of their representatives in
Washmgton and state capitals and of the news media
who report and interpret for others the policies and
. developments that affect us .
!he ultimate ~bjective of this celebration is just
that. greater publoc awareness of the interdependence
of the modern eco~omic system's sectors-and of the
nee ds and the controbutoons of agriculture .

Lohrer

SHOP BAHR CLOTHIERS FOR WEARING
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SOCKS

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I

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

614/99~·2133

thy adviser and is now serving as
grand lecturer in District 25. She is a
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Wilson of the Rock Springs area.
Shari also has been named by the
high school faculty to be a Girls
State re presentative this summer
under the sponsorship of the
American leg ion Auxiliary.

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

Seasonal

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by~~c.An...

Bank

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LEVI'S BENOOVERS
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WOMEN

MEN

LEVI'S

Remember, we all have a stake in agriculture. . . .it's vital to
life itself. Join the Central Trust Company in a salute to the
farmers of Gallia County on their day... .TODAY!

Shari Lohrer, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William Lohrer (the former
Ca rla Wilson of Middleport )
received the Grand Master's Excellence In Youth award on March 13
at the Grand Master 's Banquet held
in Greenville. Nominations were
based on active participation in
school, church, corrununity and the
Order of Rainbow for Girls.
Shari is a junior at Troy High
School where she is active in
ASTRA, Thespian Society, women's
chorale, wind ensemble and is field
director for the Troy High School
Marching Band which has been
selected to play at Disney Land in
Florida, the last week in March . '
Shari sings in the First United
Methodist Church Choir and has
been active in Troy Assembly, Order

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Member FDIC

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Middleport, Ohio
MEMBER : FD IC ·

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'•

"

�Thursday, March 18, 1982

Page--8- The Dai

_==-_P_ub_l~( NoJic"-e_ _

Judge ends 5wildlife cases
..

Five defendants were fined on ded for deer for one year, 30 days in
hunting violation charges Wed- · jail suspended and one year
nesday when hearings were held in probation; Dean Hill, Racine, laking
the Meigs County Court of Judge a deer during close&lt;! season, $400
and costs, hunilng privileges for
Patrick O'Brien.
Kenny Guinther, Racine, was deer suspended for one year, 30 days
fined $150 and costs on a charge of in jail suspended and one year
taking a deer during the 1981 deer probation.
Others f~ in Wednesday's
long bow season and failing to chked
hearings
included Raymond Hen11t an offlcial checking station to
sler,
Racine,
$10 and costs, failure to
have it legally tagged; Terry Moore,
yield;
Randall
Lyons, Pomeroy,
Syracuse, taking a deer out of
overload,
$70
and
costs, and failure
season, $200 and costs, and aid and
to
display
decar,
.$25 and costs;
assistance in taking of a dder, $100
Russell
Cremeans,
Coolville,
$28 and
and costs ; David Bass, Syracuse,
costS,
speeding
;
Bobby
E.
Dill,
failure to have a deer tagged, $100
$5
and
costs,
defective
Pomeroy,
and costs; Earl Alley, Racine,
aiding and assisting in the taking of exhaust; Texell Balser, Middleport,
a deer during the closed season, $200 left of center, $10 and costs; Robert
and costs, hunting privileges suspen- Boling, Athens, speeding, $24 and

costs; ~Y Spurlock, Tuppers
Plains, unsaie vehicle, $5 and costs; .

DABBLE SHOP

Roger F~y, Tuppers Plains,
speeding, $25 and costs; Montie Sanders, Reedsville, Jell of center, $10

and costs; James Wl1lle, Pomeroy,
$10 and costs, failure to display a
valid registration decal; William
ltart, Pomeroy, fZl and costs,
speeding; Gordon Teaford,
Pomeroy, f35 and &lt;;OSts, left of center; Hazilee Riebel, Long Bottom, ·
$25 and costs and restitution, in.sufficien$ funds.
Forfeiting bonds.in the court were
Joseph Taylor, Long Bottom,
driving while Intoxicated, $370.50
and Charles R. Wolfe, Racine,
$271.35, aiding and assisting in the
possession of an illegally taken deer.

-.

Seeks divorce
Mary Kelly, Middleport, has filed
suit for divorce against Michael W.
Kelly, Middleport, in the Meigs
County Corrunon Pleas Court. The
plaintiff cha;ges gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.

Marriage license
A marriage license has been
issued in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to James Robert
O'Brien, 21 , Racine, and Della
Louise Johnson , 18, Racine.

Sticker deadline
near for E,F, G
vehicle operators
Motor vehicle owners with the
starting initials of E, F and G in
their last names must have their
new motor vehicle tag sticker in
place by April!.
Owners are to take their title and
registration to the registrar of motor
vehicles office in Pomeroy to get
their new stickers. Someone else
securing the stickers for the owners
must pick up a power of attorney
Conn at the· registrar's office on
Mulberry Ave.
Besides regular daily hours the office is open from 5:30 to 7 p.m. each
Friday and from 9 a .m . to 12 noon
each Saturday.

· Emergency runs
Local units answered two
emergency calls Wednesday, the
Meigs Emergency Medical Service
reporjs.
The Tuppers Plains Unit at 5 :07
a.m. took Anna Koenig, Reedsville,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland at 10:45 a.m. took Randy
McKinley from Meigs Mine 2 to
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens.

Firemen on move

Property
transfers
Kenna Bush, Kathy Bush to Royal
Petroleum Properties, Inc. (pipeline
ease. and meter site agree.), Bedlord.
Hilda P. McDaniel, Clarence E .
McDaniel (deceased), Affidavit,
Salisbury.
Clifford Hall (deceased) to Gertrude Hall, by Adm. Fred W. Crow
Ill, Letart.
Robert Dale Jones, deed., Violet
June Jones, Bobbi Gail Jones, David
Alan Jones, Cynthia Sue Jones, Cert.
of Transfer, Pomeroy.
James P . Conde, Juanita Conde to
G.J .M. Enterprises Inc., Parcels,
Middleport.
H. A. Cole, Oneita Cole to William
S. Cole, 00 a cres, Orange.

Mark Malone,
l)fmljCratiQ candidate for the
111h Ohio fltlllle District seat,
will Jae In PoJII&amp;roy for a meeting
of Mqlga CouQiy Democrats to be
~eld at 7 p.m. lonif!ht at Car~nter'a h4ll, E. Main St.,
Poiii~TQY, A N8ldent of South
llolnt, IVIaloQe was elected a
I.llwr~nce Couoly Commissioner
I~ 19'f6 allll was reelected to a
"'co~d teJ'III In 1980. He will be
B!IIO~ll tile speakerJI at tonight's
mee911tt·

WATER FEEDER
MAIN
CONTRACl NO. 6
The
proposed work. unde r
. con1ract
th 1S
consists of US
I.onea 1 1ee 1 o1 314.. and 175
li nea l ,eet of 1" wa1er ser ·
vice pipe; 90 linea l teet of
6" and 1.950 l ineal teet of
10'' PVC pl'essure pipe ;
two altitude va lve cham nect
nts ; wacon·
ter
be l'S:ions;
v a iVhydra
!;' S; system
m et e r' s ; a nd a ll a p·
purtenances.
I
The iones tcost
im a t ed
strucl
for conthi s

The Meigs County Sheriff's Department Thursday transported
Michael Mitchell, 20, and Robert
" Dink" Kennedy, both of Rutland, to
the Ohio State Reformatory at Mansfield to begin serving their sentences of lour to 25 years each on
aggravated robbery charges and
tenns of two to 15 years each on
felonious assault charges following

the last Thursday armed robbery of
the Tuppers Plains Branch of Bank
One of Pomeroy.
The departmnent also transprted
to the · Columbus Correctional
Facility, Carl Wilburn, Portsmouth,
who was given a four to 25 year sentence for theft of drugs during the
N~v. 12, 1981 robbery at Nelson's
Dtug Store in Pomeroy.

' . Syracuse, and his
IMPROVING - Paul Huston,
crel" took advantage of Wednesday's great weather to
make progress on tile addition of · brick veneering

Collin~

to. run

'

.

Syracuse Municipal Pool building. Tbree sHies of the
building will have the brick veneer when the project is
completed in about two weeks.
·

Hospital news

ag~in

Veterans
Memorial

Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R-Ironton,
said today he's seeking reelection
In the newly-apportioned 17th Ohio
Admitted-Anna Koenig,.
senatorial district comprised of
Pickaway, Ross, Vinton, Jackson,
sville; Arthur Barr, ~:j~~:~~
Eugene Smith, Pomeroy;
Lawrence, Gallla, Meigs and
Wolfe, Pomeroy; Roger Bradford,
Athens counties.
Racine.
Presently chalnnanoftheSenate
Discharged--Mary
Coates,
education, retirement and aging
Charles Machir, Judy Finney, Jencommittees, the lawmaker Is seeknifer Newman, Ruby ltalliday,
ing his sixth fenn In office.
Ethel Drake, Allen Wilson, Allegra
He also sits on the energy, natuWill.
ral resources and environment
committee, the highway transportation committee and the local government, urban affairs and small
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
business committee.
DISCHARGES M,ARCH 17
''The serious problems facing
Ohio In the areas of unemployment,
primary and secondary education
i Darren Abbott, Scott Arthurson,
and state revenues will be the
Mrs. · William Barber and son,
OAKLEY C. COLLINS
Issues lacing the General AssemTamalea Bevins, Marjorie Cayton,
bly next session," Collins said.
"Expertise In state government
Doris Childress, Jimmy Cogar, Brad
He stressed hard work by repre- Is demanded now more than ever
Davis, Henry Davis, Mrs. Michael
sentatives on the state and local, With the changes coming from WaDillinger and son, Edna Downey,
Ieyel In seeking solutions to these shington In tenns of block grants
Kenny ~r, Mrs. Anthony Griffin
problems, and cited his own efforts
and the new federalism," Collins
and daughter, Dorothy Halfhill,
In getting Increased, school and said. "I have the experience and Louise Hawkins, Minnie Huffman,
highway funding and th~ enactccmmon sense In state government
Vesta Hufford, Caroline Jarvis,
ment of the new death penalty as
needed to insure that southeastern . Marie Keeler, Perry Kennedy, Ar- •
examples of his concern for his
biilo Is well-represented when
thut McGuire, Kevin Milam, Oscar
district.
these changes com,e."
Morgan, Mrs. Gregory Northup and
son, Nellie Nott, Mary Phillips,
Theodorisa Puckett, David Ramsburg, Joseph Rehlinger, James
Ryder, Marie Saunders, Anita
Sigmon,
Evelyn Smith, Jeremy
Minor injury was reported to a
8 :09p.m _
Spires,
Ida
Thompson, George Van
passenger in a one-car accident in
Glassburn's vehicle then went off
Matre,
Charlotte
Wamsley, ClarenMorgan Twp. Wednesday night, acthe right side of the road, lost conce
Waugh.
cording to the Gallia-Meigs Post of
trol, went left and struck an emthe state highway patrol.
bankment, overturning. It was
Barbara J. Lawson, 17, Vinton,
moderately damaged.
'BmTHS
was apparently not treated for the
A westbound vehicle driven by
injury.
James C. Brennen, 54, Jackson, was
The patrol said Lawson was westbound on U.S. 35 at 8:15 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. William Beegle, son,
travelling in a vehicle driven by
Wednesday when it struck and killed
Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. James
Teresa A. Glassburn, 17, Gallipolis, a deer which ran onto the road.
Davis, daught~r. Portland; Mr. and
which was eastbound on Gallia
Brennen's vehicle was moderately
Mrs. Fred Thomas, son, Jackson.
County Rd. 10 (Thompson Road) at damaged.

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio45769

'
-- -

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

F lnanelal

- ~

21 Busi ness Opportun i ty
22 Mo ney to Loan
23 Pr ofess10n.ll Ser vic es

lteal Estate
31 Homes tor Sal e
32 Mob ile Homes fo r Sat &lt;'
33 Farms for Sale
34 Business Buildi ngs
JS Lots &amp; Ac re age
36 · Rf'a l Es tat e Wa nt£&gt;d

4l ·Houses for Rent
42 Mobile Homes for Rent
43 Farm s tor Rent
44 Apa rtment for' Rent
45·Furn ished Rooms
46·Spa ce tor rent
47 Wanted to Rent
4fi·Equipment for' Rent
49-For Lease
Public Notice

Jt.?iJ i~i'J'u
OJ•
~~ v ~ou~ly,
var

~
~

,. tu
rOPI&gt;S~Is will be
I• ed
T!1e ¥11 age of
ppoirMelgs
lp, 111 I e office of the
y 11 age Hall Mid·
l~orf, o io, ~ntll 2:30
, · AP.r I 2, 1982, and
ri n' pu~l l cly OReRf'd and
e'd el~u~ • f~r the con ·
'truct l p~ ~ATER ·

l

pi~TIIIBUTION

SYSTEM
IW'IIOVEMENTS
yt;ATER STORAGE
UNIC

'

CONTRACt NQ. 1
· Jhe pr~po•ed worw ~oder
l~lf'i::ontrt~t ~orstsla fll'lhe

·•'

' ----

deslgn, constl'uction ,
t~,t~'rjv 1nd disinfecting a
:lOO. ~ gallon precast pr,•tres s ed c on c rete
ator~ge tank with all ap·
pu,tenances.
Ttl~
estimated con ·
st1J~tlon cost for this
pr ]-ells S230,ooo.oo
CiP.Ies of Drewlngs,
S ~lficallons an~ Con·
t ~~· documents ma~ be
lflmed or ex•mined a1
C)ffice of Floyd Browne
•~elates, Llm/111(1 Con·
1111ng Engineers · Plan·
ers, 181 South Main
tr,.t, Marlon Ohloo43302.
A twenty -1l~e dollar
1115.00) deposit will be
reQuired for each set of

Public Notice

51 -Household Goods
S2· CB , TV &amp; Ra d lo Equ ipm ent
SJ Ant iques
54 -Misc . M er ch andise
55-Building Supplies
S6·Pcts for Sale
57 -Muscfal i nstruments
58 · Fruits &amp; V ege tabl es

" Small Jobs A

---

.

71 -Autos for Sal e
72· Trucks for Sal e

JIM LUCAS

PH. 742_2753
35tfn

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Gallia CountY
Are,, Code61.11
446-Galfipolis
367-Cheshire
388- Vinton
245-Rio Gr~nde
256- Guvan Dist.
643- Arabia Dist.
379- Walnut

.-

Bl ·Home Improvements
82 Plumbing &amp; Hea ting
83· E &gt;ecavaJing
84 · E lecrical &amp; Refriqer" a tion
8S·General Hauling
86-M.H. Repilir
61 ·Uph01sterv

Meigs Countv
.Area Code 614
992- Middleport
Pomeroy
985-Chester
343-Porrrand
247- Lefart Falls
949- Racine
742- Rutland
661- Coolville

Public Notice

Attention ot the Bidder is
Drawings, Specifications
and Contract documents directed to the special conregulations in·
taken fl'om the above of· struction
eluded herein relative to
ficesh the full amount of special
requirements for (3)18, 25 , 2tc
whic wi II be l'efunded procurement
of labor, the
upon return of same ·wl1hin special information
given
Public Notice
thirty (30) days after the
in the 1nformation to Bid·
bid opening. The successful ders,
1o·
the
Special
PU Bl-.1C NOTICE
bidder moy retain his ·
NOTICE OF
Drawings for furt!H!r use, ' Requirern.nts for wa~
rates.
the
hours
of
em·
PUBLIC SAl-E
and his deposit refunded.
as
ascertained
plovment
.4otice fs hereby . given
Checks shell be made
and detel'mlneQ by the that on WedneSday, March
pa~able to the VIllage of
Department
of
Industrial
31, !982 at 10:00 A.M. a
Middleport, Ohio.
Relations and provided for pUblic sale will be Meld at
Each bidder must Insure In
the
laws
of
lhe
State
of
!he offices of The Central
that all employus .and ap.
Trost Co. NA of Mid·
plicants for employment Ohio.
The Owner reserves tt\e dleport, Ohio to sell for
ore not discriminated right
to !'eject any or all tosh the following
against because of race.
color, religion, se)l:, or bids and to waive any in· collateral to wit :
formallll~s In bidding ..
I 1919 Dodge Aspen 2 Dr.
natlon.11 origin.

Public Notice
NOTICE ON
FiliNG OF .

~~~RNAW:Zt:~f

The State of Oftlo, Meigs
County Coort of Common
Pleas, Probalt Division
To till! executor or Administrator of the estate, to
such of the following as are

-----·
~-----.----------'-..:......,·-----r-------· _......__~
--.,---

,-.

-~

residents of the State of
Ohio, vi'- : - the sur'v lving
spouse, the ne&gt;et of kin, the
beneficiaries under the
will ; af)d to the attorney or
attorneys representing any
of the aforementioned P,er·
sons :
Terry D.
No. 235A6) , :~~fA,o:t?F,;~i;: , j
Lane, Tuppers
Ohio.
You are hereby notified
that the Inventory and Ap·
praisement of the estate of
the
aforementioned ,
deceased! late of said Coun·
tv. were filed in th's Court.
Said Inventory and AP'

Call Ken oung
For Fast Service
985·3561
PARTS AND

S4

"~-----...,;_
~· --

CALL

614-99~ - 2182

For
Fa-rm
and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

PRICED RIGHT
CAU TODAY!
Real Estate - General

And Home Maintenance
• Rooting of all types
•• Siding
Remodeling

Water·Sewer·E lectrlc
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Ho~k · ups
Septic Tanks
CountY C.ertitied
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367·1560
1-7·1 ttc

• Free estimates
• 20 vrs. experience

TOM HOSKINS
Ph . 949· 2160 or 949-2322
1-S·ttc

Gerald Reuter

INCOME

Custom kitchens and
appliances.
custom
bathroomo, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
healo' ng.

s outheastern Oh'10 p oiled
Hereford Assn. Sole, March 26, 1982 at 1 p.m. et till!
Rocksprings Fairgrounds,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Contllctfor

4
Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give awav and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other' thing for
sele may place an ad in this
column. There will be no
chal'ge to the ad\ler?iser.
Port lab . &amp; Britany
Spaniel. Between 2 to 3 vr .,
female , good w/ childl'en &amp;
spaded . Caii•06·0466.

PHONE
992-24!Kl
FOR AN
APPOINTMENT

l male. 8 week old brown
pup. 992-3379.

2·25-1 mo. pd.

SKATE-A-WAY
Chester, Oh.

Play Million
Dollar Skating
Game
· Stop In For Card
Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.
7 : 30 to I 0: 00
Sun. 2:00 to4:30
Available for
·
ti
Private Par es
PH. 985-3929 or
985-9996
l -12-1 mo.

-Addonundrtmodtlinl

:=o:,•;,:,ruor ..,1
-l'lumlin11nd
oltt~iul ""'I
·lf•ttEstim•la)

V. 't. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992· 111•
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-JO.tlc

~

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

li t""

Phone
1-( 614 ) -992-3325

•9so.

TAX

SERVICE

S·" c

To good home Irish Setter
&amp; 1 red mi&gt;e br~d . Call446·
Four puppies. Two males,
two
females .
Chihuahua/ Terrier cross.
Call 446·0211 after 1PM.

~~=~=:===~::~~j;~========~~~~~~=;~==~

TEAFOR
•

Will TAlK - On this
edge of town pi'Opel'ty .
Has 3 bedrooms, bath,
woodburne r, basement,
furnace , stove and
refr'igel'ator on level lot .
Low 30's.
REDUCEO - This nice
property is now below
market price for a qui ck
sale . 3 large bed!'ooms,
attic for storage, wrap·
around large porch, ful!
ba sement and gas fired
hot water heat. Mid 30's.
ON TIME - What have
you for a down payment
on this one . Small gar·
den .space. view of thel'iver , 6 rooms, modern
ba th and kitchen, patio
and porch. Low 30's.
REDUCE 0 - Excellent
built 3200 sq. ft . of living
spa c;e . 3 bedrooms,
br ic k,
2 1h
baths,
cel'am ic tile, family
room , 3 car gal'age (at·
tached), disposa l, dish·
washer, etc . Mid 60's.
HANDYMAN - 4 room
house that needs lots of
wor'k , but has over 3
acl'es of woods. SS,OOO.
WE HAVE PlANS FOR
NEW HOMES. DROP
IN ANO GET YOURS.
TElE. 992-3876 FOR
DETAilS .

Free horse manure. 949·
1&lt;155.

H011sing

Heaclquar ters

~

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
.
elnsulitlon ·
• Storm Door's
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
• New Roofing
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992-2772

SOUTHEAST
CONSTRUCTION
•Rooting &amp; Guller
•Vinyl Siding
•'arports I Patio
covers
•Concrete Work
•Room Addition~

Scoot Camp
Chester, Oh .
*short game practice
., ~ro Golf lessons
for all ages.
eRepair : cleaning
refinishing,
new
grip 5,
length change, weight
change.
*fast service 2-28-1 mo.

k
1nsurance Wor
Wind, water, or Fire
CALL : 992· 6323

U.S. Rt. SQ East
Guysville, Ohio
Authol'ized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Ouler
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1·3·ffc

2 9

~~~~1~~d

'•n and ? . 61•·

HALF Seagle, hall black &amp;
tan, fema le, 9 months old,
30&lt;·615·1110.

- - -- - - -·Lost and Found

6

lOST Siberian Huskey
(male) mo~lly dark gray
with white mark ings, one
brown eve &amp; one blue eve.
answers to' KeeGee' safe to
approach . REWARD . Call
&lt;46·4998 or «6·3t12.
Call
to Identify
pay ad ..
FOUND
Male and
Sheepdog
113889
ca
3111&gt;.
LOST ,pair of prescr'lption
glasses in black case,
silver r ims wnh dark grav
tint. Lost near Wamsley's
at Addison or at Gino's.
can U6·910.&lt;.
FOUND large male Collie
dog tan &amp; while, Flatwoods
Rd. Ca ll991·3439 to identify
and pay ad.
LOST Reg . Colli&lt; named
Angie disappeared !rom

~======2·:11:·:1m=o~ti===;;':.';~-l=m=o·=P=.!l=,·~~·~t~re~e~~~~~~~~ 3561.
Spr'uce St. ext. Call 446·
lOST lwo 6 month old part
MARCH
'
J&amp;F
Elk Hound pups. I ;;ght
,- BOGGS
PERM SALE
·
brown &amp; I block &amp; brown .
Mon. j~~rch r
CONTRACTING Call446·0911
SALES &amp; SE~VICE
Wed., March 31
Reg . S20
Now 517.50
Reg. S25
Now S22.50
Reg. no
Now $27.50
S35 Wawe Lenth
For Longer Hair
Now Slf .SO
KIJ'I Be1uty S1lon

*backhoe
• excavating
., septic systems
• water, sewer
&amp; gasnn..
•dump truck
•limestone

169 N. 2nd

Utei)Std l 119!ldl4. •

Middlepofl
Call 992-2725
3·3·1 mo.

PH. 992-7201

FOUND On Willow Dr .
brown &amp; black puppy,
Doberman mixture with a
leather collar . Ca ll 446·

4805 .

Found : red bone hound,
male, I vear Or' vounoer .
Hemlock Grove area . 992·
S014.

· 2·14·1mo.

Lost : earring. 3 loops of
gold with small pearl in·
~-------------------4---------------------f---------------------iserfed .
Lost between
llbl'arv
and
Teaford
Realty. Reword. Call 992·
5!'24.
2
tn Memoriam
Lost : brown a nd white
In loving memory of Albert Chihuahua. Answers 10
Frank who departed this name of Hasbro. Lost in
1ife 1 year aoo today March Beech Grove and 124 a!'ea .
f Formerly Bare Metatl
18, 1981. Sadly missed by 992-2113 or 141·2&lt;16.
271 w. Main, Pomeroy
All types of roof work,
wife Anna and brother and
new or repair gutter and
slster· in·law, Harlls and lOST Black &amp; tan, male
downspou",
v'-'tter
Delores Frank .
cleaning and painting.
Foxhound. Last seen on
Rick &amp; Bill Cogar
All work guaranteed .
Red Mud Ridge . II seen
Owners
3
Announcements
please call H.O. Wine
Free Estimates
Miller,
Riple~ , WVa, 304·
Reasonable Prices
BRAKES-TUNE -UPS
SWEEPER and sewing
312-6232.
Call Howard
OVERHAULS·
mach ine repair, parts, and
949-2263
OIESEL·EXHAUST
supplies.
Pi~k up and
949·2160
Open Mon .-Sal. 9-5
delivery, Davis Vacuum 7
Yard Sale
2·24-lfc
3·5·1 mo.
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges cr,.k Rd . Coli FlEA Market·Open ·alr
flea market at th.e
11--------+-----'---~-~~ ·1 -46·0~ .
Chlllll'othe Mall Shopping
Center. Chillicothe Ohio.
Turkey Hunters We ·have Buyers and
sellers
mooth calls, slate box welcome. Low rates. Satur·
calls, camo gear &amp; decoys day, March 20; 8 to8.
in sto-:k. Spring Valley
Trading co., Spring Valley
AND
Garage Sale 1071 2nd. Ave.,
Si~:es start from 30.24"
Plaza. 406·8025.
Gajllpolls. Thurs. &amp; Fri.
Porch carpet, shades,
easter Candy Prices. Sl.60 clothrng, curtain5. more
Doter &amp; backhoe ser·
Sizes from 4 10 6 ilnd ill
lb. suo lb. for full case. items.
vite, water, sewer,
wood buildings 24&gt;C36.
Di's Craft Supply, Spring
ponds,
foundations,
Valley Plaza. Call oUI-21:14.
Insulated Dog Houses
Garage Sale Sat. 20th, 8 to
reclamation.
5, t08 VIne St. Misc .
'
Gun Repair &amp; Hot Bluing. building materials, 2 full
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Rt. 3, Bo• 54
We stock modern rifles, beds, 2 lwin beds with new
Racine, Oh.
shotguns, &amp; hand guns. All mattress, 2 chest of
Phone 949·2293
or 949·2411
Ph. 61•·843·2591
muzzle loading guns &amp; ac- drawers,
M8ytag
cessol'les. Best prices fn automatic
3·3·tfn
6· 15-ffc
washer,
refrigerator 1
women's
ShOp,
Rt.. 1,Rivel'slde
Athalia, Oh
.• clothes size 10, many other
the
area
Gun
614-886·5194.
.
Items.

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

MAIN STREET
GARAGE

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING

AU. STEEL
BUILDINGS

CONSTRUCTION

Utility Buildings

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

f.~======~=~±~=====~~=~~
FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

ROSENBERG RECYCLI ·
NG Opening APRIL 2 In
Galllpolla. Specializing In
elwnlnum cans, aluminum
Siding, 1hHt1 &amp; cast alum .,
copper wire, brass.
radiatorsr auto batteries &amp;
IBM cords. Walch this
paper for location.

CAN HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
New Construction
and Remodeling. ,
FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN.

Cillo

dl plolflno piece;
lap i....- olllf IIIIo; 1114 lui "" " " " - IIIIo; 111,.

'""o-r·

"'"t

TE.RMS: Cash, Che~~. ly\astercard, Visa
George F ~ Richards, Auctioneer .
~
Plan Now to bring a friend and spend an ·enjoyable afternoon.

•

9

• Dozers
eBa&lt;khoes
• oump Trucks
: ~~~~~er
• Water
esewer
•Gas Lines
eSeptic Systems
· Large or Small Jobs
PH . 992·2418
3·11·1 mo.-p&lt;l

c~l01; ciHI~'• •od
clllila ...._ flo 1t1too f!1tcM1i;
... bfllf lttons;, callodioo ol ..... llolh; "" " - of
--~~i-111

I

REES.E
. .·. ·
TRENCH. lNG
SERVICE •

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

set: coltoc1loor , _ , ,.., . . - ; ,.., ....
fifll Jodi CJiwiop; Cl~ -~ CIJIIoli , _ ol ~
llodlllioo; lin •I~ Ps Md """' .... .toull; lilrtt- clacl; IIIII Yic- 111ft IIIII cloct 11-.4 lltcWo dolt Ill oil ito

"

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph . 992·217•
2_. 26 .11 ,

beegle
I:=========jt==~:;:;:::==j-;::;:;:;;:;:;;;=~ old.
Good Mother
rablt dog .full
Father
hall.

' ' - caintt; 1 fool 1111 6 """ _ , . ,
jiiMI lnllld sc-: """' ...,""'
Cllnil;
ioiM
Clli-......
lrHI: -prdtl
ChiiiSI PJdtft.Mifl: COIIfflll.ll cMiMtl;
Mllfihlt

-1

FREEA S2.00 detail brush,
with the purchase of a
paint kit.
3-S-1 mo. pd .

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights
6: 30p.m., Bashan . Factory
choke 12 gouge shotgun.

2 male puppies. 1 weeks

POMEROY
LANDMARK

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

·•

• Dhpasals
• Oishwashen
e Hcl Walfr ro~~nk'

st... lnlli~ -

By Carolyn G. Thomas
Deputy Clerk
C3) 18, 15, 2tc

_ _ __. .;.___ __,__

e li'ollfttJU

,_ "-; saft '"' Cll._ 4

-

SMITH NELSON
NOJORS 1NC,

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011

• Drnn

Mise;. Merchandice

SPECIAL PUBLIC AUCTION SAlE
SUNDAY I PM
HOLIDAY INN
March 21, 1982
So. Point Ohio
We are back again with a large lot of un'usual
items of all kinds!! There will be J1ems tor
DEAlERS, COlLECTORS and DECORATORSEVERYONE WELCOME Ill Just consigned 26 pc
Meakin Tea leaf.
·
·

c-..

AVI C E

ALL MAIC E S

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

...~ ..... , quill fKI; lO , _ ol

S~

• W.uhen

Don' f forget our regular Saturday Night Sale at
~:OG p.m. Lots of nice merchandise . Auctioneer :
Don Rosser:

,.. -

- spray

- brushes

- plaques

C. R. MASH
.
CONSTRUCTION

y

'

pra is_rment will be for
hea l'..fng before this Court
on the 6th day ot April
1982, at I : 30 o'clock p M. '
Any person desiring· to
file ~xceptions thel'eto
must fli~ them at least five
days pnor to the date set
for' hearing.
Given under my hand
and sea l of said Court, this
15th day of March 1982
Robert E. Buck
Judge

For all you r ~Iring
· ·
.
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195
·
3·7-tfc

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Not responsible tor accidents.
Terms of Sale - Cash.
AuctiOneer': Bill Brown

Public Notice

Public Notice

35 Y E
rs . xperience

ROOFING

T · dF
Keep n15 A or
Fut'-'re Reference

Sevel'al truckloads of merchandise coming in .
Plenty of parking space. GoOd Food . Bring vour
own chair.

IAverage 4 wc.rds per line )

- paint

For bulk delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh .

PH. ft2,3J43 or t92•2Ht

J-11-1 mo. pd .

"

•,

1 _ _ _Y
!,.a
~r"'d~5,•,;
1e,__

Fishing License on sale . Big carport s ale. Wed ..
Come and see our new shi p· Tnurs., and F r i. On In·
tersection of 143 and 7.
ment Of 1912 Fising ·ROds.
.
Variety . Deep free1e also.
Reels, Trading
&amp; Lures.
Spring 99H&lt;I53.
Valley
Co., Spring
Volley Plaro, U6·8025.
Terry Shain residence, An·
Rl. 338. Fri. March
Gun Shoot Racine Gun liquify
TO a .m. to • p.m. Adull,
Cli.Jb. Every Sun. starting i9,
inf ant !&gt;' and c hildren
at 1 p.m . Factory choke clothing.
Ra in cancels.
gu.ns only .

~==:::;;~;;;~~==t=:;;;;;;;:;;;;:::~fr;;~~~~~~~~~r.~~~~~~~~~~ Pies.
112 German
Shephard
pup·
Call.u6·794J
.

FRIDAY. MARCH 19-6 :00 P.M.
3 Mile West of Albany
Corner of Routes 143 and SO

up to 15 Words .. . Three day tnsen,on ............. .S3 .0U
in§ertion ... ...... ..... $4.00
Up to 15 Words ... One day
.Up to 15 Words .. . Shc day
inSe rt ion .... .. .~ ...... $7 .00

ELECTRIC
SERVICE

• Custom Pole Bldgs.
• Roofing work
14 Years Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583
or 992·2282
3·17·1 mo.

SPECIAL AUCTION

Mason Co., wv
Area Code 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
4S8-leon
.
576-Apple Growe
773- Mason
882-Ne¥~ Haven
89S- Letart
931- Bulfalo

- statues
m ·rrors
'

Radiator Speeiallst
NATHAN BIGGS

L,J;.

New Homes - extensive
remodeling
• Electrical
work

IN THE
COMMON PlEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PROBATE
OIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE
·ADOPTION OF TASHA
JOY JOHNSON
No. 23,692
-NOTICE BY
PUBLICATIONTO : JAMES ARTHUR
WEBER, JR ., last known
address: Toledo, Ohio.
You are hereby notified
that yo u have been named
as putative father of Tasha
Marie Bellamy. This action
ha s been a!irsigned Case No.
23,692 in the Common !=&gt;leas
Court, Juvenile Division,
Meigs County, Pomeroy,
Ohio45169.
The object of the Petition
is to adopt said Tasha
Marie Bellamy by the
Petitioner's and divesting
you of all parental right
You are requiredto an·
swer the Pet1tion within
twenty-eight days or ob ject
to tne gl'ant ing to tne adoJ)·
t ion within twentv ·e ight
days ~Iter t~e ""l_a st ,
publicaf1on of th1s no11ce,
which will be published on·
ce each wee k for six con·
secutive wee ks. The last
publication will be made an
the 15th daY of Apri l. 1982.
anq the lwenty ·e•ght days
wil l commence on that
date. In ca se of failure to
an swer · o r othel'wise
respond as required by _th_e
Oh 10 Rul e s ot C1v1 1
Procedure, _ judgment by
default will be rende red
again st you and the
Petition granted tor the
re lief demanded in the
petition dated March 5,
1982.
'
ROBERT
F. BUCK ,
JUDGE AND
EX ·OFFICIOCLERK
(31 11 . 18, 25 i4) 1, 8, 15, 61c

following telephon,e exchanges. ..

13 Vans&amp;4WD
74-Motorcvcles
75 · Boats &amp; Motor s
76· Auto Parts &amp; Accessor ies
77 ·Auto Repair
78 Camping EQuipment

3·11 -tfc

~:a~e;samlcS~planters

--

Announdments

Rt. 2 Box :372
McArthur
r;:::========:::t.========~::;-tr=~;::~7,~::;:;;::=l1ir======:==;==;1 information
Judith
Miller
o
·
HIO.
VAllEY
.
Ohio or l·h14·S96·5564.
MIL' rR
• . ..

-----·--·· -·
Public Notice
---------·-

8

estimates, 949·2801 or
949-2860. .
No Sunday Calls

Specialty"

·--

Classified pages cover the

-_,..... ........ ······
..... .·. .
65-Seed&amp; F ertilize r

--

Spec.li cal ions and Con·
tract docume nts mav be
obtai ned or exa mi ned at
lhe ott; ce of F loyd Browne
Assoc iates, l imited Con·
sui ti ng Eng ineers · Pl a n·
ne r s, 181 South Ma in
Str'eet, Marion, Oh io 43302.
A twent y-f ive dollar
!S2S.POI deposi t will be
requi red for each se1 of
Dra wings. Specificat ions
and Contr ac t documents
ta ken from the above of ·
fi ces, the full a mount ot
wh
ic hl'eturn
will ofbesame
· l'efunded
upon
with in
thirtv (30 ) day s after" the
bid opening. The successful
bi dde r may retai n hi s
Dr awings
torit furth
er use.
and
hi s depos
refun(ted.
Ch ecks shall be made
.pay abl e to the Village of
Middl eport, Ohio.
Each bidde r must insure
lhal all empl oyees and ap·
pli canls for employment
a l' e no t di SC I' Imin a ted
agai nst because of race,
color , religion , sex, or
na ti onal o!' igi n.
Attent ion of th e Bi dder is
directed to the s peci a l construction regulation s in·
eluded herein relat ive to
spec ial req uirement s for'
procureme nt of l.abor , the
speci al inform at ion gi ve n
in the infol'm a tion to Bid·
de r s,_ to t he Spec ial
ReQUII'ements for wage
ra tes. the ho urs of e m·
pl oyment as a scertained
and determin ed bv t he
Depa rt me nt of Industrial
Relat ions and prov-ided for
in the laws of the State of
Ohio .
The Owner reserves the
r iq ht to re jec t anv or all
bids a nd to wa ive any in·
form alities in "bi dding .
THE VIllA GE OF
MIDDlE PORT , OH 10
Fred Hoff man
Ma yor
i3) 18, 15, 2tc

" Beautiful, custom
Bui11 Garages"
Call for' free ' Siding

•Spring bevelo. pments

-~

59-For Sa le or Trad e

61 -Farm Equipment
62 -Wanrcd to buv
63 -Livestock
64 -Hay &amp; Grain

•MObile Home Sites
•Water &amp; Gas Lines

pr~~~i~i~slgf·oog~wing·s.

Passenger inj!lred in accident

Deputies transfer pair to pen

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

IMPi~e1~~NT5

.

At 5:35 p.m. , firemen and two
trucks answered a call to Cheshire
where a fire was reported in
progress. Fortunately, it was extinguished when they arrived. A.t 6
p.m., two trucks and firemen went to
the old lumber mill In Middleport
That call was a false alann.

Middleport firemen were on the
move Wednesday but fortunately
found no fires to battle.
~

-

BuQm·ess .Se...
.a ,;ces
.a

CON~WJi~lci&gt;Rs

The Daily Sentinei- Page4- 9
3

Sealed proposals wi ll be
0
Y
re~ eived by the Vi ll.age of
M1~dle.Port.
Oh
10, 1n theMei9s
off 1cecounty
of t he, r'----------...,.----------.,.----------'T"-------~--1
Mo&gt;~or . Villa~e . Ha ll Mid·
dleporl, Ohio, until 1:30
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
COMPlETE
P.M., Apr il 2, 1982, and
RADIATOR
then pubHc ly opened and
SIDING
POMEROY ,
OHIO
SERVICE
read a loud for the con ·
p
·
99• 2063
H·
.~; •
From the Smallnt
s1ructio n of
WATER
STOP and too~ at our
Heater Core to the
DI STR 1BUT ION
fine selection 01 plaster
Largest Radiator.

Meigs County happenings ••
-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

GARAGE sale · l6 year
collection. 868 Rafferty Dr,
Terra Estates, 'Addison
Ohio . . SO pair jeans, on·
tiques, trunks, ISO dolls.
knick-nacs, hell tree, desk,
cObblers bench.
YARD sole, 1'11 miles out
Greer Rd. , lool&lt; tor sign,
new 12" B &amp; W TV , hospital
bed, CB, mens &amp; womens
clothes, etc. ThurSday,
Friday &amp; saturday, 30H7S·

4-152 .

,,

a

- ---

11- - --Hel Wanted
Someone 10 play piano or
guita r for Gospe l Si nger s.
Ca ii67B123 .
DRIV ERS wanted. light
pic ku p a nd delive ry, ca ll
Gene. 30&lt;·675· 7&lt;91.
E VENIN G te leptionesales,
ca ll Gene, 304:6JH 091 .
E LDERLY woman to li ve

In for room &amp; board . 304·

Public Slle

615·S03&lt; or 675·4389 .

&amp; Auction

L. E. Neal Aucllonejlr Ser·
v ice
Estate · t='ar'm ·
Household-Misc. We sell Ill
Licensed &amp; bonded Ohio &amp;
WVa . 367-1!0!.
TUESDAY at 7 p.m. New
time ·new management .
New &amp; used merchandl.se.
Limited consignments. MI.
Alto Auction House . Rf. 2
south of Ravenswood.
R ic k Pearson , Ex ·
perienced AUCTIONEER .
Estates, antiques, farm ,
household . Licensed Ohio·
WV . Buying antiques. 304·
173·5165, 173·9185.
9
Wanted to Buy
WANT TO BUY Old furniture and AntiQues of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
U6·3159 and 256·1961 in the
evenings.
CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, Gallipolis,
Ohio. Caii.W.-2282 .

NEED a job? Are you !Ired
of thai some old 9 to 5? Do
you like the idea ot travel to
places like Florida, California, New York and many
other maJ or sta tes? Are
you over 18, s ingle &amp; free 10
trave l? If so, th is 11 what
you have been looking for .
Paid 2 weeks training
period, transportation fur ·
nished ,
r e tul'n tran ·
sportation guaranteed .
Equal opportunity fOr' 8d·
vancement, F E Produc·
!Ions Is now hlrelng 10 guys
&amp; gals to travel Wi1h us
demonstr a t ing a new
chemical product. See Mr.
Stenson , Lowe Motor Inn .
Pt . Pleasant, Thursday or
Fr iday, 10·4.
OLIN MILLS has several
immediate openings for
tele phone appointment
clerks . No expel'ie nce
necessa r y . Avon , . Tup·
perware and Sllrah Coven·
try experience helpful but
not necessary. We train,
may work 9 a .m. to 1 p.m .
or S p.m. to 9 p.m. Apply at
Scottish Inn, Room 163,
Jolin Thomas, 1 p.m: to 2
p.m . or 5 p.m to 6 p.m.
Thursday , Frida~. &amp; Monday ONLY . Equal Op·
portunitv Employer.

Buying Gold , Sliver,
Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverwal'e. Dally
quotes a-.llable . Also
coins &amp; coin supplies lor
sale . Spring ValleyTrading, Spring Valley 12
Situat.ions Wanted
Plara, &lt;06·8025 or 446·8026.
Have room , board. and
laundry
We pav cash for late model 992-6148 . for elderly person .
c lean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Will do babysitting in your
BIII Gene Johnson,
home . Pomeroy·Middlepo·
446-0069.
rl area. 992 ·3379.
Wanted to buy junk cars or
wl'ecked cars. Phone 388·
9303 .

-

Insurance' - - SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co . has offered
Antique furnltur'e, old cup· services for fire insurance
bOltrds. ~tone j8rs with blue coverage In Gallia Coun ty
writing, &amp; old egg baskets. for almost a century .
Call367-0138.
Farm, home and persona l
property coverages are
ROSENBERG RECYCll · available to meet In·
NG Opening APR IL 2 In dlvidual needs . contact
Gallipolis. Speclallrlng In Foster Lewis, agent . Phone
aluminum cans, 8lum ir'\Um 379·3318
siding, sheets &amp; cast Blum ., -----'
copper wl re, brass, 15
radiators, auto batteries &amp;
IBM cards. Watch thiS K.rate the ulllmale In self
de1ence all pr:ivate lessons,
paper for location .
Men, women; &amp; children.
Instruction lhru black bell.
Wanted timber. We cut, Also available Karate
paving good prices . Ca ll un iforms puchlng and
406 · 01C~ .
kicking bags, and protec ·
five equipment . Jerry
BEDS·IRON, BRASS, old Lowery' &amp; Associates
Studio , 1&lt;3
furniture, go ld , s ilver Karale
dollars, wood lee boxes, Burlington Rd., Jackson,
stone jars. antiques, etc ., Oh . Call286 ·3014.
complete
households .
Write : M.D. Miller, Rl. o,
18
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992-1760.
Wanted to Do
Day care In my home by
Gold, silver, ster ling , the hour, day or week .
jewelry, rings, old coi·ns &amp; Meal provided, EX ·
cunencv. Ed Burkett Bar· f&gt;E RiENCED. 991·2112.
ber Shop, Middleport . 991·
3476.
OLD FURNITURE , beds,
iron, bl'ass, or wood . Kit·
chen cubbards of ali types.
Tables, round or sq uare .
wood Ice boxes, Old desks
and bookcases. Wltl .buy
complete household . Gold,
silver. old money, pocket
watches, chains, rings, and
etc . Indian Artifacts of all
types. Also buying baseball
cards. Osby Martin 992·
6310.
Oouble bottom 12 ln. plow,
6ft. pick up disc, I or 2 row
cult ivator &amp; lime spreader .
992-7275.
Small cement mixer. 949·
2163.
RAILROAD
304-895·3455.
-.
.....
'.'•

lies,

phone

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

' "

'

r-'

•

1J

Cigarette
Vending
Business. Call 304-113·5651 .
HAVE a highly profitable
and beautiful Jeon Shop of
your own . Featuring the
latest in Jellns, Demlms,
Sportswear and Western
Wear . $12,500.00 Includes
beginning Inventory, fix ·
tures and 11'alning. You
may have your Store open
In es little as 15 days . Call
Mr . Re ynolds, any time,
SOI ·327-6S81 .
22
Mo.'.'!!_ to Loan REFINANCE or purchase
your home . 30 vear fi xed
rate. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 11 E. State St.,
Athens, Oh . 592-3051 .
23

11

Help Wanted
Do you en)oy fashion.
makeup, jewelr~? Then
you' re a natun!ll for' selling
Avon.G·all446·3358.
A dependable person
needed to do house
cleaning for two homes and
a business In Pl . Pleasant
&amp; Gallipolis five days
weekly . References please .
Call 675·4&lt;2&lt; between 10 :00
and 3:00 to arrange In·
tentiew.
Local established firm Is
look ing for part time
mechanically minded per·
son whO can type . Send
resume to Box 400 In care
of Gall ipol is Dally Tribune,
825 lrd. Ave ., Gallipolis, Oh
45631 .

Professiona l·
Servlce.,s_ __

Plano
Tuning
&amp;
Repair.Call Bill Ward for
app ointm e nt , Ward ' s
Keyboard, 446·4312 .
C &amp; L Bookkeeping. 1ncome ta x returns for In·
dividua ls &amp; businesses.
Carol Nea l 446·3862

-·-- --·-- ----

STARKS Tree &amp; lB"'II Str.:.."••J
vice, all types trlmmlnGT'W"tl
rcmOY"al , insured, 30-4·576·
2010.
t
FIR S T a nd se c ond
morgages , land contracts,
and rece iva bles pur"chased.
614-406·4113 .

31- ·

--·-- -

-HOines for Sa ie-

--- - -

~

- -· -· -

-----

Babysitter needed In my
hOme 5 days per week . Call
406·2959 after 5.

1912.Concord Mobile Home,
12K63. Ca ll 446·1015 alter
5:30 P.m .

GET VALUABlE training
as a youno business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. PhOne
us right away and oet on
till! eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2151 .

Beautiful bl'ick &amp; frame, J
bedroom home w/scenic
view,
woOd · bul'ning
fireplace , formal d ining,
central a ir w/ heat pump,
Lanscaped, 1 acre lot
wlfenced In oack yard,
$&lt;5,900 . IT% financing,
small down pa~me nt . Coli
446·3766.

Labol'atol'y . Jackson
General Hospital . Ripley
W.V.A. nas an Immediate
opening for o full lime lob .
Tech . Will accept ap·
plication from Certified
ClA, ML T, or MT. Ex ·
cellent benefits. Contact
personnel assistant at 1·
304·372·2731 Mon. tnru Fri.
e .o.e . M-F·H.

For sal e b-;r owner'. In Rod·
ney "11 , new carpet, large
kitchen &amp; lR , 3 bdr ., 1 car
g a r ~ g e, ass umable loan 8
1/4%
Farme rs Home
Financ ing available, In·
terest c redit subsidy may
reduce payments. C,alt 256·
1254 afte r 5 :00.

.

/

�Page--1()-The Daily Sentinel
31

Homes for Sale

46

:rhey'll Do It Every Time

6 rm . house attached
oaroge, oood condition. 3.&amp;5
East Broadway, (RI . 35),
Jackson . Pri c e only
$12,000. 286-6305.

Spacotor R enr

2500 lbs. tobacco base. Call
«6· 1519 or 4.46·0917.

47
Nice 3 bedroom home on .65
acre. easy to heat, with fuel
oil, wood or coal furnance .
FHA &amp; VA approved .
$26,500 or take over
payments at 13% Interest .
Would consider mobile
home on 'trade . Phone 388·
8370.

wanted to Rent

Professional couple desires
to lease or rent 3·4
bedroom, ·2 bath home in
Gallipolis city or lower Rt.
7 area. Ph. «6·8348 after 5.

................ .
• • • • .I

House for sale in Gallipolis

51

near Hol:zer, city schools, 3

'

... .

,

. . ....

Household Goods

bdr . , all brick , 10%
assumable interest on
$53,000. Call «6· 7060 or 675·.
2'/90.
3 bedroom, large gi"lrege. 2

bedroom rental . :2 acres

ground .

S4

Misc. Merchandice

Sheets. 31h south of Mid·
dleporlonSR7 .

Franklin woodburner
stove, S200. Call 245·5201 .

~IMITS ." ll

you earn between $9000 to

Prix stero system,
player, AM·FM 8·
track . Call 367· 7793.

$15,000 a year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobile home)
for as lillie as Sl3S a month.
No down payment. Call m .
7034 .
-i bedroom house by owner .

1110 mile from Shadle
bridge. Rt. 35, $37,500. Call
675 ·1325.
PRICE reduced, sale by

owner. 2 Story house, 13
rooms. Ideal for large
family or rental property .
Needs some repairs. In the
.20's as is. Phone 304 675·
.1353 after 5 p .m .

Farm . 27 ilcres, J bedroom
house. total electric. heat
pump, central air, all car·
peted . new 12 x 36 metal out
·build ing, pond, all new ten ~
ces, all mineral rights. City
water and spring water.
Wood, good hunting . Close
to new Meg is mines
opening up . Beautiful
location for family . Asking
35,500. Must sell , will
negotiate. Immediate oc·
cupancy . 614-949·2793.

ONE year old, new sub division, 8117 % assumabie

loan, $68,500. 304-675· 1529
afier 5:3Q.
house, 1211
Main St. 6 rooms, 2 story
)&gt;rick. custom buill. 304-675·
;1381 .
ONE

J2

owner

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES. Gallipolis. Price
reduced, used mobile
homes. CALL 446·7512.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, ~ MI .
WEST, GALLIPOL IS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868.

Mobile home . No pets or
drunks. John Sheets, JV2
mil.e south of Middleport on
SRI.

35

TWO bedroom trailer ,
Ashton· Upland Road, $150.
plus deposit &amp; utilities.
Phone 304·675·4088 .
TWO
bedroom,
un furnished. One bedroom ef·
fie Ieney . 30&lt;-6752122 .
MOBILE home, 3/• mile out
Sandhill Rd . 304-675·3834.

Lots &amp; Acreage

THREE bedroom mobile
home, adults only, no pets,
reference required, Camp
Conley, 304-675·2133.

Forty acres vacant land
with water, lots and pines.
Call 379·2603. Priced to sell .

TWO bedroom, furnished,
12x65, all electric, Glenwood, WI/ . S200. monthly
plus e lectric. 304·576·9073
or 576 · 2~41.

One hundred acres with
frontage on SR3S west of
Jackson.
Beautifully
wooded and adiacent to
fully
developed
recreational facilities {I.e.
swimming, canoeing,
hiking,
much
more) .
Several exciting financing
plans available to meet in·
dividual needs . .A rare op·
portunity . Call us today aJ
9'12-6696 or 614·286·2177.
Evenings ca ll 614·286·4058.

43

Farms for Rent

FARM tillable land lor
rent, share basis. phone
304-675·3030, 675·4232 .
44

Apartment
for Rent

Apartment for rent . Call
4.46·0390.

Corner lot. 7th and John St.
Syracuse, Ohio. Call 304·
675·6269 afler 4 p.m .

2nd. floor effiency apt,
Adults on lv, no pets. Brad·
bury Apartments, «6·0957 .

12•60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up with 2

Or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan ·
ci ng available. Phone «&lt;\·
1294.

41

Houses tor Rent

J room unfurnished apart·
ment, adults only, no pets,
utilities paid . Ca ll446·3437.

1979 Winsor 14•70, 3 bdr .• 5 room house. 2 bdr., $200.
microwave, stero, wood
One child acceptable.
floor in kitchen, full bay , Redecon!lted, range &amp;
window, furniture , $14,995.
refrigerator turn . 446·4416
Call.u.\·3547.
afler7PM .
1979 3 bedroom, 14K70
mobile home with 7x24 ex·
panda. Also with 22•8 front
porch, rural water and
FREE GAS on. 6/10 of an
acre. Will take 12x60

mobile home as trade in.
$26,900. 367-0576.
1970 Gregory · I2K6S . 2
bedroom, equip. kitchen.
Gas heat. Also 10 acres in
the country for rent. Has
good water well -free gas.
In the Pomeroy area.
Financing terms available.
9'12-6093 ..
12 x 60 trailer, excellent
condition . Call 446·1552.
Furnished, air conditioned,
underpinn ing, set up on lot
In Middleport .
2 bedroom lO x SO trailer .
BroWn's Trailer Park . 992·
332 •.

I

USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

HOME .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
L icensed &amp; insured . Call
30H76·2711 .
For sa le 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trailers, furnished, with
a ir . Call 304-713-5651 .

2 bedroom unfurnished
apartment in Crown City.
Call 256·6520.

APARTMENTS :
bedroom, rent start.s at
$152. per mo. &amp; 2 bedroom
starts at $188 per . mo.
Specia l rates for Senior
Citizens. Call 446·2145.

5 room house, porch,
basement, $150 mo. Call
615·5104 .
2 bdr ., First Ave., historic
home, just redorated. Call

3 bedroom unfurnished
apartment. $215.00 month,
plus utilities. SIOO deposit.
Three credit references
required . Court Street. Ca ll
446·0088 for appointment to
see apartment .

~46 · 2570.

5 rm . house in GalliJX&gt;Iis.
Caii446·394S alter 5PM.
Homes tor Rent, Lease or
Land Contract in town, or
country .
Call
Strout
Realty, 446·0008.
5 room house with bath .
Large lot near Racine. 992·
5858 .
4 bedroom , central air and
heat, city water. fireplace,
unfurnished except kit·
chen. S300 month plus
utilities. Reference and
deposit
required .
1n
Racine . 949·2293 .

2 bdr. apt. HUO e.cepted,
kitchen furn, utiliti es par·
!Iaiiy pd . , exce ll ent
location . Ca ll 675·5104 or
67H284.
.2 apartments on Main St .,
VInton, . Oh . 2 bdr., clea n,
large yard &amp; garden spot,
sec . dep . Call245·5818.
Furnished apt. 2 bdr ., $230.
Utilities pd ., one child ac·
ceptable. Call446·4416 after
7PM.

Nice 2 bedroom home in
Pomeroy for rent . Stove,
refrigator furniShed . $185
pius utilities and security
deposit .
Adults,
no
children. no pets. Available
about April 2. PhOne 992·
5292 after S p.m .

Furnished upstairs aprt., 4
rms. &amp; bath. Clean, no pets,
adults, dep. &amp; ref . req. Call
446·1519.
Good location, 3 rms. &amp;
bath , carpeted, $195,
utilities paid . Dep. &amp; ref .
req . Call 446·7482 n'lor·
nings.

2 bedroom house. Call 675·
3~31 .

1981 ALL ELECTRIC 12'
WIDE .
2
BEDROOM
mobile home setting on lot,
readv to move into. S899S.
10% down, BANK FINAN ·
CING AVAILABLE, 30~ ·
576·2711 .
14'

WIDE .

3 bedroom unfurnished
apartment. 992·5434 or 992·
5914 or 304-882·2566 .

ALMOST new, J bedroom
house. Fully carpeted, air
conditioned, fam il y room
with fireplac~ . one and one·
half baths'. References
required . call 304·675·2497
after 5: 00p.m .

1 bedroom furnished apt .
992 · 543~ . 9'12·5914 or 304-882·

3 · bedroom

THREE bedroom brick
· Slate Modular Homes, 304· home with large extra lot,
.. 516·2111 .
located just outsle New
Haven. City water, ce ntral
air and heat plus fireplace .
1973 2 bedroom mobile
home on 2 acres, Jerry's · $285.00 per month. Par·
Run
Rd. ,
2 storage tlallv furnished or un·
furnished , For more in·
bui Idings. 304·516·2637 .
·
formation call before s :oo
1972 BUDDY, $3500 . 2 304·615·3467.
bedroom . 30•·895·3562.
42
Mobile Homes
for Rent
1972 Schultz trailer, 14K68, 3
bedroom . Ca11675·3868.
Centenary, 2bdr ., private
lot, ref. &amp; dep., $160 mo.,
1979 LIBERTY mobile adults. Ca ll 614-643·2644.
home, 14x60, 304-675-7337 .
TW&lt;l'2bdr. mobile homes.
1972 12x6S SHULTZ, 3 Oep. &amp; ref. required . Call
256· 1922.
bedroom , gas heat, par·
. !Ially furnished . Call 304·
675-1901.
2 mobile homes for rent . 2
bdr. each, fully turn.,
adults only . Call «6·4110.
1981 INDEPENDANCE by
Detroit, 1Ax70. Someone to
take over payments and
All electric mob.ii§/h:me, 2
$2,000. down . Pay off
bdr .. adults only, no pets.
$10,000. 304-458 · 1825.
Call 36N438.
33

Farms for Sale

6. rm. house with bath, tab.
. barn &amp; 1200 lb. lob . base, on
40 acres on St . Rl. 218, Only
7 112 miles from town,
Call 2.&amp;5·9222 after
6.

.:w,ooo.

11

For sale or rent. 3 trailers·
1 w/famlly rm . &amp; fireplote.
House on REI. 1 above
Eureka on River. Call 388·
8683 for information .

NEWLY decorated, 2
bedroom apartment, close
to Hospital, deposit and
reference required, 304·675·
1962.

45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
ll!lht housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel .
46

I

a

Eary Amer ican couch &amp;
chair. Call before 2:30, 446·
9472 .

CHROME &amp; glass tabl e
with 4 chairs. Sound Design
stereo. 304-675· 7337 .
S4

Misc. Mert:handice

For Sale Beaut iful floor
model console stero, AM·
FM 8· track &amp; record
player, $300.00 . Call 379·
2314.
Massey
Ferguson
bulldozer diesel , 7ft. blade,
wench, good cond., $14,000.
Call 446· 2522 after 5.
Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county apj)r'oved. 1,000
gal. tank, price $340. Other
sizes in stock. haul in your
pickup truck. Call 614· 286·
5930. Jackson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

1978 Jeep Renegade, good
cond . 1980 Harlev Davison
SL T, fully dressed, ex.
cond . Caii67H545.

fur ·:

Spa co for Ron!

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, ·Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Laroe lois. Call
992-7479.
,

Pets for Sale

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat. $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285. to $195. Tables,
SJ8 and up to $109. Hide·a ·
beds,$340., queen size, $380. HILLCREST KENNEL
Recliners. S175 . to S29S., Boarding all breeds, clean
Lamps from $18. to 565. s indoor·outdoor facilities.
pc . dinettes from $79., t o Also AKC Reg . Dober·
.$385 . 7 pc ., $189. and up. mans . Call «6·1195 .
Wood fable with ~ chairs,
$219 up to S495. Desk $110. BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Hutches, S300 . and SJIS., Boarding and grQOming .
meple or pin~ fin ish. A 1&lt;. C Gordon
setters ,
Bedroom suites - Bassett English Cocker Spaniels .
Cherry, $795.
Bunk bed Call 388-9790 .
complete with mattresses,
$250. and up to SJSO. Cap·
lain's beds, $275. complete . Qood clean horses for sale .
Baby beds, S9'1. Mattresses Call 388·8623 . ·
or box springs, full or twin,
$58., firm. $68. and $78 . POODLE GROOMING.
Queen sets, $19 ~\ . s dr . Call Judy Taylor at 367·
chests, ~9 . 4 dr . chests, 7220 .
$42. Bed frames, $20.and
S25,, 10 gun · Gun cab inets, REGISTERED femal e, tri ·
SJso.. dinette chairs $20 . · color
Basset Hound, goOd
and S25. Gas or electric with children, good pe t,
ranges, $295. Orthopedic male offer . 304-675-6777.
super lirm, $95, baby
matresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
frames S20. $25. &amp; $30. Used
Furniture· bookcase, 5 pc.
Farm supplies
dinett set, Living room
tl estael(
suite . Used· range~ and
TV's. 3 miles out ·Bulavllle
Rd . Open 9am to lpm, Mon . 61
Farm Equipment
thru Fri., 9am to5pm, Sat.
4.46·0322
Gravely Tractors, pur·
chase a new Gravely in
March a'nd get a special
Frigidafre no vent, dryer, eilrly Spring discount, in
$65. Kenmore wahser rea l addition to a FREE rotary
plow or till er. Outdoor
ni ce, $110. Call 4.46·8181.
Equipment Sa les. Jet . Rl. 1
&amp; 35, Ga ll ipolis . Ph . 446·
G . E . washer
lar ge 3610 . Open weekdays 9 to 5,
capacity. G.E . dryer J tem - Saturdays 9 to I.
perature's, clean, nice,
guaranteed. SlOO each . Call
Hay round &amp; square bales.·
256·1207.
3000 lb. cattle scales. lmco
H D 5 If. bush hog . Call 245·
5 pc . White twin size 5047 .
bedroom suite with 2 beds,
$300. Call «6·0696 after 5.
Ut ility trail er 8x5, sturdy,
only one year old. Also 1978
Electric s1ove, white, ex . Gravely tra ctor . Call 446·
cond . Call 446·3945 after 9627 .
SPM.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes.
houses.
Pt.Pleasant and Ga ll ipolis .
614·446·8221 or61~· 24H484 .

TWO apartments.
nished, 304-675 · ~378.

56

Suba

tank

Gravely
tractor
and
mower . Completelv r ebuilt
motor and new cluthes,
S8oo.oo . Phone 446 ·4198 af·
ter 4:00PM .

Wanted to Buy

Goat Header fo live on
farm &amp; care for goats .
Want to buy goats &amp; sheep .
Call 256·6642 after 12 noon .

6co3_ _ _:::
L:.:
iv:.:ecos,_,to"c"'k' - - -

78

t'I~==========;::==========~
"
LiVestock

63

Goats, kids·, 3 yearlings . 3·3
mos. old &amp; 2· baby kids. Call
614-7048.
16 pure bred
polled
Hereford cows. 985·3882 .

SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
Polled Hereford Assn . Sale,
March 26, 1982 at 1 : oo p .m .
at
the
Rocksprings
Fairgrounds, Pomeroy,
Ohio . Contact for in·
formation : Judith M iller,
Rt. 2 Box 312. McArthur.
Ohio 45651 or 1-614·569·5564.

Auto for Sale

· 71

1975 MUSTANG II, 39,000
mil es. Want someone to
assume payments. 614·446·
8617 .

FOR GOOD COF"'

THURSDAY

Auto Repair

64___ Hay &amp; Grain

8:00 D ,.(l) Cil

CAPT~NEASY

AN HOUI'r
LArf~ ...

NO

good

condi ti on,

304 ·675·

MATTE~

WHAT 'iOU
SAY A6 0UT THESE PEOPLE
NOT WANTI~G 10 HELP,
W!?' VE- ~0 OTHeR CHOICE

.... ........ •........
.........
,,,..,

~ ·

,

304·615-6662 .

71

Autos for Sale

Truck's for Sale

1977 Ford pickup, good
cond . 6 cyl. Call «6·4554.

For sale 1972 Ford Galaxie,
$500 Call446·3766.

1978 Ford 3/4 Ton pickup .
1973 Plymouth in e•c. cond .
Blazer,
Sand
1980 Toyota Tercel AM· Morris
FM. air, ' automatic , red Hollow Rd.
with black interior, 16,000
mi les, $3,695 . Call446· 1724. 1980 Ford PU, 6 cyl ..
stand., $4250.00 . Phone 446·
74 Vega station wagon, 7322 .
good condition. Call 388·
1975 Ford IJ2 pick- up with
9767 .
flat bed . 50,000 miles. $1400 .
74 Bu ick Century, 4 dr., 949· 2890.
good shape, $650. Call 446·
1979 International dump. 6
2439 .
cylinder. OT 466 . Single
1975 Cutlass Supreme 350, axle, 2 speed with air pick
auto., PS, PB , air, AM·FM, up cheeter. 14 II dump. All
ex . cond. Priced right . Call steel belted radial t ir es,
good condition . 10.00 by 20
446·0515 .
tires, P new ex tra t ires.
65,000 actual miles. 742 ·
1972 Plymouth Satellite 2505.
stationwagon 318 enQine,
runs good. S250. Call 388·
302 FORD truck, wrecke d,
8230 .
304-675-6597 .
1977 Trans Am. auto. PS,
PB , air, low m iles. 1979 1974 GMC 112 ton truck ,
VW, .t·spd, air cond . Call good ti res, 6 ply, runs good ,
real good bed &amp; body . J .A.
446·251"1 .
Hatfield, Gallipol is Ferry,
WI/ .
1977 Ford Thunderbird,
S1,650.oo . PhOne 446·7322.
Jeep CJ5. 6 cyl., 3 spd ..
lock · in hubs, high back
bucket seats, AM ·FM 8·
track, roll bar, 12x15 ti res
with white spoke rims. runs
good &amp; easy on gas. Looks
1974 Mercury Comet 302, V· sharp,
priced to se ll. Cal l
8, auto. trans , rough . Call
367-7671 or 367-7560 .
1976 Ford Granada 6 cy l. ,
auto . trans. PS, PB , very
good mechanicaly . Call
446·30« .

~46· 3044 .

1982 Plymouth Re li ant.
A. T .,
AM· FM stereo.
d ig i tal dock, 35 mpg, under
warranty . $7000 firm . 992·
5628.

1977 Ford Thunderbird,
white with blue interior,
AC , PB , PS, AM· FM 8
track stereo. Excellent
condition. $3500. 9?2· 7735.
1975 Ford Torino, runs
good. good shape . S500. 992·
6J16.

1969 Nova, 350, 4 barrell, 4
speed, oversize
cam,
cutl ass wheels, great tires,
new paint, liHie p·utty, lot of
new parts, perfect con·
dillon. $1~95 .
HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West V irginia . Over
20 les's expensive cars in
stock .

GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS many sold
through local sales. under
$300.00 . Call 1·114·569·0241
for your directory on how
to purchase. Open 24 hours.
1981
CHEVY
Malibu,
power steering, power
brakes, air, low mileage,
must sell, 304-895·3618.

1915 PONTIAC Astra, no
rust, 304·675-31«.

65 MUSTANG, very sharp,

79 Ram Charger, 4·wh ee l
drive. Call 388·9991 or 388 ·
8623.
1974 Jeep CJ ·S, ex . cond.
Call367 ·7804 .
1980 CHEVY Scottsdale, lf,.
ton, .t·wheel drive, 4 speed,
AM· FM. regular gas. 30,000
miles. good shape . 300735150.

74 BLAZER, V·8, a uto , P S,
PB, lock out hubs, 15x38
motor, lift kit, header s, roll
bar, AM· FM 304-675·5214.
74

Motorcycles

·"---'===~-"'-"--­

All used bikes reduced at
Betz Honda, check with us
before you pay to much.
Call.u.\·2240.

8UT TO MK. IT'!i OJJil.
ONLV HOPE!

8:16 (fi) Ullaa, Yog.o 8lld You
8 :30 D (1) (I) NBC News
(]) $60,000 Pyramid

7:00

CAMPER , sleeps 3 ,
r efrig er ator , sto ve &amp; mise .,
$600 . phone 304·675·4373.
Motor Home

W~tJ l U'Jfl1'/o,'1 I. TOCJA

1977 Star c raft fo ld out cam ·
per , sl ee ps 6, ex. con d,
$1,400 . Call446·3040.

1974 Honda 360 in A-1 cond .
Will sell cheap. Call 446·
4395.
2·1981 Honda motorcycles.
900 &amp; 150 CB custom . Call
388·8711 .
1973 Harley Davidson .
Recently overhauled. $500 .
9~9 · 2163 .

12 CHEVROLET, good con·
~ilion,

81
Hom e
_ _lcm
c . pro ve me~s- _

30A·675· 1402.

TWO 10 speed bicycles,
boys &amp; girls. 74 Buick Cen·
tury, automatic, PS, PB,
air, 304·576·2113.

CAPTAIN STEE MER Car ·
pet Clean in'Q fea tured by
Haffelt Brost hers Custom
Carpets . Free es11mates.
Cal l446·21 07 .
Fr enc h Ci t y Painting
r esiden ti a l &amp; comm er cial ,
interi or , ex terior, paper
h a ng ing ,
&amp;
tex tur ed
ceil ings. Call 367 ·7784 o r
367· 7160 .

specia l Marc h and A pril
only . Gene's Deep Stea m
Cl eanin g. Scotch Gaurd.
Free es tim a te. 992·6309
- ·-- - - J
RON 'S Tel evision Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
M otorola . Quaz ar, and
house ca ll s. P hone 576·2398
or A46·245J .

I WAG A
TODOI.Eil!

1 C'H GEE YOOR !\OTHER
IN 'lOUR FACE -.'CEPT

GtiE yji\G H.ll'il 0' -·

8:00

FILLEO OtJT MORE -

Special

ALLEYOOP
...SO l'M GONNA GIVE
TH' FOIJ(S SOMETHIN'
T'LOOK AT UNTIL

A &amp;UIIAITUTEi'
GUZ, WHAT ARE
YOU TALKING
ABOUTr"

GASOLINE ALLEY

first, Bowser,
we shall
dispense
with our
sucker!

Water well s. Commercia l
and Dom es t ic. Test holes.
Pumps Sal es and Service .
304-895 ·3802.

WINNIE

A MILLION
PARDONS, MY

CAR PENT RY ,
home
b ui ldi ng &amp; r emodli ng,
plumbin g ,
e l ectrica l ,
masonary , 30.4·675-2440.

BfAUTEOU5

YOUN6 LADY.. .

--

79 HONDA Custom SOOCX ,

JIMS Water Servi ce. Call
J im Lanier. 304-675· 7397.
Camp Conley .

8}:::-.:_- Upholst.ii:=:::..:=.
T RISTA TE
UPH OLS TERY SHOP
1163 Sec . A ve., Galli pol i s.
446 ·7833 or 446· 1833.

IF l COULfl/i'Et!EYE
YOUR

7'REMENPOU5

HOWPA/i'~

YOU SNOOP
AROU"U7 MISS
WINKLE 'S OFFICE

.. . AS SOON AS

I TURN MYMCK
ON

_§~c~~!i '!_g

JONES BOYS WA T E R
SERV ICE . Call 36J.7471 or
367-059 1.

... I WAS MERELY
TRYING TO SEE
WOI&amp;&lt;LOAI7/'

Plumbing
- ---~ _!!!:_a_!i~g
CARTER 'S P LUMB IN G
AND HEATI NG
Cor . F ourth and Pine
Phone 4d6·388e or 4.46 ·4.477

Gallipoli s Divers if ied Con·
st. Co . Cu stom doze r &amp;
b acK hoe worK . Spec i al
fa rm r ates. Call us l or tree
est imates. 446·4440.

e

(jJ Pollee Squodl ·

G Cll (}D Magnum. P .I.
Rick enlists Magnum ' a aid
in solving a crime that occurred 35 years ago . (60
min .}
(I) Down Home Country
Mualc
Charlie
Pride,
Jimmy Dean and Tammy
Wynette host a country
music extravaganza featuring the world 's top country
and western recording artists. (3 hrs.l
8:30 ()) MOlliE: 'Oh, Godl'
(I) 11 (JJ Boaom Buddlaa
Kip accuses Hohry of mak ing improper advances to
his ;sister.
())) Down Homo Country
Muolc
Charlie
Pride,
Jimmy Dean and Tammy
Wyneua host • country
music extravaganza featuring t ~e world's top country
and western recput~ng artists . (3 hrs.l
9:00 D (l) (I) Dlff'rent
Stroke• Conclusion . Arnold Ia wired to got proof
that he and his friends
have been terrorized .
!Closed Captioned!
()) 700 Club
(I) II CDI Barney Millar
!Closed Captioned)
D (I) P~e I Choice
Award• America's favorite
performers, television programs, movies and musk:
will be determined by a
~ecial Gallup Poll. (2 hrs .l
9 :30 • (l) Glmma a Break
(I) II (jJ Taxi (Closed
Captioned!
9:45 Cll TBS Evening News
10:00 D (l) [J) Hill Street
Blue• Balker and Waohington bust a stolen car ring
and Jovce Davenport 's disillusiOnment jeopardizes her
work and her private life . .
(60 min.l
(I) • (jJ 20/20
10:16 ()) Beat of On Location
10:30 (]) Sln11_out America
11 :oo
Cll CIJ rna (I)® 111
CDI Nawa
(]) Naahvl11a "FD
Cll All In the Family
Cll Swinging Over the
Rainbow W (Willie Nelaon
t 1 :30 II (l) (I) Tonlght Show
Johnny is joined by Jack
Lemmon. (60 min.l
(]) Another Ufe
(I)
MOlliE:
'Beyond

em

yOU~

YfAH?
I'M NOT
SO SURE

I liUY
LINE

a

Mom-·

Cll II CD1 Nlghtllne
G
(I)
®

2

18

BARNEY

I'LL PUT TH' MEAT
WHAR'5
AN'
TATERS ON TH'
MY SUPPER,
TABLE
AN' VOU GO
MAW?
VORESELF TO
TH'SALAD

AGGERVATIN'
FEMALE

BAR

[J

tii

I

t
I I IJ

tDIRAHS

)

tTHOOSEj

Now arrange the drcled leners to
torrn the surprise answer, as sug ·
geated by the above cartoon.

) KI

Mswer: A(

I III

I I I L)

)'0(

(Answeratomo«ow)
Yesterday's

Jumbles: PLUME

I

~nswer :

FABLE

HOOKED

LOCATE

Comes under pressure when a driver steP,a
on II - THE PEDAL
.

BRIDGE

The reverse bid
By Osw•ld Jlcoby
ead Alu Soataa
NORTH

Mark Twain said, "Every·
one talkB about the weather,
but no one does anything ·
about it."
In " Modern Bridge
Conventions" the authors
have tried to cover all phases of bidding. One subject is
the so-called "Reverse bid."
Today'• hand shows a simple reverse bid by opener .
His two-heart lild is a
reverse since It abuts out a
return to clubs at the two
level.
Everyone knows a reverse
bid shows extra values. Roqt
and Pavlicek recommend a
minimum of 17 points which
Is normal expert practice.
They also follow expert
practice In making the bld a
one-round force and In
requiring that the reverse
bidder also promise another
bid.
Responder 's first duty
here fs to confirm a fivecard suit II he has one. Going
one step lurther the suit
rebid Is unlimited, but may
be made wlti1 a rock bottom
minimum response as ma~
be the other weakness bid or
two notrump.
Opener has 19 HCP . This
Is two more than he needed
for the reverse so he jumps
to the spade game. Had he

1·1'"'1

+QH
.AK63
t AZ
+KQ8Z
EAST

•u

WFST

+su

•1o a
tK8764
+A tO 7
SOUTH
+K 10713

•u754
tQJU

•~u

•Qz

ttou

+H4
Vullll!r~ble: Neither
Dealer: North

w..t
Pw
Pw

Pus

Nortb

East

1+

Pw

c

Pw
Pasa

2\'

4+

Opening lead:

Soaq
1+

2+
Pw

•s

just 'bid three South would
pass with his minimum.
Four spades makes easily/
but without this use ·o
reverse bidding the chanc'es
are that North would play
two or three notrump ana .
only collect seven trlclis. · •··
iNEWSPAPBR ENTBRPRISE ASSN.!

NCAA ·
Baaketball: Chompk&gt;nahlp
G•ma ·
11 :46 ()) MOVIE: 'Thief'
12:00 (]) Bum• &amp; Allen
Cll
CDI Vegol Dan lolls ,
in love with a jewel thief.
(RI (60 min.l
12:30 8 (l) (I) leta Night with
Dmd lllttermon
(]) Jock Benny Show
1 :00 (]) I M.,..ed Join
(111 Nawa
1:30 (]) Mv IJt1le Margie
Cll MOVIE: 'Five Ml111on
Yean To Eerth'
[J) Nawa/Sign Dfl
1:45 ()) MOVIE: 'Eyawltneaa'

e

a

t!I£W,.VJw
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

1 - price on

(]D I Believe
2:30 (]) Ufe of Riley
3:00 ()) Bum• &amp; Allen
3 :30 (]) Jeck Benny Show
())
MOVIE :
'Buatln'
PEANUTS

HOW MANY TREE5 HAVE
YOU WRITTEN DOWN?

40 DIBcourage
41 Wallach's

(2 wds.l
(assess)

Jackson

DOWN

5 Pontifical

1 Pacific

10 Came down
11 Old saws

islands

zAfrican beast

13 Role for

3 Repeatedly
Lucille Ball 4 Devoured
14 Pertain
5 So. Am . river
Veaterday's Anawer
15 An Individual BSkilled
II Faucel
7 Intimate
Z% Uquld
29 Hackneyed
17 Give 8 Repeatedly
measure
30 College In
whirl
9 Romaine
%3 Cake to-be
Wisconsin
(2 wds . )
121n office
24 Served
31 Lesaen
18 Unyielding 11 Parley
25 "Merciless" 36Anny or ·
20 Kook
19 Ma Kettle
one of comics
folding 21 FOR's Scottie portrayer Z7 Tip-getter
37 Song syllable
%2 Walk
~-r.:-~-r.-%3 Fabric style

%5 Sought
diamonds

26 Ancient
EgypUan city
Z7 Won! with
b.--+-+~
jammer
%8 Sailor

Z!l Blast
oltrwnpets
:!!Small bird

33 Outfit
U Medll

fortress
35 Educe
37 Mulberry
cloth
:IS~oof

311 Melee

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW

2:00 (]) Bachelor Father

OAK', POPLAR, 5PIWCE,
APPLE, MAPLE, PINE.
CEDAR ANP "I~H ...
THAT MAI(E5 EIGI-IL

(I) MOVIE: :Haii'Drtvera'
4:00 (]) 1 Merrled Joan
4:30 ()).My Uttl• Margie

CRVPTOQUOTR8

IZH

KMUPDHS

G UI

IU

PQI

-------

It:

.

One letter olmply •lando for another. In lhil sample A 11
uoed for the three L'1, X for the two O's , etc. Sln11e letlers,
apo~trophet, the Jenllh and lormallon of lhe wonla ore all
hiDII. Each day the code lelten are different.

l..ooee'

IU

SBWH
SBWH

YBNVY

ux
DVXH
SHG

EIBMM

DVXH
HBEVHM,
EIMUGO HM .
LUMYBG

Yesterdly'a Crypleqaote: THE MAN WHO NEVER MAKES A

MOWR E YS Upholstery Rt .
I Bo•124. Pt . P leasant, 30~ ·
675-4 154.

MlSTAKE fS tHE MAN WHO . NEVER
ANYTIDNG. -mEOOOREROOOEVELT .

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

,.

I ()

1,,

RINGL ES'S SERV IC E ex
peri cnccd ma son, roo fer ,
carpente r ,
el ec tr icia n,
general
re p a 1rs a nd
remodeling. Phone 304 -675
2088 or 675 ·4560.

LOC KSM I TH
Service .
Residential , automotiv e.
Emergency servic e. Ca ll
882·2079.

(I)
NBA
Bollketball:
Houaton ot Atlanta
(I) Medical VIewpoint
(I) lAverne and Shirley
D Cll Family Feud
Cll Bualne11 Report
C1D Rlc:lwd Slmmona
())) All Crellturaa Great
end Small
II CDI Entertainment
Tonight
D (l) (I) Feme Tho
teachers put on a show for
the students and Doris and
Montgomery try an experiment. (60 min.l
(]) Nlltlonlll Geographic
(I)

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
sturp p r emoval. 675·133 1.

85 - ·- ~-~~r~ l] ~~~i~g: ~

Part interest In 19' Baja Ski
boat. 175 HP Mercury, all
ski accessories, S700 down
1964 FORD, 2 door, A speed, plusSJI . per mo. payment.
SJOO., phOne 304·675· 4399.
, 4.46·1265.
•

JUST LIKE
'{OlJ HMN'T
ritEH iloE SINCE

Bell Contrac ting Ge ner al
plumbing serv ice, hom e ·
remodeling &amp; re pai r s. Free
estim ates. Ca ll 446·4002 .

For sale 1981 Honda CR80.
Elsinore . Phone 895·J59'1 .

Boats and
Motors for Sale

ANNIE

Marcum
Roo f i ng
Br
Spouti ng . 30 year s ex·
pen ence, 5pe cia 1izing in
built up root . C&lt;?ll 388·9857 .

J ACKS REFR IGE RATIO·
N Air condi ti on' se r v ice,
comme rciaL indu str ia l .
Phone 882·2079 .

75

II (D) Muppet Show
D ())You Aaked For It
(]) Another Ufe
())
Real
Detectlvea:

PAl NTI NG · interior an d
ex ter io r ,
plumbing ,
roofing, some r emodelin g.
20 yrs. e• p. Call 388 9652 .

1981 HARLEY Davidson .
low rider, 80 cu. in . 1,340cc,
2500 miles, 304· 615·6138
day, or 675·6071 after 6 p.m .

1975 YAMAHA 350 street
bike, excellent condition,
reasonable, 30H73 ·5018.

7 :30

STU CCO PLA STE RING ·
t e xtured cei lings co m ·
m ercia! and r esidenti a l,
free es t imates . Ca 11 256·
1182.

84
E l ectrical
---... &amp;_ R._efr~~!!!ion
SE WIN G Ma chine r epairs.
serv ice. Authorized Singer
Sa les &amp; Se rvi ce Sharpe n
Sc iSsor s.
Fabr ic Shop,
Pomer oy . 992·227.4 .

30A·615·5162 .

WECIT

Re~

em Newa

5£FJ1ees

1981 Kawasak i CSR 250 .
Street bike . 1200 actual
miles, electric starter, ex·
cellenl condition. Bought
August 1981 . Sell for S1100.
Helmet included . 614-949·
2820.

ex.c ellent condition, full
faring, new tires, S2,100.
304·.&amp;58·1763.

Cll Gomer Pyla
Cll Mupj18t .Show
G Cll &lt;lD CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
II &lt;ill ABC News
D (1) P.M . MllliUina
(]) Weekend Gonlenor
()) Uttleat Monnald A
lovely young mermaid falls
in love with the handsome

Speck Call

83

tour Ofdinary _ ,• .

(I) Happy Daya
II Cll Tic Tee Dough
.
Cll ())) MIICNell-lehrer . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I ~""'Y

I nsull at ed t r uck topper .
Wil l fit sh ort bed Ford pick
up tru ck. $75 . Ca ll before
2:30, 446 ·9472.

----

Unecrombla- tour Jumt&gt;lll,

prince she rescues from a
shipwreck .
Cll Carol Burnett end
Friends
Cll Entertainment Tonight

BORN LOSER

82

by 11enri Nno1d and Boblu

one letter lo each squa10. 10 form

(1)3-2.-1, Com.ct

Camping ~
Equipment

~

72'

CD1

® Proo oont' d

Hay for sale. Call 256· 1922.

1969 VALIANT . ~~ In·
ternatlona l travel, 4-wheel·
2,000 bales of good, clean, drive. · 1979 Dodge tru ck, 6
wired straw . S1.25 per bale. cyl , standard, LWB . 1968
Call614·896 ·2250.
Pontiac , 400 cu . in . engi ne
&amp; automatic transmi sion.
Large round bales . Phone 304·615·6628.
614 ·985 ·3887 or contact
Albert P!lrker after 6 p .m .
76 P IN TO station wagon
Squire, 25 mpg , radial
Mixed hay for sale. Squar~ t ires, no rust, AM· FM, 8·
track, excellent condition,
bales. 992-3553.

a Cll &lt;JD •

New.
())
~
Flbuloua
Clowns Entenatners who
have brought laughter and
tears to generations are ·
saluted.
Cll Andy Grffthh
Cll ABC Ne-

&amp; Cam pe, r_,s_ _

5455.

1t ftll"'-'l IDil iilllliAT SCRAMBLED WORD DAME ..

~ ~ ~~ •

EVENING

1967
Yellowstone.
Sleeps 146, ftgood
condition .
$BOO . 1977 Yamaha 6,000
miles. Phone 992·65 10 .

79

1915 PONTIAC, Bonnevill e,

7 months old Hereford bull .
Can be registered. 614·9492179 .

ALWAYS MAI-&lt;.es

Television
•
•
VIewmg·
3/18/82

CUSTOM AUTO BODY
WORK &amp; PAINTING Free
es t i mates,
low r at es,
guaranteed w or k, also
sma ll engine &amp; lawn mower
r epair. 446·9159, Guaranteed Automot ive. Behind
Arcade on Court St . in old G
&amp; J a lley, Gallipol is.

New &amp; Used Toy built ·1960 Chevy, 3 speed, 6 cyl,
tillers . Bulk garden seed . 50,000 actual m ites. Un·
Swisher Implement, Inc ., believable shape, asking
Gallipolis. Call446·0475
51000.
1981
Plymouth
Hori zon, 4 dr., low mileage,
1·12' John Deere wheel automatic, PS, PB, stereo.
disc . l ·set of Jotln Deere 4 9'12·3798 after S p.m .
bottom 16' ~ semi mount
p lows, 1·Hill sboro tri ·axle 1977 DOdge Aspen , 6 cyl,
goose-neck 28' trailer . Ca ll $1900 will negotiate, good
61056 ·6534 .
cond ition . 992·5544 .

62

DICK TRACY

Quality Autobody ~ Pa int
work . Professional custom
pa int work on motorcycles .
A uto Trim Center , 446·1968.

Martin 12. string acoustic
guilar·S375 . Oinelle with
four chairs (yellowi ·SJO.
Couch (3 sections&gt; with
reversible cushions·$50 .
Stereo speakers·S20. 614·
9~9 · 27.41 or 614· 9~9 · 2~57 .

LUMBER
I"K6"
and
1"x8"x6' thru 16' 'poplar
sheathing, air dried. Mill
Wood Inc . Yard near in·
tersection US 33 and WV 2.
304· 213-2522. M· F 8·4:30,
Saturday 8· 1.

I TELl-YOU?

245-9578.

2 pr . Sears jeans. Worn and
washe d once. 33 X30. SIO
each . 949·2163 .

DRAGONWYNO
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow
puppies , CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 446·
3844 after 4 p .m .

Apartments. 615 ·5548 .

MT . Vernon Ave. Small
furnished
apartment,
adults, $170 month, call 30~ ·
675·1902.

Mobile hOme. Call446·3358.

Coffee table ~ end tables.
Must see to appreciate,
reasonalbe. Call «6·3937.

Olmypic 400
regu~tor , complete suba
out gear and 18 11: Gator
boat frailer . Call 446·1642,
ext. 332 or 367-7292.

2566.

! mobile home, $89'15. All

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refr i gerators,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap · .
pliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
«6·1398.

DICK'rnACY

Auto. Parts
&amp; Acces sories

The Daily Sentinei- Pag~ll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

For sa le two Chevy motors .
327 for sso, 292 for $75 . Ca II

E.celsior Oil co .• 636 E .
.Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
9'12· 2205 .

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters. Rio Grande. 0 .
Call 245·5121.

74

Thursday, March 1g, 1,982

Windshield broken? Call
Southern Gl ass. In surance
clai ms welcome, tree
mobile service avai lable .
Call 446·1011 .

Gr~nd
recor~

FOLEY saw fill ing equip·
ment for sa le. Phone 304·
576·2293.

NEW INCOME

by Lany Wright

KIT .'N' CARLYLE "'

WEIGHTS and bench with
leg extension, phone 304·
675·4634 .

John

~ason .

Thursday, Ma rch 18, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

G 1112

H f ----l•l ..--..,_- ·- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - -

K~

F•twr• Syndic:ate, Inc.

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

DOES

�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 18, 1982

Ohio

ELBERFELD

ME FRII).A
. Y
OPEN

FRIDAY, MARCH 19th,
SATURDAY. MARC:H 20th

Accident forces mine worker evacuation

Y TIL 8

SA I.E

JUNIOR ALL WEATHER

SPECIAL

COATS

TOWEL SALE

Junior Sizes 7 to 15 in New Spring All
Weather Coats.
Smart New Styles and Colors

Quality Dundee ·Towels Heavyweight Floral Patterns in Pink, Orchid, Blue and
Tan.

4.99 HAND TOWEL, 22"x44" . 3.88
2.99 HAND TOWEL, 16"x24" . 2.38
1.49 MATCHING WASHCLOTH 1.18

foUowed until representatives Of the services could arrive on tile scene about
3p.m.
An area of about 50 yards around the scene was evacuated and some 30 to
50 workers removed from the work area , Wllllams reported. Upon jnspection, WIUlams said that he and Cole found no contamination.
However, he said the manufacturers of the gauge, Texas Nuclear, was
notified and sent a representative to the scene. The damaged gauge was
being crated today to be removed from the mine area and wiD be replaced by
anewgauge.
·

•.
at y

LADIES'
i

Voi.30,No.237
Coeyriphted 1982

L

.

.

5

PQmeroy~Middleport,

t ' 2 -

Williams said the gauge is one that is commonly usd and is about the size
of a gallon bucket. The gauge is made extremely heavy by lead casing, he
reported. The unit was being installed by the company of Hartman and Hartman.
Williams commended the United Mll\ll Workers Safety Committee and aU
of the companies at the mine for excellent work in carrying out instructions
and working out the problems involved.
Charles Legar, county disaster director, advised the stale office of the illcident as did the Meigs County sheriff's department.

•

,

SALE PRICES
START AT ONLY

SPRING
COAT SALE

enttne
2 Sections , 12 Pages

Ohio, Friday, March 19,1982

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Full length and a;. length All
Weather Coats. Sizes 8 to 18
and 16'h to 24'h . Numberous
Styles and Colors.

LADIES'

SLEEPWEAR
SALE

SALE PRICES
START AT ONLY

$2639

Spring Sale

JUNIOR DRESSES

Special group of spring
and summer weight sleep·
wear. Baby Dolls, short
gowns, pajamas, robes
and long gowns. Sizes
Petite thru XX L.

lj2 PRICE
. '

\\
\ \

Shuttle launch
practice set
.

New styles and colors for
Spring, Sundresses and
Jacket
Dresses . Knits,
poly / cotton blends, prints,
stripes and solids.

.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Although Colwnbia's two astronauts
are experts at landing on an ill-equipped runway in New Mexico's
desolate Tularosa Basin, they and space shuttle Oight controllers
decided to practice one more time in a rare, mid-countdown dress
rehearsal.
·
Meanwhile, tons Of equipment was loaded onto a train to make the
trip to the New Mexico landir1g site from California, where furious
rains washed out theprimarylandlngsileaiEdwardsAir Force Base.
The first trainloads were to leave this moming, and were to arrive
before Monday's 10 a.m. EST launch.
On launch pad 39A at the'Kennedy Space eenter, where Columbia Is
being readied for its third mission, the countdown was ahead of
schedule.

JR . S IZE S3 to13

LADIES'

Reg. 12.00
Reg. 20.00
Reg. 27.00
Reg. 34.00

Spring
DRESS SALE

''
'

.•..•.. SALE 9.59
...... SALE 15.99
. .... . SALE 21.59 ._
. . .... SALE 27. 19

-~--""

Prints, Solids and Stripes
in Sundresses, Jack e t
Dresses and 2-pc . Dresses .
Misses and Half Sizes.

."·\I.

Reg. 27.00
Reg. 36.00
Reg. 43.00
Reg. 52.00
Reg. 63.00

, •.

\
'

Two representatives of the Ohio Disaster Services flew by Natimal Guard
helicopter to Meigs Mine 1 Of the SOuthern Ohio Coal Co. 11lunday at1emoon
after a radiatill!l gauge being installed at a new coal wasliin8 plant was
damaged.
.
James Willl.ams of the Ohio DiSaster Services who made the trip to Meigs
County with the second representative, Kenneth Cole, said a llftlng device
broke allowing the gauge to fall while being ~lled. The Imps~ caused the
face plate to break off thereby allowing the emission Of a higher than normal
amount of radiation.
The Ohio Disaster Services was notified and Issued inslnlctlona to be

,,

\

\.

Ashbrook undergoes more tests

... . SALE 21.59
.... SALE 28.79
.. .. SALE 34.39
... . SALE 41.59
... . SALE 50.39

LITTLE GIRLS'

SPRING DRESSES·

.

'I

Weeke nd Sale of little girls' dresses.
Buy now for Easter! Complete range
of sizes.
Reg . 6.00 . . .. . .•....... :. SALE 4.79
Reg. ~ . 00 ........... . .. .. SALE 7.19
Reg. 14.00 . •.. .. .. .... . . . SALE 11.19
Reg. 19.00 . . ....... . ..... SALE 15.19
. Reg . 27 .00 ....... ... . . . .. SALE 21.59

20% to 50% OFF
LUGGAGE SALE

SUPPER SALE
Boots, wedges, scuffs and
ballerina styles. Broken sizes.

Top quality Ai r way luggage in an a rray
of colors and styles. Sturdy con struction for yea r s of use .

Reg. 5.00 . . ... . .. . . SALE 3.50
Reg. 6.50 ........ . . SALE 4.55
Reg. 9.00 .. . . .... . . SALE 6.30

Reg. l4.00 CARR Y-ON BAG . Sale 27 .20
Reg. 46.00PULLMAN ...... Sale36 .80
Reg. 53.00 TOTE .. ... . .. .. . Sale26.50
Reg. 107.50 26" PULLMAN .. Sale 53.75

SALE! MEN'S
WORK UNIFORMS
·Wrangler 19.95

Reg. 8.95 SH IRT S ...........
Reg. 10.95 SHIRTS ..........
Reg. 11.95PANTS
..
Reg . 12.95 Extra Size
PANTS . . . . . .
. ...

. B'ue Denim
Western Shirt

Sale 6.79
Sa le 8 .29
Sa le8 .99

JEANS
Selec ted from our regular stoCk . Boys painter
jeans, corduroys, m en's pre-shrunk denims, corduroys. Limited Quantities. Not all sizes. No exchanges or r efunds.

Sa le9 .79

SPRING SALE
MEN'S WEMBLEY TIES

Neck size 14'1&gt; to 18. Sleeve lengths
33 to 36 inches. An excellent work
shirt. 100% cotton pre-shrunk style
as pictured. Excellent tor welders.

New patterns and solid colors in
ready tied and four-in-hand ti es.
. You ' ll like the selecti on and sale

prices.
8.50 Wembley Ties . . ...... Sale 6.69
9.00 Wembley Ties . .. . .. . . Sale 6.99
10.00 Wembley Ties .. . • . .. Sale 7.79
11 .SQ Wemblev Ties . ... . .• Sale 9.89

Reg. 529 OAK ROLLTOP ••.• . . .
Reg. 31900 PINE KNEE· HOLE ••
Reg. 39800'PECAN KNEE HOLE • • •
Reg. 25900 PINE KNEE HOLE • • •
Reg. 25900 OAK KNEE HOLE • • •
Reg. 37'J.OO PINE TRESTLE •• • . .
Reg. 11900. PINE ROLLTOP • • • • • • • •

SPRING

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30AM TO 5:00PM .

SALE 42300
SALE 25500
SALE 31800
SALE 20800
00
• • SALE 208
00
• • SALE 297
00
• • • SALE 95

/ .
//
/

/

_pARK FREE IN POMEROY ALL DAY SATURDAY

ELBERFE ·os IN POMEROY

WASHINGTON- The Reagan administration &amp;~I'll to have ~uc­
•• • ·-ceeded in heading ·off a potential new otltbreali ·of tlghtlng between
Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization, •!though officials
caution that a ceasefire remains fragile .
Philip C. Habib, President Reagan's special Mideast negotiator,
managed to strengthen the ceasefire between the PLO and Israel
during a recently completed mission to the region, it wa9 clear from
the comments of several officials ThUrsday.
Habib told reporters following a meeting with Reagan that he
doesn't think Israel will attack Palestinian forces in southern
Lebanon.

VIENNA, Austria - The OPEC oil mlnislel"ll are meeting here today
to seek ways to share their shrinking market, keep their price up and
their cartellntact.
.
With the market glutted in part by an receslliOJHpurred world mdustrial slowdown, "and production levels already at a 1:1-year·l~w, the
ministers of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries are
faced with a hard choice.
They can further trim production in a bid to restore a balance between supply and demand, or face new downward prea.sures on their
prices.
OPEC's benchmark price Of ~a-barrel for Saudi Arab"1an light
crude already is being undercut by as much as t6 a barrel on spot
markets, where oil is sold to the highest bidder.

Four Dutch newmen killed
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador- Four Dutch television ne~
who left San Salvador to cover the guerrilla side of El Salvador s war
were kllled when an anny patrol returned fire from a rebel band, the
Defense MlnlBtry says.
Defense Mlnister Jose Guillenno Garcia said in a staleiJ)ent the army patrol was unaware the journalista were with the guerrillalllsald
were operating 35 miles north of San Salvador ln Chalatenango province a leftist stronghold near the Honduran border. •
Gen. Garcia said the Dutclunen were killed in a 46-minule gunfight
Wednesday night after the rebels fired at the anny patrol near the
village of.~ Nicolas Piedras Gordas.

Winning Ohio lottery mmber

DESK SALE
00

U.S. holds off new outbreat

OPEC wants to sure up market

CLEARANCE!
MEN'S AND BOYS'

Regular and ext r a si zes in pants with
long or short slee ve work shir ts to mat·
ch . Navy , Forest Green, Ch:t r coal ,
Khaki, Olive.

MANSFIELD, Ohio - Rep. John Ashbrook, a Republican U.S.
Senate candidate, underwent tests Thursday at a Mansfield hospital
where he was taken after fainting at a restaurant.
Hospital officials said he was out of bed, walking around the hospiial
and talking with his wife and others between sea.slons with the hospital
staff.
Ashbrook, 53, Johnstown, lost consciousness aboutll: 30 p.m. while
dining in Mansfield Wednesday night with members of his staff.
An aide on Ashbrook's Washington staff, Reggie Bashur, Thursday
said Ashbrook wasn't receiving medication and that doctors believed
the problem may have been caused by exhaustion.

ClEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 307.
In the semlweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number wu 9962.
The lottery reported earnings of $444,132.50 on ita daUy game. The
eamlnga came on sales of $1,1*1,243, while holders of winning tickets
are entitled to share $818,110.50, lottery officials said.

Weather forecast
Showers and polllible thundel'lltorms through Saturday. Showen
pDislbly heavy at times1onlgbt. Lows tonight In mld-401. Hlgh8 Saturday 70-'lli.
near-100-~ and I) percent
Saturday. Winds
rly 1~21) Jlll)h tonight.
Ell 'ed Olllo Fereeut
Sudlly dnqla Taelda)'l
.
Cllailee afllllwen SudaJ ad c:lluee II olwwa• • -nunlw
M , ,.. Fair Taelda)'. Jl1&amp;lil ill tile 1IJIPn' .........
llppl:l'
111 ud til Ma.day ud m'~ Ill lo m'« • 'l'llliloLj. O•etiiiP\f ~
ill tile . . em, 8 ' y 111111 m" . . tu U . . em, II
'J
ad'l'aaday.

Chancerr:
.

I

..ur

..

.

),

BURNING-Memben of Rullaud AmerlcaD Leglou Poet 411 aud
their guala look ou u Commauder Keunetb Mlcbael burned the mortgace oa the )1011'1 U acre farm aud beadquarlen faciUty Weduel!lay

Digbt. A dluner was served tO members and guesta following the burDiog of the mortgage oo the poll's property.

Columbus men escape ·drowning
Two men escaped drowning the vehicle through windows and
deaths early Friday morning when swam to shore.
the car In whic they were riding
The Pomeroy Emergency Unit
went into the Ohio River on East was called and transported both
Main St.
men to Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy Police said the car where they . were checked and
driven by Ricky D. Hannon, Colum- released. The incident occurred at
bus, pull.C 'rom the Landmark Ser- I :53 a.m. Friday morning and the
vice Station, headed west at a high car was still in the river at 11 a.m..
rate of speed. The vehicle hit some Police said Hannan is being
loose cement blocks pUed at the base charged with reckless operation.
Of a pole causing Harrilon to Jose
control of his vehicle which went left
Pomeroy Police also investigated
Of center, striking a utility pole another accident at II :05 a.m. Thurknocking It over, then croased the sday on Nye Ave. A car driven by
railroad tracks before going over an -Brian E. Bass, 26, Syracuse,
embanlcment into the river .
traveling north, failed to negotiate a
.. 89th Haf1!Uin ..and a passel)ger, CUI'Ve, s\I"Uck .a ~n and .a -utility
Herbert J . Chasteen, &lt;;olumbus•. left pole. There were heavy damages to

.

the vehicle and a passenger in the
car, James Grady, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital where
he was treated and released.

Police said Bass is charged with
drivin g while intoxicated and
driving without an operator's licell-

se.

Cyclist hurt in accident
A 2..year-old "Cheshire resident
west of Ohio 7, al6 :45 p.m. when he
was Injured in a mqtorcycle ac·
lost control, went down on the side
cident on Story's Run Roud In Meigs
and struck the front of a parked
cOunty Thursday night, according to
vehicle registered to Rebecca Malothe Gallla-Melgs Posl of the state
thews, Rt. I, Cheshire.
highway patrol.
Rocky L. Freeman was later
The accident caused moderate
treated and released from the damage to the bike and slight to the
emergency room at Holzer Medical Matthews vehicle. Freeman was
Center for bruises.
·
taken to HMC by private vehicle,
The patrol said Freeman was east.- . and the patrol cited him for no
bound on his motorcycle. one mile motorcycle license.

Gas consumers testify before FERC
By JAMES HANNAH
Aaloclated Preu Writer
COWMBUS, Ohio (AP) - John
M. Debltetto, who recently retired,
says his monthly heating btu has
risen from $311 In December 1979 to
$81 in December 1981 for about the
same amount of natural gas.
"The day's going to come when
you' re going to retire - you young
fellahs - and you're going to find
out it isn't worth It," the Columbus
man said In teStimony Thursday
before the Federal Energy
Regulatory Cominisslon.
At issue were complaints about
the Columbia Gas Transmiss!Qn
Corp., which passed along a 23 per·cent rate Increase to customel"ll of

Columbia Gas Of Ohio Corp. last September. Since February, the com·
mission has been reviewing Columbia's price increases to delennlne
whether they are justified under the
1978 Natural Gas Policy Act, which
alloW-ed phased deregulati6n of gas
prices through 1985.
More than 400 consumers,
lawyel"ll, politicians, gas executives
and reporters squeezed into the rare
field hearing. Clutching gas bills
that have soared In recent months,
Ohio utility customers trooped to the
stand one by one.
Charles Jackson of Colwnbus said
his gas bill has "almost tripled in the
past three months" to $75 a month.

"And since I'm a retiree, I don't
have any regular Income," he said.
James Powell, of the Citywide
Coalition for Utility Refonn, said,
"It .seems like the powers that be
feel like lhe consumers have an
unlimited supply of funds ... 1983 wiU
be a heat-or-eal year for a lot of
people."
.
Powell asked that Columbia make
no "unneccessary" charges and that
refunds be made to consumers in
lwnp swns along with accwnulaled
interest.
Rep. Clarence Brown, R.Ohio, and
ranking Republican (Ill the House
energy and power subcommittee,
said Colwnbia 's purchase of un·

controlled gas is "almost double the
industry average, fourth highest
among all pipelines. And he added
that the price Columbia pays Is well
above the industry average.
"What Columbia is doing makes
no sense ln tenns of business logic,
makes no sense in tenns of collswner logic, makes no sense In ter·
ms of any ki!ld of logic, !' Brown
said.
"It would be interesting to know
how much money Columbia Is
making by buying at Cadillac prices
lis own deep gas, rolling those costs
through to consumers and dumping
that Cadillac gas to ... purchasers at
Chevy prices.''

Financial woes
force board to
pursue tax levy
The Eastern Local School DIAtrtct
Board of Education voted to place a
three mill, five year operating levy
before voters of the district at the
June 8 election at a regular meeting
held Thursday night at the high
school.
Dectalon to plaee the levy before
votenl came after a dlscusaion was
held on the financial picture of the
district. It was reported that the
district wiU receive only 40 percent
Of Ita IPPI opilatlons ln the f~ six
lllOIIths of this year and only sixty
percent of the state funds nonnally
received during the last six months
of the Year as a result of state cuta. It
was staled that the Eastern Bourd
wtu have to borrow money to continue Gpel"lltlng during the last part
ofl11111
The last time a ·tax levy for
operatibna wu aptiroved In the
dlatrld other than the 10 milia approved for one year In 18'17, was in
1888. The board approved Ita 11182.
budget last night.
The board did approve the purcl!ue ol tine oewlchool 00.., the
m.jorlty at the COlli Involved to be
reemburled liy the lltate. The bid for
the chull went to Dill Ford, Parbrlburg, and for the bodies t6 carpenlet"• Co.• McArthur.

The board adopted the first part of
a new policy book which will go Into
effect on Aug. I, 11182 and three days
were added to the school year to
make up for days scboola .were
cloeed over the five calamity days
aUowed by the slate without
makeup. Students will attend
classes through June 2 with the
revised schedule and teachers will
put ln their final day on June 3.
The board approved a senior trip
for May 13:18 to Willl.amsburg, Va.,
and Viglnla Beach.
The contract of James Page, high
school principal was renewed .
A new ditto machine was purchased for the Chester Elementary
School and the board agreed to pay
$150 matching !Ujlda to the Tuppers
Plains PTO for new stage curtain
purchased. Plana were made for
several to repreaent the board at the .
regional meeting of the Ohio School
Boarda A.Moclatlon on March 30 In
Athena. Elol!e Boston, treasurer,
was authorized to atl4lnd a collference on activity funds to be held
in April. The out regular meeting
was let for 7:30'on Aprll15. Board
lllefllberJ lt1endlntl the meeting
wen Done! l.Arldna, W!Uiam
Badde)o, Jllllel CBidweU and Ber- _
nard Sbrieven.

a

LEADS CHEERS - Cllrta Wolfe, wllo Hl'prlled the Soutberu Torudo 1- by nlllndal as "Tile Purple Demon" led cheen during
Soalbmt'• Clau A repaaai ajlpearuee '111unolay algilt at OU'• C"'''
voeatloa Ceuter. Wolfe wu die orlpuol "Purple Dem011" two yean ago
wbell die TorudoN weal to the 1late bllketball tou11111ment. See more
pbotol aud 1tory oo J)aleti H.
a

•

•

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