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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

*MEIGS MARAUDERS
*EASTERN EAGLES·
*SOUTHERN TORNADOES

Collegiate rankings

Income tax hints

story on Page 3

Series on Page 6

Marauderettes triumph

Trustees organize

story, Photo Page 4

Story on Page 10

h.e
Voi.32,No.t94

aily

vs.
Nelsonville-York-Away-Jan. 17
Vinton Co.-Home-Jan. 20
Wahama-A~y-Jan. 21

WASHINGI'ON (AP) -

QUILTING, AN AMERICAN TRADD'ION
llwlll;y Kuhl at her Flatwoods Road home near
Pomeroy works on her Dutdl Girl quit. Next to go

vs.
Kyger Creek-Home-Jan. 20
Ravenswood-Away-Jan. 24

SOUTHERN
' vs.
$outhwestern-Home-Jan. 20
Kyger Creek-Away...:...Jan. 27

TORNADO SCHEDULE
Jan. 20, Souhwestern .................. Home
Jan . 27 ........................ at Kyger Creek
Jan. 28, Wahama ........................ Home
Feb. 3 ........................ .. ....... at Eastern·
Feb. 4 .................. .... at Ceredo-Kenova
Feb. 10, North Grtlla .................. Home
Feb. 11, Huntington St. Joe ......... Home
Feb. 14.. .......................at Ravenswood
Feb. 17, Hannan Trace ............... Home
HEAD COACH - CARL WOLFE
RESERVE COACH-HOWIE CALDWELL

EASTERN SCHEDULE
Jan. 20 Kyger Creek ................... Home
Jan. 24, Ravenswood ........... ....... Away
Jan. 27, Hannan Trace ............... Home
Jan. 31, Fort Frye, Away ........... Away
Feb. 3, Southern ............ ............. Home
Feb. 10, Southwestern ................ Away
Feb. 11, Fort Frye ....... .. .. ...... ..... Home
Feb. 14, Waterford ......... ............ Away
Feb. 17, North Gallla .................. Away.
HEAD COACH-DENNIS EICHINGER
RESERVE COACH-DON EICHINGER

'

IIIIo her frame wll be a replica of the &lt;AiwUy J..anes
quit wNcb WOII her a llaaiJit poellloa In the 8te&amp;ml
and FOI!Ier Mnunfaln Mist Con'e8t.

Quilt maker not discouraged
;..

EASTERN RESULTS

REp.

Clarence Miller's office, which is
lighting to prevent shutdown of the
Sunnyhlll coal mJne in southeast
Ohio, has welcomed the federal

EASTERN

Federal Hocking 56 Eastern 48
Kyger Creek 44 Eastern 42
Hannan Trace 49 Eastern 39
Southern 64 Eastern 37
Waterford 44 Eastern 34
Federal Hocking 56 Eastern 37
Eastern 61 Wtrt Co. 49
Wahama 68 Eastern 40
Southwestern 5! Eastern 44
WON 1-,- l.OST8

1 Section, 10 Pages
20 C.nh
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Miller welcomes
•
EPA probe ID
Perry County

MEIGS

SOUTHERN RESULTS

enttne

Pomeroy-Middlejlort, Ohio, Tuesday, January 17, 1984

Copy•ightod t914

Southern 50 Gallipolis 47
Southern 49 Southwestern 3li
Southern 58 Kyger Creek 45
Southern 64 Eastern 37
Southern TI Miller 57
Southern 68 Loean 57
Southern 62 Ross Southeastern 57
Southern 62 Wahama 53
Southern 81 North Gal)la 51
WON9- LOSTO

•

MEIGS RESULTS

Meigs 62 Federal Hocking 5~
Meigs 49 Miller 33
Nelsonville York 54 Meigs 48
VInton Co. Meigs 51
Trimble 70 Meigs 69 (OT)
Belpre 64 Meigs 61 (OT)
Alexander 69 Meigs 66
Worren 55 Meigs 54
Meigs 73 Wellston 53
WON 3.- LOST 6

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH

.

se.a~

ll&amp;aff
Quilting has been a hobby wtth Bunny Kuhl lor
many yeats, but It wasn'tuntU last spring alter seeing
an advertisement about the SleaJliS and Foster Co.'s
Mountain Mist quilt contest that she decided to get
into competition.
The first prize was a luxury Calibbean cruise for
two and $1,00&gt;, and there were six other cash and gift
awards. Quite an enticement for Mrs. Kuhl!
Worlananshlp, design, and color coordination were
listed as the judging criteria. Mrs. Kuhn selected a
patchwork pattern, "Country Lanes", and created It
in lvocy, beige and brown.
As the Instructions specltled, she prewashed all of
the cotton materials which went into the quilt. She
was careful and consistent in the suggested eight
stitches to an inch . In early October, she shipped her
quilt off to Cincinnati where It was judged along with
hundreds of others from across the country.
Mrs. Kuhl's "Country Lanes" was selected as a
flnaUst, one of the top 200 in tl)e competition, and was
shipped off to Houston, Texas lor the 1983 Quilt
Market held at the end of October.

There the seven top winners were chosen by a panel
of nationally known quilting authorities and they
became a part of the Steams and Foster's permanent
collection.
Mrs. Kuhl's quDt was not one of the top seven prize
winners, and she'll really never know where It placed
in the competition, although she was told that It was
displayed on the bottom row, a section reserved for
the most outstanding quilts.
But as things wlll happen sometimes, Mrs. Kuhl's
quDt was "lost" as the 1983 QuDt Market was being
dismantled. It was well insured so Mrs. Kuhl feels no
financial loss. She lmows that these things happen
sometimes. And she's not discouraged. Already she's
looking forward to the 1984 contest.
As for now, she's spending time getting together
materials to create another quilt like the lost one.
Meanwhile, she's finishing her 'latest quilt, a colorful
Dutch girl.

.

Mrs. Kuhl says It takes her four to six weeks to
complete a quilt and that her favorite time to sit at the
wooden frame Is the early daylight hours. Most of the
quDts she makes are given· as family gifts.

environmental regulations and provides for the EPA to Issue reports in
such cases.
Straw said Mlller, ROhlo, approached Dtngell about the problem
and then sent his own letter to the
EPA.

Environmental Protection Agency
into the tray.
, AnEPAof!lclalsaldMondaythat
the agency plahs to Investigate the
"My indication is that we'regoing
threatened shutdown of the mine,
todothisstudy,andwe'reprepartng
where Sal Jobs are at stake.
to do It," Kee said in a telephone
"We want U.S. EPA in this," said interview from Chicago.
MllleraldePhUStraw."Idon'tknow
The EPA report will "lay out as
exactly what It will lead to. (But) we best we can what is going to happen
want the peace of mind of having here and what thereasonsare," Kee
them along with us."
said. He said, however, the section of
Air pollution regulations in Michl· . the Clean Air Act in question "does
gan have resulted In Sunnyhlll's not provide EPA with any tools to
biggest customer deciding to tennl· change or to make things happen
nate Its contract with the mine differently."
sometime this year.
Last November, a ruJtng by the
David Kee, dlrector of air Michigan Air Pollution Control
management inEPAReglonV,sald Commission resulted in a Michigan
the agency received a letter several utlllty' s decision to end Its contract
weeks ago from Rep. Jolm Dingell, with SUIUiyhlll sometime in 1984.
I&gt;-Mich., asking tbe EPA to invest!· Sunnyhlll, located in Moxahala,
gate the Sunnyhlll case as It relates Ohio,inPenyCounty,shipsabout90
to the Clean Air Act. The provision percent of Its 1.5 mllilon tons of
deals wtthjoblossesstemmingfrom relatively high-sulfur coal to the

utlllty annually.
Off!claJs at the Peabody Coal Co.,
which supplies the coal to Consumers Power, have said their options
Include persuading ·the utility to
reapply to the pollution commission,
finding another market for Sunnyhlll coal, suspending operations at
the mine or closing the mine
permanently.

Sunnyhlll Is Peny County's
employer, wtth 420 cilrrent
workers. A total of 100 workers were
laid off in December following
technical problems at a Conswners .
Power facUlty.
Peny county leaders estimate
that the mine's shutdown could cost
the state and localltles as much as
$56.7 mllllon in lost income and in
payments for unemployment compensation. On Dec. 28, Gov. Richard
Celeste met with about 30 Peny
County leaders to discuss ways to
keep the mine operating.
Kee said he will probably assign
twoorthreeworkerstotheSunnyhlll
case and that he expects the report
to be completed In several months.
largest

.
Governor's ac1.d rain
solution forthcoming
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - In
what Is expected to be an abrupt
departure from the policy of his
prede&lt;:essor, Gov. Richard Ceieste
is to spell out inseparateforums this
week his views on how to deal with
acid rain.
Celeste views the solution as
national in scopewlthOhioandother
industrial states bearing part- but

not all - of the responsibility for
cleanup.
According to some scientists, the
chief problem Is that Ohio coal has a
high sulfur content.
They say acid rain is fonned when
sulfur dioxide emissions from
smokestacks combine with mois·
ture and fall to the ground as rain or
snow. Some scientists say airborne

emissions are carried long dist:.n·
ces and damage plant and acquatlc
life in the eastern U.S. and Canada.
In an inteiVIew published today
by the Columbus Cltlzen.Journal,
Celeste is quoted as saying Ohio
must take some action or be the
target of a national movement.
"If Ohio does nothing, wewillseea
solution Jammed down our throats,"
he said.

Wooster firm will oversee ·waterline
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel ll&amp;aff
Engineering Associates Ltd.,
Wooster, was hired by Pomeroy
Council Monday night to oversee the
waterllrie replacement project
within the vDiage which will begin
this spring.
Council authorized Mayor Ri·
chard Seyler to sign a contract with
Engineering Associates as soon as
the agreement Is approved by the
village solicitor. Doug Little.
Councll plans to replace water
lines and extend the sewage system
in the Kerrs Run area and replace
waterlines begl'hl"ing at the Kroger
Store and move towart! the .main
part of town. Plans involve doing a
block at a time and going as far as
HUD will allow.
Council must use a $70,00&gt;

MARAUDER SCHEDULE
Jan. 17, Nelsonville-York ... ·......... Away
Jan: 20 VInton ............................ Home
Jan. 21, Wahama ............. ........... Away
Jan. 24, Trlmble ......................... Home
Jan. 27, Belpre ........................... Away
Jan. 31, Alexander ................... .. Home
Feb. 3, Warren.:. .. ·c·.: ............ .. ...... Away
Feb. 10, Wellston ......................... Home
Feb. 11, Wahama ....................... Home
HEAD COACH - GREG DRUMMER
RESERVE COACH - MICK CHILDS

Appalachian Regional Commission
grant for water line and sewage
extension in the Kerrs Run i)rea.
Baddloe stalus
Jolm Anderson explained the
status of a backhoe. He said the
village owned backhoe's motor was
damaged as a result of the wrong
size radiator being used.
Anderson stated that to repair the
backhoe would cost $5,574. On a
trade in for a used Case !illl council
would be allowed $7,500 leaving a
balance of $1.2,00&gt;.
A new Case 5!ll costs $55,00&gt;
Anderson reported.
Council, at the present time, has
on loan a backhoe belonging to
Southeastern Equipment Com·
pany. The backhoe being used is the
one the company said the village
could have on a trade in for $12,00&gt;.

Council agreed to trade in the old . glvenltsapprovaltousetheparking
backhoe on the used backhoe It Is area behlod the junior high ooDding
using providing the company made for a parking area for employes of
the necessary repairs to the one the Meigs County Board of
Education.
councll will receive.
Wehrung suggeSted that the
In other oolsness, council apare&lt;~ be checked to make
parking
proved a temponuy appropriation
sure
It
Is
in good condition.
for the general fund totaling $10,00&gt;.
Weehrung
also suggested that
It was announced that a meeting
will be held this evening at the office council meet with the Board of
of Dr. James Conde at 7 p.m. Public Affairs with Mayor Richard
concerning the proposed construe· Seyler setting the date and time of
tlon of new county recreation the meeting. \...)
Bruce Reed brought up what
faclllty. All council members are
council
must pay into the Public
urged to attend.
Retirement System for
Employes
Wehrung reported that the street
Fred
Crow,
who served, as village
committee held a meeting and the
street department is asking for a · solicitor for 39 years.
1
Reed said the amount due Is
pay increase. Wehrung did not
$5,301.75. Crow had sent a check to
elaborate any further, hoWever.
Wehrung commented that the PERS but the check had been
Meigs Local Board ofEducatlon has returned since the village Is

reswnslble for payment. The vii·
lage share is $1,115.41 plus interest in
the amount of $7!18.65.
It was noted that Crow intends to
reimburse the village for-the total
amount. Council tabled the matter
for further studv.
Henry WerrY suggested that a no
parking sign be placed on Mulbeny
Ave., near Breezy Heights since
parked cars block the view of
drivers coming of! Breezy Heights.
Mayor Seyler suggested council
take things a step at a time. The
Mayor noted there are things that
need to be looked into and suggested
that one problem besolvedata time.
BUI Young reported the county
board of education has moved into
Its new quaners on the second floor
of the city buDding.
Following inspection of the new

quarters there were only two
problem areas - one was a third
ground wire was needed on the
electrical system and the furnace
was not working properly.
Young also suggested that a
five-year lease be drawn up.
Betty Baronlck suggested that the
stop sign at the intersection of
Highland Church Rllad and Mul·
beny Ave., be changed to a yield
sign.
Anderson felt that the stop sign
should remain with possibly an
advance sign placed warning driv·
ers that a stop sign was ahead.
Anderson also suggested that the
speed llmlt in the area be enforced.
He also said that In his opinion the
stop sign was poorly located in that It
was too high and the sign was bent.
1ContinuC'd on pagp 101

G-J-M 648 board okays belt-tightening budget
By KEVIN KElLY
- OVPII&amp;alf
GAIJ'..lPOLIS -A cale11dar y~&amp;l'
'budll'1t-reflectlrig lost revenues and
belt-~tenlng waa approved MOn;

. I

claybytheGalllaJackson;Melgs~

'

Mental Health Board.
Before approving the
ievenue aild expenditure estimate;
the,boird adopted tour recommel)·
datlons trorn Its llnpce commlttee
calling tor addltlollal cuts by June, a
move trorn !be board's present
'

prepared

•

..

:~.

'

~

·,

--

'I
'

.

---·· ....•

-

~

.

buDding on Jackson Pike and board director, explained to board
cancellation of leases on a 'car and members that the budget was
equipment.
prepared under several aSSUIRP'
TOtal estimated experlses antlcl· tlons, chiefly thelossof$24,~trom
paled by tbe bud&amp;etfor this year are · the operating levy in Meigs County,
$2.2'18,~ From that amount,
which Its county commissioners
'$1'/0,Iro lias beell iilllte4 tor board chose not to appropriate in 1983.
&lt;JilerlltlOns, and based on a recom·
A change has also. been noted in
mendailon .from Gallla CoUnty funding, partlC\!larly the reduction
board
Warren F. Sheets, of Communlty·Development Block
tbeboardwillfevlewthatamountin Grant ·money. That loss was also
July to eut the appropriation to figured In~ the budget, which Is
$150,00&gt;.
.. oown trorn the July 1983 proposed
Dr. Richard E. Hun\ef', ac!lna totalaf$2,594,7!Kl.

member

The $170,00&gt; appropriated for
board operations this year is down
from the $287,00&gt; proposal of last
July, Hunter noted.
"I really don't think It could
hamper a new executive director,"
he explained. "You can amend this
at any time In the year, but we do
need a budget with which to
operate.''
Hunter reported that $2H,ll5.50
was transferred from Meigs to
GalllaCountyalterJan.l.Themove
was mandated by a ,September ·

board resolution to rotate Its funds to
the three counties It serves.
In'examlnlng the budget proposal, the Rev. Frank Hayes, another
board member from Gallla County,
reported that the board finance
committee hadmaderecommenda·
tions to Cill costs.
The committee suggested that a
moving notice be sent totheownerof
the building the board lias been
leasing. That lease expires June ll.
A lease on a car used by board slaff
en&lt;binFebruaryandthecommittee

recommended that the lease be
cancelled and the car returned.
Another $14,00&gt; could be saved,
Hayes said, If yase on an ffiM
displa~te!'Was discontinued.
..All".of those recommendations
'were accepted by the board and
incorporated Into the budget resolU·
Uon, which passed unanimously.
Board members Ralph McCor·
mlck, James M0\1111lng, Jolm Rice .
and Dr. Edward Berklch were
absent.
(Continued on page 101

�..

•

The Daily Senti

Comment
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

DEVOO'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AR&amp;\

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Manacer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Preaa Asaocla·
lion and the Amerlc1111 Newspaper Publisher Associuioa.
'
LETrEKS OF OPINION are welcomed. Tboy llboalcl he 1-tllu M w luaa. AU letters are tubject &amp;o ed.lta.&amp;aad mut be 1lped wUII aame, ..drs1 ud
teleplloae a umber. No Wlllped I etten wW be pubU.IIed.. Letters IIMtlld be ..
(Ood taste, addressln&amp;IIISUel, aot penoaalltlel.

Mysterious
retail sales
There has been a stunning and mysterious development In economic
affairs that has a lot of people wondering just what to beUeve.
Christmas sales, it now appears, weren 'I anything outstanding after all,
measuring about 0.1 percent higher than In November, after seasonal
adjustment.
This assessment, which comes from the U.S. Department of Commerce,
seems to defy the evidence .. Masses of shoppers seemed to have thronged
the stores, for example, and the storeowners themselves reported that
sales were up.
. .. , __
Storeowners have been known to say such things In the past, the purpose
being to develop a sense of enthusiasm among shoppers. 1be shoppers
could have been just window shopping.
But the newspapers, 1V and radio repo~ also said sales were up.
So did "the experts," the economic analysts and forecasters who tell the
world what the facts are, as opposed to the erroneous notloi\S people might
tend to beUeve on their own.
~
For the experts to be told they were wrong Is a source of continued
embarassment, sine\' hundreds of them are now on record with forecasts
based on what they thought was a surge In Christmas sales.
"'lbe best Christmas season In recent memory, " said Morgan Guaranty
In a statement typical of the genre. "Consumers have traded In 1982's
somber mood for a more confident attitude," said Wright Investors'
Service.
The reasons, they suggested, were clear: People were getting their jObs
back and Improving their real - as opposed to Inflated - Incomes. They
had access to credit. They felt confident about the Immediate future.
So what happened? Some pa;slble explanations can be pondered:
-1be government figures are incorrect.
It wouldn't be the first time. The November sales gain over October, for
example, was revised to 1.1 percent from the originally reported figure of
1.9 percent. It Is possible that December's gain might be revised higher.
-1be private-sector economists were wrong. It wouldn't be the first
time for them, either. Could they have become entrapped In their own
sense of expectancy, by their own theories about what Christmas should
bring?
-Icy conditions In many areas could have cut Into record-high sales.
But how can retailers report much higher sales and the Commerce
Department miss them? Could strong sales at nationally known stcires
been offset by weak sales in smaller stores?
_
·
Perhaps the answer Is beyond the expertise of economists, retailers and
government economists. Maybe. But If yoo polled economists today yoo
can bet that many of them would say that the whole thing wUI be explained
In about a month - when the government's retaU'sales figures for January
will be announced.

Letter to the editor ·
King Herods of the Court
In Matthew's Gospel 2: 15 It says
"King Herod was furious when he
realized that he had been outwitted
by the wise men, and In Bethlehem
and Its surrounding district he had
all the male chUdren killed who
were two years old or Y,ounger."
Today the King Herods of the U.S.
SUpreme Court have decreed that
aU unwanted, unborn babies must
dle! Planned Parenthood, which Is
the number one abortion promoter
In the world, kUls over ~.000
Innocent preborn babies each year
In the U.S. alone.
There have been 11 years of
Holocaust, that makes Hitler's and
Stalin's murderous rampage seem
small In compartson. Over 16~
mllUon babies slaughtered since the
January 22. 1973 Infamous decision
by our U.S. Supreme Court.

In December 1983 our Congress
defeated another pro-Ufe blli and It
was hoped by many that now, at
last, 'the pro-life movement was
dead.
Despite the blanket of silence that
Is thrown over the movement by
television and press, the people are
rallying In ever growing numbers.
Every major city In the U.S. wUI
have Its silent marchers. The hugh
March for Life that has been staged
for 11 years In Washington, D.C.,
despite aU kinds of weather, Is
growing bigger each_year.
The polls Indicate that abortion Is
a detestable crime to most people
and the grassroots swell Is Increas·
lng to pass an amendmentto stop II.
Loretta WUUams
Patriot Star Route

Coming ·u p: Jan. ·29_.--'----w-'--u_lia...,...;..m_F._.B_uc_kl_ey_J.--r.
The other day on television, The
New York Thnes' Tom Wicker, a
poUtlcal observer who takes hlm·
self very seriously, was asked the
routine question, '.'Is Reagan golllg
to run again?" The normal answer
to this Is: I expect so. All the
Indications are that he llttends to.
· The kind of thing that prevents
presidents_ from running for a
second term does not appear on the
Reagan horizon, so that to the
extent one can predict other
people's Intentions put It down as,
Yes.
Well, Mr. Wicker decUned to do
the sate thing. What he said was
that up untll quite recently he'd
have ·guessed there wasn't any
doubt what Mr.,Reagan Intended to
do. "But now I'm not so sure." He
thought -that Reagan had gone
beyond mere theater In putting off
his announcement. He believes It Is
altogether possible that on Jan. 29,
the date designated for his pubUc
announcement, the presldef!l wUI

say that he does not Intend IO'nm.
The conversation was overheard
by a Reagan.watcher who contributed an analysis that comes from
close to the White House scene,
whUe conceding that many of the
announcements that come from
close to the White House scene
con!Uct wltb one another.
According to this, Reagan decided awhile ago that he would not
run for a second term. He reasoned
that the country was In pretty good
shape, that the reinforced miUtary,
together with tough stands !liken In
Central America, the Middle East
and the Caribbean, had rehablll·
tated substantially American prestige; that the trend toward ecorlbmlc reform domestically Is about
as much as one president, facing In
so many respects a hostlle Con·
gress, can be expected to do; and
that, under the clrcwnstances, It
makes sense, at hls-ag'e, to retire
and let others take on the fight.
But this report Is more compU·

---

cated. He goes on to say that In 1968, Gov. Ronald Reaaan of
although Reagan's very closest CaUfornla declared hls candidacy.
advisers have suspected that this Richard Nixon had Miami pretty
decision has been reached, they well sewed up, and the' oetentlble
have also planned to means of opposition came from Nelson RAlck·
coping with 11. What they wUI say Is efeUer. 1be nation's moet proml·
that the general disorganization at nent conservatives, having Inferred
the second level of Republican ,. that Reagan would not run for
leadershlll Is not something that president so soon after achieving
would mend In a couple of political office, had already pledged
primaries, that the result of the their supporl to Nixon ..
pubUc struggle between Bush,
Accordingly, there were those of
Dole, Baker and perhaps Kemp us who were surp~ at Reagan's
would leave the party In consldera· sudden announcement, which apble dishevelment. Moreover - so peared to l!lliJr.e so Utile sense. The
the analysis continues - no one of day after the convention concluded
these gentlemen has the power to I wrote In this column that one could
communicate with theenttreAmer· not understand t)Je public Reagan
lean community as Reagan has without taking Into account the
that power; and that, under the private Reagan. Reagan ran, I
circumstances, he must sacrlflce speculated, because so many peohis Intentions for the good of the ple had Invested so much energy
country and of party. A very old Into his candidacy - people who
tine, but one that does work on
were Initially aroused to block
certain people.
•
Rockefeller In the event Nixon
A remlnlscence. Only a few days stumbled.
before the RepubUcan Convention
But poUtlcal fever had taken
over, and there they were with their
own candidate. They approached
Reagan and said, In effect: "Ron·
nle, you've got to run. You can't let
all these people down." And so, he
dld - I speculated - even whUe
knowing that no political point of
any consequence was being served
by his doing so. He reached me by
telephone the day after the column
appeared, and tQ!d me that I had
relied the facts of his candidacy
exactly.

SAVINGS

FROM YOUR SUNDRY STORE!

6\G
64 ot.

f\ll\. 10UC"
.

there.
Jordan: As I first reported,
Weinberger planned to help the
Jordanians form their own rapid
deployment force to pollee the area.
After the publicity, ho~eyer. Congress refused to put up t &gt;! money.
Kenya: U.S. forces wlll be
allowed access to the air and naval
facllltles at Mombasa on the Indian
Ocean. "In return," Weinberger
noted In one secret report. "we have
agreed to upgrade the airfield to
support operations by maritime
patrol and fleet support aircraft,
and to dredge the harbor chimnel to
provide access . for our aircraft
carriers.'' He authorized $75 million
through 1985 for this work.
Pakistan: President Zla ui·Haq
has promised to allow U.S. planes to
use airfields In Pakistan should
Soviet bombers threaten the Persian Gulf from Afghanistan. He has
also agreed to let American
weapons be sent to Afghan rebels
through Zla's special forces. In
return, the United States Is already
giving pakistan $3.2 bUUon In ald
over five years, providing special
lntelllgence Information to Zla and
training presidential bodyguards.
Bahrain: This tiny Island In the
Persian Gulf has agreed to conduct

W ~teh the
Forget George Orwell In 1984, and
keep your eye on the computer.

mine-sweeping operations In return
for U.S. ald -ln developing Its alr
defenses - Including S200 million
worth of surface-to-air missiles.
Diego Garcia: This Britishowned flyspeck In the Indian Ocean
Is the principal air and naval base
for U.S. forces In the region, and
Weinberger has allotted $575 mll·
lion for rent and construction
lmprove!Tk!nts, Including airfield
expansion and facllltles for moor·
lng Marine and ammunition ships.
Oman: Weinberger plans to
spend more than $300 million to
upgrade military bases U.S. forces
may use In an emerl\'l!ncy. Oman!
facilities would be vita) for naval
forces In the Arabian Sea and for
land-based planes and minelayers
to protect the Strait of Hormuz.
Saudi Arabia: In addition to the
AWACS planes operated by U.S.
crews, the United States has Its own
supply depots at Saudi airfields.
More than $1 bUUon Is being spent to
stock enough equipment and am·
munition to sustain American
forces for 90 days of combat.
Somalia: Welnberl\'l!r needs S30
mUUon for Somalia, ~hich has
agreed to give U.S. forces access to
alr and naval bases on the Indian
Ocean and near the southern

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Wellsville has replaced East Canton as
the Class A leader while top-ranked
· Canton McKinley has a new
challenger In OassAAA this week In
The Associated Press' Ohio prep
boys basketball ratings.
Meanwhile, the three leading
teams rtrTialned' the same In Class
AA with Mansfield Malabar first,
Columbus Bexley second and Columbus Whitehall third.
Wellsville, once a state Class AA
power In the 1970s, moved In front
with a 60-58 triumph over Steubenville. It was the Tigers' ninth
straight triumph In an unbeaten
· season. East Canton, once beaten In
12games this winter, alsodefeateda
Class !i.A opponent, Magnolia Sandy
Valley, 51-44.
Wellsv!Ue had 256 points to 225 for
East Canton In balloting by a state
panel of sports writers and
broadcasters.

entrance to the Red Sea.
United Arab Emirates: Weln·
berger Is giving and selllng this
strategically placed Persian Gulf
federation surface-to-air missiles
and more than $1 billion In
sophisticated Intelligence ·
gathering equipment and elec-.
tronlc -weaponry.
Portugal: Weinberger was wUllng to pay $155 In military ald to
Improve Lajes alr base In the
Azores, a vital refueling waystation for U.S. forces en route to
the Middle East.
MONEY MANIPULATION : Mr.
Dooley observed that the Supreme
Court reads the election returns. So,
apparently, does the Federal Reserve Board.

Springfield South (12-0) became
the biggest threat to the Oass AAA
lead owned by McKinley (12-0) . The
runner-up Wildcats took advantage
of Akron Central-Hower's 66-58loss
to Cleveland St. lgnatlusto move up

Today in history

1: .

Medicare check for the past five
months.''
"Mrs. Jones Is dead."
"She's In our office kicking and
scramlng and seems to be very
much aUve."
"I'll send you a printout of her
death certificate. U that doesn't
convince her, nothing wtU."

NEW YORK (API - It was a
landslide vote for No. 1 North
CaroUna: But for Kentucky and five
other Top Ten teams In the weekly
Associated Poll college basketball
poll, II was a case of mild slippage.
The 12-0Tar 1-Jeels, who last week
knocked off a pair of Atlantic Coast
Conference rivals (No.5 Maryland
74-62 and No. 12 Wake Forest 71}62).
were rewarded wllhaU62flrst-place
votes and 1240 points . from a
nationwide panel of sports writers
and broadcasters. The point system
Is based on 20vot!)S forflrst place, l9
for second, etc.
Conference play provided several
surprises this week, yet nobody
could have been more surprised
than previously second-ranked Kentucky. The Wildcats, 12-1, were
trounced by unranked Auburn 82-63
last Friday, so they become the new
No. 3team, exchanging places with
DePaul.
The undefeated Blue Demons.

Although the Fed vehemently
denies any political motivation, a
chart kept by administration economists show that the growth of the
money supply. which Is controlled
by the Fed, undergoes an uncanny
Increase In election years. These
spurts In the money supply encourage economic growth, and In ·an
election year this can be a plus for
the party In power.

Apologia - In a recent column I

blamed G. Ray Arnett, assistant
secretary oflnterlor, for wanting to
tax non·huntlng conservation equipment to pay for the preserva lion of
wlldUfe. fie was not responsible for
the user tax rules, but was· just
following t'!e wishes of Congress,
who passed a l!Wl act Instructing
the Interior Department to find new
. revenues for wildlife conservation.

!

0) .

Middletown (11-11 was fifth In
Class AAA wllh Central-Hower
sixth, Toledo Scott seventh, Cleveland St. Joseph eighth, Cincinnati
Qak HUis ninth and Lancaster lOth.
In Oass AA. Willard was fourth.
Portsmouth fifth, Bucyrus Wynford
sixth, Dayton Oakwood seventh,
Navarre Fairless eighth, New
Concord John Glenn ninth and
Fostoria lOth.
Springfield Catholic Central was
fourth In Class A followed by
Strasburg Franklin fifth, Richmond
Dale Southeastern sixth, Mansfield

who edged St. Mary' s, Call!., but
crushed Alabama-Birmingham,
also Improved their homecourt
record to 99-3 since the late 1970s.
DePaul,ll-0, received ll60 points.
Georgetown, 13-2, which was•
upset by Big East rival VIllanova
65-63 In double overtime, and
Maryland, 11-2, each dropped two
places to Nos. 6 and 7, respectively.
The new fourth·and flflh·ranked
teams are from Texas: Houston,
now 16-2, and undefeated Texas-EI
Paso each cUmbed three notches,
respectively.
The Miners,
are
one
of four NCAA
Division14-0,
I teams
still unbeaten.
· Nevada·Las Vegas, 14-1, continued Its steady climb In the poll to
No.8, while UCI.A,l0-2, which lost to
Pac 10 rival Oregon 62-51, feUthree
places to No.9..
Rounding out the Top Ten Is
I!Unols, 12-2, which lost to Indiana In
overtime 73-68, but beat Ohio State
55-53.

NON-DENOMINATIONAL
A series of gospel servicces will be held at the Carleton .
School, Syracuse, Tuesdays and Thursdays at 7:30p.m. be-.
~inning January 17.

:
•·

•

·...•

1

"'..

0ur•Message: Jesus Christ, His life, death on Calvary
.
and resurrection

........•

Do '{ou TttiNK
ORWeLL Wa~ RiG~T?

' "' 1''

Art Runnel, Don Dorst, Kevin Tanner, Billy Brothers, Paul Melton,
Greg Rager, Chuck Pullins, Joe Parker, Coach Rusty Bookman, and
kneeling, Rlef Herman, manager.

I .

StPeter's seventh, Peebles eighth, ana all moved .' lnto the top tens for
Marla Stein Marlon ninth and ,.....th...;e...;tlrs=t...;t;:..lme=thls=..:se.:;aso=n:.;;._ _ __,
Columbiana lOth.
'
Lancaster, Fostoria, Peebles,
Marta Stein Marion and Columbl•

Prep ratings
COLUMBUS. Ohio tAP I - llow a staw
puwl uf §jD'hi wr1tm and broadC'&lt;Jstt&gt;n.
mlf'fi OhiO hJgh M'hool ~·s bas lu~ball
!Pam!&gt; thb '4'Kok lor Tiv&gt; Assorta1c'd Pn'!&gt;.."
•III !Xlintl&gt; for Orst to 1 jX)tnt for llkh1 ·

CLA.\j,._'iAM
I. Canton Mcf&lt;lnlt&gt;y. 11·0. 29!1 points.
'l. Sprlngfldd SOJth. 12-fl. ~1.
1, TokU&gt; St. Fnll\('ili. 1Hl. 00
t Bartman. 12..(), Ulfi.
5. Mlddll'fown, IH 164 .
6. Akron Cmtral·llrM·f'r, II I. 1.11
7. Toi!Xk&gt; Srolt . HJ. 100
tl. Clt&gt;wland St .l&lt;JM1&gt;h. m1. !6.
9. Clni.innatl (:.tk lUll!&gt;. 12.Q. ~
10. l..a.T1('a!iff'l. Il l. 'l7
Othl'r !idlool'i f'('("('ivin~ W or ITVf't'
points 11. Wam"n WrslN'Tl RI'K'I'W 2~

12. Elyria Ul lJ nk&gt;• . Oncinnall Ekk&gt;r
and Uma Smlor 17 L\. ClP.'f'\and Ea~t
16 Jfi, 0a)100 Dunbar 14 17. LROOnon II
IM. Canton Timkm 10
C1.A"i!oiAA
I. Manst)(&gt;ld Malabar. 11·0. 'M)
2. Columbus fk&gt;xJc.., , IJ. I. 229
J. L'olumbu!i Whi!C'hall. li 0. t1G
t Willard. Ill . 141
~. Portsmouth. 11 ·2. 137
6. &amp;.,·rus Wynford. ll·fl, \34
7, DQyloo OBkwood. II .Q. IOl
R. Navartl' Fairless. 11 ·1. ~1.
9, N&lt;"'' Concord Gk'nn. 9-1. :u.
10. Fostoria. 9.Q••12.
Olhtr tiC'hooL" l't'('('l\'lnl! 10 or mort'
points· tt'. Akron Sl. Vlncc'nt ·St. MM;.' :n
12. Lima Cmtral CatholiC' 29. L1. StrubPn · .
\' 11\(' 22. 14. Wam.&gt;n KmiV'dy 21. 15 ITIP I.
Warrm Champion and Sandusky Pr-rkins
ll 17, A..'lhlabu.la llarOOr 17. 18. Ha\'mn.a
SOJ U'IC'asf 16. 19 !!11' 1, GtwnfiC'Id McClain
and ClP.·Nand Unlwrslty 15. 21 . ('lt"('k'vlllf' L1 :!2. l.ruK"aslf'f Falrtlt'ld L'nlon 12
tl lllf' l; Bo:-lpn' and Spnn¢1C'Id Kl'fl ton
Hld$.'f' II ?I nlfot. Bloom- Carroll and
H(•ath 111
('1...\~~ .\

I. Wo:-IL"\'tllf'. 9-0. U .
1. E:alil Canton. 11 I. 22.'1.
l. VM Burm. 1J.fl. '!JR.
4. Spr1ngflc~d ('athollc rmtr..li. IH . L'M.
~. Strasbur~ Franklin. 12·1. Ill
ti. Rk'hi"'OOCC Dale• ~thro stf'rn . 9·1.
110.
7. Mon ~ fk&gt;ld St P!'trr's. 9·2. Iii
R Pf'('bk&gt;s. 11-0. ~
9. Maria Stf'ln Morlan, 9·1. !'!:!.
IU. Columbiana, 10.0. 4:.!.
Olht&gt;r schOOL-. 1'('('('1\'lnJ:: 10 ol' rnorl'
JX)lnts: II , Si'brlnR McKln\(•y 41. 12.
Gloustf'r Trlmblf' :W.. 13, Roclnf' Sruttwrn
33. 14 rlk&gt;t. O!twllll' and Old WashlnJ::ton
Bocitryt.&gt; Tr-o~ll :n 16. DrlphOs S!. John·s
2R 17, Monror\'1lk' 19. 18. McOon.:lld lj
19~t Drrlin Hiland 16. a!. Bc&gt;a\'l'!' EastC'I'n
L\. 21 Hk'l. Columbus Acadmw. Corlland
MapiC"A'ood, Br1~ and Cincinnati
AL'odmw of Physical Education 13. 2"1.
r O!itolia St . W£"rrddi''ln 11 .

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'~JeLL, iT'&amp; 1984.

from the third .spot. McKinley
earned 299 points while South had
250.
Malabar (12-0) kept a firm grlpon
the Class AA lead with 285 points, 56
ahead of second-place Bexley IlJ.l).
the defending state tournament
champion In the middle classlflcatlon. Whitehall (12-0) remained In
third with 226 points.
In Class AAA, defending state
tournarnent champion Toledo Sr:
Francis (11-0) leaped from fifth to
third place with 189 points, three
more than another former state
tournament winner. Barberton (12-

North Carolina is
nation's top team

COffipU~er_~____
Ar_tB_u_ch_wa____
ld
posed to be confidential."
"We know that but we have to
find hlin."
Okay, 1222 Harding Road, Bees·
vUie, Vlrglnla, but you don't know
wfiere you got lt."

.

Ninth win -pushes W~lisville to top

Billions for defense_______Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASHINGTON - Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger has
secretly earmarked several bUUon
dollars to secure bases for the
Rapid Deployment Force through·
out the Middle East. He has sought
- not always successfully - to
work out solid agreements with the
countries the Pentagon Is pouring
money Into, In hopes of guaranteeIng U.S. access to the naval and air
facilltles.
Welnbflrger rates the Persian
Gulf areaas the United States' No.3
defense priority, after North Amer·
lea and the NATO aUies. From
Inside sources and several secret
and top-secret docu_ments, my
associates Dale Van Alta and
Donald Goldberg have uncovered
the detanS of Weinberger's quiet
preparations for the defense of the
volatile, oU·rlch region:
Egypt: Negotiations for a threeyear construction program already
underway at a secret alr base
collapsed last spring when Egyptian President Hosnl Mubarak
refused to go along with the deatl.
The base Is Ras Banas on the Red
Sea, and the United States had ,
planned to spend more than $500
mllUon upgrading. It, even though
U.S. forces could not be stationed

------ -

.

,

BOYS EIGHTH GRADE - 'lbe Melp el~h grade team, shown
above, has a 6-2 record this year. Team membent Include standing, left
to right, Sieve CasseU, Joey S!Qtder, Scott Wllllams, Michael Bartrurn,

You must add to the human
factor of good nature the normal
temptation to stay on as the prince.
Presidents, having sought power,
tend to enjoy the exercise of It. The
fusion of White House life, and
acquiescent temperament , continues to argue the strong llkeUhood
that, on Jan. 29, the doubt will be
reased from Tom Wicker's mind.

The new computers, which are
being Installed In Washington by
the bureaucracy to save money and
make our government more effl.
clent, may chip away a little more
"Is this the Lethargic National
at our rights to privacy.
The new computers can now Bank computer?"
"talk" to each other and gather up
"Speaking."
Information from o~ computers
"This Is Hewlett-Packard, the
without the average citizen know· Soctai Security mainframe. A Mrs.
Ing anything about lt.
G.L. Carruthers has been collecting
For example, the IRS computer health benefits when she ~n't
can call up a credit bureau deserve them. Would you transfer
computer and $3Y, "Honeywell, · $1m from her bank account to
Today Is Tuesday, Jan.l7, the 17thdayofl984. Thereare349days left In
can you give rrte some Idea on how . ours?"
the year.
much money Charley OgUvy spent
"Sure, what are friendly compu·
Today's highlight In history:
last year on lunches, dinner, hotels ters for?"
·
On Jan. 17, 1884, the great comedy film producer and director Mack
and transportation?"
Sennett was born In Richmond, Canada.
"Sure, TRW, hold on a second.
"Hl, ·Sperry, what's new at
On this date:
"
Here It is, $23,1m. Is Ill! In any kind . Selective Service?" .
In 1706, Benjamin Franklin was born In &amp;ston.
· of trouble?"
"Did Frank Dolan ask for a
"He might be. Call me In a few student Joan trom your bank?"
In 18J7, Thomas Jefferson's daughter gave birth to James· Madison
Randolph, the first chUd born In the White House.
weeks and I'll let you know."
"U my memory serves me he
In 1893, HawaU was proclaimed a repubUc.
,_
•.~-· "WI!lle.I'V\! got you on 'the Une, did."
.
can you tell ~what Salh Knlshe
"Well, don't give It to him. He
Alsolnl893, the19thpresldeJU&lt;itheUnltedStates,RutherfordB.Hayes,
died In Fremont, Ohio at the age of 70, 12 years after ·Jeavtng !tflce.
flied. u 111!J·tft&amp;n111! Jlii yeiir!"He'"-Msh't J'@gl5tered for the draft."
In 1917, the United States paid Denmark $Zi mllllon for the American .claims he's dead broke and can't
"It's done. You promlsed me
VIrgin Islands.
.
'
, pay his Lord&amp;: Taylor bill."
In-depth profiles ·on Ivan Monk,
In 1945, Soviet troops and PoUsh patriot forces Uberated Warsaw from
. "Knlshe made $150,000. ·~ ·
Donald Griaheivald, ilnd George
the Nazis.
..
.
''Thanks for the data. ru talk to Dormer."
And Inl952, oneoftheThreeStooges,Jerry"CUrly"ltoward,ciledlnSan you soon."
"I'll call yw tonight,~."
Gabriel, Calif. · ·
· Meanwhile, over at the FBI, Its ·
· Ten ~ ago: Egypt and Israel agreed to separate their forces along
master cm~puter II trying to locate
"'Ibls Is the New York Welfare
a Fred Lwnbach, who blllted them IlepartJDent COOiputer. Am i talk·
the suez Canal and Umlt the weapons each side had In tile area.
Fiv.e years ago: Ayatollah Khomelnl, speaking from exile In France,
on a sting operation. It calls up the Ing to the Health and Human
, urged his supporters In Iran to continue their campaign tobl1ngdoim the
U.S. Census Bureau. "Apple, Services em~~"
government of Prime Minister Sllallpoor Bakhtlar.
what's the last addreu you have for
'"~bat's cOirect."
One year ago: GeorgeWallacewasSWUllln loan wlj)lecedeutedfourtlr Fred Lwnbllch?"
"We have a Mrs. L. L. JOIII!I who
term as governor of Alabama.
·
"Gosh, our census data Is sup- . says she hasn't ' received her

. ..

..

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
· PomiJO't' Middleport, Ohio
Tueeday, January 17, 1984

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Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

·Tuesday, January 17, 1914

Meet the Eastern Eagles
.••
..
I

1

Tuesday, January 17, 1984

I

The

Ohio

Daily Sentinei -P~S

.

.••
'
•
•'

·~*-· · ··.:.C~\:.1.":;.~

,,
.......

Pomeroy-Middleport,

~·~

...,1--

.,.

...,.

l"

JIM NEWELL
5-10, Sr. Guard

TIM PROBERT
i&gt;-6, Sr. Guard

MEIGS COUNTY
JAYCEES
&amp;

MEET ON T~E 2nd 4th WEEK OF THE
MONTH AT THE JAYCEE HEADQUARTERS
PRESIDENT
BRIAN CONDE

PAULCOWNS

HO,

.tr. Forward
'

Marauderettes edge Eastern, 31-30
EAST MEIGS Freshman
Jenny Miller's rebound - lay-in with
three seconds left lifted the Meigs
Marauderettes to a nail-biting 31·30
win over Eastern here Monday.

With Eastern on top J0.29, Meigs
had possession and worked for a
good shot in the final minute. A first
shot missed with a jump ball
resulting. A secondshotalsornlssed

VICE-P~SIDENT

Mlller' s key rebound was just one
of many for the young Meigs lass as
she combed the boards for 13
carooms along with six points.
Jenny Meadows led Meigs with 16
points while B. J. Gordon had one of
her finest games with nine points
. and seven rebounds.
Eastern's ftne Margaret Horner
led the Lady Eagles with 14 while
Angle Spencer chipped In with
eight.
With the non-league win, Meigs
goes to 11).3 on the year and remains
at 8-3 In the TVC.
The game was close train the
opening tap. Meigs' largest lead
was tour points while Eastern was
on top by three at one point.
Coach Ron Logan's Marauderettes made 12of4!)from thefioor
for 30 per cent and seven of 14 foul
shots for 50 per cent. Eastern made
two of nine from the line for 22 per
cent.
Meigs had 32 rebounds, 18
turnovers, and 15 fouls. Eastern as
called for 12 fouls.
In the prelllrtlnary reserve game,
Meigs defeated Eastern 21-U.
Marta Musser led the winners with
15 as they raised their record to ~
on the year. E!lstern was led by
Amy Young with four.
Meigs' next action Is Thursday
when they host Nelsonv!Ue-York at
5:00.
MEIGil (II) -

MICK HOWELL
SECRETARY
BOB FURST
TREASURER
STEVEN STORY

' DIRETOR
STATE
DICK OWEN

CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
BRUCE REED

Today's Young Men ... Building ABetter Tomorrow
We've a future we can count on ...
because of the work our Jaycees are
doing today. Their role in civic affairs
has ~nabled us to glimpse the tomorrow
that could be ... filled with realized goals
and bright promise .

Their drive and enthusiasm hiS in·
spired us to make our community the
best ever ... and their un~ndlng dediCI·
tion to hard work has given us a
chance to accomplish many things. We
proudly applaud their fine ~fforts . .

Meadows 6416, Gonnn

J..'l-9, Miller ~. Dean~. Harrllcln ~.

Hadck&gt;x ().()G,

ile&lt;'v~ ~-

TOI'AUIIt-7-'1.

FA8TERN &lt;•l - Spincer ~ Horner

7.0.14.

SHOOTS OVER HORNER - Meigs' Jodi Harrison (14) tires a
jumper over the anns of Eastern's Margaret Homer (32) during
Monday's non-conference battle with Eastern. Meigs edged the fighting
EagleUes, 31-30. (Dave Harris photo)

~.

BANK ONE.

DaU~ J.l-7, Whltlalch ~1·1, Wllsoo
Hibbs ().()G, Dl&lt;klle ~- TOI'AUI

14-S...
By~

Meigs
5 10 9 7-31'
Eastern
4 8 10 11--ll
RPserws - M('ill'$ 21, Eastern 12.

LL ST.

fey, an outfielder who playea for
Cincinnati during the 1930s Nol
was 10&amp;63 for the Reds lncl~dln:::
.14-8 season as a, teen-age rookie 1n
1967
H~ is to be Inducted Into the team's
Hall of Fame during the annual
BallplayersofYesterdaydlnnerata
downtown hotel on Jan. 28.

106 BUTTERNUT

..

W. MAIN

Two S VA C teams see action tonight

THE
(:ENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY

Member: The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assoclaton and the
American Newspaper Publishers As·
soctatlon, National Advertising Repre·
sentatlve, Branham Newspaper Sales,
711 Third A venue, New York, New

Weather permitting, two games
Involving SVAC schools are scheduled tonight.
The SVAC leading Hannan Trace
Wildcats fresh off last Frlday's4845
victory over Southern travel to
Symmes ValleywhlleOakHIU plays
at Southwestern.
On Wednesday, Wahama a 72-68
loser to Eastern Saturday night
visits Kyger Creek in a make-up
game postponed from last week.
Teams return to SVAC action
Friday night when Southwestern
goes to Southern; Kyger Creek
travels o Eastern at North GaUia
visits Hannan Trace. Saturday's
schedule finds North Gallla hosting
Lenore, W.Va.

Meigs freshmen
post ninth victory
ROCK SPRINGS- Jumping to a
quick 15-0 lead, the Meigs Marauder freshmen coasted to their
11th win against no losses with a
52-32 win over Federal Hocking
here Monday.
·- Donnie Becker led 11 Meigs
scorers with 14 points wltlle J. R: ,
Kitchen added 10. Russell led
Federal Hocking with eight.
Meigs' first learners saw orily two
quarters of action In the one-sided
contest. The little Marauders' next
game Is Thursday atAihensat5:30.
Meigs won the first meetlng 58-l!,
. FEDERALIIOCKJNG(32) -RusseiiJ.2.S, .
. Harris ~2-2 , Householder ~J.l . Way ~1-1, ,
Tabler 1.0.2, Pat GUIIan 1.().2, Phil Gillian
3-1·7, Kincade ~1·1 , Simmons 2.().4, Penswlck
1.0.2, Gusman 1.0.2. TOI'AUIIU-3t
MpGil (U) - Kitchen 4-2-10. Easoo :1.().4,
· MIISOel' 1.().2, Howard ~. Becker 5+14,
C'lln&lt;'I.J.S. EUiolt ().()G, Melp 1.().2, TannehiU
~. Hart I).()G, Nelson ~. Powell 1·2-4,
Fleldll.0.2, Casoell ~J.l. Werry~,Hqgy
1.0.2. TOI'ALII a.lUI.

IIJ.-t-:

Fed..-11 Hockin&amp;
Melp

3 12 6 11-32
19 17 10 1&gt;-52

I

York 10017.

SVI\C STANDINGS
1\LL GAMES
Team
WLP OP
Southern ... " .. ""'""" :"."'"" 10 I 1!16 548

POSTMASTER: Send address IO Tlte
Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St ., Pomeroy,
·•
Ohio 45769.

Easlern """ ....... " ..... ""'""·" .3 7 ~
Sout hwestPrn ..................... ..... 3 8 5.1)
North Ga llla """""·"· '·'"""""2 8 516
SVI\C ONLY
Hanna n Trace ....... .. ............. ~ 0 252
Southern . ... .. . . ... . ......... ..... : ... 4 1 'Bt
KyRer Creek " ... """""""'""3 2 261
Southwestern ........... .... ..... .... 1 4 'lil
Nort h Gallla """"'·".'"'"'". ,"1 4 329
Eastern .................... ....... ... ...1 4 217
SV 1\C RESERVES
Southern ..................... .... ...... 5 0 2.1)
Eastern ... .. ... ., ............ ..... ... .4 1 247
Nort h Gallla '""" '"""'"·""""2 3 :D!
SouthwestE'rn ... ................... ... 2 J 179
Hannan Trare .... .... ............ 1 4 D)
KyRer Creek .. "·· , " . " " " ' " " ' " ! 4 195

SVII8CIIIPTION RATES
By Curter or MotorOne Week .. ........ ,.. ,.................... $1.00
One Month ............. .. ................. $4.40
One Year ................. ,.............. $52.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally .... ................ ........... ... 20 Cents

Han-nan TraC&lt;' ............ ,..... ...... 9 2 fll3 470
KyRer Creek ".," .. , ... ""'"""""7 4 683 :126
:i91
582
631
215
219
210
266
363
258
173
163

'1111

No subscriptions by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier ~rvtce lJ
available.

Hannan Trace at Symmes Valley and Oak
HJU at Southwestern
Wednesday's pme:
Wahama at Ky~er Creek
Frtday'" ~:ames:
SouthWE'StPrn at SouthE'rn: Kyger Creek at
Eastern and North Gallla at Hannan Trare
Saturday's game:
. Lenore. W.Va. a t North Callla.

MI\IL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ltlllde Olllo
.
13 Weeks ......... "" " '""""""'"" $1C.04
26 Weeks .. ,"."" """"'""'"., ..... S27.30
52 Weeks ,.. .. .. .. ...... ,.. "'"""""" $51.48
O.lllde Ololo
13 Weeks .. ,.... " ......... ,.......... " " $15.21
26 Weeks '"'""""' "'"'""" '"" ' " tl9.64
•52 Weeks """""'"""""·"""" ' " $56.21

FREE HEARING
TESTS SET
FOR POMEROY AREA
FREE ELEtTRO~IC
HEARING TESTS

214 E. MAIN

MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES

MIDDLE

Meeting every 2nd and 4th Mond,a y at the Jaycee Quarters
Main St., Pomeroy

SWISHER-LOHSE
PHARMACY

E. MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO·

JAN. 19
9:00 TILL ·
12:00 NOON

W. MAIN

..

POMEROY

•·

~·

i

I

POMEROY

108 MULBERRY AVE . .

A
.,
:1:

. '1:

.:I
'I

'I

'

K'IN'GSBURY HOMES · ·
SALES &amp; SERVICE
110 E. MAIN

POMEROY

· THE. DAILY SEN'TINEL
'•

11 COURT ST.

' I

.
(

',

)

t

.-. ·-

.

· :Racine-Syracuse, OH.
I£1BER FDIC

POM

R. CRAIG MATHE.WS, D.D.S.
LARRY KENNEDY, D.D.S. ·

CREED

SUGAR RUN MILLS

Member.
FDit ·
,,

BELTONE Consultant Who WiiJ-.Ie At:

.

500 E. MAIN

N. 2nd

"

'I

· We Also Service and Rel)lir All IIIUs of Hllrilll Aids;
. Batteries And Supplies For All lakes .For Salt
IF-.YOU CANNOT COME IN..
CAll FOR AHOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE '992-3829

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS

POMEROY

CROW'S
FAMI·LY RESTAURANT

. :~

· using modern electronic equipment tO' deterine if his loss Is one.
• which may be helped. Some of the causes of hearing loss will be explained am! diagrams of h.ow the ear works will be shown.

MID.IlLEIIORlrl

MIDDLEPORT

I ,

'I

Meigs Inn, Pomery, Ohio
· Anyone who has trouble hearing is welcome to have a11eirin&amp; test

RAWLINGS-COATS
BLOWER FUNERAL HOME

TWO LOCAL CHAPTERS

C.K. SUPERMARKET
. 2nd AVE.

THURSDAY

Jaycee movement began in 1915 in St .
Louis .

POMEROY

264 S. 2nd

·'

Farmers
Bank

HISTORY

A full time staff of 90 in Tulsa, Oklahoma, provides wide range of service .

POMEROY

MAIN

Will Be Given By
Mr.. H. William Mattingly .

•

MEMBERSHIP
Nearly 8,600 local chapters with
375,000 members in 50 states and the
District of Columbia .

POMEROY

K&amp;C JEWELERS

POMEROY

MULBERRY HEIGHTS

HEADQUARTERS

Subscribers not desiring to pay th.P car·
riPr may rPmlf In advancP dlrttet to
ThP Dally SenflnPI on 3, 6 or 12 month
ba~ls . CrPdlt will be given carriPr.Pach
month .

217
225
222

Tonl~' spmeR:

2nd

Better Banking Service. That's The Central Idea

VETERANS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

JAYCEE FACTS
Personal development through com·
munity service for young men 18-35.

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
•

MIODLEPORT

155 N. 2nd

POMEROlrl

PURPOSE

.

POMEROY

DR. JAMES P. CONDE, INC.

PQMEROY

MULLBERRY AVE.

Publl.shed every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, lll Court Strft'l, by the
Ohio Vall~ Publishing Company. Mul·
tlmedla.lnc., Pomeroy, Ohlo457&amp;9. 992·
2156. Second class postage paid at Po-

FRANCIS FLORIST

•

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

Member F.D.I.C .

(USPS 1411-. . )

POMEROY

E. MAIN

EWING FUNERAL HOME

A Dtvilloe ol Mlllllmodla, loc.

210 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY
&lt;

The Daily Sentinel

meroy, Ohio.

PERSONAL GROWTH AND SUCCESS .... WHILE
WORKING TO AID OTHERS THROUGH
COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT.

POMEROY
.FLOWER SHOP

.

POME

HARTLEY SHOES

MIDDLEPORT

Gary Nolan joh)s Reds' Hall of Fame
CINCINNATI (AP) - Fon:ner
pitcher Gary Nolan, who won more
.than 100 games during his 10-year
career with the Cincinnati Reds, has
been elected by the team's fans as ·
the 47th member ofthe Reds' Hall of
Fame.
Fans voted Nolan into the hall
over pitcher Jack Billingham, a
former teammate, and Chick Ha-

10 CONDOR ST.

MluuLU'UIIU

PAT HILL FORD

.

....
..

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

ROYAL CROWN
.BOTTLING CO. ·

'~ :
~·

,t

l~•,

. :1:

,.''

, . L

-------- - I

• . •j

STORY &amp; STORY

We Believe: That faith in God g~ves meaning and ·purpose to human life;
Thatthe broth~rhood of man·transcends
the sovereignty of nations;
That economic justice can best be won
. by free men throu~h free enterprise.
That government should be of laws
rather than o.f men;
That earth's great treas·ure lies in human
.. ·personality;
And th~t service to ·hu.manity is the 'best
· work of life.
~

..

ATTORNEYS AT lAW
W. 2nd

MEIGS INNPIZZA SHACK

126 E. MAIN

1'13

•·

POMEROY

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN INSURANCE
AVE.

POMEROY

SIM~ON'S
308

'LU;J•,\o;oMD.-CHEVY I INC.
~OME

·

STATE FARM INS.
• 3rd

MIKE SWIGER, AGENT
MIDDLEPORT
•·

)

POMEROY

--

)

�•

T~y.

The Daily Sentinel .

By The Bend

Tuesday, January 17, 1984
6

Page

Some tax forms offer ease

$50,&lt;XXJ.

A single taxpayer using the
1040EZ may claim only one personal exemption and is permitted
no exemptions for children or other
dependents. Taxable Income must

be less than $50,&lt;XXJ with no more
than $400 In Interest Income and no
Interest at all from All-Savers
certificates. Earned Income can be
from wages, salaries and tips only.
No dividend Income Is allowed. The
1040EZ contains onlY. llllnes.
While most of the Instructions
needed to complete the "!040EZ are
on the form, you need the tax table
from the 1040A Instructions to
figure the tax. You will also need
the special work sheet from the
1040A instructions to figure your
deduction for c harit a bl e
contributions.
TAX TRAP: Don't let the
simplicity of the 1040EZ (or 1040A)
trap you. Don't use either tax form

MIDDLEPORT- Group TI of
· the Middleport Presbyterian
Church, Middleport, wm meet
Thesday at7: 30p.m. at the home
of Gladys Cummings. Co-hostess
wUI be Mrs. Kathryn Brown.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A regular
meeting of the Meigs County
Fire and Emergency Association will be held at 7: 30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Middleport
Fire Station. A visual demonstration on the chemistry of fire,
combustion and extinguishment
will make up the program.

Htfppenings
Spaghetti dinner
-POMEROY - A spaghetti
: supper will be held at the
Pomeroy Elementary School on
Friday, Jan. '1:1 from 5 to 7:30

p.m. The dinners will be $2 with
desserts, other sandwiches, and
soft drinks. The supper is
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Elementary Safety Patrol.

Area salespeople now have the
opportunity to participate in the
fastest growing sales training
course In the country.
The Lee Dubois Selling Techniques 11rogram will be offered In
three s hort , sa les-prod ucin g
courses on Wednesdays, 1-5 p.m..
Jan. 25, Feb. 15 and March 7 at Ohio
University, Athens.
These four-hour courses cover
selling techniques applicable to any
market and any product and are
designf'd to Increase the sales of
both the new and the experienc~
salesperson.· Each course is self-.
containf'd, allowing those interestf'd to register for one or all of
thesP Information-packed sessions,
according to their time and Interest.
Shortcourse Number I J an. 25, is
designed to help you Overcome Call
· Reluctance. "B luepri nt" You r

Jackson, (Thriller' sweep awards
ByYARDENAARAR
All!ioclated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Singer
Michael Jackson swept the 11th
annual American Music Awards on
Monday nlght by winning an
unprecedented eight honors, IncludIng favorite male vocalist In both
pop and soul categories.
In addition to the vocalist honors,
his top-selling LP "Thrtller" was
named favorite pop and soul album,
lils No.1 single "BUlle Jean" earned
favorite pop single honors. and
"Beat It" won as favorite pop and
s()ul video. Jackson also was given a
special A,ward of Merit, and a
tribute by other entertainers.
The only award Jackson could
liave won but didn't was for favorite
soul single, which went to Lionel
fUchle's toe-tapping "All Night
LOng."
"We might have to get the ushers
to clean out the seats around
Michael Jackson so he can p~t his
awards down," said Riehle, host of
the two-:hour ABC telecast of the
Ainerlcan Music Awards, the music
Industry's annual public opinion
poll.
· WIU!e Nelson was named favorite
male country vocalist, the second
time he has received the honor and
lils fifth American Music Award.

10

filing

household - $2,300; married, filing
separately - $1,700.
If you qualify and have made
sure that using the 1040EZ doesn't
cost you tax dollars, file this form
according to the Instructions.
If you have determined that you
will not lower the amount of tax you
owe by Itemizing your deductions,
Form 1040A allows you a little more
Oexlbtllty than 1040EZ. Form 1040A
has been changed frOm prior years
to permit more deductions and
crdlts. New schedules have been
a dded.
Unlike the 1040EZ, form 1040A
can be used If: You are married or
single. You had dividend Income.
You are claiming a credit for

political contributions, child care
expenses, or the · earned Income
credit. You had Interest Income of
any amount. You had unemployment compensation. You made an
IRA contribution. You are claiming
the deduction for married couples
when both work.
TAX TIP: In 1983 you may
deduct 25 percent of your donations
to a charital;&gt;le organlzation up to
$100, for a maximum write-off of
$25, even If you use the zero bracket
amount and do not Itemize. In 1984,
you will be allowed to deduct
contributions of 25 percent ofm&gt;or
a maximum deduction of $75. The
deduction wtu Increase to half your
contributions In 1985, and In 1986 you

446-Gatti.,Otta
367-Chuhtre
311- Vinton
245- RioGrandt
256- Guyan Dial.
643- Arabta Dial.

CU1t':10UII"

Resplendent In a glittering red
Sgt. Pepper-style outfit and dark
glasses, Jackson strode repeatedly
onstage to thank everyone connected with his recordings, from
producer ~ulncy Jones and the
"disc· jockeys who played the
record" to his parents and "the
American public."

favprite pop female vocalist award
and struck a spontaneous note with
her exuberant acceptance speech.

sa;~. ~?~~Y~:n:;o ~~ll~~~;;· i:~.~

great is a liar...

Dary!HaUandJohnOatesmade lt
two years In a row as favorite pop
group, while Gladys Knight &amp; The
Pips were named favorite soul
group, earning their fifth American
Musl.c Award, and third award for
favorite soul group.
Aretha Franklin was named
favorite soul female vocalist. the
third time she had won In that

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and re·
core rad1ators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Mason Co., w. va.
Area COde 304
675- PI. Plea•ant
458- Leon
57·6 -Appte Grove
773- Mason
812- New Haven
895-Letart
937- 8uttato

OWtlTAXIS
"lN·D-SlVI-·-···--------------·-··................ ·-··········

will be allowed to deduct everything
you contribute, up to half your
'
adjusted gross Income.
Many taxpayers still must use the
long form. These Include people
who want to Itemize, those whose
taxable Income Is over $50,&lt;XXJ,
those who file a variety of other
forms, and those who are married,
but flUng separately and have a
spouse who Itemizes.
Next: Who must me

t n Gall Ia County

Prospect, Establish Instant Rapport and "Giftwrap" Your Presentation. Short course Number 2. Feb.
5, concentrates on How and When to
Close a Sale! How to Handle and
Answer Objeetions Is the In-depth
topic of Shortcourse Number 3,
March 7.
The $2S fee per course Includes all
materials. For a detailed brochure
or to register contact the Office of
Continuing Education. Conference
and Workshops. Memorial Auditorium - lower level, Athens, Ohio

~

tn Meigl County

446-2342

992-2156
t n Mason County

675-1333

104 COURT ST.
POMEROY~ OH.

12·29·1 mo.

On;w 1&gt;Y 1'111111 wtlll lilts

64

Nam•-------------------

AT
Pomeroy
Landmark

4570.1, (614 I 594-6876.

Pomeroy PTO
approves TV
purchases

Public Notice

___
_
2.------

17. - - - - - -

1e.
-_ 19, ___
_

] , _,_

3. _ _...;.._ __

20. - - ' - - - 21. - - - - - -

_______

TOPSS MISS CHRISTMAS - Kathy McDaniel was crowned tbe
1983 "Miss Christmas" at a recen&amp; meeting of TOPS Club 570 at Rock
Springs. Ms. McDaniel lost 93 pounds In nine months. 'llte club now
· holds Its meetings In Middleport on Tuesday evening. Other members
recognized for substantial weight loss In 1983 were Judy Holter, Pearl
Knapp, Judy LaudennUt, Mary Folmer, KeUy 'lltompson, Joyce Hall,
Glenna Hunt, Helen Hill, Mary Snyder, Carole Bush and Brenda Holler.

,

5.
_ _ _ _ __
~- ------

22.

23.-----25. _ _ _ __

24.------

e__ _ _ __
'-----"------

'------ -

Cancer Society meeting conducted ·

10.
11. ____- ~-

12.
-_
-_
-_13.' ___
1~-----,_;

15. - -- - - 16.------

21.
_-_
_
71. -_
- -_
..
._,
29 _ _ _ _ __

30. _ _ _ __

31. _ _ _ _ __
32. _ _ _ _ __
33. _ _ _ __

34.-----25. - - - - - -

Mall This Coupon wltll Remlttllnce
T..e Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomerovr 011.45769

Fund
7.851 8 1
Road and Br~dge
Fund
1.06106
F1re Protec11on
Fund
1.225 93
Federal RP.vP.nuP.
Shartng Fund
1.65765
T01a1
22.112 14
Total Receipt~
General Fund
I 4. 12B 80
Motor VAh1ciA
L1cP.nse Tax
Fund
I 0.4 44 77
Gasoltne Ta~t
Fund
2118076
Road and Br 1dQP.
Fund
2 992 2B
F1r P. PrO!f'CI10n
Fund
2.255 40
FedP.1al AP.VPnuP
Shar1nq Fund
791 00
Total .
51.79301
Total Receipt~

Moror VP.h1dP.
L1cP.nSP Tax
Fund
GasolmP. Tax
Fund
Road and Br1dqP.
Fund
F~re Pro!P.CI1Dn
Fund
FP.dmal AevenuP
$hal mg Funft

GP.nP.ral Fund
Mo10 1 Veh1Cif!
L1cP.nsP.' Tax

The Orange Township Vol un teer F1re OepartmAnt. Tuppers
Plams. Oh10 w1ll accept seaiAd
b1ds lor recovenng of Ax1sttng
sh1ngles w1th new shmgles,
rP.plac1 ng ex1St1ng gutter with
new vmyl gutter and downs pout. ex1stmg sofl11t and fac1a
board to be cove red by
aluminum.
Further work may be
co nstdered
B1ds Should be marked
sea led b1ds
. PrP.vatltng wagf! Wl!l apply.
~······ · ·· · ·"A bid guaranty, as' reqUired

'&gt; -by·" SP.Ction t 53.54 of The
Aev1sad Coda ol Oh10. shall

Road and BndoA
Fu nd
·
Total
GP.nP.ral Funrl
MoiOr VP.h1CIP.
L1censP. Tax \.,

~Townahlp

GasohnP. Tax
Fund
Road and B11dQe
Fund
·
F1rP. Protect10n
Fund
FP.dP.ral RP.VP.nuP.
Shanng Fund

31,1983

13:~'1:'

=-r.d.

Pon.oy, Ohio
J-13,1984
t C*lify the folowlng report

to bo comoct.

Betty J. INohop
Townahlp C1lttc
Tei.No.e14
742-2492
SCHEDULE t

Fund

S~all Enoughto Fit Your'Pocket

or Inside Your Pursel

Balances ......... .. t 2. 8B2 . 3~
L1abji1MS .. . ... .. .. . 12.6B 2.3B

Suont'nory .of Caoh

.....

w•ll be opened and read March
lolai-.ReOaiJill ·
28. 19B4 at B:OO P.M Marl
And E....,.._
b1ds .to:
.·
. Orangei Townsh1p Voluntear
1,1883
F" e b epal'tme'nt ·
Ir.er1eral
..... ,.... 8.5B9.77
PO. BPI! 142
Tuppets Plains. Ohio 457B3
'
.. .. 1.725.92
If 1 t 7,· 24.'2tc

Shown wilh·Prlntor/Caaaetto tnterloco (not Included)

·

• UK Memory ' 24-CI18racter Liquid Crylflll Dlepley

Functlone .

• Mlllu1'11 1/lxP/texP/4" • Welghl4 OZ.
11 Add Our f'rlrileriCMMitl lntlrflce (28-3581',
.
I11US) to UN .Reidy·to-Aun CIIMitj SoftiHN

·l
·L
..'

~

l

. .......
~

'

f

•

·.

,.

742-2328

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holl1nd, Bush Ho&amp;
Firm Equipment

Outer

Farm Equipment

&amp;

Service
1-3-llc

4.053 34
3.4B I 33
2.44B 65
73.905 15
17.975 41

GRAVEl
'

HAULED
AL TROMM

742-232.8
10/20/ t.f.n.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addona and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Conc:Nte wortl
- Plumbing ond tltc:tricat
work

(Free Eatlmataa)

REDUCEO WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Now Open

Jerry's Custom
SLAUGHTER
8Hf and Ho1s
"From the Farm
to the Freezer"
Cut 1nd wrapped to your
specifications. Fnt. Oependlble Service.
CALL: 742-2789

or 742·2~15
1·11 ·1 mo.·pd.

"CUT OUT

FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All

Makes
•Washera •Diahwaahera
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

4-5-tfc

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns

2.2BB 81
55.974 31
4.743 16

3.0 17 45
1.765 63
529 37
35 I 05
12.BB2 38

&amp; Aluminum

Vinyl

SIDING

Roger Hysell

GARAGE

BISSELL

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

SIDING CO.

. AUTO &amp; TRUCK

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garagea"

Call for free sidinl es·.
timates~ 949·2801 or
949·28o0

REPAIR
Also Transmission .
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

Public Notice
LEGAL' NOnCE

Pomeroy. Ohio. Will tie ,held at
the office of sa•d Bank 1n

Pomeroy, Ohio. according to 1ts

bylaws. on the third Wednesday of January. t 984. at 4:00
p.m. lor the purpose of electing
directors and the transaction oi
such other ~usin ess as may
properly come
meeting.

•

before

said

Paul E. Kloes.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all , your wirin1
nHds; furnaces re111ir · ·
service and in\tallation. ·

Residential
&amp; Commercial

Call 742-3195
Or

Secretary

992;5875

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'x16'

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Do1 Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine: Oh.
Ph. 614-843·5191
10-6-tfc

(t2) 27 (!)9 , 15. 17. 4tc

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

...........

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

-IE: ·

:.

Announcements

Wanted to buy tobacco
poundoga. Contact Joe Call,
61 6-266-e024.

Wanted to buy. New, uaed &amp;
entique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete houaehotda. Alao complete Aucti oneering service. Call Rod ney
Howery
614-698 -7231 .

SWEEPER and aewing machine repair. parta, and
aupptioa.
Pick up end

Gun shoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday otorting 1
p.m . Fectory choked guns
only.

11

Help Wanted

1- - - - - - -- --

Maintenance man to care for
apartment complex. Call
676-6104 or 676 -6386.

Book -keeper with typing
Lon weight FREE with and aecreteriel experience.
Du-A-Diot. 100 per cent Need immediotoly. Send
manufacturers rebate cou- resume to P.O . Box 607.
pon. Fruth Pharmacy and Racine. Oh, 46771 .
Hockenberry Pharmacy.
Help wanted: telephone
ulea people. Also someone
4
Giveaway
with small car for envelope
delivery. Cat! 992-6296.
Doberman Pincer 1% yrs . AVON MEANS MONEY.
old. female, only to ap- Straight percentage of earnproved home. Coli 446- ings. sponsorship and good
4472.
routoa ovoilable. Colt 1 -304676-2318.
Free to good home. Must
find home due to moving. 1 Want to hire piano player.
Collie male. Med . size dog- Henderson . United Methohouse 6 chain go with Duke. diat Church . Cat! 304-676 1 block robbit female . Also 1141.
pin. 31993 Wetchtown. Minersville. Oh.
Fantastic way to pay Christmas billa. earnings two
Free puppies. Born 12-8-83 . woya . AVON . 304-676Father VJ Irish setter, mother 1429.
Irish setter. Color mhted .
Long Heir. Coll696 -1234:
AN OHIO OIL CO . offera
high income. plus cash
To a good home: 1 English bonuses. benefits to mature
bulldog pup. 15 week old person in Point Pleaunt
male. Has had shots. Call area . .., Regardlell of expe 992-7726 .
rience , write M . T. Read .
American lubricants Co .•
Fomoto black Cock-A-Poo. Box 426, Deyton, Ohio
excellent with children, 2 46401·.
yoora old. 304-676-7436. 1---- - - - - - Wented tutor for graduate
4 German Shepard pupa. statistics. Please call after
two mote, two female . 304- 6pm 304-676-7717.
773-6798.
1--- - - - - - Buaine11 opportunity look2 German Shephard• to ing for someone to buy out
good home , 304-676 - and take over clothing buai 6766.
nell. Includes inventory,
tixturoa,
·
304-676Five female puppies. father 1317 or
registered Australien Sheep
dog, mother Border Collie. I·
304-676-6730
12
Situations
Wanted
3 yoor old, female Oobermen. One old year Red mate
Doberman, gentle . 304 676-6931 between 10om Will care for the elderly in my
home. lots of references.
end 6pm.
Men or wonlen. Colt 614667 -3402 .

1-;:;==;:=:.::===

6

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL
Jerry and Ellen's
Coin·O~Matic

Formerly Duds and Suds
Attendant on duty .
Clothes Washed &amp;
Dryed $2.00 a Lilad
· · One illy Service ·
Phone: 992·5937
·
t-5-1 mo.

Lost and Found

LOST 1 mole Beagle pup
with brown leather collar.
Lost in vicinity of Lower
River Rd. &amp; Neighborhood
R d . C a It 4 4 6 · 2 6 6 0
evenings.
lost two Beagles, black.
white and brown. Vicinity of
Ripley Road and Jerrico
Rood. 304-675-3401 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Remodeling. painting, elec·
trical repair &amp;: rewirin~
plumbing. heating end rooting. Free estimates. Call
9B6-4121 .

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

Horper'a Adult Core Home
has a vacancy for another
resident, elderly person. Call
304-676 -, 293.
Housekeeper bv., the hour.
304-676- ,359.
Will do babysitting in my
home evenings or midnight.
Call 304-675 -6803, 8:30
am to 6•00 pm.

I=========

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleosont. WVo . 13
Insurance
Auct. Lonnie Neat. Youth
Center Bldg., Camden St.
614-367-7101 .
SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered
Rick Pearson Auctioneer aervicea for fire insurance
Service. Estate. Farm, An ~ Coverage in Gallia County
tique &amp; liquidation sales. for almost a century. Farm.
Ucenoed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp; home and personal property
WVo . 304-773- 6785 or coverages are available to
304-773-111 85.
meet individual needs. Contact Harry Pitchford, agent.
Auction every Fri. night II Phone 614-446-1427.
the Hartford Community
Conter. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Financtal
Conalgments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Aucti'onoer . 304 - 276 - 2
1
Business
3069 .
Opportunity

1- - - - -- -- -

1- - - - -- - - --

9

Wanted To Buy

We poy cash for tote model
cleen used cera.
Jim Mink Chev.-Otds Inc.
Bitt Gone Johnson
446-3672
Buying doily gold, silver
coin·• · rings', jewelry, sterling
· w1re, old coins, large currency. Top prlcea. U . Burkett-9o~r Shop, 2nd. A.vo.
Middleport. Oh. 614-99234711.

Money to Loan

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 1 2'h% purchon or
refinance, 11 '14% edjuatable
rate . Leeder Mortgage,
Athena, 1 -800-341 -6654

23

Professio.nal
Services

PIANO TUNING Lower
pric es -regular tuningadiacounts to Senior Citizens.
Churches &amp; Schools. Ward 's
Koyboord, 304-676 -3824,
TWO MONTH SPECIAL,
Jan. and Fob. 1 984 off
season prices on furniture
re - upholstering . Mowreya
Upholotery, 304-676-4164.

Se rv1 ces

Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvalesence
Home. 18 yean experience. AVON Earn 40 to 46 %
Clifton, W . V . 304-773- commiaaion plus aponaer6873.
ahip. Call 446-3368 .
Riverview Personal Care
Home now haa a vacancy for
o otdorty peraon. 304-7736882-.
.

22

Employ rn enl

delivery , Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Goofgoa Creek Rd. Coli
614-446-0294 .

8

No Sunday Calls

Nottce 1S hereby given that
the annual meet1"9 of the
stockholders of The Farmers
Bank and"Savings Company of
21 I West Second Street.

3

Poy top dotlor lor uoed
mobile homea end truck
comporo. Call 614 -4460176.

1---------

Only

3-11 -tfc

••'
I

Je1111," wldcb eariJed r.vortte pop 111nc1e bolionat tlie
. lltb 111111Ua1 American Millie Awanlll at 'the Shtlile
· AudMorlam In LOe ~· (AP Liuierphoto) .

29.032 57

( IJ 17. lie

. • EMilY Progl'lm.,.,_ In Pocket BASIC
• Allowt 18 ArithmetiC ~ 8.String

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

12.17069

2.4 75 72

Total

s._o-n11or

The owner has the right to
rr.JACt or refuse any ·o.r all bids
submitt Ad for any ~eason . Bids

'Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

llalonce
Dec. 31, 1983

For Floeel vEnding o-lllf!er

accompany ecich proposal submitted. as follows·
A cerhf1ed check. cash1er's
check. or letter of crecht equal to
Cooh..._
hve (5) percent of the b1d.
No subcontract work w11l bP.
31, 1983 .
contracted unles·s approvAd by ASSETS
the owner.
,
DepoSitory BalancAs
Work shall commence May
(ActiVA and
1, 1984 and f1n1sh on or before
Inactive)..
S14.1082B
May I 5. 19B4.
Less: Checks Ou tstandCep1AS of 1nformat1on for
•ng ....
1.225.90
b1dders may be obta1ned . by Total Assets .. . ... t 2.BB2.38
ca lling Lamar Lyons at 667 - LIABILITIES:
6693 or or Bruce Hager at Fund

667 -6269.

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

26.0 15 12

Ftmd

FINANciAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS

Business or Residential

11-1-dc

Parts

turt, 44e·31119, 3rd. &amp;
Olivo St .. Gollipotia, Oh.

' - - - - - - 12-21-1 mo. I Vacancy: Julia's Personal

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683
or 992-2282

GasohnP. Tax

Public Notice

PH. 992-3194 or
992-2388

New Homts-httnslvt
Rtmodelin&amp;
Insurance Work
Cust~ Pole Bld&amp;s.
&amp; Glri&amp;IS
'- Roofin&amp; Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinp

9.694 97

Fund

PUBUCNOnCE

Owner

22.7 1B 57

Exponditurol
Public Notice

ROGER MANLEY

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

na•ncea

GP.naral Fund .

Total

RADIO SHACK'S TRS-80® PC-3
POCKET COMPUTER ON SALE NOW

.,

-·

Hotpoint a~ ,:;ances
General Electric TV's
Hoover Sweepers

Alabama won favorite country
group, favorite album for "The
Closer You Get," and favorite
country video for "Dixieland Delig)Jt," but group members admitpledge ..!0 the flag was led by
Marjorie Gibbs a nd Bonnie
ted that Jackson's triumph overshaFisher's fotirth grades, and condowed their own.
category and her fourth American slsted of several songs sung In
Fund raising projects were dis- Memorial Hospital, 7:30p.m.
"I don't think anybody can
cussed at the executive board
Music
Award.
rounds.
The
room
count
werit
to
the
Preceding the luncheon meeting,
compare to Michael Jacksoq," said
Rogers and Dolly Parton won the two classes with 42 percent of meeting of the American Cancer the Rev. William Middleswarth had
Alabama's '!'eddy Gentry. "He's favorite country single award for parents present.
Society held Thursday .111 Veterans prayer.
had ayeai'that most artists can only their duet, "lslandslnTheStream."
Bob Morris reported that a staff Memorial Hospital.
Others attending .were Jeanette
dream of."
It was Rogers' 13thAmericanMuslc
meeting will be held Tuesday to
It was decided that the door-to- Lawrence, Elizabeth Smith, HarIn other country awards, Barbara Award and Miss Parton's second.
less Frank, Barbara Matthews,
discuss the principals' fund, the door crusade wUI be held May 1-10.
Mandrell was voted favorite female
J~ckson, who received lOnomlnaDelores
Frank,
executive
direcRalph Werry, Gerald Powell, Mary
library, ;md the six week report
vocalist and Keqny Rogers and· tlons In eight categories, arrived at cards.
The co~ test of the open house tor, noted that an aU-day tralnlng O'Brien, Craig Matthews, Pat
Dolly Parton shared the award for the Shrine Auditorium telecast on
program wUI be held In Chillicothe In
favorite single for "Islands In the the arm of Brooke Shields. Last held attheschoolwaswonbyBecky February and that several people Ingels, Linda Hamm, Ef!lla Smith,
Dr. Wilma Mansfield, Kermit
Triplett's
sixth
grade
and
Mae
Stream."
week, he received an unpreceden- Young's third grade.
should make plans to attend.
Walton,
Teresa Collins. Gloria
Miss Mandrell, picking up her
Next board meeting was an- Jewett, Sharon Michael, and Jeanteed 12 Grammy nominations.
Refreshments were seiVed by the
fifth Amer.lcan Music Award and
nounced for Feb. 16 at Veterans ole Witherell .
Also featured was a tribute hosted sixth grade parents.
fourth straight for female country by Miss Mandrell to three diverse ,-----------------...--~-------.:....._ _ _ _ _ __
vocalist, also praised Jackson as "a music figures who have recently
person who my children can look up died: Marty Robbins, Muddy Wato."
ters and Karen Carpenter.
Pat Benatar won her second

'J'IIRQIIj:D.:.. Mkhilel JackPJJespollds to IIJe
••"eace IIPP'IMII" Moilday night after recelvlug Ids
Anie,leu Mullc awlird for hiS No.1 ilmlle.' J$1!1ki

~'

992·2181
ON All

television stands. Cost figures wut
be secured before the next meeting.
Hank Cleland report"'! on the
basketball season for foUrth, fi!th
and sixth graders noting the
practices to be held.
Paula Whitt presided at the
meeting with Monsignor Anthony
Giannamore of th~ Sacred Heart
Church giving devotions. The

·

MIIC. Merchendlae

Year-End·
Clearance Sale

Phon•·------------------

I lForRent

(formerly uwrence
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)

1 6 Yeare Experience

AddNI~-------------­

( )Announcement

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
.In Middleport

DEC. 30th
PH. 992-3383

CIW811fed

Annuunr;emenl s

I
lone Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
12-20-lfc

WILL OPEN

Savel II
..,.;·lid -

c )For Sate

MIOOLIHltT

~oute

CAB CO.

Curb Inflation
Pay Cas.h for
Claulflecls andl

"11 we don't accede 1o all
demandll, It'll call all the
inc machines in the
room out on strike."

Middleport, Ohio
1-13· tfc

Roofing &amp; Sidin&amp; Co.

coupon. CllnCel yaur ad bV plaW when VOU gel
, resu"-. Maney nat refundlble.

Purchase of two color television
sets for the Pomeroy Elementary
School was approved by the PTO at
a recent meeting held at the school.
The purchase will come from
funds raised at the fall carnival.
Also to be considered further for
purchase are a microscope and

WOLfE INVESTIGATION

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON ·

MEIGS

• Wrtlll your

• INSURED
Experience

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofinl - Sidin1 - Concrete
Pllios - Sidewalks New Consttuction - Rt·
modelin&amp; - Custom Pole
Barns.

I II I ,j Il l. I ,j I

Wanted To Buy

..;z~~ ~ wood
Wonted to buy uaod cool &amp;
hee..,a. Swain Furni·

r

IL-"====='---::-~1

992-2198

collector meena duirtltll
cleonlng.
•Wire bruaheo for croo·
Iota removol.
•111% Dlacount Montha
of Jonuary and Februory.
•Coli now to protect your
fomlty.
PH . 949·2739

9

LAFF·A·DAY

The

Standing timber, wilt poy
top pricea for red a white
ook. CoH 1114-388-99011
efter 6 . or enytime
weekenda.

PAT HILL FORD

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

Sales seminar set

Calendar
TIJESDAY

unless It Is In your Interest.
Inappropriate use of the 1040EZ or
1040A can cause you to pay more
tax than you owe. The way to tell
whether you should file a long form
Is to do a rough calculation. Add up
all deductions to which you are
entitled to see If they total more
than your zero bracket amount. If
they do, you will pay less tax If you
Itemize your deductions. That can
only be done If you file form 1040.
Remember, there are different
zero bracket amounts depending on
your filing status. The zero bracket
amount for the filing categories
are: manied, filing jointly, or a
qualified widow or widower $3,400; single, or unmarried head of

•

Metga Co. Art• COdt
614
992- Midditport
Pomeroy
915-Chtaltr
J43- Portiand
241- Lttarl Falla
949- Ractne
742- Ruttand
667- Cootvttle

6!4

I

Ohio

Business Services

l:lm11tlfl«•d /Nfll«'ll ma11•r th«•
follmvin~t lt•lt'/lhmu~ t•xt·hllnll«'ll,,
Gatlta Co. Arta COde

By RObert Metz
(Second of 14 articles)
Henry Ford said you could have
any color Model T Ford you wanted
so long as It was black. Uncle Sam is
a bit more flexible.
Tll1&lt;payers have a choice of
Income tax forms. There Is the 1040
:long form and the 1040A short form .
Single taxpayers have an additional
option, tax form 1040EZ. The tax
form 1040EZ Is designed for single
taxpayers who earn less than

)

January 11, 1984

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommend•
that you do business with
people you know, and NOT
to aond money through tho
mail un1il you have investigoted the offering.

Own ·Your own J .e an Sportaweor; llldiea Apparel.
COmbination. Acceuoriea,
lllrgo Size atore. Nationot
brenda: Jordocho, Chiu, Lee,
Levi, Vanderbilt, tzod,
BEDS-IRON. BRASS old Gurin' Sax, ~aprit, Brittania.
Furniture, gold, silver dol- Colvin Klein, Sergio Volente,
lars. wood ice boxes. atorie Evan Picone, Claiborne.
jiora, ontlquoa, etc. Comptoto Mombera Only. Bill Bta11,
houaoholda. · Write M .D. Orgo~icotly Grown, Health·
Mllter, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Oh tea, 300 othera. 'f7,900 to
*24,900, Inventory, oirfare;
467119 or 814· 992·77110.
trolntng, flxturea, grond opWont to buy Indian ortliocta •. oning, ·etc. Randy Koenen
(81218B8-e565 .
'
Phon it 81 4-448: 4298.

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

4 bdr . ranch home. fargelR ,
full basement, with garage.
wood burner included. city
schools, 2 miles from town.
Call 446 -0276 .
Ranch on 5 acres. beautiful·
setting with tall pines'
around the house. Spacioua:
livingroom which overlooks·
the pond. 4 bedrooms, util~ '
ity room and kitchen has e:
built -in range . Assume pay-.
menta with 1 small down·
payment. S68,900 . Con:
446 -3176.
6 room house. bath. 3 acres:
ground, near Porter on Old.
Rt. 1 60. (:ott 446-2867 or
446-4202 .
3 bedroom ranch styled·
homo. Call 446 -0109 alter' .
5 •30.
•
3 bedroom. Superior loca-'
lion, , 0 % down , , o %:
financing
We have buyers for homes in:
tho S40,000 to 166.000.
range . list with ua. A -One·
Real Estate. Carol Yeager:
Rooltor. Cat! 676-6104 or,
675-6386.
Fantastic home at the edge'
of Gallipolis . large inground swimming pool.
huge gorgeous family room
with fireplace. also a fireplace in the living room . 3
bedrooms. game room. 2'12
baths. plus a beeutiful view
of the river. 2 acres of yard
for outdoor living. Will sell
on land contract with approved credit for just
$6.000 down payment and.
aiaume land contract with
peymenta of $400 a month.
Con 446-3176.
3 BR house, single garage in
subdivision , reasonably
priced. (614) 446-1343.
Middleport. clean home ..
Priced very. very reasonable!! Includes alot of furni··
ture. Con 614-992-6941 . .
For sale- Sacrifice 2 bclr.
house on Blue lake. 2 lots,
$14,600. Cat! ofter 4PM,
614-266-6413.
located in Syrecuse-Near
schopl S. swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on one-·
third acre lot. Price reduced
$23,600. or wilt rent for
$240 mo. 304-865-3934.

HOUSE FOR SALE-6 -rooms. basement. double
garage, 1 and one third acre
lot. Rose Hill. Pomeroy-...
Excellent condition .
S32,900 . 1 - 614 - 678 ,
2513 .
For sale: older home. good··
condition . 7 rooms. 2 baths.
many repairs and improve·
menta already made. low·
utilities. Close to ltorea and
schools. $18,500. Colt 992-.
7726.
7 room house. 1 Yz acre 101.
barn. basement, carport, On
Rose Hill in Pomeroy. Good
condition, $26,000, pt~a
furniture - $2,000. Total•
S28,000. Cat! Ediaon Hob·
Stotler II 992-2464 or
George S. Hobatetter at
992-7763. Witt consider
financing part of it.
"' ·
3 acres with a nicely co~­
structed concrete block
homo 26x60, 3 bedrooml,
one bath, 12x 15 living room
end 24x24 family room .
Partially carpeted, fuel oil
furnace with facilities for
wood burner. 1 2x16 block
storage building, 20x30
block garage. Right off
Rt.248, country setting, 'A
mile East of Chester. Ohio..
Notionol Bonk-6 142210.
House for sale or rent in
Middleport. 5 rooms and
both. Con ofler 6 p.m.
614 -742 -2436 .

BY OWNER. Meadowbrook
Addition. all brick, ossume
8 .6 lOan. moderate down
payment. 3 bedroom. 2
.baths. dining room. built ·in
kitChen. garage with autQ
opener. Central air·cond. ,
terge tot. priced mid fifties.
Shown by appointment
ty . NO REALTORS .
304-676-3446.
By owner, Gallipolis Ferry,
throe bedrooms, two baths.
100x200 lot. 9 .8 per cent
o11umoblo loon . 304•67521B3 .

1---------

•.
- .. .
·

�.•

17,....

~~~9~e~~~nw~~~n;y~~~tiM~I--------------~=---~--~~;:=~~m.~~;•~·~M~~T;•;pm~·;·~Oh~~~~~r:::~~==:-------~~~~T~u~••l•~~~~17~,g1;~;~
78
Th.ey'll Do It Every Time

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
614-446-7672 .
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL ' S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST. GALliPOLIS.
RT 36. PHONE 614-446·
7274 .
1977 12x60 mobile homo, 2
bdr .• furnished . good cond .•
$7,600 . Coli 614 -256 6618 .
Mull Sell 4 bdr .. 14x65,
plus 12x20 room , CA. 1101;
age building. porch 6 awn ing . Corner lot at Quail
Creek, French City Brokerago Service. Coll446 -9340 .
Priced to sell, 1979 Sterling
14x70. 2 bdr.. CA. vinyl
skirting. French City Brokerago Service. Call446 -9340.
1972 mobile home. needs

some repairs, with 1 \7 acres
very reasonable . Call 446 0063.

1978 Shultz 14x70 control
air, all new furniture. ex.

cond. on rented lot. Call
evenings 446-2076.
1979 12x66 Liberty, unfur ..

gaa heat. gas stove, exc.
cond . $6,400 . 614 -388 9325 or 614-246 -6176.
1979 Bayview 12x60 with
12x8 oxpondo, AC , axe.
conlf. Call 446-9416 or
446-2217.
1980 ,14x70 Fairmont Boyview 2 bdr .. lorgo LR, 1 both,

den. alec. range. gas heat.
waaher -dryer, CA. furniahed. In Rodney rented lot,
. paid water. trash pick-up.
Aaaumable 7 yr . loan
13.29%. $2,000 down. Call
446-1016 oftor 6.

1970 Vindalo expondo
12x63. 2 bdr .. control air.
deck, awning, underpenning. Coll614-245 -9222 .
For Nle on contract located
2 mi. from hospital on Rt.
160. 12x60. 2 bdr.. nico
trailer on rented lot. $600
down, $100 por mo. at 10%
intoreot. $6,00. Cell Jock
N11l 11 4'411·0167.

ATTENTION-Do you need to
move into a nice mqbil•
home without the hassle of
set-up. We hove 1 1979
Freedom 14x70 deluxe
model on a lot In tho Country
Mobile Homo Pori&lt;. Thio
home haa a front dining
room with wooden bow
window , a circular kitchen
with lots of cabinets, 2
bedrooma, large luxury bath
with garden- tub. Price of
•12.1100 . Includes metal
building , patio cover, otops,
wether and dryer. Everything in tip-top condition .
Ready to live in . For information coli 614-992 -7034 or
614 -992 -6284.
12x66 Mobile homo located
Hartford, W. Vo. 304 -882·
2794.
'69 Schultz mobile home,
two bedroom. new carpet.
c•ntral 1ir-cond., needa
some work . $3,400 ._00 .
304-676-4819 or 304-896 3472.

33

Farms for Sale

40 acre farm. with remod,lod 4 bdr. house. 60 tree
orchard, bearing age, grapea
It nut trees, road goea
through property. water
tops on each aide. In Rio
Grande area. c ·all 614-2455302 .
Farm for sale on Tribble
Rood, 100 acreage, 1,400
lb. tobacco ollottmont. 304676 -7460 or 676 -7310 .

34

Business
Buildings

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
35 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Wataon Rd. Owner financing evailoblo. Ce11446-8221
l(fter ~ wookdoys.
For Nle City lot in Bidwell,
, _800. Call , 446 -4113 or
446-6609. '"-

2ilx60 garage, 2.6 acre lot.
$1,500.00. Rt. 36, Beech
Hill, W.Vo. 304-676' 3721.
l',ive lots, Grear Rood. uppor
Hillview. Scenic view from
ftont wlndowo. $6,000.00.
304-676· 7749 after 6pm.

. ..._

R1: 111 a! s
Houses for Rent

For ·ule rant. Two atory
house. 4 bdr .. $260 por mo.
•2150 dep . roq. Buy
U9 •.IIOO. Coli 446-4222.
9 :3IY-11:00.

2 bdr. houM, 2 blocko fr.om
cl1y pori&lt;, .UOO month plus
utllltleo. Nfetonce. ovol!oble
now. CoN 441·2419.
• F01 rent Of Ieese 1 floor, 2
bdf, ho- with carport In
clt'f, 11.. heat. Coli 448·
19411.

.,

Apartment
for Rent

Fantastic home at the edge - - - - - - - - - of Gallipolis . Large in - Moden 1 bedroom apt .•
ground swimming pool. carpet, complete kitchen ,
huge gorgeous family room well insulated. all alec ..
with fireplace,. also a fire- air/ heat. Deposit required .
place in the living room . 3 Ph. 446-4383 days or 446bedrooms. game room. 2 1h 0139 oven .
baths. piUs a beautiful view
of the river. 2 acres of yard 1 bedroom Apt., $196 . mo.
for outdoor living. $400 including utilitiea. Equal
month . Coli 446-3176 .
Housing Opportunity. Con·
tact Village Manor Apts.
Nice 3 bdr. house for rent or 614 -992 -7787.
po11ibly sell on land contract. Call after 4PM, 614 - Rivorsido Apu. Middleport.
266-6413.
Special rates for Senior
Citizono. f130 . Equal HousHouse with bath and large ing Opportunities . 614 ·
yard . Near Racine. 614 - 992-7721 .
992-6868 .
Apt. for rent . 614-992 6 room house. Baument. 5908.
natural gas. rural w1ter. 1
kid accepted. Large yard . 3 bedroom furnished Apt . in
garden. no petl, drunks or Syracuse . 614 -992 -7689
dope. John Shoots. 3'1J after 6 p.m .
miles South Middleport. 'R·
7 . 367-0611 .
APARTMENTS . mobile
homea, houaea. Pt. Pleasant
House for rent . 4 rooms and end Gellipolio . 614-446 both. Fully corpotod. storm 8221 .
windows and doors. Unfurnished. Call 992-3090.
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartment• now available to
Nice 2 bedroom house on elderly &amp; diublod with en
black top road in Eaatern Income of less than
School district. $160 month $12,300. Renting for 30
plus deposit, no pets. No percent of adjusted incomeSunday calls. ' 614 -949 - .Phono 304-675-6679.
2801 .
Nice 1 bedroom apartment,
For rent in the Eastern local utilitioo furniohod, 304-675 Diatrict. Neat modern 4 7112.
bedroom houae, full base·
ment. $200 deposit. Refer- In Middleport two room
ence• required . Jean Trus· efficiency apartment. Call
sell . Evening at 1-304-882 -2 566.
614-949 -2660.
Two bedroom apartment
Two bedrOOf1"S, large livin- partly furnished . Yard and·
groom with wood burner. beaement. e176 .00 month.
Located on the Ohio River. 304-6711· 2264 ovonings or
8200.00 month. Coli 304· 614-4411·3703 days.
676-3030 or 676-3431 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
12x60 2 bdr. modern furnished trailer. , convenient
location, Uppor River Rd.

Apt. for rent . Mooon. WV.
clean. goOd condition . Call
304-773-6637

Nicely furniahed modern
mobile home, in city. 1 or 2
adults only. Call 4411-0338.
2 bdr. trailer 2 mi .• from
hospital at Evergreen private
lot. Coll446 -0167.
With or without turn .,
12x60. 2 -bdr .. nico &amp; cloon.
No pitts, dop. req.. ref.
preferred. Coli 614-2661636 before noon.

2 bdr. mobile homo fully
furnished, adults only. C~ll
446-4110.

1--- - - - - - - -

12x60 2 bdr. unfurnished on
Rt. 36. Dop. &amp; rot . required .
Call 446-4369 .

2 bdr. trailer below Eureka,
adults preferred or a email
child. $135 por month. Call
614-256 -1167.

45 Furnished Rooms

1------- - - -

For rent Sleeping Rooms
end light house kooping
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
Coli 614-446-0766.

Sleeping room $126, utilitiel paid. Males only, range
&amp; rofrig . Call 446-4416
after 7_p.m.

46

44

Apartment
for Rent

Small furn . house 1 or 2
adults only, no pets. Call
446-0338 .

2 BR Apt. , $129 'mo.
Utilities partially, furnished.------ - 3 bdr. house for sole
on land contract. 304-11766104 or 304-675-6386,
Carol Yeager Realtor.

Uaed GE refrigerator, West·
inghouse electric range, livingroom suite. familyroom
suite. table &amp;: 6 chairs .
Corbin It Snyder Furniture,
966 Socond Avo. 446·
1171.

Bedroom. living room suite,
ttero music center. washer
&amp; dryer. dinotte oot. 1980
Oldsmobile Cutlass. Call
446 -8227.

3 pc. do_uble bod bedroom
ouito. Cell 446-4292.

66

Hey &amp; Grain

84

Pete for Sale

~ AKC - R'hlotored mole
Cocker splriiets. blonde 5
yrs. old, rod 3 yro.. good
blood line, good temporl·
mont. Excellent for breed·
lng. Coli 4411-9372 after
5:30PM .

Ground 11r corn fll .l50 per
100. Iring own container.
304-8715·3308: No Sunday
Ill ea.

I r.IIISJHIII.IIIIIII

Lhasa Apoo pupploo AKC
Registered will be reedy Jon.
21st, UOO. Ce11448-07011.

71 ·

Panasonic stereo AM -FM.
good condition. no speak oro. $160. Call after 6 p.m ..
304 -675 -3087.
Guns. one set Modal 141,
Remington rifle . 36 cob., 32
cab.. 30 cab.. rool good
condition. will not sellseperato. Call after 6pm 304773 -6666.

Building material s
block, brick, sewer 'Pipes,
windows , lintels , · etc .
Claude Wintara. Rio Grande,
0 . Coll614-246-6121 .

LUMBER - Rough cut. oak,
poplar, 2x4, 2x6, 2x8, h4,
1x6, hB. length available, 8
foot through 14 foot . Hogg
&amp; Zuopon. 304-773-66154
daytime.

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all broods. Heotod
indoor-outdoor facilltiea .
AKC Doberman puppleo:
Stud Service. Cell614-446 7796.

Firewood delivered . 836
pickup load, 10 loads $300.
Coll614-266 -1427.
Firewood cut up alobs $15
pickup load . Call 614 -2466804.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Cell
614-367-7220.
Briarpatch Kennels Profeslionol All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·
cllitieo. Englioh Cocker Spaniol puppiea. Call 614-3889790.

Will cut and deliver firewood. Coll614·266-1628.
Equipment trailer tandem ,
16ft, $1,000. Also Gravely
backhoe, $1,200. Coll614 268-1427.

Drogonwynd Cattery ·
Kennell. AKC Chow puppioa, CFA Himalayan, Persian 1 and Slam eM kittene.
Call 614-448-3844 after' 6.

l----------

Dozer with end loader Cooe
310, $4,600. Coll614 -2561427.

~ LIVI! S IIli.~

61

I HAVE EXAMINEV THE
SCENE OF SlltiDYS
STRU~GLE WITH
CffEilTUFfE~ (W)

THE...
HO
fiEAOY EXPLANATION
PRESEifl; ITSELF".

R. G. Mev•• and Bon, Dl1111
Service and m8jor overhoulo. Experienced In all ,
typos, diesel and guollno
onglnes. Industrial or auto,
hydraulic and electrlel Sirvice. Located at Muon Co.
lnduotrlol Pori&lt;, Point Plee sont. 304-1175-7422 .

8 :00

IF ANYTHING COMES
UP, WE'LL SRING 'IOU
BACK HERE !

Locksmith Service, Sharpening Service, Gluo and
Screen Wire installed .'
Subkon Sorvlco Co.. 304·
8715 -3694.

8:30

remod~llng

and repaira. Qualtiy work . ; ,
Ruaonoblo rates . 304 -117528711 .

9:00

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

'.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING . Rt. 1. Box 3115. Galli·
polio. Coli 614 -367·0676. ; .

Farm Equipment

l---- - - - - - -

83

Excavating

•··

9:30

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

112

WINNIE

Cot 215 hoe. dozers, crono,
loodero. dump truck. Call
1114 -4411· 1142 botwoon
7 :00AM &amp; 5 :00PM .

WANTED TO LEASE to· 1975 Ford Granade, runs
becco allotments in Muon 3ood, f400.00. 304 -676County. Phone 304-458- 1 _B_7_B_.________
1076.
,- - - - - - - - - - · 19B2 Spirit, olx cylinder.
auto, AC, PS. PB, AM -FM
radio, crulse, twotonepolnt,
63
Livestock
rally wheels, 32,000 mllos,
excellent cond. f4,200 .00.
6_7 _
5 ·_4_1_4_8_ _
Register American Soddio _Ph_o_n_•_3"'0_4_·_
1
brad moro, 8 yrs. old. Coli 72 Oldomoblle, fair cond.,
614-246-60911 oft!' 6.
cheap, phono 304 _876 •

YOU, ER. SAID YOU

1¥1t$0NAi.

HAD

PROBLEMS .. ;AND
I'D LIKE'TO HELP.. . IF 1 CAN .. .

Good-1 Excovotl~g. boo.omonts, footero, drlvawoyo, ,
septic tanks, landscaping. , ..
Call anytime 1114 -4411 · .:
41137. Jemoa L. Devloon, Jr. •
owner.l
., .
J.A.R . Conotructlon Co . -~
Water Lines , Footers . ~:
Drolno. AIIkindsofDitchlng . .:
~g~ll.nd, Oh . 614 - 742 · -~

I·1 _;~:::0:::-~======:::
72

Trucks for Sale

';:;=:::::;;:=:;:::::;:===· ,

I'

~,

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

'" '
-;

1 hereford baby beef-500 to ._,_ _ _ _ _ _ _.--600 lbs. 2 hereford heifers- r
' ------,----400 to 500 lbo. Good stock. 1981 Toyota long bed, olr. , Coli 742-2014.
AM -FM topo. li spd, excelPooquolo Electric Co , all •
lent cond. Coli 448-0844.
pOLLED HEREFORD
ph1101 of electric work, ell . •
work guaranteed . Aerial : :
BULLS _ From A.l. breeding 1979 Ford pickup, F-1 00. truck
rental. 614 -446- , ,
to the top bullo In the goo d con d " • 2 •9815 · C• II 40611 .
country. Agel - 11 montho 614-388-99015 from 9-li.
I ~~--_.!,_____
to 3 ,yeors. Price 71icontspor
SEWING Machine repeiro, ::
pound. Contact ARROW 1978 Chevy pickup V-B. service. Authorized ·Singer •
&amp; S
,
F/!.RMB. Athe fts, Ohio . •uto, Bcotsdele, package, ·
. ervit o Sharpen , ,
''
·
••troo, ex. cond . c • 11 Solos
Phone1-814-1193·8274.·
· many
Scluors . Fabric Shop , •
4411-0848 lfter 11.
Pomeroy. 614 -992-2284. ::
19115 Cl)evy 2 ton truck, 1 II
~ •;
Hey &amp; Griln
.
ft. bed, 1,000 gal. water
G
H
~·
86
1
1
tonk. •1400. 2111-111120
enera . au mg ""

Hoy fo! ulo. Coll814 -3117· 1974 Ford Compor'lpoclol.
7143.
- Good condl11on. 304·1178·
2108.
Hovo•ovor 300 bu. oar corn ~=========
for 1111. •4.00 bu. 1114· ~
742-3010.
73 Vilna 8t 4 W.O.

- - - - - - - -lc-

1-------..:...--

Nice hoy 11 CoolvMie ·and
Rutleild. Dlocount t 01 Iorge 1178 Jeep CJ-11, ••c. cond.,
quonltleo. &amp;14·1117-3818.
must 1811. .Coll4411-4013.,

L,,_,,

;

THAR ANVTHING
I CAN DO FOR VOU
WHILE
IS

"'O'RE

THAR IS
ONE LITTLE
THING,
LUKEV··

g

VOU DADBURN
I •• REVENOOERS !!

LAID UP.
SNUFF'/?

1-------"--- '

'
' PEANUTS

l·

ANOTHER ~· DMlfllVS ",!
AM I 601N6 10 BE A·
11
DMINUS'' PERSON ALL
MV UFE, MARCIE?
WHAT CAN I DO ?

Good hey for oel•. Clovor·
OfCherd llfiii·IMIIfa. 12 Pill'
bell. Cill742;21211. ·

1--......,------

Hey for 1111.
·2111.

I
)

78

304-11711· .

Auto Parta
•

Good mixed ,.._,, t1 .•10 por
bile. Peell grinder, 304-

Acceeeortee

I foot truck topper,
t1 211.00.,304-11711-11477..

1171·2101.
(

_______;___._j·' :
87

(

Upholste.r v

" :
I

Till STATE
I
UPHOLSTERY SHOP ~::
1 113 Sic. Ave., OeiHpolls,• !114·4411-7833 or814 -4411•
1133.
•

e

U ·(f)

Cll Remlng1on
Steele Laura and Remington
infiltrate the circus to investigate a homicide. (60 min.l
(f) Everly Brothers Reunion This reunion concert
was taped at London·s
Royal Albert HaiL
(l) SCTV t5 Set at a slightly
seedy television station in
my1hical Melonville, the
crazy crew includes conniving president Guy Caballero
(Joe Flahertyl, brash station
manager Edith Prickly (Andrea Martini, oddball Ed
Grimley (Martin Short} and
loudmouthed comic Bobby
Bittman (Eugene Levyl.
Cil TBS Evening Newt
CD
()I Hart to Hart
.INNNewa
10:30 (J) Firing Une
(j)) Newa
• Comedy Time
.11 :00 8 Cll (J) Cll D (I)®.
()I Newt
(f) Not Neceasarily The
Newt
(f) MOVIE: ' lf&lt;!ney'
Cil Another Ufe
(]) SponaCenter
Cil All In the F•mily
(j)) All New Thlo Old House
• Benny Hill Show
1 1:1 5 (]) This Week In tho NBA
1 1 :30 U (f) Cll Tonight Show
(f) MOVIE: 'Kitty and the
Bagm11n'
·
(J) Belt of Groucho
(J) Soap
(J) M1111num P.l. When
an image appears to Rick on
the beach, the idea leads
Magnum to a deserted plan·
tation and a dangerous fa.
mily iervant. IRI (60 min.l
(J) 1.01enlgh1 Amerlcll
()J All In the F.mly

8

Hey fOf sole. !182-34111.

Reel good mixed hoy. N wet.1U per bell. Cell 742·
'2873.

.,TURUNEt
I ()
)

Now anango tho circled IOCtera to

lorm tho surprise ona-. u aug- "
gosled by tho obcve Cl"--

A"[

Prlntanswerhere:

II r ]" (X I)
(AniWOriiOmOn'Ow

I

YoSio&lt;doy's

Jumbles LURID IVORY JUMBLE SEAMAN_
AniWif What he called his prelly lemale
assistani - A VISUAL AID

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Who wants to lead trumps?
NORTH
+U7Z
Kit

t-17...

.A+to

+7S3Z
WEST

EAST

+s

+QH

.Q 10 7 s
U 7U
+A Q 10 8

•Ju

8KQJ62

+H

SOUTH
+AJ 108 6

•vz
•Au

+KH

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Nortll

Eut

Paso

3+

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

..

Sootll

t+

Opening lead:

•3

By Oswald J•coby
IUid James Jacllby
We will continue with
more hands from the Dallas
knockout.

Here we see Charley Weed
at a sound four -spade
contract. If • East holds the
ace of clubs, four is cold
(and five is possible if
there's no trump loser).
As you can see, the ace of
clubs is wrong. At the other
table South played for a 2-2
spade break and lost three
clubs and a trump.
Charley avoided a trump
loss by the simple expedient
of never playing trumps.
He won the heart lead and
cashed the second high
heart, ruffed a heart, cashed
the diamond ace and ruffed
a diamond in dummy. Tben
be ruffed the last heart
while East discarded a
diamond, ruffed his last diamond and finally led a club.
West's ace pickled South's
king. West took two more
high clubs while East
chucked his last diamond.
They were down to a
three-card ending, with
dummy holding the K-9 of
trumps and Charley holding
the A-J-10. It didn't matter
what West led; the rest of
the tricks belonged to Charley.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

6S~~,.,r
by THOMAS JOSEPH
3 Biological

ACROSS
1 Epic
5lmpudence

groop
4 Enunet

5 Happy look
I Grass genus
7 Do the town
8 Perceived
bythe

9 Set right
11 Bishop's
headdress
13 Gambling

game
14 "Smoke"
heroine

senses
10 Acquire

Yesterday's ADSwer
1% Exuded
17 Swruner (Fr. } Z5 Leading
32 Mortise' :
!8 Redford
fitter
19 Section
28Samuel's
33To
of glass
teacher
Z% Instance
pieces
30 Correct
Z3 Arranged
35 Other
a text
like a
things
31 Europen
(Lat.)
ladder
river
Z4 N.J. city
39Lamprey

15 "Indeed,"

in Dublin
1&amp; Backslide
18 Pause
zo Tree
Z1 Caligula's

greeting

Z% Attractive
Z3 Backbone

zo Evaluated
%'/ Bastinado
!8 Dawn deity

Z9 Sandy's cry
•Peach
variety
34 Wyoming

city
• In the know
37 Soap plant

a calif.

\'I)Cidish

4t Altercation
41 Voice
4Z African

town
43 Church

season
DOWN

1 Philippine

' Wand

zLove (It. )

Cil Clitllria

::
JONESBOYSWATERSER· 1
VICE. Call 1114-3117-7471 ,
or 814 -387-0591 .
••

Nood oomethlng hauled
away or somethlnq moved?
We'll do ij . Cell 4411-3169
between 9 and 6.

()I People' I Court
Jeffersons
1J (f) Tic Toe Dough
CIJ Hogen' a Heroea
(J) 8 (J) Family Feud
ClD Wheel of Fortune
()I
Enterlllinment
Tonigh1
• One Day 01 o Time
Blll Cll A Team A woman
hires the A Team to investi·
gate the theft of munitions .
(60 min .}
(I) MOVIE: 'All tho Rivers
Run'
(f) MOVIE: ' The King of
Comedy'
(I) I Spy
CIJ MOVIE: 'Centennial'
Pert 8
(J) lifestyles of the Rich
ei1d Femous
1J (J) (iD Miaoisoippi ,
(J) (j)) Novo 'The Case of
ESP.' The scientific evidence for and against ESP is
examined. (60 min.}jCiosed
Captioned!
()I Foulups. Bleeps/
Blunders
•
MOVIE: 'Don't Look
Now'
• ()I Happy Doya Fonzie
pleads 'The Fifth' at a school
board hearing at which he is
accused of hitting a student.
!Closed Captioned!
U (f) (l) Riptide Nick and
Cody risk their lives to rescue an executive analyst
being held captive by an assassin. (60 min.l
Cil America Crosarooda
(])
NCAA
Betketball:
Clemson 11 Maryland
1iJ ()) CiD MOVIE:
'Seduc1ion of Glne'
(J) (jj) American Playhou11
'The Ghost Writer.' A young
artist recalls a visit with a
wortd-famous author who
lives in seclusion with two
women. (90 min.l !Closed
Captioned! ·
• ()I Three's Company
()I Oh Mldeline

e

31 8

Turkoyo for sele. Coli after 5
p.m . 814-992-2834.

t

~ YALERN

I

WHA'T WA'5 'THE
t:'OWt-J PAYME NT
ON 'THAT
APA~TMENTf

•
•

10:00

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna, ponds, ditchoo,
besomento, etc. Call II 14446-4907. Corter &amp; Evans
Tranaportation.

1-------..,.----

CHI

DCJJ

e

- - - - - - .·
Will do all typoo

CAfiTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 814-446-3888 or
1114-446-4477

(J)
(lJI

FLYIM
(J I

e

,

Moy1og woohor f715, Kenmore washer t!IO, Kenmore
washer e715, elec. range
Hll, gao renge •ss. side by
JA 'C KSON ESTATE side rtfrigertor •1110. fro11
APARTMENTS (Equal free refrigertor t 1po, 17 ft.
Housing Opportunityl hu chest freezer •1215, 3 aofoo
one and two bedroome, rent 11ortlngot t46to 175, small
otortlng at f157 for one M1y11g porteble wooher
bedroom and f193 por f95. Skoggo o\'pplloncoo,
month for two bedroom. Uppor River Rd. 1114-446with $200 deposit located .:7398.
near Foodlond e~d Spring
Volley Plaza. pool· and TV Complet~ living room suite,
ant. Coli 446-274&amp; or leave coffee table, -end teblei,
meaaeg~ .
•
lempl. couch and owivol
rocker, colO&lt; conoolo TV, 2
Nice 2 bdr. ·carpeted opt. in yuro old. Zenith storo.conKonouge with wuher •
sole, 1 veer old, 8 track.
drver hookup, f171 pluo ovory1hlng 1700.00. Phone
utllltloo. Coli 1-304-273• 304-n3-113112.
97411.
Teble, four chelra, buffet,
Furnlohed upltllro _,apt. 2 phone 304·11111-11292.
rooms • beth, Iduna only.
Oleen, no poto. Dopoolt, W- Morning IIH. heetlf
required, utllltln paid. 441- 311,000 btu, •100.00. 304·
111111.
1171-4141.
' I

7 :30

ANNIE

GET- yo~r ' carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN ,;
STEAMER . Water removal.
fumlturo cloning, fru ootlmotes. -904-11715-2295.

82

9

I·-·-e--I I J
M--

()I N-•

1-'---------1----------'----':""-----164

1----------

CHOCOL.A"TE51 OH,...JO'\"'!
1 HAVENT HAD ONE

FOR AGES.'

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut·
ter. (Day 1114-1592-40111.1
(night 1114·1198-8205.1

1974 Olds Cutlou. Low
mileage. Runs good .Coll
992-2707.

1976 Cadillac Coupo DeVIlle. Bui offor. Coli 949 Farmalt Cub tractor with 21106.
cultivators . turning plow•
and old mowing machine. 1 976 Olds Cutluo Su·
All wheel weights in good promo. 2 dr. 1971 Chevy
condition, f2 .000. firm . Impala. 2 dr. 1972 Oklo 98 .
Call 446 -4120 oftor 5.
2 dr. 2 tronsmisslono-1 Oldo
and 1 Chevrolet. Cell 986·
450 John Deere dozer. Cell 3839 .
oftor 7PM. 446-1542.
1987 Muotong, olx cylinder,
auto, good J ondltion ,
Wanted to Buy
f1 , 260 . 00 .
04 - 45816515.

Dttll-llt'lolf:~W

Wotor Walls. Commorclol
and Domostlc. Test holes.
Pumpo hleo and Sorvlco.
304-8915-3802.

1981 Oklo Cutl111 Supreme
Brougham 32,000 mi .
Loedod 90 day 50-150 warranty. Coli 1114-379 -27211 .

F.1r111 Supplli'S

O l.. t~aog,.N_III'd....,,

1/17

1----------

(!)

DCil

0:00 • (f) (J) Cll • (J) ()I •
()I News
(f) Consumer Reporte
(f) MOVIE: 'The Second
Time Around'
' CIJ N - Treaoure Hunt
(]) Thla Week In the NBA
CD Utile Hou11 on the
Pl'lllrle
(J) (j)) 3 -2 -1. Contact
• Buck Rogers
8:30 • (f) ClJ N9C Nowt
(f) MOVIE: 'Airplane II :
The hquel'
C1J Riflemen
· (]) SportsCenter
CD
()I Ate News
II (J) ()I CBS N-•
(J) Buoineto Report
(j)) Why In the World
7:00 8 (f) PM Magazine
Cil Alila Smith ei1d Joneo
(])
NCAA
Betketball:
Duke 01 Wake Forest
CIJ Carol Burnett
(J) Entertainment Tonigh1
Cll Chortle' • Angelo
II (J) Wheel of Fortune
(J) (!)) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newohour

RINGLE' S SERVICE IXPI· ,
rloncod roofing , Including
hot tor eppllcotlon, corpon1111', olectrlclen, mason. Coli
304 -11711· 2088 or 8715 45110.

•n.

())
(J)
(J)

EVENING

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, otump ;
romovol . Coli 304 -678 1331 .

Autoa for Sale

~ge

e

RON'S Televiolon Sorvico.
Spociolizing In Zonlth and
Motorole , Ouazer . and
hou11 collo. Coli 304 -5711 2398 or 1114-4411-24114.

e

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olivo St .. Gollipolio. New
a. used wood It coal stOves.
6 piece wood living room
' auita with 8 inch flat arms
8399, bunk bods complete
with bunkies $199. 2 pioco
antron livingroom suitea
$199. ontron re&lt;:llners $99,
other recliners t80. maple
dinotto sets f179. box
springa
mattress twin or
full $100 set regular-firm
8120, mopple dinotto choirs
$36, woah otondo $34,
maple rockers $69. 7 piece
chrome dinette set $149, 5
piece dinette set e99. used
bedroom suites. rafrlgera·
tors, rangaa, chest. dressers,
wringer washers. TV' a, dry·
oro, &amp; shoeo. Coll614 -4463169.

Umestono delivered. $10 a
ton. Coll614-266-1427.

RAY S USED FURNITURE.
6 drawer doole $26, maple
cheot 826, rebuilt Mey1eg
washer e1 00, kitchen cabinet with flour bin $60.,gas
heater 65,000 BTU $70,
aloe.- hot wotor hooter 860.
olec. range 876, , 2 pc . .
bedroom suite $66. block &amp;
white TV $36, Hundrodo of
old tools frorri tho Hills &amp;
Velloya of Meigs, Gollio &amp;
Athens Counties. Coll614367-01137.

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

DCIJ
CIJ
CIJ
CIJ

1/17/84

ANGI:~A ~ VOU KNOW THO~E TWO
I WA~ TE~~ING VOU A&amp;OUT! THE
OTHilR ONE WITH l HI!l LIMO BROUGHT
THE-M ~OMe; PACK IN&amp; -£RATE~
~AST NIGHT.

Appliance Borvlce all mokoo
&amp; modols rofrlgortors ,
weshera. dryera, rengea.
compactora, dlahweehers,
mlcrowoveo. Heating &amp;
Cooling, Bhoet Motol Worlt. •
Go lila Refrigeration Co .
1114-448-40811 .

e.

Nearly new washers &amp; dryers, reconditioned &amp; guaranteed 30 days. Wo opociellze
in washer &amp; dryers only. Call
1114-266-1207.

Home
lmprovementa

Morcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
lng. 30 years exporlence,
opoclollzlng In buNt up roof.
Coli 1114·388· 98157.

•s

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryara. refrigera tors. rongoo. Skaggs Appliances. Upper River Rd.
beolde Stone Croot Motol.
614-446-7398 .

•

PLASTERING • New on~ .
repair commorclol and reol· .
dontlol, free estlmotos. Coli
614·2158 -1 182.

Limestone delivered
per
---------ton. Coll614 -388-91112.
· AKC Registered Doberman
puppleo, redo &amp; bloch, f71i .
TOP CASH pold for late
Mobile hom~ auppliea: non - CAll 4411· 77911 .
model used cars. Smith
toxic antifraeze-•6.60 per
Bulck· Pontloc, 1911 Eutgallon. Water heating ole· If Fish opoclolo ore whet you orn Avo.. Gallipolis. Coli
ore
looking
for?
We'vo
got
menta, water heater. steps.
814-4411-22 82 .
windowa. doors, faucets, them galore. Zebre 2 for
breakera. etc . HotPoint f1 .00; Ghol1 Shrimp 2 for 1978 Plymouth Chomf
heavy-duty electric dryera. • 1 .00; 91eck MoiNos 2 for 41,000, air cond., ounroo ,
this month only f279 . e1 .00; Bmoll Neons 2 fOf 4 spd. with 2 spd axle. Coli
Kingobury Homoo Ports and f1.00; Red Fin Shorko after 4PM, 448· 7414.
Accoosory Store. 900 Eut f1 .150 each. Dwarf robbltto
Main St.. old Bookmobile f4.1i0 eech. Filii Tonk, 117 FOfd LTD good body,
building in Pomeroy or call 241 3 Jockoon Ave.. Point extra parte. runs perfect
Ploosent 11711-20113.
992 -6587.
fiiOO. 74 Buick nttdo trono·
million 82150. Cell 11148 foot truck topper-f76 .00.
21111-131
Musical
New wringer washer. Old 67
school desk. Seigler fuel oil
Instrument•
1979 T-llrd, one owner.
'
stove. Antique aolid oak
ox.! r• oherp, new radiale,
pump organ. 1981 'IJ ton
cuotom wheels. f4.000.
Chevy pickup truck:&amp; cy- For sole-Spinet-Console PI· Coli 1114-21111-1141 after 11.
linder, standard . Call 985· ono Bargain . Wonted ·
3839.
Responsible party to teke 1974 Audlso• good cond ..
over low monthly paymenta f8150 Of boot offer. Coli
New wood burning atove on Spinet Plano. Con be 1114-388-99015 from 9-15.
with firebrick $325. ooch. 111n locally. Write Credit
304 -676 - 1578 or 675- Monoger:P.O.Box 537 Shel- 1979 F01d Pinto Runebout,
7896 .
byville, ln. 411176.
40,000 mllu, ••· cond.
U , 191i. Coli 1114- 388Hoy $1 .60 por bolo. Wood 1 set of ludwig drumo. Aslc 99015 from 9-15.
$26.00 pick -up load at form for Brion, 614 -379-2700.
or $36.00 dolivorod . 3041974 Plymouth Dustor for
895 -3808.
Wonted old plonoo. Paying partl, good slant
engine
820. and •40. each. First and 3 spd. tronsmlulon
SAM SOMERVILLE ' S Army floor only. Write giving
Call 4411· 78315 .
Surplus, closed for repaira. directions. Written PianoaJon . 14 to Jon. 28. Opon .Box 188 Sardis, Ohio 1981 Chevy Chevette 4spd,
Jon. 29th 1:00 PM.
439411. Phone 1114-483 - 1980 Renault L.Cor 4 spd,
18015.
1979 VW Rabbitt IUIO,
Will haul sand and gravel.
1978 Chevy Novo auto,
Phone 304-468-1666.
Baldwin organ with double 1983 Ford pickup auto.
keyboard. Fully equipped 1979 Ford Courlor pickup 4
Firewood for solo. $30.00 with lesllo opookero, foot opd. AH vochllcu priced
pickup load. Phone 304- podol and rhy1hms occom- right to ·11le Of trade. John' a
676 -5963 dolivorod .
ponlmont. Coli 1114-992· Auto Soloo. Bulovllle Rd ..
6384.
4411-4782.
20 inch girls bike, 20 inch
boyo biko. 1 girlo 10 spoed, Gibson flat top guitar. Coli
19711 Ford Pinto 119.000
26 inch. 304-676-5162 .
992'-3342.
mi .. f800. Coli 4411·81194.

limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gollia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son. Coli 446 -7786 .

51 Household Goods
1

TV &amp; Appliances. 627 Third
Avo ., Gollipollo, 614 -446·
1699. Spin woshoro. gas &amp;
electric dry'ers. auto
washers, gas &amp; electric
ranges , refrigerators . TV
aets.

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivorod. 12"-22" stocked
in yard . HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 614 -2666246 .

For lease, Chevron Station,
2 bedroom mobile home. Mason area. Good location.
New carpet, utilities paid, no 304-675 -2982 after 6pm.
pets. drunko, dopa. 1 kid ·
accepted. John Shoots. 3'1J
Merch~nd1se
milos South Middleport. R7 . 367-0611 .
Two bedroom. all electric,
8126.00 per month, $60.00
deposit. Aohton Upton
Rood. Phone 304 -6764088 .

good ohope. Coll4411-42811.
Truck top for short bed,
f 160. 1981 office troller
60x10, control olr, A-1
cond .. $4,600. 22 ft . cabin
cruiser with lnboa,r d ·
outboard, $2,600 or will
trade. 1976 LaSalle travel
trailer 27 ft , with air &amp;
owning 84,1 00. Bolenlng
1 o v, HP garden tractor with
snow blade, cart , aerator, It
limo oprooder, 8860. ' Coli
614-643-2916. Waterloo.
OH .

54 Misc. Merchandise

For Lease

81

For 1111 largo metal dook &amp;
choir. Call 614 -266-6413
after 4PM.

&amp;
$30,
king fromo
$60.
Good
selection
of bedroom
suites. cedar c he sts.
rockers . motel cabinou .
swivel rockers .
Used Furniture -· bookcase.
ranges. chairs, dryers. refrigerators and TV 's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri. , 9am
to 6pm, Sat .
614-446-0322

HuntingtOn, WV
Home 8cix Office
Clnemu
CBN c.ble Netwrk
&amp;pons NetwOflc
Atlenta, GA
Columbuo, OH
Parlcersburg, WV
Ch8rMeton. WV
HuntingtOn, WV
Columb111, OH
Alhene.OH
Huntington. WV
Huntc.ne. WV

•

2-P215x14 Doy1on rodlolo,
snow tirea. eeo pair. ....
than 6,000 miloo on tlroo. 4
Ford Courier whoolo with
chrome hub capo, f40. li
Chevy Blazer whool o 15", II
lug. no. Call &amp;14 -379·
2307 after 6:30.

Old glassware, stone jars,
radios. clocks. etc. No Sunday calls. 614-949-2801 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pori&lt;, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Largo lots. Cell
614-992· 7479.

Sl: fVI CI:S

e

Notional air tl~ht wood·
burner for quick sole f271i .
Been used 4 monthe, ex.

...

327 !luck onglne with euto.
trono .. rune gc)od •1110.00.
304-418-11113.

Infant car seat with cover
f16, baby owing f10 , eonsolo stero with 8 -trock fliO .
Call 14-245-9498.

~ily Sentinel

Television
Viewing

~-

lilly Lee' o Tlru end Battery
loleo. New end used tlros,
·eloo. tire repllro. 1 1103 Jof· ,
feroon Ave. Point Pleosont. ,_
304-11715·114011.

Firewood for sele. Call 446·
1287.

55 Building Supplies

large trailer lot on But avillaAddison Rd. Coll.446-4736
or 614-367-0232 .

i. 'l"::e~:~ea

Matching vanity.&amp; bed, 11150
motorcycle, old l• nterno,
Iampo, 4 cholro. chlldo pi·
ano, dook. Coli 4411·82153.

53 · Antiques

Space for Rent

49

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair. rocker, ottoman, 3 tables. (extra hfovy
by Frontlerl. fll85 . Sofa,
choir end IOVIIOII, f276 .
Sofoo end cholrsr.lced from
f281i . to $8915. obleo, f46
and up to f 121. Hide·• ·
bod o:·u 40 . and up to
f6215 .. Rr ' hnero, f1715 . to
f371i .. amps from f28. to
f75 .f P&lt; - dlnottea from
899 .. to 436. 7 pc. $189
and up. Wood table with six
choi rs f 426 to f745 . Dook
$110 up to f226 . Hutchoo,
f660 . and up, moplo or plno
flnioh . Bunk bod complete
with mattra11e1, *250 . and
up to $395. Baby bod o,
$110. Mattre11ea or box
springo, full or twin, f6 8 ..
firm , $68. and $78. Quoon
oots. $195. 4 dr. cheoto,
$42. 6 dr. cheats. $64. Bod
frames, $20.and •25., 10
gun - Gun cabinets, t360.
Goo or electric ranges $376.
Baby mottrouea. $26 &amp;
$36. bed frames $20 , $26,

a.

Unfurnished three room apt.
(range and refrigerator)
$260.00 month. Utilitieo
paid. Newly carpeted . Call
304 -6'76-3030 or 676-

doposit req . Coli 614-446- l -:=
8668.
1-34:::3:::1:::.= = = = = = = =

2 bdr. completely furnished
mobile home. ,Cell 446·
9669 .

-20x60 store building lo·
C;ated on Main Street in
RUtland. Hoo nice 4 room
and bath apartm8nt above.
Will accept leto modal cor or
truck on trade. Asking
$12,600. Coll742-2460.

41

~~~~;~~~~~~~~=;~~~~;~~
41
44
Houses for Rent

64 Mlac. Merchandlae · ...
K-IT_'N
_'_c_A_R.,;,LY..:I:.:.;;;E_'u-:--:-~--.....;.;._...;..-:-:::-,

61 Houaehold Goode

nw

-Midcl_~port. Oh~

1984

4

lo

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::

•.

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1:

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

Ot!e letter limply •lands for another. In this sample A is
Uled for tbe' three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, .•:
a~. the lenlth ond formotlon of the words ere al) · .
hlnll. l!fKb day tbe eode letters ore different.

• C1J Nlghtllne

Q 11114 Unlttd FMtln

MAVSE I CM! TIIINK
OF SOMETI-UN6 EL5.E...

• Twii'P._ht Zone
· 1 1 :45 Cil NFL 1 GNIItest Mo·
I'MIItl NFL'o
Greoteat
Momento preoenta . high· •
lights of Supai' Bowl 'XVI'
featuring the San Francisco
49er' s vo. Cinclnneti Ben·

.12:00 (I)
~~·Allen .
·
CD MOVIE: 'ltl'lllt..Jecket'
(I) Nlghtllne

BurM.

()J

MOVIE:

. C.YPTOQUOTES

GVW

CKRWt
WHSV

VOTMHUBT

KT

MWSHOTW

GP •• YYWIWU.O

BPIPGVJ

HUB

OUBWITGHUB

BP

PGVWI

MWZPUE

'Goodbye

•Ageln'
Thlcke of the Night ·1 2:1 II (]) FIS World Cup Siding:
'
Men'• Downhill Coverage

I W H T-P U

GVWJ

TWNWT.

BKN ·

Y•terday'a Cl),..ll&amp;~: YOU MAY AS WELL FALL FLAT _

ON YOUR
ACE . AS LEAN OVER TOO
-BACKWARD.-JAMES111URBER

.:

FAR- :
.

�•

Ohio

10--The' Daily Sentinel

wooster finn chosen
It was also suggested that a sign
be placed on Mulberry Ave.
directing traffic to SR 7 and SR 124.
Meeting with council was Guido
G!rolam! concerning theplac!ngof a

(Continued from page 1)

lottery terminal at his business
establishment on U. S. 33. Glrolaml
also owns a busineSs on Pomeroy's
West Main Street.
G!rolam! asked that a sign be

moved trom a pole near his Rt. 33
establishment. He said he had
contacted the Ohio Department of
Highways regarding the sign.
Council agreed to accomodate
Gtrolamt.

Election highlights trustee meeting
Election of officers and talks by a
number of guests were highlights of
the annual meeting of the Meigs
County Association of Township
Trustees and Clerks held at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center.
Bob Pickett was reelected president and other officers elected
Include Gary D!ll, vice president;
Shirley Johnson, sec retarytreasurer, and Otis Knopp, executive off!eer.
Phil Roberts, county engineer,
spoke on the need for placing signs
on roads of the county and Bob First
and David Coulter spoke on re-

source conservation and dev~lop­ Jones and David Koblentz, county
ment and ways this program can commissioners; Meigs Sheriff
benefit the county. Common Pleas · James Proffitt; Emmogene HolJudge Charles Knight discussed the stein Congo, county recorder, and
importance of townships having Jimmy Allen of the Southeast
adequate liability Insurance.
Equipment Co.
Refreshments were served by the
State Senator Oakley Collins
spoke on pending legtslat!on In Ohio staff of the center to some 50
and the financial situation In the members and guests.
state.
Also Introduced and making brief
comments were W!ll!am Wickline,
county auditor; Ted Warner, Meigs
County Highway Department;
Roy 0. Heilman
Larry Spencer, county clerk of
Orv!lle Eastman and Betty Eastcourts; Manning Roush, Richard
man, Pomeroy, rece!vedWordofthe
death or their cousin, Roy 0 .
Hellman, Enterprise, Oregon Sun·
day evening.
Mr. Hellman, a former Pomeroy
Marriage licenses
resident, was the son of the late
W!lliam Hellman and Etta East·
Marriage licenses were issued In
man Hellman .
Meigs County Probate Court to
He !s survived by his wife, Hazel
Gary Gene Putman , 21, Rt. 2,
Hellman; one son, James HeUman,
Coolv!Ue, and Debra Elaine Pooler,
Enterprise; one dauglher, Etta ·
19, Rt. 2, Coo!v!lle; Scott Allen
Werst, Enterprise; six grandchUdWarner, 24, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and
ren and three great grandchUdren;
Betsy Anne BeU, 19, FayettevUie, N.
two nieces and several counsins
c.
from Meigs County.
Tax extension granted
Funeral services wUl be held In
Enterprise, Oregon and burial wUl
An extension on the payment of
be In Klamath Falls, Oregon.
the first half ot1983 real estate taxes
has been granted, Meigs County
Ohio lottery winners
Treasurer George Collins said this
morning.
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Deadline for payment of the last
winning number drawn Monday
half of 1983 taxes has been extended
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
from Jan. 20 through Feb. 15.
game, "The Number," was 568.
However, Co!llns said no extension
1n the "Pick 4" game, played
has been granted on traUer taxes
Monday through Friday, the winand they must be paid by Jan. 30.
ning number was 8165.

I

I

Area death

Meigs County happenings..
Scout meeting set
Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245
w!ll meet Thursday, Jan . 19, at 6:30
p.m. at the Bradford Church at
which time awards w!ll be given.
Plans w!ll also be discussed for
the trip to Fenton Glass In February.
Members who are In the bowl-a·
thon are to be at Skyline Lanes
January 21, at 2:45 p.m. Plans are
underway to hold a Pinewood Derby
with all cars to be completed by the
first of February. F&lt;or additional
Information call den leaders or cub
masters.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Charles Schoonover,
Rutland; Ilene Hall, Middleport;
Paul Michael, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Evelyn Wofford,
Goldie Lawson, Marabel Frecker, 1
Worley Davis.

AWARD WINNING

Three calls were answered by

from thesceneotanautoaccldenton

MlnersvUle HUl to VeteransMemor,
1al Hospital.

KAHN'S "No Sugar Added"

BACON........ ~~~.~ 1

99

Regular t}S ~B. 1
Beef $} 69 LB.

KAHN'S 1-LB.

BOLOGNA

Voi.32,No.t95

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD .................~~-. $1.29
HOMEMADE SAUSAGE ....•..............•..~~-. $1.39
PORK STEAKS •...........•..•..................~~·. $1.49
BONELEsS PORK ROAST ..•.................~~-. $1.39
"WE NOW HAVE OLD FASHIONED BOLOGNA
8 PAK
COKE &amp;SPRITE •••••••••

THURSDAY ONLY

R. C. COLA ..........a.~~c:.$1..29
99(
BROUGH10N

PIZZA SHACK

BROUGHTON 1I 2 GAL.

;h«M!seiVitamin D Milk

EAT IN OR TAKE OUT

240z.

PHONE 992-6674
OPEN 4 P.M.-12 MIDNIGHT EV-eRY DAY

~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~~~~~~~~~~~

$1_29

99(

VALLEY BELL

2°/o Milk
Gallon $1 69

CREAM CHEESE ..............~.~~:~~: 89¢
PAPER TOWELS......................~ ... ~~~. 59¢
MAC. &amp; CHEESE DINNERS ........2/89¢
JACK MACKERAL..........................t~.~.~~. 69¢
PHILADELPHIA

GENERIC

Meets Wednesday

KRAFf.

The Syracuse Third Wednesday
Club wlll met Wednesday at 10 a.m.
at the Syracuse Municipal Building.
Potluck refreshments wlll be
served.

Boosters to meet
The Southern Athletic Boosters
wlll meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
junior high.

)

Judgment soueht

A suit for $28,304.~ was filed In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Union Planters National Bank of
Memphis, Memphis, Tenn., against
Larry T. Jeffers and VIolet L.
Jeffers, Pomeroy.

G-J-Mboard
(Continued from page I l
The board held a Ph-hour
executive session with attorneys
Hamlin King and W. Joseph Strapp
to discuss legal matters.
King Is representing the board Ina
suit filed against GaUla County for
uncollected revenues from the
operating levy renewal that was
defeated In 1981. .
Strapptstheboard'scounselln the
lawsuit executive
Maxine director,
Plummer,
the
former
entered
against the board and other public
officials for attempting to remove
her from her job last year.
The levy money suit was also rued
on action by Plummer, who was
dismissed by the board last Sept. 15.
The board has discussed dropping
that suit, but deferred action un!U It
met with King.
Following the closed meeting, n&lt;i
decision on either suit was taken by
the board.

RED
GRAPES

(

....,...

OIA!oa)s

POTATOES

'

6-9~8.

• 'W\&gt;e-Oeon Leio..w&lt;-r,.,• ~ sheMs

50 LB. UNCLASSIFIED

and--

• Sold oak frames, doors ~

$499

·-desV-..d-

DEL MONTE

syslem

PINEAPPLE

• Sel-ciosOlg IW1ges
• An !lml)t d convenience
octeSIIOries

992-3978

We Accept

Crushed, Sliced,
Chunks In Heavy Syrup
·20 OZ. CANS

.RACINE
PLANING MILL
Syracuse

r~~~~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~

"I find the big catches.
Block finds me the big
refunds.''.

"WIC"

79¢

Double the value of manufacturers' cents off coupons
• · ·
·
up to 49' In face value.

I

'I

"Big refunds are the best catch of aU at

.

-

'

SAVE DOUBLE $$

AT C.K.

SUPERMAR~ET

.

Block. My preparer is trained to know
where to look for every deduction
and-credit. And over the
long haul, that means
more money in my
pocket.''

snow after midnight. Low 24-28.
Variable winds 10 mph or less.
Wednesday, snow and cold. High
25-.ll. Chance of snow 50 percent
tonight and 90 percent Wednesday.

People who know
their busineSs go to

fac!lltles and housing.
Jones asked If access road funds could be used for
the housing develqxnent that will be built near the
Senior Citizens Cet;lter. Closser said he would check It
out. but It would have to justify jobs.
The road behind the hospital was also brought up,
but, commissioners were told It would hjave to be
Investigated. 11 that was possible, Closser wlll notify
the commission accordingly.
lndultrtal UMge
Dave Kob!entz asked about the possibility of using
access road funds If an Industry such as a canning
factory would locate In Letart Falls where thousands
ot tomatoes are grown each year. Closser said as long
as It created jobs, It could possibly qualify.
Commissioners were trying to determine where and
If a part of the money could be used In Metgs County.
aosser also proposed a revolving loan fund for
smaU business and Industry.
The proposed uses Include working capital,
machinery and equipment, construction, expansion

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel stall
Meigs County Commissioners were lnfonned
Tuesday that between $1 m!ll!on and $1,400,lm In
uncommitted funds are st!ll avaUable through the
Appalachian Regional Development District.
Tom aosser, executive director of Buckeye Hllls
Hocking Valley Regional Developmmt District said
ARC has approximately $1 mllllon unconunltted
dollars 'for fiscal year 1984 and between UXl,tm and
$400,lmln the access road fund Ulat Is unconunltted.
However, the money must be used In economic
development or job creation.
The ARC money could not be used for the Tuppers
Ptalns sewage project, or an Industrial park. Oosser
said the commission cannot operate on the
speculation that a park would be developed.
It could be used. tor a low Income housing project.
"It has to justify jobs" Closser said.
The access road money must also be used for .jobs.
It can be used to widen the main artery or improve

LOGAN, Ohio (AP) - Dale Johnstorl, whose trial In the mutilation
. sl&amp;!!lgs.!Jf )l!s .s~ughter and her fljlllce Is In Its second week, told pollee
~ had "visions" after the slaytngs, a policeman has testltled.
Logan pollee detective James Thompson testified Tuesday that Johnson
told him of "psychic visions."
"He said he would close his eyes and see faces, and thought they might be
suspects In the case," the detective sal!IJohnstoon, 50, Is charged with two counts of aggravated murder with
death penalty specifications In the October 1982 slaylngs of Annette Cooper
Johnston, 18, and Todd Schultz, 19.
Thompson said Johnston also "had a vision of a bag of clothes."
"He had seen Todd's red tennis shoes on top oflt, and they seemed to be In
a closet SQillewhere," Thompson testified.
A former neighbor of Johnston, Linda Anderson, said Johnston carried a
black-handled pistol In his belt under his vesh
"Every time we saw hlm he ha(! It," she testified.
Pollee has testified that Johnston told them he had rifles but no
handguns.
The.three jullges hearing the case learned that Johnston tape-recorded
his telephone conversations with Hocking County Sheriff Jim Jones,
Including one conversation In which Johnston told Jones about shots being
fired near tile cornfield wllere parts of the dismembered bodies were
found. An autopsy report showed Miss Johnston and Schultz died of
gunshot wounds.
Jones testified Tuesday that Johnson considered suing the Logan pollee
depattment and that Johnston has asked him whether he thought there
was a "cover-up" In the pollee department.

118 E. Main 8t.

PEPSI
or 7-UP
2 LITER BOTTLES

$119'

KARL KEBLER-OWNER
PHONE 982-3781

We
·

.

P.ometoy. Ohio 41718

r~~-....,.---------.---·-----------":--------------'---------

.

--· - ---- ---- --·-

Re~ry~

the Right tq

. MIDDLEPORT, Ol:f.
Llm~t Qu~ntltles.

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS

---- '. ---~-------~

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

HEAVY SNOWFALL- More thM two 1nc11eS of
snow had laDen In Meigs County by rnld-mondng as a
ma,jor wmter stonn moved through the area. Road!!

were c1oged and vlllqe, COUJity and state highway
crews were salting and plowing to make ~
passable.

First major snow fall
blankets Meigs County
today and off the mid-Atlantic coast
tonight.
A very cold high pressure system
wascenteredoverthecentralplalns
this morning. As the low moves out
colder alr wlll push Into Ohio,
dropping temperatures to near or
below zero over paris of northern
Ohio by tomorrow morning and Into
the single d!glts over much of the
rest of tbe state.
Snoww!lldlmlnlshtofiurrleslater
today and tonight and flurries wUI
probably continue Into tomorrow 1n
the northeastern half of the state.
With colder air moving In, _It wlll
continue quite cold with highs from
15 to 25 degrees tomorrow
afternoon.
Early this morning temperatures
wereinthe20soverthesoutheastern
third of the state and In the teens
over the rest of Ohio except In the ·

The Pomeroy Street Department
was hitting problem areas with salt
as the areas were reported and the
county highway department had
every worker out on the roads.
However, they, too, were plowing
arid cinderlng the most serious
traffic hazard areas. Pomeroy
stores were practically without
custOIIIeJ'S andsomeemployeswere
·not on their jobs as a result of the
snow which caused sUppery roads.
Snow dlnnlnlshlng to flurries and
. One store at 10 a.m. was without
customers; another had had two . cold to~t. Low 1(}.is. Northerly
IY!ncb 1~15 mph. Thursday, partly
customers all morning.
. Stave shovels were Ill action cloudy and continued cold. High In
everywhere as residents fought the the rnld-:Dl. Chance · of 511011( 70
constant (alllng snow to clear walks percent tonight and 20 percent
ThundaY.
·
and driveways.
Exflellded Oblo Forecast .
· Meanwhile, areas along the Ohio
River were expected to get 2 io 4
FrldiQ' lllroulb Sunday:
Inches of snow today, the heaviest . Putb' cloucl1 iDd cold ~.
accumulations In the state.
~af--~.Falrlllil
By this evening, · &amp;CC!IJIIujatlons Suada.J. llllhllnOiidy ..
WW taper rtf to about an Inch In the llle .... Frld!Q', WllriM!alo the
nort)lwestern counties.
......-.to mid . . bylluadeJ.~
Lowpressurealongthi!GulfCoast ISO lo 11 a1Jo¥e ..._ llld
east of New Orleans wlll .move llllalrdq ........ lis-dey.
·oortheast through the Carolinas

Weather forecast

:·.:) ·s·u·p. ER. ,
. KET·
•· MAR.

Also meeting with the commissioners were Mitch
Farley of the Ohio Department of Natural Resouces,
Phil Roberts, county engineer and Ted Warner,
superintendent of the county highway.
Farley explained that ODNR plans to rectalm a
mine area at Bone HoUow Creek In Bradbury by
reseeding and stopping erosion. Sediment has flowed
from the mine area Into the creek causing the creek to
overllow.
The question not answered was who would
maintain the creek after It Is cleaned i&gt;ut? .
Farley said fl could be done under the Ohio
Drainage Law or with an agreement with the county
engineer.
Under the Ohio Drainage Law the Improvement Is
maintained by the county with funds obtained by an
annual assessment upon the benefited ownen;.
Commlsioner did not like that arrangement.
Roberts agreed to assist but first wanted to meet
with the Ohio Department of Highways to see what
the!!' Involvement would be. !Continued on page 12)

Rebates
unlikely

closed all Meigs County schools
today and put business at a
stands lUI. ·
Snow began falling after 6 a.m.
Wednesday and by9a.m. two inches
had fallen and the snow continued.
Traffic In Pomeroy was light as
residents who Couldn't get around,
apparently stayed by the home
fires. Those who were traveling
found slippery spots which were
difficult to manipulate.

•Redeem your manufacturers money-savinc e,oupons at C.K.'s andre·
ceive double the value when you purchase the specified item. One coupon per item. No expired coupolis.accepted. Double redemption offer
does not apply to "Free Merchandise", cou~on,or couporis over49~ in
face Vllue. No cash refunds when Double Coupons value exceeds pnce
· of item. Ciprettes and .certain other items afe excluded .~Y law. To insure product to all our customers, -;;;, -.,. ltmitinc our Double Cou1 pon" offer to one jar of Instant Coffee and one can of Ground Coffee
~M.hoppinc family. Double Coup6n offer cood Thursday, Jan. 19, ·

. .

and renovation, property acquisition, start-upcap!tal,
product development, Interim loans In anticipation of
permanent financing.
The maximum loan to Meigs County would be
$50,lm. Under the proposal, private lndustty could
qualify aosser commented.
The RLF wlll be the responsibility of the district's
Economic Development Action Conunlttee (EDAC)
consisting of 10 to 12 persons from banking
Institutions, labor, business, Industry and educational
Institutions.
1n order to implement this, RLF and EDA-ARC
grants must be obtained. The local match can be
provided through CDBG funds, fund drives or
. operatlong buclgets.
As a participating county-community, the entity
can make recommendations for loans as long as It
meets the overall objectives of the regional RLF.
Oosser'asked commissioners to study the proposal
which he Indicated may or may not develop.
ODNRplans

By Sentlael &amp; AP reporis
The first major snow of the winter

THURSDAY. JANUARY 19th

SECOND &amp;MILL ST.

'l Sections, 12 Poget
20 Cents
A Multim.dio Inc. Newspope,

Johnston says
he had visions
after slayings

OPEN DAILY &amp; SUNDAY-9:00AM. TO 8:00 P.. M.
iiiiliillll..ioillliiiiiiiiiiiii.._.lliiiii

enttne

Uncommitted funds still available

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUNDAY, JAN. 22nd

ExteadedOI*IF-.t

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

4;($}

Coupons

COf'PON Sl1VINGS

tax time. That's why I rely on H&amp;R

Cloudy tonight with a chance of

Sal . - . Lon ISO to 11 abo¥e
~ llld FrldiQ' llld· .. llle

BANANAS

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 18, 1984

-Inns

• Ft.mrure ~ tnsh

Weather forecast

Thursday through saturday:
. 8llow llurriM . . 'Diunday.
Oti-awfle fair and cold ' t~nq~~
s.Auda.J.JDahi15-15'Diundayllld
FrldiQ' 8lld mid to . upper -.

aily
Copyolghtocl 19e4

-----------------------J

Emergency runs
local units Monday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports. At10:49a.m., Pomeroy
took Archie Swartz, 156 Mulberry
Ave., to Holzer Medical Center;
Poffieroy .at 5:44p.m. took Kathryn
Diles, 104NewSt., to Holzer Medical
Center, and at 8:40 p.m., the
Syracuse Unit took Judy McNickel

HILLSHIRE

..

VIEWBIMDENCE- Fonner IAJprpollce capte.. Sieve Mowery

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exiiiiiiM!l
........... wllle
weelulla*'llllelllll'derbillafDIIIe·U

aed by the~~~-···

'II

I&lt;+ ....,.lltciuupdlallle

llloatiDilllllllmlllll'dlerml:adeabaflllllll-yeiii'Gicle!l!pd........
her bo,yfilead Ia o.ber, I a (AI' 1z 1rphoto)
-I

.

.

•

northwest where the mercury was
In the single figures.
Around the nation, a storm that
dumpeduptoahalf-footofsnowon
Missouri marched toward the
Northeast today, the result of a
collision between heavy moisture
from the Gulf and an unyielding
Arctic air mass that sent the
mercury plunging below zero
across the Plains.
Drivers spun on icy north Texas
roads, and travelers' advlsolies and
winter storm warnings were posted
today from the southern Plains to
Ohio and Kentucky.
Numblhg temperatures spread
southward, threatening wlnd-ehUI
readings of 20 degrees below zero In
Oklahoma and snowfall In north
Alabama, the National Weather
Service said.
The front that chilled Butte,
Mont., to 28 below today was on a
"collision course" with moist alr
~m the Gulf, with the resuiung
snow and rain expected to extend
from the central states to the East
Coast, said meteorolqgist Nolan
Duke at the National Severe Storms
ForecastCenterlnKansasCity,Mo.
Asmuchasslxlnchesofsnowwas
' forecast for New Jersey, and paris
of New England also braced for
heavy accumulations. "A mixed
bag" of winter weather ln.Alabama
· was expected to Include snow In the
north, theNatlona!WeatherSe~

office In Blnnlngham predicted.
Five Inches of new· snow blanketed Spr!nglleld -and Joplin, Mo.,
early today, and 6 Inches was
!'eC9l'ded In the southern part of the
state.

.)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Although lawmakers are debating a
b!ll to gtve Ohioans a rebate trom
last year's state Income tax Increases, the chances of a rebate any
llmesoonaresllm, lawmakers say.
The Hoose Finance Committee
opened hearings Tuesday on a bill
which was promised last year when
voters decided keep the 90 percent
Income tax Increase enacted at the
request of Gov. Richard Celeste.
Ostensibly, the state wUI refund to
taxpayers any surplus the tax
producesover$100mllllonattheend
of each fiscal year, If unemployment
In the last three months of the fiscal
year Is below'U percent.
But at Tuesday's hearing, it was
pointed out that there are several
other refund trigger factors and
Celeste wants to Insert more.
Tax Commissioner Joanne Umbach also told the committee that the
governor wants to earmark onethird of any surplus to help pay
Ohio's $2 b!ll!on debt in funds
borrowed from the federal government to pay unemployment compensation benefits.
In addition to retention of $100
million for current operating purposes, the bUI sets aside a capital
improvement reserve and says that
before any refunds are made, there
alsomustbeapayment,determlned
by a special formula, Into the state's
budget stabUizat!on (rainy day)
fund .
Rep. Edward J. Orlett, DDayton,
the bill's sponsor, said that aU those
Items could add up to $500
mUI!on-$700 m!ll!on which would
have to be tucked away before there
was a refund.
Although the bUI faces no organIzed opposition, some Republican
members of the panel, Including
Rep. Robert E . Netzley, R-Laura,
said they are skeptical. "This bUI is
designed so that it never wUI
produce any refunds," Netzley
charged ...t
Orlett "'said the measure was
promised because of " Irresponsible
projections" during the Nov. 8
campaign on the Issues that the state
will end the fiscal year with a $1
bUllon budget surplus.
"We felt obligated to respond by
saying that at the end of any fiscal
year, any amount In excess of $100
mUlion wtll be refunded to the
taxpayers," he said.
_
He conceded however, that tbeset
asides required by the b!ll means
that no refunds are likely this year.
"We have a long way to go before
there are any refunds," he said.
Besides earmarking one-third of
any refund pool to help pay the
unemployment compensation debt,
Mrs. Limbach said the administration also wants to change the
unemployment compensation
trigger.
As now written, no refunds could
be made unless the state's unemployment rate averaged less than 11
percent In the last three months of
the fiscal year.

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