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11011
LieU II
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Letters to editor
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Longwalling, Mash
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NILSON'S RIO •
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IIFUTIILE
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IISIO'I'IBO. t1A9
Voi.31,No.222
Copyrlghtocl 1983
. . ION'S ......"
liT IIIPE
1111111
NELsON'S REG•• 1.79
NELSON'S REG. $2.29
No.2223
PLUSH IIIII
MediUM
CHRIPII IIIIILS
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Senllnel staff
Middleport VOiage Council Monday night voted
• unanimously to request Ohio HUD for permission to
establish a $122,00llow rate, revolving business loan
account.
This action was taken at the request of Mayor Fred
Hoffman who said the fund would be established from
HUD moneys to provide loans to businesses which
wish to expand and hire neW employes. The request
would amend the HUD grant program of the village,
and If approved on the state level, would establish the
fund which would be replenished as businesses repaid
the -loans. Council would administer the loan lund,
approving each application. Guidelines for businesses tQ qualify lor the low interest loans would 'be
established.
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•Plush soh cuddll ... Hear them chirp when
you give them a shake.
$149
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NELSON'S RIO. S1."
Still eligible
t1.29
Mayor Hollman also read a Jetter from the stllte
slnllllllll
11" High
By ROBERT E. MILLER
As8oclaled Press Wrller
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - Gov.
_]Jchard Celeste's first State of the
State speech to the Legislature was
written to stress "a long-tenn
strategic development program,"
an aide says.
Paul Costello, the governor's
press secretary, said Monday that
today's speech would call lor the
.. coordination of development, education, taxes andotheret(orts "that
will help put people back to work."
He said the address would be
more of a policy speech than one of
specifics.
Cele;te's detailed plan lor the
next two years will mostly be
incoi'JX)ra ted in his administration's
biennial budget. to be submitted to
lawmakers on March 30, Costello
said.
Asked about reports that the
governor will seek higher business ·
taxes to balance the tax load
following' a recent 90 percent
Increase in the Individual Income
tax, Costello said, "I can'tsay a hard
'no' to thai."
But he said there would be no
specific proposals with regard to
proposed tax changes. He said
Celeste would have some com:
ments about a tax structure "which
Is lair and equitable."
Celeste feels that currently,
Ohio's etfort to do something about
II" with . roln·
bow terry hat'
thlrt and pows.
PUS
SESIIE STREET
Ell CILDR liT
PUSTIC
USTU EllS
TO FILL
this year
Easter Egg fun
is coming
from
ate
Sesame Street'"
$1.19
NILION'S RIO. $2.49
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its devastated economy "is helter ·
skelter" and Jacks coordination,
Costello said.
He said the governor also believes
Ohio lacks efforts to "leverage"
both.federal and state dollars into
loan, bond and other efforts to gain
maximum investment results. ·
Leveraging generally means use
of tax-free Investments In whlcb gains can be passed to the .
job-producing private sector.
Referring to recent statements by
mostly Republican groups that
want to repeal the Income tax boost
on a statewide ballot, Costello said
the governor was urging coopera·
tlon of both parties and all groups to
work for economic recovery and
"not to spend so much time on
anti-tax rhetoric."
Sen. Donald E. " Buz" Lukens,
R·Middletown, said Monday the bid
to repeal the income tax increase is
gaining momentum.
He said the Increase wUJ bring In
· from $:Dl 'm!Uion 10 $400 mUllen
more than the state needs between
now and the end of the fiscal year on
June 30 to erase a projected $511
million budget deficit.
Celeste's fiscll,l advisers dispu te
estimates of Lukms ;md others who
said the increase was excessive.
They said that unless there is a
sharp upturn In the economy. the
state will end the fiscal year with a
cushion of no more than $75 million.
PUCIIIEIIS
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YOWOIOICI
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I COLOR PRINT.1sEip.2'!FILM
DEVELOPING
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Elp.
&boo 135, 110, 1211 ... Dllc. 24 Elp.
C-4t prDC~~K. ..... 3S • M ...... .
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Coupon Ei:pires 3/ 28/ 83
Nel~n's
I Nancarrow's
ATiiLETEs HONORED - Memben of the MeJP bo,a and
lb'la lluketllllllellllll aad wreadlac squad were hoaorecl wHh ,
haaqaet Moadq
Melp hllh BeboeL Coach Gre1 Drummer',
rllbt. Ia lllllwn II tbb llel&b Wllecap pboto wUII HCoatlleam All·
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NELSON'S DRUG STORES
-N ANCARROW'S PHARMACY
8EOAL HleciiH Nick Blna. BliP wu clluea the leun'a M•l
V,._ble Player. 8ee IJ!ory aad addllloul photos oa pqe 4•.
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2 Sections, t8 Pages
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper
and Bob GUmore and there will be a representative
from the Reiser firm as well as one more resident
named to the conuntttee
Mayor Hoffman reported he has been in epntact
with Robert Eason who will survey Hudson St., as
requested by the village council, following several
meetings between council and several residents of
that street. The vDJage has set a $500 maxbnum on
the amounr to be paid fo.r lhe survey.
CouncUman Gilmore reported he has met with
trustees of the Middleport Masonic Lodge on the
possiblllties of the vU~ge using the first floor of the
Masonic Temple for staging civic events. A number '
of details have to be worked out, Glln1ore ri!I>Orted.
CouncUman Satterfield reported that six new street
lights have been put into place.
Attending the session were Mayor Hoffman,
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck, and CmiDcllmen GUmore,
Horky, Satterfield; WU!Iam Walters and Dewey
Horton.
•
gtven~
GROUND BREAKING ·- Rep. Jolynn Boster,
~~. pictured at left, tams the eerernonlal
first shovelful of dirt at the groundbrealdng ceremony
Monday
for Ute new Gallla Cowtty courthouse.
Gallla
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County conunlssioner Paul Niday, at right, looks on.
Gallla o::ommlssloners wiD push for a 0.5 percent
lnco;>me tax hike to help pay for the $2.4 mWlon
structure.
Ground broken for courthouse
Sales tax issue will
go on November ballot
OVP staff
WF
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Prison
terms
. By JEFF GRABMEIER
11 Oz.
7
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meeting.
Council approved the February report of Mayor
Hoffman showing receipts of $4972.32 in fines and lees
and approved a llstofhomeswhichwlll be renovated
under the HUD program, all of those listed exceeding
the $9500 figure per home. CouncU approval Is
required for those homes going over the $9500 figure.
Mayor Hortman said the work would be done this
summer. The list of homes was compiled by the
program engmeer,
The mayor announced that the Business Tax
Abatememt Committee Is being formed which will
deal with a tax abatement program for businesses
maklnf( improvements in accordance with the recent
study of the business area by Reiser and Associates of
Athens.
Yvonne Scally and Craig Mathews, president and
vice president of the Middleport Chamber of
Conunerce; respectively, will serve on the committee
along with Mayor Hoffman, CouncUmen Carl Horky
CouncU completed Its third reading on two
ordinances and approved them. The first will giye
disabled.persons and senior citizens a 10 percent and
unemployed residents a 20 percent reduction in their
water and sewage rates. The second ordinance
provides lor salaiy increases lor village officials. The
ordinance increases the salary of the mayor from
$2500 to$4500a year; the clerk-treasurerfrom$2500to
$400); council members from $8 to $12 per meeting
and board of public affairs members from$4 to$8per
99~
BSIO'S ·
..alliES
at y
office of HUD indicating that Middleport Village
continues to be ellglble for ·Urban ~elopment
Action Grants. Tile letter noted Middleport has had a
satisfactory track record In handling grants and has
provided equal opportunity employroent and low cost
housing in the commwtity.
The mayor announced that Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric has requested a rate hike
through the Public UtOitles Conunisslon of Ohio.
2aCaHnt
12 Oz.
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Budget will
detail program
'2'·
Slnlll PLUSH
RIIIIIW RIIIIT
Page 6
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 15, 1983
By BOB JIOEFLICil
'1"
Larg1
D.l 1111 PIPIIT
WITH IIIIL IISIET
Page 4 .
Loan permission sought by council
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PLUSH
Right to Read
themes
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Banquei honors
cagers, wrestlers
concerned citizens" who want the The project was delayed several
county to save the interest charges. months after the refeerendum
On Feb. 22, the commissioners petition was flied and the commls·
borrowed $1.3 mUUop at a 6.9 sioners searched for alternative
percent interest rate from three financing.
area banks to build the courthouse.
Although conditions "have been
The county agreed to pay off the
Jess than desirable at times" Niday
loans within 20 years. The re. said he Is "pleased with the
mainder of the structure wlll be
progress" made .
financed with Insurance funds the
He said planning tor construction
county received after the old has "taken Its toll on (county
courthouse burned In January 1981.
prosecutor and Jegaiadvlsor Joseph
Nidaysaidcommissionersdidnot Cain's) life and I'm sure It has for
decide to push for the sales tax hike others involved In the project."
to spite area businesses who
State representative Jolynn Bos·
opposed the Increase.
ter, D·Gallipolls, and a representa·
· "This should not be vlewed as a live from Gov. Richard Celeste's
deliberate confrontation with retail office also spoke at the ceremony.
merchants or anyone else," he said.
·Although ground was officially
Many people have decided a sales · broken Monday, contractors began
t.ax Is the fairest way to build a work on the project a week ago.
courthQt)se, he said.
They are currently tearing out the
In hls remarks at a luncheon prior
foundation remaining from the
·to the groundbreaklng, Niday .. former courthouse.
alluded to the referendum petition · The general contractor, Custom
drive an.d other prObie~ that have FacUltieS Inc. of Indianapolis, has
plagued · the tornmjssioners since estimated it will complete construe· ·
• the 101-year-old courthouse burned. lion in nine months.
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GALLIPOLIS - Citing growing
public support, Gallia County
commissioner Paul Niday said
Monday 1he county will continue to
push lor a 0.5 percent sales tax hike
to help pay lor the new county
courthouse.
Niday made the announcement
as state and -local officials broke
ground lor the four-story, $2.4
million structure.
. 'We're going to continue with the
sales tax process and allow the
electorate to decide (whether the
tax should be increased)," Niday
.said.
·
He said the county could pay otl
$13 million In loans lor the
courthouse In about lhrlie years If
the sales tax hike Is approved,
saving the county about $1 million in
Interest.
The commissioners passed a
resolution in December to inb-ease
the sales tax long enough to pay for
.the new courthouse. However, the
Gallipolis RetaU Merchants Associ·
ationsponsoredareferendumdrive
In January which· gained enough
signatures tQ put the Issue on the
November ballot.
x.
Because of oppoSition to the tax,
the Commissioners have discussed
withdrawing the tax increase
resolution.
· However, Niday said Monllay the
county wiD place the Issue on the
November ballot "In response to
_Weather jorecast
Clear tonight. Low 3540. Winds northeasterly less than 10 mph.
Sunny on Wednesday. High~Extended Ohio Forecast
'lband~ through Saturday:
• Partly cloudy 'lbunday and cloudy with a chance of rain Friday
and Saturday. Momlng lows mostly In the 3Qs to low 408. Highs In the
1llkW88 to low 808 'lbUI'IId~ and In the 40s io low 50s Friday and
Saturday.
Rick D. Wilson, 25, Success Road.
Reedsville and Dennis Riffle, 25,
Chester Road, Pomeroy, were
sentenced to the Ohio State Peniten·
tlary Monday after court appearances on on bills of ln!onnation.
Both men entered voluntary pleas
of guilty .to several counts of
breaking and entering. WUson was
charged in seven separate incidents
which occurred over the past two
months. Riffle was charged in
three.
A:ll the charges were contained in
bills of information prepared by the
office of Meigs County Prosecutln
Attorney, Fred W. Crow III, who
represented the State ofOhio.
Judge Knight sentenced each
man to the maximum tenn, not Jess
than two nor more than five years on
each count and specified thaI counts
one, two and three would be served
consecutively making the etfectlve
term six years to 15 years lor Riffle
and six to 35 years lor WUson.
According to the Paul Gerard,
Investigator lor the prosecuting
·attorney, Rlffle and Wilson had
previously been convicted of felony
offenses. Both had served time in
prison.
Riffle was just released on parole
from prison in January, having
been convicted earlier of felonious
assault. He had before that been
convicted and served time lor a
breaking and entering. llson also
had two prior felonies.
In other court action, Tony Kirby,
20, Hamd!'n (VInton County) entered a plea of guilty to breaking and
entering in connection with an
Incident which' occurred in March at
the Noble Hamon residence.
The charge Is a felony of the fourth
degree.
. Kirby had no prior felony record
and was released on a $1,00)
personal bond pending completion
of ·a pre-sentence Investigation.
Final sentencing will be Monday,
April 11 , at 9 a.m.
John W. Barnett, 19, also of
Hamden, entered a pleaofnotguilty
to a single coun1 of breaking and
entering. •
Youth faces
speed charge
A Mlddlepori teenager was cited
lor excessive speed after a singlecar wreck on Hobson Drive Monday
night.
The GalUa-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol cited John D.
Follrod, 16.
Troopers say Follrod was westbound at 11;40 p.m. when he lost
control, went off the left side of the
road and struck a guardrail.
His car sustained moderate
damage.
A Bidwell man was Injured in a
two-car collision on U.S. 35in Ga lli a
County early Tuesday morning.
David Roush. 39, was treated and
released at Holzer MedlcaiCenter.
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Colllmentary
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lliCuuriStrtt l
~ Pum l! ru v ,
Ohiu
Cl4-!J9i -Wi6
()E_\'OTED TO THE I NTt: RF.STOFTHE MEIGS..MASON AREA
ROBERT L. WINGETT
I
BOB HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
1\ 'li i ~ Liloll'uh l isht• r/ Cuntrullt ·r
DALE ROTHGEB , JR.
A MF.MBER nf Tht· As:( ut'ia tt'ct Pres:o~ . lnlund Daih
Amt·rinw !'olt' " s pap.or J•ubli.~ llt•rs As~u<'lwtiun.
•
Prt·s~
A!>SIN'iiltiHn and lht•
I. ~~ 'ITERS OF OPINION are ~t·knmc-d . They ~ h uuld be less thlln 300 wnrds lmlJ;: . All
ldh·r:- un• :mbjt!t' l tn t'ditinl( :.a nd mu~t b.! s lt~n~ with ~mt!, addrt>ss 1111d lt-lephullt'
numlk< r. Nu unsignt'filrtlrrs willlw puhli~h.. d. Lf'lkno: shnuld bt- i11 ~nud La.~k . add ressi~
b~ues. 1111l
paliOnalities.
Tuesday, March 15, 1983
For the little fellow s. . . . _ _ _ _ _J_a_me_s·_J._K_ilpa_tri_ck .
WASHINGTON - It made not
is dear tothefoundation'sheart. The the "agency fee."
even a small splash In the local
I can cite an example, close at
workers were resisting the kind of
papers, but a recent decision of a · extortion, in their view, that goes
home, of how the system works. I
u.s. District Court in Maryland with a union shop.· ·
am not 11· member of the American
could set off a nice new wave of
Under a union sbop contract, all Federation of Television and Radio
litigation in the sea$ .of organized
employees in an affected bargain- Artists. Neverlh<iless, .because tl)e '
labor. Temporarily; aueast, the big • ing unit that are compelled (a) to
localAFTRAunJonhasaunionshop
boys have lost one, and the little
become dues-paying members of · contract w)th local TV stations and
guyshavewonone,andbecausethis
the responsible union, or (b) ·to pay major networks, I cannot get on the
doesn't ha ppen often, the story is
the union the equivalent of member- air ur!Jess I pay dues to the union.
ship dues anyhow. The idea is that · The union perfo!mS no service
worth telling.
Back in the summer of 1976,
whatever for me, but that is of no ·
once a union is certlffed as a
nearly seven years ago, 1B telebargaining agent, the union must · consequence. The rule Is, pay or or
phone workers In Maryland go!
bargain for all employees whether stay off the air. So I pay up, and it
together and !tied suit against the
or not they are union members. It Is
irks me sorely.
giant O;>mrnunications Workers of . unfair for "free riders" to accept the
This was thesituationiamongthe
America. The plaintiffs had the help
telephone workers in Maryland.
benefits of a union's services
.of the National Right to Work Legal
without paying their rightful cost.
'J'heyhad to pay dues totheCWA ,or
Defense Foundation in a cuase that
they had to quit their Jobs. It. was
Out of this Une of reasol:linil comes
£1't'11. @)1~93 fOI!T ""'""''ll>l'-16$...... _
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Htli.ME
Letters to editor
Longwalling history
.In answer to Gilbert Zwelllng's
Question - there was longwal ·
~il(g In Meigs County in 1932.
~ s tarted to work for Pittsburgi# Coa l Company Mine No .
1~ ; where the Racine Planing
M\11' now Is, June 1924. I worked
fOr Pittsburgh Coa l Co. until it
w~s sold to Stallers & Essex,
19~0- 1932 .
1 continued to wor k for Essex.
Shortly after it took over the
m!ne , Staller & Essex put in a
sy~ tem of mining ca lled the long·
wall system. It was not modern
a s :the system is today. The fi r m
drove on entry south off 14th wes t
entry 500 feet. They started to
drtve east taking out a 500 foot
block of coal.
those days , they cut the
block of coal · at night, shot it
down , got It ready to load on the
In
day shift. it was shove led on a
conveying belt by hand .
We got $5 a day shoveling coal.
I mean it was work . We earned
th e $5.
I don't remember just how long
the longwali was in operation becau,e I went back driving entry in
the main north . But the longwall
put the mine on a squeeze. They
started shooting the top down to
lighten the weight overhead and
prevent the· squeeze which was of
no help and finally they gaveup the
longwall. This mine had a shaft
down no feet. The coal was below
the Ohio River bed. The last I
worked in this mine was at 33rd
north sit of the entrance in 1936.
Russell M. Cline
Rt. 1, Racine
Phone 992·5078
Goodbye, Hawkeye
This is in reference to the edito. rial cartoon which appeared in this
paper Sunday, March 6 concerning
MASH . I realize that these thoughts
will never reach the responsible artist, but I still feel that something
should be said.
1:was quite shocked to see a scene
depicting the death of MASH. I
could not under$tand this bit until I
looked at the upper·rignt·hand
comer. There was shown a crypt
for network TV. I think the art had a
bit of importance to it, but was done
with little thought to the situation.
"I:elevlsion bas not died becau~e
the· great show (s ) have gone their
way, but becuse there has been a
sudden dead-end to the in!luex of
new, likeable enterta1nment. A
gOOd analogy is the fact that a car
d~ not run forever . It needs new.
fuef to replenish the old that has
l!eOO used.
But where are we to find such a
show whose cast have become
members of our families. We cried
when Colonel Blake was killed so
near to returning horrie, feeling the
harsh realities of ife, and death, and
war. We rejoiced when Trapper
John went home, but felt saddened
when he left.
We wanted to comfort Radar
O'Relllly when his uncle passed on,
and to celebrate when Colonel Potter was blessed with a grandchild.
As in any group, we waited to see if
the newcomers were fit to lay their
roles in o~r famtiy. All of them did.
We felt the same feelings toward
them as we would our own close
families; our friends. And we felt
the pain of loss when they left.
Where will another show with
such true feelings, appeal , and guthard feelings come from? Probably nowhere. MAl)H was a lucky
strike, making some television, at
least for a while, seem quite likea·
ble, though sttilln most cases insult·
ing tD our intelligence.
It's not educational, but then
again, that was never its main pur·
pose. It was to entertain, as it does a
good ·d<\al at times, although those
times are becoming fewer and
farther between. Evenless, now
that its lucky strike is gne.
Goodbye, Ha wkeye.
Fred L. Young
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Gop po ItiCiaDS
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g o a ft er b ank ers
"lt. wasn't like the book."
E
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Bruce
Berenyi has .had to learn not to let
losing bother him too much.
Wasted efforts became commonplace for the Cincinnati Reds'
pitcher last season, when lack of
of!ensivesupportturnedfineperfor·
mances Into just another nodecision or loss.
"It's always there," saldBerenyi,
who finished 9-18 last season despite
a 3.36earned run average, "It got to
the poirit that it didn' t bother me too
much. If you got hit hard or pitched
poorly, that would be dlf!ereni."
Bereny!'s poor record conceals
his effectiveness last season, when
the Reds lost 101 games and had 'the
National League's least productive
offense.
The right-hander had 1B starts In
which he worked at·least six Innings
and gave up two ruils or less. He lost
four games by one run arid six by
two m . In August, he had a 3.29
ERA butlostall fourofhis decisions . .
He took the mound knowing that
one bad pitch might cost him a
that simple. But a body of law has
been slowly developing to this effecl
- that compulsory dues may be
exacted from non-members for
three persons only:· collective
bargaining, contract administratlo_n and grievance procedures ..
Dissenting workers cannot be
oompelled to pay for a union'sother
activities.
In the case at hand, a "special
mastet" appointed by the District
Court took voluminous evidence on
how the CWA spends Its money.
Whole batteries o! accountants and
experts were called In by both sides.
The union contended that just about
everything was related In someway
to bargaining, contracts and gr!e.
vances . For example, the union
argued that its contributions to
charities helped to create a favora'
ble public view of union labor,' and
thus promoted an atmosphere
conducive to productive bargaining. The special master threw that
one out.
On careful examination, the
special master last summer concluded that an astonishing 81
percent of the union's funds were
being spent for "impermissible"
purposes- that is, for purposes not
directly related to bargaining,
contracts or grievances. The recommendatior)s of tile special
master floated up to District Judge
James R Miller Jr. On March 4, he
reduced thell'fjejceutto'l9~1o, · .I
and ordered the union to refund 79
percent of the agency fees that had
been extracted from the plaintiffs.
The individual payments wbn't
amount to more than a few hundred
dollars to each of the 18 mavericks,
but the legal prlnciple has large
application, The rullng means that,
while a union is free to lobby lor the
Panama Canal Treaty or the Equal
Rights Amendment, non-members
cannot be compelled topayforthese
extracurricular activities.
FAJ..L IN TilE SPRING- Philadelphia PhD·
We~~ ceaterflelder Garry Maddox tries to make a
sboeatrlag catch ol a baU ldt by the Toronlo Blue
Jays Mitch Webster Ia Monday's game at Clear-
WASHINGTON -A man who
told a Washington, D.C., grand jury
he had seen Sen. Strom 'J'huimond,
R-S.C., accept two $10,1XXl cash
bribes claims he is being railroaded
to prison because of his sworn
testimony.
The man is William W. Pearce,
and the circt~mstances of his
indictment , arrest and incarcera·
ti6n are indeed peculiar. Here's the
story:
Pearce was hiredbyex·CIAagent
Edwin P. Wilson , now a twiceconvicted felon . At one point,
Pearce was asked to spy on another
Wilson associate. Pearce swears he
saw th<' associate deliver bribes to
Thurmond on two separate occa·
sions at the Capitol Hill Club in
, Washington, D.C .
Pearce also had a full ·time job
with Honeywell, Inc., which was
unaware of his work for Wilson.
When company officials heard or
the connection between Pearce and
Wilson, they questioned Pearce
about it and secured hisdismissalin
Aprtil982.
Pearce sued Hon!'ywell over·
what he said .was a forced
reslgna tiM; Honeywell coun·
tersued, Cl'liming Pearce de·
frauded the company on some
billings. The matter dragged on.
Then on Feb. 2 and 3, I reported
Pearce's charges about the alleged
Thurmond bribes. On Feb. 8,
Pearce met with Hone)Well attor·
ney John Lucas. He says Lucas
wanted to settle the legal dispute.
Pearce said he agreed to drop his
suit when Lucas promised Honey·
well would drop the countersuit.
On Feb. 10, Pearce appeared
before the grand jury and gave
s worn test lrnony about the alleged
payoffs to Thurmond.
On Feb. 17, two U .S. marshals
showed up a t Pearce's Virginia
Beach, Va .. home. Pearce was not
there. The marshalS showed his
18·year-old son, Todd, a writ of
attachment on the house, which
allowed them lo make an inventory
of ltscontentsas partofHoneywell's
civil suit.
In an unusual move, Lucas. the
Honeywell attorney, accompanied
the marshals and was allowed to go
through the house, too. Pearce said
his son saw Lucas examine the
contents of a desk drawer.
A spokesman for the marshals
said they didn't see the attorney
rummaging through Pearce's belongings. But there Is some question
whether Lucas was in tht'lr sight at
a ll times, and Pearce says the only
'"
un;r~~u·re
looking ror the culprits
who put the contract out on the EPA
director, you don't have to go any
further than the inner sanctum of
the White House.
1 got this directly from a horse's
mouth in the West Wing.
He told me, "We had to e liminate
Ann Burford without prejudice."
"That was a shame. She seemed
like such a nice person. I always
thought she was a team player,"
"Perhaps. But the heat was on,
and we couldn 't let it' touch the .
President. We had to keep hazardous waste out of the White House."
"But fromwhatlcangather, Mrs.
Burtord was only following White
House orders. Didn't you people
warit todismantleEPA andmake it
easier for business to dump their
sludge all ov<;>r America?"
"Sure we wanted it. But WI! were
hoping it could be done quietly. We
asked for a surgeon, not a butcher,"
"But from all I can tell Mrs.
Burford was only following instruclions. I thoguhthermarchingorders
weretomaketheenvironrnentallsts
~~!k.~ the neo-Nazls of the United
Reagan administration, but our job
in the White House is to protect the
President at ali costs. When push
comes to shove - you always shove
the EPA head and not the
President."
"Does the President know you put
a contract out on Mrs. Burford?"
"I thil\k he suspects we did,
though the less he knows, the better
· it Is for him . He s till wants to believe
the press was out to get her and not
us."
"Just out of curiosity, how did the
White House fol't'e someone like
Mrs. Burford to resign?"
"The best way was to trickle down
leaks to the press. One of our people
told a White House correspondent
Mrs. Burtord was a lousy adminls·
trator. Another leaked tha t she
played politics with the agency. A
third handed out the EPA hit list.
Then a staffer told a columnist
where to look for conflict of interest
In her staff. Our task was to make
smoke and le t the medlafanthefire.
To make sure it didn' t look as if we
were being disloyal , we denied
everything that was printed In the
press or appeared on television.
When the President announced he
had utmost confidence in Mrs.
Burtord and she could stay on' the '
~
.. '
'
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Two there.
teams with NCAA tournament
"We're-certainly going to try our
experience meet two with none best. We're looking forward to the.
tonight at Dayton Arena in the 1 Alcomgame," Staaksaid.
prellmlnary round of the National
Xavier defeated Loyola of ChiCollegiate Athletic Association Bas· cago in the Midwestern City
ketball Tournament.
Conference tournament to make it
The winner of the opeoing ga~ totheNCM . Al~mStatemadethe
beiween Georgia Southern and playoffs by beating Texas Southern
Ro~rtMorrls; whlchlosttolndiana
for the Southwestern Athletic Con·
in the !irst round last yelll', will play
terence championship.
Purdue in the Mideast regional at
Georgia Southern is JB.ll, and
Tampa.
·
Robert Morrlsis22-7.
The winner of the second ganie
"We're a much better team than
between Xavier and Alcorn State, we were last year, our record
which lost 9484 in the first round last proves that," said Robert Morris
year to Houston, will play George- Coach Matt Furjanic J r.
town in the Midwest regional at
"The first time you make it to the . .
LoulsvUie.
NCAA you're kind of star struck.
"A lot of people would have been Last year, playing Indiana, was
happy with 21-9, but we expectd part o! the whole experience.
more from our team this year," ' EJq>erience makes you a ' better
Alcorn Coach Davey Whit)ley said team," Furjanic said. ''The way I
of his team'sseason. "Maybe it was feel, we'reoneofthebetterteamsln
because I wanted them to excell too the east."
much because of what we did last
Georgia Southern beat Robert
year."
Morris ~ earlier in the year in a
"We're really pleased to be a part consolation game in a tournament
of It," said Bob Staak, coach of at West Virginia, but that doesn't
Xavier of Cincinnati, 22-7. But' mean much to Southern Coach
Xavier has not won a single game in Fral\k Kerns.
the Dayton Arena In 14 contests
"Even though we played them .
game.
"With the score tied ·or your club
one run ahead or behind; every pitch
is a major pitch," Berenyi said.
"You couldn't make a mistake or It
could cost you a baligame.
"M!>re times than not, ifyou made
one mistake, you lost a game."
The Reds plan to field essentially
the same starting lineup this year,
and Berenyi figures they'll be
hard·pressed to become a winner.
"If we played .500ball; It would be
a great step afier last season,"
Berenyi said.
His personal goal is to pitch the
way he did last year.
"I haven't set any (statistical)
goals, I just want to pitch the same
way I did last year," Berenyi said.
" I felt I was really consistent last
year."
After off-season salary arbitration, the 28-year-oid pitcher thinks
the Reds might view it differently.
Berenyi asked for $229,001 based
before, I don't feel consolation
games are avery good barometer of
a team's strength," Kerns said.
"We're very similar to Robert
Morris. The team which executes
better will probably come out
ahead."
Staak took over at Xavier in 1!m
and has been bullding the program
in his first head coaching job.
"I was kind of Ignorant coming
into the program, thinking we could
rebuild it immediately. I came to
learn it takes four to five years to do
It properly," he said.
Xavier never won more than 14
games In a season in the 10 years
before Staak got there. His first
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) three teams amassed only a 28-54
Forward
Rndney Green hlt a 16-foot
rec:ord.
jumper
with
four seconds left as
But the rebuilding finally paid off.
Salem,
W.Va.
,
upset second-seeded
Xavier has itsfirst20-victory season
and previously unbeaten Walsh,
since 1956, the first of three
successive years the Musketeers · Ohio, 65-63 in .a first-round game
Monday night of the NAIA basket·
played in the National Invitation
ball tournament.
Tournament.
Walsh had the ball with two
Alcorn has been prominent iii
seconds
to play, but Salem's Larry
post-season tournaments since its
Bryson
intercepted the inbounds
spectatular 1!m season, when it
pass
to
hand
theCavaliersthelr.ftrst
finished unbeaten in 27 regular'
loss in l5 games.
season games and was invited to the
Salem, 22·8, advances to a
Nrr.
second·round game Wednesday
'
night.
Walsh had tied the game at 63.@
on a steal and three-point play by
Curtis Craft. After a possession by
CINCINNATI (AP) - University
Chicago Bulls of the National Yates, an·assistantatnlinois; North
Salem, Walsh held the ball for 2:38
ofCinclnnat!Athletic Director Mike
Basketball Association. His Cincln· . Carolina assistant Eddie F ogler
until Jell Szczepanski lost It out of
McGee has assembled a search · na ti teams were 68-71, including a and Ohio University Coach Danny
bounds with nine seconds left.
Metro Conference mark of 2145.
committee to find a new basketball
Salem led by as many as six points
Nee.
roach following the dismissal of Ed
Grinker said Badger would make
McGee said he hopes to na me ·in tht' first half, and was ahead 32-29
Badger.
a statement later this week, after he Badger's replacement within three
at the intermission. But Walsh
returns from a junior college weeks.
McGee said Monday he offered
outscored the Tigers 16-8ln the first
Badger another job in the athletic
basketball tournament in Hutchin·
Badger said last week, amid
fiVe
Of the second half to
department, but Badger said
son. Kan.
take minUtes
a 4540 lead.
rumors of his !nnminent dismissal,
through his attorney that hewlll not
"We felt the basketball team was that he definitely would coach
Bryson tied the game, 53-53, with
accept another job at UC for the . not competing successfully com- somewhere.
a free throw with 9: 56 left, and the
remaining two years of his contract.
mensurateto theresourcescomrnit.
two teams traded leads the rest of
Gr!nker said UC' s offer of another
"We bave two years guaranteed · ted to the program ,'~ McGee said.
the way.
job in the athletic department was
on his contract and you can rest
"After careful consideration, it not acceptable.
Salem's 7-footcenter, Ron Moore,
assured he wUI be paid," said
hasbecomeobviousthatachangeat
scored
16 points and guard Ronnie
Badger 's firing was announced
attorney Ron Grlnker. Badger's
thistimeisinthebestinterestsofthe shortly after a •noon meeting
Leggette added 14. Szczepanski led
annual salary was believed to be
basketball program and the unlver- between Badger and MCGee.
all scorers with 20 points while
$55,001.
sity," McGee said.
Ricky Wllliams had 14 for Walsh.
Grinker said McGee told Badger,
BadgerwasinKansastospeakat o Several names have been re"We're relieving you from yirur
ported as possible successors to · head coaching responslbillties,"
a junior college dinner Monday
night and was not available for
Badger.
and offered to enumerate the Tournament set
comment.
They include Tom Apke, a
reasons, but Badger declined .
A softball tournament will be
He was hired at'uc in Aprlll978 Cincinnati native who coaches at
"There is no doubt that it hurts
held
at Coolville March 26 and Z1,
after leaving as coach of the Colorado; former UC great Tony
when you change coaches. We are
putting together a group here at the Entry fee is $6l plus two softballs.
university to continue contacts with for additional Information call 667high school prospects untti a new 3350 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. or
667-6416 after 5.
COWMBUS.. Ohlo ~APl -The Auoc-1·
coach is hired," McGee said.
Akron Callmtry; Dolsha KlnR. You~
explanation for Honeywell's subse·quent attacllmeut of one of hls bank
accounts is that the att9rney found
the account among Pearce's private papers.
Lucas said he couldn't comment
on any aspect of the case because it
Is in litigation.
On Feb. 18. Pearce called U.S.
District Judge J . Calvltt Clarke Jr.
to complain. rt was Clarke who had
signed the order stating that the
mar•hals must take the Honeywell
attorney with them to the Pearce
home.
Th!' following day, Pearce arrived at court inNorfoikaheadofhis
lawyer , and was confronted by a
man who said he was an FBI agent.
The man showed no identification
and served no legal papers on
Pearce, but informed him he was
under arrest.
on his performance; the Reds
offered $150,00!, and an arbitrator
agreed with the ballclub.
"I fel t I was really consistent last
year. The organization In particular
didn't think I was," Berenyi~id . "I
think I was ."
Berenyi admitted the salary
dispute left him with some sour
feelings toward the Reds' front
ontce."
his left foot.
Reliever Tom Hume made h.
first appearance since being sent
.home with a virus last Thursday,
Hwne pitched the sixth Inning and
set down all three batters, striking
outone.
·
·
Reds' reliever Joe Price used his
sense of humor to shrug off· Jim
Rice's blistering home run over the
left.field wall in the i!fth inning.
As Price sauntered out to left field
for his ruMing, he motioned toward
a parking lot beyond the wall.
"Was anybody parked out
there?" Price said.
\ ·.
"I've got some feelings now that I
didn't have before," Berenyl said.
"But I'm not going to let it affect the
v;ay I would pitch.
"I don't hold It against the team at
all. Russ (Nixon, manager) and
everybody else has been straightforward with me. I want to help the
After recording two hitless innings
team win . They didn't have
in his first appearance, Price gave
anything to do. with it (the
up two·runs on five hits in just two
arbitration) ."
innings
Monday.
On Monday ,Ted Power made his
"I
teamed
a lot today anq got_ .~
pitching debut for the Cincinnati
more
out
or
it
than the last time I . .
Reds Monday and got less than a
·
pitched,"
Price
said. "Last time .;
supportive reception from his
was too easy.''
·•
fielders.
Power, purchased from the Los
Cincinnati starters are of! to a slow
Angeles Dodgers' farm system last
start this spring.
October, gave up five hits and four
runs in three Innings. However, two
of tile runs were unearned because
of a pair of errors in the third.
Center fielder Eddie MUner
charged a single by Jim Rice in the
third and let the ball hop over his
glove and to the center field wall as .
Dwight Evans scored from !irst
base. Rice scored when second
baseman Ron Oester let a grounder
go through his legs.
Homeowners
Insurance
First baseman Dan Driessen made
his first slart in three games and
went Q.for-3. Driessen has been
slowed by a sore knee.
Third baseman Johnny Bench_
and right fielder Cesar Cedeno
again sat out the game Monday.
Bench has stiffness in his back and
Cedeno has missed all five Reds'
exhibition games with tendlnlti,s in.
IT'S A
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Salem Coll~ge
upsets Walsh
~H11
thru1!J
FRIDAY thru THURSDAY I
•,
''
.'
Committee will find new UC coach
Contract on EPA________Ar_tB_u_ch_wa_ld
The story on Pennsylvania
Avenue is that the press got Anne
McGill Gorsuch Burtord, head of
the EPA. The rumor has been
fanned by Pr~sident Reagan as well
as Mrs. Burtord. It is unfortunately
water, Florida. Webster got a bit and Maddox got
a separate shoulder and wUI miss at least two
weeks of aprlng training. (AP Laserphoto)
Xavier plays -Alcorn State
·in NCAA tourney at Dayton
Railroaded to p..__r_is____~_·n· __?______Ia_ck_A_n_de_rs_on
.
.
Republican politicians are going after bankers these days with the kind
of invective Democrats normally hurl.
The squabble started over a Reagan a dministration proposal to
withhold taxes on Interest and dividends starting July 1. In the past few
weeks, the rhetoric has turned nastier and the fighting has spread to
charges and countercharges over whether the banks are keeping interest
rates too high and paying too few taxes.
, Who can blame P resident Reagan, his treasury secretary and the
Republican chairman of the Sena te Finance Committee from going after
such an easy target? Afte r all, who ever rooted for Mortimer Snerd as he
foreclosed on poor Pauline?
The politicians know there's no love lost between the public and those
silk-hatted, bulging-vested, tight-fisted bankers.
That might be why Reagan ripped Into the banking industry with relish
last week, complaining that it s lobbying bllt2 in Congress to repeal the
withholding provL,ion has been marked by distortion and scare tactics.
"1 think that the banking industry would do a lot better to spend its time
thinking about lowering interest rates than lobbying," the president told
reporters.
Reagan said he is so determined to defeat the banks on this Issue that he
would veto a multlblllion dollar jobs bUI if the moneyrnen succeeded in
adding on a n a mendment to -repeal withholding.
The day before, Sen;lte F inance Chairman Bob Dole, R-Ka n., all but
accused the banks of throwing orphans out into the street. "Let the poor
people who are looking for jobs wait.for the banker s," Dole said, referring
to the d<'lays in passiilg a jobs bill that resulted from the attempt to add the
withholding repeal to the legislation.
"We miscalculated the political
Dole has been so incensed by what he has called 1he most Intense and
ramifi~at!onls bf toe ~nvironment
vicious ·lobbying campaign in his Senate career that he has launched issue in the United Sta~es. For some
he administration' s blessing - hearings Into the tax breaks banks
reason, which we didn !foresee, the
e
.
American people don't like dirty all'
•
a~ury ·. S1a.'Y Dollliltl Regan, hlrmelf a ..btte \'lid SiJeet . , or
water as much as we
ier threw the administration into the fray in mid-February by
thoug they did. When Congress ·
suggest~ that banks were keeping interest rates higher than their own
started making a mountain o! acid
borrowing costs would justify so they could Increase earnings. That
~r:urns ~ut of every molehoie, ~·
judgement was endorsed by Federal Reserve Chairman Paul A. Volcker.
~~ord sdays were numbered.
The president picked up the theme to do some personal jawboning a
So she was sacrificed for
week later, saying he saw "no reason why the banks can't bring those
po!!llcal e~lency?"
interest rates down another notch or two." The next day, major banks
;"e t don t _ enjoy putungln a
lowered their prime rate from 11 percent to 10.5 pel't'ent.
con rae out on anyone
the
T.
Berenyi learns to live
with puny hitting
Page 2-:-The-Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
~
T he Daily Sentinel
Ohio
..
job as long as she wanted, even Mrs.
Burford knew it was time to resign."
" It was clean and painless," I said
in admiration. "And I'm sure Mrs.
Burford doesn't even know who
stabbed her in the back. She' ll
probably go through life thinking It
was the press and the environmen·
tal!sts who threw her in the acid pit."
"We hope so. The last thing we
want a person we dump in the E:PA
ashcan to believe is that we had
anything tp do with it. After all, we
need Mrs. Burford for the 1984
Republioan campaign, particularly
since her phllosophy towards cleaning up the environment is the same
as ours."
. I
. "'
'
Re{)resemrng
..
. ·''
State Auto Insurance .
A lnend you can depend on
, ' ',
•
rr~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;
Fl
"""~-
I
E
IS
•••
.. Expert
Evans on first team All Ohio
alfod Press' 19&1 AU.(JOO <.lass M hllh
acbool Rtrlil basketball ~~electlOtli, made>
wtth the recornrnE'tldatlo.. r:A a state pan·
el of ssnrts ~ten and bmadc:asters:
.
FDI8T'm-\M
'Dlane DaviS, Ashtlbula,
~fOOI-3
Sr.,
den Trt·Valle')', ~iO ' Sr. , 16.6; Darcy Huff·
man, Maallkln '1\.dl.aw, S-6 Sr.. 29.7;
JuUe Frwnken. Columblls Ready, S.l Sr.,
:11.5; Krlstl Groonu, Sprtftgboro. $-7 Sr..
~-0: Nancy Evan.s, Gall.l.poUs, l).ll Sr.,
27.2; Jane ~'ted. Chagtln Falls, S-6 Sr.,
. :li.3.
l
SEOONDTFAM
BMh ~ttler. Chlllk:othe Zane 'I'I'Ilee, r..
. ~ Jr., 18; LaRae Pentt, Swantm, $-ll
S..., l!iO; Pam Pullllo, Welllvtlle. 5-9 Sr..
I lUI; ThereA DuM. Sprtnaftdd Cattcllc,
~10 Sr., :11.0; Sllely KlaN. Cinc.'tnnatJ
~ ~ Sr., 2.\S; !W Dcixlsh,
I - 4 ~2 Sr.. l9.~ ·
! rMl, WllHIIftiPOI1 Wflttall, 5-lO Sr., 22.0;
i
Pretton, Mlnfml, !>T Sr., :IU.
JOieiYn -
TIDD 'nWI - - ~ ..Ill Sr.. 12.4:
I""""'
Win...... 0nv1tte. e.• J,.. '"~
, Amy Sdolll. Ollumbua tlelde>. H Sr..
Son---·
_
' lll.~ Dee~.
H"""" 10.0; !Iori> Slla·
Cat-. ,., Sr., lll.~
,.. Rood. <klo..u Deer Parto. •n
j..... Sleubln....
dt;J
•
...
5-tl.. t&&,
Sr., 11.0; Dtma
~5-8 Sr., 19.0.
......
Rowland.
"Personally, I love toxic waste."
I
I .,
•
Dawn Eastman, Richwood North Union:
JennUer Grancktatl, Heath: Jane lf'Nln.
1::::::. ~~~:"~
Ovec 40 million 721
rodiols olready produced for America~
car owners.
Double belted with
Sa..,.
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Shelly Jorae(l80n, New ~-
Fir.estane' fam.ou~
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Georae.
D&llafonhtne: MillY ArRI(Cial, ~ Mlui-een F'redrlck,
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field McCialn; Bnndl Reed, Waverly,
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P205/70R 14
P205/7.!!1RI4
P215/15RI4
P225/75R14
Pi205/7.!!1R 15
P215/7.5RI 5
us.t.S
'1 .70
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6:1.95
1.90
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65.95
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P235/1SII.15
79:95
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1.113
2 .01
1.87
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2.2-t
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2 ..t9
2.67
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2.59
2.7-t
2.96
Rli' . *'"I; Lelltl Hall, Rlrtlmwth
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Mia Dallll. WUIIW IUver VIew; AliBI
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HaiSt,' Circleville; Teena Keith, A.ltiVUle
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00.01 OF YEAR - ton;y I'NIIIIIo.
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JHI VWst, HaDIJI r:rkm Ullted:. flit
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Prices on
Hay, Delaware 0\mtangy; Darla Wood,
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Front End Alignment Most Cars
Brake Service
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Page--4- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeror-Middleport, Ohio
MEIGS SENIORS - The Meigs Maral!der
basketball team was honored at the Meigs High
Sc hool Monday. senior members, along with
head coach Greg Drummer, were lelt to right,
Gr.e g Taylor, Bill Holcomb, Rick Edwards, and
Rick Chancey.
'Tuesday, Marth 15, 1983
SECTIONAL CHAMPS - 'lbe sectional
champion Meigs wreatung _.quad was honored at·
the Meigs High School Monday. Shown left to
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 15, 1983
The Daily Sentinel
Page
5
right are seniors Ken McCollough, Brill King, and
Troy Bauer along with Junior Mike WUford, voted
the most valuable wrestler and junior Danny
Davis, the most Improved.
·
Winning spirit fills air at cage fete
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· HONORED · TOO - The Meigs Marauder
girls' basketball squad was honored at the Meigs
High School Monday. Shown left to rlgh(are se·
nlors Paula Swisher, Cindy Crooks, and Paula
By KEITH WISECUP
Marauderettes. Seniors awarded
Coach Larry Grimes pointed out
ROCK SPRINGS - A wlnnlng were Cindy CroOks, Paula Swisher,
the leadership of his senior membspirit filled thealroftheMelgsHigh and PauJa. Horton. Others were
ers Ken McCullough, Troy Bauer,
School cafeteria Monday evening Cathy Dean, Trtna Reeves, Denise
and Brlll King. Other members
as tie members of Marauder winter Stegall, Bl11l J o Gordon, and JeMy
honored included David Averton,
athletic teams were honored.
Meadows, along with managers
James Johnston, Larry Romine;
Coact! Greg Drummer, while Is· Mary Jacobs and Megan Cole.
James Snyder, Robert Sisson
suing awards to Ills varsity cagers,
Dave Barr, Danny Davis,
Special awards went to Stegall.
expressed tits appreciation to the most promising sophomore;
Priddy, Craig Sinclair and Mike
Wlllford.
many people who are determined Crooks, most assists; Horton, best
to make Meigs a winning basket· defensive player, and all·SEOAL
Assistants f!)r the wrestlers
ball team.
pick Meadows, leading rebounder
awarded were Ray Wlllford and
Seniors tlonored were Bill Hoi· and best offensive player.
Brian King, along with statlstlcomb, Rick Chancey, Rick Ed·
Coach Gloria Alexander's little clan Melanie Dillard .
wards, and Greg Taylor. Others Marauderettes honored were Jodi
Marla Grimes' wrestling cheer;
merited were Jay Evans, George Harrison, Rhonda Neece, Sherry leaders honored were Kim Roush,
Hobson, Nick Riggs and Mike Ken- RusseU, Kristin BaUey, Cathy De- Debbie Porter, RDbln Buffington
nedy.
Long, Ruth Fry, Rhonda Haddox, and Karen Goggins,
. Special awards went to Holcomb, and Betty Lottls. Varsity cheer·
A special thanks was offered to
most Improved player; Riggs, leaders honored by their advisor the Meigs Junior High cooks tor
most valuable and leading scorer;
Lynn Bookman were RDwena Ave- their effort at the banquet.
Ta ylor, leading rebounder, and rion, Renee WUUs, Paula Swisher, .--------;----.,.....,..
Evans, best sportsmanslllp.
Kim Fraley, Paula ·Horton and
Reserve . coach Mlck ChUds -Cindy Crooks.
The Dail ~ Sentinel
,.
awarded '!IS cagerstncludlng Nick
Reserve cheerleaders honored
(USPS ! - )
Bush, Dan Thomas, Jackie Welker, were Marla Averion, Lora Horsley,
A DlvWon of Mulllmedla, "'!:·
Trey Cassell, Scott Gheen, Dave LISa Ashley, Debbie Werry and
Publl.11hed ev~ry afl(>i;-OOOf!. Monday
Fisher, Rick Wise, and Mike Brenda Cunnirigham. Freshman
through Friday, Ill Court Stteet, by tho
Chancey.
Ohio vauev Publishing CoftiAilny'. Mul·
cheerleaders accepting awards
tlmodla, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio «<'M, 992·
Also honored along with tbese were Beth maine, PeMey B~ .
2156. Second class postage paJd at
two squads were managers Joe Cindy Soulsby, Daphne Dillard,
Pomeroy, Otuo.
Humphrey and Charles Knopp and
Debbie Wyatt and Julie Sls,;on.
Member: The Associated Press, Inland
st;~tlstlclans Sonia Wise and Patty
Awarded lastly on the agenda
Dally PieS..'l As.soi'latlon and the Ame-riDuffy.
'
were the highly · successful
can Newspaper Publishers ~tlon.
National Adver tlsln~ Representative,
Freshman cagers honored · by Meigs wrestlers who brought
Branham Newspaper Sales, 733 Third
Coach Tim Saunders were Shawn
home a sectional championship
Avenlll', New York, Nl"W York 10017.
Baker, Rodd Harrison, Brian Hou·
during the year.
POSTMASTER: Send add.re5..<il to The
dashelt, Chris KeMedy, Brian
Daily Sf>ntinfl, 111 Court St. . Pomeroy,
Korn, Parker Long, Scott Pullins,
Ohio 4S71;9.
. .
Lee Powell, Chris Shank, and Da·
Court.up':lolds contract
SUIISCRIPnON RATI!S
vid Warth, along with manager
By CarriP.r or MotOr RoW;!
Lonnie M: LeMasters.
One Week ... ... ...•...................... •. $1.(10
CINCINNATI (APf- A HamllQnp Month ............................ ..... $4,40
Girls' roundballers honored in· ton County Common Pleas Court on
<>ne Year .................. ,.... ,.......... $52.80
eluded Coach Ron Logan's varsity Monday Issued a preliminary
SINGELUJPV
PRICE8
injunction ordering boxer Aaron
Dally ......... ........................... 20 Cents
Pryor to abide by his managerial
,SUbscribers not ck.osir~ to pay the carries:
cont
ract with restaurateur Buddy
may remit in advan('(> dii'E'CI toTtM> Dally
Ca ge standings
LaRosa. pending a trial on Pryor's
Sen1lnel oo :l, 6 or 12 month ba...tiil'i . Credit
ALL GAMES
will be f{lven carrk:-r caC'h month.
-TEAM
W. L.
P OP
law suit to be released from the
• ·Portsmouth
'20 3 1589 1299
contract.
No s ubs<:.TlpUons by mall permlned Ln
Whe c l ersbur~
20 3 1690 1294
towns
where home carrier service Is
World
Boxing
Assocla·
Pryor.
the
Ath ens
16 8 1518 1437
avallabll'.
Ga ll ipolis
14 7 1157 1018
tlon junior welterweight champion,
Log an
11 10 1269 1257
had argued that the contract was
, MAIL SUBSCRIP'I10NS
Nor thwest
11 11 1264 1256
Inside Ohio
lnvallq,
and
had
signed
to
defend
his
Sheridan
1 12 1439 1445
13 We<'ks .. ,.. , .. ,.............. , .. ..•.... SI4.04
Iront on
title without LaRosa 's approval.
10 12 1208 1228
:ffi Weeks ............. ........ ,...........• $27 .~
Pt. Pleasa nt
9 12 1338 1347
52 We(!ok.s ...................... : ... .... .... $51 .48
Judge WilliamS. Mathews ruled
Waverly
8 13 1257 1318
Outside Ohio
in favor of LaRosa 's request for an
Jackson
13 w........................................ $15.21
8 J3 1309 1292
• Alexand e r
in junction putting Pryor's fight
W Weeks .............. ......... ........ ... $29.64
8 13 1327 1317
Washin g ton
52 weeks ........... ................ .. ..... SSG.2t
7 14 1168 1404
purses in. escrow until the matter Is
Meigs
2 18 988 1317
sett.led . • ·Still in Tourney.
l
Hort9n, along with "'1Phomore Denise Stegall, the
most promising sophomores, and junior Jenny
Meadows, the most valuable player.
..
College's Top 20
By Thr A.-x:lalt•d Pn'!l.'i
Tiw Top 1\o.1..'!1~' warn~ in thP final A"·
~· laK'd Pre;s roUCJ,;<' ba~ kf'tball poll fo!'
!lit' 19R.!-&1 M-ason. wit h l!r~t -pi3C1' v91c>S
In par('lll ~. rl,.._'Onls and tota l !XIint.<;.
Points bast'd on
:lH~HK-l'i'- l fl· l ~ H- llt!
ll-lll-li-X..7~J.;;..t . ;l - :!-l:
I. H ou~ ton t:'i'.!t
2. l..oulwillf' 1~ 1
:1. St. JoM·~
-1. Vlr,ltlnla
!i . Indiana
+i. Nf'\·lldal..as \'1-!~
7. UCl..\
R ~or1h Camlina
'li'.!
~-:1
'!i ~
:l'i·-1
'2.1.:1
~::!
2Vo
:!6-7
!!. Mkansas
10. Missoori
11 . Aosmn Collf'g{'
12. Krnruc~c:>·
~ :l
1:1. VIllanova
R Wiehit;1 Sial! •
tl -1
~~~-
...~~:\
.!It-HI
'!'l-7
:l.'l-l
!ll.firol' ~o<la
t l ~~
17+i
1!1. Oklahoma St .
:!1+. Gt:'Orj.(t•tuwn
l~·ti
1~1
21-ll
1~7
Tf'n n.·Chuttan()l:(
Ui. N. Carol ina St.
17 Mc•mphls
~I .tit>
16-';'
24-ti
::!1-7
f"·~
:.!'.}!
Aho rmivlng: \"Oif'"S in i.llphabrlit'l.ll or ·
tk'r-: Alabama. A l abama Sl:atr. Auburn.
Dllnols. Illinois S!.. Iowa. lll.lislana S1 ., ·
Maryland. M issl~'lippl. Ml<;.'l ]~lpPI S1 .•
Orl<'ans, OhiO Sta t<', Oklahoma,
PI!!Sbul'JI;Il. P\J.rdU('. Stf't.'iOII. SW-Lool
NN '
slana . SmK'USl'. TrnOC'SSf'('. T('xa s ChrL'I·
Uan. Vana>rbJJt . Vlri:inl ~t ComrnonwNJih,
WashlnRton St .• \.\'('S1 Vlr!Vnla.
Saturday res W&.s:
Winte rsv ille 79 Athens 63
Wedn esday's came :
Portsmou th vs. We llsville, 9 p.m. at OU
DeMOLAY Wf:EK MARCH 13thTHRU 19th
DeMOLAY
BUILDS:
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Congratulations and Best Wishes
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From The Following Community Merchants
·POMEROY, OHIO
Sugar Run Mills
POMEROY, OHIO
..1;
Village Pharmacy
MARAUDERETTE SENIORS - Senior members ol the
: ~elgs Marauderetles 1982-83 cage team were, Jell to right, Cindy
;crooks, Paula Swisher and Paula Horton.
.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
·'
For Meigs County
•
FREE ELECTRONIC
HEARING TEStS
THURSDAY
MARCH 17
·, 9:00-12:00
NOON
:
Will Be Given By
,; H. William Mattingly
:~ BEL TONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
:~ ,
.
MIIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO
.
:~nyone who has trouble hearing is welcome to have a hearing
:test using modern electronic equipment to determine if his loss
rs one which may be helped. Some of the causes of hearing loss
till be explained and diagrams of how the ear works will be
.:Jhown.
:~ We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
:
Batteries And Supplies For All Makes For Sale.
'
ff YOU CANNOT COME IN :
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This year; there are more than 100 changes In the
tax laws and lorms. But at H&R Block, one thing
hasn't changed ... fair prices! Just ask. and we'll
give you a free estimate of the cost for preparing
your ratum. You get a complete interview . Plus we
doublecheck your return for accuracy .
OPEN WEEKDAYS
9:00AM. TO 6:00P.M.
SATURDAY 9:00 AM. TO 5:00 P.M•.
PHONE 992-3795
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
618 E.Maln Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
.
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CALL THE HOTEL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE 992-3629
.,
- - - -- - -- - - -- - - - - -------- -·
Meigs Inn/Pizza Shack
~~------~--------~P:O:M:E:RO~Y,~O:H:I:O~--------~~------.J~~
Pomeroy Flower Shop
.' FREE HEARING .
TESTS SET
•
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Insurance Ag~~rcy
*LEADERSHIP
*CITIZENSHIP
*TEAMWORK
*BROTHERHOOD
Adolph's Dairy .Valley
POMEROY, OHIO
·-
The Farmer's Bank
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
POMEROY, OHIO
s
Family Restaurant
Francis Florist
rave y Tractor
and Service
a. .aran s
.. -Memorial Hospital
I
I
POMEROY, OHIO
Pat Hill Ford
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.
G & J Auto Parts
POMEROY, OHIO
Just fill in the amount you need and bring it to any City
Loan and Savings office. We'vegoq~Jentyof money for both '
homeowner and personal loans. So if you need money to pay
for home improvements, to consolidate your bills, to put your
kids through school,~ buy a new car. chances are we can
lend it to you. Contact us today to learn more about our
reduald homeowner loan rates.
t:l 1::\ OTY LQ\N .~SAVINGS
-~ r::l a Control Data Company
·
GALlJPOIJS:358SoaniA...,446-1973
POMEROY: I25E.MainSt..992·2171
Central Trust Co.
Ewing . Funeral Home
The Daily Sentinel
POMEROY, OHIO
POMEROY, OHIO
Kingsbury Home Sales
POMEROY, OHIO
~
!ill
_ge ouse
Locker 219
K & C Jewelers
POMEROY, OHIO
Fabric Shop
Bank One
POMEROY*RUTLAND*TUPPERS PLAINS
POMEROY, OHIO
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�The Daily Sentinel
By The Bend
Tuesda.,, March
March 15, 1983
Business .s-e rvices
15, 1983
'Page 6
VInyl & Alu!"lnum
·CARPENTER
SERVICE
-Addoni and'romadoUng
New mom in town .needs helpful friends
-.------.---..;.;.,.;..-o-'-------...;--,
liy REI~ AND SUE BOO'TEL . Ice-breakers: these casual · ex:
have been married a year, but for
the last six months he has not made ... ·
DEAR }JELEN AND SUE:
changes could lead to lasting
love tome.
I'in just home from the hosplta!
friendships. Happy parenting.
I finally turned to my boss . .
HELEN
with our first baby. We have no
becau~ I needed a man- any man
parents or relatives close by, and
- to make me f~lllke a woman
we're new In town so t can't call a
KINDA SCARED:
again
.
.
· ..
more experienced friend wh~n I ·
The toll-free Beech-Nut Hotline
Last week I discovered I'm
have a question, !tee! silly bothering . seems just right for you. Conce!Yed
my doctor.
flye years ago by the well-knoWn · pregnant. Helen and Sue, I still love
John. How do I tell him about the
Baby bookS are okay, but It would
food ,corporation, It has handled
baby? .I couldn't stand an abortion.
be. nice to get personal answers
more than half a inllllOI\ questions
,... EXPECTING TROUBLE
about sleep, feOO!ngs, development
about infant nutrition, growth and
DEARE.T.:
... all thOse "stepl;"tluitmakeyoung
development. It noW Includes preThere's
no easy way to tell a
flrst·tlrne mothers feel shaky. ·
natal lnfonnatlon for expectant
husband,
"I
love you but I'm .
Any suggestions? - KINDA
mothers and halldles many queries
expecting another man's baby." So · ;
SCARED
on early childhood care.
. · Every Hotline call Is personally . say It; wi!hout delay, and hope this ;
DEARK.C.:
opens the door for discussion about
· "Young Mothers' Clubs" are
answered by a consumer affairS
your fa!Ung marriage. With a
great for that. Isolated flr!it-tlme
specialist. If the problem Is a
therapist's
help, It might stm · be
parent feeling. Check with your . common one, she puts the caller lil ·
saved;provldedyou'rebothequally
'
local library or fte\\'Spaper to lind
touch with the appropriate taped
willing
to
work
at
Change.
_
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out whether or not such a group
!'e$ponse, Prepared by medical
HELEN
AND
SUE
.
meets In your area.
experts. II It Is \1111que, sjte
Also. many cities have vtsltlng researches the question and pro(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a
nurse services and well-baby clinVIdes an Individual reply.
Ics. Call the County Health Depart·
Nationwide toll free Beech-Nut subject lor dlscuylon, twogeneration style? Direct your
ment lor this Information.
Hotline number Is 1-ml-523-6633: In
que$t!o'ris
to either SUe or Helen
I'd guess your biggest problem
Pennsylvania, calll-800-492-2384.
or
both, 1f you want a '
Bottel
new' town loneliness. So start con. Now, relax and enjoy your baby.
combination
mother-daughter '
~SUE
versations with neighbors, and with
answ~:>r
In care of this
·other mothers at the supennarket.
newspaper.)
You'll find bllbles great little
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
l am 24. My husband John and 1
president of the Humane Society of the UDIIed ·
Slates, also a speaker, and Nancy Yaw, pres!•
dent, a resident ot Hocking County. Nancy Reed,
a ·hoard member of the southeastern Ohio organ!·
zallon and also a Meigs resident, was present.
I
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ofCh~terCouncll323, Daughters of
Daughters of America
. ..
Mrs. Erma Oeland hosted a
m~tlng olthe Past Councilors Oub
turefromActs~ theLord'sPrayer
Amenca, recently.
Laura Damewood presided at the
meeting which opened with scrip-
Calendar
TUESDAY
COOLVILE - Revival at
Whites Chapel Church, Rt. 2,
. ' Coolvlll~. beginning Tuesday
: through March 20 at 7 p.m.
· The Rev. Roy Deeter will be
··the evangelist. and Rev : Phil. lip Ridenour Is the pastor.
Public Invited to att.e nd . .
MIDDLEPORT - Group 2 of
Middleport First United Presby•
terianChurchwillmeetTuesday
·at tne home of Mrs- Paul
"HaptonstaiL
Ridge Community Church on
C:R. 32 with Rev. Carl Hicks
as guest speaker beginning
Wednesday through March 20 .
Services are at 7:30 p.m.
nightly. The public Is lnvltd to
attend.
/
.SYRACUSE. - Syracuse
Third Wednesday Homemakers Club will meet Wednesday
at 10 a.m. at the city building.
Bring darning needle. Potluck
refreshments will be served.
: I'()MEROY- Salisbury PI'O,
•Tuesday, 7:JJ p.m. Program
: ~rate club demonstraiion.
;, .. RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
Free and Accepted Masons will
· hold Its annual inspection Tues'·fi.ay at 7: JJ. p.m. Work In the
, entered apprentice degree.
EAST MEIGS- Spring sports c
. banquet will be held at Eastern
High School Tuesday at6: J:lp.m.
MIDDLEPORT Literary Oub,
2 p.m. Wednesday atthe home of
Juanita Ba,chtel. Maxine Philson
to review "The Letters of E. B.
White."
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
Cheste(, special session, 7:30
p.m. with work In the fellow·
craft degree.
1HURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Child Con·
servatlon League, Thursday
at the Pomeroy Legion Hall,
WEDNESDAY
.
·
6:30
p.m. dinner with hus- EAGLE RIDGE -There will
bands
as guests. Eloise White
:be a five-night revival at Eagle
to
have
devotions. PeggyHou·
a.ldge Community: Church begin
dashelt
to take the traveling
rung March 16, through March
prize.
20, with the Rev. Carl Hicks as
·guest speaker. The church is
POMEROY - Magnolia Oub
located on County Road 32.
will
meet at 7: lJ p.m. Thursday
.Services will be at 7:ll nightly .
night
at the home of Mrs. Dale
'the public is Invited to attend.
Smith.
• POMEROY ::__ Bible Prophecy lecture at Pomeroy
Seventy-day Adventist Church, 7
SATURDAY
p.m. Wednesday, Topic, "EviSHADE RlVER Lodge 453,
dence that Demands a Verdict."
Cliester,
annual Inspection 7: lJ
Special music by Junior and Rita ·
p.m.
Saturday
with work In the
White;
public lnvlted.
,
fellowcraft degree. Dinner at
· : POMEROY - A flve·nlght
6: lJ p.m. Members to take pies
to the hail after 4: lJ p.m . .
revival will be held at Eagle
Regional happenings
Antique school presents.study
Ten leading antique experts from Southwestern Ohio will
speak at the 5th Annual Greater Ohio Antique School presenting
. a comprehensive furniture study on Wednesday, Aprll6, 9 a.m .4 p.m., at the Holiday Inn Dayton Mall. Speakers and topics
;are: Ray Mongenas, English Furniture; Victoria Vlslntalner,
Shaker; Jane S\kes, Ohio Furniture; Mark Kelly, American Feller a!; Sue Ellen Johnson, American Wm. & Mary Furniture;
-1'om Porter, Investing; Richard Guggenheim, American 18th
Century; Roger Early, Early Victorian; Marge Piper, Amerl'can Painted Furniture; Sam Forsythe, Wlndsors. Conducted by
)lost of WPTD 14-16 "Antlquery", Marilyn Hart and Set Deco·rator, Marcie Weisenborn. Call 513-890-0642 or 513-854-8687.
· Write: Greater Ohio Antiques School. 7200Peters Plke,Dayton,
·.Q hlo 45414.
·
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=~pecial
services slated in Rutland
•· "Is My Name Written There" will be presented at Rutland
Church of'the Nazarene Sunday, March 20 at 6:30p.m. Taking
l!!rt will be Rev. and Mrs. rt. D. Brown aad members of the
o)lurciC Alf area churcnes-and the generarpubtc are Invited ·to·attenct .'The program deals with the Judgement.
Song evanf!,elists in Racine
·
,
·Mr. and Mrs. Danny Frederick, song evangelists will bold
~rvlces at Racine First Church of the Nazarene Saturday, ·
March 19 at 7: JJ p .. and Sunday, March 20, at 10:30 a.m. "Re·
demption'' from Mt. Vernon Nazarene College will be In charge
of services and sln~ln~ on Sunday evenlnl! at 7:30 o.m.
Revival at Either's House
: A revtval will be held at Father's House In Hartford, beginning March 21, at 7:30 p.m .. nightly. There will be different
speakers each evening. Clyde Fields, pator,lnvltes the public to
attend. There will be special singing.
.
.
and the pledge giVen In unison.
Officers' reports were given by
Margaret Tuttle and Opal Hollon.
Games were played and refresh·
ments served by Erma Cleland and
Dorothy Myers. Elizabeth Hayes
won the door prize.
Othei;"S attending ·were .Mae
McPeek, Pauline Ridenour, Charlotte Grant, Betty Roush, Ada
Morris, Leona Hensley, Ada Bissell,
Cora Beegle, Marcia Keller, Ethel
Orr, Thelma White, lnzy Newell,
Goldie Frederick, and a guest,
Sandra White.
Philathea Women
New ·officers were eiected and a
program on wllls was presented by
Jennifer Sheets, attorney at law, at
the recent meeting of the Phllathea
Women of the Middleport Church of
Christ.
Elected were Dorothy Roach,
president; Mildred Riley. vice
president; Betty McKinley, secretary; Cathy Cooper assistant secretary; and Farie Cole, treasurer.
Following her program on wills,
Mrs. Sheets was presentect a gift
from the group.
Branson birthday
Branson
James Brett Branspn ceh!brated
his first birthday with a party at the
hOme of his aunt and uncle Jack
and Vicky GlllllanonMarchB.Hels
the son of Joyce and Bevtn Branson, ol Helper, Utah.
· Brett, his mother, a brother
Brock, and his grandmother:
Mildred Lipsey are visiting here
with his aunt, Mr. Gillilan, lor a
few weeks .
A Smurf cake decorated by Mrs.
Gillilan was served with Ice cream
to the guests. Attending were his
mother and grandmother, Mrs.
Lipsey, his brother, Brock, Mr.and
Mrs. Gllllllin.and cousins, Vlck Gilman, Mark and Donna GUinan, and ·
Jeremy Alan, and friends, Tim and
Betsy Hawthorne and Margie
Reeves and Brandt and Robbie.
Telephone congrtulations were
received from his father and grandparents, Bill and Faye Branson 1n
. Helper, Utah.
·
Ra~ine, Oh. ·
Ph; 6i4'-843-5191 ·.
1o.e-"'
4
Pomeroy,
GARAGE •
·
AUTO · & TRUCK
.
REPAIR
15 Years Experience
All Work Guarinteed .
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992 • 7121
,_,,_,,
742·2324
773 • 5 684
Phone
I
St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, off.
Roofing, Spouting
Complete Home
Remodeling
Address
fI
H-1 mo
I .
.
1 Print one word in each
tI
()Wanted
1 )ForSale
( >Announcement
( ) For Rent
I
-~
1
17.
lB.
3. - - - - - -
, 4. - - - - - 1 s. _ _ _ __
I 6. - - - - - 1 7. _ __ __
I
B.
9. - ' - - -- --
I1 10. - - - - - 1 11.
I 12.
---~---,
113. ---~
I 14.
1 15.
I
33A.: Qh
Brad
port
o bury Road. M 1dd le·
1
19, - - - - - -
20 . - - - - - 21. - - - - - - 22 . --~~-23 . - - - - - 24. - - - -- -25. - - -- - 26. - - - - - - -
27. - - - - - - -
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
. 33.
tt
1
.. 1
.1...-----~---~---.---·--·-
Oh•o 45769 was appo•nled
Execulnx ol lhe ""~1e ol Hen,.
OilS Sm11h. deceased lale ol
Reedsville. Oh•o.
Rober1 E
131 15. 2/ ;ogbaje,cJucloe-Cierk
..
COM,..UNITY SHOPPING PAYS·
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!
P.state of Gny P Gillenwa ter.
d eCf~ased . late of Box 77_
Rutland. Oh10 4 ~ 77 5
Rober1 E, BtJr.k
/
Probat P. JtJdge- Cierk
131 I 5. .22. 29 . 31c
Reel Estate Generel
64 Misc. Merchandise
CENTRAL REALTY
"
~
.'
•
..
·~
·~
AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
~ENERAL ELECTRIC
& HOTPOINl
WE ALSO WORK ON
::
,
•
NEW LISTING - 1973 trailer in Middleport, 2 bedroom, laundry
room, underpinning, insulation ..lolal electric hookup included, can
be ~ kl your lot or rental at present Jocatiort Appraised value
more than asking price. $6,950.
·
....
••••••l!li
I
,,
..
SUCCESSFUL
BUSINESS.
IS A CINCH
IF .YOU USE,
THE INCH!
I
Tllet'a rlghtl When you uae 1 column
Inch or more in nawaP.per edvertlling,
be It dlaley or cleaalfled. you reach
thou11nd1 of potential buyere that ere
eager to · receive your money-liVIng
me. .
v•·
.
.
The Daily Sentinel
1
~
-·
-'~dorofrettfrompalnond
horm
•..:':,":,!~.;'on root In pooco
In tho 8teooird Sovloro
Arma.
Sodly mloood. by her huobond. ton. doughtoro, olo·
taro. brothero and friends.
3 Announcements
So;klng porttlnieoecrelor.,;l
poiltlon · for evenl(lll end
WMkend1. H•v• thrH ,..,,
e•porlenco end college. d!o'
groe. Cell 614·2411-1181
evenlngl an_d weekenda'.
.TREE TRIMMING. REMO.
VAL. CALL 814·949:2128
OR t14;992·6040.
Will oore for the eldorly In
o.ur homo. Trilfled. oxporloncird.
614
992 7LPI\I14 ""'" glvon.
•
• - 3 ·
· Will ~o houoe · cloinlng,
SWEEPER ond oowlng
rna -
....
SIDING
'Sidl·n· ·
•
'Roofing
'Gutter & Down Spouts
'R d I' ·
' emo ' '"'
20 Years
Experience
In Home
Area .
FREE ESTIMATES
*Lowest Rates
A
d
roun
*Friendly Serv.i ce
A TRY
742-2328
GIVE US
Hlgloy'o Borberohop. Upper
Rt . 7, Open 8 doyo, 8 to
6:30. Haircuts 83.00 .
Racine Gunctub haa dioccn·
gun
sept.
·
34·2· mo. pd.
SMITH NELSON
MQ:TQRS
Inc•
'I
'
Pomeroy, Oh, .
Ph. 992-2174
BOGGS
"Something New"
RAVENSWOOD FABRICS
Now Hao Faohlon
Outlot Quality
Clothing:
'Jeans
·
'Blouses
•swim Suits
'Eveilina Gowns
Etc.
Open Tues.-Sat.
SALES & SERVICE
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
·
Aulllorized John Deer,
New Holland, BUSh Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer ·
Farm Equipment
10:00 to 5:00
204 Washinaton St
Parts & Service ·
Ravenswood, W.Va .
r:=:;:::::::====jr===::::=====;i
;
::=======::;i
CEMENT
2-Z&tfc
II
J&L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &
1-Hfc
H.
L. Writesel
ROOFING
fiNISHER
All""'es
of roof work, new
'JP •
or repall, gutters and
downspouts, gutter Clean·
·
d 'nt'
·
In& an par In& storm
doors and windOWS.
AllWork Guaranteed
· ·
"Free Estimates''
Call: 949-2263 ·
Or 992-2791-Io..
Rich;ud Garfield
.'Parking Lots
•Drl'veways
'Basements
'Patios
Reasonable Rates
Rt. 3, Pomero·y, o·H.
PH. 614·985·4464
l7·1•o"
'----------~
----------1----------+----------1
THE
KOUNTRY KLUB
olltw Grips
:RR~wineisl
_ lhhitn&i.ng
...,•Balancine
oGolf Trips
For Youna People _!
•Pre-Season Sale ,
20% &30% OFF
uFORD
JOHN T~
Chester, OH.
MILLER
ELECTRIC
SE
RVICE
For all your wiring,
needs; furnaces re·
·
p11r service and in·
stallatl'on.
CHARLES SAYRE
AN D SON
Residential
& Commercial
Call 742-3196
Route 1
Lonr· Bottom. OH. 45743
985·4193 or 992-3067
2-16-1 mo.
GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.
Industrial. Commercial,
Residential, Interior and
Exterior.
Painting
1
Sandblasting
~orlarblaoting
Parking Lol Stripping
Spray Painting
TaiCtura Coatings
FLIJy lnsured-;-flll · CAlL 614·949-2686
Kitchen Cabinets- Roof·
ing - Sidine- Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction ~ Re·
modelina - Custom Pole
Barns.
Roofing
&Sidl'ng_Co.
l-1·11t
12·20-tfc
PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Dozers ·
JESCO
Bu I LDERS
-Backhoes
-Dump Truc.ks
-Lo-Boy
-Trencher
.,-Water
-Sewer
-Gas Lines
.,-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478
l-12-3 mo.
Lon. Bottom, OH .
BULDJNG
ROOM ADDITION
.S
REMODELING
ROOFING &· SIDING
"FREE ESTIMATES"
::J
.POMEIIOY
LANDMARK
614-992-2181
J&F
I
CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•UMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES ,
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING.
CONCRETE WORK
80110£0 & WOfiiC GUARANTEED
PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201
J.7-11c
"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE''
TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
618 E. !4ain, Pomeroy, DH.
PH. 992-3795
We Do Booltbepi11 For
985-3561
All Makes
Snlall ...... and Co!pogta
•Wuhera •Dii,.W81hert
Range•
•Aefrlger.tora
•Dryara •Freezera
Businesses & Partnetships
MARY C. KEBLEII-OWNER
,
PARTS and SERVICE
4-S·He
1-27-2 mo.
.
_PlOwing .gardena and doi8r
work. 304-676·B912.
Giveaway
ANY PERSON who hos
•nythlng to give aw•y and
doe• not offer Or attempt to
offer any·othe_r thing for aale
may · pl1ce an ad in thi1
column. Ther'e will -be no
charge to th• advertiser.
•
'
until
Sorvlco.
Spocl•lizlngln
cury
Outb<>Ords."
SpringMer··
tu ·
noup opociol. Coolvlto, Oh.
814-667-6B07.
13
Insurance
'
•
SANDY AND BEAVER ln-
aurence Co . . ha1 · offered
Mrvieee fo,r fire lnauran6•
coverage In O•lli• 'County
for ·a lmoat • century. F8t1\'1,
home 1nd peraonal prOHd¥
coverage• are ev•ll•bl• to
moot lndlvld~ol n•do. Contact Eugene Holley, ogont . •
Phone 388-8690.
Aro you poylng to mu-h for
your ho~pitot-heolth ,lnoi:i·
ronco . Cell Cor'roft
Snowdon. 448-4290. •'
1 fomo.lo dog. hod ell lhots
end opoyod. Coll448·_1112.
H•H toy collie • poodle.
Malo· • tomato. 814-7422476.
12 YEAR Old Border Collie
to good homelnthecountry .
Good companion
for older
people.
Call 304·875·
678B.
15
lo
School•
Instruction
.. ti"
Karate the ultimate in 1ilt'-"'J
defence
ell private
leiJO... •
Men. women,
• chlldreq,
lnot,ructlon lhru block belt.
Aloe evlllobto Koreto uotl•·- r
6 LostandFound
formopuchlngondklcklng .l'
bego, ond pmtectlvo oqulp· ~
REWARD· Loot todleo ring cioloo
mont. Jerry
Lowery
• AoooKoroto
Studio,
143 •~
with ooverol 11Dnoo. ·Loot tn Burlington Rd ., Jockoon '
vlnclnlty of ·Silver ·Brldgo Oh. Colt 814-288·3074 0 ; .:0
Pl•.i :•. Ponderoaa, Janet 614 384 8180
•
Boyo ond Foadtond At. 36.
•
•
.
~Citt 446-4612.
LET tho prolooolonolo troln .~
you in tick_otlnll· trove! ·~•
Found Chango puroo. Call to agency procodureo, end 100•.
lden_tlfy, 446-2342.
orvotlono. Training lodonoat '
Loot on Redmond Rldgo. ho~o and financing
con be t
1 1 800 44
• 1· :
Joponooo Aketa mota dog, ~~~;S:! 8~~ '
.
wearing -Choke cheln wh:h
rablea tag. 304-875-2277
or 8715--3583.
8
1--------""-- •
:
•
~
~
18 Wanted to Do .
\
Public Sale
& Auction
Auction ovory Fri. night ot
the Hartford Commun~y
General Houtlng and Truh "' ·
remollll Service. Re!loble .,
and do-ndoble. Coil 448· ~
3.1119 oftor 6PM 2156-1887. •
merchondloe every woek.
Conolgmonts of now ond
uood morchond'
1
'"" • woyo
wetcomo.
Richerd
Roynotdo
Auctlonoor. 275-3069.
LEMLEV'SORtLLINGWe!Jr
Wello, Shollow gu and core
drilling. Myero and Gould
·
pumps.
Sotoo
and
Strvlco.
Goa end oil watt ..rvlce. Coli
Center. Truckload• of new
AUCTION
everyWVSotB..dov
I ht, Mt A~
c:nolgn.;,en~~ w~rco".;,':::
Emm• Bell auctlone•r.
9
HO IIIE
REFERENCES
' PH. ·985-4141 ·
2"1mo
ehootl
-:--:-:-.....:..-~--Juet .oponed. Lorry'• B<>Ot
Call 843-5425
3-i 0-1mo.
tlnued
814-992·6022.
Wanted To Buy
WANTED TO BUY Old furniture ond Antlquoo of all
kinds, .. u Kennoth Sweln,
448·31&9 or 2&6·1967 in
the evonlngo.
Buying Gold. Sllvor,
num. Gold and SMver
••• tho hlghootln two years,
check our prlcoo on gold e.
lltver, ocrop jowotry. Buying
Old colno, ocrop rlngo •
ollverworo. Doily quotoo'
ovollobto. Atoo colno • · coin
oupptloo •for oolo. Spring
V 11
Valley
Plou, 446-8025
or
1 ey Trodlng
Co., Spring
448·8026.
.•
dable.
For eltlmate Clll
Good uaod plclcup truck.
Coli 446·4053.
Went*d
partl for
John
Deere 2010. Colt 614-367·
0837.
BEDS-tRON: BRASS, old
furnltu,., gold, oliver dot-
1111111t engine repolr, loWn ~
mower•. riding mowera. ro~
<
totllloro. Ruoonoble rotn. ~
. 3rd. • Olive St.. Golllpotla ._
-.
446-3159 botweon 8 end 11:
~
E•porlon..d typlll wanti~g ~
to do ony kind of typing 01 r
hor home. Ploo .. cell 446- ~
::::~litlng
hou~ '\..~
or lklht
work. Coli 614-2411·6046.
Gun Reblulng contoot ~
Jomeo H. Holley. Cell 614· :!'
2415-6849. NoSundiycottl. .:,.
:,
12,.
HOME LOANS
fixed
rote. Loader Mortgago, 77 E.
State. Athono, Ohio. 1-614·
6U·30&1.
.
Georp_ S.~
. ,Jr.
...._
0111•: 9U-fl39
NEW LISTING - FARII _
135.70 acre farm with ~I and
gas minetals. Excellent cattle,
~~ 1~ ~~~r~La~
;vri'able.
lpnmises. All utilities
Approx. 3 miles from Rutland.
IIEW LISTIIIG _ 1974, 2
....
b...room Freedom mOOile
home. All electric and air·
comitioned. Elltra nice for only
$7,000.
.
.
POIIEROY - East Main Street
-A cozy ad nell, 3 bedroom
home. La11e eal-il k~c~.
Wel~kefll. home, with nice front
pllth for ·view of river.
$27,000.
.
BA. . ADDlTIOII ·- !.My 3
balraom brick, 2 bath hllllje,
on over one at~e. EQuipped
kitchen, drapes, airCCIIIdlilned. -'1d lar(l! flr!iiiY
room wilfl~
· ace. OWner
flnlndna
·
·
. Vtlali
Aaoc.
PIIOI!t
Chi!JI Lltnlay, Aaoc.
l'fiont 142-3171 .
LaBONTE'S·
QUAIL FARM
1ong Bo ttom, Oh ·
I'll. 985-4345
Cloll loBonle, S..-Owne•
' M
-·q. ~
~
.·
",_·:\I
~~\i !
1\\ . .rL. ·
Mature Quail · now being
sold. Ens available with
notice alter May I: Day old
chicks available with depo·
•it aft M 25
•
er ., . ,.,., mo.
ROUSH
C'ONSTRUCTIQN
RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair end tecore radiators and hell·
tar ccns. We can IIIIo
aclcl boll and rod outredlaton. We also rap8ir
Gas tanks.
New Homes Remodeling.
Extensive ·
~CnussturoamncPtoWJeortB!d•s.
.:o~:[:f~ork
.
•
oAIIInlllllll & Vinyl Sidinp
15 Yoan E•porlonco
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992 • 7583
or 992-2212
PAT HJLL
992-2196
ltl. iddloporl, Ohio
1
STRIP
-COAL
53000 A TON
'
PH. 992-2280
ANGIE'S
PIZZA
PH. 992-6851
349 N. :2nd St.
Mlddloporl, OH.
Mon.-Thurs. 4:00-11:30
Fri.·Sat. 4:00·12:00
CLD.SED SUNDAY
Pizzas_;_Pilll Breld
Italian Bread-Subs
2·"11-111!11.
' ' '•
..••...' ... . .'10...
... ..• ". ....
1
Card of Thanks
.. I wloh to thank .all our
nototlvoo, Irion do, ·netghboro
• Rev. Wotkor. for tho help,
c•nl• • klndn-. Aloo tho
nun• 81'id On. of Holzer
Hoopit'ol during my tnn... In
tho hoopltll.
Uoyd Nice.
,.
.
~
· ceo. In Ohio 1 -800-9U" ~
2351, out of Ohl'b .t
1-B00-641·6288.
~
~
ProfeSiionel
i
~
-
I
W•ntad to I••••
t~baccO.
2&c per lb. 304-675·22711.
--
.................
.........
.. .
.. ......
'
11
MINE RUN
I
c•L· Bookkiooplng
Gold. oliver. otorlln!. Je· T•K Return•
:
wotry. rlngo, old cono • for tndividuolo&.bookiiHplng
• buolno- ':
currency.
Ed
Burkett
Btrber
Shop. Middleport. 992· Short tonne u.oo
· •
3478
Long
'
f
orint
no.oo
end
up
·
Carol Neo'
446·3882
·S et of overload aprlng1 to fit
19B1 Chovrolet holf·ton PlANO TUNING 8o REPAIR
pickup, 304·875·6182 .
Call Bill Word for oppolnj• . ~
11-11··'·
·!3-tk
i
Buain111 It Second Mori:~ ... .,
gage loena. Equity R11ouf- ~
lara. wood ice boxe1. atone
joro. ontlquoi. otc., Com·
plot• houoohotdo. Write:
~
446-3159 or 2158-1987 of- •
tor 8PM.
~
We pay caah for l•te model
cle•n u•d can:.
-:2:::2::-:-M:-o-n-e...!.,..yto--:-L-oa-n-F~anchtown Car Co.
BMI Gene Johnaon
448-0089
tr
"
·:
•••
814·388-8543.
: .:
Lawn Mowing no yoord to bjg "~
or omoll. Rollobto onddop.,;. · "
M.D.orMillar,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Service•
lr"i"'.;u;;;;;;;:r;;;;r;ml IIt-;::::;::;~~;~=:;1-;:=======~~;::=:::=====::J Oh.
992-7760.
· I-------
1
NANCY
.I
.No sunday· Callo
>ll ·tlc
·BAC KH 0E.
·SERVICE
Reel Estate General
CALL~!~~sE:Ll:·_ _. .
.,....,,
'
ALL OTHER APPLIANCES
NEW LiSTING - 3 or 4 bedrooms pOssible on this one. Trai~r with
large add-on on nea~y an acre lot Includes s!Drllge buitdin& Lot
can .haw second traier as extra income. Cal fur more details. .
klking $12,000.
""::
ONLY '31.9_5 ,.,,",
"
~-----....:.;.-~_, ~=========+=========-t=======· =·==·
NEW LISTIIG - 4 bedroom home in the coontry, vinyl siding
stmn windows, on 3 acres, lots of frul trees. plenty of good water,
assume loan of $18,500 witll monthly payment of $258orarrange
a new loan. •
.
~
AND FW!D CHANGE
n
IIOIIIL£ HOllE - With large ~ buiklin& also asphall driveway.located on quiet. clean streel oul of high water in flacine. The
iving room is extra large. There~ acement walk and large covered
polth, also a metal sorage buiklin& You can be in this Ofle in two
weeks fer qny $16.900.
=~
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
OF GAY P, Glu.ENWATER. DECEASED
Cue No. 23792
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On January 14. 1983 . 1n the
Me1!=jS County Pro batP. Court.
Case No 23792. Oan1el C.
GlllenwatRr. Star 'Route. Box
240 A. Tornado. W vn 25202
was appo1nted ExP.cuto1 of the
By ahOIIPihlln your home lreil you 11ve on
pa, the wHr end tNr ~ yciur car end avoid
the ~~Narda· of hllltway and frMWay
trevellnc. It pays t~ ahop wh- you· .livel
)~
Public Notice .
.o.ll - - - - - - - - -
SHOP LOCALLY
•
Frorq he Smallest Heater
Core .to the largest Radia· .
tor.
·Radiator Speciaist
NATHAN B.lGGS
35 Yrs. Experience
ALUMINUM SIDING
Public Notice
•lnoula11on
•Stoom Doo"
PROBATE COURT OF
•Stoom Windowo
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
•Ropl .. cemont Windows
ESTATE OF HENRY OTIS · •New Roofing
SMITH. DECEASED
FREE ESTIMATES
Cue No.NDTIC
23977
JAMES KEESEE
0
.
APPOI~E';.,y
.,
PH.
_
992 2772
OFFrDUCIARY
[
· 3-ilmo
Me1~s
Mall This coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St. ·
. Pomeroy, O.h . 45769
'·
Raben E. Buck
Probale Judge-C lerk
!3i l 5.2229. 31c
RADIATOR SERVICE
On Jun,uary l B. 1983. ,r, thB.
County . Probate Court
Case No. 23 9 77 'J ess1'e Curt1s.
39522 St. Clo" Rd . Pomeroy:
34. - - - - - -- - 35.
~ 6.
I'
COMPLETE
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF HAZELV. THOM·
SON. DECEASED
Case No. 24028 ··
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY .
On February 23 1983 '"Ihe
Me1gs Coumv Probale Cow rt
case No. 24028. Rober! M
Thomson. 409 Cenuan Bldg..
Akron. Oh1o 443GB was appo•nled Execulor ollhe eslale
of Hazel V. Thomson . deceased. tale of A.F.D. NO_1. Box
II ,_ - -- -- · 1 2. ----~-
..••
Call for free siding IS·
timates, 949-2801 or
00
4
space .below. Each In·
I IIIia I or group of figures
I counts as a word. Count
1 neme and address · or
j phone number If used.
1 You'll get better results --1--11-4-4--;
If vou describe fully,
I gove _price. The Sentinel To 15
II classify,
reserves edit
the orright
to ~~tt=$~~~t=j
reject
To 25
1 any ad . Your ad will 0..
I put In l.he properTi~0::3:5L_j~~~~E~'
classification If you'll ~
These cash rates
-I check the proper box
.1below.
·
include discount
I
I
ciPEN .9 ill 5 iiON. thru SAT.
All Typos or Auto RtPIIr.
BrokeSsP.TEunC•I-UApLs. tic.
TRANSMISSION FILTER -
Farley
whomttmory
pooood owoy_
ol•
In lovtr\g
of Helon
Y••n•aotodayM•rch14th.
You he"" toft .thlo tend of
Situation•
Wanted
supptloo.
up and
yardwaahl11g..
• · gordon
·work .
chine rep•lr,Pick.
p8rtl,
and light
window
peintlng.
dellvory. Devli . Vocuum .
or 614·
Cloonor,
hell milo up 742·3084.
11 ·
-. ·'
·tr
Glen Wllln, Mark Morcu and Steve N&Uy. They
'l!'lll be appearta1 at the .Racine First Church ol .
t~e Nazarene Suaday at 7: SO p.m.
992- 6215 or
·
1 Name
N
GROUP
I
P&S BUILDINGS
(Froo lotlmalol)
• • · .
I
Classes celebrate reading week
MBMBERIJ 01'
v c YOUNG Ill
'1_
·
I results . Money not refundable.
I
.
from Mouat Vernoa Nuarae Collece are Dou&
Wine and Dan Harrll .(front), and Barry Wbllt,
lnsulatd Do• Houses
•· .
·
I
II;
B.ISS
. ELL
SIDING CO •
"Bea~
Cus,pm
8Ul 1tifGul,
t arages
l'olno1IIY. OH.
to 2•'x36'
.-flum!olna
·~
olootoical """"
1 Write Yocur ow n ad Md order by mall with this
1 coupon.
ance 1 your ad by phone when you get
Haley birth ·
Mr. and Mrs. RobertMichaeiHa·
ley, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, announce~
birth of a son, Robert Benjamin on
Nov .. 24, at Pleasant Valley HospitaL 'l;he .Intant weighed eight lbs.
and six az.. and was 22 Inches long.
Paternal ·grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Young, Middleport, and the late Robert Earl Haley.
Maternal grandmother Is Dorma
Fry, Rutland, and the late John J.
Fry.
Paternal great-grandparents are
Mr. anCl Mrs. John Young, Racine,
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Haley, Racine, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Car. uthers, Sr., Middleport. . ·
The couple also have a daugllter,
Cortney, age two.
.........,. and gutter work
· ---G~naell Vt'Odc
178 w
, lllin
SIDING
II
1
..
at MVNC and an education rnajor, Is the son of Mr. and Mrs .
Don Harris of Westerville. Dan Is
the pianist for the group. Glen
Wllson, playing bass, Is a senior
from Westerville and Is the son of
Mr. artdMrs.JoeWIIson. Helsan
accounting major. Steve Nally, a
sopomore from Defiance, Is a
music major. He Is thesonofMr.
CUff Nally;
MVNC Is a four-year Christian
liberal arts college located · In
central Ohio In the colonial city
of Mount Vernon.
Sizes start lrom·l2'll6'
UTJ.LIJY BUI LDJ NGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
CO.
1
:
<[~
Redemption of Mount Vernon
Members of Redemption are
Nazarene Coll-ege will present
Barry Whitt, Mark Morgan,
the gospel of Jesus Christ In
Doug Wine, Glen Wilson. Dan
music Sunday at Racine First
Harris and Steve Nally.
Church of the 'Nazarene. They
Barry Whitt a junior Christian
will be ministering during the
education maior, Is the son of
7:30p.m. service.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Whitt of BatRedemption will be sharing Iii
tlmore, Ohio. Mark Morgan, Is a
· churches throughout the school
sopomore religion major. He Is
year In the tri-state area of Ohio,
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Sherrill
West VIrginia and Eastern Ken- · · '-j.M organ of Fort Wright, Ky .
tucky. A variety of musical
Doug Wine oi St. Marys, Ohio s
styles presented by Redemption
the son of the Rev. and Mrs. John
will give Inspiration for all ages.
Wine. Doug Is a senior psychology major . Dan Harris, a senior
· .
1
Arrangemenis were mad!' to
purchase Easter lilies for the
church. A thank you note was read
'from Becky Loving, a fonner
member now residing In Indiana:
The Phila thea song and the Lord's
Prayer opened the meeting.
Reorted .on the sick list were Steve
Powell, Beulah Roush; Leo Searles,
Allee Brown, Jean Kloes, Sara
Rupe, Julie Glaze, Oarence
McNeal, and Herman Kincaid.
Members brought articles lor the
March "thlnkliig of you" box fQr a
Kentucky Christian College
student.
·
Named to the coinmlttee to serve
the Birchfield-W!)ford wedding in
June were Sharon Stewart. Debby
Melton, Cathy Cooper, Farle Cole,
and Martha Chi)ds. The group also
voted to serve the Hess-King
HIGHLIGHTING the Rl&ht·to-Read observance at the Rulwedding reception In September,
lanci _E iementjlry School was an asaembly durin& which primary
along with a dinner lor the Men's
classes dramatized two chldren's classics, "The Three PI&•" and
Leactership Class and their wives on
"GoldUocks a11d the Three Bean."
Intermediate studenla some
.
May2at the church.· .
pictured, observed "dress as a character day". During the assemFarie COle and Clarice ErWin
bly, studnts shared ~< book they had read dUrtn& the week while
gave officers' reports.and devotions
e><plalnln& their costumes and leWnc about the cbaraclen repre·
on the spring theme with poems,
sealed. Teache_rs also took part In lbe share prolfl'am.
readings scrlp\Ure and prayer were
· given by Sharon Stewart, Helen
Reynolds, and Evelyn Murray.
. Hostesses for the meeting were
Tuppers Plains Elementary ' wore leprechaun badges du~ng the
Sharon Stewart, Evelyn MI,lrray, ·
School
celebratred Right-to-Read
week.
·
.
Dorothy Baker, Helen Reynolds
The sixth graders took notes on
and 'Eleanor Lohse. Guests were Week. with a St. Patnck's Day
theme,
"Richer
for
Reading
·
Get
stories
dictated to t~ by the
Delcie Forth, Dorts Billley, Donna
Rich
by
Reading."
Each
classroom
kindergarten
students ·and then
Hartson. and Mrs. Sheets, with
pot
to
fill
with
~ld
printed
and
illustrated
t~tem In a
had
a
black
other members attending being
nuggets.
The
"nuggets"
were
books
book
for
the
kindergarten
\O keep . .
Gertrude Mlller. Rose Reynolds,
which
the
.chldren
had
read
during
Debbie
Giannotti
assisted
·In
Clara Conroy, Ella Mae Daughthe week. Silent reading In each
organizing the activities 1n the
terly, Margaret Lallance, and
classroom
for
15
minutes
helped
to
classrooms
for Right-to-Read .
.Francis Roush.
add more gold nuggets. Children
Week .
Mount Vernon Nazarene College
presents message in Racine church
POLE BULDINGS
12
949-2860.
.
y
'
Cash
for
I
Pa
· " and .I ==~~~~==~t====~===~~========j~========~~~~~
.cIasslf lads
~14·742· 224B
t PRICE
R H II
·
~no
Savel I .1
: CONSTRUCTION . oger yse
AL TROMM'S
~~~~~lR ~~:v~ -:::~:-:-~~~~_94_~'"-"k_R_d_._c_.u .,..~:-.~m_;_;~-~"'"-~-·::. ::tu-,~-,=.~-:,.
I
II
is
Organization members meet throuRhout area
cur: b I n.,. IatIon . .
y
--
S~ates, a speaker lor the day; Phyllis Wright, vice
In Memoriam
f'r'F=~;;;;;;~·~·- ~-=-=·-=··#"f-;·-=-=-========~
lir==;;;;;;;:;;~;:==;rr~~~=s=::==§==-'S
.
,
ALL
ST
.
EEL
&
YOUNG
Helen help us
HOSTED - The Meigs County Humane So·
clety hosted the Consolidated Humane Organtza•
·Hons of Southestern Ohio Saturday with nine
~ountles being represented. Pictured from the
lett are Rita Lewis, secretary, a resident of Melp
County; Sandy Rowland ol _the Northeast Regional olflce of Ibe Humane Society ol the U nlted
The Daily
Ohio
'
Help Wanted
ment, W•rd'l Keybo1rd
446-4372.
\.
•
�Page 8
The Daily Sentinel
--
... . ·- ..... ..
.,...
------
;
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sole. choir, rooker. ot1oman. 3 ,.bloo. 11xtro h••vv
by Frontier), 1688. Safe,
oholr and loYiooo1, 12711 •
Sofu and cholra prtcodtrom
1286. to 1895 . Toblu, 1411
and up to 1126. Hid•·• ·
bodo, l440 .. ond up 10
16211 .. Rocllnero, 1175. 1o
1360., Lampo from 128. 10
176. 6 pc. dlnettoo from
199 .. to 1435. 7 pc .. 1189.
ond up. Wood lob.. with olx
chairo 1426. to $745 . Dook
1110 up to 12211. Hutcheo,
1660. ond.up, maple or pl~e
flnloh. B~nk bed complo1o
THREE bodroom houoo,
. t.ncod front & bock yordl,
81h 111Umabl~ loan, 30•·
875-8889 after 4 :30 p.m .
THREE bod rom houao. full
h18ement. well ln•ulated,
coal or wood fumace, alumi num aiding. new roof. 507
3rd. St . Now Hoven. Con·
tact G'enn Harrah. Parkera·
burg, 304-422-3117 .
ASSUMABLE 8'h percent
loan, paymen.ta 1276.00
month, 3 bedroom. garag~ .
fu II basement and fenc;ed in
with mattreaaea. *260. and
up to 1395.
•no.
bock yard . 304-676 -3030
or 304-676-3431 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS ,
RT 31. PHONE 446 ·7Z74.
~
bdr., already set up .on
ranted lot. Coli 814-2469619 otter 6 .
1980 Rodmn 14x70 4 bdr.
1326 down, $168 mo. Muat
have good credit . Call 614 388 -9778.
2 bdJ. gas heat. air cond.,
new carpet. clean . Y.z mile
from Hoopitol. Coli 614388 -9780.
1880 1 4x70 Buddy mobile
home, 2 bdr ., cantrl!ll air,
new hot water heater, wood
building Included. axe.
cond. CaU 446-9486 after
6.
1973 Trenton Mobile Home.
good cond. 16600. 2661696.
Windsor. 14x70 Coech with
7x22 oxpendo, throo bod ·
room, two full baths. full
ctrpetl, central air. under·
plnrwd, to181 ala:tric, covlfod patio, built In otero
1nd microwave, Ito rage
building, ice moklf, otorm
windows. 1nd more. Purchase with-wilhout furnl tu re. Soi ~P on ranted lot.
~!~~~~~~!~~~~~!~!~~~
41
Houses for Rent
2 bdr. unfur n. house, $175
per mo., sec. deposit re quired . Call 446-4303 .
House for 'r ent or aeltt.
Located in Syracul8. Oh. 3
bedroom with carport . onethird ,ere lot. 826, 000. Will
consider house trailetaSpart
payment. 304·762-8488 .
3 bedrooms.
unfumiahed
house. Call304-676-1887.
expando. 3 bedroqma, 11h
bo1hl, control air. 814-7423183 or 742-2728 .
HOME .
Mlddlopcrt-2 bedroom furnlohod upl1alro opt. 8160 .
plu1 deposit & utilities .
614-446-1788.
$100. dapooit. 304- 5769084 between 9 · t 2 or
evening 7-9 .
homes~ houses. Pt. Pleasant
ond GaHipolio.
8221 .
2 bdr. largo troilor portielly
fum ., 1 milo out of Golllpollo
of Rt . 688. Coli 814-2469170.
--------lc-
2 bedroom Mobile Home in
Racine. 8200. month.
1100. dap, You pay utill1ieo.
Kitchen stove 8& refrldgera-
4183.
76
8o.
<
•
Auto Parts
Acceuorles
- - - - - - - - .,
OPEL engine 8nd tranamle- ·~
lion, 304-676-1839, coli
oflor 4 :00p.m.
FURNISH EO oportment , Pt.
P.. ooant, utlll11oo paid, call
304-896-3460.
Furnished cottage, adults,
no peta. 304-676-1463 .
paid, adults preferred. 304676-4361 .
2' bedroom mobile home for
rant or ..1e In Middleport.
Unfurnished. Oepoait re-
45
Furnished Rooms
Sleeping room t1 16, utili·
tiea pd. single mala, share
Two bedroom, half fur·
nlohod, 1973 Holly Pork.
So1hg on 1 00x100 lot with
2 bedroom 12x60 In attractive country aet1i1 g ~ar
Coolvlle. City water. Free
gas. Washer &. dryer hoo·
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork, Routa 33, North of
kupo . 614-887-3838 .
992-7479 .
81uody Houoo, in Golllpolil
Forry. 114,000. Pho,. 304876-1335.
19n 14x70 Windoor. 2
bodroom unturniohod . 304676-8930 or 676-~ 348 .
ONE bedroom mobile home,
Pomerov. Large Iota. Call
1150.00 per month, phone
304-676-4,64.
TRAILER loti, 'h milo out
Sandhill, Rd. Call 304-676 3880 .
TWO bedroom mobile
home. 304-876-4046 .
Trailer space for rent. Sand
Hill Rd . Approx Y2 mila out.
304-675-2949 .
33 Farms for Sale
47 Wanted to Rent
fleldo, 146,000. Muot ooll,
"
'
C'APTAN EASY
79 Motors Homes
8o. Campers ·
I T'~ TIME- FOR FORCt.
WE''VE' &OTTO STOP THE'
MAYOR ~EFOitE IT'S
TOO LATE-!
I WANTED TO RUN FOR MAYOR
FOR THE &OOD OF THE PEOPlE,
AND ! INI"'D UP STARTING A
C IVIL WAR !
rNtoneble offer. 3 bdr.
home, new furnance .
county water new bath
carpeted, new alum . aiding
coal • wood burning stove.
Good barn & ather out
bldgl, garage . Located on
Apanment
for Rent
old 180 near Porter. Call
6, 4 -388-9060.
2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart·
I
'i~:~~
per mo. or if
207 acre farm. Langaville. 1'
0 $200
io 110,000 or lou
mineral rites included. no HUD available. A-OM Real
houoo 112,000 down wHI Estates. Carol Yeager, Real·
corry re11 . 614-388-9346 .
Acreage
'
Wanted: Tobacco poundage
for 1983 season . Call 2661336.
1 acre land. 8 miles from
ho1111itol on Rt. 160. 266 1596.
Loti for sale in Racine.
614-949-2340 or 814949-2671 .
Lot In r..el oroo. 76 ft.
tronlrlgo by 126 ft . .depth.
City water. 12,000. 81 4 ·
992·2066 .
8 acres land . Spring water,
MWtr, electric . On good
*8, 200 . 614 -992·
2603.
Open rolling pouurelond
or
tor. Call 304-676-5104 or
676-5386 or 875·7786.
Furniohad apt. 1 bdr .. 920
4th Ave. Gollipollo. AduHs.
$226 mo .. utilitiao paid . Call
446 -4416 aftor 7PM.
3 rm . and 4 rm . unfurnithed
apart menta. Utilities · paid.
no pats, no children . Call
446-3437 .
e15 pick up load . Coli
614-246-6804 :
56 Building Supplies ·
Building materials
block, brick, Mwer pipet.
windows, lintels, etc .
Claude Winter~, Rio Grande,
0 , Call 614-246-5121.
toro price on all building
materials. Delivery availabe.
Galllpollo Block Co ., 1 23'h
Pine St., Golllpolio, Oh 448.
2783 .
48
Equipment
for Rent
1 coffee table
471hx18Yzx151h itt and 1
end table 26x18Y2x2.01fz
with light walnut fi!'lilh 830,
also light walnut 7 drawer
draaser with large mirror
$56 . 32x63- 174 piece•
brown underpinning for 1
mobile home und just 1
year came oft 1 14x70
mobile home, long plecet
measure 32 " , ahort pieces
21" and 10 inches across.
enterlock in a metal frame.
wood grain finiah . Call after
&PM. 44:10-3066 .
New 1 983 White aewing
machine free arr11 model,
with built-in atraigtit stich,
zig zag. patterns, make
button holea. monograma,
much more. We are over
ltocked with thia model, we
must decraen our inventory. Factory 20 yr. guarantee. Reg. price over 1300,
clearance price onty 180.
56
Pets for Sale
HILLCREST
KENNEL
Boardi!'lg all breeds. AKC
Rag. Doberman• pups afd
Doberman Stud Service.
Call 446-7796 .
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow P.,P-
piet. CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kittens.
49
For Lease
Blue Healer puppy for tale.
160.00. Call 266-1335 .
For ••1-. or trade . Aegist~red
Bluetick Coon Hound. Call
614-992-2078 .
614-246-6863 .
crank-up comp0r. Coli 446 1662 attar 5.
Fepcing wire 10-4 7 20 rod
rolls 176, limited amount .
Jim's Farm Equipment. call
Call614-388-9031 or614388-8120 .
Used formala , 1 red size 20,
1 Navy & White aize 20, 1
coral pink size 14, 1 light
hardwood lumber. Custom
made furniture . We plane
lumber. Bidwell Country
Furniture. Bidwell, Oh .
8o.
Fruit
Vegetables
Bring forth therefore fruit
worthy of repentance.
Luke 3:8
Pototoeo U.S. No.1 , 16.00
100· lb . bog. 13.26 50- lb.
bog. 304-876-3762 or 4411·
8247.
59 For $ale or Trade
1976 Buick Electra 2 dr.,
PS, PB, AC, AM-FM 11oro
$1 ,860 or trade for cattle.
farm equipment of equal
value. Call 446-41137.
Mon:um Roofing & Spcutlng. 30 yoar11experlonco,
opociollzlng In built up rOof.
Coli 8t4-388-9867.
livestock
Roglotorod Ouonor Horoe
Broodmare Sorrel,
700
Block Angua buM, 2 yr. old,
Roglotarod. Call 814-2581411 .
Mora pony groon broke tot
hamou. friendly • g.,tle,
I 1 OQ. Coli 111 .t-388-981111.
- - - - - -. ·110900
Roglotorod Quarter Horoo.
Ruth RooVOI. Aloo groda.
Soddleo, brldloo, winter
Stud urvlca. Regle1orad
blonde Belgian Stillion.
Reoonablo ro111. 814-949 2465 .
IIHODE lolond Rod hono.
14.00 ·ooch . 304-1176 6477.
84
Hay
8o.
Grain
Round bolo• of hoy for llio.
Coli 448 -8118&, dollvory
ovolloblo.
Hoy for Hlo. Coil 614-211661118.
.
.
Good mixed hoy 11 .60 bola.
Colt 448-4699.
lo•dar-Mas11y Fergu1on 1
Bus hog in good ohapo &
older model lntern•tlonel
trector (needa work)
11,600. Call 446 -0866
doyo & 446-4267 evoi.
1852 Chevy 4 door. 1700.
Runs Hke new. Body very
houoo calli. Coli 6711·2398
or 446-24&4.
n.ooo.
78 Coupr XR7, 302 outo·
mode, o.c.. p.o., p.b .. rool
ahorp. 814-982-7406 .
HARTS Uood Caro. New
Haveil Wool Virginia . Ovor
20 Ius upenalve cars In
otook.
1974 260 Z Dotoun, runo
good, 31141-1178·2020.
t976 Comoro *1400. Sao
at 73 8urdello Addition,
304-8711-2884.
BUying hou•• and a pertmonll. Nood proportloo with
favorable price and terms.
1971 Camero. 304·11768844. ·
66 Seed
8t
Fenlllzer
bd.room Apt . Adults pre-
31 2
&..Gr.,do Blvd . 1300 per
mo .. no pota. Cell446·0122
lf1ar4PM.
..,.., , . . , . d houoo ....,r
lldWell. Cell 448-1831 ....
...... for appoln1mtn 1.
ferred . No pots. 61 ~992 ·
2749 .
Galllpollo-Downtown f\lr·
nlohld 1 bedroom 1p1. Cerpeted. elr cond. 1225. pluo
dop • U1AhH. 814-44111788.
1-----...,.---- -
Get your kll'pol In ohlp
ohopo. Water romoval, FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN :;:
STEAMER 814-4411-2107.
'
)oFITJ I
Removal . Munl-~ackho!t
$JI . hour, inaurH, free
82
..
...••••,..
mower
Honcho peck•ga, V-8, lift
brought y01.1
Gretchen? Come on~
some ca~e!
I know
y~u're
[ know you don't
l i ~e caramel frostinq
(i]) Great Railway Journeys
9:30 (]) MOVIE: 'Victory'
IJJ NCAA Basketball
Championship:
Preliminary Round - Game 2
(I) Ill GJ 9 to 5
9:45 (I) TBS Evening News
10:00 10 ill CZl 51. Elsewhere Dr .
but I ate that
part for 4ou!
1n
here!
Westphal's · morals come
into conflict with a cancer
patient and Dr . Fiscus steps
in as a replacement on a
conditioner, PTO ooodoro,
hoy & grain elovatoro, oil
kit, now tlroo, 13,200. Coli
448-0618 .
kinds of field ready equip·
ment. Howe's Farm M•chin·
n
71
Autos for Sale
Biezer 4x4 low mlklage,
Electrical
Refrigeration
Harts' purchase of a honeymoon bed entangles them in
I'M THINKING OF PUTTING
THESE DESIGNS INTO PRODUCTION,
NOW THAT VERA'S
NK?
BEEN MOVED UP.
THE'RE'S A SPOT
OPEN IN THIS
·"
'
DEPARTMeNT.
..
1979JoepCJII. Biue.8cyl ..
3 opood. 4 bomol corb .. com,
Hrvk:e . AuthoriMd Singer
,Pj •
Soleo & Borvlco 8horpen
•
Sclasorsr Fabric Shop.
Pomoroy~..,-2284 .
,1
PAIR
WHAT DO
,.
SEWING Mochlno r-lro, ' ..~ .
ti.... 13,800. 1114-99269n.
this documentary .
()) til ll}l Han 1o Hart The
STAN,
one o-"'· Cell448-0288.
header. dual exhauat, good
I
WONDER IF I DARE
APPlY FOR IT.
'
,•
,.
,• .
ELVINEY · -ASK LU!<EY IF
I CAN BORRY
TWO DOLLERS
heulod
Now hauling llmutone for
GO IN THAR AN'
ASK HIM \fORESELF,
SNUFFY
WE AIN'T ON
SPEAK IN' TERMS
''.
DEPENDABLE WASHER·
DRYER REPAIR. Guaran tood work . Coli onytlmo
81 4 · 2118-6620 or e1 4·
2118-1207.
Umeotone or fill dlr1. Dellvorod. Coli 6t4-882-3859.
' PEANUTS
I
87
'(OU THIS, CllMLES, BUT
PEPPERMINT PATTI{ IS
601N6 TO ASK YOU TO
I FEEl. I HAVE
HELP lolER 8ASEBALL TEAM
I
,.
SHOULDN'T BE TELI.IN6
Upholstery
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 183 Sac. Avo,. O.lllpollo.
448-7833 or 448-1833.
MOWREY& Upholotery Rt .
1 Box 124. Pt. Plunnt
304-878-4164.
'
·,
TO ...
'
SHE
TO
WANTS
ME
PITCH?
a art smuggling scheme . IRI
160 niin.l (Closed Captioned]
Don'1 Knoek 1he Rock
Ill INN News
10:30 II) Star Time
(J) Mirage
&lin Soerch of..,.
11 :00 10 (]) ()) IIJ ()) ®J Gl lUI
News
(])MOVIE: 'Final Conflict'
()) All In 1he family
CD News/Sports/Weather
(i]) MOVIE: 'Eivisl'
l!il Bonny Hill Show
. 11:30 II (I) CZl Tonight Show
(]) Screening Room
II) Ano1hor Ufe
IJJ E!'"N SportsCen1er
(!"' w1U !: 'The Great
ern
to prove a pollee officer innocent of killing a teenager.
drlvewoyo, top ooll for yordo
& till dirt. Coil 814 -367 ·
7101.
JIM8 WATER SERVICE.
CeH Jim Lonler. 304-676·
7387.
...
~~~by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
1 Barge
5 Outdated
10 Tropical
1 Impassive
2 - lily
3 Christie's
food plant
'(0U(f OPTIMISM
SHOULD
BE FRAMEP, CHARLES
IRJ (60 min.!
<RI All In tho Family
Ill G) Nightli""
Ill Madame's Place
12:00 (I)
MOVIE: . 'Funeral
Home'
II) Burn• & Allen ·
IJJ NCAA Basketball
PrelimiChampionohip:
nary Round - Game 3
(J) Nlgh111na
()) ® Sign Off
'(]D MOVIE: 'Kings Go
Forth'
D (jJ loo1 Word
• Gun1molce
12:30 D (I) (!)Late Night with
David Letterman
II) Jack Benny Show
Cl) loet Word
·
Ill ()) MOVIE: 'McMillan
& Wlfo: Aftershock'
12:45 (I) On Loi:atloio:
An
Evening Robin Williams
The famous comedian performs live at San Francisco ·s
Great American Music Hall .
1:00 (I) I Married Joan
D<lJNowa
,. I
I'
•
...
'•
. I,
Sign Off
•
<Il
J •1:30 ·Owmlgh1
<('
'
"
,,
murder
train
4 Go courting
5 U.S. naval
hero
6 Enunet
7 Mossback
8 Winding
(for whose
benefit? 1
9 Railroad
17 Packing
locomotive
plant
11 Stylish
19 Between
15 Simple
I Colo. and Mo. 18 Shade
20 Pastry
of blue
UBi!
Z2 Dream (Fr. )
23 Curse. ·
-'
'
21 Playwrigl)t
Connelly
22 Lettuce
'
.
variety
23 Wild
pig
24 Snap of
a fing er
25 - H aute
27 Itsy-bitsy
28 Free from
f aults
29 Dripping,
as dough
34 Mail in India
35 Poem
:u Cunning
' 25 Civil wrong
26 Mischiefmaker
27 Instructor
30Roman
household
god
!..vwA •••dssacre'
·
31
Be wrong
(I) Benny Hill Show
Iii ([) Quincy Quincy tries 32 Aust. bird
RAR NF.Y
General
oomothlng
..
. 11 Transported
12 Potpourri
date with Nurse Daniels . (60
13 Coupling
min.)
14 O'Neill play
(I) Five American Guns
The stories of five people
15 Spoil
who used guns are told -in
16 - bono
WIN NI F.
DEPENDABLE WASHER ·
DRYER REPAIR. Guoran1ood work. Call anytime
e14-268-6620 or 814·
218-1207.
..
..· .
development of Hitler's Se·
cret Police. its use and its ul·
timate destruction . (90 min .)
Dozer, backhoe, dump ·
8t
a ())
.. .
Plumbing
Heating
84
....
a ())
..•
&
0~
.
I
..
-
.
....
STARKS Troo Trimming &
tNclc. Wotk by hour or job.
Coil 446-7803.
1879 Honda 8110 1,000 mi.
Coll446-811113 .
a.-
Cl) Dr. Who
(i]) Over Easy
7:00 D (I) P.M . Magazine
.
IJJ NCAA Basketball · Answerhere: THAT'S THE(
Chemplonship:
Prelimi- ·
(Answers tomorrow) ... ·
nary Ro~nd - Game 1
Jumbles:
EAGLE
MOTIF
BEWARE
GE NDER
(J) Carol B~me~
Yesterday's
()) Entanainmimt Tonight ·
Answer: What the cattle rai se r did w11en he got a bum ·. ...
CD Charlie's Angola
steer-BEEFED ABOUT IT
.
• '
Tic Tac Dough
J~mble Book No. 20, containing 110 pUQ:Ie5, Is 111vallable lor $1 .95 P9ttpald
Cl) I1D MacNeil- Lehrer
from Jumble, clo this newapape~, Bo,;34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. lnct~de your
Repcrt
·
name, addrns, z ~:ode 1nd m1ke checks a abhl to News aperbooks.
Gll News
Ill GJ People's Court
fill Star Trek
7:30 D (I) Uo Detector
C1J NBA
Baoketball:
Atlanta at New York
()) 0 ()) Family Feud
.'
Cl) Business llepcrt
Oswald Jacoby And James Jacoby
@ You Asked For It
This Old House
01 (jJ Entertainment
•
Tonight
-' '
8:00 · 10(2) CDA Team The team
comeS face-to-face wi th
sure that North would know
some mountain-men who try
that he, South , only held four · .
to eliminate all outsid.e rs .
NORTH
3- 1~ · 83
spades. Alter that start the
160 min.I
+A3
bidding proceeded slowly to
ll)liiiOVIE: 'Nighthawks'
\PA97U
a rather sporting si x ..
Cil MOVIE: 'The Disapt K 10 8 7
diamonds.
pearance'
+AB
South won the diamond
II) I Spy
WEST
lead with his queen over
EAST
Cll Gl il}l Happy Days
East's nine. A second t r ump
+Ql0862
474
®l Ace Crawford
to dummy's king dropped
•
Q
10
8
6
(PREMIERE) A detective of
". 3
East's jack. Now South wa s
•• 3 2
tJ9
the trench coat school is ·de+Q 10 7
ready to go after hearts.
+K9432
termined not to be diverted
They went king, ace , ruff
from business at any cost.
SOUTH
with a six-spot, which was
Cl) ® Nova 'Tho Case of
+KJ 9o
high since the jack-nine of
the Bermuda Triangle: The
\P K J
trumps had dropped. Then it
mystery of the Bermuda
t AQ61
was back to the ace of
Triangle is examined . IRII60
+JS>
· - .1 .
spades and ruff another
min.! !Closed Caplionedl
Vulnerable : Both
heart with his ace, Then
til MOVIE: 'Wild and
back to the ace of clubs to
Dealer: North
Wooley'
pull West's last trump.
8:30 (I) til 11Z laverne & Shirley
West Nortb East
Then
South
cas hed
Carmine goes on national
Pass
dummy's
last
trump
and
television with a song and
'
Pass . 3t
Pass
. "fifth
heart.
The
kong
or
dance act. !Closed CapPass 4+
Pass
spades was his 12th trick.
tioned!
Pass
Pass
@Gun Shy (PIIEMIEREI A
" You're just too lucky "
Pass Pass Pass
good-natured gambler has
exploded West. " Would you
his life changed when he
have bid the slam with the
wins two children in a card
five instead of the six of
Opening lead: • 2 .
.game.
trumps? Wouldn' t lou have
9:00 10 C2J CD Bare Essence
gone down if I bel the jack
Sean agrees to go to work
or diamonds?"
for the Marshall's perfume
By Oswald Jaeoby
"Not too lucky," replied
company and Niko tries to
aod James Jaeoby
South . ''After all , the spade
convince lady Bobbi to
_
finesse was of! and · hearts
marry him. (60 min.)
South's two-diamond
didn't break 3-3. But I did
II)700 Club
· response to lhe one-heart play the hand pretty wen
IJJ ESPN's NCAA Tonight
'
opening is the correcl expert didn't I?"
(I)
Gl
11Z Three's
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
move. He wanted to make
Company .
®l MOVIE; ' Gone
with the Wind' Part 1
Cl) History of the S.S. To. ........
.
night's program looks at the
·.
.
304-89&-3802 .
Wo'll do it. Coil44 -3159 or
614-268-1967 ohor 6.
maple hutch with
glooo doora ond motchlg
dinette oat-with 8 chelra for
111211. Call efter 4 :30 1114992-11283.
Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gestod by tho abova cartoon.
4+
away or 1omethlng moved?
1400. Coli 448-0703.
liMP.
'"
Water Walls. Commercial
and Domeatic. Test holes.
Pumpa Salaa and Service.
Need
TV Ward ' s color. remote
co"trol. conaole. 6 mos . old,
IN iHE
...
· JONES BOYS WATER SEAVICE. Celllll14-367-7471
or &14-367-0681.
UMd wooho'* & dryero;
Kenmoro, 2 WhirlpOOl, 1
Moy1og wuhan. Phllco
coppenomo matched pair. 1
Kenmore dryer. 2 Whirlpool
dryers, 1 GE dryer. All
guoron1Hd 30 doyo. Call
614-266-1207.
IREGOFT
t
I I I J
'TAIL CSoO'T CAUISHT
........
....
RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
· noncod roofing, Including
hot· tor opplcotlon, cerpen- ,
1or, olec1rlclon, moeon. Cell •.
304 -876 , 2088 or 875 - '.
4580.
Lonnie Bog go Excavotlng .
Furnilhod opt., 2 bdr., 1176
m~ .. wotar paid, 2nd. floor,
131 4th Avo.. Gollipolio.
Coli 448-4418 eftor 7PM.
3 r. & both aportmon1,
ponlally tu mlohod. no pe11.
Land with Mobl.. Homo, . Call 448-3733 ovonlngo call
write to: P.O. Box 633. 448-0171 .
Oalllpolle. Oh 411831.
Flr11 floor furlnohod opt;
utiAIIOI pold, dopooh & leooo
requ ~od- AduiiJI, no polo.
Call ot 831 founh Avo .•
Golllpollo.
41 Houses for Rent
·Apt. for rant . Holt doublo-2
I
.....
romoval. Cell 675 -t331 .
711 CHEVY Luv truck, good
condition, 304-575-201111 .
1-=----------,_..
ary. Rt. 124. Mayhew Rd.
Jackaon , Dh call 614-286·
6944 .
.
ViAll COME
BACK, ANNIE.
j-,-------- -
For sole wheot drillo, com Wanted to leaN tobacco :;7;3=:V:a:n:a=&=4::W::.
plontora81Q& 14tt., whoel poundoge tor 1983. 614dioko, fertilizer sproodare. 266· 6534.
bolero, rotary mowaro, 1 2 & 1-:----:-::=:-:--::-::-::::-::-- _79 ford Bronco Rongor XLT,
3 bottom 3 pOint plowe. LEASE-OPTION TO BUY 3 oxc. cond.. prlco 111.1100.
frontloodar, BN Ford troctor bedroom houoo. For lnfor- Coll814-3&7-7238 .
largo hog leader lika now, motion coli 304-875-11888
9N Ford troctor. Farmoll H oflor 4:30 p.m.
1978 Jeep PU 4 whoel dr.,
tractor. , Matthew
ER . THAT WAG AWF'LY ROU(iH DON'T MAKE
TH' '1/AY Y TOLl/ TH'
JUO~MENTG
MI~ERG THEY'D PROB'LY
ABOOT MATTERS
LOSE THEIR JOBS B'CAUSE
YOU KM0\'1
0' FJ DO, "1/ilWY' ...
NOTHING Af\OUT!
,.u..,
274& or leave mes•ege.
Box '1109 Gollpollo, Oh .
45831 .
WHA'T iHE MOUSE
5AIP WHitN H/6
,.
ANN IF.
949-2602 .
:;;::::::;:=;:::::;::::::;;::;=
Good mixed hoy flr11 and 72
Trucks for Sale
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
oecond cutting, 11 .50 bole.
AND HEATING
Coli 614-992-7184 oftor 1882 Chovy Sllverodo.
Cor. Fourth and ~ne
6PM .
hoovy duty, hoH ton, omoll Phone 4411·3888 or 4411 ·
V-8, outo., PS, PB, pool· 4477
Good mixed hoy for Hie. 111
LW8, tilt, whooll,
cruloo, AC,
and 2nd culling. 11 .60 belo. m1e1,
AM-FM,
20 I :~i=~~;;~~==:
Cell 814-882-7164 altar 6 MPG. 41100 mll01. like now.
p.m .
Coli 117!·11739 ovonlngo.
1193 per month. Col 448·
ton. Col 614· 246-681 8 .
tJ
,.
F & K TrM Trimming, atump
86
· 2 bdr . apt. unfurn . except
refrig . & stove. large yard.
gard., spot, Main St ., Vln·
I DOUMI
I KJ
I JICTEN
(J I
Expert South a victor
Motorola , Qu11ar, and
1970 Volkowogo~. runo ·ol11motao, 304-1178-2010 .
good. In good condition.
Call 304-6711·7828 or 675- E & R Troo Sorvlco. fully
inaured. fre'e estlmatea .
8445.
Phone 814-367-08311. call
74 Mulling, 11ondord llhlft attar 5 .
1260. 304-896-3886.
HoUaing Opportunity' has
one bedroom apartments
rent starting et $157 per
month end two bedroom
apartment• rent starting at
446-4416 attar 7PM.
Unocrarnble lhese !our Jumbles,
onolettlfiO each oquare. to form
tour ordinary words.
BRIDGE
JACKSON ESTATES 'Equal
Gallipolis.. 8226. utilltiet
pd ., 1 bdr., adul.t s. Call
IJJ ESPN SpcnsCenter
Cil Gomer Pyle
()) Ill GJ ABC News
llJ ([) (jJ CBS News
byHenriArnold andBobLoo
ern
Carpent• work. Repeirw or
romodollng, coiMng dlo &
woll ponollng. lloooonoble
rl1oo. 814-992-27119 .
'foramen'• Uood Cora. For
looo oxponlivo cors. On S .II.
124 In longovllle, Oh. 111 4742-2734."
or boot offor. 814848-2372.
fiA'7 Ml:,t>.?LJ:;S.
oxp. Call 814-388-91162 .
RON'S Tolevlalon Servlco.
Speclollzlng In Zonlth ond
owner, tixCallent cond .,
III~ US PIIIlN(JPI
•
PAINTING - Interior ond
IX1arlor. plumbing, roofing,
ood cond. 814-887-8243,
uppora Plalno.
19118 Dodge Coronel. 4
door hord top. Orlglnol
W. ..
13,.\LL~... DR. IJ~I<
textured celllnga commer-
for 1983. Coli 814-246- For ule or 1rodo 1878
. Plymouth fury good cond.
6693.
Call 614-379-2726.
63
PART'/
cial ond reoldontlol, froa
111lmotao. Coli 814-2511- ·
1182.
1ome remodeling. 20 yrs.
1 878 Eldorado Codllloc fully
equipped. Take ov.r poymomo. 614-949-2816 .
'TH~
<;/!>.'{'; WII..BI:~
PLASTERING ·
for .... or 1rodo 1978
Plymouth Vololre good
cond. Call 614-379 -2728 .
Squro baloo of hoy. 61 4 -
wk. 366 with forko. Coli
1114-246-6804 .
STUCCO
COOL IT Wl'rn
Tobocqo poundage. Cell
448-3592 or 441-9n7.
Furniohod opt. 607 2nd ..
Real Estate
Wanted
Years'
~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORD GAME
I£J ~~ s
a ([)
Home
Improvements
l,older car. automatic. hlw
gat miiMge. Pleaae contect
441-481 II or-446· 3647.
booto. 1114-698-3290.
68
:::::r:::====· :
~====== ··
Tobocco pcundogo for 83,
will poy 20 COnti lb. Coil
614-2111-1145.
harte blankata . Weatern
Firewood split 8& cut to
lenght. Pick or delivered . We
honor HEAP Vouchers. Call
•
WANTED •
blue olzo 14. Coll446-2726 .
To loooo. tobocco poundage.
Coli 266-, 979.
Sale: Preuure treated fence
poot 12 .96 oa. Kiln dried
51 Household Goods
Very good condition. tm•l·
Coil 446-3844 oftor 4PM .
town cell collect. free deliv·
ary to your home.
ble, operate yourself. $90. uasoned, 826 pickup load .
~
62 Wanted to Buy
1974 Chevrolo11mpola, A-1
condition. air conditioning &
po-r brokee, Phone 44630n or 448-2026.
--..,--=---~--lc-
Call 814-386 -8918 out of
446-9777, 446-2.4 82 .
Backhoe andloadar diga s i - - - - - - - - - ft ., large bed pick up haul•· Firewood for sa~ . Split and
-r day. 304-896-3841 .
•so.
1889 Chevv N,ovo for ooia.
Cuh only, Moko on oHor.
Coll44&-7187.
16 II, John Deere dloc
14110., 10 ft. ')n1arnotlonol
fartlllzer ..,roodar
Hay
11 . 40 . 814 -985-3581.
Long Botiom, Oh.
Wanted tobacco poundage
'
weed land for farming in the 1976 Plymouth Volalre
Vinton. Will fertilize 8& lime. tionwagon & 1976 Ston:roft
Coil 6, 4-38.8 -9300 .
44
For sale lump coel & firewood. Zinn Coal Co., Inc.
. :---..lE;:V~ENI:llil:lNililG--
8 :00 D lll IIJ IIJ ()) Gl Gl GJ .
Ne.
Cil MOVIE: ' Heanland'
IIl Tic Tac Dough
1JJ ESPN's Sportafor~m
()) Andy Griffith
CD News/Sports/Weather
Cl) ill) 3-2-1, Contact
Ill Charlie' a Angels · .
8:30 0 (I) CZl NBC Newo
(I) MOVIE: ' The Atomic
Cafe'
II) MOVIE: 'The Tender
'illtlll.\.0 OO'il
~
e-;-9
I
form. Coli 448-2884 .
Clntury Producta infant .!Sa
toddler car aeat, new . Call
Pattui'a for rent. Located 1 Yz
mil as wast o1 Alfrod on So.
oide of C.R. 231 . Coil
collect. 1-51 3-886-2060.
64 Misc. Merchandise
Television
Viewing
Sentinei- Pa
I I
614-256-8246 .
Farms for Rent
Farm for sale 26 ecru
mostly level. good hay
7196.
Cut up slabs for firewood
on Rt.338 in Antiquity, Oh .
Phone 614-949-2424.
614 -
AM ste~eo tuner, Sanyo
atereo c·a llette deck, 2 Bose
301 apeaiCers, ell in excel ·
lent condition. 304-676 -
The Dail
3tt~a;
~~
:;;::::::;::::::;::==
lno ecc'op1ed . 703~942 3B71 Hickory Hill. Nuroory,
lit. 1 Box 390 A, flohitrovllle,
VA22939.
ottirao amp, JVC TV-3 FM·
675-8679 . Equal opportunIty housing.
46 Space for Rent
3 .bdrm. house at
.
.'
ment. Parts. englnea. Trade
JVC 40 wart per channel
Call 446-1408.
axtro nice. 1166. month .
$'1 00. dopooH . No Pe11.
614-992- 747~ .
...rs chain link fence end
1- - - - - - - - - -
come in this HUD aubsidized
•partment building . Twin
Rivera Tower, phone 304·
on ThomooRidgo Rood . Coli
304-87&·3280 and ook for
. Ron Hickmon.
36
INTeRESTED IN MY CAeE
• THAT IS, MY GHOST..
10 ft. elum. boo1 1180. ·~
304-1171-5762.
:::
TROYBILT IIOTOTILLERS
Dlooounta. Avoid April price
inc..ue. Froo Hiller Included . lmmodlete ohlp-
We are able to give contrac62 CB,TV, Radio
Equipment
Supply , 8-6 . 304-676 2218. 676-8753.
2 bel. room mobile home.
ri>o~ .
TO HAVE A FAMOUS AUTHOR
A PROSPeCTIVE '. CL..IENT-
14 fl. 1iumlnum booo boat, ~
- - · _live well, tuly , •,
WIIMICI. 11orogo. Call 448· '""
400 loc~ot t.n.,. pcl\1. At
Shade, Oh. Clydo 8mlth.
&14-698-1283 .
TO ALL CONTRACTORS-
614-446-
beth. 919 2nd Avo.. Gallipclio. Coli 446-4416 after
7PM .
home lll'ld 4& acres located
Hotpoint washer & dryer.
Small fumlohld opt. utilitleo
6 room mobile home for rent
·
both 8150. Call 446-4672 .
ONE bodroom oponmen1o
for the eldarly. All utilitioo
peid. 'Tenonto pay 30 percent of their adjusted in -
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
quired. No children.
992-3461 .
197& TWO bedroom mobile
6pm, Sat.
446-0322
2 bedroom home fumiahed,
located below Hitching Poat UNFURNISHED apartment
on St. 'At. 2 . You pay for rent, 1 bedroom.
Utilities . 8160 . per month, I 180.00 Call Automotive
614-367-0288.
8o.
r THINK MR. T1'tACY WIL..L..
up to $376 . lloby motroneo,
126 ranges,
& $36,$326
bed
Gas or electric
fromoo 120, 826, & 130,
king frame 150. Good ooloction of bedroom oultoo.
cedar chooto. rockoro, metal
cabinets. awivel rockers.
UMd Furniture •· bookcaae.
rangea. chairs. lind tables,
washers. dryers, ·refrigera·
tor• and . TV's. 3 miles out
Bula.ville Rd. Open 9am to
6pm, M·on. thru Fri., 9am to
3 ro omo with bet h. Furnished . UtiiHioo paid. 366 N.
4th St. !\lliddloport, Oh.
APARTMENTS , mobile
246-9229 oflor 6 :30.
fico 1980 14x70 wRh 7x21
Apanment
for Rent
614-446-0382.
tor turn ., rel't unfumiahad.
Being transferred. WiiiMcri·
44
3 bedroom houae, all elect· 1 bedroom furnished apt .
ric, recently remodeled, ex· 61 4 -g92-6434.
cellent location in Point 1 - - - - - - - -- Pieasant. $300 per month Apartma ·n to . 304 -676 plus eecurity deposit, Phone 6648.
app. 1''h mila frOm Rodney
on · Rodney-Cora Rd. Must
..,. to appreciate. Gall 614·
36 Lots
MS. QUEEN1 ITIS AN HONOR
gun · G1-1n cabinets, $360.,
dinette chairs $20. and $26.
1974 Ariin gton 12x80 2
. USED MOBILE
6711-2711.
Mattresaea or box
2'11U MoDedo . Lito n -.
Uood very little. UIO for
One or 1400. for ·both.
P,.for to ooll both. Muot ooll
duo to molrlng . Coli 614 ·
1149-2180.
Middleport, Ohio
1983
DI CK 'i'RAC'Y
71
Iotta and
, Motora for lela
oprlngo, full or twin. 068 ..
firm. 188 . and $78. Quaon
sets. $196. 4 dr. chests,
$42 . 6 dr. chilli, 164. Bod
framao, 820.ond 826 ., 10
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 448 -7672 .
Baby bode.
Tuesday, March 15,
March
111 Hou. .hold Qooda
They'll Do It Every Time
31 Hoinee for Sale
..
'
Ohio
-
NBC
Cl) My lillie Mort~ie
News
33German
artsongs
35 Portent
..,.
36Demented
37 Actor James
38 Annoying
39 Nelson
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it::. : .:
AX~DLBAAXR
-
lo L 0 N G F E L ' L 0 W
~
....
· •·I'
Ooe letter aimplr. s,.nds for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters '"'•'
apootrophes, the len~th and formation of the words are aii· · •
hints. Eorh day the eode letters are different.
""''
..
CllYPToQUOTES
XNU
WXPY
BZY
AK
, JSYV
AVDYPYKDYU
AV
CXQ ' PY
~
,_
.
._ • I '
GYVKAXV
. •,
DSBV GBKKAXV . - KXQPOY VXD FVXJV .,
Yes~nllly's Cryptequote: THE BEST PART OF THE FICflON" ·'
IN MANY NOVELS IS THE NOTICE THAT THE .. ,.
CHARACTERS ARE ALL PURELY IMAGINARY • .· ..-
- FRANKLIN P. ADAMS
. ,-
.. ...-
�Pag~ lQ..-The Daily Sentinef
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Controlling board
helps treasurer
... -\Jl
70
Feb. 71
Judge says records are public
LOGAN, Ohio (AP ) -A Hocking
County Common Pleas judge has
ruled that records compiled by the
county coroner in the slayings last
fall of two teen-agers are publ!c
records.
However , Judge .James Stillwell
on Monday postponed ordering the
records to made available to
Dayton Newspapers Inc., pending
consldera Uon of a motion by
Hocking County Assistant Prosecutor Frederick E. Moog.
Mong contended that to divulge
the records, including autopsy
reports, would h.lnder the investigation of the double homicide.
Un Oct.· 14, the torsos of Todd
Schultz. 19, and his fiancee, Annette
Jolmston, 18, were found snagged in
.. underbrush in the Hocking River.
not far from downtown Logan.
Two days later, other parts of
their bodies were found buried In
shallow graves scattered through a
cornfield near the river.
Dayton Newspapers said the
coroner, Dr. John E. Rauch, has a
statutory obligation under Ohio law
to co.mpile records and make them
publ!c.
Rauch has refused to allow the
newspapers a~ to them.
The newspapers asked the judge
to order the coroner to release the
records.
After agreeing with Tom Pyper,
the attohley for the newspapers,
that the records are public, the
judge scheduled a conference on the
newest motion lor Aprll 4 and set a
hearing on the matter for Aprll6.
Jan.
.' Apr.
Patricia F. Kitchen. Middleport.,
filed suit for divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
against Edward Kitchen, no address recorded.
Charles H. Hudson
Charles H. Hudson, 58, Middleport,
died yesterday at his
residence.
He was born Dec, 4, 1924, In
Syracuse, to Dewey w. and CaSsie
J. Adams.Hudson,of Middleport.
• He was a Sexton at the Beech
Grove Cemetery and the VIllage ot
Pomeroy. He belonged to the F .O.P.
of POmeroy.
· Surviving are four sisters, Mrs.
Guy (Marie) Bush, of Ponieroy,
Mrs. Sherman (Margaretj Williams, of Chester, W.Va., Mrs.
Kenneth (Donna• Eblln,of_Rutland.
77~~~~:'\.
79~~~~,.~
Jan . ao~~~~~~~~~
Nov.
'OPEC CUTS PRICES- The steady rise and abrupt decline In
the price charged by the Organization of Petroleum ExportiDI!:
Countries lor a 42-gallon barrel ol34-deuee Saudlllght crude oU
from August 1970 to March 14, 1983 Is charted above. Thee 13
members of the oil cartel aueed Monday to their first ever price
reduction, setting a $29 per-barrel benchmark for their product.
( AP Laserphoto)
New OPEC agreement won't
guarantee lower pump prices .
NEW YQRK (AP) - OPEC's
first-ever price cut does not guarantee further reductions in what
consumers pay for gasoline and
home heating oil - retail prices
might even climb a few cents,
industry analysts say.
Barring a .collapse of the cartel's
agreement on crude oll prices and
production, prices at the gasoline
pump will stabilize, the analysts
said. Some said the bulk of the price
reductions for petroleum products
may already have occulTed.
·
The Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries announced
agreement among its 13 member
nations Monday to reduce its
benchmark price for crude oil to$29
a ban1"1 from $34 and limit
production to 17.5 million barrels a
( c= )( (
day.
But with world oil prtces on the
spot market at about $28 a barrel,
analysts said OPEC was merely
recognizing that Its posted prices
had been unrealistic.
Charles Cahn, an analyst at the
Investment firm of Sanford C.
Bernstein & Co. said that If the price
and production agreement holds,
prices for petroleum products
should stablllze and then might
climb 2 cents to 3 cents a gailon
monthly for two or three months
late this spring.
William Randol, an oil industry
analyst at First Boston Corp., an
Investment firm, said OPEC's
decision would not have much oi: an
Impact on prices for petroleum
products.
)c--c:= )( (
)
OUT OF WORK?
1/
TRAIN FOR SOMETHING SECURE
If You've Been Laid OH or If You're
Unhappy in a Deadenct_Job .
GAWPOUS
BUSINESS COLLEGE
Alumni game set
Meet this evening
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
sponsor ail alumni basketbail game
Saturday, March 19. There will be
competition between men over 00
years of age and men under 30.
There will also be a girls.game if
enough Interest Is shown.
Cheerleaders · must be former
cheerleaders tram Middleport,
Pomeroy and Rutland.
Those tntersted In participatingin
the basketball games are to contact
Gene Wise, Middleport, and those
Interested In beingcheerleadersare
to Contact Gall Hovatter.
Admission to the event Is $2 for
adults and $1 for students.
· The Meigs Athletic Boosters wlU
meet thlsevenlngat7:00p.m.atthe
high school.
MaJTiage licenses
Two marriage licenses were
Issued in Meigs County Probate
Court.
Licenses were issued to De~ry
Dale Bryan, 25, Cheshire, and
Sheila Kay Wines, 16, .---Rt. 1,
Cheshire; Charles Thomas Chatr
man, Jr., 19, Rt. 1, Racine, and
Tammy Kay Smith, 19, Racine.
Court actions filed
Two suits for money were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by First Family Mortgage Corp., of
Florida, Lisle, Ill.
·
.One was .In the amount of
$27,276.31 against Jewell L. Matthews, Racine and Catherine J .
Matthews, Racine, and the other In
the amount of $ll,438.76 against
Douglas G. Allen, Pomeroy, and
Pamela K. Allen,' Pomeroy, and
City Loan and Savings Co.,
Pomeroy.
A foreclosure suit was filed by
Guy Howard Shuler .and Mary
Margaret Shuler. Rt. 2. Racine.
agalns John L. -Douglas, Rt: 1.
Guysville, eta!.
According to another entry the
grand jury wtll convene on March
17, at9a.m.
..,__
Other survivors
Henry L. C\mnlngham, 86, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, who died Sunday In
addition to other sunrlvors, is
survived by two great great
grandaughters.
Emergency runs
Four emergency c.llls and one
fire call were answered by units of
the Melg County Emergency Medical Service Monday. ·
At·7: 43 the MiddlepOrt unitwerit to
the Rutland Street reslckmce of
Charles Hudson who was aead on
arrival; at 3:00p.m. the Middleport
unit responded to a call atDr.Jmes
Conde's office for Wllllarn Clonch
who was !a ken to the Hoi2Jer Medlcal
Center; at 4: 50 the Middleport
firemen answered a call to North
Second Ave. toextingu!shacarflre;
at 5:03 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
transported Gladys Cuckler from
the Pomeroy Health Care Centl!f to
Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at
8:01 p.m . .the Pomeroy unit took
Jack Stivers from cOndor Street to
Veterans Memorial.
SALE
ENDS
SAT.,
MAR. 19
~--- :
w. l. ".J
Honor
'
.
Thursday m~ting
The Rock Sprtngs Better Health
Club will meet Thursday at 1:15
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Lottie
Leonard. Judy Humphrey wtll bave
the program, and Nancy Grueser,
the contest.
Veterans Memorial
Admitted: Homer Graham, Racine; Jack Stivers, Pomeroy;
Kathryn Philson. Racine.
Discharged: Lois Cornell, Don
Meeks, Betty Monson, William
Hart, 1rls Roush, Nellie Groce, and
Cuba Little.
N£'11
FR£SII scENT
$-
CLASSES AVAILABLE
REGISTER NOW FOR
SPRING QUARTER
FINANCIAL AID STILL AVAILABLE
CAUNOW .
446-4367
GAWPOUS
BUSINESS COLLEGE
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MOTOR
The Complete
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IHo•nlo CtWnlng Syii1iiiiii
10 - Tho-In
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Price
1.93
K marf!' Aluminum Foil lO·Ib.' Cat Litter
Pkg. Of 3 Creme Eggs Lux®lath Soap lar
Milk chocolate with Both-size beauty Versatile for home and With natural ground
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Be sure to see all the other styl~s Van Heusen kntt shirts plus our
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$30.00 Tools
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-
and Mrs. Junior (Laura) Auther:
son, of Coolville; five brothers.
George Hudson, o!Rutland, Denver
Hudson, of Norton, Ohlo, Bernard
Hudson, of Pomeroy, Lewis Hud,
son, of Racine, and Sonny Hudson,
of Middleport; and several nieceS
and Jle(lhews.
' Fimeral ' services wlU be ad
Wednesday at 3 ' p.m. at the'
Foglesong Funeral Home In Mason.
w;th the Rev. ~lW!seotfic!atlng.
Burial · will !le In the Graham
Cemetery,
Friends may .call today at the
funeral home from~ o.m. and 7-9'
p.m.
•
Meigs Coun_ty happenir;r-gs
SO~~~~~~~~~~
··. ·act. a1~~~~w~~~~~
Due to a warmer-than-usual customers can realize immediate
winter and a resulting reduction In . benefits."
gas used, Columbia Gas of Ohio
Koebel said that while most
budget customers are having their
customers will receive reductions in
monthly payments reduced.
their budgets, some will Increase
The reduction runs for the
remaining five months of the because gas usage from year-toyear is dependent on factors such as
budget-year plan.
"We know that many customers weather, number of people living In
are having difficulty paying their a house, ' ~ange In thermostat
b!lls, even though this winter has setting or addition of gas
been the warmest we have ever appliances.
recorded," said John M. "Jake"
The budget plan runs annually
Koebel, Columbia's office manager
from
August through July of the
for Gallia and Meigs counties. "So
following
year,. with payments
we are taking this unusual step of
reducing payments now, so our divided evenly over 12 months. New
budget-year amounts for 1983-84
wlll be set next August.
Since future-year budget payments are based in part on weather
expectations, customers now receiving a reduction might see their
new payments increase more than
usual in August, Koebel said.
ea deaths
0
·June 79~~~~~~""~o...
Nov . 79~~~~~~~~
Budget customers will benefit
Seek divorce
....
4lt
Aug.
Mauger said the · office was
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Controlling Board has dipped Into processing $:lJ million to~ mllllon
its emergency fund for $230,783 to . on peak 'ctays.
He held out the prospect of
help the treasurer's office.
Dep uty Treasurer Charles reducing operating costs.
Majority Democrats on the board
Mauger said Monday the money
will be used to' meet payrolls for the
OK'd the request on a 5-2 vote.
rest ol this fiscal year, which ends
In other action, controllers:
-Released $161 million In subsiJune30.
"They ha ve been in a shortfall dies to school districts for March, an
since July last year and it's just been amount which reflects cuts ordered
a continuation," · Mauger said. by the governor to help balance the
·'When they started that fiscal year bud!:\?\- By comparison, January
they were running into budget subsidies were $192 million.
- Approved Racing Commission
problems at that time.··
ln addition. some new equipment plans to spend $111,870 to hire five
purchased to help process tax veterinarians for Ohio's seven
commercial racetracks during the
revenue is not operating properly.
"It is onlyopera tlngat3percent of 19&3 season.
· -OK'd, despite reservations
efficiency. They've had problems
reading the sa les tax codes," about the $417,000 cost, Mental
Health Department plans to buy a
Mauger sa id.
Se n. Stanley Aronoff, · R- half dozen parcels of land In
Cincinnati, said controllers pumped Cleveland as a site for the Northeast
an extra $3>2,00) into the·office last Regional Forensic Unit.
- Approved Commission on Agyear before current Treasurer
Mary Ellen Withrow, elec ted In Ing plans to contract with the
Community Health and Nursing
November. took office.
"The treasurer's office came in Service to provide two meals per
on two separate occasions in order day throughout the year to residents
to beef up whatE'ver they.needed by of Worley Terrace in Columbus.
- Released an additional $228,116
way of pen;onnel and eqUipment to
through
the Mental Health Departefficiently process the taxes,"
Aronoff sa id. "With that the ment to Community Mental Health
treasurer's office indicated it would Center West, Toledo, for a residenbe able to do its job thoroughly and tial facility serving 18 people.
efficiently. The request today asked
-OK'd mental health plans to
for more money to do the same spend $.ll9,183 for renovation of the
geriatric bu!ldlng at Massillon State
things that they asked before."
Hospital.
Aronoff said the treasurer's office
-Agreed to pay a Texas comwas exempt from the Ia test pany $25,000 to repair or replace a
spending cuts Imposed on other ' compressor on a Division of
agencies by Gov. Richard Celeste.
Reclamation helicopter.
Tuntkly, Marth 15, 1913
list:
$159.95
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Spray Paint Or Primer Cellophane Tape
Gray primer or black All-purpose tope In
or White paint. 13 oz.· Y.x1500" roll. Save.
"Net wt.
�
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03. March
Text
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Dublin Core
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March 15, 1983
hudson