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                  <text>Southern wins;
Eastern loses again

Reds still seek
long ball hitt,e r

Beat of the Bend
Page 10

Pages 3-4

PageS

•

at y

e
Vol.31 ,No. 183
Copyrighted 1912

en tine
1 Section, 14 Pagos
1S Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 19, 1983

Rice pushes for 648 board decision
By KATIE CROW .
Sentinel staff
John Rice, chairman of the Gallla-Jackson-Melgs 648 board Informed
Meigs County commissioners Tuesday he hoped a decision will be made
concerning the controversial report of the Community Services .Review
Group at a meeting next Monday.
·
No decision was made when the board met Monday night.
Rice further said that If a decision Is not made next Monday he hopes one
will be made within a two week period.
Commissioner Richard Jones and Rice agreed It was very Important
.· that the problem doesn't drag on.
·
Rice said it. will be hard to get a vote out ofthe board, but hewasgolngto
have to get a decision.
Also meeting witlj the commissioners were Stu Wilms and Jim Hartzler
of the engineering fln:n of John David Jones and Associates.
Wilms discussed a roadd to the new landfill. A tour of the area was made
Tuesday morning prior to the meeting.
Hartzler Informed commissioners the facUlty plan for the waster water
facUlty In Tuppers Plains was completed.
Hartzler asked commissioners to pass a resolution adopt.lng the waster
water facility plan for Tuppers Plains. When adopted the plans wUI be
forwarded to the EPA. Funding will be available following approval of
EPA Hartzler Indicated.
Hartzler observed that at the present tlnie, It appears the EPA Is behind
the project. He also Indicated that the Tuppers Plains problem was high on
the priority Ust.
Jones asked If nothing was done at this point what would happen.
Hartzler answered by saying the bulldlng ban woold stay on and
Individual owners would receive nothing from EPA but would be under tlie

control of the Meigs County Health Department. He alsO added that the
EPA encourages the health department In such matters.
David Koblentz, commission president, reported he had several
residents from Tuppers Plains wanting to !mow what Is being done.
Jones asked Is there Is a problem who has the final authority? He was
that the final authority would be the health department.
The commissioners did not vote on the resolution due to the absence of
Manning Roush who was unable to attend due to the death of his
mother-In-law.
·Bridge Inspections
.
Also meeting with the commissioners were Phll Roblirts, county
engineer and Ted Warner.
Itobert.s told the board the county highway department has completed It
formal brtdge Inspection and as soon as their Inspection report Is returned
from the state he will start doing another Inspection.
Roberts asked for funds to replace a bridge In Rutland Township on
Leading Creek. He noted the bridge Is over 100 years old and has been
neglected. Total cost to replace the span Is $23,181. The commissioners
approved the request.
A letter was given to Roberis from Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
concerning a guardrall from the bridge on county road 21, In lower
Middleport, to the Middleport Corporation.
Roberts Informed the board that he had made a contact with Ben Tom
regarding material. Weather permitting, as soon as he receives the
material, work will begin on the guardrall. Possibly In two weeks.
Roberts also stated he plans to do some resurfacing on the road from SR
7 Bypass to Middleport Corp.
The road from the Sft 7 Bypass to the Middleport Corp., belongs to the
county and must be.maJntalned by the county.

advised

81~ received
Four bids for an two ambulances for the Meigs County Medical Service
were opened.
Bids were received from RSVP Toledo for two 1983 ambulances In the
amount of $00,850 and from Horton Co., Columbu&amp; for two 1983 vehicles In
the amount of $62,521. They also had an alternate bid for 1982 vehicles. One
In the amount of $28,549 and the other In the amount of $Z7,619.
Braun of Oakwood, Ohio did not submit a bid and a bid from Shoemaker
Ambulance .Sales, Cincinnati, had all specifications enclosed but no bid. A
blank page was found where the amount of the b)d would have been.
All bids were tabled for study by the Meigs County Emergency Service
and the' commissioners.
Franklin Rizer, a board member of the GaUl-Meigs Airport, Informed
the commissioners that he had attended an emergency meeting of the
airport board, noting that a new. radio signal is needed for planes to land.
He said the radio would cost $5,225. He also noted that the airport Is used
dally by Bane Ohio for the Farmers Bank and a complaint has been made
concerning the problem.
.
Rizer hoped that the county commissioners and 'the Gallia County
Commissioners could meet and work out the problem. With the radio out,
planes have to use vision to land.
He was Informed that the Meigs Board will be meeting with the Gallla
Board next week and the matter wlll be discussed.
Wally Bradford of the Meigs County Fair BOard also met with the
commissioners concerning repair ot the grandstand. A general discussion
as held on the rna tter.
'
Attending were Koblentz and Jones, commissioners, Mary Hobstetter,
clerk and Martha Chambers.

Controlling board okays Meigs proJect

Two more Celeste appointees
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Gov. Richard Celeste appointed two
Columbus residents today to posts In his administration.
Gary Holland, 33, vice president of the Columbus BOard of
Education, was·named Celeste's administrative assistant for special
projects.
L. Lee Walker was appolnteddeputydlrectoroftheofflceofbudget
and management and president of the state controlling board. Ms.
Walker Is a partner In the law firm of Epps, Heckman,. Walker &amp;
WUllams.
Holland, a member of the board of education since 1979, Is a former
director of government affairs for the United Way of Franklin
County.
Ms. Walker, former director of the Legislative Reference Bureau,
also served as public Information officer for the Ohio Ethics
Commission.

Board continues report study
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - The Gallla.Jackson-Melgs 648 Mental
Health Board wUI hold a special meeting Monday night to continue
studying a state review group's critical report on the agency.
\
The report called for sWeeping changes In the agency's operation
and the resignation of Maxine Plummer, its executive director.

Reagan helping Sen. Percy
WASHINGTON - To the dismay of conservatives, President
Reagan Is helping Sep. Chari~ Percy raise $12 mUllon for his
re-election campaign while Ignoring another Republican who may
seek the llberalllllnols senator's seat.
Reagan wasllylng to Chicago today to speak at the sold-out dinner
for Percy, the GOP chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, and to visit again a black high school that has fought off
closing 'throogh private fund-raising.
'·
Conservatives are unhilppy that Reagan will not even stop by a
dinner for Rep. Tom Corcoran, a conservative Illinois Republican
who Is considering ru!Ullng against Percy, a three-term Incumbent,
In 1984.

Winning Qhw lottery number
I

CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Tuesday night In the :
Ohio Lottery's dally game, ''The Number," was 855.
In the "Pick 4" game, played three times a week, the winning
number was 3434.
The lottery reported earnings of $633,914 from wagering on Its
dally game. Earnings came on sales of $8'77,175.50, while holders of
wtnn1ng tickets were entitled to share $243,261.50, officials said.

Weather forecast
•
Clear and cold tonight. Low 5-10. Winds variable less than 10 mph.
Thul'9day, partly cloudy and not as cold. High 00-35.
Eldeuded Oldo FOI"eC88It .

Frlda3' Ulroulh Snnclef': .

Cloudy wi&amp;Jo a cJumce ol rain or mow Ulroulh the weekend. Slow
wumllll
with eaf'b'·DIOI'IIIq Iowa Ia theupperteenlto~-­

trend

FridiQ',I'IUII to the upper. to ........ Somday.lflahlla the. to
: IDw •

Friday aad IIIOIIy Ia lbe . .

So..,.
-

r

. -'·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
day executive order.
State Controlling BOard Tuesday ,
"The Ink on the executive order
approved a Natural Resoorces
was hardly dry before. a major
request to use $54,6.ll for the West
agency of state government has
Shade river basin study In Athens
asked for an exemption - namely
and Meigs counties ..
·the Consume,rs' Counsel," Aronoff
Despite claims that Gov. Richard said. "My question Is whether the
Celeste's "Buy Ohio" order was
action of the Controlling Board In
being violated, the Controlling approving any such contract would
Board has agn!ed ·· to let the
be consistent with the executive
consumers' counselhlreout-of-state policy just establlshed and whether
consultants.
this Is going to be a precedent for
The Democrat-controlled panel other agencies."
approved contracts with consulRep. Edward Orlett, D-Dayton,
tants from TelUIS and Maryland said opponents of the request were
Tuesday to help the consumers'
''being little picky .• '
counsel In rate Increase cases by
Orlett said the governor, In
Gerier!ll Telephone Co. and Dayton selecting his cabinet, went out of
Power &amp; Ught Co.
state In some Instances to recruit.
Sen. Stanley Aronoff, R ·
"The order Is not that specific and
Cincinnati, questioned the decision It does not have theforceoflaw ... In
In view of Celeste's Inauguration
my opinion," Orlett said.

a

Celeste's order rEflulres depart- be released to districts which
ments to give preferential consider- provide aid for non-public school
ation to Ohio vendors where systems.
possible.
,
Districts use that money for
Controllers apprcived a $26,901 materlalsandserv!ces-textbooks,
consumers' counsel contract with school nurses and the like - for
Charles Land, Round Rock, Texas, puplls in the non-public schools.
to provide assistance with quality of
service Issues In General TeleThe Office of Budget and Managephone's $32.5 mUllon rate Increase ment requested that half the
case. . _
payment be held back because of
Also OK'd was a $21,963 contract budget problems.
with Exeter Associates Inc., "BeTim Luckhaupt of the Catholic
thesda, Md., to provide assistance Conference of Ohio said that
regarding rate design In DP&amp;L's withholding release of the rest of the
$192 million rate case.
money beyond March wOuld cause
· In other action Tuesday, con- · problems.
trollers released $192.1 million In
Controllers also ok' d Mental
subsidies for January to the state's Retardation Department plans to
public school districts.
spend S250,1XX!as thestate'sshareof
But they distributed only half the a workshop to serve ~ people In
$25 mUllon that had been expected to Paulding.
·

drop
in
36
years
Economy suffers- sharpest
....

WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S.
economy, crippled by recession
from start to finish, declined 1.8
percent In 1982, the sharpest drop
since 1946, anew government report
Indicated today.
Moreover, the ' economy - as
measured by real, or Inflationadjusted, gross national product was falling even faster, at an annual
rate of 2.5 percent, In the just-ended
fourth quarter after rlslngsllghtlyln
the previous six months, the report
said.
The decline for all of 1982 was
more than four times the0.4 percent
drop during the 198) recession, the
most recent previous national ·
business dow!}tum. Real GNP rose ·
1.9 percent In 1981.
The fourth-&lt;juarter dip, though
dlsCoiiraglng news on the surface,
was mosqy discounted In advance
by analysts who said the economy Is
now growing again In the first
quarter of 1983.
They said , tpat rather than
producing new products, many
business managers were selling off
Inventory stockplles In the OctoberDecember period, thus setting the
stage tot production gains to come.
Whatever · 1983 brings, today's
Commerce DePartment figures
capped a sour 1982 IIi which slow
sales and high Interest rates cauSed
companies to cut output and lay off
mUllons of workers, pushing the
nation's unemployment rate to a
42-year high of 10.8 percent.
Administration officials have not
yet made their official economic
projections for this year. But they
have been talking In the range ofl.4
percent grOwth, a rate much slower
than In the early stages ot. previous

recoveries.
Most private analysts are es'tl-

matlni at least a bit higher.
Commerce Undersecretary Robert Dederick, SWIIding more
optlmJsttc than some of his administration colleaRues. noted on Tues-

day that the housing .Industry Is
already pushing out of Its own long
'downturn.
He said housing starts have rtsen
43 percent since October 1981, an
Increase that "means residential
construction will be an Important
contributor to the general recovery
which should be getting under way
this quarter."

Tuesday's reports on housing
starts and Americans' personal
Income were less than encouraging,
showing 1982 starts at the lowest
level since 1946 and Income rising at
the slowest pace since 1963. But
economists said both figures were
likely to be better this year as
recovery picks up strength.
The recession, by most accounts,

VOLUNTEERS-~ and village captains met
In the OODference room a&amp; Veterans Memorial
llo8pMe' Tuellday DIP* to receive materiel needed for
the I!IIIIUill campeip of the Melp CJJepter of the
Americall Heart Ai.da&amp;loa. 'lbere wiD be captains
In the vlllape aad ~with 10 people 81111istlng
the ~........ IICClOI'CIII!I to Rhonda Daley. cochelrmen of the en•Jal campalp. 'lbe villages of
Syracuae. ~ Racine, Pornetoy, Middleport,
end TJwenl'lelal wiD be IIOIIclted as
weiiM the 11 liM........ II! the county. Le!l* year Melp

R••"""

began In July 1981. But growth early

In that year kept real GNP moving ·
upward 1.9 percent for the year as a
whole.
:
The figure had declined just Q.4
percent In 1!Rl, the year of the
most· recent recession. It dropped
0.6 percent In 1974 and 1.1 percent In
1975 during the recession that
spanned those years.

County reclved end awero for having the large!!t rate

of Increase In donations for Its size. F!'II011981 to 1982
Meigs County had an inCrease of $6.000. The
campaign wm be held during the month of Feb.
Pictured are !IOIIle 9f the captains and the area they
wW serve, 1-r, seated, Carrie ~ennedy, Pomeroy,
Karolyn Black, Rutland, Nancy Circle, Sutton
. TownsNp, Doris Gnlellel', MlnersvDle, end Ginger
Pratt. Hemlock Grove; standing, Rhonda Dalley and
Gloria Jewett, co-chalnnan of the event.

�~:;~~~1~983 ~~~~!!!!==~

'·'

'

, me·n·tary
.,
Com

High school
cage results ·

~

Page-2-The Daily sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, ~io
J
Wednesday, January 19, 1983 I

,

Ashtab.tkl 19. Erie IPa,) Mcllowt'IJ 1D
.Atwf11!1' Chr. 73, Akron Olr. 32
Aun:ra 57, Strftot.5boro .S
Austlrllown-Fttch £6. Wa~ HardlJ'~ t8
A\lUI 78, Cuyalq:a Hts. 6.1
A VITI Lake 62, Rcd:y River 29
Batavia 62. WWJamsbuf"R :'IS '

--------~------------------------------------------------------------------~------------------~------------ \l

Crossroad

The Daily Sentinel

-

IIICuurtSITI!t'l
P11muuv, Hhiu

lilt-992-!156
IH·: VHTEDTOTHF.INTF.RF'-~TUF'

TJIE MEifi.."i-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
BOB HOEFLICH

!'AT WHITEHEAD
A .~~&gt; i s ~nl

C.rnl'"rall\obnagrr

Puhlisht.'r/Cuntrollt·r

The news stories are freighted
with rumors about what Mr.
R,eagan plans to do In his State of
the Union address and In the
subsequent budget. One or two
rumors suggest radical surgery
("Reagan Considering Flat Tax·
/Would Eliminate Deductions").
Most of them suggest a return to
convention ("Reagan wm Ask/For
Tax Surcharge" ). The pressure on
Reagan is considerable, and en·
t!rely conventional. Whatisconven·
tionfl? It ts most easily. defined as:
Accfpt just about everything the

ahead"---~---------w_il_lw_m_F_
: _Boc
__kl~ey_J_r. 1I
--

Democrats have lilstitutionallzed
under RQosevelt, Truman,
Kennedy, Johnson and Carter, and
let a Republican administration
tlgure out a way to pay for all of It
on the unders~ndlng that other·
wise, the Republlcl!n Party Will be
held responsible for the deficit and
ensutng problems.
Mr. Reagan faces a challenge
well artlcula ted by Irving Krlstol,
the godfather of the neo·
conservatives, In The Wall Street
Journal. There he said that there
are two Republican parties, that of

the establishment - so to speak t11e

party d. Herbert Hoover; and the
'()!her Republican Party that brts·
ties with Ideas - so to speak the
party of Theodore Roosevelt.' Mr.
Reagan was elected as a repre!;!!n·
tatlve . of the latter party. He is
being absorbed by the former
.party.
Krlstolls COITj'Ct thatmostofMr.
Reagan's Cabinet would have'
worked as happily for Nixon or
Ford. His perspective Is correct
when he remarks that U.S. political
history Is "mainly the history of the

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

A 1\olEI\IRER n( Thr Assm·iaiL-d- Prr~s . lnJ and Dail)"
Amt&gt;rinm N t' &gt;A"ttpl:lpt:r l"ubli.~ht' ni A,ss iM'iatiuaJ.

Prrs ~ A~SIH · Wiitln

I.F:'ITF.RS Of' OPINION "1m' "1' ir't1mrd. Thn should bt·lt:ss Uutn :100 " ·urtls l nn~ . All
ldtrrs art· subj~:t• \ In ~:ditin~ and must bt' ~-iiJ(iJt&gt;d with namt.', address and h•l•phmtL'
IIUmtwr . Nu unsil(nt•tflettrrs willbt- puh!lshrtl . Li:tlt&lt;rs sh•.uhl bt&gt; in ~tlt.d l.aslt", t~ddrt•Nsinc
is~tws ,

nul per:&gt;flmalillt~ll.

Canton McKinley n, Canton Soo th ro
Cant011 Trinity 100, !Wal 1..11e Chr. :Jl
Cardinal 49. Newbury 4.1
Carey 76. Arcadia 53
Carl.bk&gt; lti. Franklin 64
~an:kln 75, Rlcl\rtQ!d 1-k'!Jmts $

Ii

Cln. Andenon 66, Cln. Col~ln M

Cln, Ftnney!OWI"I 61, N. Bend Tay lor ~ .

J(JJ'

Ctn. Nortt»-esr 611. ctn . 1\.lrptn 56
C!n. St. Bffnard ~. On. Sl&gt;l,...,. Hills !'il
~- Woodw-ard IM, Day. While n

Ctn. Wyoming !"6, Rt'adln~ 58
Clermont NE 84, N£'W R.kttmorid 6t
Cleve. Ben8:1k1lne '!17, Hudson W. RP-

""'•:1!
~eo. Collinwood 66, Clc\-1'. W. Tcdl 48
Ckve. East 49, Clt!Yf.'. Llnroln·W. 44

Cleve. Glenvill" too. ~- Hay m
Q('Ve, Grtswald 6l. Elyria Klnlt'l 4.'i

n

Squeak first and.loud!

Every year about this time I
pause long enough ·to mentally
balance my books on the year just
past and view with apprehension
the year ahead . I can't remember
any year In the last 60 when the
future has held so little promise.
And , as years ago, I have seen
some dUlles tn my time.
PRa~
It will be 60 years this summer
when I had my first job on public
works. I was water boy for the
T~e
culvert crew of the Pratt Construe.
tion Company which was building
the brick road from Jerse:ivute
(now Shade) to Athens. I e3J11ed$l
per day and my noon meal at the
road construction camp just north
of Jerseyville. I was In the money.
Slx whole dollars a week just to
carry a few buckets of water a few
miles a day to refresh the crew. The
cooks at the construction camp
never lost thetr amazement at my
appetite. That old road is stut there,
following the line fences to Athens.
To be sure, It has been covered with
asphalt and patched over the years
but the baste brick highway wilh
the same brtdge and culverts built
for the Model T are still part of the
Pomeroy-Athens highway.
The road from Pomeroy to 1the
Athens County llne was buUt by the
Ebersbach Construction Company
of Pomeroy. a couple of years
before. The section from.the Athens
County line to Jerseyville was bull!.
a year
before as a separate
contract by the Fi-ed Beckler
Construction Company, Athens.
Because Athens Couny then had
several brick plants, the portions of
TCJ&lt;1ay is Wednesday, J aq. 19, the 19th day of lffi'l. There are 346 days left
what Is mw Route 33 in Athens
tn the year.
County was bricked and In Meigs
T&lt;X1ay's highlight iii history:
.
County was concrete. The roadway
On ·Jan. 19, 1938, Generallsslmp FranciscO Franco's Nationalist Air
was cons'tructed bji slip scrapers
Force bombed the Spanish cities of Barcelona and Valencia, kllllng 700
drawri by teams of horses owned
peopl!~.
'
.
.
and driven by local farmers . As
On Ihls date:
there was no heavy eqUipment for
In 1861, Georgia seceded from the \mton.
road construction In those days, the
In ~~18. the Bolsheviks dissolved the Russlah Constitutional Assembly In
roadbed Jacked firmness and.
Pe~d.
.
.
within a few years a tnp from
, Japan invaded Burma In Wor ld War II.
In
In 1
981· Ihe United States and Iran reached final agreem~nt on the . Pomeroy to Athens became an
adventure. It still 1s for the high
relea~e of 52 Americans held hostage 13 months by Irantan militants.
speed cars of lnday for the road
Ten' years ago: It was announced that the U.S. gross national product for
i from Darwin to Athens still follows
1972 had risen 6.5" percent.
.
the same cowpaths and Jlne fences
Five years ago: In his State of the Union message, President Carter said
It
followed more than a hundred
his priorities tor 1978 were a strong energy bill and Senate approval of the ·
years
ago.
Panama Canal treaty.

\'

Now I LaY Me DowN To §Leep; .
I
"ff\QY Dot·fr cuT oFF MY HeaT.
BuT iF I fReez.e BefoRe ! WaKe,
uT;LiiY lile BLaMe Wit!- TaKe.
'

Most of you. who live tn Meigs
County know all thls. You know that
when ·Ohio road money has been
passed out in the past, Meigs
County has come out on the little
end of the horn. I write of 'It only to
remind you and your elected
officials that Meigs County people
.for the most part are still forced to
travel roads that were never
surveyed or planned at all. They
simply follow the old horse and
buggy roads which were buUt .by,
following the path of least
resistance.
According to the U.S. News and
World Report, Ohio will get an
Increase of 114 percent in federal
road d&lt;;&gt;Uars from the nickel a
gallon federal gas tax which goes
into effect Aprlll. There wiD be a
mad scramble by the 88 counties
.for this a:1ldltional money • as
highways aU over the state are In
miserable condition. I don't think
any counties In the state are more
tn need of this windfall than Meigs
and Athens Counties or any

"' Col.

highway more needed than the two
sections Jlnking Athens with the
Ritchie Brtdge at Ravenswood.
Most people In Southeastern Ohio
are sttll following the same trails
their forefathers took when set!llng
this section of the state In the early
I!nls. Actually, until the last !ew
years when roads were planned by
highwayengineers.' most roads in
the state followed old accepted
right-of-ways, eliminating the need
for land·acqulslt!on by the state. In
Meigs County, tor Instance, Ihere
have been only two stretches of
highway bull! In my lifetime that
radically departed irom thls prlncl·
pte, the Route 7 By-pass around
Pomeroy and Middleport and the
section of Route 33 between Rock
Sprtngs and Darwin., Even the
section of Route 7 between Pomeroy and Coolvllle ke~a~e.'Blly lq:
the old right-of-way, leaving It&lt;*.
to etimlnate the most dange~
hazards., When Route 33 Is COD)'
pleted from Athens to the Ritchie

"

CorlhOcton 73, Jotn Glmn 57
!Aly. Cham.Jul

"

E. Clin!on

Fairless 00. Akron C&lt;wmtry ~
Failvlew Park 57, Olmstl"'d F'all~ ~
Faypttf' ffi, Hllllf\l ~1
FtrelanOs ?J. lndrpmdm('(' Qi

ron Fry(' '!17, Plr"l(' GI"'(IVe t W. va.r Val-

Superior's Frankie

k'Y~

F'ostorla ~ . N&lt;W Rk&gt;jr:N 40
H7 , EmanlK"' Bapust ~
S)·lvania Nath... k-w Tl, 101. StarT ~

Tot LibOry

Ort&gt;t;:on Clay R1 . Tol. Waltf' 29
Fostoria 58, NN' Rk'al't 40
ElmwcOO 61. Genoa 57
0tsejt(l 7'.!. Kansas Lakota 65
Qlk

Harbor 7!i, Eastwood !Vi

.. · . . $ 99

USDA

w~ ~. GlblonOO!'R 63
Col. Northlan~ 411. Col . Wanersoo ~
01:-ill~A-ill"E' 66, Col. Wbt'tstone 51

Cot W('S1 79, HIIUW'd !l6
Col. Rt&gt;ady ~ w..lfont'I'!IOfl ~2
G~ tit, WntervUk&gt; N. -43
Whitehall 66. Gahanna 62
WonhlnKton it, Niow~rk 47
· Ok.&gt;ntanr:.r T1. W01'1hJngton Chr. 62
SprlnR- Christian 8\ Ohio Dl&gt;af 6t
lanes. fkar.fn"an:s fl\, Canal Wlndeter

Round Steak..... ~~ ..

6

USDA Choice-Boneless ..

LynchWf"R.O.y 76, HillSboro 62

E. Oln1on

f;r ,

Mlaml'l'racl' 66

Norltuncr Gl. l...oucklnvllle-ll
Cald\1-'l"'ll 44, Ba.rnesviUt J9
Miller 75, PhUo 64
Sky\"Uf' 1R Gllll'rrllf')" C.th. 51
Gl't't'Mft '7l, SprinJ:. Nor1h 61

RJ.

n. s. CharJP.o;ton Sf: 6
South 00. Col. Eutrmor Gl
Day. JC'f'tersa~ r.. Yeb • Spei~ -r.;
Gl'l"l'Detikw 6.\ &amp;ollt:nJok 57

l&lt;ftlt al
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Trtmf:k&gt; 19, VInton Co. ~

l

AU$1Int~~FIIch

Nehoan•tik&gt;- York R2. Ftdf&gt;rai-Hockln" Iii
Hannan Trn~ 62. Symmt.'S Val: ~
Oak HW 15. Patriol SIN 51
Racin(' Swthern t!l, Wahama , W. Va . .1i
86, Wllm&gt;n Harding til
&amp;&gt;t-Un W. Rivrvf&gt; 66. LL'\lm 63
·
Brist~ M.i, Souttllrlllon !14
canton Trirlil)' 109. Sak&gt;m FWal l..ik&gt; :n

\

Chartbn ~. Rkhmond HC'Ights ~

I

C)p.•f'. &amp;onedk1~ !il, Hudr.on WRA :J(
['kl\'l'_ Hawltm 66. Pl&gt;ny 41

Cardinal 49, Ntowbu.'ty 4.1

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.W1eners................
12 OZ. PKG.

$

59
Chuck Roast .....~~ ..
Bucket · .
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$ 49
Cube .Steak ....... !~·... ·

Ck:&gt;\'l'. Marshall !B. C'Jco\'('. Ha... rs 71.

I

Srldge Is will also complete the two
miles remalnlng of the by·pass
·
from tile Meigs High School to .
Route 7. at Five Potnts as was
originally Intended.
I think this Is a good t1me to
remind everyone interested In the
Route 33 Improvement that the
wheel that squeaks first and loudest j
gets the most grease. All over Ohio •
j
there Will be squeaky wheels but
none more deserving than ours. It
wiU provide the most direct rwte
between Columbus and Charlestml,
open Meigs and Southern Athens
County to tourist travel for the first
time• and provide farmers ready
access to the markets. I hope eaclt .J
of the orglmlzat!ons and cities ,
represented at the meeting at' '
Pomeroy December 7 Will not let
the gloomy predlct!ons of that· \
ineetlng discourage them.
, Having watched the high expec-' ·'
tatlons for the Pomeroy bridge fade
, .away during the Great Depression, .
I hOpe history ~ not repeat Itself. •&lt;i
. •-:r

ClPIIf'. St. (Jrnatlull 61 , P:u1na Vat~·
FC~f").'l' trJ
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C&lt;ipicy 84. Akron E.... l/1
.
COI"'Iand l...akeoVk'w 64, Vk'nna M.atflliWs

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Elyria ()pr1l Door M.l,
t lan ~1

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Mast~lllon

C'l\115·

Falrlfss 59. Akron Co\'mlt)' ,r,t
Glrilrti-!H, Yw~lc:M'n Ututy 6:1 .
Hubbard 7."\. Slrulhl'!1 ~
.Hfl"'r"IOO Unkln 91. llf'r~ll Sprlnp;fk&gt;ld

..

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Ktont Roosroi.Ttt \'\, Aknlrl Nonh !'t.l
l..onl&lt;;to.i.·n 61. F'ar mln,ltlon ·11
Map~rwroct R'l, Bklomtk-ld :fi
Mc-Donald ti:ol, J aC'kiKtn-MIIton );

Parma

Nonn0111~·

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Parma

Maine U. S. No. 1

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~and

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48
Wllm.'n Cham~n ri&amp;, BitdRl'!' ~ OT
WarrEn ~~lanl'l ~. Boai""O-nan 41'1
Warrm LaBr.tt' ~- N('Wton Falls 53
WoodridRf' :11. Mo~rt J6
VOUI'ftSIOWn tJrsullfM' ~ . YoonRStCM'n
Moo~ !It

Flavorite
1o· M
2 /( . ·I'I k.

°

to Reds' camp •

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Five non-roster
players invited
'
CINCINNATI
- Five non·roster
players, Including three pitchers
and two catcherS, .have b!en
tnv.lted to the Clnctnnati Reds' 1983
sprtng. tratnlng camp at Tampa,
Fla. They are pitchers Charlie
Lelbrandt, Bob Buchanan ancl
Brian Ryder and catchers Ray
Corbett and Dave Miley.
Batteryman on the Reds' roster
have been tnvlted to report on Feb. ,
18 with the first workout 9Cheduled
tor the Roseland tratnlng complex
on Feb. 19. The rest nt the squad
Will report on Feb. 28 and begin
work on March 1.
Letbrandt, a 26-year.old Jef.
thander, was with the Reds for the
entire 1~ se11son, posting a 5-7
record.
.
Ryder, a 22·year-old righthander, was a member of the ·
IndlanapOII$ team that won the
· American Assoctattori chllmpionsbiP, where he had a 6-8 record.
Buchanan, a ~1-year.old let·
thander, and Corbett, · 23, both
played for the ~· Waterbury
iarm ID the Eut.em League last
season. BnchaMn had a record of
1Q.ll, wlille Corbett batted .283.
Miley, :b;J, hit .252 for Tam"" of
the Florida State League.

.

Potatoes •••••••••••••••••

CllrlsUan 4.l
Sobn 89, Hudson 11

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Euclid G6. Gf'nloo.•a 57

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Day. Oakwood 57

E. Clt""Vr'land Shaw 91. Clf'V{'. Kennedy

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Dey. Jt'fferson 1T. Yellow Sprl nlt'l 75
Oelaw;are til:i. CoJ. \\'IM;'tstonc 51
!Aiy!e;town 91. Da ~ton !II

as early as possible," and states
that "the use of contract field :
services ts Umlted to a period not to :
exceed 12 months" after mtlltary :
personnel are trained In how to l
maintain and use a weapons l
system.
Despite this offlclal Utle, the
president Will find, If he pur!l"es the,
matter, the Pentagon is using
scores of clvlllan technicians sometimes for years at a stretch- •
to !reel&gt; some of our most Important
weapons systems tunctiontng.
In shQI't, without civilian mercen·
artes, our expensive weapons won't
work. Check It out, Mr. President.
'

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Fryer Parts.........~!.

Nathland 611. Col. wanei'!IOI1 ~1
Col. ~ady Sl, W. Jef11!11100 52 ·
Col. Wcsl '19, Hilliard 00
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Crrtland l...akt"Vil&gt;w 64, Vk&gt;nna Mathews

•
l,

Lowell Wingett

Mixed

Oeve. Souah 7S. Maple Hts. n
Calumt:iana Cz'E'!itvleow Rl. Beaver l..u:-al

' !.-.

Today ln history

'

plus liaison between users · and
equipment." ·
Next, the president might want to
send out for an Internal Pentagon
document, DOD Directive 1Ul.2,
titled ''Management and Control of
Engineering and Technical
Services.''
My assocla te Lucette Lagnado
obtained a copy, which I'll be happy
to show the president If he can't '
locate it. I think he'll find It a little
puzzling. It states clearly that the
use of technical mercenaries
should be kept to a mlntmum. It
requtres the armed services to
''achieve ln·house self·sufflclency

.

Flrs"r Bapt. ·

&lt;levl'. Mars,hall 00, C)(IV(.'. Hayes 7:!
Oeve. St. IRJlatk.i s 6], Parma Valll')'

;

ing him.
First, the president should send
someone over to Room 38915 at the
Pentagon to pick up a report titled
"DOD Use of Civilian
Technicians."
The report was prepared for the
Pentagon by a Washlngton think
tank called the Logistics Management Institute. The summary
states: "The· (De!ense Depart·
ment) forces rely heavily . upon
clvlllans for technical assistanceadvice, Instruction and training of
military personnel In the lnstalla·
tion, operation and maintenance of
weapon systems and equipment,

CIPve. Hawkl!n 66. Peny i&amp;J
Hcr l~t' 00, ~lyrla

Cleve.

,_II)

I!

WASHINGTON - President
Reagan has taken exception to my
report that the Pentagon's new
weapons are too complicated for
our mllltary personnel to operate,
so clvlllans known as "technical
mercenartes" must be hired to help
keep them in working order.
"I don't thtnk It's true," he lold,. a
press conference.
Now, I know the president can't
keep track of everything that's
going on In the federal government,
particularly a military beehive like
the Pentagon. So I'll be glad to help
the president find out what his
generals and admirals aren't teil·

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JANUARY 22, 1983 .

· Cln. Walratl Hills 76. Cin. Aradem)' !13
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Cardlf"IRion 62, F"l't'dl.&gt;rlcktCM'n til

I

ptre

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Buckeye Till II 83, Meadowbrook 41
CaldwE-ll H. Barnesville :D

I

Disarray is in the eyes of the beholders, and President Reagan doesn't
what they say they see. ·
' The proof, or disproof, of his insiste nce that the administration is
proceeding In a planned and ordetW fashion will be in the procluct.
He contends the press corps is in disarray, misguided by anonymous and
inaccurate sources, and that the White House is in order.
The first evidence points in his direction. It came with the bipartisan
agreement reached by his Social Securtty reform commission on future
financing of the troubled pension syst~m.
It is a compromise in which the White House accepted tax increases
while the Democrats agreed to long· term benefit curbs. Reagan and House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. both endorsed the plan, which would settle'
an issue Ihat has troubled Reagan for years - and a financial crisis
confronting Congress with the need to act swiftly.
·
That gives both sides a way out, and it could be a model for eompromlse
a nd progre5s on the tangled problem of the federal budget to be submitted
to Congress Jan. 30. That already has been delayed a week. Talk of discord
and indecision iii budget preparations led to reports of troublE' in Reagan's
shop. They led also to the president's crackdown on leaks.of information .
from his official family. ·
White House Chief of Staff James A. Baker III said the Social Securtty
settlement, which now goes to Congress, certainly didn't fit the notion of
disarray in presidential leadership. Sen. Pete V. Domenlci of New Mexico,
the budget conunittee chairman, said the compromise averted the
posslhillty of ''a kind of pollcy paralysis."
At the same time, Reagan has shown a willingness to bend on the budget,
whiie insisting that he has not and will not sacrifice principle. A year ago,
Congress balked at the budget he submitted, because tit a deficit only about
half the $m billion· plus that now Is in prospect. It took tiaJf a year to sort
that into a compromise budget. A repeat would be pOlitically intolerable for
an administration heading toward a presidential campaign, and already
facing the assertions of Internal discord that so angered Reagan.
· Reagan said he called his news conference last Frtday to counter those
suggestions. "That is why I came in," he said, "to point out to you
accurately where the disarray lies, It is in these stories that seem to be,
going around. because they are not based·on fact."
Then came the Social Securtcy compromise, fashioned by a Jong·stalled
commission late Saturday. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said
the settlement was an example of presidential leadership "because he.
·, . . , appointed the commission." Reagan propo~ it; he and the leaders of
Congress appointed the members.
Now comes the budget, and it is no less a challenge. No outside panel is
Involved there; the calls a re Reagan's. If he can deliver a budget Ihat will
meet' hts economic goals and stand the test of a deflcit·wary Congress, it
will b€ persuasive ev idence on hls side in the argument about leadership.

~

Bristd 56, Southington s.
Brooke, W. Va , 59. Ste\l.bE,'r!Vlll(&gt; !'i7

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Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

71, N. ObMtcd 56

IJntdcsvUJe 76, Brunswick

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Leadership
Or disarray?

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&amp;iMormoek ffi. Falrbtt11 ~
Bcrli1 w. Reserve 66. ustm m
Btiidfml 48, RUS$18 4.~

Democratic Party, with the Repub- 1
. llcans providing a series d. running I
footnotes." And he asks the rete- :
van! question when hewnltesofMr. t
Reagan, "~ he really want to
move the party forward, even at
' the cost of mtra·party tension, or
even dissension? ... Is he a pollt!cal
leader or merely another conventional Republican president?"
1
Consider the deficit. suddenly I
lli!come the cause militant of
presldent!al critics who have tradlt!onally worried about budget
deficits about as much as they have I
worried about being swallowed by
whales. How to cope with It? The I
need to straighten out Social '
~urtty Is outrageoUsly . plain, so
much so· that the failure of our
' leadership to come up with a ptan
indicts self•gpvernment Itself.
,
But at tile other end, the division
Is very clear. It Is a division
between the orthodox, who would '
tax more; and the people with fresh
Ideas, who would tax less. But less,
In this case, does not mean 10
percent, less Inflation, less lndexa·
tion, tess Increases in Social 1
~ty. and no decrease In the 1
margtnal tax rate of 50 percent.
Less would mean to slash the top
· tax to 25 percent, to eliminate
double taxation of dividends, to end
taxation on Interest on savings.
At thls juncture, In midterm,
Reagan will probably have the last
opportlinlty to associate hilll!lelf ll
with the second Republican Party.
That party Is the party o( George
Gilder, Irving Krlstol, Milton
Friedman, Wllllam Simon, ' The
Wall Street Journal editorial page,
and National Review. Those who
know Mr. Reagan do not doubt
where hls heart Is. Those who have
never endured political office, let
alone the presidency. ca:niwt e~Uy
Imagine the pressures to conform
visited on an Incumbent.

I

Ultd lht•

The Daily Sentinei-Poge-3

,

59
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4- The Daily Sentinel,

Wednesday, Jan11ary 19, 1983

~ildcats

The non-leag\Je win boosts Wa·
telford to 5-7, while Eastern
dropped to 0.13.
Three Wildcats reached the
double figure plateau led by 6-4
pivot man Brett Arnold with 14
points, and 12 each !rom Myron
Huck . and Mike Cramer. Sophomore Jay Carpenter again whipped
the nylons for 13 points, while Jim
Newell added 10 for the Eagles.

TOUCIDNG HANDS - Eastcm's Mike Collins
( 42) and WaterfoJ'dl.s. Brett Amold go up for a jump
ball during Tuesday's non-league action at Eastern.

Players Unlng up lor the ball are the Eagles' Troy
Guthrie (32) and Waterlord's Marvin Spring (41 ).
Waterford won, 54-49. Scott Wolle photo.

Oaks defeat Southwestern;
Wildcats dump Vikings,62-59

Alter a couple of unsuccessful
possessions by both squads, EaSt·
en\'s Tim Probert tripped 'the
scoreboard first to put his club on
top 2.(). At the 5: 57 mark, center
Mike Collins added two more. for
the Eagles with a turn-around
jumper off the glass. Opportunity
was knocking at the door for the
Eagles In the first round, as several
missed shots by the Wildcats fell
Into Eastern's possession, but also
eluded the Eagles as a result of
untimely turnovers.

Southern tops ·Wahama, 49-35

dump Eagles 54-49

By SCOTI' WOLFE
EAST MEIGS ~ After rolling to
a spirited 23-19 halftime lead, the
Eastern Eagles suffered a dlsap- ·
pointing second hall that resulted In
a 54-49 triumph for the Waterford
Wildcats here Tuesday evening.

attempts for a hOt 48 percent.
Eastern cooled down In the second
halt to hit W of 66 tries for 33
percent. From the line the winners ·
sank 10 of W lor 50 percent~;~nd EHS
claimed nine of 14 attempts for 65
percen.
Both clubs had 17 personal fouls,
Eastern had 15 turnovers, 11
assists, and eight steals, while
Waterford had 10, eight and four In
those respective areas. Waterford
won the battle ot the boards 36-32
led by Steve Arnold's six. Jay
Carpenter had 10 and Jim Newell
six for EHS.
·
In the reserve clash Waterford
claimed a 41-31 tdumph over the
Little Eagles. Paul CoUlns led the
winners with 10 points.
Eastern plays at Hannan Trace
on Friday In an Important SVAC
match. ·
·
EASTERN (ttl) -Collins 4-2-10; Probert
3-2-8: Guthrie 2-2-6: Newell 4·2·10: Cal'pO!Iter
6-1-13: Malson !.1).2: Gaul ().1).(1: GrllfUh ~.
TolaloiiiH-I! . .
WATERFORD

Sprt~

154) -

Cramer 0.0.0: Arnold 7.{).14· Mcl.o.J ().().():
Drayer 2..1-7: Huck 5-2-12· 'Cramer 5-2·12:
.C ramer 6-0-12; Huck 0.5-5.
Score by quarters:

Tot. 11-IJ.If.

Eastem
Waterford

'

12 ·n 12 14-49
10 9 16 1~

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class postago paid at
Ppmeroy, Ohio.

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U'ITLEFIELD JUMPER -

shoottng guard, lets fly with one ol his patent jump shots Tuesday night

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against Wahama. Uttlelleld finished with 10 points. Southem, despite
beiDg forced to play a slow, deliberate game, won, 41-35. Tim Tucker
photo. '

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By SCOTI' WOLFE
RACINE - The red-hot Southern
Tornadoettes rolle9 to a 35-10
halftime advantage over the Alex·
ander Spartans here Monday evening, then stearrirolled to an awesome 104-21 triumph In girls' high
school basketball action In Charles
W. Hayman gymnasium.
A -vibrant display or offensive
basketball by the Tornadoettes
lightened the Southern gymnasium, overshadowing the dim light
cast by Alexander's meager offensive total. The stellar performance
leaves Coach Connee Enslen's gals
with a 12·1 mark, and ·:;.a ledger.
within the SVAC.
Southern's Amy Littlefield again
turned In a more than spectacular
performance by netting 37 points
and collecting 21 rebounds.
Besides Littlefield 's Impressive
statistics, Tonya Salser clipped the
nets for 24 points and. a fine floor
game. Mel . Weese added 16
m arkers, and Laren Wolfe 15.
Cindy Crabtree sank eight for
Alexander, Shelly Hawk and
Teresa Bartlett each had four.
In the first round Southern
exploded for 22 points and dornlna·
tlon of a vital Inside game,
controlled mostly by forward Amy
Llttletteld. When the sparks had
fizzled )n the first period fireworks
display, Southern clu ng to a 22-6
lead . Southern's offense sinnmered
through the next round , but held on
to a 35-10 advantage at the half.
The third period brought nothing
but trouble for the Spartans as the
rnlghty Tornadoettes unleased a
sleeping offensive "monster."
When the seoring giant awoke, It
explocted for a 35 point scoring
spree that sizzled' the nets and the
. shooting Janes of the ·SHS court.
Alter three rounds, SHS held an
unchallenged 70.16 lead. What may
be more Impressive Is the torrid
pace tqe Southern gals maintained
In the final round.
Unlike theweatheroutsldeSouth·
ern's mark was on ' the rise in
blazing fashion, breaking the century mark In a record breaking
performance. The final score was
104-21 .
Southern hit 43 of 92 field goal
attempts for a sizzling 47 percent
and hit 18 of 24 from· the line.
Alexander hit nine of 36 lor 25
percent and hit three of eight at the
- line for, 38 percent.
Southern won the battle for the
boards .54-19 led by Littlefield's 21.
Lare.n Wolfe's 11, and Cindy Evans'
10. Alexander ha~ 17 fouls and
Southern 12.
Southern plays Thursday night at
Kyger Creek.

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Score by qtW1ero:

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BANK ONE OF POMEROY
POMEROY~RUTlAND•TUPPERS PlAINS

ol the Week•

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The S:.foot-8 junior forward from
Franklin Grove, ill., scored25polnts
In a 71-65 tJ1umph over Central
· Mtchlgwt and ·follO\Ve(! with 23
points ·In a 62-51 decision over
Bowling Green.
· 'Miami guard Linda Mallender
,was-selectedwomen'sMA.C Player •

261! Jackson Ave .
67S-2731

=·

Pam PtU1 auloltonoa ....

Week.

SIS /Min St.
67S-IS20

MASON
Route 33
173-5511

Zl IJ 35 3!1-104
6 4 6 1&gt;--21

COLUMBUS, Ohio ' (AP ) - For
helping Northern Illinois whip
previously unbeaten league opponents Central Michigan and &amp;;
wllng Green, Ttm,Dillon has been
named Mid·Amerlcan Conference
men's basketball Player of the

Genetaf Molooa Corporalion
'

POMEROY
lt9 W. 2nd
992·2139 .

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

Player of week ·

SALE ENDS 1·28·83

2-40 Third Ave.

According to t:oach Wolle, "This
categories.
is the type of game you just try to
Coach Howle Caldwell's young
win!" And that's what the SHS
Whirlwinds ~!'hipped up a.43-32 win
crew had on Its mind as It opened up
In the preliminary reserve contest
a 37·23 lead alter three periocts.
· Greg Nease had 15, Darin Roush
Southern started the last frame
had 10, Todd Adams eight, and
in a zone defense, but as Wahama
Scott Schultz six tor Southern. Bill
shot . more freely the visitors
Clendenin had 10and Boyd Northup
dropped back Into Its man-to-man
eight lor Wahama.
in the waning minutes of play.
Southern plays Kyger Creek at
Despite a dlllerent pace and
home In what may be the SVAC
different style, when the dust had
championship game Friday night.
SOt.1111ERN (18)- BostiCk I·:H: ~m
oodlt
ttled
th
Walla
hard
se
on e
rna
w
0-U: Brtnag,r 4.().8: Curfman 3-(H;: Bostk:k
was Southern who claimed the
1.1).2: Teaford ().1).(1: Beegle 6-6-IB: Connolly
spirited 49·35 victory.
~ Uttle!leld 3-4·10: HUI O-M: Canlone
0-M. Tulolo IJI.IS4.
Wa h ama eas 11y won the battleor
Wo\IIAMA css 1 _ Roosh :~- 7 . 13 : Kimes
the boards' as both clubs had low
().1).(1: Bradley 2-!H: GUiand 1.1).2: Embleton
productions, 28·15. The winners had
~2-12 : Mlt£hell 2-!H: Troy IHJ.O: Spradltng
().0::0; Russeu 0-0-0; oawsoo 0-U.{). 'l'otal8
17 louis, five steals, and seven
JU.:tlf.
turnovers, while the hosts had 16,
So~~;:"'"'
14 11 12 12-49
one, and 25 In those respective
Wahama
6 u 6 12-35

NOW
·n
YOU CAN .
PUT IT BACK

Hl-2: Jomson 3-(H;: Michael 2-!H. Totaltt

G

· G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

During the rnlddle two frames
Southern Itself strayed a way from
. Its man-to-man defense and exhibited several zone formations.
Nevertheless, a highly contested
battle had developed by halftime,
with Southern holding . a 25-17
advantage.
In the third round Southern
changes Its offensive format as It
also went Into a slow-doW!) offense.
Throughout the final rounds both
clubs worked for the good shot,
:ovhlle at the same time ·e ating up
large portions of the clQCk.

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49-50 59-50 81·50 87 ·50
55·50 71 -50 85·50 89·50

AC-Delco is the way to go

had a good shot.
·Guard Darrell Mitchell first
broke the scoring Ice with a soft
Inside jumper to give the hosts a 2.()
lead. The Tornadoes then went on
the warpath as Beegle, Llttlefield,
Bostick and Brlnager unreeled a
string of 12 unanswered points, the
score 12-2.
During the stint Southern's sticky
man-to-man defense played a big
role as the quick-handed Tornadoes
came up with several crucial
steals. Meanwhlle, Wahama contlnued Its lumbering offensive
tac tlcs, keepIng things clooe with a
hustling effort,14-6, at the end otthe
Initial round. ·
Throughout the contest Wahanna
settled into a 1: 2: 2 zone defense of
Its 2:3 variation.

•

Southnn (1M) - Weese 7·2·16; Salser
11-2·24: Uttlefleld 15-7-37: Wolfe4-7-15: Evans

WITH

REGULAR .............. .
PART NUMBE.RS:

By SCOTf WOLFE
MASON- The hustling Southern
TornadOes of Coach Carl Wolle won
the second "Battle of the Bend''
Tuesday evening 49-35 over the
Wahama 'white Falcons. It was a
deliberate offensive performance
at Wahama High School.
Seeking to avenge an earller90-56
demise at tlte hands of the
Tornadoes, Waharna went with a
deliberate slow-down offensive
strategy the entirety of the game,
slowing the pace enough to take
away Southern's main offensive
Weapon - the "fast break ." The
res1.1lt was a reasonably close high
school basketball contest that left
Southern with an 11·1 overall mark~
whUe dropping Wahama to 0-7.
Zane Beegle again gained topscoring honors In the low-scoring
affair by netting 18 points for the
winners. Rod Llttlefleld sank 10,
Tyrone Brlnager eight, and Kevin
Curfman six.
Mark Roush zipped' 13 for the
Whlte Falcons, while Eric Embleton added 121n a fine duel effort.
From the beginning, there was
no secret as to what Coach Lewis
Hall's White Falcon strategy would
be. Wahama gained first possession and Immediately went into Its
control offense, making no sertous
movem ent towards a goal untO It

Tomadoettes
rip Spartans .

Inside Ohio
•
13 W('{'ks ... ............ .. .. ...... ...... ... 514 .04

DOORSTEP SOON!

.

Rod Uttletield, Soothern's hot·

SE:' nUncl on a 3. 6 or 12 ·mon th basts. Credit
Wi ll bP gtven rani{'r each month.

Waterford fought back tying the
score In the first round. but EHS
won a nip-and-tuck batle, 12-10 at
Ina bilit)· to score key baskets a nd
Wildcats win
ward , tying it up, butfouling allowed .the period's conclusion.
.
I he benching of a top Southwestern
Despite a last ·ditch e ffort to HT' s Robbie Brumfield to bring the
On several occasions unravelled
player throughout much of 1'ues· ou tscore in the final period, Symmes
score up in the home court's favor. Its fast break, putting the 'Cats on
day's SW-Oak HiH m eeting a t Va lley was handed a 1;2-59 defeat at
.
The half closed 37·29 in !IT's favor:
the run for most of the second
Patriot Tuesday night helped lead
the hands of backyard rival Hannan
sv·s Todd Robinson · led all peri()(). At one point Eastern built
lhe Oaks to a 75-51 .non-league Trace on the Wildcat court Tuesday
scorers with 30 points on 14 baskets lip a n eight point lead In the second
victory .
night.
and two free-throws. Following him round, but aggiesslve play by the
Oa k Hill , picked for first piace in
The Vikings outscored their hosts, . in double-figure scoring was Brum· opponent tightened the score, 23-19
Ihe Ohio Va Jley Conference, took the
13·9 in the fourth quarter, but only
field, who made '18 points, and at the hall.
Highlanders · a part in the fourth
afterHThadbuiltcomfortableleads
Barnes. who scored ,12. The only
In the third round Easternle!tlts
quar ter with a 30-point advantage,
during the second and third cantos.
other Viking to score big was Larry first half momentum in the lockerwhil e SW scored only 14.
SV played the game tightly with Miller with nine.
room as Waterford fought back to
The Highlanders looked promis- Mike Jenkins' squad in the begin· ··· SV, coached by North Gallia's tie the game just ·two rnlnutes Into .
ing in the opening, despite the los s of ning, but never regained that . 1900.81 rounaba ll mentor Paul the round. The score teetered from
Paul McNeal during the first period ' advantage · until the last four
Pettit . shot 49 percent from the field team to team, but Waterford took
due to fou l trouble. They ended the
(24 of 501 and sank 11 of20 tries from
the upper hand and led at one point
minutes, when they came wit hin two
quart er bnly three 115-121 behind
the free-throw line for 55 percent.
35-29. The hustling Eagles of Coach
points of tying with !IT.
Norm Pcrsin' s team .
With 2:35 remaining. the score
The Wildcats fared well on foul Dennis Eichinger again came to
Both tea m s continued togiveeach 59-57 in !IT's favor and the Vikings
shots -16of23for69percent -and Ufe after a time out, tying the score
other a game. with the half ending reaching the possibility of getting
less we ll !rom the field , establishing at 35-35 after three pertods of play.
31 -26 in the Oa ks' favor.
46 percent on 23 of 49 attempts. The opening minutes or .the last
ahead, a Mike Rossiter jumper
SW Coach Lloyd Myers took allowed HT io pull away to 61-57. SV
There were 25 tota l rebounds for HT,
fram e was highly contested, until
reserve leader Steve Pelfrey off the scored shortly thereafter. but a foul
with Jeff Barnes contributing 11. midway through the round.
benc h, while RogerWells hadoneof on a Wildcat player gave Rossiter a
The record also shows !IT had 14 ·
Waterford gained '\ · burst of
his c ustomary two-figure scoring one-shot opportunity from the - turnovers and 17 assists.
momentum tha t carried them on to
nights for the Highlande rs. record- charity line . He made good, with the
Earlier, the Viking l'li!S€rve .de· victory. In the waning seconds
ing 15 points on four baskets a nd scoreboardreading62-59fortherest
feated !IT. 36-22. Sylvester Bloom· Eastern m ade a desperate bid to
seven free-throws.
of the game.
field was top scorer for SV with pull off the victory, but that effort
J e ff Meek alSQ contributed to the
During the first quarter. both
seven. while HT's Terry Cline was fell short on the 54-49 final.
SW scoring, making 10 points.
teams played nip-and-tuck with
credited with 11.
·
In the last round Waterford
The fina l quarter told ihe tale. as each other, with the period ending
The Wildcats are now 7-6 overall. canned .Seven of nine field goals,
P ers in emptied his bench to leave
1W3·il1d3. In beg
the second dquartber. the
and seek to better their 2-3 SVAC :ovhUe on the night hitting 22 of 45
the HighlandNs in the dust. This
was accomplished with top scoring the visitors'
cats
an poun to
mglead,
ackonly
at
record
when they
hostnight.
Eastern. 0.11 . . - - - - - - - - - -- opposition
on
the season,
Friday
by s tarters J im Slone, who had 17 to have the Vikings tie 19-19.
SYMMES VALLEV 159) -Burcham 1M:
points. and Wendell French. who
'rhetie wasbrokenbyJeffBarnes'
Fulkll ~ : Robinson 14-2·30: MUI•r 4·1·9:
recorded 16 ·for the · nig ht. .Johnny connection on a pass. lie then threw
BowUng ll-l-1: wau 2.0-4: llnw•n o.n aark
1). H Totals 24-1 Hill.
Harrison paced his teammates wit h the ball inside to Hossitel'. who
HANNAN 'I'RACE 16'.11 - Rossltez· 2-2-6:
12.
leaped to make one of his two
Bays 0-2-2: J. Barnes 4+12: Baney 2-H :
StatL~tically, SW shot only 28
basket s from the field for the
g":~!';~!8 'T="if';~' swalnJ-(H;:
percent from thP field . s inking 16 of evening.
Soore hy quartet'Jii:
1~ 16 17 13-59
56 tries at the bask!'!. On fn'&lt;'·lhrows
SV seored again shortly after- Hannan
SymmesTraCf'
Valley ,
11 2416~
they were good for 16 o f 26 for 61
percent. There wprr 26 rPbounds , 10
contributed by Wells . and the te a m
also had 16 tumovrrs and s lxass is ts .
The Highlander rcscl'\·c. despite
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Junior over the Watertord Wlldkittens.
double-digit seoring b)' P r lfrc.l· tl 4t
High girls' · basketball team re.and J OC' Ba ker il lt . lost to Oak Hill' s
Coach Pam Douthitt's girls
mained undefeated in league play overcame a 7-1 de ficit after the first
B-warn , 58-4:!. Mike Fis hf'r 10Cl a ll
here recently with a close 19-16 win period. but still trailed at the hali
scorers for 1he Oaks wil h lR
over
Kyger Creek. EHS IS 5-0 inside 9-7.
SW drops to .J·Ron the season, and
the
SVAC
and 5-3 overall .
In the last two rounds, ~lutch iield
retu r ns to Jcagu&lt;· acl ion Friday a t
EHS
rolled
to a 7-0lead in the first goal shooting put Eastern in the
·
Nort h Gallia.
quarter and held a 12·2 edge at the driver's seat. At the conclusion of
Oi\K JUU. (75) - G rtoen 4-0-B; McCov
2-2.6; Slone i -:l-17: French 7-2-16: H a rrl ~i.
ha lf. In the third round the tide soon three rounds the young Eaglettes
4-4-12: Half' 1-2-4 : Ra ynor 1-24 ; AdkJns 0-2-2;
as KC pulled closer at 15-8. led 14-9, then rolled through the
changed
Taylo r I.U-2: Ruff HJ-2: Pou•r 0. 2-2. Total"
\'11- I!J-75.
.
In the last round It was a race to the final round to the 21-15 decision.
SOt..rl'm\'ESfERN (!U J ~ M cNea l 2 -2 ~ : • fi nish , but the y&lt;;iung Eaglettes held
WC'liS 4-7-15; Layton J.Ht Bak('r 3-2-R: Meek
Margaret Horner led the winners
.
on for the 19-16 win.
2-f,-10; Carr 1.(}..2; P&lt;.•lfwv 1-0-2. ToCals
with
a game·hlgh 15 points. Ann
1&amp;-19-Sl.
.
Krist! Hawk and Tony a Savoy led
Sco~ h)' (jUIU1A&gt;~ :
Diddle
added five and Tammy
the winners with eight each, Pam
Oa k Hill
1!1 16 14 30-75
Capehart one. Eastern shot 21
Lawrence ·added two and Janet
Southwt'SIC'rn
12 14 11 14- !11
percent from the field and 50
Werry one. The ~ Eaglettes are
percent
from the line.
coached by Ralph Wigal.. Renee
Ward had eight for KC, while Jill
Horner collected 5 rebounds and
Drummond had four. Kelly Roush
Diddle had seven for the winners.
two, and Krlsh Lemley two.
Deanna Forrest had eiglit points
In today's cars and trucks, the baRer)' has
CINCINNAH (API - Fire bal·
Eastern plays Thursday night at
many jobs to do:
for
the losers, Beverly Hoffman
ling Mar io Soto has been named the home before the girls· va rsl ty
RADIO ·
POWE1t WINDOWS
· had four, Darla Bowland two, and
Cincinnat i Reds Mos t Valuable game against Hannan Trace.
TAPE-DECK
POWER MIRRORS
Donna Offenberger one .
Player for 1982 by the theC'~clnnati
HEADLIGHTS
CRUISE CONTROL
Ea$tern, now 4-5, plays at
Chapter of the Baseball :Writers
DASH UGHTS
POWER DOOR LOCKS
·In a non-league girls' reserve
Fedetal
Hocking January 25at5: :.1
PO~~ ANTENNA
WINDSHIELD WIPERS
Assocalion of America, lit was match Eastern claimed a 21-15 win
[ REAR WINOOW DEFOGGER
p.m. ',
announced today. ·
Delco FreedomliBanories do al these jobs
, superb!y and. o11 yes. one othef: They
have plenty of reserve - r to start your
car, time aftOf time. An&lt;l they never need watet'.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

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�St. John, Louisville post coll~ge victories
By A,goclated Press

'
St. John's is back 1n the victory
column, and forward David RusSell
says the Redmen now have reason
to look forward to their Big ;East
Conference game Satuiday at
Syracuse.
·
Russell was lbnlted to four points
- playing with a sprained. right
wrist -In St. John's first loss of the
season, 68-64, last Saturday at
Boston CoUeg~. .
·· Tuesday night, he was listed as
doubtful against Providence, but by
thetlmetheshootlngwasover, there
was no doubt he had recovered. He
and Chris Mullin scored ~ points
apiece as the eighth-ranked Red·
men defeated Providence 74,54.
"The loss to Boston College was
good for us becasuse we didn't want
to lose our first one to Syracuse,"
Russell said. "We take It very
seriously when we play each other.
We don't llke to lose to them." The
game will. be played at the
25,00).seat Carrier Dome, home of
the 15th-~ked Orangemen.
1

'

- -.

Wednesday, January 19, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Russell said the wrlst still was Tulane. Wagner scored eight of his
soreTuesdaynlgbtbutdidnotreally garne-))lgh 24 points during the
bl)ther him. Most of his points were
spree, whlcb gave Louisville a ~16
scored from short range. ·
· lead with 3: 42left In the half.
"He couldn't shoot .from the ·
Wagner also hlt lii!Veral key free
o~tslde;" Coach Lou Carnesecca
tbrowsafterTulanehadfoughtback
said. " It was strictly up to the to within three points, 52-49, with
doctors whether Russell played. I 1:48left.LancasterGordonaddedl5
had nothing to do with It, but the
points for the Cardinals, 14-2.
doctors gave their OK"
"Free throws- that's what hurt
St. John's made . a romp of It me against DePaul," Wagner said.
midway through the second half, The Cardinals escaped with a 63-58
outscorlngProvldencellJ.!totakea .victorylnthatgamelastSunday. "I
60-49 lead with 6:22 left. The wasn't concentrating, and I was
homecourt victory gave the Red· missing the front end of one--andmen a 15-~record, 5-11n the Big East.
ones."
Ofls Thorpe had 17 points lor
Unranked Teams
Provldenee; whlchfe1Ho8-9and1-4
Tyrone Beaman ·hlt four tree
ln the league.
throws In the final 1: i.9, helping
Tennessee hand Alabama Its fifth
In the only other game Tuesday
loss In six games, 73-li4, In
night Involving a ranked team, No.9
Southeastern Conference action at
Louisville defeated Tulane63-55.
Knoxvnie, Tenn. Michael Brooks
Top Ten
.
topped Tennessee witl1 22 points,
MUt Wagner led Louisville on a
and Ennis Whatley had 22, for
1&amp;6 scortng romp In the first half,
and the Cardinals turned away a
Alabama. Tennessee now Is ll-3and
TulaneraUyln thesecondhalftowln
3-2 In the SEC, while the Crimson
Tide dropped to 9-5 and 1-5 In till!
the Metro Conference game at
conference.
Glenn Rivers scored 15 points, and
Marquette led by as many as 27
points In the second .half before
beating Tennessee · Tech 78-59.
years).
His wife, Marla, said of her Freshman Dave Hop(len scored ~
poirlts to lead Nebraska over Iowa
husband's salary demands, "Cleve·
State,
59-54, in the Big Eight
land would be crazy to sign Manny
Conference.
for what he's asking."
Butch Moore hjt a jumper with 11
Trillo already has told the IndianS
seconds left, then made a gamethrough his agent, Dave Landfleld,
that If he Is not signed by the end of saving steal as Southern Methodist
spring training, he wlll break off defeated Baylor 62-6111) the Southwnegotla lions with the 'American
League c.lllb. He Is playing out his
option and will become a free agent
CLOSED SUNDAY
after the 1983 season.
Trillo, the MQst Valuable Player
MONDAY, THURSDAY
In the 198lNatlona!Leagueplayoffs,
MORNING ANO SATURDAY
has not ruled out Japan for his 1984
OPEN 9-5
season. He says he has an
overwhelming offer from the Seibu
REST OF THE WEEK
Lions to play In Japan, even this
year.
ANN'S
. - - - - - - - - - ----1

Wednesday, Janu.ary 19, 1983

· ----~--~~~--------------------~~~~~~~--------------------~~~~~~~
•

Family
1JZedicine
.

est Conference~ Kelvin .Jolutson ·
scored 21 points to lead Richmond
over Old Domlnlon, n-70.

•
PASSES OFF- Zane Beegle, playrnaldllg guanl fortheSoulhem
.Tomadoes, passes the ball around during the slowdown olfenslve
. !;truggle against :W ahama Tuesday night. Beegle led the Tornadoes to a
4~ vic!Dry. Tlnj Tucker photo.

~eds

still looking
for power 'hitter
; CINCINNATI (AP) - TheClncln·
nlltl Reds have added Atlanta third
~enian Bob Horner to their
growing list of sluggers they
cauldn't obtain through a trade.
Homer's agent, Bucky Woy :
confirmed Tuesday that Horner had
cOme to a $5.5 million agreement
,qtth Atlanta !for four years. But the
B,raves have made no official
announcement.
; "There's no secret we had
discussions with (Reds President)
Dick Wagner durtng the winter
meetings in Honoluluu last month,''
said Braves Executive Vice Prest~nt AI Thomwen.
• "We talked to them again a couple
of weeks ago and dldn '!get very far .
But I don't expect any deals to be
;iTiade for Mr. Homer. At this point,
•W,e'renotpursulngany tradetalks, "
;~mwell said.
;. :· WoodyWoodward.Redsasslstant
;~neral manager. wouldn't respond
;~o 1'-nY questions Tuesday about
. ltomer. But he did say the Reds
:\vere still looking for a power hitter.
:: "I don't think it's any secret we'd
':Uke to add some offense. We are
· ·eonttnulng to talk to clubs. We are
: still pursuing," Woodward said.

.

Other sluggers the Reds are
believed to have have talked about
and didn't make a deal for Include
Texas third baseman Buddy Bell
and San Francisco right fielder Jack
Clark.
The Reds had a 61-101 record last
year and were last In the National
League with 545 runs sclired, an
averageof3.4 per game. ·
First, Bell became unavailable
wh~n the Rangers were believed to
hljve demanded Reds pitcher Marlo
Soto In the deal.
The Clark swap apparently fell
through when the Reds' four· for-one ·
proposal at the winter meetings
wasn't enough for Giants General
Manager Tom Haller.
Meanwhile, a number of Clncln·
nail players are expected to file for
salary arbitration, dlsllklng the

By EDWARD SCimECK, D.O.

A··w,.,. .Profeaaor "

of FamiiJ Medlclne

Oblo Unlvenlty Collese
of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: Doctor, I have a
sensation of burning · when I
urtnate. I also feel like I have togo a
lot, but I produce little llrlne. What
could be wrong?
AN~WER:

What you descrltJe are. symptoms that Indicate a . pO.ss.lble
urtnary· tract In·
fectlon, also commonly called a
bladder Infection. Urjnary tract
Infections are the most common
Infectious diseases experienced by
adults, and they are more preValent In women than men.

Reds' offers to them for the 1983
season.
Woodward chuckled about so
many playE'rs wanting raiseS.
''I do find It interesting that
nohodylswilllngtostepforwardand
take responsibility for the losses,"
Woodward said. "It's very hard to
be generous coming off a last-place
finish."

,.

championship game, the, OaUas
Cowhoys and the secrets . of a
successful running back.
On the Cowboys, Saturday's
opponent In the NFC Championship
·game, Riggins said: "I don't dlsllke
the Cowboys, It's just that they and
~ dispute .
.(coach) Tom Landry are so
1; The 33-year-old Riggins. whose successful ye;rr In and year out YoU
::running has aimost s!nglehandedly want to beat them . .With Tom
:carried the Redskins to the brink of Landry and just the uniforms they
;the Super Bowl, held court for could be tough to beat. Put some
;reporters for more than an hour.
people In those unifonns and you
,,
have some problems."
•: He jolted them with a mock
A victory Saturday will put
·~ttrernentannouncementandthen
'
Riggins Into the Super Bowl for the
•".plunged into a wide-ranging discus- • . fltst time in a 12-year pro career that
~i;lon wlllch touched &lt;1mong other
:thing
' son themeanlngofSaturday's began after his graduation from the
,.
University of Kansas.

,.

...."'

. .. ir'

Girl Scout diary
Big Bend Service Unit
Plans for the observance of
~ International Thlnldng Day on Feb.
26 at Royal Oak Archery Building
were discussed durtng a meeting of
Big Bend Service Unit of Black
Diamond.Girl Scout Council.
With each of the troops to present
a country in costuming, games,
, ~kits or songs, and fOQds, Thinking
DaywUlbeheldfr9m2to4p.m. The
annual observance Is held to remind
~
' scouts of the world·wkle scope of the

rliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The new tax laws.
This year's No. 1
reason to go to
H&amp;R Block.

ftrl

Hickel

.,.

scouting program.
Quilt blocks were distributed and
a discussion held. on project of
creating a quilt from the Individual
blocks completed by each troop.
The QSP materials have arrived,
lt was noted, and will be distributed
to the t mops soc;&gt;n. · 1lie annual
cookie sale will begin Friday at 4
p.m. and orders wlll be taken
· through Feb. 4.
Delivery Is
scheduled for early March.
First ald training Is being planned

Smith

:Iii .,.

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

even a new entry for charitable deductions on

the 1040A short form. And that's just the beginning!

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

fWINIIU

We know every change on every form.

OPEN WEEKDAYS
. 9:00A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 9:00 AM. TO 5:00 P.M.
· PHONE 992-3795

· J1UU 1111

P.RICE
•••
..............
. ..............
. . -=
·~

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
618 E. Main Street
v
Pomeroy, Ohio"

.....

............ w

OUBN 1111

...ular Prict $599~95

Iiiii'\

PtiiC[

"149.97
•
.• . .

!!~!,

*1M.97

W!

l"ll.w;

!!~!,
-.-9""'
...-. ~6."'77 r I

BEMCO TWIN OR
FULL SIZED SETS
$

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY

~~~~!""!!"!!!' -- ' -

"• H&amp;R BLOCit.._
'""- new tax laws.
.-.

.1.111 year'a number one NGIOIIIo go to Htlllock.

992·2635 .

announced. A·skating party was set
for March 12 from 11 a.m. to 1:·lJ
p.m. and from 2 to 4: ll p.m. at the
Skate--a-way Rink near Chester.,
"Piscover New Worlds", a program for sixth graders was
explained.

sev-

session Include Rev. Tom Dooley,
Hal Johnson, Carl Hysell, Sister
Janet Rectenwald, Father Tony
Giarmamore •. Rev. James Ki&gt;esee,
James Miller, Richard Jones,
Robert Barton, Rev. Leslie Hayman, Rev. J!lmes Broome, R.ev.
Ralph Butcher, Harold Johnson,
Robert Miller, Thomas Kelly,
Rogel' Stewart, DOn L. Snyder,
Harold H. WilliS, Lewis (Duke)
Kennedy; James Young, Mrs.
Sandy Iannarelll, Mrs. Judy
Crooks, Mrs. Marjorie Stone and
Mrs. Nina Butcher.

Hickel
Tiffany Rene Hickel celebrated
her first birthday recently with a
party at the home of her parents.
Benny and Brenda Hickel,
·' Pomeroy.
Attending were her sisters,
ShellY and Tara, her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald . Michael,
Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hickel, Hartford, W. Va., her
great-grandmother, Susie Fischer,
Morning Star; Carol Theiss, Stacey
and Matthew, Roger and Dennis
Michael, Syracuse, and Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Michael, GalUpolls.

Get two great tastes in our Fish &amp; Chicken
Dinner. Each dinner has a crispy fish fillet
and two tender whitemeat Chicken Planks ~
served with fresh cole slaw and golden fryes.
.

Pomeroy Brownie Troop 12'76
Activities for the year, Including
parties, folk dancing, a visit to Mr.
Cartoon, andl)lkes, were planned at
the Tuesday night meeting of the
Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1276.
A visit to the Pizza Hut, a valentine
exchange, and an Easter egg hunt
were among · the. special actlvltles
.

B~en:~tlng opened with the flag

Call 1-800-624-908()

ceremony
· Jeanie
Taylor,
Julle Buck, led
and by
Jennifer
Barnhart.
Bernadette Anderson, troop cookie
chairman, spoke to the girls about
selling Girl Scout cookies. The
lnfonnatlon packs will be given to
the scliuts on Friday, the first day
'C.. cookies are to be sold.
·•
',
Several records of various types
of music were played, Including
disco and country, with the girls
dancing to the music. Refresh·
·m ents were furnished by Jody
Smith .

OP

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

WINTER

SAVING~

; ALL WOMEN~S AND

Smith

JOHN
A. WADE, M.Q.,
INC.
.
.
VETERANs·MEMORIAL. HOSPITAL
.I

BCJTS

30°/o OFF
ALSO INOlJDES

EA8, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL AUERGIST

WOMEN'S FASHION

·aooTS

CALL (614) 992-2104
. o r (304) 675-1244 .

...,

.CHAPMAN. SHOES
NEXr TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.

'l

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llB.

CRISP-N-SERVE BACON . ~8••• S!.49 .
HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD .•...•.•...•• n .. s1.59
CITY HONEY LOAF
• LB $2.59
LUNCH MEAT •..•....••.••

F~ENCH

~.

AGAR

ILED 'HAM
3 LB. BAG WINESAP

I tB. KRAFT PARKAY

...........,,Ali 99'
MARGARINE Q!Wlll' 79' · APPLES
16 Ol. CELLO BAG
CARROTS ........... •AA 39'·

12 Ol. KRAFT 16 SLICE
PIMENTO PROCESSED

30 COUNT FLORIDA

•

CHEESE .....t~l.97 CELERY ............. P!t 69''
32 OZ. BANQUET

Chicken Dumplin&amp;s. SotisbufJ Stook,
Turkoy &amp;Gr1vy, Chicken Noo~lt

BUFFET SUPPER .•••.•Y~~ •• s2.09 :
.2's CARNATION RICH CHOCOLATE

HOT COCOA MIX ··~···: JI»-.. s1.59
32 QZ. SMUCKERS WHOLE

.

SWEET ·PCKLES ••••.•••• Jn. sl.89
101\ OZ. CAMPBELL'S

Chicken w/Rice SOUP ·... 2/79'- ·
200's WHITE KLEENEX

FACIAL TISSUES •...••• JIJII .... 8~ ;
~

12 OZ. HORMEL CANNED

SPAM LUNCH MEAT •• J:~•. $1.79·
'

15 OZ. ARMOUR

CORNED BEEF HASH
'

.'~n. s1.09

10 OZ. TROPICA"A

FRUIT .DRINKS . .......... ~3/Sl.OO.
16 OZ. DEL MONTE

Office Houri by Appointment Only

.

ON YOUR
DOORSTEP SOON!

GIILDREN'S SNOW .

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

AlL .fEAJ3 12.00
TUfSDII!r •2.00

CABLENTERTAINMENT

The· second birthday of Borine
Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Greg Smith, was celebrated with a
party recently at the home of her
Winners In the essay colltest on Chester sixth grade, third place,
grandfather, Larry Pickens.
"Pioneer Schoollng"; and Trtcla
the theme "Early Life In Colonial
A Bugs Bunny theme was
Wolfe, Racine sixth grade, fourth
America"
spbnsored
by
Retul'l!
carried out In the cake and
decorations. Favors were given.to . Jonathan Meigs Chapter of Daugh- place, "The Men of the
Revolution."
ters of the American Revolution,
the children. Attending were
The first place -w!nner will be
were announced today.
Bonne's parents and grandfather,
presented
a sliver medal, and the
The contest was for fifth and
Scott Pickens, Steve, Dreama,
secant!
place
winner a bronze
sixth grade students In the county.
Stefani and Christopher Pickens,
medal
at
a
DAR
meeting ~
Eighty-two students entered the
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wilt. Mr. and
spring. Breanda's essay will be
contest.
· 'Mrs. Terry Pickens, Jill and Terry
·entered
In the state·c ompetltlon. All
were
Brenda
Zirkle,
The
winners
II, Zanesville, and Becky and BtU
those
who
entereil will receive
grade,
first
phice;
Racine
fifth
Amberger sent gifts.
certificates.
subject
"Fashlons
In
Colonial
Bonne's paternal. grandparents
Judges for the essay contest were
Times"; Jay Reynolds, Chester
celebrated her birthday while the
MrS.
Ben Philson, Mrs. Ted Reed,
sixth grade, second place lor
Smiths visited In Charleston over
and
Miss
Mary Virginia Reibel.
"Pioneer Life"; Heather Flnlaw,
the holidays. Presenting her with
gifts there were Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Smith, Rick and Tracy,
and Mrs. Thelma Garten.
Six Meigs Countlans were among degree and Mark E. Mitch, Pome-the 531 students of Ohio University roy, received. his .bachelor of
who were candidates for degrees at science In electrical engineering
degree.
the end of the 1982-83 fall quarter.
Graduating with honors were ,-----------~
Lester Albert Green, Jr .. Rt. ·2,
Coolville, bachelor of science In
CAKE DECOI'fATING
education; Michael Bryan Way·
CLASSES STARTING SOON
land, Middleport, bachelor of
SIGN
NOW science In electrical engineering,
and Donald Alan Dudding, Racine,
bachelor of science In journalism.
Susan Lynn Goe,llel, Reedsville,
reeelved her master of arts degree;
PH. 992·6342
John Mark HaggertY, Pomeroy,
317 N. 2nd
. Middleport
received hls bachelor of science

Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
LarrY Jarves, Mineral Wells, W.
Va.

.

eMOA• MATMfS SliT &amp; SUW
A~ ~I"Y

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

along with a special outing at Camp
Klashuta wtth the Pomeroy Junior
·troop and Investiture for the new

Residents receive OU degrees

ish &amp;Chicken·
.
Dinner
$2.59
.

.

.

bY Mary Ash with the date to be

DAR essay winners announced

CIMI!ty .....

Thll year you're~ with over 100 chengM In the tllx
lawa end forma. Did you know that worldng married
_.pea mey deduct up to $ 1,600 for the flnt time 7

the conduit whlch goes from the
bladder ' to the outside. Although
chlamydia do not grow In a usuj!l
culture med)um and are somelbnes hard to detect, the lnfectlopls
easUy treated with the antibiotic
tetracycline.
QUESTION:' Are there other
problems that have the same
symptoms as urinary tract
Infections?
·•
.
:
ANSWER: Yes, there are
eral other lllnesses thai can catise
the same symptoms. Frequently,
women with vaginal Infections
may also have burning dur!Jig
urtnatlon. Yeast Infections or trl·
chomonas Infections, common
causes of vaginal disturbances, can
· hoth bring on this discomfort.
U you have any disorders with
urtnatlon, you should contact your
doctor for further evaluation.

SPECIAL OFFER!

~ Residents observe area birthdays

'

·There's

Involved.
Some 20 persons attended the
meeting and suggested the establishment of parent support groups;
development of peer group settings
o~ support groups; providing edu·
cation and guidance for parents·
/peer groups; formulating a Fe!'
lowshlp of Christian Athletes
Association, and continuance of
open forum discussions. ·
The Feb. 7 meeting \VIII be held at
7 p.m. In Meigs High School library
and the Initial group Is seeking
more Involvement bY Individual
parents, educators and church
members.
Members of the planning committee and those attending the first

Area Thinking Day activities and outings planned·

JANUARY
CLEARANCE

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

II THE

Jtedskins' Riggins ends sn~~n~:e
:· WASHINGTON !API - Wa·&amp;hlngton Redskins running back
:John Riggins ended his 18months of
:media silence on Tuesday as he
:ipoke to reporters for the first time
'Since returning to football tn 1981
;!allowing a year· long contract

FASIDON .BY TORRENTE- Two modele dlllplay • pari of lbe 1983
Sprbil'8ummer IDgh Flllhlon CoUedloll8 from French coulurter
Torreate, a sabnon, left, and grey silk Unen IIUII, wllh jacket 111111 sleeves
ll'lmmed wllb python llldn worn over allllk Oneil skin. Ia baclip'oulld, Des
' tile Madeleine Temple In Paris dty cenler. (AP Wlrepho&amp;o).

Tuppers Plains

MULLEN INSURANCE

Mike Olejarz, southwest Ohio
· regional coordlna tor of Fe~~~?wshlp
of Christian Athlefes, will meet
with Meigs Countlans involved In a
Meigs County Ministerial Associa·
tlon task force on Feb. 7.
Olejarz at the February meeting
will dlscuss with residents the
setting up of the Christian Athletes
Program and how such program
would function.
The Initial meeting of the task
force was held at Meigs High
School recently through an Invitation extended bY the ministerial
association for the purpose of
discussing marijuana, young people and options available to con·
front or deal with the problems

a

AND

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VALENTINE'S
DAY

CAKE DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Rt. 7

ANSWER: Doctors usuaJ.ly ask
When diagnosing a urinary tract
Infection, we must first rule out the patients with symptoms · of a
posslbWty of kidney infection, a urln!ll'Y tract Infection to give a
. much more sertous t11ness than urine specimen, which is carefully
bladder Infection. Your doctor will collected and examined for pus
check to see if you have a hlgh fever cells, red blood cells or bacterja. To
(103 to 104 degrees), chllls or low do a urtne CUlture, a few drops of
back pain. ln conjunction with your urlne are placed on a special
other symptoms, any of these signs growth material and put Ina warm
could Indicate a kidney lnfecUon, Incubator. If there . Is bacteria
which frequently requires hospital· causing Infection In the bladder or
lzatlon with fiulds and antibiotics kidneys, the germs \VIII usually
grow on the special material Within
given through the veins.
U ypu dcr not have these ·43 hours. The urine culture can also
symptoms, your doctor will llkely help your doctor determine the
treat you for a ,bladder lnfecUon. type of bacteria causing the
. This can be done as an Outpatient, problems. This, In tum, will aid In
with ·antibiotics like sulfa-based '· selecting the antibiotic most effecdrugs given orally. Usually you Will tive against your infection.
Onetypeoflnfecttonthatmaynot ·
begin feeling better within a ' few
days.
show up In a standard urine culture
. QUESTION: My doctor spoke of Is caused bY chlamydia. This
organism often infects the urethra,
a urine culture. What's th:ll?

Ministerial group meets next month

ORDER NOW
'
FOR

..-----------"-1

DOWN lNG-CHI LDS

.

Bladder 'infections 'more.common in women

Trillo demands huge contract
MARACAIBO, Venezuela (AP)
-Manny Trillo says he's asking the
Cleveland Indians for such a high
salary because he doesn't want to
play baseball In the Ohio city.
In fact, the three--time all-star
second baseman was stunned over
what the Phlladelphla Phlllies gave
up to get Indians outfielder Von
Hayes lnaDecembertrade.Besides
Trillo, the Phlllles parted with three
other players.
" As many players as they (the
Phlllkis) traded tor him IHayes).
It's llke I was a nohody. It's llke we
were all nobodys In that trade," he
told Knlght·Ridder News Service.
Trillo· was preparing to play a
gametheothernlghiwith.hiswlnter
team, the Zulla Eagles. when he
said: "I really don't want to go to
Cleveland. That's why I asked them
for so much money (an estimated
$5.7 million for six guaranteed

The Daily Sentinei-Page~9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SLICED.PEACHES .... ~. ~~~ ... 6f
17 OZ. STOKELY

·SUCCOTASH

• I • I

I

I

I I I I

... I

.1.19

�,.

•

,.
Page- l 0- The Dail

'

Wednesday, Jan

Pom•roy-M!ddlepart, Ohio

Senrinel

I

•
l

Until the past couple of day, I had
forgotten what cold weather Is
really llke , hadn't you? We've had a
great winter to thls point In time
and this too shall
pass. At least we
have n't had two
or three feet of
snow dumped on
us - and each
da y gets us closer
·~ spring.
E.J . Hill, a F latwoods Road
resident, found one of those deflated balloons a lso - but with his
came no note or address - only a
name. Tara Gri!fleth. The writing
appeared to be tha t of an adult and
the Grif!leth Is not spelled as It Is In
Meigs County so a pparently the
balloon came !rom outside of the
county .
The Kiddie Shoppe, whloh has
oeen located on West Second
Street, Pomeroy - · originally It
wa s begun ' tn Middle port - has
closed Its doors. Another sign of the
times, no doubt - and these signs
we ca n do without.
High school graduates a re pretty
bl)i a ffairs these days with lots of
gf!lds. However, It hasn't always
been tha t way. Time was when
completion of the eig hth grade was
goOd enoug h for most folks and they

by · c hoice or necessity gave up
education to go to work.
In the late 1!ms, P omeroy High
School ha d only sb&lt; or so graduates
each spri ng . F or example, making
up the class of 1895 were Phllllp
Felger , F ordyce C. Geyer., F rank
L. Hood , E dward .L. Morton,
Arthur Pfarr, Abby E . Glaneg!n,
Alma F1anegin and Luella L.
Barnes. Mem bers of the class of
1896 were E lmer F . Da vis, Harry
B. Robertson, Carrie L. Geyer ,
J ulia H. Hum phrey, E stella Hun·
!ley a nd Sophia M. Schmlttauer.
The re were seven graduates In the
class of 1897 and the se Included
John F . King , Arthur D. Morton,
Homer H . Sparks, Anna B. Evans ,
Lucy M. Harver, Emma Neutzling
a rid Ma rgaret Williams. Moving
lntn the next century, the cla ss of
1903 had only three members , M.M.
Lasher, G ifford Meyers and Lillian
Stander. Quite a change !rom today
when an attempt Is made to provide
a high school educat,lon for everyone - whether they want It or not
- and le t's face It, some don't.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Lite rary Club will m eet at
- 7:30 p.m . . Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Carl Hor ky. Mrs.
: Horky will also have ·the book
. revlel!'.
.'

SYRACUSE- Third Wednes·
day Hom emakers Clul? ?f syi-a ·
cuse will meet at the municipal
building at 10 a .m . Wednesd~y.
Each member Is to br ing a
"covered dish and material such
as thread and scissors on a quilt.
RUTLAND - Young Wee\&lt;
:will be observed at Rutland
.Church of the Nazarene begin·
·n1ng Wednesday and ending
Sunday. Services will be held at 7
p.m. Wednesday cond.u cted by
youth. Thursday youth will meet
a t 5 p.m . to call on members.
followed by a pizza party. On
Friday and Saturday, services
wU! be a t 7 p.m . a nd Sunday at
6: 30p.m . A mini-revival will be
held Sunday featuring Rev. and
Mrs. William Groves. The public
Is invited.

TI-IURSDAY
POMEROY - Magnolia Club
at 7: 30 p.m . Thursday a t the
home of Mrs. Ka rl Grueser.

P OMEROY
Willin g
Workers Class of E nterprise
United Methodist Church will
meet at 7:30p.m. a tthe home of
Dorothy Long.

POMEROY
Episcopal
Church Women wtll hold a
luncheon a t 12: 30 p.m . Thursday
In the Meigs Inn. Hostesses will
be Grace Elch, Margaret Dutton, Helen Hayes and Nellie
Brown.

MIDDLEPORT Middleport Child Conserv~tlon League
wlil meet at 7:30p.m . Thursday
at the home of Peggy Hanis,
who Is have devotions. Janet
Duffy a nd Peggy Houdashelt
will be hostesses.

FRIDAY
DORCAS - There will be a
soup supper at Bethany United
Methodist Church, Dorcas, Friday a t 5 p.m . Soup, sandwiches,
and dessert will be served.
Member s are to take their own
container s for carry-out order s.

SATIJRDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Delta
Kappa · Ga mma will have a
carry-In dinner Saturday. at
Middleport Church of Christ at
12: 30 p .m , Hostesses remind
m embers should take their own
table service.

Astrograph
•
January 20, 1983
More travel for pleasurable purposes than In the past is llkely for
you thls coming year. Now Is the time to begin to plan where you wo1,1ld
like to go and with whom you would Uke to travel.
AQUAIUUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Guard against tendencies tOday to
blurt things out before thinking them through. You could say something
which might embarrass yourself or others.
. PISCES (Feb. 20-Mareh 20) Be optimistic regarding ways to
Improve your material position, but don't be a dreamer or wisbful
1 thinker . This could lead to dlsapP&lt;!Intment later. .
ARIES (March 21-Aprlll9) Normally you are rather self-assured,
but IDday you might have unrealistic doubts pertalnlr]g to your ablllty. .
Don't underrate yourself.
TAURUS (i\pri120-May 20) There's a possibility your feelings and
logic could he In conflict today and cause you to think along unreallstlc
lines. Make practical evaluat!Qns.
·
GEMIM (May 21-.June 20) It might be dltflcult to withhold things
you wish kept secret !rom an lnqulsltlve-frlerid today. Don't give her or
him any openings tn'launch a. probe.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Weigh your alternatives carefully
IDday, but don't let this cause you to.be totally Indecisive~ If you can't
make up your mind, you'll remain on dead center.
·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) More time may" be spent today In finding
excuses why tasks should be postponed than In actually doing the work.
Spend your energy being a doer as well as thinker . .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If you'~ In a position to exercise .
authority, ' be very careful how you conduct yourself todl!y.
Subordinates you rub wrong won't be !Orgivlng.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Qct. !3) It's best to say "No" up front today If a
family member requests something you don't think you can dellver,
because she'll be depending on you.
S()ORPIO (Od. '24-Nov. 22) Unless you have something
complll)lentary to say abollt cq-workers today, It would be !Jetter ,t&lt;i
keep yow: thoughts ID yourself. Avoid crltlctzlng·.
SAGJrrARIUS "(Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You're likely to handle your
maJor eiqJendltures prudently today, but there's a chance you'll not get
value received lor your smaller purchases.
CAPIIICORN (Dec. 2Z-Jan. 19) Making !Do much over trlvlal
1s1ue1 could cause family problems today. Should minor lllti'act\ODS
· occur, try to look the other way.

·'l

eon.-.

Inc.

Uti1111es Comm1ssion of Ohio on
October 13. 1992 an ap plicati on requesting on increase in'
rates and charges for services
ren d ~red within its jurisdiCtiOn.

Po!l'e roy's newly expanded and
remodeled Kroger Store ·marked
the grand opening of the Improved
!llclllty Sunday with brle! ceremonies a nd favors and foOd Item gifts
tO customer s. The Improved facll·
lty Is attractive and new featureswhich we're not really used ID In
this community ~ Include a Ooral
shop and a res13urant facUlty.

The case number before the
Public UtilitiOs Commission of

Ohio is 82-1339-GI'&lt;·AIR.

· A copy of the app l1cation is

available for inspection at the
office of Syracuse Home_Uti lities Company, Inc. on Ma1n

Str eet, Racine. Ohio 4577 1.
Additionally, a cbpy is a-.ailable
for inspection at the offices of
t he Public Utilities Co m m ission

Of Ohio at 375 ~ou t h High
St r eet . Co l u m bus . Ohio

a·or

'43215.

In its application. Syracuse
!Hom·e Uti li ties Company, Inc.
alleges th()t based o n currem
expense levels. the existing
rates do not provi de a rl;lason a·
ble leve l · o( co mpe nsat1o n for
·u t1l1ty seivices . Based on t his
all egatio n. the Applicant re·
quesis the Public Ut ilit1es Com ·
m tss1on of Oh10 find and
~ utho rize the Apphc anl to
c harge the rates and charges
set fort h below as .. Proposed

I
'

1....

A BIRD IN NEED - Debbie McCreleM
examines an illlured sandhill craae, the oecGDd
largest member of the crane family, ¥ loflt bcMb 118
feet In a coyote trap near Corpll!l ChrWI, Texas. Die

Ra tes".

biJ'd wiD be deattoyed 11111- lll'&amp;lllclal fed can he
obt•lned llllCl attached tp. the Cl'elle. Mc&lt;JreleiB, who
takes care o1 many Injured blrdl, illonkfnl for tielp to

• Any -

save aDd care for the crane. (AP Luerplloto ).

It's great weather to wear a
frozen srnlle ... do It!

onu• toryaru-.

I

Rfi c o rn me hd at10 n s w h ic h
d1 ff~r fro m the applic ation m ay

DEAR HELEN:
When I was 16 I. viewed these
out-of·fOCUS ads of pregnant women
with romantic illusions and misty
eyes .
Tnen I majored In art at a school
torgt!tedyoungpeople. WehadUve
drawing (of the human figure) lor
four hours a qay, five days a week.
One modet ·was a mother o! five
who moved like a cat. She was
great fun to draw, with her
Rubenesque figure and smooth,
·
fluid movements.
Then she got pregnant
Artists are trained to see accurately and record movement
quickly. As our model's pregnancy
progressed, she became stiffer and
slower. Her caWke Ouldlty was
gone and the body which months
before had a dancer's grace now
moved like a hippo. We had ID

render her out.(}f-focus because her
shape was ~ut.(}f-focus In reallty . .
In the ensuing ll "years , I've
noticed this same change from
grace to gross In many pregnant
women. For one "pg." who retains
her ease ·of movement and grows
more attractive, dozens don't.
Our model's " old self" returned
soon after delivery, and we were
delighted to draw her baby too.
However, the experience chaliged
my romantic notions of pregnancy.
I wonder If most of the sentimental·
lty about It Is really societal
conditioning of the same sort which
decrees little girls must play with
dolls and little boys with cars and
trucks.
I'll bet there'd be fewer population prOblems If everyone was
forced to draw a !Ially record o!
pregnancy from the third month
through the ninth.

Meigs club members gather ·for
Syracuse PTO
Fund-raising activities at Ute
basketball tol!rnament to be held at
Syracuse Elementary School wene
planned during a meeting of
Syracuse P'IO held recenily at tre
school.
Betty Van Meter, president,
thanked all those who helped With
Christmas parties and ball games
conresslons and reported that the
football trophy had been engraved.
Room mothers were adviSed to
make plans for the valentine
parties to be held on Feb. 14 at 2·
p.m.
Approval was given for a party
for the basketball players . Purchase of new wet-dry vacuum
cleaner was approved. It was ritted
that the parent-teacher conferen·
ces wUI be - held Jan. Tl. Mrs.
StearJ:Es IntrOduced the student
teacher, Debbie Pickens.
cathy Blaettnar, dlstrlct coordl'
nator, talk!!d on · ~ reading
program with Shirley Sayre's
reading studenls presenting tre
program.
ROom count was won by the first
grade. .

Philathea Women
A craft fair wltll demonstra tions
on llow to make several of the crafts
highlighted the January meeting of
Phllathea Women of Middleport
Church of Christ.
Showing various Items they had
made were Rose Reynolds, Clyda
Allensworth; Sl!aron Stewart,
Mildred Riley,. Phyllis GOkey,
Becky Loving, and Cathy Cooper.
Dorothy Roach presided at the
meeting which opened. with the
Phlla!hea Song and prayer by
Debby Melton. Devotions were
given by Martha Childs who used the
~h Psalm and poems by Helen
Stelrier Rice from her booklet, .
"'l

ReportswereglvenbyFarleCole,
secretary-treasurer, and Grace
Hawley, flower lund. Reporle W
were MJ1clred Hawley, ~

McGee, ,Debbie Malden, Ken ijar·
r!s, Car.! Nelson, and Evelyn Lewis.
Nora Rice reported on the"Thlnk•
'

.

· firm, COfJIOfll·

publicmion CXMI ..... PIICP
t11ot ...
diocrimin.l-

By HELEN BOrl'EL
DEAR HELEN:
,
I get furious at people who say a
pregnant woman loses her looks
and becomes gross and repulsive.
Are these the same ones. who say
age Is ugly?
My husband and I enJoyed each
stage of our three pregnancies.
Perhaps because he seemed to love
rrie more as I grew, I really
blossomed - friends say I was at
my prettiest when I was expecting.
Now that we're older, we've
added a few pounds, and f!IY man's
stomach Is no longer fiat. I'm not
tumed.(}f! by his "changes," We
love each other lor the persons we
are, not for eXternal appearanCes
aione - NOT SKIN DEEP
DEARNSD:
. I share your attitude, but many.
disagree. As the saying goes, "It's
all In how you look at it." Read on:

"Someone.Cares.~·

.

liOn or m.y flo,
- - ' to 8oction 4909.18
of the Codo. "'
'objection to MICh IUCIIAII
which lll8y llhge .... ouch

be made by the StaH of the'
Pu b1 1c UUI!t1es Com mission of
Oh10 o r by tnterven tng part ieS
and may be adopted by the

Arguments on beautifulness of pregnancy

POMEROY - E vangeline
Cha pter, Order of the Eastern
Star , will hold officers' practice
at 7 p.m . Thursday to include
work practice.

LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE
~OURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO, CASE NO. 18221
F- - S.vlngo Co..

p any. In c. fi led w!1 h th e Public

Helen help us

Calendar

NOncE TO
CUSTOMERS
s.,_Home

Not1ce IS hereby g1ven that
Swacuse Home U ti~i tles Com .

C stamps
lying around around and wonder
how much they are worth on
sending out mall? Tom-Reuter of
the Pomeroy Post Ot{lce says the
A's , orange In color, are worth 15
cents, the B's , purple, are worth 18
and the C's, brown, are 20-centers.
George Collins, Meigs County
These stamps were printed
Treasurer, has a nice Valentine's · quickly · a t the . time of price
Day g1!t for you. Rear estate taxes
Increases as supplements until
we re due on Jan. 20- an extension
stamps bearing the prlee could be
has been granted and now you can
put onto the market. Incidentally;
hang onto your ready cash ll!ltll
the A, B and C stamps cannot be
Feb~ 14.
used for International mall.

It was recently re ported that
P om eroy VIllage bad been advised

Public Notic'

Utllhloo

PROPOSED RATES ·

reco-...ry IGC RI rate will be

to all co nsu mption.
Howeve r. the GCR 1S not a part
of th1s rate proceec:l1 n g
appl1ed

-H.

.

.

Got a problem? An adult subject
for diScussion? You can l.alk It over.
In her column If you write to Hek.n·
Bottel, care of this newspaper.
•

2

,•

To think you eowld not say

J

!Iefort you' elosld your eyes.
FO&lt; til OilS,.. did your bnt;
011, God, l"nl yOU tltrllll
rest!
.
Sodly misstd b:f hiurifo. ehllchtn and Irion s.

:

.. '

~

Pursuant to an ORDER OF
SALE ISSued by the Court of
Com mon Ple as 1n the above • ''·There - used to be a rnah&lt;&gt;rnl
,_,,
n amed case. I will ·expose for ' there, but with the.governineo•tl
sale at pubhc auctiOn on the
,
front steps o f the M e1gs CoU nty
pinching pennies...
Co u rt House, Pomeroy. Oh1o. at
1S. 15 o'clock A.M on Satur·
day. the 5th day of Febr uary.
Public Notice
1983. the fo liO&gt;Ntng land s an d
tenements. IO· Wit: ·
S1tuated 1n the Cou nty of
REVENUE SHARING
M e1g s. In the State of Oh1 0 a nd
PUBUC NoTICE
1n th e Town sh1p af Sahsbu ry
Th e Boa rd of Trustees ol
a nd bou nded and descn bed as
Columb1a Tow nsh1p ha s sub fOll ows:
mitted 1ts Fo rm OH·3 to State o f
Beg1 nn1ng at the South l1 ne
Oh10 Aud ito r.
o f One Hundred Acre Lot No.
A c op y o f the report and the
306 and on the Eas1 s•de of the suppo rtin g d oc umentation are
. Rutland and M 1ddlepon Road: Bvatla ble for pubhc 1nSpect10 0
t hen ce East on the Sout h hn e of
at hom e o f townsh1p clerk At
Lot No. 306 abOIJt l•fty-one 3. Box 82 . Albahv. Oh19
·rods to John Ausselrs hne and . January 17. 1983 thrOugh
l and. thence 1n a northerly
February 5. 1983.
d1 rec11on along J ohn Ru ssell's
l1ne atx&gt;ut ten rods; thence
111 19. ltc
W est Parallel Wi th the sa1d
Sou th t1ne of sa1d l ot No 306
to the 'EaSt side o f sa1d Rutland
a nd Mld dleoo n. R oad~·the nce 1n
Public Notice
Southerly dtrec tt on along the
East s1de of sa•d road abo ut ten
LEGAL NOTICE
rods to th e p lace ol begmn1ng.
SftERlFF'S !;ALE
cont emmg ab o ut. Three acres.
Court of Common Ptoaa.
m are o r less.
Moiga County, Ohio CUe No.
Excepting and re serVI ng to
18222
fo1mer Grantor. her he1r s and
F...- Bonk - S.\Iinga Co ..
ass •gns. an ea sement to use the
p re sent dnveway . w h1oh ex· ' ond Mary Lou longonotte
Plolntlflo
tf nd s acrD.$5 t he nortn~rly
VI .
r
port10n of tt)e real estate here1n
Clifford Long..-, et II
c on veyed r-a the ad1acen tl ands
Delendonu
of th e Grantor Th 1s n ghl ,of ·
Purs uan t to an ORDER OF
way shall be 15 fee t w 1de and
SA LE 1ssued 10 the above
shall extend generally 71!, feet
nam ed c au se. I w1ll expose fo r
o n e1ther s1de of the centerline
sa le at Pubhc Auct ron o n the
of the extst1ng r1g ht of way The
fro nt steps of the Cou rt House .
ng ht of way shall be used tw the
Me1gs Co unty. Pomeroy. Oh10.
Grantor here1n . her he•r s and
at 10 .0 0 o 'cl ock A.M . on
ass1gns. 10 common Wl lh Gran·
Saturday. the 5th day o f
1ees. and hell h er party sh all at
Febru arv. 19S3 , the foll ow1ng
any t1 me obstru Ct t he use o f the
lands and tenements. !O-Wit
same by the other,
The follootn g real estate
The property 1S ap pra 1sed at

.;

sold !or l ess than two-ltw ds of
the appra tsed pr1ce.
Te rms. Cas h m hand

I

~~~tocc:!;~h~=;:~~:e

JAMES J. PROFFITI
SHERIFF

as

Hart.

Pack 245
Pomeroy UMW

Mr. andMn.Robert~. Sbtillo

.

lnng Bottom, OH. 45743
986-4193 or 992-3087
12·2Q.rtc

!

2. - - - - - - - . 3. -

•.
5.

--"'----

17.

-

a

7.
B. .

26:
27.

Real Estate General

9.
10.

~.
29.

11.

30.

:~:

~~· -

1~

33.
34.
35. - ·-

_ _ _ _ __

Ij

j·

Mill This Coupon with R.tmiHance
The ~lillY Sentinel
.
111 Court St.

lj'

1

·I"

I·
~~

L... ----~!~-:.o.!:..~:.~~-~--~-.J

OPEN 9 to 5 MON. tltrio ~T.
An TY!IIS of Auto Repair,

llnbs, Tune-Ups. etc ..

sPECIAL
TRANSMtSStON

ALTER

AND FLUID CHANGE

Onty 31 .915
1

" Beautiful, Cusrom
Built Garages"
.
Call for free siding 1
eslimates, 949·2801 or '
949·2860.
N'o Sunday Call•

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSUlATION
VINYL &amp;

ALUMINUM SIDING
Oit11Uirtion
oStonn Doont

""'""""*"

oStonn Wmdows
•R
Windows

•-Roofing
FREE ESTIP,1ATES
JAMES KEE~'EE

.

.

minera~.

rn

PUJ!LIC ACCOUNTANT
Now ~cepting New·
Clients
Low Rates
15 Years Experience

All Work Guan1nteed
To Be Done RieJrt and
On Time
CALL 992·6273 -

or 992-6206

12/ll/1 mo.

''CUT OUT
FOR FUlURE USr'

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes ·

1OOo/o NYLON CARPET

RLILTOII .

walhen •Ranges
•Ralrigonlton

•Dryan •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

4-5-rtc

- - ' -'-'-- --

-_,;,l

112.95

NOW $16.95

'

As tow AI

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
· Also Transmission ·
PH. 992-5682
Dr992· 7121
3·2Hic_:_

HUNIJIBIS

··

Wit1t Pod Installed

'4.99

0!' 5~ TO atOosi-

RUTlAND RJRNITURE

THE DABBLE SHOP
OPEN 9-5- CLOSED THURSDAY
PlASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC -BISQUE
Check Our Spedn "for
Tho Month of .Jan-v

DABBLE

SHOP

251 ~ W. lllin St.

Pomeror; OH.

12·24-1 ....

742·2211 .
DillY! A LIT1\I-SA111 A lOT

chine

repair,

pan1.

aupplloo.

end

Pick up and
delivery, Devil Vacuurn
Cleo ner, one · hiH mit• up
448-0294
Georg .. Creek
..
Rd.
thoot,

Coli

Recine

Gun ·

Club. Evary Sunday l'tltrtlng
1 p.m. Foctory choked guno
only.

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair- service and
installa.tion .
Residential
&amp; Commercial

INCOME TAX SEI\VICE.
Feclorol and State income
taxe•. Quarterly reporu: W·
2 forma. Dono by 1 p.,.iint-·
mont. 614-992-2272 or-·.
Won~ Eblin at 41000 •rei CHfl Rd Po
~u-,
" meroy.
Song foot Jan.22 , 7:30p.m "•
Silver Run Fr• Will Baptlat ;
Church. Sing•ro·Tho Unroa .
Family, Tho Gabrial Quartot. :
LONG 1 DAY SALE JANU - :
ARY 22, D • D EQUIP- •
MENT, ALBANY OHIO.
·

4·

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has :
anything to give away and •
do• not offer or attempt to '

offer any oth., thing far aole ;
may . place an ad in thia ·
column. Th•e will be no ~
charge to the adverti•er.
:

•

Mother Cat and 2 klnen1 . "
'

448-231 B.

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE

four ._autlful killona. Only

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

apply. 3 maleo, 1 female
Suitable for Indoor pet~
only. Would prefer accip.
tance in palrw. Phona 814.
982-2631 after 5 p.m.

PH. 992·3194 or
992·3305
No Sunday Calls
1·5·1 mo.

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Sizes start !rom 12'116"

· UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'.

home• for

Wanted-Good
'incere

pet

loverw

n ..d

26" Zanlth conoolo TV In
wood cabinet. Noedo pic- .•
tu"' tube. 814-992-30711.
Dog, male, pan collie. To
good home. 814-9923"988.

8 month old black Gorm.on
Shepherd, excellent heolth
good with kida. 304·676:
1879.

TWO cor bodioo 10 junk, no
motora, 304-675-1248 or
8711-IIB38.
6

Lost and Found

. Insulated Do&amp; Hovses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
R). 3. Box 54
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-1143-2591

LOST white • "liver colorod
Englla~ Pointer. Loot on Bob
McCormick Rd . Call 44621B1 or 814·367-0664.

10·6·tlc

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Snt1llest Heater
COfe to the Larpst Radiator.
Raciator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 VI$. Experience

Public Sala •
&amp; Auction

WVe Stete Champion Auctl ..
onwr Rick Pearson. Eatetea.
entiQUII, term, houeeholde.

Ucenelld Ohlo·WVo . 304773-5785 or 304-7739185.
Auction avary Fri. night at

tho Hartford Community
Center. Truck! oad• of new
merohendiae

every

week . · - ~

Con1jgm1nts of new and
uMd merchandise elweya

~

1

walcomo. Richard Roynoldl
AuctionNr. 2711;3088.

Pomeroy, 011.
Ph. 992-2174
2·26-*c

L-----------~·· ~
~~~---9 Wanted
To Buy
WANTED TO BUY Oldlurni·

lu!" and Antiqueo of oil • '
klndl. call Kanneth Swain

ROOFING

H. L WHITESEL
-Gutters

448·3159 nr 21if·1967 In

the eveninge.

·

Buying Gold : Silver, Ptotinum, old Coins, 1crap ringe

•Downspouts

&amp; silverware . Deily quotea
IYiilabte. Al10 COin1 &amp; coin

•New or Repair
oPainti~

FREE ESTIMATES ,
Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263
'
'

.
7-14-Uc

aupplin ·lor 1111. Spring
Voley Trading· Co., Spring
.Valay Piau, 448-B0211 or
448 -8028.
We pay caah for late model
ciHn tiled car•.
Franc~toWn

Car Co.
BJU Gone Johnaon

·1---~-----------r--------------~ ~4-411_-o~o_ll_a_.

Sq. Yd.

4

3 Announcement.

· Gun

lnstaletl

a~. ~ illlstant. -

OTHER CARPET

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

r---------~tl

AUTO&amp; TRUCK
.,
REPAIR
•1

'
Witlthd

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

_,.,~

SWEEPER and oowing ma-

':· Middleort. Ohio

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

•Wom.o•Diah-

Office ............................... ........... .. ...............992-2259

BEST SELECTION IN
TRI-COUNTY AREA

·.... '11;95

992·2196

i-l l mo. .

8

St. Rt. t24 Pomeroy, D~

mlsiottt.

SERVICE
We can repair end
I8COI8 radiators end
heater cores. We can
also acid boll and rod
out radistors. WB aiao
repair Gas Tanka.
PAT HILL FORD
J.l3-11c

PH. 992-2712
12·31·1 mo.

REALTORS '
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.. GRI ................................. 992-6191
.leon. Trussell ............ .......... ..........,.............. .... 949-2660
Dotttt Turner ..................... ............................ 992-5692

64 Misc. Merchandi.s e

Sell mlstant.

RADIATOR

heir. 1 yr. old, had all•hot• '

.

A
~

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6 :30P.M.
Factolv Choke 12.
Ga!JII! Shofi,Jns Only.

t::::========t==:--======::;1 4411-0718.
opoyed, and clodawlld. Coli ;
•

The Rieht Home For You! - POMEROY - 3 bedrooms w~h
carpeting, Separate dining room, nice kitchen wrth range,
insulated, storms, free standing fireplace. Secluded, quietl Just

Housing
Headquarters

Bashan Building

Hou18 cet grey with long : ·

$38,900.00.

YOU CAN AFFORD ONE OF
THE ABOVE. CALl HELEN.
BRUC£ OR VIIG.

I

·I1

AUTOMATIC
TI!ANSMISSION CO.
m W. loin
" -· OH.

1·12·3 me.

' NEW LlmJIG - RUTLAND - A ~ce ranch home with 3 .
bedrooms, basemen~ forced air fumace, insulated. Deck.

'

1
li

Antennalrwtel.tlon

Houaac•ll•ndahop
•ervic•ev•a.
1:5·1 mo. pO ,

.PULLINS
'""CAVATING

.

$22,500.00.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Scottie Smith
All mok••nd modolo
•

EXECUTIVE HOME
Rent - Sale
3·11 ·1fc
Call 7~ 2 • 3 l 9f7-tlc
· This contemponlry 4 bed- • ,
room, 2 bath, home with ~========~:::=====:::::::::::::~
finished family room, attached J1011¥ located near
PoiiiiiiCIY is · available for
ROUSH
immediate occupancy. A
tease and or option to
CONSTRUCTION
u
purchase can be amrwed.
New Homes - extensive
-Dozers
Call:
ttmodelinc
-Backhoes
JAMES J PROFFITI
'
SHER IFF
RCS REALTORS
o£1ectric "'ttt
-Dump Trucks
Me1g s County
1-614-593-5571
.Custom Po~ Bldgs.
-Lo-Boy
19. 3tc
&amp; Garaees
- Trencher·
otloofina Worl!
-Water
~uminvm &amp; l'myl S~ings
- Sewer
15 v... Expeoience
-Gas
Lines
Real .Estate General
GREG ROUSH
Pit. 992·7583
-Septic Systems
or 992-2282
LARGE or SMALL JOBS.
II ·II ·UC
PH. 992-2418

NEW LlmNG - MIDDLEPORT - ' Third Aw. - Neat home in
e:lOd location. 3 bedrooms, bath, range-ref., fireplace. Asking

--- 1

I
I
I·
, .II

992-621601'992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

NEW umNG - 1006 fiaed rate ava i~ble. This 2 bedroom home
in Pomeroy can be yours with $2,400 down. Payments of $92.66
month~ for 20 yeatS. Good condition! Total price $12,000.00.

RACINE - Renovated 6 room
residence next to siDre and
schools. Modem bath, nat gas
heal and large flat lot for only

_ __:__ _ _ I
"21. ~----- I
22. --~---- I
Ir
•
a
1

V. C. YOUNG Ill

SIDING

PH.992-2259

Reasonable 2

20.

L

15.
16.

-

tFrw Eltimetel)

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

POMEROY, OHIO

NEW USTIJIG - 3 bedroom
large lot on qLiet
Has rural water and
modern ~1£hen. On~ $13,500.

GUN SHOOT

...

1---===----,-i;:::=======~~-==::::~~~==::;1

I

18 . - - - - ' - - 1
19, - - - -- 1

.,. .,.

1

Nam•----------

1. -- - -- -

,

· Rnuta 1

NEW LISTING - RUTLAND - Modular with acreage. Plenty of
gartlen space plus a 3 bedroom, 24'x58' modular, _2 bath~ fully
equ1pped kitchen, fire(:Uce, central a1(, FA Electric heal Rear
enci!Eed pon:h. Appro~mately 5-6 acres. $38,225.00.

)

X

AND SON ·Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

SYRACUSE - 1975 Kirkwood
14a65, lurn~ure, equipped
kitx;hen, 2 level lots and bloclt
garage-shop. Natural gas FA
Furnace, OOW !28,500.

I

1

'CHARLES SAYRE

NEW LlmJIG ~ 30 acres of vacant land wrth all
Excelent huntint Sorre timber. $7,000.00.

I
I
I
I
I

Oh'
10
Ph. 98&lt; •269 or no&lt;
•382
~
N....:-a

\IIIDI«,

DIYIIIVM Wlli•rna

WVfJI.

Barns.

coupon. Cancel your ad bY phone when you gel
resul tS. Money not refundable.

I !Wanted
I J For Sale
1 )Announcement
1 J For Rent

1

"
ing- Siding - Concrete
Patios _ Sidewalks _
Ne C struct'
R
W on
iOn - emodeling - Custom Pole

porches. dining and 21evellots.
.kiSt $26,&lt;XXJ.

These cash rates
Include-discount

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

608 E. MAIN

VIRGIL B. SR. JULTOR
216 E. 2nd 51.
Phone
1-1614)·992-3325

$21,500.

- COnc:ret* wodc.
-=a:J -~

~:0TV

~~;;~~~~~~t~~~~~~~~~E====~~~~j
K~chen Cabi' nets- Roof·

Real Estate General

EAFQRD{H

-Add!~!~!£LeBng·

. - Roofitg and~ work

11 -~8-tfc '

Real EstatB GBnaral

MIODLEPORT - Small block
Hill home. Nat gas FA
fumace, basemen~ 11100. kit,
and _space for small garden,

11er da~;Mr. arl'hJirs.~ ~

A. J . GouldatN~ · } . .

614-992·2181

~vel

will!

vl$lted

POMEROY
LANDMARK

$18,500.

Chrlstmaa

l ·J·Hc

MOBILE HOME - with large add-on building, also asphalt
driveway . Locatd on quiet, clean street out of high water in
Racin~ . The living JOom is extra large . There is a cement walk
and large covered porch, also a metal storage building. You
can be in this .one in two weeks for only $16 ,900.
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
NANCY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 843-2075

Sl99.95

Phon•------------~---

·I

Parts &amp;Service

Rentals: $115: $220 - Racine
1200·
-Middleport

Prices Start AI

Addren---------

Jean Brunslde of Florida spent l
,over the Christmas holiday with '•
•
her children and her parents, Mr.
I
and Mrs. Ward Sayre.
, l
Mrs. Edna Pickens and son, !
Hary Pickens, and Mrs. aild Mrs.
Terry ·Phllllps spent Chlistmas
j
with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Im-' t
baden at Mlddlepprt.
1
Robbie and Eddie WU!Iarns or'; i
Columbus spent. Christmas vaca- " l
tbn with their grandmother, Mrs. ' ' ~
Edna Pickens and ~. l\lld Mrs, '' ~ '
Bllly Cozart:
l
Mrs. Francis MQrris returned &gt;' ;
home after Bpeadjng ~er~ days
\
with beilii"andson, ~ t
• over
Mr. and Mrs. BIULakealld(llhjlty, ~
Atlels area, ~ In ~ '!
sever":~ days
l!er da~, 1

Dealer
Farm Equipment

CENTRAL
REALTY
Residentia I Investments

30,000 BTU
90,000 BTU
150,000 BTU

Write your own ad and order uy rnli\V with this

.

Correspondence

Farm Equipment

$37,500.00.

conducted the meeting with Polly ••
. Eichinger giving devotions. She ~
used the poem, "Talk It Over With .'
God" by H~len Stetner Rice, and, , (
had prayer.
.
''· ~
Officers' reports were given and · ~
Ada Warner collected the of!erlng :
of the least cob\.
" •
Mrs. Dill had the program · :
entitled "God Speaks In Many ·, l
Ways." She saki that several ways ,· : ~
In which God speaks to us are• !
sUence, wounds, dreams, an!! "The : ,
Unllkely."
•
A dessert cour5e was served by '
VIrginia Edwards. Graci! Wha le y t
was co-hostess.

Walk-In Garden Ciub

Ill 5 12.

·SALE ON
SPACE HEATERS

RUTLAND -

'

New Holland, Buoh Hog

sby, nice size, 3 bedroom
home. l'h bath~ fireplace, 2

.
Betty Baronlck, vice prellldent,

IDwn.

1115. 12. 19. 3tc

1

\ .
noting that orders can be placed on l
Thursday afternoons at the Senior 1
Citizens Center. A hundred orders! 1
are required to have them dell- 1
vered to Pomeroy. Otherwise, ~ \
food orders must be picked up out of (

Racine FDA

223. Page 207 ol the Deed

Record s o f M e1 Qs Cou nty.
Oh1 0 .
Sub1ect to th e rt.Qht reserved
by fo rm er Grantors. thetr he1rs
and a ss~gns . to use the water
fro m the well Situated on sa1d
tract of land 1n commo n w1 th
these Granto rs. lh e ~r he1 rs an d
a SSIQf'lS . The r1 g ht of t he forme r
Grar'! to rs to use th e water from
th e well sh all cease an d
te rrnrnate w he n th e p ub li c
w ater suPp ly :s av a1la ble to th e
pr operty desc r•bed 1n deed
recorded 1n Vol . 2 2 3. Page 20 7
of the Deed Reco rd s of M e1gs
Cou nty. Oh 10. No new use rs of
wat er fro m the well w 1ll b e
perm1tted w •tho ut the con sent
of the former' Grantors and
th ese Grantors. the1r hetrs an d.
ass1gns
The prop erty 1!: appra1sed at
S33.900.00 and can not o e
so ld tor less than two- th1rds o f
the appra1sed pnce.
Terms: Cash m hand on d ay
of sale

home

~

Authoriied John Dee:re,

West 350 feet to the center of
the publ1c roa d: thfln ce So u ·
th e~ste rl v al ong the ce nter lf!lE
ol th e publ1c roa d to a p on11
wh rch po1n1 rs du e West from
the place of beg 1nn1ng; th ence
East 190 feet to th e plac e of
beg1n n•ng. co nt a1nmg 1.85
acres. m ore or less. Th1s bemg a
part of a 51 ac res and 10 5 ro d s
tract of land descnbed •n Vol

&amp;4 Misc. Merchandise

Curb Inflation JI;
l Pay Cash for . 1 with
street.
:·
Classlfleds
and
!
I
II
Savell I .
I'

•

property conveyed to Cl •fford
Lpngenene by deed recorded
•n Vol 23 6. Page 397 ol the
Deed Re cords ol Me•gs
County. Ohoo. thence North
along the East lme of sa•d
Fract•on 36. 300 leet: thence

S35.900 00 and cannot be

II

·

U.S. Rl. Sli EaSt
Guysville, Oh io

ac re tract t6fcorn
l and·
oarta of4 the
Southwes
er. a of
50

a

~~------~-------------~I

~

sotuate •n the Townsh• pol Olive.
County o I Me1 g s and S tate o I
Ohio. an d beu"'Q 1n Fract 1a n 36 .
S.ec1100 34. Town 4.·Ran ge l l

the Northeast corner o f sa1 d
Fractron 36 wh 1ch· po rnt of
begm nmg IS o n the Eastlme of
sa1d F r a c ~1 o n 36 and at

Ch- F. Johnoon t1 II

·IOodbrt

~

CARPENTER

almost 1.004 feet south lrom

Ill

lo.n wllo passtd owoy Jan.
19. 1911.
Sod ond sudden wos tilt tall.
til one so dtorly lovod •w oil.
A •ittor &amp;ritf, osllocluvoro,
It •s to part with ont so door.
Wo olton sit and ttoinl of you,
And speak olltow you dltd,

.

SALES &amp;SERVICE

c base. a nd beg 1nn1ng at a pornt

In lovioc lltMOIJ of Doony E.

'' l'

noted that 11~ sick and sbut·ln c~
were ·made by the members during
the past month. Special prayer tor
the Rev . Robert McGee, confined to
the O'Bieness Hospital In Athens,
was held .
Thelma Dill gave a report on th!!
meeting of the Meigs -Cooperative
Palish !Rltlng that the food bank Is

In Memoriam

Public Noticto

at the Oh iO Co mpany's Pu r ,

Ploin1lll

111 19. 26 1212. 3tc

PERSONAL to " Lacking '
Strokes": ActresS Ruth Gordon, ·
who will never grow old, says, "If I
go long enough without getting a
compllment I compllment myselt,
and that's Just as good because at
least then I know It's sincere."·
Have ·you "loved yoursel!'' today?·

.
1466

l

husband

YOU~G'S

~~ -

M e1gs CountY

program. Openings for several
lng of You" box which is being sent
monthly to a youth from the church Officers we re V,!lted on and plans for
thebowl·a·thonattheSkyllneLanes ·
attending Kentucky Christian Col·
In Galllpolls on Feb. 19 ' were
. lege. For roll call members gave a
discussed.
snow remembrance.
Hostesses were Francis Roush,
Clara Gilkey, Lula Mae Quivey,
~OPS
MarthaChllds,andLoulseMcEihln·
J. '
ney. Tl1ey served refreshments to
those na med and 'Gertrude Miller,
Shorty Wright was the top loser at
. Helen Reynolds," Mary Bailey, the Wednesday morning meeting of
Margaret Lallance, Oara Conroy, ·T OpS OH 1466 at Rulland. She was
Eleanor Lohse, Beulah Roush, EUr-Pcesented a dollar, a ribbon and
Mae Daugherty and Nina Bland.
nlembers sang In her honor.
.
·
The pledge In unison opened the
meeting cOnducted by MrS: Wright.
She also read an article entitled
" Diet Isn't Necessarlly 'a Bad
Word." H~arts were added to the
A :sax&gt; donation was made to the
board In the current contest and
Racine Fire Department lor a new
calorie ch;p1S.were revjewed .
walkletalklewhentheauxlllarymet
Tuesday nlght at the hall.
Beulah Auther son presided at the
meeting with Teresa Jolmson lead-)ng . In the pledge, and Sharon
A dlscu"Sslon ~ seed catalogs and
Johnson leading In the Lord's
new
flowers was held members of·
Prayer. A $10 donation from
the
Walk-In
Garden Oubtook a look
Marllyn Powell for the Christmas
t()lfard
spring
at a recent meeting.
treat was acknowledged . ·
Participating
In the discussion
It was noted that the unit began
were
Leota
Smlt,h,
Helen Carper,
the NeW Year wit!IOqt bills. A soup
BelvaWutard, Ruth Francis, Ola St
dinner was planned tor tonight
Clair, Naomi Reed, Yvette and
(Wednesday), with vegetable soup,
Yvonne Young.
chill, bean soup, hot dogs. chicken
Mrs. Carper was the wlner of two
salad sandwiches, pie, cake, coffee
quizes.
.
•
and pop to be served.
Mrs.
St.
Clair
gave
a
New
Year's
It was noted !hat the game parties
thought to open the meeting With
will be beld every Friday !rom 7-10
Mrs.
Francis reading a verse on
p .m .
"Getting
Along with the Weather."
Refreshments were served by
Sandy Patterson. The door prize . For devotions, a poem l)y Helen
Stefner Rice was read entitled "God
was won by Jean Johnson. Attend·
Gave Man the Earth tri Enjoy Not to
lngbesldesthosenamedabovewere
Destroy."
Ruth , · aln, Mae Oeland, Agnes
A letter of thanks was read from
Bogg• .,, Sandy Patterson, and
the
Senior CitiZens Center for the
Thelma Walton.
donallon made lnmeinoryotEdlson

'

Customer Servec e Ch arges.
55 00 per m onth
Custo m e r C o nsumpno n
C harge, S1. 35 per md
In ad d it1 o n. a gas cost

Is an artlst phot~grapher specializing In
equine portraits. Even the discomfort of very pregnant mares makes
him cringe. Artists are highly
sensitive to the distortions of the
female body. I am one who no
longer thinks It would be wonderful
to be pregnant! - M. K.
My

meeti~gs

Thecommltteeo!CubScoutPack ·
245 met recently to plan the next .
A donation to the city hall lund of
Pack meeting to be held Feb. ll at
the '' Middleport FirSt' Baptist Pomeroy United Metbodlat Olurcb
as a memorial to EulaiJJ Webllter
Chiii'Cb. The Webeio ceremony wU!
was made when the United Met!»
· be held at thllllme and patches will
dllt Women met In the church
be prtlllllllld to the clubl!COOII. .
Bob Smith opened the meetlni IOCial i:'OOm Tuei\IIIY I!VfliiiDI,
Memorial' aervlcel for Mrs.
with prayer. Joann CcJuncl), Cllb
Webltw win be ~ by, the
cornmiiiiiDIIet, pn!lellt and
umt at tbe next lll!dnl· It was
· 8II8WI!l'i!d ·qulStloaa about the

CommiSSIOn .

BOGGS

LAFF-A-DAY

Public Notice

Business Senrices

-.

111 Court St.. POIItiQY, Ollio 4S769

by the Meigs County Health
Department that the department
would no longer provide and
solution needed tor an lntoxlcator
used by the police department. In
the past ihe solution was provldeq
by the Ohio Department of Health
that has Indicated that the village
will not he provided the solution and
nat the Meigs Health Department.

Do you have A,

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write Oaillp Sentilttl Classtfitd Dtpt.

l

Pomeroy High School didn't used to have as. many graudates

The Daily Senti nei- Page- 11.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

j

Beat of the bend
By BOB HOEFIJCH .
Dally Sentinel Staff

Wednesday, January 19, 1983

ry 19, 1983

HIO
VAUEY
ROOFING

________

•'

'

Wanted to buy Square Dan·c - :· ~
ing outfit•. All slz••· men'l - :· -

ond woman'a. Coli 4411 41137.

AND HOME MAINTENANCE

~~1:.~2"'

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

Cottintlrtill

'Stonil ...-. &amp; Doon

FlEE ISIIIIATO .

20Y-E.,-

flill HOSKINS

Pll. 742·21l' .
Or 949:2160 'o/251

Buying old ond . _ oomlc
booka oftor I p.m. 304-8711231.

l
•I

. ''
~

�•
e
9

12

The

Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

Wanted To Buy

41

Houses for Rent

44 ·

Apartment
. for Rant

.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE••

72

6 rm, hoU" 'In Country' 2Y.r 1-----.:..__ _ __

Old stoneware jarl·. jugs.
crocks &amp; milk pitchers, also
old wicher baskets. Call

mi. from town, eat In
kitchen, l.Room. w -wood
burner, 3 bedrooms, utility
room "ond both, c•upet1hruoyt, minimum 1 yr. lease
ond deposl1. Coli 446-3046
days. 446·2602 evenings.

614 - ~67 - 0138 .

Buv raw fur a_nd beef hides.
George Buckley, 614· 6644761 . Weekdays 5 to 9.

weekends 12 noon to 9PM .
deer hides and ginseng and
trappi ng s upplies. Rt. 2,
BEDS· IRON . . ·BRAsS. old
tumiture, gold. silver dol·
Iars, wood ice boxes. ·stone

jars. an tiques. etc ._. Complete hQuS8holds , Write:
M .D . Miller, Rt . 4 , Pomeroy.

Oh Or 992 -7760.

THREE bedroom house for
rent. nice ·location , 304675-1090.

Gold. silver. sterling , je welry , rings , old coins &amp;
r.u rrency. Ed Burko1t Barber
Shop , M id dleport . 9.92 -

Help Wanted

15

Licensed Adm-inistrator for

10 0 bed skilleQ nursirig
home in Southeast Ohio.
Salary comonsuratad with

Mobile h.orOe 1981 2 bed·
Karate the ultimate in self room 14x60, with 21ft. roll
defence all private lessons,
Out, extras
incl. :S.$1take
4,000
or
Men. woman. &amp; children. $3,000
down
over
Instruction thru black belt. paymonts. Call 446-2062 .
Also available Karate uniforms puching and kicking 78 Nashua mobile home
bags. and protective equip· 14•70 excellent cond. Call
rnent. Jerry lowery &amp; Asso- 614-367-7469 after 6PM.
cLUes Karate Studio, 143
BUrtington Rd., Jackson, 1971 14x64 Fleetwood mo·
Qh . Call 614-286-3074 or bile home. 27x7 ft . front
614 -384-&amp;160 .
porch , awning. front win·
:::======~== dow awnings. central air,
gas heat , A· 1 cQnd ., price
18 Wanted to Do
$7,000 . Call 446-4644.

experience. Send resume to
S HMC . P.O .Box 1088 . Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .
The Rio Grande College
C.E.T.A. office is currently
see king twent'l·iflv e (25)
persons to participate in a
food service peraprofes -"
sional
training
programclassroom
. Unemployed
per- 1
son should contacl1helocel
Bureau of Employment Ser·
vices for further details and
to arrange for an interview.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY General Hauling and Trash
removel Servicit. Reliable
EMPLOYER .
and
dependable. Cal! 446 P 0 . No. 25040 .
3159 after 6PM 256-1967.

1----------

The Gallia County Junv&amp;nile
Court is in need of foster
homes for unruly youth.
These youth need love,
strong guidance, and a place
where they can sortouttheir
lives. Become a foster par·
ant and help Galli&amp; County' s
future. For more information. call the Juvenile Court
at 446-3842 .

HAVE FUN paying your
Holiday bills. Sell Avon and
earn good sss. meet . nice
people . Coli 614 -843 2982, 614-38B-9045. 614992-3690 .

Will keep pre-school child ·
t'en in my home, Spring
Valley area . Call after 6 ,
446 _8325 .

1----------

Dry wall hanging and finish ing . 13 years experience.
Free estimates. Reasontlble
rates . Call 614-388-8880.

21

Business
Opportunity

lecturer for new weight loss
group . Must have car. We
are looking fo ran aggressive
person who is seeking maximum income for . minimum
hours . Must be able to meet
the public and talk before
groups. For interview call
1-614-428-3030 Of 1-304428· 8805 and leave name.
phone number and best time.
to be reached .

Will lease Pennzoil Station
on busy At. 7 in Gallipolis.
For information write: J .
Siner , P.O. Box 1946, Parkersburg, wva. 26101 .

The West Virginia Departmant of Healtl'l is seeking a
full -time Hospital Adminittrator for ru Fainnont Emergencv Hospital, located in
Fairmont, Wes• Virginia . Requirements: baccalaureate
degree plus two years of
experience in hospital or
health services. or business
administration. This 44-bed
facility provides long-term
~•.. skilfJJJ nursing services and
·~·- outpetient clinic services..
'
Applicants shou ld submij
~~ .,esumasand applicatiOns to:
l. Clark Hansbarger, M . 0 .,
Director of Health. 1800
Washington Street, East,
Charleston. West Virginio
26305, by December 15.
Salary negotiable . Eq·ual Opportunity Employer - AA
· Plan-1\1-F -H

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

LOOKING FOR A PART
TIME JOB that hes good
pay, life insurance, retirement plan . that will teach
you a valuable job skill, plus
help with a college or

22 Money to Loan
HOME ~ LOANS 12% fixed

rate. leader Mortgag~. 1 614-592-3061 .

Business &amp; Second Mortgage loans . Equity Resouri8S. in Ohio 1-800992-2351 , out of Ohio
1-613-268-0112.
'
23

Professional
Services

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; tax service
for all types of busineses .
Carol Neal 446-3B62
PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appointment, Ward '• Keyboard,
446 -4372.
PERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL - Professional
Etectrolysis Center, Inc ..
A.M .A . Approved, Dr. Referrals. Grft Certificates, new
hours . By appointment.
304-676-6234 .

There's~~~~~~!~~~~

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance C9. .has ·offered
teNk:ea for fire inaurance
oover~e in Gallia County
for almost 1 century. F~rm,
home ond P«&lt;Onol property
cover-c~•• are 11'18fleble to
nwet lnclvidual needa. Contoot Eug.,o Hoi loy, ogont.
318-8190.

-0

1974 Schultz mobile hom&amp;,
2 bdr. axe . cond .. 12x66
with 4x 10 expando. 9x24
awning. central air, dishwasher, range, refrig ., In ~
eludes new carpet, drapes,
$8, 700 . Coli 614-367 0691.
30ft. 1973 Bonanza mobile
home set up in Southern
Valley mobile home park
Cheshire, Oh. May be seen
Man-Thurs. noon .
Good used 2 bedroom mobile homes . Furnished .
BrOwn's Trailer Park, Rt.
124. Minersville, Oh . 614992-3324 .
Taka over payments for a 76
2 bd.room mobile home.
Academy. Cell 614-9492300 or 614-949-2091 .
USEO MOBILE HOME.
676-2711.

14x65 TWO bedroom, Holly
Park, with 100 ft. • 200 ft.
lot . included . Washer &amp;
dryer, 2 air conditioners.
large kitchen with all built in
appliances. with built In
dishwasher. new carpet &amp;
draperies. excellent condtiion. 4th Street, Mason,
WV. 304-773-6713 after 6
p.m.
33 Farms for Sale

Vo-Tech
education?
only
one
around! High
School Seniors or graduates. you may even qualify 31 Homes for Sale
for a cash bonus. ContBct 1 ----~-----­
the West Virginia Army •National Guard. For more
inforfJlation call Sergeant House for sale on hind
Sergeant Lutton at 304- contract. Cheshire. Oh. 7
676-3950 or call toll free rms .. . basement, garage,
workshop, gas furnance .
1 -B00-642-361 9 .
614-388-B276.
DIESEL mechanics. no &amp;Ill ·
peri"nce necessary. For in ~ 3 bck home in town, baseformation call 919-227 - ·ment, large lot. many trees,
woodburner, quiet n8igh0536 , 919 -227-6115 ,
a.m . to 9 p.m. Monday- 'borhood, 832,600 . Call
Friday . Adams 446 -4999.
Ehterprlsealnc.
3 bedroom house for tala.
AVON Representatives New carpeting throughout.
needed . Help pay your Located on Bashan Rd . and
Christmas bills. 304-676- sits on 3 acres of land.
Excellent terms to rjght
1429 .
party. MAKE AN OFFER . 30
year financing available.
Contact Bank One of Pome·
12
Situations
roy . 614· 992-2133 .
Wanted
For Sale-house and garage
on one acre In country.
GINGER BREAD STUDIO . $12,600 . Call 949-2690.
Art leuoris . .,foni earringto~ . 698-3290 .
32 Mobile Homes
Will care lor elderly Woman
for Sale
or man in my private home.
Good expe'rience, resoneble
rates. call anytime. 667T R I - STATE M 0 B.l L E
6329 or 667-3402.
HOMES. USED- CARS,
- - - - - - - ' ·- -lcWould like to do hou•work, TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
will woltt Mason or Gallia CHECK OUR PRICES.
County. Phone 304-676- CALL446-7672 .
6874.
13

1975 Partially furnished
Windsor. 1 4x70. central air.
washer &amp; dryer, fully
skirted. 246-9143 or 4460404.

For lale or rent 12x60
mobile home. gaa he••· rural
water. clo1e to town, availa·
blo Jon. 1ol. Coll446-1240.

10.3 acres. 12x60 mobile
home, tobacco base, trailer
partially furnished . Hannan
Trace Rd, $18,000 or
S12,000 land only . Call
614 -266•6704 or 614 266-1139 .

35 Lo,ts &amp; Acreage

36 Acres at Rodney on W. T.
Watson Rd . Owner Financing availa~e . 446-8221 .
Two acre lots-150 ft . road
frontage. city water, behind
84 lumber. Call 30\t-6766873 or 676 -3618 .
36

Real Estate
Wanted

Wonted: Farm of 100to160
Acres. · roliing land. Reply to
Box 6000 , in c-o Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 826 3rd Ave ..
Gallipolis 46631.

41

Houses for Rent '

Good location $126 mo.
A-One Real Estates. Carol
Yeager Realtor, 676·5104
or 876 -6386 or 676-7786 .
d4 bdr. houl8,fireplace, full
baten:'lent, 3 milea o.u t of
town. city school. Call 4481816 or 446-1244.
3 bdr .• total elec .. house in
· Henderson,
WV .. $226 mo.
446 9662
Coli
"·
·
Very nice 2 bdr. duplex
home. furnished, Main St.,
Cheshire, Oh . Call 614·
246 -5818 .

ALL electric home, very
reasonably 'priced , 30467.5-6711 after 6 p.m.

! =~========
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

0 NE bedroom, unfurnished,
$176 . . All utiNties Included
except electric . 304-676·
1371 or 676-3812.
46 Space for Rent

Eureka 2 bch. , furnished;
riverfront lot, ref . &amp; dep. Cal
614-643-2644.
12x60 furnished . convefient location, Upper River
Rd. Sac. dap. raq . Call
446-8658 .

2 bdr. trailer in

co~n try . Call

614-256-6813 .

Mobile home 5 mi. from
town. no pats. Call· 4461158.
~-----~-lc-

2 bedroom 10x50. Adults
only. Brown ' s Trail&amp;r Perk,
Minersville. Oh . 614-9923324.

74

2 bd.room furnished me6te
home. We pay utilities.
Adults only or family with
orie child . No pets. Deposit
required. located 2 miles
out on SR. 143. 614-9923646.
3 bedroom Mobile Home.
Approximately 5 miles from
Pomeroy or Middleport.
614-992-6868 .
TWO mobile homes for rent

on At. 2 about 5 minutes
from town . Call after 6.
304-676-6277.
2 bedroom furnished trailer,
8175 . month plus utilities.
Depos~
Required . 304 675 -4622 or 304-6751080.

1-----------..;.i
1--------~--

44

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olivo St .. Gallipolis. King
coal &amp; wood heaters with
fan $469, oat box spring &amp;
maltreu $100, firm $120,
aofe~ loveseat &amp;. chair •199,
love teats 8170, new coal l
wood heatera ea low ••
1399 with blowere, used
coal &amp; wood heaters, new
dlnet aets $715 • up. refriger·
ators. ranges. bunk beda
complete •179 , bunkiea
mattresses $40, che1t1.
J,;i;&amp;;l.t~: TV'a. Call 446. 69.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- waahers. dryers, refrigeralors, rongao. Skeggo Appliances. Upper River Rd.,
be1lde Stone Craat ,.,otel.
448-7398 .

Apartment

for R8nt

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker. 'o ttoman. 3' tebles. (ex"a heavy
by Frontier), 16B6. Solo,
2 bdr. Regency Inc . Apart- chair end lovellltit, •275.
ments $200 per mo . or if Sofas and chairs price.d from
income is S1 0 .000 or less 1286. to t896 . TabiH, 146
H UD availabte. A-One Real and up, to t126. Hide·aEstates. Carol Yeager, Real- b&amp;dl, •440 . and up to
lor. Coli 304-675-6104 or $626 .. Reclinoro, •175 . to
675-6386 or 675-7786.
8360 .• lampt from $28. to
$76 . 6 pc . dinettes from
2 bdr. unfurnished apt. in 199., to 1436. 7 pc., 8189.
Crown City. Call 614-266- and up. Wood table with lix
6520.
chairo 1426. to '746 . Dolle
1110 up to $226. Hutchos,
Bradbury efficiency ap1 ., $660. and up. maple or plne
2nd. floor, adults only, 729 finish. BUnk bed complete
2nd. AVe .. Gallipolis . Call with mattreaMa. t260. and
446 -0957.
up to •395. Baby be&lt;' ·,
$1 ·1 0. Manr•••• or .•:A
Furnished apt. 1 bdr., 920 springa, full or twin, _*&amp;8 ..
4th Ave.Gallipolis . Adults, firm, 168. ond 878 .. QOoon
water 8t electric pd, $200 sets, 8196. 4 dr: ch'nta.
mo. Call 446-441 6 attar 142. 6 dr. cholls, $64. Bod
7PM.
friomeo, UO.and 821!.. 10
gun - Gun cabinets. •3&amp;0.,
1st. floor part. furnished dinette cheira •20. and *25.
apt . Utilities paid. Ufernce Gaa or electric ranges, •326
required . Inquire at 631 4th up to U76. Baby maAVe ., Gallipolis.
treoses, "1 26 &amp; 836, bed
framoo $20, $26, &amp; 130,
Garage Apartment. 3 rm . &amp; king frame e&amp;o. Good Mlecbath, furnished including tion of bedroom suitn.
washer &amp; dryer, adults only, cedar cheats. rockers. metal·
no pets. Call446-1619 .
cabinet,, swivel rockers.
Used Furniture -- bookcaae,
1 bedroom Apartment for rangea, ·c halrt, end tablea,
rom. Call 446-0390.
Washera, dryers. refrigera·
tors and TV't. 3 miles out
Middleport upstairs 2 bdr. Bulovlllo Rd. Opon 9om to
apt .. $180 plus deposit. Call &amp;pm, Mon. thru. Fri .. 9am 10
446-1788 .
6pm, Sat.
446-0322
POMEROY-2 bedrl&gt;Om unfurnished apt. , $160. 2 Whirlpool washer 2 spd., 4
bedroom house $1 85. Dep- cycle also Whir1pool dryer 3
osit $100. Call 614-992- lomp .. 190 eo. Call 8142288 .
266-1207.

Apt. for rent. Half doubl•2 RAY'S USED FURNITURE
bd.room Apt . Adults pre· Refrigerator •126 , gaa
forred. No pets. 614-992- heater t86. gill range *75,
2749 .
2 piece bedroom suite
t!126. couch •2&amp;. dinlnEfficiency apartment wtth groom table and four chaha
utilities and cable paid. $8&amp;, coffee tablo ·$10, pelr
Ground floor with nparate Harp .. end tablta •26 ea.
entrances and two porches. Open 9 to 6, coli 614-361·
Call614-992-6738 .
0637.

.with Major Hoople

bdr. farm house, Pt.
Pleasant area. call for additional information 446 ·
4802.

Small unfurnished houl8 in
town. 2 ~R's , pay own
utilities. No pets. Dep .
Roq .o$160.00 mo. 446.7886, altar 6 446-4046.
.
Unfurnished on
Lower Rt. . Dep. requ . Call
614-266-1413 .

m

Motorcycles
'

CAPTAN EASY
MEAl/WHILe'
!lACK AT THE'
M()NI\j;TeRY,,.

..

Round king tlze 'bed red
velvet headboard and cuttom opr..d, $600.- Go II
814' 1182-7184.
54 Misc. Merchandise

17 ft . tendem axle trailer 7
ft. wide, extfll good cond.
10 ply tr•il•r tlr••· wood
floor rempa, light . Must sell.
can·&amp;14 -388-9060.

HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boordlng ~II b....di. AKC
Rog. Dobonnono pupa otd
Doberman Stud Service.
Call 446-7791.
POODLE GROOMING. Coli
Judy Taylor· ot 814-3677220.
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
- KENNEL. AKC Chow puppin,. CFA Himalayan. Per•ian end SiamaM klnena.
Coli 446-3844 after 4PM .

AKc'· Doberman pup1, 8
weeks old, 4 male~ 3 fl)ma.les
block a. lon, •126 .00 &amp;
8160 .00. Coll4411-1069.

boro, uddlo bogo. tolrl~
very good condftion. •J
Fog lights. Cell 814-992~'.
7811.
. .
1975 M.oico 125. •1150. ,..
304-67&amp;-6360,coll otter II'~
p.m.
''":~

,, ~~==~::::::::~~
Auto Parts

~

&amp; Accassorlaa

_-~

78

78 FORD % tQn truck.~ ~;
304-676-3024.
•

Tit~~ AR~ ~0 MOI/I !:''7

liU&lt; WJNCM'I

OFFENHAUSER crooo ram '
duel quad manHold for amell
block Chevy. New. never •
UHd, 880. ~04-882 , 288~ . . -~

'
''•. c'
.

j

59 For Sale or Trade
19711 Buick Electro 2 bdr.,
PS, PB. AC, AM-FM 11oro
• 1,960 or trodo for cottlo,
farm equipment. or. mobile
home of equal value. Cell
448-4637.

Truck camper, oven, refrig., __
&amp; furnonco, oloop 6.1•• now
cond .• •1.100. CoH 114- ;
388-8319.
-.

.,

TillS Tlf· THI/(6 lfl
~Mil WAH8UCIIS?!
Wfi· Wif!IT IS IT?.'

ALL ffi6HT.

F1DO! IIELEASE
til~!

1979 Motor homo, - n .
low mileage. self co nUll ned,
outomotlc, 8 trock. 304B82-2730.

TMAT~

L'itlN!

Firewood, 835 . trUck lo1d.
t66. a cord . Split and
delivered. 814-843-3803.
Firewood delivered UD. a
cord. Coal dollwrod $46.
ton. Coli Tom Hoskin• 814949-2160 or 614-7422834 .
REPOSSESSED SIGNI Nothing downl Taka over PIYmenJa. asa.oo monthly. 4 x
8 "flashing 1rrow sign. New
bulbi. letters. Hale $igna.
Cell FilE E 1-B00-626 744&amp;, anytime .
s~ black atereo, lm-fm, 8
track. record play•. •160.
Childt rocker-recliner .
brown •16. 814-742 2706.

White French Provincial
chest, nice antique :1..4 size
[rope) bed and manreu.
614-986-3847.

Home
Improvement•

61
JOHN OooroiiO, 3 pt. hitch,
live power, good condition,
304-882-3243.

63

Livestock

1-------'---Ru rabbits. all wire cagea.
Cell 446-2004.
Purebred Poland Chine
boar•. br ...lng age. T.J·.
Farmo Crookovlllo, Oh. , 181 .4 -342-2034.
.
·lcRegllterid . duarter HorM.
Rutlt R•ves. AltO. grade.
Soddloa, bridloo, wlntor
horae ba.nketa. Western
boots. 814-898· 3290.
RIDING honea II 1acldl11,
304-678-2263. 678-2610,
6711-2821.
SIX woek old pigs &amp;
chickens, 304-B96-3488.

Now six-pioco living room . 64 H_a y S._ Gra~n­
suite, 304·676-61 62 oftor ·:.:·_ _..:::._.:.__:-: __.:...:_"_ _
6;30 p.m.
TOBACCO quote for solo,
304,876-1126.

----------------1
WARM Morning natural gaa

hoa111r, 66000 BTU, oloctric
blciwor, UOO. 304-7736346.
7

Black Ban wood burner
stove double jacket. all
quener inch · ateel, varible
speed fan, uHd :1 winter.
Aloo 610 McCullough choln
nw. uHd 1 winter, 304·
773-6019 aftor e. p.m.
Firewood . e16 . yourpickup.
304-876-2010.
GE 30" electric green stove.
304· 876-3388 or 304876-2930.
--·
Chalnsaw Remington. new
18" heavy duty extra chain
•175 .00 . Automatic ollor
Sl-4. 304-676-681 9."
W.T. RAWLEIClH Producta.
For hulthler. nicer looking
pets. Wllluggnt Mr. Groom
animal care productt. Dele .
&amp; Wilmo Wood dlotributoro,
304-878-1090.
BABY IMioolnott with oklrt.
boby clothes, pumpkin •ot,
ma11rnity clothet . 304..
876-3848.

-~----"'--- , .

STUCCO PLASTERING
-~l
tutured celllngt commer- ..~
clot ond rooldontlol. fno •
ootlmo111. Coli 114-211111182 . .

ALLEY OOP
IT'S REAP'!' AN'
WAITIN' FOR "'IU,

PAINnNCl - lntorlor • •
exterior, plumbing, rooting,
10m• nmodeling. 20 yq.
oxp. Coli 814-388-9112 .
)'

001'!

DIG RIGHT
IN!

I
- ~) ·

Morcu,. Roofing &amp; SP&lt;&gt;utlng. 30 VMrs•xperlence,,_ "' \
specializing in built up roof. . :J
Coli 814-388-98117.
'{

i

GENE'S CAJPeT CLEANlNG . Deep Iteam cleaning, ~~t
Scotchgaurd. Free eati_, "'~
m1t11. l,.ow rat••· 614·992 ..
11309.
"'

::i
t

RON'S Tolovlolon Sorvk:o.• ....,
Speclollrlng in Zonlth ond · '
Motorola. Quazar. and~:~
houso con.. Coli 678-2398 '
or 4411-24&amp;4. ·
·' ' '
F &amp; K Troo Trimming, otump
romovol. Coii67B-1331 .

He could've
.starved fo.r
all ~ou cared!

•

~-~

r

.

. , I
RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpo- · ~ ~

yr· .

....... ... .. .
~ ••••

71

' ·'. 4

'

... .

-~1 ·

Auto• for Sale

82
1978 MCl Mlgot 42,000 .
mil ... Must Mil. Coli 448w08
7414.
CARTEI!'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
12 pa.....gor Ford von
Cor: FOurth and Pine
1971 moclol. outo .. air.
atero-radio, t2,096. Coli Phono 448-3888 or 448·
4477
448-4514.
---------:-

19711 Corvotto•l.200 firm .•
Cell 878·7547 oft8r ,7.

84

&amp;

1981 Hondo Civic outo., olr
cond., AM-FM 11110. Coli
114-245-1287 oft8r IIPM.
19711 Buick Eloctro 2 "bdr ..
PS, PB, AC, AM-FM lloro
•UIIIO or trodo for cottlo,
farm equipment, or mobile
home of equal value. Cell
448-4637.

Electrical
Refrigeration

.·'

. .t..

·-

J~t9

SEWING Machine rep.tlirs, .\
HrVice. Authorizeet Sing•r
Salea &amp; Service Sharpen ~
Sclaaou . Fabric Shop . .... '
Pomeroy . 982-2284.
: \

l

:::::::=~==::;210

I,

'

........ . . . . . ...
~ ,... .

. .. r .~

BARNEY

I MADE THESE

PAPER FLOWERS
"fOR 'IE IN SCHOOL
TODAY, AUNT
LOWEE2.V

AIN'T THEY
PURTY!!

ALL BUT ONE··

MV REPORT CARD

.. -1
t

111,.-...;~

,.,.

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

"~

I
I

..

night's proQram featUres an
All Ame rican Male Beauty
Pageant, a look at hibernating bears and a man's sports
museum . {60 min .)
(l] MOVIE; ' Dead End'
(]) I Spy
I])
NCAA
Basketbalt:
Illinois at Purdue
CIJ Ill {l2) Tales of the Gold
Monkey
0 CIJ Anne Murray's
Caribbean Cruise Anne· s
gul 1ts are Eddie Aabbin, Ri.chard Simmons and Jose
Luis Rodriguez, (60 min.)
&lt;ll ® Skaling Speclacular
Carol Fox and Richard Dailey
lead an all-star revue in this
special ice skating performance . 160 min .)
·
®! NCAA Basketball :
Illinois at Purdue
fJ) · MOVIE:
'Sergeant
,...._
York'
9:qp 0 (l] (IJ Facts of life The
girts decide to lie when Mrs.
Garrett's car is stolen.
(l] HBO Rock; Air Supply
In Hawaii This Australian
pop rock group performs all '
of their top hits .
(]) Battle for the Family
'CIJ Gl (D) Fall Guy
·
0 I]) MOVIE; .'Another
Woman's Child'
Ill
Kennedy · Center
Tonight 'My Father Stravinsky .' Igor Stravinsky's son,
Soulima , g ive~ a . performance/documentary of Stra- ·
vinsky"s family life. l60 min .)
(fi) MOVIE; 'Monlgomery
to Memphis'
9 :30 IJ (l] (IJ Family Ties Alex
finds out that · Elyse·s
brother is wanted by the FBI
for embezzlement.
(l] MOVIE: 'A Piece of the
Action'
9:41 Cll TBS Evening News
1 0 :00 0 (l] CD Quincy Quincy
asks his psychologist girlfriend to perform an 'autopsy' to determin,e a
.murderer . {60 min.)
(l] MOVIE: .'Neighbors'
. I])
NCAA
Basketball:
·: North Carolina State at
North Carolina
CIJ
(D) Dynasty
(]) Information Une
® Anne Murray's Carib·
bean Cruise Anne's guests
are Eddie Rabbitt, Richard
Simmons and Jose Luis
Rodriguez. {60 min)
fill INN News
1(f'aO 1111 In Search of....
11 :00 IJ ~ Newscenter
(() All In the Family
(]) 0 (I) Ill ~ News
Cil News/Sporta/Weather
CIJ DIMI Allen at Large
® Eyewitness News
(jj) Sign Off
1111 Benny HHI Show
11 ;30 IJ (l] (IJ Tonight Show
(l] Not Necesserily The
News This show promises
to be everything the current
news is not .
I]) Another Life
(]) MOVIE: 'Edge of
Darkness'
(I) Benny Hill Show
D ()) Hart to Hart
&lt;ll Sign Off
® All In tho Family
8l G) Nlghtllna
Ill Madame· s Place
11 :46 (I) MOVIE; 'Tho Ultimate
Warrior'
12:00 (l] MOVIE: 'Fort Apache.
the Bronx'
I]) Burna &amp; Allen
I]) ESPN SpartsCentar
()) Nightline
® MOVIE: 'The 0.-ra-

e

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR ',;
LIVING room 1ntique bar~
SERVICE coli City Furniture ;
nice condition .
at Flo- ·
·. 1
gency apartment 14, Sand· 76 Gronodo · II cyl., oxc. 304·876-280.B.
cond., low miiMge:, eeldng
U.800. Coli 814-2415 -::
9861.
86 . General Hauliri'g
66 Bulldln·g Supplies
HARTS .U11d Co.W. Now
•
Hoven
Woot
Vlrglalo.
0110r
JONES
BOYS
WATER
SERBuilding motorlolo block,
brick, •-or plpeo, win- 20 '"' expenatve : cera In VICE. Collo614·367-7471
or 114-367-015,1.
dow•. lintels, etc. Claude -ck.
}'·
Wlntaro, Rio Clrando, 0. Coli
I
N..d tomathlng _ hauled
t
814-2411-8121.
CARS 81001 truokt' 8751 away or aomethlnu mond? ·, t
Available It local ·govemBuild your own u•ra.. or ""'nt soiii.Colllretun•blol Wo'lldoh. Coll44"·31119or ~· ;
1114-2118·19!17 oftor II.
---'
wo~hop, 24x24. 8850.
1-119-819-0241 .
Lumber furnlohod. Coli ndw,
JIM&amp; WATER SERVICE.
1-814-881!-7311.
'78 ~-p Wogon..r, '75 Call Jim Lenior, 304-878- •' 1 •
P~ntloc Cotollno. '80 Chevy 73117.
Chevotto. '79 Dodgo Omnl, 1 -~---------..-.....;. ,..,._ .
I
'73 Chevy 2 - 1truok ·)IIIIth
I I
hydroullc llfl. Mobllo ~=-~~~~~~---- ·~ I
H--'72 Crown ltevon 87
Upholstery
·· ! ~
114xll5 .wf1h 8Jt10 tip out.
Poopl11 lonk. 304-1711~
I
1121.
TRt STATE ,
1
68 Peta for Sale
'
· UPHOLSTERY IHOP
1971
Robllh. 11 U loc. Aw., Golllpallo
...,..lem oondt-. 304· 4'¥·~33 or441-1133. ·
171·4327.
Ilea"*-&lt;~
........
hound pupploo tor lllo.
MOWREYI Upholo-.y :Ill. ,
f
304•171·8113 t or 304· ; 1172 PONnAC, 304-171- 1 lox 124, Pt. Pluanl
'
2771 • .
171-7277.
304·171-41154.
':

a.

Yo1.1 has no
idea o' th'
pain I has
suffer

rienced roofing. including
•
Hoy for ofoe. 400 bolu hot tar lflpllcotlon, i:Orpen•
orchard gr1u end clover at . to&lt;. oloctriclon, mooon. Coli
Ci:Jolvlllo. 1800 b1llos ti- 304-e7B-208B" or 875·
'
mothy orcherd gr111 e. 4610.
•
I
clover ot Rullond. Coli Coolvlllo1-614-867·3838 ovon- Wotor Willa. Commerclol -"'
inge or weelc-daya.
•nd Do,nutlc. T11t holn. "''
.
Pumpe 1'8eles and Servtce. : ..~
HAY, wheat and oateatraw, 304-891·~'!0~.
304-875- 2817 or 176I I'._
3927.
Get
lhlp
oliope.
romovol. FREE
ESTIM.II
, FURNITURE !'
CLEAN! G. CAPTIAN
' "
STEAI\'E , 14-448-2107. 1•.

-

HOT YOIJi' COHC~
IT'G ME YOU )j\Vf

OORffY AroJT! AND TIE
C~AR6E OF KIIJNIIPPIN6!
PIIT LIIIBY

Truck load of spirt HISOntd
will cherry firewood. Call
614-387-7419.
Slabs cut-up 115 fulllongth
$1Q PU load, round wood.
Iorge truck lood. Call 814246-6804 .

t

THI!IItE'WEFlE.
A

~RONCA!

~T

OF VVHEON HE
FELL THII:Olii!IH
"THE ICE.

Now orrange the circled letters to
form the IUI'pfiae answer, as
gostod by tho above cartoon .

J I I

suo·

Print answer here:

"K xxrxx r

!Answers tomorrow)
Yesterday's- ~ Jumblas: TROTH NIPPY ' GAIETY JITNEY
Answer: What he said When the teacher gave him a
zero for hi$ work -:-THAT'S NOTHING
Jumble ·~

No.: 19, containing 110 pUzzles, Is available tor $1 .85 poe,tp,ld
hom Jumble, clo thl• newspaper, Box 34, Nonwood, N.J. Q11Ua. lncludt your
naiM, Mldrna, zip coda and make checks payable to ,.ilwsoaperbookl.

BRIDGE

IJ (l] lla) You Asked For II
I]) ESPN SportsCenter
(]) Basketball Game
(]) 0 ()) Family Feud
Cll Business Report ·
(j]) Hitch Hikers Guide/
Galaxy
Ill {l2) Entertainment
TonighiB:OO IJ CII (IJ Real People T a-

Ax8 HEAVY dUty utility . • t
trollor.. good tor houllng j..
firewood, phone 304.882- 1
3238.
' 7'
'
79 Moton Homea

r·

ISTRYVE
. I () )

7:30

I

____&amp;_c_a_m_pe_,.___

I I

Hour

J

,,

LISTE-N TO"ME ... I PIP YO I) A FAVOR!
THAT WAS T~E; WOR:ST WINE I'VE
~AD SIIIICIO THE STUFF HANI&lt; EIAVE
ME FOR PLAYI&gt;te THE DIRI518LE
PILOT IN THAT AIRPORT MOYIE ...

.
-1976
------------~-~
KIWINkl 600. Cro~

Pets for Sale

[ CUPANb

e

··o

1981 Yemehe M1xim 815Q,;7 ..,t,
Shaft drive. Uke MW. Exceh ~
lonl condition . 1;841octuol , ,
rna ... 814-992-88&amp;4·.

v-....

6 rms. y, double, all utilitiet
furnished. •3&amp;0 a month.
•so dop. Coli otter 4:00PM,
448-9780.

8 Cil Newscentor
I]) Tic Tac Dough
ski School
(]) Carol Burnett
()) Iii ()) (D) Nows
CD Newo/Sports/We()) (j]) Powerhouila
® Eyewitneu News
• Wonder Womon
1:30 8 (}) (IJ NBC Nows
Cil VIdeo Jukebox
I])
MOVIE: · 'Torpedo
Alley'
(!) This Week In the NBA
(]) Bob Newhort Show
()) • (D) ABC News
0 ()) ® CBS Newe
(l)Dr. Who
®Over Easy
7 :00 IJ Cil P.M . Magazine
(l] MOVIE: 'The 1111agic of
Lassie'
I]) NFL Films ·super Bowl
'V' Highlights: B81timore vs .
Callos .'
.
Cll Gomer Pyle
Cll Enlertainment Tonight
(IJ 1!111 Charlie' a Angels
0 ()) Tic Toe Dough
()) ® MacNeil-Lehrer
Fie part
® Eyewitness News
Ill G) Miracle Revival
11:00

•

3

Mobile hom• &amp; Iota for ule
1087 Buddy m""llo homo
12x80, 2 bdr., 111 hoot, Duplex 2 bdr un~urnlohod,
rural w.... Ht up with 2' or •195 mo. wolor pold, U60
4 Iota. Con 441· 1 240.
dop. Cell 446-3949.

EVENING

'.

1'-----------.1...--------~ :;h~III~R;d::·~·;::;:=~=:::;=
OUR BOARDING HOUSE

1!19/83

1976 Kow-kl 1500 .,.._. ' ·
bike . · Runo good, . look•~ ·
good, •310.- tor qulc' Nlo."
114-742-2602.

51 Household Goods· .56

Santi nei -- Page~ 13

Pall

WEDNESDAY
.

-=-:--:-::_;-.,---

For aewa lump coal &amp;
firewood. Zinn Coal Co .•
KOUNTRY MOBILE Home Inc. Cell 446-1408 ,
Park, Roulll 33, North of
Pomeroy. large lots. Call Firewood spllt.acut. to
992-7479 .
length, yOu plc·k up . We
deliver. We eceapt HEAP
cards. Call 614-268-6.246.
48
Equipment
8 ft . deli c111 and gondefor Rent
108s. Produce. case &amp; 8 ft.
freezer &amp;. 8 ft . freezer.
Contact 387-0378 .
Backhoe ilndloadBt' d.igs 8
ft. , large bed pick up haL!Ia· GRAIN FED BEEF. Coli
ble, operate-yourseH, $90. 814-266 -6618.
par day. 30 4-896· 3841 .
Tobacco Poundage . Call
614-448-4437.

•••ret11nrllww

. The

Television
Viewing

-,,''

u . s. ~ 'r~o~011
utili·l~=========:;:::;::;::;::;::;;===::::::!J

FURNISHED one bedroom
apartment In Pt. Pleasant.
EKtra nice, no peta. P'hona
304-676-1386.

Ohio

--------~-------- ·

MASON WV, 2 bedroom
apartment, unfurni1hed.

11

t

. I •

FURNISHED, 4 room cottage, adults, no peta, 304·
676-1463. .

ties,
304-882·3366.
carpet,
air, $160. plua

, ~omeroy· Middleport,

19, 1983 :

1171 ~T Chevy truok, goo'd t .
tjr11; now bllttory. "!!tl
on front fondoro, gocid fo .
form uoo, 81,010. Coll441-i ·
1700.
·- •

2 houses for r:ant. 1 in town. · Unfurnished upstairs apl for
1 on Crab Creek. 304-676· rent. good location, 304676-1302.
3224.

3476 .

T ruck• for S1le

-

Wednesda

1878 Ford F-1 00 PU tru~
CoH 441-41111.
,

Apartmenta . 304 - 675 ·
6_6_4_8_._ _ _ _ _ __
_
1 APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
ond Gollipollo. 1114-4488221 .

PomeroY·· 2 beL eoom unfurnished house . $195. mo. 2 room effici•ncy apt. 1 •
Security deposit . $100 . pfua . 304-882-2666 or 1-614utilities. After &amp;-cell 614· 992-7206 .
992-2288 .
u·NFURNISHED apartment
for rant . 1 bedroom ,
4 room house. Preferably 8180.00 Cell Automo~vo
adults. ·no pets . 614-992- Supply , 8-.6 . 304-676 2218, 876-6753.
3981.

Athens .. Oh .

,-

'.

1983

Wed

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Finessed by finesses
NORTH
• Q 10 9 7

1-19-83

.Q7
• QJ 2
+AQ83

diamond finesse for down

EAST

WEST

+42

+63
.10 6 3 2

.AKJ9
t K 10-83
7 62

t96l&gt;
K 10 9 4

+

+

SOUTH
+AKJ85
• 8 54
.A74
+J s

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West
Weir
Pass
Pass
Pass

Nortb.
I+
2+
Pass

he led his jack of clubs and
let it ride for a finesse.
East· took his king and led
back the 10 to dummy's
queen.
South could discard one of
his diamonds on the ace of
clubs, but still had to try the

East

Soul~

Pass
Pass
Pass

1+
4+

By Oswald Jacoby _,and James Jacoby
West took his ace and king
of hearts and shifted to a
trump.
South, a man in a hurry,
won In dummy and led a second trump to his hand. Then

one.
"Finesses work for every-

one else, but never for me,"

moaned South.
South had lost two finesses
and his contract, but he had
also chucked that contract
right into Lhe gutter.
He should have started his
finessing procedure by leading the three of clubs from
dummy. If East rose with
his king, South would get to
discard · his two small
diamonds. If East ducked,
South wouldn't have to lose a
club and could lose the diamond finesse with impunity.
If any readers would like
to point out that South's
actual play could only lose
to the actual position of both
minor suit kings and that our
suggested play would lose if
West held lloth those cards,
we can point out that West
dealt and passed and had
shown up with the ace-king
of spades. If he also held two
kings he would undoubtedly
have opened the biddipg.

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

tSS~,,.".,('
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Venezuelan

to Skidded
U

copper
center
5 Cage SOWld
' Sphere
10 Rose essence
1% Tolerate

13 Trifle

Interpret

DOWN
1 Rock group
2 Vituperate
3 Ancient

t Brew
5 Thin slice
of bacon

Yesterday's ADBwer
111 Wing (Lat.)
6 Aquatic
11 Haggard
animal
21 Portuguese %9 French tenn
novel
7 N .Z. tribe
explorer ·
oflove
17 Moslem title 8 Wear and tear 22 Moslem
33 Olive genus
18 Bullock
11 Habitual
34 Still water
Weapon
14 Fi-oglike
23 Songstress
36lndiao
!1 Stringed
16 Observed
. tw:ner
· cymbals
instrument 19 Muscle;
25 Strike
37 Jordanian

:ea

Z3 Low caste

sinew

HiJ!dU

mountain

24 Pale
25 Concerning

Pilla
2&amp; Blustered
Z7 Lady in
.. The Raven''
28Stadiwn

cheer
2t '~Turandot"
hero

30 French
friend

31 Hwnble abode
32 Apex
_3_5 Rejoiced
37 Hawaiian
city
38 - Boothe
Luce
39 Foreshadow

6-+--1--

doeo'

8l ()I Last Word

· PEANUTS

THIS IS A l-IMP ONE,
ISN'T IT,

Address important?
'

SIR?

NOT IF I(OU THINK
ABOUT IT, MARCIE

•Gunomoke
12:30 D (l] CIJ Late Night with
David Letterman
(]) Jack Benny Show
Cil , NCA/o Basketball:
Illinois at Purdue
()) Last Wlll'd lit ()) MOVIE: 'Premonition'
__;.,.
1 :00 (]) I Molried Joan ·
1111 (II News
• Sign Off
1 :30 D
(I)
NBC
Nowe
Ovemlght
m MOVIE: 'Loose ShcNis'
· ()) My Uttlo Maitl•
(I) Sign Off.
·
Newo/&amp;kln
.IIICNN Heodtlne News
2 ;00 l])llachalor Felher
9
NeW.

m

a ())

~~h

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how t o work i t:
A- XYDLBAAXR
II " LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. ! n this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the 1wo O's, etc. Si ngle leiters.
apostrophes, the ,length an~ fo~mati?n of , t he words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are differen t.

CRYFrOQUOTES
GCNNC 'T
· JSABBAJ
GWCMVAB.

BATBA
FT
SHWQV

FB

FMB
ZHWJC

IATFPB
ZCSYFTI
ANASBCT

on

cas

Yesterday's Cryptoqaote: IF YOU ARE PATIENT IN ONEMo-

MENT OF ANGER, YOU WILL ESCAPE A HUNDRED DAYS
OF SORR()W.-CHINESE PROVERB

..

�--

. Pomeroy-Mi.ddleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 19, 1983

~~!,!"~e ~,!~..~~~ ~~~~ I

)

HEAJ) OVER WHEEU! FUN - Nancy Snyder
wo·re ber roUer skates to a Marietta park with fuD

Intentions to enjoy herself standing up. But a look at

Mayors end

the other kids enjoying lhe sledding caused her to
Invent a new spori - roller ~edding. (AP
Laserpholo).
.
.

l~

court cases

Six defendants appeared before 10 days jail sentences on disorderly
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
manner charges and Paul E. Clark,
Tuesday night.
Middleport, was fined$~andcosts
Charles D. Jones, Middleport, and was given ttu'ee days In jail on a
was given a $10 and costs,
charge of driving while Intoxicated.
suspended, fine for driving left of
center; Lance T. Herman, MiddleThree defendants were fined and
port, was given a five day jail
nine others fOrfeited bonds In the
sentence for driving without a
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
license and a 20 day jail sentence for · Andrews Tuesday night.
driving while intoxicated; Joseph
Fined were Mike Hewitt, PomeM. Powell, Middleport, was fined roy, $100and costs, Intoxication, and
$15 and eosts, speeding; William T. $50andcosxts,disturbingthepeace;
Reeves, Pomeroy, and George Chartes Whittington, Pomeroy, $:nl
McDaniel, Middleport, were gtven and costs, destruction of prope~.
r-----~----------------.

Are·a death's··

Clara B. Shuster
Mrs. Clara B. Shuster, 87,
Pomeroy, died Wednesday at Veterans Memorial Hospital following a
llnger!ng Illness.
Mrs. Shuster was horn Feb. 17,
1895 at Wade, a daughter of the late
Henry and Loretta Yonalley Whetstone. She Is survived by a son a!ld
daughter-In-law, Gerald and
Mildred Shuster, Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, and a granddaughter.
Preceding her !n death besides her
parents were her husband, Nolan
Shuster, and two sisters, Myrtle
Miller and Emma Louderback.
The large lighted cross which
overlooks Pomeroy VIllage is located · on the former Shuster
property on Lincoln HUI and Mrs.
Shuster for many years untll 1979
lighted and extinguished the cross
for the church. Due to her
relationship with the program and
church, In lleu of flowers friends
may contribute In her memory to
the Trinity Church Cross Fund.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Frtday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. Mark McClung
omclatlng. Burial wUl be In Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends maycail
at the funeral home after 7 p.m.
Wednesday.

....

Investigate accidenl
The Gallla-Melgs post of the state
highway patrol Investigated a
two-car accident Tuesday afternoon
in Meigs County.
The patrol said Mark W. Grossnickle, 23, Rt. 1, Reedsville, was
eastbound on County Rd. 43, two
mlles west of Ohio 681. at 2:40p.m.
when he pulled off to the lefl side of
the road.
This was followed by a collision
with an eastbound vehicle driven by
Harold E. Smith, 39, Reedsville,
causing slight damage and no
citation to be issued.

Cited to mayor's court
Three cars were damaged and
one driver was cited to mayor's
court In an accident on E. Main St.,
at11:43a.m. Tuesday.
Pomeroy Pollee said a car driven
by Annie Chapman, Pomeroy, had
to make
left hand
turn. A
stopped
car following
and adriven
by Kenneth

=.:~:~~~c:~~~~~
from the rear by a third vehicle

joblessness hit both the South and
the Sun Belt besides the industrial
MidwestfromNovember1981tolast
· : November, according to new stateby-state unemploYment figures released by the government Tuesday.
In five states - Alabama,
Arlzona,IIllnots,MichlganandWest
VIrginia- the jobless rate jumped
by 4 or morepercentagepointsover
theyear. WestVIrginla'sunetnployment spurted by 7.4 percentage
points over the year, according to
theBureauofl..aborStatistlcs.
In November 1981, six states had
double-digit . unemployment, according to the figures which are not
ad!ilsted for such seasonal varia·
tlons as weather and school closings.
By last November, the ·report
shoWed, 19 states.and the DIStrict of
Columbia had unemployment rates

I

Rev. Robert McGee

at
or above 10 percent of their labor
forces.
The national, seasonally unadjusted unemployment rate was 10.4
percent In November. The adjusted
rate was 10.7percent.

and $:nJ and costs, giving beer or
Uq\10r to a intnor; Roy Buchanan,
Reedsville, $100 and cos Is,
Intoxication.
Forfeiting were Charles Lewis,
Veterans Memorial
Pomeroy, $43, posted on an assured
clear distance charge; Bobby
Admitted--Harold Ha.ger, RaHerdman, Middleport, $46, speedcine; Norman Grueser, Syracuse;
lng; Lori L. Guinther, Syracuse, $45, Perry Mitch, Middleport; Harold
speeding; Mathew Weaver, Middle- · Triplett, Pomeroy; Clara Shuster,
port, $43, left of center; Arthur
Pomeroy; JudyGUkey, Pomeroy.
Smith, Leon, W.Va., $45 speeding;
Discharged--Robert VanMeter,
Fred Burney, Pomeroy;
pos- Allee Plantz, Gregory Jonnson.
session of a eontrolled substance;
Blaine James, Mundry, W. Va.,$50,
~peedlng; Tim Crites, Pomeroy,

s.m.

allbutthe10IargeststateswUlnotbe experienced by ' FIInt, Mich., 23.4
available from the Labor Depart- percent, Yopngstown-Warren,
ment untU mid-February. For 40 Ohio, 22.5; ROck!ord, Ill., 214;
states and the District of Columbia, JohnstOWJ., .Pa., 2(1.7, and Duluththese figures are gatliered from
Superior, Mimi, .~.3. The lowest
state employment ..services and rate was 3.9 pecimt in Stamford
other sources and their disclosure Conn. .
lags that of the national rate by
The bureau said all but 10
about six weeks.
rnetropPlltan areas had higher
The seasonally adjusted national unemployment in November than
unemployment rate In December . atthesametbneayearearUer.
stood .at 10.8 percent of the 1l1
Among the 5Q states, Q!lly Ma~
mllllon-member tabor force, with had a better emp(oyment picture at
more than 12 mUlion people out of the end of the lyear. That state's
work.
.
.
. .
.jobli!s$ rate sUpped from 7.1percent
T!le state and metropoliU!Jl ~a in November 1981 to 7.0 percent las~
employment report released Tues- November.
·
daysho\¥edthatjoblessratesin91of·
The highest jobleSs rates Ill
some 220 areas surveyed equaled or November occurred tn Mlchlgali
exceeded the natlonall0.4 percent · andWestV!rglnla,16;4percent,and
unadjusted rate In November.
Alabama, 15.3.

l·

GRAND OPENING SUNDAY, JAN. 30th
DOOR PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED

HOURS: MONDAY-THURSDAY 5:30 A.M.-8 P.M.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY 5:30 A.M.-11 P.M.
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./

Vol:3t,No.lB4

1 Sect ton , 12 Pages
15 C.ntt ·
A Muhlmedlo Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, thursday, January 20, 198.3

Copy•ighoed 1982

Shorter work
week, layoffs
under revieW

$59995

$64995

National
Product
Billions of Dollars
Based on
1972 Oolats

TWO ONLY

Hoffman to seek reelection
Middleport Mayor Fred Hof- government and services, and In
Initiated and completed by thts
capital improvements by both
fman today announced his candladministration Include:
aacy for re-election as mayor at the· public and private businesses and
-A new 200,000 ga 1. water
organl2atlons. There is still much to
June 7 primary election. Hoffman
storage tank was recen11v put Into
be done, both In new programs to be
has been rnayor of Middleport since
service which will vo·•&gt;Vide adeInitiated in the ~tear future and the
October, 1974, When he filled the
quate water storage •:•pacity for
continUing of some of the good
remaining portion of the late John
the village for many ~·ears In the
programs whiCh have been started
Zerkle's term. He was subsefuture. This, along wi\h substantial
during the past few years . ••
quently elected to successive four
.... water line improveMe nts on Vine,
In order that these programs can ···Grant, Beech, Powell c1.nd Page St ..
year terms beginning Jan. 1, 1976
· be continued at a level whleh I feel
and Jan. 1, 1!8!.
was made possible l'y the use of
has benefitted the majority of
In announcing the candidacy,
approximately $900,000 In HUD
Mlddleort residents, 1 have decided
Hoffman issued the following
funds which were made available
to seek re-eleetlon to anoth~r
statement:
to the village through the efforts of
four-year term."
"During the past utne years, I
this administration.
Some of the improvements In the
feel that many improvements have
-Sanitary sewer ;lnes were
village and beneficial programs for
been made in our community, both
installed on Powell, Page, Broad-·
ln.. the operations of the village . our residents which have been
(Continued on vagP 14)

,n

SEO grants total $600,@00

, CO~ORTV
25
CoDsoleTV

mlstattheConferenceBoardinNew, Wednesday that they .fear Interest
how, could be brought down,"
-The president r eared compteYork,
said
he
thinks
a
recovery
rates
could
be
pushed
higher
In
1983
lion
oi a 1984 · :!get plan as
Greenspan said.
way
and
that
the
already
is
under
unless
the
federal
budget
deficit
is
.
Treasury
Secre.
Donald Regan
Many economists are looking for a
will
grow
much
faster
lhls
.
economy
trimmed from the current projec- . promised deficits of under $200
After the steeep drop In economic turnaround from the 2.5 percent
tlons of
billion.
billion for each the next three years
activity last year, 1983 ougllt to be a drop In gross national product year than the Reagan administra"On lhls course, we could not
and another senior aide vowed a
year of steady, If modest, improve- durtng the 1982 fourth quarter. The tlon'sforecast of a 1.4 percent rtse.
Commerce Department reported
expect either sustained economic return to bla~k Ink by the end of the
ment for businesses and consumers,
Sommers estimates ~Wth for
growth or genuine prtce stability," decade. Other admlnistatlon off!Wednesday that the fourth-quarter
many eConomists believe.
thegroupsqldinaletter to President ciais said next year's deficit will be
retreat ended a year In which the . the year of2.4 percent. By historical
"The turn is at hand," Alan GNP dropped 1.8 percent .L the standards, both percentages would
Reagan and congressional leaders.
about $190 billion, a record budget Greenspan, chairman ·of the ecobe
extremely
small
for
the
first
year
In
other
economic
developments:
gap.
biggest decline since 1946, when lt
nomic consulting firm Townsend- fe!l14.7 percent.
of a recovery In business conditions.
-Martin S. Feldstein, the pres!-Japanese Prime Minister YasuGreenspan &amp; Co. Inc., told a forum
Somers also sees no significant , dent's top economist, said Wednes- hiro Nakasone ended talks with
"This ts a year of reeovery," said
In New York on Wednesday.
· Malcolm Baldrige, the Commerce decline In the unemployment rate.
dilY that ll)e ·administration Is President Reagflll at an Impasse
"There has not . been. any ~p­ Secretary. He add,ed that he expects TheConferenceBoardlsaresearch
consi~rlng a "major tax ,reform over U.S. requests that Japan Uft
seated, permanent damage In our the recovery to pick up speed as the group supported by business.
., lnillatlve." He said one approach frnport quotas .on key agricultural
economy which would preyent It year roUs on.
In Washington, a groUP,, of being discussed was to move from _ products. "We got no promtses ·on
·
frOI)1 really movingupverysharply ••
business and financial executives the existlng income tax to a tax on that," Said -Commerce Secretary
provided that interest rates, someAlbert T. Sommers, chief ecpnotold the · Reagan administration consum!Jt!On.
Baldrige. .

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MECHANIC ST., POMEROY

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL
MIDDLEPORT

Celeste receives bond·proposal for new housing

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - Des- bill added by the DemocratL:';.;:4P:..----·__9.;;.,_ _ ..... · pite sonie ptilltlc'al flri:'WOrks, a bDI controlled Senate at Celeste's bidGNP DIOCUNE "" Chllrt olthe ---'-- creating a bond Issue, program to dl ~~s." "repr:ehensible and
u.s. OroM Na&amp;lonal ProciUct boost housing construction has been
u...,wu
llhows ·in die loud~~ quarter of
sent to Gov: Rlc:hard Celes!efOJ: his
Involv~ ·was language which
1li8Z, a cteeUne from lhe previous . · expected approval. .
.
. · apparently clears the way for
uarter to SUll triJion, 'lbe
'I'lle House completed legislative ·· Celeste to go ahead with his plan to
~ by rece11111on
action Wednesday when It accepted . restructure the state Department.of
q
~totlnlllh,decllnedl.8
Seitateamendments, 70-26, after a · Economic and Community
""""'
JIE' ceitt In lll8l, lhe llharpeiJt !loor ........
.Development"-Iince 1948, a new P"el'DAsslstantMlnorttyLeaderWaldo
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_..,.
1 di 1 d
Bennett Rose, R-Lima, triggered 0-NewBoston,warnedRosehewas
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n ca e
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Ir;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;======;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=====~

TheCOOoencarwasrammedlntothe
back ' of the Chapman vehicle.
Damages were moderate. Lewis
was cited to mayor's court on an
assured clear distance charge.

Page6

.

19" B&amp;W

Pomeroy police chief
seeks public assistance
,Pomeroy Pollee Chief George
Stitt today asked pu bile help to solve
a wave of thefts in which cllr
batteries and car radios have been
stolen.
Chief Stitt said Simmons Motors,
Smith-Nelson Motors and residents
In the nearby areas have been
victims of the thefts.
It Is obvious that the items are
beb)g peddled to purchasers, Chief
Stitt said and he asks any person
contacted In regard to purehaslng a
car radio or a car battery to contact
his omce at once. AU Information
wlll be kept confidential, Chief Stitt
said.

Pag(• 9

Center chairman
unconcered about
group.,s decision

JANUARY \CLEARANCE

Court actions r.Jed
A j11dgment lri thearnountof$2,600
was filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court along with three
dissolutions of marriage and a suit
for support under the Reciprocal
Agreement Act.
J. Wllllam Lowe, Middleport,
filed suit in the amount of $2,600
against Stone WOOds Ltd., Marlet\3,
et al for damage to a water line that
deprived theptatntlffandhistenants
of water and use of sewer and for
rent for stored equipment and
materials.
Marsha Aline Batman (Payne)
flied for support against Thomas
Edward Payne.

Page 2

Livestoclc report

Consumption.tax studjed by Reagan

drtven._bY Charles Lewis, Pomeroy.

Flllng for dissolutloll of marriage
were Ralph E. Searles, Rutland and
Bernice R. Searles, Vinton; David
Lewis Chase, Middleport, and Allee
Jane Chase, Middleport; Bobby Lee
Kul!n, Rt. 2, Cheshire, and Dessie
Mae Kuhn, Rt. 2, Cheshlfe.
In other court actlon five marriages were dissolved and another
was granted.
•
Granted a divorce was Mary F.
FreemanfromJackB.Freemanon
charges of extreme cruelty. Mary
F. Freeman was restored to her
former name of Mary McAngus.
MarriageS dissolved were Barbara Kennedy and Perry Kennedy;
Cathy Ann Swartz and Jerry David
Swartz; VIvian Ellzabeth Jones and
Ayward Curtis Jones; Larry David
TucJcer and Janis Suzette Tucker,
and Robert Thomas Stewart and

RACINE

and
Mark
address
each onnoopen
flask
recorded,
. $88Roush,
charges.
'

Five calls were answered Tuesday by units, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
reports.
.
.At 10:27 a.m., Pomeroy took
Jos[)ua Davis to Veterans MemorIal; at 11: 53 a.m., Rutland, took
Clara Shuster to Veterans Memorial; 1:57 p.m., Tuppers Plains took
Eleanor Riel to St. Joseph Hospital
In Parkersburg; Racine at 2: :a! p.m.
took Dennis Hart to Veterans
Memorial and Middleport 111 5:49
p.m. took Shirley Herman to
Veterans Memorial.

Letters to e~itor

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Four-day work weeks and layoffs of state
employees are among optlons under review to cope with state government
money problems, officials say.
Both steps are among many options being considered as the Celeste
administration grapples with a budget deficit proJected to exceed $500
mllllon by the June 30 end of the fiscal year.
.Gov. Richard Celeste's top fiscal o!!'lcer, Chris Sale, said Wednesday that
a four-day work week was .one item that might be illcluded on a long llst of
!li~YOR HOFFMAN
options she is to submit to the governor.
Legislative sources said, the layoff of state government emplqyees,
perhaps 5 percent to 7 percent, was being reviewed.
Paul Costello, press secretary to the governor, said Celeste would have
no Immediate comment. ·
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
investment while taxing personal Wednesday night the admlnistrn· anything etse that t: not kept for it.•
"Those are options the governor has not responded to yet because they
Reagan administration is studying
spending on consumer goads and
·
have not been presented to h1m as a package," Costello said.
tion " is considering a major tax lasting value.
Ms. Sale said she expected !he list of ·Options. to be submitted to the a revamped income tax system that services.
reform Initiative," and a SCH!alled
The Idea behind a &lt;''JD'Umpri•m
·would exempt savings, stock and
President Reagan's chief econo- consumption tax is "one of the
governor this week.
tax, Feldstein said. '' !hao mdividu
mist, Maitlit S. Feldstein, said approaches we have been ais would pay feder ,olra:-.l's onl\' i•li
Arthur Evans. executive director of the Ohio Civil Service Employees bond purchases and other fonns of
Association, 'which ·represents · many state workers, was asked about
. ttllscusslng." 1
that portion of InC{'• • Thp;· S!Jffid •m
"The consumption tax approach pen,onal consumpti•J•:
shortened work weeks and layoffs.
is appealing ln a number of ways,"
· "We're faclng a $500 mllllon bUdget deficit. We all recognize that when
C'ash savings, · v.m·hases ,f
you ()ave that kind of deficit ... there are going to have to be some
Feldstein said in a speech prepared stocks or other ,,,,..ts. and rc•pay·
.for delivery to a tax conference.
reductions somewhere," Evans said Wednesday. "(But) one lhlng we will
ments of loans",., uuld be subtracted
be doing is protecting the interests of our members."
from
that par. ·•f a person's income
Feldstein emphasized that ad·Records · in the Department of Admintstratlve Services placed the
ministration discussions on a con- subject to laxi•tlon, he said.
. . number d. state employees as of last month at 57,265, down from 58,254 in
The present tax code ,e ncourages
sumption tax are preliminary and
December 1981. Excluded from those figures are state university and
"no specific or final decisions have people to bcri'O\v by allowing them
county Welfare pepartment employees.
to deduct Intel ffit costs from their
been made."
~rt Brlndza, president of Ohio CouncilS of the American Federation ··
But he said a consumption tax ·taxable Income, and discourages
released Jan 7, according to ' 111&lt;.
of State, County and Municipal Employees, said he would not comment on
ByJEFFGRABMEIER
"removes the distortion In the them from. saving by taxing
panel.
OVPstaff
shortened work weeks or' layoffs ·" until we get something substantive."
present iaw that favors current Interest, dividends and capital
The deadline falls on this Friday,
The chairman of the Gal!laImposition of a four-day work week was considered and rejected ·last
consumption and discourages sav- gains, he said.
but
Howard
said
he
Is
not
wonied.
Jackson-Me!gs Community Mental
Critics of a conslimptton tax
yeill' by fot;mer Gov. James A. Rhodes.
ing." Without an increase In savings
''That two week business doesn't
'Ibestlite faces a sea of red Ink because of recesslon-spawna:l declines In Health Center board said he \s riot
and investments, the economy approach have a.rgue9 that It favors
mean anything to me," he said.
tax revenues and Increased expenses.
.
. concerned that his board has taken
wealthy people, who a1le:llla better
cannot expand, he said.
"With as much Information as we
Through December, the Legislative Budget Office said, general revenue
no action ·yet on a state report
Feldstein, chairman of the presi- position to save a.
have to go over, you .can 'I do thts
·
fund 11tc0me was $66.3_zyllllon below estimates, while expenses were $76.3 critical of the agency.
dent's Councll of Economic Advis- large proportion of thllli- money
Charles Howard said the center type of thing (qulck)y )."
mllllon over estimates. ~ .
·
ers, did not describe ln detail the
or Invest it In stcx;~··alld ~In the past two meetings, the
board , is studying the 32-page
Spending for general relief as of Do;&gt;c: 31 was $41.2 million more than had
consumption tax he had in mtna, but Lower-income peop~ critics say,
been forecast. Expenditures under the Ald To Depen(jent Children document wrttten by the Commun- hoard has gone over the repOrt's
economists usually apply the term often have little to savE\Wter paying
findings Concerning the center
Ity Services Review Group "at a
program exceeded projections by $11.9 million.
consumption to food, entertain- for housing, energy, fold and other
pace where everyone has time to polnt-by-polnt, Howard said.
Extending a package of temporary taxes due to expire March 31 is
ment, tobacco, clothing, rent and necessities.
. Members wlll•meet again next
considered unavoidable, but such a step would still leave a gap of more
understand it."
·~
.~
The center board met for nearly Wednesday to "assimliate" the
Information, he said.
three hours Wednesday night to
However, he is unsure if any
continue reviewing the report,
Howard said. The review group's action will be taken then.
"I will not predict when a decision --report was also the topic of a board
WASHINGTON- Grants totalllng more than sf&gt;.~ have
Increasing cloudiness tonight. Low near 20. Mosll)r cloudy tonight.
will
be made," Howard said.
meeting a week ago.
been awarded to four Southeastern Ohio agencies for the
Hlgh35-40.
The 648 boaid has met once to
"We don't want tomakeanyhasty
contlnuatlon of programs assisting the elderly, according to Rep.
ExtEnded Ohio Forecast
discuss the report, but has alSo
decisions," he said.
Clarence Mlller.
Samrday through Monday:
.
. .
In Its final report, the seven- · made no decisions concerning it. A
The funds, approved by ACTION, were approved rcu- ·the
Chance of rain or !lllOW Samrday and Sunday. Cloudy and tumlng
person review panel recommended second meeting far them ts schefollowing:
colder Monday with a chance of snow IJurrles northeast. Highs mlbe
significant changes -at the center, duled Monday.
-$507,300 to the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development"
m~ to rnlfl-:lfi'l. Lows In upper ~ to mid-80s.
The county commissioners from
Including the ·resignatiOn of execu(GOAD) of Marietta, Ohio, for the continuation of a multl~tillty
Gallia, Jackson and Melgs ,countles
.tlve director Bernard Niehrn.
Foster Grandparent prngram.
plan to meet in Gallipolis Friday to
-$32,900 to the Meigs County Council on Aging for the continuation
The report also calls for the determine what course of action
of the Meigs County Retlred Senior Volunteer Program.
CLEVELAND (AP) --7 The winning number drawn Wednesday
resignation of Maxine Plummer,
they should take.
-$41,600 to the I. 'hens Senior Citizens program for Its RSVP
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally game, "The Number," was 711.
executive director of the GalliaThe review group said state and
program.
The lottery reported a loss of $821,166.50 from the wagering on Its
Jackson-Melgs 648 board.
comm\lnlty offlclais should meet
-$37,000 to the Washington County Commissioners for the ·
dally game. The loss resulted from sales of$S83,573.50, while holders
The 648 and center boards should
two or three weeks after the report's
contlntJation
of the Washington county RSVP outreach program.
nf
'WPrP
I tn •hArP $1.704.
nffl~l·is said.
act on the recommendations within
release to discuss how to proceed in
two weeks after the report was
the situation.

Emergency runs

The Rev .. Robert McGee, 51, 211
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, pastor of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church tor the past five years, died
Wednesd~y morning at O'Bieness
Memorta!Hospltalln Athens followIng a brief illness.
The Rev. Mr. McGee was born at
The Plains, a,sonofOscarMcGeeof
The Plains and the late Mary
McCialnMcGee. Hewasagruadate
of The Plains High School, Ohio
. University and the Methodist Theological School In Ohio. He was a
navy veteran of the Korean Conflict
and formerly was employed at the
· atomic plant in Waverly, Battelle
Institute In Columbus and a I Ohio
University with the computer sclene
program. He was a former pastor of
the McDougel and The Poston
UnJteil Methodist Churches and the
Jacksonville Charge. He was a
member of Amesville Lodge 278,
F&amp;AM. and the Pomeroy Middleport Lions Club.
Besides his father, he is survivect
by his wife, Janice B. McGee; two
daughters, Mary (Jan) Fowler,
Beckley, W.Va .. and Christina Gay
Fultz, Hllllard; a stepson, Allison
Rorick, and a stepdaughter,
Nanette Rorick, both of The Plains;
his stepmother, Beualah McGee,
The Plains; four grandchtldren;
two sisters, Mrs. Russell (Shirley)
Tinkham, The Plains, and Betty
Harrison, Columbus; two brothers,
William D. McGee, Kissimmee,
Fla., and Thomas G. McGee,
Sarasota Springs, N. Y.
Besides his mother, he was
preceded in death by astster,Donna
Jean McGee.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Saturday at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church with the
Rev. Benjamin Edwards and the
Rev. Wesley Clarke omciat!ng.
Burtal will be In the New Marshfield .
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Hughes Funeral Horne, 168 Morris
Ave,, Athens, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Friday, and at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church from 10
a.m. Saturday untu time of services.

Mothers March
of Dimes drive :
scheduled ]an. 29-30

'

r;:=====================::;-:OPEN FRID W, JAN. 28th

...

I

PH. 992-2635

Alfred Dietzel to head Ohio's of Dietzel's pay, reported to be
the questloQ then.before the House.
Finally, he slammed his gavel and
development program~ chairman . S!ll.O!J0.$100,000 a year. The maximum allowed by law for the
of an advisory coii1'Cll. is illegal.
shouted down the veteran Allen
director's post is $63,500. - . ~ .
County laMnaker.
He said an arrangement fot
. The · bill originally passed the . chambers of commerce around the' . That idea collapsed when some
. Senate Democrats raised questions
· House Jan. 12 by a lopsided vote of
state to pay the six-figure salary of ·abOut' coofllcts·of Interest, and the
· 88-9. Some Republicans said they
Dietzel, head of the Columbus senate adopted What Celeste called
swltthed their votes to protest the
chamber, runsafoulofOhlo'sethJcs ·. a good compromise. ·
treatment given their as$1stant
taws, claims by Democrats to the
Rose said Dietzel .In the council
· lead.er. ·
contrary notwithstanding. ,
post wlll be considered a public
R.osesaidCel~te'shandllngofthe
Celeste lnltlaiiY proposed naming offlclalsubject to the ethics laws and
developo~ent department matter,
Dietzel developnient director and that he could be "criminally liable"
. speclfic~lly the recruitment of
having the chambers pay all or part If the chambers pay his salary.

' .

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