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                  <text>Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Rebellious inmates release hostages

Area deaths

. One by one, the hostages, some
NEW YORK (AP) - ~lllous
Inmates at the Ossining Correc- dazed and looking tired, walked out
_tlonal Fllclllty released unharmed
ofthecellblock,greetedbyapplause
theif 17 hOstages early today and · !rom coworkers.
Cheers were !Ieard !rom the
5814 they received amrtestyfortheir
as the siege drew to a
cellblock
53-hour takeover. but prl$&gt;n otfi·
close.
ctals ~led making · such a
The Inmates said they would lock
promise.
·· Th~ siege at the prison ·once
themselves In their cells, and atl: 40
a.m. special stale troops reoccupied
known as Sing Sing Wa$ declared
over by the lrunates Monday night
the five-story cellblock.
Gov. Marta Cuomo, who took
after local televlsion stations broad:
cast 10 points of agreement. tha.t
office Jane 1, had refused to deal
prisoners said they had reached
with the Inmates until every hostage
with state cotTeCtlon officials.
was freed. He praised prison
At 12:28 a.m., the watch coni·
officials for resolving the crtsls
mander at the prison announced
without serious Injury to any
over guards' walkie-talkies that the
hostage or Inmate.
"Dozens, maybe hunpreds of
last ho$tage had been freed. Except
for some bumps and bruises, all
hard decisions were made and most
were reported In good condition.
were made without time .for

'

Ethel C. Hein

Floyd Farra

Ethel Clark Hein, 60, of ROgers
City, Mich., a fanner Middleport
resident, died Sunday afternoon at
the Munson Medical Center in
Traverse City, Mich.
Mrs. He\n was ·born oh April 3,
1922 In Middleport, the daughter of
the late Clarence and Amy Y(!auger
Clark. She was also preceded in
death by one brother, Charles
Richard Cla rk.
· A graduate of Middleport High
School and the Holzer Hospital
School of Nursing. she spent her
entire U!e in the nursing profession.
She was a member of the Westmln·
lster Presbyterian Church. Rogers
City.
Mrs . He in is survived by her
husband, Jack, and three daughters, Mrs. Scott (Pamela ) Sinkuleof
Traverse . City, Mich.; Marlene
Hein, Dearboni, Mich.; · and Mrs.
Charles (Kay) Hein, of Raleigh, N.

Floyd Farra. 1!7. Broadway St.,
Racine, died Sunday night at
Riverside Methodist Hospital in
Columbus.
He was born July 25: 1898 · at
Belisvllle, W. Va., a son of the late .
Issac and Catherine Milhoan Farra.
He was a retired farmer and
riverboat employe and attended the
Racine Baptist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Mona
Heiney Farra; tht'ee sons, JQe,
Rome, N. Y.; Floyd, Jr., Columbus, _
and Ralph of San Antonio, Tex.; a
daughter, Laura K. Bod\)Y of Fort_
Walton ·Beach. Fla .. and 15 grand·
children. Besi~es his parents, he
was preceded In death by two
daughters and four brothers.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Friday at the Racine Baptist
Church with the Rev. Don Walker
officiating. Burial will be In the
Letart Falls · Cemetery. Friends
may call at the Ewing Funeral
Home !rom 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .
Thursday. The body will be taken to
the chllfch to lie in state one hour
preceding the servi~-

c.

Also surviving are three brothers,
Clarence Clark, Tacoma, Wash.;
Harry K. Clark, Minersville; Walter Franklin Clark. Gallipolis
Ferry, W. Va.; and three sisters,
Mrs. Kay Cable. Livonia, Mich.;
Mrs. Florence Tedder, Kerrville,
Texas, and Mrs. Jean Null,
Middleport. .
In l!eu of nowers, friends may
contribute in Mrs. Heln's memory
to either the Westminister Presbyterian Church or to the Emergency
· Room Equipment Fund, Rogers
City Hospital, in care of Pamela
MacFaldn, Director of Nursing, 555
Bradley Hwy .. Rogers City, Mich .•
49TI9.
Friends may call at the Gatzke
Funeral home of Rogers City until
1: 30p.m. on Thursday at which time
th~ body will be. taken to the
Westnilnister Presbyterian Church
for services at 3:30p.m. The Rev.
Stephen E . Morse will officiate.
Burial will be In the Rogers City
Cemetery.

.

Una M. Curtis
Funeral services for. Mrs. Llna M.
Curtls,ll7, Racine, who died Friday
at Washington. , C. H .. were held
Tuesday morning at the Ewing
Funeral Home with _the Rev. Don
Walker officiating.
Surviving Mrs. Curtis are her
husband, Harry E. ·Curtis of
Racine; a daughter, Mrs. Walter
. (Marcia Ann) Wells ofWa\!hlngton,
C. H.; threesons,RichardandTom,
both of Houston, Tex., and Sam of
Lorain; a sister, Laura Riffle,
Racine; two brothers, Harry of
Racine and Merle of Pennsylvania;
seven grandchildren and six great·
grandchildren.
Burial wm -In the Greenwood
Cemetery.

Mason woman gets jail t~nn
· Sharon R. Denney, 20, Mason, W. · His name isbeingwlthheldas not
va .• was sentenced to a term of one · to impeded the apprehension of the
to five years In the women's · man, who earlier entered a volunreformatory at Marysville when
tary plea of guilty to grand theft.
she appeared before Meigs County
according to Paul Gerard, prosecuCommon Pleas Judge Charles H.
tor Investigator.
Knight Monday on a charge of
Donna Malone, 30, Racine, and
breaking and ent~rlng.
BUI Foster, Jr .• 18, Stlversville, both
Denney plea~ guilty to the charge did appear for final sentencing upon
contained In a bill of informalfon
their prior pleas.
Malone was charged with grand
prepared by the office of the
prosecuting attorney. Fred W. theft In connection with monies she
Crow, m. whlchcameasaresultof had fraudulently received from the
an Incident last Oct. 15 at the
MeigsCountyWelfareDepartment.
The money was repaid and Judge
Rutland Furniture Store.
Two Rutland men who assisted Knight place Malone on probation
Dermey 1n recei'(ing and disposing for a period of two years. Fostenyas
of stolen property had earlier been charged with two counts of grand
theft. He also was placed on
sentenced to terms in prison.
Denney was . remanded to the probation for a period to two years.
custody of tbe sheriff for execution Wednesday meeting
of the Judge's decision. ·
The Gallla Me!gs FOP Lodge 95
· A 25-year old Pomeroy man failed
will
meet Wednesctay, Jan. 12, at
to appear for his sentence hearing
7:30p.m.
at Pomeroy Village Hail.
Monday thus Judge Knight ordered
that his bond be T.€\\Oked and that a
warrant be issued immediately for
Clo~ due to death
the man's arrest.
The office of Crow. Crow and
Porter and the prosecutor's office
will be closed Tuesday and Thursday due to the death of Eleanor
Crow.
(Continued from page 1)

$2,224,866

Councilman Dewey Horky sug·
gested that any property given by
the village to any business or
industry in the future revert back to
the village.
Mayor Hoffman asked the street
light to committee to Investigate
llghtJng•conditions at severalloca·
!Ions where, he said, new street
lighting does not seem adequate.
Arnong these locations were Mill
and S. Third, Brownell Ave., Oliver
and DewSts., BeechSt.,andHooker
St.
· Mayor Hoffman also asked
councilmen tocomeupwithldeason
how village lneome ca,n be In·
creased during 1983 without any
Increase in taxes. He suggested that

pavement conditions on Logan St.,
and the drainage at Logan and
·Broadway Sts.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Ji~n. Clerk·n-easuret
Buck, and Councilmen Horii:Y,
Horton, WJ111am Walkers, Gllrr\Ore
and Satlelfleld-

MEMORIAL SERVICE.'!
Memorial services for Mrs.
Eleanor Crow, who died Monday '!'oming at Holzer Medical
Center, wiD be held at the Grace
~pal Churc_
h 'l1lursday at
1:30 p.m . Private graveside
riles were' held today at Beech
Grove Cemetery with the Rev.
AI McKenzie offlclatiDg.

Admitted: Gertrude Gray, Ma·
son; Cathy Carleton, Racine; Paris
-Hess,• Pomeroy; George Green,
Albany.

Discharged: Franeis Luikart,
Stanley Bass, Nellie Perry. Lillian.
Schenkle, and Irene Roush.

The Meigs Local Board of Education Tuesday by a
3·1 vote rehired Mrs)ane Wagner as clerk-treasurer
a salary of $20,931.76, but only
for another year
after It moved Into executive session to discuss
several questions which board president Bob Barton
had written on a piece of paper, apparently regarding ·
the clerk-treasurer's post. When the vote was takeg
on rehiring Mr-S. Wagner following that executive
session board members, Lan-y Powell, Arland King
and Robert $Jiowden voted to hire Mrs. Wagner,
bbanl member, Rlcl\ard Vaughan abstained from
voting and Barton voted against the rehiring. ·
Barton was reelected president for 1983-84 and a
temporary appropriation of $312,092.88 was adopted
when the Meigs Local SchoOl District's Board of
Education met for Its organizational session Tuesday
night In Middleport.
'The temporary appropriations resolution adopted
by the board Is In lieu of a pennanentapproprtations

QEARANCE SALE

MEN'S COATS &amp; JACKETS.
All of our Man's Wintw
Jackets. Vasts. Dre11
Coats and AIIWeather
Coats. Regular and Extra
. Large Sizes, Good Selection..of Style and Color.

$14 95- $5990

oo

r~wlnn~~ing~~tl~c~ke~ts~w~e~re~e~n~tl~tled~~to~J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
share $536,594.50, officials said.

BENSON &amp;HEDGES

~~

'\ I .

.,..__~
'.11

1
ecHO [_I~~

r

•

tA

....612

For
MT22f-4

t-•nH;EOM
__,______-:::;::-'--:""-1
TilE
Nl( 1!'1'&amp;1'11' MI[V

u"

Only 6 mg yei rich enough to tx: cal Jed deluxe.
_ . Regular and Menthol.

.1

P215/75Rl5
Fillstone
DLC Radial BW ~
$Sl 95·

Open abox today.

'

.

'

'

POMEROV1 HOME
,

'

PH. 992·2094

l'ome-v.
So .-.lea

,.

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Nflwspaper

placed on higher interest drawing accounts.
Supt. Dan Morris was designated as agent of the
board to receive, expend and account for federal
funds. It was agreed to purchase bonds for the board
president, treasurer, superintendent and assistant
superintendent.
Supt. Mol}'ls.served as temporarychairmanforthe
organizational session.
Following the speclal.organizational meeting, the
board moved Into the regular January business
session.
·
During that session, the boarq purchased three new
school buses, with the approval of the Ohio
Department of Education, and those buses may be
available for service as early as next month.
.
Supt. Dan Morris reported thatonlyoneacceptable
bid was received on bus bodies and only one
acceptable bid on chassis. The acceptable bus bid on
bodies was received from Edwin S. Davis and Son
and the board agreed to purchase the three bodies
.

,..._J_ '

from that firm.at a cost of $8265 eac h which Includes
options. The only acceptable bid on the chassis came
from the Gibson Truck Parts Co. of Athens. The bid of
the firm was $14,!l;8.92 for the chassis plus $3684.88 1n ·
options for a•total cost of $12,930.80 each.
Supt. Morris Indicated the buses might ~delivered
as early as February, a fa st service compared to the
normal walt that t,akes place between the time buses
are purchased and•delivered.
There were four bids submitted on the plumbing
work required at the Meigs Junior High School In
conjunction with renovation of the bulldlng which Is
taking place. The board accepted the low bid of
$15,430.41 submitted by Karl Grueser and Son of
Minersville.
High School Principal James Miller and Fenton
and Jeanie Taylor, faculty members, were named
junior class advisors for the current school year and
at their request the stipend for the advisors post wiD
be placed in the junior class fund .
(Continued on page 12)

Elderly man
dies in blaze

Prinie rate
drops again

FOlNTPLEASANT (OVP ) - A Wood said this morning that the fire
By Associated Press
apparently siart.ed In the basement
Weinberger recommended an
Point Pleasant man ~led this
Interest rates on consumer
$11.3 btlllon cut In proposed
of the home, made contact with the
morning, possibly as a result of
loans have fallen Uttle In reCent
ceiling and spread to the living
military spending next year, a
smoke lnhatatlon, when fire gutted
months although the prime -rate
step that he and Reagan had
room.
his home at 301 Staff House Road.
. continues to drop, but a governUpon arrival, firemen began
once resisted . Weinberger said
Woodrow W. Kapp, fJl, was
ment ·report Indicates Ameli· · the. cuts reflected savings from
pronounced dead at the.scenebyDr. extlnquishing flames at the front of
cans are becoming mtirt! wi;.ing
the house In the living room area.
the drop in prtce Inflation.
John Grubb. Mason County
to borrow li)Oney. . ·
, Will\ a hose, they then went to
·....:On Wall Street, _the stock coroner.
.nie Federal' Re5erve Board
market failed to sustain the rally
. The Point Pleasant Fire Depart- Kapp's bedroom where they discosaid Tuesdily that Americans
that had carried the Dow Jones
vered the body lying on a bed. The
ment reported It found Kapp's body
· took on $2.52 btlllon more In new
average of 30 Industrials to
bedroOm Is located on the southern
In the bedroom of the one-story
Installment debt In November
record highs for three straight
side of the house.
home around 6:13 a.m. The bed•than they paid off: That was a
Although the house was gutted,
sessions. The Dow closed Tuesroom had heavy smoke damage, a
switch from October, when the
day at 1,00.79, down 8:56, on a
the extent of the damage Is still
fire deparirnent spokesman said.
amount of outstanding debt
volume of 98.25 million shares.
Th!! Point Pleasant Pollee De- · be ing Inves tigated . Fire men
dropped $324 million.
-A group of 35 senior bankers
brought the blaze under control In
partment notified the Mason
Ted Gibson, an econoinlst at
approximately 30 minutes. Twenty·
from North and South America,
County Sheriff's Department of the
crocker National Bank In San
two firemen , taking three trucks,
Europe and Japan met in
fire at 5:33 a.m. The sheiiff's
Francisco, said the report shows
Washington and fanned an
went to the scene.
department is cooperating In art
"a very gradual restoration of
Point Pleasa nt EMS a lso
International institute to moniinvestigation of the blaze with an
confidence by the consumer."
responded .
.
tor world debt problems. The
Investigator fl'9m the State Fire
Consumers generally had
organization will serve as a ,.
Funeral
arrangements
for
Ka
pp
Marshal's office.
been Jess willing to take on new
private institute for the bankers,
Cause and actual time of the fire will be announced Ia ter by the
debt as the recession deepened
bringing together Information
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point
has not yet been determined.
this past summer. depressing
about borrowing nations' needs,
Pleasant.
Point Pleasant Fire Chief Jim
retail sales.
economic .conditions. and plans
Any pickup In consumer
for repayment of loans to the
spending In 1983 Is expected to
world's banks.
help revive the economy. The
November Increase In the
:"•••• _Lending Rate -amount of outstanding Instal·
Jment debt was due mainly to a
big Increase In auto loans. Car
At the Tuesday meetlng, the
Election of officers and commitsales jumped In November as 15%-commissioners
approved a force
tee appointments highlighted Tues. the domestic auto companies ·
year 1983, when
account
for
the
day 's meeting of the of the Meigs
offered a variety of financial \
competitive biddiJig is not req_ulred
County Commission.
Incentives.
14%for work consisting of the general
David. Koblentz was elected
Whlle consumer loan rates
• bOard president while Manning . cons truction, Improvement, main·
have fallen only. gradually. the
tena nce and repair of roads, bridges
Roush was named vice president.
prtme lending rate that applies
and
culverts at various locations
The
other
board
member
is
Richard
13%to commercial loans has
directed
and enacted by the Meigs
Jones.
Mary
Hobstetter
was
reapdropped 5!6 percentage points
County
Engineer.
pointed as clerk.
since July.
. Orion Roush and --Herbert E.
Other appointments were ClarBanks across the country 12%Shields
were reappointed to threeence Taylor, dog warden; Jim
reduced their prtme rate Tuesyear terms on the Me igs County
CorneD courthouse custodian; John
day by one-half point, to 11
Planning Commission.
Stahl, courthouse janitor. and
percent,
the
lowest
piime
since
meeting.
County auditor e lect. William
Everett Holmes. apiary Inspector. ·
11%August 198).
..
It was also brolightoutdurlngthe •
Wickline
and Judge Robert Buck
Ell2abeth
Hobstett
was
named
The ·prtme rate is a base from
discussion on water rates that some
were
each
appointed to two year
clerk
of
Meigs
County
Court
and
which banks figure Interest on
of the water connectlorls are not
terms
on
the Buckeye- Hills·
Donna Boyd and Linda Bentz were
loans to corporations. It has no
being billed.
10%Hocking
Valley
Regional Deve lopnamed dep\Jty clerks.
· direct bearing bn consumer loan
Council suggested the the Board
m
ent
District.
Reappointed
for two
Named to the' Community Imrates. Rates on consumer loans
of Public Affairs present an updated
IJIAISIOINIDIJI
years.was Eleanor Thomas.
provement Corporation were David
now average between 18 percent
list of customers who have not paid
The Meigs County Commission1112
•13
Koblentz, Bernard Fultz, Howard
·
and i9 percent.
for water connections and present
Frank, Katie Crow, E . F . Robinson,
ers wil~eel in executive session
Other
economic
developthe list to the clerk for bbilling and
PRIME LENDING RATE Friday
. l4 ;~ 11 : 30p. m .a ttheir
and Vernon Weber.
ments Tuesday:
payment.
&lt;;tfflce
th
I he Meigs County ·
Major
commercial
banks
.
Named
to
the
Public
Assistance
-In Dallas, President Rea·
Council·
meet on Monday,
IIC1'0811
the
nation
'l\ae8day
Ic.members
of
the Gallia-Jac kson-·
Examining Committee were David
-~
gan ' unveiled ·a plim to give
Feb. 7. at 7 p.m.
.
.
Meigs648
board.
wered their prime leading rate.
Koblentz, Robert Buck and Howard
fanners surplus grairl for Idling
Attending were Mayor Charle_s
Purp&lt;&gt;se of the m eeting Is to
Frank. ·
up
to
half their fields . Agrlcul- · from U.5 percent to U perceat,
Pyles, Margie Wolfe, clerkc.
The commissioners will meet
reaching lhe loweat level of the
discuss the community service
.
t
ure
Secretary
Johll.
Block
pretreasurer, Alfred Lyons, chief,
each Tuesday at 1: 30 p.m.
review group report.
key corporate lendlllg rate IInce
dicts the plan will save the
Robert Johnson, fire chief, Glen
Aupat 1980. The fll"aphlc shows
$3 billion to $5
government
Riser, street ~lssloner, Larry
the declne ollhe prime .lending
btlllon In storage costs and loans
Wolfe and Bobby Roy, members of
rate from 1.5 percent bt July 1982
over two years, whlle adding
the board of public affairs, Robert
to
l1 percent Tuesday. ( AP .
little to retail foOd prices . .
Beegle, Frank Cleland, Ben Petrel,
.
LllserpbQto).
• •
-Defense Secretary Caspar
Dan Sayre artd Carrol, Teaford,
council members.
. WASHlNGTO!'I (AP) - .Presipresident's State of the Union
dent Reagan plans to propose this
address to Conl\fi'SS, according to
month a major,long-tenn overha'ul
the sources, · who asked that their
· · ' Clearing and ·cold tonight Low around 20. Winds westerly to
of the federal Income tax· system
names not be used: .·
Spratley · said he had been
· southwesterly 10 mph or Jess. Mostly sunny 'Thursday: High 35-40.
that
would
Include
lowering
tax
The thrust .of the revisions Is
approached about taking a Job on
Extended Ohio Forecast
In
exchange
for
narrowing
rates
similar
to what has become known
the panel last weekend. ·
Friday through SUDday:
.
.
current deductions, administration
as
the
"flat-rate"
tax plan, under
Spratley conceded he was lnte~·
·Chance ot rain or snow Friday and snow flurries SatUrday- Fait
sources
said
today.
·
which
personal
Income
tax r ates
ested but said he refused because Of
Sunday. Jll&amp;h8 In mkh'I08 to mkl-401! Friday and Ill the 301! Samrda)'
The lnltiative, which one official
are lowered but the amount of
. the number of pending cases bef9fe
and Sunday. LoW!! In the 2118 Frlday _and Saturday and ln .the teens
described as "major taxref9rm,"ls
lncQme · subject to taxation is
the commission In which he was.
~·
.
.
to be disclosed on Jan. 25 In the , lncreasec:J beclluse of a narrowing or
Involved.
ellmlnatlon of tax deductions.

Koblentz heads
M'eigs commission .

..

wm

l

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Reagan plans majo_r
income tax overhaul

,_Spratley won't get appointment

'

F

505 E. Main

--:;.

nre

.,.

"" ollllllft

enttne

•

WASHINGTON (AP)' - The Social Securtty refonn panel Is edging
toward tentative agreement on a rescue package that would Include
higher payroll taxes aixl a delay of up to six months In cost-of-living
Increases, sources say.
Despite few public expressions of optimism that a compromise can be
fashiOned before a Saturday deadline, members of the ·panel and
administration officials met privately Tuesday night for more than two
hours and agreed to gather again this afternoon.
Tuesday's talks convened after White House Chief of Staff James A.
-Baker m lx1eted President Reagan on the outlook for a compromise.
--: Baker talked with Reagan aboard AlrForceOneasthepresldentreturned .
from a speaking engagement In Dallas earlier In the day, sources said.
A source fatnl!lar with the talks among panel members and
administration officials said Tuesday night the group was "pretty near to a
tentative agreement" on a solution for _the retirement system's deficit,
which the commission has estimated cbuld range up to $nl bllllon by 1900.
The source. who like the others asked notto be quoted by name, said the
possible compromise could ralse' $168 btlllon to $18l btlllon.
A second source said, "We are talking abOut 25 things, among which we
may finallY agree On 10 or 12."
Among the strongest possibilities are:
.
-Expanding Social Security coverage to all new federal workers.
-Raising the 9.35 percent payroll tax on the sei!"Cmployed to 13.4
percent.
·
-Accelerating some of the scheduled Increases In the payroll tax
between now and 1990. along with an offsetting Income I'IX deduction.
-Putting off this July's cost-of-living Increase until October, and
thereafter delaying the scheduled hikes by one month for each of the next
three years, or simply a one-time six-month delay.
-Taxing half the benefits of some retirees If tliey l)ave a tot&amp;llncome
exceeding $20,!nl for Individuals and $25,!nl for couples.
At the conclusion of Tuesday's session, Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
D-N.Y., t'lld reporters: "We have reached agreement to meet again ."
Alan Greenspan, the panel's chairman, darted Into a waiting White
House limousine saying, "I have to catch a plane."
'~:he refonn panel goes out of business Saturday, and the COillll!isslon's
15 members so far have agreed only that the Social Security system needs
to save $150 billion to roJ billion between now and 1990. Members have
. been unable to agree on a mix of payroll tax Increases and a slowdown in
th~ growih of benefits to achieve the savings.

Racine Vlllage Council Monday
night approved Its annual approprt·
atlon ordinance totaling $S6,roJ.
Funds appropriated were: Gen·
. eral fund, $35.~;
fund, $3,500;
street fund, $9,!nl; state highway,
$4,(ro;__ revenue sharing $3,200;
water department operation,
$29,!nl.
Council. In other business, approved 'the first reading of an
ordinance Increasing residential
· water rates $1.50 per month.- The
ordinance also provides for term!·
natlng service of deUnquent customers who are more than two
quarters behind .In payment and
requires a depoSit for water service
to be restQred.
The Board of Public· Affairs,
following a study, will recommend
to council rates for commercial
users and ~port at the ·March

'

Batteries in stock Sale
Priced. at ltvll. OfF
...._rtiriaU71Jat
olll

•

Racine council okays
annual appropriation

~~~-;::::-::-;:----.~~~;;;---~,
· ALL

A service fund of $500 was established for the board ·
and regul_a r meetings were set for 7 p.m, on the third __
·Tuesday of each month except In December when the
regular meeting' will be held at 7 on the second
Tuesday.
•
.
Membership In the Ohio School Boards Association
was renewed and llabUity Insurance was purchased
for board members. Clerk-Treasurer Wagner was
authorized to secure advanees from the county
auditor when funds are available and payable to the
school district and she was authorized to Invest
inactive funds at the mosl productive Interest rates
when Inactive funds are available.
Mrs. Wagner
reported that checking accounts already have been

nears accOrd

FOR THE NEW SPRING INVENTORY

..

reSolution which Mrs. Wagner reported must be
adopted by Aprtl1, but It can be adopted before that
time.
·
The boanl elected Powell to serve as vice president
for the next year and salaries of board meetings were
set at $40 for each regular meeting.
·

'

'

Three calls were answered by .
units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service Monday. At
4: 12 a.m. the Pomeroy unit went to
Memory Gardens to transport Call
McHugh to Veterans Memoi1al
Hospital; at 11 a.m. the Middleport
unit took MilQred Ziegler from 226
South Third Ave., to the Holzer
Medical Center, and at 11: Tl a.m.
the Middleport unlt was called to the
70 North Second Ave. residence of
Veirna Siders who was not
transported.

•-"
r~

at

ss committee

SALE PRICED

CLEVELAND (AP) . The
winning ntiD:Iber drawn Monday
night 1n the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "TheNumber,''was348.
The lottery reported earnings of
$500,500.50 from the wagerting Its
dally game. Eamlngscameonsales
of · $1,037,007, while holder:; of

•

•

•

Regularly Priced
*24.95 to "99.~

Lottery winner

•

1 Section, 12 Pages

ar

and a third was granted In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Marriages dissolved were Linda
K. Wyatt and Loyd D. Wyatt, and
Gall Frances Yarbrough and Harry
Sanders Yarbrough.
Florence A. Shamblin was
granted a divorce !rom George
Michael ShambUn on charges of
gross neglect of duty and·extreme
cruelty. The plaintiff was restored
to her former name of Florence A.
Swick.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Janaury 12, 1983

Sentmel staff

ROOM

RIGHT NOW we'rnellil1 at
CASH ONLY M1Y ECHO
Chain Saw and Trimmer in
stock at 15% OFF last yea(s
. prices.

Page 8

By BOB HOEFUCH

WE NEED TO MOVE STOO&lt; TO MAKE

11---------

Page 5

Meigs board-rehires clerk-treasurer

L.OUNGE OPEN FROM
10 A.M. TO 2 -A.M.

Wayne Thomas Cleland, 26, Racine;
and Margaret Ann GQfflth, 24,
Middleport.

Emergency runs

Pages 34

Vol.31 ,No.178

A marriage license was Issued In

Two marriages were dissolved

Girl scout cookie
drive underway•••

Copy•ightod 1982

M~ County Probate Court to

End marriages

Eagles beaten;
KC tops Wahama

Fonner Southern
ace paces Redmen
to MOC victory

e

Ask towed

•

able . to actually earn the amount
year. In real life. we have not been
granted."
He noted that Ohjo Power rates
traditionally· have been either
lowest or among the lp'\'est In the
state and well below the national
average.

The lrunates seized 17 hostages
when the siege began about 7: 00
p.m. Saturday, released one almost
lmmedtately to'take mesages to the
prtson admlnlstratlon.. tlien released a second Monday morning.
Meanwhile, two guanls .who had
tried tohlde!romtbeprtsonerswere
found. after the s1ege began and
herded with the other hostages.
The.lrunatesrepeatediYsald they
did not want ''another Attica,"
referring to the197lrtotattheprison
In upstate Batavia, ·N.Y., where
pollee stormed the facUlty. The
Insurrection left 43 prisoners and
guards dead.

Veterans Memorial

Ohio Power
requests new ·
•
rate Increase
Ohlo Power Company today
announced plans to file a request
with the Public Utilities Commls·
sian on or after Feb. 28 seeking $84
million In additional rev~ues. .
Charles A. HeUer, company
president, said the request, If
granted in the full amount, would
raise 'tlie typical residential customer's bj]] for 750 kwh by 16 percent,
or $7.38. He pointed out that an
increase Is unlikely before next
November "more than 16 months
after the conclusion of our previous
case." '
In Its previous case, HeUer noted,
Ohio Power received only twothirds of the requested amount.
"Thlscasewillbeadirectresultof
the previous one," Heller said. "Had
tvereceivedwhatwerequested,and
in fact justified last time. we
certainly would not be filing another
one now.''
HeUer said the return on Invest·
ment allowed Ohio Power In the
1981·82case "was the lowest allowed
any electric utility over the past

reflection," Cuomo. told a news
conference at his Manhattan office
atla.m .

~~~:::::::::::::::::;:;;,;:;;.;;::::;::::;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;~

meetings
he will
the ·
the finance and
commltlee
holdjoin
several
meetings to discuss additional
Income posslbllltles.
A study by Reiser Architects of
Athens on the revamping of the
business section Is nearing complelion, Mayor Hoffman reported, and
will be unveiled at a publlc meeting
on Feb. 3. Copies of a .letter froril
congr-eSsman Clarence E. Miller on
river bank erosion were distributed
to council. A Jetter !rorri the Ohio ·
Department of Natural Resources
to BUJ Durst who headed the
summer youth Utter program was
___ read. The Jetter commendl'l) I&gt;ur.jt
and the program. Lltte_r was picked
up over an area of 1QI miles, there
· were 703 bags.of Utter resulting and
. 1264hourswe~putlnontheproject,
the letter stated. eouncu discussed

Tuesday, January 11, 1983

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
.6 mg "rar: · 0.6 mg nicmine av. per c1garene. by FTC mPthod . '
\

COI.UMBUS, Ohio (AP) Consumers' Counsel Wtlllam Spi'a·
tley awarentJy won't becomeQneof
the new members of the Ohio Public
Utltltles Commission.
Gov.RlchardCelestehasalready
appointed twocommlssloners since
taking offtce Monday and mwlt
name three more bv AorU 10.

--~--'J
' .
.~

Weather forecast

.

•

�. -4 .

)

W•dnesday, Janaury 12, 1983

.Commentary

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio · ·
Wednesday, .ianaury 12, 1983 ·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

*

.Senatorial .moonlighting

The Daily Sentinel
lli CnurtStrt•t'l

. i

Pnmcr11\', Ohiu

,Jt.-Hi-!156
UE\'(lTED fO THE INTERF..S'F.Of' THE MEIGS-MASO~ AHF:,\

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publishrr

· BOB HOEFLICH

I'AT WHITEHEAD
A..:ooisbl••ti'Lihlish~rJt..:"ntrullt·r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt&gt;"'!i Edi1or
A MEMHF.R uf Thl' Assuol'iHtrd Prrss. lnJctnd Daily Prrs:-o i\:oo.~ud:.~liun :wd lht'.

Aml'rinm NriUfJ&lt;tprr l&gt;ublisht'l'liAii sudllli••n.
LETTERS OF OPINION »re "t&gt;ll'llm~ . Th ..y should bto Its~ \hint 3tO 'A"IIrds lmll( . All
lrUrn an• ~ubjr•·l lu .,dilinK »nd mu11l bt- si,cnrd 'A'ilh ru~mr •. addrr1ui and lt'lrphlmt&gt;
numbtor. Nu unsi~ned lelknt 'A"ill bt- publishrd. ~~~rs shnuld bt- Ill ~nud lad!:', ;a~dr~sl.._
iS!oUt"!i . d ill

pt~nulilit$.

.

States struggle in
their own ,red ink.
: While President Reagan wrestles with budget deficits, state
governments are struggling in their own red Ink, a product of recession
compounded by cuts In federal aicj.
That two-way stretch signals the end for the "new federalism" program
Reagan proposed a year ago as a way to begin reordertng American .
government with a single, bold stroke.
Governors won't bargain to take over federal programs without federal
revenues, and Washington doesn't have any money to offer.
The National Governors' Association estimates that city and state
governments lost about $17 billion In federal funds under each of Reagan's
first two budgets. There are further cuts in prospect, if the administration
can get Congress to make them .
' The White House has been considering a reincarnation of "new
federalism" that would lump as many as 30 to 40 federal aid programs ·
together, ·then turn them over to state and local governments. The idea, as
in the original version, is to send along federal revenue sources to cover the
cost.
. But with $200 billion federal deficits in prospect this year and next,
Reagan needs the revenue In Washington. Indeed, In order to .keep the ,
deficit from soaring even higher, the administration a)ready has had to tap
some of the very tax sources Reagan had proposed turning over to the ·
states as part of the federalism plan.
Reagan plans to propose another $30 billion to. $33 billion worth of
domestic spending curbs or cuts In the budget he will present to Congress
late this month. Even cuts that don't go directly to federal aid programs
will have an Unpact on state and local budgets, because they leave it to
states and cities to do things Washington won't.
So when the governors convene in Washington on Feb. Tl for their
midwinter conference, they wlil be seeking to hold onto what they've gotand they certainly will not be looking to take over any more programs or
expenses that now come out of the federal treasury.
It isn't a partisan matter. As Reagan's dilemma shows, budgets and ·
deficits do not respect party or philosophy. No one In American pOlitics
denounced deficit spending more consistently than Reagan, and the
deficits he now faces are more than three tUnes as big as any recofded
before hUn.
But any time the governors vote on a policy statement, they will vote
. Democratic. Thirty-four states are governed by Democrats now, only 16
by Republicans.
The governors association says state deficits totaling about $2 bllllon are
in prospect for the current budget year. By law or tra~tlon, states cannot
end the year with budget deficits, so governors and legislatures are tooking
for solutions Jlow.

.

Not nece~sarily
the best of·news

War -against feds

The word from those who clairil to kitow is that if oil prices collapsed It
wouldn'tnecessarlly be good news.
This is so, as you've probably heard, because an economic collapse In oil
exporting countries would almost certainly spread to other countries and
soon threaten the International monetary system.
The word is also that if you seek to pmtect U.S.Industries from low·cost
foreign competition you won't bolster till' economy very much because
foreigners will retaliate against American exports.
No matter which way you tum, there's trouble, say the "experts."
If you-decline further loans to nations that can't even afford to pay the
Interest on their debts you'll just make matters worse. The word from
those who know Is that you'll destroy the world economy.
Tax policy is styinled. You can't raise domestic taxes because that wlll
slow any recovery. But you can't let them remain 'where they are either.
because then tl\e budget de!lclt will grow larger.
And monetary policy too. Those who know say that If Interest rates get
The five-cent surcharge on gasomuch lower they'll release Inflationary demand and be self-defeating. But
line Is supposed to be used to repair
they also say you can't let them remain high or you'll thwart recovery.
brtdges and roads . and flrovlde
On defense policy; Some of those In the know say you can't spend so
300,000 jobs. I imagine the states
much on defense and expect to run a productive economy. A(ld others In
are starting to hire people to do the
the know say If you cut there might not be any economy at all.
work rtght now. The trouble, as I
And executives worry that If they spend for expansion they might find
see It, Is how will they select which
themselves too big lot the market, and if they don't they might miss an
ones to do the repairs~
opportunity.
·
. ·
.
They probably won't have any
Those who study the mind have an insight into such behavior, explaining
trouble finding qualified people
that when progress Is thwarted the patlentlurns In on hlmrelf in search o!
from the construction fields, but
answers, disregarding the possibility that the answer might lie In action.
does this mean the white-collar
Rather than test Ideas, the patient worrtes his mind about nuances that . · unemployed can't have a crac]! at
bear less and less on realities, and eventually comers himself In mentai·
the jobs? .They need the money as
trap from which escape Is almost Impossible. '
badly as the blue-collar worker.
"You'd like to work?"
"Yes, slr."
"What did you formerly do?"
"Vice President of an advertising
agency.'' .
,
"Then I don't Imagine you know
much about brtdges."
." That was my specialty building brtdges between the ad- ·
verttser and ·the consumer."
Some of the local )llgh scmols 'o'clock High School." Would you
"I'm not talking about that kind
allow mid-term graduation. East• believe that someone made one of
of . bridge. I'm talking about one .
em Local Is one of them;Jthasbeen. the graduating seniors type an
that spans a body of water."
decided that It would cost too much Insert of cotrec.tlon?
·
"I'm sure I can do It, Would you
to bl!at the gym for lhls very special .
We Concerned pare!lts ate In a ·
like to hear me sing 'Bridge Over
occasion. Instead the graduation ltustratlng state of mind. l would
Troubled Waters' ?"
will be held at the Cllester like to thank Mr. Hut!, the senior
~·Do you know anything about
Methodist Church. Here Is
Of class· advisor, because I think he
plllng?"
the buiTII!II!I'S: the annOUilC!!ments has truly ttled to do more for these
,"What advertising man doesn't
have 81ready been received and
kids. After all there Is only ONE
know something about piling?"
they reed "The Senior Class of 1983
way at Eastern High School. "You may have tocllinbspims.''
Darlene
Newell,
Long
Bottom.
.
rt Ea$tem Hlgb Scl)ool BIIJlWIICeS
"You got the rtght lillY. In the ad
eornrnencement Exerdses S!Jftday Ohio 45743.
businesS
I wask nown !or my
aflemOOII, January alxt(!enth 2

-

such private functionaries as could
be hired on the free market.
For an awful motnent, she made
some progress In the backtooins.
and a cruel uncertainty clouded the
atr for the Coo.st Guard careertsts.
But they rallied quickly- with the
· support of aluinnl 8!1d lrtends and rescued the venerable service.
Undismayed, Anderson charged
off In another direction and assailed
the creaky U.S. fl!llrltlme Industry
- which manages to stay afloat
only through loan guarantees and
subsidies from the taxpayers.
Supporters of maritime subsidies
argued that an Amertcan mer·
· chant J118rlne was essential to our
worldwide mllltary commitments.
As evidence, they pointed to the
Fl\lkland Islands conflict; the
Brtllsh commandeered 70commercla1 ships, lncludbig the Queen
Elizabeth II, to transport men and
supplieS to the South Atlantic.
But the flag waving did not
impres~ Anderson, who set (orth

Any jobs toda

a

Letter to the editor
Someone goofed!

one

'

EASTERN [II!)- Dailey 5-2·12; Wllltlatch
3-2-8;
(){1.(}:

Spencer G-1-13: Relbelltl-2: Ambrose
wuson 1).{).0; Mankin ().().(). 'roi'AUJ

Eastern comeback
faDe short, 58-53
By sOOrr WOLFE

Meadows 4-2·10: Crooks 0.3-3; Swisher 2-0-4;
Reeves 0-0-0; Dean 0.0.0. TOTAL% 14-1149. •
By quEU1ei'S!
•
Eastern
7 7 13
Ml!lgs
9 u 10 ~ .

8--35:

,..,.,,

.

t

'

·• The Daily Sentinel

Tl-IE SUNSTREAM "

!USPS 14~9601

A Divi•lon uf Multlmt'diJI, In I'.

For the most part Eastern played
EAST MEIGS - A fourth even with Its larger foe In third .
quarter comeback bid by Eastern's round, but the latter stages of the
Eagles !ell short here Tuesday stanza added live more points to .
evening as the hlgh'llylng Miller the Miller margin, the score 48-35.
Falcons swooped Into victory lane,
Early In the last round Miller
58-53, In an exciting high school went up by 14 points on two
basketball contest.
occasions, bui then tlle Eagles
A well-balanced, double-digit at- sliced away at ·that · lead and
tack by Jay l.un!ng, John Harvey,
eventually knocked It down to !our,
and Rodney Burgess, who scored
5147. The visitors then went up by .
15, 14 and 12 pojr.ts respectively,
seven, 58-51 In the final stages.
Ignited
potent Miller ollenslve
With 30 seconds remaining
attack that made Its claim on EHS's Jimmy Newell canned two
victory midway through the second· of his 10 fourth quarter points to pull
quarter, when it outscored the hosts
the Eagles closer. Another steal
].5.,1!,
gave EHS a chance to score again,
·Mlller, now 8-3 overall, has but It wasn't to be as Miller opened
quickly proven Itself as a· strongh·
up Its offense to run out the clock on
pld among class "A" basketball . the 58-53 triumph.
,teams In Southeastern Ohio, how· ·
Eastern hit 19 of 421ron:! the field
l!ller, the local Eastern Eagles
for 45 percent, and hit 15 of 22 at the
~re eager to share a part of that
line for 68 percent.
!glory, coming close at the end with
Miller saJ1k 26 ol61 !leld goals lor
ra hustling' team effort. The loss 43 ·percent and hit four of 12 at the
:drops EHS to 0.11 on the season.
line. Miller won tbe battle of the
·Junior sharp-shooter Jimmy Neboards 3S-30 led by Luning's nine.
;'Well had his smotlng eye focused on
Collins and Carpenter had eight
i'a 17 point eflort, pivot man Mike
and seven respectively for Eastern.
Collins durllPfll in 10, whUe Rob
EHS had ·nine aSsists, 10 ste'!ls,
Malson and Jay Carpenter ea~h
and 16 turnovers, while Miller had
sank eight points.
eight, 11 and six In the same
Mlller controlled 'ihe opening tjp,
categortes.
'
but after a fruitless posSession
Reserves Win
Eastern broke the·scoring lee on - n
Eastern enjoyed a big victory In
Inside jumper by Rob Malson.
the· reserve contest as Coach Don
After another scoreless posses·
Eichinger's little Eagles rolled to
stpn by fhe Falcons' Malson again
an Impressive 49-36 trtumph. Two
banked one oil the glass after
outstanding oflenslve perlorman·
recovering a loose ball near the
ces by Johnny Miller and Royce
Eagle goal, the score now 4.0.
Bissell paced the win. Miller netted
Rod Burgess shifted the MJIIer
18 and Bissell 15, as the two
offense Into gear with their first
Increased Eastern's narrow 24-W
seore of the night before Jim
hal(tlme advantage. Mike Ross had
Newell. swished a 15 footer to put
eight lor Miller.
_, •
EHS back on top by !our.
Eastern varsity player Roger
Luning, Burgess, and Tom GaltBisseU was absent from the EHS
ten took turns on the scortng
line-up, but was on the sideline In
merry-go-round to gtve Miller an
uniform after a lour,day stay In the
8-6 advantage, after three costly
hospital alter a sertous back Injury
turnovers by the Eagles washed
sullered last Saturday in practjce.
away their early momentum.
Bissell, who owns a 16 point scoring
Wl;en time expired In the opening
average, Is out Indefinitely with
round Miller claimed ahard·fought
three fractured vertebra.
1!&gt;-14 advantage.
Eastern hosts Kyger Creek In an
During the second canto Eastern
Important SVAC contest this Friseemingly split Mlller's full court
day, beginning at 6:30p.m.
\
press, but a panicked EHS offense
EASTERN ~U) - COllins 3+1~ Probert
1.().2; GuthHe 3{Mj; NeweUS-1-17; Carpen ter
made a sertes of costly turnovers
1.&amp;8; Malsoo 3.2-8; Gaul 0-2-2 and Grlllith
on Its end of the court midway
~. TOTALS 1&amp;-U43.
MILLER ~:ill) - Harvey 6-2-14; Spencer
through the frame. As a result,
2-3-1; Humphrey ~ Burgess IHI-12;
Miller flaunted a »22 lead at the
LunJng 7-1-15; Galtlen H-9; Lanning 2-3-1.
TOTALS 2'1-4-48.
lntermlsslon.ln ,that half Muter ace
Score b7 qlUU"tenn:
John Harvey zipped 12 of his 14
Miller

a

1 ·'

)fi-J-35,
1
MEIGS 139)- Stegall44-12; Horton4 -2-10; ...../ ~··

Publisht.&gt;d t'Vt!ry ttftt-rni.Mm. Mon~ y thruugh
Frid&lt;t)", Ill Court Str~el, by the Ohio Vttlll')l
Publishin~ Cornp,!lny • Multimt•dia , Jnc..
Pmneroy, Ohio 45769. 992· 2156. Second da~
~Uij.tt! pj:~hl ii l Pomt&gt;roy, Ohio.
,

. OMNI85'

Member : The A:(Sociotal Press , Inland DHi·
ly Press A.\lsuciution and tht! Atnt'r.kan
Nt!wspaper Publls~n Association. Nationlll
Ad verlising Rt!presentwtive, Branham
Nt•wsp~:~~r Sales, 733 Third Avenue , New

York. New Yurk 10017.

POSTMASTER : Stmd Hddress·to The D-dil}'
· Sentinel, 111 Cu~rtSt . , Pomeroy, Ohio ~769.

'

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'

I

-·

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WITH A DEPENDABLE
BATTERY FRDM

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•

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TERMINAL ENDS
TOP MOUNT ..
SIDE MOUNT ..

~----------------~------------------------~---------------------.,,
former VICe President of an •
degnees you have?"

upward mobUlty."
"You don't seem to have many
callouses on your hands."
"That's because I had the
'Flighto' account lor the R&amp;F Soap
Company. Your hands were always smooth as a baby's skin.
Lopk, man, I need this job."
"There are thousa:itds of people
lined up for employment. We only
wani skilled workers who are
knowledgeable about brtdges."
"! thought Bonzo wanted everyone to go ~k to work.''
· "! wish you· wouldn't talk that
way about the President. II he
hadn't signed the gas tax bill you
wouldn't be here today applying lor
a job."

The Meigs reserves ladles eked
out a 15·l3 win over the little Eagle
ladles. Sherry Russell paced the
winners with five and Margaret
Horner led Eastero with six. The :
Melg'\. ladles will host the Logan :
girls at home Thursday at 5:30p.m. ·

Now a·Kero-Sun·Heater••• as low as·

MIKECOUJNS
fH, Jr. C

Art lJuchwald
.
.:.
•
advertising agency?"
"Just a B.A. from Dartmouth."
"I hav.e one job open, but It's a !
"I'm sorry we're only hiring
backbreaker. '(ou have to feed a•
Ph.D.'s to fill potholes."
"What about spreading tar. What concrete mixer with a shovel every.•
kind of education do you need for ten minutes."
"I'll take it. I'm not proud."
:
that?"
"I'm sorry I can't gtve It to you." "A master's In engineering, orR
•why not? ''
~·~ · ·
:
doctorate In geology."
"We've
taken
on
'quota
of
~
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and
I
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STARTERS &amp;
ALTERNATORS

REMANUFACTURE

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IHO, Sr. G

her views In a comprehensive
treatise Intended lor official eyes
only, but Intercepted by my
associate Donald Goldberg. She
made these contentions:
- "Most of the major arguments
advanced In support of assisting the
U.S. merchant martne for national
securtty reasons are sertously
flawed ."
- "There Is no evidence that
relying our foreign shipping poses a
significant rtsk to the United States'
In times of peace or war."
-''There tsnobaslslorbellevlng
that non-U.S. flagships would not be
available In an emergency."
- '"Economic Nstlllcations lor
federal assistance to the merchant
marine Industries are weak."
These dogma tic statements .
caused Instant trauma In maritime
circles. With the allocation ·or funds ·
In Jeopardy, the ·Industry's powerful friends In .Washlngton engaged '
Anderson In mortal combat.

-

DAVID GAVL
&amp;-0, Sr. C

ROGER BISSELL .

lack Ander5on

-

added 12 and Kelly Whitlatch eight.
Meigs converted on 14 of 46 from
the field lor ~percent and a flpe 11
of 18 from the foul line for 66
percent. Eastern made .15 of 53
from the field for 28 percent and
five of 12 !rom the free throw strtpe
for 42 percent.
The rebounding battle was as
close as the final score with Meigs
holding a 35-31 edge. Meigs had 11
turnovers compared to only one for
Eastern. Eastern was whistled lor
. 17 personal fouls to 14 for Meigs . .

,

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her views regarded her as a Trojan
horse lodged Inside the federal
command post, Itself.
Anderson proved equal, alas
more than equal, to the bureau·
era~· apprehensions. She blocked
a proposal that would have required federal Identification cards
for every man, woman and chUd In
the country - a bureaucratic
dream that would employ more
bureaucra~ to keep a closer,
benevolent watch upon t he
citizenry.
But she galloped Into the fray,
assailing the Idea as an Intolerable
Intrusion on the prtvacy of free
Arnertcans. The victory and the
glory wew hers.
Next she did battle with the Coast
Guard. She wanted to scuttle It
altogether and shut down the CoaSt
Guard Academy In New· London,
Conn. II there were functions that
couldn't be elimlna ted, she suggested, they could be distributed
among. the Navy, the Army and

ROCK SPRINGS .- The Meigs
·Marauder girls' varsity cagers
posted their lo~rth win against
eight losses bere Tuesday night
With a ·close 39-35 win over the
Eastern Eagles.
•
Sophomore Denise Stegall paced
the Marauderettes with 12 points
and 13 rebounds. Paula Horton and
' Jenny Meadows added 10 apiece
for Coach Ron Logan's lasses.
Angle Spencer paced the lady
Eagles with 13 while Dee DaUey

William F. Buckley Jr:

Something called the Democracy
value of ihese gentlemen's votes.
to the gove~
· mme~=nt;-..-;:Oth=e::rts=ha=v=e-::to::-"'-;:ha=:d=bee=n-:p-:ald=$500=~by~the::-N:':""atlonal-;:--;
· Project, wbose charter can be
And I !lnd this presumption about
worry whether the bank will lend •, Assocl8tlon of Manufacturers, one
summed up as wtshlng to make
elected representatives, made by
them the money necessary to pay
would need to face the likely fact .
America unsafe !or capitalism, has
ostentatious civil libertarians, quite
the school bill !or children In .that subornation had happe!led.
come out through Its founder aoo
extraordinary.
.
.
prlvate schools (because Congress
This Is.· not a plea lor stmpte.
president Mark Green ·iJi strident
Pause, !or a moment, at the othE!r and ·the courts made It all but .rnlndedness In · assessing human
opposition to a recent move by the
end of the question. Last year,
ImpOsSible to patronize the public
mqtivatlort. The thing about Con· :
Senate. In l!m, the Senate excongressmen were expected to get
schools) . That such men are In
gress Is that maiJy men are.
changed a pay raise for a pledge to
along on about $60,001 per year. to
search of supplementary Income
disposed to accept Iiower as a
limit to $8,000 per year the Income
drop that statementan a crowded
should not surprtse.
desirable substitute !or I!Xlney. The ' ·
that could be earned by its
theater is to touch off a canflagra·
The question naturally arises excitement, the adulation, the
members for work done outside
tlon of resentme!lt along the Hoes whe.t her the acceptance of money
privilege, the roar of the crowd,
election night-~ of this counts. It
government. (That measure was
of: "What's so tough about getting paid In the·form of a lecture fee Is a
backed by a public·interest group
on with $60,001 per year! My
presumption that one's vote Is !or
Is, so to speak, legal tender. That Is
with which 1 was mistakenly
husband earns $20,000 per year,
sale. It would appear to me that If
the kind of brtbery that most often
·associated.)
and we make out all right! " To this Is so, we are porbably ready
affects democratic legislators. Not
What . then happened was that
which the answer Is that we are simply to give up·on democracy. It
the money In band, but the roar of
Inflation set , in; but, also, that
supposed to have In Congress,
Senator Cr~ton can be got !or 00
the crowd. · And that ego trip Is
resenlments matured. I remember
though of this we are not lrequen!]y thou, and Senator Lugar for under absolutely free. Untaxed. Stand
listening to tlie complaints of
enough reminded, extraordinary nine, we have elected to high or,tce before a targe crowd and denounce
senator Moynihan, freshly elected
men of extraordinary talent -: on men who are humiliatingly cheap poverty, talk about a Hiroshima
and looking back wistfully at an
whom extraordinary demands II! the practice of prostitution.
survivor, summon the vision of a
· Income of over $100,000 he had
(two homes) are made. These are Annual public disclosure of the starveling In Appalachia over
made during his last y.ear out of
men, many of whom In the open sources of revenue would appear to
against the opulence of Walter
market wouj.d command higher provide a prudent guard against Annen berg' s hou~ In Palm
offlceirom lecturing. In addition, pi
course, Mr. Moynihan had been
pay, whether as lawyers, doctors, · brazen graft.
Springs- and you see1n action the
i&gt;ald by publishers, for whom he
businessmen or what have you.
real graft of the American political
wrttes books and magazine art!Somecongressmenareprtvately
II, for Instance, It were estal&gt; scene. But 'his Is the kind of thing
cles. Mr. Moynihan Is known to
wealthyandcanbeaslndlfferentto llshedthatSenatorLaxalthadbeen unlikely to be denounced by the
wrtte for everything save possibly
their official remuneration as· paid $100,()()() to address the Democracy Project, ~~~!cause, unthe Pollee Gazet~. !or which, 1 . Herbert Hoover or John F.
truckers, one might legitimately happlly, it Is an attrlbute of
assume, he wrttes under an
Kennedy were, both of whom
suspectthatsornethlngwasup. Ill! democracy.
assumed name. So, gradually, the
re\W11ed their salaries as president
were established that Tip O'Neill
restriction was liberalized to
$25,001 In 1979. And In October of
1981, · the limitation was finally
repealed . The Democracy l'rojectlles (sic) foresee the satelllzatlon
of Congress by American business.
Congressman David Obey of Michl·
gan Is quoted as saying, "This Is the
single most dangerous thing that's
happened since I've been here."
Lest he be suspected of exaggera. tion, It s])ould be noted that Mr.
Obey was.elected to Congress after
Hiroshima.
What are they all afraid of? Mr.
Green Is, let us face it, afraid of
brtbery. " Steven D. Symms, Idaho
Republican, personally netted
$47,200 (In 1~ ) . Alan Cranston,
California Democrat, earned
$30,600. Richard•G. Lugar, Indiana ~til 111'1
Republican, made $8,500 speaking ~,
to live special-Interest groups In 00
~~~.,_.~.---·''J-4
hours In Mtonesota. Alfonse M. ~
d' Amato, New York ReP\lbllcan,
made $25,250." I cannot see the
~' , .
relevance of the emphasis put oil
these figures unless It Is to suggest
that that, roughly, Is ·the market

WASHING'rON -In the back·
. rooms of the White House, an
undaunted Donna ~!xote has been
waging a one-woman war against
the federal establishment. Her
name Is Anneltse Anderson, and
she has trted to dismantle just
about every governn1ent agency
that has come within her purview.
She took sertously Ronald Rea·
gan's campaign speeches denounc·
lng the evils of big government.
Through her political zeal, Ander·
son wound up as an associate
budget director. She mounted her
swivel chair In the White House
complex with all the majesty of a
noble knight astride a charger and
began tlltlng with the Washington
windmills.
_ As a dee!Kiyed, determined
libertartan, she believes devoutly
that the less government Interference In people's affairs the better.
This Is at odds with the creed of the
bureaucrats who man the bastions
of government. Those familiar with

Marauderettes post fourth victory

Meet the Eastern.Eagles..•
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The Daily Sentinel· Page-3

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INT PLEASANT AUTO
.515 Main St.
675-1520

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WedMscfay, Janaury 12, 1M3·:.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.-Vanderb.i lt upsets Crims.6 nl Tide, 81-79

W•dnesclay, Janaury 12, 1983

••

Wolfe leads .,R io.
over Malone team·

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131

KC posts·
'lOth win

night,

Boll!: Score
KYGER CREEK ('10 ) -

Wahama

--~

Reserve swre - KC 49

In'\..J.:it~niounted 'to a ooi&gt;-slded
~

affair, North GaUia added another
wrn to its rec&lt;iro by handlrig visiting
the visiting Hannan (W.Va.) Wildcats a 77-33defe)tTuesdaynighton
..the Pirate court.
The non-league game began with
the Pirates taking a strong 194 lead
over the Mason countians and
maintaining It lor the rest of the

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game.
After finishing a strong first haU
with the lead 35-14 in Its favor, NG
then moved ahead In the thlid
period tocompile2'ipolnts, based on
strong performances by three of
Bruce Wilson's starters.
. Matt Kemper, who racked up 24
points in last Frlday'sSVAC victory
over Eastern, led Pirate scorers
with 19 against the Wildcats. Eric
F'enick chipped in 15 points: while
Anthony Blackburn had 11.

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Paul Mayt\ard's Wildcats continued trailing the Pirate lead for the
remainder of the game, getting in
only 13 points while NG sealed the
win with a 77-33margln at the end of
the final period.
For Hannan, the lead scorer was
Holley with 13 points, while Dexter
contribuled 10 to the Wildcat cause.
1be record book shows NG took 70

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Maisch had 19 points and Mowery
17tolead theRedmen. Mowery also
pu.Ued down seven rebounds and
dished out seven assists. Wolfe and
Curry joined a duo indoubled@tsol lOeach.
Zeigler paced the Pioneers with
21, whlle BrentSkogenaddedl1. Rio
Grande held a 30-25 margtn in field ·
goals, while the Pioneers connected
on 14 of 20 free-throws to tbe
Redmen's 8 of 14 card.
MALONE (II) - Zetglfr 9-3-21 ; Pordue
4-2-8: crawford 4-1-9; Lillo 1-J.5; Hulsman
1.(&gt;2; Shutt 0.2·2; Skogen 1·3-17. Tolalo

2J.1Ht.
RIO GRANI)E (Ill) - Mowery 7..).17;
Richards 0-1-4; Maisch 9-1-19; Shaw 4-1-19;
Curry 4-2-10; WoUe !Ml-10; Penrod 1.(&gt;2.
ToUIIIIMtll.
lblfUme .8CGI'e: Rkl Grande 37, Malone 36.

RIO GRANDE GUARD Kent Wolle (12)teDsteammalesto"set it
up" dlll'lna Tuesday's Mid-Ohio Conference game against visiting
Malone College. 'lbe ~ won their second straight league game,
&amp;Uf, at Lyne CeNer. WoUe scored 10 points. - Keith WUson photo.

. shots at the b.asket from the fietu,
sinking 30 for a 43 percent mark.
From the charity line, the performance was stronger: 17 of 29 tries
· for 59 percent.
Kemper also recorded 21 rebounds and ·Penick, 18, for the
evening total of 64. There were 11
turnovers and 10 assists to the
Pirates •credit.
'
Amy Littlefield scored 33 points
Hannan was 42 pereent on
to pace Southern's girls to a 66-54
free-throws, sinking five of 12
attempts on the basket The team
non-league basketball victory over
visiting
GaiUpoUs Tuesdlly night.
also jotted down 46 total rebounds .
Further statistics were not
The tr:tumph left Southern 10-1 on
available .
the yeai. Gallipolis dropped to 6-3
overall.
To help things, Ron Twyman's
· reserve squad also gave the junior
Southern led 18-9, JG.o26 and 47-40
at the quarlermarks.
Wildcats a rougli time on the floor,
with the Pirates recording a 57-19
Tonja Salser added 12 markers
win. Tim .Smith scored 16 points,
tor the wtnners. Mel Weese chipped
In with ll.
with Thurman Holliday tallying 15.
For Hannan, Robbie Ray was high
Nancy Evans led Gallipolis'
point man with eight.
.
The Pirates gear up for league
Sponsor tournament
play Friday when they host Hannan
Trace.
The Eastern High School Athletic
NOII'l1l GAU.IA ('1'1) - Mil&gt;'! :1,1-9·
Boosters Will be sponsoring 8 girls'
Penick 7-1-15; Kemper 1&gt;3-19: lldlttoc*ad
4-l ·~ lllockbum H -U: Neei2.J.7; Lor 3-1-7.
Junior High Basketball tournaTo~Ut•nm. .
ment at ·the high school on Feb.
11.\NNAN till .,. Powers 2&lt;H; Dexter
34-1~ Holley 6-HJ; Waugh 1.(&gt;2; WU""'
14-16. EntrY deadline will be Feu. 7.
2-04. Tololo IH-31. .
The da~,;. confirm an earlier .
Soorebyqe!l~
North Gailla
,. · ·
19 16 2:1 ·rr.:.rt
scheduiirig' coliruct: ·
'
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S.~uthem

girls whip
·Gallipolis, 66 to 54

Hannan

I W 6 13-JJ

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Old Dominion h1, Va. C'omrra~~'fla l th 62
Sl. AndrrY.·'! 69. C'ol'Or"llla Sl . &amp;7
SoulhW&lt;"SfPm . T('M . Al. Mill'lilpR 61
StC'ISOO 6.~. UtiCa ."AJ

'IUtHdaty'"' CIIUrJI• ~ So!.'Uf't'!oo
By ..,..

.....,.

~liolk'd Prt~

~ron Coli. 9.1, Rink' JsLund 77
DartrtnJih 72. W\!llafn"; 711

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Vandt&gt;rt)il! Rl. Alabama 79
W_ J\pntU['ky 00. J ackson\i hl' S2
W"'&gt;t Gfoot"Kia I«T, Moll'hOuS(' ~

Lon_ot Island U. ~ F"al rk•l!i[h Dk·ki11"0l

HI

I

Niagara 14. Corrvoll ~1 ,
Sl . Jotwfs lfi. ConnrMiru! T.l

DIIOCII.~

""""'

Appabt'h!an Sf. 60, Dol\'ldSQfl ~. aT
FbftSa 92 . Sou1h norlda 79. vr
·
C'~a Tr&gt;dl 71 . C'k&gt;rmon ~
l..ror~tM·n . K.\'. ·ln . Unlorl . Ky 9!
J iJmt'5 Madison fit Malnr ~
Mc-rrcr Kl, Samford U
Murray Sr . 84 . f.". llllnoll! 7fl

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T('('h r.'l. St. Xa'-·IN· lil

Tf'x a~

"'Fm'

FAR
Colorado Coli. 74
Hu mbOklt St. Rl. S. OrNron
. S!. Martin ·~ i 4. Pa &lt;'llk' Luthl'ran l:i'l
WarfK'r Paclfl&lt;' !1-1, l.c"'."hl &amp; Clali&lt; i2
W. Montana i!'i, Carroll, Mont . ti-1
flliu C"ffk'~ Bwolu!thnll
Mid-Olio f..anl

Adal'nS Sl.

~

Iowa Sl . 73. N. Iowa :"11

1l!11n 7-1. Ccdarvll)(' W. :nT

Mankato SL ft'i. N&lt;'b.-Qmal\a 72
M.1rquM r.- R'i. Jona 7!'l sF: Lool.slana \1, Housron Baptlsr -H
SW l&lt;an!lOI:o; Iii, Slc&gt;rl!nR !i9
X&lt;l\·ifor , Ohio 70. E . IU.&gt;ntuci:'' .t1

Thh:-1 1'11 , H iram~

Sllt1I1IMl&lt;l' .

c:JIIaOOma Sf , Ull. Or-al

Rob-rt~

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992~2342

Langdon,19, a righthanded pitcher.
He attends Brevard Junior College
t Cocoa Fla
here he had a 4 2
a
··
·• w
·
record with a 2 "" earned run
·"" .
average. He struck out 49 and
•
watked 141n 40 Innings.
. Jones said he was an all-around
high school athietl' in the CaUfornla
Interscholastic Federation. .
"I was aU-CJF ·1n - ~sketbaii
football and baseball, rn;t In col~ · ·
they 'd only let me pay
1 ba seball,"
Jones said._ "Loyola-Marymount
.has n? tootball team, and they felt
the basketball season would CQnfUct .
with the baseball season that starts
In Febru
the ;,
ary ou re.
Jonessaidhisbrother,TI;'rry,isa
first baseman at San Diego State.
"My dad, Jim,piayedlntheRedSox ,
-----"'-----,;
, :. - - , - - - - : . __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _o:.:r.:::g=anlza=:.:tt:.:.o;;.n;;fo::..r.::se:.:v.:;er:.:a::.lY,;.;e::::a::.rs:::._ _

'.•·

Young Marauders
remain undefeated

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
. CALL 992-3381

Reds. draft ·pitcher, ·slugger_

attack with 29 points. Renee Halley
added 10.
•· GaillpoUs had 29 rehounds,12 by
CINCINNATI tAP) _ Tracy
Evans and six by Jodi Adams . The
Donald Jones, a 21-year-old third
Blue Angels had nln~ steals, three
baseman from Hawthorne, Calif.,
assists and 21 turnovers.
was dellghted to•.IJe drafted by the
Ga!Ua Academy· shot 36 percent Cincinnati Reds. · '
from the field, sinking 22 of 52 _
.
' Jones was the first player
attempts. The Angels were 14 of 22
selected Tuesda y In the secondary
at the foul line.
phase of the major league draft for
Gaiipoiis resumes SEOAL play players previously drafled but
at Ath~ns Thursday.
unsigned.
Box score:
Jones was orglnally selected In
GAUJPOIJS
(54)
Evans]-2-29:
Dodson
h
·
0-2.2, Cook n 7, Halley 4.2.10: Miller 3%:
t e 1ourth round pnmary
phase of
Adams (H)(}; Amsbary (H)(}; Elllngson !1&lt;).():
the draft last June by the New York
T~~~ ~~.;., ,_ 1.11, Salser Mets. But he planned to continue
~12: Llttlelleld 15-3-33; wolfe 1·24: c.
going to Loyola Marymount College
Evans 1-&lt;&gt;2; Bentley (H)(}; Johnson !1&lt;).();
and did notsign. However,hedidnot
Mlc'-11.0.2; Adams ()11.1) ; Houdashelt MO.
return to sc
' hoo
._llast fall.
TCJrALS--ByqiWiero:
TheRedsalsohadflrstchoicein
~~~~
baseball's amateur free agent
1: ~ ~ :~
draft. They chose Leroy Ted

results

j

I

43.

DOWNING-CHILDS

b~r.

NEW. YORK; (AP) - Alfred leaguehlstOry,sourcesclosetoboth
Manliel " Billy" Martin and George ' the Ya nkees and Martin said.
· M. Steinbrenner ill, two of base"It's a tremendous· rontract - ball's most celebrated antagonists, longterm and a lot of dollars,"
are friends- again. .
Martin said. "It's a regular con·
And thatcanf{leanonlyonethtng. tract. No ifs, ands or buts, I will get
BillyMartl!lis manager of the New paid."
York Yankees- again.
Which prompted another quesRumored for months, the an· !ion. Considering Martin's track
nouncement that Martin would record - seven jobs In 14 years ol
manage the Yankees for a third managing, and one scuffle after
time came Tuesday at a news another with boss George - how
conference during which both men
long will he have to work for that
promised ta lay aside their Punch &amp;
money?
Judy act.
Martin's two earlier hitches with
With that, Bulldog Billy became the Yankees came from Aug. l,
only the fourth man to manage the
1975-July 24, 1978 and June 18,
samemajorleagueteammorethan
1979-0ct. 29·, 1919. He was forced to
twice and. Steinbrenner had made
resign the first .time when he said of
his lOth' managerial change since
outfielder Reggie Jackson and
buying the club 10 years ago this
Steinbrenner: "One's a born liar;
month.
•
the other's convicted."
It also was Steinbrenner's fourth
Four days after the resignation,
change.of leadership 111 a year. Boj)
Steuibrenner stunned baseball by
Lemon staried the 1982 season for
announcing on Old Timers' Day at
NewYorkbutwasreplacedbyGene
Yankee Stadium that Martin would
return as manager in 198l. Stein·
Michael in April. Michael, In turn,
was replaced by Clyde King in early
brenner's timetable was stepped
August,
.. , " ·..
up, howeVer, whentheYankeesgot
King will stay with the club as a
off to a bad start in 1919, and Martin
tDp adviser to Steinbrenner. Con·
returned in June. The second time
tactedathisGoldsboro,N.C.,home,
Martin (jlt, he was fired outright
King said the Yankee boss "wants
{;liter his now-infamous fight In a
me ID be upstatrs with htm to make
Bloomington, Minn., hotel bar with
marshmallow salesman Joe
decisions and evaluations. Not
ordinary scouting, but special work
Cooper of Lincolnshire, m.
where I'll be close to him."
The 54-year-old Martin said part ·
- Under terms of his contract,
of the problem in both those earlier
• $000,00) occasions resulted from
Martin will receive about
per year for five years, making him
misunderstandings.
the highest paid manager in major
..
'

....

U 17 ,13 8--49

The Meigs Marauder eighth graders remained undefeated with
their eighth straight win 8344 over
Eastern at . Middleport Monday
night.
!l.iey Eason paved the way for
the powerful young Marauders
with 18 ·points and 14 rebounds.
Jesse Howard, who coach Rusty
Bookman said played a tremend·
ous aU-around game, had 17 points
and six rebounds .. J. R. Kitchen
added 10 points and seven rebounds
while Steve Musser had eight
points and seven rebounds.
Other Marauder scorers were
Don Becker with seven, Tim CaseU
had six, Rex Haggy five, Phil King
lour, ahd Scott Powell, Marty
. cune, Brian Tannehill, and Jeff
Nelson all had two each.
Eastern's fine athlete Eddie
Collins led the young Eagles with
17. Eastern taUs ID i -6 on the year.
Meigs, which has averaged . 60
points per game while giving up but
36, hit on 53 percent of their shots
from the field .

three-point play and WoUe hack-to- ·
back baskets for a 10-point lead.
The margin stretched to 14at the
ll: 01 mark, when Wolfe sinked In a
jumper from the corner. ·
Sonie deadeye free-throw Une by
the Pioneers In the closing minutes .
took the difference to four at the

Pit~-tes~rip Wildcats

'-tE: /-/,'~~5.

Cl"'k 34·10;

Waham~

.

pair. of Oasl\ets. Bob Sha~ netted a

Moles 14.Q-28; Bradbury 4-0-8: Love 3-6-12;
Stroud 2·2~ : D. Manln 2-0-4; Waugh 1~2 and
R . Martin 0-0-0. Tolals 21H2-1'0.
WAHAMA. __ {f9) - · Rous h 2-3-7: Kimes
2-7-11; Bradley 1-0-2: Gllland ~2- 12 ; Em-

bleton ~J.-13 ; Mlt che\11.0.2; Spradling 1-0-2.
TolalslH!-49.
By quarters:
Kyger Creek
10 16 ~ 22-70

.

Wolt~d~OfftoDanCurryfora

!lo

'

.

· Rlo . Grande started fast, s(feak·
lng to. a.l2-4 lead in the first five
mln.~tes btihind lOpoints by forward
John Malsch. Forward J tm Zeigler
bro\iiillt the Pioneers back to within.
to tme' within seven ·consecutive
markers. '
The game remained close until
the ;1.4: $ jnark of the second half
when;WoUe keyed a surge that put
the Redmen In the lead for good.
. With ~ Redme" leading 41-40,

'

Coach Keith Carter's Kyger
Creek Bobcats posted their ' lOth
victory of the season Tuesday
night, 70-49 over the winless
Wahama White Fal~ns .
Down 28-26 at the half, the
Galllans put together a strong
second half outscoring the hosts,
42-21 to win going away .
With junior center J . D. Brad·
bury on the bench most of the
evening in foul trouble, senior
forward Jeff Moles enjoyed his best
game this season canning 28 p&amp;fllts
on 14 field goals.
Brent Love, the Bobcats' 6-2
junior forward, who has been
coming on strong lately, had
another productive night with 12
points while guard Keith Clark
dumped In 10 points.
Moles also collected 15 rebounds.
Eric Embleton led Wahama with
13 points. Deron Gilland added 12
points while Scott Kimes connected
for ll. .
According tD the charts, Kyger
Creek sank 29 of 75 Door attempts
and 12 of 18 at the foul lines.
· Wahama hit 15 of19 at the charity
stripes.
Kyger Creek won the reserve
contest, 49-43 behind a 20 point
effort of SOPhomore ChucK Vogel.
Sopl\omore Steve Waugh had 10
points.
Clendenin and Dawson led the
Little White Falcons with 13 and 12
points respectively. Kyger Creek,
10-2, goes to winless Eastern
-'
Friday.

.

.

--~----~~~------------------~------------~-----·'

5 .

Martin rejoiJ!S
George's circus

.

Fortner" SOuthern ·guard Kent ·
WoUe brOke open a clQse game with
six points al)d assists on two other
baskets durt,ig a .four-minute span
of the llecond'lialf Tuesday night ID
lead tile·Rio Grande Redmen ID a
61H)or'-~ory over the Malooe
Pia~ In Mid-bhio conference
'
play;
The·\;ictory moved the Redmen to
13-6 on the season and 2-0 in league
play; They will play at Mount
VernonNazareneCoUegeSaturday .

a

ENJOYS GOOD OFFENSIVE NIGift' - Jeff Moles,
forward lor lhe Kyger Creek Bobcals, enjoyed his best nighl this season
with 28 points and 1~ rebounds Tuesday against the Wabama White
Falcons. Kyger Creek overcame a two point deficit at halftime lor a
71J.49 victory. Moles Is guarded in his Tim Davis pholo by Waharna's
Scott Kimes (34). Also shown Is the Bobcats' David ~ (23).

The Daily Sentinel-Page

•

wllllaim 9CfX'8d 2:1.
; •
r-----...---.._-.;;..!'

By A.!osocla6etl Press .
only chip away at the lead. Ennis · BWy Goodwin scored 16 points lor
C.M. Newton spent many years
Whatley, Bobby Lee Hurt and Er:tc
St. John's while au-ts Mullin added ·
tiylng to build up the Alabama
Rlchard."!ln contrlbuled mostly to · 14. For ConnectiCIIt, Earl Kelley
basketball program.
,
the eomeba~k. The Crimson Tide had 24 points and KUczenskl had 13
Tuesday night, he worked at
managed to whittle the lead to twp points and 11 rebounds.
.
tearing it down.
points by the buz:ler, !he ctosesi
EISewhere,DanRuland9cored17
"I thougllt we played asweUaswe
Alabama had come since the tlrst po\ntsandi:&gt;atTeUJacksonaddedH
could play," said Newton after hls
eight mihutes of the game.
as James MalliSOn rolled past
surpriSing Vande•'bilt CommoSanderson blamed himself for the Maine 84-59; Old Dominion's Ron·
dores upset the nation's lOth-ranked
defeat. '
nle Wade hit four free throwS In the
team 81-7\tat Tuscaloosa, Ala.
In theonlyothergamelnvo!vtnga . last 26 seconds to ice a 67-62 victory
Newton had roached at Alabama
ranked team Tuesday night, David over Virg1nla Commonwe!llth; Ron ·
with some success for 12 years
Russell scored a game-high 29 Harris, Barry Stevens and Ter·
before lea~ for Vanderbtlt last · points and grabbed ll rebounds as renee Allen combined for 59 points
season. Newlon's 1!1!1·82 team had a
No. 3 St. John's beat Connecticut tD lead Iowa State to a 73-50victory ·
modest 15-13 record, but this year
85-73 to improve Its record to 14-0.
over Northern Iowa; Andy Black hit
the Commodores are off ID one of
The victory tied a 72-year-old three free throws In the ftnal1: 16 of
their best starts In years with anll-4
school record for consecutive victo- overtime to lead Appalachian 'State
mark.
ries at . the Start of season. . In to a 00.58 victory over Davidson 811!1 _
"It was an awwl!Y good win •. to
1910-11, the Rromen won au 14 Bobby Jones' 25 points paced'
say the least," Newton said. "I've
games they played.
Western Kentucky over Jacksongot to compliinent Wimp (SanderSt. John's took charge early and ville 66-52.
son) and his team for coming back. led at haHtime, ilJ.23.Connecticut
Also. John Salley and Mark~
A team with lesscharacterwiluldn't
center Bruce Kuczenski scored led a second-baH rally that erased
have been able to come back the eight straight points for the Huskies an 11-polnt deflctt•as Georgia Tech
way Alabama did tonight."
in the first of Coruwcticut's two brief trimmed ClemsOn 71-66; Rlck
Alabama jumped out to an early
second-haU rallies. nie Huskies Townsend and Joe Alexander each
seven-point lead, but a series of
came as close as three points, 32-29, scored 17 points tospari(Niagara ID
missed shots took its IDU as
early In the half and later four at a 74-63 victory over Cornell; John
Vanderbilt dosed the gap. Phil Cox,
· GarriS siX&gt;red 31 points and grabbed
65-61.
who scored 24 points for Vanderbilt,
However, they could come no nine rebounds In leading Boston
then reeled off six straight to putthe closer, as St. John'sforced Connec- College to a 93-77 trlumpll over
Commodores ahead by as many as • ticut into a successiOn of turnovers Rhode ISland; Bubba Jennings
23 points ~rly in the second half.
and scored eight of Its last 10 points pumped In 16 points, all but two of
Alabama recovered In the last 10 on free throws to put the game out of . them in the first half, as Texas Tech
·minutes, buttheCrimsonTidecouiq
reach. · ·
overcame Texas 59-51; Ronnie

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·I

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StOp br any BANK ONE office
foralllhccletalh.

.

I

BANK ONE.,
-FDIC

I
I

I
I .

.

II

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
POMEROYtRUTlAN)el\JPPERS PLAINS

.

. .~

. lf4000 10,''34

STORE COUPON

II

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~------------~--------·------~--------~
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-

---,,- --· - - -· :· -- --

~-

----;::--

-~-

...

---:- ; .--- ~ - - .:.....--- --~-·--

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Page-6- The Oaily Sentinel
'

Meigs
personals

.

'

· 12; 1983

"· Wednescla.y. Janaury 12, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. John Bryan.have
returned lo their home tn Middleport after holiday visits in Springiteld wtth their son, Danny and his
family, and In Lorain with their
son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Russell. While there,
Mr. Bryan became . iii and was
admi tted to CommunitY Hospital in
Lorain on Christmas Eve. He was
hospitalized there for a week.

holidays wtth her four children and
grandchldren. She also visited her
sister and brother·ln·law, Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Corrigan. ·
'
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Lue)teydoo
entertained recently wtth a holiday
dinner party at their Letart home.
Decorations Included lighted tapers on the dining tables room.
Attendii)g were Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Roach, Point Pleasant, Mr. and
Mrs. Carrol Shinn, Leon; Lowell
Shinn , ·Ailsa Shinn, Huntington,

Mrs. Paul Andrews, Long Bottom, visited in Columbus over the

W.Va.; · Mr. and Mrs. LaiTy
Luckeydoo, Larry II and Phillp
Luckeydoo, Point Pleasant, Mr. .
and Mrs. James Brewington, Mrs. ·
Esther KisseD, Roger, Sandy, Amy
and Lee Luckeydoo, Middleport. ·
.
. · , Christm'ls Eve and suppergues~
of Goldie Wolle at the home of her
daughter and son-In--law, .r-tr. and
Mrs. Henry H~rtman were Mr. and .
Mrs. Gene Van Meter, Granville;
Marlene ·Thompson, _Columbus; ,
Mr. aild Mrs. Howard Wolfe and

and ~. Wolfe were dinner gueSts
of Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Colllll¥.

son, Rick, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
PanneD and daughter, Kelly, Belpre; Marcella Casto and sons,
Joshua and Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Klrr)es, daughter, Jessica,
and Mr. ail(! Mrs. ErroU Conroy, aU
local.
Others visiting at the
Hartman home were Mr. and Mrs.
H:arolq Hawk and daughter,
Tuppers Plains. The ·eene Van
Meters and Mrs. Thompson were
overnight guests of Mrs. Wolfe. On
New Year's Eve Mrs. Thompson
·
·

!.. y

.'

WEDNESDAY

Margaret Jurado and he£ SOil)
John, East Manhattan, N.Y., spent
a week here wtth her mother, Heled
Handley during the hol!days. s~ ·
was joined here by her husband;
Orlando, a few ::leys before N~
Year's and the family drove back to ·
New York over the New Year
weeken(j.

POMEROY- Regular meet., ·bigs or Pomeroy Chapter ttl,
1 . RAM, and Bos\yorth Council 46,
.1 R&amp;SM; wtll be held at 7: lJ p.m.
Wednesday at the temple. Comr: mandery tun-form practice will
be held
'ihe meet~.

e
1
I'

STORE HOURS:

Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm

after

Sunday 10 am·IO pm

-; of Syracuse Church · of the
Nazarene will be Wednesday at

'.

.

POMERO)'- Regular meet·

GIGANTIC ,

r
\

'

lng, Pomeroy Chapter fl) RAM
and Bosworth Council 46,

-'..

R&amp;SM, 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday;

•

~

.

commandei-y fuU form practice

after meetings.

• •

u.s.

EAST MEiGS - Eastern
Band Boosters, 7: lJ p.m. Wed·
ne!iday at ~ school.

.,

-

..

;, f~'JIIed to
reedily ava•leble !Of saMI in aach Kr()981" Store , ucept 11
~ nrJBt .., h
.:1 . H wt do 1'\lfl 0J1 of ~ ed\Mtiaed
rtem , we will ot1er you your choice o1 a c::ornp.rable rtem.
E.och ol

"""""""' ' '""

KROGER
WELCOMES
YOUR
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

when ava ilet*l, raflecbng the Ntme aavingl or I raincheek
....t'IICh will ar1titMt vou to purchase !lle &amp;&lt;Jvenised nem at the
ad\.tettiled price within 30 days .

TOTAL SATIS FACTION GUARANTEE
Ev&amp;f'Ythtng vou bvy at Kroger 11 guaranteed lor your tot61

CO PYRIGHT 1983 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES

.41e Carolina
SUced Bacon

GOOD SUNDAY . JAN . ' · THROUGH SA TU RDA Y, JAN . 15 .

WE IUSUVf TH E RIGHT TO liMIT QUAN TITIES . NON!:

SOLO TO DEA l ERS .

1-lb.
Pkg.

TIIURSDAY

.: ·

RACINE -

r

POMEROY - Revelators of
McArthur wtll be featured at
Hysell Run Holiness Church,
7: lJ p.m. Thursday. Theron
Durham, pastor, Invites the
public. .

CHOICE

POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority 5: lJ p.m. spaghetti
~er. at t~ Riverboat Room
of Diamond Savings and Loan .

.;• ~.
~-. •

Kroger 0.5%
Lowfat Milk

Boneless Round
Ti Roast

Kroger
Orange
Juice

88

Gal.

Ctn.

CHOICE

Pkg. •

RED BARON SUPREME PIZ•ZA 22-0Z. PKG . , , $3.29

Kroger
-Saltines

ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the hall.

ALL FLAVORS KR&lt;)GJ:R

~:::~~ . ,~~$119
KROGER .

GI'Gde A
Large Eggs .. _..... Do•.

79c
·

KROGER COUPON
REGULAR OR SUPER CRUNCH

'

FRIDAY
ANTIQUITY - John Jesse. burg, mtsslonary from France,

,

~=~~~~i~
¥ellow
·onions

. Ch~PP~d

Sl79 .

Ham .. ...... .......... .. lb. .

.

~

•• •••••

. . . 59 c
H~i~. 89¢
WHERE

.,

PORK STEAK OR

.

Pork Roast.... !~.

$

SUPERIOR'S FRANKIES

¢

.

.

Wieners~ .. ~ ..1!.0!·.~K:••
BALLARD'S PURE

$ 4·9
·Por k Sausage .....
1-LB. ROLL or 12 OZ. LINK

'

ORANGETOWNSHIP-Speclal meeting Orance rownshlp
Trustees, 7 p.m. Frtday at home
of clerk, Nina Robinson; bids ori
truck to he opened.

Bananas.......~........L~.

---

FRESH

Delicious
Apples

F

RACINE - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughtersolthe
American Re~1utlon, meeting ·
Friday, 1: lJ p.m. In social room
of Racine First Baptist Church;
members to take cancelled
commemorative stamps for
veterans; hostesses, Mrs. Robert AShley, Mrs. Marla Foster,
Mrs. Lillian Henderson, Mrs.
;,Lawrence Smith, Mrs. Gene
Yost.

Boxes
JUMBO SIZE U.S.D.A . EXTRA FANCY .
WASHINGTON STATE RED OR GOLDEN

MIXED

to begin.

'

Kroger

l·lb.

· Th~y.

wtll speak at Antiquity Baptist
Church, Route 338, Frlday, 7: 30
~ p.m. Public Invited.
•
RACINE Fire Departnient's
Ladles Auxiliary, 7 p.m. at the
fire department, «ames parties

FROZEN PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE

Red
Baron - 22·01. $299
•
P1zza .... _... .... ....

:

•.
RAClNE - Southern Band
'•. Boosters will meet Thursday at
' _7: 30 p.m. In the band room.
'
•
POMEROY - Shade River
I · LOOge 453, F &amp;AM, wt11 meet In
.: · reg\!lar session at 7:ll .p.m.

$. 99'

USDA

lb.

. ..

FROZEN (3-CT . PAK)

-

BEEF TRIMMED
.

$ 48

.;

NEW
IDEAS
COME TO .
UFE

SATURDAY
POJ'.1EROY - Star Grange
·will meet Saturday for Its
_ January meeting. The rltujlllstlc
• team wtll practice at 7 p.m.
• preceding the regular meeting.
AU team members are urged to
attend the practice session and
all mern'bers are asked to attend
the meeting. Vegl!table and chill
wtll be .s erved and those attendIng are to take Ingredients.

Luncheon Meats

~~: ·~~·

LIMIT 4 PIIGS.

Hymn sing set at
J.ong Bottom
c~urch
,.

COINI

;' Mt. Olive Con'ununlty Church at
• t.ong Bottom will have the Unroe

Harmony for a hymn
'famlly
lng at 1and
p.m. Oil Jan. 23.
•
· Meet8 Thursday

JiHy Meat Entrees

. f. S'J 88 .
.....
UIIT 4 PIICS.
&amp;..

.

''

.

.

FLAVORITE

Margarine.. ~ ...
WAGNER'S

54

¢

oz.

Orange Drink...
FLAVORHE .

• ·

.

)land

room.

Maca ron 1•.•••5.~~~0!...

...•'•

,,

..•

'.

!,

.

• '
\

,'

"'

oz. PKG.

29

BORDEN'S ELSIE

3LB.

BATIHROOM nSSUE
6 ROLL
FAMILY SIZE

. $}' 49'

$669

,,.I(,'•

~. -~

12

.COTTONEUE

COFFEE

&lt;.

.1.,:'

$

•
·cheese s11ces
....
FLAVORITE INDIVIDUAL

.

' t.

;t~

8~ ;

$
69· Ice Cream .... :~~~~L~_.. 29

$ .

Southern Band Boosters will meet
Thursday, JIP!.13,at7: llp.m: In the

.

..

49
Cube Steaks....~.~

day at 7: 30 p.m. In the band

• room.

USDA

·u.s. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE ,

·BUCKEl

Southern Local

Band Boosters wUI meet Thurs-

•

18

$

9c

198J , IN GALLIPOLI S AND POM£ROY STOR£5.

19
Ground Beef ... ~;~

RAClNE Jlllllor Hlgl! Athletic
Boosters will meet Wednesday
at the junior hlgh Immediately
following school.

..''

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak .

setiSfacbOn 111011dle-. of manufacturer . If vou are not NtilI( roger will rep&amp;aca vour Item wit h the aame brand or a

txand 01' refurld your purchase pr1011

POMEROY - Gallia-Melgs
Lodge FOP 95 wt11 meet Wed. ne!lday at·7: 30 p.m. at Pomeroy
Clty Hall.

~.S. GOV'T GRADED CliOICE,

fled ,

oom~i 1~

298 SEOOND ST.

7 P-111 '

'

KROGER·lOOth. ANNIVERSARY

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

Sen'tin

Calendar :

'

SYRACUSE- The N.W.M.S.
.

The '

'.

I

'

ulnit One Per, Customer .
Good Only At POwell's
Offer Expim Jan. 1&amp;, 1983

,.

•

..

HYLAND CHUNK

DOG FOOD
25LB. BAG
Limit One

~

2 J

$ 99
Per Customer

Good Only At Polll(ell's

Offer Expilas Jan.

,.

16, 1983

••
••

�12, 1983

Ja

Ohio

.

'

12, 1983

· 'Rising t9 Greater Heights' theme
of 1983 Girl
. .Scout··.cookie sale,.
.

'

.

'

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.

~

It's Girl Sco11t cookie time again!
The theme this year Is "Rising to
Grea ~r Heights' • ilnd · In Meigs
County, the county chairman Is
Janice Ha~.

Grt.:.U~~k-1

,o!~ f4\'C.I.tt .w.«&lt; ,

'

COOKIE TIME - Troop cookie rallies are · fllembflrs of Pomeroy Junior Troop 1276, !rOOt,
popUlar as the scouts look toward the annual cookie Jeanie Anns, Jenny Buck, Greta RHDe, and Deanna
sale which will bring 25 cents In the troop treasury for ilaggy, and back, Aim~ Mitch, Jennl Werry, Monica
every box sold. The money Is used for special events, Turner, ;JennHer. Newman, Amanda Roush, · lind
l'roop camping and trips. Plctilred at their rally
Tuesday where each girl tasted the cookies are thes«:

Nancy Baker. Janice Baggy, troop leader, Is the
ci)Uitty cookie chairman. Orders wDI he taken from
Jan. 21 to Feb. 5, with delivery In March.

Tax

purchase of prograin and resource for the required bond and ipce!ltive
maten.JB, silch as tents, . We . program.

Jackets, sports equipment, tlln\
Whllethesroutstakeordersfrom
strips, and · books: as well as .Jan. 21 through Feb. 5, they do not
· thivugb support sefvlces of the. . collect money untll the cpoktes are
H
dellver~. March 7 to 18•.
s••
........

'l'roops use their profits l&lt;)'fl!lance

Girls In the Black Diamond
Councn of which Meigs County 1$ a
part wlli begin taking orders at 4
p.m. on Jan. 21 and .will continue
through Feb. 5. Tile sate price
again this year wlli ben. 75 per box
and there are 9even llavors from
which to chOOSe.
The Girl Scout cookli! sale Is a
major source of funding for Black
Diamond Couilcn with the profits
helping subsldlze summer day
camps and also provide part~of the
financial assistance to girls who

activities they plan for themselves
c1ur1ng the year. Many ioeat girts
spend weekends ;tl the Center of
Scle!lCe and IndustrY In Columbus
and the cook.le money partially
fundS. the trips. Troop camping
trips and spectat tocat events are
also many times funded through
the cookie sale prollts. '
the $1,75 per .boX paid by
purchasers, 73 cents goes to' tbe
cook!e company, 76 cents to the
:Black Olamond Girl Scout Counctl,

r;:=======::::::::::;

·

•

.

Shaeffer, trained by the

lnler1lal Revenue Service, will be
.staft!ng the counseling desk from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m . Appolntmen~ for
be made by contacting
service
Leafy Chasteen at the center or by
pljonlng 992-2161.
· Tile · Tax·Aide/ TCE . service Is
designed to help older taxpayers
understand the various tax forms
and take · advantage · of special
provisions In the tax laws for
retirement Income. ·
Counselors are advisors who

OPEN 9-5
REST OF THE WEEK •

have been Specially tra,ined b)! the
· .IRS to prepare returns for older
taxpayers. Tax·Aide Is comrrnmlty

ANN'S
c· A.K.E DECOR.ATING
SUPPLIES
Tu. pp. ers Plains

~25::cen:ts~to:th:e~tr:oop:~·a:nd~o~ne;·ce;·;n;t~~~·~~~~~~~;~

otherWise
be unable
to ..·
. mlgltt
participate
In Girl Scout
Pl'OI!l'ams.-

service .program of NRTA-AARP,
the nation's largest organizations of
older Americarls.

returned to troops through maintenance of carrtpbig fatUities, train·
lng .courses for adult volunteers, ~,

EXCAVATING
-Dozers

will

GUN SHOOT

Bashan Building.

SERVICE

EVERY
SAT. .NIGHT
• 6:30 P.M.
facto!Y Choke 12

985-3561

st. Rt. 124 Pomeroy., OH

AUTO&amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .
Also Transmission ·
PH. 9.92-5682
ot 992-7121·
3·24:tfc

Preceptor Beta Beta
A Christmas brunch for members
of Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma P hi Sorority and .their
husbands was held a t the Meigs Irtn
recently .
E ach of the meml:ler s was
presented ·a necklace by Grace
Eich, sponsor. Husba nds rece1ved
boxes of cand y.
Attending were Mr. a nd Mrs.
Edward Eaer, Mr. a nd Mrs. Virgil
Erown: Mr. a nd Mrs. AI Crow, Mr.
~rid Mrs . Bob Freed. Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Karl
Krautter, Mr . •and Mrs. F e rma n
Moore , Mr. a nd Mrs. Don Mora. Mr.
and Mrs. George Morris, Mr. and·
Mrs. David Ohlinger , Mr. and'Mrs.
Tom Rue, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Rupe, Mr. a nd Mrs. Wiliam
Swatzel, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Theiss, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thomas,
(14r . and Mrs. Ha!'Vey VanVranken,
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Walton and
Mr. a nd Mrs. John Werry .

Chester UMW

Goldie Reed, Jim and HelenQuivey ,
and Rolland and Doris Eastman
taking part.
..
.
Refreshments were served by the
Rock Springs Grange with Colum·
bia tose!'Veat the Marc!) meeting.'

Shrinettes

A school of instniction to beheld in
Athens on Jan . 18 was announced
when the Pomeroy Chapter 186,
Order of the Easte!Tl Star, met

The annual holiday dinner party
.of Twin City Shrlnettes was held
recently at LaSalle B2staurant.
After the dinner the group went to
the decorated home of Mr. and'Mrs.
Jarries Clatwortby for a social hour
a nd refreshments.
Attending were Donna and Guy
Morris, Mary and Tom Bowen,
Mary and Walter Grueser, Beulah
Ewing, Cora Beegle, Laura and D .
A. Byers, Shirley Beegle, Jean
Moore, Gertrude MitGhell, Carolyn
Dailey, Edna and Arthur Slusher,
Emma anci Jim Clatworthy, Paul
and Pat Barnett, and Kathryn
Hysell.
.
)

Pomeroy OES
.

Tuesday
Temple. night
· . at the Masonic
·
Pam Massie, worthy matron, and
James Soulsby, worthy patron,
Rreslded with the sunshine offering
being tafsen by Kathryn Oliver , and
Chloris Gaul, conductress read the
landmarks.
Obligation wa s &amp;~ven by Soulsby
who also presented a 25 years pin to
Mrs. Oli•Jet.
Mabel . Goegleln
reported on 'c ards sent to shutlns.

. 1 LB. SUPERI~R VACUUM PACK .

Pomona Grange
A request for old hearing aid
batteries was made by Elizabeth
Jordan at Meigs . County Pomona
Grange meeting held at ROck
Springs Grange Hall recently.
The 45 members attending were
advised that annual Inspection will
be held In May. Arth\lr Crabtree,
lecturer, conducted the literary
program using the theme "The
Challenge of a New Year." He had
several readings and a truth or
consequences game with Bob and

4-H news notes
The E!ght fs Enough 4-H Club niet on Dec .
14 at the Chester United Methodist Church
with eight members and two advisors in
atteOOance. .
·
Gift !terns were made by the members
·were exchanged. DeCorative bells ffi!l,de .of
gum baUs Wf'n' hung in the church windows
by the members.
·
· Trlsha Spencer was In charge of rPtresh·
ments and she served cheese ball, mars luna!·
low treats and punch. The next meeting of the
club will be Jan. 11, frorn6 to 7: :llp.m.At thai
ilme snowflakes wtti be made outotpeiOn and
Jallet Koblentz wUI give a demonstratlOn on
hOw to mane piCtures. - Susan WoUe,
reporter.

1

CAKE DECORATING
ClASSES STARTING SOON
SIGN UP NOW

o

0 0 0 0 0 I ....

0 0

Ill. lEU.QUEER ·

•Wu~Ro!lilh-

w!:r."~..i:'." L_

· •Drven """""'"" ·

Part Garman Shephard 3

puppieo. Call 614 · 246 ·
,9.277.

PART$.ond SERV~~·tlc
Newspaporstci'glvoawoyto
_ _._..:..._ _ _ ___._. any Qrgai'lization or individ1 ual Wh_o wou'ld like them .
Lots and lots . Call 986 ·
4327:

J.3.l mo

Kitchen Cabinets -l!oof·
ing - Siding - Co!lCret. e
Patios - Sidewalks New Constiuc:tion -

•Gutters
•Downspouts
•New or Repair
•Painting

Re-

modeling ...,. Cu~orn Pole
.Bams. '

CH~:~E~J:Y.RE

· FREE ESTIMATES

Roofing &amp;Siding Co.

Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263

Route 1

Long Bottom. OH. 46743

9B6·4 t 93 or 992·3067
.
lHO·tlc

J.l4.ijc

ONE cutelltlle puppy, 304 ·
675·21 08 .
AKC Wollt Highland white
female,

Terrier,

spayed ,

304·675·4114.
FREE block &amp; white call,
304·675·5150.

6

lost and Found

LOST Manilla envelope With
personal,. papers . Rewafd .

Call 445 ·1279 or
4060 .

446.

MARGARINE

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

Licen,ed Ohio·WVa.

_
1·,,·-···,,...._,"'_"

11.1-....e•

I

,,....

,.

'
'•
'

CHOCOlATE

.....""--.,
, . .. . . . , .. Do,

POT PIES

vs

.Ctlllord Longen-. et al
Derendentl .
PurSua'n t to an ORDER OF

12 OZ. PIG.

•••••••••••••••••••

2/894

10'12 OZ. CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN

NOODLE SOUP .... ~ ........ 2/69'
4 ROLL PACK GENERIC

TOILET TISSUE

'

• • • • • • • • • • lEi·•••

894

30 COUNT JUMBO

BOUNTY ,TOWELS

Two different shun forms and new deductlona make
shon form filing more complicated this yaar•. Our
preparers ~now the naw t11x laws and fonils. We've
s.t udied them for months.
·

••••••• .RP~~ ••

994

15 OZ. LUCK'S

PINtO BEANS ~ •.•. 2/$1.15

OPEN WEEKDAYS .

15'12 OZ. CHEF-BOY:AR·OEE

9:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 9:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.
PHONE 992-3795

PIZZA w/CHEESE ......s~~-. s1.49
' 3 OZ. ARMOUR

POITED MEAT

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
61 8 E. Mai" Street
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

. •
CAN '
• • • • •• • • • • •• •

2/60¢
;;J.

46 OZ. HUNTS

TOMATO JUICE ~··~ ....w... $J.Q9

-- ·~

S~IFF'S SAL~i
of .Common Pleas.

Meigs County, Ohio caoe No.
18222
.
F.,..,. Bonk -Savings Co ..
.and Mary Lou ~
Plein·

MILK .•..••••...•• ~.~-~ ... bgc CRANBERRIES ... f!~q. . 99'

Two different short
forms this year.
H&amp;R Block can
uncomplicate
them for you.

. Public Notice

. LEGAL
.
NOTICE

. .I.epAL NOTICE

3 lB. lAG YElLOW

~· .

.

Public N!)tice

1.17 CELERY ..... :..... P!t .. 69'

·

•,

SHERIFF'S SALE
COURT OF ·Cj)MMON
PLEAS. MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO. CASE NO. 18221
fMm_.. a.·n k - Savings Co ..
Plaintiff

"'

Charles F.· Johnson e1 al
~endants

Public Notice

The tollow1,ng were received / prepared by The Oh10 Environmental Pra t.ec110n •A-gen cy
(OEPA) last week. Effect 1ve
dates of tmat acton s · and
1s~ u a nce dates ot pro m sed
act tons are stat !II : F1nal act1o ns
m ay be appea led. 1n wnllng.
w thtn 30 days of the Gat e of
th1s na.t •ce. to The EnVIfon men:
tal Bo ard of R ev•E~"N~.Am .' l 0 1.
2 50 E To&gt;M1 St. Columbus.
OH, 432 15. Noti ce Of any
appeal shall be fi led wrth the
d ~r ec t or W1th1n 3 d ays~ Proposed a: t•onswtll become f1nal
· unless a writt en . adjudication
hearmg _ reQI;JCSt IS sub,m itted
w1th1n 30 da ys of th e tssuanc e
d at e: or the d1rector rev •ses/ wllhd raw s the Pri:lp:JSOO actiOn. Any p erson may s'u bmtt
co mme nts and /or 1'equest a ·
mee ting rega rd tn g any no nfinal act10n w1th•n 30 days of
the date tnd•cated . "Act10n." as
used above does not 1nc lude
rece1p1 of a ver if•e:j' oanplam t
If s•gniftcant publl(:' 1nteres1.
ex•st s, a puQitc meet1ng may be
held. As to anv act1on. •nclud,ng
rece•P t of Ve nf1ed co mplamts.
any perso n may obta1n no t1 CC
of further act1 o ns. and add tuona·l 1nfor mattan. Unles s oth erw ise prov1ded 1n not1ces o f
par ucular act1ons. all co mmu n• - ·
cat•ons shall be sent to: Heanng
Clerk. OEPA. P 0 Be• 1049.
Columbus. OH. 43 2 16 Ph
(6 141 466, 60 37 Consut ORC
Chap 3745 and OAC Chaps
3745.47 and 3746~ 5 for
requ 1remem s.
.
F1na1 1ssuance of permtl to
ins tall
Southern Oh 10 Coal Co.
S.R. t 24 . t .25 m1. So o f
Salem Ctr..
Salem Cen ter. OH. Effec tt11e
dai e 0 1/07/ 83
Fac• litv.descnpt1on: Alf
App hca110n No. 06-900
Th1S f1 n al act1on not pre ceded by propo sed acton' and
15 app eal ab le to EBR. Magnette
Storag e-Bins &amp; Dust Collecto rs .

Pursuant to an OROE R OF
SALE 1SsuP-d by the (..:oun at
SALE 1ssue d 1n the above Common ·Pleas 1n' the · abo\'e
named cause. 1 w111 ex pose lor named case. I wdl expose for
sate at PubltC Auct1on on the Sale at publiC auct10n on the.
front steps ofj1:he Cou rt House. !font steps of the Me1gs Coun ty
Meigs Cou nw. Po meroy. Oh to., Court House, Pomeroy, Oh10. at
Bt 10:00 o'clock A:M on 10 ·15 o'clock A. M. on Sa turSaturday. the 5th dav bf day. the 5th day of Feb rua·ry
February . 1983, the foUowmg
1983 . the follow1ng lands and
lar)ds and ten ements. to -ww
tenements. to -w11
Th e followtn g real estate
S1 tuated 1n the County of
Sttuate H'\ th e Townsh1p of Olive. M e,gs ~ 1n the State of Oh•o and
·County of M ~• gs and State of 1n the Townsh•P of Salis bury
Oh 1o. and be1ng 1n Fract•on 36. and bOun ded and deScnbed as
Secuon 3 4. Town.4 . Range 11
fo llows
,
at the Oh10j Com pany's PurBeg1nn.ng at the South l1ne
chase. an d beg 1nnmg at a pomt of One Hundred Acre Lot No.
almos t 1.004 feet South tram
306 and on ·the East S1de ot the
the Northe ast corner of sa1d
Rutla nd and M td dlepoJt Road.
Frac1 10n 36 \hlh 10t:l p()lnt of thence East on the Sou th l1ne of
beq1n ntng IS on the E~ st L1ne of
Lo t No 306 about fl tty-one
sa1d Fra ot• on 36 and at
rods to John Russell's l1ne and
Southwest corner of a 4 50
land. thence 1n a north erly
ac re tract of land . a pan of th e d1rect1on along John Russell's
properw conveyed to Cli fford
line about ten rods. thence
L6ngene ne by deed recor ded W est Parallel w•th the sa1d
1n Vol 236. Page 397 of th e Sou th l1ne of sa1d Lot No. 306
Deed Records a t M e•gs , to the East s1 de of satd Rutla nd
County. Oh1o: th~nce North
and Midd leport Road : thence 1n
along the Eas t hne of sa•d
a Sou therl y d1rec110n along the
Frac t1on 36. 300 feet: (henc e
East s1de of sa1d r.oad about t,en
West 350 feet to _the cen ter of
rods 1o the place ot begtnn•ng .
the publ• c road . t h~Qce Sou' contatntng abou t Three acres.
th easterly along the center hne
more or less
of th·e public road to a P&lt;Mt
hceptmg and re servmg to
'h'htch ,001nt IS due Wes t from
forme r Grantor. her he 1fs and
the place ol be,g•nn•ng: thence
as s• gns an easement to use the
E a~t 190 feet to th e ~lace ol
presen t anveway. whtch ex beg1 nn 1ng.' conta•n•ng 1 85
te nds across the n ortherly
acres. more or less Th1s be1ng a
portion Of the re a! estatP. here1n
part of a 51 acres and l05 rods
conveyed to th E! adtacent lands
tract o f land descr1 bed •n Vo l
of th~ Gran tor Th1 s nght ·of223. Page 207 ol the Deed
w ay $hal l be 1 5 fee,t w tde an d
Records of Metgs County.
shall.ed end Qen erally 7 111 teet
OhiO
on ell her s1d'e of the cen te'rlm e
SubjeCt to the n~hl reserved
of the ex1s11ng r1ght of w ay The
by former Grantors. thetr helfsl
ngh t o f way shalt be used.by th e
· and asS1gns. to use the water
Gra ntor herem . her hetrs and
.from th e well Situated on sa•d
ass1gns. 1n common Wi th· Grantract of land 1n co mmon wuh
tees. and ne•ther party shal t at 111 12. 1tc
these Gran tors. th e1 r hetrs and· any time obstruct the use ol th e
ass• Qns. The nght of the fo rmer
same by 1~1e other
Grantors to use the ~at er from
h-a-nd-;:-iae­
The property 1s ijppra•sed at 1-::-::-:M-;:-isc-.-:M-:a~r-c7
the w elt , shall cease an d
S35.900 00 and cannot "be·
term1nate• when the pub li c
sold for lesS th an two -1h1rds of 1--~---:-:-'-­
water suppl y 1S f!vada b!e to the
t,h e appra 1sed pr 1ce.
property descr1bed m deed
Terms Cash •n hand
recordeQ 1n Vbt 223. Page 207
JAME S J. PROFFIIT
of the Oeedt Record s at Me1gs
SHE RIFF
County. OH1o No new users of
Metqs Co uhty
wAter from the well VVIII be
(1 15 12. 19. 3tc
perm1tted 'w•thout the consent
of the former Grantors and
these Gra ntors. th e1r h R1rs ~ an d

SPACE HEATERS
30.000 BTU .
90,000 BTU
150,000 BTU

1. '·

Get two greot ta!;tes in our Fish f. Chic;:ken -\
Ohmer. Each dinner has a crispy f[sh fillet
and two tender whit.emeat Chicken Planks:'\
served with fresh cole slaw and golden fryes.

WINTER CLEARANCE
SALE CONTINUES
NATIONAL ADVERTISED B.RANDS ·

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA.

SAVE

The pr operty ts appratsed at
S33.900 .00 and cannot' be
sold for less than two -t h•rrJs ot
' th e appra1 sed prtce.
Term s: Cash 1n hand on day
ot sal e,

JAMES J . PROFFIIT
SHE RIFF
M e1gs County

3cc

Real Estate-General

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

COUNTY: MEIGS
PUBUC NOTICE

SALE ON.

.

Auction every Fri. n•ght 'at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads bf new
merchandise every week .
Consigments 9f new and
u~ed merchandise always

li · ~~NN~. tv• c •ll-

CHEESE ........ rM. •.• 51.69 ONIONS ...........liM .. 6~
QUAllS Of BROUGHTON'S

PH. 992-6342 •
317 N. 2nd
Middleport

Prices Start At

5199.95

··"POMEROY
LANDMARK

VINYl &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
olnou!ation

· VIRGIL B. SR. '
216 E. 2nd St.

oStorm Doors
.Storm Windows
ofloplocement Windows

Phone

-Roofing
FREE ESTIMATI!S

1-(614)·992-3325

PH.

More or
bedroom

100xl19: carpet, ll!nge, retng·
erator, disposal and furniture.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
. SIDING

Excelent Cond Only $11.900.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Near
Pomeroy stores. Small lot 3 .
N()W $13,000.00 -

'.
'

"Beautiful, Custom

Built Garages''
Call for · free sidi ng
.
949·2801
.9 49·2860.

FARMERS - 80 acres oear
Racine. Lays well for crOjJS.
gQ«Xj 3 bedf110m oome. A
cheap place to live.

No Sunday Calls
3"1 Hie

Sale
&amp; Auction

Antiq._.es of all
kinds. call K·a nneth Swain,
446 ·3169 or 266· 1967 in
the evenings.
-

· &amp; Ga~ps

&lt;Aluminum &amp; ~nyl Sidings

15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583
or 992-2282

11 · \1 -tl c

n6·Hc

. MANLEYS
TRASH SERVICE

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes start·!rom 12'xl6'

Weekly trash pickups in
Middleport, Bradbury,
and Lea.ding Creek Area.
"You Call, We'll Haul."

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up

Io 14'x36'.

' Buying Golc;t. Silver. Plati~
nu~. old c~ins, scrap rings
&amp; s•lve.r were . Daily quotes
available. Also coins &amp;: .coin
supplies for aale. Spring
Valley Trading . Go.. Spring

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

PH. 9~2-3194 or

Rt. 3, Box 54 .
Racine, Oh .

992-3305
No

. Ph. 614·843·2591

Sunday Calls

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co .. :. · .

Bill Gene Johnson

445 ·0Q69

'

.

1

Wanted to buy Square Dane·
'ng ~utfits. All sizes, men's
and women's. Call 446.

4537.

Insulated Dog Houses

· I0-6·tfc

1'5-1 mo.

pay cash for uSed
mobile homes. Damages.:
repossed or - insurance
claims considered . Call446 ~'

Will

0175 .

Olc;t stoneware jars, jugs·;
crocks &amp;. milk pitchers, als t.;
old wicher baskets. Call

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Now .Accepting New

OPPORTUN(lY - lld country
oome and 2 acres near Meii!S
H1gh. Rural wa~er. bam and
pasture. $14,000.

AUCTION
J.D. 450 BULL DOZER
INTERNATIONAL 3400A
BACKHOE
INTERNAflONAL 1600 ·
DUMP TRUCK
10 ION LOWBOY TRAILER

RACINE - Modern one
bedroom home. Gas furnace,
bath, lot 62xll9. Only

$14,500.

liiE SEU 0000 HOMES AT
REASOIIABI.E PRICES.

THE PEOPLES BANK
OF
. PT. PLEASANT

Housing
Headquarters

10 A.M.

JAN.

Real E.tate - General

Clients
Low Rates
15 Yell$ Experience
All Wolk Guaranteed
To Be Done Right and
On Time
CALL 992-6273
or 992-6206
12/~/ i

Buy raw fur and befit hide's .

George 8uokley, 614-6644761.. Weekdays 6 to 9.,
weekends 12 noon to 9PM.
dear hides and ginseng and
trapping supplies. Rt. 2,'

For all yo11r wiring .
needs;
lurnaces
repair ser.v ice and
installati~Jn .
.
Residentia 1
&amp; Commercial ·
Call742·31

mo.

BOGGS
.SALES &amp; SERVICE

3 Announcements

u.s. Rt. so East ·
GUysville, otlio

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm EquiP,ent

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

SWEEPER .and sewing ma ·

Farm·Equipment
Parts &amp; Ser~vice

Georges Creek ild.
4411 -0294 ..

t ·3·1fc

NEW LISllNG - MIDDLEPORT - Good starter home - cute 2
bedroom, one floor plan home'Wilh hookup for wood burner, gas
heater, dinio~ room, utiity hookups. Chaio tink fence around lot
Some insulation. $24,500.00.
,
NEW LISfiNG- IIDillEPOI!f "- BeiutihJ new carpet in tllis 3
bedroom home. witl1 prage IIIKl worksliop ·in basement Central
air - Willi mainillined 81l11!ril!r. l:loi location. Just $25,900.00.
MIDDL£POIIT - 3 bedroom home, quiet street new forced air
~ f~rnace. Hardwocxf fleor.l. 50'xl32' lot Just $18,900.00.
1

LETART - Owner wil self this property seveial ways! ~ acre lot
wi!h one bedroom cottli!! - wei maintllined beautiful 3 yr. old
double wide - liiUSUil features, 3 lledl'OOrns, dining room, 2
large baths, fireplace, carport, melal ~1111! buikli(lg. Buy all aAd
{el1t !lie cotla!l1l. Buy ct(lage aAd lot for $15,000 ~ Double Mde,
cai'oort and lot for·$32.000. Mow double wide, carport from let for
$30.~. Cal for' shiMilti . . · .
.

RAC.INE .:...1211 fixed rile i-VA or f.HA'on this beal4ilul 3
bed mom spltleYel home wit~~ I~ baths, fully insulated, ps forced
air, palio, carport summer kilthen, rec. room, nice moderJj !citcl1en

firelllace. Outstanding

at

PLA$TEA CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE .
Chock Our Spec:ialo For
The Morith of JonUOfY

DABBLE SHOP
251 l'z W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH.

IUI.toll '

. 1

.

8EDS·IRON. BRASS , old
fumiture , . gold, silver dol· _.
Iars. wood ice boxes, 1tone .
jars, antiques, etc ., Com"'
plate households . Write: ·

M.D. Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Oh. Or 992· 7760.

Wanted To Buy:Several co!
pies of Edgar Ervin ' s 1949
History of Metgs County,
Please quote price and con.
ditiQn of book . Box 146,

Pomeroy, Ohio. 45769.

Help Wanted

Licensed Admihistrator fo~
100 . bed skilled nursing

home in Southeast OhiO. ·
Salary comensurat8d with ,
experience , Send resume to

SHMC, P.0 .8ox 1088 Gat·
lipolis, Oh 46631 .
'
DIRECTOR lor Shellored

INCOME TAX SERVICE.

Workshop, Gallia Co . Board .

Federal · and State income
tiQI. Quanerty reports, W~

fication requirements of the "'
Ohio Department of Mental :
Retardation and Develop- •
·mental disabilities. BA de- ..
gree a must. experience and ~
background in busineu. in- '
du1trlal production lind sa- ~
leamanship is assential. Ap. ·•
plicatlons may be- obtained ~
by writing P.O. Box 14, -:-

· Wll babysit In
~---------' 304·773·6540.

lt:========:j
s&amp;WTV

11

Doc.11. 814·742·2763.

2 forma. Dono by appointment. 814·992·2272 OFIH
Wando Eblin at 4t000 Laurel CAff Rd., Pomeroy.

12·24-1 mo.

I'll. •$-4269 or 98$-4382

lH

an yo nt who k~owa who
ahot 2 goats on the Jim
Lucas h rm Saturday

CLOSED THURSDAY

Dolllt Tilmer .................:......... ,..........,.......... 992-5692

lfALTORs

REWARD OF 100.00 to

THE DABBLE SHOP
OPEN 9·5

· Henly£: C!Nnd, Jr.. GRl ........................... ,..... 992-6191 ·

.

Call

Club. Every
shoot.Sunday
Racinestarting
Gun
1 p.m. Factory choked guns
r.~=======~ Gun
only.

· AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

.

1\thana .• Oh.

chine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
dellver.v..,.,~.. Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Delilef

'.

'T

tu i-e and

&lt;Roofing Work

·PUBLIC ACCOUNTA~T

Ollie• .....:........................... :......................... 992·2259 .

.

Wanted To Buy '.

WANTED TO BUY Oldfurni·

oEtectnc worl
&gt;Custom Pole Bldgs.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

9

614·367-!)138.

8

.... ,,..1 ................. ;.. ,.: ....... ~ ................~~ ... Mf-2110

.

exten5ive

Valley Plaza. 446·8026 or
446 ·8026.

NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom, .
all elec. 1974 Sch~ and lot

LARGE. FAMILY - 3 or 4
bedrooms, ~ furnace, carpet· .
ing, lots of closets. S'Mmming
pool, new 2 car garage and 2
lot nea-r Middleport !Chool.
$51,500.

~tmodeling

35 Yrs..Experience

12·31·1 1110.

bedrooms, city utilities, bath,
furnace, and ·basement

· CONSTRUCTION
New Homes -

NATHAN BIGGS

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992·2174

Welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 275·3069.
-

.ROUSH

RADIATOR
SERVICE
from the Smallest Htilter
Ccle to the Largest !ladiator.
Radiator Specialist

992-2772

equippe&lt;l
all rninera~ls:.·$i9;500liJ,

..

HARTLEY SHOES

COMPLETE

JAMES KEESEE

NEW.

with dishwaSher. Also healalalllr.
$49,500,00.
'

·20°/o .. S0°/o .. 75°/o

304 ~

773·6786 or 304-773·
9186.

121&lt;1-IHW-

30 COUIII flORIDA

t OZ. KRAFT SHARP WEDGE

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WVa State Champion ·A ucti oneer Rick Pearson . Estat8s,
antiqUes, farm, hou~&amp;holda.

.1.1,t .. 5

Fish &amp;Chicken
&lt;Dinner &amp;2.59 \.

\

co.lumn. There wiD . .!;HI no

·charge to the advertiser.

I I

as ~1 g n s .

POMERO.Y, OHIO
PH. $92-5272

does not offer or enampt to
offer any other.thing f9r Sale
may place.' an . ad in this

I

Coun

•

STORE HOURS
: I!ION;·Thurs.-Sat. 9-5
Friday 9-1

ANY PERSON ·w ho hao

.

SLICED BACON .
H) 2.29
HOIIEIIADE
·
$
.
HAM SALAD ............ n... 1.59
ECKRICH
n~ $1.99
PICKLE LOAF
ECKRICH
JUMBO BOLOGNA ...•. n ... $ h89
I . I •• I .

r-;:===========;1

$

..

8 OZ. BANQUET OR MORTEN

· The annual blue and gold banquet
for Rutland Cub Scout Pack 2«1 was
~~ for Feb. 11 at Camp klashuta
when the pack committee met
rec'ently at Salem Street traller.
The committee discussed past
projects and .future activities for the
pack. Parents will be notified of
plans for the banQilet. The next
meeting of the committee will be
Feb. 3 at the trailer.

::
7:;:
22
: :8::.::::;:::=::::::;::::;:::==
4
Giveaway

8

while Ma~l ¥oore reported on
Christmas remembrances. .
A
. commarldry•dlnner will be served
on Jan . 15 and assistance was
requested .
.
. ,
The 'Inspection committee of
Soulsby, Sylvia Midkiff, and Mrs.
Gaul will function at the next
meeting with Lois Pauley to take
blood pressures. Joanne Kautz and
Dale Srriith presented a kitchen
clock. Mrs.KautzandMrs.Masssie
~ll provide pinons next month.

Rutland scouts

"Sholom" ·was the title of the
program for the $&lt;'!Vice of prayer
and self-denial held when Chester
United Methodist Women . met
recently aHhe church.
Bertha Smith and Betty Roush
were leaders for the program with
Mrs. Smith explaining that the
offe ring for the Quiet Day service
will go to the Deaconess and Home
Missionary Pension Fund and the
World of Peace with Justice Fund.
Mrs. Roush explained that Sha ..
1om is a word of greeting which
mea ns " peace" and can be defined
~s cessation from war, friendship
beiV.;een individuals or with God,
conte ntrrient. almost everything
which m a kes for welfare and
happiness.
. The group sang "Ta ke My Hand,
Precious Lord" led by Daylene
Bahr. Mrs. Smith invited the group
to join in a time of meditation atter
which the members brought for·
ward contributions of money to the
worship a rea . Prayer closed the .
progra m .
·
Ninety·seven sick and shu tin ca lls
were re por:ted . Kathryn Windon
read a list of activities performed
a nd contributions made by the
society during l982. Bernice Bailey
tha nked all who had helped with the
canteen at the bloodmobile visit. A
discussion was held concerning
proj ects for the new yea r .
11 was noted that the group has
jelly flavoring and seasoning for .1
· sale. Canned goods arc still bemg
collected for the food bank.
New officers for 1983 are Mildred
Gaul, . president; Kathryn Mora,
vice president; Bett)i L. Moore,
secre tary; Ma rilyn Spencer, treas·
ure r ; Ka thryn Ba\lm. program
resources; Altona Karr. Christian
personhood; Bertha Smith. suppor·
tlve community; Ethel Orr, Chris· ·
ttan socia l involvement; Helen Wolf
and Daylene &amp;\hr, Christian globaJ
concerns; Jean Roush, Ethel ' Orr.

income tall!.' service. Feder•l
&amp; State. Wallace Rl.la.,ell.
B111d~ury. Oh . 614 · 992 ·

IIi Courl St.. Pomeruy 1Ohio 45769

Meigs club members gather ·for meetings
Ruth Karr, Jackie Frost. commit·
tee on nominations; Esthe r Mays,
Clara Conroy, Eva Hollon, mell'l·
bershlp; Elizabeth Hayes, Marie
Probert, Clarice Allen, public
relations; Betty Rolish, assistant
:;ecretary; aJill Kathryn Windon,
assistant treasurer.

Announcements

anything to give away and

All Makes

Gauae Shotg!ln$ Onl}t.

Or Write Dlilly.Sentinel ClasSified Dept.

'•

APPLIANCE·

FIRE DEPT.

H. L WHITESEL

GARAGE

PHONE 992-2156

FOR, FKE~~SUSE"

ROOFING

Roger Hysell

•

'tUT OUT

. RACINE

faces multiple
charges
'.
.

The Daily Sentinel

I

PULLINS . .

An ·Income tax school for area Getting The Most From YO\Ir
farmers
be held Tuesday' Jan. · Records; Review of ACRS (Aceel·
18, from 10 a .m . to 2" p.m. at the
erated Cost Recovery System)
-Trencher
Meigs Inn in Pomeroy, according Depreciation; "Expensing"; ln-lllater
to John Rice, County Ext~slon V.e$tment Credit; and New Tax . ~Sewer
-Gas .Lines
Agent, Agriculture.
·Law Changes.
-~eptic Systems
Subjects to · be. cove red ·Include:.
Everyone Is Invited to attend:
LA~GE or SMALL JOBS
The ·onlY costs lnvqlved will be ·
Middleport tnotorisl ·
PH. 992' 2478
lunch which' .s hould be around $3. ·

Money re&lt;:efved bytheCoimcnts

3

l';:::::~::::=;:::::;r;::::::::::::::::::~::=:::;::;~::=::~

-Bac:khon .
-Dump Trucks
-Lo·Boy

Bruce H. Gheen, MiddlePOrt, was
cited for driving while ln(()Xlcated . ·
and driving while under sus!Jenslon
following an accident on North
Second Av,.. at 1:45 a .m. Tuesday.
Middleport Police ret:~Prted !hat
Gheen struck a utility pole on North
Second Ave. ca.ustng extensive
damage to the vehicle.

.

·B usiness Se:nices ·

Farmers ' income tax session set

can

.

Rt 7

the elderly

Center, Mulberry · Hts.; Pomeroy:
from Feb. 1, through Apr!) 15,11 was
announced.
·
Tax·MierrcE Is a tree .Income
tax c61111setlng service tor older
persons sponsored'by the National .
Retired Te~hers Association and
the American As,soclatlon of Reilred Persons In cooperation with

111e rns.
Francis

CLOSED SUNDAY,
. MONDAY, THURSDAY
MORNING AND SATURDAY

or

counse.llng for

will be offe1ed at the Senior Citizens

The
.

· Tax· counseling offered for .elderly

"

.

Ohio ·

my

homo.

of

MR · DD . Mullt moetcerti· •

Song foot Jan.22, 7:30p.m. Cheshire, Oh 45620 or col •
•
&amp;IIv•r Run Fr•·Wll Boptlat 814·367·Q102.
Chun:h. Slngort· The Unroe
Family, Tho Gobrlal Quortet. ~---------------'Rock Drummer wanted. :
LONG 1 DAY SALE JANU ·
ARY 22, 0 &amp; 0 EQUIP·
MENT, ALBANY OHIO.

Must have own kit.

Cali

~

814·245 ·9303 osk fO&lt; Tim t
Or Kevin .
•

.,

driver wanted· or sell •

a.ester, Ohio

Call446· 1279or, t.

&amp;--·
-·-Olio•
Dowayne Wille,..

HAVE FUN paying your •'
Holldoy blllo. Sail Avon and : '

Alrriok••dmodela

earn Qood ••• , mHt nice ·a-

poop to. Coli 1114 · 843 · ' ·
2982, 614.·388·904&amp; , 81.4· , •.
992-3899 .

Hou• calli ond ohop

·~""-

f

..

,.

�:

12, 1983 --

!P~a!g~e~~~~O~~T~h~e~D;a~ily~Se!n~t~in~e~l::~~~~~~--::--------~~=i~~~~~lr~~~Oh~i~o~~~~:;::~~::~----------~~::::~r:~======1:2:,:1:9:8:3
·
44
KIT 'N'

11

Help

Apartment
for Ren t

They'll Do It Every Time

NHd lady to live In with
elderly lady. Coli 614·256·
1 690, s alary negot iable.
P1 rt

t ime

61 HouHhold ·s oods

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTM'ENTS (Equol
Housing Opportunity! hoo .1

bttdrQom ap~~rtmenta. rant
atartJng et t157 per month.

ma intenance

wo rker f or Syracu se Water

Coli

S yllem . Appro ~ti mately 30
hour monthly at $4 .60 per
hr. S end ' appliCatio ns. including e~tperi ence and referncet. to Board of Public
Affairs, P.O . Box 323, Syra·
CUIO, Oh 45779 .

446· 27411

or

l•vo

meaaage.
Unfurnished no children , no

peto, f150 per mo. piuo

utilitiea.~ aec.
446· 21~9 .

dep. req.
.

eli

Bradbury_.· effic i ~cv apt.,
2nd. floor. adulte only, 729
2nd. AVe., Gallipolis . Cal
446-0957.
Fwnished apt. · 1 bdr .. 920
4tli · Avo.Goliipolls. Adults,
woter &amp; oioctric pd, $200
mo. Col 446-441.8 alter
7PM .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES .
· woahoro, dryoro, relrigoro·
toro, rongoo. SkoODI Ap·
pHonceo, Upper R..._, Rd.,
bnklo Stone Creot Motol.

Sofa. chair. rocker, ottoman, 3 teb..., (extra heavy

73

87&amp;. ·6 pc·. dlnenea . tra., ·

tor . Adults, 8150 month

plus . utilities. 614-3848309 .
Apartmenta.
6548 .

TRUCK IN G. no experience

neceslllry·. For information
call 919.227-6140 or 919 ·
227-6159 . 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Monday through Friday .
Adama Enterprises Inc .

For sale-Repossessed

3 bedroom hou• 600 block
of Third, *200 mo., d8potit
&amp; refenmce required. Cal
446-3497 .

304 · 676 ,

APARTMENTS. mobile

homes. houses . Pt. Pleasant
ond Goliipolis.
8221 '

81 4 -446·
-

6pm, Sat.
446-0322

washer
dryer
81 . . Kemore washer
GE dryer like new
Whirlpool auper Cl ·
pecity washer like new
f130. All guaranteed 30
days . Coli 614·266· 1207.

Sofa • Ch•ir, dinette eeat.
color TV. 2 bedroom suite.
waaher 8t dryer. Selling
cheap leaving ltete. Cell

1~

~

dryer. 2 air conditionera.
.. rge ldtchen with all built tn
epplilnces. with built in
dishwasher. new carpet &amp;
. ootimateo, 446 -3100 or draperies. excellent con446 - 7122, Kotaiic dtlion . 4th Street. M•aon,
Landacaping.
WV. 304· 773-5713 oltor 5
Special Window Tinting.
Auto, reaidential . commer·
dal • R.V. windows. Free

81 4·643-21144.

2 bodroom 1Ox50 . Adults

only. Brown'a Trailer Park .

tWM INA

!IUT THE MONK!&gt;
IN THAT PLAC!:
TALKED. THEY
WERE Ffl: IENDI.y,

PLA CE I.IKeTKiS.
ONC!; . i/IHE'N I
AUDITIONED FO~

we GOT ALONC&gt;

''THJ TEN COM+t!INP-

SO WHY DON' T WI! TAI.I&lt;. T .
'feS, WH Y NOT~ YOU STAilT.

~lt-..:.T.:.;::4L_I&lt;_!...-~

Queen size waterbed like
new with pad. lfhMII •
pillows, 8400. Coli 614·
387-7452.
18 11. Low boy 2, oxie traHer

and a new 1 ~ 3

HP Myefl

pump '&amp; tank Iilla now. Coli
448-7504.
Firewood, $311 . truck lood.
$86 .. a cord. Spfit and
delivered. 1114·843· 3603 .

57

A(II)(lll]

1

ln:::.~:~t•

NOTICE DF PUBLIC SALE
The .following doocribod
item wilt ··be offered for
public 11io to tho hi~heot
bidder on tho 24th dov of
Jonuory , 1983, 11 10:00
o'clock AM.
1 Lowrov Gonio oreon moclol
TG44K ond bench. Bole of
tho oecurity listed e - wHI
bo hold on tho promiaas of
tho City Loon ond Soviftge
Company. 358 Second
Avo., Gollpolio, Oh. Torms
ol ooie: Cosh. S.llorrONrYn
tho. right to bid ond tho right

Firewood delivered ,UO. o
cord . Cool delivered 846.
ton . Call Tom . Hookino 614'
949 · 21 10 or 614 -742 ·- to r.-t~t lny end 1111 bide.
Prior to tho doto of 11lo,
2B34.
errangementa mey be mada
G.E . No !root relrigorotor; 2 10 inspect this merchandiH
chaira. kitchen teble &amp; by coiling 4&lt;48· 1973 bo·
chairs, end tablea. 814-992· tweon tho hours ol 9:00AM
end 6 :00PM .
8881 or 614· 992·5017 .
FHzpotrick Orchord. Stor·

8 pioco ludwig drum 101
includ.. all cymbals end

atanda. 11 &amp;00 firm . Phone
304-675-5295 . '

.. -.. ·

BUILDING MATERIAL. Flot

metal

sheet• porcalan -

:1.00

enom"! c011ted, 4ft. by 8ft.
thru 4ft. by 1211.
to
19.60, odd oizoo 3.00 to
• 15 .00. 614-867-3085.

MinerovHie , Oh . 814· 992·
3324 .
58

Pets for $ale

Nice 3 bedroom mobile
home near Hanisonvlle. Un-

1---- - -- - -- •:

Used

Auto

QUIT MOPIN6!

'r

AM·FM Dollun PU rodio,
ioto modtl Chevy Dollun PU
bod, 8ft , otool flotbocl. VW
15• snow tir.. • wheolo •
other 1II' tirll, II holo mag
whHil lor PU'o, Mlllor'o

~'1, I'l-L BE:T I.DTS OF PfCA..E:'~
AlaSTRI~ Ra3ABI.'I ~I..'I W,
H~HA,~ 1 HA-~A.1D,~­

; ·

•
•

~

HAAAHAHAAAHAH.A.HA .•.

'

Parte·. :•

Ademoville·Horrioburg
Coli 614-245-8102 .

tion'

Rd . ·:
,

(1) ESPN SportaCenter
(I) Andy Griffith
Cll
Family Feud
(I) Buolneao Repon
@ Hhch Hikers Guide/
Galaxy
D
(jJ
Entertainment
Ton!llht
· ·
8 :00 II (2). f1) Reol P-Ie To·

'

a ())

--~~--~~------'
79 Motors Homes

- --------- .
S.

1973

cam~r

Campers

Bononu

30

'

lt.

treiler Park model.

Con bo ' " " Wodneldoy
Jon. 12. 1983 ot Southern
Voloy Mobilo Homo Pork
Chuhiro , f3,000.

'

,
.
•
·

night's program features a
convention of college cheer·
leaders, a pianist who performs in a van and a profile
of a narcotics agent. (60
min .) _
Ill MOVIE: 'BHe tho
Bullet'
())I Spy
til NCAA Bnketboll:
Mlnneootoo 11 Michigan
(I) MOVIE: •The Reven·

•• CHI LOHOOO 15 A·
PIFFEREtiT COUtiTRYI'IE'RE Oi'ILY 155UEI/

TEW"RMY

1979 MotO&lt; homo, cloon, ·
low mileage, Mlf contaiMcl. :
outomotic, 8 trock. 304· .
882-2730.

l'tj~ ~Tales of the Gold

----------~------- ·

________ ,
81

MB Ford trl01or. f1,300.
Call 614-388-9818.

Home
Improvements

•
• '&lt;

textured ceiUnge commer·

Uveltock

. ciol ond rooidlentiol. lrw
eotimotas. Coli 614-256· •
·..:
'10 Cowa 6 1 bull for aale~ 1182.
Hetivy Springera mhr;ed . Call
PAINTING · Interior ·•
446-0871 .

.

- -- - - ·lcRegietered Quarter Horse.
Ruth RHYOo. Aloo grodo.

Saddles. bridlea. winter
horae blanketa . Weatern
boots. 814-198· 3290.

exterior. plumbing. rooflnt: .;
oomo remodeling . 20 yro. •,
oxp. Coli 614·318· 98112 . ·:

RIDING horoeo • 10ddleo,
304·11711·2283, 676-21110,
578-2821.

Coil 614· 388-9857 .

2"1.1 v•r old pony atallion.
Call304-875-7772 .

Scotchgaurd . Free eatl - :mates. Low ratn. 814-982~--:·

. -::-:---:-:--::--:::---:-- 64 Hay
Grein

a.

1- - - - - -- - - -

Clover hoy, 1200 wire tied .
12.50 bolo. Jackson, Oh .
Coll814-286·6340 .
Allollo hay 13.00
304 -6711-5064 .

bola.

Hoy- weed frH. 75 oants,
11 .711 per bolo. Gl.,ridgo
Form, Rodmond Ridgo, Gol ·
lipolio Forry. 304 · 675 ·
8970.

.-. ..
'

71

''

a

Marcum Roofing a Spout~ ~
ing. 30 y~~ars · experience. \•
opeciolizing in buRt up root:.:
•

a

GENE'S CARPET ·cLEAN· ,
lNG . D - 1110m cloonlng.'
6309 .

.

.

CARPENTRY, WALL PANELING, CEILING TILE IN· ,
STALLED. Reduced retn

for

months

of

No dol.lbt Pert has a
abollt it! In a biq warrant out
car with a driver! for her arrest!

Jan1.111ry.

Fobruory, Morch. 814·992·
27119.

She's in his
office riqht
now!

St.

RON'S Tolovision Service.
Specloili inlf- in Zenith onol '
Motorola. 1 Ou•zar. anti~
houso oollo . ~II 176-2398
or 446-2454 .

Auto• for Sale

'

19B2 Buick Regal 25,000

miles, A·1 condition. PB.
Ps. cruiae, tilt ateering.
·AM· FM otoro &amp; co10etto
plover. Col448·1211 .

F a K Tree Trimming. stum•

1977 Mercury Monorch 4 ·
dr.. AC. PS. PB . Aaking
12000 . Coli 614 - 379 ·
2320 .
1878 MG Migtlt 42,000
mHeo. Muot aell . Coli 448·
7414 .
1978 · Coowanh Vogo II
opel., oU orginol, ,446·9378.
1974 Novo good cond .•
114,000 mi., new ti,.,. (60'o
&amp; 70'o) olloch.. o18ro
tom, upholoto,.Y ond oxhoult
aylltllm. Prico f1 .1100. Coli
4411-0827.

304-6711-2088 or 1175·

4~80 .

Watar Wollo . Cornmon:lol .
end DomMtlc . Teat holM . .

liP ANP AT :EAt,
1 ALWAYS SAY.

Pumpa Sa'-• end Service. ,'

I . .. 1 DIDN ' T

EVENTUAI.LY.

WAK£ YOU ,
DID 1?

'
&lt;.
ahl. ,~

'

Get yoUr carpet in
ahape . Water rem"oval. FREtt
ESTIMATES. FURNITUIIf; '
CLEANING. CAPTiotiN-&lt;
STEAMER 614·448·2107::
82·

....·:•

Plumbing

a. Heating

Cor. Founh and Pine

7

a.

Electrical
Refrigeration

DOODLE,

------~-.:._:_ ,.

TATER

••

SEWING Machine

IT'S TOO NICE A DAV
TO BE COOPED UP .
IN TH' HOUSE

UPSV-

•.,.'

repairt:;'·'

• HOME LOANS 1211 fixed

rete. Leader Mortgege, 1·
614· 692· 30111.

Bueineaa • Second Mort·
gage lo•n• . Equity Re ~
oouraeo •.. in Ohio 1-800·
·992· 2361 , out of Ohio
•.. 1 ·1113·258·0112.

OPPORTUNITY KNOCK ·
lNG with this 149 ocro

garage, minorell, and Much
more. If you have inter..t in

1 good cou~try farm or
minerals. don't p....up your
opportunltyli . Coli R.C.S .
Rooltoro. 1·1114·1193·61171.

·as

Profeuional
Services

PIAND TUNING &amp; REP,.IR

Coli Ill W.rd lor sppoint·

, ment; Worcl·s KoybO.rd,
4411-4372.

homo, gorogo an ,.rge t;
4 ·aareo. remocloled houoo,
Forma,._ Homa' F,lnoncing
ovailoble. Col J.H. "Joko"
Sa-rvilo, 8711-3030 or
1175 . 3431 .

1----- ---40 ecret. 2 bedroom•. al
olactric,

HUD

Approwd,

44

ApertiJI&amp;nt
for Rent .

~- r•t. HUD
profll'lm ovolloblo. A·OIIo
Roll Eototaa, ·e oral Yuger,
Roollor. Coli 304-11711·
5104 odl711-11381.

F.. niihod opt., U211, utli·
tiao pd., 243 Joclloan Pitt,
Oollipolio . • Adulf•· 441 ·
4416 .m.r 7 p.m.

Daboimon tuil bloodld, pop·
••· bled&lt;. 140. .con ·4411·
1824.
AKC roglotorod Irish Setter
puppl01 no . . 304 ·" 3·
11138.

57

Mualcal
Instruments

=.::":= ·.::.del~

' GillON . Leo Poui . (T-·

CARl 110111 trucko .711
Avolloblo 11 locol govom·
-nt ooln.Coll (relundible)
1·118-N8·0241.

-------------··-

77 CHEVROLET COJ)rlce
Cloooic, 4 ·door. cio.,,
N· ADA lluo look
13. 300.00 ftrm. Col 304·
1711-344&amp;.
1178 M11111ng. 4 cyl. turbo,
4 speed. oir aonclltlon, aun
roof,
1-trocll. :liM·
875·78111.

••fm

1810 Flot X11. Coli 104·

'

.

oomothlne

houlod

away or 10metlling moved7

LOOK AT

JIMS. WATER SEIIVICE.
Coli Jim Lenior, 304· 11757397. '

TillS! 'fOUR
II.II).TEf( DISH
15 FROZEN

1!~;=~:;;;=:;::=
•
Upholstery

.

•

.

-~

WHEN A 140RSE'5 · .

WATER

~OU6H

IS .

FROZEN, l-IE USUALLY
THE ICE WITH

~EAKS

HIS NOSE ...

I MEANT
FO!i:·VOU
TO TRV rr;
NOT ME!

31M·I71·3874.

'·

operiiiiOn

w..t
Pass
Pass

Nortb

Eesl

Soutb

IY

Pass
Pass
Pass

3NT

2~

Pass

I+

Opening lead: +6.

By Qowald JacC!!Jy.

IUid Jamn J•callr ·

The Ladies Pairs was won
by Carol Sanden of Naah·
ville, Tenn., and Betty Ann
Kennedy of Shreveport, La.
Carol arrive in Biarrltz with
her husband Tommy, one Of

ti~•at•"t.f
loy THOMAS
JOSEPH

40 English

ACROSS
. 1 Philippine

§Chool

23Surmount
25 West Indian

.:

·'

,.,

!&amp;Agree

37Reclined
•38Puton
' 39 Shield

..

"

-.

,.,.,..

([)lu!fta &amp; Allen .
CD ESPN lportaCanter

JB

.. .Preecher'
. .. ,.

r

'

RDOYXQWlRERDH

([) Nlghtllno .
(I)BignOff
()It MOVIE: 'liuelt ond tho

--·
'

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

• Moldorne' I Piece .

j1 1 :45 (I) MOVIE: 'Tho Big Knit.'
: t2:DO ([) MOVIE: 'The Extormi·

MOWIIEYS Uphololtry Rt ; ·
1100124 ........
'
~04-1.711·41 S4. ·
lint,

~

+QIO 5

.

TRIITATE
I!PHOLITEIIY SHOP
1 1113 loa. ·Ave .. Goillpolio ·
4411·7833 ar 448-1133. ..

•
I

' PEANUI'S

Wo'll doh. C.I144I·:J119at ,
614-258-1117 ott.r 1 . ·

87

Y52
t K52

tion of al political foes. (60 ·
min.)
border
ClD Eyewitne10 Newo
(llJ lien Off
.
• Benny Hll Show
DAILY CRYPTOQU01E - Here's how to work {t:
11 :15 (I) All In tho FMIIIy
AXYDLBO\AXR .
1 t :30 • (I) f1) Tonltlht·8how
II
L
0 N G F . I! L L 0 W
(I) Anather,'Ufe
(I) Benny Hll Show
· One letter oimply itondl for another. In thio sample A 11
• ()) Hilrt tv . Hort A pi~
used for the th"" L's, X for the two O' s, et~. · Single leiters,
who works lor Jonathan atapoetrophel, tho leneth ond formation of the wordo ore all
tempts to kill Jennifer 10 . blata. E..,h day tho oocle lellen ore different.
·
.
' ~
have Janothan lor herself.
(R) (80 min.l
()It AU In tho Fomily
• lD Nlghtllne
.
CRYPI'OQUOTES

General H11ullng :

,11_7_•_-3_o_8_8_...
_•_4_:oo_._ _

twin 12 Peivy amJI. IIHt •·
efflr. hat o"-r. 304-1711- 1171 CHIIYILIII 1171.
3428 . .·

Nood

brutal

Humming Bird. · the eli mine·

JONE8 BOYS WATER SEI'I
VICE . Coli 1114-387·7471
or 1114·3117-111191 .
;

304~372- 8489.

H AI R
lo o .
I(EMOVAL- Prolooolonol 3 li
ts .. Acreage
Eloau-alyolo · Con1ar, Inc.. 1.~--------A.M.A:..!.!£;;;t~~ Rot· 31 A.,.. ot Rod• - on W. T. I - - - - - - ' - - - • •• ..,.. ,.
- · nn.,
2 bdr. unlurnllhecl opt. in
lloun. ly appointment, W - Rd. Ownor FinOF1C· . Crown City, Coli 814-218·
304-871.e234 .
.
ing ovoileblo. 441·822 1.
6120.

p E R M A N E NT

Hitler'.

~

Ferry.I .:~~=;:::~~E
ond 1 • 2 bdr.

houaa;
madam Gallipolla
2 or 3d ~roolom

Greene uacea the events of

·:

- - - - - --.:' \

79 oc-. 2. borno. omol
23

.

WEST
+843
Y7
.A983
t1074
+K8762
+J93
SOUTH
+AKJ87

m

Scluora . Filbrlc Shop "
Pomaroy. 992·2284.

tQJ6
+A4
.EAST
+Q95
'KQ9 4

volcano
28-ball
(enjoyed)
l7Rosary
and coming comics.
piece
(I) Stoor Time
(llJ Guitar
28 Urge {Scot.)
• In S..rch of....
Z9 Mocha, e.g.
1 1 :00 II ()) Newacenter
.
3Z My {Lat.)
. ()) MOVIE: 'Tho Damned'
33 Gaelic John
(I) D (I) • fBI NIIWII
N~~wt~/Sporti!W""""' 3t English
(I) HHior'o Night of tho
· river
Humming Bird Sir Hugh

Phono 448· 3888 or 448·
4477
; .

84

1·12·83

II (I) f1) Quincy Quincy in·

Brothero
(llJ--ch .
10:15 ()) Sc....,lng Room
.
(I) TBS Evenina News
10:30 ()) Seventh Annual Young
Camedlano Show Alan
King hosts this look at up

CARTER 'S PLUMBING ,.
AND HEATING
'":

NORTH
+10 2
Y AJIOI II

America's top players, their
six children and two -sons-in·
Jaw. Jack Kennedy, also a
life master, and the Kennedy
children didn't get to go, but
Jack was in dally touch by
telephone.
.
These days women seem
to like to play no-trump as
well as men and here we see
Carol at three no-trump.
She won the club lead with
her queen over East's jack
and led a heart to dummy's
10 and East's queen.
East feturned the nine of
clubs to dummy's ace. The
10 of spades was led and
covered by East's queen.
Carol won and led her last
heart. · West discarded a
diamond. Carol played
dummy's ace and gave, up on
hearts. She could only come
to eight tricks even if spades
broke 3-3, ·but she wanted
nine.
·
She led dummy's queen of
diamonds and when West let
it hold, Carol went out for
everything that wasn't
nailed down. She led the jack
of the suit. West took the ace
and led a diamond back. He
was sure that Carol still held
the 10 and three of club$.
Now Carol scored an overtrick , Making three would
have been a near top, mak·
ing four -was a top.

41 Fuss over
knife
5 Levantine
DOWN
vestigates his own chief fire
I Rolls of goods
boat
inspector after the inspector
9 Russian city 2 Bay window
bobbles on inqui,Y. (60 min.)
3 Was poorly
Ill Making Love Better IOim~e
legally
received
Compare your Views with
the experts on this HBO spe1% Londoner's t Danube
cie!. ·
Yeslerday's Answer
tributary
elevatOr
(!) NCAA Besketboil:
14 Understanding 25 Hymn of
Virglnle at North Carolina 13 Coral islands 5 Arctic ship
State
,
15 Vietname$e 6 Michaelmas II Thought (Fr.)
praise
. ()) D (jJ Dynaoty, Bloke's
holiday
daisy
It
Lopez's
%7
Vanquished
conviction that Stephen ·s
7 "Quincy II
29 Jargon
theme
·spirit is COI'Jfirmed and Mark II O'Neill play
co-star
17 Billy takas advantage of Alexis.
30 Banish
song
!Closed Captioned)
8Hank
Williams
2% Pulsale
31 Reswne
(I) National GeogFIIphic
18
Calwnniate
williams
23
Jewish
36 Conswne
Speclol 'Rain Forest.' A
a
Hoosegow
classic
benediction
37 Spanish
close-up look is presented ·
of plant and animal life in en 21 South
11 May I?
Z4 Fondle
article •
.,....;;.......;,....,.,,...
environment that has 100
·African
inches of rainfall. (60 rnin .J
2Z Dithers,
(Closed Captioned)
to Bumstead
· (JD Sovon llricleo for Seven

.1 0 :00

romovol . Coli 675·1 331 .

304·195· 3802 .

f1) Family Ties Mal·

wants to get close to her .
brother.

rienced roofing. Including
hot tar application. carpan.Z
ter, electrician, maeon. c.n ..

'

Women play no-trump

•

1o1y is 'used' by a girl who

RINGLE' S SERVICE oxpo-i:

.... ..

I

II (l)

9 :30

aarvlce. Authoflzod Singw,
S.loo &amp; Service Shorpell

Rutland farm . ~nxioua sel
haa priced accordingly. lncludea rurel home. bam.

Monkey
(I) Seven Brides for
Seven Brothers
(I)
MOVIE:
'Nicholas
Nlckleby'
(jJ
NCAA
Besketboll:
Minnesota 8t Michigan
(llJ National GeogFIIphlc
Special 'Rain Forest.' A
close-up look is presented
of plant and animal life in an
environment that has 100 ·
ihches of rainfall. (60 min .)
!Closed Captioned!
Newt That Rocked '82
9:DO • (I) f1) F..,. of Ufe Blair
decides to do anyth!ng to
• keep her new boyfriend.
()) 700 Club
.
(I)
~ Fell Guy Colt is
rescued from car ·thieves by
some f8f110US Westem" heroes. (60 min.)
Ill()) MOVIE: 'lnveolon·of
Privacy·
lllJ B,..ilian Connection
Brazil's first free elections in
18 years is examined. (60
min .)
•
NCAA
llasketboli:
Virglnio at North C11r0Uno

a

{

STUCCO PLASTERING
63

BRIDGE

·iii

-

•v•·

furnished . 2 children, no
inoide poll. Heat lurniohod .
61 4· 742-3033.

BORN LOSER

a. Accusories

"
--~· ·-~··--· ·

1970 VW good cond., boot
offer. Coilll14· 2411·8322 .

22 Money to Loan

'!Y'
.
Now arrange lho c:lrded lllloro to
·(1) Warnen'o Merathon
form lho iurprlae onawer, aa ""'l· · ~
'Road to the Olympics.'
gaited by lhe above cartoon.
(I) Bob Newhart Show
(I) • (jJ ABC News
Print 8118wer here:
D (I) ClD CBS Newo
(I) Dr. Who
.
(AniMFOIOmorrow)
(llJ Over Euy
7 :00 D (I) P.M. M-Ine
: Yasterday'ol Jumbles: KEYED SHAKY FOIBLE BRONCO
Ill Video Jukebox
·
Anowor: Whalthal dumb skeleton musl have been (1) 1 983 A011 Bowl HIIHeo
A BONE HEAD
(I) Gomor Pyle
~ look No..11, conta~ 110 puzzln, 11 available for 11 .15 poi!IJ*d
(I) Entertainment Tonight
lwam ,umble, olo th6l MWIPIPI'• Boll 34, Norwood, N.J•.07M8. ·Include your
f1) • Chartie'o Angelo
u - . addrMe, zfp codt and make check• Dl!w•ble to N1wapepttbooks.
D (I) Governor Rocke·
feller
(I) State ot State
ClD Eyewl1neu News
(ljJ MocNoll·lelver Report
~Mirocle Revival
Hour
7 :30 D (I) (j) You Asked For It
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
Ill MOVIE: 'The Compotl· .

4

Merchandise

WHEN HIS (!;II'I:L

1N$16TED THAT HE
FiloJ~ A .JO~ ii-115 15
WHAT HE vECIDEC'
TO L.OOK FOR.

w..,...

GO AHEAD. TALK TO ME •••

t860. 304-773· ,6009
.
~~~~==;;==~==~~~~==~~~~====~~~on~d~be~c~k~n.~t,~
~~·~•~n=•=w~.

1----------

apllt. cut to

.CAPTA N EASY

THe PART OF
HEROD.

2,000 miiH. klgpge reck ,

1----------

Firewood

a

,

M/iNT6. • I. WA6
R!ADIN6 . FOf&lt;.

81 Honda CM400. looethon ;

bo~room 1
-.:=========-

length, you pick up. Wo
deli-. Wo ICCopt HEAP
cordo. con 814-258·8245.

.•.,.

W.

~

!- - -- -....::.....::.....::.__

E~M"eka 2 bdr., furnished
riverfront tot. ref .• dep. cai

a. 4

•

O"tiiUytEA. IIIC.

house. 3 bd .rooms. all refin-

USED MOBILE HOME .
7_
11
_ ·- -' - - -- General Houling and Trash 1_5_7_6_·_2_
removet Servic8. Reliable 14x65 TWO bedroom, Holly
end dependable. Call 448- Pori&lt;,' with 100ft. x 200 ft.
3159 oltar &amp;PM 256-1967. lot included. Washer •

D (I) Newacanter
(I) ,..OVIE: 'The Turning
Point'
(I) Tic Toc Dough
(1) Ski School
(I) Corol !lumen
(I)
(I) • (jJ Newo
f1) News/Sporti/Weathor
(I) Firat Day Coverage
ClD Eyewltneaa News
(llJPowemouoe
• Wonder
6 :30 D (I) f1) NBC News .•
(I) MDVIE: •God' o Coun·

·&amp;:DO

t-1 ~

age cleerance 11le. Some
446-8116 .
var•dea aalow.as t2 .25 per
2 room efficiency apt. 1Good
iocotion
$125
mo.
iahed. new carpeting
2!llb . beg . Get youro ·new ot
:304·882
·2868
or
1-614·
New
craftsman
solo
.
To11
through out. Sits on 3 acres. A·Ono Reel Emtn, Carol 992-7206.
our
orchard on St. Rt. 689 .
cushions
and
arm
covers
board plus other fringe be· Located on Boohon · Rd. Ylljjer Raoltor, 675-5104
included. General .. ectric Phono 814-8119·3786.
or
675-5386
.
nefita. Send resume and Excellent term1 to right
UNFURMSHED oportmont automotic woohar runs will 1---~-----­
availability to P.O . Box party. Price reduced to
for rent. 1 bedroom, l')eed' s minor rapair. Call Heavy duty waaher and
4
bdr.
~ouse.
flrapiece.
lull
8745. South Charieoton, $30,000. 30 veer financing
$180 .00 Coli Automotive 614-245- 5685 oltor &amp;PM, dryer·$186 . Heavy duty
available . Contact Bank One . baa.-nent, 3 mi~l Out of Supply, 8 · 6 . 304· 675 · o_n~V1_im_•_we_e-;-h-nd_o_.___ woohor-$65. 30 ln . goo
wv 25303 .
town,
city
school.
CoM
446·
1
of Pomeroy. 614 -992 2218 , 675-6763 .
ronge· t65 . 30 in. electric
1·
1615 or 446· 1 244.
FUU time babysitter needed 2133 . .
.12 cu. ft. Hatpoint rolrlgero· range. eB&amp;. Coli 614-742·
to come to my home during 1- - -- ----,...-FURNISHED 4 room cot· tor, gold guoremaad , e110. 2362.
'
tho day. 1 child . light 6 bedroom . 21h betha. elec- 2 bdr. house unfurnished on tage. adults. no pete, 3!J4· Whirlpool automatic
housekeeping , reference re· tricity, restor•d victorian. Lower Rt. 7. Dep. req, Cal •75 -14&amp;3.
washer. like new. Gu•ran- Firewood for •ate. Split &amp;
quired. Phone before 6, wall to w.-H carpet, ac gas 614-.256-1413.
dlelivared f35 . plck~p load .
tood. Coil 448-8181 .
304·675 -3797 . Alter 6, heat . 304-675 ·6804.
Coll· 614·247-2192 or 614·
Unfurnished
upeteira
apt
tor
Pomeroy-2 bd. room unfur·
949·2029 .
nmt,
goOd
location,
304Nearly
new
GE
harvest
gold
304-676-6803 .
1:;:;:::;:;:=:::::=.==~= niahed houae. t1t6. mQ,
675·
1302.
w01hor
with
mini
waah
&amp;
SecuritY deposit. t1bo. piua
32 Mobile Homes
ooltner dioponoer, 1 8 lb. freezer bMf, all airee. 304utllitial. After 6-call 61 4·
12
Situations
for Sale
. Guaranteed 30 882 · 2537 ·or 304 · 882·
ONE bedroom apartment in
992-2288.
Wanted
50. Coli 814·256- 2213,
Henderson. partially furnished, 304-875-1972.
McDANIEL CUSTOM BUT·
TRI-STATE MOBILE 4 room house. Preferably
CHERING, cutting &amp; wrap·
GINGER BREAD STUDIO . HOMES. USED· . CARS, oduits, no polo. 814 ·992· MASON WV, 2
pi~V· 6 deya • week. phone
Antiques
Art lessons . Joni CarTing- TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS . 3981 .
apar~ment . unfurnithed.
53
3~·882 - 3224.
CH .E CK O.UR PRICES .
carpet. 'air, 81 eo ..plua utili ton. 698, 3290 .
CALL 446 · 7672.
•tieir,
304·882-3366.
6 rooms and bath, unfur·
MAHOGANY SEnEE SET; V. horaepower Myers SubWill care for elderly lady in
niahed, depoait required.
settee, arm chair. lnd mergeable pump and Ot.fdit.
my home . Reasonable rates. CLEAN USED MOBILE New paint and carpeting.
45 Furnished Rooms rocker. Oak cabinet letter 2 v•ra old, excehnt condiEXP,erience and reference.,., HOMES KESSEL'S ·QUAL· 614·992·3090 .
.
file .
Victorian fainting tion. 304-176-2207 otter 6
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES, .
Call304-773-9186.
4 Mi. WEST, GALLIPOLIS. Houae in Racine. 2 bd.room. Weakly rates, ana - peraon couch . Coli 446-1171 or p .m .
446-2573 .
RT 36 . PHONE 446·7274.
fully furniahed . $200 . 860, 2 people f70 . Circta' o
Whirlpool woahar ond dryor.
13
Insurance
month. Deposit required. Motol. Coli 446·2601.
1 yeor old, almond . 1400.
For 11lo or rent 12x60 814-949 · 2801 .
54 Misc. Merchandise 304-675· 76110 .
mobile home, gas heat, rural
Sleeping room $125, utHi·
SANDY AND BEAVER In· water. cloae to town, availa· Small 4 rm ho.uu, unfur- ties ~. lingle male. share
3 drawer buffet tor ..... can
surance Co. has offered bleJan. 1ot. Coii448-1240. nished. Racine Aree. Adulta. both. 979 2nd Ave .. Gallipo· For sale lump coal • fire- bo
ooen ot 2815 Jockoon
services for fire inaurance 1- - - - - - - - -$125 end depoolt. 949 · lio. Coli 446-4416 oltar wood. Zinn Cool Co .. Inc.
Avo. or coli 304-876-2123 .
Coll448 -1408.
cOverage in Gallia County Mobile home &amp;lot• for aale 2619.
7PM .
126.
for almost a century . Fann. 1067 Buddy mobile home
Slobo
cut·up
$151uii
length
home and personal property 12x60, 2 bdr .• gas heat, In Pomeroy-2 bd.room
no PU load, round wood, New aix·piece liVing room
coverages 111re available to rural water, set up with 2 or houoo. Equipped kitchen, 46 Space for Rent
Iorge
truck lood. Coil 614· ouilll, 304-675-6162 oltor
meet indivktual needs. Con~ 4 lots . Call 448 ·1240.
carpeted. forced airfumace.
6:30 l!_.m.
245 -5B04 .
tact Eugene Holley,· agent.
Call 614-992 -2918 .
Phone 388·8690.
Mobile home 1981 2 bad·
room 14x60. with 21 ft. roll 5 bedroom, reatored Victo- Large trailer lot on Buteville- For lale Reateurent · ASHLEY wood burner .
out. extras incl., t14,000 or rian, AC. low heat. beautiful Addioon ·Rd. Col 446-4738 Cerryout equipment. UMd. • 1 110.00 304·1175· 3184.
loweat prices . RADCO,
$3,000 down • take over corpet, $550 mo.. 304· or 446·4286 .
15
Schools
THREE piece aectional
304 ·6.2 3 · 1 378 .
peymanto.
Call 446 -2062 .
675-6804.
Instruction
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
couch. 8 months Old. Phone
Rou11 33, North of 1983 Necchi sewing me· 304-675 -5066 .
78 Nashua mobile home HOUSE Maodowbrookaddi· Pori&lt;,
Pomeroy. L•rge Iota . Cal chine. Dioi·A·Motic with
14x70 oxcellont cond. Cal tion, 3 bedroom•. reftlrence
992 -7479 .
Karate the ultimata In aelf 614-387-7469 after &amp;PM .
free erm equipped to zig ug.
required, phone 304· 675·
defence all private lasaona,
monogi'Bim , over celt . •uw 55 Building Supplies
1542 .
•
Men. women. • children. 1 979 unfumiahed Windsor
on but1ons • moke button
lnatniction thru bleck belt. Trailer with tot . . t 18.500. 4 rms. &amp; bath unfurniahed .
holeo. Reg. price f439.95
Alto available Karate uni- 614-992 · 6345 Middleport. located at 26 Central Ave .• 48
year in cl. .rMce aale 1126. Building material• biock,
Equipment
forms puching and kicking
Coli 614- 385·8918. Out ·ol brick, HWer pipes. win for
Rent
bllgs. and protective equip· Sx2!) . Mobile Home. Remo- Galipolis. C.ll448-1473.
town coli coiioct, trw d.Uv· dows. lin1el1. etc . Ct.ude
. mont. Jenv Lowarv &amp; Aooo- deled . 8800 . 614-949 · THREE bedroom houae for
ery. TheH machine• are Winters, Rio Granda. O, Call
ciates Karate Studio. 143 2646 .
brend new. ule in orQinal 814 -246·5121 .
rent.
nice
location
.
304·
Mica
endloader
digs
8
ft
.•
Burlington Rd., Jackson, 1 - - - - - - - - - - 675-1090.
fraight box .
large bed pick up hauloble,
0h . Col 614 -286·3074 or Good ueed 2 bedroom mooperate youraelf. t90 . per Houoe coel f24 ton. Higher Build your own garage or
614 -384·6160.
bile homes . · Furn;ahed.
born, 24x24. 1695. lumber
day . 304-8911·3841 .
if delh1eNd. Will accept Ohio furnished . Can deliver .
Brown's Trail• Park. Rt. 42 Mobile Homes
HEAP Vouchers. Coli 614- Other lizes. Coli 1 -614 ·
124, Minoroviiie, Oh. 614·
for Rent
255·6118 .
992-3324.
B811·7311 .
. 18 Wanted ~o Do
FkJrida resident desires mature female to care for 10
year' old girl. Room ilnd

EVENING

Motorcycles

~::~~~~!r~c'r!~o:~:l:i. 64 Misc.
up to *376 . Baby . mo·
troues, 826 " us.• bed

quiet neighborhood in Mid·
dlepon. Stove &amp; refrigera-

Vans

Baby bedli,

tion of bedrOom suites,
cedar chests. rockers, metlll
cabineta. 1wlvel rockera.
Uaed Fumiture ·- bookcaae,
ranges, chairs, end tables.
washers, dryer~, refrlgera·
tors and TV' a. 3 mile• out
Bulavllle Rd . Open 9a.m to
6pm, Mon . thru Fri. , 9am to

1/12/83

19711 FORD Van for ·aole or '
trade. aiiO Ford . van Pt~rta "
3~875-1607.
·•

8560. and up. maple or pine
finish. B~nk bed complete
with mattr••••· e2&amp;0. and

fromos $20 , $25, &amp; 130,
king frame $50. Goodsalec ~

WEDNESDAY

•

1978 K· 5 Blo-. 4·WD .~
uc. cond., PS, P8, AM· FM
radio . H. 700 or bolt oHor.
Coli 992·59311.

199., to 1436. .7 pc .• t1 89.
and up. Wood table with aix
choii·s $4211. to f74&amp;. DHk
f110 up. to $2211 . Hittchoo,

fremoo,
120.and
e211 ... Bod
10
t42.&amp;dr.
cheoto,f64
gun · Gun cabinetl, •3150..

•

;

.

U85. to •895. -Tobloo, $46
ond up to •126. Hido·• ·
bodo, U40, a net up to
t526., Reclinoro, t176. to
$360., Lomps from t28. to

t1 96 . 4 dr. cheats.

•
'

phono ,

Sofa a and chaira priced from

aets,

'

An-ow ~

by Frontiorl, t885. Sofo,
choir ond lav-t, 1278.

opringo, full ·or twin , fl8..
firm, $68 . end 118. Quaen

.Television
Viewing

-~

Truch for Sale

-

The Doily Se nt i ne i -- Pag~~ -- 11

MiddlepOrt, Ohio

1971 Dodge 4 wh•l drlvo ;
trud&lt;. Coil 446-7504 .
,

LAYNE' S FURNITURE

8110. Mattrea•a or box

Pomeroy-

•

•

72

1171 Dodge PU 311 Stoond·
0 n1 1 hilt t22• Col 814
;
•
u.
•
3 88·936 7 . .

446 ·7398 .

up to $396 .

1 bedroom Qaraga apt. in

by L.airy Wright

CARLYLE '"

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-

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•

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. Yestenla.)''111(:ryploqllote: INORDERTOOOGREAl'THINGS,
1
'
, ONE MUm' BEEN1'HUSIAST!C.-&gt;-SAINf SIMON

�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel .

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~

•

Wednesday, Janaury 12, 1983

•

- ·Local briefs..•.-- Assault charge brings probation period
Fire loss totaled $1J4,300
The Middleport FITI' Department answered a total of 593 calls
Juring 1982, Ftre Chief Jef1 Darst rej)ortS .
· Among the tota l were 11'7 fire calls and 476 emergency runs. Of
the fires, 30 were structural, 171nvolved vehicles, 15 were brush and
trash, four were mutual aid, 22 weT!' rescue missions and 29 were
false alarms and ser\ilce calls.
. .
Est~ ted los~ for !Ires totaled $114,300 Inc luding $108,600 on
structural fires and $5,700 on vehicle fires. Firemen put In 1,345.9
man!Jours and spent 607.5 manhours on fire training. There was a n
average of 13 men per fire call. All vehicles were driven a total of
13,666 miles for the year.
December calls totaled 45 Including seven fire calls and 38
' emergency runs. All vehicles were driven 844.7 miles In December.

February WIC schedule given
The schedule for r esidents participa ting In the WIC program to
pick up F ebruary coupons at the Meigs County Department of
Health offices includes: Initials, A·G, Wednesday, Jan. 19; lnltials
H·N, Friday, Jan. 21, and O.Z, Wednesday, Jan. 26. Hours of pickup
are 9 to 11 a .m. only. Those who cannot m a ke theappointeQ day are
to pic kup coupons on Feb. 2, again 9 to 11 a.m. only. '

Police investigate nine accidents
The Middleport Pollee Departmenf made 42 arrests during the
month of December, Pollee Chief J . J . Cremeans reports. Nine
accide nts were Investigated; merchant pollee collections totaled
$70; parking meter collections, $365.72, and there were 188 parking
ticke ts wrttten.

Robert L. Kuhn, Middleport, was
and costs, no operators license.
fined on three c:·• rges, Including
Keith Musser, Middleport, and·
assault with a deaJly weapon, and
George McDanJe~ Middleport,
put on six months' probation whe n
were each sentensed to five days In
he appeared In the court of Mayor
jail ondlsorderlyconductcharges.
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Meanwhlle,one personwasflned •
Kuhn was find ,$200 plus costs on
and 19 others, Including seven on
the charge oi assault with a dea_dly · speeding charges and five on
weapon and placed on slx months'
c harges of open flasks, forfeited
proba lion, $50 and costs on disor·
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
derly m a nner, and $50 and costs on
Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday
littering.
Also fined were James D. Priddy,
night.
Fined was Paul Steinmetz, Sr.,
Rutland , $250 and costs plus three
Rutland,$63andcostsonachargeof
days In jail on a charge of driving . failure to regiSter his motor vehicle.
while intoxicated and $50 and costs •, Forfeiting bonds on speeding
on driving under suspension; Bruce
c harges wer;e Terry MsNickl!1.
H. Gheen, Middleport, $350 pius
Route 1, Racine, $48; Gregory A.
costs, plus three days, driving whll~
Winebrenner, Route 1, CoolvillE:,
Intoxicated: Cha rlie Geary, Mlddle$46; Donna K. Hy~ll. Pomeroy,
.P,Ort, $10 "Jld costs . no mUmer, $10
$46; Jeffrey S. Smith, Hartford, W.
and costs. no safety gear; and $50
Va., $43; Leroy A. Johnson, Chester;

W. Va .. $45; Larry Hunt, Columbus,
public Intoxication; James Alief.
$52; and Earl E. · GWlsple, New
Route 2, Racine, $513, driving w~
Haven, W. Va .., $47.
intoxicated; John C. Calllenter;
On the open llask charges
Bellvllle, W. Va., $63, failure lli
foifeltlng bonds of $88 each were · transferhlsUcense; JuanltaH. W~
Allen K Partlow, Pomeroy; Keith
Pomeroy, $63, failure to reg1ster1;
J . Gilmore, . no address; Parrell
Thomas .E. Molden, Pomeroy, 543..
May, Jr., Pomeroy; Larry Richard
stop sign violation; Kelly J. ThO:
Hill, no address; and Douglas
mas, Rollte 1, VInton, $513, drlvlnJ
Rollins, no address.
while Intoxicated; and Wllllarn El',
· Others forfeiting bonds were
Morris, Pomeroy, $513, drl~

r~RI;c;hard;;;:;;:::;::::·::$113;;··;;;w;hll;e;;ln;to;xl;c~ated~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~'

.JANt!AWO&amp;RANCE

CONTINliiES!!

1

Gallia-Meigs CAA meets Thursday
The Gallla·Melgs Communlty Action Agency will hold a special
and organizational meeting of Its board of directors jointly with the
Head Start Policy Councll on Thursday, Jan. 13, at 7 p.m. at the
Cheshire centralofflce.
.
·

OFF ALL

.

2 SALE SHOES

CHAPMAN
SHOES
NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Meigs schools closed Monday

.

Couple applies for marriage license
A marriage license was issued in Meigs County Probate Court to
Jimmie Ray Snider, 20, Pomeroy, and Albena Lynn Richards, 16,
Pomeroy.

Youth meet slated ]an. 19-23

ACCENT TABLES
Quality wood components. 20
inch. diameter. 25 inch height.
Perfect for any room.
Reg. $11.49

BATH SETS

. $919
SALE

. • .

'

·~

.

The board accepted a c ha nge ' Colwnbus on F e b . 14; Gordon ·
order on the renovation project of
Ftsher, athletic director, to attend
. the junlor high school eliminating
the Ohio State Basketball Tourna·
new seating for the a uditorium. This · merttin Columbus on March 25, and
April Smith, Pomeroy Elementary
will decrease the cost of the project
secretary, to attend a n elementary
by approximately $22,00J. The
school secretary conference In
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electrtc Co. was given an easement for
Colwnbus on Jan. - 25. Substitutes
the lnstaUatlon of underground
will not be needed In any of the three
Instances.
cable for service to the high school
and a contract with E. C. Babbert,
Inc, for service on the Meigs High
The board moved into executive
School's aeration system was
session durtng the meeting to hear a
approved. HenryEbllnwasglvena
student expulsion a ppeal and followIng that heartng the board affirmed
eontract to provide transportation
tor a handicapped student ;from
the expulsion action which had been
lakeh by Supt. Manis. At the close of
Rutland to Meig); High School.
· Added to the substitute teacher
the regular meeting · the board
list were Patricia A Chapman,
moved Into another executive
Betty Hutchison and Jelffl'y Werry session to discuss personnel, flnan·
arid restgnations accepted Included ces a nd exempt employes.
During the regular session, Clerk· ·
those of Rita Hamrn as clerk·
custodian of the student activity Treasurer Wagner was authorized
to negot!a te with .a le nding ·Institufund at the high school; Marla
tion for borrowing $300,00J for a slx
Grimes as clerk-custodian of the
·
month
period should an occasion
student activity fimd at the junior·
ar1se
whe
n the funds would be
hlghschoolandDav1dL.Sheetsasa
needed before moneys arrive
substitute custodian .. The student
activity funds are being placed Into through regular channels.
Approximately 40 ,residents atone account in aecordance with a
·new lawand wlli be handled through tended the meetlrig held at the
junior hig h school cafeteria In .
the otflce of the c lerk·treasurer,
Middleport.
Also present for the
Mrs. Wagner.
meeting In addition to those named
Leave requestS granted Included
earner was Asst. Supt. Janies ·
· John Blae~r 'to attend a DECA
'
district chalrpetsi&gt;ns confe~c~ In Carpenter.

'

DELTA ® BY CORONET ·

REG. 18.99 .................. :............... SALE fJ 19
REG· I fl·99 ............................ ..... SALE '9.59
.
REG. 13 .99 ............................ SALE '11.19
. REG. 117.99 ................................ SALE '14.39

PAPER TOWELS
•. 125 Sheet Ro ll
• Soft imd Absorbent'

backmg. Machme washa ble.
Many colors and sizes.

20°/o OFF
RAG RUGS
Assorted Colors and Sizes

REG. 13.49 ................ SALE '2.79
REG. 15.99 ................ SALE 14.79

TOWELS
Bath Towels - Hand Towels .- Wasil
Cloths.
Quality Cannon Royal family.
Large selection of solids and prints.

•
•
•
•

Extra Abso rbent 24 's
Toddler 20's
Form•Fit Tapes
No Pins Needed

WOODBURY

2.0°/o

SOAP
• 3oz .
• Lotion mild soap

YOURCHOitE

• 28 Ounce

BIC®
SHAVERS

8 COUN,
PACK

Protect your furn iture with quality
foam·backed throws.
Sized .for chairs, sofas, loveseats
and hlde·a·bed s.
Solid s-Prints·Piaid s.

.

LIGHTBULBS

CUSHIONS

~

• 40 Watt
• 60 Watt

Sale includes all of our · flloor cushions and toss
cushipns in corduroy, velour and prints.

20%

• 75 Watt
• 100 Watt

Reg. 14.49to 116.99.

SALE PRICES

S3 59 to $}359

F

0
R

LADIES' &amp; GIRLS'

FANCY JACQUARD

Bed Spreads

20%

.

TABLE COVERS
Cloth and vinyl sQuares, rounds, oblongs and
ovals.

.
Some with .matching napkins and placemats.

20°/ooFF
BLANKETS
Electric blankets- Vellux
blankets - thermal blankets - sheet blankets . .
Twin, Full, Queen and King
Sizes.

:

SHEETS
· !o~ . quality Cannon Royal
Family sheets. Solid colors
or .Prints in Twin, full,
Queen and King sizes.

Save2()0A,

2()0/o Off
.,

FOIL

• 100% Acrylic

r'

YOUR
CHOICE

'

'

ALUMINUM

KNIT GLOVES

Our entire stock of' quality bed
spreads including quilted throw
styles and famou.s Washington
spreads.
Twin, Full, Queen and King . .

REDUCED

PINE .OIL
CLEANER

• 8 razor s per pack
• For close comfortable shaves

FURNITURE
THROWS

Save

NATURAL

DIAPERS

'

Save
'

•

DISPOSEZE ®
DISPOSABLE

AREA RUGS

I00% polyester and nylon piles. Rubberized

Meigs board rehires clerk...
:continued from page 1)

SALE STARTS
WEDNESDAY
JANUARY 12TH

2, 3 and 5 !ieee sets. Many different ooicJ's and pnn1s. Mach.....

washable.

Emergency squads have six calls

of Mason County would mean
By JUDY OWEN
m aintenance of the highway would
POINT PLEASANT ,.Point Pleasant City Council revert to the State of West VIrginia.
The state is currently receiving
Monday went on record in opposi·
tlon to a plan endorsed recently by federal assistance in maintaining
the City of Ravenswood to abandon ·· that portion of Rt. 33, he said.
"We are receiving vital financing
· U.S. R t. 33 from .Ripley through
for
a Mason County road ," Wedge
Cottageville, MI. Alto and New
said.
"We would he foolish to give It
Haven to Mason, where it crosses
up."
the Pomeroy·Mason Brtdge Into
Co\lnCil unanimously passed a
Ohio, as a federal highway.
Point Pleasant Mayor J. J . motion authorizing City Attorney
Wedge told , council t~e plan Carroll Casto to draw up a
endorsed by the Ravenswood coun- resollltion opposing the abandoncll calli for Rt. 33 to cross Into Ohio ment of U.S. Rt. 33 In Mason
over the new Ra'(enswood Bridge. County.
Wedge salil he will take the
The plan is being promoted by the
resolution
to other county govern·
Clty of Athens an(! ~ the nnld·Ohlo
mental agencies, ·including the
Vall ey Mayors ' Assocla.tlon,
Wedge said, to open up a direct County Commission of Mason
route from Ravenswood to Athens. County and the town councils in
The mayor said abandonment of Mason a nd New Haven, and urge
them to adopt similar resoluilons.
U.S. R t. 33 through the Bend Area

1

113.49

Admitted, Gail McHugh, Pomeroy; Robert Alkire, Pomeroy .
Discharged, Robert Williams , Roger Bissell, TI.

Council
opposes 33 action
.

Satislaction Guaranteed

11.49 S1andanl Size w/polyfil .•. ..... .. Sale.19.19
Rea.
S1andanl Size WlfOIIII fill ..... Sale 110.97
Rec, 113.99 Queen Size w/polylil ........... Sale 111.19
Reg. 117.49 Kine Size w/polyfil .....•.........Sie '13.99
Reg.

Veterans Memorial information

Slx calls were answered by units of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Tuesday.
At 4: 12 a.m. lhe Pomeroy unit went to theMeigsMemoryTraileron
,Route 7 for Gail McHugh, who was transported tO Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 12: 50 p .m. the Middleport unit took Gerald Overturn
from Bone Hollow Road to Veterans Memorial, and at 1: 41 p.m . the
Pomeroy unit transported Carl Gheen from his Starc:her Road
residence to Veterans Memorial.
1
The Tuppers Plains unit went to the home of Sally Poole r , Pooler
Road, and transported her to St. Joseph(lospital in Parkersburg, a nd ·
a t 9:50p.m. answered a call to Eastern High School for Ray Maxson
who was taken to Veterans Memorial.

GENERAL.STDRES

. BED PILLOWS

Youth week Will be observed a t the Rullimct Church ofthe Nazarene
Jan. 19 through Jan. 23.
. The youth of the c hurch will be In charge of the 7 p.m. services on
Wednesday night a nd on Thursday at 7 p .m . the youth wi~ be calling
on members of the church followed by a pizza party in the fellowship
hall at the church .
A Mini revival will be held on Friday a nd Saturday at7 p.m . a nd on
Sunday at 6: 30 p.m . In charge of the services on Friday, Saturday and
Sunday with be the Rev. and Mrs. William Groves. There will also be
special services a t the Sunday morning services which are a t 10: 30
a.m . The youth of the church cordia lly invite the public to attend .

.

SHOP&amp;SAVE
AT YOUR NEAREST
DOLLAR GENERAL
STORE

Schools of the Meigs Local Sc,hool District will be closed a ll day
on Monday, Jan. 17, In observ~nce of Manin Luther King Day ,

· M~'S, BOYS' AND YOUTH'S

VINYL GLOVES
o 100% Acry 11c pi le-lined

• Leather look vinyl

..
YOUR

CHOICE .
PAIR

PAIR

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