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Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

'
Tueldly. March 19, 19815

55 Southem residents view
Murifie.ld Yill~~ building __ Saturday, ·55 Southern Local
Dlstrict residents traveled to.
blln, Ohio, to vtew the workofthe
archttectural firm of Firestone,
Jaros, Mullin, Inc., of Worthington.
The group toured the Deer Run
Elementary School near Murllleld VIllage- a residential area
of the Dublin School District. The
Deer Run Elementary was constructed In 1980 for gracle K-6
with enrollment of 600 students.
The group also toured the Dublin
Middle School, grades 7 and 8, to
view

from t~'other ~hoots that can be
Incorporated Into the proposed
Southern building.
The next step, according to
Southern Loal Superintendent
Bob Ord, Is for the board of education to select one of the three
archllectural firms that have
been Interviewed and have them
begin preliminary work.
How many mllls will be required?
This Is a question that many have
been asking. Board member Dennle Evans responded, "The amount
of State Dept. of Education funding
and the estimate

Southern bus .!lriv~r. Ike Spencer, said, "We are already paytng- taxes and since the State
Dept. of Education Is willing to
pay one-half to two-thirds of the
cost, why not try to get It- otherwtse the tax money wUI go to
Cleveland or some other area of
the state." ·
•
Supervising elementary prlncipal Robert Beegle reported he
has a list of 25 residents who have
expressed a desire to go see a
school that Is like what Is wanted
for Southern Local. It Is expected
that the board of education will

e
2 Sections, 14

work done on the newer section cessary before an accurate mlllage lie Invited) to give the residents
of the older school building. Stu- can be given. It Is my understand- an opportunity to get a general
dents were able to return to the Ing the State Department Is ex- Idea of what Is wanted for the
pected to_ lund onl'-half to two- Southern Local building. Many of
Middle School this past Novemthe residents expressed an Interthirds."
ber.
R., Dan Halneti, Jack Williams, Supt. Bobby Ord,
INDUSTRIAL ARTS- Dlacualllng lqduU:Ial
est In seeing the Shenandoan
Board of Education memllers
Bob Dudding and Bob.Beegle. (Bob Beegle photo)
Arts
program
at
lhe
Dublin
Middle
School,
L.
to
Elementary In Noble County.
· Supt. Ord said, "The board of
David ·H!ll and Dennie Evans
said they were very pleased with education and I feel that falling
the Interest being shown for the to take actio~ to provide the reslproposed K-8 etemehtary 'bulld-· d.e nts of .the. dlstr)ct an opportunlng for Southern Local as evl- Ity .to express their wlsMs. for a
(Continued from page 1)
"except I put my money tn the bank
denc.ed by the large turnout tot · new -school and resulting lmprothey
are
not
concerned
about
the
andl'dllketodrawltout."
~ement In the ,educattonal oppor.., ......._,.~ ·~.t!!::d:;.\':g..trtp-;- · · -1· .
soundness
of
the
company,"
Prest'l'li~:!p.~g..•!L~..'!!!l!Q!:l;!!&lt;l!1.
It Is hoped, that by visiting the tunities for thl'-&amp;tudents would be
dent
S(ephen
E.
Wood
said.
to
· Columbus which will leave
various schools, board members, a disservice tb- our children and
The
governor,
a
Democrat,
orDayton
at 8 a.m. Wednesday for the
staff, as well as citizens, will be neglect of our duties and respondered
the
state's
70
pr1vately
Statehouse
In an attempt to talk !o
able to see various good points sibilities."
Insured thrifts closed on Frt.d ay Celeste.
after a run by depositors trlggered
Anotherll,&lt;mpeoplehadcalleda
by Home state's closing March 9. statl'-sponsored, toll-free telephone
Home State closed after It was bot-llne since It )legan operating
. revealed the thrill could lose Saturday, spokesman Tom Meyer
mUltons of dollars In the failure of said Monday·
·
The governor took to his monthly
ESM GovernmentSecutJUes Inc. of
Zora E.
hart
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
statewide radio call-In program
Wednesday until ttmeofservtceson
•
Thursday.
That put the assets of the Ohio Monday night 'to reassure depostZora E. Barnhart, 94, Stewart.
Gilbert Bechtle
Deposit Guarantee Fund, which tors of the closed savings and loons
died Monday at Hickory Creek
Gilbert Bechtle, 58, Henderson, provided pr1vate deposit Insurance that he was doing everything he
Nursing Home at The Plains ' died Monday tnSt.Mary'sHospltal, to the state-chartered S&amp;Ls, ln . could to get the Institutions refollowing an extended Illness.
Huntlngton.
jeopardy. Celeste has estimated the opened.
She was a daughter of the late
Born Oct. 5,1926, In Henderson, he ODGF Institutions have about
The governor said he would
LewtsandRet~SI!J1mo1JSLudwlck.
SPEECH DEPARTMENT - Commenting on the spee~h
Is the·son of Uiura·Neweu -Bechtle,- · 500,&lt;m customers and sald .theshuL . support a special prosecutor to look
Surviving are a daughter-In-law, . Henderson, and the late Gilbert D. downwasnecessarywhllesta!E'and futo·t heclostng"!HomeStatc,wh!ch
rGQm at ·Deer Run Elementary near .Murlfleld VIllage. In Duhllp
Marcia Barnhart with wliom she Bechtle, Henderson.
Sehool District, L. 1o B., Southern Supt. Bobby Ord, Racine reme- .
federal officials worked on plans to Is OWI¥!d by political ally Marvin
made her home for 21 years; a
dial reading teacher Joyce Rllchle, Southern guldeance counselor
• nftden
Warner.
He was an employee of the West restore depos1tors co
ce.
"The answer Is yes, let me say It
Leah Ord, and Mrs . Barbara Lawrence. (Bob Beegle photo)
grandson, . Bob Barrtluy't, Guys· VIrginia Department of Agriculture!
The "bank holiday" was to have
ville; a granddaughter, Doris Worsand a member of the Concortl ' ended Monday, but Celeste ex- again, yes," Celestesatdtnresponse
wlck, Mars, Pa., lour great· Baptist Church. He served In the tended It for 48 hours. About 125 to a caller, Identified only as Bob
grandchildren and several nieces u.s. Army from 954 to !956.
federally Insured S&amp;Ls are not . from Youngstown, who labeled the
1
and nephews.
Other survivors are two sisters, affected.
banking crisis "your own
A member of the Betheny
·
So
2 500 · 1 turned t t Watergate."
me •
penp e
ou a
The House debate over the
Methodist Church and a member of Evelyn Thomas, Middleport, and
VIrgie May Columbus and three the · Sinclair Comn\unlty College
A Meigs County man was cited
the Betheny GOOdwill Workers,
brothers. Robert Bechtle, Point gym In Dayton Monday night tn leglslattonthatwoutdmarktheflrst early Sunday morning by the
Mrs. Barnhart was preceded In Pleasant, Clifford Bechtle and
response to a newspaper advertise- hunlle In getttngtheS&amp;Ls re-opened Gallta-Metgs post of the State
~31 JACKSON PIKE · RT.35 WEST
death by her husband, three sons Johnny R. Bechtle, Henderson.
Phone-~-&gt;1524
ment urging Home State depositors Included an angry· unprecedented Highway Patrol lor DWI and fleeing
and a daughter.
Funeral service will be 2 p.m. to form a single, strong voice to fioorspeechbyHouseSpeakerVern
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT I SUN
following a single-car accidental the
Seyvlces will be held at 2 p.m.
AI.L SEATS lz.25
Intersection
of
SR
7
and
Orange
Thursday
at
the
Crow-Russell
speak
for
those
affectEd
by
the
ru:~tf:
descended
from
the
speakJON EYER.Y TUESDAY
Thursday at the White Funeral
Funeral Home with Eugene Zopp,
bank's collapse.
Twp.289.
Home In Coolville wltli the Rev. Roy minister, officiating. Burial wUI be
Organizers Curt WUkerson and . er's rostrum after ReP- Thomas P.
Raymond w. Larkins, 54, of
Rosepfflclattng. Bur1al will be In the atConconiCemetery.
Fred - Kaufmann said they had Gilmartin, D-Youngstown, who Tuppers Plains, was being pursued
Stewart Cemetery. Friends may
th 250 bo
11
vo~agatnstthebtll,satdthatoniya
northbound on 7, when troopers said
Calling hours are after 2 p.m. gotten more an
P ne ca s hancituloftnstltutlonswouldbeneflt.
call at the funeral home atter 6 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral home.
during the weekend In response to , "We do this topeoplewbo've been he apparently lost control of his car,
-·
the ad they placed.
went off the left side of the road,
"We'realltnthesameboathere," falrandjustandhonorableandgood
struck a sign and went through a
Wllkersonsald. "InsteadofaUthese taxpayers," he said, adding that
yard, came back across the
people · hollering and screaming, "we are not doing the governor a
highway, went off the right side and
let's have one voice.''
favor" or the people of Ohio a favor came to rest In a cornfield at 12:41
Kaufman received deafening ap- to pass the bill.
a.m.
plause from the crowd when he
"ll's hard for me \o understand
Larkins sustained minor visible
By The Assoclaled Press
Factories, mines and utilities opened the meeting by saying he any -member saying It's the gover- Injuries In the Incident, but was not
U.S. factory use, mirroring a combined operated at 80. 7percent or dldn't know an~thlngabout finances oor's proposaJ..It'saproposal to help treated, troopers said. His car
people, to get the Institutions
decline In Industrial production, fell capacity last month, down 0. 7
sustained moderate damage In the
reopened," and to give the public
sharply In February to Its lowest percentage point from January, the
accident.
confidence, Riffe said.
level In a year and a deficit In the Federal Reserve said. The decline
Rep.ThomasW.Watklns,RStow,
I
' be
broadest measure of U.S. trade was tit tandem with the central
(Continued from page 1)
joined
Gilmartin
tn
voting
against
mnmg
ollery
num
r
soared to a reconllevel In 1984, the bank'seartler report that Industrial
Councilman
Bill
Young
reported
government said.
.
output dropped 0.5 percent In
the bill.
CLEVELAND (AP) The
he has received complaints about
Meanwhile, the Conference February.
·
. Also on Monday, Reps. Mary · winning number drawn Monday
Board said Morujay that American
The Fed blamed the capacity the tom up sidewalk on East Main Rose Oakar, Thomas Luken, Tony
night In the . OhiO Lottery's dally
workers received average annual '· utilization decline on harsh winter where some new construction began Hall, Edward Fetghan, Wtllls Grad- game,
''The Number," was 537.·
but
wasn't
finished
,
Mayor
Seyler
wage Increases of 4.3 percent over weather In' early February that
lson, John, Seiberling, Dennis EckIn the "Pick 4" game, the winning
the lasi three years. down from 8.5 closed some factories. But some suggested that council walt until ,art, Louts Stokes and Bob McEwen number was 7767 ,
spring to see what the building wrote Edwin J . Gray, chairman of
percent gains In 1979 and 19ffi.
analysts cited Inroads Into U.S.
contractor plans to do about the the Federal Home Loan Bank
The lottery reported earnings of
production by strong foreign
Board, asking . him to speed the $571,645.50 from wagering on lls
Starts Friday, "BABY''
situation.
competition.
daUygame.Earntngscameon'l81es
"FRIDAY the 13th PART 5"
The Union Ave. repair project
process lor FSLIC of $1,227,341.50, while holders of
Special Midnight Movie
(Continued from _page 1)
_
Factory use hit a peak during this scheduled ·tor spring by the Ohio applicaton
Insurance.
d h· ·
Friday &amp; Satur ay s owrnc
Sens. J ohn Glenn and Howard wtnntngtlcketsareentltledtoshare
them will be more attractive recovery of 82,7 percent of capacity Department ofTransporta tlon and
$655 696
"FRIDAY the 13th PART 5"
last Ji.lly. Theratefell to81.4percent
tax abatement for The Maples
according to Wehrung.
tn
October
imd
was
essentially
elderly
housing
project
on
Mulberry
federal task Ioree
At this time, plans lor the
Metzenbaum
alsoto devise
called ways
for to
a
ensure that Social Security reciprecreation facility include the ball unchanged through January before Ave. were brle!Jy discussed.
One of the councilmen had heard Ients and others who normally have
fields. adequate lighting, and ·an the big February drop.
The deficit In the nation's broadest that the Union Ave. project was not
their federal checks deposited In the
asphalt track for running or
trade
·
measure,
called
the
current
on
ODOT's1985agenda
but
others
on
69 closed Institutions get their
walking.
Council may try to schedule account, swelled from $41.6 billion In council, Including the mayor, be- money.
lieve this Information l.s tncon-ect
another public meeting. Price 1983 to $101.6 billion In 198!1 and
move
the
United
States
helped
and
will verify ' the matter with
comparison Is underway and councloser
toward
the
status
of
a
net
ODOT.
cil hopes that construcdon of the
facility can begin In theneartuture. debtor country for the first time In 71
Council has authority to allow tax
years, the Commerce Department abatement but one- councilman
satd.
Emerg~ncy
point&lt;:&lt;! out that tax abatement Is
supposed to attract new construcTonight and Wednesday, partly
tion not reward laterwhenconstruc- cloudy. Low tonight In the mtd-405.
ton has already · taken place.
High Wednes&lt;,jay near 60. The

25 Cents

Senate deadlock

... ·-

·--

Area deaths

Bam

-

Driver faces
multiple charges

By NANCY YOACHAM
time the new award Is presented,
Sentinel Staff Wrtrer
Blower will pledge S5 to chambers'
The driving forces behind Middle- savings. Other members may also
port's newly organized chamber of
pledge money to savings. This
commerce Would appear to be
money wUI be banked with Interest
optimism, enthusiasm and work.
from a $l,fmbond currently held by
These were the underlying tones
the chamqer. The Interest on the
when approximately 20 chamber
money Is to be used In chamber
members gathered Tuesday at the
promotions.
LaSalle Restaurant for a regular
Jason IngelS and Dick Owen Jr.
meeting.
were named as Middleport ·
The chamber hopes to expand on
chamber's !trst "movers and shakthe Idea that Middleport Is Meigs
ers" for their work in organizing a
County's largest community and
retail merchant's association. The
wut be promoting tourism In
two will now be part of the
Mlddlepot1 and surrounding areas,
President 's Club. Ingels, Owen, and.
possibly through brochures which . anyone else receiving this award,
would be distributed state wide and
will be presented with a plaque.
maybe centered around the Idea "A
Busbmess promotion
Day Away."
The newly formffl business proTo encourage act lvepartlclpatlon
motion association will function as a
by chamber members, a monthly
commlltee under the chamber. To
"movers and shakers awa'rd" has get the business association started,
been inlltated liy new President Bill
the chamber's executlvl' board
,B)ower as part of a "President's voted topayforthegroup's flrsttwo
Club,"
publicity campaigns. Accotdlng to
Explained Blower, "It's hoped
merchant representatlvesatyesterthat this award will lead ' to the day's meeting, the flrst promotion
'formation -of a foundation ," Each
and · publicity campaign was sue-

defl.Cl.t se·ts record

w· .

Council•.

Officials planning
JS &amp; L reopenings

r:::'=·=======:::============:;

~~--~u~n~lt~s~M~ond~a~y~.~th~e~M~e~tgs~~~~-~(55[iUM
Emergency Medical Services
ment has been reached In negotlareports.
At 10:47 a.m., Middleport took
Melvin Arnold irom Fruth Pharmacy to,.Pleasant Valley .Hosptla I;
RaCine at 12:38 p.m. took Judy
McNickle from Pine Grove Ro;ld to
Veterans Memorial; at l2 : 46 p.m.,
Pomeroy took David· Landaker
went to the Flood.Road and treated
Dave Landaker. Rutland at 2:41
p.m ., went totheHarrtsonvlllearea
tor Earl Artx, taken to Veterans
Memorta1Hospltalandat4:54p.m.,
Rutland went to Sand Ridge for Fred
Neece who was taken to O'Bieness
Hospital.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Maxine Hobbs, Dex-

ter; Dorothy Robinson, Coolville;
Bertha Conde, Pomeroy.
Dtscharged--Johru!On Scarberry,
Fay Sauer, Edna Lee, Mont Vance,
'Ibom8S Hawley, Mahlon Eblin.

lions for a new contract between
KrogerCo.andtheUnlledFoodand
Commercial Workers International
Union. ·
· .--.'
Union omctals are now searching
for a location to allow union
stewards In 67 Ki-oger stores In
central, eastern and southeastern
Ohio.
No details of the proposed
contract will be released until the
stewards have had the opporlllnlty
to see the terms. But !&lt;roger
spokesman Jim Mcintire said after
the tentjlttve agreement was
reached Siltunlay morning that It
was Kroger's understanding "the
uniOn wUI recommend acceptance
of the package."
The propoSed contract wUI last
three years If accepted. It was
hammered out following an 18-hour
bargaining session between Kroger •
and the union In Columbus that
began Fr1day morning.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Armed with a new law effective this
morning, Gov. Richard Celeste and
state banktngo!!tclals nowwlllwork
to reopen the' 69 savings and loans
cloSed five days ago.
However, angry depositors · at
Home State Savings Bank In
Cincinnati, which closed March 9,
tliggertng the run on other thrifts
and Celeste's onler for a bank
still don't know the fate of

Weather forecast

squads
answer five calls
Agreement reached

checking, however, councll believes
that the property Is already tax
exempt because It Is owned by the
county.
Present for last night's meeting
was Mayor Richard Seyler,
members of courril, John Anderson; Larry Wehrung, !Jetty Baronlck, Henry Werry, Bruce Reed and
BUI Young, and Jane Walton,
clerk-treasurer.

chance
·l :
tonight and :a&gt; percent Wednesday.
Extauled forecaat
'
'lbund~ UlrouiiJSalurday:
Fair on 'lbunday. Chance of ......
Friday and Salurday. IUp In llle
~ lo rnld&amp;o 'Diund"' and '
Friday and In llle upper tOll to upper ;
• Sa&amp;urday. r.-s In llle l!lld-20olo '
rnldo30II Tlunday and Friday,
Wannlnllo llle 8111 Salurday.

.I ,I 00 1313IELnD
I 17 ~ u
11777

I

liAS

14
14
15 ........................ .
15 ....................... ..

7
.117115
....................... .

$3.25
PH.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

Mllln St.
Rutland
0,.. lsOO te •soo llen.·Sat.

PH. 742-3011 .

VILlAGE OFFICIALS - 11tese Pomeroy Village
offidals wbo played an active role In the opening of
the new Pizza Hut 011 Weet Main Sired were on hand
· iU. t~ upe:.1 t.uu...iiie held W iitc new inl'iiin~ Tuesday
night. Village officials secured a HtJD grant lo
provide sewage disposal lln&lt;'S so thai the busin"""

could open. Members of vlliale councU on hand to
sample the fare of the new restaurant were, from left
around the table, Bruce Reed, BeCty Barontck, Larry
Wehrunf:, Jom AndersOn and Bill Young. Additionai
photo on Page 10.
·

ON 'DIE MOVE - New Middleport Chamber of
Commerce officers are hoping lo drum up
enthu.•lasllc support for this year's chamber proJed.•'llle chamller Is "on the move" according to Bill
Bklwer, new chamber president. Plcturedlefllortght
· are Mark Harvey and Dean Harris, both members of

· the huard of dln!&lt;:lors; President Bill Blower; Jason
lnf:Cis, vlt'j&gt;-presldent; Craig Matthews, treasurer:
ancl Yvonne &amp;ally, acting secretary and hoard
member. Another board member; Gregg Gibhs, WIIS
not. present for the pkture.

.,.._.......,

today, Celeste used the term "within
days" to describe his timetable lor
manyS&amp;Ls,
Bob Moore, chief spokesman for
the federal Home Loan Bank Board
In Washington, said this morning
that 17 Ohio thrlftshaveappllcatlons
pending fort he Federal Savings and
Loan Insurance Corp, with 13 .of ·
those !lied since Home State's
closing.
"Normally It would take ... at least

cess!ul for Ute village.
Blower would also like to see a
clerk's or employees' association
started under the chamber. ·
In other business, It was TePQ!jled
the chamber has been gathering·
Input for new bylaws which are to be
voted on when completed.
Dues are being raised to $3.5 for
associate members, $50 for regular
chamber members, and $1(XJ for
banks and utUltles .
Associate members will be tndl'1dua Icitizens, employees or professional business people who want to
participate In chamber but will not
have voting privileges.
Plans were also discussed to
change the annual organizational
meeting from January to a su mmer
month .
Treasury act!ount
And tt was reported by Treasurer
Craig Matthews that as or March 1,
the chamber had $000.87 In checkIng, pending bills from a hospita lity
suite at the recent state chamber
conference In Columbus, and a bill '
for the business asSociation's inllial
promotion. The chamber also has
$654.90 In a savings account which Is
Interest from the Sl,&lt;m bond.
Letters of resolution are to be
drafted as soon as possible and
directed to appropriate Individuals
with regard to the Pomeroy-Mason
bridge repairs scheduled for this
su!Tlrner.

The chamber does not oppose
repairs but does oppose closing the
bridge completely to carry out
repairs.
Chamber offers continued support to the boxing club which has
moved Into Middleport and Is
hopeful that plans lor a YMCA for
the village are still evolving.
Chamber Is a lso In support of the
bike path which has been proposed
for' Middleport by village· council
and will write letters In support of
the necessary legal transactions for
the project, If council so desires.
ThankJ. were extended by the
chamber to the · village street
department for .s now remova)
e!for1s during the winter.
Agenda dlscusst.'d
The upcoming year's agenda was

It Is believed that a )X'rman,·nt
briefly discussed and It was decided
that 'past year's projects should
chamber office would be beneficial
aga in be carried out. Including the
for the organization by creating "a
annuallall block party. Additional
physical prr=nt'C" In thf' communIty
and a suitable location for an
chamber projects were suggested
office is being sought a t this time.
but no official action was taken by
members .
· ·Stated Yvonne Scally, past
A walking hlstorlcal·tour Is being ' chamber president. prcsenlly on
encouraged for the vlllag~. With
serving on the boardofdirectol'!;and
Mike Gerlach, a history teac her at
as acting secretar~y. "We plan to
Mejgs High ~hoot, )o_be In charge.
focus promotiorys -on-aU al'('as of
II the tour does come about. Blower
Middlepot1, !rom one corporation
expects It wUI be sometime during
limit stgn 'to thf' other."
the summer.
Taxi servtoe endorsed
The next regular mecting of
The chamber Is also encouraging
Middleport Chamber of Commerce
adoption by village council of the
will be April 9 from 1-2 p.m . with a
taxi Sl'rvice which has been prosidewalk meeting plannro fo r that
posed for Mlddleport and Pomero)·.
time, weather permitting.

Proposed tax cut
may be increased
COLUMBUS, Ohio !API - De
mocrat lc Gov. Richard Celeste's
proposal lor a 10 percent cut In the
state Income tax may be effectively
week
the House

that If so. the tax provisions wi ll bl'
amended next W('('k to l'f'f!ov·t lht ·
change.
Hlnlg's commit!('(' Is expc&lt;.:tt&lt;l to

They have planned a caravan FSLIC approval, he said. But In
Chairman WOllam E. Htnlg,
to the Senatl' prior to th1• I ,f'l:i,la
from Dayton and Cincinnati to the emergency, "approval might be
D-New Philadelphia, said Tuesday
lure's Easter break thi'S('('I)nd "'' ~· b
Statehouse this morning In an determined In a matter of days" ·tn
that while the percent;~ge would
of April. Then fi"Cal d!'acllln,. for
attempt to talk with the governor.
some cases.
remain the same ·tn the gov.e rnor's
passage Is July l,
Celeste planned to meet with S&amp;L
Celeste met with bank board
twO-year budget bill, the cut would
Uncler the governor'sorlginat bill.
officials at 11 a.m. to discuss Chairman Edwin J ., Gray In
bemaderetroactlvetoJan.1rather
there would be a 5 percent c\11 In t ht•
Implementation of the new law.
Washington on Tuesday to urge
than take effect on July , 1 as
Income tax on July I, followcdu;· a
Flanked byotherstateofftclalsas speedy approval of the thrifts'
originally proposed.
.
• second 5 per('('nt cut a year later,
he signed the emergency legislation
appltcatlons.
Hlnlg, whose committee on Toes- , although the sccond-Yt&gt;ar cut would
shortly before 3 a.m .. Celeste said
One of the law's new provisions
day received a substitute budget bill
be expanded to 10 tx'rcent If
the bill-which requires most of the allows thes&amp;Ls, while still closed, to
111 which Celeste's tax plan was specified economic baroll'lt'h' I'S
privately Insured Institutions to
permit depositors to withdraw up to
unchanged, Indicated that House were favorabie.
obtain federal Insurance- not only
$750 a . month from their at'counts,
Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr.. D-New
Hlnlg said the envisioned changr
will help put them back Into business
Boston, wants the panel to find
aUevtattng ftnanclal hardships
would translate Into a 5 pefcent cut
but will make them "stronger than among some deposllors.
enough money - about $79 mllllon for all of calendaryear1985and a 7'1.!
ever because they wUI be meeting
It wtll be optional on the part of
-to make the cut effective for all of percent reduction for 1986, growing
local Institutions to Implement the
this year.
tough new standards."
•
to 10 percent (or posslbly15tx'rcen t)
"We have achieved a great deal provlstoit and to work out partial
Htnlg said that so far, the In ca lendar year In 1987.
tonight with the pas.wage of the
withdrawal procedures for
committee has made $10 million In
Celeste, In serklng to enhance the
legislation 1 am slplna," Celeste . depositors.
cuts In the budget bill and been scope of his original proposal,
saki. "We are protecting $4 billion,
However, Senate President Paul
LEGIONNAIRE OF 'I1IE YEAR - Mickey WIIUams, left,
advised by the Office of Budget and Bppi!rently Is reacting at least In
the savings of !100,000 Ohloons."
E. Glllmor, R-Porl Clinton, said
conun.der of Pon ....vy'A Drew Wet.&amp;er Pool 311, American Legion,
Management of a $45 million part to majority Republicans In the
Although conunerce department "Ohio's S&amp;L crisis Is oot necessarilY
pl'lllflll&amp;s the LePonnalre of llle Year troplly lo Raymond Teaford aL the
upwanl adjustment In revenues . Senate who already have approved
omctals said a handful of the over. I don't think any piece of
· JIOIII'• ....a! bb1htiiQ PllliY held Tuesday night aL the JIOill horne. 'l1lls
estimates for the biennium which and sent the House a bill calling for a
state-chartffl!ll S&amp;Ls which al·
legislation Is a complete solution.
year llle 141m Ire of llle Year awanl _pes lo two lllliinbel'!l !"!'__SU! rtsJuly 1~--~per.cent.cul.Jn_tbe.lncomeuaxovfl·
~ ready have awiTftrtar- reooral
BUF'werliive gJveiflhe-&amp;OVerilor-Oie--~~ervlce to- the poet. The other recljllem ill .J.H. El!!ehileln, wliilwas not
"We are trying to find the $79 the next three years.
Insurance might be able to reopen
tools."
Jh .,. l.t nllhl- More pholo8 on Pa&amp;e 10.
million we need," Hlnlgsald,addlng
k
~
..

!-

•

Mlssislllppl for Meyer and Berberlck In about 1961.
The new restaurant seats 80 people and Is done In an
altracllve decor. There Is parking for 40 cars.
Opening io the pubiic on Thursday, theri!!!iaunmt will
be open from 11 a.m. lo II p.m., Mondays through
Thursdays; II a.m . lo 1 a.m., on Fridays and
Saturdays and from noon to II p.m. on Sundays.

Optimism, ~nthusiasm, work
underlie ch·~mber's planning

·
f
))
F
. actory use a s,•

Pomeroy

OWNERS - Horace and Dorothy Karr, oil the
right, who own the new Pizza Hut bulldlns on
Pomeroy's WeiSt Main Street, were on hand for a
pre-opening preview for inviied guesis at the
reetaurant Tuesday nlghi•On the left are Gary Meyer
B!ld Larry Berberlck of Athens, who are responsible
for the buUdln11 of the new restaurant In Pomeroy for
Pizza Hut. Karr huDt the. nnt Pizza Hut east of the

"

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

C_, _ _

Pege-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy----Middleport, Ohio

ommentary
.

Wednesday, .March 20.. 1986

.

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fun
..-.-·-·-

The Daily· ~entin~~"===~~~~~~
Ill ~ourl Street ·
Pome~o,y,

Ohio

: DEVQTED TO THE INTERESTS OF T.H E MEIGS-MASON AREA

.

.

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l""r'"\...;,1-...-T-!r-"'T""'E::!!di~ ;

· R'OBERT L. WINGETI'
Pu111lshet'.. ·
; PAT WHITEHEAD
·:Assistant publisher/ Controller .

-.

BOB HOEFLICH .
General Manager

..

~=:-::t;;:::=::;_;,:~:_· ·~D~A:i
LE- ROTHGEB, JR."' _

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·.

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.

A professor ot history !rom ~
University o! Connecticut, disdainful of efforts to adopt a constitutional convention Urnlting fed&lt;:ral
spending to federal reVenues, re.
at
the Constitutional Convention in
178'1. ElllrldgeGeri-y, the precursor
·of GeOrge McGovern, proposed· to
write Into the Cons.tltutton that at no
'time could the government con script more t'han 3,&lt;XXJ men Into the
army. "Washington, It was re: · po~OO.~li 19 a s

of ourselves

whisper that Gerry's motion should
Include the proviso that 'no fDrelgn
enemy should Invade the Unlted
States at any time With more than
J,(XX) troops.' "
A nice anecdote, but more
apPliCable, how~er, to the ongoing
debate about the strength of oor
military - · which strength, one
supposes, Washington might have
stipulated as: equal to tbe power to
deter the enemy, plus one Infantryman . A ma{gtn of error.
Bu~re-academ!c~ntempt

Cor

ir'illiam F. Buckley Jr.

the balanced budget ts a reflection

on an Immature knowledge of
human psychology. Remove the
discussion, for a moment; from the
political ·context.
It Is gen~ally supposed that a
human being can, without running
any rtsk to his lungs or hean, smoke
and Inhale 10 cigarettes per day.
The problem, then, comes not !rom
smoking cigarettes, so .much as
!rom smoking more cigarettes than
the human organism can salely
aboorb.
•

suppose that one could devise a
practical means o.t making the_llth
dally cigarette unavatlable? Or, to
expand, suppose that, on discoverlng that one's alcoholic blood level
was traversing the threshold
beyond 'which a human being tends
to lose control of his coordination, or
his emotions, or hls judginent suppose- again, justto supposethat that tncrerilental drink were
knolvn to have In It an ounce of

~~.~~to~oo~

physical torment of convulsive
vomiting and stomach pain.
Wouldn't those restraints be
?
weIcome ·
We discovered, In the evolution of
our democralie experience • that
"'e once
k •·r
cer ta 1n thl ngs "
""
ld
lo
h
granted we sou no nger take
•••
that we·
Ior granted · «
• or 1ns~nce,
·
cou ld owns1aves. F or Instance, that
women should be denied the vote.
F or 1ns t ance, thai we needed to
waIt unIll the mon th Of March
r
·
oo

. Ohio
.
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'

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est are
eliminated in rell'ional

ATHENS ·- . Botlt the state's
seventh and eighth class AAranked
teams fell victim to tmranked ·
opponents here Tuesday as Steuben ville .upset previously'
undefeated Portsmouth West 60-57
and Col bu 8 Linde M Klnl
kn ked urn
n- c
ey
s7 ~=:~en~~~
Steubenvtlle (19_6) will meet
Columbus Unden McKinley (l~ )
In the finals here Friday night at
7: 30 p.m. With the wtnner advanclng to the state tournament In
Columbus the following weekend.
SleuhenvWe-PorlaniOUih Weel

:1n

7

lndian8, .UCLA ro~p in NIT

By'lbeA_.!e'""Preo8
nloo points at halftime and Closed
.ofc-the yearra;;:J. Hamuinn and .
,The regular season may have Wlthln seven before Indiana 's
Jason Burcbett led 1 ~ Siders With . been dlsa~lnting !or both the · . secpnd-half s~ak put the game.out
ljl andJ.8 re4pect1 i
Indiana
d UCLA basketball . of Richmond s reach.
.
West had trane:ie~ -goln u;-t~---teams. Howevtt, bo:t. seem-:l~ter
-Ilidlana ootrebeundedcRichmond
the final quarter but came !tthln
mlnied to make up for It In the
39·25 for the game, and the Hoosier
two at 55-5.3 and 57_55 late in the
Nat onallnvltatlon Tournament.
passers- Jed by Stew Robinson and
me Th Siders
For the second game In a row, the
Dan Paklch with seven ·assists
~ ·
el
tWice had
Hoosiers and Bruins were big
apiece -set up 22 baskets for their
::O:"'C:~:~ t e the game but could winners, as Indiana crushed Rich- teammates, compared with only
·
mond 75-53 and UCLA rout~ ~~,el![htas;!!~~!2f~PI\!eJ:1'"'" -=·-'
Greenlleld-Uodea McKinley
·· t:~ebraska ~-63 In second-roorid
"Wilen we get oorcenterreboundThe talented Panthers from
action Tuesday nt~:ht.
. lng, It's a very big plus for us, " said
Columbus jumped to ·a huge 2().6
Imllana, a 15-13 team during the
Indiana assistant coach Jim Crews,
lead by early second period, but had
regular season, had opened .the
speaking In . place of Coach Bob
to hold off Middleport-native and
toomey last week Mth a 19-57
Knlght, who has refused lo answer
l!m Meigs grid Rick Van Matre's
bombing of Butler. UCLA, 16-12
reporters' post-game questions

-~~~~a~~

-r- ·~

The traditional black-robed dignity of Ohio's Supreme Court has given
way to open bickering in which at Ieastfourof the seven justices have aired
their di!!erences In the news media.
~.....M-uehvf~it ste..-ns fPnm~he- biHer pollHeoJ t:&amp;tiipaigr.s'"6f":l~· ;hai-8ftvllk-ulf.....--;;and diminished Ihe Democratic majority. But now the justices are
breaking long-established precedent by publicly defending or criticizing
decisions of the coun itself.
·
In the past , they rare ly commented beyond their written opinions.
Associate Justice Robert E. Holmes, a Columbus Republican, Is the
latest to "go public," as he put it. He says the.phenomenon ·ls a good thing
that he hOpes it will continue and that It wlll "re-cement bonds tletween the
"
court and the public."
~
Holmes last -week Issued a statement In which he challenged public
statements by Chief Justice Frank D. Celebrezze, a Democrat, with regard
to a number of decisions.
· Among other things. Holnles noted that the chief justice defended a
series of decisions that liberalized laws covering workers' compensation
ciaims palo wiih employer assessments.
Holmes also said that Celebrezze " has endearingly referred io the court
as a 'people's coun."' He said, " I personally adhere to the thought that
there must be a continuing interest and concern by the court that our
decisions are fair and equitable to all litigants, Inclusive of Ohio's business
P.S.George Bus ,I
llller!;'SIS." " ..
At a news conference in Columbus earlier this month- a rare event for
too flexible.
the chiuf justice - Celebrt"ae scoffed at claims that- the workers'
'
compensation decisions will damage the state's tluslness climate. He
termed such claims as "hype" and said Ohio's workers' compensation
system Is 8th-lowest in the nation in terms of employer assessments and
12th highest in claims paid.
Binsteln the Inside story on Grins: Associate Justice Andrew Douglas , a Republican whose election last
WASHINGTON - Preside nt stratghted out Argentina's
. pun's abrupt departure.
ye~ helped reduce the Democratic majority on IlK- court from 6-1 to 4'3,
Reagan's meeting this week with economy.
Alfonstn's· decision closely folPolitically, he found It Impossible
has gone public with hls charges that the court's lawyer discipline system
Argentine President Raul Alfonsln
lowed an extraordinary meeting
comes at a time of growing concern to resist demands for pay raises,
has been discriminatory - punitive to lawyers who have criticized the
over Argentina's $45 bllllon foreign with the result that Inflation Is between Grinspun and IMF Direccourt .
Associate Justice Clifford Brown c.alied news reporters to lambasl
debt· A default could stan a chain getting worse Instead of better. And
tor Jacques de Laroslere in Washington. They discussed the IMF's
Douglas and to accuse hlm of secretly laying groundwork for a campaign
reaction among the world's debtor that makes the International Mone·
to unseat the chief justice next year. Douglas denied the charge
nations.
· tary Fund and other lenders ,demand that Argentina demoncategorically.
'
Reagan will be trying to paper nervous.
strate fiscal discipline tly Imposing
Argentina Is in the same predica- an IMF-drafted austerity program.
·:The other justices, J. Craig Wright of Columbus, a Republican who last
over the last iraces of Argentine
But the meeting In de Larostere's
y~ar defeated Incumbent James Celebrezze, the. chief justice's brother:
bitterness that remain from hls ment as other debtor nations- or,
aipng with Dernocrats Ralphs, Locher and A. William Sweeney, have not
proBrttlsh stance during the Falk- for that matter, any hard-up elegant office reportedly degener·
~ntered the public fray so far .
,
land Islands over three years ago. Individual trying to get a bank loan:
ated Into a shouting match . Grins,
Unless It can show that It's pun became so "obnoxiOus," ac· However, Wright ran ·a heavy media campaign prior to the election
The admintstratlonl dearly wants
which assailed "the Celebrezze rourt" for assenedly practlci&lt;:;:&lt;1'lOiiHcs--Argentma .on -the· IJ.Sc side In Its · financially oolld, It won't get the cording to an IMF source, that de'
Laroslere showed him the door. The'
from the bench and punishing unfriendly members of the legal
efforts 1? contain the spread of loan. But If It were financially solid,
exasperated IMF chief Is believed
&lt;:ommunity: .
commumsm In the hemisphere.
of ccurse, i! wouldn't !1el'd the loan.
But Argentina won't be worth
Argentina remains, In the phrase to have used his 'influence on
Alfonsin to have Grtnspun sacked.
of
one Internal U.S. economic
much as an ally If Its tottering
economy collapses. Without con- report I've seen, " the chief problem
Grlnspun's replacement,
tinued International loans, there Is In La tin America.''
Harvard-edu caled Juan Sourlittle chance that• the InflationThe seriousness with which rouUle, Is enjoying a brief honeyToday ts Wednesday, March 20. the 79th day of 1985. There are 286days
weakened
economy
will
ever
reAlfonsln views hls country's debt
moo,n with the IMF, thanks largely
left In the year. Spring arrives at 11: 15 a .m. EST.
gain Its strength.
crisis was shown recently when he to his tough talk about bringing
Today's Highlight In History:
On March 20, 1&amp;~2 . Harriet Beecher Stowe's Influential novel about _·· Yet this vital Infus ion of money Is fired hls personal frten~. Econom- Inflation under control and encouprecisely what 's ·t~etng threatened
Ics Minister Bernardo Grinspun.
raging exports as a solution to the
slavery, "Uncle Tom's Cabin," was published.
by Alfonsln's failure so far to
Sources gave my associate Michael country's long·term debt problem.
On this dale:
In 1727, physicist, matnematlcian and astronomer Sir Isaac Newton died

.

Dear Mr President, ·
Thank you. Soviet Union
feels same way. When do you get
younger, more flexible leadeP

•·,-~
~

0

n

Losing money

War:.....
· _ __....__ _ _ _ _J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n

Today len hiestory

I~ i:1~~~Napoleo1i Bonaparte ~ntereaParts. begtr!iiirlg hiSHuridrect Days~~
rule.

1

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Letters to the Editor
Tuneless but loud

You think . Lowell Wingett's co" liJmn will give you a headache?·You
should have heard what I accldenially picked up on my radio one day
last week. It was a program called
the Top Forty. The man said he was
going io play the Top Forty tunes In
the country. (He didn't say what
country.) Well, sir, !listed a few of
l)Jem and thought you might be
interested.
; I. I'm Gonna Jump My Bones by
Oumho and The NitWits.
.

6. Big Sweet John by Sodom and
The Gomorrahs: -- ..--- -·--.. - ··
7. Whoppa Teacher Blues by
Bonehead and The Meanderthals.
8. I'm Having Their Baby by Bo
Peep and The Sheep Dip.
9. Nuke Them Turkeys by Bonzo
and The Tree Swingers. ·
10. Snarf Na Garf Na Murph Na
Gurf by Mumbles and The
Lockjams.
I can't vouch for the authenticity
of the song titles and the names ol

Fo~s ~ and .'friends

·Robert Walters
--------------~----~--------------------------------

WASHINGTON (NEAJ -On a
slightest stgu of disobedience to or
memorable occasion many years · dissatisfaction with the ruthless
ago, the late Sen. Everett M.
central government. The number of
Dirksen was · pressed to justify hls
people murdered during Pol Pot's
capricious political behavior.
tenure Is estimated at lOO,&lt;XXJ to
·"- ...P~r ~phrasJru:_. J;talpl] __ w.a 1dO-- JOO,&lt;XXJ,
Emerson, an indignant Dirksen
In early 1979, however, troops
proclaimed, "Consistency Is the
from another communist nation,
hobgoblin of small minds."
Vietnam, swept across KampuThat aphorism probably provides · chea, overthrowing Pol Pot's
the best available defense for this
Khmer Rouge government In
country's schizophrenic attitude
Phnom Penh.
toward the real and Imagined
In the ensuing years, this country
communists of the world.
has covertly joined forces with the
President Reagan surely has
People's Republic of China to
exacerbated an already difficult
punish VIetnam for Its takeover of
situation. Thus, we have the
Kampuchea. The beneflctartes of
spectacle of a president who not
that ef!ort have been three KBmou-

about 90 percent of all petroleum
production In Angola, whlle Texaco
1
Is also Involved.
In addition, Angola's slate-owned
oil' company has been the benefl·
·clary of more than
mUllan
wonh of loans from New York's
leading banks- Chase Manhattan,
CUtbank, Morgan Guaran'ty,
Bankets Trust and Manufacturers

sm

Hanover.

.• 3. Danger To Pick Up a Stranger
a· Ma~ger ·by Vermin and the
ttce.
• 4. Hell, No, I Won't Go by Rick
Short and The Dropouts.
: 5. Don't Bug Me no Trlvtals by
Puss~;Ut and The Maggots.

til

played at ten thousand decibels. I
am stU! trying to get my dog down
off the flagpole. I wUl say this for
them though, although they were
tuneless they sure were loud. Lionel · Boggs, Chairman for the
Abolishment of Boom Boxes.

Thanks, for a job well done
• I want to give credit where credll
ts due and that Is to the quick
response or the Pomeroy and
Middleport Firemen for the excellent job they dld the day my home
!Jurned. Also the Ladles Auxiliary

for the food they brought the
firemen .
I appreciate It very much and
can't thank them enough Jor a jotl
well done. - Charles Mash III,
33439 Naylor's Run Road,
Pomeory,

A vote of thanks
: Ioweavoteofthanks, asdoesthe
oommunlty and county, to one Mr.
SUI McKinney, the agent !or the
-~umane-Soctetyln MetgsGounty. l
Pf'Cently wrote.a letter to the editor
cioncerntng tbe dog above the law.

•

Well, Instead of passing the buck,
Mr. SUI McKinney had the dog
, captured by March 16, just two days
after the letter.·
Mr. McKinney - thanks!! - J
Hudson.

presiding over an "evil
empire" shamelessly.maneuvertng
for an opporiuntty to meet with that
nation's new leader.
Slmllarly, we have an admlnlstratton that · has elevated the
struggle for political control of
Nicaragua to a level just shot of
Armageddon hut has been unenthuslasttc about providing desperately
needed assistance to those bravely
reststing the Soviet Union's takeover or Afghanistan.
In Reagan's defense, however,
much of this country's Inconsistent
policy toward communism was in
place when he assumed office and
he has merely perpetuated it.
Consider, lor example, the
strange case o! Kampuchea, tbe
Aslan nation formerly known as
Cambodia whose clttzens suffered
under the communist Pol Pot
regime from April 1975 through
December 1978.
During that Marxist reign o!
terror, there were mass executins
of citizens wno O!Splayeo even tne

••

Is communist Pol Pot's Khmer
Rouge.
The alllance With China In
Kampuchea Is only one manllesta.lion of this country's new-!ound
friendship with the world's lariest
communist-led government.
Late last year, Amnesty InternaUonal reported that China was
holding tens of thousands of
political priooners in jaU or "reeducation" camps and had exe·
cuted thousands of others.
There Is no indication. however,
that any of communist Peking's
excesses are of ~oncern here In
Washington.
·
Finally, there Is the strange 'case
,of Angola, a communist nation that
the United States refuses to recognlze dtplomattcally but whose
economy Is propped up by a
consortium of this country's leading
banks and oU companies.
This country Is by far Angola's
largest trading partner, purchasing
more than halt of Its annual oll
exports. Gulf 011 1s responsible !or

A substantial portion of the
proce€ds from the oil sales pay for
the estimated 35,&lt;XXJ Cuban troops
positioned In Angola to protect Its
Marxist government.
Thus, the United States Is In the
position or decrying the s tationing
of Cuban troops In Nicaragua while
financing their presence In Angola.
That's .selective antl -comm~nlsm
at Its best - or worst.

Berry's World

~----~;~2.~Lego~~M~y!Le!!g~by~F~a~g~a~n~a~n~d!Th~e~~t~he~~~~gbu~tm:.tha~t·~sy1w~h~a~til~t--~~~~~~~~~~~~-i~~~~~~~~~~~~!~:-------·t-------·--·-------·

_

But the latest figures indicate
Sourroutlle has a tough job ahead .
In the 12 months that ended Jan.
31, Inflation topped · 750 percent.
That's depressing enough, but In
Feb111ary lnflaUon ran at an
annualized rate ol1,&lt;XXJ percent. If
Sourroullle Is to maintain the
approval of Argentine's creditors,
he'll have to figure out a way to
bring Inflation down to "only about
100 percent a year. And \)lat would
·
border on the mlraculoos.
Argentina under Its first freely
el~t government In years has
taken one tmponant step toward
cutting Its International trade de·
flclt It has reduced Imports by
more than 50 percent. But It has yet
to take the equally Important step of
Increasing Its exports by the
massive amount necessary. Despite a modest trade surplus at the
moment, my banking sources
privately doubt Argentina's ability
to boost Its exports enough to repay
It s huge foretgu loans.

- - - ----

'

their season at 22-1.
Troy Smith led Steul:JenvUle With
20 points whie James WUson added
15. Southeastern district co-players

Saturday night's quarterfinals. Also
advancing were Virginia with a
61!-61 triumph over St. Joseph's
(Pa.), Marquette with a 56-54
deciSion over Cincinnati and Fresno
Strate with a 66-55 defeat of New
Mexico. ·
In SECOnd-round games tonight,
South Florida ·plays at LouiSville,

viSits Lamar.·
Uwe Blab scored 17 points as the
Hoosiers, taking control with 12-3
spurts early In each hal!. rolled_ past
Richmond in Bloomingfon, Ina.
The smaller
trailed by

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•WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20-ROAST BEEF

...

Starts Friday, "BABY' &amp;
"FRIDAY the 13th PART 5"
Special Midnight Movie
Friday &amp; Sa!u.rday sho.wioa ,
" FRIDAY the 13th PART 5"

.

..

. $ "

4
•THURSDAY, MARCH 21-CHICKEN BREAST
$ 9S
(lroilod, leneltssf Potato, Yt~ttablt, Salad and loll ......... 4

•

Mcnhod Potatoes, Gra•y. GrHn hanc, Salad, loll .............

•FRIDAY, MilROI 22.:....WHITEFISH tlrolltd_oi Frlodl

$ 9S

Potato, Y...talole, Salcul, loH ....................................,.........
Yr;
.. ... 12
... :.. 12

x·Lea Ann Gaul , 1nr....... ,.........
x·Krlstl Gaul, lnl-p ..................
x-Angt(&gt; Spencer, lnf·p ............... , ........... 12
x-Belh Berkhlmcr. or. .. ...................... , .... 12
x·Kim Dent, inf ......................... .......... .. l l
X·Amy Young, lnf. .... ..................... ....... I
x-Tonya Savo)', lnl .. .......
. ..... 10
x,J.esa Rucke.,lnf·p . :........ ,.......... ........ to
X·Arlene RUehle, of ............................... tO
Amy Ek.&gt;rkhlmrr, of ...._........................... :. 9
Amy Connolly. of
· ........................ 9
Metani&lt; Mankin, of,..................... ,... ... 9
Bonnie Koenig, of ..........................
.. 9
x-Denotes let'termen,
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March 25 Alexander ......................... Away
March 26 Belpre ........ .................. ... Home
March 2'1 Fe&lt;J ..Hocklng .... ................ Home
March 2B Belpre .. ., .......... ................ Away
Apr. 1 Soull)ei'II ...... .......... ................ Away
Apr. 21'r1mble ................. ... ............ Horne
Apr. 3 North Gallta ...... .
.. ......... Home
Apr. 6 Frontier ......... ... .................. Home

•SATURDAY, MARCH 23-ANY ENTIEE

.

SlOO

. . . ;.

lncluclts Potato, Yo11tablt, Salad, loll .....................

4

Off

·~!:!~: ~.:~=~: ~.~=~~-~~~.~~ ~-~~~-~ ~~.~~~-~~ $495
•T:,.~:~.~ ~~!!:~~ 1!,~;,-:~~~~. ~-~~~.~. ~~:~:~:~. :~. ~~~~. s495
SERVING HOURS-S PM·l 0 PM
Now. Ser•ing Daily From 11 -2

LUNCHEON SPECIALS .................................... Only

$ 9S

THURSDAY NI'GHT IS OLDIE NIGHT
Dance to Yesterday's Hits
From 1 0 to 2 on Thursday
And Today's Hits on Friday &amp; Saturday
Nights With Danny Hood

2

I
I
IElltD llr.S
165/80 D 13 "' ...................... ..
185/80 D 13 ...... ....................
195/75 D 14 ..........................
105/75 D 14..........................
115/75 D 14 ........ ........... ,......
115/75. D 14 ..........................
mns o 15 ..........................
125/75 D 15 ..........................
135/75 D 15.. ........................

28.00
30.00
34.00
36.00
37.00
39.00

3B.oo

39.00
40 00

.

always are, too. "

Natural gas can add comfort,
convenience and value to your home.
.:l4st ask Holly Perry, and the families
in the gas-equipped homes she has
sold.

_,

I

COLUMBIA GAS

Coach Tim Sunders' Marauders
R8SOII next
week. Tbe Melp baseball preview
will appear In Sunday's Thnes-

open their f'elll]ar

•
"

~

,.

JCLIP AND SAVE)

SeniA9e'..............

· ~F-roiit"-ii""'to•·r "'Sta'tements ~-

LIKE GAS HEAT AND APPLIANCES!'.

Shelby.

~--

- Payroll P'r oceasing
- Federal II&lt; State Reports

NIQHTLY SPECIALS

~-=

Apr. 8 Hannan Trace ................... .. ... Away

PH. (614) 992•7270

rr:============================:=========:::::========================~

Art'a high school baseball begins
this evening as Meigs travels to
Southern for a 4: 30 scrimmage
game. '!'be defending TVC champion .Marauders also travel to
Logan Saturday for two practice
aarnes as they take on Toledo
Whttmol'l! at 11 a.m. and return to ·
the diamond !or a 2p.m. pme with

•

:.1

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

from
Who had
bases.last
We·season
have three
girls'batting
back
averages over .400 .(Gaul, Spencer
and Savoy). Also looking good With
the bat In pre-season practice Is
'
Gaddis and Young. I think we wlll
do all right offensively.
"Defensively, we lac~ In the
areas of pitching and In the outfield.
At this point It looks like we are
going to rely·on· Krtstl Gaddis and
Angle Spencer to do much of the
pitching. Lesa Rucker wlll be
· backing them up. Last season we
depended on Lort RUehle to handle
most of the pitching dulles."
Eastern should have a strong
Infield With considerable experience at those positions . .Douthitt
continued, "Our Infield looks solid
and should be tough." Gaul, Savoy,
Dent, Gaddis, "Young. and Spencer
are all competing for starting
berths In the Infield, depending on
who wlll be pitching a given day.
."It's as true today as it's always
The outfield wm consist or
been. Families prefer natural gas in
Ritchie, Berkhlmer, and Rucker
With back up from !our freshmen,
their homes. Gas .heat give$ .the
Amy Berkhlmer, Donnie Koenig,
warmth that makes the whole house
Melanie Mankin and Amy
comfortable, no matter how cold it
Connolly.
outside. It's reliable, too. A
~-·'11.1r ·al'e w01rki~,g~lmm~_,""""I'I!""H---------ll--i"""" ~niiffillY9ilefn43eirsse~~--jr
season practice. Wl(h a little more
U
confidence from our pitchers and
· which means real cost savings comoutflelderswewlllbeacontenderln
pared to other systems. And if the
the league," states Douthitt .
·home has other gas appliances-like
Continuing, the EHS coach conw
. ater hea.ter and range - so much
eluded. "We have some talented
the better. So when I'm asked about
ball player... u our gtrts play up to
their potential, we'll win some ball
the features of a home·, I'm always
Jl8mrs. We are playing a pretty
glad wheri I can say it has gas heat
tOIIJihschedule!lf28games,ptaytng
and appliances. The people almost
fllul' 1o slx games each week.

for scrimmf!Ke today

II

BAAGm MATIMEES SAT l SUIO
All S~ATS $2 . 25
AIIHISS IOf1 EVERY TU£SDAY $2.25

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

Other returnees Include juniors
Apr. 10 Kyger Crrek ........................ Home
Kim Dent and Amy Young, anll
Apr. 11 TMmble ............ ................... Away
sophomores Tony'a Savoy, L!!sa
Apr. L1 Fcrt Fr)" ........ .................... Away
Apr. 15 Sou1hwestern ........................ Aw11y
Rucker and Arlene Ritchie. Dou- . Apr. 17 Southern ............................. Home
thltt said of her returnees, "I wlll be
Apr. IB Waterford ................ ,........... Home
Apr. '.1J Frontier .. ............................. Away
looking for leadership from our nlne
Apr. 22 North Gallla ........... ,............ Away
returning girls. We have some good
Apr. 23 Miller .................. ............. Away
baU players in thls group."
~~~: ~ ~~':~:~~:::::::::::::::::::::: ~~=
Douthitt continued, "We hve
Apr. '!1 Fort Frye ............................ Ho'""
some speed offensively , and plan on
Apr. 29 Kyger c ....k......................... Away
Apr. 3) WatE'J'ford ............................. Away
running a lot once we get on ~
May 1 Soothw...lem ........................ Home

MfliiJ8 at Southern

"C'MON - give us a little SMILE!''

Southwestern Louisiana Is at Ten-

"I look for some of our tougher
opponents outside our league to be
Belpre, Trimble, Fort Frye, WaterfDrd , Frontier and Alexander . I
think the teams to beat In the league
will be Kyger Creek and North
Gallla. They should bepntty strong
this season."
FoUowtng Js a sch~ule and

roster.

-·---..·-

&gt;31 JACKSON PilE ·In 3&gt; WEST

runaway victories Tuesday
night sent Indiana and UCLA Into

McClain With
Linden McKinley advances with
an 18-7 mark while McOatn bows
out at 22-2.

Eagle girls have 13
can(,lidates; open March 25
EAS1' MEIGs-With 13 players
trying out for a starting position, the
Eastern Eaglettes' varsity sonball
team of Coach Pam Douthitt are
anxlously·awattlng the start or the
1985 prep softball season, which
begins Monday, March 25, at
Alexander.
Eastern finished the 1984 season
· With "a· n overall mark and 44
ledger Inside the SVAC.
Only bne senior was lost to
graduation last year; pitcher Lori
. Ritchie. who . was Eastern's premter hurler and top winner.
Currently four senlon;, two junIors, three sophomores, and four
freshmen are among those trying
out: Of those candidates, nine are
returning from last year's squad ,
one aspect that pleases fourth year
Coach Pam Douthitt.
Returning seniors that Coach
Douthitt wlll be expecting a lot from
are Lea Ann Gaul, Krlstl Gaddis ,
Angle Spencer and Beth Berkhlmer. The lea_dershtp these girls wlll
provide will play an Important pari
in the 1985 season.

high 29 points to lead UCLA over
Nebraska at Pauley Pavtllon. The
Brillns led by as many as J.iJ points 1n
the !trst lialt and held a 41-3llead at ·
the lntermlsslolf.""NeOl'aska never
serioosly threatened thereafn.r, as
the Bruins led by as many as 21
points.
" It was a great team effon -" said
ua..A Coach Walt Hazzard. told
..my~~u~t.!al&lt;e.r:E!',l:l!lck .tp.l.l;le
Apple.' r woold love to go back to
Madison Square Garden and s how
tne people hack there the real
Bruins."
In Charlottesville , Jim Miller ,
Tim Mullen and Olden Polynke led'

;;~~beifu~r~e~th;e~s;ta;rt~o~f~t~he~N~IT~,~h;~~~-;ce~e
i~il;yii~~si~ioo~ni.~~~~~·~a~~
~~nd;·;h~al~f~V~~~;~~s~u~~~e~a~s~t~h~e~~i~iii~i~~~~~m~
~

- Pm1m\ouflfWI!Srrall:l'lll tiind tl\1! """""G,_.~"MeQe.!nf'lusen;
Scioto Countians their first loss of ·to Gallipolis 54-50 (ot) during the
the season toadvanee Into Friday's regular season, played catch-up the
championship roond.
entire game as the Franklin
Close games have been common countlans jumped to a !HJ lead and
for the "Big Red" as they have won were up 18-6 after one quarter.
their last !our tournamen• games
By the third period, McClain had
'
byalotalofllpointstncludin'g00-58 · narrowed It to 42-36 but could not
over Claymont, 57-55 over Mays· cope With the Panthers' "''pertor
•·
ville, and 57-53 over Trt-Valley.
quickness and board strength.
·
Portsmouth West liad defeated
Ohio University-bound Reggie
Ironton 69-62 (ot). West Union 82-81, Rankin took the Bobcat home fioor
,
.
and Sheridan 1010-87 before being io,hls liking With 24 points In leading

hefoi'I'C~a:.;g-~re·t!:lg'_,.~=•L~es!.,~~ ~ i-"~''""lmsim"'ia~iltgm:"'i'l•"'"'"u'".,;''en;d" ·-l.;!rnlien-ll1e~Kl~w;,A::h~'~osS..,Mt.!W

dent. For Instance, that the U.S.
Senate, In order to warrant Its
equality With the House of Representatives, should be composed of
members elected by the people
rather than appointed by the state
political establishments. For Instance, that It subVerts the democratic process to . spend more
money on federal enterprises than
Is raised tly taxation ...
In other words; the Idea of the
balanced budget amendment
should be reseued from the Idea
Ilia t It Is Inconsistent With the
eVolutionary modifications that are
always being made on basic
republican Instruments. The great
"'crtsls"lri 'England wltlnbe Reform" ..
Aero! 1832 was , really, just another
crisis In a long line or crises, among
them those that gave us the Magna
Chana, and the Glorious Revolution of 1688. Many of our own erlses
have been internalized Within tbe
political system.

The

�.:w..

t

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. .
Wedn~~sday, March 20. 1985

Eas~ern

Wednesday. March 20. 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

underclassmen wtll getto~much
action in contributing.to a winning
seasorr.

Bryan Durst, U ·p-3rd .. .. ..... .., ................. . 9
Kyle Davll. 3rd·l&gt;&lt;' ................................. 9
Steve Horner, ot ...................... .. .............. 9
Mark Grlflln. tnl-&lt;&gt;1 ............... .', ........... ..... 9
Jeff JolviOOII. ·tnl-&lt;&gt;1 .... .. ....................·.; ..... 9
Jeff. Caldwell, 2b-~n ............. ... ............. 9
Brian Beeler, lst.of ...... ... ...... .. .. : .. : .. ........ 9
X - ~ left@l"11leR.
EM&amp;en set_lhde
March 2! Alumni .. ! ......................... Home
March Zl Alexander ......................... Away

Alexander of the Tri-Valley
Conference.
Wolfe says, "K''"Pr Creek should

gives us another "plus" because
our starters wUl have to perfonn to
keep their positions.· Wilen gam~

~~~~~~~:~~~~~~,,~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~l~~~~£~~~~~~~~~!t~~~~·
~have
'
startlilg bids on
season
pitch·
everyoitereturnlngfrmulastyear's
opening day against the Eastern

ing, Coach Scan Wolfe Is confident
In his young pitchers and predicts
they will come through. "Our
pitchers are throwing very well at
this point. Their control Is gooo,

Alumni Wednesday (tooay).
Last season Eastern finished
with a ~8 overall record. After a
• slow start of
, Eastern finished

"Practices have gone well, the
kids have worked hard and they all
have a good attitude and much
enthusiasm," said Wolfe.
-·--· · -·~•

squad. Otherwise !be league should
be well balanced and we have a
chance to do some damage."
Following Is a roster and
·schedule:

March 26 Federal Hocking .... ..... : .... .. Away
Marth Z7 Federal Hocking .... ........... Home

April) Southern ............................... Away
April 3 North GaUia ............... .......... Ho""'
Apru 6 Frontier (DH ) .. . .'.................. Home

-~~~~~~d~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
last half of tbe season, placing as
runner-up in the sectional nnals.
Third year' Coach Scott Wolfe
hopes to Improve last year's 9·8
record and return Eastern's win·
nlng baseball tradition to tbe status .

are working hard.. With some
seIf·confidence I know they'll do
well."
·
Last season Eastern had a strong
hitting club, recording a healthy
.345 . team baiting average. East·

season will depend upon the play of
ourolderplayers.Theymustsetan

Player- P...
, Yr.
x·.JlmWeber,lst·rf·p , ............................ l2

AprU 8 Hannan Trace ....................... Away
April 9 Miller ......................... .... ..... Home ,

x.Je!f Bissen. or ................................... .12

example and provtdeleadershlpfor
our younger players. Our mental
attitude, our ablllty to conc.:ntrate,
and our ability to execute well also

Apri110 Kyg..- CJ'eek•.. , ........... .... ..... Home I'

D. J . Randolph, oL ...... , .... , ............ , .. ... l2
Karl
Smith,
of .......................................
l2
x-Royce
BtsseU.
p.lSt-&lt;1..........................11

AprU 15 Southwest~ :.. .... .. .............. Away-

AprU 17 Southern~ ............... :.......... .. Home
AprU l8 Waterford ..... ;, ...... :... .......... Hom~
AprU :lllar Frontier (DHI
Cameron, W.Va .......... Away
AprU 22 North Gallla ............ ,;,.,,., ... ,Away
"'!ri U.M\Uor , .. , ............ oo·.c ....... " c,.A.,.y
·· Apri1 24 Hannan Trace ...............·...... Home
April 25 Alexander .. .. ...................... Home
AprU 27111mble (OH) .... .................. Away
April 29 Kyg..- Creek ....................... Away
April :II Watertord :........................... Away
May 1 SOUihwenern ...... ; ......... ........ Home
May 1-10 Sectional Tournamenl at

x-Tracy Taylor, 3rd...,.o!.. ..... :..... .- .......... ll
Tlrn Dorst, c·lst·P ...................... .: .. .... ...1!

~r:j ~£i~ern~·s~
fle~l~dln~g,~h~o~w~ev;;er~,~~~hw~a~rt~ed~_;wi:JJ~p~l.a"~y~a~l~arge.rolep;:;;;,In the 1985 1frw
~~:~:!~:,~?.;rr:
:::: :......
: :u~
r.:l ~ :
Ch-.ll1L...c.....::::...-.::..,:..::,.,..,,"

~

""
t:
.Eastern lost eight talented senlors to graduation, but hopes to field a competitive club this season
with a good selection of younger
players. Graduated from last year's squad are Jim Newell, Tim
Probert, Larry Cowdery, Troy
· Guthrie, Mike Coll!ns, Tom Eve·

year.
"In preseason practices our
players have been pounding the
ball. Our llmlng at !be plate Is
excellent and our contact has been
great. I hope this can continue
under game situations and am
confident It will, because these kids

Eastern plays 25 regular season
games against another tough schedule
including
Trim·
bl · of llopponents,
F
H
nd
1
e, Ml er, _edera ocking, a

evtn
Morris,
or ..............................
.... .. n
Ed
CollinS,
ss-p-2nd
...............................
10
Greg Leachman, tsi.Jrd-of. ..... ................ 10
10
Doug
lnl-ot'
............
..............
Brent Beaver,
N"orton, of..
.........
,.............
.............
l-rlO

Brent Bissen, 3rd-lst·p ............................ 9

• ·.cage stat lS• t res
'
tnal M
.. ez,gs

D' ·

1Namer

.

.

Ir.;::=======~;;l
Gallipolis

Fg-a Ft-a Tp Ave. Rb ·

:~n~~;u::nana~-S~~~ re~~~c~an~~~f~;~~~at~hl~~f\ls Jennt.Couch ........................... ,... ,.... ; .. ... .. .. 61-131 33-58 1557 67.17 49
48
selection who hit .477 as Well as I
will hit
II
h
belt
Jodi Ha!Tison ...................... ,, .......... .. .. ...... :68-17l l1· 27 .14
·
.
earn
we , per aps
er . Jenny Miller .. ..... ............ .......... . .... .......... 101·229 51-73 253 ·u.s 139
·~ ptt~~.;nany Qf Eastern's victories.. thim last season, and Is confident
B. J. Gordon ............. .... .......... .... ...... ........ 48-155 J 3-1Qi)§JL1,7..JL'k
Tli6t: · players"' Wiil'"-'be~ gn!aliy" illaHlils year's- tamHV!ll·-alsv ·tK&gt;·a·""~ J u"Il*,."'I;,...
--~~--'""'"""'"'~~··~-~-..*~
-87
~ 1.""
~ ""' er .......................
.......... ..............
rt&gt;- 181 45,. 9 .0. 176
missed, although Eastern still looks goode fielding tfeam.
Rhonda Haddox .... ..... ....... : ........................ 10..51 13·32 33 1.5 28
for at least a .500 season. ·
urrently our seniors • seven
Jennl Swarz .............................................. 11-44 19-44 41 1.9 62
. Only four (4) lettermen are junl~rs, four sophomores, and eight
Ruth Fry ... ........... .................................. 2-i1
1-5
5
12
retu,~.i: to a~tlon t~s season. frre m~_ :~~=~;o~ . ~ta~.~ ~-.!Je~ i:Oft!s~;;.:;.;,;.: ;;;;.;;,; · ·:;,;,c:.= ·~~·~ . ~~· .,,.,):~ ~~~10~~=ll...-- .,_.10
hOwever~ t)lel\e- four (:.) pmyers 0 1~ h W If . d ,
f
Rhoitd'a"N'eece ........ ........ .. ................. ........ 3-10
1:5
10
9
c
o e sat , 'Lack o
Marla Musser ............................. .. ............ 1·8
2-2
4
.8
provide a solid foundation and
strong leadership for this year's varsity experience seems to be our
Assists- Jennl Couch, 75; Jodi Harrison, 41; Jenny MlUer, 14; B. J.
young team.
main weakness, especially expeGordon, 47; Julie Miller, 18; Rhonda Haddox, 44; Jennl SWartz, 6; Ruth
Returning are senior Jeff Bissell, rlence In key posltlons. I do feel,
·Fry, 1; Betty •Loftis, O; Rhonda Neece, o; Marta Musser, 0.
who hit .422 last season; senior Jim however, that we have tbe personMeigs - Points scored, 1,018; avg. 46.3. F~ - Meigs, 382-994; 38 pet.
Weber a solid .333 hitter; junior neiiD rm th~ positions. How well
Opponents_ 775, 35.2. FT _ 256-444; 58 pet:
· ------:--·- - - - - - - - - - - - - slugger Royce Bissell at .339; and and how quick we adjust wm be the r--.o·;..
junior Tracy __ Taylor another ·solid key."
~. liltfer: ... " · ..... ~.. •c · '-- · " ·"""Ea·SYeill"l.~'depth"·ls tts greatest ·
Final TVC standings
Other top prospects include strong point.. "We have several
T&lt;am
w. L Nelsonville ................. ........ ......... ......8 10
sophomoresEddleCollinsandGreg . people who can play several
Me~ .......... .................................... I7 1
Federal-Hocking ....... ............. : ........... ? ll
Leachman, who did well when different
and do an
Alexander ............................ .......... 15 3 . Wellston ......................................... ... 315
4 Miller .............. ......... .... ............... ..... 2 16
called upon last season.
i~~;;~~·~th~e~re~. .,!l~th~ln~k~th~ls~ [ TrlmbleVInton County
.... ..................
.............................
.... .. .. ...... ......
.......13
!4 ~
D.:tpr~ .... --:-!"?...... ::':": .. ... •·~-... . ::.~•.-...~~.... ::-: 2- 16
Seniors D. J. &amp;indolph'lmd Karl
·warren .... .. .... :.. :" :·:~· : .... : ..=
."':' .. :~ ...,· 9

! ..

I

. Smith, juniors Tim Dorst, Jim
Caldw~ll. Kev~ Barber and Tone
Chapman · are actively seeking

.

starting roles. while solne
mefnbers . of its so.phqmore and ·
freshmen class are prime candi·
daleS for a position,
Several upper classmen out for
the !lrst time could help the Eagles
as role players and as team leaders,
while a strong contingent of

....:'•..i

.~ot~NL:

A N

°

Kt'lth Cl'('('l, pltd'l(lr, trom thl&gt; Ki~ns.as
Cl l\' Rural~ In C&gt;xchanlrtf" for a min'or
lc&gt;~t' Pla_\'l'r to be named lat('l' or t•aSh
ronslcrra lloll"

N""""' """""' .

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Rt'les S«::

~.,. Hoo·on. tnnet"''

BASKE11IAlL

Naatk&gt;IW BMkethall !Wioli•IO&gt;n
PHOENJX 'ilJNS-Pioc&lt;d Lan;· Nan&lt;'&lt;'.
forward. on the l.nJun&gt;d r('f;CJ'\1(1 Jist . Actl-

v"'"" Milt.. ~"~

AND
113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY .
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

""'

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.

.

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SH.OWTIM£ .

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' The Pally Sentinel

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·THE
RACES!
...-•.,-=····· l'{n"G n'' =? 3' 1 98 5

•

has. 23. diamond candidates, open March .20

The words "Play Ball" will be
warmly greeted by tbe Eastern
Eagle · baseball team In 1985 as

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

fnrw~trr!

FORBES HIGH TENSILE

BARBED-WIRE

1983 MERCURY LYNX
WAGON
4 cylinder engine , automatic tronrs,..io:. "-ir:'lr . power

151/t GAUGE, 2 STAND
POINT, S" SPACING,

-,

USDA
BONE-IN BEEF

""$~:,~

Round
Steaks

-.-·.·

st~ering , air

,_.....·.
~

conditioning, AM radio, rear defogger . roof rock, radial tires .

'1!'~ ~

$4 90000 ·~

Was ss,400.00 . NOW .

lENGTH: 10 Rods I1.320 Ft.l
Made In U.S.A.

FARMS
GRADE A

•UNSCENTED

Charm in
..... Tissue

Leg
Qu~rters

79

1

79

FAMILY
SIZE

BONElESS

189ll.

15 oz.
CAN

LB.

·-

ASSORTED

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

~cg::~~~ " ~ ~. LB, 2

6 PACK

39

· c···

~~:-!PLE
-

20 oz. CAN

'--!--;----'--

8 9.

'.

RAGU HOMESTYLE OR REG. ASSORTED

~:~~iT!I

32

oz. JAR

GREEN GIANT ASSORTED

1

69

Dawn Dish .
WITH THE PURCHASE OF

...d · :c?l
Detergent

been pvlng It their all dw1ng the past year. Leading the reserve cheel'll
were, on Door In from, Annett Cardone; standing left to rlght, Leanne
Clark, Dolly Ifill, IUid Kim Adams; IUid on top, Dina Shuler. Leanne
Clark and Kim Adams were ro-captalns for this year's reserve squad.

~~::~ND ... ....

VACATION
.BIBLE SCHOOl

LB.2

89

.•

BREAD-- :-:-:.

,.

ALL VARIETIES

3

200Z.
LOIIVES

129
---

BAKe N SERVE

;

.

BRIAD ........ ..16 oz. LOAF 99

~ VIiS

UADERS, TEACHRS &amp; WORKERS•••

Y.. Are IMitad 'ra Preview 1M Al·flaw 1915
St•llal'4 Yacatlall lillie SchHI C.ursa.
C~ . - ' - " ond Shctrel

FIIDAY, IIAICH 22, 1985-9:30 A.M.
Middleport Church of Christ

~'7&lt;~

.
S
ave
15~
·a:· on. 2forbarssofter,
of Dove•
·

437 .... St., Middleport, Oh. 45760

smoother skin.

SpoiiHred by Middleport look Store

1/4 Moisturizing Cream

: . . . . St.
.

ON IMD

... ............
'

. •••••••,

0

-WHITE POTATOES

$

SUNBEAM

....

~~::Es . ·

1.

29

18

oz. Box

BI-RITE

CHUNK
TUNA . . 8V.OZ.CAN

~I~:::o

•.
69

.

7 oz tAR

1

$

20 LB.
BAG

99

19

•
79 '

FOODLAND CREAM OF MUSHROOM OR

2

CREAMOF
1
CHICKEN SOUP ~l~t"

..•'·'

DAIRY DELIGHT
SHEDD'S

WINESAP, ROME, GOLDEN or

RED DEL.

AP~

E.S

COUNTRY
·
CROCK 16 oz. CROC'K

6 g•

~---·-·-

,_ _.,-11'\Sll!ll-

SANDWICH MATE

BR.EAD ...... ..18-20 oz. LOAF 89

-~-··--,-~
15~
MANUFACTIJRER COUPON/EXPIRES SEPT. 30, 1985

.. LB.

11 9

U. S. NO. 1

HEARTH FARI'ttS'

..,.

c.-.J

49

DURKEE MARZ

THE BEST IN FRESH PRODUCE!

FOODLAND KING SIZE

WHITE

120Z. PKG

SAUSAGE . .

WIENERS ...
BAKERY
•

. 1

POLISH \i"Phht''·~

MEAT
,.,.

=~g~:
•REG.•HOT

TENDERBEST

&lt;

POST TOASTIES

TENDERBEST •REG.•THICK•THIN

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

.

.23

4

REsERVE-:.:_ sOuthern's enthU!ilailllc reserve cheerleadem have

SINGLES :

3-LB.
BAG

12 oz. PKG.

&gt; -

119

FOODLAND

2'/o
$169 .
MILK ••••••••••••••ctt~h.
·
•
•

�Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. March 20, 1986

First National
:drops out of
Home State

Family

-- • •- Plo::,•~ar

ec:

The Right To
limit Quantities

ror

Fernwood Garden
.

· Members were reminded of the
flower show •Which will be held In
conjunettonwlththesprlngreglonal
to he held In Nelsonville at

ways, like opening during the touched. She explained that at the
daylight hours and closing at base or the · mimosa leaflet 1s a
nightfall, rir
at night and · sac-like structure called the pulviclosing in the
are nus wtilch rains of water when It Is

member
her arrangement and then read a poem to
coordinate with it. Several of the
members read poems which they
•,;...t!&lt;l!l ~Iitlen l~.selvl!li. ForroUcall
each answered with the name of a
flower or herb with a romantic
association.
A review of the book, "Little
Plants for Small Places" was given
by Ida Murphy. WUovene BaUey
read an ·-artich! from The Upper
Room for devotiolll. Committee
reports were given, and Thelma
Giles, president, reacfportlons of an
article from the last Garden Path.

ments were served.
At an earlier meeting of the club,
WUovene Bailey gave a program on
"The Surprising Mobility of

have of changing positions. The
speediest of all plant movements,
according to Mrs. Bailey, Is that of
the momosa which wiD fold lis

. GRADE A

-.:, -~-Whoie -~chlckl!·n ••·:!:. ·
.

.

.

.

FRESH PORK BUTT

19

-~~Steak ~'"Ro- o sf. ~n-• • !~ . .-..·-"""""·=

Save$6500
When you buy a ·
Culligan water softener
...

Plants." She discussed how plants
will tum toward the light as they
grow and · gave the sclentlftc
explanation for the growth pattern.
Mrs. BaUey also discussed how
some flowers, such as the sunflower,
are so stulngly attracted to the sun
that they wm follow the sun an day
long, slowly pivoting their upturned
heads to keEp the sun directly on ·
them .
Some flowers respond In other ·

Members read a garden poem
roll call. A letter was read !romMrs.
VIrgil Covert, regional director,
regardingtheworkshoPsonarrang-

1-100-624.:9113
21 1/1 Palmer
AthtnS, OH.

1,

~-,

1

!
r~le::av~es~w~lthln~_;seco~~nds~~o~f~be~l~ng!!:,~~!!!!!!.!!2!:!!£!!!!!!!!:._ _ ___:__l~====-=-=-:__.._ _::-.::--.::--:=":::":::--.::--.::--.::--.::--.::--.::--.::--.::~~":=-=-=-=--=~--=--=--=-=-:

SUIENDSSATURDAY .

OPEN DAllY 10-9; SUN.

·Riverview PTO meets
USDA CHOICE

-

$

·

89
Round Steak •••• !~.. 1

An Informative program on
_ emergency medical techDlclan services and equipment used In the
, local area was presented by ·EMT
members Sue Reed, Diana Jolles
andJeffJonesattheteeerttmeetlng
of the Riverview PTO.
The EMTs displayed and demonstrated the
of a· varteti of
equtpmeni and then concluded the

.

program with blood pressure
cheeks.
'
• The nominating and . auditing
committees were named by Pat .
Martlnwhopresldedatthemeetlng. ·
Pred Kessingllr'sfourth'gradeclass

received the banner and awards for

-use

having the highest percentage of 1

parents In attendance. '

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

-chucl&lt; Roasf •••• !~ ..-$1-69- -~HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED
. $
9
Sausage·•••..••..•.! .. · 1 9

_. _....
--·
-~"'1,;,.,

-=
=-

5111'11101 WtiCII MIAY

BREAKFAST HAM ••••;.~ ••••!L•• S1.,7·

SUPIIIOI

BULK WIENERS ••••••••••••••1.w. S2.89

---II4Y~mw•~------------~.-na~2.1~k

$

BOILED HAM····~·············~·· 1.9.7
110.....
HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••
~ •• S.1 .29
'

Federal insurance
_qualifications are
.~tough,' S&amp;Ls claim
CINCINNATI (AP) - Many of
· the privately Insured savings and
- loan banks closed by Gov. Richard
. Celeste may have a hard time
meeting qualifications lor federal
deposit insurance, officials of sev'J&gt;ra l savings and loans say.
The officials say that concerns
ahout the' financial health of the
private Ohio Deposit Guarantee
. Fund, insurer of the closed 70 state
savings and loans, may make
getting federal insurance Impossible for many of those closed 70
)nstitutlons.

1·U.. Parkay Quarten

·- Potatoes ·..............
~ ·· ·
-1 -9 9
20 LB.

'

BROUGHTON
0/0

,

2 It Ml.lk.•••••••••••••• $169. . . ... . .~.
.

Margarine
GAL

7

u ••••••

5 O:Z. IAIIOUIT

&gt;

I

f

COOK IN BAGS ••••• ~ ...~~!11•• 2/S1.09 .

.

2 Ll., 1Q PC. IAIIOUIT

!~ ... 59&lt;

•

THRIFT KING

, .

. _·

.

.Mac./ Cheese eu~:!· sI
.

,.

• MAXWELL HOUSE IONUS PACIC

••••

•

limit Ono Ptr Cutlollllr
Good Only AI Powell's
Offor EapirH March 23, 1915

•

•

PEANUT BUTTER

: ·INSTANT COFFEE

: ·:~~~· ·s399

.1 TV Dinners •••~•••~!:!~ 79&lt;

••• • •
.• •••·····couPON·······
JIF·
••

•• ••
• ••••• •
·······
•···~·couPm·

4.0_0z.
Jar

•
••
0

o

·~··· ···········~·····

o

BANQUET

$2 79

•

C"l"..!'T~.:.i

.

•

••

69(

llntll On~ Ptr CutloGood Only AI Powell's
Offer bpiros March 23, 1915

'

SHURFINE SUGAR
S Lb.
. lag

3-Lb.. loll8r
IMd
Game Time, ShoWplace
or Shady mixtures. Savel

·Decorative plastic
pinwheels.

.......

86.88

Ryan" 8as Line 'lrlmmer
Electronic Ignition with nn-

Hp lhroiHe contror Savel

___;,.._1-.. ·~-~-~---'-· --- - -

&lt;

at...

••••••

AI\J C\.11.'1 • • • • • \

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR •
Slb.
Bag

,

limit Ons Per Cuslomor
Good Only AI Powell's
Offtr bpiroo Mar&lt;h 23, 1915

••••••

• ' • • •. •

.4.88each
us

SAlE

.

SOUP- ••on •.-...... 2/8 7 (
•• o:z. DOLl
$
PINEAPPLE JUICE ••••••••••w. ••• 1.39
15'1• oz. DIL aom
TROPICAL FRUIT ••••••••sm. 2/S1.69
24 01. lOYAL PIIIICE
.
·
y A.MS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'i¥1••~ s1.09
1JV. OZ. lllnAIIY QUADI n-.n PACI
·
OATMEAL •••••••••••••••••••••••IIA. S1.89
uoz.
$
INSTANT NESTEA ••••••••••
2.79
160 COIIIT
'
.
SCOn NAPKINS •••••••••••••• ne.••• 89C
I OZ. IIAHOAI •RAllY
. . POTATOES ••••••••••••••••MI•• 2/11.19
11 01. , - . .
.
.
ROAST IIIF••••••••••••••••••w.••• S1.69

TREAT
8

$ .

1.57

........

.

Our Rea .• 89.77

Our Reg. 6.97

Sale Price

40-Lb.. Organic Peat
Mollfure presetvlng peat
!of lawns, gardens. shrubs. ,

FRIED CHICKEN DINNER ••1!1. S3.79

oz.
Pot"'' Pies ••••••••••••••

'Y

.......

,s

1O'lo OL CUPIII.I.'S CIUil OP

1:1oroXB.reach ••••••• 1

Water soluble fertilizer tor outdoor
or Indoor use. 23-19-17 formula mill.

21-lnch a-lagger Lawn Mower
3'h-HP lawn mower with recoil-start
. engine, wheel height aqjustment.

GAL.

PARKAY

,~~D~I.~ER

~~·~"d8~~ ~F~

~~ ... Go..... hl.
MliG.AIINE ............. 79c i APPLES
............. 1.1 '
24 a•. lrollflhton's
"n.CellaPack
· .
conAGE
........~~.... 39c
CHEESE ........... ~!!'.-. s1.39 CliiOTS
~~
Fisher'• . .
YELLOW
Hot Pepper
Cheese ............t~•.• $2.69 ONIONS ........ ~.!:I..... 79c

$

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE

ODG F members kept 2 percent of
_ their net assets on deposit with the
: private fund to support its deposit
• Insurance proceeds. In the wake of
- the March 9fallureoftheCinclnnatl-based Horne State Savings Assocla{Jon, the largest ODGF member,
:those Institutions risk losing that 2
percent, officials of the thrifts said
_Tuesday.
. The Federal Savings and Loan

.

SPECIAL SALE ' .

~-&lt;O~l ·,·~~ ~._..,_.;..,._..._._.,_~~ ~·-~

.

-

dishes and people'
Solve these problem s
wrth a Culligan
water soltoner.

·ctt;tb condtfCtf meeting _·

Winter flower arran~nts
· made by members were dll;played
at ·the
lneetlng ot the
Garden Club held at the

recent

'

NIHI

t-;=====~===============~

advi8ed to avoid alcohol; a . potent
stimulator of enzymes and Irritant
shock-like state and his abdomen Is of the digestive tract's Unlng.
bloated and tender to the touch.
Suraery Is uncommon In treating
Often this discomfOrt follows a hout acute pancreatitis, but may be
of heavy drinking or eating.
performed If compUcatlollB such as
QUESTION: How wiD a doctor bleedlng ol howe! obstruction occur
diagnose and treat pancreatitis?
If complications such as bleeding or
ANSWER: Blood and urine tests · bowel obstruction occur or If tests
measure the level of the enzyme show that gall stones have formed.
amyl.ise, which Is markedly high
The best possible ways of pre,
when the disease Is present. X-rays venting pancreatitis are to ellmland a manual examination of the
nate alcohol abuse and to treat
a b dome n may I n d I cat e lrnmedlatey any gall bladder probpancreatitis.
lenns you may
'u pancreatitis Is diagnosed, the
patient Is hospitalized and a tube
connected to a continUous suction
to Edward Schreck, D.O., Ohio
unit Is Inserted Into the stomach via
University College or Osteopathic
the throai to prevent production of Medicine, Grosvenor Hall , Athens,
Ohio 45701.

,

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

you want it ...
you ·ve got it...

symptoms of pjiDCreatlUs. Frequently the attllcted peraon Is In a

00::

STORt HOURS .
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM

more enzymes - Druga (such as

urine output ~a constant, shai"p · · meperidine) will be preocrlbed to
pain In the upper abdomen are suwress pain. Patients will be

puacreaa. Many ldentlsta believe

thatlnaddltlontothecioglngofthi!
duct by pll ~toneJ. the pancreas,
My father was
1101111! unknown reason, Inrecen tly dla~ as having pan- Crelllll!lits production of enzyrtll!li.
creatitis. What Is this d 1Jeaae and thereby auravatina the pro111em.
~S0118
W Els I~?
Panct'l!lltltis Is a seriOus dtsea.se,
.
R•
but It Ill not a common one. There
#"""'~"'""'~"""- :.~~~Us Ill an
are only 2!1 to :II cases per 100,000
""
uw..uuuotlon of
adults. The mortality rate for
the pancreas Irel!e'Vere pancreatitis Is 10 to 15
quently !ltsoperpent. LOng-term cornpllcatlons
elated with gall
Clin also result, such as fei-'Urrlng .
,stones. The pan- _:
low-grade pancreatitis or the devel·
creas Is a gland
.
opmeitt of Jarae, fluid-filled cysts In
whlch lies just behind the stomach· the pancreas Itself.
'
'In the Uppier part of the abdomen
QUESTION: Wtiat are the
;.....~Uilt-IIC'IIdu-lll!lu!lrt (for control- Btymptoms of pancreatitis?
ling blood sugar) and digestive
, ANSWER: Signs of pancreatitis
enzymes_
show thelruelves within a day or so
When gall stones block the duck of the onset of the disease. Severe
which leads from the pancreas to .

, r-:rm

;nent for receiving Insurance Is
"having capital reserves of5Jli'TC!'n!.
:whether the 2 percent that member
bankskeptwlththeODGFwiUcount
toward that arnount' Jsn't known.
• "That;s the question of the hour,"
: said James Wlmberg, president of
:.ValleyWood Savings, whlchhas$66
Jllllllon In assets.
• Wlmberg said many of the ODGF
=utstitutlons do not have 5 percent in
capital reserves. He said hls
: Institution could probably meet the
; requirement If the ODGF funds are
· -COUnted.
: "We're right close to 5 percent."
-wtmberg said. "But there the 2
. ?-rcent comes Into play."
·
.; A preslden\ of another savings .
: and loan, who asked IIQt to be
• Identified, said, "If they're requlr• 1ng ODGF companies to write ott
• that 2 percent, that brings a lot of
. -;tljern below FSLIC requirements.
-Most of these companies are
:t)oatlng around the 3 percent
.ftlafk,"

nausea !IMvof!l.itinil, a decreased

..

7

The

is pancreatitis?

bllckup of enzymes Inflames the

~=~"""~"""P""'l;I~::*'~~UIIIy:;T:IIIa:Jit)Mef_ •,IS1

more In assets, officials say.
State officials and state-appointed ·
conseiVator Arlo Smith are s\UI
conducting negotiations In el!orts to
sell Home State to a buyer that can
reopen the crippled, CincinnatiIts

serio~

the IIJI8ll tntsUne, the resultlna

D.O.

of l'llmiiJ Mem •

~

Ohio

medicine How

By~~~·

CINCINNATI (AP) - First
National Bank dropped out of
negotiations to buy the closed Home
State Savings Bank because state
officials couldn't
First Na-

March 11 withdrawal of First
National Bank from the talks dealt
an early blow tothestate'sefforts to
quickly reopen Home State.
"We were trying to work out a .
solution to the problem together. .We
reallzed neither of us could reach
our objectives. All of the pieces
didn't come iogether," Mark T.
Johnson, president of First National
Bank of Cincinnati, said Monday.
State officials said First National
-"'· ·"""-'=·~·=,rQGt:.:!~'~'Inlllla:: :r:::;rr ~~-:::oi::::~'7~i
to complete the purchase than the
state. could compile from Home
State's resources and the private
Ohio Deposit Guarantee Fund,
-·" --··· ...... insun?rGfHnmeState'sdcpos~ti.""-.....
"Therewasnowaywecouldcome
l!p with the type of money they
:wanted . . The spread was just too
}:l'eat. The govei;~~Or said we just
could not meet those terms," said
J:&lt;enneth Cox, Ohio Deparlrnent of
Commerce director.
: State officials offered First Na. tiona! a package of certain Home
.State assets and the remaining $90
m1111on in theODGF, butstlllfell$100
m1111on short of rneetlr)g the bank's
requirements, Cox said.
·Johnson · said - First National's
Interest In buying Home State Is no
longer "practical."
State officials say they are
negotiating with two companies
. ·Interested in acquiring Home State.
Banking giant Clticorp of New York
· has been identified as .a suitor, and
· some reports say Chemical Bank of
New York City also may be bidding.
Horne State closed Its doors
:March 9 after a run on Its funds by
;depositors alarmed at the neWs of
·the March 4 failure of ESM
Government Securltleslnc. of Fort
• Lauderdale, Fla., a securities
: broker which had loaned $670
- million to Home State. The state
.assumed control of Home State on
:March 10, appointing Smith, a
-retired Cleveland banker, as conservator to protect Horne State's
· depositors and locale a buyer.
: Home State Savings Bank, owned
- by Cincinnati financier Marvin L.
Warner, was the state's largest
thrift institution- with 03 branches,

Mwc:h 20, , .

$139

lllllil 0..0 Ptr (UIIOII!Ir

Goolll Only At Powell's
. Offer lxplrtr March 23, 1915

rv. oz. ca•afiOII

_

_

SP,IIADAILES ..........~······ 2 JS2.79

•••••••••••••••••••••

r

I.

'

·

Our Aq. 2.97

2.47

Gil
"

lnctuslrlal taracle Edging
20-11. plaatlc edging con- ·
trots unwanled IIOYJII\'

Our

Rea.

Our 6.97

12.96

9.88

1..... lldeMIDR Coni
3-wlre grounded tor tiGf..

""'· Outdoor/IndoOr uae.
'

•

4.97

[!1!]

Oscillating Spli......

Wlttrs lawns up to
2SOO sq. ft.

Our All. 7.97

6.97

Lengllt . . . . . . .
Rounc:t point long handle
~ A ;arclelt mUll!

�. -.
Paga

8-The

Ohio

~~ter

Mad•

Elementary operetta set Friday

•
·Students of the Chester Elemen- Al1red Temple.
tiry School will present a three:~~Ct . Other students wjJJ make up

Arnold, Kenny Burke, Joey Coates,
Mitch Jacks, Jeremy RaymoncJ

Ingels, Charles Bryant, Carrie
Connolly, Heather Farley, Rhonda

Includes Penny Aelker, Andrea
Adrl~ Frecker, Arnie
Friend. Debbie Frost, Rachael
Hawley, Stephanie Hollman, Amy
Krautter, Sarah Pulllns, Amber
Well, Amanda Wells and Cynthia
White while third grade boys wUI be
skeletons.
Making up that group are Riehle

· -~prmgc · ··
· · .· L
•
·-·· -·~~
ts-- tn--tr•e ~-air

-----Intheseroke---Riffle

In addition, airmen whoeornplete
Spec. 4 Steven A. Riffle, son of . basic
training
earnrelations.
c.redltS toward
training
In human
James A. and VIrginia A. Riffle of
an associate degree through the
Syracuse, was Involved In a
Community College of the Air
NAIDsponsored exercise by par·
Force.
..,
tlclpatlng In the
return of
Reuter wUI now receive special-

. -·tvro:c.
~·
1985.

The exercise was designed to
develop uniformity or doctrine,
standardize procedUres for rapid
response ·to a ci1sls and demonity
to
diSplay
their
lalents
In
arts
at 137 Butternut
strate solidarity In commitment to
and crafts on June 22 and 23 Ave .. Pomeroy,
NATO goals and objectives.
another promotion by the Big Area
r e cuperating
Rittle Is a vehicle driver with the
Merchants Association.
from a broken hlp
Third
Annored Division In Hanau,
Court Street will be blocked off to
sustained In a fall
West
Germany.
··
pi"QVIde space for the displays and
on the 'lte foor
He
Is
a
1981
graduate¢
Southern
Lynn Street wUI also he used If
weeks ago. Mr.
High
School,
Racine.
Local
more space Is needed. The displays
Lowen will mark
••. - .. . . . ~.ls.,!L?.ru! blrlbday. on March ~ He__ .wU! he featured In conjunction with .Tl_............
;au:tON"~-~~----~
'
.
would appreciate hear~g from . the annual obServance of Heritage
Day by the Meigs County Pioneer
you.
Airman David A. Reuter, son of
and Historical Society.
Donald E. and j'aullne M. Reuter of
The "Easter Bunny" will be · Making up a committee to review
232 ~ MUJ St., Middleport, has
- appearing at P!easers· Restaurant . appll!!atlons of tho,e wlshln~: to
graduated from Air Force basic
display are Melvin VanMeter, Paul
training at Lackland Air Force
In Pomeroy from 9 to 11 a.m. the
Simon, Nancy VanMeter, Macy
Base, Texas.
next two Sa turdaysMarch 23 and 30.
Powell and Joe Clark. Lois Pauley
Residents are Invited to have
During the six weeks at Lackland
Air Force Ba$1! the alnnan studied
their children's pictures taken with · who has had prior experience In
thE.' bunny and for a $2 tee they staging these events Is guiding the
the Air Force Mission, organization
group and wUI work with the
and customs and received special
receive two print ~ . Proceeds will go
applications committee.
· to the local- March of Dimes fund
drive.
11 you are a boater, the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
Two signups for little ll'ague .sends along a reminder that now Is
activities have been scheduled.
the time to purchase 1985 bo:at
The Syracuse Baseball Leagu!' registrations. Registrations can be
wlll hold signups from 6 to 8 p.m. purchased at Forked Run State
Thursday - that's tomorrow night Park, P.O. Box 127, Reedsville.
- and from 10 a.m.. to 12 noon
Saturday at the Syracuse MuniciHer friends were glad to read
pal Building. The final slgnup about Dr. Sally Schaaf, formerly of
period is 6 to 8 p.m. on Monday, Middleport, .In the current edition of
March 25. There will be no later Ohio's University's McCracken
registrations so a word to the wise. -~ducator.
.
Stgnup for the Pomeroy Youth
With an accompanying photo, the
League wUI be Saturday from 9: 30 article states that Dr. . Schaaf
a.m. to 12: :Jlp.m. and that will take earned a bachelor's degree with a
at the Meigs High School.
dual major In elementacy and
P~'one needing more Information
secondary education, master's de.
call992-5067or992-li060. Slgnup gree
education
and a PhD' '

---

E

cue

practloes

well, Patsy Chapman, Mike Will,
Kay Balderson. Macy Jo Buckley,
Rori Hill and Principal Rick Martin.
Jenny Machlr Is pianist.
·Room ll)Ohters have supervised
themaklngofthecolorfulcostUme5 .
wlll ·be
A

AU

in~

1

20-year

-

Mrs. Cogar, who has been active
many years.
The cake Inscribed "Good Luck,
was served with other
~·resl11llE11tS. The Cogar famUy's
address will he 5273 25th Ave.
'ao.Jth~vest , Apt B, Golden Gate, Fla

~ s:coutlng for

S)thers attending the party were
Snider, Rhonda Spaun,
and Heidi Snider, Came
Scarberry, and Melissa Justice,

NOTICE

The Dally Sentinel
Is Now Takinp
Carrier Applications
For The Po~neroy Area.
Phone 992·2155

·

POMEROY -

Meigs Better

BeerCiuiJWIII-meet -')']lursday
evening, 7: :J) p.m., at the county
extmslon otftce.

ROCK SPRINGS - Better
Health Club will meet at 1: 15
p.m. Thursday at the home of

'

POM E ROY Willing
Workers Class of Enterprise
United Methodist Church Will
meet at 7: :JJ p.m. Thursday at
home of Dorothy Long.

resesvatlons are due today aad
may be made by caWna 742-ZZil
or742-2141. Costwl1Ibe• . Beullh
Johnson of t1ie GaWa County
Retlted Teachers AIIOciaUon

FRIDAY
SYRACUSE A jitney
supper will be held Friday from
~7 p.m. at the Carleton School.
Home made food will be served.

· - SAiUIU&gt;AY -:- . -

wm present ihe program•

oAJr--

ROYAL
Belles- and
MIDDLEPORT ~= .BeallL.J.!Ie!!f.- ~= a· ~
· ~-,-,h ·~
County ReJired Teachers will
Club will sponsor an open dance
meetforal2::.lp.m. Juncheonon
Satumay, March :.1, frQm 8-11
Saturday afternoon at the Mld·
p.m . at the Royal Oak Park
dleport Masonic Building. Lunch
recreation buUdlng.

parties

_.

-~-

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES

Elementacy School.
The publk: Is Invited to attend the
evening performance. A$1donatlon,
wUI be asked at the dOor.

COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY: Mary Ann Orllneltl,
Beoratary

~r~~~~~i~~~i==~~~=~riiii,
Specl'a l'
:,
;

-;~,:H:
,&amp;:'!!':w:!!I::;;:E:.J al tbe_.llo.Atb. ~ _~- .
..

Hickman
Spec. 4 Carmen J . Hickman, son.
of Bonnie L. Hickman of Rural
Route 1, Point Pleasant, W.Va ..
was Involved In a NATO-sponsored
exercise by participating In the
Anny's return of forces to Ger·
many (REFORGER) 1985.

Minerai·
. (PAINT THINNER)

-

~:~~~~~~~~· -;-:~-=~:~:·_~,c~~~!~~~~standal'dlze procedures for rapid ·
response to a crisis and demonstrate soUdarlty In commitment to
NATO goals and objectives.
Hickman Is an .armor
member with the Third Armored
Division In Friedberg, West
Germany.
He Is· a 1977 graduate of Gallla
Academy, Gautpolls.

-crew

For thinning oil base painl. varnish &amp; enamels
&amp; for cleaning brushes, rollers, equipment
clothina &amp; hands. -1-Gallon 1~17 -?9\
. .
•

....

--

-

-

· --

-- f

PICKENS HARDWARE
'''""''"--·~·~ ,_

'

~

I

f

'
r.

-Cost -No-More.Per Serving Than
Bone-In
•Easier To Carve • Easier To Judge
•Easier To Cook _Serving· Size
~~-.&gt;--

-·--

~

•.•

-.

aawn~1•n

EKI'I .:If thrN

m• ""'IC'
rl re ow rfl&lt;1

adve" istd items

readtlo; aw .. '-ble lor Nle rn U ch

1(, 1(1~1!'

TOIAl SATtsfACTIOIII GUAIIAIIITU
to Ill'

Store

" Clip! i15 II)I!C ofrU. V 1'\0!ed rn t h (l iod If Wfl •Ju lim

our of 0111 edwenlled 1111m. WI! w ~ l nllt!r vou vour
c hcwfl Clf " cnmf"rllbllt rt~m , whtm ava,ta6af..
•ll llfH.hrK t lhn $Amoi ~hrnus m 11 ra•o cllf!f·k wh teh

h lll\lthrnj-1 vo~.&lt; b ~&lt; v at Kro ger rs g ul!llntee&lt;l tor

vow l ora! sauidiiChOn reg l rdlfta.s of m anu fllctu rer.
II 't'Ori !Ire not Wtrs loed Kroger wr• r ept!l~e vour
it em wrih t ht: ~me br1nd 01 a comparablft tuand or
rel unrl Vi:ltJI purc hlUfl p ~tce

fED
-

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,
GRAI~ FED BEEF, CENTER CUT

€~

Chuck Roast

--·- -·-

-

- -

•Red Seedless
•White Seedless
•Blue Ribier

Pound '

$ 88

Grape Sale
Pound

·

Will utrhtlu '(flU Ill f&gt;UII.hll!.e t'ur ar f...,:ri~JII •I IIIII il l
the l(fvr,rtiled pucu wtth Ofl lO day~ Onlv one

..endor COIJPOI'l
nu rttt.Md.

Save now at Diamond
and get a gift with each deposit.
8Ift
Timex Mini Alarm

.

_...- . ..· · - · . - ......., 'f

USDA .
aiOICE

r.;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~

Stealing Papers Out
of The Daily Sentinel
Box.S. Anyone with
Information Should
Contact Tht Daily .
Sentinel or Meigs Co.
Sheriff's 01H11f.

be

wm

· ottlcer.

· Lenora Leifheit. Phyllis Skinner
will present the program and
Nancy Morris will l1f' In charge
of the con_test. Dues wUI be
payable at the ~-

He Is a 19112 graduate of Meigs · ·
High School, Rock Springs.

Michelle Metzger, Alvena Van
Meter, MU!Ie Van Meter, Amy
Metzger, Wendy Taylor, Sue
Me1Zger, Susan Jett, Tammy
Capehart.

$l. OO •OO RIWard f Or ·
Information Leading ·
to the Arrest and

will

pie. Deputy Matron Sally Glf·
ford
serve as Inspecting

will be giv.en an oppor·
tunity to be he&amp;l'd. Pur·
thsr ln!ormaiton may be

University.
Following more than 10 years ·
teaching in pubHc schools, Dr.
Schaaf returned to Ohio University
for graduate study and upon
completion ·o r her PhD, she joined
the faculty of the college of
educa tlon and Is currently an
associate professor of curriculum
ano Instruction.
--I don't know about you, but I'm
not ·In the least bit encouraged to
buy a fish sandwich when I view
that ·television commercial featurlng a mermaid. Do keep smiling.

REWARD.

reunion

POMEROY - Evangeline
Chapter 172 ot. the Order of
Eastern Star will hold Its annual
Inspection Thursday, 7: 30 p.m .•
at the Middleport Masonic Tern-

discussed.

farewell party· given
.._ A farewell party honoring Shirley
~ar, longtime scout leader and
~Ice unit director, who Is moving
l(o Florida, was hosted by Cadette
::&amp;:out Troop 1115 and Junior Troop
;:i042 at the Carleton School Thurs~ay night.
-;: Other scouts at the party were
:':rom Troop 1049 and 1067. Plaques
~ nd gifts were presented to Mrs.
i(;ogar and several tributes to her
;worklnscoutlngwereglvenbyRuth
,Shain, Jayne Good, and Donna
Also honored durtng the

POMEROY - Meigs County
Better Beef Club will meet
Thursday, 7::.l p.m.: at t~
. county exlei\Sion of!lce.

POMEROY - Middleport's
class !If 1985 wm meet Wednesday. 7 p_.m., at the home of Diane
Caruthen, _ , Rock

"'i~a~n~d~~~~o~r~eofi~u;m~b~u~·r
Ohlo Eleo·

· and

Jason
The production Is under the
direction of Maxine Whitehead,
vocal music Instructor, assisted by
teachers,
Stivers; Wilma

G&lt;o:ma.•y &lt;Ri~~cR.!~EJ~)..--~~~~~~~·~I;i~~::~~~~~-+'J-~
. -···
.

music students or the school.
. By BOB HOEFUCH
OVP Staff Writer
Bllll..owen ts._mnflni'Q to Ill$ home . _Residents will have an opportun-

---:! Members of the Twin City
lnettes are advised that dues for
985aretobepaldnowandaretobe
t to Edna Slusher. 109 Kerr St.,
romeroy .
'
•
---: The Meigs High School Vocal
~ters will stage a publlc spagh·
~ttl supper from 4 to 8 this Saturday
•t the Salisbury Elementacy
}chool. Cost is $3 for adults and $2
tJr chllldren under 12. The booSters
«nnuaily stage a fund raiser to
~rovide some extras for the vocal

-WEDNESDAY

No . 84-l2·EL·El"' Bubrue A. w rev1- the tuel
procurement

THURSDAY

VanMeter, Stacy

.,

,..

!or publlc hii&amp;J'iilll

Llsa~~olrma)l~~·-:as~oo~rne~,~N~Ich~o:Ia~P.Ic~kens::·~Chrls~~-l·

Dillard,

Beat of the bend

Calendar

The Pubile 'O'tl11tlee Com·
mission of Ohlo hP eet

Malhotra; Dean Mays, Janelle
NeutzUng, !Wd Newsome, t.Orre

· Operetta
p.m . Friday
In · the ""-at
liC.l!!l&lt;&gt;l
u~~and.lnclude.JQ!IIWa.
Casto.
IIIM!~..Wolf~
. ~ ,Meii~,Jg,
.l-e'{!Y...,
7: 30 ~- ..chorus
groop$. First graders will
11e ~ .1¥~
Jared Rlde!lour.
Jol!n Ridgway,
Gtbbs, Sarah Harris,
. "Tom Sawyer"
aUditorium.
Melissa Demp$ey, Jamie Erwin,
Secood and fourth graders Wlifile · BilX'liCe ·Lyons; Mlche~
;The musical, based upon Mark Ralph Foster, Jessica Frederick, Mls$1ss~· llqiUII'e dancerS and Kimberly Michael, Matthew
T)Yaln'sclassic. "TomSawyer"h as
Ryan Hawley, Eric Hill, Brian lncludeCharlesBisseU,RyanBuck· chael, Carrie Morrissey, Lynette
a ~arge cast of students trom grades
Hollman, Robert Hoffman, Eric ley, Mike Bailey, Jessie Chevaller, Neece, Stephanie Otto, Chris Paul.
Hollon, Jessica Karr, Clu1s Ml· Tara
Lee Connolly, Jamie ton, Jimmy Pullins, Kellle Riden·
one through six.
Matt Flnlaw, a sixth grader, wUJ cilllel, Jennlter Mora, Robbie
Frederick, Tracey oor, Luciana Scott, Shen1 Smith,
play the leading roie and 'illS clase~ · "Murpny;Wfmoie neiSOtf;"'oiy;.!Vni,
:!
frie!lds,Huck FlnnandJoeHarper,
Micah Otto, Noelle Pickens, Paul Joseph Karschnlk, WiliJam Kauff,
Fitthandslxthgraderslllaklngup
will be played by Blll Jojtnson and
Pullins. Branill Reeves, Amy Daitlelle Kibble, Courtney Knapp, a vocal chorus Include Monica
Adams; Robert Bailey, Christina
Tom Hunter, also sixth graders,
Smith, Michael . Smith, Jatrnee Sara Machlt, Rebekka Mclntcye,
respectively.
Spencer, Carla Stewart, Eric Tuttle, . Tom McKay, Todd Michael, James Barber, Paul Erwin, Melissa Fred·
Playing other major roles are
Heather Well and Laill'en Young.
Ord, Michelle Pooler, Jessica Rad·
erick, Stephanie Gardner, TI1fi!JIY
.Alvena VanMeter, Aunt Polly; Amy
Crystal Smith,
Gardner, Lee GUIIlan, Tony Grate,
Mike Roush as
Michael
ThatcheT; Leigh Ann Redovlan as
Amy Laurence; T1m Michael as
Injun Joe; Benny Bcyant as Pard;
Paul Erwin as Dr. Robinson; Riehle
Hunt, Muff Potte-; Jeremy Buck·
ley, Ben ~rs; Danlelle Scott,
Widow Douglas; Matt Ridenour,
Judge Thatcher; Tommy Wilson,
Rev. Walters. and Erik Waters as

LEGAL NOTICE

The Daily Sentinei- Pegt 9

Ohio

Gin·
Ma2navo1 Tot. Audio System
Maonavox 19" Color TV
Tappan Microwave Oven

1Yur
500*

7Yttr 5Yttr

3~ Year

5,000' 7,500
6.000 10,000
6,500 11 ,000
7
11,500

11 .000
13.500
---··
15.000
16.000

""~'

be t cceotfld

per

ttem

I~ FREE!

I
I
I

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE
REGULAR OR DIET RC 100,

Diet Rite
or RC Cola

GALLON

2-Liter

--xwo·Gilts

WITH COUPON

0 Cool ot men:handloe mu.t be reported 0(1 IRS Form 1099 in the year the acrounl is opened. 0 Plea.'l&lt; allow 4·6 weeks for delivery. ¢ Mt•n·handi&gt;'t'
can be deltvered lree o1 charge anywhere wit}lin the continental United States. but Cannot· be delivered to post c,ffk:e boxes.¢ ~ n·~·rvi.• rlu·
·
right to discootinue offer at anytime.() Substantial ~nally fur early withdrawal.

OlAMON) SAVNGS
AIIDIOAN~

You're Worth More At Diamond.

lt!•1i

Deposito 1100.-.d
Ia

StOO,OOO.

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

All New
Instant Mountaieer

BUCK

WIN
UP TO

.,..

INSTANRY

__._.._~

-

�10-The

Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePOrt. Ohio

March 20.

The Daily Sentinel

..

March 20, 1985

PHONE
992-2156
tlr ""'Doll,- C1111111H ..,._
111 CHr1 R.. ' -• IIIIi&lt; Ullt

Business Services

•

.

The Deily Sentinei-Page-1 f•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
8

11

Public Sale
• Auction

Teldng oppllcotlono for ox·
porlancod body Npolr mon .
Alao, PI
eon to c... n and detiiM care.
Apply ot SII!II!IOnl CodiHac. .
Olde; Cltevr-' on Mon. or
Mo~h . 21th. 21th
b e t - 8 :00 o.m.-4 :30

•

.'.
'•

ERIE .

21

Help Wanted

r-..
p.m.

9

Wanted To Buy

WI PlY cuh for loto mOdel
ciMn uled cara.
Jim Mlnll Chev. · Okla Inc.
Bill Gono Johnaon
441-3172

•n

DITCHIN(i .
- S"ERYICE .-.·
• ·CHAMBERS - Presidents of both the Pomeroy
and Middleport Chambers of Commerce were among
bivlled guests altendlng a pre-opening_preview of the
ne\11 Pizza Hut In Pomeroy Tuesday night. Dis&lt;,'U!O;Ing
the new restaurant were, from felt, . Ron Ash, ,
Pomeroy Chamber of (',onuneree president; Charles

675-1333
64 Misc. Merchandiae

f lllflillyllll'lll
S1:1

POOLS PLUS

2111,.,._._
Pt. P111 Mt, W¥ IUSD

675-1311

*16xu.,
IUICH SPICIAL *
•.,...... Peol
loll leltlo

1·614-992-7191
.lhwlftdt .

R-E.Buck
""""'"'Judge

U.-

ONo Valley
Co.
MorlletllepoR
-~. March 11, 181111
Tn&gt;nds: V('al calves steady: fto«K&gt;r &lt;:"a nle
steady: rows steady.
FHdor St.,..rs: Good and ChoiCI' i!JO.lXllbs.

511-70: lXHOO 57-Ql: 400-500 M-66.50: fiOOQX)
MI&gt;Hit-50: 600-700 o.HJ.50: 100-llll 54-62: llll
il&gt;l. and over 5U0-58.!l0.
) ' _ . llelfers: Good and Chol"' :150-lXl

lllo. ·-~: r.o-56: 400-500 47-55:
,.,.., C!.50-!l6: lliJ-700 11·56: 100-lHl ~';-~1.50;
liJi 11&gt;1. and over 42!0-~.
· F _ . Bulls: Good and Choice 25lhlXIIbO.
*n: :IXHOO 5UII: t00-500 50-63.50: ~
:111.~1.50: 1100-70051-Ql: 100-imll'l-58: lmlbs.
.w1 fJIIf!f' !iJ.ii).M.ffi.
Hollteln Steers and Bulls D).fiXI lbs.
37-411.50.
- Bu1cher BuDs l,ZXt lbJ. and up; Utilities
*50: Canners 46 down.
Butcher Cows, utUitlfs 38.!10-44.25: canll('f"s

and cuners 33-ll.
u.lllwt'tahl allow grade cows 31 down. ·
• -·Spr11'¥tft' Cows 29().410; Cow and calf Comb.

-.m
.
• 'Veal Calv...

chon and prime ll'l-91:
nwcUum j{l'ade 61·75.
Boby Calvt'S by ""' liNd ~­
Top 11011'1 216-2«141.50-42.25.
r ,.Butcher Boars «X&gt; ft». and up 28.~·32.
·Bulober Sows 400-500 lbo. ll-42; ~

41-43.15.

_ Pip by the head 17·:11.
Ap~l 9, 1llll5
~Sak'7p.m.

1\leOday,

- Feeder Calf and

George Horak, Richard RusseU, Joe ZwHilng, Elza GUmore, Jbn
Gilmore, Frank Vaughan, Jerry Rough, Raymond Jewell, Robert
Vaughan, Don Runnel, George Nesselroad, and post champ, Leonard
.JeweU for !lecuring members. WUUams also earned one of the awards.
Recognized for continuous long tbne pOst service were Robert
Vaughan, Royal (',ook Dr. ltay Reutet:, Leo Vaughan, Clifford Young,
au ~ years; Charles Smith, 42; Robert Buritem, 50 years, and Leo
Story, 60 years.

NEW LISTING- New Lima
Road - Approx. 58 acres
vacanl land with approM.
700 lt. toad lrontage for
building sites. Includes all
mitrenls. Water &amp; electric.
available, $17,900.06.
NEW LISTING - Close ta
town - Big garden area &amp;
ten acres. Nice .farm house
w~h several buildings. Owner
wants a qukk sale. Asking
$26,900.00.

r-;:=======================:;1164
NOTICE OF SECOND PUBLIC HEARING
The Village of Pomeroy intends to appiY.IO Ohio Department of De·
velopment lor !undine !rom the Community Development Block Grant
Small Cities Program.
·
· The Villaee is eligible for up lo $600,000 of FY'85 CDBG lund and up
to $400,000 of FY '86 funds.
On llarch 19, 1985, lhe Villaee conducted its first public hearin&amp; to
inform citizens about tnt ~;uHG proaram and proaram re~ulrtllttnts.
Based on citizen input on local assessment of the Villaee s need the
VillaJe Is proposing to undertake housina rehabilitation and blieht
elimmation activities lor fiscal year 1985 and 1986.
Asecond public hearinf will be held on Tuesday, March 26, 1985 at
7:30 P.M. at Village Hall o give citizens adequate opportunity toreview and comment on the Village CDBG application before it is submit·
ted to the Ohio Department of Development.
Citizens are encouracad to attend thrs meetineon March 26, 1985 to
express their views and comments on lite CDBG application.
\

PRICE REDUCED - on this
acrelaying
!arm. land
2 older
houses
&amp;. nice
willt-oil·&amp;
gas rights. Owner must sell
and has sliced price to
$29,900.00.

COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING in
Pomeroy - Owner would
like an offer on this business
room. Call lor details.
REALTORS
Henry ECleland Jr.

992·6191
Jo Hill 915·4466
Jnn Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992· 5692

A lB.

, .

. IUlllll

'iii:AjjijiiiiiiitiS toi•ZENITH
*SYLYUIA
.SPEED QUEEI lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CONGO
.· DENNY
WILL HAUL

.,

JUST CALL!
992-3410
or
843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL·FILL DIRT

Real Eatate General ·
11. L. "Bud" llcGHEE
troker·Auction 'SerYit
f'lttlyl Lllllty
lltlp County Assacl1te

Phone 742-3171
Now Accepting Uetlnge in Meigs Ca.

IO·B·Ifc

RADIATOR
SERVICE

w

INTER£ST£D IN A
HEW VEHICLE

We'd like to introduce you to
En111"A·C.r, tht toodom way

to drive tho vehicle of your

cholca.

NO OOWN PAYMINT .
IOWII MOIITIIY PAYMINT

BLACKSTON
NEW -CAR &amp;
TRIKI UAsiNG

·eo•. 32&amp;

Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Faster Service
(all

992-2196
Middleport,

(CUJ OUJ fOI fUTUIE USI)

AffOIDAIIf • POITARE

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

1-(814)-992-3325

317 North

Stcoitd

Middltport, Ohio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE
IUSIN!SI I'IIOHr
(6141 t92·6550
RISIDINCI I'HONf
16141 991·77'1•

POIIEROY - Ni&lt;• 3 BR, 2
story framPt\\;~~dge of
town. ~c:.. v" 6 .:~s furnace,
lull ba se ~ent &amp; lg. lot. Only
$22,000.

..

·- IRA INDIVIDUAl IEnllfMENT
ACCOUNT

1o.s•to ·

......

~
,_ ........ ,... _

fnjoy co. .lttt roloaolito ..,.

Notlpriott S,.. Stlfl ~ It ...
......
..r. ....... in .....
IIACIWOOD HOMI SI'AS
4003 7 s..r.n. ld.
Po,_oy, OH.

.MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOI All YOUR
WIIIIIG NEEDS

Rt1idontlal &amp; Commerci•l

Call:

992·5175 Or
742-3195

•VINYl SIDING
•AlUMINUM SIDING
•BlOWN IN
INSUlAnON

·GUN SHOOT
UCINE
FIRE DEPT.

..............
EVElY

. AGENCY, INC.

114 COUll ST. POMIIOY
Acr011 from (-thauq

992·6671

LANGSVILLE - 12 acres
plus, 2 BR ranch home only
a lew yrs. old barn &amp; drilled
well. $31,500.

•W•ahen •DilhWIIherl
•Rang••

Til COUNlRY LOFT
GIFT SHOP
OPEN: Tues.·Wtd.·Fri.
Sat. &amp; S1111. I 0 to S
· Mondays I 0 lo I
Closed Thilrsdoy
OWNE!'f: Sorah Flthor
En4 of Rt. 7

ly Mli11 High Schaal
Turn loll, ontor r_,. 7,, ht
*irow.Y oo rltht.
·
1/ 15/ tln

PARTS end SERVICE

4-5-Hc

Roger Hysell
. Garage
lt.

124,P-ror Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

AI" Trt~••l11l11
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
3·24-lfc

- Concme wortl

- Plumbing •nd et.otrle~~l
woo1o

··

(F- Eatlmotosl

,.

.

V. C. YOUNG ~If

992·6215 ar 992·7114
,_,.,, Ollie

.

12·B·tfc

I mUM from

12 '-" ~J11c

J04-675-6276

IUYCHILL'S

GUYSVIllE, OHIO
Authorized John Dttro, ,
lltw Holland, Bush Hoc
Fann Equipment
Duier

Ho•CENTII
v•••o
,_.,,ON.

101 WHI llltt St.

PIL 992·6911

fer• E•alplllelf

Pert• &amp; Sthl~t ·
1·1-tfc

-,;••¥11
~

lUllS

AIIIIOIIIIII!Illi!ll\S

"THE lEftY IASIET"
GIFT SHOP
"Country Gifh and
AcctiiOI'itt''
Si1th St.. Syr•,.., 011.

(ron Stitch anti f ole

Painting Supplilt

SALE-D.M.(. Flou....291

.. Qru!.1 ~: ...n!.~~
Fri. IIIII Set.
Also Optn ly Appt.
(101111 Sun. &amp; MOn.
o-: Corolyot McCoy

1/1011 ....

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Sizes Start Froni 12'116'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36' .
Insulated DOl Houses ·

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Ott.

Ph. 614-143-5191

1Htfc

SVIIEEPER and Nwlng ma·
chine rep.elr, pilrtl, . and
auppllea.
Pick up end
deliv.,y, Davia Vacuum
CIMner• .one half mile up
G-r~u · Creole Rd. . Coli
114-441-0294.

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS-Ratinonca
to low fixed r1R . U1e equity
tor 1ny purpoM. Le1der
Mortgogo Co.. 614-5923061 .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALtTY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 Mt . WEST. GALLI~OLIS ,
RT 31. PHONE 114-4487274.

1·10-1.1.1.

SUPEIIOI
SIDING CO.
Vlllln 1 ,..._•• ·
ConiPiete Gunor WCHit
Complete R•mo ...lng
llooflng of oN
Worlted In homo-

rv-

zo.,....

"F'" EotlmotN"
CAll (GillOt

Ph. 16141 143·5425

PT. PlEASANT OFFKE
UOS JACISOII AVI.
SMAU -lOUis

._,.,.....,,...
,...,
.......... ,..
W1t 11

The tuok Welton Club wll
hevo lt'a Big Buck Door
Horna and Grouae Tall

....., 1 ,...., ....
lotw ... ~~ &amp;&amp;•ttolt &amp;&amp;

wet .tlllllU .
•au' IY anOMian
304·•71·1441

-1-tfll
., .

HrVice ~

Will pkJw g~rdene. large or
small, Point Pleltant, Kanougo. Ohio aNa. 614-4464081 or 304-676-7228 aft..-5:00 PM.

21

Real

Esl~ l e

1974 Now Moon lo 2 Iota/
vory good cond ., .IIC. lulild:
ing, off Rt. 218. Coli 614 •.
266·6794 .
•
12x60 King nice, *5.200 or
take car on trade . Call

31

Homes for Sale

By owner 186 acral, custom
brick home, 2000 aq .ft.
w·glraga, 3 bdr ., 2 bl ., FP,

F:nanml

oil HT lo AC . Modern equip.,
bldg., b8rn. county water.
Mineral rights incl ., t1391&lt;.
Call 114-669·6311.

Business
0 pportunity

8e1utiful 3 bdr. h9me built
for you 818,900 lo up. SH
our modtls. Call 1 ·61 4886-7311 .

614· 367-7609 .

.

1969 12X60 New Moon , 2.
bdr. with 7X12 expendo fi
BX12 utKity attached. Ac ;
rural water. Cell 614·258 ·
1256.

wlnnera

J1clkon
45e31.
Secretary-receptionilt with
bookkeeping-computer ••·
perl ... ce or tr•ining. Send
reaume to P.O . box 989.
GaiNpotla, Oh 45631 .

pr...ngtiona 1t

Hourly Clinic Aido nMdod
pert· dmo In family planning
Shedo River Rd., Cheater, officii. Mull haV11 high
Dhla:--81ginnlng ·at ·1:30 .chool diploma or .,qulval·
p.m .. Sot. Morch 23rd. All ency; good communic1tion
portlclponta ahould bring .tc.iUa; .ccuracy with flgu,.a;
thllir trophlet. Tho public be dopondable. a,.nlzod,
1nd aportamen .,. welcome
reaponaib'-. Trelning
to com• 1nd bring tMir 8Yiil1ble for m1ture indlvkl·
trophlea ond woteh the ual who lo """altlve to
judging.
reproductive M1lth needa of
ctlenta. Mutt h..• rlliloblo
Women'a A1robic1 Club tl'lntpartatlon be willing to
Monclar. Wednoodlr. · ond· trovel locally. Wookday. ov·
Thu!Woy. 9 :30·10:30 at eninga and S1turday houra
R utlond Civic Co-r. Duea are to tM expected. Send
t.71aw- .
reaume, Including two em·
ployment referenc11 to
P11nned Par11nthood of Sou·
4
~IVMWIIY
thNII Ohio, IN. Court St ..
Athe'no, Oh 41701 by Morch
21, 19e&amp;. PPSEO It on
Uoed oament btacko. Cell equal opportunity employer.
448-3797.
Poaltlon opon RN port•tlmo.
2 fleagle puppltt. 1 male. 1 conii'ICt. App~ at tho Golllto
Coullf\' 11Nith Dopt .. Court·
fomolo . con 441 -&amp;59e.
houae. Mon .-Fri.. 1 to
2 femele Collie pupplee. 4:00PM . E.O.E.
lbaut a wlta. old. 1 whitt.
Bath bMutlful doge. Cell Eldor~ lody living olono
tllclng for NapectOble per·
814-848-3009 .
aon of good chei'ICtor to Ww
Hcne m~nure to give 1way. in home • there expmMa.
Coll814·211·1101 .
Cell 114-882-1411 .
their club. houM on South

and

I'""

Fult alze monron to
IWIJ. Coli 114·982·71 I .

3 puP,IH, port bolglt ond
port bluo hMior, t - It·
molot, ana ntlle, 304-111·
4080.
Port Gormon lhophord.

Lost and Found

Wllrla E..na.. Faund rour
o l d - 'lrnaky.' Voluable
PIPif thorotn. Contoct mo.
lttlll. 807· 748·2831 .

7

Yard Sele

...... ~iiiiipoiii.........
&amp; VIcinity .

J,.....sp.a

Tltontlor I ,.....s p.a.

Government Job1 .
11 5,000-1150,000yr. polllble. All bccupetiona. How IO
find. Coil 801·187·1000
Ell. R-4~62.

y,-;cf

WHde. W•lkw•y• cleared .
l••v•• r1ked. Hedgea
trlmmod, otc . Cell614 -9922219 . Bill Slock.

••e-

Are you alck and tired.,of

f•ting olclt and llrod7 LNrn
ta Uke charge of your
heolth, fMI gNit, enjoy life.
FrN - l e t ahowa how.
c111 114-2BI-1n2.

CUNIC

OPEN EACH
THURS. M. 6-8

Reps Needed for buaine11
accounts. Full limo teo.ooo
to •Bo,ooo. Port ·tim•
112,000 to $18,000. No
telling . Repeat buelneaa. Sat
your own hour~. Tr~lnif'!g
provldod. Call 1·612·938·
1071 Mon. thru Fri . lAM to
5PM . C.S .T.

Di.Penclllble-

Permanent hlir removal.
p;ofe11ion11 Electrolyaia
Clinic. New Houra by ep·
polntmont. 10 AM-B PM .
Mon thru Fri. 304-8756668.

night cl8...a rea.anable pri-

I

IN -DUPOIT
PAUL E. SIIICICEY, D.V.I.

Truck driver• needed, minImum oxparlanco. Cell 51 3163·0847.

Man wante to do farm work
or •nv kind of work. Call
446-4169 .

Mutt oolt I 9B3 1 4x52 Jo{
Skyline completely fum . ••·'
cept bdr .. w•aher • dryer/
completely underpinned,
8x 1 0 1torege building Mt-'
ting on pt'iv8te rented tot~
C•n atey if aold. C•ll
7200 after 5P~ .

·.,... open dally. Sheron'a
C•amica, Buffalo, WV. Call
304-937· 2745 .

TOWN &amp; COUNIIIY
mE~NARY

1 1 Help Wanted

Chrlatlton lody will do bobyelttlng In homo. Celt 814441-81135 .

City, price neg.. holp finance . Call 614-251-1444.,

Sheron'l Ceramlca. Cer1m·
ica. grHnware. bi8qul and
flnllhod ploc11, day tnd

witCh dae, 304·871·1222.

A.U.

v11:1:"

PIANO TUNING AND RE ·
PAIR . Reduced ratealimit:ed
time only. Ward' I Keyboard,
304-675 -5600 or 676 ·
3824.

12•60 Schult. 1 0•22 ft .'

porch, l erge level lot, Crown-

Government home• from
e1 . (U Npojrl. Alaodaliquont
Wllevo EWtna--Fouft!l your: tax property. Coli 801·887·
old book 'Smoky.' Voluable. 8000 oxt. GH ·41e2. for
pope; therllin. Contact mo. inform1tlon .
Stllta. 107-749-213B.

mole,g.rtle.~d~.good

1/1/l 110. , • •

..••

Glllipolis

SINGH 124.95

IUGI. LOIIG

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

. 2/25/1 mo.

Po-oy,.. IDft Brill&amp;*

fiCIWy (hlka

SALES &amp; SERVICE

- Addont and NrwocleiW.g
- Aooflng and gutter WOflt

'1.

62 IIDRTH
POINT PI.EASAIIT, W. VA.

PH. 949-2801

BOGGS

CARPENTE8
SERVICE

~
MORl

"Free Eatlmetea"

No Sundoy Call1

NEW-I£PAII

•Refrigeraton
•Dryer• •Freezera

J04·t75·6276
·Live Enterteinment ofree HBO
•Kitchenette~ •Remurant ·

1111/lfo

YOUNG'S

'•

62711tird

3 Announcements ·

949-2969
or 949-2263

SAT. •aMY
6rSO P.M.

New Hamel Built

Housing
Headquarters

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·

All Meku

915-3561

11-14-tlc

. 16141 985-3105 ....

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

EASTERN - 122 acres.
Good 6 rm . ranch home with
IIIII basement. lo\ minerals &amp;
outbuildings. $65,000.

Hale!\ Ylrgil anti
lruct Ttafard

...

lEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

J ' I mo

Murpltr. Milton loush

County Appliance, Inc.

Exporlence

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutters Cle•ned
Painting
Storm Doors
. ."a. Windows

ftTCLAA~DI

Phone

IIIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom garage apt. on corner
lot. 2 car garage with slor ·
age. Only $17,500.

1 5 V eare

L------""'""'"'·11 Howard L. Writtisel

"1'1"8 ~. .U:RAl'IWO

218 E. 2nd lit.

RACINE- Old time 2 story
"4 BR home. Bath, basement
and one acre. Offer welcomed. Asking $27,500.

' lilw MDmli-£1tMIIiYI
lornodoling
I_,.... Work
Cullom Ptlt lltlgt. ·
&amp;Gorogos

RCiofing Co.

.'

RACI'II£ ~lg. 3 BR ,i' stoty.
family home, plenty of room
for.childten, lg. lot &amp; 2 car
garage with storage. Owner
will pay closing costs.

Good used refri1erators,
Wishers. dryers. ps and
electric r1n1es •nd JY nts.
OP~N B TO 6

CHESTER-985-3307

Clorlo

131 20. 27. (41 3. 31C

MALlO ;

S..o

WE ARE .YOUR SALES •
AND SERVICE

l.eno K. N-od.

Real Estate General

TUPPERS PLAINS - 6 rm .
family home. It has bath, automatic heat, 3 or 4 BRs, lg.
level lot. $23,800.

ROUSH .
CONSTRUCTION

'"JI::
leofint Work
~ !~~~~'!!occ~7·H·l 'i"tUiillrtUlii"'~iilifi"WWnp

. PAT HILl FORD

NEW LISTING- New Lima
Road - 3 bedroom house,
woodburner, fireplace, elec tric b.b. heat, aluminum Sid·
ing, 2 car garage, slorage
building. Good condition .
$36,500.00.

8y OWMr, newly remad1t1l
room hauN. lociWII
"""' Hermon Portc. lergofot·
with gordon 'apoco end
e28.000. or oeaumo 1'4
percent loen pe~mena
11 . ..00 incJudMIIIHIIIIf
lnauNnco, 304-875-1111
oftel4 ,

Ae-cl1imed mobil• homei.
1100 down-tiki over PlY·
menta. E-Z credit checlt;
&lt;Milr¥-.-reci frHln· Oftio. iiimf-""""'nta~7 Cell (1141 772·1220
or 773-3926 .

18 Wanted to Do

131 20. 27, 2tc

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

Situations
Wanted

Modern 3 bedroom hou• lot
tho vMioge of Cheator. OltWI
can.- Glert " ' - •
814·816·3571.
•

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Colt 446-9346.

information about sUbmitting
comments.

Real Estate

12

.

4 acre• with bam 1tyle
houH, ' miln from Point

Will coN for lit or oldorly
your homo. by hour or dey.
axporlencod In modlcol core.
304·171-1 1 37 '

In Muon County

,We can repair and re·
·core radiators and
·heater cores. We can
' also acid boil and rod
:out radiators. We al.so
repair Gas Tanks.

TEAFORD

Goad dodlcoted mualclon
goaplli group. Colt 304n3-IB08.

~or

8oby tlttor nHdod houro
dtffera .. ch wHk. peraon
with no other responsibility
tlk• exceHent care of 2
chlldron , 304·812·3727 of·
tor 6 PM.

.

,

H-aforS... '

BoautHul Alta Log homo, 3
acrea, 2 miiM from Point
PleiNnt on Jericho Raid. 3
-roomne. 1 both, f..
_m..,t. woodon dacli.
, ....., per cent ...umablel9art;
e84,000.00 . 304-871:
7733.

Window , Tinting : Raaidan·
till. CommeriCJII. &amp;. Auto.

Abrams (2161 679-2046 at
the Fodera! ResOlVe Bank of
Cl"'""and H you need more

e. Mai,nWa

"*

Open t-orlea with tho
new Avon, calt 304-1751428.

992·2156

aerve Bank during the com·
ment period. Call Mr. Martin

i ~..,----,~~lrik:to,t-rf~PDI1-·---~·~:ick•ey Wtufamsfll'escnted-mcmbers!l1Jf mva:rruno11.0iffi!r Smltb,

(6141 446-7619 or (6141 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box.1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Whol•••l•r· Broker·A out•
Bull.,...: Mfg. Co. lnvoiW!d
In rnaee·merbting of canllllpi'oducta le expending
natlonwldo. Wo ""' looking
for --orlontod peroon for
exciUJive territory ·..,Yiclnt
accounta. High Income P&lt;&gt;ttntill. Start-up lnv..,torv
purc:haM: ell-9.000. Colt
317 - 841 - 1483 Mr .
Wellhlngton.

31

12•86 Torch 2 -3 bdr., u~ ·
fumiahed. H~a ell acreensl(
atorm1 , &amp; homem•d• ~
porchoo. Coil 446·7132 . . •

the opplic:adon, n they are
raceived by the Federal Ra-

1WO ·· - Thi~ pair of World War I veterans was ·among tlie
approxbnate 100 persons attending the anwal blrihday pariy of Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legfon, held Tuesday night at the post home
In Pomeroy. They arc, Fred Goegleln, Jell, and E :,J. HW. (',onunander

i-

COMPLETE 110U81!110LDS
FURNITURE . 8odt. Iron,
woad. cupbalrdt. clllln.
cheete. b11ket1. dlahee.
atono jlro. antlquea, Jold
.ond .allv 0 1. Wrltt · .D .
·Miller, At.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
41719 or coil 814-892 :
7710.

1·11··-·

eluding reqU8Itl for hearing on

'

LISA M. KOCH, II.S.
~ licenitd Clinical Audloloaist

Bus.; 985-3813
Res.: 985-3837

tf., t,;,;IHuibn

Payment of 30 cents per pOund on
local tobacco farmers' product Into
the burley price support program
(!leans those farmers Will have that
much Jess money .to work wilh this
year, according to Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation officials.
Jim Wells, OFBF tobacco coordlpator, ~aid the Joss wlll also make it
difficult for the tobacco farmer
when he tries working out a lease or
Is producing.
· ·Based on a basic quota of 18
million pounds, . Wells said that
amounts to $5,434,539 taken out of
southern Ohio's economy. Coupled
With a possible reduction In government support price for burley this
:Year, It could affect farmers' ability
to repay operating loans.
Farmers had been paying 9 cents
per pound Into the support prop-am. which Wells described as an
escrow account to hedge against
tosses suffered by tobacco growers.
Tile fee Increase was announced
recently by U.S. Agriculture Secretary John Block.

~

I1C

FHI E•fl•fll•

CLEVELANB (AP) ~ Two surgery.
.
Waagner family, J acobstei n
doctOr!; waived their fees and cut ·
Ankeney, who·operated on Clayworked to have Clayton admitted
··"·· .•. ·-~· .!!irQ\lgh_ SQ.m...!' IL~pita!.red.!JlpeJn _ ton soon after he was born ,.,said the: .
··for the operation. · - - • " ••
agreeing IO perform a heart
fee waiver was not unusual In such
" We agree&lt;l to call It an
operation tor a 3-year-old Pennsyl- cases.
emergency so he can -be admitted
Yl!llla boy.
"We always do that," he-sa id.
right away," Jacobstein said.
Cla)1on Waagner · will get the
Following pleas · from Jhe
operation Thursday at Rainbow
Babies' and Children's Hospital.
The famOy recently moved from
VIrginia Beach, Va., to the small
. tonlltitution of
~ylvanla - border 1own of
.' tegion
Greenville. .
.The child was born with one pair of
. r,&gt;,,.;;i'!· lll11illlier for the follow·
heart chambers Instead of two. His
1f theUnited Srotes
heart cannot pump enough blood to
}'IJs h.!!'.gs; so C!ayton .has turned blue
because hls blood doesn't have
eoough oxygen.
·Also, the boy·has no spleen, so he
tnust constantly take antibiotics.
Initially, Rainbow officials told
·----~ cliiYton~ s pan'nif R:(&gt;ger and' MaiY
period.
_Wa11gner, the operation was can·
celed 'because they couldn'tpay for
131 20. 27 (41 3, 19, 4te
It.
.
Public Notice
~Hospital regulations don't allow
for free care for out -of-state patients
NOTICE OF
APPUCATION FOR
In non-emergencies, said hospital
MEMBERSHIP IN THE
spokeswoman Ellen Gambrill.
FEDERAL RESERVE
The boy's father said he owned a
SYSTeM
NOtice is " - \ ' gi_, that
small computer software firm and
applicant lfarmers Interim
had been unable to afford medical
Bank. 211 w. Second Street.
Robert E. Buck.
~ranee for Clayton. When the
Pomeroy. Ohio 467691 has
Probeta Judge
applied 10 the Federal. Ro....,
· Severity of the boy's medical
Board for membenhip. · The
Lena K. Naualroad
condition became known, no insurer
appllcont ·ptOpOSe&amp; to engage
Clerk
would take him, Waagner said.
BUSINE~SMAN - harry Poweii,-Pomeroy buslnessnum, wns
In bu'"- II the following
location:
· Ms. Gambrill sa ld the boy's
131 20, 27. (41 3, 3tc
honored by the Ladies Aui&lt;iliary, both locally and the eighth district, for
211 W. Second Street
condition was considered serious,
his help with organizational projects when the annual blrihday party of
~ Pomeroy. Ohio
Public Notice
but not life-threatening, so the
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, wns held Tuesday night at the
The public is invited to
submit wrinen comment. on
surgery was canceled. Rainbow
post home In Pomeroy. · Making presentations to PoweU were Kate
thil application Ia the foderal
policy Is to recommend thatfamllles
Wel•h. left, and Ellen Rough, right.
Rtllel\'a Bonk of c~;~;;
seek care In their home areas In such
East Sixth and ;
cases, she said.
v1,1•
· '! t U&lt;~l lli:IJII Ul A11011ue, P.O. Bo•
..Ciaveiand, Ohio ,44t01 .
• But ClaYton's carillologrsr,rvrarr- ·~------~· - · _" __. · ·~.,.comment period of this appli~
Jacobsteln, and surgeon, Jay L.
ca~on will end on April 19,
~keney. agreed to waive their fees
1985. Tho Federal Re•rve
will con•ider comments, in·
fo.r the operation and care following

Support fee hiked

Television Listenina Devices
Computerizid Hearina Aid Selection
Hearina Evaluations-For All Aces

"

GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWER LINES
ELECTRIC LINES

Hudson, area Pizza Hut supervisor; Mark Gillispie,
manager of the ne\il business and BW Blower,
president of the Middleport Chamber of (',ommerce.
An oftlcial ribbon-cutting ceremony wW be held at 11
a.m . Tlwrsday and a specclal grand opening will be
held In AprH.

.

.

tc11h•
end up tor your
junk cor or trucll. Fplckup. Colll14-241·9181 .
24 hre.

HtGH SCHOOl JUNIOR·
SENIOIIS . Tho Army No·
tiollll Ou~rd cen give you
V8lu1ble woltl ••perlence.
Good Poy, goad .,oflta.
plua lurn a llcHI. Cal 304·
1175-3910 or t ·800·142·
3118.

Bueineaa
Opportunity

a._ lale: Thurw., Ft1.• •

lat. Chlkh•w~ bed·
ding. jewohy. .
...
more, PJOjeator, Ianni
apult e. lld-I·Aodnoy
' lloil.

Sorvtco NproHntootivo. Be
anoclated with one of the
leedera In con..,~ flnanctol ....,lc••· lmrnodltoto op·
""lng for quollfiod Individual
lnt•e.ted in conaumer fi·
nanc'-1 HI"VIcea-coneumer
homo mort-.
lnaurence 11111. credit
ctrda. income tllx ,,..,.,..
don, and
office
Hl!llniiiNtion. 8 - 1
candldoto will bo toll·
motived, ltko · cheUonglng
war!c, hew goOd communi•
cotlon ollHa. ~....
Jw•ndableto
apply aomprehentlve
trllinlng pr01f0m• to per·
form aucc...tuMy In etedlt,
...... colloctlano. and eel·
mlnlalrlllon . c-petltlve
llllry - -.... with

-•1

t•

;;..=.;

ex.,..lccoce • e111oefhn1 M ·
noflta. If W.•Mtld. ooll

441·2711 end ook tor Mr.
Cltot-.thy toryour • ......,__ . ...tlolll Ohio.
Inc., 411 2nd. AVo.. 01111·
IlOilo. Oh. E.-1 Opportunity

•mployor, M·F.

Government

Jaba .

• 1I,OOO·fiO.OOO.yr. ....... All - ........... " ... find. Cell 1-101·117·
8000 lilt. 11·1108.

1 bdr. houtelt6,.Mi11Creek
Rd . •s ia, e•cept tools. Until

Beauty Shop for ule eatlblilhed bu1ine11. Call 448·

3703 .
Once in I lifetime. Home 1nd
Auto Store tH . and R.
Fireatone Store) at 81499 2 - 2 2 38- Middleport.
Ohio. All l'rierchlndiae. ule
countera, light fixturea. tire
ch•nge equipment. Priced
under •eooo. S1te mult be
completed before March 24 .
1986.
Llundermlt for ••I• In
Pomeroy. Ausonable. Only
interested persona need call
114·992· 5937 and oak for
Jerry.
A golden opportunity-M•k•
money in your apare tirnl.
JoinFAIENDLYHOMETOY
PARTIES , the 1. .c1ar for 30
yMra. Opening• for "''nagers 1nd deelera. WI hiVe the
llrgeat •nd be.a linl in perty
plan . e1 rn big money plua
bonu... and trevel lnc:entivea. Start now and earn
· --~ ttl
c1 11
monoy tmn-• y.
1·800-227-1610.
Own your own jeln oporta-r. ladlea opporel.
children•~ l~rge Jize. combination. weatern atore. acconorilto. Jorcltoche. Chic.
LM. Levi, Eooy SI-t. lzod.
E1prlt, Tomboy. Calvin.
Klein, Sergio V1lenta, EVIn
Picone. Liz Clllborne.
Mombora Only, Oftonic:at~
Grown. H11ltht1x. over
1000 othera. 17.900 to
e24.800 lnvontory. trlln·
lng. fi•IUNI. grand -nlng.
ttc. Con open 1ti daya. Mr.
Loughlin (812) BIB 811115.
t 20 complltaa 1H with ollct-

ric hookUP8. 10 with eewer
hookupa. 3 bollittful tolooa
which moot komptltaa ·
look. Lltrve IIWimmlng • with- wllkclurocron
tho llko. 3 metor diving
pltottorm. 2 alld11 aut In
we tor. concotelon llltnd.
roatraol!lt end chongt
hau-. Chlin link oraund awlmming · baak-tl caum. llh- -rd
court. 24 fl.x 32 fl. lot
Trldlnt Poll lnd building. 40 ft.x 110 fl.
racrootlan building with
mapo - · ...,_,. end
--lng-.-tap
rolda In parlt. loo h - .
ehower hauaea nd rtl·
lraanll. for 111e toy • - ·
H - Kltrr. Rt. :i. Ponte·
' roy. Ohio 46761. " ' 814-111·3341.

•

April14. 836,600 .

Rio Grtnde-3 bdr .• 2 bath1,
LR . DR, den, tam . rm with
wood stove, full b1aement.
city w1ter •nd aewer . 'Owner
tr1nderring oYer...a. High
t30'a C~ll614 ·245 · 9485.
3 bdi'. hou• 8 y'rs. old,
f•mily room with firepl1ce.
large kitchen •. 1 Y.t bath. ~ c1r
gerage . city achool1.
Crouae· Bock Ad. 160,000
firm. Call 446-8188 for
appointment.
OreenTownahipnew 2 atory
4 or 5 bdr. fo•mat dlnin·
groom, utility room. 11h
b1th, garage, concrete drive,
nice lot. • 'lh mi . from
O•llip,otla on At. 1•1 . Will
consider mobile home Is
trtde-in . B•rgein priced .
,_•11_2_.6_oo_._c_o_ll_44_1-_a_o_3a_._
,Older aix room houte (with
two bedrooms) for ultl' or
rent. Double car garage, full
beaement . On •pproxi ·
mtttolr 1.9 acre lot. RoM
Hill, Pomeroy . 129,600 .
Cell 614-1178·2113 .

3 bedroom houM In Ruatic
Hilla. Ful~ caopeted, otorage
buHdlng. l•rve lot. Calll14·
992-1085 aftor 4 :30 p.m .
.
_
Rustic Hlll1. Living room,
recreation. room. 3 bed·
room1. "h •ere priv1te lot:
8x10 wood building end
chain link fence. C1H 114992· 61151 .
-------:---:-Old houM for Nle. ' liMn
romodelod. 7 rooma and
beth, ,_c..,.... ~ Iota. 2
out-buildlnp and glrage.
SoH "" timo· Yt down plyment. Finance hllf on ..nd
contract. Elnore Rtynolda.
114·1117·1148 . Main St ..
Coolville.
-------:---::
Oovornm""t homoaltom • 1
(U Npolri. Alao dollnquflttt
tax property. C. It 1·805·
687·8000Exi. GI1·9805for
information .
------:---::-In s.,.acuM, 9 room houM.
2 bethroomo. woodbumlf,
olum. lkllnl!. 2 cor corport
with worlllhop. Call 114·
812· 72111.
-----:---:--.U..lnono. Ronttlto-.
and
third ac-. 2
1 ....."&gt;0!"
end mobile
from Point
ount City llmlta,
114.100 .00 . 304 -871·
7308 or 114·441·8040.

1970 12x70. 3 bedroom
mobile home . Good condi..:
tlon . Call 614-992-5090.
Now 1986 Springbrook'
1 4x64 , 3 bedroom
•12,950. 1986 Springbrook14x70, 3 bedrooma. 2'
bath, 113,960. 1986 Jofr\
1 4•70. 3 bodroom.
•14,950. 1985 Oak Cava
1 4x70, 2 or 3 bedrooma. l
both, $15,950. Moat hornu
Ire loaded with optM)n11
Gtrdon tub, dolu•• applllnc81. extra in1ul1tlon,
cathedral ceilinga With fin•
and much more. USED&lt;
1975 Go-nor 12x60. a.
-room only 16500. 19811
Ubarty 12•46, 13600. F,..
dol ivory end lit-up, Laclted
2 miiH from the new
Aaven1wood Bridge. JUfte-.
tlon of 1-77 end Rt. 2:
Mobile Homoa. 304~
273·5136.
.,

o..,,.,

1 2d6 mobile homo on 1
•ere ground. 2 bedroom•.
Coli 614-742 -240?.
2 bedroom tnObllt home.
new undorpenning. pore~'.
14,000.00. 304-1711i-?308
Of 614-441-8040.
•

33

Farms lor Sale ,

Ftrm houH • 88 ecr;~
tobocco beN ond mlnor'l
ri{jhU. ln...PortM, Oltlo . OftC•mplign Creek Ad .
149,000. Call 448-7247 ..

with

34

BU11ine11
Buildings

FOR SALE OR LEAliE,
commercial property en(l
new building. 70'x100'wlt_l1
2 ecrwa. 200' !'Old ltontagt.
1onlng required. 2 mi'-1
nonh of Point PIM11nt. 'II:
Vo . on At . 12. Pltono 304.
675 -1578 -daya. ~6715-7896 i .. nlnga •"'I

-•ndt.

36 l.ota • Acruge
Ovor 1 ocro I - ' lot It
Porter. 8k12 bam • ...,.
tank. -dy for hau10 or
mobile homo. Colli or COli·
troot. C..H I 14-381-1731.
2 -

lata. 7 . - from

town. off Rt . 2 . :MI4·17e·
8181-lp.m.

4 .42 ..~.In304-171-17H.

'

N~W~~,

�Page-12-The
311

LAFF·A·OAY

RMI Eatate
Wanfact ·

64 Mite. MerchandiH

Wtdnndlly, March 20, 1

Wednelday. March 20. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

'N' CARLYLI ®by

66 Building SuppiiBa

n

Wright

TRACY

Auto Repair

Television
Viewing

Poraono Body Shop. Locust
Rd. Pt.Piaasant. P..t K.K.
Fraa Estlmetos. 1114·11•·
4174.

Would like to buy or rent
trwiiN lot ip country. P...t•r
in Selem Cent., or Ung1·
ville oroa. Call 114·742·
2148 or 114·892·&amp;411 .

The Daily

Ohio

ona-

U'*lomblo

(I)

&lt;JO •

(I) Fishin' Hole
I]) Beverly Hillbillies

79 Motore Hom"
&amp; Campers

o•

House for rant . Coli 304·
875· 7283 875· 61
or
616·6388.

. ())Dr. Who
I]]) ·3·2•1 . Contact ICC)
Diffrent Strokes
IMAXl
MOVIE:
'The
Eorthling'
8 :30 D (fj Cil NBC News
()) To Calcutta with love
(I) Mazda Sportalook
I]) Gomor Pyle
CIJ
1D ABC Newa ICC)
1!1 Cil ®CBS Newa
(1)Nightly
Buslnoaa

e

NOW I KNOW WHY
! WA-;. -;.&amp;NT AWAY

iVERV

CO~ P'E

CA~&amp;6

VOU Wil&lt;i

Y~AR...

OF

IT WA!o &amp;E·

PU~"~6 ANOT~EI&lt;

IT WIVJ, Al.~

FOR VOU,SQN .
We WANT eD

YOU TO HAVEo
THE- ll&amp;!oT OF

I&lt;IPNAPPIN&amp;.

!9MCI11Quore. lo IDtm

I TURBS
I KJ

I

r

I I

J

IMOODDEI

() I

KJ

a

eVI'IlYTHING.

)

·----·--

()) Hot Pouoto

Housea for Rent

...

t,_ lour Jumblol,

Jour ordinar)l wordo.

.-----=EV=EN..,I"'N""G..__ __

e:oo •liJ CIJ
(I) mo
News
41

ftfli)Nl fj}1f _1!' THAT SCIWIIILEO WORD ClAM£
1£1 ~~~ by Heo1&lt;l Arnold and Bob 1M

~

3/20/85
I

13

·.

Roport

Gll Body Electric

1 . bedroom. fully furniohed
houae ap1rtment in Middleport:. All urilitiel Included.
Call· day 61 4·992·23B1 or
night 614-992-2609.

61Jr~Fro~D
~~!{

For rent: 1 bedroOm fur.

niehed illpart:mant. Cal1614992·6434 or 304-882·
2688.
c

OOTI:&gt;

~~:~r:~:;:~:a:~'S~~o~~~-~~;~~;~~~~:,.1
month. Coll814-992-3064 .

2 bedroom houaa In Bellmead• are•. fenced yard,
call 304·876· 7207 must
have references.
....r
4 bedroom house. 1422
Ohio Street. Point Pleaunt,
Section 8 approved. 304676·2722.
Hou•e in Hender.on; 2 bed·
rooma, full size basement,
·~85 . 00 month, noo.oo
d*polit and refrencea re·
quirad. 304·676·1 118:
Two bedroom untvmiahed
house, 507"12 Second St.
New Haven, .WVa . 1176.00

month, e100.00 dopoait.
3!14·882-2605 c

'5ATIS~TORt.(.

Furnlahed apt .• 3 rma. and
Deposit required.
Phone 814·992-2937.

ces. Call 448·4488 .

APARTMENTS. mobile

homes. houaes. Pt. Pleaunt
and Gallipolis. 614-446·

8221 .

Nlco apta In Handaraon,
304·878·1972 otter 8 PM.
1 bedroom apt, furnished or
unfurnished, utilit:iea paid.
304-875-7112 or 876·
41.83 .
Furnished one bedroom apt
In Point Ploaosnt. Verycltan
and nice. Phone 304-8751388.

1---:-:-:---:-::-:--

Special thia week. 30 in .
elect . range coppertone
t75. eye level electric range
White $96. gas range 38 in .
white f96, Whirlpool auto
washer $76, Kenmore auto
washer *76, Kenmore dryer

$126, Whirlpool outo
washer like new 1160. aide
by aide refrigerator fr..zer
white $196, gudryor $125.
Skogga Appllencaa Upper
River Rd. 814-448-7398.

1-:-------:--

Gold tw"d couch. You ptck

up. $30.00. Cal! 81o4-9492674.

4;2 Mobile Homes

PHOTO SPECIAL now thru
March 31st. 6 reprints from
color. negatives or 3 prints
from llidel or 3 copy prints
from prints. Yowr choice 99
centa. Hockenberry Phar·
mecy Nor1h.
Restaurant Equipment, tables and chairs, 'coolers.
atainl81a ateel sinka. caah
register. front and back bar.
304·87fj-, 080.
One Pair- of liVing room
lempo, 304· 876·6428.

for Rent
Furnltlied, · nd 'City ' ·tlllltS•
.._ _ _ ~tar -&amp;-.uW:ap ~furnlt~d.
beautiful ~iverview , fc.a nauo• · Foater'a Mobile
H~mo Park. 446-1 602.
Nice 2 bdr. mobile home.
cOmpletely furnished. nice
location, no pets. Call 814·
245·5818.

1 2x60 2 bdr. trailer, fur·
niahed. 8260 mo.. 1100
depooit. Call 44B·8583.
1 lh50 In Syracuaa. portly
furniohed . $160 .00 per
month plua depo•it and
utilities. No pets. one child .
C 011B14·992-7680.

(!J NFL's Greatest Mo·
ments: Best-Ever Profes-

sionals
MOVIE: 'Along the

I])

Furniohad room, •100. Utilities, ronge, rof. Share bath .
Men q(lly. 919Soc .• GallipJ&gt;·
lis. 49J'441 8 after 7 p.m.

1::=~=;::;::;:::::;;::::::::==
52

Pre-spring clo18·out on ell
ateel buildings-direct factory to you diacountl·
Immediate delivery-Cell col-

lect 1-617-692-3821,

65

Seed

8t Fertilizer

CB, TV, Radio

TrdnspurtoliUil

46 Space for Rant

71

milaa. 304-675-2419.

73

F;mn Supplit!s
&amp; L1v~:stuck

Equipment

1984 Ford F 180, 4 opood,

overd~e. Ranger A pkg,
.~,M-FM ~Ut!!!. 13 ..000

Vena 8t

4 W.O.

Spring -ial: Gone' a doop
ateam carpet cleaning .
iiccilcir guan;i, ire• ••i.i·
motea. Con 81 4-992 ·8309
or 814-742-2211 .

preny novelist in the Florida

Everglades;- trying to a-s capo
the wrath of a crime kingpin.
(R) (60 min.)

1978 Ford von F-250 cargo.
Call oftor &amp;PM, 448·21ell.
1 978 Ford E 100 Econo·
Una Van. Auto. 11200.00
CaH 614·992·8624 .

poriMc:ed carpantor, oloc:tri·
ci~. m•.on, ~Inter, roof·
ing {including hot tit

78 Suberu Brat. 83.000
milu. E•c. cond. 304·e768217.

Autos for Sale

Great Divide'
(J) &amp; iD Fall Guy ICC)
Colt's on the run with a

RON"S Tolovialon Sorvico.
S....,.allzing . in Zenith ind.
Motorola, Ouezar. end
~~..::~ ·~!~::;....sel~ ~!~~!?! - .... ~ ....... .
239B or 814-448·2454.
- Fetty, Tree Trimming, atump
removal . Call 304·576·
13G1 .

Ill (I) Snoopy Gets Married?
• GOOD GRIEF!
ALL NEW SPECIAL!

capt ivating

American Music The successful musical team of
Rodgers and Hammerstein

oppllcatlonl 304·675·2088
or 875· 7.388.

is profiled. 12 hrs.l

Ill MOVIE: 'Donovan's

· fo'ty year'!

It's stuff
· full

o'

memories
fer "im!

bust!'Memories
securi to
0;:.-;;:::tt:::;, cold
hard

Rear
IHBO] MOVIE: 'All the
Rivers Run' ICC) Part 3
IMAXJ MOVIE: 'Contract
on Cherry Street'
8 :30 0 (I) ® Romance of
Batty Boop
([) Wild America (CC)
9:00 D Cil CD Facta of Ufe Jo

1 972 Gravely wolk behind
l:ractor, 2 .speed axle. 30 .In

mower. neerlng lulky,
1800.00. 304-676-7733.

1 982 Honda 1 100 Interstate 4,6150 milea. Clll4413882-or·446·0281,

cash~

made from her mother ' s
special recipe . IRl
CD 700 Club
(I) TDP. Rank Boxing from
West
Lake Tahoe
Bracket Final Ten Round
Welterweight Bout betWeen
Oio Colome and Eric Man1n.
(2 hrs. 30 min .)
C1J Ill (j]) Dynasty ICC)
Blake laShes out at Daniel
when Krystle refuses to reconcile . 160 min l
0 · (I) @ MOVIE : ' Used
Cars'
([) Survival Special ICC)
'Mysterious Herds of the Sudan: The migration of the

Plumbing

1977 Hondo 7110 oxc. cond,
•900 or belt offer. Coli
448· 1097.
1 974, 750 Hondo fully
drooaad. 1 4,0DO miles.
•8oo.oo. 304·875-7733.
1983 Motorcycle Suzuki.
RM2SO. 17711.00, phone
304·882·3203 ond loevo
your number.

76

'

Boats and
Motora for Sale

1---------CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND H£ATING
Cor. Fourth ond Plno
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 or :
814·448·4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT,· :
lNG. Rt. 1; 11011 358, Oelll· ":
polis. CoM ·814·317·0578 .
B3

white -eared kQb antelope

and the tribes in the Sudan
that rely on the antelope are
e•plored . 160 min.)
9 :30 D Cil CD Sara Stuan has

Excavating

mixed feelings when his
buddies persuade him to re-

Good· 1 E•cavating, boiOment•. footer•. drlvewaya,
aoptlc: tsnks, londecaplng.
Call onytlmo 614·448·
4837, Jomos L. Dovlaon; Jr.

vive his old rock group.
1 0:00 D Cil CD St. Elsewhere
luther loses a co-worker
and his hearing when a
boiler e&lt;plodes . (60 min .)
I]) Portrait of America:
Masaachuaena
(J) II) (D Arthur Hailey' •
Hotel ICC) A concen pianIst has a bittersweet reunion
with a former love. (60 min.)
(J) National Geographic
Special
® Woody Herman' a Big
Band Celebration
Ill American CaeNr
IHBOl MOVIE : ' Horry and
Son'
I 0 :30 ()) My Little Margie

:

·
·
·

owner.

Dozer Work lend clearing,
landscaping, otc. Fraa ootlmateo. Coli 446·8038 or
992·7119 anytime.
B4

·· AN' I
GOT TH'
HOUSE
ALL TO
MVSELF

Electrical

8t Refrigeration

BOOHOO
HOO

SEWING Machine repein.
aervice. Authorized Singer
Sileo ' &amp; Sorvice Shorpon
S_cJts_O!:!c Ee.bric llllop. __ _
l'omoroy. 814·982-2284.

t285 to t745. Doak
Furnlahsd afflcl..;cy 1185 up to 1225. Hutchoe, 1550.
utHiteo pd .. olngle odult, 920 · Bunk bod . complete with
4th Ave.. OolllpoNo. 441· mattretMI, •271. end up to
4416 after 7 p.m .
1388. Baby blda, 1110.
Furnished llfficiency apt~ ~

LR · OR combination, kitchen • both. Prlvm. SecurIty dep. • rotor-. Call
446·4107 or 448· 2102.
3 bedr. apt. close to down·

town. Call 441· 1 843 or
441·4289 for more lnlor·
motion.
Apartment for ront 411 2nd.
Avo. completely furnlohod,
newly decorotad, ollallctric.
t200 mo., plua aecu~y clop.
Rot. ,req .. odulto only. Cell
446·2236 or 441· 2811 .
lliwrolde Apta. Middleport.
IPHial ratea tor lonlor
Chlzeno. 1130. EquoiHou ..
ing Opportunltleo. 614112·7721 .
Two bedroom ~p•r1mentt In
~~ N•J!I, -He-.,.JIIm\Y. !'!!ll!:

Moigo Electric Sorvlco . Call .
ua, you'll bo glod you didl
Stave Barnett ot 814-898·
8553.

.Soap

e&lt;)Y.'!HIS
MU51" 13!: MY

Mattr••a Or box 1prtng1,

full or twirl, 1118 .. firm. 188.
end 178. Quoon 1111. •1111.
4 dr. chaste, 141. II dr.
chests, 1111. Bed fromoa,
120.t2tl., 10 'g un· Gun
cablnoto, 1350. Oeo or
olectrlo ranges t3711. Baby
mattr...... 1211 • 1311, bod
fram11 120, 125, • 130,
king !ramo no. Good oolec·
tlon of bedroom oultH.
rooken. metal cabinet&amp;,
hoodboards Ul • up to
188.

EJ5

General Hauling

DAY~

cent Irish horses and the
people who rtde . train and
breed them are examined .

Jamea Boya Water Service.

Also poola flllod . Call 814•
2U-1 141 or 814-441·
1175 or 614·448-7811 .

Now Pro.os, 4 _ . t trons·
mloslon for 1074 \6 ton Ford
Pickup. Call 81 4 · 742 ·
30114.

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

Uood Furnlturo .. '11 pc.
dlnatta. hasd boarde. and 2
-oorn auttoa. 3 miloo out
Bul- lid. Open tam to
Bpm, Mon. thru lot.
81 4 ·448·0322

IMAXl Album Ft..h: Ptlil
Col!Ina
11:000 Cil (J) CD 0 Cil GO
®News
Ill Bill Cosby Show
I]) MOVIE: 'Cisco Pike'
(J) Notional Geographic
Speciol ICC) 'Ballad of tile
Irish Horse ." The magn!fl-

e

SNAKE!!

1 bar oot 3 stools. 1 bor iet
with 2 stoolo. 1 d r -. Cell
4441·0144 or 441·4B37.
Mixed firewood 120 a
ploltup load. you haul II. Call
445-4111 .

lood

1877 Ford Granoda,
condition. CoU 114· 92·
1418.

87

(60 min.)
• Benny Hill Show
(MAXI MOVIE : 'The Young

r

Kon'a Wator·S.rvlce. Wolla.
cioterna. pools flllod . PhoM
81 4·3117·0823 orl14·367·
7741 night or day.

Nursea'

1 1 :30

&lt;(..~··
PEANUTS

Uphol1ta,.Y

e

C1J CD Tonight Show
()) Best of Groucho
(I) SportaCenter
(J) WKRP in Clnclnnetl
0 Cil Magnum, P .I.

HIM IN WHEN
IT RAINED

I ~OI!LON'T EXPLAIN
M'{ JOKES ..

eNightllno
ID

ABC

z-

Apoohe: lhea-u.'

'·

,.
'

VACANT
.
Answer: Wha1 tlatfootedness ls for a tJaffl c

--- -··

·-

-- --· - _;...-···-..•.

-:_,___ . _

~......'"""""""~"""""-='-""~·-""""'=-'""'-'·A···~~-""""~ ... "'"'""'""-

_.,......,. ____..

~.

""'"''.,_..."" -~···•·=·t

·~-~. Jame.s JacobY~.······ --~- ·--· • _... .-:·...... .

Thirty years
to a better play

NORTH
+K7

5·20-85

.QJVB
tKJ ·S
+KS72

By James Jaeaby
WEST
EAST
Here's a little problem for you, but
• J 10 9 4
•QH2
you will need to be all thumbs, so you
.72
can cover the East and West cards
• 1018 4
tAQ97
and decide how you will play four
+Qn
.... J 104
hearts after the spade jack iJ led.
·
SOUTH
H tltiJ were being played 30-odd
+A63
yea..~ ago, a. ~naJ&gt;Iy COI1)petent
· ?AK106S4.
declarer would draw trumps, ending
tl%
in his band, and tben play a club to
+ss
I
tbe king, losing to the ace. Later,
Vulnerable: Neither
when he played a diamond, he would
Dealer: South
Jooe two tricks in that suit, giving the
defenders four tricks to set t)te
'!Y~ L .N!!ib_ • . ~L~ Sl!!illo .• _
OOtifract. oor·rrcuonal aeclatet'B ~·~-" ..
cept was not bad: First, try to see if
Pass
n'
P ...
4.
Pa.u
Pass
Pass
the club ace is well placed. If it isn't,
fall back on a diamond guess and lean
toward West's holding the diamond
Opeoinclead: +J
ace. (After all, if East has one ace,
West ls a little more likely to have the ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - '
other. Of COUI'!II! there was and still is
a better approach.
Declarer should win the spade king,
play one high heart, play the spade
ace, and trump a spade. Playing
another beart to his baud draws tbe
defendert' last trump. Now· a die· on lead . with tbe other diamODd ~
mood is the winning play. True, lead through dUJil!lly's club kin&amp;. But
declarer will still have to guess when· on the actual bal!d, and wbeaevt!r'
ever tbe diamond queen and ace are East has all tbe key cards, East 1,1 enc(
split between East and West. Should played. He must either cash his minor:
declarer · guess wrong in that event, suit winners or give declarer a slut!'
East can win the trick' and put West and a ruff by leadbg spades.

.3

I.

~~a•~•e
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Detail
1 Fencing cry DOWN
5 .._Done
1 Prophet
Him Wrong" Z Magnani
8 Ojdahoma
s Having but
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13 Sicilian
city ..
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15 Ta~r
11 1' - Maria"
17 Give
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11 Compare
ze AdVanced
deg.
Z1 Low I.Q.
holder
!3 Jollity
Z4 Macho guys
25 Devout-

Martin.
film
5 Beardless
i Rduge

'

Yesterday's Answer

7 Summer 16 Similar
(fr.)
19 Virginia'
18 Outmoded
willow
football
Zl A "Gunplayer
smoke"
11 Lover ·
deputy
of beauty Z2 Ease
1% A G&amp;S
!3 LoUDvillain,
brigida
Dick 25 Trim

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engmeer

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33 "Wbat is new?"
S4 Judge
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31 "Agnus -"

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IILONGFELLOW

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One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L'S 1 X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
'

•'

3-20

•
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News

• Twilight
1 2 :00 ()) Bumo • Allen
(I) Muda lportaloolt
CIJ ABC News Nlghtllno
CIJ Ded' s Anny
.
IB MOVIE: 'The Man Who
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192·7411 .

POETRY

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TRIBTATI!
UPHOLSTERY IHOP
1183 8oo. Ave.. IIIUipoU1
814·448·78Uor814·448:
1833.

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sets out to earn some e111tra
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&amp; Heating

1977 Monte Carlo high
mileage, exc. running cond..
uaea no oil. body fair. Cali
after 6, 814·258·1264. -

and

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Gll Rodgers and Hammer·
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been his life fer

Wanted 1 0 laying honnnd 2
or 3 roosters,. 304-675·
2183.

poodle

heads for the altar .

That oi' bui ldin's

19 83 Dodge Colt 4 opd .. 1974 Honda 750 whh farring rack &amp; helmet U60.
1982 AMC Spirit 4 opd.. Coli 814·245·8120.
1978 dodge Aapan auto.
1978 Plymouth Fury auto. I-19_8_3_H_on_da_7_5_0_8_h_o_d_o_w.
John's Auto Salu, Bulovillo Coli 6 1 4·448·3182 ,or 814·
Rd. Call 448-4782.
441!-1738 ave.
·

Adv .

Snoopy falls in love with a

RINGLES'S SERVICE, ex·

82

WCHS

0 (I) &amp;I Snoopy's Getting
Manied, Charlie Brown

Rotory or cable tool drilling. ·
·Most -no completed some
doy. Pump sal.. ond oorvi·
Cll, 3\)4·895-3802.

I Jumbles'
THYME
,·

Jefforaona·

from cancer. (A) {60 min.)

Want to rent corn &amp; hay
llolda. Golllpolio &amp; Cheohiro
orea . Call 814·387·0181
after dark.

III1

cop-THE ARCH ENEMY

7:30 D CD Tic Tac~~lf~·~·= ·~t-··-:-~- ....r=~--~

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59 For Sale or Trade

Fo; rent SIHplng Roomo
end light houaa kHplng
room1. Park Centr•l Hotel.
Coli 814-448-0788 .

•

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(Answers tomorrowl

.,
Yeser
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Mark try to help a mOther
whose only son _is dying

Brown eggs, $1 .00 dozen
will deliver to Point Pleasant
O~!:! a ~~k ~n F~iday..
304·896-3396.

III

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CD Jeopardy
® Wheel of Fortune
8
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Tonight
• WKRP in Cincinnati
IHBOl Video Jukebox
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Heaven ICC) Jonathan and

Trade Center Furniture
Out,et, Kanauga, Oh. New
Maytog &amp; Crooley Applian-

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~~~~~·paid. Call 14 ' 992 '

bath.

• One Doy at a Time
7:00 D Cil PM M-ine
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Pege-14-The Daily Sentinel
---- --- -----

-

Shenff's~; departm~~t
pro~Jwo acciderlts

Area deaths

Local Briefs:
Middleport cleanup week slated

Harry E. Miller

Cleanup week in Middleport will be held Tuesday, Aprtl 2, through
Frtday, AprU 5, vlllage officials said today.
Residents w:e requested to clean up their yards and lots during the
next week in order to take advantage of this once-a-year tree pickup
by the village.
Beginning Aprtl 2, residents may place their trash and other
excess llerns near the curb In front of their homes and it will be
picked up by the vlllage, free of charge.

. HanyE:MUier,8l,qled'J'ul&gt;sday
everilng at his home at 36861 Texas
Rood.
Mr.MUierwasbornMay5,1003,at
Grand Rapids, Mich., a son of the
Ia~ .Edward and Katie Miller. He
was a retired C &amp; 0 Railroad
engineer.
Surviving are his wife, MarY
McCoy MUier; seven sons, Richard
of Euriice, La., Gary of Washington
Court House, Donald of Pataskala,
PaulandErnest,bothofGahanna;
John of Cleveland, and Thomas of ·
Plantation, Fla.; three daughters,

JohnH.Shanks,89.CooJVUie,dled
Tuesday evEOing at till' Parlcvlew
Nursing Center in Parkenburg,
w.Va.,followingabrleflliness.
He was born 1n CoolvUle, a son or
the late Frank and AUce Chevalier
Shanks. He attended the CoolvUle
United Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Ruby
Russell Shanks; three sons, Howard
of CoolvUie, Russell of Baltbnore,
Ohio, and Richard (Dick) of
CoolvUie; a daughter, Mrs. VIc
(Betty) Clark of Coolville; a sister,
Helm Shanks of Coolville; and 13

Mary Roberts of Cleveland; and a
slster,JackleMcClellandofColumbus. Twenty-flvegrandchUdrenalso

Besides his parents, he 'w as
preceded in, dl!ath by a daughter.
._.. b !her
four slsrers .Uu a ro
· ·
Services wUI be held at i p.m.
FrldayattheWhlteFuneral Home
in CoolvUle with till' Rev.·' Roy
Deeter officiating. Burial wUI be in
the CoolvUle Cemetery. , Friends
may call at ·~~ funeral horne
·
""'
.

'

Cleanup·' tree Lanting progra.m
p'

The spring cleanup arid tree planting program spoJISOred ·by the
Ohio Department of Transportation begins this week and runs until

o,r
Two accidents;' ~ on ,County
Road 00 (Momlfli ,1S!.ar Road)
octurredearlyWednesdaymornlrig

:"!

college youths while on their spring breaks to clean up Utter along the
'lll seedlin E tire
state's highways and plant approximately 1 ITll on
gs, n
cost of the program Is $500,(XX).
"The advantages of this· program are twofold in thatlt wUI put our
youngpeopletoworkwholnturnwlllhelpmaintalntheupkeepofour
infrastrucl\ij'e's natural environment," Gov. Richard Celeste said.
Approximately 1~ youths wUI work throug~out ODOT's DistrlctlO
r"""on, which Includes Meigs, Gallla, Athens, Vinton and
'"'
Washington counties. ·

survive. ·
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by a sister.
Services wUI be held at 10 a.m.
Friday attheEwingFuneralHome,
where friends
call from 7 to 9

-------.._.,._-------~-------·-------J-f~r~~~B~~~~:~L\Y:II!.~!n--:u:~n:fltu~t:lmea~;#;~;;"~~=.ay

'" ----··-~·---~- -~····o~-- ·-·~·-·~·····1"'--""·-'~":""'··-----·-

Bonds posted for speeding

---- -~-·'1Jr.';':va

f

"

.

•

j

.

,

.:~ties sa1ll BroWJI,was travelIJ!g west towards ~ty , Road 28
t~ Rood), w!Ji!n ,tfle t(uck he _
andwereinvestlga~bytlii'Mei~~S Was. driving, owned ,lly Michael
COI)ttySherlff's~t.
, Lawson, Racine, ran .off till' right
At approxlmately•tl45 a.m., Carl side of the roadway 'onto the sort
J Ctrcie Racine was ttavellngeast shoulder and struck a tree. :
~cooniyRoadlomhiswayhome " No injuries were reported and
from work. C!tcie ~portedly feU ' damage to the vehicle was Ug~t. No
asleep at the wheel, went off the left ' r;cl:ta:tlons=:w:e:re=lss:u:ed=
. ::::='
side of the road and hit a tree. Circle.
sustained chest InjurieS In the
1
mishap and was transported to

VeteransMem~Kospltalbythe

Racine EMS unit. ·. .
Damage to Circle's automobile

l18rii;~;'O(M;';';d+'~~~B~rown=~of~~Co~l~wn:;bus.;;.~De-~-:~~~~~~·it~LlL~:.ea,:;;.t·:..·-"':115-~lo/r~ll
to.the.report
flied by Sheriff Howard Frank. No

i i'rtd ·

-·---·--'I--•-

-John H. Shank&amp;

; f j,I

citations have bl'en Issued at the
presenttlme·
The accident oroured near the
-~
·
Morning Stan.:qurch.
Earlier' in theJJnomlng, Deputies
Don Spyder and Jlll)mer Souf!;by
investigated the1second accident on
the county road involving Joseph J .
1
Bro'fll ofRacint;.
.. ..
" - 7 ·;;-·-·-- ·- ---

ne ·

=:::;
S' ,
•RETREAD
NEW TIRES

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ommtsston atls lo ratify .contract

,

"1.11 1
8 ,1Gl • •

By NANCY YOACHAM
voted yes. Commissioners Koblelitz and Manning
'"·" W-"Sentinel """"
,...,r
Roush voted no.
Melgs Cou. nty •s HIghway Departm.en t workers
"Where ·does this put us?," Koble·ntz asked Phil
remal ned on the jobthi s mom Ing despIt e the fac t that
Roberts, Meigs County Engineer.
· Wednesday fa. lied 1o ra tlfy a
Count Y comml ssIoners.
"I'd say in a strike," Robe
· rts answered.
.
roposed
t --1
th
1
----- ~e~i~n on- contract . agreemen
or - e - - - Sta~~~~:;!:. =~n'sli~~ ~~-:~ ~ :~h=

GENERA'L ~ '
~- TIRE'- -~) ·--···

agreement by commissioners Is required.
Th
posed three.. ssed d
e P~.
yea~ contract was cu
an
discussed said David Koblentz, commission pres!dent "so let's put It on the table and see what we're
-!Win~ to. dQ.:• The cornmL'l.&lt;lon bas .. until next

- Martin Mpllohan.
"Where the lubber
Pomeroy;
Trenton
Clelan&lt;), f&lt;ifn&amp;
Iva Leona Clark, 83, Cheshire,
roy;
Truman
Priddy,
Rutlapd;
Apparently motorists are becoming aware that speeding -..:UI not
Meets The load" ·
Maud VanMeter, 100, Clifton,
was found dead in her residence at
,
Geo.rge
;_
~bef~bach,
~Jdd~eJIO.rt,;
~
W'la.,
.•
&amp;J~
~ay
at
the
!:fSI·
4;:.l_
p.m.
'rues¢l:Y~--···
·
.
_,
IJ!'. tolerate~J.l?Pomeroy., .. _ ... _ ............. _ • . ·. ·-· .
It, 2nd Ave. 1
•
· Tuesday night only nlne defendants forfeited bonds posted on
denceofa daughter.
Born Jan. 3, 1902, in Van Wert 'Eugene ,Johnson, Racine.
Middleport, Ohio
Discharged - Kenneth Crespeeding charges while last week the number was about 'n. Four
County, Ohio, daughter of'the late
Born Sept. 23, 1884, In Bowling
others were fined on speeding charges.
Green,Mo .. shewasthedaughterof · John and NeUie Higgins McNeal. means, Travis Childress, Clarence
PH. 992·7161
Forfeiting bonds on speeding charges In the court of Pomeroy
the late H_e nry and Deborah
she moved to GaUia County in 1924. ' Proffitt' .
Mayor Richard Seyler last night were Debra Rawson, Middleport,
McDanlelStewart.
ShemartiedLincolnLeeCiarkon .--------.,,----.L..,---------'---$43; _Richard Dalley, Athens, $45; Linda Powell, Pomeroy, $49;
. Also preceding her In death were
Nov: :.!, 1926, at Catlettsburg, Ky.,
Cindy Crump, Lron, W.Va., $44; Dennis .Stanley, Syracuse, $44;
her husband, Harry D.•VanMeter,
andheprecededherlndeathin1962.
Patricia Humphrey, Pomeroy, $43; Carl Klaiber, Long Bottom, $48;
Who dl~ in 1946, and a son. Leonard
She was also preceded In death by a
Homer Parker,_Rutland, ~_5, and Robert Musser, fomeroy, $49.
VanMe.ter.
•
..sonJri 1~.
. Keith Barrett, Hartford, W.Va., forfeited a $43 bond posted on an
Surviving are three sons, Ray·
Surviving are ttuee sons, James
Improper backing charge.
.
mondE.VanMeterofFranklln,and
Clark of Newark; Lee Clark of
Fined In the court Tuesday night were Ricky Keys, High Point,
Cheshire, arid John Clark of Palm
Ralph T. VanMeter and WilHam
N.C., illegal left turn and no operator's license, $70 and costs; Terry
"BUI" D. VanMeter, bothofCiifton;
Springs, Calif.; four daughters,
_ Spencer,,3yra.t:use, $43 ano cost&lt;;, . _s~ing; ...Keith SParles,
three daug!tters, Lucy .Johnson of
Mrs. P.E. (!i-ene} Ste!finscn or
- Middleport, $43 and costs, failure to yield; ~incent Stone, Pomeroy,
MOton, W.Va ., and Josephine JusCathedral City, Calif., Mrs. Jack
speeding, $ll and costs; RickY ·Lunsford, Pomeroy, speeding, $45
tlceandKathleenVanMeter,bothof
(Reva) Kinsey and Mrs. Gordon
and costs, and Betty Caldwell, Middleport, speeding, $20 and costs.
Clifton; 18 grandchildren, 49 great(Neva) Altland, bo!ll of Redwood,
grandchildren and :ID. great-great- Calif.', and Mrs. Grorge (Nellie)
grandchildren.
Walsh of Las Vegas, Nev.; sever;II ·
· .. - Funeral services 'Will be lfelt;i" · · granctclliidreh and &amp;eVerargreat:
Frtday at I p.m. In Foglesong . grandchildren; a stepson, Roy
mayor~s
Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va., Wiih
Clark of Middleport; .a nd a stepLuther Raine and Eric Brown
daughter, Mrs. Lrona SJ?.Ires of
Three defendants forfeited bonds and five others were fined In the
officiating. Burial wUI be InGraham
GaUipolls.
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Cemetery.CalllngboursareThursFuneral arrangements wUI be
1&gt;
Forfeiting were Randy K. Lee, Pomeroy, $00, stop sign violation;
day, 2 to4p.m . and7to9p.m.atthe
announced later by Miller's Home
William A. Wooten, $&lt;11, speeding, and Larry E. Clevenger, ·
·
funeral home.
for Funerals.
Southgate, Mich .. $&lt;150, driving while intoxicated, and $50, left of
center.
,
Fined were Mike Dorst, Middleport, $100 and costs, five day
suspended jail sentence, resisting arrest; $100 and costs, five day
WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!-. accurate MX missiles underscored
suspended jail sentence, menacing threats, and $50 and costs,
dent fleagan's decisive Senate thepresldent'spowersofpersuaslon
disorderly manner; Debra J. Snyder, LanRsvUie, $425 and costs
·
victory on spending for the MX and gave Reagan the first major
and three days in jail, driving while intoxicated; $200 and costs,
missile sets the stage for three other legislative victory · of his second
concealed weapon; Roy Boggs, Mlqdleport. $25 and costs, disorderly
The Stride Rite"' Collection. Beautiful designs and
·
votes he must win before Congress White House te.rm.
, manner, and Charles Knaf1p, Mlddlei&gt;ort, $100 and costs and three
colors that will make her glad she's a girl. Quality and
will release $1.5 billion to resume
Senator after senator credited the
days in jail, receiving stolen property.
·
comfort ,in styles Y,ou'll both find a little more fitting.
MX production.
victory to Reagan's personal lobbyTheSenate's5:H5voteTuesdayto Ing and his adroit use of the
argument that killing the MX
free funds to

Maud VanMeter

,.

Five fined in

Five calls were answered Tuesday by local units, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 10:55 a.m. the Pomeroy Unit took Martin Mollohan from the
Pomeroy Health Care Center to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
12:53 p.m., Middleport took Cathy Wiley, South Fifth Avenue, to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 3:39p.m. took Carolyn Gilmore
from the office of Dr. Harold Brown to Veterans Memorial; Tuppers
Plains at 8:16p.m. was called to the residence of Harry Mllier on the
Texas Rood: He was dead upon the unft'.s arrival, and at 11:39 p.m ..
PomeroY went to the Count I)' Mobile Home Park for Daniel Ralrden
who was taken to Veterans Memorial.

Lottery
CLEVElAND (AP) The
winning numher drawn Tuesday
night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 819.
In the "Pick4" game, the winning
number was 7142.
The lottery reported earnings of
$583,556 from wagering on Its dally
game, Earnings came on sales of
$1,190,001. whlle holders of winning
.tjckets areentltied to share $607,015.
In the parimutuel "Pick 4" game,
sales totaled $178,312. Holders of
winning tickets are entitled to 45
percent of the ttake, or $8],261. A
winning $1 straight ticket earns
$2,2!0. A winning $1 boxed ticket
earns$95.

'

I

I
I

·

Weather
Tonight, mostly clear. Low in the
low :lls. Thursday. partly cloudy.
High in the low 50s. The chance of
precipitation Is near zero tonight
and~ percent Thursday.
Olilo Extendtd Forecasl
Friday through SUnday:
Chance of rain each day. Highs in
the mid-405 to mld·50s. Overnight
lows mostly In the :ns.

~·~+00

l

•

\

SPECIAl OF THE WEEK
11 PC. SHRIMP

t

Sle44

t

~

WITH FliES.....$ 1.94

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

"At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
POMEROY, OH.
.
PH.H2-2556

0 ...... ____. +00

PLEASE, DON'T LET
NAMES BE DECEIVING
The Farmers aa·
. nk and~'-~avings Company of Pomeroy
(S A COMMERCIAL BANK
FULLY INSURED BY THE
FDIC
.

·

those Involved In the matter and 10 determine If the
department has just cause to strike. If workers do
strike the union ·will then send In a mediator
'
·
o!,IDberts wa~ as~~ by ~~bl~ntz_to,:O~~a~!
~
....,,fn, a represen.au•e'fo, "'""'n"r~ar1 r ""era non
of State County and Municipal Employees
•
(AFSCME), "Then we'D go from \)Jere," Koblentz
sa aid
·
Koblentz said he was not ratlfyin~ the contract

·
·
,
ause he feels the increased pay raises the contract
-.yould mean a total $262,(8) budget increase for the
. ·
would
have
allowed
thirty-five
highway
department
'highway
department
over
the
three
year
period.
1
•
·
emp
lf the three n.on-union emplo,·ees
at the highway
K oyees are "excessive",
J
oble.ntz · also noted he dlt:ln't feel he could
give his
department are also ...
mven the same benefits as the
·
·· Okay--tor the highway department raises when he
union employees, which has been the usual rustom lh
Ca!l't give other coun_ty employees the same. Says
the past, the total three-year budget increase would
• K()bJf"l~·~a t~ my_pmlll!:m,.J10t,J!!e!J;'£.~~""• ' ..--be ~.5!!~. -·"-·=" ,., . . -=~ ~~......&lt; .. --·-,·-··....,~"-··· "'"0·
lfiey Iii right.
The county highway department Is funded out of the
Roush agreed with Koblentz and added that
state's auto license and gasoline tax and not out of
according to a recent report In "The Daily Sentinel,"
county general fund money. Courthouse, sheriff's
1
average year Y wages In Meigs County rose 4.3
department and county in!ii-mary employees are
...!:"'!~JIL "-:rlle ll!P~~JUghwa¥--2epar:tment
pal!&gt;! kom ~roperty tax revenue in the ~eneral fund .
contract would provide an average yearly Increase of
It Is the understanding of Koblentz and Roush that
9 """" ·
t
rd'
Ro h
""
·""""' percen acco mg to
us , or a •• percent
based upon county population increase, tax structure,
increase over the three years
and other pertinent information. wages for Meigs
Th
t t lied f
bo. ba
·
e con rae ca
or an a ve se pay mcrease
County's highway department are comparable with
of $.60 for !9R'i; $1.20 for 1986; and
for 1987. This
those of surrounding counties.

&amp;:'fY ...

sun

Planning program·under study . . .~~
Meigs County Commlsslonersare
now considering a planning program proposal for the county which
has bl'en submitted by .the Gallia- Meigs Community Action Agency.
lf accepted by the hoard, C.AA
would receive the $20,000 that has
bl'en earmarked this year by the
commissioners for a county
-plaiiner,"A· deiaUed deScription
the pr_opos;ll was ,reported _on In
Wednesday's commissioner' s
meeting by Commissioner Richard
Jones:
According to Information from
CA.A., the proposal Is for a
partnership to accomplish a common goal, rather than a grant
proposal. C.A.A. feels It can assist In
both eronomlc and' community
development projects in Meigs
County by utUizlng resources,
programs and activities already in
place In the county.

or

MAYBE NOW:
E'LLTAKE
SNEAKERS OFE

both national security and thec;~use
of world peace.
"The power of the presidency Is
amazing,'' said Sen. Dale Bumpers,
D-Ark., an MX opponent.

·

Wednesday to act on the proposed contract
agreement
·
When the motion to ratify the contract was brought
t0
a ro Uca II voIe, on IY cor:rmIss'oner Rlc hard J ones

court

Senate okays MX spending

bee

:. ··-" ...ll'l!~S!!!l~!!'t~.llilrg@f!l!l)gJ;r,ys,.mlll!!:i!UOMt.l!!~~=- !~l-!t~.:c!!.-:g-oo:r.m!Gsiollo{~M~if.&gt;l?ruuly1v..-,,;,i-w;&lt;i• ,

.
Admitted

LeOna t:rarltr.
· ~~~

·2 Section I. 16 Paget
26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 21. 1986

"' "'·

WH.. •· .. ~
JtL .,K
vq
1.£ Olll l•tr
pI I•1 v
.

VoL34; No.240
Copyrighted 1 986

The planning program would
missioners to give some thought to
determined .
require a total budget of $100,656 future expansion of Meigs IndusRumors about the bridge's closwith CM contributing $81,656 and
trles which now provides work for38 ing this summer haveranged from a ,
the county commissioners S"..U,OOO. · Indivlduais. Wedemeyer feels 't!}at . weeli to'tnreemonthS. .
..
H accepted, the program Is to be in the next year or so. expansion of
Roberts also reported that a
completely staffed by ' 'Meigs
some kind will be necessary.
slippage on County Rd. 3 (Depot St. )
Countlans.
Wedemeyer also suggested that in Rutland Township has heen
Lee Wedemeyer, superintendent commlssloner~conslder~veloplng repaired by the Ohio Bridge
oL 9,~rle,tor Sch.ool ~ and lyfelg~, J!, ~~d~qtla! • .f~c!)lty .• fo~;, . M!!!g~ ., . Coowwy.,ata.".f!~Pox~"!13tc =:of
Industries, was present at Wednes- County's. mentally handicapped $6500.
day's commissioner's meeting to who. no longer have parelits or
Ted- Warner, · county highway
bring the commissioners up to date family members to care for them.
department crew supervisor.
on current union activity at the
·
Bridge report
warned the board that complaints
facility.
According to Phil Roberts, Meigs about dust might be forthcoming
He explained that the Ohio County engineer, the Ohio Depart- from residents along some county
Education Association (OES) has
ment of· Transportation Is still not roads. Warner ellplalned that the
petitioned state and local labor sure If the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge · department Is preparing for an
boards for recognition as a union will have to be closed any time this "invert seal" in front of some
bargaining agent for the Carleton- . summerwhllerepalrtothebrldgels ~ouses . The invert seal process
Meigs Industries employees.
made. It Is Robert's understanding reqUires that the road be ripped up
The Mental Retardation Board that some type of epoxy overlay Is'· and turned over before the $65
has filed a counter petition for a
needed !&gt;f1 the bridge's deck, but percent asphalt base Is applied.
SECret ballot vote on unionization.
whether or not the work can be done Dustv conditions will onlv be
(Continued on page 12)
. -.Wedemeyer also asked the 'rom- one lane at a time has not yet been

Customer lines fonn for ·S &amp;L reopenings
William D, Connelly. Savings One

Chapman ·Shoes

opened for the first full day of , day afternoon;• and Columbia Sav'business today after a state- ings and Loan In Cincinnati had
Imposed shutdown, but officials of
reopened Monday,
the opened institutions expressed
Thrifts opened for limited service
confidence they could meet custo·
will allow customers to make
mers' money demands.
unlimited deposits or withdrawals
At least three of the state- of $750 or less. Thrifts that open for
chartered savings and loans closed · full service wUI allow unlimited
last week were to be open today, and
deposits and withdrawals.
most of the~ other closed ihriftsare
Outside the Century Savings
expected to reopen for limited
office in Cincinnati, a Une of
depositors formed before the doors
service by Frtday.
Century Savings, with offices in were set to open at 10 a.m. But
reporters and photographers outColumbus, Newark, Toledo and
Cinclnna t1 was open .tor full service
numbered customers.
"I need the m0ney, but I'm only
today, said Century vice president

to takeout a
fli'Sfffi lliie
insurance.''
Another woman In line, Mary
Sparks, said she Intended to make a
partial withdrawal.
"I need it for the IRS," shesa!il. "I
have to pay $5,750, but I'm going to
leave the rest in."
Century Savings President Robert Mizer said his firm would
reopen because It Is a subsidiary of
State Savings Bank, which is
federally insured. He said there had
bl'en no run by depositors before last
Friday's closing order.
"Wewereverycalmhere. We had
a few j:Jeopletakemoney out, but we

the early'"""" a•"u
closed before."
At the Savings One office in
Mansfield, about 60 people were in
Next To Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Une when the thrift reopened for
limited service at 9 a.m . today.
BUI Matthews, treasurer of SavByOVPStatfreports
free of charge, Butler said. Any
Approximately l53,(XX) gallons of
damaged equipment may be relngs One, estimated the Mansfield
'
branch handled "several hundred"
liqulfled petroleum gas or propane,
placed by the company, but will be
customers Wednesday when It
that has been contaminated with
considered "on a case-by-case
opened from 20:l0 untO about 7 p.m.
hydrogen sulfide gas, hilS been
basis."
He said most customers were
shipped by ·Ashland Oil, Inc. , ·to
The contaminat e d propa·ne
making withdrawals, bur that one· distributors in a four state areashould present no problems !f
customer in Dresden made a$15,000
Including GaUipolls, Pomeroy and
burned in a properly vented, closed
deposit ,
Rutland.
system. Butler added. The fuel Is
Thomas Batiies, state superlnAshland has started recalling the
stored and shipped under pressure
tendent of savings and loans, said
gasfromfivedlstrlbutol'l\. including
in special containers which keep the
the Federal Reserve In Cleveland
Buckeye Gas in Gallipolis and
gas iiquified and is delivered to and
had agreed to make Its discount
Pomeroy, and Rutland Bottled Gas
stored by consumers In similar
containers, Butler continued.
window available to those lnstitu- 1n Rutland and The Plains. The
Uons that open, providing them with
company Is urging customers not to
Bill Seacrlst. president ofSeacrist
WASHINGTON (AP) - The · worries of an Impending recession.
Imports slowed during the final a' source·ofcash If neeiiffl.- -- ·· use gas bought between March ll
Fuels Co., In St. Albans. W.Va .. said
three months of 1004, the country
"One of the things we're con- and March 20, according to spokes·
his company expected no problems.
economy Is growing at a surprls· Those fears were eased when
lngly sluggish rate of 2.1 percent so growth rebounded In the final three
posted Its worst merchandise trade cerned about Is that they have
man James Butler.
"All It'll do Is it smells awfully bad,
. Now's your
to get a jump on outdoor
'
far this year, down sharply from the months of last year.
deficit in history ..- a $123.3 billion adequate liquidity tomeet. .. someof
According to the Chemical Manu- more badly than usual," he said.
Summer living! Find patio and lawn
USE OUR COIIVEIIIENT
pace set In 1984, the government
Today's report, however, revised
Imbalance.
the fearful depositors that they
facturers Association, hydrogen
The propane. Butler said, was
furniture
gro1.1pings
at
cool
estimated today.
the extent of that rebound from an
The report also projected that might encounter on their first days.
sulfide, fnapurestate,ishlghly toxic
shipped in 17 truckloads. each
LAY·AWAY
earlierreported4.9percentratetoa
business Investment In plant and That'soneofourprlmaryconslder- to humans. However, when mixed
carrying 9,(00 gallons of the fuel.
The Commerce Department put
values ... like these!
growth In the gross national product
slightly smaller 4.3 percent pace.
Inventories and residential constru- allons," he said.
with propane, the chemical is much
from Ashland's Catlettsburg. Ky.,
- the broadest measure of ecoThe Commerce Department's elton will show little Improvement
Connelly said he has already
less hazardous.
plant between March 11 and March
"flash" estimate of growth Is made ·during the first three months of the obtained vault cash from Fifth
"Consumers," Butler said,
18.
nomic health - at Its slowest rate
Indoor or outdoor, , pool
,·' t •
slnceaweak1.6percentpaceturned
before a quarter Is over. Today's year.
11)lrd Bank, a full-service Cincln- "sbould not attempt corrective
Ashland became aware of thl'
...... ,·'
or patio .. . Parma·Wic.ker"'
In
from
July
through
September
last
report
contains
complete
data
only
nat!
conunercial
bank,
to
prepare
actions
on
their
own.
Thesecompan_
problem
following a customer's
\...;.·
offers the look of wicker
year.
for January with estimates for
for Thursday's banking day,
Jes are now in the process of . complaint Tuesday, Butler added.
plu1 dur1blit.y. High b1ked
-Inntherbad n£Ws, the report said
February·andMa.-ch. Thequa.-terly
·Gross National
- "It's more than we usually carry,
checking to determine If C!Jstomer
An investigation determined lhat a :
polyester finish resists
estlmatelssubjecttoseveralrounds
Product
because we don't lmow what~ to
tanks contain contaminated fuel."
scrubber which removes hydrogen
Inflation Is heating up.
rust end ii .d esigned to
A measure of prices tied to the of revisions later In the year.
anticipate tomorrow," Connelly
Bob Sheppard, district manager
~ulflde from the gas before it goes
withstand all weather con·
GNP- the Implicit price deflatorJump In lnfiatlon
(Flash)
said.
of the Buckeye Gas and Doxol Co. ,
Into storage had failed . The equipIs
rising
at
an
annual
rate
of
5.4
Much
of
the
deterioration
In
~--·
Savings
One
president
Masters
whlchoperateslnAthensandMelgs
ment has since bl'en replaced,
dltiona. Choose ·from an
growth stemmed from the jump In
~'I
' ; said at one time as many as 60
County, said there are40customcrs
Butler said.
percent in the still-unfinished first
i
arrey of summer colors.
quarter, the fastest clip since a 5.6
II oyd/Aanders
the,lnflatlon rate.
!;
· ~~depositors were lined up at the
usln~451anksofthedefectlve gas In
"We have a longhistoryofmaklng
Before Inflation was taken into
II ,
·
\\\
Mansfield office; but there were no
the MlnersvUle section of Meigs
quality products," Butler rx-·
percent pace In the second quarter
of 1982.
account. the economy was calcu- .
·
1 Rat GNP'\ \
problems. Masters said he ordered
Copnty.
plalned. "We . get embarrassed·
The
new
report
caught
analysts
fated
as
expanding
a
tan
annual
rate
to
truckloadS
of
cashtrom
the
Federal
·
The
fuel,
Sheppard
said,
wUI
have
when
something goes wrong."
Reg. 111.00 .................... lALE $6800
by surprise.
of 7.6 percent In the first quarter,
$1,671.2
Reserve Bank In Cleveland.
to be pumped from the tanks which
As soon as the company became
Most had been predicting the
actually up from the7.1 percent rate
Billion
"I think the governor may be
wlllberefllled.'Theprocess, nesald, aware of the problem, Butler said
Reg. 196.00 ...................SALE
economy was growing at an of the fourth quarter last year.
~
right; In the long run we may have
should take about a week. The last
officials began to Identify the
1179.00 ................................................................SALE $15200
,
annualized rate of around 4 percent
However, infiatlon, as measured
stronger banking in Ohio," Maste..S
load of defective gas was received
destination of the shipments and the.
0 10
-this y~&gt;ar, aboutthe rate they expect
by the price deflator, picked up from
said. "But It's a painful way to
on March 13, he added.
suppUers and also notified approp. ,
71
S116.00 .........................................: .... SALE $15800
. for the entire year.
2.8 percent in the flnalthree months
achieve it."
,
"At the present time," Buckeye
late federal and state authorities . •
While that pace would be below of the yepr to 5.4 percent In the
sl
Quarter
"I've
had
hundreds
of
calls
from
Gas
Products
Co.,
of
Rio
Grande
Other companies receiving the-:
1
3~SEAT
Reg.
SALE S21 QOO
the 6.8 percent growth turned in
January-March quarter. This
s....co
people assuring me that they're
spokespersonJaneGelgersald, "we
fuel include Dominion Propane In
durlngl984,1twouldstUibeahealthy dragged the growth of the infiatfonu 5 c""'"""' 0 ""'
going toleavethelrmoneywtthus,"
are cooperating tully with Ashland
Grundy, va.; Blue Flame Gas tn '
S262.00,.,..,.,,.,u.,,.,.,,.,,,.,.,,..,.,.,.,,.,_..,,.,.,,.,.,$ALE $22200
rate for the third year of an
adjusted GNP down to 2.1 percent.
., o.., ....~ 0 , N'"''~ 0 ,,.,,
said Theodore Simson, chairman of
OU tocorrectthesltuallonlnthearea
Waverly. In addition to Gallipolis
j
economlcrecovery.
Thereportalsoputblameforthe
thehoardoiFirstStateS&amp;ving5and
affected. Currently, we have no
and Pomeroy, Buckeye outlets In
Most economists believe the sluggish growth on the country's
.GNP FlASH - 'l1le G._
LoanCo.ofColumbus. "Wehave$50
further statement we can make. Portsmouth, the Keriova and Nitro.
economymustexpandatapaceofat
poor performance in foreign trade.
Nallonal Product 11Mb Iii up U
mUitonherereadytopaydeposltors
Any further questions should be
areas of West VIrginia and the:
~
least3 percent to create enough new It projected that Imports are rising
pecceul lor lhe lint quarter Ia
If we have a run."
directed to the pubUc relations Paintsville, Prestonsburg, louisa·
FREE
·
~
jooo to kl!ep unemployment falling.
sh81l11y in the first (Juarter, robbing.
18111, lhe Commerce DepariThe reopenlngs will bring a
department of Ashland OU."
and Flemingsburg areas of Ken-:
DELIVERY
-;,:;:.:_:::.,.•:::_~~=:::~'::==:::~=~4,- llt--~'";:::The lh!1 -9~er slump....,.ln. -_do
_ mestlcmanufacturersofsales. _· ---~ ~rted ~:..J..~ __gradual end to 1he.li1a.lemi!Je the... __ Ashlandwlllreplaceanyrontaml- tucky also recE'Ived the contam~
~
acfiv'itYfiS year"'liiiirorough on
EVell1hOogh the rateotgrowth1n
I "trpliiitiij.
thrifts endured for a week.
nated gas porchased by consumers nated fuel.

~~~,..~~~~.;...;;SAVINGS

contaminated gas

Economic groWth on decline

yme

....

ifJ.
··.. __, _

LOW BACK SPRING ·BASE CHAIR,
HIGH BACK SPRING BASE CHAIR,
LOUNGER, ....
[OYESEAT GLIDER, ....
GLIDER,
sua.oo .....................................................
LAWN SWING, ....

1/J

S81 oo

2

.:1

ELBERFELDS

•,

'

- ~--

•.

1

...

-

·-- ·...

- --~ - ~

.......

•

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