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Inside today"s Sentinel...
Ponwray',~ .Amy Sisson
honored ... Page 6
Southern's Zane Beegle Second
Team All-Ohio... Page 3
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Are~ deat~ ......................... t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... .-. . . . . . . .. . . . . . , ••• ~age 14
· Classified ads ...... .. ............ ................................ Pages 10-ll-12
Comles-TV ................................................................. Page 13
Editorial ..................................................................... Page 2
Sports ............ ............... ...................................... .. Pages 3-4-5
Society .............. , ................. .... .......... ;, .... ..... .. ..... Pages 6-7-s-9
e
Vol .31 ,No.228
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at y
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enttne
2 Sections, 14 Pages
20 Cents
A Multim edia Inc. Newspaper
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 23, 1983
Copyrighted l983
Consumer costs
,d rop 0.2 percent
c::::=- ........
The Saving Place®
Our firm intilntion is to haW! ~ ~·
tised ilem in stock on our lhe!Vel. H .,
ldYertised item is not avaMble tor pur·
chase due to any unto•ese.n 1eal0fl.
..: mart will issue a Rain Chac:k on requn1
fOI' tne mercharldiae (one item or rUIOf'lo
~ lamily quantity} to be~ atlhe
sMi price ~ IIVllllable Of will arel
)0'1 a comparable quality ilem .t a~
rable reduciion in price.
the last 12 months. Economists.
however, expect those prices to pick
up somewhat later this year. partly
as a result of the heavy farmer
partic ipation in the Reagan admin istrat ion's new Payment in Kind
program lo trim price-depressing
crop surpluses.
Analysts also say the heavy rains
on the West Co.ast may have
darnagedC•Iifornia fruit and veget able crops so severely that prices
will rise furt her. Las! month .
however. those prices tumbled
sharply.
Food prices had risen 0.1 percent
in .January afterbel ng unchanged in
both November and December.
Last month. fruit and vegetable
prices fell 1 percent. Prices for
meat. poultry. fish and eggs rose a
slight 0.1 percent, as did prices for
dairy products. Cereal and bakery
goods prices rose 0.3 percent while
restaurant meal prices were un·
changed and prices for a lcoholic
beverages rose 0.5 percent .
For the last 12 months, consumer
prices overall have risen 35
perccnt.
$29.
If last month' s 0.2 percent decli ne
Today·s r<'port sa id that gasoline held s teady for 12 stra ight months.
prices, as of last morith, were 16.6 · the -yearly drop would be 2.4
percent below their peak level .of percent. The annual rate repcrted
March 1981. Last month' s record by the department is based on a
drop came after a 3..1 percent more pl'ecise ca lcu Ia t ion of monthly
decline ln ,January and a 0.8 percent prices than the figure the departfall in December.
mmt makes public.
Food prices, unchanged last
Consumer prices rose 0.2 percent
month, haverisenonly0.8 percent in in January. fell 0.3 percent in
By SALLY JACOBSEN
A..wlciated Press Writer
WASHINGTON i APl -Record
declinE'S in gasoline a nd fuel oil
prices sent consumer prices turn·
bling 0.2 percent last month. the
government said today. It was only
the second time since 1965 that
cons umers' costs hav<' . ac tually
fallen.
Gasoline prices plummeted 6.7
percent: over the l•st four months
they hav<'.fa llen 10.8 percent . F uel
oil prices !ell4.7 percent.
The costs of food a nd housing
were unchanged. Medical care
expenses soared 0.8 percent .
Today's . repcrt from the Labor
Department - following three
months oflittle or no gain- boosted
('('(]nomists' predict ions I hat the
Consumer Price lndf:x for all of 191'0
may match las t year's 3.9 percent,
the smallest rl-;e in a decade.
As for gasoline and home hea ting
oU. economists say they expect even
!unher declines in the coming
months as a result of OPEG's
decision last week to slash its baw
price for crude oil by $5 a barrel. to
December and wNf' uncha nged in
November.
The February and December
declines were the only two recorded
since the 0.1 percent drop of August
1%1
The department reported these
other details . of last month's
consumer price activity:
-Natural gas prices, rose 0.2
percent, after rising 1.7 percent in
January. Analysts generally attritr
ute this winter's higher gas prices to
congressional decontrol of new-gas
costs.
-ThE' plummeting gasoline pri·
ces forced overa ll transportation
costs down 1.6 percent for their
fourth s traight monthly decline.
Automobile finance charges !ell 2.7
percent for the si'Venth such
monthly fall in a row. New car
prices were up 0.9 percent and used
car prices rose 0.8 perc~nt.
-The 0.8 percent increase in
medica l care costs ma tched the
increases .of the two pr~v iou s
months. Charges for physicfans
jumped 1 percent and hospita l room
fees soared 1.6 percent.
-Homeow ners' costs were up0.2
percent and renters' cost s c·limbed
0..1 percent.
-C lothing costs ros<' 0.5 percent.
reflecting anmd to winter sales and
the int reduct ion of s pring styles.
-Entertainment costs climbed
0.4 percent.
All the· changes arc' a djusted fot·
normal seasonal variations.
C&SOE move reduces rates
COLUMBUS, · Ohio !API - Col umbus and
SouthPrn Ohio Electric Co. stopped collecting
construction cost s today for the Zimmer nuclear
pcwer plant . a move that wlll reduce the average
customer's bill by S1 to $2.
The Public UtilitiPS Commi ss ion of Ohio ordered
the company to remove th!' customer charges for the
plant bein11; buill on the Ohio River near Moscow.
Ohio. On Monday. th0 company film information
with lh<' PUCO to comply with the orders.
Still pending with PlJCO is a decision on whether to
require Columbus and Southern to refund $.1.7mllllon
already collected since last November on Zimmer
construction cost s.
Columbus a nd Southern spokPSman Marshall
.Juli~n said PUCO approval of the rates will mean
cost reductions to customers of from $U1 for
customers on a .;small use" rate and consuming ~
kilowatt hours to $1. 7R for custom<'rs on standard rate
who use 1,200 kilowatt hours.
. Customers using more than 1.200 kilowatt hours
per month would receivE' a few cents in additional
price breaks, Julien sa id.
Collecting construction costs of the Zimmer plant
was halted because of Nuclear Regulatory Cornmis·
sian act ion in November that stopped a ll sa fetyrelated construction at the site.
From 1979 to 1982. Columbus a nd Southern
customers paid about$$ million toward costs of the
Zimmer plant. Total cost of the generating plant is
estimat ed at $1.7 billion.
It is a joint proj<'Ct of Columbus and Southern,
Cincinna ti Gas & Electric Co., and Day1on Power a nd
Light Co .
Cincinnati Gas & Electric is supervising the
construction.
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F1LES PETITION - Da Juanita Ruschel, left,
22, Ebenezer Street, Pomeroy, Is making her first
appearance on the Pomeroy political scene. Ruschel,
a &lpuhUcan, fUed her petition Tuesday morning for
a seat on Pomeroy CouncU. Rusche! Is employed at
Holzer Clinic Ltd., Middleport, and Is a 1978 graduate
•
Future projects county topic
Propc,;ect future projects were
discussed during the regular meet·
ing of the Meigs County Cornmis.
sioners Thesday.
Meeting with the board were
Char les Blakeslee. director of the
Meigs County Planning Cornmis·
sian and Herbert Shields. a member
of the cOmmission.
Projects such as recreation.
corridor route to th<' n!'w Ravens·
wood Bridge and indus! rial develop·
ment were discussed.
James .J . .Jennings of .Jennings
and Associates. Columbus. who is
present!~ · consultant for tl)e board
of commissioners and the planning
commission. will me<'t with the
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24.97~~~8 9.97~~ee
7.970ur
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12.47
· 1.97~~;
Truck Seat Cover
Gal. lody Filler
7MM Plug Wire Set
Auto Undercoating
Bucket or bench in
assorted colors.
Filler In easy
handling formula.
Sizes for many
U.S. cars, lt. trucks.
Helps prevent rust,
deaden sound. 20oz.•
•Netwt.
commissioner s at th<' nexl meeting
advertise !'or bids for hospital,
to discuss what the priorities are for , sut:gica l and major medical insu·
'the county.
raneE' for county employes with bids
to be opened April26, at 2 p.m.
Due to numerous obj<'Ct ions the
- Cranted permission to Colurn·
commissioners received in issuing
bia Cas Transmission Corp. to
a carry·out license to Charles
inst all a six inch gas pipe line under
Calaway. dba, Circle C. Driv!'Thr'\1,
Thppcrs Plains and Charlene Doczi.
and across county roads 31 and 35 in
dba. Pick a'nd Shovel. Salem
Lebanon Township.
- Approved the bond of William
Center. the commissioners will fill'
Wickline as Meigs County Auditor
their objections to the issuanc0 of
for the term of March 14, 19&3
both permits with the Liquor
Control Board and request that
through March 14. 1987.
-,-Agreed to an advance draw of
hearings on bnth be held in M!'igs
$30.000 from rhe April tax settle-·
County.
rnent for theopcration of the men tal
In other matt ~rs. the board:
retardation school.
-Agreecj to authorize the clerk to
Columbus firm . gets roof bid
The Eastc•rn LocaiSchooiDlstrict
Board of Educalion awarded a
contract to Modern Protective
Co<Jting, Columbus. for tota l roof
repair to all four buildings in the
district during its regular m0eting
Thesday night.
The bid was $43.000, with work to
begin on the extensive imprOW'·
ments this summer.
Th(• board studied bids on
insura nce for buildings with an
ilCceptance to bemadeonAprill9.lt
was agr('('(l to seck applicanl s for a ·
junior and senior high vocal music
teacher for next year and thP board
entered into an agreement with the
Meigs Cou nty Board of Mental
Break ground for
With a symbolic turning of earth
and a few brief comments-mainly
about thl' frosty weather- Holzer
Medical Cenler officials broke
ground Tuesday for construction of
a building · to · house computed
tomography full-body scanner.
Construction began a few weeks
ago when a crew from Karr
Construction. Chester. started work
in the " moat" area below the main
entrance walkway to the hospit•l.
The building, expected to be
complet e by mid-November. will be
a 3.600-square foot, one-story addi·
of Meigs High School. She is the daughter of Mr. and
·Mrs. Allred Rusche!, Pomeroy. She stated "I'm
interested in doing something worthwhlle lor the
village of Pomeroy." On right is Frances Thomas,
director of the Meigs County Board of Electons.
Retardation on students at tbe
Ca rleton SchooL
Added to the subs! itutc teacher
list werE' Donald Dudding and
Valerie Hanstine and Carl Barrin·
ger wa' namro a substitute bus
driver . Karen Smith was named a
substitute school secretary.
Th!' board accepted thl' res igna·
lion of Susan Thompson as girls'
track coach and purchased a
scaffolding set from the Fick
Construction Co, Pla ns wereJ:!ladc
to berepreseilted at the Ohio School
Boards Assn. springconfer!'nce and
la give $1'10 in matching funds to thC'
PTO at 1\Jpnrors Plains for the
rpurchase of a wa ter cooler at th!'
Tuppers Plains SchooL
A discussion was hl'ld on the
employment of a Mar ietta architec·
lura! firm to recommend improvement s to the buildings but the
malt!'r was tabled at this time. The
board talked about the state budget
as proposed at this time by Gov.
Richard Celest!' a nd <'Xpressro
how that sp<'Cifics of the budget will
he firm by May L
The board adjourned into cxecu·
live session to discuss personneL ·
Attending th!' meeting were Supt.
Richard Roberts. 'J)·pasurer Eloise
Boston and board members. William Buckley. .Jimmy Ca ldwell,
Bernard Shrivers. Roger Gaul and
DOrscl Larkins.
n~w. Holzer project
tlon to the main building. A hospit al
spckesman sa id it 's being built of
sandblasied concrete to match
HMC's exterior, and will be
att.ached to the existing rad iolOgy
department on ·· the· building's
ground level.
Thespckesmansaidexpanslonof
radiology facilities will allow ultrasound. nuclear medicine and CT
scanner to be adjacent to eaCh other
and keep all radiology functions
together in one location.
Design engineering was done by
the Cincinnati iirm of Bosch &
LaTour, P.A., the spckesma n said.
The firm 's president , Robert W.
LaTour,. participated in the ccrcm·
any, as was Louis R Ford .Jr,
c haitman of Holzer Hospital Faun
dation board 0! tnistees: Mcn:ill L.
Evans, building and grounds com·
rnittee chairman: Hugh P. Kir·kel.
HMC president; Dr. Char IPS E.
Holzer .Jr.. medtcal·staff prestdent;
and Dr. Saiq:l Hojat, radiology
department chairma n.
Initial planning for th<' scanner
began in late 1900, when maJOr
scanner manufacturers were tn·
vited Jo HMC to provi(lc staff with
in format ion. Medi ca I staff
members visited othN hospitals to
observe CT scanners in operation.
TheCTscannPrselcctedforHMC
produces cross-SI2('tional i~g~9f
any region ofth0 bod)•: · ..
·· ·
A cc rtificat~ or n('('(l for the
project was awarded to HMC in
August 19R2. Planning for construelion a nd purchose of the scanner has
been underway since. Th<' spckesman sa id insta llation ofth!'sc•nner
will eliminat!' nC'cd for loca l peopiC'
to travel to a noth er hospita l to usc-a
scanner.
Twenty take part in
enrichment programs
,.
. BREAKING GROUND - Rober Medleal Center official~ 1111 intO
eliHh tr"'"'IIY on lhe slle of lhe bulldin1 deslped to hou8e a new
oompuled lornop-aphy full.body scanner. Wielding shovels are, from
left, Roberi W. LaTour,l.oulrl R. Ford Jr., MeniD L. Evans, Dr. Saled
Jlojat, Hugh Klrkel and Dr. Charles Holzer Jr.
'·
By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel Stall
While programs for the talented
and gifted stu<jents are not running
wild in Meigs County, some action
Is taking place.
Programs of eiU"Ichment are
reCommended for the talented and
gifted and through the efforts of
Jolm Costanza, a county school
supervisor, 20 such students from
eleprentary schools across Meigs
County this winter have participated In The Young Experimental
Scientist Program conducted
through the Columbus Ce~ter of
Science and Industry.
In January, BUI Schmitt, education director of the Columbus
Center of Science and Industry,
known as COS!, was in touch with
Costanzo about t)'j:, program.
Costanzo was given two delegations Including one teacher and five
students each with the stipulation
that the students had to come from
separate school districts as did
each teacher for the two delega·
!Ions. Costanzo was not satisfied
with the Meigs County allotment
feeling that all districts of the
coUilty should bE' involved. He .
contacted Schmitt explaining t he
need of Meigs County students for
partlclpa tlon in the program and
after some deliberation, eight more
students and two teachers were
permitted to be added for
participation.
(Continued on page 14)
FACULTY - These lour teachers have been involved In the Young
Experlenc~ Scientist Program for, Meigs County talented and gifted
students. They are, left to right, Darlene Amott, Pomeroy Elementary;
K!>ren Walker, Salhbury; Joyce Ann Ritchie, Portland, and RAiberi ·
Sanders, Tuppers Plains.
�'.
Commentary
The DaiJy Sentinel
III Cou.-l Slrt!t>l
Pum.eruy, Ohiu ·
ilf-992·215i
Dt·: VOTED TOntt INT~REST OF THJo: MEIGS-MASON ARF:A
ROBERT L. WINGETT
P ublish.. .-
FIAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICif
Ali!>l!>tllln l Publhiht'r/Cunttulh·r
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
NI'WJ!i E ditl)l'
A MF.MBER n[ Tbt: A:t!ltK'i.alr'tt Prl'ss, Inland DMII't' Press AssiM'ialiUII and tllr
Amull 'llll Nt."Wiplolpt'r Publi~r~ht'nl Assuriatiun.
·
LF.TIERS OF OPINION an- ""t!lf'um~. Thry ~bwld bt-l~s liU1n 380 wunb IIIII~ . All
leU.-n.: art' ~ubjt'fl lu tdilinrr: and mu111 lw xiKJ~l'd with IUimt!. addrt'ss and trl~bmlt'
numbr.r . Nn unalgnl.'d lrt~n; will 1M' publhdlt'd . l...t>lkn s buuld bto in ~oud task . addn..-s!drJIII
hi!t&lelf, nol ptNUI'LIIIIi.tit!!t.
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Page-2-·The Daily Sentinel
Pomera,-Middleport, Ohie
Wedi'MISI\Iay, March 23, 1913
'
How are you ~oing?
· . 13ecause of a ll the to-do about aU prices a nd interest rates and big federal
deficits there probably is a tendency of late to forget about you.
: How are you doing?
: The statistics, which allegedly compress your condition into a digital
Jtadout, are mixed. Unemployment remains high, but per-<;aplta
disposable income is at record high levels and consumer debt is relatively
low.
· But do statistics tell your story - or merely the general story?
· Even economists- or perhaps It .should he said, especially economists
-; will tell you there's a big danger in statistical measures and an even
bigger one in using statistical measures as If they were thermometers or
lilrometers.
; The unemployment rate, for example, is a national figure. You,
however, are an Individual worker plying a specific skUIIn a single area of
the country. There Is no average person, job or locality.
: The jobless rate also Is processed. Officially. unemployment In
February remained at 10,4 percent of the civilian population, with
1i,446,1)X) people out of work. But that figure was lowered by the technique
or seasonal adjustment.
- You can seasonally adjust numbers and make them look better or worse
on paper, 'but In doing so you do not create one job or relieve one bit the
financial anqulsh of one family or any one member of it.
: Seasonal adjustment as It applies to jobs Is an economic measurtng and
forecasting tool, rather than a statement of conditions. Seasonally
adjusted, there were 11.45 million unemployed In February. But the
unadjusted, raw count was 12.4 million people.
· You can't really blame the economists for tbls sort of thing.It was never
the Intention of anyone to have these figures broadcast hither and yon as It
lllfY were the hard, factual, chiseled-In-granite truth.
·: Adjusted figures are meant not to measure your conditioh so much as to
gJVe a rough Indication of where the general economy is headed.
; - Statistics that show consumer purehaslng power at an all-time high
OOII't mean the financial condition of all segments of the population are
~tier off than they were a year or so ago. Not at all.
: Looking behind those figures you may find a less healthy depletion of the
ect>nomy. Some economists say the huge middle Income group - and
JQ,yer Income group too - remains In recession and the national figures
ru-e_ skewed by prosperity In the mu~h smaller upper classes.
:. Says Albert Sindlinger, aent 'strength' In housing and autos has been
tlO)nlnated by stockholh enough money to spend as well as invest In the
rilarket. "
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: So hOw are you, the Individual, doing?
Berry's Wor,ld
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Ill
a~jiJJ
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:'Isn 't it OBVIOUS? They 're ham/Ji.Jrgers. One 's
Burger King an ' the other's McDonald's.
THEY'RE FIGHTING! "
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foday in history
; :Today Is Wednesday, Marcjl 23, the 82nd day of1983. There are 273 days
left In tbe year.
: Today's Highlight In Hlstoty:
:·On March 23, 1715, statesman Patrtck Henry made a plea for Amertcan
tremom from Britain with tbe famous words: "Give me liberty or give me
death."
: On tbls date:
: In 1919, Benito Mussolint founded a new political movrment In Italy.
: In 1933, the German Relchstag granted Adolf Hitler dlt!'tatortal poWI!rs.
:: In 1942, the United States began lis program of moving
;J'apanese-Amerlcans from their West Coast homes to Internment camps
d)lrlng World War II.
::And, In 1945, American and German forces crossed the R~ River In
Germany durtng World War II.
· Ten years ago: An Israeli government report disclosed thatmUIIons of
dollars In property that belonged to Egyptians In the Sinai had been toouid
~ the Israelis In 11M! months after the 1967 Six-Day War.
; . Five years ago: The Senate completed action on a bill raising the
mandatory retirement age to 70 for most Amertcans.
·; One year ago; Dissident army officers seized power In Guatemala, just
15 days after a conservative general had been elected president of the
Central American nation.
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: ; Today's btrtbdays: Former Atlanta mayor MaYJUird Jackson ls45. lrtsh
Cithollc leader Bernadette Devlin Is 36.
; : ThoUght tor today: "From tbe little spark may burst a mlghtyOame."
.:.;. Dante, Italian poet (1265-1321) .
..
"I wish Senator Balu;lr would stop referring tO this as his
·
retirement home!"
higher morality than getting bac:k
an examination with a high grade,
the honor system would not work.
Mr. Reagan, as leader or the free
world, does well to remind liS that
we are dealil!g with men explicitly
bound to the proposition that the
morality· of advancing world re..
volutlon superordlnates any other
morality. Much flows from this, tor
Instance, tbe emphasis we need to
place on verUicatlon In an)'IJIOW toward nmtuat disarmament. 'nle
notion, propagated by Alrlllany
Lewis, that Reagan was In efllet
telling U8 that God prefers chocolate Ice cream over tutti-fruttlts,
well, nuttl.
There Is, to fact, a noble analogue to what Mr. Reagan as attemptiRJ. Just after delivering
his s~Mid Inaugural address.
Abraham Lincoln replied to · an
enthusiast that he did not expect
that the speech would prove lm·
mediately popular. "Men are not
flattered by helng shown that
there has been a difference of
purpose between the Almi&hty
and them. It Is a truth wblcll I
thought needed to be told."
The allusion as , of courae, to
those In the Union who believed
In slavery, even as our oppoMots
In the Soviet Union believe ' In
slavery, although while the men
around Jefferson Davis prayed
to God for help, those around An·
dropov caught doing so would
cease to be those around Andropov.
But Lincoln's analysis, mt 111111ke
Reagan's, mutatis, alluded to "the
progress ot our arms. upon which all
else chlefty depends." Reagan said
that the survival of the Union for
which URroin fought depends stgni·
ttcantly 011 our being strong. Llnroln
said that In the dispute In which we
were Involved, "Both parties deprecated war, but one of them WOUld
make war rather than let the nation
survive. and the other would accept
:war rather than let It perish." So Is It
today. again, the necessary changes
having been made.
Another civil Wa...._r_ _~_ _ _ _ _ _Ja_ck_An_d_er~so_n -WASHINGTON - Another clvll
war Is about to explode In Nlca·
ragua, less than four years after
Sandinlsta guerrillas overthrew the
U.S.-backed dictator, Anastasio Somoza.
Thousands of well-armed and
trained anti-Sandlnlsta rebels
have already Infiltrated Into nor·
thern Nicaragua, and their lead·
ers say they' re ready to launch
an offensive against the Ma·
nagua regime. they believe their
chances of success are excellent.
Coordinated with this mUitary
action. exile leaders of the Nicaraguan Democratic Force (FDN)
plan a diplomatic move designed to ·
give thett cause lnteranatlonal
crediblllty. they Intend to create a
state-within-a-state - a "Free Nl·
caragua" -In the area that comes
under their control.
By moving Into Nicaragua
proper from their sanctuaries In
neighboring Honduras, the FDN
units have already discarded the
1m11ge of a futile exile move·
ment. Setting up a revlal government within Nicaragua 's borders would be the next step In the
FDN's quest for recognition.
My associate Jon Lee Anderson Interviewed FDN leaders In
Washington and Miami. They
emphasized what they feel are
crucial points about their movement.
-Though the core of the FDN's
fighting strength Is made up of
former members of Somoza's
defeated National Guard, people
from all sides or the political spectrum have joined up. Their com·
mon borid Is opposition to the
Sandlnlstas' Marxist regime.
-Unlike· the Sandlnlsts, FDN
leaders Insist, they will hold
comletely free elections within
18 months; even leftist parties
will be allowed to take part.
-The FDN guerrillas say they
have no connection with the
much · publicized joint exercises
The 'jobs' bill
held across the border by the U.
S. Special Forces and the Non·
duran army . " We don 't havl! any
gringo trainers," an exile leader
stressed. "We are all Nicaraguan fighters , fighting Inside Nl·
caragua."
Despite this claim of Independence, Intelligence sources say
the Reaaan adm!nistrtton Is unquestionably giving at least tacit
support to the FDN movement.
FDN leaders claim to have wide
support ill their nortbem Nlcara·
guan brid&eheads and to have ~
crulted 110t only many peasants,
but disenchanted Sandlnlsta mlllti·
amen aa well.
Lowell Wingett
The admlnlstratjon's " jobs"
sion that the administration and
bill finally passed the Senate last
Republican party are concerned
week, after being debated In that with joblessness. Everywhere In
body for mroe than a week. Ob- the news , It Is referred to as " the
ject of the debate was a rider cal- $5 billion jobs btl".
lng for the repeal of the wlthholAs ABC news pointed out the
dln tax on savings accounts other evening, only about$2.5 btl·
tacked on the "jobs" blll after a
lion will actually be, spent for
vast lobbying effort by the na - wages. The other $2.5 billion will
tion 's banks. to the average be spent on planning, material ,
unemployed worker whether or etc. Due to the nature of the pronot the "jobs" bill passed made jects and a federal law mandat ·
little difference . It was pre- lng that federal projects pay the
sented by the administration as a
prevailing wages In the locality
sop, not a help, to the nation's 12 where the projects are located,
million unemployed.
workers on the jobs must be paid
In true Reagan fashion, the the skilled labor union rate which
"jobs" bill promises much but In ABC news estimated to average
reality alters little. It moves up $15 per hour. This would crate
.the. completion date for needed only-85,000 jos, a mere drop.ln the
gOvern·m en t .projects which are bucket when more than 12
already on the planning board lion Americans are unemployed.
and would have been started
A genuine jobs bill would be fosoon anyway.
cused on the areas of h!gh unemIt makes no new jo~ available . ployment, not where some gofor the hard core unemployed
vernment agency feels a governwho have already borne the
ment project should be given
brunt of the depression . Jobs
high priority. It should deal with
created under the bill will mainly those segments of society who
call for skllled labor which will
be provided hy the labor unions
at high wages, cu ttlng down the
number of workers removed
from ,the unemployment rolls. It
makes no provision for jobs for
the unskilled , women and teenagers . As a bill to help the
unemployed, It Is a failure before
It' gets started but as legislation
to help the administration's sag:
glng popularity, It may be fresh
ammunition to the lady with the
syrupy voce on Republican TV
commercials.
Before you accuse me of being
too critical of this latest sample ·
of Republcan roguery, let's take
a closer look . at the so-called
"jobs" bill. Like the companion
measure pa~sed by the Houe earlier in cooperation with the administration, tt has no Intent to
create jobs. It could be more
aptly called a "Pentagon Relief
Blll" as most of the projects are
In the Defense Department or the.
"Republican Propaganda bill"
as It Is meant to give the lmpres--
mil-
are conveniently overlooked In
the leglslaiton which just left the
Senate. If the $2.5 billion had
been provided for training jobs
at the minimum wageof$3.35per
hour, It would have provided
350,000 jobs for a year to some of
the hardest hit job seekers In the
country. The present Senate legislation does not direct the jobs
be In areas of high unemployment which the House hill specifIcally called for .
The two versions of tbe legislation will be worked out In a conference committee. President Reagan
Is already making waves by Indicating that too much "jobs" spendIng Is called for In the legislation.
The House bill called for spending
$4.9 billion on government projecs .
The administration has never dented that the business community
Is their prtmary constituency.
The highest unemployment Is
among the youth of tbe country,
partlclularly among minority
youths. the administration's answer to high youth unemployment
Is to IOIWI' tbe minimum W381! to
$2.50 per llour for summer )'UIIIh
jobs. Lepiation to this effect wwld
be part~C\warty favored by one segment of tile primary constitue~K1'
- the faat food Industry. It SIICII a
laW' were pa5sed,tbe MacDonalds,
the Burier Kings and the Pizza
Parlors would Immediately start
avtng ~ cents on tbe hour fOI' employes tlwlt airady have or tause
who w<*ld replace present !!In·
ployes. Not a ijad savings whell you
considet' llle number of fast fOOII establlsh,_s nationwide.
A gelllllae way to solve the problem of lllgh youth unemplooyment ~AUld be the reestallllallment ol the Civilian Conservation Corp. Young people cold be
paid the minimum wage to naht
the dust bowl' days of the 1!130's.
the CCC was the vangual'!l that
fought the erosion problem . It Is
worse today than It was thea.
The main concern of the administration Is propping "P Its .
sagging popularity. not jobs!
Ull
Southern's Zane Beegle
rates·Second Team All-Ohio .
William F. Buckley Jr.
AlthOugh it sometimes seems
evil In t he world ," a· statement dltion, namely, by reaffirming our
as If everybody has c 0 m me nted , that, unhappily, deserve no belief that some things are rtght,
on Mr. Regan 's speech In Orheadline. and he did say t hat "we others wrong, that a decent respect
lando to the evangelicals. mostly
are e njoined by Scripture and the for the . opinions of mankind reto deplore It , H isn't by anym
Lord Jesus to oppose It wltl! all quires that we make cle8{ _why we
eans clear to the student who
our might." And that also Is true. think some things rtght, others
reads the e ntire text what ex·
He did not. as Lewis Insists, wrong, and that we proceed, to conactly a ils rhe fuss Is about. The
and as the eloquent Hugh Sldey tinue quoting from the Declaration
columlnlst Anthony Lewis Is so
of 'flme magazine sugg~~.ts, go of Independence, "with a ilrm rellIrate one fears for his health.
so far as to say that , In all matt- . ance on the protection of Divine
Gra nted , If one could harness the
ers, Americans are blameless. Providence."
day-to-day Indignation · of Tony
On the contrary, he followed the
Mr. Reagan's speech touched on
Lewis one could olve the energy
line above with the statement, a number of matters, Including
crisis. but he Is saying, In that
" Our nation , too, has a legacy of prayer In te public schools, abordyspeptrc blur, that President
evil with which It must deal. "
tion, sex education and other mattRonald Reagan, on March 8,
Did he then. as Mr. Sldiley ers presumptively Interesting to a
1983, denoucned as ungodly ever· charges, act as a "self-anointed sol- gathertng of evangelicals. On tbe
yone who favors a freeze In nu- , dler (s) of God with unbending rna Iter of the Soviet Union he
judgments about who and what are stresSed a point of Indispensable reclear armament .
Well. If that's all there Is to good and moral"? Yes, hut surely levance at every level of current neworry about. the remedy Is slm· MF. ·Reaan did this In a way not only gotiations. ·
pie. He didn't. Mr. Reagandldln- consistent with Amertcantraditlon, .
If at West Point one-half of thecadeed say that "there Is sin and
but In a way that enhances thai tra· dets asserted that there was no
The Daily Sentinei-Page--3
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API- Mike
Smith of Old Washlnglon Buckeye
Trail, a 2,100-polnt career scorer
.who has led his team to an 88-7
record In four years. is The
Associated Press' Class A Player of
the Year In Ohio · boys prep
basketball.
The Ohio ·c tass A Coach of t)le
Year Is Bob Arnzen. Despite losing
1981 Player of the YeiU' Alan
Kortokrax, Arnzen guided Delphos
St.John's to an unbeaten regular·
season record, the AP's No.1 state
:MNEBEEGLE
ranking and a second straight spot
In the state semifinals.
Their selections were made with
the recommendations ·of a state
panel of sports ivrlters and
broadcasters.
nie 6-foot-3 Smltb made 58_
percent of more than 1,300 career
field goal attempts and 79 percent of
more than 600 free thi'Ows. He
averaged 22.4 points In fourseasons.
By GEORGE STRODE
Arnzen has spent all33ofhis prep
AP Sports Writer
coaching seasons at the Delphos
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
school, joining a handful of coaches
Medina and Toledo St. Francis, two . who have surpassed tbe 500-vlctory
teams that overcame what seemed
mllestone. Arnzen has 522 victories
like Insurmountable odds, wlll join
and 214 defeats, including a 21).()
old hands Middletown and Akron
record this season.
Central-Hower In tbe Class AAA
Smith also has made the AP's
state hoys basketball semifinals
AU .Ohio first' team for the second
Thursday night .
straight season and heads a
Seventh-ranked St.Francis (25nine-player first uillt Ibis time.
1), bidding to become the first .
Joe Verhoff. Kalida's 6-4 senior
big-school boys basketball cham·
who averaged 21.4 points this
pion from Toledo, will play seven·
winter, moved up from the 1982
time Ohio titleholder Middletown
second aU-state squad.
I24-21. Ohio's No. 8 rated team, at 6.
Also landing spots · on the first
· Unranked Medina (23-3). also In
team were 6-5 Chris Stucke of
the state semifinals tor the first time
St. Henry, 6-4 Robert Burden of
In history, wlll face 19!'1) king
Botkins, 5-10 Rod Swartz of MogaCentral·Hower 125-1) , the state's
dore, 6-5 Jay Luning of Hemlock
fifth ranked power, at 9::ll in the
Mlller, 6-4 John Loyer of Gallon
other open 1ng game In St.John
Northmor, 6-4 Brett Kaminsky of
Arena.
On Friday, tlleshowbelongstothe
Class A and Class A semifinalists.
In Class A, second·ranked New
Washington Buckeye Central 1~0)
ST. PETERSBURG,Fla. (AP)takes on No. 22 Yellow Springs
Right-hander
John Fulgham, who
t22-41 at 11 a.m. and top-ranked
underwent rotator cuff surgery two
Delphos St.John's (2&0) draws No.3
year;s
ago, continued to Impress
Old Washington Buckeye Trail
Tuesday
night wltb four scoreless
(2rH}) at2::llp.m.
Innings
as
the St. Louis Cardinals
In Class AA, No. 2 Oak Harbor
defeated
the
Cincinnati Reds 4-0.
(25-1>) battles No.5 We llsville (24·2)
·
The
victory,
boosting the Card!·
at 6 p.m. while No. 3 Columbus
nals'
Grapefruit
League re<;ord to
Bexley (25-1) plays No. 4 Akron
7-5 after an earlier loss Tuesday to
St.Vincent·St.Mary 122·3) at 9::ll
the Toronto Blue Jays, was clinched
p.m.
with two-run bursts In the first and
The championship games are
third Innings.
.
Saturday with the Class AAA
windup at 11 a .m .. the Class A
contest at 3 p.m. and the Class M
flnaleat8p .m.
s~gnup
Medina lost Its ·leading scorer.
6-foot-6 center Russ Katalac, after
Stgnup tor the Racine Summer
16games. Katalacwasaveraglng16
League Baseball program will be
points when he underwent ankle
held Saturday, March :ai, at Racine
surgery.
Kindergarten from 10 a.m. unW 11
''Since Katalac left, we have
a.m. Registration · tee Is $5. The
worked awfully hard. We are doing
It on desire and determination. We league_ Includes T-~. pee wee,
little and pony leagues.
are not fast, don't jump well, but we
have great shooting," Medina
Music iri 'ihe air
Coach Alan Darner said.
The6-toot.J Brtan Stadnik and 6-5
NEW YORK (AP) - Music·
Jay Peters have shouldered more of
loving
members of the Ladles
the scoring burden since Katalac's
Professional
GoH Association have
departure. They both average 18
formed
their
own group. The dOn't
points ~r game.
St.Francis won a pair of regional
have anameforltandtheyarenot
even sure everybody can play In
games last week without Shawn
·Reid. whom Coach Val Glinka calls
harmony,
having fun. but they say they are
the.best guard In the state. Reid was
· Vivian Brownlee Is the leader and
out with the chicken pox and his
plays
the mandOlin. Mary Dwyer Is
status Is up In the air this week.
on
plano,
Beverly Klass guitar,
"You go Into shock when someDonna
White
guitar, Julie Pyne
thing like that happens. Everybody
banjo,
Mary
Mills
· drums, Jane
was apprehensive," Glinka said of
Blalock
mandoltit,
Beth Daniel
Reid's illness. "Fortunately, we had
harmonica,
Dorothy
Germain
tamtwo juniors (Scott Bittinger and
bourine, and Barbara Moxness
Mark Beauch) do a good job In his
fiddle.
place."
"We don't have name heca1,1se
Reid, a second-team all-state
we
don't want anyone to know us,"
selection this year, averaged 18.6
fo].111der
Brownlee laughed. '·aut we ·
points. He already· Is conurjltted to
enjoy
tt."
Furman University.
State
tourney
to start
Thursday
with lt. ·
1~1 ( 1 a.~s
A All..ffitlo hiJ.!h
ba~ kf'lhall
Sf'h1 1o ~ .
f('( , •r:nrTWfldulio n.~
('I of spor1s wrlrrr,;
ITiii<k'
;~nd broadca.~l{lr.; :
fiH8T'IEAM
Mlkr• Smith. Old
an W('St : Rich Chapman, Cortland Mapl<'wood; [)(>!liry Dunran, C l!nton· Ma ~ll':
Dmn;v .F'l•rguson . . Jamloslown Crt'l'fl('\11{'\i.·:
Wa'~hln!rlon Budt~·('
Tr.Jil, · 6-foohl, 2UI poln l~ JX'l" gam<>; .!Of'
Vc>rl'llff.
Kalida, ti-4
Sr ., :!l .t
Chrl~
S1!1Ckf'. S l. 111"11 1) , h-~1 S1 ., 21.11: R.obl•rt
Bw"dm . Bolldns. 6-1 .Jr.. ~Jl; Rod
Mark C()(·hmou l'. BcaVC'r F:aslf'rn.
HONORABLE MENTION
.Jam£'!i MC'VIck('f, Sil rahsvllk> Shman·
dooh; Paris YotD. Woodsfk.>ld: Mlkf' Sl·
kora. Cambridge Gu<'r!U('y CD!ho!lr; .Jo hn
Ma.~ r, J3(>rlln H iland; Dou$1: RCl!iS, Nr1,1:
PhJia[toiphlaa Tuscarawas rll tOOIIt•; Doug
Mog:J£k"ll"t'. ~ 10 !', r.. ~.3 : .Ju.v
l.unin l!. Htomkrk Mlll('r f\.5 Sr·.. l1 .6;
~ ·a rt z.
.John l.o)"f'r. Cialion Nm1hm0r. IH Sr ..
:J:u;; [ht'lt Kaminsk,\·. Millm>JXlrl . I)...J Sr.,
IliA : Sr>an OTonnot•, lndrpmdt>nC'I'. !'}.11
S!·..
RMI.~tatt.
~. 0
SEC:OND TFAM
Bob Mnx'"l kO'>Wikl, 8rld,Rpor1, 0.2 .Jr .•
tl,ti; . )('S...:• M01WIIl . M•·Oon;d(t f\.~ ~k.,
~.11:
Zant•
IWt·kk·
Wort hJngJoo
PJrhlllan:
,Jfff
Krawf"l\'k, RichwOOd !';01'1 h Onlon; TC'd
Bush. Columbus GrmtdvN•; ~)()up. "WII·
son. . lohn,town 1\'ort hrk:lgf'; Bar11' NN·
mf'lsler, C:O.IIon Norltvnor.
RudiN' Southern. 6-0
Mlllersport and 5-11 Sean O'Connor
of Independence. All are seniors.
Second-team selections were 6-2
Bob Mroczkowski of Bridgeport, 6-5
Jesse Morgan of McDonald. 6-foot
Zane Beegle of Racine Southern.
5-11 Pat AustlnofChllllcotheFlaget,
6-1 Chris Carlettl of Cincinnati
Summit Country Day. 6-5 Steve
Hartschuh of Bucyrus Wynford, 6·5
Bill Marx of Usbon Anderson and
6-2 Sandy Sayl'l' of Freeport
Published every afternoon, Monday..,.
the Oh io Valley Publlshlna Commpany
· Multimedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohip.
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'
Sr., ~JI: P<.~t Auslln , C'hUIIOOihl' FlaRf'l ,
Mark Giardina, MlddiC'flC'ld Cardina l:
.'l-11 Sr., 16.7; ctw~ Ca tlt•nl. CifK'Inna11
Chris Confl(lr. C kvl'land luthl>ran Ea...t:
SummiT ('oont~ D.:r~' . lt.l Sr.. :lil.O: S!C'YI' . Rill Dlckf'\·. I..ard ln Clrnr."k'W: f\arl Ru·
pcorl , Tho,T,pson l..l'dg(TOOnt; Brad B"·an,
HartS(""huh, H~·rus W~· nford . t>-? .tr. ,
( !a t<'!< Mills Huwlwn: Phil Sa!Kow, S£>tr.
Ill.~; Bill Marl!, u.~oon 1\ndf'r son, ~~~ Sr .•
!U1; S<lml\· S!nw. F'rff'J)Orl l..ak('IUJld. ft.2
inlo!: Mlkl' Falasca. Ek>rUn Cmt('r Wo:>slf'm
~- .. :!1.7. .
.
Rt>sf'r;<•: Tom Eblry, Cortland Map!('. ,
wood; Shawn Smith,' [..('(>tonla: Alan
11DRI> 'flo::A\1
.lotln Durant , ~n('9(vUII' ~run s . lh1
Knlgtu . Wlndha"m.
.
S.r..
lfiJi: .lf'll)" Francis . Lolumbu.<l
'nm Thmwald 0110\"lllf': Srou GraJ.
NN" Wilshln2fon 8U<'kC'V(' CN!Ir-al; ,]('If
VMitk'. 6-1 ~ph , 22.1 ; Alan Obrrsll'r.
Haar. ElrrYJr(l WoodmOrl': R.;.mdy KortnkF:asr Ca nTon, h- 1 S1'., IRI>; Mlkr F-4!"bf'11.
rax . Kalida : .Jon l.lrllar. Nnrt h Ralt l·
Bast"Om Huptowt~l · l.oudon. &6 Sr. . 21.!1;
mOll': SIC"'\ "f' Cain, Clnrinnatl S!. B<'mnrd:
Mark F..chstrnkampc'l". GI0\1"iiN· i'rlmbll',
Da n ·t n C;t!iC'ack>n, Bradf01'd; Tom Cla tk.
5·11 Sr., 11.6; .tim Calllf', P01·I ~TOOUih
Ct'dan1Uco; Ron Rlddff. Sprin~lt>ld Ca lh·
O:'ly. & 5 Sr .. 17.1: Trrl')' Mayo. Y<'llow
ollt" ff'nl ral: F:d Wat:'Ol , Mlddlf'IOWn F'rn·
~rings . ~.. 11 ~r .. 16.0: Oan'f'll Hf'xlml'l".
Favcnf' (~ll' ham · Fil)TUC', 6-4 Sr., 17.."\.
wick .
O;t\"ld Rl{'h!C'f, Richmond Dal(' ~Th·
PlAYER OF YF.,\ft.- Mlk(' Smllli, Clld
ra.'1r111 ; Johnny Harrlsoo, Oak Hill: Ki'w~~h i n.'non 8111.·kc-:-~ T rull
C'OM'H OF \'EAR - Bull i\nrl.('f), Dd·
vtn Adkin.~. Locawllk' Vaiii'Y: Tony Ta ~··
lOT'. Chllllrothc> Fl~l'l ; Jim SM>IK', Oak
pt.'ts st. .JuW.'!!.
SI'E(lAL MI!'NI'ION
H!ll: ./lmm~ · C'haffhl. Frankfor1 Adena.
.•
throu1h Friday, 111 Court Street, by
The Public Ut1lltles Commission of Ohio has set
for public hearing case
No. 82 - 162 - EL- EFC
(Subflle A), to review the
fuel procurement practices and policies of Columbus and Southern
Ohio l!ilectrlo Company,
the opera,tlon of Its Electric Fuel Component and
related matters. This
hearing Is scheduled to
begin at 9 :30 a .m . on
March 25, 1983-at the offlees of the Pu bile
UtUitles Commission of
· Ohio, 375 South Hlgh
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43216.
tano, Rl<'hmond HI'IS[hls: Davr C..rrbi:'r,
NcwWry: Oavl' Chapman, Ashland Ma·
plf'lon: Mar k Potarih.L~ . ('k:'\'P\and l.ut hN··
~an ·
of u sta ff'
(VSPS HI·-~
A Dlvllloa of Mulllmeclla, lac.
LEGAL' NOTICE
.Jim Wld!k'l', SuRamwk Garawa~~ Da·
,.WJ Mllclwll, Columbu.'i Aradt>mr : ~·
rr1~1 .. Johnst(Mll Northrld2f•: Tom Tar.~l ·
muJMRUS, lltl iO I AP I - :rtK•, Assorl·
· . The Dai.ly ~entinel
~Ail7
1982-83 Class A All-Ohio
:11M fl'm;,Jt"
M'hnol boy!i
I\
II Til
All Interested parties
will be gtven an oppor·
tun1ty to be heard . Further Information may be
obti1ned by contacting
the Co!nrnleslon.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
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THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: David M. Polk.
Secretary.
Lakeland.
On the third team we re 6-3 John
Duranf of Zanesville Rosecrans, 6-4
Jerry Francis of Columbus Wehrle.
6-1 Alan Oberster, 6-6 Mike Egbert
of Bascom Hopewell-Loudon, 5-11
Mark Echstenkamper of Glouster
Trimble, 6-5 Jim Gable of Portsmouth Clay, 5-11 Terry Mayo of
Yellow Springs and 6-4 Darrell
Hextmer of F~yette GorhamFayette.
~RODS
*REELS
*TACKLE BOXES
*ARTIFICIAL BAIT
*LICENSES
*TACKLE, ETC.
Cardinals blank Reds 4-0 in contest
· Summer baseball
Saturday
a
HOME SECURITY
SYSTEMS
THE ULnMATI IN HOME AlARM SYSTEMS AND SMOKE
DETECTING DEVICES WITH A SAVINGS TO YOUR.OF 100%
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CONSIDER THESE FACTS....
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•Priceless parsonal possessions n seldom recovered INSURANCE IS NO SUBSTITUE.
•A Jock Is NOT ADEQUATE PRCmCTION apinst a buiJiar or other
intruder.
. .. '
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CRIME IS INCREASING .
AT A FRIGH'Q:NJNG RATE
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.one Robbely EVIIY 58 .SecOnds!
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' A SEOJRITY SYSTEM IS A. PRovEN DETERRENT ,
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FOR MORE INFORMATION WITH NO OIWGATION ·
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Unconditio•J GU1111d81d to OM You Pea of lind.
Hernandez doubled home Lonnie
Smith In tbe first Inning after the
tatter had singled to drive In the St.
Loutsshortstop.
ed
In the third, with David Green
The same
In combination
the final runproduc
with a
knocking
single to left. Hernandez also got his
second RBI earlier.
Pastore permitted seven of the
eight St. Louis, hits, while his
successor, Joe Price, struck out five
In three lnqlngs.
Fulgham, unscored upon In six
exhibition innings, allowed four hits
and struck out three during Iits
four·lnillng stretch. Jeff Lahti, a
former Cincinnati farmhand, and
non-roster left -bander Dave J3o.
nohlen collaborated with Folgham
on a seven-hitter.
Cincinnati has lost seven of 12
exhibition games.
Ozzie and Lonnie Smith figured In
on both St. Louis rallies against
Frank Pastore with singles. Keith
PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON ' W• VA •
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CAL·
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ECKRICH 12 OZ. PACKAGED
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BBAGE ..... ~~· 29'
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I
�Page
The Daily
4
Pomeroy
Sentinel
Middleport, Ohio
Wednetday, Marm 23, 1983
Smith says Buckeyes better without Kellogg :
CHAPEL KILL. N.C. (AP l Nort h Carolina basketball coach
.i Dean Smith thinks the Ohio State
team he and his defending natiOnal
champions Tar Heels will face in the
NCAA East Regionals Friday is a
lot better without Clark Kellogg.
Kellogg was a forward on liist
SPason's team that lost a first-round
East Regiona l game to James
Madison. f..:ellO!JR would bave been
a seniOr tbis. yt'llr. but moved on,.
(leclru·tng himself eligible lot· the
NatiOnal BaskE>tbaU Association
and beeomlng a member ol the
Indiana Pacers.
Smith told reporters at a news
conference Tuesday that the dlfferenC(' Is that the Buckeyes are
playlng more team-oriented basket-
ball since Kellogg's departure.
" I reallY felt Ohio State was
sh11ggling seriously at that time
because Kellogg was thinking pro
and getting some points and
rebounds," Smith sa Id. "That' swhy
I really believe that they have a
much better team without Kellogg.
Not that Clark isn 't a fine player. It
just did something to the ir
chemistry."
The new Buckeye chemistry
resulted in a 79-74 victory over
Syracuse In last weekend's second·
round game at Hartford, Conn. The
loss denied Syracuse a chance to
play an NCAA tournament gameoq
its home court, the Carrier Dome.
"Some of you were talking last
•
TCU faces Nebraska In top NIT contest
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
The Texa s Christian University
baskPtball team features an allSPnior front line that ranges from
6-foot-8 to 6-10.
That rould present some tall
problems for Nebraska inThun;day
night's National Invitation Tournament quarterfinal game at Lincoln ,
Neb., according to Husker Coach
Moelba.
· "They'rea tough teamforustogo
against becauSP of their size," says
Iba. "They play a good matchup
zone defenSP a nd the 30-second
clock will favor that. They'llalsonin
their motion offense as well as
anybody we'll play all year."
The TCU-Nebraska game Is one
of three NIT contests Thursday
night. In other action, Wake Forest
meets South Carolina In Greensboro, N.C., a nd Fresno State plays
at Oregon State. The quarterfinal
l'QUnd will conclude Friday night,
when Mississippi takes ori DePaul
in Rosemont, Ill.
Quarterfinal winners wlll advance to ihe S..mlfh1als Monday in
New York's Madison Square
Garden. The title game wlll be
played March 30.
TCU Is playing some of Its best
ball of the season. Two weekends
ago, the Horned Frogs upset then
sixth-ranked Arkansas 61-59Jn the
semlfina·Js of the Southwest Confer·
t>nce tournament In Dallas. TCU
followed that victory with a 62-59
loss to nationally top-ranked Houston In ~heSWCchamp!onshlpgame.
In the first two games of the NIT,
the Horned Frogs took a 64-62
decision over Tulsa, the 1981 NIT
champion, and then beat Arizona
State Ialit Monday night.
"!CU will be a very physical
team for us to play," says lba,
thinking mainly of the Homed
Frogs' front llneof6-10centerBrian
Christensen and 6-9 Doug Arnold
and 6-8 Doug Cuclnella at forwards .
"We're going to have some short
practices, so we don't wear our kids
down. They're bener· off fresh.
You've got to make sure you have
your legs and some bounce In a
physical game. You've got to be
able to jump."
Nebraska beat Tulane 72-651n the
first round and then knocked out
lona 85-73in the second round.
be a tie."
In Monday night's other secondlana Coach Pat Kennedy missed
round games, Mississippi won 65-57 his team's · loss to Nebraska.
over South Florida, DePaul downed Kennedy had stayed at home
Northwestern 65-63, South Carolina Sunday when his wife gave birth toa
trimmed Virginia Tech 7~68. son, and then was unable to make
Fresno State turned -backMich!gan connections for ·a !llght to the game
State 72-58, Wake Forest beat South Monday.
Florida 65-57 a nd Oregon State . . lana's knockout marked another
walloped New Orleans 88-71.
NIT tourney Without the possibility
The Ole Miss victory has pumped of a New York-area team In the
up Ken Turner, Mississippi's assist. winner's circle. The last team from
ant coach. "We're in Newark, just
city area
to win
theJohn's
New
across the bridge," said Turner, the
York-based
tourney
was St.
Implying that he had the New York in 1965.
skyllne in his sights.
The most exciting game of the No waiting
second-round was between DePaul
and Northwestern, won by the Blue
OLD DOMINION, Va. !AP) Devils on a 35-foot buzzer shot by Mark West, a6-10basketballplayer
Kenny Patterson. Ironically, Pat- for Old Dominion, got started in the
terson wasn't even first choice to game because he was bored just
take the final shot for DePaul. T he standing around.
plan formu lated by Coach Ray
"When I was an underclassman
Meyer called for either Bernard in high school in Petersburg, Va.,"
Randolph or Tyrone Corbin to take he said, "I had to walt for a ride
the final shot .
home each day because my older
''But they overloaded on both of brother was practicing With the
them," explained Patterson. "So varsity. I decided to kill time by
they threw the ball back to me, trying out for the junior varsity. And
figuring the worst It would be would I made the team ."
v
week about playing Symcuse at
Symcuse," Smith told the reporters. "That's why you shouJd·never
dlscusssomegamethatwon'tcome
about."
Smith said he thought his team
wouJQ have been ready to play the
Orangemen, but they'U. have to
work especlally hard M the
Buckeyes. He mentioned guards
Ron Stokes and Troy Taylor as key
members of the Ohio State attack.
"'They certainly look to f!ISI
break," Smith said. "Their guards
will penetrate and they try to get It
Inside to (center Granville) Walters
and (fmward Tony) Campbell,
although Gaznphell can shoot
outside."
Campbell Is the team's leading
.scorer at 19.1 points, while Taylor
averages l2.8and Walters lsat10.6.
' 'We must stop the penetration of
their guards, " Smith said. " If we
can play defense as well as we did
last Saturday, then that Will go a
Jongwayinhelplngus."
The Tar Heels opened defense of
fr=======:::=:::;;::;;:;;:;;::=l::::::::::::::::~"
WHOLESALE
DISTRIBUTORS
socks."
Hume was first drafted by the
Dodgers when he was a senior at
Northeast High in St. Petersburg,
Fla. " But I was drafted In the 37th
round and theyshowednointerest in
signing me, so I enrolledat Manatee
Junior College."
The following January· the Reds
selected Hume in the first round of
thesecondaryphase. Hes!gnedand
got an$8,000bonus.
"I go in a lltt le nervous. Thls
changes after the first pitch,
though," hesa id .
"Sometimes ! don't even remernberwhoi pitch to.! don't go for
strikeouts. 1 "'et satisfaction out of a
...
~undball . If the "" Y fans , that;s
"'
~ too."
"okay,
seams, not across the seam like m,v
other pitches."
Hume found the pitch throwlng
one day when Johnny Bench was
still catching,
"John called time, and asked
what I did. I told him about the
seams. He said, 'You'd better keep
throwin'lt,'andihavc."
Hume said he was trying to
develop a changeup pitch this
"What I remember is that my
coach goI rnad when I toId hlm I
wou ldn 't be p itching t ha t spring for
good old Mana Iee, " he sa Jd ·
Hurne accidentally developed a
Cin cinna II counted Hume as a · s_inker pitcher a few seasons a"o.
"
poten tlal blg 1eague s tarter t hroug h
"I don't really know why it sinks.
'dn't
his minor Ieague days. But he d J
All 1 know Is I throw it with the
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Manager
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Anderson
McNamara assigned him to short
relief.
Hume had to · accept It,_ and,
eventually, the change made him
rich.
Pitching In relief Is not more
relaxing. He has to concentrate on
what he's going to throw.
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PASADENA, Calif. (AP)-ltwill
be a bus drivers' holiday- but this
time de luxe.
... . .... '
Ann McBride, a Los Angeles
driver, won the top door prize, at a
party thrown for the bus and limo
'l'ucsdl\Y TriplllUt•
drivers at the 1983SuperBowlhere.
Next to Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Man..'h I, 19R:l
The other players ~Y seA total of 1,500 drivers enjoyed a
Tt•arn
PUi.
k:cted include, fortheSouthsquadin
Wa ld Crcl'>ll and Sons .............. ..
.. .... 44
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the 7 p.m . Class A-AA game, Steve Su~r Run Ashland ............... ....... ,.. ...... ~ .)
and6.600cigars,allfurniShed · -1---'-----'-------l-------------------------:
drinks
Wlllard of Beverly, Brad Walke of .JBI. ConstiTU<'tlon ........ :......... .............. JE1 · by a n organization called Friends of
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Wheelersburg, Jon Homer of Ma- . BluC' Ta rta n ...
. ........ ...... .,. ........ ~
the Cigar. They sat back a nd
La r ry's G roc£'1)· .......... ......... .............. i"l
dlera, Thomas Howard of Valleywatched
the Super Bowl on a giant
High indiv idual gam!.' - M den£> WUson
view. Mike Smith of Buckeye Trail,
177; f'~ rolyn Bachner •. Marlen e> WUsoo 17[);
TV screen.
Jim Slone of Oak Hill. Michael Carnlvn Bachner 169.
The big prize Is an all-expenses
, Hl~h Sffics- Marlenf' Wil<oon 4R.1: Carolyn
'
Daniels of Pleasant and Doug Fogt
paid trip to the 1984 Super Bowl for
Bar hl"lff' ~74 : Hazll('(' Rebal .fii
'.
of Anna.
Tl"'am hlg:h gamr-- JBL Cons true- lion l 16t
McBride. The game wlll be played
Tf'am high series - Blue Tartan l:M.l.
The Class AAA North team wUI
in Tampa·, Fla.
_
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'
Athens, TonyBeverlyofChllllcothe,
E ll!ott Fullen of Springfield North,
Bruce Allen · of Newark, Steve
Brown of Beet;-bcroft ~nd Charlie
Miller of Warren Local.
Each the 16 districts in the state
selects players for the aU-star
contests, with the rest of the squads
choSen by the site committee and
the teams' head coaches. Final
roster selections are expected next
week. OH-SBCA selected the
coaches last fall .
Ron Niekamp of Lima Senior Will
coach the North AAA and John ·
Grunkemeyer of Mt. Healthy the
South AAA. In the A-AA game, each
squad has two coaches, with the
North being headed by Frank
Cegledy of Youngstown Rayen,
aided by Jim Lawhead of '-'lraln
Catholic, and the South has Russ
Gregg of Whitehall, assisted by
Terry Leggelt of Buckeye Trail.
Since theadventofthetwogames,
the North AAA has a ~2 edge In the
series, and the North A·AA squads
have won six of the seven games.
There were 16 Classics held with
only one game, and the North and
South split eight each.
CANTON, Ohio (AP)- Minerva · feature Alliance's Jerry Wllllams
High School forward Dan Perry has
a long with Tony E merick of
become the first !rom his school
Wapakoneta , Jim Gilmore of
ever chosen to participate in the
Warren Western Reserve, Rob
annual Ohio North-South Cage
Davis of Wintersville, Dennis HopClassic.
son of Bowshear, Bobby Taylor of
The 6-foot-2 senior was picked by
Mansfield, Bill Toole of Bay, Greg
the game's site selection committee
Bel! of East Cleveland Shaw and
to play on the North A·AA squad in
Roger Smith of Lorain Admiral
the April 9 affair at the Memorial
King.
Civic Center.
Playing for the South AAA team
Perry's selection was announced
in the 9 p.m. game are Class AAA
today by Dave Behner, the McKin·
Player of the Year Kannard
ley Senior High principal ~ho is
Johnson of Taft , Mark Current of
directing the Cage Classic, spon- Middletown, Steve Bruning of
sored by the Ohio Hlgh School
Basketball Coaches Association.
Perry, who averaged 11.1 rebounds and . 20.1 points while
shooting 54.2 percent from the field,
helped Coach Ray Davis' Lions
capture a share of the Senate
Sk.vlnc Bowling Lan ~
League title. The two-year starter
Morning Glories
was · an All-Senate League and
March 1. 1983
Plo.;.
AU-Stark County ClassA-AA choice Team
~·o·s Company .... ... ............... .......... .. 149
as well as a first -team choice on the
C u stan Prin!s ................................... 13ft
Class AA All-Northeastern Ohio
Simmons Olds , C::td illac
and Chcov ................... , ..................... 97
Inland District squad.
Th C' Mf'IJ.":S ln"n ...... .. ................ .............. 8.1
Perry joins Fred Nell of Senate ThP Fabric Shop .............................. ... R:!
Ml •rli A.msbarv
League-foe Tuslaw on the North
Hair [)(>sl~cr ........... .................. .. .... 7S
squad along with Oak Harbor's Dan
Hi~h ind. ~am (' AN n GroV('r 197;
Christie, Bellevue' s Brian Keger- Barbara WhitfinK1oo lR'l; Ann Growr 182.
High ind. ltu't"C-garne-;- Ann C rO\'l'r :i.'tl;
rles , Ridgewood's Danny Olinger,
.fun<' l...amlx>rt 4AA; Barbara Whl1tln~onb
St. Henry's Chris Stucke, Young- ~fi!l .
High tpam gamf' - 1\\•o·s Compan,v ~r.1 ;
stown Rayen's Mark McLendon,
Fa bric:- Shop 811--1; 1\4'o's Comp;&.ny !1)1,
Lorain Catholic's Cris Kelly and Thf.
High IC'am lhrt"C""gaml' - ~'o' s Compo.m,\
Orange·s Mark Boddy. The others 2.17-j: Cu.<itan Print 23ll; M£'1TI A~bcuy,
were named by the respective Hai r Or'Signa:· tl-1.'1 .
district coaches in votes conducted
over the past several weeks.
Potn(•roy BowUn• LanO>i
AND
TERM··
PLANS FROM
DISHWASHERS
IKKKE\'
w !n~: .
I.CYCU
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BUFFALO RII.J.'i-Namt"d P;tlrkk .1 .
Mcfin.xX•r .l r r •J«n~l l\'f' \"k'r- prr'l'lldl"nl
und Norm Pullom ,.k(o Pft'!lkrnl lor p!av·
""f'lh'Ndu..v'~ O.ws
'1. ~·H11 1l• ~~
~m DII'Wl li. Mllwaukr'<' S.<:,J
Oakland ;!, \lrovrlun rl I. 11 lnnln!C'
('11 1\IDrn!a r1, Chk'~ rr..:L• :1
St. J.ou L~ 4, nrv:IJmal lll
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PtlllD>Iphla 3. O.ltir'rrlrt' :1, Ill'
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'1\~··~ <lamt'H
Allanra I , n•us tJ
Toronto to. St. lml~ AA !1
I 1J11. An~IN\ It Hoo:ooloo 4
NOW '499
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NBA results
Mon!l'('ft l J , KaMa11 OIY ss o
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DOWNING-CHILDS
ADMIRAL
$349.95
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GAS
I"ll 'a !'.~l~nrd
.I1N 1 [)['l«m
S1. Lwi~ .11 lkl:>ton
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Tnmnlll :rt l'hii:K il'ltJhi:•
NC'\1.' · "- ' ' "'~ :11 \\' a ~hi n!..'10n
Mlnnr~ll u at Montl"t'H.I
~v·,. Oaarnt.,.
Ynrk iN!.~ H. IJo:!.lon 0
.
ThP Phil~delph ia Phillies and
1-0.
[Jaltlmore OriolPs played to a 3-:J tie
8!11 Gullickson and Ray Burris
combined on a five-hitt er as the . in a game that was called after 13
innings.The Orioles loaded the .
Montreal Expos blanked a Kansas
City Royals split squad 3-0.
bases with none out in the bottom a!
the13thbul rookieEdWojnarl'tlred '
Dick Schofield's two-run double
the next three ba il ers.
highllgl)ted a five- run fourth inning
against Chuck Rainey that gave the r-;:==========~
California Angels a 5-3 victory over
the Chicago Cubs.
Riehle Hebner had three hit s and
four RB!s to lead the Pitt sburgh ·
Pirates to a 10-5 victory over the
Detroit'Tigers.
Tony Bernazard doubled home
two runs and Pat Tabler drove in
113 SECOND AVE.
two more with a triple and single as
the Chicago White Sox edged the
POMEROY
Minnesota Twins 6-5. Another Whit e
Sox squad whipped the other Royals
squad 8-2 as Britt Burns a llowed one
HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTION
RANGES
Nattoft411A~·
t:dmtm t• ~t a t \\'lrmip• 'l!
--
Walke, Slone named to South
All-Stars; Tilt ·slated April9
. with two singles and two doubleshelsonan1Hor-18tear-!nleadlng
the San Francisco Giants past the
Seattle Mariners 7-5.
Jerry Reuss pitched seven innlngsand hit threesinglesastheLos
Angeles Dodgers routed the Hous,
ton Astros 14-4. The Dodgers broke
the game open with six straight hit s
In the fourth Inning. Mike Marshall
homered.
Ex-Dodger Steve Garvey hit his
first home run In a San Diego
unlform, a first-inning_ shot off
MUwaukee's MOOSP Haas, as the
Padres defeated the Brewers&-1.
Lynn Garrett homered In the 11th
inning to give the Oakland A's a 2-1
victory over the Cleveland Indians.
Rick Sutcliffe, the American
League ERA leader last season,
r----------------~
· SALE NOW IN PROGRESS
COLO RIC
ir1Aratnp.
Mlnm·snta at Tororll o
m.
allowjng four hits and striking out
three as a split .squad of Cardh'mls
blanked the Cincinnati Reds 4-0.
· Jorge Orta smacked a two-run
homer and Ernie Whitt , Jesse
Barfield and HOsken Powell added
solo shots as the Toronto Blue Jays
walloped another group of Card!~
nals 10-5.
Chili Davis, who started the
spring with an 0-for·15 . slump,
continued his recent torrid pace
Ri'itd;.· und .Juan ra~ lllo . lnfl<'if:t'r.l; Olon
l lur1ku r1 itt Ru~a lo
"''
leagues. And for a change, he was
the Seaver of old rather than the old
Seaver who struggled to a ~ 13
record in 1982, Including a 5.50
earned run average.
Another right-hander, John
Fu lgham of St. Louis, is 12 years
younger than Seaver and pitched 10
complete games In 19 starts four
years ago but Is ciJming olf rotator
cuff shoulder surgery. Tuesday, he
hurled four scoreless Innings,
l
All TV'S ARE NEW
AND IN CARTONS
Quantities, Colon & Selection
•
,Jamrs. Clll ftf'ldl'!'ll; Bill SC'hrOOdM'. l:""cllch·
l't", untl Jo:mk' Cumarll:l. plldn, and a.o;·
M~n~rd thtorn In rhl>lr mlnor-lraJ!;IJC' lr• ln·
f'\c'"' Yurk IW n'->f'I'S Il l 1.)('11'011
\ 'am11u\·c·•· at W;t~ hi n!-'100
~- ,,"'ro
By The Associated Press
For the time being, Tom Seaver Is
Tom Terrlf!c again.
The38-year-rlght-hander, winner
Of 264 games and three Cy Young
Awards, held Boston to five hits In
seven innings Tuesday as the New
York Mets trounced the Red Sox !W
In an exhibition baseball game.
After 51h years with Cincinnati,
· Seaver is back where he spent his
. first 10'h seasons in the major
MII.WAl;KJo":F. · RRF.Wf:R.S--C'ut Rund,Y
K'•odn•-'U.f"' Gamt-,;
·nuu····b~ ·~
r-------------~
ITEMS ARE LIMITED
The Daily Sentinel-Page-S ·
Tom Seaver back, Mets 'blarik Red SoX, 8-0
PRI_
CES GOOD THRU MARCH 28TH OR WHILE QuANTITIES LAST
~" i\port.ol ...........1ioll4
'
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
YOUR
Transactions
Nalloftal Hodtt•y LA,...,.,
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
Reds
to stay in 1978.
qultemakeltwhenhecameuptothe
.
Scoreboard ...
NHL results
·'
• l
Open To The Public
Financial success has not changed Reds' Hume
TAMPA, Fla. (AP ) - Has
financial success changed Torn
Hume?
"Not rea lly. I have a good agent
blll no fmancial adviser," says the
Cincinnati Reds ace reliever.
"I read financial publications now
and then, but I don't quite
understand what I'm reading," said
Hume, who.has a four-yearcontract
estimated at $!ro,IXXJ a year.
He lives in the same Bradenton,
F1a. house, " but Susan and I got It
3~ ·years ago. Well, I did buy a nice
house in Cincinnati for the summer.
"I wear the same kind of clothes, .
same jeans, same old shoes, same
their crown last Sa!Yrday with a
~9 victory over James Madison,
the same team'u defeated last year
en route to the title. Sam Perkins
scpred 18 polntsand,MlchaeiJordan
added 161n the victory.
The 6-foot-7 Jordjm Is the team's1,
Jeadingscorerat19polntspergame
and was a ftrst-team selection to ,:
The Associated Pn!ss All-America ·
basketball team.
Smith declared rerklns rni!Ch
Improved from his t6e Injury of two •
weeks ago. Freshman center Brad' ·
Daugherty Is stlll recovering from
severe shin splints and junior.:
•'orward Matt Doherty Is bin.dered-·
by a recurring lower back problem.
The latter.two are expected to start
Friday night.
In trying to reach the Final Four
for the third straight year, Smith' ·
said he was more optllnlstic about ·
thlsteam'schancesthanforothers.
"'I was more concerned In 1981
than I was this year,'' Smith said of ~
theteamthatlost(hechampionship
to Indiana. "But I'm very pleased."
Wednetday, March 23, 1983
. POMEROY•RUTLAND•TUPPERS PLAINS
GAWPOLIS
• j
--
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'
~
," ff§lt
t~~li' l1"
-. ..,..
,,
�Marth
.
.. ·
Wednesday, Mqrch 23, 1983
fJ
Page
Area organizations meet throughout coun_ty
Star Graden
Club
'
.
.
"Planned Parenthood for Your
Plants" was the topic of a program
presented by Mrs. Neva Nicholson
at the r!'Ci'nt meeting of the Star
Garden Club at rhc homP of Mrs.
Wanetta Radekin.
Mrs. 1\icholson noted that March
is an ideal time to multiply the
indoor plants and talked aboui the
qui.ck rooting ones such as coleus
which can be started in water. Peat
moss vermiculitE', and perlite arc
stand,a rd propaga ting mediums,
she explained, but require uniform
soil moisture. Cuttings for this can
be eit her whole leaf sections or leaf
buds and she listed begonias,
peperomonia, Afr ican violets, geraniums, fushsia and Christmas
cactus as easily ~>roprogated this
way .
Guides for times of planting
vegetables wNe given by . Mrs.
Virginia Nelson who said that when
the snowdrops bloom, plant peas,
lettuce and onion sets; the crocus
blooms signal planting time for 1
carrotts, radishes and lettuce; early
tulips indicate that the ground is
ready for beets; daffodil blooms are
a s iin to plant parsnip and salsify;
apple blossoms give the time to
plant bush beans and seed corn, and
tomatoes should be planted when
the barn swallow'return .
Allegra Will presided at · the
meeting with devotions being given
by Mrs. Radekin who us€<! scripture
from Matthew 13 and readings
"God's Gift" and " I Talked with
God Today."
Mrs. Radekin
introduced those on the program.
Miniature arrangements Were
displayed · by Mrs. Stella Atkins,
Miss Ruby Diehl. Mrs. Radekin,
Mrs. Will and Mrs. Nicholson. Mrs.
Nelson won the hostess gift . .
Refreshments In the St. Patrick's
Calendar
WEDNESDAy
POMEROY - Galtla-Melgs
FOP Lodge % will meet In
special session Wednesday at
7:30p.m. at Pomeroy City Halt.
RUTLAND- Rutland Sons of
the American Legion will meet
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
Rutland Legion Hall. All charter
members are asked to a !tend to
complete signing the charter.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Women 's Association of the First
United Presbyterian Church,
Middleport, will meet Thursday, March 24 , at 7:30p.m. at
the church.
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse Third Wednesday Homemakers will meet Thursday,
March 24, at 9 a.m. at the city
building. Work' on a quilt will
be completed . Persons to br·
lng darning needle and yarn .
Potluck lunch wllll be served.
spectlon. Work In the most excellent master degree .
MIDDLEPORT - ·Twin City
Shrinettes. Thursday, 7:30p.m.,
home of Jean Moore, Middleport.
SYRACUSE - Syrqcuse
Third Wednesday Homemakers
wtll meet Thursday at 9 a.m. to
the Syracuse Municipal Building. Work on a quUt will be
completed. Persons are to bring
darning needle and yarn. A
potluck lunch will be served at
noon.
· MIDDLEPORT - Women's
Association of the First United
Presbyterian Church will meet
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
church.
RACINE - The Women's
Weight Training Class at South. ern High School will be Thursday at 7 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT -'- Middleport Pack 245 will hold Its Blue
CHESTER - There wtll be a . and Gold Banquet Thursday at
weekend revival at Chester
the Middleport Masonic Temple
United Methodist church,
from 6 to 8 p.m. Badges and
Thursday through Saturday,.IJeawards will be presented. Bring
gtnnlng at 7:30 nightly. Guest
table service ami' covered dish.
speaker wlll be the Rev. Frank
For adrlltlonallnformatlon conCrofoot of Athes. Special music
tact dean leaders.
each night and the publlc is
invited.
POMEROY Preceptor
POMEROY - The Royal
Arch Masons, Pomeroy Chapter 80
meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. for the annual In-
will
Day theme were served by the
hostess assisted by her daughter,
Avanell Holliday, a !(\lest.
·
ThP April meeting will be at the
Harvest HOU'>f' in Albany, with Mrs.
Martha Chapman as hostess. There
will be a bulb exchange.
M I'ddlepo rt Garden
CJ ub
.h
. h bs
!(\lest mg t 0 ervance Wit
members to wear antique style
clothing and display family memorabilia and antiques, was planned
for April when the Middleport
Garden Cl ub met recently at the
home of Mrs. Paul Haptonsta ll.
Mrs. Dana Kessinger opened the
meeting with a prayer for March
taken from Culdeposts. .For rollcall
members named their favorite
A
spring
flower.
A letter
read
from Mrs.
Baulah
Hayeswas
thanking
the club for the valentine remembrances. Several shut ins members
were remembered on the holiday.
It was noted that Mrs. Mildred
McDaniel is recuperating train a
hip fracture. She resides at Brist9l
VIllage, 600 Fifth St., Apt. 39,
Waverly.
Mrs. Dorothy Morris showed
flower arrangement slides from the
OAGC giving a COinmentary on
each. She also showed slid<>s of
arrangements made by members
over the past severa l years.
Terrariums werp exhibited by
members, who r<>ported on soil
preparation and plants used. A St.
Patrick'sDay themewas used in the
decorat ions with a mantel display of
a map of Ireland and green and
white mums .. Mums were also used
on thetableflankedbygrren tapers.
Another arrangement of green and
white mums, madp by Mrs. Hal
Johnson, was displayed. Favors
were shamrock replicas with Irish
prayer~. Mrs. Haptonstall and Mrs.
Johnson served refreshments. Mrs.
Louise Thompson presided at the
punch, Mrs. Johnson at the coffee.
meeting of the Southern Band ·
Boosters in the high school band
room.
Meml;>ers were urged to support
the upcoming spring concerts. A
'bake sale was set for April2 at the
Racine Home National Bank and a
tag day
be held sometime in
May. The membership drtve Is
continuing and anyone wishing to
joinmaycontactJane Beegle orJo
Ann Tuttle.
CommittPCSnamedwereMr.and
Mrs. Sean Mullen , Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Ash,
Mr. and Mrs. Eber Pickens, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Frank. Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Hill, ways and means; and ,
Mr, a nd Mrs. Dennie Evans, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Beegle, Mr. ad Mrs.
Darrell Norris, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Johnson.
·
Lcx:al girl 'Excellent Youth'
·
will
A my SiSJon
Amy Danielle Sisson, daughter of
Mr. and ·· Mrs. Frank Sisson,
Pomeroy, was the recipient of an
excellence In youth awards at the
reception of the 12th Masonic
District honoring theGrandMas!fr
of all Masons In Ohio, Friday night
at Rio Grande College.
Vernon E. Musser, grand ' master, made the presentation to Miss
SISson. Slmllar awards went to a
member of the Rainbow Girls and
the Order of DeMolay.
Amy Is a past honored queen of
Bethel 62, International Order of
Job's Daughters, and was recommended for tbe award by Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F. and A.M. The 12th
Masonic Dlstrtct Is romprtsed of
Meigs, GaUla, Jackson and Lawrenee Counties. Active In Job's
Daughters for the past lour years,
she has held the offices of llbrartan,
junior custodian, senlQr custodian,
Inner guard, marshall, guide,
junior princess, senior princess,
and honored queen, She is a
member of · Grace Episcopal
Church, Pomeroy.
The National Socl!!ty, .Children~
111 the American Revolution, an' ilounces the acceptance of Whitney Brooke Ashley Into membershlp. She was eligible to join the
. soclety based on the service of
her fifth great -grandfather,
George Holter. who seved under
Captain William Moyer and Golonel Michael Pobst In the Third
' Battalion of the Northampton
County. Pennsylvania, Militia .
Whitney Is the daughter of
April 8 was set as the date for
insta llation of new officers
elected at a recent meeting of
Marv Shrine .37. Order of the
White Shrine of .Jerusalem held
at th e Pom eroy Masonic
Temple.
Practice for installation was
set for April:; at 7:00p.m. a t the
temple. Plans we:re made for a
rummage and b<tke sale, May 3
and 4. Those with Items to
contr'ibute are asked to call
773-:;91;2 or 992-749'\.
An Easter Cantata "Jesus
Lives" wlll be presented by the
choir of the Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport,
Sunday, March 27 at 10: 30 a.m.
"Jesus Lives'' Is by Harold
DeCou and will be directed by
Joan Robinson. Organist will be
Donna Jenkins.
Choir members · laking part
are Cherole Burdette, Nancy
Cale, Pauline Horton, Sandy
Luckeydoo, VIcki Houchins, sopranos; Betty Fultz, Twtla
Childs, Donna Byer. altos; Carol
Tannehill, Steve Jenkins, tenors; Ben Philson, Vernon
Weber, Robert Robinson, Charles Wayland, basses.
Recreation
Commission
acceptmg
applications
Applications are now being
1CCeptcd by the Middleport
h ocreat ion Cor:nmission for pool
marager, life !(\lards and swimming instructor. Forms may be
picked up from the mayor's
office in VIllage Hall.
Easter serv~ces set
The Rev. Benjamin Edwards
of Athens wilt be the speaker at
the Easter Services for the
Pomeroy United Methodist ,
Chul'('h, Sunday, April 3.
At the 6 a.m. Sunrise Service
(which wtll Include the Trinity
Congrega tlonal Church) he will
be speaking from Matthew
28: 1-10, "Experiencing the
Risen Christ." At the 10: 30 a.m.
.service he wlli be speaking from
Luke 24:1, "Seeking , and
Finding."
Mr. Edwards Is superintendent of the Athens District of the
vnlted Methodist Church which
Includes Meigs as well as six
other Southeastern Ohio
counties.
The cantata, "Jesus Lives",
will be presented at the Forest
Run United Methodist Church
9 am . Sunday.
Dan Nease Is the narrator,
aild Rose Ann Jenkins. the
pianist. The choir members are
Janetta Davts, Betty Blackwood, Debbie Hauber, Mary K.
Roush, Marsha Russell, Marybelle Warner, Hilda Y:eauger,
Linda Hamm, Marcia Arnold,
Jill Pugh, Roma Sayre, Kathleen Scott. Alfred Yeauger, Rick
Hauber, Roy Jenkins and Stanley Merrifield.
Nurses to meet
The Parkersburg Chapter of
the American Association of
Critical Care Nurses (AACN)
wlll hold Its March meeting on
Thwsday March 24 at ·st. Josepll's Hospital in the first Door
conference room at 7: 30 p.m.
Following a halt hour business
meeting, Dr. Nlkunj Shaw will
discuss the topic "D.I.C."
The meeting Is open to all
area Registered Nurses and
LPN 's. Refreshments will be
served following the meeting.
She Is lhe gr~nddaughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Thomas Schoonover, Rutland , and Larry Pickens, Pomeroy.
Great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Wilt and Mr. ·and
Mrs. S. G. Pickens, Pomeroy, and
Bonnie Miller, Middleport.
-~........
jill Picken.r
Melissa Lynn Russell, 12 year
old daughfe·r of Marine Capt. and ·
M-rS. Karl R. Rus sell, and grand'
daughte.r of Mr. nd Mrs. Kenneth
Russell , Racine, and Mr. and
Mrs , Roy 0 . Smith, Rock SprIngs, won the "cl tlzen or the
month" award of Kallau Hawall
Marine Base §chool for Marc I).
Melissa attended the Salisbury
School In Meigs County before
going with her family to Haw all.
Meli.r.ra RuJie/1
COPYIIGHT 1913 · THE KIOCEII CO , ITEMS AND HICES
GOOD SUNDAV , MAICH 20 . THIOUCH SATUIOAY ,
MARCH 26 , '"" · IN GALLIPOLIS ANO POMEROY iTORIS.
WE IUEIVE THE IlCHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOlD TO DlALUS .
'
0
r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
-
KROGER
WELCOMES
YOUR FEDERAL
FOOD STA!WPS
.
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
Eoch of
~tiwd ltonw io ~irtd 10
evlillb6t ror .... in ..ct. K.roger Stew. . eXQIPI •
r.wv
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.a.
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do M1 out of lfliiW.Iiwd
iWn, '!111M will oft. you .,our c::hoic» tA • ~-- it8m,
'lllfwl arv....,.., r-.cling the ...,.. MVingl Of • rlinchlek
wNch will ~ntitll 'f'OI.I to purer- me ~ ~ " the
--pri<»-:l)doyo
TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
March 24 • 25 • 26 • Thurs., Fri. & Sat.
E~
you buy a1 kr0911 il g.W1nt_. tor .,our te~
t1Wiction reg~~~ of rnenufeeturtt II 'f'OU .,. not Nlll·
ftld, l(f'Ogll' wil fepilee your item wi1tl the Ul"'''l bflnd 01 I
~~ br..-.dor rwfu!ld 'f'OU' purttt.M pricil _
THE FASIDON SHOPPE
5th Street
882-3312
. · New Haven
. REG. $23. TO $46.
25 0/ OFF
All Spring & Summer Dress as....
/O
BY CANDI JONES
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25 «Yc OFF
Proltt. Dresses •••••••••••••••••••••••••
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U.S . D.A. GRADE A
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~~~!c~o-~~-~-~~~~~~....... 25 %oFF
=~~ J:!.B•A•~~~•••••··~··••••20 % .OFF
Holly Farms
Whole Fryers
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Store Hours:
20 0/ OFF .JOO~eSn
9·
Slips •••• •••• ••••• ••• •••• •••
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~.m.
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Mon. thru Sat
FASHION 220
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OFF U,awaJ Pial
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& Visa Welcome
U:S.O.A. INSPECTED
PINEHURST & LORRAINE
'
Southern Boosters
Fund rais ing, membership, and
support of I hi' Southern Band were
the topics of discussion at the recent
10 %
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Holly Farms
_Mixed Fryer Parts
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Ole .Carolina
Sliced Bacon
•
PINT RETURNABLE BOnLES,
PEPSI FREE,
1-lb.
Pkg;
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Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi C~la
Happenings
Cantata to be
Sunday
Jlll Pickens, four-year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Terry Pickens,
Zanesville, was second runner-up
In the Miss Tri-State Pageant re- ·
centy In Ironton.
.Go Krogerlng.Anci .Sawe. • •
·During Our
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority wtll meet at
7:30p.m. Thursday at'Rlverboat
Room, Diamond Savings and
Loan, Pomery.
Mary Shrine
installation set
'1<t'lth aiul Emma Ashley of Crew
Road, Pomeroy. She joins her
sister. Rachel Audrey , - as · a
member of this national orgnlza tlon . Whitney Is the granddaugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D.
Ashley of Letart Faalls. It Is
through her grandmother. Mrs .
Robert Ashley, that she proved
her ellglbilty since Mrs. Ashley
Is a member and vice -regent of
the Return Jonathon Meigs chapter: D.A.R.
Base 'citizen of month'
Jill Pickens honored
·cAR_takes Pomeroy girl -
The Daily Sentinel
By The Bend
Ohio
39
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•I
.
Homogenized ~$J99
Milk ._..... ...........
s12s
AVAiLABLl ONLV IN
STORlS WITH
DELt·BAKERY.
HOT FOODS
AVAILABLE
t lam TIL 7pm DAtl V
lb.
'
.46· Years
[
Of Service
To The
Community!
California
·Head Lettuce
•
•
c
'••
";.
•
•
Save on 2&'~1110ool liCA lL·IOO
color wllb electrunlc tanl111
Now you can have 1 big 25" diagonal
picture at a money·savtng price.
Feature• XL· tOO color picture quality
and elngle-knob electronic tuning. •
Choice of finl1he1.
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rI.
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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
were her grandmother, Mary Gillilan, aunts, Laurte Provence and
Mrs. Reeves, and cousins, Brandl
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Fisher of
and Robbie Reeves and Donna GU.
Syracuse
hosted a birthday din!Uan ~<) Je'remy Alan. ·
ner
for
·thelr
son, Mason , Sunday,
Elona Lee recently won first
on
his
sixth
birthday.
place In the Shell Chemical saAttending the dinner were Mr.
fety contest and her picture
and
Mrs. Leroy Esstcks and
along With her safety tip was picsons,
James, Tom and Stnaley,
tured on a Shell Chemical safety
and
Arthur
Proffitt, Minerva,
calendar. She Is a third grade
and
grandparents
.. Mr. and Mrs.
student at Chester Elementary
·
Mason
Fisher,
Mlnersvlle.
SchooL
Wednesday,
MalliCh 23, 1'13
Fisher birthday Harmon ·birth
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0
Gillilan birthday .
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·Shain birth
ANN'S
STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm
CAKE DECORAJIMG
Sunday 10 am-10 pm
Holman birth
u :e Gi!fiLm
· Ohio
..
Grandparents are Mrs.Catherlne
Holman, Racine, and the late Jacob
Holman, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Mr.and Mrs. Terr.y Harmon Bell, Morning Star. Mrs. Helen
a nnoupce the birth of their son, . Phillips, CoolvUle, Is the paternal
'
Brandon Keith, Jan. 20 at the great-grandmother.
Cabell Huntington HospitaL He
weighed seven pounds, 14 ounces
a nd was 19 Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Woods, Middleport.
Paternal grandparents are Harold!
Hannon, Brlcjgewater, Pa., and , Mr.andMrs. SamShain, Racine. rp;;;;;;;;;~;;;~-;;-.
Mrs. Estella Harper, Gallipolis announce the birth of their third
Ferry, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs.Har· . child, a son, Mathew Joseph, born
mon have two other sons, Shaun, Jan. ii at the Holzer Medical
Center . The Infant weighed eight
three, and Tony, seven.
!)(iurlds,l2ounces,andwas221nches
long. Mr. ·and Mrs. Shain's other
childrE!II are Emily, eight, and
samuel, siX.
Paternal grandparents , are
Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Holman of
Mr.and.
Mrs. Harry L. Shain,
Morning Star announce the birth of
Racine,and.thematernalgrandpart~ir first child: Feb.l7 at the Holzer
ents are Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Medical Center. The eight pound, 11
Winebrenner, Syf!icuse.
ounce child has been named Jacob
Route 7
Old YFW Hall
"
RQbbie Reeves.
"~ The fourth birthday of Robbie
Tuppers Plains .
Elona Lee Gillilan celebrated
her ninth birthday at her home
on March 19. She is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs . George Gillilan,
Rt. 3. Pomeroy .
. Margie Reeves decorated a
Smurlette cake for her niece which
was seved wttli Ice cream to the gu ests. Attending besides her parents
'-.
'
667-6485
,~eeves was observed recently at
the home of his pa ren ts, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reeves, Chester.
A Smurt cake decorated by his ·
mother was served with Ice cream.
Attending besides his parents were
ll sister, Brandl, a brother, Bryan,
. his grandprents, Mary and Roy Gil·
!Dan, uncles, BUI Gllllian, Tom Gil·
l!lan, George and Linda Gllllllan,
Lee and Donna Gillilan, Jeremy
Alan, Freda and Russ Holsinger,
Daphne Cremeans, and Crystal
and Leah Spurlock.
r_B_r._~_nd_n_,z__K_e_il_h_H_·a_~_._o_n___P_au_l~.r--------------~,_._._._~--~~~~~~~~~;;;;=;;ei
DAILY SPECIALS
THURSDAY-Pinto Beans and Corn Bread
FRIDA Y-Ribeye Steak Sandwich... & Potato
.SPECIAL OF THE WEEK ~
SATURDAY--Meat Loaf
~
Skin~
PIZZA BURGER
WITH WARM WEATHER COMING .UP, A NEWSPAPER
ROUTE IS AGOOD IDEA! YOU EARft MONEY WHILE BE~
lNG OUTSIDE, WINNING GREAT PRIZES, AND ME£riNG
GREAT PEOPLE.
ROUTES IN POMEROY, MIDDLEPORT, SYRACUSE.
WITH FRIES ..... $1.59
CALL US TODAY AT ·
DAIRY VALLEY
$1.14
.ADOLPH'S
THE DAILY SENTINEL
~
SUN.DA Y-Bar-B-Que Ribs
MONDAY -Flounder Fish Sandwiches & Fries
TUESDAY-Kraut and Franks
WEDNESDAY-Lasagna
ALL SPECIALS INCLUDE All-YOU-CAN·EAT SOUP AND SALAD BM
HOURS:
Mondoy thru Saturday - 5:30a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Sunday - 8 :00am. to 4:00 p.m.
"
'l.
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"At The End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"
POMEROY OH.
PH. m-2556
992-2156
~
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0
VALUABLE COUPON
.. . .
W1eners............. ~···
Jason Neale Knight
POMEROY, OHI9
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Nea te Knight , 2:r/
Race St., Middleport, announce the
birth of their first son, Jason Neale.
on March 12 at Pleasant Valley
f!ospital. The Infant weighed seven
pounds.
•· Paternal grandparents are the
late Otis and · Venedla Knight of
Racine. Maternal grandparentsare
Gerald and Ellen Rought of '
Pomeroy . Maternal great ·
grandmotner is Mrs. GeorgeiSies·
selroad of Pomeroy.
THURSDAY, MARCH 24th
FRIDAY, MARCH "25th
SATURDAY, MARCH 26th
0
'
' A bridal shower honoring Kim
DeMoss and Eddie Fife was held
recently at thf hom<' of Kathy Fife
With Esther De Moss and Kar~n
P,halin, co-hosts.
Games were played and prizes
were given toJuneKa lattaandMrs.
',
•'•
Phalin.
•
-
SUPERIOR FRANKIE
.
USDA CHOICE
·
·
Round Steak.......~B~
USDA CHOICE
12 OZ. PKG.
$ 99
••
.
$ 29
Chuck Roast ....... !~·.. .
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
$ ·69
Chuck Roast ........~8~..
.
. GljestswereRubyBumslde,Mrs.
i<alatta , Faith Dickens. Marie
i{!ng; Kay Koehler. Kathy Fife,
. Karla DeMoss. Grace Thoma and
I.;lnda, Chris Schaffer, Cherie Cee,
CindY Warden. Others presenting
gifts. to the couple were Mary
Jioudashelt , Pat Thoma, Shelia
Carsey. Debbie and Mike Grate,
Martha Fife,aoo the Burger Chef
e'mployes.
•This oHer excludes cigareHe5, or any
other items prohibited by law.
•lhe total value of the doubled coupon may not exceed $1.00.
•
DeMoss shower
VALUABLE COUPON
Fryer Parts.........L!~ •
,,
.t
-·
ORKS••••..••
>
MIXED
-.•'
I
I
.
59
% Pork loin ..... ~~
Knight
birth
.
--------- SUPER.VALU
POWEU.'S
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 26, 1983
.
AT POWELL'S
MANUFACTURER'S COUPON
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
$.
U. S. NO. 1 IDAHO
10 LB. BAG
.
.'
•There is no limit as to the number of
manufadurer's . coupons . you may
redeem.
--:""..~-·~.,-"
•
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••
••
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REITER'S
..
0
I·
I
19
49 Choc.
RC, Diet Rite •. Decaf. RC, 8 PAK. ~
RC 100, Neh1, Upper10.i6•~•2T~...
'
<
$_
..
·MargaFme.~ !~~~K.L!;
.
•The total value of the doubled ma- ·
nufacturer's coupon cannot exceed
the purchase price of the item. Money
will ·not be refunded .
'
~~"'""':".
•
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KRAFT
MIRACLE..
-.-....-................
.
0
ec>nly one manufadurer's coupon per
item.
49
Potatoes••••••••••••••
eOffer is only good for produd on
hand. No Rainchecks.
•Any manufacturer's .coupon greater
than 51 (: will be redeemed at face
·value only.
SMUCKERS JELLY OR
I
.
.'
S10R£ HOURS:
•,
Moli•.s.t. •I n-10 pm
Gra
· · · COUPON· · · : : :
Slndlf 10 1111-10 pill
.•This offe~ does not ~pply to Powell's
Super Valu c:Ck.pont frat couporis, or
any competitor's coupons.
218 ~Dst
POM~, 0.
,..
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..·;·
CRISCO
CHEER ,
FLAVORITE
-SHORTENING
DETERGENT
SUGAR
~ 3 LB. CAN $'199
0
•
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Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer i;xpi!~
I'
84
oz.
$299·.
Umit One Per Customer
........
5lB.
BAG
Umit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell'.s
Offer Expiras Mar. 26. 1983
Good Only At Po~l'a
o
· Offer Expiras Mar. 26, 1983 · :
,.
,
$149
.
e e
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�Ohio
Man:h 23, 1983
The Daily Sentinel
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...li....
cop•es requ1red by the Comm •ss•on's regu lations to. Ken neth F Plumb. Secretary, Fed-
(Morch 20, 19831
eral Ener~v Regulatory
Commiss•on. 825 North Ca-
Take not1ce that the foUowrng
apph catto n has
been flied 'Nith the Federal
Energy Regulator y• CommiSSion and IS ava1lale for publtC
tnspect10n
a Type ot Appltcat•on Prelt mtnary Perm 11
b Prqect No 6939-000
c Date F1led December 1 7
hydroel ectr~c
I ',;/'l i.[,
-- f '
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!983
d ..... Appttcant· The C1ty of
Jackson Oh10
e Name of Protect Bellevtlle
locks and Dam
f locat•on on the Oh10 Atver.
1n M e1gs Cou nty. Ohto and
Wood County, W est V1rg1n1a
g Ftled Pursuant to. Federal
Powe1Ac1 . 16USC 179 ! (al ·
825(rt
NURSES WALK THE LINE - Nurses wlllk the
pick et Une at Akron General Medical Center In
Akron. The 400 member Ohio Nurses Association
local and hospital oHiclals broke ofi negotiations al
9: 30 p.m. Tuesday, and the RN's walked off the job at
6:30 a.m. lhls morning Into freezing weather. (AP
Lase111holo).
Nurses go on strike in Akron
AKRON. Ohio tAP!- Abou t 400
registered nurses from Akron
General Medical Center wa lked of!
their jobs toda y alter negotiations
broke down beffieen me mbers of
the Ohio Nurses Associa tion and
hospital officials.
Picket lines went up around the
hospita l about 6:30 a.m., officia ls
said.
Hospital officials met through the
night to set upcontin gency 'p lans for
the strike at the 557-bed medical
center , near downtown. The strike
Involves only nurses.
Gene Shepard, president o! the
DNA, sa id several economic and
non-economic Issues are unreSolved and led to the strike.
Hospita l spokeswoman Carol
Lucas sa id today that officials are
preparing a statement on the strike.
Winter remains ·in NE Ohio
By The Associated P ress
created blizzard-like conditions,
Cleveland school officials sent the
was expected to taper off to flurries
district's 79,<XXJ pupils home Tuesby evening. Flurries were predicted
day and the normal rush hour
lor Wednesday.
dragged on for several hours as
"This is strictly lake-effect
motorists ba ttled the heaviest · snow," said Les Waite, a weather
snowfa ll of the year.
service spokesman at Cleveland
No rtheastern Ohio hat!l been
Hopkins International Airport. " It's
spared a severe storm this winter,
not going very far inland."
and s nowfall for the year was below
Lorain, Cuyahoga and Geauga
average. But by noon Tuesday, 5to6
counties were hardest hit ·by the
inches of snow had fallen downtown, - snow, which began falling about
and nearly a foot of snow was
12: 25 p.m. Monday. Waite said.
reported east of the city in Chardon.
For the year, only 31.6 inches of
Th e Nationa l Weather Se1v ice
snow had . been recorded in nor
said most of the snow, which
theast Ohio, compared with the
record 100.5 inches for the same
period in 1982, Waite said.
Cleveland's "Operation Snowbird " worked overnight but lost
ground to the blowing snow. which
covered areas as fast as plows could
scrape them , sa id supervisor Mary
Brister.
Side streets and neighborhoods
went unplowed, l!'aving cars covered with snow and drifts of more
than a foot in some places.
" ! think everybody's kind of got
the word, and people realize we
have to give a ttention to the main
streets," Ms. Brister said.
Bevill says ARC funds coming
WASHINGTON (AP)-Ohioand
the 12 other Appalachian states will
get the money they need to phaseout
the Appa lachia n program if ~P
Tom Bevill , D-Ala. , has his way.
Bev lll , chairman of the House
Appropriations subcommittee on
energy and water development ,
promised Appalachian governors
Tuesday that "we'll get you some
money" even though the ~agan
administration wants to halt the
program.
· "This committee has always
supported your program," Bevill
said. 'I feel it will fund it again and
support your phaseout plan."
Last year, the Democrat controlled House approved the
Appalachian program but it ran into
trouble · in t he Republican controlled Senate. Without authorizing legislation. the program was
cant lnued lor one year . under a
catch-all continuing appropriation
measure.
Mississ ippi Gov. William F.
Winter . speaking for the governors,
said Appa lachia "is still a very
severely depressed area" and
needs help to br ing thequallty o!ll!e
there up to levels found in other
parts a! the nation.
Winter sa id that for many years
people left the region to look
elsewhere for jobs and a better life.
This was reversed, and the region
ga ined population alter the ARC
program was launched in the
mid-1960s.
"One of the greatest exports of
Appalachia over the years has been
some of Its most talented people,
leaving a residue of the unskilled
and uneducated ," Winter sa id.
"It would be a travesty to
termina te this program at the very
time that people are beginning to
see some hope, some opportunity
for jobs."
' "Give us a cha nce to phase it
(Appalachian program) out in an
orderly way."
The administration wants to end
funding this year for the Appalachian Regional Commission's community development, education,
health and other programs, said
Winifred A. Pizzano, federal cochairman of the ARC.
Under the administration's proposal, those programs would be
taken over by the states and the
Appalachian highway program
would be put under the J:lt'partment
a! Transportation.
·
1\'llss Pizzano said the administration wants to cut funding for the
regional highway program to $8l
million in fiscal 1984.
The ARC governors have asked
for $.m.7 mlUion for fiscal 1984 for
the second year of Its planned
five y('ar finish-up progra m .
Of that amount. $215 million
would go for highways, $78 mUllan
for a rea development programs,
$54 mUUon for a jobs program and
$15 mlUion for aid to distressed
counties.
Citing Improvements that have
been achieved under the ARC, from
new highways to vocational education a nd better plumbing, Miss
Pizzano said, "These measures of
progress a re the major reasons why
the Reagan administration proposes to discontinue special a id to
Appalachia."
The Appalachia n region 1ncludes
parts of 13 states stretching from
Mississ ippi, Alabama and Georgia
in the _South to Ohio, Pennsylvania .
and NewYork ln the north . ·
h Contact Per!i<Jn W M.
LeWIS & Assoc1a1es Inc . 7 40
Ftfth Street P 0
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
compromise blll to help home
buyers and farmers unable to pay
mortgages has drawnsupportfrom
farmers but opposition from
bankers.
As originally introduced by ~P
Harry Malott, D-Mount Drab, the
measure would have authorized a
blanket moratorium on home and
farm foreclosures.
But the substitute blll Malott
offered the House Agriculture and
Natural Resi>urces Committee
calls for non-binding mediation,
·although courts could stU! delay
foreclosures for 90 days to 18
months.
The compromise was backed by
the Family Farm Movement and
the Ohio Public Interest Ca.Jnpalgn,
but the Ohlo Bankers Association
opposed it Tuesday.
Ralph Bolen, executive vice
pres !dent of the bankers group, said
the btll "probably goes too far " and
raised the prospect of uneven
Implementation by boardS set up In
each county.
" Financlalproblemswethinkare
a very persona l m atter and should
be treated that way. The Idea of
government stepping in on existing
contracts is also disturbing," Bolen
said.
Dick Dalley of Mount Sterling, a
co-director o! the farm movement,
said. "The substitute bill aswesee it
has got everything in it that wewere
looking for in a mora torium bill.
Basically we want to get loans that
can be negotiated out. "
Support for the compromise also
came from Pete MacDowell of the
Ohio Public Interest Campaign,
who said, "We think It's a prudent,
needed bUI that sets up a fair,
balanced process."
Malott said the bill gives judges
an option that rould be used as an
alternative to foreclosure.
"The btu tS not a blanket
moratorium on foreclosures but
provides for a case-by-case analysis, an opportunity for both lenders
and borrowers to protect what
they've worked so hard to achieve,"
he said.
Committee Chairman David
Hartley, 0 -Springfleld, said the biU
'
'•
would create a five-member Home
Credit Emergency Review Board In
each of the state's 88 counties. 'It
would also create a single, fivemember statewid.e Farm Credit
Emergency ~view Board that
would operate lhrough the Department of Agriculture.
Borrowers or lenders could
petition their county board or the
state farm board to mediate
problems before foreclosure . proceedings begin.
"U negotiation by the board falls
and the lender files for foreclosure,
Box t 38 3,
Portsmou th
Oh1 0 4 5663.
Anentton
Mr James S S1gg. Manager.
Stud1es and Plann1ng
' Comment Date Apnl 2 2.
1983
Competmg
1
Appl1catton.
Pm1ec1 No 6900-000 Dale
F1led
December
1
1982
Due Dale. Apnl 20 I 983
k Descr1pt1on of Pro1et The
proposed pro1ect wauld ut•i tZe
the extstt ng Corps of Eng1neers
Bellevllle Locks and Dam and
would constst of ( 1) a new
.powerhouse contamtng ~hree
generattng untts havtng a total
rated capac1ty of 54 6 to 100 1
MW (2) tnterco nnectton wtlh
an ex1stmg 138-kV transmiSSton line. and (3) appunenan t
factlltles. The Applicant estimates that the average annual
energy output would be be
!Ween 287 0 nd 526 6 GWn.
1. Purpose of Pro1ec t The
energy ctenved at the pro posed
orOJCCt would be utiliZed by the
Applicant
m Thts nottce also cons•sts
ol the followmg stardard paragrahs A4a A4c B C and 02 ·
n Proposed Scope of S1u d1es under Permt t A preltm1narv
perm11 1f ISSued . does · not
authonze construcl to n The
term of the proposed prel1m1·
nary perm 1t IS 1 1 months The
work · proposed under the
prehm1narv oerm1t wou ld m ct ude economtc anatvs• s. prep
a1 at•on of orehnmmary eng tneenng plans. and a study ot
enwonmenal tmpacts Based
on resu lts ol these studtes
App l 1cant would dec1 ded
whe ther to proceed wtth more
de tailed stud1es and the pn:~ pa·
ratton of an appl1cat10n lor
ltcense to construct and oper ate the prOJeCt Ap pl1 cant est1·
mate s that the cost of the work
to be perlarmed under the
prel1m1nary perm1t would be
origtnal and the number of
PitOl Street N E . Was hington
D C 20426 An additiOnal
copy must be sen t to Fred E .
Spnnger. Ch1ef. AppliCB t•ons
Branch . D1vtS10n at Hydropower Ucens1ng. Federal Energy
Reg ulatory Comm1SS1on. Room
208 RB at the above address A
copy of any n otice of intent.
compet1ng appl1cat1on or motion to 1ntevene must also be
served upon each representa tive of. the Appl1cant spec tfled 1n
the p an1cular ap pl1catron.
D2
A4a htst1ng Dam or Natural
Wat et Feature Project .Aslyone d es1 11ng to l tle a
compettn Q appltcatton l or pre hm1nary \perm1t for a proposed
pro1ec1 at an ex1st1ng dam or
natural water feature protect
must subm1t the compe tm g
apoltca!lon to th e Comm1SS1 0n
on or before 30-days alter the
spec1 ft ed com ment date for the
part1cular appl tca t1 0n lsee 18
AaoncY C:Omnon11 -
Fede ral .• Sta te· and loca l agen CieS are 1nv1ted to hie com·
ments on the descrtbed
appl1catton (A copy of the
appiiCtron may be obtarned by
agenc1es d1rectly from the
Appl1cantl If an agency does
not ftle comments w1th1n the
t1me spec1f1ed for f1 l1ng comments. 11 INIII be presumed to
have no comments One co py
of an agency·s comments mus t
also be sent to the App•catlon ·s
representatives
Kenneth F ~umb
Secretary
13) 23 !tc
(1 982) lr1 determlntng the
appropna te actton to take. the
CommiSSIOn w•lt constder all
p rotests or other comme nts
fil ed. but only th ose who f1le a
m otton to tntervene 1n accordance wtth the Commtss1on·s
Rules may become a partv to
th e proceedtng Any com m ents. proiest s. or motions to
mt ervene mu st be recetved on
or berore the spectf ted comm ent date for the parttcular
appltcauon .
c
. NOTICE OF INTENT TO FILE
COMPETIN G APPLICATION"
'C OMPETING APPLICATION"
PROTEST' 01 "MOTION TO
INTERVENE'. as apphcable.
SAVINGS MORTGAGE CORPORATION. Plat nttH , vs JAMES A
RIFLE et al.. defendants: upon
a JUdgment there1n rendered.
be1ng Case No 18.328 1n sn1d
Court I W1ll offer tor sale at the
front door at the Coun House 1n
Pomeroy Me1gs County Oh1o.
on the 23rd day of Apr•I. 1983.
at ten o'clock am. the followIng land s and lenements to Wit
SITUATED tn the Vtllaqe of
Syracuse. Me1qs County Ohto
Bet ng l ot No 5 tn McBnde's
.Addl!ton to the Vtllage or
Syracuse
Prem1 ses known as Corner
Carrol & 3rd Syracuse. OH
45779
The Real Es1ate was appraiSed at S29 500 00
Terms of Sa lA s 1 000 00
cash at 11me ol sale w•th the
balance 1n cash w1th1n th•rtv
(30) days alter date ol sale
Oepos1t to be watved tl sold to
pla1 nt1ff - f1rs t mortgage holde r
Cannot be sold for lsss than
two -th1rds of the appra1sed
va lue
James J ProffItt
Shertfi ot M e•gs Co~mtv
M arch 22 . April 5
Public Notice
ORDINANCE
NO. 1130-83
An Onli•ICOI 1D E........
Sa' I ila far Vllltgl Offdlll ..
-
Be il onloi!Od by ... Co..1CI
of ... Vllloge of -..,.u.t -
Ma1ch t983
Attest John P Buck
Public Notice
g1ven 1n the lnformat1on to
Btdders. to rhe Spec1al Requlfe·
ments for wage rates. the hours
ot employment as ascenatned
and determ 1ned by the Depart·
ment of lndustnal Relattonsand
provided for tn the laws of the
State of Ohto.
The ONner resef\les the nght
to retect any or all btdS and to
wa1ve any tn1o rmaltl les tn
bJdd1ng
Real Esteta Ganarel
SW Washtngton. DC 202 t 9
Wtthl n 2 1 days oft he date of th e
last publ1catlon of thts nottce
NEW LISTING - 3 acres in
Sutllln Township. 3 bedroom
home, woodbumer, modem
ltitchen, lap water on good
blacktop 1oad. Asking $27,500.
The public ftle '1s avatlable for
•nspecttoo In the Aegtonal Offlee. One ErteVIew Plaza. Cleveland , Ohto 44114 . dunng
regular busmess hours.
BANK ONo OF
POMEROY. NA
Pomeory. Ohto
BANK ONE OF
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO.
NATIONAl ASSOCIATION
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sea!P.d proposals will be
rece1ved by thP V11taoe o l
M 1ddleport M et!lS County.
Oh1o. 1n the oH1ce of the Mayor.
V•llage Holl. Middleport Ohto.
unt1l 2 30 PM . M arc h 31 .
1983
and th en pu bl1cly
opened and read alourl for
Snt PREPARAnoNRESTORATION
13.6 ACRE Sntf
CONTRACT NO. 9
The proposed vvork 111 lh t::>
Conuac t conststs of cleannq.
slr tpptn ~ and stockpllmg ton·
SOli and seed1ng approx1mfltely
3 ocres i)nd turn1.Sh1ng plac1 ng
anrl compacttng upprox1mately
20.500 CUbiC VtHdS of h\1
malm1al nnd all appunPnant
work
The es!lmatP.d construcuom
COS t l or thiS PIO {CCt IS
Sl 10.00000
Cop1es ot Oraw1n(:ls SpecJIIca ttons ;md Contiact <10Cuments may bf'! obta1ned o r
r.xamtnP.d ilf the o!flce of Ftovd
Browne Assoc1a1P.s l trn1te<l
C ons ult 1nn EnqtnP.ers Pl anners. 18 1 Sou th M a1n
Street Ma11on. OhtO 43302
A twenty· live rlo llar I~ 7l) 00)
depos1t Will bP. requ1red to r
eoch set of Oraw,ng ~ . Spec111 c:~~t10I1s and ConlfaCt documents tnken fr o m thP abovf'
olf•c••s. the IIJII arnount of
whtch will be IP.fundnd \lf}Qn
mturn of same wtthHl th tr1Y ~3 0)
davs after lhP. b1d onen1ng ThP.
su ccessl~tl btdder may ret:11n
h1s DrawtnQs lor further use.·
and h1s depoSit tel unded
Checks shall be made nJy<~
hle to the VtllaQP. o t Mtddteoort.
Oh1o
Each b1dder m~t s t tnsurfl that
all employees anrl appl1erm ts
for empioyrnont 1UA nCJt rl1S·
cnm•natP.d aga•nst because of
ruce . color . r~ I 1Q1 0n $ex or
nai 10flill Ot'lfltn .
Annnttan' of l hP. B1dd e• 1s
d uectod to thP. spf!Ctal cu nstructtotn regulat tons 1nduded
heretn telaHve 111 SPfiCIJl rfl qurrr'!ments tor procumment o f
labor. thP. SPC<;ILII 1nl orrnatto n
Sec I Th a1 the charges lor
wa1er serv1ce .a nd sevo~age
serv1ce be 90 percent of those
rate s now set forth tn Ordt·
nance No 1121 -82 and d rd t·
nance No 1}22-82 or any
amendmems thereto 1n the
fut ure . l or the fo llowtng
persons
{a) All persons c tass1fted as
sentor Citizens wh1Gh are defined as betng homes tn wh1ch
the head of household tS 65
years o ld or older ( head of
household betnn determ1ned
by the def t01!10ns of the U S
Bureau ot the Census and the
l) S In ter nal ReVP.nue Servtcej
(U) Persons u rde r d 1sab1hty
wh.c.h a re dehned as per manel"' tly and totally d1sabJed. under
del1ntttons o l the U S Depart ment of Health Edu(·at•on and
W elfare or persons sulfermg
from serv1ce connected d•sab tl·
IIIP.S exceed tnQ 60 OP,rcent as
deltnP.d bv the U S Vererans
AdmtniSlrJII On. provided thm
such pe1son 1:; thP. head of th e
househo ld as df'ltned tn Subdt·
v1S1on (a)
Sr.c II Thnl the chaJClP.S for
water sf'rv1t.•
aorl sP.Wage
serv1Cf! bn 80 pnro:!nl o l th ose
rti!P,S now set for th 111 Ord •·
ndfiCC No 11 2 1-82 and Ord •n<~nco No
1122-82 or any
amendment :- t!H•rr>to •n the
ltttutP
l n t l h P l o l low1nq
pet sons
(n ) HousPholds tn wh 1C h the
h(!arl Ol thP. hOUSP.hOid IS
unemptoverl nnd rece1vtn{l unemplovmP.nt c; omt"letlsa tlon be·
nP.Itt"l ptovtd ed such llnemplovr.d per son 1s thf" headolthe
hOIISA BS dP. ftned Ill ~CtiOn (a)
ol 1h1s ord1nanr.P.
St•r Ill In or der to ob1 a1 n the
rl1 SC Oun\. f!lifllhiP J"'P.ISOilS mus t
makf! appl•ca!lon up J form
whiC h Will be piQVIdnd by ,tha
Vtllilr:Je and lurm sh ev1dHnce to
thP. V11l.1q e. Board ol P\.Jbhc
Allatr s, that th roy m P.P.1 the
P.l1g1b11ttV JP.Qllllcmen ts as pr ow lP.d lor hP.rP.•n TfJP. d1scoun t
as n•ov •dPd 1n th•s ord •nance
!>hall nn 1 dOply unttl each
appltr:an t has lu111lled th e rfl·
C1u11P.m nn1s lnr ·the dt scount
and thP. CIISC0111lt !;hall bP.
h't m1nnterl 11 the t1pp1tcant
wulm thf! rl1S;_tblltty c;pc tton
shall m any 11mP be de1mm1ned
hy thP- U S Oep.1 rtment ol
HP.alth EdiiCill•on Jnrl Welfare
or thfl U S VPIPrans Adm•niSIraiiOn to h.tvfl a dtsa b•hty lf!ss
lh.Jn l h1l$P d1~h n pd Ill thtS
01d1 n.mc.e
Sec IV Tl11~ Ord111ance shall
takt! Rlfflct and l lfl 1n tull lorce
hom :!tlc1 al!• '' thP. P.tl rl 1ec;1 date
nrovHiA<I tJV law
Pa S!'iP.f i
thP 14th Oay of
March t 983
NEW USTIIIG - 3 bedroom
ins!Jaliid ranch. Woodbuming
fireplaee, carpeting eqUipped
ltitchen, gass furnace, garage
and n~e Jot on west end ol
RuUand. For $36,<XXJ.
131 ! 6 23 21<
.Roger Hysell
GARAGE
St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.
AUTO & TRUCK
REPAIR
ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
llew
Ho!Ms - htensin
Rtmodtlln&•1 nsurance Wort
.Custom Pole Bld&s.
& Garaau
•Roofina Work
tAltlltiun & Vinyl Sidiqs
15 Years lxperl•nce
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282
Also Transmission
992-5682
or 992-7121
PH .
32Hic
ll·tl tfe
..,n carry
POINTS - 122 acres ol
nice ~ying land New garage,
concrete ftoor and a like new 2
bedroom Schulz trailer. Gas
furnace, T.P. water lor
$26,500.
FlY£
WE ADVERTISE OUR LISTIIIGS 4 TillES A MONTH.
Housing
Headquarters
AUCTION
.
ALL CARPET
INSTALLED
WITH PAD
FREE
•.
.'·
AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
I:ENERAL ELECTRIC
& HOTPOINl
WE ALSO WORK ON
ALL OTHER APPLIANCES
AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
"Lowest Rates
Around
"Friendly Service
GIVE US A TRY
742-2328
~
- ·
POMRoY
lANDMARK
614-992-2181
STARTING AT
S!295.PER YARD .
INSTALLED
STARTING AT
..
'
Industrial, Cotnmercial,
Rnidtntiltl , Interior and
Exterior.
Plllntlng
Stndbltltlng
Morterbltetlng
Ptlklng Lot Stripping
Spray Painting
Texture CottlnJII
Fully tnsund-f• ~
CAU 614·949-2616
ere the hlgheat In two yMrl,
Call: 949-2263
Or 992-2791 0•11,
3
Com· liiiiiiiiiii
plata antique•.
houeeholds
. Write:
jara.
etc.,
M .D . Miller, Rt. 4 , Pomeroy,
Oh. Or 992-7760 . •
Announcements
21
Business
Gold, oliver. otorllng. jo0 0 rtu 1'I
wotry. rlngo, old colno & , ____P_P__ _n_ _V
___
chine
SWEEPER
repair,
ond -tng
parte, mo·
and
:~~~~:~.
currency. Ed Burkett Barber
Pick . Vacuum
up oncl
Davia
one holt milo up
George• Crook Rd. Coli
448·0294 ..
Shop,
3476 .
J&F
•DOZEI
Wanted to buy. lnveotment
property. Colt 814-992 6868 .
weight with Now Shope
Diet Pton ond Hydro• Wotar
Pillo ot Fruth Phormocy.
Wonted oict Plonoo . Poytng
UO.OO ond $40 .00 oach.
First floor only. Write giving
dlrectiona. W itten Pianoa.
Cokoo modo for all occoolono. 304-273-6288.
Bqx 1 B8 Sordio. Ohio
43946 . Phone 61 4-483 ·
1606 .
Square Dance · every Satur·
dey from 9 to 1 AM. Country
Rock Sunday 7 to 11 PM .
Rdbert Pickett"o, Eost Dar·
wtn, St. Rt. 681.
Wonted to toooo tobocco,
25c per lb. 304-675-2275 .
Center now tllking appllca·
tion for ambulatory patlent1 .
For inform.tion phone 304-
11
773-11882 , ook for Botty
Mercer.
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIIESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LiliES
4
WORK ..
•lAND CLEARIIIG. ·
Hompstor & cage. Call 446 4438.
1101111(0 & 110111( GUAIWIIEtD
PHONE Jill CLIFFORD
Afraid to attend Church
becauae of your IBcklng in
knowiodgo of tha Word ol
God7 A FREE of charge
Horne Bible Study coune
Giveaway
•POIIDS, REClAIATIOit
CONCRnEWOR~
992-7201
3·7-Hc
'
'
.
Sizes from &'x&' Up
to 24'13&'
Ph. 915.4269 or !185.4312
Chester, Ohio
DeW1!yne Wllllenis
• Scottie Smith
All lllkls and Motltls
Antelina lnsllllltion
H0111 Cllli and Shop
St!Yitt Availlbla
P&S BUILDINGS
!IIC!f!_e, Olt. .
Pit. &14-143-5191
104tfc
~ 3-18·1
Vinyl
&
Aluminum
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garaces"
Call for frM sldinJ ts·
timates, 949:-2801 or
949--2860.
No Sunday
Call~
EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
'Sidina
'Rooflna
'Gutter & Down Spouts
'Remodtlin&
20 Yars hperienc~ ,
In Homt Ar11
"Somethin& New"
RAVENSWOOD FABRICS
Now Hat Fashion
Outlet Quality
O.thlng:
•Jeans
·
Etc.
Call 843-5425
l-4 ·2· mo pd
J.-4-1 1'110.
J&L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &
•Replucem.,t Windows
•N.- Roofing
PUBLIC AUCTION
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
321mo
SALE OF ALL FURNISHINGS'
FROM DAVIS HALL
Roofing, Spouting
Remodeling
14 Y11rs Experience
All Work GuarantNd
742-2324
773-5684
PULLINS
EXCAVATING
.. .
. ''
. '
'
~
..' .'
.
'•
''
SACRIFICE - QUICK SALE - No waiting, m011e nght 10. 2
bedrooms, bath, lving room, & eat-in kitchen on first floor.
llllsement has 3rd bedroom, laundry area & extra room. Concrete
ClrpOtt with shed II the end of dnve.
, ' '
laart - $220 plus deposit
PlUS OTHER OCCASIOIIAI. RENTALS.
.. ''
'
''
J
J
' J
•' Jj
l
I
I
/
ITEMS.TO I!_E SOLD: lcmre seats, couches, c)lairs, end Ia
bleSJ!nd coffee tables frOm the Visitors' lounge;
French Provincial styling and all in excellent condition.
Fireplace screen and accessories, pictures, lamps and
a laree drop-leaf table.
.
Church deacon seat, 12 feet long, a Baldwin baby
grand piano and an upnght piano.
Office, classroom· and study furnit~re , includmg clas·
sroom chairs w;th study arms; desks, tables, etc.
More than 50 'beds, pedestal desks, straight chairs,
arm chairs and metal trash cans from dormitory
rooms.
,
· ·
LUNCH WILL BE SERVED BY THE HMC EMPLOYEE
RECREATION COMMITTEE.
TERMS DF SALE: Cash or certified check at lime of
purchse. All items to b• purchased in their uisti~l
condition. No advance sales permitted before Auc·
tiC!flat 11 AM . Not responsible for eccident or loss . .
AUCTIONEER : KENNETH SWAIN
Bartender
needed . lmme·
AR£ you tired of job huntIng? Tha Now Soroh Coventry io aoettlng foohion show
directora. Ifyou warit
to earn
e-.cellent money, call 304676 -4 831 for moro
information .
buoineos. Colt 1-800-112692<10.
.•
Money to Loan
puppies, 2 mote l!o 1
fomoio, pert pit bull &
Gorman Shoppord. 304882-2993.
Services
1---------Cl!ol Bookkeeping
Tax Returns & bookkeeping
for Individual• & businaatea.
Sh<lrt formo e&.OO
long forms 120.00 ond up
Carol Neot
448-3882
PIANO TUNING l!o REPAIR
Call Bill Word for appointWard '• Kaybo.,d,
446-4372.
ment.
PERMANENT Holr Removal
Professional
Electrolyell
Clinic Profeaeional Building ·
Room 1. A.M .A. and F.C.C.
,.
3
12
Situations
Wentad
Room.
board & care for
approved . Doctor referrata,
y appointment, Phone 304676-6668.
BMgle. and mixed.
. 'I
Reaaonable .
Free gordon plot 304-6752482 .
614-992-8022 or 61 4 ·
992-6748.
FIVE tmall kittene, 6 weeks
otd. pert Siomooo, 304-6756145 .
Odd jobs. painting, email
carpentry work, house
ctoonlng . 6t4-992-6814 .
GARAGE to give owoy, In
Pt. Pteooont , 304 · 676 1366 .
Riverview ' Personal care
hame for the oldoriy pe tlento. 304-773-6882.
6
ing out for odd joba. From
cutting graaa
plumbing
and from dean up to fin·
ished carpentry. Colt 6t4992-7826 and 614-9853664.
Modern businees bldg. 58
Male, rock vocalist available
evenings.
-llllckhots
-Dutnp Trucks
-Lo-loy •
-Trencher
- Wtttr
-Sewer
-Gill Linn
-Stptlc Systems
lARGE or SIALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478
1·12-l mo
TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
. SERVICE
~
611 E. lllin, PwiMiij, 0H.
PH . 992·3795
, We Do lotilufllic for
Smll, ...... ltid Colptnll
~
& Pabwslt_.
IIAR'f C. KEBlfR-OIIIIER
YOUNG'S
CEMENT
FINISHER
Richard
~arfield
'Parkinl Lots
"Driveways
'Besements ·
''atlos
CARPENTER
SERVICE
...
_......,. ...,.,_.
t
"
•
cnf ....
.........
I
'lnl
-CecLsl WVfk
. .1.... _ . .
('rM htlmGI•)
Reuonable 'Ratts
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 614-985-4464
371moPd
V. C. ·YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992-7314
l'ttmoroy, Ohio
11·21-tfc
liON t'MIIIIltn IIIII flee..
tar We c.t lito
llaid balllld nxl aut ..
diiiOia. We tllo ...,...
LOST . Female
Doberman
Wednesday near Memorial
Field. Fawn color. name
588 from O.llipollo. Rewerd . Coll448-2310.
7
Are you paying to much for
LOST Iorge bluish-grey cot.
Loat approa. 2Y.z mi. out At.
GetT111ka.
.
PAT HILL FORD
992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
HHft
Yard Sale
:;n~':t~~;·~
r,oldonce .
YARD oole, 192 North Pork
Or,. Pt. Ptn,ant, Friday,
Morch 26th. 10-4 p.m.
concolied If rain.
Public -Sale
lla Auction
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE'
Fr0111 ht S1111ltst Htlltar
Cora to the l.lraest Radii·
Auction every Fri. night ot ·
the Hartford Comnlunhy
Center. Ttucktooda of now
merchendlae every week.
bdiator Spaclalst
Conalgment1 of new and
uaed merchendl.. elwaye
985-3561
All Make•
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.
•Drywa .,......
Pemeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992·2174
•Walhwa •DIIhwaet.re
Re...o
•Refrtgerotoro
PARTS and SERVICE
4· Iff:
2-1 Iff:
Phone 388-B890.
your hoopltol -heahh inauEostor Croft Solo. Fri. & Sot. ia nc e . Co It Co rr o II
Antiquity. Sign in yard. _sn_ o
_w
_ de_n_._4_4_6_-4
_2
_9_o_._ _
CDMPI.ETE
RADIATOR SEIMCI
!lATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience
SANDY AND BEAVER tn Co. has offered
aurance
seNicae for fire lnaurance
coverage in Gellia Coupty
for almoet a century. Farm.
home and pereonal property
coveregea are available to
meet individual neede. Con·
tact Eugene Holley, agent .
"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
tor.
for work. Alao have acoua'lic
guitar and electronic key-
LOST brown 8 trock tope boord, 304-876-71 98 ,
cooo, fuM of tapeo. Felt off I:;;;==;==== = = =
cor bolwoen Crown City l!o
Golllpollo. 'Reward . Colt 13
lnsur8nca
614-2118-9382.
8
RADIATOR
SERVIa
We '*' ...,.... and . .
to
Lost and Found
REWARD Loot lodlios ring
with aevaral etonee. Loet in
vincinity of Silver Bridge
Plaza. Ponderoea. Jones
Boys and Foadt8nd Rt. 36.
Colt 448·41112.
-Dozers
Home of the former Holzer Medical Center
School of Nursing.
All items wm be on display from 9A.
M. until 11 A.M. on the day of the
sale at the Gallia County Fairgrounds.
SALE BEGINS PROMPTLY AT 11 A.M.
available by manufacturer.
low freight, competitive
prlcae. complete Una of
quality buildingt. Earn up to
t100's per year in your own
Gottipo· Il~j=;~~;;~~==
diote opening. !)olale only.
614-992-9901 or 9926891 . Aok for Mike .
12 YEAR old Border Collie
to good homeinthecountry.
Good companion for older
pooplo . Colt 304 - 875 5768.
t----------+----------1-----------1 Fonnie.
Rowerd. Cell 446869t. 448-1008 .
SATURDAY, MARCH 26. 1983
AT 11 A.M.
GALLIA COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
U.S. 35 WEST OF GALLIPOLIS
PRICE
CONSTRUCTION
Complete Home
•Storm Doors
•S1orm WlndoWI
Public Sele
lla Auction
I---------STEEL building doalorohlp
I
E~~~:cellent
condition S..
location-all
for in
diate occupancv-· lntereet
rates are down and probably
won't be lower.
ready
me·
and or rental
Broodwoy-Mid dtoport .
Home
Charitable organization hir-
ALUMINUM SIDING
,.....
Canter, training .
Faehlon
HOME LOANS 1 2% fl•od
rate. Leader Mortgage. 77E.
State. Atheno , Ohio. 1-6 14692-3061.
elderly only.
10:00 to· 5:00
204 Washinaton St.
Rannpood, W. Ya.
•
fixtures, grand opening pro·
motions. Cell Mr. Koltecky
(6011327·8031 .
46674 .
7280 beforo 4 or 614-3B8·
9783 oftor 4 .
black shoggy dog.
Mole. 6 monttio old. 614·
,986-3870 . .
Mate
Open Tues.-Sat.
or ladloo Apparel Store.
Offortng all notlonelty
known brand• euch •• Jord·
oche, Chic, Loo, IAvl, Yenderbllt. Cotvtn Klein ,
Wrongter over 200 othor
brondo . H ,900 to $24,600
includes beginning Inventory. airfare for one to
22
Babyaittar needed in Spring
Valley area for 2 year old 1
dey per week . Prefer someone with children . Call 448-
304-876-4095 .
'Blouses
'Swim Suits
'Enniil& Gowns
FREE ESTIMATES
J.ll-tft
•lrwul1don
"
mo. pd
sa.99
.... .
8
SERVICE
Own your own Jean ·
Sportswear, lnfant-Pret"n
For Agri Buaineas-Saleman.
general office
Send resume to
.
444 , Rio Grande , Oh
reoume to Box 969.
Ito. Oh 46631 .
Ienon you want, call now.
U . P . C ., Box 231.
Middleport.
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Help Wanted
1
Rolioble bobyolttor for 2
children doy shift. Must
have referencea . Prefer 180
Spring Volley oroo . Call Buaineu & Second . Mort·
gage loans. Equity RBJour·
448-7893 otter 4:30. ·
ceo. In Ohio 1 -800-992·
Legal Secretary wanted , ax- 2361, out of Ohio
perlenco prefonod . Sond 1-800-641-6286 .
home
APPLIANCE
Doa Ho~ses
992-
1---- - - - - - -
Conirol hunger and IDM
S&W TV
lnrulatd
Mlddtoport.
RIVERVIEW Poroonot Core
·CONTRACTING
~
1-:---------
I
All 1)1115 of roof WOit, ,..
or !8plir, ~ _.
downspouts, DJIW cltlllitll ... paintirc. storm
dOOIS ltid windows.
All Wort GuarantNd
' "Fret Estimates"
.,
check our prlceo on &old & l!o building. Fr.. ost. No Job
-•;
1
1
1
to large or to amall. Call
N ver. ocrop ewe ry.
uy ng 814· 245-111 1<1 or coil cot·
A opoclalthonko toell wha Old colno, ocrep ri11g• l!o
brought food oncl ""t flow· ,nvorworo. Dolly quoteo tact 1-2811-29112 .
word8 of condolence ovolloblo. Aioo coinol! coin
during tho loll of our oon oupplloo for nte. Spring Oddo end ondojobo. Raeoo·
rotoo. Celt II 14· 7<12·
ond brothor Chellea H. Hud - Volley Trading Co., Spring noble
2
oon. Nophowa. who took Voitey Pion, 448-8026 or , _ _50_2_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
I
core of tho grove. Rev. CocM 448-10211.
Gardena plowM with large
wt11 for hla help . Atoo tho
lingere. May God richly BEDS-IRON. BRASS. old •ototittor ol• lnchoo d•p.
bleu you on• •n-:t au.
. furniture, gold, ottvor dot- ::z~!~98'ont. Routor-llt4- : ,'
!are. wood ice boxaa, none
2 2l-ttc
H. L. Writesel
ROOFING
Wanted to Do
Wanted to do plumbtng.
electric. roofing. remodeling
num. Gold end Silver prk::ee
CardofThenks
Puppy, Germon Shophord,
304-1711-7271 .
RUBBER BACK
CASH & CARRY $4,99
.,
IIEW llSTIIIG - 3or4 bedrooms possible onth1sooe.Trailer with
lqe ldtkJn on neady an acre lot. Jnctooes SIDra~! buildin& lm
•can have second trailer as extra 1ncome. Call lor more details.
CAll. US TD TD llliY DR SEU
ltMCY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
. fHOIIE:I43-5115
Or 112·271.1 Ia ... AII I
PAINTING INC.
3·10 I mo
KITCHEN CARPET
The Daily Sentinel
RENIAL -
PH. 992-2280
37-tfc
•,
... lhe .nd turon your ~r •nd avoid
the !lazar* of hlchwfiJ and fraewQ
tmtllna. It pllp to lhop wher* you live!
IIOIILE HOlE - with lari!! add-on buid!Og, also asphal
dnvewat located on quiel;--dean street out ol high water 10
Racine. The liY111g room ~ extra large. There is a cement walk and
'lqe covered Porch, also a metJI sb'al! build10g. You can be 111
litis one in two weeks lor only $16,900.
GHEEN'S
1
er..
A TOll
l·l·ttt
Resldentiel
lla Commercial
Call 742-31915
SIDING
'
the Comptroller of the Cur·
rency. Wash1ngton. 0 C
2021 9 for hiS co nsent to a
merger at Bank One of Pome·
roy. N A.. Pomeroy. Ohto w1th
Bank One of Southeastern
Oht o. Nat1ona l Assoc 1atton.
$3000
18
Buying Gold. Silver, Pfeti ·
EXCEllENT BUY - Gravel 1----------+~---------t~---------+----------j can give you a clear under·
Hill, 6 roomhome Lois ol
otonclng of tho Word of
remodeling, carpeting, large
God. With no obligation on
eat-in kitchen, dry baseme11t 64 Misc.
ALL
STEEL
&
experienced te.w:her can bf
natural gas lu(Ttace, front
aent to your
by limply
AND
POLE BULDINGS
po!th and level I~ lor only
coiling 986-3684 or 992 3824. To got tho tlmo of
Sizes stttrt from U'xl&'
$21.500.
COMMUNITY SHOPPING. PAYS
OFF IN. MORE WAYS THAN ONE!
Br •hoppfncln your hom. ..... you H¥!1 on
CENTRAL
Farm Equipment
Parts & Service
For all your wiring ,
needs; furnaces repair •ervlce •nd lnltelletlon.
the balance. I ~ baths, several
garage~ Heatolator, carpeting,
large krtchen , dining and one
acre Only $40,<XXJ.
-
Real Estate General
D•ler .
· MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
ON Ill. 143- One mile off Rt.
7. Wllh 10% dowl\
Authorized John DHr,
111w ""''-'
Buslt .._
,_..,
,,...
Farm Equipment
Ill IIKl
$75,000.
• I I
NOTICE OF
FlUNG OFAN
APPUCAnON
TO MERGE
s&KAUCTION
Riverside WJ Inc.
NEW LISTING - 84 acres
nea r Hemlock GrO'Ie w~h ~
minerals. Nice modernized 3
bedroom home. Natural gas
furnace, hardwood floors, large
bam and other bt.ildings.
Cnrl Horky · • ... ;
PtP.Sidt· nt ot • • ~ .. .
Counc1l
Public Notice
OH.
Na·
tionwide Road Seriit:t. Mov-·
ina tips and i11$U1111ce.
H1·21M
Cnrl Horky
Ptesttlent of
Ccunc11
Main
trucks, turniturt pads,
STRIP
COAL
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OH 10
~~~~~~;;;~t.=~~~~~~~~~~========~t~~~~~~;;~~
NEW -LISTING - I year old
80% finisood2 bedroom home.'
Full basement carpebng, nice
ltitchen and 5 acres in Salem
Townsl'ip. Want only $19,500.
Clerk
coiner
RENTAL & ""''RWAV
..._.
local and on.-.y,
low rates,
top flllintaintd trucks. Ri&ht
silts, ri&ht equipment. Hand
MINE RUN .
11
Wanted To Buy
'
~
Auc st Jnn P Bur k
Cl•· •k
SHOP LOCALLY
SALES & SERVICE
12·21Hk
1-(614)-992-3325
~:
BOGGS
45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
Phone
Fred Hoffman
Mayor : ':
& Sidina Co.
Route 1
Lona Bottom, OH.
VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E. lnd St.
THE VILLAGE OF
M IDDLEPORT OHIO
!31. 16 23 2lc
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
J
Roofi~
Any person destrtng to comPublic N.!tice
ment on thts appltcat ton may
do so bv aubmmtng wntten
ORDINANCE
comments to. Otrector. Bank
NO. 1129-83
Oroan1zatton and Structure D•v- ·
Be ilanlainad bytt,. Council
ISIOri Com otroller of the Cur·
rency 490 L'Enfant Plaza Eat. of tt,. Vtloge of Middlopoft u
Public Notice
By v1rt ue of an Order 61 Sale
1ssued out of the Common
Pleas Court of Me1gs County.
Oh10. tn the case of SECUAilY
Kltcben Cabinets - Roof·
Inc- Sidlnc- Coitcrtte
Patios - Sid-lkl New Construction - Rtmadtlin& - Cust0111 Pole
Barns.
I 983, and end.ng March 30.
1983
NOnCE OF SALE
or in any ca5e'Where a foreclosure l r - - - - - - - - . . . . 1 - - - - - - - - - , 1
action Is filed, the borrower may ask lt
the court to delay theforeclosurefor
90 days and refer the case to the
I
appropriate board for their recomTHURSDAY & S'lmJRDAY-7:00P.M..
mendations," Malott said.
In the case of farm property only,
At
of Depot &
the board could guarantee interest
Rutland,
on farm loans for up to 18 month&
from a fund backed by profits from
the state's liquor sales.
SHERIIM DWS: Owner
Once a board made its recomAuction11r
mendations, judges could delay .a
foreclosure up to 18months or allow
Terms II Sill:
or CIIICII with POiiiM I,D.
It to proceed.
ROONEY HOWERY:
Call
ces · of the above-named banks
wtll conttnue to be operated
Thts nOtice is published pu rsuant to sectton 1 82B(c) of the
Fe deral Depostt Insu rance Act
and Part 5 of The Regulations
of the Comptroller of the Cur·
rency ( 12 CFR 5) Th1s notice
w1ll appear vveekly, on the same
days. beg1nmng M arch 2.
Public Notice
Filing and Sorvic:o of
Noti ce is herepy g1ven that
RMponaive Dornonll - AfYV apphcat1on has been made to
f1 lmgs m ust bear 1n all cap1 ta l
lettersthe tttle ·c oMMENTS·
23. I 983
tt IS ~o memplated that all offi-
1----------
Motiona
21t
Athens. Oh10 under the charter
of Bank One of Southeastern
Ohio, National Associatton and
with the t1tle Bank One of Sou·
theastern Oh to, Nattonal AssoCiat tQn This appltcaMn was
accepted for fi ling on February
... ...
-.........
................
hr,;,:~:=~~~~ilF=~~;;;:;:::::~::::::::::::::~T;::::::::::::::~
--- -·
(3) 2. 9. t 6 23. 30. (4) 1, 6!C
Sec I That th~ salanes l or
elected ofl1c•il ls ot thP. Vtllane
shalla be os follows
M ayor $4 500 00 I)P.r year
Clerk-Tr "asurer. $4 .000 00
CFR 4 30 IO 4 33 (19821 A
not1ce of 1ntent to ltle a pr!l year
MembArs of Buard of Public
com pet1ng apphcaiiOn for preltm1nary perm~ \ w1 ll not be Aff;:m s $8 00 pot meettnQ (not
to e:-.ceed 12 meet1ngs per
aco~p t t;~d lor f11tnq
A4c The Commtsston wtll vear)
M embers of COllllCt l. S1 2 00
accept apphcatrons for ltcense
01 exemption from l1censtng. or per meetng atte nded ~wtlh the
a nottce of 1ntent to su bmtt ex.cept1on of the Prestdent of
suc h an appltcatton tn re- Council ), (not to exceed 24
sponse to th1s no ttce A nottce meetu19s per year)
Prestdf!nt o f Cou nctl S14 00
of tntent to f1fe an applicatron
lor ltcense or exempt1on must ·pw meetrng att ended (not to
exceed 2 4 mettnflS Pf!r YP.ar)
be subm1tted to the Comm•sA counc1l member shall be
Sion or or before the spec1 f1 ed
comment date lor the parttcular deemed to have att ended a
appt,cttOn Any apphcat 1on lor meeung tf such member aplicense o r eKemptton from nca rs at a H¥.1ular or spec1al
ltcensmg must be !tied tn mect ulQ even thounh a quorum
su ff 1C1ent to conduct bus•ness
accordance w1th the commtsston·s regulatio ns (see 18 CF A does not appear
The salanes provtded 1n th iS
430 to 433 or \\4 .191 1t
4 t 94 11 8721 m as ord 1nance shall be pa1d com mP-nc lng w1th the term s of the
appropnate )
B Conrueull. Ptol&itli, or specrf tc offtces wh1ch 0001n C?n
qr alter January 1. 1984
to Intervene Sec II ThtS Ord1nance shall
Anyone may subm11co mments
a protest. or a · motion to take efJP.Ct and 00 1n Ioree from
tntervene 1n accordance w1th and after the Aar hes t date
provrded by law.
the requ1rements ot the Rules
ol Practtce and Procedu re 18 1 Passed lhe 14th day of
\\38 5 2 t 0 .
Dt,t.
Athens. Ohto
1----::---:-:-:---:-::---:---
s t 00.000.
C F R
Ohio bankers oppose compromise
and the ProJect Number of the
part•cular apphcat•on to wh1ch
the hhng •s 1n response Any of
tne above named documents
must be fi led by prov•d•ng the
The
Business services.
Ill Cooort 51., , _ _ - 45711
Public Notice
P-8939-000
UNntD STATES
OF AMERICA
FEDERAL ENERGY
REGULATORY
COMMISSION
Notico of Appllc:etion
Filed with tt,.
Conw1 I • -n
....
-'
Public Notice
Public Notice
1 11 . r
.
Ohio
.
''
PHONE
992-2156
o. •it• f!tllr Sootiool ctosslfiH
-~-~~
'
Man:h
welcome. Richerd Aeynoldl
Auctlonoer. 2711-3069 .
AUCTION ov~ry Sotunloy
night, Mt. Alto. WY. 8 p.m.
Conalgnmenta welcome .
Bell auctioneer.
Emm1
1
16
Schools
Instruction
112 + acre• with 2
Gottie County.
homes
Coll992-3287 or676-261 a
1 V2 acre with 6 rm . houae.
with basement. need eoma
work on hou•. 87 600. Call
' 614-246-9211 .
modern
3 bed~oom
home.
carpeting, out building, 1
acre, drilled well, close to
miriea on Vinton-Eno Rd.
Coli 614-388-8418 boforo
noon, 614-246-9416 oftor
noon.
HOUII for sole 4 bdr. 2 tuft
bathe. finilhed basement, 2
car garage in the back . Seen
by appointment only, 203
Kineon Dr .• Goltlpollo. Coli
446 -1 223.
Save thousands $by buying
from
owner.
Asauamble
loan 11¥2% . 3 bdr. ranch.
1 'h botho. ~"itt in kttchon,
laundry room. large living
room with brick fireplace.
new above ground pool,
garden space,
it 3 yra.
home
AIIO available Karate uni·
home
overloo.kng
Ohio
forma puchlng and kicking River. Wooda, 6-20 ecrea,
bego. end protec;tlvo equip· tennis court, city achoote .
ment. Jerry Lowery a.. A11o· 446 -3554 or 1-513-423ciotea Koroto Studio, 1 43 89 28 . Owner~ Agent .
Burlington Rd.. Jockson.
Oh. Coli 614 -286-3074 or REDUCED new 3 bdr .
614-384-61'50 .
hou1e in Sunkist, waa
$59,000 now e56,000. Colt
446-3517.
17 Miscellaneoui
Wanted ride toHuntlngton
fivedaylwMk . Arrlve8a.m.
leove II p .m . 304 -8 76-
Country home for sale. 7
rooms, bern. 2.7 acres. Sara
Rameev. Rt. 3 . Pomeroy
P1ke •. t10.000. •• io.
4 acres, 6 room houu. fOf
more information 814·986·
3878 .
ISearsI·
·'
FREE
EXTIMATIS
link Fence
'Ctrpetina 'Ptlntinc
'Ciialn
ISearsI
CATAlOG
MIIOIANT
Po~.OH.
llnll • .., 8lllif.Oitln
'"· 912·2111
JESCO.
BUILDERS
'~1111ott011, OH.
HOlE BULDING
ROOM ADDitiONS
. REMODELING
. ROOFING & Sl DING
"FIE£ ESTIIAT£S"
REFERENCES
PH. •S-4141
2·21·1111.
AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSION CO.
m w. 1111n l'olllaq, 011.
WANTED TO BUY Old furniture and Antlqu" of oil
klnda, coil Kenneth Swoln,
448-31111 or 2118-1987 In
thiiiVOningo.
We pey ceah for leta model
Clean u•d Clr'l.
OPEII t ID 5 a t1itu SAT.
All '"" of Alto ltpllr,
...... r-u.c. etc.
SPEC1.4L
TIWIIIIIISIOII FIL1U
. AID FWID CIIAIIG(
OIILY 131.15 ,__
Frenchtown Cor Co.
lilt Gene Johnoon
448-0081
Pay cooh for u - moblto
homu or tre-vel trtH·
ero. -191111andup. Coll
8t<l, 441·01711 . .
fl"oblle ho,. uleo, ttreo •
WhMia. 371-2322 .
L
.'
old. 4 mi. from -Gottlpollo,
Karate the ultimate in self priced in SO ' a. Col 446defence all private lesaone, 4703 .
.
Men. women. a children.l - - - - - - - - - lnstNctlon th<u black boh. Large contemporary family
7132 •.
9
Court St .. GeMipotio.
18
Wanted to Do
--
Hou • for •ale with nice
view of the Ohio. Khchon
with dining area. 2 bed..
room• and large bas..,ent.
Gonerot Heullng and Trooh
remove! Sorvlco. Reliable
and clopendobie. Colt 4483169.
THREE bed rom hou10. full
Lawn Mowing no yord to big
baaement, well Insulated.
coal or wood fu mac•. alumi·
or amall. Reliable and dapen·
dable. For eetlmate call
441-31111.
s-11
One ocre. Colt 843-5234.
num aiding , new roof, 507
3rd. St. New Haven. Contact Glenn Harrah, Parlrara-
burg, 30<1-422-3117 .
onglne repolr, tewn
II'IOwere, . rldlngll'lowe~a. rototHien. R. .10n1ble ratea.
3rd. • Oliva St .. Goillpotlo,
44t-3111B betw•n 9 end B.
1----------
E acre, 3 bedroom. famroom, wood burner. 2
gerego. 2 cutbuitd·
lngo. cell 304-895-3458.
,.
•'.
�'
12
.. ....
31 Homes for $ala
51 Household Goods
They'll Do It Every Time
8V. ASSUMABLE loon . poy·
fenqed in yard . Call 304-
676-6889 alter 4 :30.
THR EE bodroom, lull'boso·
Ca11446-3549.
mem. 75x120 lot. Clifton
city water , gu hea t .
$17.000 . 304 -773-5B60.
New 5 drawer.dresaera $62.
small dea.k •a9. 4 drawer
chest 860, unfinished harvest gold refrlg. frost free
8250, white 2 dr. refrig .
frostfree $96. electric range
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
$9&, gao range f9&, 2 pc.
livingroom suite $66, 6 pc.
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOM ES . USED · CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446 ~ 7572 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES · KESSEL'S DUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
RT 3~. PHONE 446-7274 .
New 14x70' s being sold at
cost and under. Call 4469662 . Kanauga Mobile
Homes Sales, Kanauga , Oh .
dlnene oat 855. Skogga
Appliances, Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh . 446· 7398 .
Open 9· 5. Mo~. -Sat .'
SWAIN
AUCTION & FURNITURE
air and wood building in cluded , Located in Green
Terrace Mobile Home Court .
Call
446 - 9486 ~
1975 Holly Park Mobile
Home, 14x70 wi1h central
air, new drapes, naw carpet.
Owner willing· to lease present location, including pastu r8 on SR 654, Bidwell.
Call 446 -9786. 8:30-3:30 .
Evenings, 367-7160.
1971 Froodom 12x50 , 2
bdr .. good cond . Call 614 ~
245 ~ 5549 .
12x60 mobile home. 2 bdr.
Calll;14·245 ·5830 altar 6 .
Clean 1972 1 4x60 Kirk·
wood Mobile home, gas
heat . 1 ,A baths, front and
rear bedrooms. $7900. Call
614 - 992 ~ 6732.
$2 ,950. up used mobile
homes for sale . 2 bedroom,
corrlpletely fur~ished .
Ready to move in. Brown' 1
Trailer Park, Minersville. Oh .
614-992-3324.,
~~
1
,f3C:X,
·
1
p .m . 614 - 742 ~ 2854
614·985·41 17.
or
l=l~lQ~Jil==E~,E~·::=~=,==~'=:::~:::::O:H:I:O==~~
44
41
Apartment
for Rent
Houses for Rent
61 4·992·5434 .
$75 depooit . Call 614-245 - 3 bed. apts. All inc;luCte
9316.
individual carports with storage buildings & fenced back
2 bftdroom home in town . yards . Rental to suit all
$240 mo . deposit required. budgeta. 304-273· 3344 in
Call Jim at 446 · 3643. Tho Ravenswood between 9
Wiseman Agency. ·
a.rrt. to 4:30 p.m.
1
2 bedroom house . Large 822 ·
livi'lg room. kitchen & bath .
UN FURNISH ED apartment
Furnished . Overlooking for
rent, 1 bedroom .
OhiO River. Adults only. $180.00 Call Automotivo
Brown's Trailer Park . 614- Supply , 8·6 . 304-675 ·
221 a. 675-6753.
992·3324 .
3 bedroom house. Middleport area. $275 month .
Fenced yard, air condition,
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Eureka : Riverfront lot. 1
bedroom, fum .• adults . Ref.
& dep. $100. Call614· 643·
2644.
•
c
nished . Phone (3041 882·
3692. Alter 6 p.m.
2
troller for rent. all
e. r.tric Call 446· 4480 .
USED MOBILE
571;-2711.
Eight rooms, Lincoln Pike,
$200 mo . plud deposit . Call
,;~ 2 . roq ~
"~'
11 614 256
a
·
·
446~4892 .
Kitchen stove & rolrldgera-
tor furn., rest unfurnished.
614 ~ 367 · 0288.
2 bedroom tr.eiler . Furnished . Adu lts only .
Brown's Trailer Park. 6,1 4-
ry' s Run Road. 304· 6752356 .
carror reot. 614-388 ·9346 .
123.02 acre farm , 2 gas
wells. Y2 mineral rights, 2
ponds & water well. ApproKimately 22 acres farming
balance timber. $31 ,000.
614 -992-6909 .
63 .29 acre grass lfpd & nice
mature timber. ;:All minerel
rights. 2 gas wells, free gas
hookup, 20 by 40 2 otorytMe
2 bedroom fu mished, 1
child, no pets. $160 . par
month, New Haven .' 304-
882-2466 .
1::4::5= ::::~. =.=,.-=~=;;;;-=R::::o::o::m=s·
Sleeping room $115. utili ~
ties pd. single mala, share
bath. 919 2nd Ave., Gallipolis . Call 446-4416 after
46 Space for Rent
1--------'---
f100 . doposit. 304· 576·
9084 between 9 ~ 1 2 or
•y
7 -9.
'1-----=-------44
Apartment
for Rent
f41 ,000 . 614 · 992·6909 ~
; Lot in Northup on concrete
·Rd. 1 27'x1 20', $4,800.
Call 446-6254.
6·20 Acres woods,
looking Ohio River.
OV!!M'~
city
school• ~
448·3564 or 1 ·
513-423 - 8928 .
Owner I Agent .
36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd. Owner financ-
·ing evoileble. Coii446· B221
after 6 waakdeys.
2 bdr. Regency Inc. ·Apartments $200 pet mo. or if
Income is $10.000 or lass
HUO available. A-One Real
Eatatet, C~rol Yeager, Raai-
1Dr, Coli 304-675·5104 or
~75 · 5386 or 675·7786.
rood. 58.200. 614·992·
2603.
Rural aree . Nice lot, 136'
frontag'o x 1 27' dapth. In·
elude• 1974 SkyNne 1 2x60,
city wotlf. 1 mlle-Rt. 33,
1811 3 mi. ochooli. •&.696.
Lot-16' ltontago by 127'
depth joining otlwr. City
woter. 814-992·2066.
109 ACRES mon or lOll,
wooded, 8 mUes out Tribble
Rood ot Arbuckle. •30,000
304-876-1838 . .
36
Real Estate
Wanted
Buying hou•• ond aport·
mem.. Noed proponiM wl'h
fovoroble price and tormo ..
8ox 1109 Golipollo, Oh.
46131 .
- r=~~
/
~ -· ~r
thing downl Teke over paymenta $68 .00 monthly. 4x8
flashing arrow llign. New
bulbs·. lettet'l. Hale ligna.
,,.._..,.-X
7~"i .
68
,., WHICH I!> WHY I
THE:
•NOMINATI0'-1.
Reese -Weight
hitch. reoeiver, duel-ca...,
away control, electric braka
TO
_, .
1
1978 , 21 ft . Motor Home:
loio than 10,000 r11ilios:
clean. •utom•t-C. PS, 'P'1
AM-FM 8 track, 4 opeokoq; ·
reduced to 1 2,000 or 'b.-\
offer. ,304 -882 -2730. , :
Fruit
Autos for Sale
81
Home
Improvements
near HMC. Cell 446 -3617.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
·nuu•u like to rent fumished
or unfurnished house or
trailer in country. Cell . 992-
5!116.
Backhoe endloader digs 8
ft., large bed pick up haula -
ble, operate yourself. $90.
por day. 304-895-3B41 .
49
61 4-266-6245 ~
Coli 614· 379· 2617 .
For Lease
Country Store for lease
$100 per. mo. Coli 614 ·
246-9316 .
3 rm . and 4 rm . unfurnished
apartments. Utilities paid,
no pets, no children . Call
446·3437.
Furnished apt. 607 2nd.,
Firlt floor furinshad apt,
utilities paid, deposit &lease
required. Adults, no pets.
Call at 631 Fourth Ave.,
Gallipolis.
JACKSON ESTATES 'Equal
Housing Opportunity' has
one bedroom apartments
rent
~toning
ot •1 57 per
month and two bedroom
apartments rent ltarting at
~193 per month. Cal 4462746 or "ave menage .
2 bdr. epartm.. t park front
view, pllrt furn ., water paid,
•17& mo., .Coll448·3919or
441·0021 .
'
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
by _Frontier), $685 , Solo,
csha1rr and loveseat, 8275 .
o asandc::halrsprlcedfrom
8286. to 8896. Tab/ea. $45
and up to $126 . Hide-a·
beds,$440 . and up to
f625 ., Recliners, $176 . to
$350 .. Lampo from $28 . to
$75 . 6 pc . .dinette• from
t99 .. to $435. 7 pc., 8189.
and up. Wood table with oix
choira $426 . to &746 . Deok
1110 up tq $225 . Hutches.
1660. and
up,bed
maple
or pine
tinioh.
Bunk
complete
with moure11eo. 1250. and
up .to U96 . Baby beds.
8HO. Mottreaoeo or bex
opriau~~o, full or twin, .f68.,
firm. 868. ond 878. Oueon
nto, $195 . 4 dr. cheoto,
t42. 5 dr . chesto. $54. Bad
10 gallon acquarium with
fish. 2 hamaters, 2' Chiclid
'
12.000 BTU, 110 Emorson
Q~iet ' Cool, $326 ea. Call
614-367-0378.
game with 8
Atari
c.er -
tridgea. $295 . Call 614·
256-6216.
Doll moldo to make 27
different dolls. most of them
new. 98 Chrittmas ornament mo_
lda, 56 111orted
molds, wind chimaa, 7 pc .
tea set. 1igurlnea, table&.
choir for doll. ond beoda.
Call 1· 614·682·7163 .
OUR BOARDING
Ml"'l~bike,
camper trailer.
Magnus organ, plant stand.
~:; ...,;;;,~'
,:,"~
0. Call614· 245 -5121.
TO ALL CONTRACTORS·
We are able to give contractors: price on all building
ma~rials. Delivery availabe.
Gallipolis Block Co., 123'112
Pine St .. Gallipolis, Oh 446-
M.F. 1086 with cob & duals
2883 houro 18.4-34 tires.
·New Ideo Super Sheller, pull
BUILD YOUR OWN HOME type 2·30" rows, 6 Kill·
6 rooms and bath. 82,996. brothers gr8vity beda with
See
our models,
1-614-
WMFA-1,
Gordon
of bedroom 1ui1e1,
chests, rockers, metal
awivel rockere
-~~
Coli 446-779&.
Rt.2, Racine.
2862.
Call 446-3844 oftor 4PM.
Call446~1069.
2 male full blooded beagle
puppies. 6 weeks old . $60.
4 or 675 ·
1577.
OFTEN STA~T:S
FR'OO :SC~t4"(t;H.
Now arrange the circled lettaro lo
lorm the surprloe answer, oo aug·
gealed by lhe Obove cartoon.
I XXXXI I I I I )
Jumbles: E)(PEL FEVER
I
IAnawero tomato ow)
SUBURB AGHAST
Mswer: The newspaperman turned dry cleaner
because he didn 't believe In thisA FREE " PRESS"
Tonight
74 OLDS Cuduo, PS, P8,
614·247 ·
night's show features a
woman who teaches handi-
cappad children to . rollerskate, tho Miss L.A. Body
contest and a dairy farmer
who plays the violin to make
his cows give more milk . (60
F & K Tree Trimming. stump:··
geles
puppies.
Trucks for Sale
camper top. Coli 61 4 · 258·
1371 .
Livestock
1975 Dodge P.U. with
topper. V. ton 225 6 cyl.
Standard. 614· 949 -2657.
1975 Chevy pickup. 614·
992-7342 anytime Sat. or
after 7 Week days .
73
Vans· a. 4 W . O.
"'
1--------1978 Ford cuotomized PS.
PB. AC, R. dne. 4 ~opt.
seou table. bod. ica box.
llagiotared Quonor HorH.
Ruth Roeveo. Aloo grodo .
monthly payment• on spinet
piano . Can be Man locally .
Write Credit Manager: P.O.
Box 33,
15541 .
Frlodeno,
PA
!--..:._________
&0 laying hena for ule.
t1.00 each. 614-742 -
'-~'''"'1
'•. ~
•
II
"
b
.:t!i::::·c;d}, '
.__.
·-
'
~YOUR
N-.1 0 'Y
r-- ·
•
1---------APPA,LOOSA horoe, good
Crossfire Gary Collins and
'OONU~.
Hay & Grain
Mary Ann Mobley co-host
an hour-long profile of the
lives of six children' who are
the innocent victims of war.
Williams,
Bette
Anson
8 :30
Boxing
features
Robbie
Sims and Tony Chiaverini in
a 10,..ro und Middleweight
I love
bout . (2 hrs .. 30 min .)
9:00 II <IJ (I) Best of Taxi
Cil700 Club
(I) Ill ~ Fall Guy Colt
chases a cat burgler. (A) (60
40U!
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
min.l
(I) ®I American F~m
Institute Salute to John
Houston Lauren
Baca ll
hosts this special tribute to
the celebrated actor, director and screenwriter John
Houston . Guest starring
Phono 446-3888 or 4411 · ·
44n
'
0
•
Lonnie Boggs Excavating.
Dozer , bAcli.hoe , dump truck . Work by hour or job: ·
·
Bette Davis. Robon Mit·
&
I·
exc. oond. Coll446 -2360.
1 974
Enduro dirt
bike, 2,900 mlloo. Coli 468·
· H1y for aale. ·aquare bales. 1997.
Delivery ovoilobla. Coll448- 1---'-- -- - - - - 65'6 6 ,
"''""'""a'
Refrigeration
MISS ALLGOOD
UKI'{) NIY WORK.
I COULD TELL.
@II MOVIE: 'Wake hiland'
(2 hrs .l
9 :30 <IJ Screening Room ·
9 :45 (I) T8S Evening News
10:00 II <IJ m Quincy A handi·
boby. (Ri (60 min .)
<IJ MOVIE: 'Cheach and
Chong'o Nice Dreams'
MOVIE: 'Forbidden
<IJ
Games'
(I) Ill ~ Dynasty Alexis
SEWING Machine repairi, ,
service. Authorized Singer ~
Sales • SBfVice Shar)M" ~.
assembles Blake's board of
directors and Congressman
McVane 'cripples Alexis '
plans for Colbyco. (60 min .!
[Closed Captioned!
1 0:30 (]) Star Time'
Ill INN News ~
11:00
Cil (I) 0 (I)® tl'l ~
BARNEY
u
Ne¥'..
(f ·· :>1'' ,x>rtsCentar
(I) All In the Family
GlORY BE!!
I GOT ME A
Cil Newo/Sporta/Weather
LITILE
NIBBLE
(I) Dave Allen at Lerge
Benny Hill Show
1 1 :30 U <II Cil Tonight Show
<IJ Strippero Film clips and
•
Need something hauled
awaiy or something mowed?
dramatic reenactment re create tf:'e lives of six
women strippers.
We'll do it. C.ill446-31 69or
614·256· 1987 alter 6. ,
Nurse'
drlvewayo, top ooil for yordo
~ ~~~. din. Coli 614·3~'7'
1
DEPENDABLE WASHER;
DRY'ER REPAIR . · Guoron·
•
work. Call anytime
PEANUTS
1980 Kowo~oki 440 LTD
llko new. 3,&00 miles. Price JIM& WATER • SERVICE,
• 1 .000. Coli 81 ~4 - 982· Cell Jim Lanier, 304-87&· .·:
8317.
•
7397.
',, ··
.:..
__.
_____ ,
..
.•
1982 Hondo CB750 cuo· - = : , - - - - - - - - ·'
tom. Crooh boro. od)uetoblo 87
Upholatery
66 Seed & .Fertilizer beck reot, cruiM control,
cuohlon grips . 814-949·
'
..._
2734.
. ..
TRISTATE
: ,
LEASE-OrnON TO ~UY 'tl----..,..---UPHOLSTERY SHOP ; •
bedroom houoe. For lnfor, 400 KDX w-loothen ond 1 1113
Sec. Avo .. Gollipollo .
madon coli 304·875-5889 nelmeto, eac. oond. 400 441·7833 or 441·1833. .
•Iter 4:30 p.m.
mneo. 304·1715-11788.
.
Whiz kid's play lacks class
I
NORTH
:1-23·81
+AKQ83
.QJ 10
tAK
+QJ5
I" 8 52
... .
I+ 10 9 8
• Q 10 9 7
+76432
EAST
WEST
i! 10 9 7 H
~
• 96 43
t85
SOUTH
+J62
.AK7
tJ643 2
+AK
. Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West '- Nortb
East
Sou•h
1 NT
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
It
Pass
3<t
7 NT
Opening lead: +1 0
By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
Some 20 years ago the
late John Crawford had just
won a pair event with a
young partner who was sup-
posed to be a future star.
Johnny was aske.d about
ljjm and gave this reply. "He
bids well, has a good feel of
the table, but he will never
be of world class."
When asked how he could
be sure, John gave this hand
as an example.
We will carry on with our
recollections of John's story.
"I might have bid seven
no-trump right away, but
waste\! one round of tiiddinf.
with my three-spade cal .
Naturally, if I had played in
seven spades I would · have
made my contract and
would have received an
average score. It wasn't too
strong a field and quite a
few aeclarers managed to
go down at the spade or notrump grand slam. My partner couldn't wait to chuck
his contract. At trick two, he
led a spade to dummy's ace
and there was no way to
recover from that five-zero
spade break."
John was correct. There
had been no way to guard
against live spades in the
~ast han<J. However, the
simple play of the spade
jact at trick lwo would have
allowed South to . make his
grand slam.
tt~"*"*~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Mortise
fitter
39 Watched
DOWN
1 Transaction
2 To~go (Fr.)
3 Cary Grant
film
4 Some
5 Interlaced
1 Facts
5 Distaff
sailors
10 Joie
<le vivre
11 Pizza
ingredient
12 Unite
13 Canadian
peninsula
14 Netherland$
river
15 Isle (Fr.)
16 Spanish queen
17 Despicable
19 Anais -
Yesterday's Answer
6 Candlenut
11 Stories
tree
15 Willow genus
1 February
18 "Oz" dog
highlight
21 Dismissed
8 English
22 DiStrict on
school grad
the Shannon
9 Having sound 23 Ceremony
24 Tiger cat
25 Demon
21 Unyielcling
28 Wrinkle
32 Colored
34 Saint (Port.)
35 Lambkin
ZO Adversaries
Zi Photocopy
22 -boy!
Z3Hamess
strap
:U Roman
emperor
~Helsinki
citi2en
Z& Palance film
%7 Baby watc:her
Z9 Porker
30 Pagoda
ornament'
Sl Caesar
33Relax
35 Whirlpool
36"-
Ciu"istian
soldiers.., "
37 Carryon
<IJ MOVIE: 'The Sehauous
Now h•ullng lime1tone for • •
___
. . . ...
capped coroner attacks
Quincy for believing a father
is innocent of murdering his
614·268 · 6620 or 614:
268-1207.
3-:1.3
chum and Charlton Heston.
DEPENDABLE WASH!R ·
DRYER f!EPAIR . Guorin:
toad work . Coli anvti"!l
61 4·266-6620 or 6t4 ~
256·1207 .
• :'
·r ead
SOY4> =-
WINNIE
.
a;;-
.,...
guests .
(!) Top Rank Boxing from
Worcester, MA Top Rank
Unlock the
door, Clovia!
' & Haa~lng
Excavating -
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
White and JoAnn Pflug are
2377.
1-:==========
breeding more. Gentle with 74 .Motorcycles
children. *600.00. Coli 1- - - - - - - - - -304-876·4168 otter 5 :30.
64
cious . 160 min .l
(I) (jj) Uve from the Met
'Tannhaeuser.' One of. Richard Wagner 's best known
·operas is preSented in this
. special performance. (3 hrs.,
30 min .)
l- - - - - - - - - -82
Plumbing
83
(60 min .!
8 Children: Caught in the
76 DODGE Powerwagon, 3A
ton. club cab. good condi tion, $2,000 . 304 · 675-
1982 Hond• 460 custom
It'
t~;;~}
3145.
ALSO TAKE
A BIG LOAD
OFFA MY BACK!
GUZ!
Sciuora . Fabric Shcip, ,
~P_:o_:m_i_r_oY:._·_9_9_2_·2_2_:
.B_4_._~ ;
Saddlel, bridles, winter AM -FM radio tapa pleyer
horae blanketa. Western I f~~~C~a~l1~4~4~6~·~3~3~4~8~.~ ED'S APPLIA,NCE REPAIR
booto. 614·698· 3290.
I·
1 Hammond Organ . 614~
19731ntern•tional Scout 2. SERVICE call City Furniture
949·2477 .
Stud ser~lce. "ReUistered 4 wheel drive. $800 . Good 304· 675-2808 .
blonde Belgian Stollion. condition. 614·992-8644
WANTED : Ae sponaib'e Reaonable rate1. 614-949- after 5 p.m.
pany to take over low 2466. ..
1- - - - - - - - - -- 86 General Hauling
Musical
I natrume nts
IT'D
~{E~":E1RN.?, 4-~4~~:1~~~:
with or witflout insulated ·con 446 -7903.
10 yrs. old. very opiritied.
not lor 4-Her'o. •600. Coli
altar 6PM, 614-379 -2144.
BE GOOD FOR
'tOUR. IMAGE,
hostage ~
(I) ®1 Seven Brides lor
Seven Brothers Hannah
tries to defend Evan after he
has been knocked uncons-
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE ,
For aale 520 JD farm trac,or
63
WEU., I THINK TH 1
CHANGii WOUW
0
Get your carpet in lhip
shape. Water removal, FREE
72
1975 Chevv 6 cyl . auto. PS .
blue bloodline, black ond
ton . Call beloro 4 :30p.m. or
olter9 p.m. 3(/4·675·1822.
67
Performance The team
tries to stop a band of terrorists from holding Los An -
'
feodero. Coli collect e 14·
586-2260 . John L. Betto.
Non Register Quarter horsaj :;;~===:::;=::~;;:::=
DOberman
houso collo. Call 576·2388:
or 446 ~ 2454 .
••
power windows, AM·FM ·
"
radio, good runninv condi· 1 --------~-~
don, U60 . .304·676-6287.
BRIDGE
()21
Cil MOVIE: 'Barbarosa'
(]) I Spy
(]) Inside the USFL
(()
tl'l
()21
High
Cor. Fourth and Pine
AKC
----" ~
.
air conditioning ,
304 - 675 ~ 271
446· 2109.
.
'
speed,
f2.000 . 304·676-2784. '
.- .
.. ~.
c:>OC.TOR WHO
5PEC:IALIZE5 lioJ THIS.
Jumble Book No. 15, containing 110 puDIII, Is available tor S1.85 postpaid
tromJunmla, cJo thl1 newapapt(, Box :W, Norwood, N.J. 07848.1ncl00. vow
name, sdc:l,..ll, t COde and makl chtdtl payable to Newapspelttooka.
Cil MOVIE: 'Final Conflict'
1976 FORD F100. 302 3
9 p.m . 304-675-1822.
" i (l!l±!M
I('
Yesterday's
E.nte!'tainmenf
·
8:00 U · <IJ (I) Real People To-
Speclelizing in Zenith 1nd
Motorola , Qu•z•r. and
676 · 7~09.
NEW & Used Harve1tora
Structures. Automated livestock feeding-computer
AKC Doberman pups black
.& ton, 3 montho old . $76.
t1
~r~ orid'~~~if":~~~o:;~;
1978 Mercury Bobcat atati·
onwagon $1800. 2 blocks
from Maple Drive Inn. 304-
Bean meter flow pump
modet 460, Ellison rolling
cultivator &.row 1 cubic yard
earth moving pan, 2
13.6x28 4 ply tires with
tube on power adjust M .F.
rims, M.F. 32 loader, poat
hole digger. Andriw Cross ,
Boar~ing all breeds. AKC
Reg . Doberman• pupa efd
Dober~en Stud 'S ervice .
'1
Hoo oil u~lltln paid. Call li~d·
.. book.,;,••
448·3143. Tho Wloemon
:~hJE;_ and tableo:
Answerller8.f
Tonight
•'
after 6 .
pump model 500, John
HILLCREST KENNEL •
~
'11
OHAY, F!£;() ••
BOT ITGIJRE
[}0H'T LOOI\
!lN' I'LL TELL Y'
WilEN Y' tiCT T'
PR0/11/StH!..
fl16HT GPOT.' ..s~~-.-:::7
1974 Ford Pinto. •350.00 . E & R Trae Service, fully :
Call 304 ~ 675 - 1212 before insured, free estimate& .
Phone 614·367-(1836, coli
4:30 .
156M2 type Ind. 56A for
Pets for Sale •.
,.,.
c
COUGAR . XR7 ,
676 -3668.
wagon. 28'x6' electric corn
auger. Reco frost alarm
model
56
1979
loel'jed, low mileage, 304·
Rupp irrigetion pump model
l I \~.:S~N~Ll~ ONE.'~
lh
n.~,r:.
rr~N.~t:V!
' v-.~~0\Y
. ou ' , (WK~'
'-'
·1'11~rUN"
j i1
20 lese expeneive cars in
ato·c k.
2783.
with Major Hoople
.
I
tGLANID
min ~ l
grinder
Building materials
.block, brick. sewer pipes,
w i ndows , lintels, et.c .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
~ • MA.KES SE.N~E WHEN YOU
I'
.. ,YOU (iO OVE8 T'
TilfiT LE/JiJE, MNIE,
MIII{IN' !INY MalEY?.' TEGTINfi (jR(}(JHIJ
FOfl ANEW
Dioc plow $275. Mixer 1
removal. Coli 676· 133 1.
$775. Call 446· 1978 Chev. Monze, excel.
4157 .
cond .. 4 opeed, $2,700 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE expe·
Phone 446· 2974 .
rienced roofing, including
Measey Ferguson 60 farm
hot tar eppllc•tion. carpen·
tractor. like new $3,000, 79 PontiaC Sunbird Formula ter, electrician. muon. Call
4,6j)O
mileo,
83.
150.
Coli
new tires, new paint , rebuilt
304 ·875· 2088 or 676·
engine. Coli 61 4 ~ 245 · 446 ·0555 , 8 :30 to 4 :30.
4560.
5818.
1982 Dotoun 200SX .
Woter Wello. Commo~·
200 bolas of hoy n .76 bolo . Loaded. 614-992-6137.
and Domestic. ·ren holea.:
Tractor & term machinery It
Pumpo Soleo ond Service.,
lumber. Coli 114-388-8483 HARTS ·Uied Cors, New 304-895-3802.
'
H.ven West Viriinie . Over
or 1·471 · 1 472 .
66 Building Supplies
REMEMBER .T>II>.T ADULT.S DO
EVERYT>IIN6 !II>.CKWAADS! 60
-GET ANYONE WHO 60E~ Tt4E Wll'ON6 WAY
'-~EIRP OUTPUh COME& OUT AKE.I'.D.;.LI~E UNCLE
1 CATCH ,'j; 13Ulc>Y'5 C,I..NDIDP..TE! · >I
10 BONU5! )
. "'\
t-...·
WERE '
~~~~~.!'~~~~
•~6~~· .~~
~·~'!' "amo860. Goodoolec·
1 98" Pontiac Phoenix. 2
door, front' drive. automatic,
am -fm. a.c •• sharp. Econom ~
ical. Unly 13600. 446_7_4_3_8_·- - - - - - - --
Farmall cub cultivators,
turning plow, belly mower.
aide mower & blade. $2660.
304-675-6999.
HOUSE
l?,~T/
~
· ,,~~!!'
... YE8 LYIN, 1'14881/CIIG, AN INVESTMENT
NHY'P YOU BUY TH'
IN THE FUTIH/t.
16/Nf IF IT ftllGN'T
1 HEEDEU IT A5 A
G
RON'S Tolevioion Servlc~ ..
Loader-Ma1aey Ferguson 1
wk. 356 with forks. Call
614-245-5804 .
'-----------..L----------1
r
up to 1376. Baby mo-
.
304-675 -2674.
Usod 2200 Ditch Witch
treneher. Call 1 ~ 61 4-7842 .
dinettecheirs•2o . a.,d$2.6.
Gaa or electric rangea, $326
Agency.
Apt. for rent. Half doublo-2
1
eam to
bd.room Apt. Adulto pre- I!Pm.lllfori:~
9om to
fornd . No peto. 114·992· jltji~iP,~:.Sot~·----~
2749.
.
L
8 60 .00,
AKC Doberman Pinchar,
blue bloodline, black &. tan. 4 Registered Polled Herecall before 4 :30p.m. orafter . ford Bulls breading age .
fro moo, •20.ond 82& .. lO
gun • Gun cobinato, $360..
Efficency apartments. furnlahad, in town, 1160 mo.
614·742-9925 .
fireplace,
446-7322.
Air conditioners 2 yrs. old.
Sofa, cheir, rocker, ottoman. 3 tablet; (extra heavy
standing
.O,KC r!llfiotored Shetland
Sh 0opdog, 1 yeor old. mole.
f1 26. 304-676-3538.
fish . 446·6632 .
61 Household Goods
FREE
reddish -orange.
614-992 · 3544.
PU toppers, several different
colors and sizes. 876 to
01 36. 8 & D Motors,
I
•
matee, By hour or job.,
Reference if required. Ph oM
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
502· 563-9926.
J rJ . I I
profiled .
J
.rectricol work. Fne totl·
~ KENNEL . AKC Chow pup·
8ft . meat case, 8ft freezer,
pies.
CFA Himalayan, Per14ft. produce case, other.
misC. store equipment . Cell sian and Siamese kittens.
For Sale I 10 new quality
built 4'•8' flashing arrow
signs . Complete $2,600.
Cell collect, Mr. Calhoun
~nte!'tainment
tRETHOMI
'Steamtrain ' Graham , part
historian and storyteller, is
ANNIE
part,, John Bean meter flow
A-1 cond ., new paint International 21ft ton cab 8t
chassie. long wheel base.
12,600. Will consider trad ·
ing on anything of value .
...
MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
®News
Ill (j2l People" s Court
fl) Star Trek
7:30 D <IJ Ue Detector
(]) ~SPN SponsCenter
(I)
NBA
Basketball:
Atlanta at Boston
(I) 0 ~CV Family Feud
(I) Business Report
® You Asked For It
(j]) King of the Hobo Maury
8B6·731 1.
Firewood split & cut to
\enght. Pick or delivered. We
honor HEAP Vouchers. Call
tJ
(I) · (j])
R&S Remodeling. Interior
and Exterior. built on room1,
petioa, carports, rooflflt,1
ma1onry finish concrete ..
town call collect. Free delivery to ybur home.
'
Cil Charlie's Angels
0 (I) Tic Toe Dough ·
'
614 -367-0378 between 10
& 4.
Equipment
for Rant
(I)
- - - - - - -·
type C.B. mike
1 ~1~: All in e~c . cond. Roger
1
1::=='=6==4=·9=9=2=·=
5=2=32=·=
154 Misc . Merchandise
1- - - - - - - - - -
Call 614-386-8918 out of
wfth
nolhlng
Gl Cl2l
(I) Carol llumett
'
446-739B .
New 1983 White sewing
maChine f,ree arm model,
with built-in straight stich.
zig zag, panerns. make
button holes. monograms.
much more. We are over
stocked with this model. we
must decrease our inven tory. Factory 20 yr. guaran tee. Reg . price over $300,
clearance price only sao .
(I) (jG
'A Previ~ of the Regional
s~mifinars. ·
& Vegetables
71
<II (I) 0
Heaven'
(]) nc Tac Dough
(]) Pick The Pros
(I) Andy Griffith
Cil Neyvs/Sports/Weather
(I) (j]) 3-2·1, Contact
Ill Chertie'o Angela
6 :30 U <IJ (I) NBC News
(]) MOVIE: ' Brewster's
Millions'
(]) Fiohin' Hole
(I) Gomer Pyle
(() Ill Cl2l ABC News
0 (I) ® CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
(j]) Over Eoay
' 7:00 D <IJ P.M. Magazine
(]) Coli . Baaketball Report ·
&UT 1 DO HAVEl
THE: PERFECT
CANDIDATE, we
MIGHT BE LUCI<Y
ENOU6H TO BE
A8LE
PRAFT-
control . f426 . Coli 614·
387-7412 , or 614-387'
7242 .
.. '
H""rt"
1
I YONOL I
Began
Newo
<II HBO Theatre:~ Separate
Tableo ·These two one-oct
tel.
CAN~OT ACCePT
.//
u
<IJ MOVIE: 'Ticket to
•CAPTAIN EASY
• /.
ut"'<. ..-..~4
Me I.
!- - - - - -- - --
Furnithed apt . 1 bdr., 920
4th Ave. Gollipolis. Adults,
$225 mo .. utilltlea paid . Coli
441 ·4416 alter 7PM .
- - - - - - ' - - - - · Gollipolio. &225 , utllltieo
Lots for sale In Racine.
d 1 bd
d I
C8 II
p ·•
r.. 8 Uti.
.614 -94. 9· 2340 or ' 614· 446
·4416 alter 7PM .
·949-2571 .
e acral lend . Spring water,
.ewer. electric. On good
. ."'"
);.._ off
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Mobile home spaceior rent
48
2 bedroom home furnished,
loCI!IIted below Hitching Post
on St . Rt. 2. You pay
utilities. $150 . per month,
block building. other out,buildings . water tap .
36 Lots & Acreage
~
Unocnmble leur Jumblea,
one letter to each oquare, 10 1orm
leur ordinary -a..
by Henri AmoklondBobLM
plays show the lives of people who liVe in a seaside ho-
KeeP 'bJR. cu.ws.
.
- washers, dryers, refrigarato_rl, ranges. Skaggs Ap pliances. Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
month, 304- 676 ~6294.
a.
207 acre farm. Langsville;
mineral rites included, no
house $12,000 down will
"""'
~fli}NlfiillJ ~THATSCIWIIIL£DWOADOAME
~ \9 ~~·
I (X]
-r~!NOW
11
for the elderly. All utilities 1•oo -~::'·•• ~P lood ~ Call
!04 .
paid . T~nants pay 30 per- 1o
cent of their adjusted in ~
1 colfo "'l table
come in this HUD subsidized
47 Y2 x18Yz•16 Vz in. and 1
.apartment building. Twin
Rivers Tower, phone 304- end table 25x18 V.x20'!z
with light walnut finish 830,
675·6679 . Equal opponun · 32x53
- 174 pieces brown
ity houSing .
underpinning for a mobile
home used just 1 year came
Mt . Vernon Ave. 2 bedroom
off a 14!11:70 mobile home, ·
apartment. 304·675 ·1 962 . long'
pieces measllre 32 .. ,
shon pieces 21 " and 10
THREE bedroom apartment,
central air, waterbed , Inches across. entarlock in a
metal frame, wood gr.ein
washer & dryer hookup, fin'ish . C.ell after 5PM , 446 storage area, $260. a 3065 .
reasonable offer. 3 bdr. 992-3324 .
Park, Route 33, North of
home. new furnance,
Pomerqy . Large lots. Call
c~unty water new bath 1~ THREE bedroom 992· 7479 ~
carpeted, new alum . siding 1pa~•Y furnished, all electric 1-=;:::::::::;::====;:==
coal S. wood burning stove. . 1imUI•.;.,, bulh on room. wood ~ I·
cool burning stove. one acre. 47 Wanted to Rent
Good barn
other out
bldgs, garage. located on outbuilding , $250 .00 1- - - - - - - - - old 160 near Poner. Coli month. $100. deposit, Jer-
6 14-388·9060 .
WEDNESDAY
6:00
/
wood
heaters
as lowused
$~99 with
blowers.
coal & wood heaters. new
din~t sets $100 & up,
refngerators. ranges. bunk
beds complete S199. bunkie& mattresses $40. cheats,
dressers, TV' s. Call 446 -
'
!
/'
sofa-loveaeat & chair $199 ,
love seats 870, new coal &
The Daily Sentinei- Page-13
179 Motors
; .: • '
& Campers :; ;
Firewood, oplh, •3o.oo .a
trucklood , t36 .00 deli vered . Ph. 11141 992·2770
or (304) 882· 2194 .·
~
REPOSSESSED SIGN I No,
Ohio
Television
Viewing
Cor troller for Mia. 304 '
675-7348 .
t7,500. 1977 ~ton Chevy
truck ox cond ., t3,600. Will
oell both at $10,&00. Coli·
446·0641.
Antique Oak Reproduction
fur,.iture, full line in stock.
also Antiques. Paul Conkell
An~iques, Tuppers Plein•.
.DICK TRACY
Auto Parts
:
& Accessories ' :
~
ONE bedroom apartments j . ~~! u~ ,-~~abs for firewood
1972 12x65 mobile home. 1 - - - - - - - -· lc2 bedrooms. $4,000 or best
2 bedroom Mobile Home in 7PM .
offer, 304·675·5694.
Racine . $200 . m·o nth, I-==========
$100. dep . You pay utilities . 1-
fields, $45 ,000. Must sell.
by Larry Wright
76
1~3
Small one bedroom fur· Apartment in Pomeroy . 62 CB.TV, Radio
nished house near Bidwell . Trailer in Syracuse. 614Equipment
Call 446-8639 evenings for 992-7511.
appointment.
Apartments . 304 - 676 - 23 channel Cobra 85 for
4 rooms fnd bath, full
$45 . 23 channel Cobra 89
basement, all new paint , 5548.
carpeted. No inside pets. APART.M ENTS , mobile withpdwermikeS70 . Setof .
Deposit and 6 mo.nths lease homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant MoQnraker beams wit~ rotor
requirod. 614 ~ 992 . 3090 .
and Gallipolis. 614-446- lbr,o,lxe. lplc~,o;;a;· x~. tower fo $226 .
d
Farm for sale 26 acres
mostly level. good hay
KIT ' N' CARLYLE"'
3159.
House for rent $150 mo .
1972 Sherwood Perk Mobile Home . 14x65. Excellent
condition . Partially fur-
33 · Farms for Sale
54 Misc. MerchandiM
1 bedroom furnished apt:
2 bdr. mobile home ref &
HOME .
Marth. 23,
fan $469, set box opring &· Call FREE 1 -800-626·
mottreos $100, firm $120, 744.6, anytime.
e. I%'TN ST.,
Ct..EVE:LAN",
'
1
614-94~ · 2719 .
12x60 trailer and lot in
Rutland with fenced in yard
and garage. Phone after 6
~$
FIW'/K PS~I<IG>,
,
1
carpeted. 614-742-2435 .
Corner lot with mobile
home. New carpet. central
air, large patio, large build ~
ing . 5th&: Pearl. Racine. Oh .
62 Olive St., Gallipolii. King
coal & wood heaters with
':A,,;
1980 14•70 Buddy Mobile
home, furnished , 2 bdr ..
large bath with garden tub ,
buih-i n stero. round kitchen
with double ovens. central
t, Ohio
One Hotpoint ·no frost Ouality·locuat pwt1 for aale.
refrigerator-freezer, one Coli doy or nlaht 81.4-251·
General Electric range with 6702 or 114.251· 1 148.
self cleaning oven. A pair of
lady Kenmore heavy duty ,1977 36 ft . Bononu travel
convenible washer & dryer. trailer. tilt room, ex. cond .,
1239.00 a mont h .
Three bedroom, 1 'lz bath,
r.1ent
Pomeroy· Middleport,
Wednesda , Marth 23, 1983
~
The Daily Sentinel
'(OU I-lAVE FANS?
AND.WHEN ONE OF US .
lilTS A I-lOME RUN . WE
WANT YOU 10 TURN
SOMERsAULTS, JUMP UP
AN' DOWN AND 60 CRAZV!
(]) Another Ufe
(I) MOVIE: 'The Dared·
evil'
(I) Benny Hill Show
II ()) H•rt to Hart ,The
HartS attempt to capture an
· eK ~convict and · recover a
jewelry shipment. (RI (60
min .)
(I) (j]) Sign Off
® All In the Family
Cl2l Nightline
eGunsmoke
12:00 (]) Bums & Allen
.
(]) NCA,\ Dhrioion Ill
Women's
Beaketball
from
Championship ·
Won:eater. MA
(I) Nlghtllno
(ll MOVIE: 'The Miracle
Worker'
· • (jJ l.eltWord
12:1& (1) MOVIE: 'An Amortcen
.
W......wlf In London'
a
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
lo LONGFELLOW
ODe letter •Imply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
wied for tbe three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letten,
apootropheo, the lenfllb ond formation of the won!o .ore all
hints. Each dey the code letters are different.
CllYPI'OQU<n'ES
.E A
U W J 'L
T.N A C I
VLHZI
CJLHD
RADHAXA
VJU
VPLA1'
LTCA
LNA
H J
DWXA
PHTZL
VLLVSB . - ARJAT
AZSNAJRVSN
. Yesterday's Cryploquole: VIRTUE IS THE STRONG STEM OF
MAN'S NATURE, AND MUSIC IS THE BLOSSOMING OF
VIRTUE.-OONFUCIUS
·"
�_
-----
_,...
-.-----·---
Wednesday, MaKh 23, 1983
Page--14-The Daily Sentinel
Twenty...
Local briefs:
Will show Holy Land slides
Sherman and Mickey Cundlf!. Syracuse will be showing slides of
their trip to the Holy Land at theSalvatlonArmy,l15Bl!tternut Ave.,
Thursday. March 24, at7: 30 p.m. There will be special music. Mrs.
Wining invites thC' public to attend.
Final signup Saturday
Final sign up for the Syracuse-Minersville Youth League will be
held Saturday, March 26, from 9 a .m. until noon at the ballfield at
· Syracuse Elementary School.
· The program· includes T -ball, minor league. peewee, little leag'.t<'
and pep wee girls softball.
·
Youth interested in pony league also must register. Foiradditiona l
information call992-5811l. All parents are encouraged to register their
children. Saturday's sign up will be final.
SOUI'IIERN - Six talented and gifted atudents · the Soutbem
Local School district took part Iii the Young Experimental SclentW
Program. 'lbey are, left to right, Carol Fisher, Letart Elementary;
Kathy lhle, Racine! Tracy Beegle, Letart; LesUe Dudding, Racjne;
Becky Evans, Poriland, and Kevin Burgess, Syracuse.
Emergency runs
(Continued tram
A hJihllght of the propam was a .
recent visit of_the ~ ~tu!lents and ._
~e four teachers to cosr 1n
Columbus . where tbey were
brought together wttll 10me 37JJ
othi!r gifted students from other
Ohio locations for "hands on"
science activities and demonstratlons. Physical scleoce, earth
science and history were the main
areas covered by cosr statf
members during the visit.
The program was fllnded by
CQSI and a grant trqm General
Electrtc .. Costanzo Is more: than
pleased Wtth the program and
although General Electric might
not be providing a gr1111t for future
programs, he Is hoping that Meigs
County students can be involved
next year. Students and teachers ·
have found the experience to be
Interesting, exciting and motivatlng, Costanzo reports, and hopefully, will spread the knowledge
gained through their trip to COSI to
other teacherS and other students.
The Eastern Local School provlded the bus used for transportatlon of the :aJ Ioc.al students and the
faculty advl~rs to COSI for the
hands-on studies.
Hospital news
·· vot .3l ,No.229
Copyrighted 198;l
Come In and See Our
Magnificent Colledian.of
Seeks divorce
Three forfeit bonds
Three defendants forfeited bonds, six were fined and one was given
a jail sentence in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Michael Athey, New Haven, $450, posted on a
charge of driving while intoxicated; Kenneth L. Buckle~. Coolville,
$48, speeding. and Lawrence Stewart, Rutland, $40, speeding.
Fined were Connie Grirrun. Middleport, $25 and costs, destruction
or property; Charles E. Lawson, Vinton, $425 and costs and lOdays in
jail, driving while lnto~icated; Jerome K. Howard, Pomeroy ,$15and
costs, speeding; Terry E . Icenhower, Cambridge, $100 and costs,
driving while under suspension; Jenny Grinstead , Pomeroy, $10,
driving on an expired license; Paul A. Miller, Middleport, $25 and
costs, spinning tires. Kenneth Musser was given a five day jail
sentence on a disorderly conduct charge; 10days for resisting arrest
and 15 days for assault on a police officer.
·
. EASTERN - Eastern Local School District talented and gifted
students taking· parl In the Young Experimental Scientist Program
from the left Include Don Allen Harris, Chester; Tom l\'lorrlssey,
Chester; Christopher Spencer, Tuppers Plains; Joey Bame,
Riverview; David Rice, Tuppers Plains, and Michael Mardn,
Riverview.
ladies' and Mens' 1\ings.
Filing for divorce were Norma J.
MU!s, Rt. 2, Racine, agaln!lt Alan P.
MU!s, Rutland; Steven H. Dunfee;
Middleport, against ·Nancy L.
Dunfee, Kent, Oh.; Almena Klein.
Pomeroy, against Thomas Klein,
Pomeroy; Jeanette Tlloma s.
Pomeroy, against Tim Thcmas,
Pomeroy.
Filing for support was Julie
Richmond against Larry E.
Richmond.
·
~-~
CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
The Womens' Fellows.hjp of the Meigs County Churches of Christ
will meet at the Bradford Church Thursday, March24at 7:30p.m. The
program will consist of a film about flowers from Williamsburg. Va.
m
PH. 992-6342
317 N. 2nd
E. Moin, Pomeroy
Area deaths
J
Vena Whaley
Mrs. Vena Whaley, 86, Pomeroy
Pike, Pomeroy, died early Tuesday
evening a t Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
A housewife. Mrs. Whaley was
born Aug. 29, 1897 at Darwin. a
daughter of the late George and
Amanda St iles Howe tt.
She is survived by four daughters,
Mrs. Karl (Doris I Grueser, Miners·
ville; Mrs. Nat (Maxine I Prentice;
Haines City, Fla.; Mrs. William
(Ann! King, Newark, and Mrs.
Herbert Herdman, Lakeview. Six
gra nd c hildren . six grea t ·
grandchildren and iourgreat -great.
grandchildren aiso survive.
An active member of the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Organiza tion, Mrs. Whaley was preceded in
death by her husband, Welby
Whaley, her parents and a
daughter.
Services· will be held at 2 p.m.
Thursday a t the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Richard
Rothemich officiating. Burial will
be in Burlingham Ceme tery.
Friends may call a t· the funeral
home from 6 to 9 p.m . Wednesday.
Herbert Moore
MEIGS - These are the talented and gifted atudents of the Meigs
Local School District making the COSI trip. FrOm left are Cindy
Maynard, Salem Center; Mark Corsi, Salisbury; John Evans,
Rutland; David Frymyer, Salisbury; Aaron Sheels, Harrisonville;
Teny Fields, Pomeroy; Lesley Carr, Pomeroy, and Joe HaD,
Bradbury.
I
Herbert F. Moore, 78, 301 Wright
St., Pomeroy, a former Middleport
businessman , died Monday night at
University Hospital in Columbus.
Mr. Moore and his brother, Harry
S. Moore, operated the R. C.
Bottling Co. In Middleport ior a
number of years until1970 when he
retired. He was born Feb.17, l!lffiat
Ashland, Ky., a son of the late
Samuel S. and LU!ian Rule Moore.
Surviving are his wife, Gladys;
four sons, Herbert F ., Columbus;
.Jack, Rapid City, South Dakota;
Ferman E. of Pomeroy, a nd James
A. of Philadelphia, Pa., and a sister,
Helen Lyle. Ashland, Ky . Also
surviving are 16 grandchildren, 20
great ·grandchildren and two great·
great-grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews . .
He was preceded in death by his
parents, three brothers, Harry S ..
Franklin a nd Eugene Moore, and a
sister, Mrs. Marie . Wheatley. He
was · affiliated with the United
Methodist Church.'
Services wiU be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. William MiddlesMeigs Memory Garden. Friends
warth
officiatiJlg.
Burial
wUIfrom
be in2
may call
at the funeral
home
to 4 and 7.to 9 p.m. Thursday.
WE HAVE IN STOCK AFULL LINE OF
ANTIQUE COLLECTOR BOOKS
*Firearms
*Baseball Cards
*Sports Memorabilia
*Clocks
*Giassseare
·*Coins
*Jewelry
*Bottles
@) ·
AtiiCRAFT
AATtLLI!AY
WEAPONS PRODUCTION
1974·1982
WEAPONS PRODUCTIOI
1974·1982
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
MIDDLEPORT
CAR SEATS
tl200
By KEVIN KELLV .
OVPstalf
RIO GRANDE- In what was
billed as a discussion of black
politics in th<' 19005, civil rights
activist Julian Bond Wednesday
night vigorously a ttacked Presi •
dent Reagan for a retreat on
basil' human righ ts.
ThC' end· result of this, Bond
believes. is establishmenl of
white suprem acy as a permane nt feature or the American
c haracter.
"We now know what real fear
is, " the ' 'eteran Georgia legislator told a Rio Grand<'Collegea nd
Community College a udience.
"Two years ago, Reaganomics
was an unproved economic
throry. Two years later, it's still
an unproved economic theory,
but its applica lion makes the
Gneal Depression look like a
Sunday school picnic."
Reagan, whom Bond labeled
a n "amiable -Incompetent," has
bPttered the ll ws of the haves
while the have-nots can expo.>et
/FREE
PARKING
DAVID DUNN
7-11 NIGHTLY
126 MAIN ST
POMEROY
-~~===·==· =·===~~~~~========~j
•
•
Send the Egg Basket
Bouquet
.
Hl' l1.. :~ .111 LI ~IL• r ,!.!iff dw mixt·.., l'nlnrful ·I ~., .. tL·r fl, •WL'f" .1nd ltll 11 1.:1 t 11.,. 1r .1n
,c.u ~< I I,~ 1k\ wiri.J four tllll"f,tLk.Lhk r., ,~.
ll' f q.~\ . h ·.., 1he E'* ( \.1-,k~· f Boli<JI It: I
And if~ ,, .l,:li.c.htt'ul ~1ft rh.1r wil l ht:
l 'lljl ')'l"l.l .1 11 y<.;.l f kIll).: lx·(~ IU<;.(.: I hc.· b :1:- ·
kc.·t hr,,·,lllll"'• th<: r'IC:rft,_., kirt:h t n ,li.'fl..; -
\11~
h1rin,c.
kl'l'pin_g
t:AA"· ript.:nill,l: fn1i1.
nr hnld
.t pl.uu.
j~~~~~~
OtK c.plilk ct llto our ~hop .ull.l Y<lll (,lll '>l' llll
y11ur
,c.ih :1 hn, ~~ .11 1 ~ wllc.·rc.· 111 1hc.· l i.S. Hu1 ,c.c.·t l t'.ll'k i 11' 1
C1 ll u~ 1111by. A-.k fpr llw 1·: ).!,1.!. H.1~~ l 'l HcHKJlll' f.
And
rt'llll'lllht:r, \1
DOUBLE ROLL PRICE . ...•.. .. •.. .. .... .. .. .. .. . $ 7 9 8
irh Pt 11nt·n ty FltJ\1 L'l' Sl1111, 1 ht· f~ JW\'1'" .I I W,I~'~
in,~-: .1~ l,l'l'ff)' . 1~ rln ·
flni\L' I''
l:
unt.' i 11
~ti nt: I h·
dll'II N 'hn
Easter Sunday is April3.
PE-PASTED, VINYl COATED
~~~~~:~~A~:~:~~~~
POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
" THE WAV AMERICA SENDS LOVE"
PH . 992 -2038
101 BUTTERNUT AVE .
OR 882 · 5721
POMEROV. OH .
~~~~~
~==~~
106 MAIN ST.
. . . :. . . . . . .:. :.
Sl398
POMEROY
Page 4
Page 5
•
at y
defense system, Reagan turned to
an oft en successful tactic to work his
way on a reluctant Congress.
And, with the surprise a nnouncement of his anti-ballistic missile
system plan , the president dangled
a carrot on a stick by indicating that
some Pentagon funding in the
future would go to 1a system of
deterrence based on something
other than the threa t of reta liation.
The early publi~ reaction re·
ceived by White House te lephone
operators was nearly 5·1 in support
of Reagan, according to Peter
Roussel, a deputy White House
press secretary. But on Capitol Hill.
early reacl ion opposed the
president.
Sen. Mark Hatfield . R-Ore.,
chairman of the Senate Appropria tions Commil tee, said the presi·
dennt's '· terr ifyi ng propo sa ls "
would drain fund s needed to rebuild
Am erica. Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass .. spoke about
" the misleading red scare tactics
and reckless Star Wars schemes of
the president."
White House spokesma n Larry
Speakes sa id the genesis of the
anti-ballistic missile proposa l was a
recent briefing of the president by
national security advisers who
painted a plcturP of military
developmenT In coining years and
"aU he could see was a buildup of
offensive weapons."
Bond attacks President.,s policies
$4400
MEIGS INN
27
AAMOII
SUBMARINES
PRESIDENT'S CHARTS - 'lbese are four of the charts UBed oy
President Reagan used durin< his natlonaDy televised speech from the
- ·OviJ Office ai lhe White H01111e Wetlnesday night. They show four
categortes of weapons production comparison betw~ the U.S. and
Soviet Union from llr74 to 1982. (AP Laserphoto ).
Our new Automollile Child
Restraint Systems meet all
Federal Motor Vehicle
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PRICED FROM
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23 THRU
SATURDAY, MARCH 26
f)
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We have rear-facin& (for
newborns) and silndard
upright models (for
toddlers up to 40 lbs.).
ANQ OTHER BOOKS OF INTEREST
83 MILL ST.
WEAPONS PRODUCTION
1974·1982
Q)
Issued marriage licenses
Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs County Probate Court to
James Gary Markwell , 22, Pomeroy, and Rhonda Kay Bamhart,l9,
Pomeroy; Elvis Wayne Peck, 25, Rt . I. Racine, and Christine Ann
Pullins, 25, Rt . 4, Pomeroy: James Edwin Miller. 30. Portland and
Denise Ann Miller, 25, Portland.
the Senate a nd on the Democraticcontrolled House when key economic votes approach,
With his speech Wednesday night
on the Soviet buildup a nd his
proposal to develop a missile
Karat Gold .
SUCKERS.....$2.00 P11 'h lb.
Riverview students
to present op~ratta
•
•
enttne
.
.
.
2 Sections , 12 Page\
20 Cenh
A MuhimHf ia Inc New•poper
Missile defense system
pushed by President
Opals. Onyx, ·P8iiils:
Sapphires, ·Rubies, Top;u,
Turquoise . Tiger Eyes ,
"Star Sapphires ." and
Birthstones. in 10 and 14
HARD CANDY...$1.50 per 'h lb.
Meigs diamondmen
prepare for opener
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March '24 , 1983
WASHINGTON (API- For two
years, President Reagan has said
that if he can't make Congress see
Th<' light. hE' will let it feel the heat.
That is how he describes his
effons to build public pressure on
Suprfree
Church group to meet
Letters to editor
e
Veterans Memoiial Hospital
Admltted ..Deborah Smith, Racine; Vena Whaley, Pomeroy;
Cuba Little, Pomeroy; Julia Manley, Middleport; Donna ?hila·
baum, Pomeroy; Karen Hawtborne, Long Bottom.
Discharged.. Linda Carpentr, Reo
becca Smith, Dorothy Kimes.
Five calls were answered Tuesday by local emergency units, the
Meigs County E mergency Medical Services reports.
At 10 a.m .. the Pomeroy Unit took Vena Whaley from Pomeroy
Pike to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 5:02p.m. took
Ann Davis, :D Riverview Drive, to Pleasanl Valley Hospital;
Pomeroy at 5:24p.m. took Donna Philabaum. Condor St., to Veterans
Memorial: Pomeroy at 9:45p.m. took GladysCucklertromPomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans Memorial. and at 11:56 p.m.,
Middleport took Virginia Duckworth, 405 Page St .. to Veterans
Memorial.
page' 1)
''M illions of American families are daily herded into
poveny. allowed tosllpthrougha
net so loose it could not hold Moby
Dick," Bond contlnued. "The ·
president said he would leave a
safety net to protect low-Income
people. This Is simply not true. "
Speaking at the same hour
Reagan appeared natlona Uy on
televtsion to state his case for a
stronger dPfense budge t' BOnd
said "aggressive mlllta rlsm"
was another reason foreconomic
and socia l Imbalance plaguing
the na tion.
If one less B-1 bomber or
Trident submarine Is built, he
~rgued. the millions saved froni
those projects could be diverted ·
to necessary social, education
a nd law e nforcement programs.
Bond said later during an
answer-and-question pertoo he
favors national preparedness in
case of attack.
"I'm as bloodthirsty as tbe
next guy," he said. " But l see no
rea$on to destroy Russia 100
· times over ... lt's a stupid waste."
Bond indicated that recent
attacks on clvU liberties have led
the administration to view the
Constitution as "a docUment of
- - - -----------
infinite elasticity, to cut and snip
as fits the moment."
A fixture in the American
political scene sinC't' the mid1960s. Bond evoked the spirit of
that era when he told the
a udience the means to fight
Jhreats to huma n rights is with
thP ballot box a nd mass partici·
pa tion in loca l a nd nation'al
politics.
"There is, I believe, a sizable
amOUI\1 of bodies that won't
surTender today's goals to the
current princes of power," he
sa id. "Most of all. wemustsay no
to self·impost.'d political impotence. It's nothing s han of a
scandal that in a terrorist
organization like the Klu Klux
Kla n, membPrship has inC'reased. while me mbership in a
group like the NAACP has
rem ained stabiP."
Following Bond 's speech,
which brought most of the
audience to Its feet with applause. reactions were heard
from a pan<'! that agreed with
Bond'.s sentiments.
Rev. Henry Fletc her, a Ga llia
County native a nd a member of
the West Virginia Human Rights
Commission, again recalled the
early act ivist days of the civil
right s movement with a state·
ment affirming Bond's lalk.
"One of the most significant
steps is that wa lk to the polls, for
it is a t the polls where civil tight s
struggles, a fewyearsagowaged
in the streets, can bPwonat last,"
he said.
"Our greates t moment of
victory won't come with a
display or military might. nor
when unE'mployment is at its
lowest ebb, nor with two cars in
the garage and a chicken in
every pot; " Fletcher continued.
''Our greatest moment ofvictory
will come when all of us can join
at the base of the mountain arm
in arm and chant ·ln unity, 'lam
m y brother's keeper.· "
BOND SPEAKS- Georgia State Sen. Jnllan Bond attacked Reagan
admln1ltratlon poUcles om human rights during a speech to Rio Grande
College and Commwdjy College VJem-lay night, labeiHng the
PIE tldent an "archlled of avarice" for driving a wedae.between poor
andrlch.
.
.
I
Speakes said Reagan saw the
defensive system "as the only hope
to ending the buildup."
Speakes said Reagan had two
.motiv<'s in delivering the speech:
-To m obilize American public
opinion, and draw a ttention to what
he sees as the disadva ntagrous
military position of the United
States;
-To offer "some sort of longrange hope for the future ."
But in offering a new policy tha t
foreshadows a shift In a JO.year-old
stratejzy, Reagan was also making
a political statement.
In a week that began with the
president moving to shOre up his
standing on domest ic issues by
nominating William D. Ruckelshaus to takeover the Environmen·
tal Protection Agency, Reagan also
took a step to soften his hardline
image on military matters a nd
justify his defense budget increases.
Before Reagan spoke, he was
dealt an expected setback by the
House of Representatives, which
passed 229-196a Democratic budget
plan that would slash his defense
buildup by more than hair.
"The so-called 'alternate budget '
backed by libera ls in the House," as
Reagan described the IX>mocrats'
plan, is at the heart of his sudden
flurry of activity on defense issues.
With little chance of winning the
budget vote In the House, whatever
REAGAN ON DEFENSE - President Reagan points as he
· addresses the nation on television Wednesday from Washington In
supporl of his proposed defense budget. At left is a picture of Soviet
Mlgs In western Cuba according to the White House. The House voted
earlier to cut the defense budget in favor of social programs. (AP
Lllserphoto ).
pressure Reagan hopes to bring to
bear on the Congr<'ss is be ing
directed at the Senate. There, even
some key Republicans, have balked
at supporting his defense budget.
The telev ised spePCh lacked som<'
of the rhetorical fireworks tha t t hc
president a nd his speechwrit ers
have produced in the past.
But there were ple nty of pictures
-of Soviet ins lalla !ions in Cuba and
an extended airfield runway in
SovteHnfluenced Grenada in the
eastern Caribbean- a nd charts on
· And . there were numbers, intended to counler argument s for a
freeze on . the devclopmenl a nd
deployment of nuclea r weapons.
Soviet' weaJxms expansion .
week, and now have 1.300."
The Soviets, Reega n said, had 600
med ium -range la nd-based nuclear
missiiC'S in 1978; 8(XJ by the end of
1979, and 1,200 last August, and were
recently claiming that "a pproximate parity offorces" exists.
To which the president added:
" But .the Soviets are still adding an
average of three new warheads a
New contract
proposes cuts
in benefits
Eliminat ion of a
number of
benefit s including rrouction of
wages are proposed by Foote
.Mineral Co. for thP nex t thrC'e year
contract with the United Steelworkers of America, AFL-CJO a t
the New Haven Plant, according to
one union member.
The employe sa id union officials
Wednesday provided a handoul to
workers listing proposals or the
compa ny for a new three year
contact with the union.
The proposa ls lnclude .. reduce
wagesS2.50 per hour : e lirninatC'cost
of living a nd all reference thereto
under thC' agreement: eliminate all
insurance coverage provided to
employes on lay-off and all reference thereto under the agreements;
eliminate all Insura nce coveragP
pmv ided to ret ir£'Cs a nd a ll refer. ence thereto under lheagrreme nts;
elimina te the Supplem ental Unem ployment Benefit Plan, guara nteed
SUB, and all reference there to
under the agreem ents; e liniina te
the extended "acation plan and a ll
reference thereto under the agreements: elimina te thC' vacation
bonus and a ll reference thereto
under the agreements; elimina te
the percentage formula, under the
pension agrecment, for calculations
of future retiree benefit levels:
elimina te the 70-80 retirem ent
provision and a ll reference Ihereto
under the P<'nsion agreement:
elimina te the 13-week specia l payment and all reference thereto
under the pension agreement:
eliminate the62-15 and 30 year early
retireme nt provisions and a ll reference thereto under the pension
agreem ent.
Workers arP up for a new contract
with the company in October of this
year, it is reported .
' i>
•
....
•
~
FILED - Roger Manning Davidson, left, filed his petition for' the
Republican nomination to run for mayor with the Meigs County Board
of Elections Tuesday afternoon. Davidson filed four years agu as an
Independent candidate for the position. With him on the right Is Hofile
Green, a former l'omeroy councilman, who was also a candidate for
m3yor four years ago. Green will assist Davidson with ·his campaign.
Filing deadline
today
.
.
Is the only candidate to file.
Pomeroy Village wUI have a
Filing deadline for Pomeroy a nd
Republican council race a nd mayMiddleport ca ndidates with the
or's race by both Democrats and
board is 4 p,m. Thursday .
Republicans, according to the
latest primary election flllngs with
Roger Manning Davidson, Lin·
coin Hill, Pomeroy, Tuesday filed
the Meigs County Board of
Elections.
his petition .10 run .for the Repubii·
Henry J . Werry and lla Juanita
can nomination for mayor of
Pomeroy.
Rusche! have both flied as Republl·
This marks Dav idson's second
cans to ru n for council.
Earlier Incumbent, Bruce Reed,
attempt · to secure the mayor's
position. He filed for the Republia Republican, flied for nomination
bringing the total Republicans to
can nomination for mayor of
three seeking nomlnatton for two _ Pomeroy.
This marks Davidson's second
seats opening neX1 year. .
attempt to secure the mayor's
Kenit.y K. Klein flied for the
_position. He-flied for the post four
Democrat nomination to run for
years ago as an Independent. ·
Pomeroy mayor and will opposed
A graduate of Pomeroy High
Democrat WUllam · Quickel who
Weather forecast
earlier.
·
·
filed
School,
class ol 1952, Da vldson
Mostly cl~ar a nd cold lonight.
attended
several colleges a nd
Roger )11. Davidson flied as a
Low around 20. Winds northeasterly ·
universities. he is a veteran of the
Republican for nomlmitlon to run
10 mph or less. Sunny Friday. High
KoreanC{Jnflict having been honor46·52.
• for mayor. He wi ll oppose lncu'1"ably discharged from the U.S. Air
bent Republican Clarence Andrews
ExtendL'II Ohio Fore<:ast
Force,
and Richard Seyer for the nominaSatunlay t!U-ough Monday:
Employed In the mass appra(sal
tion
to
run
In
the
fa
II
.
Fair oo Saturday and a chance of
In
Middleport,
two
seats
on
and
computer business for some 20
rain or snow Swtday and l\'lonclay.
years.
Davidson pioneered thc use
council
open
this
year.
Thus
far,
Highs In the 40s. Lows In mld-20s to
Carl
J.
Horky,lncumbent,
R.,
only
(Continued
on page 81
mld--3&.
�
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howett
moore
whaley