<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13362" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13362?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T20:33:28+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44334">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/d43d4187aabc67275c6f9fb282ce4b1c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>069ef0e76c86ee0e5189945159b1c4f7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41861">
                  <text>•

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

lielal•-·

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.

�,J

I}

Commenta•1

ftap 2-lhe Dally Sentinel
Pomen~y-Middleport, Ohio
Wedn..day, January 18, 1984

I

Mondale's speeches ______k_m_es_J._K_..:ilpa:...__tric:_~k

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - Presidential
campaigns are hard on the candidates themselves. They are tough
on the candidates' wives and tough
on the candidates' aides. But I have
just spent a long afternoon ~ading
the selected speeches of Walter
Mondaie, and I can tell you this with
feeling: Campaigns are hard on the

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE INTEREST OF TilE,MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~~
~m~
~v

,...,...,__,.__-r, ,...,.....,.c:::~,""'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

press as well.
What bilge, what baloney, what
blarney! I venture that judgment
without the slightest animus toward
Jimmy Carter's vice president. It is
the very nature of presidential
fandiates, in every party and in
every generation. to engage in
blarney. baloney and bllge. Mon-

dale's demogOguery taUs in the
grand tradition. This Is the forensic
stuff from which banana spllts are
made - the ice cream ot melting
promises, the chopped nuts ot
denunciation, the whipped cream ot
fulsome flattery. Such stuff is hard
to get down.
Let me see. In the Mondaie view,

BOB HOEFUCH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
i\ MEMBER ol The i\ssoetated Press, Inland Dally Press i\ssoclatlon and the American Newspaper Publisher A!isoclatlon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They should be less than 300 words
long. ;\lllellers are subjecllo editing and must be signed with name, address and
telt'phon e number . No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
good tastt&gt;, addressing Issues, not personalllles.

-. Hunger task force
_.- begged the question
Last August. President Reagan confessed to being "perplexed" by
:. reports that people are hungry "in this great and wealthy nation."
He appointed a task force to find out if that was so.
-· His task force has now reported. Its answer: Yes. And No.
Yes. It said, there are hungry people; no, It said, hunger is not
· :•·rampant."
Yes: "We find hunger to be a real and significant problem throughout
our nation," said chairman J . Clayburn LaForce.
- But No: "For the vast majority of low-income people, the pr1vate and
::pl!biic parts of the income maintenance and food assistance efforts are
' available and sufficient for those who take advantage of them," said the
: pimers report .
: · Well, then. is the problem worse? Is hunger more widespread than
;before?
_: Yes, said the President's Task Force on Food Assistance. and No.
It dealt with that crucial question in a single sentence that didn't answer
.-It
; : "Both need and availability have grown significantly," the task force
•found.
: ·This was· the only acknowledgement that the country has an increased
:ilunger problem.
_: "We cannot report o:i any indicator that will tell us where and by how
·tnuch hunger has gone up in recent years," the task force said.
_:. And so the crucial question of whether more Americans are hungry goes
~g.

.

&gt; ·But unless the government decides that substantial hunger remains

~despite substantial efforts to feed ti1e hungry, it will not increase those

·:efforts.
· Bill Moyers, the CBS News commentator. found some grounds for
· encouragement in the dispute.
Not so many years ago, Moyers noted, there would have been no debate
over whether hunger Is a big problem. The fact that hunger is not so visible
is proof that governrt\ent programs can work, he said.
Moreover, it may be progress, that there is no longer much of a debate
over whether hunger is any business of the government.
"If there is one person in ihis country hungry, that is one too many,"
Reagan said in appointing the task force.
The implication was that the government ought to do something about it.
Reagan didn't say that the government ought to help only those who can't
help themselves. He applied no mea!JS test.
But critics are dismayed by the task force's overall conclusion that
government efforts are "sufficient."
Civll rights organizatlons, antipoverty groups, church groups, some
Democrats in Congress and some people who run soup kitchens think the
task force has missed the dimensions of the hunger problem.
Robert Greenstein, who ran the Federal Food and Nutr1tion Service in
the Carter administration, says the panel ignored the impact of Reagan's
cuts in government food"!lrograms and overlooked entirely the effects of
cuts in other basic family programs.
When the government increased the rent of occupants of subsidized
housing, he says, it reduced the amount those families had to spend for
food.
"As recently as a week ago, the Reagan administration was floating a
document calling for another $4 blllion cut in food programs over the next
five years," Greenstein said.
"That's remarkable to me. If the president believes what he said, that we
shouldn't have a hungry person in America, he won't propose another cut."
The commission's chief recommendation called for offering states the
option of taking federal money to run their own food assistance programs
and to drop out of the food stamp program.
That idea was rejected forcefully by organizations speaking for the
nation's governors. mayors and county officials.
In the debate ovef whether hunger is widespread, those groups are in
agreement. Their answer is an unambiguous yes.
For example, a study in June by the U.S. Conference of Mayors found "a
recent and significant increase in the demand for emergency food
assistance" in cit:es across the country.
Mayor Ernest Moria! of New Orleans said of all problems facing
American cities. "hunger is probably the most prevalent and the rnost
insidious."
President Reagan can read his task force's report and stili remain
"perplexed" about the extent and the reasons for hunger in America. The
. report doesn't say. To that degree, it's not much help to him -or to the
hungry.

WAY IS 1ME. WINI&gt; ILOWINCT 1*Y, ~~

Pentagon budget ________.t_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n
WASffiNGTON - Is Cap Weinberger piannlng to bankrupt the
country?
·
The defense secretary would
deny such a suggestion, of course.
But unless Budget Director David
Stockman or Congress stops them,
Weinberger and the other profiigate Pentagon poohbahs will spend
the nation right in the poorhouse.
Their own secret "wish list"
doesn't include solid gold C~dillacs
- yet. But some ot their budget
proposals are just about as
extravagant.
My associate Donald Goldberg
has obtained copies ot the military
dreamy proposals. They're class!fled "Secret," and were intended
str1ctiy for internal use. Neither the
White House nor Congress has seen
the documents. Here are some of
the most outrageous elements of
the Pentagon's planned raid on the
Treasury over the next five years:
-Weinberger wanted a $322.4

Threat to

I am sure most of you know of
Congressman Claude Pepper, Flor- ·
ida's octogenar1an gladiator tor the
defense of Senior Citizens In the
House of Representatives. If you
don't already know ot him, then
take my word that the services of
Congressman Pepper have been
invaluable in protecting Social
Secur1ty benefits and Medicare
from attacks by the Reagan
administration. Now Claude
Pepper is chairman ot the Senior
PAC Advisory Board,
political
action committee formed exclusively on · behalf of seniors and
senior issues. Now he needs and
deserves your support!
A half-century ago, in the midst of
the Great Depression, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt proposed
legislation to protect Amer1ca's
.older citizens from the "hazards
and vicissitudes &lt;lf life." The
resulting legislation set a standard
of responsiveness to human needs
that has changed the status of old
people from degrading dependency
to self-respecting Independence. If
we live long enough we ail must
expect to grow old but the
well-heeled class that is ruling the
country today seems to ignore this
Today Is Wednesday, Jan. 18. the 18th day of 1~. There are348days left
tact ot lite. Perhaps it is because
most of them come from the very
in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
rjch or the upper echelons of the
On Jan.l8, 1919, the World War I peace conference opened in Versailles,
middle class and !eel their future
France.
'
will never be threatened. There are
On this date:
26 mlillon Senior Citizens today who
. In 1718, English explorer James Cook discovered the HawaUan Islands.
are not so lucky. They realize that
In 1782, lawyer and statesman Daniel Webster was born in SaUsbury,
the era ot compassion and prag~a
.
.
matic concern for sen.lor security is
In 1862. the lOth president of the UnltedStates, John Tyler, died at the age
over and they are asked to,bear an
of 71, 17 years after leaving office.
ever-Increasing share ot balancing .
In 1968, the United States and the Soviet Unlonagreedon-a draft treaty to
the federal budget. Now they are
control nuclear weapons.
lacing the !'hazards and vicissiAnd also In 1968, In a White House confrontation, singer Eartha Kltt told tudes" ot the Reagan
Lady Bird Johnson that Amertcan youth was In rebellion becl!use of the
administration!
· Vietnam War.
·
·
Many ot Y,OU remember the plight
Ten years ago: Secretary of State Heilry Kissinger and Egyptian . !&gt;1 old toll!s In ·the pre-FOR years.
Presid~t Anwar Sadat said they would press Syr1a to enter Into
Unless they Uved With their family
disengagement talks with Israel.
·
·,
as an unproductive member, they
Five years ago: Iranian Prime Minister Shahgour Blikht!ar sent a
were 'forced to go the coUnty pOor
representative to France to plead with the exiled AyatoUah Khornelnl to
house. Remeinber the r'ambUna old
give the new Iranlan government a chance.
wooden lnftnnary on the HarrtsonOne year ago: The Unlted Nations Securtty Counct! voted to extend the
vllle Road? The IJ10St descrtptlve .
life of the U.N. peacekeeping force In southern Lebanon for another six
adjective I can think of ott•hand is
months.
"squalid." It was here that many
Today' s birthdays: Actor Cary Grant Is !Kl years old. Actor Danny Kaye · · Meigs County pioneers spent their ·
Is 71. And former heavywelglit boxlng
champion
Muhammad
Allis 42.
I&amp;St days, either by their own
.
'
.

Today in ~istory

~

President Reagan is solely, personally and wholly responsible for acid
rain, the extension of species and
the erosion ot soil into the Mississippi Basin. So Mondale suggested
to the National Wildlife Federation
at Albuquerque last March. The
president, said Mondale to the
newspaper publishers last Apr11, is
to blame tor "record business
!allures, record !arm foreclosures,
record unemployment and record
t.-ade imbalances."
You will understAnd that Congress has nothing to do with these '
calamities. Natural t&amp;rces play no
role. our tr1ends and enemies
abroad are blameless. Record high
interest rates and unreasonable
currency values must be laid on the
Reagan doorstep. "For permitting
economic weakness, the president
must be held accountable."
In a speech to the NAACP last
July. Mondale poured on tbe syrup
and cream. He recalled that when
he was In the Senate, he provided a
tree ottice in his own office tor the
NAACP's Oearance Mitchell. "I
just did what he told me to do, and it
worked out very. very well." In this
address he charged Reagan with
creating a recession -that had .
destroyed families, destroyed
neighborhoods and destroyed hope.
Speaking to the AFL-CIO in
September, Mondale served up a
truly high-calor1ed concoction.
"You don't see tur coat sales going
down. You don't see the presidents
ot big utilities lining up tor cheese."

a

biillon budget tor tlscal1985, but the
White House decided on ·a more
"reasonable" sum ot $300 blliion.
The defense secretary recommends an increase ot $.ll billion to
$40 billion each year thorugh 1989.
That would make the budget that
year $464.7 billion- not tar short of
halt a trillion dollars.
-The bulk of these billions will go
to the Navy and Air Force.
presumably to lund such highpriced programs as the B-1
bomber, the ~ missile system.
Aegis-equipped cruisers and Arleigh Burke-class destroyers.
-The Navy has been ordered to
"start preliminary alternative designs of a new nuclear attack
submar1ne to ensure our present
acoustic super1or1ty is maintained
over the increased Soviet subma:ine threat projected in the 19!ni."
As I reported earlier, this supposed
threat is a Pentagon fantasy.

-The Navy also wants to "deploy
one additional earner battle group
to br1ng the total number ot
peacetime forward-deployed carrier battle groups to tour."
-Communlcation with missilecarrying nuclear submar1nes is
given high pr1o:ity. The Pentagon
wants the controversial Extemely
Low Frequency receivers. which
would be installed under a big
chunk of "DQrthern Michigan, operating by 1987. Other communications systems should be operational
by 1988. Protection !rom electromagnetic pulse, caused by nuclear
explosions high In t~e sky and
believe- to disrupt ail existing
communlcations systems. should .
be tested by then.
-The Air Force wants 58 antisatellite n\issiles by 1989, and a new
air-to-surface missile is to be
developed.
-All the armed services wlli help

develop a new. low-eost helicopter
in hopes ot cutting down on the wide
var1ety now in use. The service
chiefs have been told: "Be prepared to accept development programs that are ·second best'
solutions tO.,YOUr service's mission
needs, In order to provide a 'first
best' solution tor the Department ot
Detense as a whole."
-A total ot 31 combat zon(
hosptals are to be funded over the
next two years.
-The Army has been ordered to
start developing "two laser weapon
systems concepts, Including a close
combal version and (an) a)r
defense high-energy laser weapon
version."
The Pentagon's ask-tor-tbe-moon
approach is ot course just a
budgetary weapon to use on
Congress - the technique ot an
Or1ental bazaar. The brass hats
don't really expect to get everything they want ... or do they?

Wednesday, January 18, 1984

/ M eet
1

(,

'·

billion rnore. I agree there is plenty
wrong with Medicare but the fault
Is not with the recipients but with
the health industry. But is is the
recipients the Reaganites say must
take ·the loss. The President's
Commission on Medicare, dominated by health care providers, is
expected to call tor deep budget
cuts that attack the pr1ncipai
victims of :ising health costs, not
the causes. There is a popular
fallacy that when you ready the age
of 65 yu have it made, medically
speaking. Baloney! Medicare covers only 42 percen tof medical costs
for ·the elderly. It pays nothing for
medicines, hearing aids, eye
glasses, toot care or dental ·bills. It
pays -little or 11othlng tor home
nursing care tor the bedr1dden. It is

I

the ·EaStern Eagles ..

·" '7

~31

JACKSON PIKE · RT. 35 WEST

- -·452A

~T I SUN
.W. SEATS IZ.OO
ADIMSSION EVERY TUfSO..Y IZJJO

8AIKlAJY MATWEES

BRIAN BOWERS
6-0, Sr. Forward

I.AftRY COWDERY
5-10, Sr. Forward

BOB MAISON
f-1, Sr. Forward

•
•
•
Meigs posts unpress1ve
Win
By KEI'nt WISECUP
BUCHTEL - Impressive was
the name. Meigs' third straight win
was the game.
In dazzling fashion, the Marauders outscored Nelsonville-York 16-0
dur1ng ll second half three minute
spurt to post a come-trom-tx!hlnd
73-53 win here 1\:esday.
Tied at 4&amp;-46 with 10 seconds lett
in the third quarter, Coach Greg
Drummer's Maroon and Gold
chalked up four more in the third
per1od, and then ripped tor 12
in-a-row to start the fourth .
Later In the final quarter, Meigs
went on a nine point spurt in just
over a minute to avenge an earlier
54-48 loss to the same Buckeyes.
"This was definitely our best
game ot the year. We tlnally
meshed as a group as it was a total
team effort. I can't critic~ any
portion ot our play," commented an
excited Drummer alter the game.
Nick Riggs pumped in a careerhigh 28points lnciudinglOotll !rom
the foul line. The 6-0 senior guard
had 16 ot his total in the secoild half.
Sophomore Mick Chancey, &amp;-3
forward, scored 10 points in the
third quarter alone to end with 13
and led Meigs with 13 rebounds.
Chancey had been held scoreless in
the ttrst lujif.
Junlor Jay Carpenter.- recovering !rom a bout with bladder
infection, added 13 points and 11
.rebounds along with a glue-like
defensive game. Carpenter seemed
to 'Ignite the Marauders with a 30
toot two-pointer at the third quarter's buzzer.
Sophomore Lee Powell had his
finest game as a Marauder as the
6-4 forward had 10 rebouilds and
tour points.

..-· ....

&amp;..1

- .
.=. -~· ;;.· .!!!:;;;;

.....-.
-!!!!!!

-.Lr

DISHES
Fiberglas
Mesh

Aluminum

8 Ftto 20 Fl

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON W.VA.

3

9 ~NU~NTEREST

965
%*
ANNUAL YIELD

1o~~U~INTEREST

11

~~N~~~~ELD

GUARANTEED FOR 3 MONTHS GUARANTEED FOR 21/2 YEA•..i

950 %

ANNUAL INTEREST

986%*
ANNUAL YIELD

1

O!~~~INTEREST 11,.~N~~~ELD

restriction on the amount insured
So if you're not earning rates
like these. get moving. We've got as
many financial solutions as there are
financial needs.
See the Yellow Pages for the office
nearest you.

GUARANTEED FOR 6 MONTHS . GUARANTEED FOR 3 YEARS

~edicare ___________L_~_e_u_w_i~~et_t
improvidence or through neglect by
their families. I can remember
back In the l!laJ's, when Meigs
County as prosperous, with coal
production booming and hunger
and homeiessness was only SC?mething you - read ahout in some
foreign land, the poor house was
always lull. No one in their r1ght
mind would choose to live there
with its drafty rooms and outdoor
plumbing but many did because
their only recourse was a pauper's
grave. The only br1ght spot in their
year that I recall was a visit at
Chr1stmas by Ben Ewing and his
little German Band and church
organizations trying to br1ng a little
Chr1stmas cheer into their drab
lives. Would you want to return to
that?
Of course, any secret yearning
.Ronald Reagan may have to return
us to the tender solicitude of the
Coolidge asnd Hoover years will
never be realized. The Amer1can
people have too much invested in
Social Secur1ty for that but he .can
alter the laws so that much ot
independence of Senior Citglzens is
lost. Remember the safety net the
Reagan people promised in 1980? It
has developed so many gaping
holes It has been discarded. It will
probably be trotted out. this year,
neatly patched, until the Nov. 6
election is over. The passage ot the
Social Securtty law Wj!S a br1ght
light at the end ot the darkest tunner
In the history of our nation. But that
light was dimmed when an administration coalition turned their big
gunson Social Secur1ty. Thedan'lge
was lmlted to reduction ot benefits
by 12.5 percnt tor pep)e who retire
at 62 and ralslng thi1 future
retirement age that wtil. reduce
benefits for today's young workers.
Since most people who retire.at age
62 do so because of U1 health aild the
conflde!lce of young workers in the
·system has l;leen underminl!d, the
admlnlstratlop has alread:,: dealt a
severe blow io what has become a
fundamental Institution .Jn. the
nation.
Now the big guns are turned on
Medicare. Last year cuts In Medl·
Cllfl! totaled $17 bllllpn. This year
the administration Is proposing $5.2

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middlepott, Ohio

1 000 %
1 038 %*
ANNUAL INTEREST
ANNUAL YIELD

GUARANTEED FOR 1 YEAR

now pn.posed that the patient pay
90 percent more tor an average
hospital stay, higher deductlble5
and higher premiums, and take a
"merans test" which would ettecitlvely eliminate coverage· tor most
middle income Senior Citizens. It is
also proposed to turn over key
features ot Medicare to .private
insurance companies.
Congressman Pepper proposes to
halt this raid on Medicare at the
polls next tall. In their first election
effort in l!MI'l, Senior PAC endorsed
41 candiates · tor Congress and
elected 24. He is asking tor
donations to Senior PAC, P.O. Box
636, Benjamin Frnaklln Statton,
Washington, D.C., 2ml4.
You will only be helping yourself!

%

00%*

1 060
11
ANNUAL INTEREST
ANNUAL YIELD

GUARANTEED FOR 2 YEARS

There's just no excuse for lazy
investing. Not with great rates like
these. So get your money over to City
Loan and Savings where six different
investment certificate options lock in
high Money Market rates.
Rates that are guaranteed for the
full tenn you selecl Rates that provide
high yields for·as litUe as 81000. all
guaranteed by the Ohio Deposit
Guarnntee Fund (ODGF) with no

Ci!)'Loan
&amp;savings
(52)
COMMER,.CIAL CR..EDIT
FINANCIAL N~
,, l nnuol O.u ,, (,'"'!"'""

If your money isn't
ea•·ni•~tbis 1mteh,
\
•t
·. ·.· . I •

Berry's World
'·
UP Aj'm IN - Melp' Jay Carpenter (00) ~ In two pcilnls
agalnlt the Nellonvllle-York Buckeylllln this Dave Harrll tldlon photo
Tuet!Ciay llll!hl. Carpenter had 13 points In the Marauden' lmpreulve
'73-13 victory over the Alhe111 County team. Buckeye playen Include
Kirk Grandy (U), Brian Bullock (44), and Jay Kline (2:2).

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT ·

GENERAL ALLERGI-ST,.
·· ~1-8
' -,-,.---..~~bY~

"Before I tell you MY Super Bowl preference.
yo11 have to tell me YOURS/"

_,

by Appointment Only·
CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

·OHice Hour'

..

..--•

�•

January 18, 1984
"'/ .'

Ohio

I

Ohio
Sportlight

LL

By George Strode
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ·
J~wett·Sclo tlnlshed Its boys prep

BOYS' SEVENTH GRADE- The Meigs seventh gradel'!l has a &amp;-2
record. Team membel'!l Include, first row, left 1o right, Chm Becker,
Matt Baker, Scott Nelgler,Jeff McElroy, Scott Barton, Scott Melton and

Keith Mattox. Second row, Coach Ron Drexler, Wesley Howeard, Todd
Powell, Kevtn Oller, Decker Cullwns, Wesley Young, Jared Sheets.
Absent were Joe Hall and Scott GOkey, manager.

Yanks draft Nazarene College's Belcher
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Tim
Belcher, baseball's No. 1 draft
selection for the second time In eight
months, believes he has a major·
league pitching future.
" If I possess the ability pro scouts
say I have, I know I'll make It,
barring any Injuries. I have
confidence In my work habits and
desire," the right·haJ1der from
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Nazarene
College said.
The New York Yankees made
Belcher, 22, the first player chosen
Tuesday In the secondary phase of
the winter draft In New York.
Minnesota also made him the No. 1
sel.ectlon In last June's regular
summer draft, but he failed to sign
with the Twins .
Yankees' vice president But
Bergesch, calling the ().foot -3, 210.
ROund Belcher a pitcher of great
quality, said, "We had him well
scouted and feel he Is a pitcher who
will be playing In pinstripes within
the next few seasons."
In the winter draft's regular
phase, another rlght·handed
pitcher, Calvin Jones of Riverside,
Calif., waschosenfi1"stbytheSeattle
Mariners. The regular phase Is for
college dropouts and high school
players who graduate In January.
Also selected In the regular phase
were Jeffrey Redus, brother of
ClnciMa ti Reds outfielder . Gary
RRedus, and Jesus I. Alou, son of
former major leaguer Felipe Alou.
Redus was picked by Kansas City.
San Francisco took Alou. Mike
Yastrzemski, son of former Boston
Red Sox great Carl Yastrzemski,
was taken by Atlanta In the
secondary.phase.
Belcher, In a telephone Interview
from his home In Sparta, Ohio, said
hebypassedbecomlngaprowllhthe
Twins because the MIMesota club
objected to him negotiating through
his agent, Chicago attorney Scott D.
Boras.
Instead. he played on United
States national teams that partlci·
paled In the Intercontlnent Cup In
Belgium and the Pan American
Games In Venezuela last summer.
During the winter months, he has
been working out on his own,
throwing into a net In his coUege
gymnasium.
Y
Belcher says the ankees are
willing to work through his agent,
making him optimistic he will sign
with New York. "They (the Yan·
•. kees) are willing to channel
negotiations the way I want. The
Twins eren 't willing to do that "he
w
•
said.

.
• I'

and catcher has set no timetable on
Theonetime
highschool
the
major
leagues.infielder
"That's
reaching
going to be up to the organization
and how weU the Yankees' people
think I am progesslng," he said.
Belcher has developed Into a 95
mph pitcher, a position he was
forced Into playing by his American
Legion manager after his prep
career. "He said he already had
eight fielders. If I was going to do
anything In the state Legion
tournarnent, I had to pitch. That's
when I first starting enjoying
success on the mound, •• he said.
He has steadUy Increased his
velocity from the high In; between
his freshman and sophomore year
at Mount Vernon Nazarene. In his
last collegeseasonasajuniorln 1983,
Belcher posted a !&gt;4 record and 2.86
earned run average. He struck out
93 batters and gave up 33 hits In 66
Innings.
Seattle's regular·phase selection,
Jones, completed his SOphomore
year at Cal-Riverside last spring
after pitching In just four games
before mm&amp;errtng ro . ~ey
Junior College In California. He was
an aU-league :;."ld AU-Call1ornla
Interscholastic Federation selec·
tlon as a senior Verbum Del High
School in Compton, Calif. In 1981.

19a.t

: J\~lTER FREE AGENT fJ
DRAFT
·'!

'

. '.,,

basketball game with Adena Buck·
eye West Saturday night with only
one player, forcing officials to call
thecontestwlthonesecondlett.
To start the game, Grosshadelght
available players. The seventh
fouled out with one second remain·
lng. Steve Sims, the one remaining
Vlklng, couldn 't ln·bounds the
basketball to himself so officials
awarded Buckeye West a 110.98
victory.
· Gross admitted both teams'
strategies, fuU-court pressing detenses, helped account for 66
personal fouls, 36 of them on
Jewelt·Sclo, a small Class A school
In Harrison County In eastern Ohio.
Buckeye West lost two players
with five personal fouls.
Around Ohio: Steve Eyl of
HamUton Badin, a ().foot -6 senior
already committed to Indiana
University, had ~ points and 11
rebounds as Badin beat Fairfield for
the first time In five years.
Anthony Thomas, Lima Senior's
G-2 senior star, broke his arm during
a victory over Princeton and may be
through for the season. Ditto for
Elmore WoodrnOI-e's G-5 Jeff Haar,
breaking his wrist when he struck an
officials' elbow against Oak Harbor.
Tom Crowe, who will retire after
25 seasons at Eastlake North, may
be facing his first losing season.
Nqrth has won only four of 10 games
for Crowe, J40.1881n his career with

the Rangers.
Bob Burdel\, a 6-4 senior for
Botkins, lellds the Lima area In
scoring with a 30.G-polnt average.
Botkins only l!verages 59.5 points
per game. Add Jim Lawhead of
Lorain Catholic to coaches who have
achievedthelr:n&gt;thcareervtctorles
this winter.
Racine Southern has lost for the
fourth time In 7'h seasons In the
Southern Valley Athlet.tc Confer- ·
ence. Hannan Trace upset the ·
Tornadoes 48-45 and ((nocked from •
the Class A Too Ten. Southern had "
won 27 straight games In the

We A...,• The

Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

Player of the Week for his
perfonnance In lll8t week's ~1-41
vlciory over MDier. Wise had 13
points, live" rebounds and two
ll88ilts.

The Daily Sentinel

Wildcats
defeat
Vikings

(USPS 1411-HO )
A Dlvlllon of Mulllmedla, In&lt;' .
Published every aft()rnoon. Monda y
through Friday, 111 Coun Str('('l, by thl'
Ohio Valley PubUshlng Company . Mul ·

llmOOia.Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohlo45769, 99'l·

2 1~. Sfcond elMs postagE' paid al Po-

meroy , Ohio.
Memtx&gt;r: Th(' Assocla t&lt;'d PrPss. In -

la nd Dally Press Assoc laton a nd th r
Amt.&gt;rlcan Newsp&amp;Pf'r Publishers As -

socia tion, National Advt&gt;rlls lng R{'pn•·
sentatiV(', Branham Nrw !lpapt.&gt;r Sa i&lt;'S,
733 Third Avenu&lt;'. N('w York . Nt:&gt;w
York t0017 .

SUBSCRIPTION RATF.'J

11 Carrier or Motor Routt
Ono Wet'k ..................................$1.00
On~ Month ............
. ...... $4.40

On(' YPar .............. ~ ................ S.'l2.80
SINGLE CO PV
PRICES
Dally ............. .
.. .... 20 Ct&gt; nls

Subscrlbf:&gt;rs not d eslr lnJ~; to pay thf'car·
rler may r£&gt;mlt In advancr dlr('('! to
Th(l Dally St&gt;ntl nl'l on 3, 6 or 11 month
basis . Credit will tx&gt; glvl'n ca rriN ('aCh
month .

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND

No subscr iptions by mall permlllf&gt;d In

MULLEN INSURANCE

tow ns whC'r(' hom£' rarrll'r st•rvlcl•

avallabl('.

I~

MAiL SUBSCR IPTIONS
IMidt Ohio

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

13 \V('('Q ...

26

~2

. ............. $14 .1&gt;1

w...u ............................... $27.30
w..u .............................. $5i .48
Outaldf' Ohio

13 Wooks .........

26
~2

. .... $1~ . 1 1

w..k, ................................ $29.64
w..u ....... .... ... ..... ..
..... ~'&gt;6 . 2 1

SUPERIOR 1·LB. VACUUM PACKED DART
FIRST ROUND DRAFT PICK- BID Murray,
left center, rear, the Administrator In the Office of the
Baseball Conunlssloner, sits with aides Tuesday In
New York during the first selection In basebaD's

Reds draft hurlers

Winter Free Agent Draft. The 19th annual winter
selection process was conducted via conference call
from the Commissioner's office. ( AP Laserpholo ).

First Half 1983 Real Estate

CINCINNATI (AP)- TheCincln·
nat! Reds have selected 10 pitchers
In the major league draft held
Tuesday and one outfielder In the
secondar phase.
The Reds picked Sebastian Rog·
ers, a 19-year-old lefthander from
Utica, Miss. In the first round. He
plays at Utica Junior College.
The other pitchers, In order of
selection were: Ronald Bennett, 19,
p
Ill
ennsv e, N.J.; Jeffrey Marr, 18,
Tt vllJ Fla Sco
tus e,
.;
tt Hamilton,~.
warner,
Okla M
·
.; lchael Smith, 19,
San Antonio, Texas; James Carroll,
19, Phoenix, Ariz.; Ernest Bacon.~.
swansea, Mass.; Eddy Yanes, 19.
Mla ml , Fl a .; William Avant, 19,
Texarkana, Texas; and Paul
J
ames, t. harles, Mo.
Fred Carter, 19, an outfielder
from Oklahoma City, who plays at
CoMors Junior College there, was
selected In the secondary phase.

Tax
Extension Granted
Closing Date Feb. 15, 1984
First Half Penalty-10% Unpaid Current
Taxes
Second Half Penalty-10% of Total Unpaid
. Current Taxes
1. On first day of month following second half closing, interest is charged on
unpaid balance of delinquent taxes from prevtous year for period of t1me from
preceeding December 1st to that day.

s c

2. On December 1st each year interest is charged against the full unpaid
balance of taxes for period of time from day established 1n (I) above to date.
Fao'lu--tty
and interet!. Office hour&gt;
•u to receive bill does not avoid ..
- .. 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Phone 992-2004. Meigs County Treasurer

rr;=:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;d~~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~l

'~REAL

WOOD PANELING"

5/32".x4'x8' SHEETS (Mill Seconds)

TERRACE GOLDEN OAK.:.~ ......... $6.49
TERRACE SHERWOOD· OAK ........ $6.49
TERRACE ANTIQUE BIR.CH ......... $6.49
DEL RAY BIRCH~ ............. :........... $6.19

at

, --·-- - - --

H0GG &amp; ZUS·PAN
MATERIALS CO.

SLICED BACON ....... ~~~~. Sl.29
.
BOILED HAM ........... ~!·. Sl.97
HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD ..... ;.......~~·. s1.59

SMITHFIELD

DAIRY

per sheet
per sheet
per sheet
per sheet

1·Lb. Blue Bonnet

Qu~rters

MARGARINE .............. 89'
CHEESE ............~~.~ . '3.99
SWISS CHEESE .. !.~~: '1.89

Chuck Roast ...L~.
USDA CHOICE

Chuck Roast ... ~·

$}59

$·}·29

USDA CHOICE

Round Steak • • • •

LB.

GRADE A

Chicken ••••••••••••

LB.

SLICED

$

.

Pork Steak.......~; .. 1

29

$}3 9

QUALITY PLUS

Baco.n.............ll!i

POTATOES ...........8~.~ '2.99

WOI 1·1-4: Smlllo U.: Webb 1-M; JJaJI »1:
Blctomfteld 1..0.!. 'li''"'~

"

3 Lb. Bea Macintosh

1'llompeon .......

APPLES .............~~~. '1.29

1:1-lfJ...'Itl.
~I~· •tuar1..,. 1

·

Hannan y,.,................... .. 2h 10 1-t U-6:J
~mm"' \ "aU.,· .......... .... ... .4 13 8 tl-1h

24 Ct. Head

LETTUCE.. ..........~~~~... 79'

Bananas ...........t~ 29¢

Documentary set
Melp County's Dave DUes wdJ
narrate a sports clocumentary on

2 lB. ORE-IDA CRINKLE CUT

the early history of football at 8 p.m.
on PBS Channel 33 of
HIIJitlngton.
.
The show describes the Ironton
Tanks and Portsmouth Spartans.

' 'Diul'!Jda31

FRENCH FRIES ........Bf.~ s1.43
10 OZ. AUNT JEMIMA
WAFFLES ...................B.~x•• 89¢ ..
BEEF SOUP ........ ~ ...cA~~ 2/99¢
15% OZ. JOAN OF ARC RED
KIDNEY BEANS ..... ~~.N.~ 2/99¢
26 OZ. MORTON
.,
SALT ....\.....................~~~. 37¢
32 OZ. NESLTE'S
CHOC. OUIK ........... ~~~. s2.79
6 OZ. STOVE TlJi
·
STUFFIWG~ .................~~~~ 99¢.
6 OZ. STARKIST' .
.
liGHT TUNA ........... ~ ..c.~~. 99¢
16 OZ•.BORDEN'S
CREMORA ............... J~~. sl.99
1 LB. SHORTENING ·
..
·CRISCO ...... ~ ......• ~ ....~~~ s1.19 .•
2 OZ. PALMOLIVE LIQUID-With 20' Off
Dl 0
NT .••.•8.Th $1.29

CLEVELAND (AP) - Relief
pitcher Jamie Easterly. who be·
came a free agent after playlngwith
the MUwaukee Brewers and Cleveland Indians last year. has agreed to
remain with the Indians through th!'
1985 season, the American League
team said.
The Indians have also signed
recently acquired second baseman
Tony Bernazard to a contract for
1984, the team said Tuesday.
· Easterly, 31, came to the Indians
lut season frol)l Milwaukee along
with outfielder Gorman Thomas In
exchange for outfielder Rick Man·
ning and }eft·handed pitcher Rick
·
·
Waits. .
Bernazard, 'II, was acquired by
oCli!veland In Decem~r from the
. Seattle Mariners· for Thomas and
ln11elder Jack Perconte.
·
"Easterly did Ji gooctjobforuslast
season when put Into ·a ffNI tough
situations and he'performed ll(lmlr·
allly, and that shauk! help him this •
season," said Iildians' Man~ Pat
· COrrales.

'I

..

"'

PARKAY

Margarine • • • • • •

LB.

Easterly signs

10'/z OZ. CAMPBELrS VEGETABLE

..

.

HANNAN TRACE (83) - J . Barnes 6-2·14;
Brwnlleld 4-4·12: BaUey 3·1 ·7: Rar&lt;loiph
J.H: Swain 1·2-4 : D. Barnes &amp;{).12: McGuln&gt;
J.l.J: Silt! 1~2 ; Davis 1~2 . Toloii . . II.D.
SYMMES VAUEY (31) - Jl'ulb t-U:

10 lb. ldeho Bakina

Kraft 16 Stice 12 Oz. Ind.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

SouthwesterndefeatedOakHUiat
home Tuesday, 5J.51. Details of the
game were unavailable al pres·
stline today. The win gives the
Hlghlanilers a 4-8 record.

PRODUCE

Kraft 2 lb. Yetveeta

.

SVAC leader Hannan Trace
jumped to a 2&amp;4lead over Symmes
Valley In the first quarter Tuesday
and never looked back to post a 63-36
win.
The Wildcats upped that lead to
J6.13 at the half, keeping their hosts
at bay for the remainder of the
game.
That was achieved In part by_the
double-digit scoring of Jeff Barnes,
who scored 14 points, and Robbie
Brumfield and Deke Barnes, who
posted 12 markerseach. Alan Bailey
and, Rick Randolph combined to
post seven points each.
For the VIkings, John Thompson
ll'd the field with nine, while Paul
Fulks and Chris Smith had six each.
Both teams played each other on
almost equal terms In the state
books. HT canned 26 of·58 attempts
from the floor for 44 percent, and
were43percent on 11of231rlesfrom
the free-throw line. The VIkings
sank 13 of 39 (33 percent ) from the
floor, and had 10 of 17 from the
charity line for 44 percent.
Randolph was the Wildcats'
leading rebounder with 12 of the '51
that were recorded, while Jeff
Barnes and Bill Swain hadslx each.
sv had~ reboullds. whue ·HT had
nine turnovers.
In the reserve game, the junior
Wildcats handed·SV a 41-33 defeat.
Phil BaUey had 13 for the winners.
assisted by 10 from Mark Sheets.
Jolin Shepherd led the scoring for
the VIkings with 12.
The win ups the Wildcats' overall
record to 10.2on the season, whileSV
remains winless this season. HTisat
home Friday against North Gallla.

POSTMASTER : Send address to Th£&gt;
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court Sl. , Pomeroy ,
Ohio 4~769 .

'

298 .SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

PlAYER OF WEEK -IUek
Wlite, H, 10phomore guard, has
been selected 1111 the Jaycees•

rr==:::::======:::;

'•

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

Umlt Quantltlee.

WAGNER'S

·
rl
n
Orange
••••••

1

COLLEGE INN CHICKEN or

Beef Broth .~ ~~ 31
3

·

HUNfS CATSUP '

s·g¢

·~~I.Oz.

$1

$ Q9

Jeno's
~

Pizza • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
. \

·

5 Lb.
~ag

$·}49

14 Oz.
Cms

lOOz.

Jar

Three Per Customer
.Good Only At Powell's
· Offer Expi11111 Jan. 21, 1984

••••

.
• 1

•

,

·
9
¢
8
•

INSTANT COFFEE

Umit

tnclelllellt weather. ~o IIUik.e-up
elate has been set according ro KG
principal Dan BrJ.Stcei'.

10 oz.

.

MAXWELL HOUSE .

FLAVORITE SUGAR

For the second ttme In two weeks,
the Kyger Creek·Wahama basket·
~game has been postponeclduero

f

24 oz.

54 0Z. BTL.

Game off again
.

BROUGHTON'S

•

$389
• .

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Jan. 21·, 1984

Offer

�Poge-6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,
ONo H.8. BO,a~~Mkttb..a

a, no.-......._

C'hilllrothe M, Athms C7
Cln. FOI"('St Park 61. Cln. Ancrrson 51
C1n. Oak HUI.s
Cln. Nonhwest M
Avm n, C'uyahofca HtL m
Cln. Pur-Marian ~. Ctn. McN icholas &lt;19
Avon La.kP f7, Rocky River &lt;12
Cleer Fcrk 66, Mansneld m
Beaver East(lm 72, S. Wf'bsft&gt;r II)
ae. Collinwood ~ . Cle. W. Ted! .all, lYI'
BeaV('f' Locul 74, Columbiana 0\&gt;s:tvtew
Ck&gt;. Eut '10, Cle. Llnroln.WcSt ~
48
Cle. Enter'IJ1,w U, Medina Otr. .11
Bea'lt't'Creek 61 , W. CarroUton 57
Cle. Gla'lvWe 58. Oc. Hay ~7
Bloom.CaJTOU 4.1, Bf.&gt;rne Union 41
t1t'. Heritage 57, Mentor Clu' . .&amp;fl
Brld$1('fl(l1 63. Whet'llnR IW.Va.J Llnsly
Cit'. Ma~hall rt, Cle. H ayes~
Cl('. T'rlnlty 61, CVCA !'J9
Hucke)'(' S. 92, Union Local n
Col.. Ready 8), W. Jclfcrson :r1
Buck~ TraU M, Meadowbrook 49
Col. Wehrle !1, Col. Westland ~
Ca l~! 66, Wat('rford :t1
Col. Whetstone 19. Oetawall' 71
CampbeU·Memorlal lll, Cor1land LakP.
Cononon Val '10, Lakeland 1'1
-47
, Copley 10, Akron Ellet 51
Canton 1'r1nlly 1.'1, Lutheran E. !10
Day. Bellbrook ~7 . Grrm('VIt'W 4K

n.

~·-

High School
cage results

"

Ca rdinal

n. Nt'W~uy 58

Day. fk&gt;lmonl

~.

Fairborn

~7

Wednesday, January 18, 1~

Ohio

Ooy. Chamlnade-Julk:orme 44. Day. Oak·
wood 29
Dsy. Jeff('t'SC)Il Ill, Yellow Springs M

Eft. Miami Trace 54
Edgerton rr. Hk:ksvUlfo M
Edon IM, Montpetk&gt;r ~

E . Clinton

Falrfteld Union 74, Lancastcr Fl.'ltv.&gt;r 64
Falrplrt Barding 48. Grand Val. •7
Fat.rvk&gt;w Park 59, Olmsted Falls 4.'1

Flreland&amp; 71. lndepmdmce 67
Fostoria 00, New Rlegt&gt;t M
F'l'anklJn 66. Carlisle 00

Jo"rrOl.&gt;rlcktown 61, Ca rdln~ on 00. O'T
F'ronller n, Woodsfield M
Glra1'd Ql, Young. Litrrty ~
Gkn Dale !W.Va . I Marshall 00. Bt'llaJI'('
~.201'

Gotlhen 72. Ck&gt;nnont NE ~1

Grand Rlvt'r 31, StMary's tPa. l Pnop

:II

Loraln EB. E:t,yr1a W. ll8
l....ordtlawn fit Blltol !II
l..o.lllvWo Acp.~lnu 73, Sandy Val. !'i:l

Gto\1t1)01'1 f7, Wfllervtlle S. 44, OT
HUIIOOro !B, LyftC'hbura Oay ~
HWt~ 63, Flyetle ~
Hubbard lB. Stnithen f6
Hudaon 57, Solon~~

Hudlon W. Re1erYt M, Gllrrour Arid.

"HunllnRton

( W . Va . ~

St.JQIM'Ph

~.

Ctriapeake!IO
Indian Hills Chr.
Ust 51

~

lndep(lldent Bap-

lndlWl Valley N. ~ Nl'Wromentown :'Ill

Jack..oo·MUton M. Mln('I"OI

Rl~

Klnaa ~. loYeland .s
K111land M, Ek&gt;achwood 42
Ledgemonl 61. UCM'land Christ.
U&gt;etonta 10, E. Palestine 57
Uma Cath. ~ Blul'tton XI

«\

M! .GIIetd tl. O'oill""' :rl

By-The Bend

ar

Cia'"""'

New I"'IUodee&gt;hla· 10,
6.1
New RJchmmd rt, Bethei·Tate fl1
Ook H.- 10. EaaiWOOd 118

Page 7
1

I

Obot'l., 19, L&lt;Jfo., CIHMow IJ
(')reaon Stt1tcll 1), Emmanl6fl BMpt . ~
Paln(&gt;Svllle Harvey !16, OWdon M
Parkenbul'l (W.Va.) South ll, Manetta

"'· f'tketon
PalMI SW
Hlll
6.1, Westfall
~.Oak

Scout cookie sale starts Friday

~1

~

Poland Seminary n , Brooldleld (T

Ports. Eaat

n. Ports. Notl't' lllul'M' ~

I

•

tmYB:1'1!!11l~!J!ll
~~!Wal

COOKIE TIME! -Orden for Gilt Seoul cooldee ' lip. Valerie 81m.-oa. a amlor IOOUt, Pun Alb, a
cadette, aad VeleMa JlunDeii, a juntor ICOUt, of lbe
wW be taken 1tart1n1 at 4 p.m. Friday aad ,..,..dDj
tllroup February 4. Pldured here promoC1111 lllelr BIJ Bead Eut, Black Diamond Gilt Scout CooncU.
ule are, front, Brenda Alb, a Brownie, hoi. . . lbe

COPYRIGHT 198~ · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES .
GOOD SUNDAY , JAN . 15 , THROUGH SATURDAY, JAN.
21 . 198~ , IN Glllipolis and Pomeroy.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOlD TO DEAlERS .

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A regular
meeting of the Meigs County
Fire and Emergency Assocla·
Uon will be held at 7: ll p.m .
Wednesday at the Mld&lt;lleport
Fire Statton. A visual demon·
stratkln on the chemistry of ftre,
combustkln and extinguishment
will make up the program.

TOfAl SAfiSFACTION GUAIANfEE

Everything you buy at Kroger it guoronl•ed for your lotol sotlsfoctlon
rego 1•l•u of manufacturer . If you ore not totlsfled . Kroger will r•place
your item wi th the tome brand or o comparable brand or r•fund your
pur chote price .

1HURSDAY

•

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Holly Fa~ms
Mixed
Fryer. Parts

300 SHEETS PER ROLL

White Cloud.
Bath
Tissue

c
LIMIT 4 PKGS. ·PLEASE

SYRACUSE- Women's Min·
lstry of the Syracuse Nazarene
Church wUI meet at the fellow·
ship hall Thursday at 11: ll a.m.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Inspectlon
of Middleport Masonic Lodge ·
363, F&amp;AM will be held Friday
night at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. Dinner will be served at
6: ll and the meeting will follow
at 7: ll p.m . All members are
asl!ed to attend.

Happenings
Trustee meeting
BEDFORD 1WP- Approprt·
allons for 1984 will be made and
the annual organizational sesskln wUl be held when Bedford
Township Trustees meet at 2
p.m. Saturday at the home of the
clerk. The public Is Invited.

OIL OR WATER PACKED

Star-Kist
Chunk Light
Tuna

Springdale
2% Milk
•

When the Girl Scouts of Black
Diamond Councll begin their ap·
nual cookie sale Friday, It will
mark the 50th anniversary of this
American tradition.
~ Idea for the cookie sale was
born back In the twenties when
Individual troops held cookie sales
as fund raisers to support their
activities. Work of the sales success
spread, and soon 'the number of
participating troops grew. The first
sale of commercially baked cookies
was held 50 years ago.
This year a special 50th a Miversary cookie, the Medallion, has
been created to commemorate the
event and will be sold along w1th slx
other varieties.
Scouts will begin taking cookie
orders at 4 p.m. Friday through
Feb. 4. They will be delivered In
March. Sale price this year of the
cookies baked by Little Brownie
Bakers Is $2 a box. Payment Is
made when the cookies are
delivered.

Meigs County begins prenatal program

Calendar

for the best of evervthing
including the pr•ce!

AOVERfiSEO ITEM POliCY
Eoch ol th ... odw•rt ited itemt it required to b• readily available for
tole in each Kroger Store . except at tp•clflcolly noted In thlt ad. If we
do run ou t of on ad vertised item . we will offer you your choice of o
comparable ite m . when owoUoble refl•ctlng the tome sowing• or a
ro tncheck wh ich will entitle you to purchote the odwertlted Item ot the
odwerl iud ptice within 30 days . Only one vendor coupon will be
ou•p led per otem puHhoted .

Wednesday, January 18, 1984

Natlonal't'raU ~1. BrtdfOrd 41
New l..exlntton 52, Tr1·VIIk'y ..

Malllllon Waahinkton IU, C.rrollton !Wl
Mayftcld 17, 0\agrln Falll ~
McC'Ialn 62, MBdL'Ion Plolna !10
Mc~11 NW !19, Wavt&gt;rly 52
McMechM !W.Va. I Oonahut&gt; 17, DcaliA·
MOOlna 58, Wt&gt;Htla)w ~ I
Medina Buckeye fll. Columbi a Ul
Mt&gt;lp73, Nellonvillt" York 11
Mentor lB. 8J'('('Iuivtllt&gt; ~

The Daily Sentinel

"

n
:e

Minerva 63. UnioniONn 1..1b
Mlnlotd M. LucuvUie Val.
MI...., "'· Bt!laiJ~ so. John "'·

I.Dw'eUvlllf! 66, s. Ranat• m. ~
Lulh«&lt;n W. Ill, KoyiiCllllt !18. aT
Macon Eastern !1.~ a n . Seven flll ts .11
Maple Ht1. $, Cit. South 6l
- I H. IIIoomllold16
Marion C,ath. !IU, Noruunor 43

ville !':6•
o&amp;."l

MJdvltw 811, Vmnlllon 14

FREE!

A prenatal program has been be !loring, the statistics on teenage
established by the Meigs County pregnancy are alannlng. Physical
Department of Health with AM and mental birth defects affect ·
Blackwell, R.N .C., as project .many babies born to very young
director.
women, she warns.
Blackwell has Issued Information
Among the health rtsks, Black·
dealing with teenage pregnancy for well llsts to teenage mothers are:
the educatklnal benefit of Meigs the death rates from pregnancy
Counttans.
complications Is much higher
There are 560,00&gt; teenage girls among girls who give .birth under 15
giving birth each year and almost years of ago than among older
one-sixth of all U.S. births are to mothers; the teenage mother Is
teenagers, Blackwell points out more likely to be undernourished
adding that although statistics can

junior auxiliary meets,
selects poppy royalty
Poppy royalty was elected at a
meeting of the Junior American
Legion AuxUiary of Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, held at the home
ot Mrs. Harry Davis Sa11irday.
Palma Wiles was elected Uttle
Miss Poppy; Amber Hankla, Junior
Miss Poppy, and Jessica HamUton,
Poppy Princess. The ~ally will
reign throogh Memorial Day.
Plans were made during the
meeting tor valentine remembran·
ces. They signed cards ln which wUI
be enclosed dollar bills for the 11
boys at Harding Cottage at Xenia.
Valentines were also signed for the
13 veterans at the Athens Mental
Health Center with each one oft hem
also containing a dollar blll.
A report was given on Cluistmas
projects, and several thank you
notes were read. Mrs. Davis read a
thank you from Mrs. OQ.rothea
Walsh for things donated foi""th&amp;
birthday party at Chi!Ucothe. Also
read was a note from Mrs. Mary
Martin for the~ donation for gifts
for Meigs residents at the Athens

Mental Health Center. The juniors
also assisted ln wrapping gifts for
the patients there.
It was noted that fruit had been
presented to Alva WUI and Helena
Sayre at the Pinecrest Nursing
Home. and Bill Rovnak at Arcadia
Nursing Home who also received
several other gifts. Other veterans
at Arcadia received dollar bills and
large candy bars.
Laney Hankla presided at the
meeting with Alnber Hankla giving
prayer. The pledge and prearnble
were repeated ln unison.
For the program, the girls studied
the history of Meigs County. It was
noted that the county was formed ln
June 1819, and that Pomeroy was
Incorporated In 1841 and named for
Samuel Wyllls Pomeroy.
Mrs. Loretta Tiemeyer served
refreshments to those named and
Anita Smith, Eighth District presl·
dent, Mrs. Janice Hankla, Amber
and Laney Hankla, Ertc McCUn·
tock, and Palma Wlles.

and suffer premature or prlonged
labor; dwing the first three months
of pregnancy, seven out of 10
pregnant teenagers do not see a
doctor or go to a clinic: poor eating
habits, smoking, alcohol and drugs
Increase the risk of having a baby
with health problems.
Blackwell points out that there are
also health risks to the baby and this
Involves low birthwelght, since
babies born to teenagers often are
born too small and too soon.
Low birthwelght babies may have
Immature organ systerru;, brain,
lungs, heat; difficulty ln controlling
body temperature and blood suger
levels; mental retardation and a
risk of dying In early Infancy that Is
much high than among normal
weight babies.
The future does not often hold a
great promise for a teenages
mother and her chUd, Blackwell
warns. Two out of three pregnant
teenagers drop out of school and
with their education cut short the
teenage mothers may lack job
sk1lls, Blackwell points out.
The teen mother may become
financially dependent on her famUy
or on welfaore and teenage mar·
rtages have a greater chance of
ending In divorce, she states.
To pregnant women, Blackwell
advises get regular prenatal care
from a doctor or clinic; eat
properly; stop smoking; stop drink·
lng alcohol, and take no drugs unless
prescribed by the attending
physician. '
Residents needing more lnforma·
tlon on the local program may
contact the health department at

992-6626.

Troops retain a portion of the
profit to finance activities they plan
for themselves durtng the year.
These Include such things as
weekends at the Center of Science
and Industry In Columbus, trlps to
Juliette Low's birthday In Savannah, Ga., troop camping, and
special local events .
The cookies offered this year are
the new medallions, c hocolate
chunks, samoas, thin mints, trefoils
or old fashioned shortbread, do-sl·.
dos, the peanut butter cookie, and
tagalongs, the chocolate covered
peanut 'butter patty .

The Girl Scout cookie sale Is a
major source of funding for Black
Diamond Councll, and thus Its
success Is extremely Important to
the program .
Cookie profits help subsidize
summer day camps, and ·also
provide part of the financial
assistance to girls who might
otherwise be unable to participate
In the Girl Scout progra m . Money
received by the Council Is returned
to the troops through maintenance
of camping facilities , training
courses for adult volunteers, pur·
chase of program and resource
materials, such as tents, life
jackets, sports equipment, tum
strips, books, as well as through
support services of the staff.

r.==========::::;
ANN'S
CAKE
DECORATING

On Dean's List

Route 7
Old VFW Hall

Julie Thoren, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Thoren, Minersville area,
has been named to the dean's Ust of
Shawnee State University College,
Portsmouth, for the fall quarter.

Tuppers Plains
667-6485

·aw~Nuffisu~---------------------,

CLASS RING S'ALE

This is lhe first time these
class rings have ever been offered at this low price! We
doubt you will find a lower
class ring price this Spring.
This is a limiled lime offer from

1
I
I

th e manufacturer. We recom-

mend that you acl quickl y. jusl
bring Ihis ad in to our store.
lADIES '
•our best selling styles in Valad1um

FLAIR

APOLLO ond FLAIR
• 10 4l14K gold o~ va ilo~ble at higher pnces
• Fulllif~ime warranty,

• Pria includes sp«ial options

o~nd

custom

feo~turH (Full- No~ me Option f.x h'il) .

• Ovt'r 200 Act iVIty Oes•gns to choose from

EXCLUSIVELY BY

R. JOHNS, LTO.

CUP ALONG THIS LINE

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

Fire Auxiliary meeting conducted

16·0Z . PKG. ALL MEAT

Kroger
Sliced Bologna

The Ladles Auxiliary of the fire
department met Wednesday even·
tng at the firehouse with vice
president Erma, Cleland, presiding.
The meeting opened with "The
Lord's Prayer" and the Pledge to
the Flag. The secretary's report
was read by Clara Conroy and the
treasurer's report by Opal Hollon.

WHEN YOU BUY ONE

16·0Z. PKG. KROGER Al(
MEAT SLICED BOLOGNA
AT THE REGULAR PRICE

SAVE ••• $1.69

'·

'

Newell, Opal Wickham, Margaret
Christy and Clarice Allen.
Reports of committee weft' given
and cards were ordered. Refresh·
ments were served. Birthday of the
month went to Marcia Keller . Roll
call was answered by Erma
Cleland, Clara Conroy, Opal Hollon,
Marcia Keller, Ethel Orr, Inzy

Sarah Renee Dalley

Dailey birth

•

California
PINT.RETURNAILE BOnLES.
DIET PEPsi, MTN. DEW,

Pepsi Free
or
Pepsi Cola

. 38

Lettuce

Nabisco
Premium
Saltines.

•

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dalley,
Reedsville, are announcing the
birth of a daughter Nov. 13 at the
Holzer Medical Center. She
weighed eight pounds, two ounces
and has been named Sarah Renee.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
Leonard Dalley, Reedsville, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Jacobs,
Chester.
Great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Jacobs and Mrs. Marte
Mlll\J'On, Middleport, Mrs. Gussie
Dalley, Portland, and Mrs. Nellie
Cozart, Coolville.

Wyatt birth
Terry and Brenda Wyatt are
announcing the birth of a daughter,
Tara Leann, born on Jan. latHolzer
Medical Center. The Infant weighed
six pouiv:ls, two ounces.
Mr. ·and Mrs. Wyatt have three
sons, Robby, 10, Adam, seven, and
Michael, four. Maternal grandpar·
ents are Mr. and Mr. RoberlBart&lt;m,
' Pooleroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Dick:
Seyler', Pomeroy. Paternal grand·
parents areMaJ:garet Wyatt, Pome-.
' roy. Great-grandparent are Mr.
and Mrs. Ardith Barton, and Lydia ·

· Pll,JS
DEPOSIT

Hysell, Pomeroy.

-~·

--- - -

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

·----------~

· - -.:;

'.

SaveS on
Light

CARR'f-OYT

DINE-IN

25% less salt

PIZZA HOT SUBS PIZZA BREAD

_

8 AS KETS ... .Chic ken .... Clams ....

25% ktss calories
25%1essfat
..........
.......
~~

Fis~

Toil .... S~r-imp
HOM£ OF THE 2~" SU~· ···

r------sAw s--s,
c Nlbllco Brandl. Inc. t.:t

11 : OOA.M.-II:OOP.M.

' \,

01 FUISCHMUI~IJGHT,M

~:

OOP.M.-1 O:DO P.M. Su11do.ys

MAIN ST RUTLAND.-. PHONE 7lf2-208q
-------------------~-------------------r------------------.
t
t

COUPON

50¢ Off s1 °0 Off

2'.000 l!lfObi!S

.
L..~-L-- ~--- ---------------- Jl--1

Thut-s.

II: OG A.M.-12: 00 A.M. Fti. and Sat.

COUPON

1 1119 ·
I 1i7't

Mon.t~tu

SVB SANDWICH

LARGE PIZZA

Coupon hplrti 'Jin. 21th
~IUA DAN'S
Rutl1nd, Ohio

Coupon ·hp11t1 J1n. 21th
PIZZA DAN'S
Rut11nd, Ohio

·

I

!
I

COUPON

I

50¢ Off !
t

1 MEDIUM PIZZA I
I1
Coupon Ex pion J1n. 21th
I1
PIZZA DAN'S
..
1
I

Rutlud. Ohio

t
. I

~-------------------l----~--------------~-------------------~

•
... -

�Page-8- The Daily Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 18, 1984

The Daily

SUCCL~

1896 Meigs auditor credited with math discovery
Old you know that a Meigs
Countlan discovered the extraction
procedures for determining the
;square root of numbers not perfect
squares?
Clinton Avery Roberts, who
·became Meigs County Auditor In
October, 1896, Is credited with that
mathematical accomplishment.
Meigs County Engineer Phil
Roberts provided a clipping which
points up the mathematical accomplishments of the late Clinton
Roberts, who was the great gra ndf at her of the prese nt
engineer.
The former auditor was born
Feb. 24, 1849 at Murrayville, W.Va.,
and he was a descendant of one of
three brothers named Roberts who
came to America from Wales
almost 300 years ago. Clinton
Roberts' grandfather, Reuben Roberts, was born In Maryland in 1m

and moved to the Wheeling area In
1802. In 1811, Jehu Roberts was ··
born, a son of Reuben Roberts.
Jehu taught school In his early
days and In 1834 came doWn the
Ohio River as clerk on a storeboat
with an Irishman named Doyle. In
that year, John, the father of
Clinton Roberts, began clerking In a
store for Captain William Hicks at
Long Bottom.
In 1838, Jehu located at Murrayville and became a member of the
firm owning the store and boatyard. In 1841. he married Jane
Kerr, Chillicothe. To them ~lght
children, four sons and four daughters, were born. Jehu moved from
Murrayville to Long Bottom In
April , 1851, when Clinton Roberts,
was just two years ot age. Jehu
engaged In a prosperous business at
Long Bottom.
Clinton A. Roberts attended

school at Long Bottom until he was
15 except for about a Y,ear which he
spent at the Coolville seminary. At
the age of 15, Roberts attended tor
three months the Iron City Business
College at Pittsburgh.
He was married In 1871 to Mary
M. Stewart, daughter of S. A.
Stewart of Long Bottom.
At the time he became county
auditor, "The Leader," a Pomeroy
newspaper had this to say:
"Roberts Is endowed with a rare
mathematical genius, the high
order of which Is recognized by
ernlnent mathematicians throughout the country. When but 10 or 11
years of age he discovered an
original (to him ) method or rule for
finding the sum of consecutive
numbers beginning with unity. At
the age of 18 he discovered a
method for cross multiplication
which, he supposed, was entirely

new. But he !earned later, when a square root of numbe,rs not perfect
student atthe Iron City College, that squares, an exempllflcatlon of
a knowledge of this method was ' which may be found 'In Vol. 2, No.3
poSsessed by others. The marve- of The Mathematical Magazine,
lous wonder of Roberts' methOd ot published ·at Washington, D. C.. the
cross multiplication can be under- ampllcatlon of which requiring
stood when we say !bat he was able several pages. Another method of
to multiply together mentally two the same kind had been published in
factors containing stx figures each, The Mathematical Magazine, the
or less.
square root of the digit three having
"He soon abandoned ettorts at been taken to the number of 500
proficiency in lightning calcula- decimal places.
tions, but pushed ahead his lnvestl"To test the correctness ot
gatlon5 of the properties and Roberts' method, he was asked by
relations of numbers In the higher the editor of the magazbte to
branches of mathematics. He has extract the square root of three to
discovered many new rules which the same number of places. This
were a revelation to the whole Mr. Roberts did, and the figures
mathematical world while an equal exactly agreed until the 223d place
number of discoveries wholly new was reac~ed when they disagreed.
to him, he afterward found had An Investigation showed that Robeen hunted out by others.
berts was correct.
"Among Roberts' many discov"Almost all of No. 7 of The
eries Is one for extracting the
Mathematical Magazine was taken

Church installs officers
. New officers for 1984 were
Installed at the Sunday evening
service of the Middleport First
Baptist Church.
·Installed were Darla Thomas,
church clerk, with Donna Grueser,
assistant; Alwilda Werner, church
treasurer, with Sarah Fowler,
assistant; Janice Gibbs, church
organist, with Sharon Hawley,
assistant; Raymond Fields, church
school superintendent . with Dan
Riggs, assistant; Sarah Fowler.
church school secretary and treasurer with Helen Fields, assistant;
and Alwilda Werner, church missions treasurer, with Sue Metzger,
assistant.
Ushers to serve one year terms
are Charles Anderson, Joe Anthony,
Lacy Barton, Lou Burton, Carroll
Cleland, Randall Davis, Myron
Fields, John Fultz, James Grueser,
Jim Grueser, Gene Gray, Charles
Huilson, Gene Hudson, Kenneth
Imboden, Fred Klein, Russell Mills,
Chris Nichols, Rob Parker, John
Riebel, Johnnie Riebel. James
Simpson, Jeff Snowden, Dale Wal-

bum, and Dallas Weber.
Elected chairman of the Board of
Christian Education was Peggy
Lewis with other members being
Wanda Shank, Pat Burton, Dallas
Weber, Marilyn Williams, and
Jerry Coleman . The Board of
Trustees is composed ot Kenneth
Imboden, chairman, Lou Burton,
Fran Parker, Gene Gray, Cathy
Riggs, Terry Moore, John Fultz,
Russell Mills and Nadine Barton.
Lacy Barton Is chairman of the
Board of Deacons with other
members being Gene Hudson, John
Werner, Dale Walburn, Fred Klein,
Bob Parker, John Riebel, Manning
Kloes, and Randal Davis. On the
Board of Deaconesses are Sue
Imboden, chairman, Debbie Cleland, Alice Mills, Anclll Van Maire,
Flora Marie Gibson, and Carolyn
Davis.
Dan White Is chairman of the
finance board with Glenna Riebel,
Harold Chase, Peggy Moore, J im
Grueser, and Carroll Oeland as the
members.

A report on the grange baking and
sewing contests was given by
Barbara Fry, CW Achairman, at the
·Thursday night meeting of the Rock
Springs Grange at the hall.
Mrs. Fry also reported on the
Pomona Grange meeting. Selected
as tentative dates for the grange
banquet were April 6 and 13. Plans
were made for a country auction to
be held at the February meeting.
It was voted by the members to

exhibit at the MeigsCountyFairthis
year. Pat Holter and Linda Broder-

up by Roberls. at tbe request of liB
editor, by a table of continued
fractions, the nature and acope of
which can only be understood and
appreciated by one who has drunk
long and deep at the mathematical
!ountaln.
"Roberts' proficiency as a mathematician Is recognized In all
parts of !be country, and It II sate to
say that the're are few eminent
mathematicians In the United
States to whom his name Is not
farntUar. H, bt the dllcharge of his
oftlctal duties as auditor ,It becomes
necessary to abbreviate an established process of computation In
order to save exhaustive labor
·Roberts wtU simply sit down and
make another discovery to tit the
case In hand."

Printed Pattern

•.

•

104 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-3383

10011. l'rllt
ZIP, SIZE, IN
Easy chemises,
wear- see and sew
newest IHhions, send
NEW
SPRING-SUMMER CATALOG. Over
100 styles plus free Pattern
Coupon Send S21or Cautoc now.
AU CINT 10011$ .. S2.5G -'t

Thurs. N1ght Dance Classes
6:00 p.m. Social Dancing
Stow O.non&amp;; S""'i: Waltz; Plll~
$5.00 coo~$3 00 ""~

7:00 p.m. Western
Tem Two-Step: Tem Sw1na;
Cowboy Polka: Tem L1nes.
$5.00 Couple·SlOO SIOife.
8:00 p.m. Ctogg1n&amp;
BosiC Stefl': freestyle; "The Gilley": Cotton-Eye Joe: Mount11n
Hoedown; S•naton1o Stroll; Ap·
PII1Ch11n ShuHle $100 cou·
ple-$2 00 lln&amp;le.
•Those students Ilk'" I the 6.00
p.m &amp; 7:00p.m. closses &amp;et the
8:00 p.m. class FREE!
Instructor: M1kki Casto
"Former
Arthur

4851

Instructor"

64 Mlac . Merchandiae

SIZES 1-20

&amp;.,./1..
.... 4.1-s
IT
,to .sew
PAY~

Murr~y

t~is NStl~

Year-End
Clearance Sale

deliaht ola dress, you II SAVE so
many dollaB. Choose low-&lt;:OSt
cotton/polyester blends. MULTI·
SIZE pattern aives 4 ~zes on
one tissue.
Printed Pattern 4851: Misses
Sizes (6, 8, 10, 12), (14, 16.
18. 20). Order reculll size.
$2.75 .. -'t ,...... AU !14M

AT
Pomeroy
Landmark

1141 ...... SIN II:
....... , . . 1 .' 1
. . . IIIII

Hotpoint Appliances
General Electric TV's
~oover Sweepers

.... ,..... ......
. The Daily Sentinel

~

--

992-2181
ON All

••

I

.Curb Inflation
Pay Cas_
h for
Claulfleds and
Savelaiaer.lbylmalt wllt1
· Wrlle your own· iol
•nd

,.

child Is subsequently murdered, Orson Welles' "The Other Side of
Wind" and Is the author of a best
perhaps to avoid a scandal. .
Peggy · Cass ~tars as Mother selling book, "Bittersweet." ·
Lynn Chausow delivers an ImMiriam Ruth, the stem and protecpressive
and sensitive performance
tive mother superior. Miss Cass Is a
versatile actress on stage, In as Agnes. She ha~ been a member
television and film. She received a of the Housm.an Acting Company
Tony Award and a Wort(! Theater and has played both on Broadway
Award for her role as Agnes Gooch .and across the country:
In the Broadway play, "Auntie . 'The National Touring Company
· and pi-oducer Tom· Mallow and
Marne.''' .
' Actress • .lecturer ·.and author, James Janek present "Agnes of
Susan Strasberg stars as Dr. · God." Tickets ilreS6 and $9 and are
Martha Livingston, tbe court ap- available at the'Memorial Auditopointed psychiatrist l!lred to solve rium Box Office from noon4 p.m.
the murder ca~:e. She starred In Monday · through Friday, or call
594-Gim for more Information.
·

•

)

I

•

LARGE or SMAU JOBS
PH. 992·2478
1118/ 1 mo

E.M•IriW...

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
NEW USTING - In Town - A
3 bedroom, 2 stDry house, oak
WOCIClwOO, washer and dryer,
AIC unit, ceiling tan, fireplace,
hardwood floors. $30,500
NEW LISTINr. - In The
Colrltry - Approx. I acre
with a nice little house, garage,
workshop, coal and wood heal
garden space, cellar, other
features. $12,200.
PRICE REDUCED - 5Minute
to Town - 2 bedroom motile
home on approx. \\ acre kt
Very good condition. Ret. and
range. Garage. S15,CXXJ.
EASTIRN DISTRICT - Acute
2 bedroom home, recen11y
remodeled, nice kitchen, front
porch, big ki. vinyt siding. Just
$21,500.
RUTIAIID - 2 bedroom
house, on main route, with sun
room, insulated, separate dining, \\ acre kt $29,900.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
8RI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

VIRGil B. SR.
216
11111

r. . 2nd St. .
Phone

H6141·992-332S
NEW LISTING - 6 rm. home
in excellent condition. ~
basement FA lumance. 3
bedrooms, carpeting all
through, 2 porches, garage,
nice view of the river lor
$30,CXXJ.

Nam•-------------------AddN~-------------­

Phon•------------~---

NEW USTING - View oiiHe
river from this 6 rm. home.
Bath, nice carpeting, nat gas
FA furnace and " lot lor only
$20,CXXJ.
NEW LISTING "- 2 apart·
ments, one furnished. Bath in
each. Natural gas FA furnace,
basement front porch, view d
the river and lg.lot lor $34,500.

These cash r•tes

I
I
I
I
I
17. - - - - - - I18. - - -- - - I
Include diiiCOUnl

(!Wanted

I

( )For Sale

( )Announcement
( JFor Rent

19,------1

1------

. 20. _ _..;....._ _

2-------

21 . -_ 22.
____

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

1!3. - - - - - -

3.-----

2~. - - - - - 26. _ _ _ __

I

I·
I
I

67.----...-.------ 25.-----8-----I
9. _ _ _ _ __

10. - - - - - -

21.

29.-----21.

I
I
I
I

I
I

11- -- - - - ' : " ' 3 0 . - - - - - 1

12......._.....,._ __

13. _ _ _...___

31. -__
- - II
32.
__-..;,._

14.
--_
- ._._; 32· - - - -- 1
15. ..,....
_-_
I
3$. ____-...
_
34.

"·----.L

.,.
..

I'
I
.I
I

Mill Thll Coupon with Remm.nce
The DIIIIY s.tlnel
· .
111 Court lt.

I

-----------------Pomeroy,Oh.4576t

.

Help Wanted

23

Profe11lonal
Service•

Malntenence man to cere for

•partment compt•x. Can
8711-6104 or 8711-6388.

PIANO TUNING low••

pd

I

J

IN TOWN - Agood buy. large
3 bedroom frame home.
Basement, furnace, ? baths,
storm ~ and windows. In
good condition. Minimum
down $3,000.
RACINE - One floor, level lot
in nice shape. Automatic heat
and all utilities. Bath, alum.
siding, Storm drs. and windows.
MINI FARM 2.4 acres, yot~ng
fruit, flliles and other trees. 600
ll on 124 near the bridge. 3
yrs. old, 3 or 4 bedrooms, TP
water, lull basement with
garage and woodbumer on gas
furnace, insulation and sturms.
$4,000.down.

WOODS - locate in the
country with lresh air and
privacy. Build to sun )'OUrself.

Good supply of ~rewood.

· BARGAIN - Will consider a
reasOnable oller on ttl~ new 2
bedroom A•frame, bath, TP
~ler with this one acre d land

plus woodbltmer. Carpeted,

insulalld and really nice.
$3,(XX) down.

Hou.\ ifl[!
He.ulc tJ.Jrlt!rs

SWEEPER •nd t-lng m•· Man to work Jn aervlce dlocounto to Senior Citizens,
chino repair, p•rtt, •nd autlon. Must be oblo to glvo Churchoo &amp; Schoot1. W•rd'l
oupptleo.
Pick up and good refencet and wortc any Kayboard, 304-8711-3824.
dotlvery, Dovlo V•cuum houro. Con 448-3828.
Income tex Hrvice, federal
ct.. ner. one h•tf mile up
Georgee Croelc Rd. Cotl Book·k - with typing and State. 614-992-7228.
end Mcreteriel experience.
814-448-0294.
Need immediately. Send TWO MONTH SPECIAL.
Gun thoot Racine Gun Ctub. rooume to P.O. Box 607. Jan . and Feb. t 984 off
aeuon prices on furniture
Ev01y Sunday starting 1 Racine. Oh.46771 .
re- upholatering . Mowreyl
p.m. Factory choked gune
Help wantad : telephone UphotS1ary, 304-876-41114.
only.
.
Vecency: JuiJa'e Peraonel
Cue Home . Formerly
Mercer Cenveleeence
Home. 18 yeera experience.

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

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Ooa Houses

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Route 1
lone Bottom. OH. 45743
9B5-4193 or 992-3067
12·20-tfc

delivery. Colt 992-6298 .

AVON MEANS MONEY .
CUlton. W.V. 304-773 - Straight percentege of earnlnge. eponsorshlp and good
687.3. I
routN available. Call 1·30431
Riverview Peraonel Cere 1178-2318.

Racine: Oh.
· Ph . 614-843-5191
10-6-tfc

menufecturert rebate coupon . Fruth Phl rmlcy and

Hockenberry flharmacy .
Giueaway

4

~""" P••pp,in

Born 12-8-83.

letter, mother
setter. Color mixed.

To a good home: 1 English

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Roger Hysen

bundog pup. 16 week otd
mate. Hao hod shot•· Call
992-7726.

GARAGE
Rt. 124,Pomtroy Ohio

good homo . 304-676 6766.

. AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission .

PH. 992-S682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

2

German

Shephards to

Five femele puppies. father
registered Austrefian Sheep
dog, mother Border Collie.

304-876-6730 -

3 year old, female Doberman. One old year Red male

Doberman . gentte .304676-6931 between tOam
6pm .

Fenteatic way to pay Christ·
mea bills. earning• two

ways . AVON . 304-676 1429.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Wanted tutor for graduate
atetittict. Pleate cell after

6pm 304-676-7717.

Buline11 opportunity looking for someone to buy out
and take over clothing businell. Include• inventory.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

Own your own Jean sportawear, Lldiea epparel.
or children's store, 300

brand nomos. 11 6.600. in·

ctudes $9,000. inventory.
store fixtures. Training and
much more. Mr. Tete 704·

12

6:30P.M.

Factory Choke

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY
742-2328

12 Gauge Shotguns
Only

6 Lost and Found
lOST 1 mate 8aagto pup
with brown leather collar.
Lost in vicinity of Lower
River Rd . &amp; Neighborhood

Rd. Catt 446 · 2660

evenings.

Lost tjYO Beagles. black.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized Jolin Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Duler .

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

1-3-rfc

985·3561
All Mokes

•W11hers •Dishwashers
•Ranges

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tfc

Al TROMM
742-2328
10/20/ tJ n.

Now Open

Jerry's Custom

SLAUGHTER
Beef and Hogs
"from the Farm
to the Freezer"
Cut and wrapped to your
specifications. Fast, Dependable Service.
CALL: 742-2789

or 742-2515

Road. 304-676-3401 .
B

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SIDING

BISSELL

SIDING CO.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

Call for free siding es·
timates~ 949-2801 or
949·28o0
No Sunday Calls
3·1l ·tlc

-

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addona 1nd remodeUng
Roofing and guner work
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrical

work
IF•ee Estimates)
REDUCED WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 •• 992·7314

Pome•oy, Ohio

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring
needs; furhaces. repair
service and installation.

(Formerly Lawrence
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)

Residential
&amp; Commercial

Owner
PH. 992-3194 or
992-2388

Call 742·3195
Or 992-5875

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL
Jerry and Ellen's
Coin-0-Matic
Formerly Dpds and Suds

Ajtendant on duty.
Clothes Washed &amp;
Dryad $2.00 a Load
Orrt Day Service
Phone: 992·5937
1-5-1 mo.

ROGER MANLEY

Business or Residential
'-----12-21·1 mo.

INVESTIGATION

Consultation by Appointment
Only, Proms Strv1ct, Child .
Custody, Mluln1 Ptnons,
Survtlllanct, Photoll'lphy, In·
surtnct ct•tms, locate Heirs,
Ptact ol Mind Rtport, Video
lnvtntory Camtte ol Ptrso1111 Property. ·
LICENSED • INSURED
6 Years Experience
WOOl INVESTIGATION
MIDOUPOIT

614·9'~2·1'6':16

payment. 168.900. Colt
446-3176 .

3 bedroom. Superior loce-

tion . 10 % down . t 0%
financing
We have buyers for homes in

the 140.000 to 166,000
range . Uat with us. A -One

Fentestic •home at the edge
of Gallipolis. Large inground swimming pool ;
huge gorgeoue femity room
with fireplece, alao a fireplace in the living room. 3
bedrooms, game room. 2 Yz
baths. plus 1 beautiful view
of the river. 2 acrH of yard
for outdoor liv.ing. Will Mil
on lend contract with lpproved credit for juat

16,000 down payment and

111ume lend contrect with
payments of $400 a month.

Can 446-3176.

3 BR house. single garage in
subdivision. reaaonably

priced . 16141446-1343.

Remodeling, painting. electrical repair 8t rewiring .
plumbing. heating 1nd roofing. Free ettimates. Call
Harper' s Adult Care Home
has a vacancy for enother
reaident, elderly person . Call

304-676-1 293.

Housekeeper by the hour.

304-675-1369.

Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth

am to 6 :00pm .

night. Pt. Pleasant. WVa. Can 304-676-6803. 8:30

Middleport. clean home.
Priced very. very reesona blell Includes alot of furni-

ture. Con 614-992-6941 .

For ule-Sacrifice 2 bdr.
house on Blue Lake. 2 lots,

114.600 . Call after 4PM .
614-266-6413 .
located in Syracuae-Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot. Price reduced
$23.500. or will rent for

S240 mo. 304-866-3934.

HOUSE FOR SAlE -8
Center Bldg .. Camden St. l - - - - - - - - -- rooms
doubht
614·367-7101 .
House ctuning $3.00 hour. garege.. 1basement.
and one third acre
Babysitting $40.00 per lot. Rose Hill. Pomeroy.
Rick Pearaon Auctioneer week one child. 160.00 for Excellent condition .
Service. Estete, Farm, An · two children in my home. S32 . 900 . I -614-678 tique 8t liquidetion sales. Ask for Marlene 304-676- 2613.
Ucenoed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp; 6329.
WVa . 304-773-6786 or
7 room house. 1 'h acre lot,
304-773-9186.
barn, basement. carport. on
13
Insurance
Rose Hill in Pomeroy. Good
Auction every Fri. night at
condition. $26,000, plus
the Hartford Community
furniture -$2.000. Total:
Center. Truckloads of new SANDY AND BEAVER In- $28,000. Can Edison Hobmerchendiee every week . surance Co. has offered stetter at 992-2464 or
Consigments of new and
used merchandise alwaya
welcome . Richard Reynolda
Auctioneer . 304 - 275 ·

3069.
9

Wanted To Buy

We pay caoh for toto modet
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

446-3672

Oliva St ., Gatlipolls, Oh .

Standing timber. will pay
top prices for red 8t white

oak. Catl 614-388-9906
after 6 ,
weekends .

or

services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. rFerm.
home and personal property
coverqes are available to
meet individuel needa. Con tact Harry Pitchford, agent.

Phone 614-446-1427.

1-=1:::;8=w=a=n=te=d=to=D=o==
Babysitting in my home.

anytime

Wanted to buy tobacco
poundage. Contact Joe Call,

S26 week per child . Call
448-7402.

Will care for child 3 to 5 yrs .
old, my home. days. good
location. center of town .

Call 446-3420.

Wanting to clean up brush,
etc . Work byhourorjob. Call

614-266-1628 or6t 4-2666674.

616-266-6024 .

Wanted to buy. New, used &amp;
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete households. Also complete Aucti·
oneering service. Call Rodney
Howllry

614-698-7231 .

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
_In Middleport

667-3402.

Will do blbysitting in my
home evenings or midnight.

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni ture. 446-3159, 3rd. &amp;

YOUNG'S

Will care for the elderty in my
home. Lots of references.
Men or women . Call 614 -

Auction every Tue sday

1·11·1 mo.-pd

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Situations
Wanted

986-4121 .

white and brown. Vicinity of
Ripley Road and Jerrico

ity room and kitchen hat 1
built -in renge . Asaume PlYmenta with a small down

fixture1, eupplies, 304-676- Reo~ Estate, Carol Yeoge&lt;
1317 or 876-3217.
Realtor. Can 676-6104 or
676-5386.

Ba1hon Building

•Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

Ranch on 5 acrH. beeutiful
setting wit h tall pinea
•round the house. Speciout
livingroom which overtook•

Box 426, Dayton, Ohio 3 bedroom ranch atyled
46401 .
homo. Can 446-0109 after
6:30.

Babysitter needed, 304·
676-1214 or 876-6033.

GUN SHOOT

AL TROMM'S
· BACKHOE
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Homes for Sale

AN OHIO OIL CO . offers the pond. 4 bedrooms. utit·

high income, pfua caah
bonuses, benefits to mature
person in Point Pleaunt
aree. Regardteas of experience. write M . T. Read .
Americ1n Lubricant• Co .•

763-4738.

BOGGS

Real Estate

o etderty peroon. 304-773· Went to hire piano pleyer. 4 bdr. ranch home. lerge LA ,
Henderson United Metho- full basement. with geregit,
6882.
dist Church. Calt 304-676- wood burner included. city
achools, 2 milea from town.
Lose weight FREE with 1141 .
Dex-A-Diet. 100 per cent 1- - - - - - - - - - Call 446-0276.

Hair. Catt 896-1234.

Ntw Homes-Extensive
Remodel in&amp;
Insurance Work
Cu,to.m rote Bides:
Garaces
Roofinc Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sldincs
111 Ye•r• Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7683
or 992-2282
11-1-tfc

uiH people. Also aomeone
with amall cer for envelope

Home now hea • vacency for

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

GRAVEL
HAULED

coupon. cancel vour lid by ~ when you get
, results. MIJitteY not l'l!fundable.

of God' prese_nted at MU

A compelling and 'thoughtprovoking evening of theater wut
open the 1984 Ohio University
Performing Arts Series programs
for winter quarter. John Plell'l!eler's hit Broadway play, "Agnes
ot Gpd" starring Peggy Cass, Susan
Strasberg an~ Lyim Chausow, will
appear at 8 p.in.' In Memorial
Auditorium Tuesday, Jan. 24.
It Is a powerful play of m~stery
and Intrigue which explores and·
questions the essence of faith and
the possibility of ·miracles ·In tbe
cOntemporary world. The ·play
concerns a' young nun who gives
btrih to a child In the convent. Hf;'r

- Donn
- Backhoes
- Dump Trucks
- La-Boy
- Trencher
- Weter
-Stwtr
- Gulines
-Stptlc Systems

243 Wilt 17 Sl, 11tw Yorl, U

Church deacon board gathers

GOING ACIWE - S,tephanle
· Houchins, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Houchlas, MldcDeport, has compl~ pled1e cl888
tralnlnl and wW be Initiated Into
the Beta Upsilon ChaPter of
Sigma Kappa Sorority at Ohio
University ,on Jan. 2t, 1884.• As a
pled1e, Stephanie teamed the
history of SIPJa Kappa, lt8
Natloilal Orpnlzatlon, how the
Greek srstem works, and the
true meaning ·of 1118terhood. A
freslunan pre-medicine major
she Is also amember of the~ .
Green CouncU and the Health
Careers Club.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

PAT HILL FORD

PRESENTS'

Meigs County property transfers

Ferrell home

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

FRENCH QUARTER

Chester community ·happenings

'Agne~

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

ick were named chairman for the
booth. Grange cookbooks are curNEW MINISTER - John Wright Is the new
He. Is pictured with hl8 wUe, Martha, and their
rently on special for$4, It was noted.
full-time rnlnlster of the Bradbury Church of Christ.
daugNers, left, Elizabeth 5 and Jesalca 3.
Lecturer Louise Radford presented the program which included
"It's a Fact" by Helen Blackston; a
quiz on Proverbs by Louise Rad·
ford; "Voices of tbe Year' by Linda
Broderick, along with suggestions
for tu ture programs by all the
members.
·
Refreshments were served by
daughters, Mt. Sterling, Ky., Miss
By CLARICE ALLEN
Dinner guests on New Year's Jessica Che\laller.
Ethel Grueser, Opal and Roy
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith and Kathy Newell, Gallipolis.
Day of Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Newell
Mrs. Erma Cleland, Marcia
Grueser. Reported ill were Herb children, Caldwell, spent the holiMr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy spent were Mr. and Mrs. John Newell and Keller and Opal Hollon spent New
Dixon and Bertha Lleving.
days with Mr. and Mrs . Delmar the holidays In Akron with their family and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Year's EvewlthMrs. Irene Parker,
sons, Erroll Jr. and Hugh and Newell and family, Kfno. and Mr. Syracuse.
Baum.
Spending the holidays with Mr. families.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Newell
and Mrs. Dennis Long and children,
Gerald and Donald Frank, Nel· Racine.
and Mrs. Harold Newell and Jim
were dinner guests on Christmas
.
were Kenny Newell, Lincoln, Neb., sonvllle, visited on Wednesday with
Miss Yvette Young, Pomeroy, Day of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Newell
Susan Springer, Teresa Ireland and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Meek and Mrs. Letha Wood.
spent the weekend with her cousin, and family , Keno.
Sherry Butt erick.
All reports were read and
approved. VIsitations were made.
Get well and sympathy cards were
sent out. There will be an active
Fred B. Srntth, Bertha F. Smith
prayer list. To serve nextmonthare
Larry D. Circle, Patricia Circle to Orange.
Gluesencamp, J. E. Gluesencamp,
James K Diddle, Right of Way,
Teresa Ireland and Mickey Smith. to James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Karr Construction Co.· to James
Ada Mae Pratt, Lawrence M. Pratt
Sutton.
To bring door prizes will be Trilba Chester.
E. Diddle, Right of Way, Chester.
to James E. Diddle, Right of W&amp;y,
Archie C. Rose, .Debra L. Rose to
Patterson, Mickey Smith, Susan
Wilbur Dalley, Annie Dunbar et
Lebanon.
Horace Karr, Dorothy Karr to
James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
al, Journal Entry, Columbia.
Springer and Tammy Haley.
James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Hobert Day, Retha Day to James
Program will be given by Susan Chester.
Paul M. Parsons to Carl Schultz, Chester /Sutton.
E. Diddle, Right of Way, Bedford.
Jr., Parcel, Pomeroy.
Springer.
Horace Karr, Dorothy to James
Dale L. Browning, Buty Joe
R,tght
of
Way,
Chester.
E.
Diddle,
Anna L. Muter, Noel J.
Browning,
R. E. Douglas, Martha Douglas
Horace
Karr,
Dorothy
Karr
to
Muter
to
Ronald
K. Browning, Lots,
to James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
James E . _Diddle, Right of Way,
Middleport.
Bedford.
Max 0 . Davis, Arline N. Davis to
Ruth Koenig to James E. Diddle, Chester.
Donna Wills, Richard Wills,
Max 0 . Davis, Arline N. Davis,
Right of Way, Orange.
Parcels, Salisbury.
Freda Ptlce, Wlllan;l Ptlce, Carmel
Ezra E. Sheets, Frances Sheets to
T.
Oller,
Linda
T.
Oller,
Alberta
Relrl A. Young to Charles H.
James
E.
Diddle,
Right
of
Way,
thanking the PTO for boxes of
·
Faulk
Jr .• Linda R. Faulk, 10.890
candy received before the holiday
acres,
Chester.
vacation.
Larry W. Rapp, Linda M. Rapp to
Jon! Jeffers was Introduced as
Charles
H. Faulk Jr., Linda R.
the new third grade teacher
Faulk,
.689
acre, Chester.
Jack
Sorden
presided
at
the
·
noted
that
the
next
It
was
replacing Carolyn Snowden who Is
Oarence
E. Lightfoot, Bonnie
of
.
the
Board
of
recent
meeting
community
service'
wtll
beh
eld
on
on maternity leave. The treasurer's
•
Lightfoot
to
Charles
H. Faulk Jr.,
Deacons
of
the
Middleport
First
March
4.
The
Mission
Council
will
report showed a balance .of
R.
Faulk,
.009
acre,
Chester.
Linda
Church
during
which
Presbyterian
meet
at
the
church
April26
at
4
p.m.
$1,328.41.
H.
Faulk
Jr.,
Linda
R.
Charles
time
plans
were
made
for
a
potluck
to
be
served
at
6
with
the
dinner
Mrs. Fetty noted that grade cams
dinner to be held following the p.m. Between 30 and 50 persons are Faulk, Richard Ray· Rupe, Alta
will be Issued Thursday. Room
congregational meeting.
expected to attend the meeting. The Ann Rupe to Clarence E. Llghttodt,
count went to the third grade class,
opening
prayer
Sorden
had
the
next Board of Deacons meeting was Bonnie Lightfoot, .537 acre,
which presented the program.
froni
the
1984
Mission
Yearbook.
for Feb. 13 at 7:30p.m. Chester.
announced
Refreshments were served. PTO
Charles H. Faulk Jr., Linda R.
Reports
were
given
by
Carroll
Ann
Hal
Johnson
had the closing
meetings are held tl;e second ·
Faulk
to Richard Ray Rupe, Alta
Harper,
~retary; Dorothy MorAlso
-attending
Was
Russell
prayer.
Monday .ot each month at 7 p.m.
Ann
Rupe,
4.406 acres, Chesll!r.
ris,
acting
treasurer;
and
Joan
Lyons.
Besides Mrs. Johnson, president,
Sorden,
card
·
chairman.
other officers are Judy Eblin, vice
president; Mary O'Brien, secretar y, and Ka y Frederick,
treasurer.

James Ferrell, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dlltord Ferrell was home for
the holidays to visit rlatives and
mends.
James has been confined •to the
Wood VA Medical Center, Wisconsin, since August, 1983, wlthasevere
neck
btjury. During his visit 11ere his
.· Mr. andMrs.CharlesB.Richards
brotber,
Reed Ferrell and famlly;
·and daughter, Tracy, have returned
came
from
Michigan to assist the
to their home in Klsslmn'u!e, Fla.
In
caring
for him. James has
family
after being hereto attend the funeral
now been returned to Wisconsin and
Dt his sister, Anna Mae Smith, who
·died Jan. 12 1.!1 Dayton. They also · lsexpecledtbstaythereanothertwo
to four months. Cardsmaybesentto
:Visited with Mr. Richard's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene · Buckley, him at the Medical Center, 500JWest ·
National Ave., Wood, Wise. 53193.
ChesJUre..

Returned home.

DEC. 30th

992-2196

Rutland PTO purchases
school science equipment
Purchase of some science and
sporting equipment was approved
at the Monday night meeting of the
Rutland PTO held at the school.
Margaret Johnson presided at
the meeting with Marge Fetty,
head teacher, explaining that the
basketball team Is in need of new
basketballs and the science department In need of new microscopes.
- It was noted that Feb. 9 Is the
·(leadllne for submitting Campbell's
.5oup labels for redemption. The
total now stands at 3,417.
The Rutland scholarship was
discussed and the committee will
meet with the Meigs High School
-guidance counselors to advise them
•o( the requirements. A scholarship
wtll be awarded to a Rutland
student at the end of the school
year, with selection to be made on
ti•e basis of scholastic record.
Application s are currently
available.
· Read at the meeting were notes
·from the Rutland teaching staff

SWEEP

WILL OPEN

3 Announcement•

Ladies. Aid group meets

· The Addison Freewill Baptist
Ladles Aid met Jan. 11 at 7:30p.m.
at the church. The meeting was
called to order by Sister Susan
Springer. Song was "I'll Fly
Away." The prayer was by Eva
Gardner. The scripture was from
Hebrews, chapter 12, read by Susan
Springer.
La dl es present were Eva
Gardner, Trilba Patterson, Mary
Barcus, Mickey Smith, Tammy
Haley, Christie Haley, Sandy Neal.

KING

CHIMN

MEIGS
CAB CO.

Kitchen Cabinets - RoofIn&amp; - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks Ntw Construction - RemodeliP&amp; - Custom Pole
Barns.

Bradbury
Church of
Christ gets
• •
new mtntster

3 Announcement•

11

prlces-reguler tuning• ·

12·29·1 mo

John Wright has been nar ed full
time minister of the Bradbury
Church of Christ.
Wright attended Kentucky Chris·
tian College at Grayson, Ky., and
during this time served as pastor at
the Fabor Church of Chrtst at
Stockport. He has also served the
Blsbopvllle Church of Christ at
Glouster for a period of tour years
on a full time basL~.
After leaving Blshopvute, Mr.
Wright attended Hocking Technical
College at Nelsonville where he
received training as a nurse.
Upon graduation be worked at
Good Samaritan Hospital In Zanesville untU accepting the new
position at the Bradbury Church of
Christ. He will also be seeking
employment In the nursing tleld In
addition to his ministerial duties.
A native of Morgan County,
Wright and his wife, Martha, a
native of Athens County, have \WO
daughters, Elizabeth, 5, and Jessica, 3.
A dinner will be held at the
Bradbury Church of Christ at noon
on Jan. 22 Immediately following
the worship services to welcome ·
Mr. and Mrs. Wright and their
farnlly to . the community. The
public Is Invited.

Grange meeting conducted

Business Services

BUSIN·ESS ,
IS A CINCH .
IF YOU USE.
THE INCH!

.

'

(\ 11 111111111. 1: 1111: Ill :,

S. Hobstetter at

992·7763. Witl consider

financing part of it.

3 acres with a nicely constructed concrete block

home 26x60, 3 bedrooms.

one bath, 12x151iving room
and 24x24 f1mily room .
Partially carpeted, fuel oil
furnace with fecilities for
woodburner . 12x15 block
storage building. 20x30

block garage. Right off

Rt.248, country setting. Yz
mile East of Chester. Ohio.
Home National Bank· 614-

949-2210.

House for sale or rent in
Middleport. 6 rooms and

bath. Can after 6 p.m.
614-742-2436.
By owner, Gallipolis Ferry,
three bedrooms. two baths.

100x200 tot. 9.8 per cent
anumabta loan . 304-6762183.
Two years otd, $16.000.00.

Ftnancial
21

George

three bedroom, half acre.

closa to town. 304·6756230 .

Business
Opportunity

Buying daily gold. sliver

Three bedroom home, 2 Yz
years old. assumable 8 Ya per

cant loan . 304-675-6713
evenings.

coins, rlnge, jewelry,sterling
were. old coins, large currency. Top prices. Ed . Bur-

t NOTICE t
Nice three bedroom home,
THE OHIO VAlLEY PUB- Gallipolis
Ferry,
LtSHtNG
CO.
recommends
kett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ava. that you do businesa with 147,000.00, call if interMiddleport, Oh. 6 t 4-992- people you know, and NOT ested 304-676-2368.
3476.
BEDS-IRON. BRASS otd
Furniture, gold, silver dollara, wood ice boxea, stone

jor1. •ntiques, ate. Comptote
households.

Write M .D .

Mitter, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Oh
46789 or 61 4-992·7760.

Wont to buy tndl•n artifacts.
Phone 814-448-4298.
Pine Pulpwood detlvorod to
the Wutv•co Woodyard,
Mlttwood, WV. Alto •tandIng pine timber. For more
lnformotiop, catl 304-27398,1 .

Flli!I I IIV IIII'!II
St! l Vlt:I!S

11

Help Wanted

to eend money through the
mail until you heve lnvesti·

gated the offering.

Four bedrooms. three b1ths.
large beautiful kitchen, fam ily room with wood burner.

Many extras, $98.000.()0.
2904 Spruce Ave.. MaaAddn . 304-676quick sala. 166,000.00 . dowbrook
1991
.
Building and equiproel\t..
Mason, W. Va. Phone 304882-2400 or 882-2181 .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
If you want something more
Reateurant end Ice Crean
partor. price reduced for

from

life,

more

money,

freedom and opportunity.

you owe it to yournlf to find

out about tho Yurlka Food•
opportunity. Just a few
houra of your tpare time

could change your life. Calt
304-875-11689 for more
infotmation, after 6:00pm.

22 Money to Loan

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12'1:1% purcheoe or
AVON hm 40 to 46 % refinance, 9% adju1t1bte
comminlon plua eponaer· rate . Leadar Mortg.• ge ,
Athen1, 1-800-341-111164
•hlp. c.n 448-33&amp;8.

TRI-STATE MOBILE
HOME·S. USED - CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CAll
614-446-7672.
NEW AND USED 'MOBILE
HOMES KESSEl'S QUAl·
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 Mt . WEST, GALLtPOLtS,
RT 36. PHONE 614-4467274.
197712x60mobilehome.2 .
bdr., furnished , good cond.,
17,600 . Catt 614-268 6818 .

1}1

•

�Page-l 0&lt;--- The Daily Sentinel
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

They'll Do It Every Time

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigera-

tors. ranges . Skaggs Ap pliances, Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel .
814-446-7398.

o'CI.OCI&lt; 1'01:14Y.··me

ing. Corner lot at Quail

L.AST 'T!Aie I GAMe

Creek, French City Broker-

IN '!He A~~OON

.. T

ago Service . Call446-9340.

IT'rt~r.

Priced to sell, 1979 Sterling
14x70, 2 bdr .. CA, vinyl
skirting. French City Broker·
age Service. Call446 -9340.

DICK TRA&lt;;Y

Boat• and
Motore for Sale

Uaed OE refrigerator, Weat lnghouae electric range, liv·
ingrottm ~ uite, famllyroom
suite. .able &amp; 6 chalra.
Cor1 1 '\e Snyder Furniture,

966 ~ o oond
1171 .

1972 mobile home, needs

some repairs. with 1112 acres
very reasonable . Call 446·

Ava. 446-

Nearly new washers &amp; dryers, reconditioned &amp; guaran teed 30 days. We specialize
in washer &amp; dryers only . Call

0063.
1978 Shultz 14x 70 central
air, all new furniture, ex .
cond . on rented lot . Call
evenings 446-2076 .

Bean used 4 montha. •• ·

78

good sh1po. Coll44e-42B8 .
Truck top for 1hort bed.
8160. 1981 office troller
60x10, central air, , A-1
cond .. •4.1100. 22 ft. cobln
cruiser with lnboerd outboord, t2,800 or will
trede. 1978 laSelle travel
troller 27 · ft. with olr &amp;
awning 84,100. Bolenlng
1O'h HP garden troctor with
anow blade. cart, aerator, &amp;
lima spreader. $8150. Call
614-843-2916. Waterloo,
OH.

Auto Parts
&amp; Acce11orlea

Billy LH's Tire• end Bitter"'~
Sales. New ond uoed tlr11 " •
olso. tire repolrs . 1803 Jef: :
feraon Ave . Point Pleuant . •

327 truck engine with auto .
tron1 .. runs good •150 .00.
304-488· 11113.

614-286-1207.

CAPTAIN EASY
ONI! MORE CHANCE' •
I'LL &amp;e l!ACI&lt; TO
PICK 'IOU UP FOR Di~NER .
IF '/OU'Ri! NOT OVeR VOUR
FOOL-15-H ~CHEME'~ !IV
THE'N ... I'M GONE!
I!A~Y.

Umestone delivered e9 per

1979 12x65 liberty, unlur ..
gas heat. gas stove, axe.
cond . $6 .400. 614 -3889326 or 614-246-6176 .

Bedroom, living room suite,
stero music center. waaher

ton. Call614 -388-9612.

&amp; dryer, dinette sat. 1980
Oldsmobile Cutlan. Call
446-8227 .

Woodburner with blower,
firebrick lined, excellent

Si! rVt i: t!s

cond . Call814-367.,-7169 .

81

1 DOt.J 'T LIKE TO TEl.!..
AN'/ONE HOW TO RUN
THEIR LIFf!, EA!PY. 8UT
SHE'S RI6HT.

1 TOLD YOU THOSE TWO
ARE ART COLLECTORS. l 'YE
K!&lt;lOWN THEM FOR ~ARS .
IF THeY WeRE MAl&lt; lNG
A COCAINe DEAl., WHV
WOULD TH&amp;V DO IT
IN PLAIN SiGHT l

Home
Improvements

Old kitchen cabinet nHds
refinished. Coli 814-3677169 .

56

Mobile home aupplies: nontoxic antifreeze-t6.60 per

2 AKC Registered mile
Cocker sponlels- blonde II
yrs. old. red 3 yr1., good
blood line, good temparomont. Excellent for brHd·
lng. Cell 448-9372 otter
6:30PM .

gallon. Woter heating ele-

For sale on contract located
2 mi. from hospital on Rt.

160. 12x60. 2 bdr.. nice
trailer on rented lot. $500

4 rooms and bath, some
furniture . Suitable for one or
two women or huiband and
wife. 12 miles south of
Athens on At . 33. No child·
ren or pets. References

Apartments now available to

elderly &amp; disabled wi1h an
income

of

less

required . 614-696-1035.

ATTENTION-Do you naedto

Two bedrooms, large livingroom with wood burner . Nice 1 bedroom apartment.
Located on the Ohio River. utilities furnished. 304-676-

home without the hassle of

set-up. Wa have a 1979

$200.00 month. Call 304675-3030 or 676-3431 .

Freedom 1 4x70 deluxe
model on a lot in the Country
Mobile Home Park . This 42 Mobile Homes
home has a front dining
for Rent
room with wooden bow
window. a circular kitchen
with Iota of cabinets, 2
bedrooms. large luxury bath 12x60 2 bdr. modern furwith garden tub. Price of . nished trailer, convenient
$12.600. Includes metal location, Upper River Rd.
building, patio cover, steps, daposit raq . Call 614-446washer and dryer. Every- 8668 .
thing in tip-top condition.
Ready to live in. For informa- Nicety furnished modern
tion call 614-992-7034 or rnobile home. in city. 1 or 2

adults only. Call 446-0338.

614-992-6284.
'69 Schultz mobile home.

heavy-duty electric dryers.
thio month only •279 .

than

down. $100 par mo . at 10%
interest. $5,00. Call Jack
Neal at 446-0167.
move into a nice mobile

ments, water heater. atepa.
windows, doors. faucets.
breakers. etc . HotPoint

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .

812,300. Renting for 30

Maytag washer e7&amp;, Ken more washer e60, Kenmore
washer $76, alae. range

percent of adjusted income-

.Phone 304·675-6679 .

875, gas range 866, side by
side refrigartor $160. frost

free rofrigartor 8100, 17 ft.

7112 .

cheat freezer $126, 3 tofaa

starting at 845 to 876, small

In Middleport two 'room
eHiciency apartment. Call

Maytag

Two bedroom apartment
partly furnished . Yard and

Wooden dinette set $60 .

basement. $175.00 month.
304-676-2264 evenings or

Coli 446-7106.

614-446 -3703 days.

Unfurnished three room •pt.
(range and refrigerator)

groOm suite &amp; end table

8260 .00 month . Utilities
paid. Newly carpeted. Call
304 -676 - 3030 or 676 3431 .

With

or

without

turn .,

For rent Sleeping Rooms

1978 Windsor special adi-

1,2•60. 2 bdr., nice &amp; clean . and light house kaaping
N
d
rooms . Park Central Hotel.
o pats.
ep. req ., ref. C 6 4 446 07
preferred . Call 614-256- , __•1_1_ 1_-_ _·_6_6_._ __

tion, 14x70, real nice. three

1636 before noon .

,.
bedrooms. one and half 1 - - - - - - - - - - Sleeping room S125, utilibetha. 304-937-2120.
2 bdr. mobile home fully ties paid. Males only. range
furnished. adults only. Call II rafrig. Call 446-4416
after 7 p.m .
446-4110.

34

Business
Buildings

2 bdr. completely furnished
Space for Rent
mobile home. Call 446- 46
9669.
1 - - - - - - - --

20x60 store building lo- 2 bdr. trailer below Eureka,
cated on Main Street in adults preferred or a small
Rutland. Has nice 4 room child. $135 per month . Call
614-266-1157.
and bath apartment above.
Will accept late model car or 1-T-w_o_b_e_d-ro_o_m-.-.-- - -c-t-ric-.
11 818
truck on trade . Asking

812,500. Call 742-2460.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

$126.00 par month, 860.00

deposit,

Road,
4088.
Two

36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd. Owner financ-

ing available. Call446-8221
after 6 weekdays.

For sela City lot in Bidwell,
8800. Call 446-4113 or
446-6609 .
26x60 garage. 'A acre lot,

81t;i.OOO.OO. Rt. 35, Beach
Hill. W.Va. 304-676-3721 .
Five lots, Greer Road. upper
Hillview. Scenic view from
front windows. $6,000.00.

304-676-7749 after 6pm.

Ashton

Upton

bedroom .

14x64

trailer. 15 miles south Point
Pleasant. Deposit and refer-

ence a must. 304-6757361.
44

Houses for Rent

house. 4 bdr .. 8260 per mo.
8260 dap . raq . Buy
829.600. Call 446-4222.
9:30-5:00.
2 bdr. house, 2 blocks from
city park, $200 month plus
utilities, reference, available

now. Call446 -2419.
For rent or lease 1 floor, 2
bdr. home with carport in

city, gas heat . Call 4461945.
Fantaatic 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'h
baths. plus a beautiful view
of the river . 2 acres of yard
for outdoor living . e400

month. Call 446-3176.
Nice 3 bdr. house for rent or
possibly sell o,n land con-

tract. Call after 4PM. 614256-6413:
3

bdr.

unfurnished brick

BR

Apt..

$129

mo.

Utilities partially furnished .·· · ··-· 3 bdr. house for sale

on land contract. 304-6755104 or 304-676-5386,

Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting at $1 67 for one

and

8193

par

month for two bedroom.

with 8 200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring

Vallay Plaza. pool and TV
ant. Call 446-2746 or leave
message.
Nice 2 bdr. carpeted apt. in
Kanauga with washer &amp;

dryer hookup, $176 plus
utilities. Call 1-304-2739746 .
Furnished upstairs apt. 2
rooms &amp; bath, adults only.
Clean, no pets. Deposit
required . utilities paid. 446-

1619.

Ph .. 446-4383 days or 4460139 evan .
1 bedroom Apt. 8196. mo.
. including

utilities.

Equal

Housing Opportunity. Contact Village Manor Apta.

614-992-7787.
Riverside Aptl. Middleport.
Special

rates

for

Senior

House with bath and large
yard . Near Racine. 614992-5858.
.

3 bedroom furnished Apt. In
Syrapuse. 814-992-7889

, House for rent . 4 rooms and

Lauro! Ulnd Apts. now IC·
captlng applications for 2
bedroom Apts. ot New
Haven, W.VA. Apartments
Include range, refrlg., carpeting. Rentall ronga from
•1&amp;8.00 to t22B.OO per
month depending on gross

For rent In the Eas1ern Local
District. Neot modern 4
bedroom houu. full bllement. UOO dapo1it . .Reference• .-qulred. Jean Trul·
a e I I . E v e n I n g a·t
814-949-2880.

'•

after'&amp; p.m.

income

per

month.

For

further Information caii304882-33Bii betwMn 11 a.m.
end 6 P·l!'· Mondoy thru
Frldey. Equal Housing
Opportunity.
APARTMENTS , mobile
homeo. houHI. Pt. PleaHnt
end Gelllpcill1. 814-448B221.

57

1-304-882-2711

54 Misc. Merchandise

Soft sculpture dolls. Cab-

yard .

HEAP

vender.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

Limestone, Sand, Gravel .
Delivered in Mason, Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards

Hoy for sole. 304-8711 2991 .

~ i~r~:~~r:~ . ~~:~~~~er&amp;

Good ml•ed hoy. •1 .110 per
bale. FMd grinder, 304578-2108.
Hoy for 11ie, coli 304-87118337.

Appllonce Service oil makes
modele refrigertor a.
wuhera, dr,,., range s.
0

Cooling, Sheet Metal Work .
Gollle Refrlgerotlon Co .
814-448-4088 .
RON'S Television Service. '
Specializing In Zenith ond
Motorola,

Quater , 1nd ·

houu cells. Cell 304-6762398 or 814-448-2454.

rr ,tnspurt.tlllill
71

Autos for Sale

61

Farmoll Cub tr1ctor with
cultivetors turning plows
ond old mowing mechlne.
All whHI weights in good
condition, n.ooo. firm.
Clll448-4120 ofter 5.

Air compressor ,· 1hp, with
hoses, bought new last year,

J IV I D E N ' S FAR M
EQUIPMENT
614-448-1876.
long tractors. Vermeer
round belero. rok011 tedders,
mowers. complete line of
bela handling &amp; feeding
accessories. Tobocco&amp;corn
sprayers. wogons, rotarytillers, roterycuttero. blodes,
cultivotors. discs. plows.
post drivers, plastic tsnks.
wood-splitters, getes. powerweshers, skid 1tear lood-

110 plug, 8140.00. 304675-1169.
55 Building Supplies

&amp; Son. Call 446-7786 .
ton . Call614-266-1427.

$399. bunk beds complete
with bunkiaa $199, 2 piece

Firewood delivered . $35

antron livingroom suites
8199, antron recliners $99,
other recliners $80, maple
dinette sets $179. box
springs &amp; mattreaa twin or
full e1 00 set regular-firm
81 20. maple dinette chairs

pickup load, 10 loads 8300. 0. Call614-246-6121 .
Coll614-266-1427 .
LUMBER - Rough c~doak,
Firewood cut uP slabs 816 poplar, 2x4, 2•6. 2•8. h4,
pickup load. Call 614-245- 1x6, 1x8. length available, 8
6804.
loot through ) 4 loot. Hogg
&amp; Zuspan. 304-773-6664

$35.

Will cut and deliver fire -

Limestone delivered. $1 0 a

834,

maple rockers $69. 7 piece
chrome dinette set $149. 6
piece dinette set $99, used
bedroom suites, refrigerators, ranges, chest. d!,assers,
wringer washers, TV s. dry-

Building meterials
block. brick. sewer pipea.
windows, lintels, etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

era, whHI horse lawn •

garden tractors. &amp; all types
of woodburnersl Tondom
wheel gooseneck end
bumper type trailers. And
see us for 1 complete line of

daytime,

parta and service!

wood. Call 614-266-1528. 1::;=;:::========
Equipment trailer tandem.

56

USED EQUIP: 2411 Mo11ay
Ferg ., BN Ford. 9N Ford.

Pets for Sale

N.H. grinder mixer. corn

16ft, $1,000. Also Gravely 1 - - - - - - - - - backhoa. $1,200. Call 614266-1427.
HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breads. Heated
Firewood lor Ilia. Call 446- indoor-outdoor facilities .
1287.
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Call614 -446-

ers, &amp; shoes. Call 614-4463169.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman. 3 tables, (extra heavy

lnfant car seat with cover

pickers, 2 &amp; 3 bottom plow.
post auger. square baiera,
corn planter, Int. dlac
mower. 604C Vermeer

boler. We buy used
equlpment---448-1676.

7796.

$16, baby swing 810, con- 1 - - - - - - - - - sole stero with S-track eso. Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
Call 614-246-9498.
614-367-7220.

by Frontier!. 8685. Sofa.
chair and loveaeat. $276.
Sofas and chairs priced from

83

Livestock

Register Americon Soddle
bred mere. 8 yrs. old. Cell
814-241i-6Q98 after li.

2-P216x14 Dayton radials,

Briarpatch Kennels Profeasnow tires, eso pair, lass aionol All-breed grooming.
than 6,000 miles on tires. 4 Indoor-outdoor boarding faFord Courier wheals with cilities. English Cocker Spa-

beds, $440 . and up to
$526 .. Racli~er1. $176. to
8376 .. umpa from $28. to
$76.6 pc. dinettes from
899., to 435. 7 pc. '$189
ond up. Wood table with si•
choira 8426 to· 8745 . Desk
$110 up to $225. Hutches,
8660. and up. maple or pine
flnlsh. Bunk bed complete
with mottrtisses, 8250. and

Farm Equipment

remove!. Coli 304 -676 1331 .

ANNIE

RINGLE'S SERVICE uparienced roofing , including

DRE6GIH6 10 QO OUT?
J HAVE A~EP '100 10
FOR~O 't'OUR CIJIGSEG
\'liTH Mit AUNE FOR
Ttt: Tl ME &amp;EINQ.

Registered Quarter horn
stolllon, grey. 111 hond1. Jay
James Breeding. Coli 4483413.

chroma hub caps. $40. 6 niel puppies. Call 614-388Chevy Blazer wheals 15", 6 9790.
lug, 850. Call 614-3792307 after 6:30.
Dragonwynd Cottery Kennels. AKC Chow pupFor sola large metal desk • pies. CFA Hlmaleyen, Perchair. Call 614-256-6413 sian and Slomeu kitten•.
after 4PM .
t:all 614-448-3844 after 6 .

1 hereford bebybeef-liOOto
600 lb1. 2 hereford heHers400 to,liOO lbo. Goodotock.
C1il 742-2014.

rt.._--------,...J"-...--------~ .POLLED HEREFORD
OUR BOARDING HOUSE

BULLS-FromA.I.braedlng
to the top buill In the
country. Ageo - 8 montho
to3yeers.Price711centl~
pound. · Contact ARROW
FARMS. Athens, Ohio.
Phone 1-814•183-B274.

1

84

Hay &amp; ·Grain .

Hove over 300 bu. ear corn
for 1ela. t4.00 bu. 814742·3010.

rangea. chaira, · dryera, ,..

frfgeratorund TV'a. 3 miles
out Bulavllle Rd. Open 9om
to 8pin,' Mon. thru Fri., 9om
to 6pm, Sat.
814·448-0322

Nice hey at Coolville encj
Rutland. Discount for large
quenltiH. 814·8117·3B31.

..

Hey for ule. B'B2-3411.

GOod

TV &amp; Appliance•. 827 Third
Ave .. Golllpoll1, 814· 4481899. Spin weshero, geo·•
electric dryere, auto
w11hert, gao • electric
rong11, refrigerator•. TV

hay for ..... Cl-orohard ii'-·•Halfll. t2 .....
bell. Call 742-2121.

YESSIR, DOC'S TWI"NTIETH
CENTURY IS OKAY IN
SOME WAYS, IIUT I ...

Real a®ct mlxacl hay. Navor
- · l2 ,_ball. Call '742·
2173.

.

9:00

BILLY

PLANS ON .MRRYit&lt;IG A

WlrN ,T Will'#
C"N/4:M£M AND I'VE NEVER
DIVORCEE

SEEN WENDY MORE HOSTiLE

,

TOWARD HER FATHER ••

Electrical

P11quale Electric Co. all
phaaat of electric work, all
work guaranteed. Aerial

OHOH··

LUKEV BARLOW!!

HERE

TAKE '/OUR HAT OFF
INTH'HOUSE

COMES TH'
PARSON

LUKEV BARLOW!!
PUT '/OUR HAT

BACK ON

1979 Ford pickup, F-1 00,
BOYS WATER SEA·
ood cond., t2,991. Call JONES
VICE. Call 614-367-7471
14-liB-9908 from 9-15.
or 814-367-0891 .
1B78 Chei.v pickup V-B. 1 - - - - - - -- outo, Scotltlele, package, Need something hauled
· mlny axtros, ••· cond. Call ow1y or something moved?. ....
448·0841 after 1 ..
We'll do it. Coil 446-3169
between 9 end li.

l

19811 Chevy 2 ton truck. 18 1-W-e-te_r_h_a-ul-ln-g-.-F-as_t_S_e_rv_i-ca~. '
ft. bed, 1,000 gel. water 1
C
tank. *.1400. 211.11·8820
ow rates. 8 11 614 • 266 1143.
.

GOTA &amp;NAPPY

-

[

I )

I

Answer here:

.

AN5WE~ WHE N

HERE, 't'Oll

=·=··;.:=·;::::;:;;::;;::: 1--:::::;;::;::::;::::==:;"

LETTER
FROM 'I'OIIR
BRoniER.
Sf'IKe ...

1974 Ford Camper 1pecl11. .JIM 8 WATER SERVICE .~ ;·
Good co'ndltlein, 304-1178· C•ll Jim Lanier, 304 •676 _::
2 10
;
7397.
''
;
1-;;:;
"
,73
Vane &amp; 4 W.O.
87
Upholstery
•,

,. . ,'

60TA

i

I

I

11

DEAR SNOOP'{, LIFE
flERE ON THE DESERT
iS FINE .. TIME 60E5
BV FAST...

IN TI-lE MORNINGS, I
WORK ON MY ROCK
COLLECTION, AND IN TI-lE
AFfERNOONS, I L!SiEN
TO MY F~ENCH WES ...

"Quand arrive-t-on

aParis? I-lOW SOON DO
WE ARRIVE AT PARIS ?"

ABOUT VERMIN.

[)

Now arranoe lha Circled letters IO
form the surpnse • -. as suggested by the above cartoon

"t xxI XXXXI

v

\

]I"

(Anaworo tomorrow }
T'es1erday s

I

Jumbles AM USE FILMY NEAAL Y UNTRUE
Answer

Wh a1 w as 1he do wn payment on I hal

apanmenP - A .. FLAT' SUM

'

BRIDGE
.Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

End play, coup and game
1-11-14
NORTH
tJ32
.AJ4 2
+K
tA10532
EAST
WEST
+Q8 76
tK
.9 8 7
• K 10 6 53
• J 10 9
+Q6532
+KB6
+J 9
SOUTH
tA 10954

.Q
+A874
+Q74
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

East

Pass
Pass

2+

Pass

~

Pass

Pass

3+
5+

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass
Opening lead:

fashion I ke pt him under
constant rressure. When he
signed or at l our spades, I
really should have passed,
bu~ I have been overbidding
lor the 59 ' years that contract bridge has been in existence and I went on to live.
" At trick one. Howard
made his first good decision.
He let the heart ride to his
queen. He led a diamond to
dummy's king and then led
dummy's jack or spades.
which was ducked to West's
king.
" West led a diamond to
Howard's ace. while a club
was discarded from dummy.
Howard ruHed a diamond.
discarded his last diamond
on the ace or hearts and
finessed the spade nine. The
nine held, but West showed
out. It was up to Howard to
lind a way to pick up East's

queen-small of trumps.
"It wasn 't hard for How-

•5

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
Howard Parker of Baton
Rouge is 29, so he and
Oswald Jacoby can be
described as a partnership
with an average age or 55 .
He is also a great dummy
player. Oswald Jacoby will
describe this hand.
" Howard's opening bid
was a rock-bottom minimum. and in my bidding

ard to do just that. He led his
queen or clubs and let it ride
to East's k.ing. East could do
not better than to lead a club
to West's jack and dummy' s
ace. Howard ruffed a heart,
entered dummy with the 10
or clubs and claimed since
he could overrun East on
the next trick.
"Lucky indeed. but Howard had given the cards a
chance. At the other table
the contract was jus t four
spades. but the declarer
went down one in that
contract. "
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

II Cll CD Facts of Ufe

(J) Dynasty Alexis helps
Oex clinch an oil deal and Peter makes a surprise announcement. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
0 (J) MOVIE: 'Carbon
Copy'
(J) Style Wars The secret
world of New York ·s youth·
ful graffiti wnters •s examined. 160 min.! !Closed
Captioned)
(j]) From Montgomery to
Memphis
9:30 II CD CD Night Court
Members of Harry 's staff,
while wondering how old
their new boss is . discover
that he has a criminal record .
10:00 II (I) CD St. Elsewhere A
snow storm creates problems tor everyone at St . Eligius and a bored youngster
playing around with the hospital's computer records
leads to tragedy. 160 min .1
(I) Growing up Stoned
This documentary focuses
on drug abuse.
(I) Eros America
(!)
NCAA
Basketball:
Virvinia at North Carolina
(J) TBS Evening News
(J) G (iJ Arthur Hailey's
Hotel
(J) Kanawha County On
the Una
® Domestic Ufe Martin·s
anempt to lie his way out of
a dinner engagement proves
futile .
.INN New.
10:30 ()) Empire While Cromwell
flins with acquiring a new
company. Ben is the only executive who wants to call in
the police after Maninson
commits murder.
ComedY Time
10:411 ®New.
11 :00
Cll (J) CD D (J) ® G
(jJ New.
(I) MOVIE: 'Valley Girl'
(I) MOVIE: 'A Clockwori&lt;
Orange·
()) Another Ufe
CiJ All In the family
(J) Dr. Who
Banny Hill Show
11 :30
Cll CD Tonight Show
()) Bast of Groucho
(J) Catlino
(J) Soap
(J) Pollee Story 'Sniper.·
DeteC1ives Calabrese and
Jameson hunt a psychotic
who killed sevaral peOple in
a random sniping at rush
hour traffic . (R) (60 min.)
(J) IAtenight America
(]D A!lln the Family
• CD Nlghttine
Twilight Zone
12:00 ()) Bumo • Allen
(!) SportaCenter

e

e

~UM"ttr
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

1 Astringent
5 " -Frome"

DOWN
I Jordan's
capital

10 Sulks
12 Alan Ladd

2 Setfree
3 Deeply

film
13 Ariz. copse
14 Burn
15 Japanese

involved I sl.t
4 Encountered
5 To be ILat. I
6 - ice
national park 7 Retire (sl.l
16 Exacted
8 Exasperated
Yesterday's Answer
9 Had to have 23 Assuage
30 Chinese
retribution
· 18 Irritate
11 Closed, as an 24 " Silas -"
civet
20 English river
envelope
25 Hoisting
32 State IFr. 1

21 Blackguard
22 Hurried
23 Interpret

17 Vellwn Iabbr. I device
33 Dobbin 's
19 Lacerate
26 Lamb's cry
tresses
22 "Evening"
29 Opposite of 37 Duffer's

24 Frame

in Paris

starboard

need

of mind
25 Nasty look
26 Chief
27 Stevedores'
union
28State
of being
behind
31 City
employee
34 Health
resort
35 Seed coat
36 Cultural
characteristics
38 French
resort
39Trains
40 French
annuity
U Feminine
suffix

PAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
II

how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

work it:

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A is
used for the three L 's, X lor lhe two O's. etc. Single l etters.
apostrophes. the length and formation or I he words are · all
hinta. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

BZ

LHP

KFOOKHTC

UHHW
K:XH€8,

UBWR

LHP ' TR

LHPT
CHH

BUU CH CTFIRU. - QBUU WHAARV
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: "·THE REASON HUSBANDS AND
WIVES DO NOT UNDERSTAND EACH OTHER IS BECAUSE
THEY BEWNG TO DIFFERENT SEXES.-OOROTHY DIX
,.

/.

HC:

A51&lt; ED WHAT TO t'O

CD America Crossroads

e
e

PEANUTS

•

1871 CJ·I JMp; 34,000 1183 Sec. Ave .. Golllpolls.
mi .. with mudder,, $2,100. 814·448-7833 or614-448C,oll 441·1002,
1B33,
.

.

.

New~

e
e

General Hauling

TRISTATE

il)

new company . Ben is the
only executive who wants to
call in the police aher Martinson commits murder.

&amp; Refrigeration

U~HOLSTERY SHOP

(l])

8
•

McCullough looks at both
the first and the very latest in
light gatherers. 160 min.! •
® NCAA Basketball: Ohio
State at Michigan
G ® NCAA Basketball:
Bonaventure at West
..
Vlrvinia
• NCAA Baaketball: Ohio
State at Michigan State
8:30 D (J) Empire While Crom·
well flirts with acquiring a

truck rental. 614 -4461988 Plymouth, 318 IUtO· 4068 .
matlc, good work car,
$2211.00. 304-876-4210 I·S-E-W-IN_G_M_o_ch_i_n_e_r_a_pa_i_rs_.
after 4:00.
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen !I
197B VW Robblt, 43,000 Scluors
. Fobrlc Shop. •
mli11. Phone 304- 878- Pomeroy. 614-9!12-2284.
3307.

197B JMp CJ ·II, ••c. con d ..
must •II. Call 4411·4013.

t

ilD

tin 's atlempt to he hts way
out of a dinner engagement
proves futile .
(J) (ll) Smithsonian Wor1d
'Time and Ligh~ . · Host David

C•t 215 hoe, dozera. crane,

85

L
I tJ

LUMPE

ai ()

Colt's lriand . 160 min .!
(J) Domestic Ufe Mar-

1975 Codilloc Coupe De- Good-1 Excavating. base Ville. Belt offer. Coli 949- menta, footers, driveways,
septic tanks. landscaping:
28011.
Coil anytime 614 -446 1975 Olds Cutlon Su· 4637. Jemes L. Oavlaon, Jr.
preme. 2 dr. 1971 Chevy owner.
lmpelo. 2 dr. 1972 Old1 98. 1 - - - - - - - - 2 dr. 2 transmlsslons-1 Olds J.A .R. Construction Co .
end 1 Chevrolet. Coli 986- Water Lines. Footers .
Drains. All kinds of Ditching.
3839.
Rutlond, Oh . 614-742 1982 Spirit, six cylinder. 2903.
outo, AC, .PS, PB. AM-FM 1-;:;::::=:;:==== =

Truck• for Sale

---

CIJ
CIJ

a

1974 Olds Cutlus. low loodars, dump truck. Call
mlieoge. Runs good.Coll 814-448-1142 between ..
992-2707.
7:00AM &amp; 5:00PM.

72

CIJEV~N;~ (J) ®

(jJ

ALt.EY OOP'

DOZER WORK By Ted
Honno. ponds. ditches.
b11ements. etc . Call 614 446-4907. Corter &amp; Evans .
1970 Duster runs good, Tronsportotion .
•1111. Coll448-9860.
1 - - - - -- - --.,..-

'72 Oldsmobile, felr cond ..
cheap, phone 304-87113180.

I. ...._'-.,.__
I. I - J

I])

tries to extort $40,000 from

1975 Chevy lmpolo •1.000
ond 1978 Jeep CJ-11 .
$2,400. Coli 814- 379 2746 .

1-:

WOAAH

CII
CI1
CI1

a

1----------

radio, cruiae, two tone paint,

C!li

lliew~hour

F &amp; K TrM Trimming, stump '

rally whMis. 32,000 miles. 84
excellent cond. •4.200.00.
Phone 304·8711-414B

8

IRARQUY
1----W-ED-N-ES_D_A_V___;;;..--,
( XJ
J
1/18/84
~LOCASE I
8:00 •

1

tour orainary words.

®News
• (iJ People's Court
• Jefferson•
7:30 II (I) Tic Tac Dough
(I)PopSpota
(!) lnalde the PGA Tour
(I) Hogan's Heroes
(J)
(J) Family Feud
® Wheel of Fortune
•
(iJ
Entertainman1
Tonight
• One Day at o Time
8:00 II (I) CD Real People
(I) MOVIE: ' All the Rivers
Run'
(I) MOVIE : 'The End'
())I Spy
(!) NCAA Basketball : Ohio
State at Michigan
(I) MOVIE : 'Centennial'
Port 9
(J) Fall Guy Colt goes into
actton when a cny offictal

19B1 Chevy Chevette 4spd, 1-:--::---- - - -1880 Renoult LaCer 4 spd. 82
Plumbing
1979 VW Robbltt auto,
a. H
1978 Chevy Novo euto.
.. eating
1983 Ford pickup euto, 1- - -- - - - - - 1979 Ford Courier pickup 4
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
spd. All vechllces priced
AND HEATING
right to 11ie or trode. John's
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Auto Seles, Bulavllle Rd ..
Golllpolls. Ohio
448-4782.
Phone 814-448 -3888 or
814-448-4477
1978 Ford Pinto 119.000
mi ... 800. Coli 448-BII94 . JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATlNG . Rt. 1. Bo• 366. Golli1981 Old1Cutlo11 Supreme polls. Coll814 -387-0676 .
Broughom 32.000 mi.
loaded 90 doy li0-110 werExcavating
ronty. Ce11814·- 379-2728. 83

1----------

Columbu1. OH
Athena. OH
Huntington, WV
HurriCitne. WV

byHenri Arnoldan&lt;I Bob l ae

Qna laner to eacn square. to form

a

II LIVI!SIIJI.k

675-4014.

62 Olive St .. Gallipolis. New
&amp; uaed wood 8t coal stoves,
6 piece wood living room
suite with 6 inch flat arms

.....

tpeclollalng In built up roof.
Coli 614-388-9867.

hot ter application, carpen ter, elec:trlcien. m11on . Call

Guns. one set Model 141,
Remington rifle . 36 cab ., 32

day calls. 614-949-2801 .

51 Household Goods

•sa..

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout- •
lng. 30 years tkperlence ,

I

WINS
WOUB
WOWK
WV AH

~THAT BCRAMBLEO WORD GAME

Unscramble lheae lour Jumbles.

e

I--------- -

cab.. 30 cob.. real good
condition. will notsellseporate. Coli after 6pm 304773-6666.

prompt delivery . 614-2666246.

up
to •396.
Babyorbed1,
$110.
Mottre11es
bo•
springs, full or twin.
firm, UB. ond $78. Quean
11.ts. •1911. 4 dr. chests,
$42.6 dr. chest•• *64. Bed
iromes. UO.ond • Uli .. 10
gun - Gun ceblneto, t360.
Gu or electric ranges •3711.
Baby mottre11es, $26 &amp;
Ull, bed frames UO. t26,
&amp; no. king !rome •so.
Good ulectlon of bedroom
lultu . ceder cheus ;
rockers, metal cabinets,
twlvel rockero.
Uaed Furniture •• bookcase,

Musical
lnatrurrienta

repolr commercial and rasi - •
dontlol, free oltimotos Call •
814-2118 -1182.
.
.:

Ground e1r corn •11.110 per
100. Bring own container.
304-8711-3308 . No Sundey
IIIII.

clipped end oil shots .
•100.00 eoch. 304-8711 113118.

up for certain stone jars. call

814-949-:"994.

Knauff Firewood Pickup or

$286. to 8895. Tables, $46

Moden 1 bedroom apt ..
carpet, complete kitchen,
well insulated, all &amp;lee .•
air/ heat. Deposit required .

For Sole, mixed hey. •1 .110
o boll. coil 949-2179

man, black and ruat. ears

bage Patch type, dre11ed in
frills for Valentine day. 304-

and up to e125. Hide-a-

Citizens. $130. Equal Housing Opportunities. 814992-7721 .

Nice . 2 bedroom house on
black top road In Eastern
School district. 8150 month
plus deposit, no pets. No
Sunday calls. 614-9492801 .
'

304-676-2982 after 6pm.

stands

Two reglo1ered mele Dober·

heavy Iron beds. $160 ond

Complete living room suite,
coffee table. end tables.
lampa, couch and swivel
rocker, color console TV. 2
years old. Zenith stero console. 1 year old, 8 track.

Old glassware, ston~ jars.
radios , clocks. etc. No Sun -

For lease. Chevron Station,
Mason area. Good location.

wash

AKC Registered Dobermon
puppies, redo &amp; blocks. t?ll.
CAll 448-77911.

8 foot truck topper-•75 .00.
New wringer waaher. Old
school desk. Seigler fuel oil
stove. Antique oolld oek
pump orgon. 1981 'h ton
Chevy pickup truck:&amp; cylinder. standard. Coli 98113839.

8120 . Call 446-4113 .

Delivered . 12"-22" stocked

home. 1'h bath. KC school
dist .. $326, daposit req . Call
614-367-7270.

bath. Fully carpeted. sto;m
windows and tloors. Unfurnished. Call 992-3090.

For Lease

446-0338 .
2

992-6587.

Wanted--color TV ' S, repair·
able, not over ten years old.

in

bedroom
For sale rent . Two story

614-992-7479'.

Merchandi se

Small turn . house 1 or 2
adults only, no pets. Call

building in Pomeroy or call

&amp; Grain

s

Pomeroy. large lots. Call

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS !Equal
41

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of

Phone 304-676-

Carol Yeager Realtor.

Renlal s

Large trailer lot on Bulaville-

Addison Rd. Call 446-4736
or 614-367-0232 .

49

LhoH Apso puppies AKC
Registered will be reodyJen .
21st. UOO. Cell448-0708 .

H1y

For llie-Splnet-Consolo PI- TOP CASH pold for late 304-8711 - 2088 or 676 ·
ono Bergeln. Wonted · model used cors. Smith 41180.
Responsible porty to teke Bulck-Pontloc. 1911 EostNew wood burning stove over low monthly payrT141nts ern Ave.. Golllpollo. Coli Water WeUa. Commercial
ond Domestic. Test holes.
wi1h firebrick t326. each. on Spinet Piano. Con be 814-448-2282.
locolly. Write Credit
Pumps Soles ond Service.
304-675-1678 or 675- 111n
Monoger:P.O.Boxli37 Shel- 1979 Plymouth Chemp 304-8911-3802 .
7896.
byville, ln. 48178.
48,000, oir cond .. sunroof, 1- - - - - - - - -everything 8700.00 . Phone
4 spd. with 2 spd ule. Cell SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One
Hay
81
.60
par
bela.
Wood
304-773-5392 .
1 Ht of ludwig drums. Ask efter 4PM. 448-7414.
piece custom lit your home.
$26.00 pick-up lo1d ot farm for Bri1n. 814-379-2700.
Oueranteed. Advanced Gut·
Table, four chairs, buffet, or 836.00 delivered. 30487 Ford LTD good body. tor, !Dey 614-592 -4066 .1
896-3808.
phone 304-675-6292 .
Wurlitzer Funmaker organ. extra parts. runs perfect !night 814 -698 -8206 .!
with occomponlments. Coli •eoo. 74 Buick nMds trensSAM
SOMERVILLE'
S
Army
Warm Morning gas. heater
814-387-7189.
mlsllon UIIO. Cell 814- GET your corpat SHIP
36,000 btu, $100.00.' 304- Surplus. closed for repairs,
2118-1318 .
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
Jan. 14 to Jan. 28. Open
675-4148 .
Wonted old plenos. Paying
STEAMER . Wotor removal .
Jan. 29th 1:00 PM . ·
UO. ond •40. eoch. First 1979 T-Bird, one owner, lumlture cleoning. free estiWill haul sand and gravel . floor only. Write giving · e•tre lherp, new redlels. motes. 304-675-2296 .
52 CB.TV, Radio
directions. Written Plilnos- custom wheals. •4.000. 1- - - -- - - - -Phone 304-468-1586.
Equipment
.Box 1BB Sordis. Ohio Ca11814-2118-1141 after 11 . Locksmith Service, Shar·
43948 . Phone 814-483paning Service. Glass and
20 inch girls bike. 20 inch 16011.
1974 Audisox good cond., Screen Wire Installed . •
boys bike, 1 girls 10 speed.
Zenith stero, AM -FM 8 track 26 inch. 304-676-6162 .
UliO or best offer. Coli Subkon Service Co .. 304 Gibson !let top gultor. Coli 814-388-99011 from 9-11 .
cassette turn table, price
876-3894.
negotiable. Call 614-742 - Panasonic stereo· AM-FM. 992-3342.
2407.
1979 Ford Pinto Runebout, Will do ell types remodeling
good condition, no speak 40.000 mlle1, ••· cond. and repairs . Qualtiy work .
ora, 8160. Call after 5 p.m .•
t2,1911 . Coli 814- 388- Reosoneble rates. 304-676F.trIll 111111 111' s
304-676-3087.
53
Antiques
99011 from 9-11.
2878 .

2 bdr. trailer 2 mi., from

soma work . $3,400.00 .
304-676-4819 or 304-8953472.

Kingsbury Homes Parta and

Accauory Store. 900 Ent
Main St.. old Bookmobile

64

Cash paid for fancy Iron or

1 yr. old matching Whirlpool
washer-dryer 1400. 19' por.tabla color TV 8176 . livin-

1- - - - - - - - --

hospital at Evergraan privata I-4..,..-,5-F""u--rn_i_s_h_e_d_R_o_o_m
_s
lot. Call 446-0167.

washer

896. Skaggs Appliances.
Upper River Rd. 614-4487398 .

1-304-882-2666 .

two bedroom. new carpet.
central air -cond ., needs

portable

Pets for Sale

Huntlr19tof1. WV
Horne Box Office
Clnamax
CBN Cable Netwri&lt;
&amp;porta Network
Atlenta, GA
Columbu1, DH

ID'il

~ ~ ~~ ~~

(I) MOVIE: 'The Terry Fox
Story'
()) New Treasure Hunt
(!) Fiahin' Hole
(J) Uttle House on the
Prairie
(J) ® 3-2 -1. ConUICt
Buck Rogers
8:30 8 (I) CD NBC Newa
()) Riflemen
(!) ESPN'1 Horae Racing
Weekly
(J) • (JZ ABC New.
II (J) (]D CBS News
(J) Bu1lneoa Report
® Everyday CookinQ
7:00 II (I) PM Magazine
()) Alias Smith and Jonas
(!) SportaCenter
(J) Carol Bumen
(J) Entertainment Tonight
CD Charlie' I Angela
(J) Wheel of Fortune
(J) ®
MacNeil/Lehrer

------''-----1---------~r---------""'1 PLASTERING · Now and ·;
Used R-40 Ditch Witch
trencher. 1-614-894-7842.

WSAZ
HBO
MAX
CBN
EBPN
WTBS
WTVN

S~: ~==~~

304-8711-11405.

8 foot truck topper .
t125.0Q, 304-8711 -6477 .

'illl~~

Television
Viewing

woter. Cell814· 2118 -1581 .

Natlonol olr tight woodburner lor quick sale U711.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomero -MiddleD!H'f, Ohio

Wednatday, January 18, 1984

-----------..;
~
17 ft. boot, never beon Ill"

IT~SATOM&amp;

age building. porch &amp; awn·

711

51 Household Goods

MAY8E 17 OV.tY SGEAIS 7N47 WAY, /lilT 'THE
.t/~ IS M&amp;EROI'EN WHEN .T 80 •• • •

Must Sell 4 bdr., 14x66,
plus 12x20 room. CA. stor·

Wednesday, January 18, 1984

Pomeroy-Middle rt, Ohio

�,.

...~

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

I

During last night's court session
George McDaniel, Middleport, was
given two five day jail sentence on
two disorderly manner charges;
Thomas A. Klein, Pomeroy, was
fined $50 and costs, disorderly
manner; Jame!; W. Gibbs, Pomeroy, was fined $10, costs suspended,
on a charge of splnnlng tires, and
Mike Harrison, Middleport, was
fined $100 and costs on a charge of

Change In
Producer
Price Index

.possessing marijuana.

0·1'1'~

Five defendants forfeited bonds In
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyer Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were James R. Lam·
bert, Reedsville, $43, assured clear
distance; Diane Patrick, $49; VIcky
Flnk, Rutland, $44; Tina Stewart,
Pomeroy, $46, all on speeding
charges; Clarence P. Grueser,
Racine, $43, Improper backing.
Fined were Steve Hill, Racine, $213
and costs, destruction of property;
$313 and costs, resisting arrest, and
$63 and costs, disorderly manner,
and Marton Watson, Pomeroy, $213
and costs, assault.

+1%-

Plioe

fOf l'obiiiBh1982

o-

-2%-

Area deaths

Elsie Roush

Elsie Roush, 87, formerly -of
Pomeroy, died at the Greenbrier
Nursing Home at Slidell, La.
Mrs. Roush was the daughter of
the late Benjamin and Fannie
Morris. She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Marcus
Roush, five brothers, Ernest, Cllf·
ford , Francis, Alban and Roscoe.
She was a member of the Rutland
Methodist Church, Harrisonville
Eastern Stars and Womens Chris·
tlan Temperance Union.
Mrs. Roush Is su;vtved by two
daughters, Mrs. Paul Wood, New
Orleans; Mrs. Robert Slagle, Slidell,
La.; two grandsons, tbree grand·
daughters and two great grand·
daughters; one brother, Delbert

Morris, Athens: one sister, Marie
Chapman, Pomeroy; four sisters·
In-law. Mrs. Robert Warner, Pome- ·
roy; Ura Morris, and Beulah
Bradford, Racine; Laura Morris,
Gallipolis: two brothers-In-law, Ed·
son Roush, Racine, and Stanley
Roush, Springfield, Mo.; several
nieces and nephews.
Memorial services will be held at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church date to be announced.

Heilman sun-ivors
Additional survivors of Roy 0.
Hellman, Enterprise, Oregon who
died Sunday are sister-In-law and
brother-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Clark, Middleport, two nephews and
one niece and close friends, Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Turner, Syracuse.

Uncommitted funds
(Continued from page I)
Farley alsosaldODNRisworklng
on a project at Goose Creek and 11
wlllstartworklnMarchona surface
mining project at Pagevllle and
Darwin.
Commissioner Jones said there is
a flooding problem on Willow Creek
Road caused by drainage from a
deep mine and a surface mine.
Farley suggested a letter be
directed to RobertS. Baker concernIng WU!ow Creek which may speed
up the procedure.
Farley said there are 30 projects
going on In Meigs County at the
present time.

Roods~

Roberts reported road signs are
still being placed on county roads.
They have 256 poles up but need
additional signs.
Commissioners reported they
were Informed by Dan Stypula, Blue
Cross-Blue Shield representative
from Athens that BUI Quickel of
Davls-Qulckel Insurance, Pomeroy
Is not an agent of Blue Cross-Blue
Shield he Is simply a broker that has
the right to sell their product.
'
Commissioners have a binding
contract with Stypula. It the
commissioners would transferrd
their account It would cost the
emplayes an additional three percent on their premiums.
Single coverage at the present
time for Blue Cross-Blue Shield cost
the employe $63.73, famUy plan cost
$170. If it were changed It would cost
th~ employe an additional three
petcent of what they are paying. All
told It would Increase the cost on the
year for aU employes an additional
$4,00l a year.
Commissioners, accepted with
regret the resignation of Orton
Roush, as member of the Rio

Grande t;:ommunlty College Board
of Trustees. Roush said he was
resigning due to U1 health. fie
resignation Is e ff ec ti ve
Immediately.
A letter was read from C. E.
Blakeslee lnfromlng the commls·
stoners that the terms of Eleanor
Thnomas and Thereon Johnson on
the Regional Planning Commission
expired as of Dec. 31. Blakeslee
requested that the two be reappointed and the commissioners
agreed.
Attending were Koblentz and
Jones, commissioners, Mary Hobs tetter , clerk and Martha

AP

Patrol cites
Meigs drivers
Two Meigs Countlans received
citations from theGallla-Meigs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol follow·
lng a two-vehicle accident on
Rutland Township 56 TueSday at
12:15 p.m.
Cited were Thomas I. Arnott, 29,
Racine for failure to display valid
registration and Sharon L. Barr, 38,
Rt. 1, Rutland, for failure to control
her vehicle.
Barr was southbound and Arnott
north. Barr applied her brakes on
the Icy road. Her pickup truck went
off the road and struck an
embankment. It then overturned
and struck Arnott's car.
Arnott's vehicle received light
damage and Barr's moderate
damage.
Another accident occurred yesterday at 8 p.m. on County Rd . 2 In
Raccoon Twp.
Kevin J . Carty, 16, Gall1polis, lost
control on the road heading north.
His car went off the road and struck
an embankment.

-

- ~ -..... . .

.

"

Wednesday, January 18, 1984

Inside today:

By'lbeA.uoclatedl'reu
Construction of new homes
jumped60percentlastyearoverthe
dismal record posted In 1982, the
government reported today.
.
However, In a stgn that the
houslngboQm Is leveling ott, housing
starts for December showed a 5
percentdropfromthemonthbefore,
the Commerce Department said.
The department put total housing
starts ln1983at1.7!&gt;3mllllonunlts, up
from the Ul62 million units In 1982,
making 1983 the best year for the
Industry since 1979.
The 1983 rebound would have been
even better, analysts have ~aid, but
for higher Interest rates last

Emergency runs
Five calls were answered by local
units Tuesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
reports.
AI 12:09 p.m., Middleport took
Mabel Kesterson to VeteransMem·
orlal; at10:24a.m., Racine took Bill
Harris to Veterans Memorial;
Rutland at 9: 49 a.m. took Allee
Kennedy, Long St., to Veterans
Memorial; Pomeroy at 7:04p.m.,
took Theresa Pierce from Wetzgall
St., to Veterans Memorial arid
Pomeroy at 1: 48 p.m. took Ernes·
tine Werry from Rock St. to
Veterans Memorial.

summer.
Meanwhile, a Federal Reserve
For December, the Commerce Board governor and a prtvlite
Department estimated work was economist said In separate reports
started on new housing at a
that the government's huge budget
seasonally adjusted annual rate of deficits may eventually drag doWn
1.67 million units, compared with a · the economy, but the current
revised rate of 1.76 million units In
business recovery should persist for
November.
at teasl another year.
All of the decline came In
Henry Walllch of the Fecteral
construction of si ngle-family
Reserve said Tuesday that It the
homes, which fell 11.4 percent In economy does not "overheat" and If
December. Construction of dwel· Inflation remains tow, the economic
lings with 2 to4 units climbed by 13.5 expansion could extend through
pe~nt and apartment buildings
most of 1985.
with more than 4 units were up 3.6
"I see no reason why this
percent.
expansion should come to a halt "he
said In a New York luncheon
Meets Thursday
appearance before the Women's
Economic Round Table, a nonpartl·
The Southern OPSE Chapter 453 san group of women economists,
will meet Thursday, January 19, at7 executives, union officials and
educators.
·
p.m. at Southern High SchooL
Ulln alsosaldcurrentclrcumstan·
Southeffl Band Boosters will meet · ces otter" little prospect" of a drop In
Thursday, January 19, at 7: 30 p.m. Interest rates In the early part of this
In the band room.

James M. Marshall, 26.-Parkers·
burg has been arrested for Parkersburg authorities by Sherl1f James
Pipffltt, Paul Gerard, Investigator
for the prosecutor an~ Gary Wolfe,
Investigator for the sheriff's
department.
was bookedwith
on a alleged
charge
of Marshall
fraud In connection
impersonation of arepresentatlveof
a power company and taking
money from eledery people.
Meigs authorities are also check.

.196
19U

PIZZA SHACK
EAT IN OR TAKE OUT

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

'

2 Se&lt;t ion, . I '2 Pagel
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Ne w spop et

Area schools
·closed second
straight day
All Meigs County schools were
closed Thursday for the second Weaver, New Haven, and Paul
consecutive day due to Wednes· Houdashelt , Pomeroy, collided at
day's four Inch snowfall which the Intersection of Brick and Lasley
created dangerous driving condi· Sts. Pollee said Weaver was turning
left onto Brick and Houdashelt was
lions throughout the area.
It was the first heavy snowfall of attempting a right tum onto Lasley.
the winter. Colder temperatures hit The Weaver car skidded and the
the county today, providing little Houdashelt vehicle attempted to
avoid the Impact and also skidded.
relief from Icy road conditions.
No more snow Is predicted for at There were heavy damages to the
least several days according to the Weaver car and moderate to the
Houdashelt car. Ther~ were no
Ohio weather bureau.
Slippery roads caused three Injuries.
At 9 p.m. on West Main ~t.. a
accidents In Pomeroy Wednesday,
westbound car driven by Jeffrey
Pomeroy Pollee report .
At ll: 15 a.m., Mrs. Dorothy Moore, Cheshire, dropped otf the
Amberger, Syracuse, escaped In· right of the road and thecarwentout
jury when the car she was driving JL&gt;f control with Moore skidding Into
west on E. Main St., lost traction and the path of an eastbound car driven
spun around striking a utility pole by Charles Adams, New Haven, W.
near the J . and R. Sports Shop. Va. Both cars received moderate
damage. The drivers were not
Damages to her car were heavy.
At 5 p.m. cars driven by James Injured.

..

•'
'

\

&lt;

.

KEEPING UP - James IWchle was one of many Meigs County
residents trying 10 keep up with the falllng snow as he shoveled away
Wecmesday when the first major snow of the winter hit Meigs County.

Pomeroy woman ~eeks $10 million from hospital, doctor

MIDDLE OF THE UPPER BLOCK IN POMEROY

HARTLEY SHOES
210 EAST MAIN

enttne
'

HELPING- Even the pusllin« ol a heipln« hand couldn't get tbl8 car
BOllig on Pomeroy streeta Wedne8day 1111811'eet11 became slick when the
lint heavy -'all ol the wider took place. 'l1le car llnally leU Into a
Jllll'kmg place untU the wealher moderated and traveling condltlom
Improved.

NEW SPRING SHOES ARRIVING DAILY!

•

19 1984

rr==========~===========

SHOP NOW AND SAVE!

Meigs cagers play twice...Page 4

aily

lng on Marshall In connection with
thefts from elderly people In Meigs
County.
Marshall has refused to waive
extradition and a Governor's war·
rant Is to be started by West VIrginia
authorities today.

OUR BIG CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES ON NATIONALLY
ADVERTISED BRANDS

Buchwald on Super Bowl. ..Page 2

Mostly clear and bitterly cold
tonight. Low zero to 5 below.
Light southwesterly winds. Friday, mostly sunny. Continued
bitter cold. High 15-W. Chance of
snow 10 percent tonight and
Friday.

The committee for the proposed
recreational center for residents of
Meigs County will hold a public
meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Middleport Legion Hall.
Residents Interest In a Meigs
County recreational facility are
urged to attend.

POMEROY

PH. 992-5272

A Pomeroy woman Is seeking $5 million each from a Point
Pleasant doctor and his firm and Holzer Medical Center In Gallipolis
In a two-count clvU suit tiled In Mason County Circuit Court.
Cynthia Darst, on behalf of her Infant daugllter, Misty Maxine
Darst, Is seekln~$5 million lnthellrstrount tromHMCand$5mutlon
In the second count from Montrle Cl\ak5upa, M.D., 2600 Jackson
Avenue, Point Pleasant, and his firm .
In the first count, the plalntltt ailegl's that HMC In October ot1981,
by or through Its agents, employees or servants "negllgmtly,
carelessly, recklessly, Incompetently, -and In deviation from the
office standards of hospital and medical care failed to properly
examine, refer to the pertinent medical history of, treat. evaluate
and diagnose, the pregnant plaintiff, Cynthia Darst and the

fetus-plaintiff, Misty M. Darst, while In the performance of the
medical procedure, I.e., sonogram testing."
The plaintiff also claims HMC failed to perform, evaluate and
report the medical condition which the Infant plaintiff suffered from .
In 'the second count, the suit alleges that In October of 1981.
Chaksupa tailed to properly examine, evaluate, treat and care for
the medical condition which the Infant suffered from and failed to
properly Inform the mother of the consequences of the birth of her
fetus.
Both counts claim that as a result of the alleged negligence of the
defendants the Infant was born suffering from many deformities In
many of her organs and systems that wUI remain with her the rest of
her lite.

The plaintiff says the alleged negligence of all the parties has
resulted In the Infant's lost capacity to enjoy life and to earn money in
the future, and that the mother has Incurred medical expenses and
will Incur many medical expenses In the future .
Both counts also claim that as a result of the alleged negligence the
Infant has suffered pain, mental anguish and will continue to do so
the rest of her lite.
The mother claims she has suffered severe and tragic mental
distress and anguish as well as "loss of comfort , consolance.
companionship and consortium of Infant all of which "111 be lasting"
as a result of the alleged negligence of the defendant s.
Darst Is seeking a trial by jury .

Despite improved economy,
welfare rolls may increase

UP
$65.::::......=...0
TO
...._
Money Tree
.·.

Il

.l

Pomeroy Firefighters were
called out twice Tuesday evening.
The first alarm came at5: 45p.m.
and the second at 7:04p.m.
Charles Legar, fire chief reported
the first call was to the Richard
Gilmore home on Highland Road
where chimney soot ignited the
walls.
Legar est imated damages at
$1,500. There was no Insurance.
Twenty-five men, two trucks, on
equipment truck and one emer·
gency vehicle answered the call.
The second call was at the Donald
PlerceresldenceonWetzgaiiStreet.
The fire started In some clothing
which caught the walls on fire In a
second floor bedroom. Damage was
estimated at Sl.OOJ. There was
Insurance. The fire Is under Invest!·
gatlon Legar reported. Twenty-six
men, two trucks, one equipment
truck and one emergency vehicle
answered the call.

W,e ather

Man booked on fraud charge

AWARI) WINNING

with the

By the Bend .......... Pap~ U-7
CIUIIIIedl ............ PaPII 8-t-18
Comlat-TV ................. Pap 11
Death. ....................... Pap 12
Edltorlai ..................... Pap 2
Sports ...... ............... Pape 3:4

Workers file retums •..Page 6

Public meeting set

rCh==a=m~be::rs:·_______________j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::H:O:U:R:S:::M:o:nd:a:y:·F:r:id:a:y:9:·5:;:S:a:tu:rd:a:y:9:·:8:::::::::::::!

Firefighters
answer calls

' II

- ~

•
•
.,••

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -AI·
though the economy Is Improving,
welfare workers have been told by
the state to expect the number of
general relief recipients to stay high
for a I least 1'h years.
Every major Ohio county saw
general relief rolls Increase at least
13 percent from December 1982 to
November 1983, the Ohio Depart·
men I of Public Welfare says.
"An upturn In the economy Isn't
Immediately reflected by a down·
turn In welfare cases. Even If
economic Indicators loOk real good,
our caseload still Increases, then
levels ott later on," said Lynne
Sturtevant of the division of public
assistance.
"I don't think anyone can really
say that an 'X' percentage drop In
unemployment will cause a 'Y'
percentage drop In welfare. We just
can't predict It that closely."
In Franklin County, thenumberof
people receiving general relief
Increased 25.2 percent from December 1982 to November 1983.
Statewide figUres for December
1983 were not available.
Compared to the Increase In other
large Ohio counties, Franklin was
near the middle, of!lclals reported.
Hamilton Coilnty had the biggest
jump In the ll-month period studied,
65.8 percent.
Marvin Tibbetts, assistant direc·

tor of the Hamllton County Welfare
Department, said the rellef rolls
have Increased far more than other
forms of public assistance.
"General relief Is generally for
singles and childless couples. This Is
the area that has been the most
depressed," he said.
He noted that state officials told
him not to expect any change In the
volume of recipients "for 191'(lontbs
to two years."
"This Is the most difficult group to
find positions for. It Is the same all
over the state. In the past two years,
young students just ~ out of
high school have not been able to lind
jobs."
Even wltharecoverlngeconomy,
those on relief r:ntght not be able to
lind work, Tibbetts said.
"The-._ not going to be a huge
market tor blue-collar workers
anymore. A lot of technical jobs are
opening up, but thepeoplewhoonce
held blue-collar jobs may not be able
to be retrained for those.
"It bolls down tothejobsavallable
now are not the ones they left. The
training, education and experience
needed are much dltlerent.''
HamUton County rolls expanded
soqulcky "becausewestavedotfthe
recesslOI! for a long ttme, then the
bottOOl fell out sharply," he said.
"We didn't have any significant
plant closings, just generallayotfs.''

Franklin County Welfare Dlrec·
tor Wayne Rugh said the fltst to be
laid otf are often the last to be called
back to work, further aggravating a
young person's chances of getting
off welfare.

1983 good year
for home builders
By 'l1le Associated Press
For homebuDders, 1983 was a
very good year -the best In lour
-and llCOftOilli&lt;lts are looking for
more of the same In 1984.
Harry Pryde, president of the
National Aslloclatton of Home
BuDders, says housing "bounced
back from two of the lowest
production years In postwar
history and led the economic
recovery, puUing millions back
to work."
Pryde conunented after the
Commerce Department reponed Wecmesclay that new·
home construction jumped ~
percent In 1983 to 1.'l03 mUIIon
unltllcomparedwlthl.l~mllllon

the year before.

'l1le 1982 fi&amp;Ui'e had been the
wol'lllln 36 years.
'l1le bnprovement lor aD of
1983 came despite a 5 percent
drop In houlllng statts between
November and December.

JOHNSTON LISTENS TO TESI1MONY - Dale
Johnl&amp;on sits quleUy In court Wednesday listening to
testtmonY In his trial on charges of murdering his

stepdaugiUr and her boyfriend. i\ witness told the
court Wednesday that he had seen Johnston force the
two Into a car In Logan where the trial is heing heard.
( AP Laserpholo) .

Witness testifies he saw couple on·day they disappeared
LOGAN. Ohio (APl -Dale Johnston, on trial for ·

Veterans Memorial

the slaylngs of his stepdaughter and herllance, forced
the couple Into his car on the,day they were reported
missing, a witness has test111ed In JohnBton's bial.

Admltted·.JUI Hobbs, Syracuse;
Dreama Cremeans, Middleport;
Mabel Kesterson, Middleport; Nl·
cole Evans, Middleport; Lillian
Werry, Pomeroy; warren Reeves,
AlbanY•
Discharged-Earl Arlx, Jean
Thlenel, Edw(II'd Stiles, Charles
SearleS, Harold Davis.

·--- - "

-

1983: Good year for housing

Wholesale Prices

r
(Seasonally Adjusled Figurel

I

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

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mayor's Court

Martha L. Erb, New Haven, W.
Va., forfeited a $450bondpostedona
charge of driving while Intoxicated
when she failed to appear In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night .

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

Steve rune test111ed Wednesday that he saw
Johnston on Oct. 4, 1982,
In downtown Logan.
"The car puDed direCtly toward the two young
people,''
said. He said the driVer shouted at ,and
eo~lfl:onted the couple.
,
.
Q1! said he didn't realize ~ driver ~as Johnston
until he saw his picture In a newspaper.,

pollee.
Rlne, who works for the state Environmental
Protection Agency, said he has been under hypnosis
:Vet~~ by pollee _In an attempt to help his

The three judges hearing the case debated whether
to allow Rlne to testify about what he remembered
under hypnosis. During Initial testimony, Rlne was
rune
told : to tell only ~hat he remembered without
hypoosls. Later, that provision was lifted
JoJmston, 50, Is charged with twO counts of
murder In the .mutilation deaths of his
DefenBe attorneY 'J'hQfuas Tyack sald RIJ!e's . aatllvated
I
testimony dllfered fran the first statements-he gave

while

___________ _ __________
:..._

~~-----

..

•·

stepdaughter, Annette Cooper Johnston, 18, and her
nance, Todd Schultz, 19.
.
Their torsos were found In the Hocking River on
Oct. 14, 1982.
Johnston has denied seeing Miss Cooper Johnston
the day she disappeared.
Another prosecution witness, Harold Summers Jr.,
said he was at Johnston's home SOllth of Logan the
day the couple disappeared. but did not see Johnston
there. Summers was strip mining on Johnston's
property at the time.
· Johnston has said he was home or hauling hay to his
farm that day.

In testimony Wednesday night . FBI Agent William
Bodlack, an expert In piaster cast depressions.
testified he could not be cenaln that any of the boots
owned by Johnston made impressions found near
where the bodies were discovered. Bodiack said it
was possible the Impressions were left by a bare foot
-not a shoe.
A final witness, Eugene McDaniC'ls, said he saw
Miss Cooper Johnston and Schultz with the girl's
mother, Sarah. at Mrs. Johnston's office ahout 6:30
p.m. the day the couple disappeared. McDaniels said
he was doing contract work at the office at the time.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="104">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2667">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41863">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41862">
              <text>January 18, 1984</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3397">
      <name>heilman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="140">
      <name>morris</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
