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                  <text>b·v Dick Cavalli··

WINTHROP

Marauders win;
·Tornadoes lose

HE'D W15H "THAT HE COULD

MY [)AD SAYS IF THE

MAKE A SOLO BALLO:JN

GCOD f?t:\IRYqAVE HIM
"TWO WI'OHES ...

. P~es

FLiqHT .A:RdUND THE WORLD ...

34

e

Head hog Riggins
runs wild as 'Skins
feed on 'Killer Bees'

M eigs SWCD ladies
a4Xiliary accepting
tree packet orders

Page4

Page 10

•

at y

en tine

Voi.3 1,No.191
Copyrighted 1983

WELL, WE KNON 11-IAT AT LEA5roNE
OF 11-IOSE W15HE615 WIIHIN THE
· R~AL.MOF F05SIE!ILITY, DON 1 1WE~

UH-HUH.

-J '
'·

'

'

WAUX), DEAR "'

1-0LJ'RE HOME /

I

.•

Ed Sullivan·l

Priscilla's Po
I COULD HARDLY
WAIT 10 TELL '-rOLl
WHAT A WQ\1[/ERFUL

EVERYTHING WENT
SO SMOOTHLY.' THE

DAY THIS HAS E'EEN .'

SWEET .Ar--.ID HELPFUL;··

CHILDREN WERE

,. AN[l

I CLEANED
TI-lE HOUSE

'WE EVEN

GOT SOME

AND . FINISHED

NONEY BACK
FI'OM THE IRS,

THE iRONING·..

1 Section, 10 Pages
10 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

$189 billion
deficit budget
unv~iled today

.I HOPE- HE: EN.JOY5
THE TRIP.

•

Governor
to protect
jobs, needy
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
Richard ,Celeste gives the legisIature proposals to deal with a
massive state budget deficit Tuesday and is expected to recommend
spending cuts, but says he'Dprotect
jobs programs and the needy .
Ohioans have been hit by four
state tax Increases In the past 26
months, and Celeste Is expected to
call for, further Increases or
extension of temporary' taxes.
Celeste met with his staff during
the weekend to work out details of a
plan for offsetting a deficit projected to be $528 mUllan by the end of
the fiscal year June 30.
He wtll deliver his recommendations In a speech before a joint
legislative session.
Celeste spoke about his plans
SatUrday at a meeting of the United
Labor Agency, a social service .
agency sponsored by the Cleveland
AF1..-CIO, the United Auto Workers
and the Teamsters.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pre~ldent Reagan toilay unveUed a
deficit-choked $848.5 billion )ludget plan for 1984 In Whlch the entire ·
spending Increase would be absorbed by t!Je mllltary and higher Interest
charges on the national debt.
As he delivered hi$. spending blueprint to Congress, the president
plunged straight Into a showdown with lawmakers over hls push to give
more to defense and less to social programs. He · said he remains
"adamantly opposed" to a public jobs bill, the first order of business on
Capitol Hill.
Despite a $189 bUUon deficit projection for !lscal1984, the year he once
pledged would show a surplus, the president declared: "The stage is set; a
recovery' to vigorous, sustainable, nonlnflationruy economic growth is
Imminent.
"SteadUy and unmistakably. our national economy Is completing the
transition from recession to recovery'," he said.
Reagan proposed to Increase spending In the new fiscal year by $43.3
bUUon - or a modest 5.4 percent - from fiscall!m, whlch ends Sept. 30.
The Increase, an amount adequate only to cover the expected rate of
lnDatlon, equaled the combined rise devoted to defense and Interest on the
national debt. That left aU domestic spending- on balance-' frozen at or
below tlils year's levels.
DOWN - 1n one wook's time, Pomeroy's aged
have been boUt In 18'73. on land purchased !rom Elija
Programs for the poor - Including food stamps, welfare and child
viBage hall has practically been eraSed ftom the
S. Goo on Aug. 19, 18'72 lor ~.000. The area where
nutrition ,- would be reduced. Annual cost-o!-Uv!ng ralses for Social
downtown scene in Pomeroy. Only a smaU section of
''i will .,. propose action, which
viBage haU has stood will be used for a parking Jot by
Securlty arid other pension and dlsabUlty programs would be delayed siX
waD was 81111 standing Friday evening. Many reslthe Pomeroy United M~hodlsl Church which pur- . · ·will be drastic action, In an effort to
months. OveraU - spending on farm programs, energy and the
denlll have been col1ectlng bricks or some other Items
deal with that budget problem," he
chased village hall several montlll ago for $11,000.
environment, education and job training would !aU.
as souvellirs from the structure which Is beHeved to
said. "But let me say that there are
Gov~mment and mUitary .salaries and pensions would be .frozen for a
two places I want to protect In every'
year.
wayicanln tllecourseoftaklngthat
However. the president sought an additional $1.5 mlUlon to run his White
action.''
House offices and $500,00J for the residence.
"First are those programs that
.
.
Meanwhile. the Pentagon's bUdget for 1984 would jump $29.7 bUllon- or
attempt to meet the needs of our
'
14 iiercent - to $238,6 bUllon, even after lin $8llllllon 'ett from' the 1984
mas! distressed citizens. those
defense spending' envisioned In last last year's 'budget. Nuclear weapons
programs which are essential for
production by the Energy Department would rise an additional $1 billlon.
people who 'a re bearing the burden
Net Interest payments on the national debt, now $1.2 trillion and
of hard times," he said. "Secondly,
mounting, would rise by $14.3 bUllon to $103;2 bUllon.
we must protect those programs
unemployment on the state budget, . deep of a depressional thls pertod."
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - The
Reagan also caUed for $146 bUUon In standby taxes from fiscal 19!*i
one need only look at the difference
state's path to the poorhouse is lined
One year ago, Collier said, most thatfocusongettlngourpeopleback ·
through 1988lf needed to hold down future deficits. The package, consisting
projections
made
last
between
the
with the · ranks of the Jobless,
economic forecasters. "not just the to work, those Incentive programs,
of an crude oU excise tax equal to 12 cents per gaUon of gasoline and an
to the extent that we stiU have
spring,
when
the
most
recent
state
financial experts say.
pro-Reagan economists,'' were preWJSpeci,fled Income ~ surcharge, ,already has ~n declared dead by
them.
..·:
budget mea~ was approved, and
Asked to give the single most
dicting a mild recovery' from the
leading members of Congress.
Outlines of much of his proposal
last week's forecast by the adminisimportant reason for Ohio's loom·
national recession In 1983.
And although his own economic forecast sees unemployment persisting
tration of Gov. Richard Celeste.
lng budget deficit, now set at about
Shortly after the signing of the havealreadyemerged,leavingonly
above 10 percent well Into 1984, the president declared, " I remain
the percentages and details to be
$528 rnUllon, former Budget Direcnew budget bill In tate June,
adamantly opposed to temporary make-work publlc jobs or public
Eight months ago, the state's
tor Howard Collier didn't hesitate a
however, "every' month after that, spelled out.
works," a position congressional Democrats and many Republican will
Office of Budget and Management
moment.
all the economists started pushing
The administration lsconslderlng
resist mightily.
estimated
the' amount the state
"Fifteen or 16 percent unemploytheir recovery' forecasts back
spending cuts of up to $300 mUilon
Reagan rejected any major tax Increases· for 1984 and promised to
ment/' he said. " There's no would spend and the amount it
month after montll," Collier said.
and tax Increases to deal with the
protect future Income.tax cuts now on the books from repeal by Congress.
mystery to It, and It's not would take In would each equal
The resulting climb in the
balance of the problem. Primary
However, hls 1984 budget ·would accelerate an Increase In Social
roughly $7 bUIIon, a blilanced
complicated."
unemployment rate had a snowbaland secondary educa lion could
Security payroU taxes as part of a blpartlsan compromise of tax and
The latest federal government budget.
ling effect: Down went revenue
carry
the brunt of the reductions,
benefit changes for restoring the pension system to health. The changes
Revised OEM estimates now
figures place Ohio's jobless rate at
from the personailncome and sales
with educa tlon groups forecasting a
would reduce next year's deficit by an estimated $12.2 billion from what it
14.5 percent, But .Collier, now place expenditures at approxitaxes; up went the costs of welfare
cut of almost $200 million.
otheiWise would be.
programs.
returned to his post at the Medical mately $7.2 billion and revenues at
Extension of a temporary 50
The new budget also would set a llmlt for the first time on the amount of
College of Ohio, said that rate does about $6.6 bUilon. The difference is
Collier and others believe the gap
percent Income tax surcharge for
employer-paid health insurance premlwns a worker could receive
not reOect those unemployed people the anticipated state deficit.
between money coming In and
April, May and June Is considered
tax-free.
Last June, forecasters estimated
money going out has been a long
who have simply given up looking
Inevitable. It would otherwise
Without hls domestic budget savings, Reagan said, future federal
for work. He believes the actual the state's .unemployment rate a
time In the making.
expire March 31. Celeste may seek
deficits w!ll reach unprecedented heights- climbing from $231 bll)lon next
year later would be 13.2percent- a
level of unemployment Is higher.
In a speech earlier this month to
to double the surcharge, or Increase
year to $.'ro bllllon In 1!118 - and snuff out any hopes for a lasting return to
The state Legislative Budget mark that has already been
the Ohio Press Club, Collier said
It
by a lesser amount, during the
economic prosperity.
_,
·
federal government decisions durOffice says the taU on the state's surpassed- and that the 1982 gross
three-month period.
national product would decline by .8
Ing World WarllaUocatedresearch
economy Is staggering .
Other options understudy inClude
In a study late last year, the · percent Instead of tlle actual 1.8 and development grants to universia four-day work week for state
budget office estimated that each 1 percent.
ties on the west and east coasts and
employees and layoffs.
rosc;li y,.,,. t !lR4 F slunaf,.
Why were the forecasts so far off
established new mllltary bases In
percent Increase In the rate of
A sampling of legislators In
unemployment costs the state $100 the mark?
the South a nd West. Ohio and other
Where It Comes From
advance
of Celeste's address
Cor por alP Income
" Thls Is a new time for you and I
states In the Industrial Midwest
mllllon In revenues and another $00
showed
general
agreement about
Borrowni(l
·. i;Tws .06
and every'body," said Collier. "No
mllllop ln added welfare costs.
were to use thelr lac tortes to make
the need to extend thesurchargebut
.22
, ..
To examine the ln\pact of one thoug!Jt that we would be In this
weapons. ·
a reluctance to Increase it.
That pattern has remained larThe General Assembly has slnce
gely unchanged, he said, meaning
Decembe~ 1!81 adopted a tempor- ·
that the transformation of the U.S.
ruy sales tax Increase, a gasoline
economy from the manufacturing
tax Increase. a permanent sales tax
to tlle information age has stripped
Increase and the current temporary
the Midwest of much of its wealth
Income tax surchaz:ge.
and mqny of its jobs.

Swelling jobless rate prime
reason for budget deficits
.

(

WHERE
ARE l.rOU
GOING"'

r'M TERRIBLY SORRY 10
HAVE OOTHERED LrOU
I

MADAME, BUT I'M AFRAJD
I"M 11-J THE WF&lt;DNG HOUSE"'

THIS LOO&lt;S LIKE MY HCXJSE.

WALIA), IAJN'T

AND 'TOU CERTAINLll Lcx::JK
, UKE MY WIFE, BUT IT

PRESS IT'"

CAN'T BE·--

PRINTED 'IN CANADA

•

•

DUSTY CHAPS

•

by Art &amp; Chip Sanso.m
~----~----~--r-----~~

The Budget Dollar

~

M'l WATC.H
W~AT'~ ~·
TIME:~ '·

...I
'

State troopers check
rock throwing incident
·
.

Where It Goes

Dtrect ·Bene hi
Paynu •nls tor
irlllovottuals

.42

Natrona! Defense I'

.29

· Grants to
Net
. Interest Slates and

Locahtoes

.12

.11

Sourt:e Otfoce 01 Mana(lement II Budyet ·

BUDGET DOLLAR OOMING AND GOING -:- '1'1111 chartllbowll
w11ere the m-r wDl be comiD&amp; from to IUppOl1 the Re11pn lilt
,Bcdpt IIIII wllere ta- mon'N will be apeatlu the IRIJII Dl ed budp!l
(U' 1

erphoto),

,.

,

-! I

By The Associated Press
State troopers were Investigating
a report of a rock being thrown at a
truck In Clennont County today, an
Incident that could bave been the
first ln Ohio since Independent
truckers began their nationwide
strike.
The reported rock-throwlng OC·
curred on Interstate 275 In tlle
western part of the .county. A
dispatcher at the Batavia state
patrol post said the Incident was
reported about 8: 30 a.m. and that
troopers were on the scene.
Ohio's truckers weren't supposed
to offlciaUy begin their strike Wltll
12:01a.m. Tuesday.
No nationwide agreement was
·reached on a strike deadline by
truckers protesting tax ll)creases., .
· David Kolman, a spokesman for
the Independent Truckers Association In Los Angeles, said Sunday the
walkout would beg1l'l at 12:01 a.m.
ESTioday.
.
Marvin Hlckr)1an, pres!de!ll of
Ohio's Independent Truckers Asso-

elation, said Sunday night tllat
Ohio's shutdown would begin 12: 01
a.m. Tuesday.
"To say tlle least, It's a mess," he
said. "We're taking care or Ohlo."
He said the association urged
members to avoid violence, but
said, "I'm a realist. We're going to
have violence, and we'll get blamed
for lt whether·we do lt or not."
Hickman predicted a shutdown of
about ~ weeks, but said he's
encouraged by response of some
congressmen and that action on
their part may shorten a shutdown.
Hickman said the shutdawn.wiU
stall delivery of fresh food and most
household goods.
Some businesses disputed this. "I
think the effect will he mlnlma!,"
said Anthony Arena of Arena ·
Produce Co. IIi Columbus. "We can
always switCh tO raU delivery." He
pointed out that large grocery
chains such as Kroger and Big Bear
have their own trucks,

Meigs County deputies check
several weekend incidents
. Meigs County sheriff's deputies Sunday Investigated a breakIng and entering at the residence
of Paul Montgomery', Rt. 1.
Langsville. Montgomery sald his
home on SR 124 had been entered
sometime :after 6 p.m. Saturday.
.Taken . were a stero and
· speakers and a clock radio.
·Drawers In the house were
ransacked. Entry was gained by ·
breaking out a glass In the
kitchen door.
Meanwhile, the footbaUfield at
Southern High SChool was damaged early Saturday morning
according to the Meigs County
Sheriff's Deparbnent.
It was reported that a Jeep
pickup truck was seen traveling
a ctrcular path on the playing

area of the field leaving deep
ruts.
The Incident is under Investigation by the sheriff's department and Alfred Lyons, Racine
marshal. According to the sheriff's department charges of
trespassing and criminal damaging will he flied ln juvenile
court pending the Investigation.
Also being Investigated Is
damage to· two stop signs In
Raclne early Saturday morning.
It is believed that the Incident at
the football field and the damage
to the signs are related.
_Stop signs damaged were the
one located near the elenentary
school and at the Intersection of
SR 124 and 338.

�·Commentary
The -naily Sentinel
111 CuurlStret-l
P••m~r11y,

Ohil•
, ...t9Z·%156i
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THf: MEIGs-MASON ARF.A

ROBERT L. WINGETT
BOB HOEFLICH

!'AT WHITEHEAD
AsKi!iLMnl Puhli~hr- r/Controlkr

DALE ROtHGEB, JR.
Nt'w~

EdUur

A MF.MBER uf Tht' As!iudatlt"d" Pn-~s. lnblnd Dw.il" Pns~ As~udati1m and Ut~:

Amt"rit •lln Nev.·spo~pt'r l»ublisht·rs A~tlt'iaiUtJD,

'

•re

I.F.1TEltS OF OPINION
Wt'IC'omed. Th~)' sbuuld bt loiN UwD 300 wnnls kmac. All
ldh•r!O art• \'Ubjt't'l lu edilull~ and mlllll be sii{D~ with name, ~rt!!itt and ttlrphtlllt'
~mber. N11 uDHIKIWti_lett.l!'n -wllllll' puhli•lwd.ldtr:b ~ht•ltlbr .in gt.MICI &amp;K!ik.lllddretm"'-

:

Page-2-The Daily $entinel
Pomeroy-:Middleport, Ohio
Monday, January 31, 1983

Sad

HULMI; ·

.

measure does not accompllsh what
have been thought cit as conseJVa·
tlve objectives.
Here is one way of looking at it.
Do you know bQw we could ellmi'
.nate the problem !)f unemployment
tomorrow? Why, It is as simple as
getting 12 mllllon people who are
now looking for jobS to &lt;~gree not to
look for jobs. To decl~tre themselves, that is to say, satisfied·not to
work. We know, ao we not; tbat In
1960 :rr percent of Amertcan women
wanted to work; and that In 1980
!hat 11gure had risen to 51 .percent?
If the figure had not risen, there ,
would now be qi&gt; tmemployment.
· Now, carry out the logic of this

.

NE~

'""IM'II, nut ptl"ltl.lllllih!!!i.

.

.

Do no~ speak ill
~f bipartisanship .
Blpaf\lsanship Is like motherhood. Politicians do not speak ill ofit.
· · That being&amp;~, President Reagan's pledge to seek bipartisan solutions to
economic woes was hardly a breakthrough. It's what he has been sayjng
aU along. ·
·
· Pemocrats said they're for bipartisanship, too. Everybody Is. They
cheered Reagan for his State of the Union comment !bitt: "We who are in
gmrenunent must take the lead in t:estorlng the economy."
Taken ;~lone, that sounded like Democratic activiSm, not conservative ·
Republican philosophy. It wasn't
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Ne!U :Jr. applauded, too, and said the
statement marked "a historic political reversal'' for Reagan.' It wasn't
that. either.
.
Reagan said the single most innportant step to economic recovery Is the
reduction of Interest rates. No one disagreed.
. He then said that fear stands in the way of lower Interest, and at that
point, blpartls&lt;inship ended. lhdeed, even GOP unity was out the window
by morning, as Repuqllcans in Congress moved to separate themselves
from some of their president's proposals by offering alternatives of their
own.
.
"Today.lnterest rates are based on fear tllat government will resort to
measures, as It has In the past, that wll .send lnflatloil zooming ·;~gain,"
Reagan .said. ay that .. he meant the kind of expensive, inter\lentlmilst,
Democratic programs he bl3f!'les for creating the .whole economic mess.
.R eagan came to offl&lt;;e preaching bipartisanship. It was nothing
unusual; that'swhat presidents do. A program backed by bOth parties has
a far better chance of approval, and·success, than one forced by eltherslde
upon the other. Besides, Reagan had then, and has now, to deal with a
.
Democratic House.
Behind the rhetoric Is the san.~.:; ~baie of the past two years. Congress Is
go!J!g to have to chooSe between two confUctlng courses.
When Reagan says government must take the lead in restoring
economic healQJ, he means wliat he always, meant, which Is tha\ the
government should get out of the way, Spend less, and. let the private
economy heal. When Democrats· say the same thing, they mean that
government should Intercede, to prime the economic pump, and to provide
jobs and aid to. victims of the recession.
To Reagan that lsaqulckflxthat willonlymakethlngsworse. He argues
that c~nt economic woes are the legacy of just such programs, born of
the era when Democrats .controlled the ·government.
And no bow to bipartlsan,shlp Is going to change that basic
disagreement. It may bend to compromise in the months ahead. But no
· one economic program can embrace those conlradictory views of what
government can and should be doing.
·

'Fired. .up' Marauders post second win
By KEttH WISECUP

state~--------~~-~-~~---w_u~~w~m~F~·-B_~_k~iey~J~r.

Mr. Reagan's speech to Congress thl!lg that comes to memOry to res- .
ls being greete4 as ecumenical lh · tore the economy. If COngress 1s
tone, which In a way It was. There ' genuillelywon'ie!l about the deficit,
·was &amp;~me wonderf111 theater ·there,
Co~ss and only Congress can do
because aU the llttle Democrats
something 'about it. ~d \1!8!!. ··
8nd all the big Democrats were preBut, reaUy, Mr. Reagan this time
instructed to rise, as t!tough sponaround led with his chlil. Because
·. taneously, to applaud the'p resldent
he opened by applauding House
when he said, ''We who are. in goSpeaker'npO'Ni!llfo.rjolnlngwitll
vemment must take the lead in resthe White House in the Co.operatlve
lOring the economy." The Ballet
breakthrough on the Social Secur· .
Russe could not have got its ballet
lty problem. The trouble with that ·
troupe to act with greater precl•
breakthrough is that It It were to set ' ,
slon. Actors Equity may aemand
the paitern for future acts of coop-'
.that .D emocratic congressman be- eratlon, Democrats would be
paid scale - which Is about a5 · springing to their feet quite spon. much as Democratic congressmen
taneously !0 applaud Mr. Reagan,
deserve, since they have done noinasmuch as the Social Security
et'TA ali9Q3 nRr -~AA-WEiiP''"-

"George really believed
he kept reading help-wanted ads - he
picked himself up QY the bootstraps and landed a job as a weather
balloon." .
·

tine of tllought. At the present m~
meilt, 70 percent ol Americans take ,
·advantage of early Social Security,
which means that they move out of ··
employment at age 62. SuppOse ·
that Social SeCurity were to talc~! a .
genuine step toward solvency, by .
' gradually postponing the age at
which an Amertcan qualified fOr be- .
· neflts. 'Peter Peterson, sometime ,
secretary of commerce, observed ·
In his recent essays on the. Social
SecUrity problem tllat since 1940,
when the benefits of Social Security
flrst'begait, Americaus'have added
one year to their Ute expectancy for
every decade that has pasSed. The
mean!J!g of thiS- four years extra
lite - Is that If Americans were to ·
qualify at age fi6 for early retirement and at 69 for full retirement
one would ~pect two fresh entrteJ
on the relevant data sheet. The first
would Indicate a sharp rise In unemployment. The other entry ·
would refied huge aiUiual savings.
What, then, Is the role of government In "restoring the economy?"
PrimarUy, Its role Is negative: to
stay out of the way of the generation of silpply, creating a felt demand. Mr. Reagan ls plilgued with
political reall\les, and these communicate to every politician the
simple truth, namely that It Social
Securit:twere to be JlC?Stponed, how·
ever helpful this would be as an economic matter, 'In {act It would
result · in adding to . the pool of
workers, 11 percent of whcim are at
this writing without work: So ... We ·
let It pass, and applaud Tip O'Neill
for helping to shove that problem
under the rug.
Much that the president said was :
exciting to hear, not least his reiterated dennand that Americans be
· permitted to patronize schools ot
tllelr choice, eVen It those Americans a:re relatively poor.

Jack Anderson
rFavors to pollutors
~----~--~--~------~------~~~
WASHINGTON - In the great
legal uproar over Anne Gorsuch's
refusal to give CongreSs fertain
documents It cjemanded, little has
been said about a crucial question:
What exactly Is in the documents
that the Environmental Protection
Agency administrator doesil't want
CongreS!! to see?
.
I can tell ¥UU about some Of them. .
They hardly seem worth going to
Jail over, yet that is what Gorsuch Is
apparently willing to do.
Take Susan Conti's memo. Conti
Is a temporary legal clerk In the
EPA's Office of Enforcement
She'll be taking her bar exams next
month.

The Conti

memo dealt with

her
research IntO federal and Callfor· .
Ilia Ia ws regarding the settlement
of civil tort actions. It had nothl!lg to
do with criminal prosecution. Nor
did It lay ou~ any legal strategy; It
simply discussed the options avail·
able In damage suits under the fed·
eral and state laws,
Yet, like the other docu!Y!f!nts,
Conti's legal research was declared
"enforcement-sensitive" by Presl·
dent Reagan as the reason tor keeplng It out of congressional hands.
Conti told my asSociate Tony Ca·
pacclo she hadn't talked to Gorsuch
about the memo, eXJ)Ialnlilll: "She
discussed things with people at a

State of the ·union

MemberS of Congress and the
American people heard a chastened l'Ulnald Reagan plead tor bipartisan support as he gave his
anilual State of the Union address.
1'he speech was a ~parture from
his statement on the second anniverSary of his tnauguralion only
five days before when he had
bragged of his accompUshments
and painted a rosy picture of the
future. In his address January 25,
he seemed to have at last recognized reality.
I don't mean to Imply that he has
'·
-radlcaUy changed course or turned
his back on supply·slde economics.
He stated at the beginning .of his
a~ that the economy Is on the
mend but somehow 1 felt that his
heart was not in it. He was more
like the smaU boy whistling by the
graveyard at night to keep his courl
age up.J don't think you want me to
&lt;
give you a blow by blpw account of
•z
~
the address for It you are blterested
J
enough to read this column, you
were probably Interested enough to
watch the program. However, I do
think you might be Interested In my
reaction to parts of the address and
Irs a new game based on THE SOCIAL
·
the reasons.
SECURITY SYSTEM
First, on the federal freeze for
Olle year of government wages and
cost of llving allowances; because
the rate of Inflation Is now down to
3.9 percent does not mean that Inflation Is licked. By taking the earning
Today Is Monday, Jl!"· 31, the 31st day of1983. There are 334 days left In
power away
a fourth of the
the year.
·
population, lnOation is bound to
Today's highlight in history:
come down but tllat doesn't mean
On Jim. 31, 1958, the first U.S. earth satellite, Explorer I, was launched at
that prices will stay down. ay freez- .
Cape Canavera~ Fla.
lng government w~~ges the COLAs ·
On this date:
at the !n'eaent levels wOuld mean
In 1606, British conspiraio.r Guy Fawkes was executed.
that unfair advantage would be
, In 1917, Germany announced a p&lt;iUcy of unrestraine!l naval warfare in
taken of . mUUons of government
WorldWML ·
.
workers, government and Social
In 1928, . Bolshevik leader Leon Trotsky _was expelled trom the Soviet
Security pensioners, ratlroad and
uruoo.
.
other retirees whose llvellbood deIn 1!M, President Harry Truman announced he had ordered
pends on their .incomes keeping
development of the hydrogen bomb.
pace with priCes. H incomes are to
, Ten years ago: President Richard NIXon said he was sending Heilry . be frozen, then prices should be fro.
KisSinger to Hanoi to make the peace in Vtemam more secure.
zen and Interest ra.tes tied to lnf1a·
Ftve years ago: Isr~l and Egypt resumed 'talks on the millt&lt;lry level in · tlon. It 1s extremely unfair to freeze
Cairo, the first formal discussions since the bi'eakdown of political
the income of ·retirees whUe still
negotiations in Jerusalem two week$ ear~r.
grantlng the 10 pezcent tax cut on
One year 11g0: Warsaw radio said 14,peo.ple were injured and more than
InCome taxes scheduled July 1.
:m
anested
in Gdansk in a protest against a forthcoming food price
That Is sbowlng partlaUty to one
...__ .
..
segment of the populatim while pe. u"'T;;s birthday$: BasebaU $tar Nolan Ryan is 35. Writer .No.IT!IBII I nalizing !he other.·It Is a well known
Maller is 00;
. tact ·that those with Incomes ol

Berry's World

~1

·~

~I

Today in history

rrom

much higher level tpari myself."
Even ~n~re ridiculous was the Inclusion In the "enforcement·
sensJtive" documents of a two-page ·
form letter.
The letter was sent out on Oct.14
to companies that either generated
or transported waste dumped at a
site in Stringfellow, Calif. It Informed them of a meeting In Los
Angeles the toUowlng month to discuss with EPA the potential llabUI·
ties each·com~ny might face.
1
''Your company Is one of the top
59 gener11tors and transporters,"
tile form letter said, "and we
strongly urge that you attend." Dynamite stuff, Is It not?

At the heart of the current battle
are 42 EPA documents requested
by Reps. EUiottLevltas, 0-Ga., and
John Dlngell, 0-Mich. The docu·
ments contain information on the . · '
agency's cleanup efforts at three of · '
the nation's worst dwnp sites. Con·
greflslonal investlga tors for Levitas
also want documents that deal with
EPA handling &lt;1157 dumps across·
· the country.
There are two points to note '
about the president's designation d. .
the EPA documents as
"enforcement-sensitive." One Is
that he .made his declaration after
reviewing only an Index of the
material, not the materlal ltseil.

Lowell Wingett

~---------------------------erately vague on defense matters
exPectations. In other words, he .Is
$50,00! and over are the main recipalthouglj he did ineiltion a saving of
askllig the 98th Congress to pass
Ients of the 10 percent tax cut.
$55
billion·over a five year period.
taxes which the 99th Congress must
' Another proposal of the presiMost
of this saving Is a paper sav·
assume whether they want them or
dent's was to control growth of
lng
by
changing the inflation factor
not. "'o me, that seems t.o be pass·
spending programs, but not deand
not
a genuine cash lillving, It Is
lng me buck to the future. If the
fense spend!Jig. He specltlcaUy
another
case of deception· to the
administration Is no 1110re capable
mentioned food stamps which he
In
tact, Congress Is set to
public.
of controlling the economy the next
said was victimized by fraud and
take a healthy bite out of the detwo years than the last two, who
waste. That has been' a particular
fense budget when It Is presented to
knows what kind of hardship such a
target of the administration over
Congress next week. Reagan was
standby tax would generate in 1986.
the last two years and for him to
emphatic
In stating that the high
Congress will never grab this one!
make a speech without reference to
was not caused by · ·
budget
deficit
The first part of his speech was
food stamps would be unthinkable.
the.
5-10-10
tax
cut or by the high
comPosed of praising the Social SeHoweve, he offered no remedy ex·
defense
budget
but was caused by ·
curity Reform Commission for fl·
cept let a certain pe~ntage of the
:spending
for
dQmestlc
programs.
naUy ;~greelng to a plan to save the
population go hungry by cutting the
He stated his opposition to any Con·
system. Whether or not the Conprogram even while thousands of
gresslonal
action to Interfere with
gress Is lh favor of the plan was not
people are getting their meals from
the
10
percent
tax cut scheduled in
apparent · In the applauS!! the
charity soup , lines. l"r!vate· char!·,
July
or
with
the
Income tax brack·
members gave the Commission
ties are not flnanclaUy able to take
eting
law
passed
In 1981. ·
members present. The necessary
on federal responsibility, no matter
That,
to
me,
is
the
gist of the main
legislation to innplement the comhow much they want to or how
State
Ofthe
Unton mespoints
of
the
mission's plan Is expected to take
much the president wants them to.
sage.
Whether
Congress
will buy
up mu~h of the Congres(l' time for
President . Reagan· also asked
the package Is anyone's gue5s but I
the next four months with nq sure
CongreS!! to pass standby taxes to
would expect to see fur fly on Ca·
result.
take effect in l986 It certain ecoI thought the president was dell!&gt;- pltol Hill for the next two years!
nomic conditions do not llve. up to

.

HOCK SPRINGS - Coach Greg
Drummer's pte-gaine strategy,
printed in on the dressing room
chalkboard, was sinnple and direct,

"GET F'QtED-lJl&gt;l '!
That's what his Meigs Maraud-

Melgsweiltintoastallwith2:23left
and leading 56-50.
·
· Guard tandem Nick Riggs and
lUck Edwards led Meigs in scoring
with 15 aplec~. Greg Taylor hustled
his way Into 10 points and a teamhigh eight rebounds.·

a

But It was the Intense play of senlor
lUck Chancey that seemed to
'ball fundamentals with a
keep
Meigs clicking.
weU-played, 60-52 win .over the
Cliancey
scored 12. points and
Federal-Hocking Lancers here S01t·
abbed
five
rebounds. The"10for·
urday night.
· ·
·
· gr
or
Inspired. by a " Parents' Night" ward had been shu)out his last two
crowd, ¥elgs jwnped out of the games. JU!llor Jay Evans added
start!Jig blocks to leads of 10-2, 2]..6, eight points and seven rebounds:
:J0.12, the latter their largest lead ot .BillhHolcomb ·'added seven caroms.
evening mid-way through the se- . . S.. arp-shootlng guard Allan
Ko.kerkepttheLancerslnthegame
cond. period .
with 17 int F
ard
po s. orw
Ben Ben'
·So intense was the Marauders'
play the.flrst 12 'minutes, the Meigs' n!!tfscored 16, all in the second haH.
tans· rewarqed the team With a Scott Sinnett chipped ;In 11 and led
the Lancers In rebounding with
standing ova lion.
ers did in staging cllnlc on basket- ,

nl:~lg~.

When t11e Lanc;ers, now 4-12 on
tile year, came oilt with a fuU-court
2·12 on the year, sank five
press ln. the second baH and · of their first six shots and finished
whittled the lead to 36-28, the Ma- at 48 percent (23 of 48), their best
rauders settled down to match Fed- night of the season from the field.
eral bucket··· for bucket 1 the Tbe Dnirnmermen dropped 14 of25
foul shots for 56 percent
rerilalnd~ of the game.
Federal made 21 of 59 shots for 36
. Federal could come no ·closer
percent
and 10 of16foul shots for 63
· t!lan six points in the second half:

percent
. SEOAL foe Waverly and travel to
The Marailders led in rebollnding
Nelsonville· York Saturday.
· •1·
33-31. Meigs committed i7 turnovBox score:
· 1:
ers (five In the first halt) to 12 for
&lt;VARSITY)
!·
the Lancers.
· FEDERAL-HOCKING (!2) - Kd&lt;er n •:
In the reserve contest, Meigs
17: R. Russeu2~; SIMett4-3-ll· ~ H~ :.
2: P~rsor\s 1-0-2: Bennett n l6:' M. •,.
falled to capitalize on three. oppor- Q.M. TOTALS 21-l0-!2.
·
••
tunltles In the last30seconds to take
lliEIGs (00) -Riggs ~H~ Taylor~2-~0; ~
the lead, losing 42-39 to the little
R. Chancey f&gt;.0.12; Edwards H -15: Hokxmb •
Lancers.
r~i~':it:~~ennedy O:W. Hoblllll 0-0- ~
TraU!J!g 40-39, the little Maraudli!EIGS !flO) - Riggs nl5. Taylor U10; &lt;
.
R. Chancey f&gt;.O.I2; Edwards 7-1-15; &amp;!Comb . ;.
ers missed a one at 28 seconds, a
0-0-0; Evans US; Kennedy ().().0; 11ob5m ().(). .'
jump soot at. 12 seconds, and
o. By.
TOTALS
:13- 1 ~·
••
quarterS:
•!
anotheroneandonewithlOseconds
Fede aiH
'·
'
left Federai·Hocklng m;~de two
Melg~ . ocklng
. 2~ ~ ~
foul .shots in the last seconds for the
&lt;R...,..es(Ill)l
FEDERAL-HOCKING
MatlOCkW •;
final count. Rick Wise paced Meigs
12; Mc Pherson 4+12; Ktocad~~ Tal&gt;ler •:
with 12 while Mike Chancel-' and
3-~; Watsono-2-2.TOTALS 17-84
•. ·
· ·
MEIGS (39) - M. Chancey 3-2-8; Floher ;.
SCott Gheen added eight and seven
1-24: Thoma5 1-2-4 ; Gheen H&gt;7: Wlse5-2-12; i
respectively, MQPherson led the lit- Weiker 244: Casscl iiJ.lHJ. TOTALS 1ii'J3.18. ~
tie Lancers with 12.
By quarters:
'
Next Friday the Marauders host
federal-Hocking
i6 s6 14-42
Meigs
106 10
u-39 ••

Jt: :

rr~~~~~~~~;;;~~~~~;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';
t~
CE

SALE
10°/o ABOVE COST
.·

Nibert Z-1-5; · Hammack 0-0-0;
Smith 0-~; Lambert 0-0-0; Rutherford 0-0-0. TOTALS 15·9-39.
Score by quarters:
Gallipolis
8 12 6 14-40
Pt. Pleasant
9 10 14 G--39

CEDA.RVU.LE - Guard jerry
Mowery connected on a 15-fOot
jumper .with just 35 seconds remaining here Saturday night to 11ft
the !Uo Grande College Redmen to
a 79-78 Mid-Ohio Conference victorY over the Cedrunrtlle Yellow
Jackets.
·
The win moved the Redmen to
18-7 on the season, 6-11n the MOC.
, Cedarville, defending NAIA Dlstric.t 22 champions, dropped lo 14·8
in aU games and 4-3 in the MOC.
The viCtory was also the ninth in
tile last 10 decisions for the Red·
men. They will stay on the road
Tuesday when they play Ol!lo no.
mlnlcan College and will travel to
Malone College on Saturday.
"This was a big win for us after
· dropping the tough decision to the
. fourth ranked team In the country
(Walsh College) Tuesday night,"
said IUo Grande coach John Lawhorn. "Our kids knew they had
their work cut oilt for them and they
responded wen.
We played an excellent team on
· their home court and came 0ut on
top which Is lnnportant In the league
pace. ·
"Our beilch played a key role in
the victory. All season long our
bench has done a super job for us
and tOnight was no different as
(lUck) Fritz 8nd (Adam) McNIchols came through In the clutch.
"I'm convinced that If we're going to be in the MOC race at the end
we're going to have to play well on
the road. This was a good place to

..,,

.

,'

,

·'

'·
. .,

'

"

'

. ~··

... ...

.

,_)

'

,;·',

...
'

~

·•.

.

~.

., '

',

A fresh new ~aste experience
that outshines menthol.
'·

It not only tastes fresher while you smoke.
It even leaves you with a clean, fresh taste.

start.''
~Red men built an early seven
poinf· lead against the Yellow
Jackets when Fritz popped In a 15footer. The lead stretched lo nine
points, at 35-26, with just 1: 32 remaining on the fil'st baH clock as
Mowery connected on a drive, but ·
back·to-back buckets by the hosts
cut the margin to :J5.30 at the
intermisslcin.
The Yellow jackets came out fir·
· ing to outscore Rio 124 in the open·
ing five minutes of the second halt
for a 42-39 Cedarville lead. The leact
then see-sawed back-and-forth with .
a pair of free throws after drawing
an offensive foul. Kent Wolfe zipped
in a 12-footer a minute later to boost
a n-67 lead.
Cedarville stayed within three
points until Mowery locked up the
victory with his Jumper at the 35
secondm&lt;~rk.

'

Mowery was joined In double fig·~

ures :by Flaclne's Wolfe with 12.
Jolui Maisch puUed down six re-

··· ···

. .v' ~.~; ......

,bounds to top the Redmen.
John Srnls paced the · Yellow
Jackets In .scoring With 19 while
Dave Carr added 17 and Tim Danube 10.
The Rednlen held a 28-26 n\argln
ln .the Jle1d goalsandwere23of33 at .
the line compared to the Jackets' 26
d. 311 card.

.. . .

Here comes

By SCOTr MILLER

Mowery turned In his third game
of 30 points or more this season and
took scoring laurels with 32 points.
He connected oo 10 of 15 shots !rom
tile floor and·l2 of 12 free throws tor
his total

~
'
•,

*CONVERSE GYM SHOES *PAINT
*APPLIANCES *GUNS &amp; AMMO .
*TOYS *SPORTING GOODS
*BIKES *HARDWARE

GAHS-Point box
GALLIPOIJS (40)- Madison
H-18; Ellcessor 142; Lane 1-24;
Sheets 5-0-10; Skidmore 244; Carter 142; Clark~-0; Edelmann d-O. 0. TOTALS 17-6-40:
l'T. PLEASANT (39) - Gibson
10-5-25; .Jones 1-0-2; Simpkins 2-04;.

!:

·

·.,... .. _..,.

'.. BRlGHr.
~;

-~

r mg. ''tar". 0.5 mg. nicotine
·av. P~l cigarette by FTC mathod.

Warning, The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoki!I!IIS Dangerou~ to Your Health'.

'

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~-··--·-'"'-·- ------ · ·"'

'.

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�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, January 31, 1983

Dolphins caught in Washington's(hog) trough
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - HaU
to the Hogs, Washington's fun·
loving offensive line, a nd their
partner. running back John Rig·
gins, who set a Super Bowl rushing
record and led the Redskins to the
National Football League
c hampionship.
"They were magnificent." said
Riggins, who kept following the
Hog~made holes for a record 166
yards on 38 carries in the Redskins'
27-17 victory over the Miami
Dolphins Sunday.
Riggins wasn't exactly shabby
either In this pulsating com e-from ·
behind triumph, played before
103,667 fans in the cavernous Rose
Bowl. It was the second largest
crowd In Super Bowl history and the
excitement of the game had to erase
any lingering bad taste of this
strange strike-interrupted season.
It was a big-play game between
two teams tl\llt had been struggling
for respect aU season and they
earned It in the season's finale with
Washington's victory constructed
around\ the churning legs of its
plle-drl\1!ng fullback .
President Ronald Reagan noticed, saying in a phone call to the
Washington locker room, " I was
going to ask Riggins to change the

-

r.

."

"

~.

spelling of hiS name."
The Redskins used their Riggins·
nomics attack to wear down Miami.
Running behind the proud Hogs center Jeff Bostic, guards Russ
Grtmrn and Fred Dean, tackles Joe
Jacoby and George Starke, and
tight ends Rick Walker and Don
Warren - Riggins kept finding
huge holes in the Dolphins' Killer
Bee's defense, best Ill the NFL.
The Hogs' playbook Isn't terribly
complicated. It's. mostly Riggins
left , Riggins right and Rtgglns
straight ahead.
"He's our bread and butter," said
Coach Joe Gibbs. "We give It to him
and make people take it away from
him.''
So, when the Redskins, trailing
17-13 early in the fourth quarter and
facing a fourth-and-one at the
Miami 43, lined up to go for it, there
was no great mystery about who
would get the ball.
"The play Is called 7(}.Ch!p," said
Riggins. "It's a play we've been
running all season."
The Dolphins called a time out
before the play. When they returned
to the line ·or scrimmage, they had
shifted from their basic 3-4 defen·
sive set to one with six down
linemen.

"'

.•

.

,.
"' '

~

REDSKINS RAMBLE - Wa¥~ngton Redsldns celebrate second
quarter touchdown during Super Bowl XVD game Sunday agalll!lt the
Miami Dolphins. Getting In on the 'Skins "high Dve" are Alvin Garrett
(89), Clarence Hannon (38), Rick Walker (88) and VIrgil Seay (80).
(AP Laserphoto).

r

Today's

Sports World

By AfJ80Ciated Press
After yet· another weekend of
upsets In college basketball, th~ top
spot is up for grabs again.
Both top-ranked UCLA - the
fourth team to top The Associated
Press poll this season - and No. 2
Indiana feU over the weekend, while
the third·ranked team, defending
national champion North Carolina,
and fourth-ranked Nevada-Las Vegas each flled a claim for the No. 1
spot by continuing Wtnnlng strings.
North Carolina's Tar Heels, 17-3,
ran their winning streak to 14games
Saturday by defeating Atlantic
Coast . Conference rlv!ll Georgia
Tech 72-65. Sophomore Michael
Jordan, the hero of last season's
.NCAA title game against Georgetown, scored a career-high 39 points
for the Tar Heels.
And NeVada-Las Vegas stormed
back from 16 points down to beat
Long Beach State 78-74 Saturday
night and remain the nation's only
major unbeaten at IM.
Meanwhile, a furtous ub...A rally
fell short Friday night and the
Bruins suffered a rare homecourt
loss at the hands of Alabama. The
Crimson Tide won 70-67 when Mike
Davis hit two~ throws tD break a
tie after being intentionally fouled
by Rod Foster with 10 seconds left.
Alabama, which never traUed in
the game, led by 16 points early in
the second half before UCLA roared
back and tied the score at frl-67.
. That gapte was preceded by a
moment of silence In memory of
Alabama football Coach Paul
" Bear" Bryant, w)lodied of a heart
attack Wednesday and was burled
Friday.The Tide players wore
biack patches on their left shoulders
In Bryant's memory.

SUPERMVP-WIIIIIIbqtoaJWWdn•'runalagbackJobniUulm

(44) eludes tacJde of Miami Dolphtns' DeJa McNeal (28) for pin durlnc
Super Bowl SVII Sunday In the Ro8e Bowl in ;re••dena, Celli. Rintna,
named the game's Moat Valuable Player, rll!lled for 181yarda,aSuper
Bowl record, and sparked the 'Skins loa Z'l-17 wtn. (AP Leserpbolo).

resistance Ineffective and began an
offensive roll of its own.
Utilizing Its running game, SHS
rna nag!!(! several three on one
breaks as senior guard Zane 13eei1e .
found the right cmbinatlon for 15
points In the frame. Both Littlefield
and Beegle took turns fabricating
Southernscoreswithexcellentfloor
games. Midway through the quar·
ter the tide soon changed and South·
ern found Itself on top 33-29 at the
half.
·
In the opening minutes of the
third round SHS went up 3~31, hold·
ing that edge until the 4~ 21 mark
when guard Tyrone Brlnager
picked up his third personal foul.
WithBrinagergonefromtheSHS
line-up the locals became a bit un·
raveled, on one occasion commit·
tlng three straight turnovers.
. Meanwhile, the Chieftains broke
campandwentonthewarpath, out·
scoring the visitors 1~ the remalnder of the quarter.
Coach Carl Wolfe's ''pack" held a
4541 edge wtth two minutes left, but
faUed to score the rest of the canto
and fell behind 46-45 at Its
conclusiOn.
In the fourth quarter Brlnager ex·
!ted via five fouls with 1: ~ left to
play and the Chiefs poured In the
periods first six points for a 5245
advantage. Coach Wolfe called a
time out to regroup his club, but
Coach Kirk Hardman's Chieftains
only turned up the wick for 22
points, thus "burying the hatchet"
in Southern's hopes of victory.
When SHS was trying to catch up
talented Jeff Morgan capitalized on
seven of nine free throws to keep his
club in the drlver's seat.
Meanwhile, Southern's offensive
drought worsened as the Racinlans
cashed In on just five fourth pertod
field goals as well as losing Little-

Bruins bounce hack,
whip Notre Dame, 59-53
.

I!

Logan dumps South~m, 68~58
By SCOTI' WOLFE
LOGAN- The host Logan Chief·
tains overcame a 33-29 halftime deficit behind an aggressive second
· half performance, then proceeded
to scalp the Southern Tornadoes 6858 here Saturday evening.
Class triple "AAA" Logan, a
long-time SEOAL league represen·
tative, is now 8-8 overall, ranking
third In the league ledger at 6-3.
Southern fell to a 13·2 overall tab,
while remalnlng on top the SVAC
standings at Hl.
Three Chieftains hit double-digits
to lead a potent logan scoring as
Jeff Frasure ripped ll!e nylons for
22 markers, Jim Glll added 18, and
guard Jeff Morgan 17.
The Tornadoes also placed three
men in double figures, but falled to
get consistent efforts from the remaining members of Its cast. Se·
1\lor Zane Beegle poured in 21
points, while Rod Uttlefield netted
17 and Dennis Teaford, 10 points.
Despite being outsized by a large
margin, Southern controlled the
boards 38-35 led by husky junior
center Dennis Teaford, who col·
lected :II caroms tn an outstanding
inside game. Nick B&lt;Etick grabbed
· nine from the Logan glass, while
agile 6-5 center Jamie Van Voorhis
pulled in 10. .
The ''Pu!Jlle Tornadoes" set up
in a man-to-man defense, that has
been a reliable asset so many times
In the past, but briefly switched to a
zone during different segments of
the game. Logan's strategy was
much the same In the opening
round as the Chiefs led 17-10 as time
expired.
During second quarter action Logan set up a 2·2·1 zone press, then
dropped Into a zone defense, but
wtth Southern's quickness and agUity the Tornadoes proved the press'

•

-~

\

"It's easier to make a first down · had huUt a 17-10 halftime lead for
Miami.
against the 34 defense." said
The Dolphins had seized the early ·
Grtmrn. "It's harder against the 60,
lead when David Woodley and
but If .you de make it, you usually
Jimmy Cefalo combined for a
make It big."
76-yard touchdown paSs on Miami's
That's just what Riggins did,
sliding off the left side and 'fifth play from scrimmage. It was
the second longest TO pass In Super
•Shrugging off cornerback Don
Bowl
history.
McNeal to race Into the end zone for
On their next possession, Woodley
the touchdown that put Washington
hadMlamlmovtngagainwtthaflrst
in fronttorthefirsttlrnein the game.
Once armed with the lead, the down at the Washington~ . But he
was sacked by Dexter Manley, who
Redskins kept Riggins banging Into
the Dolphins, chewing up chunks of jolted the ball loose. Dave Butz
recovered for the Redsklns.
yardage that eventually led to a
Riggins earned five ' straight
wrap-up touchdown from Joe
times for 21 yards in the ensuing
Thelsmann to Charlie Brown.
"The ganoe started with a 50-gut drive and wtth fourth and twO at the
(Riggins' basic call), and ended 14-yard line, MarkMoseleyklckeda
with a 50-gut," said Starke. "We ran 31-yard field goal. It came on the
the same plays all day, Our plan to second play of the second quarter
run the basic plays was there all and touched off some scortng
day. Wenever.!Jad togotoPlanB." pyrotechnics.
Miami came right back, spinning
'flle!smann played his part,
offfourflrstdownsonanlmpres!;lve
tossing a pair of touchdowns and
drive to the Washington :J..yardl!ne.
breaking up an almost -certain
But the Redskins stiffened there and
Interception with a deft defensive
Uwe von Schamann kicked a
play. But ask him about the .game
:II-yard field goal.
and he just grinned and said, "We
That made it 10.3 and Thel.smlum
just turoed our Hogs loose today."
came
back throwlrig. He hit Rick
The Redskins overcame two
Walker
for Z7 yards on the first play
stunning long-yardage plays which
after the kickoff

The Daily Sentinel
(U!PS 1 - )

A Jllvloloa of M-edia, lno.

Deld to five fouls going down the
stretch In the third frame, the score
ending 68-58.
The winners hit 26 of 53 field goals
for 49 percent and cashed in on 16 of
29 charity tosses for 55 percent.
Southern canned 24 of 61 for 39.3
percent, 13 of 28 in the first half and
just 11 of 33 the second half. The
Southerners sank 10 of 15 free
throws for 70 percent.
Southern had five steals, 14 tur·
novers, nine assists, and 26 fouls,
while Logan had 12 turnovers, 13
assists, and 18 personals.
The young Chieftains staked
claim on a 51·Z7 massacre of the
talented Tornadoes led by Troy
Wrlght's 12. Greg Nease led SHS
with 11, as Southern led 9-8 after the
first round of play.
Southern rejoins the . hunt tor
another SVAC crown Friday at
North Gallta, then returns home to
face West VIrginia power, CeredoKenova on Saturday.

Published every oftemoon. Monday
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Mu!tlmedla, !Jr., Pomeroy, Ohlo - .
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LOGAN (Ill) _ GIU 7~·18: Dicken 1.().2:
York M11; MUter 1·J.J: Frasure 9-4-22; Van
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Tolalo lf.IHII.
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S.H7; Connolly~. ToiUI !6--.

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SUI!8CIIIP'I10N RATES
By CUrler ,.. Molor -

D''S A FOUL- Leroy Sutton, 33, of Arkenus, foulaWalt:e Forest's
Alvis Rogenes they battle for a rebound during Sunday's game played
at .t he Greellflboro Coliseum in GreEnSboro, N.C. Arkansas, ranked
number 12, defeated the Deacons 68-65. (AP Laserphoto).

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Bowling Green dumps
Ohio University, 72-55

No subscrlpUons by maij permlll&lt;d tn
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M,\11. SUII8CIW"'10NS

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For infonnation leading to the arrest and conviction of person or persons responsible for the killing of 3 deer on my Chester township property
since Jan. 1, 1983.

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Contact:

Grant A. Smith

Eaglettes stop Southern

OR

Andy lyles

•

985-3947

378-6223

last reserve tllt Monday, Feb. 7 at
home with Miller.

wm

By
Grlllllley
AP Cume)IOMelll
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -Tip your hat to the new Amerlcanfolkhero-a
hunk of steel who runs through walls, pulls off quips aseasUy as he runsover
tacklers and kids the President.
0ne day· or year· he Is a combination of Greta ("I Vant to be Alone")
Garbo and Steve (Zipper Mouth) Carlton, the unsocial baseball pitcher.The
next lie Is wise-cracking Yogi Berra or Lee Trevino or puckish Muhammad
All.
Whatever he is, no one will question that John Riggins Is an enigma, an
Independent SJ!llrlt, a football powerhouse- 6-foot-2 and 245 pounds- who
almost single!tandedly ground the Miami Dolphins into submission' In the
Washington Redsklns' Z7·17Super Bowl victory Sunday.
"I'm spontaneOus," he says, :'but I always like to think I'm in charge of the
situation."
While a member of the New York Jets In the early 1970s, tie effected a
Mohawk hair style, shave(! his head completely, wore turquoise jewelry
·
and rode a motorcycle to work.
"I do It just to show I'm boss," he explained.
'
Nobody doubted Jol)n Riggins was boss Sunday when he carrled the ball
38 times, almost half the Redskins~ plays, amassed 166 yards and raced 43
yards In the fourth period for the decisive touchdown.
He set a Super Bowl work-load record, eclipsing the 34 carries and 162
yards by Pittsburgh's Franco Harris In Super Bowl IX.
He also became the first player in the National Football League history to
rush for more than 100 yards In four straight playoff games.
When President Reagan called Coach Joe Gibbs in the Redskin locker
room to congratulate the team on the victory, Riggins said In an aside:
"Ron Is the President, I am the King."
The President said in the conversation heafd over national TV, "Do you
think he'd mind if I changed the spelling of my name to put a couple of 'i's'
and an's' in lt?"
\
Gibbs responded politely, "I don't think he would mind."
Riggins was more concerned ·with seebig that due credit went to his
'HOgs," the self-named offensive line whl~h has fon'ned an exclusive club.
He played five years with the New Yor!t Jets before he signed with the
Redsklns in 1976, walking away from the Big Apple and dec~for free
.
agency.
After leaving the Jets, he played four years with the Redskllls. Tllenone
day at the end of 1979 he packed all his belongings and went orne to
Lawrence, Kan ., where he painted his house. ·
And he sat out the 198J season:
The Redskins' rookie coach,.Gibbs, flew to Kansas to woo him back.
Riggins, overshadowed by Joe Namath whlle wtth the Jeis, didn't get
much attention on his return to Washington imtlllate In the 1982
· particularly in the playoffs.
.
Riggins started carrying the bal135 and more times a game, and the
Redsklns began wlnnlng - going 8-1, best In the NFL for the season, and ·
crunching past Detroit, Mir1nesota and Dallas on hlschurningiOO-yard legs.

season,

..

-- ~

•

'
•
:

•
•

· By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
John Weinert of league-leading
Bowling Green has become the
ninth basketball coach in Mid·
American Conference history to
produce 100 winners, but he's not
taking the credit.
"I haven't made a basket In a
single one of those victorles, "
Weinert said after a big 72·55
triumph at Ohio University Satur·
day night. It dissolved a tie for first
place in the conference with the
Bobcats.
"You get on that (100-victory ) llst
when you bave great players,"
Weinert said. "But I wanted the
victory to come at home. I blew it
one game too soon."
in 6 ~ years 1,1t Bowling Green,
Weinert has a 10J.84 record. Jim
Snyder. former Ohio University
coach, tops the Mld·Amerlcan
coaching leaders with 355 trlurnphs.
The Falcons are living up to their
pre-season expectations as the
Mid-American title favortte. Bowling Green Is 7-1 to 6-2 conference
starts for Ohio and Miami, tied for
second place.
BowllngGreenhlt55percentoflts
shots and outrebound!!(l the Bobcats, No.1 in that department In the
conference, 35-ZT. Colin Irish had 25 ·
points and David Jenkins 23 while
the Falcons were holding Ohio ace
John Devereaux to six points.

•

Cage .r esults
......,..........
Akron Hoban !1), Wlndbam 61

All1ance m, Salem

*

llll, Qoy. Chrlstlon 67
Alhlabu.la
ffl, Br~
_.._
_ _•82

• Bolovta !16, 91. ~
f Balhc.Ma-.ar
·.
Bldord et.nel 11), PalnflvlJJe Harvey
71

-Bertin Hllan:l.
........
u-..~
• • Dalton C9

- :a.ee.-ll'l.
"""'- 9eaoca
J)
Bldlo&gt;o
E. 41
Bldlo&gt;o
Tntl 73, - · Valloy 8, &lt;1
CAmla ldp!IJ, Cot. Eut •

eon. GloliOok
·Perly
,.,eoMcKtaloy*''II,-A11n1n 111:
V·SI...M
Qu*- SCUtb 17, Loull¥lle 55

c.-

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THIS IS AN OPEN MEETING
SO EVERYONE CAN COME
AND FIND OUT ABOUT
OUR PROGRAM.
WHAT HAVE YOU GOT TO

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.
Top Ten
Kentucky. leaving five teams
The Bruins, 14-2, bounced back
Center Sidney Green scored 32 deadlocked for first place In the
Sunday with a 59-53 victory over
polnis and grabbed 16 tebounds tot Southeastern Conference.
Notre Dame.
Nevada-Las Vegas. It was the
Second Ten
Ralph Jackson made four free
second straight game the Rebels
At Philadelphia, sophom ore
throws In the last 12 seconds to help
had come from far behind In the
guard Gary McLain scored a
the Bruins pad a 55-53 lead. Darren
second
half.
career-high
16 points as 11th-ranked
Daye led the Bruins with 18 points,
VIllanova defeated No. 18 Syracuse
At Memphis, Keith Lee poured In
wl)lle John Paxson topped Notre
35 points and grabbed i4 rebounds 83-75inaBlgEastgame.
Dame, 10.7, with 18.
as Memphis State, 16-1, downed .----.::....-.::..........._ _ __
On Saturday in Iowa City, Greg
Stokes and reserve Andre BaniQ; . Eastern Kentuc ky~ . The Tigers
fueled a second·haif outburst that
led 40-38 at haUtlme and 65-61 with
carried No. 14 Iowa to a-63-48 Big
seven minutes left, but a full~ourt
Ten victory over Indiana. The
press and tenacious man-to-man
setback knocked the Hoosiers out of
defense helped them pull away.
sole possession of the conference
Memphis State's Bobby Parks
531 JACKSON ptKE • RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446: 4524
lead and cost them a chance to
added 20 points and pulled down 12
BARGAIN MATINEES SA_T &amp; SUN
regain the No• 1 spotlil the AP poll.
rebounds.
ALL SEATS 12.00
AO!WISSION EVEIPY TUESDAY 12.00
Iowa trailed Indiana Z7·'1:5 at
At Charlottesville, Va., Ralph
halftime but took charge by
Sampson poured In 35 points and
~N 28 thru FEB
outscoring the Hoosiers 16-2 during
grabbed 12 rebounds to lead
FRIDAY lhrU THURSDAY !
a six-minute stretch midway
Virginia past elghth·ran!led Louis·
through the second half. Stokes and
ville 98-81, snapping the Cardinals'
Banks each scored seven points
eight·game winning streak. Vlrgi·
during the surge, which gave the
nla, 17·2, shot.64 percent in handing
Hawkeyes a ~7-35 lead. Stokes
Louisville its' third setback In 19
finished with. 23 points, and Banks
games.
. scored 11. The Hawkeyes held
Sampson hit three stralgbt
Indiana .!ftlrrs Ted Kitchel and
baskets In a 1~4 spurt that helped
Randy Wittman to 13 and 10 points,
VIrginia to a 32·20 lead.
respectively, in handing the Hoosi·
Billy Goodwin scored 18 points,
ers then secondsetbackln17games.
Including six straight midway
North Carolina's Jordan prothrough the second half, to break
vided most 0/ his team's offense by
open a tight game as St. John's,
shooting 11-of-16 from the floor,
N.Y., downed crosstown rival
Including 6-of.7 from three-point
Manhattan 65-58. chris Mtillln and
territory. Sam Perkins added 23
David Russell added 16 and 15
points.
points, respectively, for the Red·
men,18-1 .
At Athens, Ga., James Banks
With the score lied 4545 and 11: 44
sank
three consecutive shots to
remaining, Jordan canned a threetrigger a l~!te 19-2 burst that carried
point field goal, was fouled and
Georgia to a 70-63 upset of No. 10
converted the ·free throw. Perkins
and Warren Martin added baskets
and Jordan ended the spurt with a
free throw, giving the Tar Heels a
54451ead.

_:j

All 4 Sizes

Northwestern dumps
Buckeye team, 66-64
CHICAGO (AP) -JlmStackfelt
that Ohio State owed him . one
Saturday when he naUed a :ll-foot
desperation s hot at the buzzer to
give Northwestern a 66-64 triumph
over the Buckeyes.
"Last year at Columbus I had a
chance to beat them and didn't do
It," said Stack.
"A chance?" said Art Aaron.

most exciting of his life.
Ohio State Coach Eldon Mlller ·
said, "The inbounds pass went just
the way they wanted. We played the
best we could but I've been beat by
longer shots.
" Every loss is especJally depress·
lng tO me and to my team," sal&lt;!
Mlller. ''Next time we'll have to play
harder and a little better."

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'

SPit::l.t.L IEDUOIONS
ON AlL

question. "I don't think It means a
''Threechances.''
thing. I think we're off to a good
"I guess he's rlght," Stack
start. Now we need a good finish."
The loss cost Ohio Suite. 12·5
sheepishly said of· a lriple overtime
Coach. Danny Nee of Ohio said,
overall
and 4-3 in the conference, a
loss at Ohio State. "I had more than
"We played with no confidence.
of sharing first place with
chance
one chance."
When It got rough, we headed for the
tndtana
and Minnesota, while ·
This time Stack had only one
bushes. A loss this early Is not
Northwestern snapped a four-game
chance and made the most of it.
devastating. It putsourfeetbackon
losing
streak following a trernend·
Northwestern had frittered away a
the ground."
ousstart.
59·52 lead late In the game and Ohio
Meanwhile, Ball State's Ray
" We had them on therunbutthey
State had come from behind twice tD
McCallum becam e (he league's
happened
to play better over the
tie It at 61 and 63.
aU-time scorer with 1,850 points In
40-minute
period
than we did,·· said
The Buckeyes were playing for a
the Cardinals· 69·57 decision over
Miller.
·
. final shot when Aaron fouled Troy
Central Michigan.
Taylor with four seconds remain· .
McCallum. a 5-!oot-9 senior
guard, hit a layup ,with 40 seconds
lng. Taylor broke the tie with his , - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - first shot hut missed the second . .
left to break the league scoring
.Three seconds remained.
record of1,848 points Allen Ray hom
Northwestern's Gaddis Rathel
of Northern llllnols established in
took the ball out to Michael Jenkins
1982.
who took one drlbble and heaveQ a
The game was stopped for about
long pass to Stack who turned. shot
three minutes as the hometown fans
and scored a three-pointer from the
gave McCallum a standing ovation
30-foot range.
and threw paper on the floor .
"It was a desperation thing but It
"It was a veryspecialmomentfor
felt good apd when I let It go, I knew
me, especially with the crowd
It was going to be there,I' saki Stack. .·
reaction," he said. "I didn't feel a ny
"The playwentasdeslgned," said ·
pressure, but!'mgladithhappened.
Jenkins, " We had time for two
I couldn't let everyixxly down ."
passes, "we wanted to get It to Stack
His coach, AI Brown, said, ' 'I'm
at
about mldcourt. "
glad for Ray's sake to have It over
Not
so, according to Northwest·
because It's a tremendous.burden io
em Coach Rlcll Falk.
carry with you ."
Current J:legistratlon &amp;
in other Mld·Amerlcan games ' "We wanted the play from the
· First Meeting Fee ...$17.00
right side but Ohio State forced us tD
Saturday, freshman Ron Harper hit
You Pay Only... 6.00
the left," saidFalk. "And we wanted
23 points IIi Miami's 66-61 triumph
YOU SAVE ... $11.00
Stack to take one dribble and move
. over Toledo, Marlow McClain had
towards the basket so if he missed
21 as Eastern Michigan trimmed
the shot, we might draw a foul.''
Western Michigan 73-61 and Kent
It wasn't needed, as Stack banked
"What does It mean to be on top State, behind Marvin Robinson's 21,
In
a shotwhlchhesaidwasoneofthe
the MAC?" Weinert repeated a beat Northern Illinois 87·78.

. Gilder takes sudden

.

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

dea~h

PHOENIX (AP) - Bob Gilder the last-hole magtc. · Needing a
found satisfaction hut very llttl!! joy birdie to bave any chance at all, the
In his victory in a sudden-death
man who had battled back s6
playoff that matched the second · gamely from his earlier disappoint·
longest In PGA Tour history.
ment sent a 35--foot putt rattling into
"I'm happy I won one, but 'I'm the cup. He joined Mark O'Meara,
glad It's over," Gilder said after Johnny Miller and Gilder as the
he'd struggled through eight extra
leaders after the regula lion 72 holes,
holes, with the title in the Phoenix which they completed In 13-under·
Open iind a $63,1Dl first place check parm. .
rlding on every one of his 30 playoff ·
Strok£&gt;!1. .
Miller and O'Meara dropped out
Rex Caldwell was the man he
on the second extra hole. They'd
played three shots when Caldweu
finally beat with a 6-foot birdie putt
and Gilder scored their birdies,
on the 26th hole of the day.
The Tour's longest playoff was at Gilder on a putt of about 10.12 feet,
Caldwell with one a little longer.
theMotorCity0penof1949. Afterll
But Mlller and O'Meara weren't
sudden death holes, Cary MlddJe.
coff . ariq Uoyd .Mangrurri were , the only casualties. The national
declared ·co-winners by mutual
television cameras fell victim to the
demands of network time and
agreement.
.
Thts time, there was tD be no , regularly-sched.u led ·--program·
ming. They dropped off after five
mutual agreement between Gilder
holes.
and Caldwell, who only one week
earlier had lost In a playoff In the
Gilder and Caldwell struggled on,
Bob Hope Classic. Caldwellseetned . matching pars for .flve holes before.
to have clinched the first victory of On their third trip of the day to the
par·5 18th, Caldwell's chip to the
his Tour career, but Keith Fergus
droppeda:IA).!Qoteronthelastholeto !ro!Cn stopped dead and failed to run
tie him, then beat him In s\Kiden to the hole. "I think he had some
mud on the ball," Gilder said. .
death wwmlhe Hope ttue.
GUder chipped close and, after
This time, Caldwell performed

playoff

Rex's putt had Upped out, he
knocked it In for the winner.
Caldwell, now 32, nine years on the
Tour and stlll a non-winner, left the
green without speaking to Gilder.
He did not attend the presentation
ceremony. He fled the course
without a word to anyone.
Caldwell, who played the final
round In 70, now has had 13
ccnsecutive rounds at par or better.
Gilder played the last round In 69,
Mlller In 68 and O'Meara tn
5-under-par 66.
At least a dozen men were In title
contention at one time or another
over the last nine holes of regulation
play. At one point, seven men
shared the lead.
Ed Sneed, Tim Simpson, Hal
Sutton, Cal Peete and Scott Hoch, at
272, missed the playoff by one shot.
Sneed had a last-round 66 and Hoch
68. Simpson, Sutton lind Peete.had
frls.
·
Fuzzy ZOeller, Dan Pohl, Jack
Renner · and defending champion
Lanny Wadkins missed by two at
273. Zoeller had a closing 64, Pohl66,
Renner68and Wadkins 'lO, .
Three other. tournaments have
gone to eight playotr holes.

I,

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GAlLI PO US
St. Peter's Episcopal Church
,541 Second Avenue
Tue: 6:30p.m.
.Wed: 9 a .m.

CLASS

SCHEDULE

• · ~n~l flbt'Uiry 19,
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1983.

�•
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page -6 - Th e Da ily Sentinel

I' .

31, 1983

Monday, January

31 , 1983

Monday, ·J anuary

The· Daily Sentinel

·Meigs organization members meet
Racine UMW
,.

, A $500 contribution was made to
the church ge neral fund and It was
voted to pay the hymnal blll when
the United Methodist Women met
recently a t the Racine United
Methodist Church.
As a special project of the New
Year, It was decided to select two
members each month to vlslt
shutlns a t home and In nursing
ttomes. Ann Richardson and Marlene F isher were named to do this In
February.
' A report was given on the
Installation of new officers during
the morning worship service by
I;ouise Stewa rt and Rev. James
Clark . Installed were Marlene
Fisher. president; Martha Dudding, vice president; Margare.t
West, secretary, and VlrglnlaRees,
treasurer .
• Plans were 'm ade for a soup
s1,1 pper on F eb. 9 from 4 to 7 p.m. a t
the church. Menu will Include
vegetable soup, chill, bean soup,
com bread, sandwiches, and pte.
Fifty shutln visits were reported.
cards were signed for Maxine
Wingett, Betty Roush, and Ruth
Tucker who are hospitalized.
Members will begin soon to sew

Evans birthday

carpet rags and quilt in the .
basement.
.
A prayer and self-denial program
was presented by Martha Dudding.
The topic was "A World of Peace
with Justice." Each member gave
an o!fel'i]lg to be sent to !he district.
Refreshments were served by
Martha Dudding.

Next meeting will be Feb.llat the
Meigs Inn. A dessert course was
served by Mrs.. Ashley, Mrs. J. E.
Foster, Mrs. l!endersi&gt;n •. Mrs.
Lawrence Smith, and Mrs. Yost
following the meeting.

.,

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

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Goett,
Syracuse, announce the birth of
· their first child, a daughter, Cecilia
Mae, born Dec. 22 at Holzer Medlaal Center. The Infant weighed
elgh t pounds and one ounce and
measured 20 Inches In length. Maternal grandparents are Edna Stewart, P ome roy, and the late
9Jiarles Stewart. Paternal grand·
parents were the late Cecllla and
John Goett.

·--

·Hospital auxiliary

,, POMEROY Special meet1
·. -tng of Pomeroy Chapter Ill
- Royal Arch Masons Monday at
1 7: 30 p.m. for work In tbe most
. excellent m aster degree.

: POMEROY - Bible study
,)Yill be held at the home of Joan
· .Wolfe from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday.
: Darts Snowden will teach minis. terlng service.
'•

1UESD.,Y

. , PO MER OY - Pom eroy
Chamber of Commerce will
: meet Tuesday at noon at Meigs
·. Inn. A slide presentation will be
, present¢ by Dianne Allen and
. Howard Wise from the Ohio De• partment of Development. The
J opic will be organizing lea• ·.
·ship for economic developmL .t.
. MIDDLEPORT ...,- Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will meet
-Tuesday a t 7 :30 p.m. AU
members should attend. Re: freshments will be served.

.'

POMEROY -

Pomeroy
't

,...._

l t-CI, h'&amp;lll..._li........,. 1

31-.._,. ....

. . ....... .._.1

3J.. . . . .
:SJ..f_
.., . .

l&amp;-L-. Io ~
.......
f .. _ _ _ ,

..
··-

Attending besides those named
were Sharon Black, Marlene Barrett, Sandy McDaniels, Judy
McDonald, Sharon Barr, Shirley
Simmons, VIcki and Hea tber Fer·
rell, Jo Ann and Alison Mays, Bev·
erly Baylor, Irene Kennedy,
Sharon Wise, Deb! Gilmore, Esther
Black, Carla and Tiffany Harder,
Florence Barrett.
Others presenting gifts to Mrs.
George were John, Gloria Aaron
and Tamara Grate, Ruth Erlewlne,
Ollie Hlll, aara Phllllps, Angela
Griffith, VIolet Jarrell, Avanell
George, Mildred Grate, Lydia
Smith, Beulah Belle Wrtte, Goldie
carson, and Shirley Turner.

POMEROY - Lebanon
Township TruStees will meet at
7 p.m. Tuesday.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Tuesday
111 8 p.m. at the Syracuse Municipal BuUding.

Personal

SerVIces

$ 10 .900.00

Suppli es an d
Materials
· Cap1tal Outlay
Other
Total For

t .600 .00
-0 1.500 00

Mayor
14.000 .00
Clerk-T,.. . .or
Personal

SerVIces

6. 100.00

Supphes and
Matertals

1.300.00

Capital Outlay
Other

9.000 00

Dino:tor
Personal
SerVI ces
Total for So licit or/
law Dtra:tor

1, 150.00

Person al
Ser~ces

1.200.00
800 .00

Other
Total For
Counc1 i
2.000.00
SECURITY OF
PERSOI\IS AND
PROPERTY

G..o.ll LaW

Ertfuiwnte~1t

Se r~ ces .

102.000.00

Supplies and

Matenal
Other

13.000.00
19.200 00

Total Fo r General

Law E~ force ment
t 3 4. 200.00
ADMIMSTRATIVE
SUPPORT FOR
PUBUC HEALTH
SERVICES
County Heahh Dept
(Co. Aud.
Dad.!
4.200.00
Total For
Adm1n 1stratrve

4.200.00

STREET
MAINTENANCE
FUND
29 .000.00

Supplies and
M atenals
Cap1tal Ou tlay
Other
Total For Street
M a1nt enance

59 .000.00
4.400 00
6.600.00

99.000.00
That the re be

ERAL FUND fo r CONTINGENCIES for purpo ses not otherWISe provtd ed fo r. to be
expend ed 1n accordance With
the pro vts 1o n s . of Sec .

5 705.40. R.C . the su m of
S 27B . 500.00 ~

Grand Total
GENERAL FUND
Appro pna-

Sec.

'
8.

approp r~ ated

2 7 B.500.00
That there be
from the CEM E-

TERY FUND
PUBUC HEALTH
SERVICES
Cemolety Opontlon
And Mointaulnce
Personal

Ser\Aces
Supplies and
Matenal
Cap1tal Ou tlay

WEDNESDAY

Phone 882-31 ~1
New Haven. WV

lO,OOO.OO

Fund

FIR E HOUSE
IMPROVlii\IENT
FUND
Cnnrracrual

Servi&lt;rs
Capital Our lay
Rrrirrmem li
Debt

Ma1ntenance
23.080.00
8: That 11-ere be
ap pr op r~at ed from t he RAE
EQU IPMENT FUND
Penorwl
Service!
2. 1XUJil
S.pp/ws • ""
MtJieriJr
1.700.00
Crpit.J ONII.y
3,011J.IXJ
Other
13.600.00
Tmal For Fire
f•nd
20,4)0.00
Sec. 9. TiJi,J t hffl b1 "fJfJroP·

n.terl from FIRE TRUCK FUND

Oth..
6,800.00
Total For Firr
Truck Furd
6,800.00
WATf:R FUND

Matcriah

Cap&lt;al fu lay

Oth&lt;r .
Total For Water
I Revenue I

ro.ooo.oo
26,000.00
·6,700.00
5l J70.00

Fmd ·
146,270.00
SEWER FUND

l'&lt;rsooll
Servi&lt;rs
Supplies and
Macri•
Cap&lt;ll Outl!y
Oth&lt;r
•

'

42,000.00

..._.

... c....,..

:s• -

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

.) J&lt;ffi (Y)

Total For F1re
House Improvement ·

Fund
1 14 .BOO.OO
SWIMMING POOL

RiND
Personal
Serv1ces
Supplies and

8 .00000

Matenals
Ca p1tal Outlay
Other

8.600.00
3.300 .00
2.900.00

Pool Fund
22.800.0 0
METER DEPOSIT

Ri'l'D

Refunds
Total Far Meter
Depos1t Fund

3.300.00
3.300.00

STREET L£VV
FUND
Capital Outlay
2n.OOO 00
.Ot her
~00 .00
Total For Street

Levy Fund
25 ,600.00
STREET UGHT
FUND
Other
1B.400.00
Total For Street

18.400.00

RECAPITUI.ATIO N
OF
APPROPRIAnONS
ANDFUNOS

Mayor

14,000.00

a ....

T,...r•

9,000.00

Solldtor/1.8w
~r

Councl

1,1110.00
2,000.00

mont

134.200.00

Public Helllh A d tnton
4.200.00
113,810.00
Total Genonl
.
Fund
278,1100.00
STREET
CONSTRUcnON,
MAINTENANCE
AND REPAIR
FUND

o-

To'al Street
M aintena"lce
Person al
Servi ces
Supplies and
M at erials

2.150.00
1.700.00
3.000.00
13.600.00

20 .450.00
FIAE TRUCK
FUND
Other .
6.800 .00

COMMISSION
FUND
Materials
Other

Personal
Services

Personal

Services

2.150.00

Supplies and
Materi als
Capital Ouday
Othet

1.700.00
3.000.00
t 3.600.00

Total Fire EQuipm ent

Fund
Other

· Total Fire Truck

Fund

6 .8 00.00

c~'!;;~
Supplies and
Materi als

Other
Totai.Pianning
Commission

Fire House Improve-

ment

114.800.00

Sw1mm1ng
Pool
Met er Depo$ t

!lons

-!2.22 4 .866.26
Soc. 211 . And the C ltVAuditOr

1s hereby aut honzed to draw h1s
warrant s on the C1ty Tr easurer
for payment s from any of th e
for eg oin g appro pnauons upon
recerving pr q:~ er cert i 1ca tes
and lw'O uchers therefo r, approved by the board or off1cers
author lled by la.v to appr()le
the same or an o rd1nance o r
resolut on of counc1! t o make
the expend itures: pro ..,ded that
no warrant s shall be dray.;n or
paid for sal anes or wages
except the per sen s empkJyed
by •authonty of and m ace()(·
dance w th law or ord1nan ce.
·Provided , fu rther.· that the
approp naton for Cont1ngenc1es can onv be exter)d ed upon
approval of a two-t tirds vote of
Council for item s o f e)(pense
const1IUt 1ng a leg al oblig ation
against the city. and for the
purposes other tha n th ose
cover ed by the oth er spec1fic
appropriato ns herein mai e.

s.,

117.;16000

llclllooWe I
Cash on Hand
DepoSitory Balances

·

Fund Balances

Carl J Horky
Preside nt of

And=Jon. 1. 1M2

134.200 .0 0
20.4 50.0 0
6 .800.00
18 .400 .00

Fire House Improve-

1 14 ,800.00

...__

2 94.650.00

Motor VehiCle l1cense

Tax Fund

Fund

4 .200.00

Total

2 7.28G.OO

lAian Time
. Ad\&gt;lllel
·'

the-

. . . .. edmioistlatcn.
hein, - exec-·

13.530.22

GasolmB Tax

Fund

2"6.535 .37

Road an d Bridge

Fund
S h ar~ n g

Fu nd

3.0 64 .00
68 .206 .12
24B.53
151 .82
400.35

Cemetery Fund

Total
Total Rocolpta

and

the-hen·-·

••neil

2 1.908 .99

Tax Fund

12.9 73 .66
24.3 61.44

Road and Br~ d ge ·
1 Fund
Cemetery·FundShanng Fu nd
Total

300.00
1.300.000.00

·•

Fund

I • Ta

~-

- ·

POMEROY
lANDMARK
61A-992-2181

. Fund
~
lllwlng Fund
Tolll

Public Notice
NOncE OF
HEAR ..GON
PETITlON FOR
ADOPTION

Dhlo Rl\lloocl Code
No. 3107.04
The
crt Ohio.
Melgo County
CotiWIMH1 Piela Court

-Ds-

C.. No. 23971
NOncE OF
HEARING AND
EXAMINATION

the Adoption

'SERVICE

ACRES - Will seH aft at
$500.00 per acre. lois a1 pasture, WQ(Ids and wildiWe. Has a
10 room 2 bath home with free
gas, T.P. water, ~rge family
room, basement ·and garden
spot WILL DISCUSS TERMS. ·

•Dryers •Freezers

'

.

'-

·

BOGGS

VINYL &amp;

SALES &amp; SERVICE

ALUMINUM SIDING

Guysville, Ohio

olnoulrnion

Authorized John Oeere, ·
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment

oR..,-,.,t WindoWs .

Dealer .

•N,w Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service

JAMES KEESEE
PH . 992-2712

1-J-tfc

SALE ·

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

PER

YA.D

" Beautiful ~

$1700

NOW THRU MARCH 5th

KAY'S
.BEAUTY SALON

Custom

Built Garages"
Call for free
estimates, 949·2801
9(9· 2860.
No Sunday Calls

169 N. 2nd

I

Public Notice

I

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF WILBUr! ,
WARNER, DECEASED
C... No. 23888
NOncE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FlDICUARY
On January 19. 198 3, I f • the

'

~·

M et gs County Probat e Co urt,
Case No . 23 968. Jose ~) h1ne
Osborne. Box 29. Lo ng Bc•tt om.
Oh1o 46769. was app:Jinted
Adm1n1st ra1nx of the estate of
Wtlbur W arner. dec eased . late
of Long Bot tom. Oh1o.
Robert F: Buck

MARY C. KEBLER.()WNER
· 1·27·2 mo.

,7~~2211 ;

Ill.

CHARLES T. TAYLOR. ET AL
Defend IIIII.
No. 17.B86
BY
PU81.1CAT10N TO: Ch a ~ es T. TaykJr. George
Cottle. Cora Collie. ,Charles A.

- Nonce

REFE RENCE

DEED:

1f!1tkes, Tu...Ups, etc..

spEciAL

TRANSMISSION ALTER
AND FLUID CHANGE

Valley Trading Co .. Spring
Valley Pla za, 446-B026 or
446-B026 .

We pay cash for late model
clean used c ars .
Frencht own Car Co .
B ill Gena Johnson
446-0069

Onty ' 31 .96

l-14·rtC

For all your wir
needs;
furnaces
rep;jir service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742 -31

PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
Now Accepting New
Clients

Low Rates

15 Years Experience
All Wolt Guaranteed .
. To

"'lumiiMim &amp; Vinyl Sidin&amp;S
15
GREG ROUSH

Be Done Right and

nme

On
CALL 992-6273

v.,. Exporietl&lt;e

Old atonewara ja rs, jUgJ ~
crocks &amp; milk pitchers, also
old wicher baskets . Call

i-31-1 mo.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

1 22 . Page 4 76 . M e1gs County

- Acldon1 and remodelii1g
- Roofing ond gutter wodt

- Concrelewodt
- Pk.mblng Sid
electricalwortc
(F,..Eitimotao)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-8216 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
.
. 1 1-26-tfc .

residing in Mei gs County. Ohio
and Jane Doe. Petitio ner. residing in M ei gs County. Ohio. filed
in th1s Court a petition for leav'e
to' adopt Infant Doe, a n ~'Nborn
c h1ld. an d for a change of the
surname of said m1n or child to
the Petit1on ers' su rname An
amended Pet1t1on tor Adopt1on
was filed by the Petitioners on
Jan uary 20 . 198 3, fo r leave to
adopt In fant Doe. and for a
change of the Surname of sa1d

ren ee.

Roscoe lawrence. ad d resses unknown 1f li VI ng. and if
d ecea sed . t he1r unkn own
spouses. he1r s. dev1 sees. legatees. e)(ecutors. adm tntslrato rs.
and ass1gns . .whos·e addres ses
are unknown:
You are hereby notrt1s:l that a
Compla1nt to. Ou1et Title has
been f1led m the Common Pleas
Court of M e1gs Cou nty. Ohio.
Case No 17 .865 demand 1ng
quiet title of the f ollow1ng

Tow n ·3.

11 . Ohio

Comp any's Purchase. boun ded
as follow s:
Beginning 1n the W est hn e of
sou thwest S.W . German' s lot in
the center of Lon g Run: thence
west along sa1d S. W. Germa n·s
west line 37 rod s and ten hnks
to a stake at th e southeast
corn er of Mrs. Jone s' lot:
thence sout h al ong stde line of
Mrs. Jones' land 86 rods to a
post thence east th1r ty seven
.rods and ten l 1 n~ to a post

The demand ol the Com-

pl aint is th l)t the title to the
ab ove descn bed rea l estat e be
, qu ieted . in the names of th e
Plaint iffS, Pa trick E, McD ole and
' Emenon Mc Do le.
You are requ1red to answer
the Compl atnt w 1thin twe nty-

Sires from 6'16' Up
to 24'136'.
Insulate~ Doc Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·8·3-2591
10·6·Hc

GUN SHOOT

SWEEPER and sewing

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Bui Iding

PLAINTIFf

vs
W. H. BERDINE, ET AL
DEFENDANTS
NO. 83CV 2
NOTICE BY
PUBLiCATION

TOo W. H. BERDINE, ~ !Mng,
whole add,.. • ur*nown; the

...,_,heirs.

-.leaa-.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns Only.
1·3- 1 mo.

tdmiulsb•tun. e11a:uton .nd/ (M'

....... ofW.H.Botdino,~
...
ct.
JENNIE BERDINE, ~ !Mng,
-

-

lo ...,_,,

tt.o

tdmiuilb8t0il.
P8CU10fl
tnd/ or
unltnown - · · .......

-e.-.
lltldl rw: llligna

--

of f1om Long. W ""'
I d.
NONA LONG. ~ tMng, wiM&gt;oo
- . . lo unkr&lt;&gt;wn. tt.o unknown

tmora,

......-.1/ or
llllon•

UICUiorl

of NoM Long. rt ell
....
You t:Jre herP.by noiJf,ed thvt vo' '
haVf! been named dP.tendan!s 1n J
eight 1281 days after the last
legal act1on en111 led Jame~ W
publ 1catOn o f this notice wh ich ' Sut!le. plcunt11f vs W H Be1d1no. et
'NI II be publtshed on ce ·each
al. delendvnts Thts ac 110n has been
¥oeek for six (6) consec utive
;)SSigned Case NO 83 CV 2 and 1S
weeks. Th e last publi cation Wi ll
J)P.ndtn[l 1n the C·omr119n P1f"!as
be made on February 7. 19B3. Co wl ot Me1 qs Coun ty Oh10
and t he twentv·e1ght 12 8) days
Thr· ob1P.cl of I he com plaint 15 a
for answ er will com mence on
pariHJOn &amp; 110n co nce r nmt=~ 011and
that date.
flas umlellyrno 1he to liownHl des·
. In elise of your fa ilure t o ·cr1bNI raal P.slale ·
answ er or otherw ise resp ond
S11ua tt~tl 1n l ebanori to.Nnsh1p
as rB:julr4\'(i by th e Ohio Rul es of, Me1gs -Couniy. Oh10 -dflrci,hod as
C1vil· Procedure. Judgment by follows One fouah of lh p. 011 anr1
default will be rendered aga inst gas under 65 acres. Situated 10
V0\.1 for the r ~ ief demanded in Sec11on 26. ToW!l 3 Aanne 13
the Complaint.
tormerty knO'J'(n as the Henry Ours
LARRY E. SPENC ER farm, all of the south half of lhe
Clerk of Cou n. southeasl quar ter of Scc110n 266
Meigs County. Dhio excepl 15 aCres as desc r~ bed 1n
(1 . 3. 19 . 17, 24, 31 !21 7. 6tc Vol urtif! 86 page 372 Me,gsCountv
Deed Records.

BEDS -IRON, BRASS , old
furniture. gold. tllvar
dollars, wood Ice boxea';
stone jars. antiques, etc ;,

Complete hou1eholdo;
Writao M .D . Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992 ·
7780.
Gold , 1i1ver, otorling ,

jewelry . ringa. old c'o lna Ill
currency. Ed Burkett Barber

Shop, Middleport. 99 ~·
3476.
Want to buy-1tandlng pine
timber in Meigs or Maaoi'l

Co. 614-992-3869.

•

Public N&lt;1tice
nnrl the pr.1VP.r 15 thm lhf! f)bOvP.
rlosr. 11 hP.d 'ui anr1 r1ns lntem·;t!'; h o
par ll ltOnf!fi I holt the •nl tl rP.sts ht'
df'lt" rm1nm1 t ha t i hl'llniAr&lt;J&lt;;I ); 1'1~ s!'l

lead singer for Country

Gaorgu Creak Rd. Call
448-0294 ..

Rock bond . Ceil 448· 3808
or 446-0037, after &amp;PM .

Gun shoot. Recine Gun

HAVE FUN paying your
Holiday bl11o. Sell Avon and
earn good •• e. meat nice
people . Ceil 614-843·
2982. 814-388 - 9045 ,
614-992-3890.

Club. Every Sunday otartlng
1 p.m. Facto.., choked guno
only.
Federal and State income
uxes . Quarterly reports,
W-2 formt . Done by ap-

Doted Jam•Mv 6. t 98 3
E SJ)P.OCP.r'
oi' COl lri S
Me1gs Cnu8tv
Common Plea5 Cou rt
(II t O, 17, 24. 3 il 2J 7._14 . 6tc

Wanted telephone s•las
people. Also person with
small car for light anv.lopa

delivery . Call 614-9927090.

Beginn i ng and advanced

The West Virginia Depart-

knitting clas•• start: in g Feb.
2 . For more information

ment of H.. lth lo Making a
full -time Ho1p~el Adminlr-

contect Suo Zlrtcle 614-992 3066.

trator for its Fairmont
Emergency Hospital ,· located in Fa.lrmont , Waat
Virginia. Requirement• :
Baccalaureate degree plue
twa years of experiel;ce

GRUESER : Hor anyone
done or begun a genealogy

rtudy of the GN&amp;Mr family?

lrt

Contact Dr. Star Grueser
o-.metrion, San Bernardino

ho1pltol or health oerviCIIIJ,

Valley College, 701 South

This 44-bed focility prO\IIdll!

4

or businelladmlnittratiori :
long-term skilled nuralng
service; and outpatient
clinic services. Applioanu
should submit reaumea 1nd

Giveaway

appllcatlon1 to : L. Clork
Hensborger, M .D., Director
crt Health, 1800Walhington

ANY PERSON who hal

Street, Eaat, Charleston.

anything to give away and
don not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for 18le

may place an odIn thlo
column. There will be no

West Virginia 2&amp;3 05, by
December 1 6 . Salary negotiable . Equal Opportunity
Employer-AA Plan-M -F-H

charge to the advertl10r.

LOOKING FOR A PART
TIME JOB that ho1 gopd

1 male and 1' female kitten.

pay, life insurance, retirement plan, that. will tllch

10 weeki old . To • good
home, Only pat k&gt;vera need

to apply . Coli 614-9922531 alter 6 p .m .
9 month old Genmm Shepherd . Phone 614 · 949 3093.
Free Puppiea- part border
collie, part german shepard .

Coil 378·B172.

Puppies fNe to good home.

304-468-1092 .

6

Lost and Found .

FOUND Small black female
wired heir Terrier. Found In
vlnclnlty of Lincoln Pike ,
Northup Bridge aree . Call
448-1572.
LOST: ret of koyo on 8th. St ,
Nome Foy on the ring.
304-8715-151B5.

you a valuable job skill, plu1
help with a collage or
Vo-Tech education? There' a
on.ly one aroundt High.
School Seniors or gradu-·
ates. you may even qualify:
for a cash bonus . Contact~
the West Virg i nia Army·
NAtional Guard. For r'nore'
information call Sergeaftt

Sergeant Lutton at 304676 -3960 or colt toll free
1 · 800-642· 36 19.

-::-:-:-~-=-=-=---SALES AGENT WAN·T ED.'·
Nationally known calendar:
manufacturer end specialty·
advertising company olfera'
an opportuni·ty for an
industrious self -starter for
full or part time work , We
need a salas o riantad person•
to present our exclusive
calendars , buaineas' glfts·
and extinsive ad\fertlelng:
specialty aasortm,nt tofirms within the bualneas·

community . The Thoo. D .
Murphy Co. i1 • pioi'!Mr In

LOST: 1 Beoglo, whit•block
opot1. 1 hill Boogie, block &amp;
ton. Rt . 2 nur Ftotrock,
304-8711· 1577.

th1 advertiiing field aince

·a

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

P.O. Bo. 3B2 , Red Ook, ·
Iowa 616815 .

wvo Stole Champion Auctl·
oneer Rick P.oroon. Eototeo,
ontlquee, form. houoeholclo.
Uoenoed Ohlo· WVo. 304·
773·17815 or 304 -773·
9i88 .

home delivery product. Oet

l&lt;IHy

C l~o: 1 k

doily . Supply 3 - 6 . Call
448· 198B.

pointment. 61 4 · 992· 2272
or oee Won de EbN n et 41 000
Lourll Cliff fld ., Pomeroy.

o lf 01 Ordt'lfl{f SOld II 11COJtiOOl hr. , - - - : -- - - - - : - : - -

patlll1011e0. tnr .1n aii()Nant :f! qf
m1nr m:y !6 1'S nnr! cor.ls hereu1 0111d
10 fltnP.I !•ti C tO ·..al(i r•'.'h P.SIJ \P !)rid
mt m1rals
YOl l ~UP rP.Qum'!d IO &lt;I O SWr~r lhfl
Compl.11n1 wt lt~ n 1 lwnllly·f'lflhl dnvs
oli m thn last publ w:!IIOn , (,t 1h1s
noiiCP. wh1r.h Will I'J (I fllJhltshf'rf on ce
flll&lt;: h 'M'lfl k f01 Sll( ' COrlSf!CII IIVf'l
wef!ks Thn i&lt;t; l pubiiGIIto n Will hP.
rr.acir- on FPhn tory 24. 1983. ;::md
lhf! IWf'!lll y ~ l(lh l rlay~. !m a nsw~r w1 il
com m,~nCfl on th&lt;Jt rtmc
' I ~ CilSI I otyour'l;ultt re to ,1nswt&gt;r or
o l he rwl ~ f' · r ~spon rl os tCqturF.d hy
lhe Oh 10 RuiflS ol C1v1i ProcodurP..
1!tdom€nl bv defoult w1ll be rr: n
df! ffld a~a tn s t yo u lor lhP. relmf
demahded 1n the Compli1 1nt

Earn extra money and
receive free houaehold
products everyone use*

machine repair. parta, and
auppliea , Pick up and
delivery, Davia Vacuurri
Cleaner. one half mile up

J

JAMES W. SUlTL.E

red oak, walnut , poplar. Any
amount . Call 814-3BB9908.

3 Announcements

Mt. Varnon. San Bernar-

IN lllE
COMMON PlEAS
COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

·Standing timber . White oak,

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

dino, CA. 92403.

Public Notice

deer hides and gin•ng 1nd
t rapping aupplies . At . 2.
Athena ., Oh .

1213011 mil.

l l ·ll ·dc

UTILITY BUILDINGS

PH. 742·2328

Buy raw fur and beef f'lides .
George Buckley, 614-15644761 . Weekdays 6 to 9 ,
weekends 12 noon to 9PM .

or 992-6206

992·2282

Sim strrt from 12'116'

YOU NAME THE PRICE
YOU MIGHT GET LUCKY

Deed Records.

Range

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

&amp;Grrqes

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

CARPENTER
FOR
RENT

Vo l.

Delilah V Lark1ns. Bert Lew-

RUTLAND~ OH.

OPEN 9 to'5 MON. tlwu SAT.
A~ TyPes of Aulo Repair.

INCOME TAX SERVICE'.

Co mpany's Pu rchase and desc nbed as lo ttow s: Beg lnnm g at
the Sou th East corner of land s
formerly owned by E.H. Slater' s
land. then,ce West w1 t~ South
line of satd land ten rods.
thence Nonll to thf! hn €i of
Dav1d Jones bt.·thEJ'lce East len
rods to the corner ol Satd E H.
Slater and Dav1d Jones· land
te.n rods . thi! nce South wit h the
Dav•d Jones hne to th e place of
begmmng to contam T'NQ (2.)
acres of land , be t he sam emore
or tess.

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
PATRICK E. McOOLE, ET AL
Plointlfb,

FUR~ITURE

.are the highest in two year•.
check ' our prices on gold •
silver. acrap j ewelry . Buying
Old coina. ecrep rings II
si lverware. Daily quote t
available . Also coins
coin
auppliea for sale . Spring

e.

oRoofin&amp; W01k

Public Notice

(31. Sec\lon 12 71 of t he OhiO

Public Notice

FIOM

m· . llain

YOUNG'S

618 E. lllain, Pooteroy, OH.
PH. 992-3795
We Do Boolllllepin&amp; For
Small. llqe and Corpome
Busi- &amp; Plrtntnhips

des.cn bs::l r ei3 1estat e. to-w1 t.
The totlovv1ng ·. des cnbed r eal
estate s•tuated 1n leba no n
T6wnsh1P. 1n the CoU nty of
Mei!=J Sand State of Oh10 to- w t:
selng In Range ( 11 ). Town

Probate Judge' Cierk
( t l24. 3 1 1217. 3tc

-.u

AUTOMATIC
T~NSMISSION CO.

New Homes - extensive
remodelin&amp;
a£1e1:1ric wor1&lt;
.Custom Pole Bld&amp;s.

01

SERVICE

Pomeroy, Ott.
Ph. 992-2174

1982, John Doe. Petit1oner.

' RUTLAND

446-3169 or 266- 1987 i n

PH. 992-7583

BOOKKEEPING

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

on the 20th day of December.

TO

l -13·ttc

TRI-COUNTY

From tbe Smallest lloate&lt; .
Core to the l:aqesllladiltor.
~· 1·
Rldiltor ..,....•tst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. [xpe&lt;itnce

11124. 3 1 1217. 14. 21 . 28. 6tc

-~~~:~:BACKSHAG $12.95 .
,...,.,,r . trit

•

M iddlaort, Ohio

992-2725
·
1·26·1 mo.

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

Ch ief Deputy Clerk

BURNISH BROWN
SAVE
t.LQO
PU YARD

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and
recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
01,rt radiatore. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT HILL FORD

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

J· t J.tfc

By: Janet D. Morris

12'xlU'

$500

• Dewoyne ~lionw
&amp; Scottie Smilh
.U -mok• ond modal•
Antenna lnrll!llotion
House callr end rhop
oenric:~ available
1·5·1 mo. p(C

seal of sa1d Court thts 20th day h-~--------;·t

"ltUE SHAG
...JUT£ BACK

SAVE

WANTED TO BUY Old
furniture ond Antlquea crt oil
kinds, call Kehnath Swain,

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

DISCONTINUED
PERM. STOCK'

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

of January, AD.. 1983.
Robert E. Buck
Judge

DAIMIED

AMBER RUST

Wanted To Buy

the ~eninga .

992-2196

tmorl, executor~.

12'119'

Auc t io neer. 276· 3089 .

9

POMEROY

Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH . 992-2478

12·3J.l mo.·

45769, on the 1st day of Apr~ I.
t 983 at Ten o'clock A.M.
WITNESS my Signature and

\

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

u .s. Rt. so Easl

.Storm Doors
•Storm Windowo

1.

1,9H.31 .
1~,188.711 I

\·

/

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

Baker . B. A. lawrence . And r eM~
J . Pullins. Lu c1nda P u ll in ~; John
Pull 1ns. G1 tmore D. Lawren ce.

Mldreu

3·24-lfc '

4-5-~ c·

.......
· ~
•
1.of. ,Iennie FLEM LONG, W !Mng, wiM&gt;oo
REF ERENCE DEED: Vol. · lddr8a il unknown; the ldnown
129. page 516 . Meigs Cou nty
holn. - odlninirDeed Record s.

1,807.03 •

Center. Tru ckJ oada of neW
merc hendise every week .
Cons igmenu of new an q
used mer c handi se always
walcoma . Richard Reynold;

814-367-0138 . .

m1nor chtld to the Pet1t1 oners'
surname
The amended Pet1t ion for
AdoptiOn alleg ed that you ar e
the father o f satd m1nor ch•ld .
and alleged lurttie r that yo u
abandoned the mother of said
m1nor Child dunng her pregnancy and up to the time ol sa1d
m1nor ch1ld's placement .n the
home of the Pet1tioners.
You are hereby l urther noti fied that you r'nay f1le an
ObJeCtion to the adoption With
the Me1gs County Pro bate
Court w 1th1n th11'1 y days of 1he
flhng of ihe PeUt1on for AdoptiO n of sa1d m1nor c hild .
The heanng on the Pet1t1on
for Ado puon. and th e examinat•on. undf:V oath, 'of all the
pa rt1es 1n 1nterest who may be
prese nt and to who m lawful
not1ce has been g1ven. w 1ll be
had befO re sa1 d Court. at the
M EllgS Co unty Probate Court .
Courthouse. Pomeroy. Oh10

1.

. ~.284.43

.

PARTS .ond SERVICE

place of beginn ing conta.n1ng
twe nty acr es.

!
2,220.10 l
1

'. S199.95

Chest•. Oltio
Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or992· 7121
·

•W-•Dioh·
wu~&gt; . . &lt;Ranges
•Rttfrlgemora

Public Notice

1,4H.32 I
1

AUTO &amp;TRUCK ·
.REPAIR

985-3561
All Makes

REASONABLE. HOMES AT
FAIR PRICES. CAll 992·
3876, BRUCE, HELEN OR
VIRG.

t

,

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH

The f ollowing described r eal
estate Situated 1n the Count y of
Me1gs. tow nship o f Leb ano n
and Stat e o f Oh1 o. to ·wlt:
Be1nQ a part o f Sect,on 21.

Young,

Auction ever y Fri. n ight It
th e Hertfo r d Communi ty

Prices Start At

S&amp;W TV •
-.~ AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Roger Hysell
GARAGE .

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

t

11131 , 11c

-- - ·- -

FOR FUTURE USE"

then ce north 86 rods to the

Fund
, 2.402.03
,....lndBrtdg. ' .
,

T..,.W....,

- - - ·-·

ALL OTHER APPUANCES

Motor Vehlde U..... . .

Water Revenue

, .':CUT OUT

374 .75
374.75 '

8JIInct

0

Jt l i O: 17. 24. 31 121 7. t 4.61c

John

Public
&amp; Auction

Buying Gold , Sllwor. Platl·
num . Gold and Silver prlceo

3.066 .83
66.21 0 .26

Dec. ·81; 1M2

Tu

"

WE ALS() WOR~ ON

.

' 'TIWwtwi Out" '

I

and the prayer tS that the abov"!
dt-•Scr ,bed a d and fjaS r1ghts be
par\lhoncd ah rl title th ereto be
qu1eted as aga1nst all defend ants. that the 1n terest be
de!P1m111ed and sel o H or
o rdered sold 1f I! canno t be
pa111110ned. fo r an all o w Cince of
auornev tees here1 n and costs
l'6u are requ1 red to answer
the compla•nt wtthln rwen ty€1Qhl days aft er the last pubi1Cil ·
116n ol th1s not1ce wh 1ch Wil t be
publ1sherl o nce ~ ach wet=; k for
Silt con se c1 1tM~ weeks The last
puiJIIGll tOn w 1ll be made on
F() bruary 14, 1983 and lhe
twent y-e,g ht dayS lo r an::wve r
w1 11 co mmence on thlll date.
In r.ase ol your• fail ure to
answ('tr or o thervv, se respond
QS ~ ~ q , m ed by th e Oh, o R ul ~so l
C1vt1 Procedurn. 1udgment w1ll
be l f:mdered aga1nst yo u fo r the
r e li e f c1 o man d e d 1n th e
Com1Jia1nt
Lany E SDP,ncer
CIPfk ol Co11 rts
Me1 QS County
Co mmon Pleas Caun

You are hereby not 1fied that

&amp; HOTPOIJfl

2.B30 .95
2.999.46

General Fund '
Total - ~ • ;.

Ge!terll Fund

co nc;e rn 1ng 011 and gas under ty Jn(1 th e followu1g descnbed real
es tatP
S1 1t Jated In Lebanon Town ·
shrp, Me•ns Cou nty. Oh10 . In
Sectto n 36 Town 2 Ran ge 11.
be1n Q the north part o l NW o ne
quartfH c onta1111nf1 78 .acres
morf' o r le55

..,.,_,

AUTHORIZED
FACTQRY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC

.

Gasoline Ta)(
Fund

The ob18C t at the co mplaint 1S

a pa r11t1on and qu1et IItie act1on.

To

15.194.26

Moto r Veh1cle L1cense

rav. OhiO 4 5 769

crtlntantDoe

Shoring Fund
~. 06 5 . 1 B
Tot al
78,77 3.77
E~
General Fund
20 .037 .9 3

oh

.

pendtng .n the Common P1 etlS
Coun ol M et gs County. Pome·

In lhe M - crt

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

·

340

Case No 83 CV 3 and ''

· legoteM.
ton.-exocu101'1
Intiodminlo1neaigns crt
E - Mooitw, if deceo.cl.
W. H. BERDINE, if IMng,
whole Mid- is u'*"'&gt;wn.
; the unknown heirs. dfl.l' I I BJ ,
legatees. ••liidbelors. exec·
utots and llligM crt W. H.
Berdine. if decu nd.
JENNIE BERDINE, if living
whole oddrea is ur*nown;

3.390.30
3.72B.43

Dozers
B1ckhoes
Dump Trucks
Lo-Boy
Trench er
W1ttr

- Septic

1-5-1 mo .

$62,000.

You are hereby notd1ed tha t
yo u havf! been named delend ·
;mts 1n a lega l act1 ofl ent1tl ed
Ja mes W Sutt le.y la.t!lt1fl vs.
Wes t Vtrg 1n 1a Pulp and Paper
Company. fJt aL df!lendants
Thts ac t10n has been ass1gned

utors, and/ or llligno crt Earl
Winters. if ·•••
x'.
EVERETT MOSlER. if liv·
!ing whose addrwa is un·
~. the unknown 'heirs,

M otor VehiCle License

(

',',

"
2 2,800.00

Planning Co mmis-

-

Blanche Winters, if
6d.
EARL WINTERS, if living.
---isu'*"'&gt;wn;
of

2.001.1 E
Total
10.167 .3C
Total R.,.._
Ge neral Fund
17.9 57.75

· 23.080.00

Program

.

to.s. """"""""and/ or euigna

999 .15
1.323 .64

Tax Fund

if
is un-

known; the unknown heirs.
d&lt;M-.lego-.
odmiuiouo-

Road and Bndge
Ce metery Fund
Federal Reven ue
Shanng Fu nd

~.

WI~RS.

wt.o. -

living,

22B . 10

Fund

1ec ,

BLANCHE

1.664 .03

Federal Revenue •

lerwfcei
General Fund

iTREET UCIHT

a,_, if

3.95 1.20

Federal Reven Ue

PICJtMif

sion
HUD

f!

heirs. i:levi'"'· legaleesadminiatrators. executors
and /
assigns of Ernest

Fund
26.763 .47
Road and B r~ d ge
Fund
4.6 37 .9B
Cemetery Fund · 5.2 0 3.89

,........

Swimming Pool
Fund

ERNEST BREWER, whole
11111 known - - is 30020
Valley Bt!1i Roecl. Rocine. Ohio·
46171 , 1lvfn9; lhe ur*nown

, R_..,..

Tax Fund

s.ullyof

Cemetery FuM

decaurd.

Gasoline Tax

SUMMARY OF
APPROPRIAnoN8
BY FUND AND
PROGRAM

Total

minisbetors. exeaJ10rS an"' dl oroaignaofMey-.if

12.188 .76
llclllooWe ll
lumnwr of c.tt

Gasolme Tax

...

Motor VehiCle license

Finance Corrrruttee

ment

heirs.~-~

12.188 .76

General Fund

Jack Sattertieid

Program

Volle,.W Ro.d. Recine. Ohio
46171 . If living; .... ......,_,

l.iab1h!1eS

Council

General Fund
Fire Equip;
Fire Truck
Street Light

MAY.BREWER. wt.-11111
known
is 30020

Totat

General Fund

-w

·

12.t88 .( 6
t V 88 .76

Road and Bridge
Fund

Clerk-Treasurer

tego-.

Net Funds on

·-r....... In'"

Jon Buck

-is rinown;
....
""""""""
.......
doNieeoo.
edrninistretors. oxecutoB. and/ or lllligns crt Ednl
BUih. if liec ad .

!Active and
lnac t1vel
S t B) 94.42
Less: Checks Outstanding
6 .605.66

Total

ApprOVE d by
C a ~ J. Horky

'u.....,...

hein. - lhe
leg&amp;IWW. llidminlsb&amp;IOf'li, euc·
uton and/ or lllligns crt Ed·
1
BuOh. if tlec I •
EDRA , BUSH. if iiving,

&amp;8338 SR 124
,..,..Ill. OH 41770
A88ET8:

UA•unEs:

Roy

lluth if.....-.
EDWARD BUSH, If 1Mng,
whoee addew is unknown;

CASH IIALANCE

Depos1t
Total Assets

.-·

...

lhe unknown hein, - -·
..-......
uton. and/ or llligM crt

Notic~t

Public

Passed January t 0 . 1983

...

fllevcrluo)
Fund

n,..,,llnil•

ll,210.00

2.224 .86 6 2A

Cemetery FUnd
Federal Revenue

i

For Sewer

6.300 .00

take effed at th e earl iest pe r'fod
allowed by law.
An est

WEST VIRGINIA PULP. AND
PAPER COMPANY, ET AL
DEFENDANTS
. NO. 83 CV 3
NOncE BY
PUBUCA·n ON
fo: ROY BUSH, if 1Mng,
whole lo ur*nown;

992-3~05
No Sunday Calls

9B6-4 193 or 992-30!17

COUNTRY - Modern 4 yr. old
ranch home. Nice family room
with ~bumi n~ fireplace. 3
bedrooms, carpeting, 2 car finishfl(l garage and ~rge level lot

utorslndl or lllignsof Jenme
Berdine. if decoilled-

vs

2.2·18.56 6.26

II

lor just $12,000.

. -. adrniniolnrton. exec·

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
MEIGS COUNlY, OHIO
JAMES W. SUTTLE .
PLAINTIFF

30,000.00

c- 8Hrtly Jot......

Public Tran sp ortatiOn
5.000.00
General Govemment
6 .31 8.54
Total fo r Federal
Revenue Shanng
Fund
12.006.26
Grand Total
Appropna -

Hardroad,

SALE ON
SPACE HEATERS

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

- Sewer
- Gas Lines

PH. 992-3194 or

Roubt 1

-

8

rooms. large lot and looks·flne

Public Notice

Public Notice

I 17.260 .0 0

Middleport, Bradbury.
and Leading Creek Area.
"You Call, We'll Haul."

Long Botlom, OH. 415743

146.270 .00

1 IIIIFICM

Fun d
6 .300 00
FEDERAL REVENUE
SHAR ..GFUND

POMEROY EDGE -

18.40 0 .00

~31 , 1882

T01 al General
Bo nd Retirem ent

..

$17,500.

lor

Housing
Headquarters

Gra n d To tal
A p p ro pn at •ons

GENERAL BOND
RETIIEME Nl'
FUND

and storage

Weekly trash pickups in

'CHbLES SAYRE
. AND SON
Roofing &amp;Siding'Co .

2 bedroom frame home. Enclosed porch ·and 5 other

22.800 .00

Fund
Sanitary Sewer
. Escrow Fund

19 6,500.00

ooly

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

Sewer Revenue ,

22 .800.00
3.30 0.00
25.600.00

Str'"'t Levy
Total For Other
Funds

nace, praee

Poie

Berns.

Bath, natural ~ cabine1s in
lhe kitl:hel\ has nat gas fur-

.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cltland. Jr., GRI .. .................., .. .... . 992-6191
DoUtt Turner ...... .... ...... ............................... 992·5692
Jean Trussell .. .. .. .... .... ..... ....... .. .. .... .. ...... ..... 949-2660

Prog ram

ll That ...... be appuprilrtd fran tie PLAI'fiiiNG

T~Wal

Swimm1 ng Poo l
Fund

NEW LISTING -IN POMEROY ~ Neighborhood restaurant
&amp; bar · .bldg., land and business. Priced to sell. Only serious
inquiries.

RENTAL INVESTMENT
Duplex house. One bedroom
apartment up and 1-2 bedroom down. Good condition. $350
potential incoome. Just $23,000.00.

300 .00
t .300.000.00

Fllld
300.00
Total
OTHER FUNDI
Gene;'! Bond
Sanitary Sewer
Retirement
Escrow
30.000.00
Fund

Fund
' '
146.270.00
16,000.00, Sewer Revenue
Fund
1 17. 260.00
1.188.000.00 Sanitary Sewer ;.
EscrC&gt;N Fund
~ 0. 000 . 00
80.00000
Meter Deposrt
3 300 00
· ' ·
1,300.000.00 Program · . · · · '
Total
1.597.130.00
18.400.00

Fund
HUD Fund

NEW USTING - ~ lot with
a 6 room home In Middleport

PORTLAND FARM -'- Owners want an offer on this fantastic
182 acre farm. Beautiful house, double car garage, barn, im·
plement shed, grain storage. Approximitely 35 acres bottom
land . Balance wooded acreage. All minerals. Call lor inlorma·
tion.

Pl anni ng Com mi ssion

modeli~ - Custom

NEW LISTING - RUTLAND - I ~ story Ira me home with 23 bedrooms, aluminum siding, woodburn er set up and gar·
age. $22,000.00:

$68,000.00.

6.800.00

~rAj~=~~ Re-

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

EXCELLENT HORSE- FARM I Completely fenced! Approxima·
tely 21 acres. 3 bedroom modern ranch home with tree gas!
Large barn lor stable, fruit trees, garden space. Asking

ment Fund
1 14.800.00
50.00 Revenue Shc;u ing' ' ·
· ,
2 50.00
Funds
12.006.26
Meter DepoSit
3.30 0.0 0

St Levy
Fund
26,1100.00
Moint. and Rop~r
Fund
99.000.00
Revenue Sharing
'
Funds
q.OOO 00
Program
Total
129.1100.00

15./xliloo

'DP'JlOO

Fund

MANLEY'S ·
TRASH SERVICE

VIRGIL B. SR .

216 E. 2nd St.

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Newly re!llodeled ho111e
on a corner Jot. G1eat location, great price. Want $36,500.00.

J

F ~re House Improve·

300.00

'fUND

........
.
""'

Fire Truck

20 .4 50.00 Street Lig ht
FlRE TRUCK
Fund
FUND
W ater Revenue
6 .800.00
Fund

E!Mrot-

17.000.00

tutw.

Public Notice

50 .00
250.00

HUD FUND

o----

Uf1•1IW•.. . 511 .. 1111....... , ,
IA-... 4_..1N" .....I

-··· ....-·

· Fund

l ... .

~

U.. ~ t · -.. . ~ .... - - - ...

Funds
68 7.72
Program
Total ;..____23.48 7,n

T.otal Planning
Commission

Supplies and
Mltefi als
CaPital
Ouday '
Other
Total for HUD
Fund .•

u., .. , . . . . ,

Revenu e Sharing

Supplies and

••
131

141 .... ....

Gonnl~
Total Street
'
Gene rei Fund
,,140.100 .00
MainterurtOO
Revenue Sharing
Fund
99.000.00 • Funds
6.318.54
CEMETERY FUND ·
Program
Personal
Total
t46.418.54
Servi ces
16 .000.0 0
Fund Tolll
Su pplies and
General Fund
2 7B.500 .00
Materi als
5.080.00 Street Levy
Ca p~al Outlay
1,000.00
Fund
25.6 00.00
Other
1.000.00 M aint. and Repair
Total Cemetery
Fund
99.000 00
Fund
23.080.00 Cemetery Fund
23.080.00
FlRE EQUIPMENT
Fire Equip'ment
FUND
.
·Fund
20.450.00

Tot al Fire Tru ck

Fund PLANIIIING6.BOO 00

--

FUND '

Total Fire Equ1pm ent

Fund

•1 1:1

. . . .toM

Public Notice

Supplies and

Materials
Capital Outlay
Other

.........
t.IMI ,..._

1-,----- - -- - --;---:--i

.7.....,._,.,

5.080.00
1.000.00
1.00.0 .00

Personal

:1~

111

. . . ..H . . . . .

16.qoo.oo

Capital Out Iay
Other
Total CerretE!IY
. Fund
23.0BO.OO
FlRE EQUIPMENT
FUND

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

. ,. .... a.-

ca... •

U1'

,, ~

Oevvey M. Horton

Fund
99 .000.00
CEMETERY FUND

I ll t~- " - - ·
....

.._..,.

...

.a ....... Din

~

Soc. 211 . Thi sord inmceshall

1.8w Ent&gt;r.,..

.~,

• •• .......
H6 ca..,.Oid.

·1·....1!._....,,_,..,........

.,....,__...
........

1.000.00

lnre~r

f'.l(llip menl

r

2.000.00
100.000.00

Services

Sec.

SYRACUSE - Missionaries .
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Hudson
from El Salvador will beat Syra. cuSe First Church of the"Naza.
rene Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Everyone Is welcome to attend.

Now renting 25 one bedroom apartment
units, renting for 30 percent of vour ad justed income under the DBpartment of
Housing &amp; Urban DevelopmBnt Section 8
program. All utilities included .

5.080.00
1.000.00

Total For Cemetery
Operation and

MlDDLEPORT - Middleport Literary Qub will meet
Wednesday at the rome of Mrs.
Robert Fisher at 2 p.m . Mrs.
Forrest Bachtel will have the
book review.

RIVER BEND APARTMENTS
HOUSING FOR THE ELDERLY

16,000.00

/llllu.. -;,.IC h•l•'llll~tltt• ''·" '"•,.~•·• ...

Jl'.. _ . . . .

Stwer Esaow

!'ollce o.p.nmom-

appropnated from the GEN -

Hon

&amp;crou.1F11flli
Co,..ractual
Serv i&lt;rs
11,000.00
Capital Outlay
11,000.00
Total For Sanitary

Gen...

Personal

· SerVI ces

s..,,.

L1g ht Fund

Support

3-

Salllt"']

Total For SW1 mm1ng

Personal

Sen' as
~B~I
f~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------1· ,Supplies
and

,_...11'-'lna

1.150.00

l.oglllollw

Sec.

the REMAINING RJNDS

1.600 00

~- 1.8w

Fund

ADDITIONAL
FUNDS
That ,... .., be apJXOpriatcd from

-0 -

Total Fo r
Treasu rer

-....;.---------------------....1

G)

REllREMEN!' FUND
Oth&lt;r
6,100.00
Total For G&lt;nrnl
Bond R&lt;tiremenr
Fund
6,300.00

Me,or

l'S...,_ • • . ,

1'1-C.....,. . . . . . .

'-tit~.

S.&lt; 23. That ',,. be "PP'OP'
rioted from t 11: GENiiRAL RJ ND

GENERAL
GOVERNMENTAL
SERVICES
EXECUTIVE AND
ADM I MSTRATIVE

February 1, 1883
This coming year It will be to your advantage to keep in tooch with
friends who live In distant places. They may have opportunities 1D offer
to you that you can't find 1!1 yOur own region.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) A situation might develop 1Dday
which will put your faith to a test. You~ll discover your beliefs are more
than up to the task.
P:flCEII (Feb. 20-Marcb 28) Even though the power to change
things may be in the hands of &lt;tiErs, youaretheonellkelyto profltrmst
from shifting conditions today.
ARIES (March !1-AprD 19) Although your normal preference Is to
be a leader rather than a follower, you are likely to be luckier today ·
playing a supporting role.
·
TAURUS (AprB m.May 28) Something opportune coold suddenly
develop today where your career Is concerned. However;' you'll have to
be alert to appreciate all of Its ramifications.
GEMINI (May 2l.June 28) It won't be your intention to use people
today, but, by tbe same token, don't hesitate
... to call upOn friends If yw
are In need of a favor.
·
,
CANCER (.June 2l.July 22) Tasks which require Imagination and
the ablllty to innovate will be the ones you'll be able to perform the best
today. Others may bore you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The rest of the week will go much easter If
you try to d~ote time today to activities unrelated to your mundane
routines. Change refreshes ~ur outlook.
VIRGO' (Aug, ~. 22) Yoor financial prospects look very
encouraging at this time, so if you have anything on tile burner which
could add to your Income give It priority.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) I1 you have a project in mind which is
large in scope, thiS is a good day to launch lt. You are lucky where
beginnings are concerned.
SCORPIO (Oct. U-Nov. 22) This could be the start of a profitable
period for you. There are factors at work behind the scenes which are
opening new channels for perlllnal gain.'
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Do not let .others put limits on
your ropes and expectations today. What may be too big for them could
be well within your reach.
CAPRIClEN (Dec. fi2-JBII. 19) You are now in a good achievement
cycle, so be sure to setgoa1s which are truly rreanlngful. You need Icily .
targets.

Chapter ~. Order of Eastern
Star, wlllmeetat7:45p.m. Tuesday. All officers should wear
cha11ter dresses.

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

I

t:ln•i}it•d f•IC•'• ,.,.,.,.,. 1lw

,..., CIIMtW•

Gandystripers and their role at
- - .
Plans for the observance of the
Veterans Memor1al Hospital was
41 · ....... - fl..l
,,_._.,_...
1 1·, - l. . , _ t
4...a
:1-.f..,...._..tortt.nt
_ _ _,
isth anniversary of
Return
1.1-' " - ' ! 1 - .
discussed by Rhonda Dalley, R.N.
U
·••••••""
......_
1 :1-UioH.....
.....
....._,
..........
4 ... ._....... . _ •
. ....... a....
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
........... f . . . . .
at the Jan 25 meeting of the
........ .
.._
Daughters of the American Revolu·
Women's Auxlllary at the hospital. ·
: ~ ~- TVa c .......
4 7-W•••• • IIII~
~
~~~­
,.... ... ,.Do
....,..u...
tlon were made at a recent meeting
Llnnle Crary Introduced the
held a t Racine Baptist Church.
speaker who answered guestlons
Public Notice
Pu bile Notice
The diamond jubilee observance
from the auxlllary foUowtng · her
will beheld on March 19, the place to
talk. Scott Lucas, hospital adinlnlsCOMMISSION FUND
ORDINANCE
be announced, with a luncheon to
trator, and Eulonda Rurnfield were
Suppl ies and
NO. 1129-83
which all state officers, chapters in
guests at the meeting.
,
Mi&lt;erials
lO.OO
AIIINUAL
Oth...
2)().00
APPROPRIAnON
the Southeast District, and guests
The Awdllary exte)lded , thanks
Total For Planning
ORDINANCE
will be invited. The chapter was
for toys donated for ho§pitallzed
Commission
An Ordinance to make approchartered on March 14, 1!0!.
children by the Meigs County
Fund
300.00
priations for current expenses
and other B)(J)enditures of the Sec:; 16. That 1lrrr lr approfCiued
It was noted that Mrs. Clarence
Granges and the Pomeroy Cub
V1llage of Middleport. State of from t 1-e HUD FUND
Hayman, Deland, Fla.; Mrs. ru:
Scouts.
P&lt;rsorol
Ohio. duri ng the f1scal year
chard Henderson, Athens; ¥rs·
Ethel Hatfield opened the meet·
Servi&lt;rs
17,000.00
end1ng December 3 1. 1 983 .
Larry Klrocofe, Warren, and Mrs.
Sec. 1. 8e ~ resolved "by the Suppl ies and
lng with a prayer. Refreshments
Materials
Cou ncil of the Village of
1 ~.000.00
Frank Walker, Galloway, all
were served by Mary Rumfleld,
1,188,000
Middleport. State of O.hio. that Cap &lt;al fu lay
members of the chapter, had . Mildred Withee, and Juanita Nor- . to provide fo r the c urrent Oth...
lll.OOO.OO
Total For HUD
donated a substantial fund to be
e)( penses and other expendiman tothosenamedandJanlceDa·
Fund!JOO,OOJ.OO
tures of the Village of MK! dleused for the celebration.
nlels, Louise Bearhs, Bertha
S.&lt; 17. 'l'hn rl-ere be •PP'OP'
pon. during the fi scal year
Mrs. Gene Yost gave the national
Parker, Katie Anthony, Jestle
ending Decem ber 3 1. 19B3. riarcd fran tlr REVENUE SHARdefense report, and Mrs. Robert
Molden, Mae Weber, Phyllis Clay,
th e foll o~ ng sums be and they ING RiND
Supplies and
are hereby ser aside and
Ashley, the program, on research·
Katheryn Metzger, Ml!di-ed Fry,
Marerials
12,006.26
appropnat ed. as follows. v1z:
lng a t the NSDAR Ubrary in
Jessie White, Eva Hartley, Clara
Sec. 2 . That there be approp- Total For Revenue
Washington, D.C.
Burris, and Ethel Grueser.
Sharing 1\nd
12,006.26
r.,ted from the GENERALFUND

l

n ..--..-.

'J'I., ...........

.,.,

.._t...... ,,_"
1 1-,_, .... ., T....
:s....................

1-t..t ..wl ~

l ·'f-

Calendar
MONDAY

. . ........... G.M.

,...

, Mrs. Goen and daughter
,.

........................
,._
... .......
.........
.............
...... -.
,..,
.
.
..
...........
_
-.. .....,..,......,
...................

1-CW et n...... .... loo....,_.l
I ... _ ,
~ioo...,_)

~

Astragraph
Goett birth

~

'The Daily Se ntinei - Page--:7

Business services

Reel Eateta General

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

I

'

Layette shower held in Rutland

Evans

-IIW

Real Estate General

Or •iio DoiHy Soo1too1
1o,t.
lll Cqort St.. _ ,_01o;t um
I

DAR Chapter

Matthew Sha ne Evans , son· of
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Evans, Por· ·
tland , observed his fifth birthday on
Jan. 19. Joining him for a celebraA layette shower was held Jan. 25
ilon of the occasion were his sisters,
honoring Robin George at the home
Alicia .a nd Cindy, a nd a brother,
of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Grate,
J::cyan, grandmothers, Ada Van Me- Rutland.
ter, Portland, and Bernice Evans,
Games. were . played with Fern
Gallipolis.
Grimm In charge. VIolet Grate won
the prtze for a game on selecting
names, while Nan Harder was the
winner of the game on children of
the Bible. Mrs. Harder atso won the
door prize.
After Mrs. George opened her
gifts, refreshments of cake, mints,
nuts, punch and coffee were
served. Hostesses for the shower
were Beulah Grate, Fern Grimm,
and Hanna Queen.

PHONE 992-2156

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1 BB8. oo you know we 're
h1re to ltly , If YOU can
organize your own time 1nd
cletwmine Your own Jucc;::ess. write : Pat Murphy , ~

ROUTE ute1perron lor new

paid wer day. Five doya per
week, dopendrlble tronrportotlon • mu1t . Coli lor
Interview tlmo . 304-175
1780.
•

�...
Monday, Janua
Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

,.

Pomeroy-

Middleport, Ohio
61 HouHhold

ot.,-

m•o••

fuo

~· i~. C'a~~i.rr-oager,

~~~- 304•876 -

.

liii'o·

.or 675 - 15386 or

D70 'f!JO , '

Situations
Wanted

2 br;IJ. unfurnished apt. in
etl!l!N'n City . Call 614-256' 6620.

Dump truck for hi re . Will
haul gravel o·r most any·

lit'th" i.

I apt. 1 bdr .. 920
. Adults,
water llo
pd, 8200
mo. Call 4411 -4416 eofter
7PM .

iJ

thing. Call 6t4-992-3869 .
HOWARD l. WRITESEL
ROOFING COMPANY .

Gutters-Downspouts-New-

Furniehed apt . $145 no
utilities pd. 3 rooms. 701
4th Ave . , Gallipolis . Call

Repa ir- Gutter Painting -

Storm Ooora &amp; Windows.
Free Estimates . Phone
6t4 -949 - 2263
992-279t .

..,._...

or 6t4-

446-441

oXJHH V.COO"t
I&gt;WII.t.IMIS ,..._,
VfNI'IFfr&lt;I,Q,

13
Insurance
- - - - - - - --

-

e·aftor 7PM.

1 bedroom Apartment for
rent. Col 446-0390 .

l~!~~!!!!!!~~§g:;~AMSS~~-=:Ltl~~~~~r:~il\;~~~d1~ ~4
·

·

.

SANDY AND BEAVER
lna~rance Co . has offered ·3 2 Mobile Ho.m es
services -for fire insUrance

cOverage in Galli a County
for almost a century. Farm ,
home and peraonal property
coverages are available to

for

•
41

uQt~ml.,.,.d

rm.
Utllltleo paijl.

T R 1- ST ATE

M Q 81 L E

Modern 1 bdr. apartment in
quiet location . close to
town. no pets, security dip .

5 rms. and bath, no pats,'ona
child accepted, Bob McCor·
mick Rd. Call 446-2660 .

our com·p rehensive mobile

CLEAN USED MOBILE

homo

HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL-

Small furnished house in
town . 2 bdr ' s . pay own
utilities. No pete . Dep . req .

2 BR Apt .· w~h 2 full batha,
B6 South Third St .• Middle·
992-2679 .

coverage

with

anyone. Foremost lnsu ·

ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.

ronco, 446-9340 .

4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35 . PHONE 446-7274 .

St60 mo . Call 446·78B6,
after 6 call 446-4045'

Mobile home &amp; lots for sale.
1967 Buddy mobile home
1 4x60, 2 bdr. gas keat, rural
water , set up with 2 or 4

For rent Or .a ale on land
comrac·t . 3 bdr. hoUI8 1 ~~~

Schools
Instruction

15

Karate the ultimate in aelf

defence all priVate lessons,
Men . women. 8a children .
Instruction thru black belt.
Also available Karate
uniforms puching and

kicking bags. and protective
equipment. JMry Lowery &amp;

Auociates Karate Studio.
143 Burlington Ad., Jackson. Oh . Call 614 -286 3074 or 614-384-6t60 .
18 Wanted to Do

off 1 60 at Poner. Call ••••
Neal 446-0t57 .

lots. Call446 -1240.
1974 Schultz mobile home.

2 bdr .• axe. cond .• 12x66
with 4x1 0 expando. 9x24
awning, central air, dis·
hwasher , range, refrig . ,
includes new carpet 8t
drapes, $8,700. Call 6t4367-0691.

12x60 mobile home, would
consider selling on land
contract. Call 446 · 1 157
alter 8, 6t4-246-5830.

In Pomerov $176 . month
plus utilities. $60. depoalt .
t;:ell 614-992-72B4.

3 bd .room house for rent on

Lincoln Hgts . All new
carpeting and pain•. Deposit
required. 6t4·992,3090.

Reduced 1980 Governor
14x70 with 10x14addition .
General Hauling and Trask Do not have to move
removel Service . Reliable $11,000 . Callt -643-2675.
and dependable . Call 446·

Unfurnisked 5 room house
with bath, 7 ac;res , barn ,
garage. outbuildings. close
to Meigs ,High School. For
Rent: Traaer Space. '614·

3159 after &amp;PM 256-t967 .

992-72.57 ·:

Bodyman for hire, own
tools; 10 yrs . experience.
Call 446 -3972 .

Want to work on Oariy or
Beef Farm . Work long hours.
Can run machi nary, experienced . Call 614 · 388·
8234.

Plnanalal
Business
Opportunity

MUFFLER SHOP Profitable
muffler dealership available.

High Career income. Business includes equipment.
stOck , warranty program,
factory training , advertising
support . Total price

t97t Elcona 12x38
$•(0DO . t964 Champion
20x44 $7.5"00 . t974
SHamrock 24x64 S18,60D .
t980 Liberty 1 4x60
$8.9 95 . 1971 Freedom
t4x66 $7,996. 1983 Mansion 14x70 $t3 , 500 .

Kanauga Mobile Home
Sales, Kanauga. OH. 4469662 .

Call 446-2066 .

port . Availabl·e immediately.

'

3 bedroom home in country .
Deposit and references
required. Phone 6t4-992720t .

6 room unfurnished Apt. in
Middleport . Equipped
Kitchen, 8150 . month. Cell
6t4-992-5692.

POMEROY - 2 bedroom
unfumiihed opt .• 8160. 2

bedroom house 8185 .

1981 Fairmont mobile
home. 14x62 on lot at Quail

2 bd . room Apt .. panly
furniihed-bd .room suite.
stove, refrig . s 176. montk
plus utilities. Cal 614·949·
2234.

1 97t

Loana·available . $16.,000
and up for any farm. business or commercial purpoae. Coli Richard Jeffers at
693 ·6536 until9 p.m.

Star

t2x60.

2

bd .room with stove. refrig .,
a . c . , · LP gas, porch and
awning. Very good cond .
Set up on rented lot.

45

$6,600 . Call
5841 .

614-9,92 -

2 bdr. ti-aller for rent. Call

For rent downtown office
•pace with parking . Call

6t4-256-66t3 .

446-3432.

USED MOBILE HOME .
576-27tt .

23

Professional
. Services

ClloL Bookkeeping
Tax Returns &amp; bookkeeping

fo,r !ndividuals &amp; busine11es.

.
C~rol Neal
'

446 -3862

PlANO TUNING llo REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appoint-

ment, Ward's Keyboard.

33 Farms for Sale

TWO mobile homes for rent
on Rt ,· 2 about 6 minutes
from town . Call after 6 .
304-675-6277.

207 acre farm . Langsville.
Mineral rights included . No
house. $12.000 down. Will
carry rest. 614-3B8 -9346 .
34

Business
Buildings

ONE bedroom mobio home.
$t60 . 304-676-4t64.

TWO or tkree bedroom
furniSI'Iad or unfur'niahed,
New Haven, 304·882·
2466 .

446-4372 .
PE-RMANENT HAIR

REMOVAL - Profeuional
Electrolyeis Center, Inc .,

For rant or sale store
building corner or Ruleville

Rd. llo Rt. 1 60 . Call 446A . M . A . Approved. Dr . 3888 .
Referrals . Gift Cenlticatea,_ - - - - - - - - --

new hours . By appointment:

Businesa fOr Ale In Middle·

304-675-6234.

pon . Carousel Confoction -

,.Rijf,...

ery. Cake decorating and
condv · auppiiH. CaR 6t4992 -6342 or 614 -992 6501 .

31 Homes for Sale
3!! lots

&amp; Acreage

IN TOWN 3 bdr . a·c with

garage. quiet location . Low 36 Acres at Rodney on W. T .
maintenance. $48,000 witk Watson Rd . Owner Financ·
11% FHA toquailified buyer. ing available. 446-822t .

Call446-443t after 5 .

3 bedroom house for aale .
New carpeting throughout .

Located on Bashan Rd . and
sits on 3 acres ·of land .

Excellent terms to rigkt
yeer financing
pony.
MAKE AN available
OFFER. 30.
Contact Bonk One af Pomoroy. 6t4-992-2t33.

114 ACRES , barn , new
house, mineral rights . Ju at
11 JT1iles f rom town . Cell
304· 675 - 3030 , or 675·
3431 .
THREEbedroornlarmhou•
whh gordon plot. t210.DO
month. Call 304-871-3030
or 675-3431.

44

Apartment
for Rent

6t4 -949 - 2160
742-2834.

614 - 247- 2192
949-2029 .

f----------

890. per day.
3841 .

cell 448-

-Very · nic
-e-2 ' --'
bdr : duplex
home. furniahad, Main St ..
C~eohlre,

Oh.

Call 614-

241HIB18.'

1---------2 bclr. hcxi• unfumlll»d on
lo-r Rt. 7. Dop. required.
Call 6t4-2&amp;6-1413.

----,---:.:..:....
·,
FOUR room upstairs apan\ '
manu,
Henderson
Park, 1126
month. Trailer
Trl'ller ·
Spaces.

~841.

Ph-'
304-876.
'

ONE badroom apartment In
Hondonon. 304-6711·'1872.

.

~

-

-

11~ .

1---------Chilled shot •tD . 99 per
1 Olb. bag. Spring Valley
Trading Co ., Spring Valley
Ploao. 441 -8D25.

'

.

-

61

JiVIDEN ' S FARM
EQUIPMENT
448-1117&amp;

.Long tract ore, Ve:rm•r
b!ol•• llo Hay aqu.,rnem.
bale f•den • moveu.

tobacco . . . . . . wagoN.
rotary tllero • cutt-.
•claro. ·bfadao. dlac,

cuhlvatora. piOWI 6
woodbwnera.
An •• ue to get 1 complete
lin a of parts A •rvicel
USED--IH 79. MF t31. FOJd
B80, Ford Jublloe. 600
Ford, IN Ford, 10 Moo•y
Herrlo Poney. JDhayt .. der.
rotory hoe. plDWL disc, JD
menurt aprelder &amp; round

h.._ btler. corn 'planter.

1399 with blowers, used

coal &amp; wood heatere, new

or 6t4-

or 614 - .

12DO. Cal 814-367-7238 .

Want to trade-John De•e

31 o Backhoe, good condi tion , for • 5BO Cast. Call
992 -2etB .

range-e86 . Electric dryer886 . G.E . wether-heavy
duty-$1 00 . Waieher&amp;Oryer
set- 1126.

1

New, he1vy -duty Reeee
hitch . F.i ts any Ford pickup.
Long John five antennae
Beam. Mark II A watt meter.
Merk VII ptew
amp. Slhronlx
VFO model 90. Call 992_73_4_9_._ _ _ _ _ __

1·

h ., above ground, with

complete $179. bunklaa

dock, $900.00, . 304-8B2 -

mattressea $40. ckests.
dressers, TV' s. Cal 446·

3872.

3169.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

REFRIGERATOR, 2 door .
white. runs good. 304-675 3676.

· washers, dryerS, refrigerators·, ra~g-.. Skaggs Ap·
plianc81, Upper River Rd ..
betide S1one Crest Motel.

Old faehioned bedroom
euite, Eureka eweeper, floor
model, -Chevy engine pana,

446-7398 .

Coll304·773-9147.

,

Se.ara Port-1-crib with 2
mettre11 pada and bUmper
peds 130.00. Infant corrier,

carseat combined, *16 .00
30~-676- 1038 .

~t~; 'tl~ :&gt;~TOO!

~~1~"7:

''-~.;'-! .~ ~-t ~'i~.,· , ) :~~~~N~'~Ti;

: : :-.;, l,;

""

•

,

,,~'-:' f.;c

,

r _-

~

-4-t
~

&gt;: l:l!

'=

oth ·e r building

BUILDING MATERIAL Flot

metal sheets porcelanenamel cooled. ,ft. by 8ft.
th"' 4 ft. by 12ft. 17.00 to
19 .60. odd ·aina U .DO to
86.0D. 614-118.7-30B8.
!!6

Pets for Sale

Boarding all breeda . AKC
Reg . Doblrmans pups afd
Doberman Stud Service .

Uvestock

Grain fod baby ba.r ,..dy to
butcher. Call 441-4344 .
--~---- - lc -

Reglot•ed Ouat1or Horoo .
Ruth Auvoa , Also grade.
Soddlu. bridloa, winter

ho rsa biM kets. Wee tarn
boots. I14-898-329D.

Young chicken• jutt 1 larting
to loy . 11 . 60 uch . Call
614-742-2928 .

64

Hay

8o

Grain

Good hay for ule . Call
HAY . 3D4-458-1UII or
304-675-7641.

•. ; •••;.. •.

.

- ~ 1'\~M"'II ..,,..,
j

;;;;,!-l~'
'"~-~·

~

wll~~;':'ll

HAY 12. bale. 304-8822422.

=

SIX month old rad Dobar""'n. tara clippad • shola .
Muot Mil. phone 304-6764873 or 814-446-1738.
57

Mualcal

I n.trumenta
AIVIIrt• electric guitar whh
flnod caM. looks and playo a
loa Paul by Glltton . loodad
with cu1tom goodt.. : Call
448-77B1 ott• 6PM.
Antiquo Krall boby grand

pl1no. good conditl~n.
rnahogeny finlah . n•ede
little ':l:lr. 12,0DD. Call
4411·B
.
'

68

~"T.H!:~N

,.,.,. •--= rI rx JD rxxJ
.• ?*1~·1

'

.•••
••

Fruh
• Vegtteblea

POTATOE 11.00 1DD lb.

IIIII No. 1 WI_.., RIIIMt.
Coli 44e-B247 or 171.·
37112.

.:;,.t·_,,'I ... ...,.. T_...
- ... :~

,

"'

·'

j

'•

lttls 'tlelnilllt_

FOR SALE- 1972.Controon-

aeie; Call Ctiorfoa J. ()ltlin-

·:

-,.,

·

w.!"!,fl;,.:::;: :=

.

noviglltor

u•• •

; ·.;,,;
1 .w
mil•
-j~~.;~ -Tire-.-, ...
·now. ~.-..;
. Call 88211460.

I'M AFRAID WE'VE"'_,__--.ll.J THERE'S FIGHTGOT A WAR ON
lNG 0111 THE
OUI!. I-lANDS,
BOIUleR RIGHT
GUZ!
NOW!

'

•

'

I

MOYIE: "l&lt;lwe lliolty' •

• 111 Tllet'al"'!i 1 . . .

Ill lilt ••

• ,.

ThP•~P- thinq6

•

move !;iow,lu,

lktaliiw of • Mel lllil

•

(J:) tit llr&amp;•rtl I.J.

'

"

.

NCAA

1•1

lhRhcky tit T•

·~

Clllile-center ·

.

1

fYh'lllllu N -

'

IT15 MOSTLY

11:11

N'OI'i.f...
JUST GOING

tua•as JOIIIIH

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

..........,
""'".,

1 Copper town
neerCanicas

ll'l!ty (al.)

.

AOOUT THEIR
&amp;J51NE5S .••

' '

'

a-y Hill 8110W

~ In..,.,.......,

1! :30 •

.
Cll Cil Tonllll!t .,_

~=-~·~:...A= ·

._,,; ·i

Lucille-

I

......

s Wave (Fr.)
4
::...

i ToogueI
what she
lashed
Yesterday's Answer
-. liNd to be" • "Cross of Gold"
1J PllbcjiiBft
orator
18 Pursue· 26 Slough
H ailabame 7 End
20 Caution
28 Devilfish
~
I Hurting
21 Took
31 Oklahoma citY:·
17 Mali'S
t Ulitil now
offense at
3% Rant
lllclmarile 12 To a22 Solitary
33 Valley

JJMlrth
&lt;~

·•·" ·., 8udtl¥ Rich. tAi 180 .11'in-1

(IIIIJIIeWhat}

. ·:·i:\:~
i~-=
~-··
:~
~o
II lkl tlary

'

·. '

e

V

.W"Id$ I

·

~ e~

U

•--

1 TWrillle

a..

(])MoviE: "Blow Out'

ME, TOO, &amp;JT

..

a·z.._I 1 _.

10:11' 1!i

.

..
. ....
·

.

.. ~
C:c=
a Lecet! 11 Delbl
I"Ov.:
'VIce ........
~...~-~·; 11ar
!~:=:!.-' :; · 1Jil~
Time
'
"She ain't

11 :Cit

·-

L-...;.--------------------- -.

I Ill

''*

''

.

bill we wllllllow llands from

I ":

8:38 • (I) CJ1 Neu lw I
81 '
10:00 Cll NCAA

H Yemen port

23Free

35 Tenninate
Z4 Militaristic 36 Palm leaf

&lt;

IIIIo for 1 womon sur-

All In tho f'MiliV.
()I ""''....
'

'

n:.

..

•
•

SEWING Machine rapoira.

Pomeroy. "992-2284 .
'

.

M t•'•Pieal
Y- n..t W..:..IM2
Thio 1how roc:opo .... pooend evonto !hot rnodtl
.,. new&amp;.
MCliVIE; 'Mr. llkellltot-

. '·

I: [10N'T KNOW HOW
VOU PUT UP WITH
THAT WUTHLESS
HUSBAND OF VOR'N,
LOWEEZY

IT AIN'T
ALL THAT
BAD··HE'S
OUTOFTH'
HOUSE~

HOW CAN VOU SAV THAT?
I SEE HIM SPRAWLED OUT
THAR IN BED EVER'
TIME I COME .OVER

,,

WHEN HE'S IN

"'

31WOI1!~

31Unlbrgettlii

tO Burdened
' wllll e8f1IO
nle:

1i:41
' PEANUTS

...•

A COOKIE, BLIT
"100 EAT IT;

nus ...

7

!AKEPOVER A
CAMP'RRE

JUST Wt-IAT I NeeDED..
A a.IOCOLATE 6lJILT
COOKIE!

.1.

1:11 .

1:-·.

)I

G F E L L 0.W

011111 t.ttor limp!$' I&amp;Uidl for another .. in this sample A to ""
IMd for l.bl t1int L'l. X for I he two o·s.- etc. Single lellers,',
opiMe. tilt leD!IIb Inti formation of the words are all -·

=

&amp;adl tle7llle &lt;ode !etten are dlll'erent. .

.1:a

A TIIIN BREAD
MN1f. OF FLOUR
AMP UWER,ANP

L 0
'

. ....

AT VALLE-Y I=OR6E, ALL
GEORGE WAS~IN6TON AND
l-liS TROOPS AAP 10 EAT
WAS ~FIRECAKE ANI' WATER"

DAR.T CltYI"!''QU()'J;'E- Here's how to work it:·
A ' X t B L B A A X ll
Ia

1:011

•'

za Additional

Cfaug'*r

•'

..,.'
-•' ,...
....

beverage

31DDuce'a .

•i

' ' I t'

••w1

S'l Perfume ·

u:a

,.

'.'

4'

34l'urJ!oleful

·.

.••'

"..

...., ...,,,

• Hl8h 11'11111. )

PAW'S OUT EveN

'·

,,.

olatate
:it Tropical fruit

%1 Half a ICOI'e

LOT

,I

a Avarice

.........
~.
' ZIJ """'8IJIE '
• ' •IIU.S.secy.

•

BARNEY

Electrical
Refrigeration

MOWREY&amp; Upholatery Rt .
prload for quick ule. -1 Bo• 124, Pt. Pl••••nt.
tiiOO. P•plos ...k 1...
304-671·41 54.

_ . advanced,

ftay -

''

'

• 1111 160 min.)

TRISTATE
UPHOLSI'ERV .SHOP
1183 Soc . A ... .- OIIUipolls.
446-7833 or 446.-1B33.

O.wakl: "Devyn Press has
t!l)me out wltJi five new
boob on blddtns and play.

' Comedy o1 marrilgo. ,,.,, .

Plumbing

Upholstery

lllld Jamee Jaeoby

'Merry Wiveo of Wiftdeor.'
RicMrd Griffiths onc1 9iiMn
Chandler are teoturad In IIIIa .

&amp; Heating

87

3NT

By·O.wakl Jaeeby

t»" IIIIWII!:

'

•

Call any day alter 1 p.m ..
304-676 -4B43.

M. H. Rapeir

PMs

once ond deception. 13 hro.)

M&amp;B Septic tank cle•ning
service, Reasonable rates,

86

Pus
Pus

2NT

tileo
to prove'
himaelf pnoll·
•• the
4077th'o
choMpiaR
•· . ' eel jOker. IRI
.
·- . (J) ()}) . . . . .,... . ....,.

Not alw~ys' And it
wi II qive us some ,.,,m, ·

ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN
STEAMER 1114-448- 2107.

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lanllr, 3D4-6757397.
•

I NT

Coulltry J ..........
(I) &lt;!I Filthy Rich Boot-

....

•

-

allleratiJe: Neltller
~baler: South

a ..

8:00 [700 Club .

stwpe. Water removal. FREE

67 PONTIAC .Firablrd,
needuo,_ wool&lt;, 3D4-671711cr 871-4230.
,

•uQ

PriJtbell:

• findo • CivU War diary
which cloimo where a for·
tune in gold is hidden.

Get your korpot In ship

2771 .

1180 Detaun 20Q ax
loaded, eliOOIIJnt condtlon,

NCAA

(80 min.)

8:30

304-895-3B02 .

1972 , PONTIAC. 304-176·

•I tel

•a:
as
tli II

leldera gropplol witll the
· 'P tt me et .,.._, ~
, . ............... ini;IIAuui
. ·• ,- ·Mtt~y ·tlllc~ Alnerican illly.

1178 -

JONES BOYS WATER
9E RVICE . Call II 1 4-367 7471 0&lt; 814-367·068t.

tH6
tJ732
88Utll

dow of the Capitol.' Elect. .

TH' MOOVI~S HII.VE IINi&gt;.DED
TH' BORDERLII.ND, \'OuR HIGHNI:SS, A.N' THEY'RE YEU.IN'
ABOUT USIN' TH' BOM81

rienced roofing. in eluding
hot tlr application, c.,en.
t•. etectrician. muon. C•ll

General Hauling

•az

Lauren foDo l»oc:t ovar hoole

RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpa-

ED"S APPUIICE REPAIR
SERVICE call Chy Furniture
304-675 -26D8 .

1M!'
tAU

In love.
(J) (B) F~lne 'In tho She-

ALLEY OOP

Fa' K TrM Trinming, etUmp

86

1871 VOI.KIWMION ta•beck, needl engine work.
1400. 304-411•1 088.

'I

motaa. Low tataa. 614-9926309.

HARTS Uood Can. Now
Haven Weat Virgin.! a . Over
20 lees expensive cara fn
atock .

77 MERCURV ,Cougor
XR·7, P8. PB, air, electric
lodla, A!III·FM St-o 8·
traok, with CB. reclining
bucket . .eta, •Pt &gt; Group
lnst. penel. m111 wheels.
88000 mlloa. 13410.0D
Cal 304-871-2111.

''

-.

eervice. Authorized Singer
wagon. 304-n3·5013or 1 .S•Ies a. Service Sharpen
304·773·6398.
1 ·sciesors . Fabric Shop,

1979~~H~o}nda
0110 ·.LX.

••lllf
.IOU

·- ..

Ge&amp;gAMn M \'II

Scotchgaurd . Free esti·

Ill

.1474

(J)IS..., -

())

GENE'S CAJPET CLEANING. Deep et•m cl•nin'g.

84

.••"..

Ia

Bllckthonio

(])
MOYI£:
Bui!M'

614- 388-96~2 .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATNG
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phono 446-388B or · 446 4477

some of them this week."
Jim: "Let's start with
'Dynamic Defense' by Mike
Lawrence. Mike was one of
my teammates when we
brought the Bermuda Bowl
back to America in 1970 and
1971. Here is the first hand in his book. Mike is East"
Oswald: "West leads the
king of spades. Mike signals
with the eight and West continues with the queen. Mike
does not play the ace since
with K-Q-J and others West
would have played the jack.
With K-Q and more than one ·
small one he would have led
his original fourth best. That
is common sense in expert
defense."
Jim: "West leads his last
spade. Mike is in with the
ace ..He returns the diamond
six because as he explaills
that Is the one lead that
can't help declarer."
Oswald: "Eventually the
defense gets t.wo heart tricks
to defeat the contract. Note
that if Mike had led a heart,
South would have lost just
one heart trick."
Jim: "Also note that South
should really have passed
two no-trump, but that bad
defense would have let him
make the game he did bid."

'"uoirw

(])MOYIE: "The Co ¥£d
'tloa'
...

_

82

.'

hra.l

~IWLE-

STUCCO PLASTERING ·
text~ 18d ceilinga comm•
cial and reaidentlal. free
aotimatu Call 614-25611B2.

W1ter Welle . Commefcial
and Oomeatic . Teat holes.
Pumpe Salee and Service.

..

ohipwrecked
Ouka
to ba·-, . .-_.. 11&gt;
to
. tho -rtofd T o...,aga, iR) (3

Home
Improvements

3D4 -675-2088 or
41180.

·

·· ... .

~Tm
"lti•....,· '-",
Firat of fiole par!o. Engll..

1:00

=

houoo call . Coli 578-239B
or 446-2464 .

·

""::. ·

,. ""';"IE:=-

WHI/TEVER YOOI fiEAGONG. I
WIG READY TO GO ALONo
!i1Tl1111EIIi, RATHER THAN
SU~T LIBBY TO A TUG-OFWM \'liTH HER IN THE

,•

· Datan• bJ the book

.

'

·~ ·'

O!*J!d .Jacoby and James Jacoby

' =t:~:·~~~

. - ~Cil~1~"1::r

715 VW camper. stove. sMk,
....,. 4. Cal 446-931111 .

RON'S Tefevieion Service.
Spacillizlng in Zan it h and
Motorole. Ouarer. and

BRIDGE

.

...

,, (]) EIPN lpwt Co ... . .
(I) AMaslow• 'weF 11111

',
·'

Campers

Marcum Roofing llo Spo&lt;iting . 30 yeanse•perience,
spedallzing In bult up roa.f.
Call B14-38B-9887.

.,

Clle Ill,......,,...,, : · .

79 Motors Homes

81

CoMt

Cll'U. o....·

~.

IAnoworatomorrow

DAISY MARKUP HOTBED
. _, What ..,It ooap might be recommended
for-DIRTY LOOKS

,

()I~··

' . ..• .

"1 :»·'

gar l!t 992-1141.1.

Ill

CIJ'Jlc TIIC Deotgh
.
® " M Fld....,_

RI(IOft

; ·.

;lumlllu: LOOSE

'

.ley.-.. . . .

Camping
Equipment

tal camper·tr:aller in good
·oo ndltion. It , 200 for qu i:k

,•

· .. ecu.,.,.-..
.

romovol. Call 675-1331-.

cY.~~· ~

TPJ'&lt;..
1
~

'

a.

"'atarlal. Call 614 - 833JB48.

~~

1m ~, ;' /0
;""--41--"''l \.. "'-....
, ', :1;'~
~if
,,._.
·t'l:
1- ~;,

~

~

1_.,, ;

·~ Y ~-

l( /

:,, .

L.:!

' .

/ , /.

ernl

ONE~

....l

~::;=::=::
78

exp. Call
63

POODLE GROOMING. Calli~
Judy Taytor 11 lt4-387- 1
7220.
'
71
AutDa for Sale
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
- KENNEl. AKC Chow
puppies, CFA Him•leyan, 12 ptueneger Ford v1n
Peni1n and Slam•• · kit· t 978 model. auto . • oir.
tons. Call 446-3844 altar otero -radio . 11.995. Call
4PM .
448-4141'
Rog. Blue HMier puppy for 1971 Bui:k Electra 2 bclr ..
ulo. Call 4&lt;16-0370 .
PS, PB. AC, · AM-FM otero
I 1,960 ar t - for cat1fe,
R~aMil1ered Britany Sp1niel
term iquipment, or mobile
fomalo. 4 yra. old 1100 . home of equal valu a. Call
Roglatorad Baaglo fomolo 7 441-,537.
yra. old 150. Call 614-2456B84.
1981 Cl»vetto 4dr .. 4 opel ..
tow miiMga, like new. Call
Airodolo Terrlar pupo. larue 448-9330 after 4:3D.
typo. AKC. Loyal, protective. obedient. Family pets. 7&amp; Dodge Cornett . price
Coli 1-814 -592-2t70 , IC!. Call 446-9224 oftor
Athene, Oh .
II PM.
AKC German Shepherd
pups 160. MCh. 304-488- 1973 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr ..
1666 or 304-178-7141.
PS, PB. air, very g~_od ·
condition . Call448-4048 .
•AKC lrloh Satter pups. 2
female only. t6D.DO 30'- For Ilia or tracla-1976 Ford
773-653B.
wagon. 1973 Chrysler

ltbrs. ranges, bunk beds

i:lz ,

Adkins Luinbor Co., Wo Mil
bem1, garage, houR patt·

arronge tho clrclad letlera to
lorm tho IUrprlu · .. suggaalod by the above cartoon .

'

exterior, plumbing, roofing.
some remodeling . 20 vrl.

36,DDQ BTU llo 66,000 BTU .
Call 304 - 773-6013 or
304-773-6396.

SWIMMING pool, 24 lt.x4

j

0 . Call 614-2,5-5121 '

.'·
•

PAINTING - interior and

Call 446-7796 .

dinotoeta$7&amp; 11o up, relrigar -

~- ~ 6

Building materiale
block. brick , sewer pipes.
window• . lintels. ate .
Claude Winters, Rki Grande,

A'ID I WOr.l'T 1!1~
AI!I~E TO AFFORD

•

M,otorcyclea

THE CI~CU5 8ECAIJ6E 1'HEY WANTED
HIM TO C10 THIS.

OF TH~ CLIMI!I MI6Hi 1!11!1
THE HERCULEAN EFFORT!&gt;
OF TWO OF McKEE'~ MEN."

1963 Fergu.on b'actoi' price

F:or ul• or trada·2 Warm
Morning bottle gee heatera.

coal a. wood heaters witfl
fan $469. set-box spring a.
Mltlrell $100, firm 5120.
sofa-loveseat 6 chai~ $199,
love seats e70, new coal e. .
wood heaters as 1ow 11

i. : l

74

v : I!IUT THI!- F.EA~ 5TO RY

Farm Equipment

HILLCREST KENNEL -

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. King

rent. good' location, '30'4- l,h(';.,._,l{!i~'/
~
7

Strout Roolty.
000B .

1

1

rug. 3x5. Coli

8 ft. pool table &amp; ICCeSIO•

FOR SALE - 3D in . electric
range-*66. 40 in. electric

:~~~r~~1

FOR rant furnflhed oaln-··
mont. 304-876-1302.

8

·

'

I? IT WOI&lt;!TH IT ~ ... T IF THECOGT Of
Al.L MY HARD WORK, LIVir,IG GOE? ANY
A"'D l 5Til.L CAIII'T' 'HI6HER, l'l.~ NeED
KI!-1!-P UP.
AN 0)(Y6Eill MMI&lt;..

...

SWORD 5WALI.OWE~
QUI'T' Hl6 JOI' WJIH

1

.e:a'

CAPTAN EASY

•

, . .,

~

truckload, f38 .00 deli verad. Ph . (6.1 4) 992 -2770
or (304) BB2-2194.

304-B96-

APARTMENTS. mobile!
c'a:n:1"!•i.!!_E
homes, l'louies. Pt. Pleasant 1207.
and Gellipolia. 6t4-446 - - : - - - - - - - - 822t.

~i~-::".~.: 9.:~.-ii:~~~;~~~~::

~

• ••

1 976 4 whool dr, Cherokee,
11 .ODD. Cal ~8-2592 .

·

"

·

1800. coli 992 211 8 ."

73 . Vans &amp; 4 W.o.

992-5633 after 6:0D P.M .

51 Hou1ehold Goods

''l

OPTIONAL 2 or 3 badroomr

1

Firewood, split. $30 .00 •

1-~ijiiii~ii

Modern 3 ' bdr . rinch,
garage, c'arpet~ Rodney ·
area. Depoeit &amp; reftrenc81
required . *285 per mo .

I ~•

,

0

11.160.00 flrln. 304· 6751 1 41 anytime .

0

,_
-~~---:"-.:o_·- ---~
~

largo truck load . Call
614-241-8804.

Firewood. $30. pickup load,
aplit S. delivered . Call

Apartments . 30'4'' -e''l,li ·
Norge .. , ~
6548 .
I ·f·io .-i 1 col~•~\\Y~•a'•.• -~ooa

676-1302.

r

•

GE

r:iREARMS
RANBE
1·· 1

topper and boat rac.k .
.Exc·ellent condft ion,

0

1

cylinder . 4 speed, low
mlleegt. good condition .

~~=======:~~~~~~-~"'-;·~'"'~·-~··;-•;.;·~

Firewood delivered •eo. a
cord. Coal delivered *46 .
ton. Call Tom Hoskins

Back hoe endloader digs 8
ft., ·large bed pick up
haulable, operat~ yourself.

.b~di_~om,

finished garage. 304-6754444 after 6 p.m.

1090.

. Farm for Rant. 6 room "'ouse
llo bath. 614-992-69De .

·

2 room alii ciency ~p'i\ OUR BOARDING HoUSE
wllh MajOr Hoople
t -304-8B2-2666 or 1-614·
FOR SALE - 9 Ig. building
Iota In Tuppers ptains. ,Good . 992-7206 .
ii:!!A.U1.F _T~fl:' ~r'f
IN' ~1~
investments. Will sell one or
·
,_,
all. Land comract conai· UNFURNISHED apartment
dered. Write P.O. Box 1071, for rent, 1
Athens, Ohio. 46701 .
11Bo .oo ca11 ·;)."r;~:·;~i
Supply , 8 - 8 . -~"•
·
'·''"!:'' ~~}~
"""1"'
22t8.
67e-6753
.
.
.;.,
•
;:.;.,._
;:.';;..;;
,_ , .
II£
1~
..
~ rr
wu ._..
~,.._o•H£R!
1~
Unfumiohad upstairs apt for
j~\l-1.1" 1_.);
_.
I\.._ .=i&lt;l~:&gt; i
"
. . I&lt;'

PARK Drive. Oneltory with

SiX room house, will aell on
land c:ont r11ct, 304·676·

43 Farms for Rent

o -

delivorad. 6t4-B43-36D3 .

2 bedrooms in M iddlaport.
Furnished, St50 . per month
614-992-6510 .

-~

#

Firewood, •36. truck load.
$66 . a cord . Split and

0

plus depo1it and ref8f'ences.
Pay own utilities . Cell

l_

j,

I"&lt;""""1

SlloW 3B spec . model t 0.
SlloW 38 aepc. modal 36., 76 each. Rom. 22-26D
model788 with 1 2X Woavor
acopa-f200. F.t:E . 25 auto
llOO. Call614-246-5066 . .

Adults only or family with
48
Equipment
one child. No peto. D e:ip~o~si t .
for Rent
required . Located 2 ·
------~---out on SR . t43 . 61
3647 .

6t4-992-5668 .

...._

'-

""'

..

1 87D Ford ton truck . 8

1972 DATS.UN lntck whh-

:-"'. .

I
)

trailer. price 1 2,00 . t 97 4 1"""s"""'6:-B:-u-:i,.-ld"'i_n_g_S7"'u-p-p.,.li:-e-s
Dodge price 460. Coli l - - - - - - - - 6t4-3B7-7238.

992-7479 .

ApProximately 6 mi .. s from
Pomeroy or Middleport .

...,.,""

Berreta model 960 pietol S_mith llo Woos on 1 .DDO
22SR , liat price 8189 .95, auto. shotgun, 20 geuge. 28
sale price 8160 . Spring in. vent rib modified barrell.
Valley Trading Co., Spring List' price •419.9&amp;. 1111
price 8321 .4&amp; . Spring
Valley Plaza. 446-8025.
Valley Trading Co., Spring
7 glo11 display cuts. Call Valley Piau, 441-8028.
446 -0002.

Furnished Rooms

46 Space for Rent

3 bedroom Mobile Home .

, •
-

eMSA~~
(M'~NI&gt;
o...u ANCe~. ·

14' Bass boat 20 HP moto;,

2home.
bd .r'oom fUrnished mobile 1
---------We pay utilities .

HOME LOANS t2% fixed
rate . leader Mortgage,
1-614-592-3061 '

opaciol 2 in. barrel!, lilt prtco
8190, ..,, pricel138.76 .
Spring Valley Trodinp Co..
Spring Volley Plaza. 4468026.

992-67JB .

42 Mobile Homes
for- Rent

124

1J
1/

~

riea, good co ., $200. Call
Chartered Arms revolver 38 448-1168.

Furnished apartment on
ground floor . Utilities anc'
cable paid . Cooking facili ·
ties and free parking. Cal

information call toll·free

6t4-992-3324.

· ,

1---------

304-8B2-2666.

Pomeroy . Large lots. Call

22 Money to Loan

ll 'i

54 Misc. Merchandise

2 bedroom furnished . apanment . Call 992-5434 or

4229 .

mbblle komee.·Furnished.
Brown ' s Trailer Perk. Rt.
124, Minersville. Oh .

//

I"

requi'ed . Phone 446-1788 .

84,996.00. Over 300 ahops
t -800·336-6014 .

4,

[-!:'!'~.;

ln Middleport-2 bd.room
semi-furnished Apt. $160 .
plus utilitiea. and deposit

KOUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 , North of

coast to coast . For more Good used 2 bedroom

'

1----------

2749 .

2 bdr . unf.urniahed mobile
hom&amp; on Rt. 35. Call 446·

Creek. Coll614-246-9263 .

•

-.,.:: :
~~

Now coal burning furnonco
l»ata 2500 oqtt. Will sell for
refrig . coppertone, Elcon 'h price. C1ll 814- 268 ·
SHiO, refrig. apt. aize 3 yrs. 1218.
old 8160. lau~ger 146,
mobl ·le hon:-e ·bed *36. l~o~
post for tale. For
S~agga Apphancea, Upper l!~~t-~!,r:informuion call
River Rd, Gollipolio, Call •v
. ,146.
4411-7398.
• .

DI!PoOit 1100. Call 614992-22B8.

614-266-9302 .

246-9t43 or 446-D404.

'

screen $160 aa. 6 pc . *10 PU loe , round wood,

Sleeping room $126. utili ·
1980 Nashua with 2 expan· THREE bedroom house for ties pd. single male. share
dos, Sell on land contract or rent. nice location, 304· bath. 919 2nd Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 44.6·441 6 after
take over payments. ~~QO l-6_7_6_-t_0_9_0;_
_. _ :...
• _ ___:.··~­ 7PM
.
down. Muat be moved. Call
1976 Windsor partially
furnished , totalelec .•
centfal air. fully skirted.
washer 8o dryer. Coli 614 -

·
~
I COOI.bN'T
M#t, 'f Wfl-\oOT
e -~
M.Y ~

I/

'! !)

bedroom aulto Ute. Ko,..,., auto wHiter llko now
8160. Maytog auto waol»r
195. electri: ranga 40" 195,
bad complete 146, Phil co

House 6 rma. &amp; bath. · Apt. for rent. Half dOuble-2
located 110 4th AVe . . bd .room Apt. Aduhs pre·
GaUi polis .' Good garden tarred . No pats. 614-992-

. opace. $175 mo.. $66 dep .
Call 446-3870 .·

!}

,.

For solo..- trade·1818 Ford
PU '14 ton. 304-773-101 3or
304-773-1388.

1----------

TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL446-7572.

MOBILE HOMES Compare

1 I

;•

some ruet. machanclally
A-1_
. Calll14·~88-1080.
_
_ _;____ lc_

1'0 il&gt;eNDfHe WHol-e 'tl;t{ AlONe
Wl-li 1.-e (I~ ' ,,...
w~. CARJ.."t.e.
,
.,
{)
~~ • .,_:

~.

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

Call 446-2706 .

meet ind ividua l needs . HOMES . USED · CARS,
Contact Neal Ina . Agancy.
ogant. Phane38B-8690.

~ t""

framoa 120.- 128, • 130,
king froimo
Good
tre11oo.
IH .160.
6 . 131i,
bod
HONDA 8D modol CR-126,
"lection of bedroom a~ites,
ox. cond. 1600. 304-676 2776 batwoon 4-9 p.m .
c.. or chostw, rodoera, metal I"" Misc. Merchandise
69 For Sale or Trade
cobl nell, owtvol rock oro.
I u ..
Usad Fum~ure -· bookcaao,
rangu, choirs. and tabloo,
·-·
1875 Buick Eloc.tra 2 bclr ..
woshoro. dryers, refrig- - I.F1;,0;0rwna,C,"-"'=.t.e lump coal •
PS, PB. AC. AM -FM otero 77
Auto Repair
tors and TV's. 3 miloo out"
Zinn Coal Co., 11 9&amp;0 or trade for cottla, I - - - - - - - : - - - 4411
1408
Bullville Rd. Open 9om to Inc. Call
·
•
llti.•-;;.r;,;-;;;;·•quipment. or mobile 16pm. Mon . thru Fri. , 9am to 1 - - - - - - - - - of equal value Call
Byerly ond Folta Automatic
6pm, Sat.
Firewood apll1,scut to ~~~~~~----·-- Tranamillion Repair. NOW
448 -0322
length, you pick up . Wo I·
deliver. We accept HEAP
OPEN. Corner of Kemper
-•· Call 614-256-6246.
Holow • Kerr Bethel Rd.
Cal 446-6839 .
2 color TV cosolo. 24' Slabacut-upcll15fulllen1J1h

·2 bdr. partially furnlehed
n8wly remodeled. gas heat,
4 bdr. ho.use . Mus,t have .rlv8rfront •vi8YI, water p•id.
references . Close to toWn . $176 ri'lo·. Call 446·3919.

Sale

~~~~---~Let

.....,
...

77 Chevy 4 - WD 8 ft . bod
36D angina, 4 opd . one
owner. 70,00D actual mMoo,

v,-.•

.,,,.,.. ,.., ......., .,,_ c.n

1 I'IV71 ""-' """"";,""'

up to 1378. Baby me-

446-3437.
----------

Houses for Rent

~~

Gas ar efectricran•a, t32&amp;

no pete, no ckildren. Cell

1~'7110 WORO QAIII[

••

Sofa. choir. rocker,
man, 3 Ulblos. 1.-tra hoovy
by Frontier), 1611. Iota,
chair and loveooot, 12711.
SofM.and chalruri•d from
1288. tO 1888. ftblos. 141
and up .. 11111: Hid!Hboda.l440 .. onil up to
1525 .• Reel inert. 1'178. to
I 360 .. Lamps from 12B._to
175. 6 pc. dinottoa frOm
t9s .• to 1436. 7 pc .• 11 a9.
and up. Wood tttblo wk_hsla
chairs 8421. to 1.748 . Dook
e110 up to 1228. Hutohoa.
1'8 50 . and ilp. maploorplno
finish. Bunk bed complete
with mattreiiM, 1250. and
up to 1395. Baby bode.
1110 . Mattrooaoa or box
springs, full or twin, 168..
firm, 168. and t78 . QuHn
sots. 11911 . 4 dr. cheotw,
142. 6 dr. choato, 184. Bad
frames. t2D .and 128., 10
gun • Gun cobln.U, 1350..
dinetiocholral20. end 125.

1'2-; bd'r. Rog.,cy '""· Apon·
1
UOO ,;.,. mo . or if
, .• -•1nnnn or 1e11
RNI

!

12

G~dt K,.1_T._'N_·_c_A_R_L_Y.;.~~E-'M_ _ _ _ _ _ _I;&gt;...:Y...,L_a_rry:._w_rlg:..h.,tl -:7::2~-:T::-N-c-:kac--f::-D-r-=s,:..a-:-18-

LA YNE"S FU.RNITU RE

AVON Good t Jrr i tories
ava ilable . Millstone It Mud
Run Roads , Henderaon ,
Beachhill , Pliny, Hurricane
Creek . Call Mill Saunders.
304 -576 - 23t8 or collect.
Mn . Stanley t · 767 -6900
after 5 p.m ..

laT Q

.·""'...

•

11

21

Monday , January 31, 1983

-

....., ~ti'nei-Page-9

31, 1983

....

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�Page-1 0 - The Daily Sentinel

Monday, January 31 , .1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

SUPPLEMENT TO: THE POMEROY SENTINEL

Flat tire, cinderblocks sign~l
beginning of truckers' strike
Is wrong, wlththeeconomytnasba(l
a shape as.it Is."

. 8y1be ~laied Preas

·----~· .i

.A gunshot flattened one rig's tire
and clnderblocks were dropped
from an overpass as a strike called

--

by Independent truckers began

Independent truckers, who own
and operate their own rigs, haul
mno;t of America's fresh food and
much ·of Its household goods and
steel, althougb they represent fewer
than 15 percent of the nation's
truckers.They are angry about
. recently approved boosts In federal
fuel taxes and truck fees. The fees
take effect In July 1985 and the fuel
taxes go Into effect In Aprll of this
year.
No nationwide agreement was
reached on a strike deadline. David
· Kolman, a spokesman for the
Independent Truckers Association
In Los Angeles, said the walkout
startedatl2;0la.m. ESTtnday.But
other truckers, notably those In Ohio
and Massachusetts, said their
deadline Is 12: 01 a.m. EST Tuesday.
Slower than usual business was
reported at truck stops In Indiana,
New Jersey, South Carolina, Pen·
· nsylvania, TI!Inols, Oklahoma, Con·
nectlcut aJK1 one stop In Colorado.
But most truck stops In Washington
state and state pollee In Texas
reported business, usually slow
after a weekend, was noi'mal early
today.
The strtke is opposed by most of
the trucking Industry, Including the
American Trucking Associations
and the Teamsters union.
"We have our reasons for not
str[kJng at this point - not that
we're happy with the situation,"
said Sills, who said lobbying with.
Congress would have more effect.
The strikers' key demand is
repeal of the highway-use taxes,
which were part of legislation that

.

lncreilsed the gasqllne tax trorn 4
cents to9cents per gallon star:lingm;
Aprll. Under that bill, the user fees ·
Increase from $240 a year to$1,!rn a
year by 19el.
The truckers also want a lid on :
state highway taxes and an end to :
the 55 mph speed Umit. .

~EBRuAR¥14

today. But many haulers kept on
trucking even though they were
unhappy with proposed higher fuel
taxes and user fees.
It was not clear how many o1 the
nation's 100,1XXl lndepepctents actually supported the shutdown called
by the Independent Truckers.Assoctation but opposed . by other
. trucking groups.
.
.
However, truck stops across the
eastern half of. the country said tlieir
business was off early today. Some
truckers were driving cautiously
WASHINGTON (AP) -The 1984 •
and said they feared reprisals,
budget President Reagan sent to ;
although the only conflnned reports
GETI'ING READY TO SHUT DOWN - IDde- said thai after be lranllported a load ol prndooe to
Congress Includes $572 m!Won for •
of violence came from Maryland
pendent truck driver Ray Robinson of Columbus, SeaUle he would drive south and "shut down" as part
continued construction at the gas :
and Pennsylvania.
Ohio, etches the message "going home" on his trailer o1 the nationwide strike by lndependeut truck drivers.
centrifuge uranium enrichment •
"The front tire of a tractor-trailer
a1 a true)&lt; stop In Paulsboro, N.J. Sunday. Robiii!IOn (AP Laserph&lt;Mo l. .
plant being built at Piketon, Ohio. :
was shot out, flattened," said
Thatisdownsllgh!lyfromthe$588 · ·
Maryland state pollee Sgt. James
m!Won
budgeted for the plarit this •
Weather forecast
' Lough, who also reported the
year, aides to Rep. Bob McEwen, · 1
clnderblock throwing today. Noone
Clouding over tonight. Low
R·Ohlo, of Hillsboro reported today. ·
was Injured In either lncldimt on
· The Department of Energy· and :
around 30. Winds Ught and vartable.
U.S. 40 near Cumberland, he said.
of the late Hart D. and Eva Tuesday, mostly cloudy with a 50 .
Ohio congressmen, who have been
Robert E. Nesbit
State pollee 1n Pennsylvania
Grandstaff Lyons. Besides her percent chance of rain. High In the
resisting efforts by some adrnlnls·
reported five rock-throwing lncl·
parents,
she
was
preceded
In
death
!ration officials to slow construction
Robert E. Nesbit, 67, Pen·
rnld40s.
dents today, but no Injuries.
by
her
husband,
Maurice
Thomson:
at the $7 bllllon plant, had asked for
Extended Ohio Forecast
nsauken , N.J., died Friday at
Meanwhile, Mike Parkhurst,
a
brother,
Seth
Lyons,
and
a
half
Wednesday through Friday:
$613 million this year.
Cherry Hill Hospital, Cherry HW,
president of the Independent
stster, Sylvia Badgley.
When It is completed In 1994, the
Snow or Ourries Wednesd!jy_, . " Truckers Association, predicted
N.J.
Mrs. Thomson was a member of Chance of flurries north Thursday.
gas centrifuge plarit is expected to •
Born Oct. 28, 1915, Philadelphia,
"every truck on the highway is
produce nuclear fuel at a sharply .
Pa., he was thesonof the lateRobert the Hillcrest Baptist Church, C&lt;r Fair on Friday. Hlgm In the :.~s:
going to come to a screeching halt."
lumbus, and Harrisonville Chapter Lowslii-25.
reduced
cost.
.
and E lizabeth McBride Nesbit.
He claimed that 75,1XXl of the
McEwen
says
that
with
the
more
•
Surviving are his wife, Ruth M. 255, Onler of Eastern Star.
nation's 100,1XX) Independent drivers
expensive gaseous diffusion pro- :
Nesbit, Pennsauken and one sister.
would take part In the shutdown. ·
are
two
sons
and
Surviving
cess now !Jelng used, this country '·
Sara Krider, Audubon, N.J .
But James Sills of Akron, national
daughters-In-law,
Robert
M.
and
cannot hope to maintain its position .
Funeral services will be held on
chairrna11 of the Councn of Indeas an International supplier of '
Wednesday, 10 a.m. at the Fogle- .Cindy Thomson, Sliver Lake, .0 .,
pendent Truckers, said a shutdown
reactor fuel.
·
'
song Funeral Home with Rev. and Douglas E. and Carl Thomson,
"is not the wisest thing. The timing
Bennie Stevens officiating. Burial Tucson, Ariz.; a sister, Bernice
will be at the Henry Cemetery. Wlnn, Bradbury Road, Middleport;
four gTandchlldren, Gregory, SteClifton.
Meigs County's emergency units
Friends may call the funeral phen, Jeff and Amy Thomson; a were kept on the move answering
sister-In-law, Ollie Lyons, Farm·
hOme on Tuesday. 6·9 p.m .
numerous calls over the weekend.
ville, Va.; a nephew, Darryl Lyons,
Sunday runs Included: 12:04 . A reminder was issued today that Blue Spruce, Manchu Cherry and must be prepaid and must be In by :
Virginia Beach, Va., and several
a.m., Pomeroy Unit, Rick Icen· tree packets and ground cover
March 3.
·
white birch.
.
great nieces and great nephews.
Hazel V. Thomson
bower from sheriff's office to plants may be ordered from the
These
seedlings
are
available
In
Funeral services will be an·
Veterans Memotial Hospital; 2: l8
tndlyldual variety packets or In the . - - - - - - - - - - - nounced
later by the Rawlings· a.m., Pomeroy Urilt, Maxine Fer- Meigs Soli and Water Conservation
Hazel V. Lyons Thomson, 76,
Bradbury Road, Middleport, died Coats-Blower Funeral Home In guson, Liberty Lane, to Veterans District ladies Auxi!iary until wildUfe and song bird packets.
In ground cover plants there are
The ~v. Mark Memorial; 12:03 p.m., Middleport March 3.
'Sunday at the Akron General Middleport.
crown
vetch, myrtle, English ivy,
The
selection
o1
plants
or
see·
McClung will officiate at the
Medical Center.
Fire Department, false alarm call dUngs does mt Include any plants pachysandra and winter creeper
Mrs. Thomson was born March services and burial will be In to the Impedal Electric Co.; 1 p.m.,
which are likely to spread or be- available in 50 crown lots.
Riverview Cemetery.
16, 1900 at Leon, W. Va., a daughter
Middleport Unit, Mildred Moore come a nuisance. Each shOuld enfrom Vlllage Manor to Holzer
For Information on prices and
courage wildlife, control erosion or
Medical Center; Racine, at 2:3t
types
of trees In the varnus
beautify your area.
p.m., Alvin Taylor from near Letart
A variety o1 seedlings available packets, just stop by the office at
to
Veterans
Memorial;
2:46
p.m.,
Gives
building
history
include
white pine, red pine, Aus- 221 West Second Street In Pom~y ,
Vi.l.terans Memorial
Tuppers Plains for John Houck, trllln pine, Scotch pine, black wal· second floor of the.Farrner's Bank
Tuppers Plains, treated but no
Leona Kohl, former Middleport
nut, Norway spruce, Canadian building or phone 992~7 between
Saturday Admisslons..£dward
transportation;
2:50
p.m.,
Pomeroy
business
woman,
notep
with
Inter·
hemlock, black locust, Colorado 7: 15 a.m. and 5 p.m. All orders
Owens, Middleport; cliarles KapDatsy
Shuler
from Locust St.
Unit,
est
a
story
with
pictures
of
the
tetna. Pomeroy; Beulah Kaptelna,
Pomeroy; Clarence McDaniel, planned renovation of the Middleto Veterans
5: 26 from
p.m. r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;:;::;;:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;
Rutland
Unit,Memorial;
Myrtle Murphy
port business district In Sunday's
Middleport.
Danville to Veterans Memorial;
Saturday Dlscharges .. James edition of the Times-Sentinel.
Pomeroy, 5:41p.m., John Houch,
Kohl pointed out that the present
Patterson, MarthaHowell,Gwinnle
Butternut ave .. to HOlzer Medical
Baker , Furniture building was
White, Clarence McDaniel, Jr.
Center;
7: l8 p.m., rutland Fire
Sunday Adm!ss!ons .. Willlam originally the Y .M.C.A. It was
Department, to Shot Gun Hollow
Searls, Middleport; Oara Gilkey, purchased from the Y.M.C.A., by
Road where Murphy OU Co. tanks
the
Hysell
Furniture
Store
and
Mrs.
Middleport; Albert Shoemaker,
had caught fire , department on
Kohl bought the bulldlng from
Cheshire; Alban Taylor. Racine;
scene
22 minutes.
Edith Spencer, Pomeroy; Ben· Hysell's and operated Becky'sShop
Saturday
runs were: 11 a.m.,
. In the location for a number of years
jamln F ields, Hartford.
Middleport
Unit
to an auto accident
Su nd ay Discha rges--E ugene before selling to Baker Furniture In
behind
Headquarters,
Cecil and
Baker was to Empire
Reeves, Homer Graham, Luvenia 1967.
Exle
Kirk
taken
to
Veterans
Furniture several months ago.
Hayman.
Memorial; 11:45 a.m., Racine
8 Ohms
Squad to Bashan for George Scott,
String beginners guitar - AM/FM/Stereo Radio
Rating: 6 Watts
taken
to
Holzer
Medical
Center;
Trustees to meet
-Hardboard case -S-Track Stere
Boosters plan seseion
mulated woodgrain
11: 51 a.m., Middleport Unit to Dr.
included
finish
Player /Recorder
James Conde's office for Patrtcla
The Sutton Township Trustees
Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet
-Steel-reinforced
neck
- Recording ·Lavel Meters
Spencer, taken to Holzer Medical
135.95
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the high will meet Tuesday, Feb. I , atBp.m.
REG.
Center;
1:43
p.m.,
Pomeroy
Unit
to
-Matching Speakers
REG. '64.95
school. Issues of interest wW be. at the Syracuse Ml!nlclpal Building.
Condor St. for Charles and Beulah
REG. '~24.95
discussed.
Katpelna, taken to Veterans Mem·
SALE
orial; 2:16p.m. Middleport Unit to
SALE
SALE
14 weekend deaths
Lazy Day Cafe for Sara McCarty,
To e nd marriages
taken to Veterans Memorial; Mid·
COLUMBUS (AP) - Fourleen ·dleport, 3: 01 p.m. to North Second
A suit for divorce and an action for persons, most of them young
Ave. for Angie Julian, taken to
dissolution of marriage were !lied In people, died In Ohio traffic accidents
Veterans Memorial; 5: 52 p.m.,
Meigs County Common Pleas over the weekend, the Highway
•
Middleport, toapartnemtnonNorth .
Patrol
said.
Ten
of
the
victims
were
Courl.
Second for Oarence McDaniel, Jr.,
Dlxie Sovel, Tuppers Plains, !lied age 25 and younger. Six were
taken to Veterans Memorial; Mid·
a suit for divorce against Garth teen-agers.
dleport, 11; 12 p.m. to Holson for
The weekend toll Included two
Sovel. Tuppers Plains.
Albert Shoemaker, taken to VeteFiling for dissolution of marriage double-fatallty accidents.
rans Memorial, and Middleport at ·
-6-String Banjo
-Ebony finish
were Sherman D. White, Rt. 2,
· The patrol counts traffic deaths
11: 22 p.m. to Fisher St. fpr Clara
PO'.ver 1\Aeter
-Heavy
duty case
Pomeroy, and Diana L. White, from 6 p.'m . Friday unW midnight
Gilkey, taken to Veterans
~Dual pickup
-LED Tuning
Sunday.
Rutland.
Memortal.
-Hardboard
case
-Headphone Jack

. -------1

Area deaths

Emergency
.squads busy
overweeknd

· .

.Piketon plant
funds included·
..
in new budget ~ ·

lood fllriUJh Fehr•II'J lth, 1111whlle t~•••tllill l11,t• .-.mr rl&amp;llt•

Ill n111111lhl1 for IJIIIII'I!IIIItll 1rrt1'1. SorrJ li lulll'l.

ARMOUR
BEEF S,lEW

VALENTINE CARDS
AND POPS
1&amp;CITE CUDS Ill CUDITREITS

0..

MO..

$129

S1988PAIR

S4g&amp;B

Vega

Akai

REG.

SALE

·WASHER

$375 00 ~usTax
• DRYER

$27995
E61811
E20741

Kenmore Permanent
Press Large-Capacity
Laundry Pair.
•Handles Big Loads

Catalog Merchants
ISearsI Authorized
Greg &amp; Patty Gibbs
108 W. MAIN ST., POMBOY, OH.

PHONE:
(Ohio) 992-2178

HOURS:

Mon.-T.,...·Wed ..Jri. 9:30 to 5
THull. 9:30 to 12

(W. Va.) 773-9577 . Sat; 9:30 to 2

'

.

.REG. 1400.00

1289.()11

S25goo

Memorex
TAPE &amp;RECORD
CARE SUPPLIES
Track aod Catsette
head cleaners
cleaning fluid
care kits

200/0 Off
SALE ENDS
SAtURDAY
FEB. 5th

SALE

S24goo

Memorex ·

S-TRACK
TAPE SPECIAL
'

90-Minute 8-Track
blank tapee 180 minutes total recording

time.

97~
;

I~MOUR

5'/o 0..

ARMOUR
CORN BEEF
'
HASH

'

.

·BAMA
.GRAPE JELLY .

I

PRINCE
ELBOW MACARONI

89~

$695

10..

$3
. 99

,.o..

3/97e

CHECKM;;;N'I

RIG. l4.5

• Aneroid meter without atop
. pin at z,ro.
• Built-In Inflation sy,tem:
• Screw valve and bulb.

t
• Two~w~ny.

$ .1 499
'.

'

'

.PURINA DIQ CHOW :

lATH

. '

NI~ION'IIIIG.

t•9·"

NILSON'S UG. 119."

V~AL~EN&amp;1TEINt:EE CARDS

S12goo

·193

ALBUM AND
TAPE SALE

'

'

.

"l '-f ~ ~

L

r

MIOW

'·

,,

... ,

~~(t

'1 (. .

.~

·~

~i~

!!1

~6·'.. 9 :
~··

'

!!1
~

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REG. '159.95

~~~
.~~:
fl

~/7, "
No.1520 ~

FEATURES

ELECTRIC
·GUITAR

25 Count
NELSON'S REG, 11.19

~
••

J

' .,

'f

MIX ,

30 Ct .

!J6 Ct .
38 Ct.
4:2 Ct.

STOCK UP ON YOUR
FAVORitE MUSICII .

QUANTITIES
ARE
UMITED

9

PRESSURE KITS

$22495

Sp8clal sale priCes on our
entire stock · of prerecorded albums, 8track and cassette tapes.

~

$ANKA

fi

.IESTLE
CHOCOUTE CHIP
Ill

8-T/STEREO
RECEIVER

SALE

fr,!

llstANT

15

2189~

~

69~ ~

39~

$9.50 VA.LUE
SPECAL

· 150...

·.

Encore

BANJO

STEREO
RECEIVER

11-1/.0L

$117

VIEINI SAUSAGE

Craig

GUITAR

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Each
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