<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13681" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13681?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-14T13:48:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44655">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8ea62ca99f756e793336291fcefd449b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a0f66c7269412a9be8e2e0eaaa65e178</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42820">
                  <text>~I

Inside today...
Southern ninth in
.Class A .cage ratings
.••Page 4
.
'

'

Area .. ................ ................... ............. ....................Page 10
..... .................................................................
.
p ace 7-8

('!·

Cornlcluoo ~ oooooo o ooooo o oouoo o ooo oo oo oo o ooou . . . . o ooooouoouooo o o;.u oa •••• • P a g e 9
~ ................ ......... :...... :•.• ~ ............ .......... .... ...... Page 2,
Soelety., ..,,,,,,.,, .•,,. ~••••n• •• ••• •• •o•~ ··• •. ••• •• •• • •• • • • ••uo oo tto••••• • • • t Pap 6
Spcwta, ••••• .-.............. .............................. ~ •• ••• •••••••• ••••.•••• •• Page 4

•

'

.
'
'•'

.

Beat of the Bend..•Page 6

•

at y

e

'

.

'

enttne
1 S.Ctian, 10 Pag•s
20 c.n 11
A Muhim.d ia Inc. Newlpaper

.
'
Pomeroy-ft\iddleport, Ohio,. Tuesday, February 1,1983

,voU1,Ne.192
:·~·ltJhtod 1913

. lV iolence spreads
1in truckers' strike
..
J

By The A-ooJP!ec! Press
Six' slx&gt;otlngs and dw.ens more
;Incidents of violence erupted acrass
~hio today as Independent truckers
-shut down their rigs to protest tax
;Increases.
.
: There were no reports of tnjurtes,
~the State Hlghway Patrol said. But
non-strlldng truckers voice
' fear for their safety It they stayed on
:the road.
:. "We were aware there was an
; Independent truckers' strike, but
; we're driving a company rig. These

¥

j

"ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO 1'HE DALY SENnNEL"
SECTIONA·PAGEA12

;many

BEN FRANKLIN®

,...

·'

c.........,

18-oz. size. Buy now
and savel

,)

I

Lfltlc

j

'

I

lrt.li ljac .... .
DIDdDI'alil

1

...

'

Green bath-size
bars.

......
=···

17

101

·llioTw......

eur

'

. ''
~

e..oz.

!

99!

....,.

, NyQull Cold
lleclclne

I

'

Blc 'Roller pen FReE
with each purch-1

l&amp;9c

I

or 2-oz'.

nlghtcrNm.

•

Prlc.

I

4-oz. loCion

91

OurLow1 59
....

1

.L••••
... "·
•
. a••
....

Olapoaablel Stock
up now and save!

.93

I

01.,0..,

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

IIIM~~~~ioor

Cumetlc

6-oz. size with dispensercup.

300-cou nt regular
size or 100 triple
size puffs.

92

88

2~

&amp;.sac

guys are playing tor keeps. I'm
scared," said Larry Tomlin, 24, of
Worthington, a driver tor the Sugar ·
Food Corp. of Columbus whose
truck was vandalized In downtown
Cleveland.
State troopers said shots were
fired at two trucks on · the Ohlo
Turnpike _n ear Toledo about 5:00
a.m. today. A Michigan truckerwas
!Ired upon In Wyandot County about
12: :Jl a.m. and a shotgun blast
struck a truck Dear Minerva about
10::Jlp.m. Monday, troopers salt!. •

99!
TwlnPMk
Ra1111111k
Lotion
Pink formula lotion
for skin as soft as a
rose petal! 8-oz. botties.
90

1~

Too much ozone in Akron
ihe

WASHINGTON - Akron has the highest az.one level in
nation,
the federal · Envlronniental Protection Agmcy says, but Ohio
officials blame the EPA's findings on faulty recording equipment.
Because of that high ozone reading, Portage and SUmmit cowitles
are among ntne Ohio counties or parts of counties the federal EPA
says face possible loss of fEderal funds for falling to meet clean air
standards.
Ohio EPA spokesman Charles M. Taylor said Monday that ~hlle. ·
the Akron·area monitor, on Ravema Road In Portage Crunty, was
showing high ozone levels last SIII1'UT1el", monitors In surrounding
.•11011beastern Ohio countle&amp; ShoWed much lower levels:
.,
Ohio ol!lclals Bald they were suspicious becaUlle high reac!lngs
were recorded at the Portagestatlonaltfrswxlawn. Omnelscaused
by Sunlight reacting to contaminants In the air, Taylor said.

Housing industry doing well
. COLUMBUS - The housing lndustcy Is having the best winter
weather for consiructlon work In decades and some buDders are
working overtlnll'. Others are counting on a state housing program
and lower Interest rates to boost business.
In Dayton, Miami Valley home builders report they are enjoying
one of their busiest winters In recent years.
"Generally, there Is a feeling that we are a hell of a lot better ott
than we were a year ago In the housing market," says WIUam
Brower, president of the Universal ManutacturtngCorp. in Camden.
"We've been working tull-tllt, six days a week,10 hours a day. Our
total employment !S 55 people. A year ago In January, It was 35," he
said.
I
·
"It has been a long time slrice we worked overtime In Januarymaybe eight to 10 years," said Brower.
·

,.

;·"IT 1$ Bon Fra~kRn'a policy to halt• 811ltomlln-!!tock d ...... tiM ..r.
1oc1 ...,_.
•
t., printed •pproxtmetely 90 davs prior· to the lale date ~-o
uld b
per 1 ·
thll eli 1::
.
.
• "'""' co
• •n un or. .een d411ay or In .cases non ·sh•pment of
item. We regret any inconvenience end will to th b 1 t
i:. ~ablelubstitute. We do reserve the f'ight to limit the quantity Oil ' it • :c.o o... • Nty;, otfw •
i_. elfoe1 only during the oale period while q....,litiealut,•
.
..,_ ema
opodal pric;eo _ , .

•n

b.

••r ..

1

.Sale Now In Progress

BEN FRANKLII)I
•,

.........,Rail's •
·-

•

Middl~port, Ohio

'"

I

•

'

Council will rehire·officers

·

SAVE!

CHECK.THESE PAGES.
FOR BARGAINS IN
EVERY DEPARTMENT

CINCINNATI - Tile city will rehire all23 pollee officers cut from ·
the force rather than deckle whether layoffs should be b&lt;ised on
senortty or sex al)d race, a councilman says.
U.S Dtstrtct Judge Carl Rubin ruled Monday that the city cannot
dismiss seven white female pollee o!flcers and seven black officers
lilcluded In the group of 23 dlsmJssed on the basts of senor-lty.
Rubin said the layoffs would make minorities "bear a
disproportionate shared the layoffs or demotions."
· "It's really been decided that we'll put . everybody back,"
Councilman CharleS Luken said. He said five of nine council
members pledged to vote to rehire all the fired officers.

.

.

Carter aide ·says Glenn front-runner
OOWLING GREEN - Former President Jimmy Carter's top
political adviser says the next Democratic candidate for president
should have a middle-of-the-road platfonn and that Sen. John Glenn
Is popular In the §Otlth.
·
· .
Former White House chief of staff Harnllton Jordan said Monday
at Bowling Green State University that Glenn and former VIce
President Walter Mondale are front-runners for the Democratic .
nomination for president.

State forecast
Cloudy tonight with a 60 peJ cent chance of rain. ~ 4045. Wind~ ·
easterly 10-~ mph. Ninety peJLelt chanceofi'aln WedllElsday. High ·

45-00.

Extended forecast
FM W bl1io F~- '111ursday through Saturday: Chance
d snowThunday .. Fl$' on Frtday and Saturday. Hflhsrno8tly'in the
lis. Lows generally In the :Ill '111unrday and Friday lftOI'IIIn&amp;s and
12-00 Saturday.
.
.
.
.
.
I

'

'

Ohio lottery winners
· &lt;lEVElAND -'lbe winnlnl numbel'drawnMolldaYntght In the
Ohio Lottery' a dally pme, '"nne Nwnbl!'r," waa J82.
·

In Preble county, twotrilckswere
shot at Monday night on Route 1Z7
near Camden, sheriff's d~utles
repaorted, adding that the 1sheriff
planned to beef up nighttime
patrols.
The state patrol said the trucker
driving near Minerva told officers
two pickups first tried to force him
off Route ll. When he wouldn't
move, someone !Ired the shotgUn at
his traDer.
Ti'oopel s -said two shots were
fired at a truck driven by Jolm
Jolmson of Marcellus. Mich., who
was drMng near Carey. The patrol
said one bullet ripped thrwgh the
cab of Johnson's ttuck and another
struck the wind deflector atbp ~
cab.
Near Toledo, the patrol said a
westbound truck and another In the
. eastbound lane on the Turnpike
were hit by gunfire that troopers
said apparently came from a
passing car.
Tmope· R.J. Johnson said the
trucks were hit seven times by
bullets that struck the cabs and
traDers of the two semis.
Johnson said the eastbound truck
was driven by Franklin A. Nard, 58,
of Oxford, Ga. Thesecondtruckwas
driven by Cassie E . Zlcasoose, 32, of
Asbury, W.Va.
State troopers at ZanesvUle said
someonethrewwhattheydescrlbed
as a "crude firebomb" onto
Interstate 'Ill. Troopers said found a
bottle with a fuse on the highway
about 3: :Jla.m. An odor of diesel tuel
was coming from the bottle, they
said.
The Ohio truckers began strtklng
at !2:01a.m. today, 24 hours behind
their counterparts elsewbere In the
nation. The violence followed
quickly ..
'"!bey made a believer out of me.
It's . going to get rough out
there,"sald Earl Parson, :rl, of
Delaware, who was driving a truck
throogh Marlon County when a
brick hurled from · an overpass
crashed through his wln&lt;lshield.
Paul Bernlsh. spokesman for the
Kroger Co.ln Clnclnnat~ said one of
the grocery chain's trucks was
struck by rocks onlnterstate71near
Springboro. However, he said,
Kroger's operations weren't af.
fected by the strtke thus fat.
At least a dozen trucks were
(Continued on page 10)

Panel
moves to
avoid
layoffs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
day before Gov. Richard Celeste
outlined a new round of spending
cuts, the Controtung Board helped
ball out two state agencies hurt by
earner reductions.
Majority Democrats on the board
agreed Monday to let Auditor
Thomas ·Ferguson use about
$447,(XX) tran last year's budget to
help avoid layoffs.
The panel restored ~.00&gt; to the
Legislative Budget Office so the
agency- which advises legislators
abouthowtocutspendlngandratse
taxes- can pay Its new director.
Both actions came on the ev~ of
Celeste's Speech to the House and
Senate spelling out his proposals for
otfsettlng a projected $528 million
deficit with a combination of more
cuts and tax Increases.
Controll!!rs were told the auditor
absorbed $2 mUllan In cuts and
' tbatthe staff of840was down by 175
-peoslle from a year ago.
"We now lind ourselves faced
with the prospects of wholesale
fllyoffs In oor dee In an attempt to ·
reduCe our exjlendltures to our
·~ approprladons," the auditor's wrtttesuequest said. ·
Rep. Robett Netzley, R-Laura,
.and Sen. Theodore Gray, R·
Columbus, ~ tbe funds
transfer,

. ,.

•,

UNWELCOME VISD'OR-A sand rock (welghtng
approxhnat.ely mo pounds) rolled down the hill
behind the home of Mr. and Mrs. Max WUson, Second
St., Pomeroy, ~d 3:10a.m. today (Tuesday). lt
went through the klb!hen window and came to rest a
few feet from the window. The rock struck a

shown with the debris.

·

·Permanent tax ·hike sougnr-COLUMBUS, Ohici (AP) - Gov.
Richard . Celeste, diagnosing the
state budget as suffering from · a
critiCal Ulness, today proposed the
"bitter medicine" of a pennanent
lncome tax Increase, spending cuts
and elimination of some govern·
mentjobs.
.
In remarks prepared for delivery
to a joint session of the ~slature;
Celeste noted that his predecessors
took office with budget surpluses
while he faces a $528 million deficit.
"The state we serve Is critically
Ill. Not mildly Ill. Nor do I believe,
c\lfonlcally ill. Butmake nomlstake
about It - Ohio's condition Is
critical," Celeste said.
Celeste proposed a pair of tax
Increases to raise money to offset
part of the deficit.

trans porta tlon authority and the
He urged the Legislature to
bani&lt;.
export
extend the current 50 percent
Celeste said he would Immepersonal Income taX surcharge and
diately reduce the budgets of most
Increase that surcl1arge by ·an
agencies by5percent. "lwlllaboUsh
addltlonal40 percent.
8,00&gt; vacant positions and I expect
"I am also urging that this
subsantlal layoffs to occur," the
become permanent,' ' Celeste said.
governor said.
"Our citizens are tired of pollilclans playing the game of 'temporary taxes. ' Once our economy Is
Celeste said programs which
well on the !")ad to recovery, we can
stimulate job crea tion or produce
and should debate the appropriate
revenue wUI be exempt from the
level of taxation. In the meantime,
order. So will the corrections
let's stop playing 'let's pretend' with
department, most institutional care
taxes."
agencies and Income maintenance
The governor outlined a series of
grants.
government spending cuts aimed at
The governor conceded that
savlng$282 mUllan. _
education would bear the brunt of
He pro~ elimination and
the cuts. "The burden of the cuts I
consolidation . of · several depart- have described will unfortunately
ments and programs, lncludlng . fallmostheavUy oneducatlon, at aU
energy, tax equalization, the rail
levels, " he said.

Man pleads_guilty to charges
Harvey E . Roseberry, :Jl, Rt. 2,
Racine, plead guilty to three counts
of passing bad checks when he
appeared Monday afternoon ln
Meigs CountY Common Pleas Court
before Judge Robert E. Buck.
RoseberryremalnslnjaU.He was
arrested last Thursday night on a
bench warrant from Judge Patrick
O'Brien' s court. Roseberry had
faDed to pay the fine and costs In a
traffic case. Final sentencing on the
charge of bad checks will be
Monday, March, 7.
Roseberry, who reportedly wrote
·the checks \lllder the name of,
Robert Johnston, was charged In a

Identification In that name.
Gerard said Roseberry had at
first dented the dual Identity, but
admitted the deception when confronted with the evidence accumulated in an Investigation that
spanned several months.
Gregory King, 19, Parkersburg
appeared Monday morning 1n
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
before Judge Charles H. Knight and
entered a voluntary plea of guilty to
a single eouilty of breaking and
entering.
Judge Knight ordered the matter
of sentencing continued until 9 a:m .
(Continued on page 10)

bill of Information prepared by the
office of Pro~ting Attorney Fred
W.Crowlll .
Passing bad checks, as charged,
Is a felony of the fourth degy:ee
carrying a possible penalty of six
months to five years in prison and a
maximum possible fine of $2,500 on
each count.
Paul Gerard, investigator, reported Roseberry had earner been
convicted of auto larceny In
Fayetteville, N. C. Gerard also said
Roseberry started using the Jolm·
ston alias sometime In 1976, and had
a birth certificate, social secrlty
number, drivers license and other

Dave Diles named to
Rio hoard of trustees
RIO GRANDE - Sportscaster
and commentator Dave DUes has
been elected to the Rio Grande
College hoard of trustees.
TheRaclneresldenthasserved21
years In numerous sports reporting
capacities with ABC-TV and Its
.affillates. In 1982, he handled college
football play-by-play . for CBS
s ports.
A ·Middleport native, son of the
late Lls.le and Lucjlle DUes; he broke
Into newspaper '.York In 1947 while a
·student at Middleport High School.
His first assignment
Meigs
area correspondent for ·the GaWpoUs D~y Tribune.
Later, Diles worked for the
.Pomeroy Sentinel and the Athens
Me5senger. His newspaper expe.

·

was

(ContinUed on paae 10)
.

wastebasket, spreading contents over the floor, The
rock also tore out the window casing. The family was
asl~p at the lbne. The Wll!!ons thought thieves were
breaking Into their residence. Mrs. Wilson (Terri) Is .

DAVE DILES

'

,..

~---- -~-

~

- .- -

-

-

-----'

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary

*ME.IGS ' MARAUDE~S
*E-ASTERN EAGL'ES

2-~ Daily Sentinel
Middleport, Ohio

Page ·
Pon_,.

~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~;:~~~--=-~~~~-=;t----------------~------~T~ue=·:dn~y~,hD~~:::;l,~J~~-=-· ­
-Politics as usual.~. .----,..-----~_Ro_b_er_t_w._al_te_rs~
The Daily Sentinel
I

111 C ourt S t~t
P umtruy, Ohio

114-lft-1151
DEVOTED TO TH E INTERFST OF THE MEIGS-MASONAREA

· ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publbt ht'r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

General M~tltaJ(u

DALE.ROTHGEB, JR.
r.a~w. EdltlW
A MF.MBER 11f Ttw A ~t!iiW"ialcd" Prn ~ . hW.nd
Amerin lfl Nt',l! ~tpa~r Publisht'n A»!IU('t.tlon,

Dally Prt'fi.N AliiUW"iMtion. wnd lht-

Burled withln the torrent or conventional political rhetoric tlowlng
!rom tlx&gt;se seeking next year's Democratic p~dentlal nomination
Ues an Intriguing and potentially
powerful theme.
The Innovative approach to campaigning Is succinctly dl!scitbed by
Sen. Ernest F; Hollings~ D-S.C., one
of at least eight Democrats considering a bld for the presidency:
"The best politics Is no politics."
Hollings, one of !hi! most articulate advocates or that radical con·
cept, suggests that "people who say
they . don't trust politicians any
are waiting, l am conVInced,

'more

for polltlclans to behave as though
they trust the people."
ThroughOut recent decades, the
campaigns or both Republlcan and
Democratic candidates for publlc
ottlce, especially the presidency,
have emphasized se!t-promotlonal
oratory aild promises which cannot
be fultllled .
The pattern has persisted dur!ng
three relatively . recent . events
which were part of what Rep. Morris K. Udall~ D-Arlz., characterizes
as "the quadrennial oratorical fest
and cattle sho:&gt;w.'i
On those three occasions, the Democrats exploring the possibility of

runnlrig for president have been gathered together -at a national conference sponsored by the
Democratic National Committee In
Philadelphia .last June~ at a meetIng or Democratic state chairmen
ln New Orleans last November .and
at the Calltornla Democratic Party's state convention here In midJanuary.
Although the speakers at those
events have advanced a number of
Imaginative and creative Ideas on a
variety or subjects, too much of
what was offered. consisted of
"elect-me" sloganeerlng and verbal potshots at President Reagan.

I.E1TER.'l OF OPINION Mr'l' ~· el eomfll . They ~i f;tould bt! letit! tb8D 318 WUrdtilOOf(. All
· lrUrf'll •rr J;Ubjet"l ln eqit!nt: and m\llt lw tdgncd with RII~M. acWrn11 aad t.elqhttll~
m~mber , Nu uulgneclldters will bt publllha:l. Ldkn dtuuld 1M= in ~t;IJtld la»k, addrn.tn,:
issuett. nut prnuwtlitio.

There are, however, some hopeful signs. Noting Reagan's mountIng proble'm s and sagging
popularity, Udall warned here:
''We had better not gloat .over this
GOP disaster ... We must nat forget
that It's been only. two years since
the voters repudla ted us - and we
should not take that ilghtly."
In an extraordinarily cand.ld
analysis, Udatl added:
"We better tell the painful truth:
Life lx&gt;lds no .'freebies.' .Some pain
and sacrifice - and yes, some
sweat and tears will be required"'"
"With their Insensitive suggtltlons on Social Sec)rrlty, the GOP
handed us a beautiful club. But this
critical system cannot endure
When every year we take ln $15 bUllon leSS than
pay out. Savings
must be found~ revenues
reclabned.
"Reducing $2(X) billion deficits to
balance budgets will require us to
pass up some tax cuts and expend!•
tures we rnlght otherwtse like tO
make.
"While we reach to help our un~
employed we must not drink from
that powerful Jug marked 'protec-

*SOUTHERN TORNADOES
,

The natural gas that's readily available from easily accessible geologIcal fonnatlons beneath Ohio and New Mexico ·h asn't been selling very
well In recent years - because It's too cheap.
But the natural gas that's especially dltflcult to retrieve fromoftslx&gt;re
fields and very deep wells ln Louisiana and Texas has been In great
demand throughout the early 191Mls - because It's unusually expei\Sive.
That preposterous situation was created by an oil and gas Industry
which currently is seeking the re~mval of federal price controls on the
low-cost gas, an action it c!abns will produce substantial savings for Its
customers.
'
But that same industry Is now withholding from the market natural
gas which costs less than $1 per thousand cubic feet (Mcf$ at the wellhead
while selling Its customers natural gas whose wellhead price Is as high as
$10 per Mcf.
Although that high-cost natural gas is being "rolled ln" oc blended
with cheaper fuel to moderate the price~ the wellhead cost c1 the most
expensive natural gas ts equivalent to more than $60 for a barrel of oil at a
time when oil Is selllng for about halt that.
·
The firms which dominate the Industry - the natural gaS producers
(principally the country's major oil companies) and the corpocatlons
which operate the long-distance gas transmission plpellnes -blame the
unconscionable price disparity on the provisions of the Natural Gas POlley
Act or 1978.
.
That federal law did liu!eed establish a disparate array of wellhead
prices for approximately two dozen dltferent categories of natural gasbut It surely did not require that unjustifiable emphasis be placed on
production and sale or fuelln the most expensive price classifications.
Nevertheless, wells have been "shut in" or temporarily capped ln
WASiflNGTON - Few cases in Hury assigned to the case, David
natural gas fields throughout the country which contain substantial,
recent history more vividly demon· Marks, believes his superior made
proven reserves or low-cost fuel. In other Instances, there are reports of
strate the sophistry or the Reagan a wrongheaded decision .. Sen. John
cheap gas being vented from the wellhead into the atmosphere and thus
administration's plans to deregu- Heinz, R-Pa., the chalnnan of the
IrreVoCably lost.
late nursing homes than one which Senate Committee on Aging, conNowbere are the Inequities of the situation more apparent than ln the
was concluded ln Texas last week. curs. And a number of nursingGuymon-Hugoton field, the nation's largest single natural gas re5erve
In 1981, a Texas grand jury re- home reform groups have
which covers more than four million subterranean acres stretching from
turned 38 !Jidlcbnents against the expressed bitter outrage over
southwestern Kansas Into the Oklahoma and Texas panhandles.
Houston-based Autumn Hills Con- Hury's rationale.
Natural gas from that vast reservoir setls for as little as 'l7 to 50 cents. valescent Center, Inc. Eight pa·
As he explalried It to my associate
per Met at the wellhead, but the five Interstate pipeline companies which
!Ients had died in one of the Toey Capacclo, the DA believes
rely upon that field have dramatically reduce!! their withdrawals In recent
corporation's nursing lx&gt;mes be- that Texas law would prevent "a
years.
tween March 1978 and Apr!l1979. flndlng of guilty to a murder IndictThe Pan~dle Eastern Pipeline Co. says Ills" temporarily resting Its
The Indictments charged murder ment In this case ... ,Neglect as a
wells" in the. Guymon-Hugoton field. The Cities Service Gas Co. has cut
by neglect.
cause of death was one thing," he
back Its purchases from the field while signing new contracts for natural
But District Attorney James said, but "fhidlng the (nursing·
gas priced at $7 to $9 per Met.
Hury, who Is leaving office at the home) chain Intentionally decided
When a Cities Service executive was asked 11 the firm was conslderlng
end of the tmnth, has permitted the to kill these people" was another.
renegOtiating those contracts, be replied: ''Why should we be doing that?
firm's oUiclals to plead guilty to a He negotiated a plea bargain, he
How would that benefit our customers?" Instead, the firm has petitioned
lesser charge. The attorney whom said, because "I believe It Is rlght."
federal regulators for mUllons of dollars worth of rate Increases- which
eventually will be borne by consumers of the fuel.
The El Paso Co. has rebuffed s.m all producers In the San Juan Basin or
New Mexico which previously sold the plpellne firm natlll'al gas at wei·
!head prices of S2 to $3 per Met for transmission to El Paso customers in
On a recent trip to Texas I discowent wrong?
Southern California.
· The fly in the ointment, as tar as
Instead, El Paso has been paying $8 to $10 per Met for natlll'al gas vered that the Republican Party ln
the
Lone
Star
State
has
a
lot
to
learn
Texas
Rep'ubllcans are concerned~
from the Anadarko Basin in Oklahoma - which then must be transported
about
playing
ethn~
politics.
It
had
Is the state's fast-growing Hispanic
a greater distance to the West Coast.
popula tlon . Texas Is to Mexicans
In mid 1982~ the Columbia Gas System Inc. asked thousands of Its better start learning it, not only for
what Florida Is to Cubans - the
suppliers or low-cost natural gas In Ohio and adjoining states to shut down Its own sake but fur the sake of the
nearest and most congenial t1
their wells for five months. At the same time, the company was committed J. nl\tl(ll81 GOP.
Texas Is 011! or the blgges t pieces
American states.' But whereas the
to purchasing 2'10 million cubic feet of natural gas from other producers at
on the chessboard of Amertan po·
nearest point oo Cuban soUls separa projected cost of $8 to $8.50 per Me!.
Btlcs.
Its
26
electoral
votes
are
the
ated
from the southern tip of FlorThe effect of those practices was candidly and succinctly described by
natlm's
fourth
largest
bloc,
and
Ida
by
!ll miles t1 saltwater, the Rio
Consolidated Oil and Gas Inc. ln a report to Its stockholders last year
Grande River provides the ooly
explaining that the pipelines prefeiTed expensive natural gas from other they are not safely in tbe pocket of
either major party. One oflts senaborder betwren Texas and Mexico
sources rather than the cheaper fuel oUered by Consolidated.
for nearly 1,300 miles. Across It,
"'The end result ," said Consoildated~ "Is higher prices to the consumer tors (John Tower) Is a Republican;
the other (Lloyd Bentsen) Is a Dedriven QY desperate poverty, fiow
than would otherwise be charged."
mocrat. The last governor (Wfl·
nearly a million Dlegal Mexican ImHam Clements Jr.l was a
migrants every year. Many come
Republican; the Incumbent (Mark
as migrant farm worl&lt;ers, to do the
W1\lte) Is a Demrerat. The legisla"stoop labor" that Americans '
ture Is Democrat-cootrolled~ but in
simply won't do anymore and tben
recent years (save 1976) the. state
return to Mexico with their earn·
has tended to go Republican ln preingo. But hundreds or thousands
sidential .cootests. At one time,
come to stay, and their children
Texas was a dependable part of the
hom here are, ofcoorse, American
Democrat~ Party's Solid South,
but today It wears no party's collar.
On the other band , there Is every
rea90n for the Republicans to feel
that their lcmg-ran!J! prospects are,
or at least ought to be, bright In
Texas. Barring only California, Ills .
the premier siate of the Sun Belt that tast-growlng section of the United States where the work ethic and
the virtues of old-faShioned lndlvld" ... And how abo.u t fixing It so the little kids In
uallsm arestUfhlghlyprlzed. Even
Scand/nav can see 'E. T. ', tool"
many lltelaig Democrats In Texas
are passionately conservative. The
state was Reagan territory ln 1980
and Is a key part or any game plan ·
for Reagan's re-election in 19114. It
the Republ~an Party lsn'lstrmg In
Today Is Tuesday, Feb. 1, the 32nd day of l!ll3. There are 333 days left ln
Texas, where can It reasonably
the year.
- F
hOpe to be sti'IX!k'?
Today's highlight In history: .
·
·
And yet the Texas G&lt;P was clobOn Feb. 1~ 1587, England's Qt•een Elizabeth I signed a warrant for the
bered last tall when Republican
exerutlon of Mary, Queen or ! ts.
·
govem:lr BUI Clements, running
On this date:
hard for re-electlm, went down to
In 1861, Texas seceded from the union.
defeat
at the hands or a mlddle-!1In j899, the United States took coittrQl of the Pac!tlc .lsland of Guam.
the-road
Democrat~ Atilrney Gen- .
In 1965, the Rev. Martln Luther King Jr. and BOO other blacks were
era!
Mark
While, even though
arrested !lurlng civil rights rallies in Selma, Ala ..
Clements
spent
$12 mDBm - beIn 1979, AyatoUah Khomelnl r$med to Iran after 14 years In exile.
lleved
to
be
the
largest sum
Ten years ago: chinese premier Chou En·Lal jll'lllsed the cease-fire In
expeuded
on
a
gubema
torlal race
the VIetnam War as a great victory for China's VIetnamese allies.
In American hls1Dry -In an effort
Five years ago: In a nationwide TV address, President carter urged
ID beat back his challerwer. What
AmericanS to support the proposed Panama ~ treaties.

MTH US."

MEIGS

tionism.' "

Hollings has repeatedly arllcu·
tated similar themes In his propollals to reduce federal spending by
$175 billion to $200 billion during tbe
next three years through 'a discipline of sacrifice - a Shared 's acrifice across the board."
,•
Abandoning the d,lsctedlted y~t
Indestructible po!ltlcal tradition c:l
promising something to everyliQdy~ Hollings Is calling for a oneyear freeze on cost-of-living
adjustments for federal penstms
and Soclai Security payments. .
Added Hart: ''Too much of Democratic politics has been based on
trying to appeal to specific constituencies to add up to 50.1 percent c:l
the vote" Instead of presenting
·vision of where we want to take the

vs.

NORTH GALLIA-AWAYFEB. 4

country."

murder ... "
According to the Law . Division

Berry's World

CEREDO-KENOVA-HOMEFEB. 5

analysis, "the nursing chart Is a
form required under rules promulgated on the basis of the nursinghome licensing statute. It thus
would seem to be a government record for the purposes or tbe tamper·
lng statute."
The tact that Ms. Breed might
have been diseased~ the study
notes~ wsa probably Irrelevant: "It
Is possible that the defendant could
stlil be held for murder U It could be
shown that Its actions hastened her
death."
Concluded the Law Division anal·
ysls: . "Six&gt;uld the Aul\lmn Hllls
case come to trial, It will command
much attention (because )"it maybe
the first murder prosecution of a

EASTERN
VS~

cor'}Xlratlon."

ALEXANDER--AWAY-FEB. 1
SOUTHWESTERN-HOME-FEB. 4

citizens. Such Mexican-Americans
Anglo-Saxon Protestants or their:
already constitute approxlma tely · clsoe equivalents. they should
study the techniques oft he GOP in:
one-filth oft be entire populatloo of
New York and ot!Er Nort!E ni
Texas.
states where plurallstr p:lllt~s ts;
Uke other Impoverished Immigrant families before them, these
an old and tamwar stay. Tlle)lshoold scour the state'slawschooli
Mexican-Americans are easy pick·
(for example) for bright young
lng&gt; for the Demreratlc Party's familiar welfare-ortented polltt:s; It
Mexican-Americans. Ra::rult them
\\berever possible to the party, and
~Wuld be unrealistic for the GCP to
buDd them up for future candida:
expect to win a majority of the
votes or the mrly post-Immigration
cles- flrstforthestateleglslature,
generatim. But wlnnlng a majority . then for statewide rlflce. There
Is unnecessary. As one Texas Re· shoold never again be a statewide
Republlcan slate In Texas that
publ~an leader remarked il me,
"It we could get even «l percent of doesn't coo taln Hlspmlc names at
or near Its top.
the Hispanic vote~ the Detmcrats
Texas Congrssman Phtl
would n£Yer win another statewide
Gramm, penalized by 'his Demoelection In Texas."
And yet Texas RepubUc ans seem cratic 'colleagues for · SUIJillrtlng
President ~agan' s ecomi'T!Ic policontent to run their campaigns
has resigned and IS limning
cies,
from the porches of their oountry
for re-election in a special ejection:
clubs, and lo field ·candidates wlx&gt;
are almost exclusively white as a Republican .

f

Feb. 4
Feb. 5
~.11

•

SOUTHERN TORNADOES
Carl Wolfe-Coach
DATE

EASTERN EAGLES
Dennis Eichinger-Coach

OPPONENT
DATE

Wawrly
At Nelsonville-York

Athens

Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

4
5
11
12
18

At North Gallia
Ceredo-Kenova
At Hannan T~ace
at Huntington St. Joe
Southwestern (6:15 p.m.)

Feb. 1
Feb. 4
Feb. 11
Feb. 18

O~PONENT

At Alexander
Southwestern
North Gallia
At Kyger Creek

HOWIE CA~DW~LL-ASST. COACH
MICK CHILDS-ASST. COACH

. Today in history

'

'1·~-'.

OPPONENT

Feb. 12
Af Wahama
Feb. 18 ·
~ilipolis
All reserve games start at 6:30 p.m.

'

"··,.,. ·...... .

MEIGS MARAUDERS
Greg·Drummer-Coach

DATE

THE SO-cALLEDaZERO OPTI&lt;lt

ever

"'

,SOUTHERN
.
vs.

"a

Some of the top legal mlnds In the
country disagree. Legal authorities
employed by the highly respected
Amerlcap Law Division of the Ll·
brary or Congress, for eXample,
complied an analysis of the Autumn Hills case. The study was
completed well before DA Hury
struck his bargain with the
defendants.
States the unpublished study:
"Under Texas law, a corporation
may be held liable for murder. The
charges made agalnst Autumn
Hills seer.• technically sound in that
they comply with the !annal requirements that..must be met ln
order to charge a corporation with

•

WAVERLY......HOME-FEB. 4
. NELSONVILLE-YORK-AWAY-FEB. 5

New strategyllL_n_e_e_d_e_d______w_ill_ia_m_A_.R_us_h--:er

··--

I

"COME GROW·

Danger inp
a.;._l_a_n__.__________;_,_J_ac_k_And__.__er_so_n

-

_j

we

Ignoring cheap gas

,.

The Daily

'

DON EICHINGER-ASST. COACH

�.r
Page

The Daily Sentinel

4

.a nd total pol!lts. Pol~tl . l:la.Yd on .•19--1.817 -16-15-1.. 1l-12-11-1G-9-8--7-6-5-+3-2·1:
1 . NCarotlno
!341
17·
3
1,(113
l.N .- LVf'gas
t 13 )

Na.ttooal BalikdhaiJ Aallodllkln
ay nw ..U.X.ta&amp;l!cl f'reM
FA.._'l'I'DlN COJ\'F'DlENCE
A.tlutk Dtv..,..
W L Pet.
Philadelphia
:li G .8fA
35 w :m
JJ 17 Ji22
New Jersey

""'on

w

Wa~hingtoo

2:4

. Mllwaukft&gt;
Detroit

l) 16

GB

B.Hwston OJ
9.A.rttansas
m .Miss&lt;llrl

0\lc~o

21 21
15 3J

.477
.l'.Ji l.'l

Indiana

14 :!!

' At lanta

5.St . Jotrl's 121
6.Indlana
7.UCLA !21

_

6S2
.500

.7

- · - U .VIllanM

8

l2.Lwlsv1ile

l)(&gt;tiV{'I"

22 ' 2~

OaUas
Utah

.m

21 Z3
18 29
l'aclllc ...'_ &gt;J

Houston

'II 1ll
'll aJ
2:i :ll

.tm
.J74

19 26

.422 1£
.:JM 2l Y.t

134

.l)l
J33

~

1~
13-4

llG
2!l1

1~·

117

"

College scores
MondM,y's CoHere Ba&amp;ketball Scores

8
9

FAST
American U. 52, Nonhl?~tern ~1

-"" 10

Bostoo U. B-1. O:llgate 51
Canlslus 73, Utk:a 12, ar

New York 114, Kansas CitY '11

r

~'A Game&gt;
llldlana at Ne~N J t&gt;r.~ey

at Atlanta

H()Jstoo at Chicago

Ptllladelpl'lla a1 Denver
Milwaukee at Ponland
W~'sGame&gt;

&amp;&gt;thu ~ kman 7'1,

Delaware St. 6J
Lltaclel 79, E. Ten~ St. 6&lt;1

lJl.tr(llt a t lndl.flrla

New J ersey at CIE'\'cland

East Carolina 66. N.C.-Charlotte &amp;I
Gear~ Mason 74. Rk'lunond 67

Kansas City at Washingloo
N('W Vark at San An tonio
Loo Angeles at DaUBS

Georgia Ill. Vandl'rbtu 61

Howard U. 78, Florida A&amp;M 76. ar
JacksonvUie St. 60. Athf&gt;ns St. !14
Marsllall 81, Davkiwn 73
Mrmpl\ls St. 73, Vlrp;lnla Tf'Ch &amp;I

[)(Inver at Houston
Utah at PWnix

MllwaukL&gt;t' at Seante

Mississippi 61. Auburn 48
MissiSSippi CoU. 74, Dt&gt;lla St. 64
MissiSSippi St . i'B. AJabama IB
Ml5s. Valley 9), Grambling 71

Transactions

Nf.'\1.' Orleans !IL'i, lona 84
Nicholls St. 7:l Prairil' Vlt"W 62
N. Carolina A&amp;T 19, Md.-E. ShoN' -ru
N. Geor~t~a \15, Plfdmont Coil. 68
Old Dominlon SR. Jamt&gt;S MadlliOO 4.3
S. Alabama 81 , W. Kerttucky Tl
S. Mississippi 8!1, Pan American ;u
So.Jthern IJ. 56, Jackson St . 54.
Tm l'lt'SS('(' 65, Kmtucky &amp;1
va . Commonwealth 50, William &amp; Mary

~· s Sport11'1'anlactlllra
II()()(E\'

NaUonal Hcdey Lcope
' CALGARY F1..AMES-Slg11ed
M~ro.J n.

Jamil&gt;

defeMeman.

BABE BALL
A.merlclm Leqllf

OOSTON RED SOX-HirOO Jot' Castll!:·
Uone to Jo~ the radiO plll)'-by-!:iay cr("W.

QI!CAGO WlUTE SOX-Signed Kevill
Hldtf'\'. p!tch('f", to a one-~ar contract.
and Marc Hill, catclw&gt;r. to a two-yE-ar

.. ..
('

,

"W.

Vlrldnia Sl . 121. Bowie St. 91

Dtr{'('tor, Mlk£" Ryan TN' Marketing Coor·

dlnatc:r, and Patti Hetf('TTW'I to head ScN!"
dal PramJt\onal ServiceS.
P HIL ADELPHIA
PHIU.IES Sign«&lt;
Tony Pen-L. flrsl base'1\M.

111\SKEI'BALL
Natloaal Ballkftball AmodaUoa
INDIANAPOLIS PACERS--Piacro Guy
Morgar1. forward, on walvt.&gt;rs.

roUEGE
EAST cAROUNA-Namcd A.l1 Bakt&gt;r
otfenstw coordinator am~ assoclatt• .tll?ad
roach.

NICHOLLS STATE-Ntnounred the

l~at lon c1

15. VMI 55

MIDWIST
DePaul 55. St. Joseph's. Pa. 54
DPtroll 68, Evans\1lte fi1
E. ntinols 71. Campbellli2
Dllnols St SG. Bradley .'Xi
LoyOla, nt. 84, Butler 73
Ohk:J U. 9!. Radford .50
St. Louis Gl, Oklahoma CitY 50
Valpara'lso 64, OPVeland St . ~
W. Illloois 81, Wls.-Crt't'fl Bay£1
Wichita St . Ill. Indiana St. 81
SOU111WEST
Arkansas St. 53. N. Iowa ~7
Oral Roberts ln. Xavier. Ohio 'ri
.S. Arkansas 48, Ouachita 47
Tul.'WI Sl. S. Dllnols 70
FARWE8T
Denver 62, WIS.- MUwaukl&gt;f' :II
E, N£&gt;w M exico 113, W. N{'W M£&gt;ldco 64
Grt"at Falls R3. N. Montana 78
Nev.• M£&gt;Klro St 79, Creighton 73
~~~ ~- Arizona 81 ·

Nattonal Leape

NEW YORK MTI'S-Nill'l'led Dmnts
D'AgOS!illo the Assistant PubUc Rt&gt;latloll5

·1

Ca rol~a

r{'!i -

Kathy 5aidtuk. women' s baS·

ketbaU roar h.

Top Twenty

St. Martin 's

San Dlcj;:Q

:n I.Rwls-Ciark St. 70

st. 71. Alr Foret&gt; -17

\\'(•Jx&gt;r St. 85. sw LouiSiana
W. Orf'l':On 7t E. OreF!On 57

'The Top 'JW('flty teams WI Ur A.SSOC'l ·
ated Press colkgC" baSke(ba.ll poll, with

~

ftrst -ptare \'Oies tn parmthesei. l"f'('QQ"ds

· High school cage ratings

{name or schOols, won-lost records and

pOOitsl:

CLW!MA

1. Lorain Klnlilo 14-0, 1/!q:CJints
2. Warrm Western ~. IHI. 24}
J. cantoo McKJnlcy, 1H, :.111
&gt;1 . O nd M atl Moont Ht&gt;althy. 1~. 171
5. AIO"oo Centrai-Howe-r, 13-1. 167
fl. East Cleveland Shaw. 1~ . ltiti
7,

r

CLi\SS.
I, St. Henry. 14.0, 'S1
2. Delptns St. John's, )5.(1, 247

Dayton Dunbar, 13-l. 117

J, New Washlngtm Btrleye- C£ntral. 14·
O.Hfl
4. Old WashlnKton 8Ul'keye Trail. l.W.

10, ToledO Bowslter, ll-4 , 28
Ot~r schlols rK'f'i'llng 10 lt morepoints: II . Columtm Northland Z . 12,
Manst:leld Senior 2l 13 1t1e1, W\nt(&gt;m1Ue
aJld Mansf'leld Malabar Z!. 15. Camtt-1.
18. 16. Bay Vlllaae Bay 17. 17, W011h·
lngton 15. U!, Lorain Senior 13. 19, Oncln·
nail Ta!1 12. '!l Fairfield

176

:&gt;,' Kalida. 13-1. 119
6. OHcwiUe, tJ..l. 99
7. Anna , 13-1, 84

s, .Peebles. 1'-0. 76
•• RacDe &amp;dhrm. lJ.:, 15
10. B\t.'YI'US Wyn!Ord. 12-2. fB

tn

q,AS8""

1. Willard, 14-1. 252

Other schoOls

2. Co!ONater, lfi.(}, 224
3. COlumbus Whitehall, 1Ml uq
4. Oak HarOOr, 15-0, '!11
J. Columbus Bexley. 15-1. 1.ll

.

Oflk)

_

B)' 'lbt A.wociMed P'rellll

'
.'

...
'

WL

............
.'.•
lrldiana

..

.
'

..
...
.

• 3

3 4

12

3 '5

'6!0
9
11 7

''

Micl\ljtaO

•

lmlt--r\rneltCM f.onf ,
1 1
2
Ohio u .
2
Mlaml Ohio
4 4
Ball Sl.
4
Ketti St.
Bowl~ Green

'

'

.

'
'
' '6

3
3 5

E. Mk:hlaan

N. uunots

''

C. MiChigan
W. Mtch!kan

..

capt~ .

.

-

'

t.oul""lle

•

"""""" Toch
""""phi$ St.
FIOI'idl ~ 1\olanO

•

'

Akron

'

3

'

'6

1
1 6

5

•
'

o·

I
I
3 2
3·

'

S. MlaslasiPPl
0' !8
' QnC'tnnatl .'
- V.... """·
7 0
Murray St.
!
E. f&lt;etlti.ICICy
~Toch

'

''

. MeVoeo.r.

,..,.,_,SL

. .
.

10' 18
tO 7

'1108
7 10
7 10
414

Y00f181toWn St.
Auttln Peay

~--· ·

•• ~'
•

3.

2 5
. 1 5
1 6

14

•

4
13 •
811
10 8
10 '

''

7U
, 11
5!3

. 4 13 .
4!3
4 15
16 3
16 3
16 1
7

'

3
3

.....,......,
R1o Grand&lt;'
11lflo

15 2
7lfl
• 8
10 7
9 8
9 •
8lfJ
412

14 1

•

•• •
'
4

7

llullloo
Wilmington
watstl

'

2 7
1 8

-Coal
7 0
.

•

1
5 2
4 3
3
I 6
1 6
I 6

c.daMile
Malro!

•

Mt. Vt'T'!10J\ Naz.
Ohio DJrnlnk:an
UrboM

-·

10 '
7 7

•• ' '
•
2
3 3
2
1 5
0 6

H~am

1ltlel

Cam&lt;s~e-Melloo

Grat .__,. li*Y c.t.
4 1
L&lt;wts
3 I
Ky.·WeMeyan
3
2
2
1
1

-lnd. SI.·Evanl.
C..tral

St. Alhland

Cenlral St.
[)oyWn
Dyko

-

M. Falrrow

Anotherhappycoa~hwasGeorge

record

ALLGAMI!IIW L P Or '
u 2 11113 817

11 •

12 3 1015 Ml
9 6 'I'll 913

t3 •

••

3
5

'712
8

~ 9 810 81lf·
~ n 1118 1175

7

13 Weeks ...... ... , ... .... .. ... ............ $14.!H
2ti Weeks ........................... ....... sn .ao
112 weeks ..... .. ... ......... .... ........... s~us
Oulalde Otdo
13 Weeks ,.... ... ........... ........... .... .115.21
2ti Weeks ... ......... .. ................ .... $29.~
52 Weeks ......... ........ .. ... ............ l."r6.21

VIEW AREA OVER BERLIN WALL - U.S,
VIce Prelildeut George Bush, center) has a look over
tbe Berlin wall into Easl Berlin from \1. stand at West

Fan~

9:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 9:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.
PHONE 992-3795
APPOINlMENTS AV AJLABLE
618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

C

-_ .-

•,

H&amp;R BLO It Z

__0..-

.ne new tax laws.
This year' I numller one reason logo lo H•R ~-

2999

less

Was $399.95 In

26-3004

Holstein Steers and · Bulls 300 to '8)) lbs.

TV

cat RSC.B

........... " ....... ..
fiii.,CQ'I'JUP·--····

uu•mA~a~•~:~~••-•

_,_.n••l:ltalll•••-

rr PAYS TO BE A WINNER- Wubinpoa Recbldna' woltdlone
n•n.... hick 1o1m Blat• itanda In neW Pontiac '1'rula Am and era·

.... .......... .
••••••••••••••
"

'100 Off Extended
Models
For High-Resolution Graphics

- - - -'i"'

Feeder Bulls: Good and Choice 250 to :m
lbs. ~ JOO to 400 lbs. ~.50: «Xfto 500 Ill!.
51Hll; 500 to 600 II&gt;!. ~; 600 to 100 lbs. 52.5057; 700 to !m Ill!. 47·~1.50; !110 and over 4449.ril.
,

Cat. No.

'

I

fiends: VeaJ calves steady; feeder calves
$1 to $1.50 higher; cows steady.
Feeder Steers: Good and Ololce 2!iO to xo
Ill!. 57-68; JOO to 400 II&gt;!. ffi&lt;;S; 400 to 500 Ill!.
57-ffi: 500 to 600 Ill!. 56.50&lt;ll.50: 1110 to 700 Ill!.
55-63; '100 to 8l) lbs. 51.50-57: tliO and ovf:!r
50-56.50.
Feeder Hel!ers: Good and Choice 250 to lXl
Ill!. 49-56; :ro to 400 lbs. 48-55.50: «10 to 500 lbs.
11!.50-55; 500 to 600 Ill!. 49-51.50; 1110 to 700 lbs.
47-~.50: 700 to lllllbs. 413.5().51; liD and over
~li1.25.

• Great Games , , , Useful Programs'-'AII on Our
Instant-Loading Program Pak'" Cam;ldges
• Educational-Helps· With Math and Reading
• Leem BASIC Programming ln Color
. • Easy to Expand • Attaches to Any TV
.

•

Ohio ValleJ U v Morkellleporl
,.......,..,, 11183

'•

6K Standard BASIC
Color Computer

Lo•

dial Mel&amp; VahaeNe Player trophy during newa cooference In
AnpiMMC!IIday..........., Rlglna u Sport Magazine's Super BOwl xvn
MVP• JUniM let a!!aper Bowl .-.d ruahlngl81 yardaon 38carrles to
· lead the '8ldM to a 2'7-17 win over tbe Mlainl Dolphins S~D~c~a¥. (AP
Luerphoto ).

-

··········--·
--D···-···--

Low .As _

Junior high girls
drop 26-22 battle

• Create Graphlca With .
On•Line Commands ,
• Ideal tor Graphs
Charts, Engineering
Drawings, Animation
• Up to 256 x 192
_ In Cllt, RSC.I
W- $499 95
. ReiOiutlon · ·

39995

(2;:02,

The Meigs Junior High girls lost
thetr 5eCQI1d game In 11 declslo'ns

against Federal-Hocking last
week, 26-22,
Marla Musser led Coach Kenda
Williams' lasses \VIth 10 points,

'

32K Extended BASIC Cut S100Now Only $549.95 (28-3003, was $649.95)

O 511) 3RI

10 10
TL1

613

A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

.

PAICf&lt;l MAY VAAY AT

STORES AND DEALERS

© 1983 Tandy Corp. 't'

.'

I .

'.

•.

'

GROUND BREAKING- Ground was broken Friday afternoon In Mason for a second location of the Mason
County Bank. Tbe new ba~ wUI provide a·wider raJ)ge of services to the New Haven bank's customers, Pic·
lured, left to rlgbt, are Enna L, TumbuU, Mason Co1Dity Delegate with the Sjlver Haired Legislature SeJ!ator
Cbarlotte Jenks, James H, Layne, bank vice-president, Ray Weaver, trustee, Leonard Erwin, of Erwin Con·
tractors, Howard K. Burris, trustee, Richard Ord, bank J~resldent and Mason Mayor Cecll Devrlct,(Photo by Tim
Davis.)

WASHINGTON (AP)- Former
defense leaders In Gem\any, Britain and tbe United States called
today for a declaration by the West
that it would not be the first to use
nuclear weapons against the Soviet
Union.
And they called for a buildup of
non-nuclear forces by the Western
allies to back up such a declaration.
The plan was being outlined at
news conferences in Washinglon,
London and Bonn, It was developed
by a committee of the Unlon of
Concerned Scientists headed by
retired Vice Adm, John Marshall
Lee, who served In NATO, the
United Nations, the Pentagon and
the Arms Control ·and Disarmament Agency during a 38-year
mUltaty career.

landed, and team owner Jack Kent
Cooke waited In the chill at the top of
the stairs before going down to meet
the president
Reagan and his wife shook hands
wl$h all the players and coaches as
they g!it of!tbeplane, and one player
p~ted the smiling Reagan with
a baseball·type cap with Redskin
colors.
The president'swordscouldn't be
heard by reporters because of the
din of jet engines and lhepresident's
helicopter.
After meeting the president,
players boarded buses and rode to
Redskin Park, a few miles from the
airport, and from there went their
separate ways.
Among the Redskins missing at

Market reports

ON

COLOR

•

Other Meigs' scorers were Rhonda

•'

Zirkle ·with slx, Julie Miller and
Je""lter eouch, two each, and
Tammy Wright and Jenn! M,111er
wiib 011eaplece, JennyCrucklerled
the winners with eliht .
Meigs' i\ext pme Is Wednesday
at borne aplnat Athens at 5 p.m.
II)'QP'F1en:
44611-22
Meigs

F·H

6 6 5 9-26

Mushers meet
ANcHORAGE, Alaska {AP) Mushers from throughout North
America will compete here Feb.
11·~ for the World Championship
Sled Dog Championships.
.
Conducted as part of the 48th
Anmiat Fur Rendezvous, the races
will take place qver a three-day
period with the men and their dogs
racing a total of 75 mlles.
Ten-time champion GeOrge Attla
·
will deiend his crown agalrtst an
_~s tncllldlng Dr. Roland Lorn·
oaro of Wayland, Mass., who has
won the.crown eight times.
Fur Rendezvous Is an annual
celelratlbnoltheretumofsprtngto
Alaska, It was started by fur·

Among those scheduled to spell
out the plan at a Washington news
conference were Lee and Robert S.
McNamara, former U.S. defense
secretary.
In London, Field Marshal Lord
Carver, former chief of defense
staff, and Lord Zuckerman, former
chlef scientific adviser to the British
government, were joining the
effort.
In Bonn, the scheduled participants Included two retired West
German generals, Karl-Christian
Krause· and Jochen Loser, and
McGeorge Bundy, former special
assistant to President Lyndon B.
Johnson.
For25 years, the Soviet Union has
proposed that both superpowers
pledge themselves not to be the first

38.51H6.50.
'
BuDs I.Wlll&gt;!. and up otti49.
Slaughter Cows, utWties 38-44; Canner.; and
cutters 33.50-37.!10.
Veal calves choice and prime &amp;i-92.
Baby Calves 40-15.

Adlens Ll\les&amp;ock Sales
January 18, 1183
CATI1.E PRICES:
Feeder Steers: (Good and Choice) :1)().500
lbs. 46-55; 500-'100 lbs. 40-50.
Feeder Heifers: (Good and Chace) :1)().500
lbs. 44.2H.l; 500-'100 Ill!. 46-li"l.:/5.
Feeder BuDs: !Good and Choice) :1)().500
lll6. 47~; 500-'100 lbs. 4$.~[;1.:15.
Slaughter Bulls: (Over 1,000 Ill!. I !1120.
Slaughter Cows: Utilities 3844.70; Canners
and Cutters 32.50-36.75.
Sprlnger Cows: (By the Head) :m-Jffi .
Vea~: (Choice and Prime) 67o50-lll.
Baby Calves: !By the Helidl 31-48.
Baby Calves (By the Pound ) .~66.
HOG PRICES:

the airport was running back John
Riggins, the Super Bowl's Most
Valuable Player, who stayed In
Pasadena for a luncheon In his
honor.
Quarterback Joe Thelsmann and
five other players ·also weren't on
board. They ·were to leave Pasad·
ena on Tuesday for Honolulu, where
they are scheduled to play In the
National Football League's Pro
Bowl next Sunday.
Elsewhere In of!lclal Washington,
the Redskins' victory pushed aside,
if only temporarily, goverrunent
business.
"The Redskin team has unified
the Washlngton community ...
which has a hard tlme ·agreelng on
anything," Rep. Frank R. Wolf,
R-Va., said on theflooroftheHouse.
Florida Democrat Claude Pepper
congr11tuiated DeL Walter Faun·
troy from the Dlslrlct of Columbia
and said he would .deliver, as
promised, a case of Fldftda's finest
oranges. "'I hope they will add to the
sweetness of victory," Pepper sald.

,

"
··
'
'·

'·•
'
•,'
•.

i

Phone (614) 992-2094

Top Hogs 210 to D1 Ill!. 56-57.!10.
Boars 40.51Hl.15.
Sows 400 lbs. and up 52-53.!111.
Pill' by the Head 2:1-52.50.

'4395

BROGAN-WARN&amp; INSURANCE SERVICES, INC.
214 EAST MAIN ST.
POMROY, OHIO 45769

.

AUTO

Pomeroy, 0. 4-5769

P155/80R1l Blo&lt;kwoll.
Plus H51 F.E.T.
Wh itewall add , 3,
F.E.T.
12. 1&lt;
2.29
2.39
2.71
2.90

Whitewall

P19S / 75R14 j 165.95
P2L5/75R 14
6B .95
P205175R15 : 69.95
P225/7 5R 15 i 74.95
P235i75R15
79 .95

plut

to ~ .

Disc: Bra.k e Special
A'\IE $20 nowthrough
S1'\Y
February 261

STAVANGER, Norway (AP)It took eight years to buHd the giant
Ekoflsk offshore oU production
complex 162 mlles from the
shoreline here,

CALL 992-6687

3rd WEEK! ),00 &amp; 9 , 15 P. M.
SAT &amp; SUN MATINEES 1:00 &amp; 3:15

Two stro'lg steel cord belts stabil ize the
oll -seoso. •reod for lOng wear.

Offshore challenge

. NEED SHORT TBIM HOSPITAUZAnoN COVERAGE ,

•

L~:
oomw unru JBSDlMil TEIIII.W

This versatile rodiai gives excellent traction
in all weather on wei or d ry pavement.

No t rade-in needed. All prices

lJNEMPLOYFD' OlJT OF WORK?
1 E M P o H A HI L v L. r, 1u ~J f F ,'

'.l..'l.,_~_I...:.....' ~ •_•-

m

STEEL-BELTED
TRAX 12~RADIAL ·

Site

Cows and Calves Combination Jro.4ll).

H

ALL~SEASON

Regs: (No. 1, Barrows and Gilts) roQ-2:Jt

it... 55.90-56.
Butcher Sows 49-49.10.
Bulcher Boars 47.1().47 .50.
Feeder Pigs: (By the Head) 18-41.50.

Whyisthis-m;msmiling?

HOME~
600 Eost Main Street

POMEROY

Springer Cows 2Q5.340.

.

to use nuclear weapons. But the
Reagan administration has argued
that it could not forswear respond·
ing with nuclear weapons if the
Warsaw Pacl nations launched an
attack against Western Europe.
Such an at lack might be successful, the Reagan strategists have
said, and therefore the threat must
be staved off by the prospect of
nuclear retaliation.
When the Issue rose last April,
Alexander M. Halg Jr., then
secretary of state, said a renunclalion of the first use of nuclear
weapons in a conventional war In
Europe would be "tantamount to
making Europe -safe for conven·
tiona! aggression. "~-

welcome champs Wednesday

WASHINGTON (AP) - Fans
were kept away from the triumphant return home of Washington's
,. Super Bowl champion Redsklns,
but President and Mrs. Reagan
showed up to welcome the teqm at
Its airport arrivaL
·
The fans get thelr . chance
Wednesday with a parade up
Constitution Avenue to the Capitol.
Team offlclals and pollee discouraged people from attending the
arrival Monday of the Redsklns,
who won Super Bowl xvn with a
27-17 victory over the Mlaml
Dolphins In Pasadena on Sunday.
Pollee blocked roadways leading to
Dulles International Airport.
Tbe Redsklns charter plane from
Los Angeles arrived · about 10
minutes before Reagan's hellcopter

SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STORE,
COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER

'

Berlin's Pol8damer Platz, ·Bush Is Danked by. West
Berlin's Governing Mayor Richard von WelzUecker,
left, and ChanceDor Helmut Kohl, (AP Photo).

OPEN WEEKDAYS

512

II
L1 6
10 7
918

seMce 1s

Two different short forms and new deductions make
· short form filing mora complicated this year. Our
praparars know the new tax laws and forms , We've
studied them for months.
·

6LI

•

c~

available.

MAIL SIIJISCRIPI10NS
lnilde Oblo

3

1
0 I

towns where home

Sentinei-Pgge-5- ·~

Ex-world defense leaders outline
non-use of nuclear weapons plans

No subscriptions by maU pennltted ln

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

5·'

shortages of perishables within
three or four days,''
The Cavaliers said that lf the
strike lasts, layoffs In all areas ofthe
food Industry will follow. The 35
workers on Cavalier docks will be
given a chance to take an early
vacation, or be laid of!.
But the Cavaliers predict a short
strike.
"These guys all have big morl·
gages on those rigs. They've got to
work," said Frank· Cavalier, who
founded the business 63 years ago.
Jtie Cavalier said more than half
of the truckers who carry produce to
their docks are Independents. They
cannot be replaced easlly.
. "We could go out a6l1 hire the
commercials {truckers) but what
would be the sense? We might get
the goods this week or next month,''
hesald.
The Cavaliers said they sympa·
thlze with the Independents' com·
plaints over higher excise taxes.
"They're mad because the raU·
roads don't have to pay them," Joe ·
Cavalier said. "The gas tax
everybody's gOt to pay that "

SUbaCI1berS not di:!strtng to pay the carrier
may remit ln advance direct to The Dally
senttnel on 3, 6 or 12 month basis. Credit
wUl be given carrler each month.

NEW LOW

0 15 191 8:18

SVAC ONLY

One Week ..................... .... ......... $1.00
One Month ............. ...... ..... ......... $4.10
one Year ... .. r .............. ... .... ... .. , $S2.80
SINGELCOPY
PRICES
Dally .... .................. .............. ~ Ca\ts

r~fl~fth~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~

SVAC STANDINGS

5 '
311
112

••
' ' 12u' '•'
'' '! •

M. Green
C. WhittingtOn

85 , 6'

10 7
6U

0
0

llllnoia

5

I
2
3

""""""""'
.-Conl
E.

Wr1Cit1St.

"1&amp; 07
t3 6
13 8
812
414
316

'

"""!'"Y
Cue Reserve

DJ..Qilcago
W. Dilnois
N. lOWII
ValWll.-Greel't Bay
C1eYe1an0 Sl

14 7
11 1
10 9
7 9
1112
5 t3
515
216

421

i!"r'eellden&amp;&amp;' (;oaf•
1
JOhn carrou
5 I
Wash.&amp;Jetr.

. sw-

,,7109

•

3 '

0
0
HooMer-BuclieJe Olltl.
8 1
8 2
3
6 3

Earlham

'' '
'

3
3 4
5
5

IJenlSOO

t&gt;stin

' ..........

14' 4

4 3

w""""
Mowtt UfUOn
Qltrrbelrl

'

Ha!XI'It'r
F1odlay

14

•
•

......

Ke!&gt;&gt;"'

I:

Defla""'

6 I

5

Ohio Wes~an
Baldwin-Wallace
~

6

' ''

MusklniJU.m

•

TaylOr

OhiO Cord.

OhJo Northern
WjHenbert&lt;

•

Sl. Louts

"II '4

••

ToledO

Evansv1lle
Detroit
Oklahoma CIIY

'

'' '2
•• 3
•3

15
13 3
13' 4
13 •
12 5
14 6

3

Iowa
Pur&lt;IUC
Ohk&gt; Sl .
IDIMis
Northwest£&gt;m
MIChigan St.
WI!ICOMin

Butler

WL

3
10 6
7 8
7
7 9
6 8
312
315

••
2
'' '

-B. Falrrow

Raveling, whose Washington State
team broke Into the Top~ as No.lS
this week.
The Cougars squeaked past
eamornla and StanforQ last weekend by a total of slx points to run
thelr
to 15-2, 7-0ln the Pac-10.
1
Ravellng was not surprised at his
team's performance: "I said before
the season started that ~pie were
downplaylng us when they
shouldn't be."
UCLA, first for two straight
weeks, lost Friday night to Ala:
bama and dropped to~eventh. It still
managed two first place votes.
·;The remainder of the firSt-place
votes were split among VIrginia
;.nth three; St. John's two and
Memphis State and Houston with
one each.
VIrginia, 17-2 after heating Louis·
ville Satuniay, moved up from
seventh ro third. Memphis State,
16-l, advancedanotchtofourthand
st. John's moved from eighth to

Aoother full slate of action begin·
nlng with four games tonight Is
sla ied this week In the Southern
Valley Alhletlc Conference.
Non-league games scheduled tonight · Include Wahama at Kyger
Creek; North Gallla at Hannan, W.
Va.; Eastern at Alexander and
Hannan Trace plays at Fairland.
Friday night, all teams return to
league play as the defending cham·
plon Southern Tornadoes attempt
to keep their· loop winning streak
Intact at North Gallla; second place
Kyger Creek
,_ viSits Hannan Trace
and Soutliwestern attempts to snap
Its long losing streak at Eastern.
On Saturday, Southern, a 68-59
loSer at Logan last Saturday, hosts
ceredo-Kenova of Cabell County,
W. Va,

"

SUIISCRIPI'ION RATES
By~orMOIOrRoule

WI. ""' Reoonl Clalo
I~ lli 25-9 Novice
128 16 l.s-9
Open
1aJ lli 1.3 Novice
144 18 2.0 Novice
147 19 14-9
Open
~ l4
IHl Novice

B. WWls
B. Nltz

Four SVAC
games slated .
this ·evening

'

MldwcOemCityCoof.
X.vl&lt;r
' 0
1
Loyola, Ill.
I
Oral Roberts

........ .......
,._,. c.ru. ...

'

:·•

ham 18. 18 (tiel. Zanesville Rosoecrans

CoileKt' BaMett.ll'

Name

great for thi! community and great
tor everybody." he said.
It marked the loftiest spot In the
history of the school, SU!lla5Slng the
No. 3 ranking achieved In 1976 when
the Rebels went to the NCAA finals.

"This is great for the university,
hapw.

and Yellow Sprlngl Hi. 71 (tiel. Oak Kif
and Br1dglopor1 15. 22. McDonald 14

Cage standings

'

;•

I1'Ct'lv~J: 10 or more

pctnts: n. Cortland MapieYiood 41. 12,
Mlddl('lown Fenwick 29. 13. Mogadore 7'/.
14 Chllilcotbe Fla@et ~ . 15. Beaver East~ Zi: 16. GaUon Not'tlvnOr 24. 17. Wind-

ti, WellSvtlle, 13-0, in
7, Yw~IIJwn Ra)'('ll. 11-3. R2
B. Akron St. Vlncent-SI. Mary , 11l-3, 66
9, MWers~f'li!: WE'5t Holmes, 14-2, ll

~

Nawavne U. ZJ {tic\ , HamUtoo Badin .
Gemu\ntown Val~· V!ew, West MUtoo
Mlltoo-Union and New Paris National
Trail tO.

8. MIO:IIt'town. 12-2. 71
.
9. Toledo St. Francis. U-1. ll

,..

fifth

10, Pottamoutla. lU, 3-1
Other schOOls n!C..'t'lvln!i: 10 or mort"
polrus: 11. Glnm:l .12. 12 ~ (tic\, Lorain
Catholic and \\'hedertbUrl a 14 Ole) ,
l.sncasler Fatrfleld Union lflld Zanesv!Ue
Maysville 22. 1£. SteubenVille 21. 17 (tiel.
&amp;llevue and Clrclt'Yille 18.. 19. Mcmili90
1\aslaw 11. !!0, ~\'..11. 14. 2l
jUe l, Mc&lt;:onnel&lt;ivl.l&amp;e Morran and Cre!too

COLUMBUS. OhiO 1AP1 - Haw a statE&gt;

panel of s porU; writers ~q troadcasten
ranks Ohio high school baskr1ba.U teal'rui
Hils week for The Associated ~

todo something (violent). That'sall
It takes," he sald.
He said that If the strike continues
for a week, It will take two weeks for
his business to return to normal
torsays,
•
At the same time, grocery
Joe ~valier, 65, and his uncle,
officials said they have stocked up
Frank Cavaller, 85, have leased
on goods to avoid shortages.
dock space at the 'massive Cleve"We don't anticipate our custoland food storage warehouse for
mers will suffer," sald Carl Fazio
morethan(i(}years. They are major
Jr., spokesman for E1lsher 'Foods.
distributors of fruits, vegetables
He added that Impacts of the strike
4!nd other perishables.
will depend upon how long It lasts.
However, lfthestrlkels powerful,
"we have great concern for the
Joe Cavalier sald that If the strike
per~hable Items like leafy vegeta·
gains S\IPI)Ort, his ~ks will be
empty by 1100n Tuesday, and . bles. They won't store long," said
Richard J.Bogomolny, presldet,~tof
shortages wm begin to show .u p In
Plck-N·Pay,
grocery stores by the end of the
Fazio, Bogomolny and John J .
week.
Heinen, president or Heinen's
"A lot of 'em (truckers) are
stores, all said they had alternallve
waiting a day or two to see which
plans for shipping meat and
way It goes," he sald. ''U It gets bad
produce if supplies dwindle during
(violent) ,you won'tseeanybodyout
the strike. The three men mentl·
there (on the highways).
"!be Insurance companies have
oned railroads . •
"But the ralls don'twork that well
told thesedrtverstoshipatthelrown
with highly perls)lable Items,"
risk. ktot of these guys are scared
Bogomolny said. "U the strike Is
and ldon'tblamethem. You'll get a
successful, we'll begin to see
small percentage of people who try

POOTMAS'fER: Send address to Tl&gt;e
Dally Sentinel, Ill C.,urt SL, Pomeroy.
Ohio 45769.

MelpBoxen
Scheduled For BoutS

North Carolina takes
over top spot in poll
By The Associated Press
·
It's been a rollercoaster year for
defending national champion North
Carolina which started the season
ranked third and then dropped out of
the college basketball ranldngs
after losing three of its first slx
games.
._.,_
. The Tar Heels are back on top
now, ranked No. 1 In the weekly
Associated Press poll for the first
time this season and riding a
14-gamewlnnlng streak.
North Carolina received 34 first·
place votes and l,(l73 points from a
panel of 56 sports writers and
broadcasters, becoming tne
team to top the poll this . year,
succeeding VIrginia, Indiana,
Memphis State and UCLA.
"There are too many good teams
to say someone Is the best," said
North Carolina coach Dean Smith
after the ranldngs were announced
Monday night. "Since we're such a
young team, maybethiswUlbegood
forourconl!dence,"
The only unbeaten Division I
team, Nevada-Las Vegas, moved
up to second place In the latest
ranldngs, receiving 13 first place
votes and 1,017 points, and that
made Coach Jerry Tarkanlan

CLEVELAND (AP) - Food
shortages could begin In grocery_
stores bby the end of the week If a
nationwide strike by Independent
truck drivers ta)tes hold, a dlstrlbu·

National Advertising Representative,
;Branham Newspaper Sales, 733 Third
Avenue, New York, New York.l0017.

chosed. ··TI)e boxers, other .than weight,
are matched by experience and
age, A novice boxer Is one which
has not reached the age of 16 and
has not had 10 bouts. Those meeting
.this criteria Jl.re In the open class.
Meigs will fleld two ln the open
class and four In the novice class.
The night's first bout wUl be an exhi bltlon between elght year olds
Mark Haley and David Darst, mak·
lng their debut.

Rtpiey also brings two others who
. Dedication, a·Uttle natural abU-'
are
favorites In the upcoming West
tty, arid a lot of sweat all pays o!f
VIrginia
state championships. Hea·
Saturday, Feb. 5, at 7:30 p.m. at
vywelght Danny Claxson and
Larry MorrisOn GymnasluJ11 as the
MeigS Boxing Club matches Its Bruce Martin are these first-class
members against several other fighters.
Those who watched "CBS
clubs.
.
Sports"
last Sunday saw Akron,
Participating In thenlght's action
Ohio's
106
pound Todd Hickman
will be clubs from Glouster, Ripley,
win
the
National
Golden Gloves
Coshocton, Parkersburg, Logan
as cloSI!IY as
championship,
but
not
and Cambridge. Two other clubs,
a
Meigs
boxer
saw
him
two years
Zanesvllle and Ohio University,
;lgo.
could possibly be on the agenda.
Melgs' 15 year old Buddy Fair·
Hlpley;s National Sliver Gloves
row
fought Hickman at the Ohio
Champion, Charlie Hatcher, will be
State
Fair two years ago. Falrrow
the night's headlining match,
lost
by
a TKO In the second round.
Hatcher was scheduled In a Meigs
match held three months ago, but
At least 16 bouts are scheduled
faDed to appear because of a prewith
trophies awarded to the
vious engagement. Hatcher won
and medals to the losers.
winners
the championship In Peoria, Illinois
The
match-ups
have not yet been
last year.

soum

Sa n DiegO at Boston

:m

The Ogily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Strike could cause food shortages

seventh positions for the second tral was third again In Class A with
straight week. Middletown moved Old Washington Buckeye TraU
up two spots to eighth and a pair of fourth, KaHda llfth, Ottoville sixth,
Toledo schools, Toledo St.Francls Anna seventh, newcomer Peebles
and BOwsher, took over the ninth eighth, Racine Southern ninth and ·
Bucyrus Wyntord lOth,
and lOth positions,
InClassAA, OakHarborretalned . - - - - - - - - - , - - - fourth place. Akron St VIncent·
st.Mary, fifth last week, tcist to
The Doily Sentinel
Barberton and Canton McKinley,
('VSPSI-)
A Dlvlolon ol MWIImedla, lllc,
both Class AAA, and fell to eighth
behind Columbus Bexley, Wells·
Published every afternoon, Monday
ville and Youngstown Rayen.
through Frlclay, 11l C.,urt Street, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing C&lt;&gt;mpan~ 1 : Mul·
Millersburg West Holmes moved
umedla, Inc., l'&lt;&gt;meroy, ·Ohlo 4$7!19, !J!I'l.
back Into the Class AA Top Ten,
2156. Second class postaae paid at
. Pomeroy, Ohio.
jumping from 12th to ninth. Ports·
mouth fell two spots to lOth after
Member: The Assoclated Press. Inland ·
losing to Wheelersburg 85-65.
Dally Press Assoclatlcn and the AJnerl.
can Newspaper Publishers Assoclatlon,
New Washington Buckeye cen-

Meanwhile, Lorain King In Class
AAA and Willard In Class AA also
kept their . poll leads for the fifth
straight week In the balloting by a
state panel of sports writers and
broadcasters,
King (14-0) plled up
points to
-240 for second-ranked Warren
Western Reserve (14-0) , WU!ard
(14-1) had 252 points, 28 more than
runnerup Coldwater (15-0) , Colum·
bus Whitehall (15-0), tledfor~nd
with Coldwater last week, fell .to
third place In Class AA.
In Class AAA, Canton McKinley,
Cincinnati Mount Healthy, Akron
central-Hower, East ~ell!lld
Sliaw and Dayton Dunbar re
malned In the third through the

Boxing card -slated. Saturday

.

Oleyney St . 71, Moq~;an SL 61
F'alrCeld 66, Brown 59
Harvard 71. Me-rrimack fi1
Maryland 98, Navy 73
Nkhols 81. Westfteld St.
~r 71. La Sa lit- 69 .....
RoiX'-11 Morris .J-1. Baltimore 4.3
St . JOSt"p h's. Main£&gt; 7R, Coli . of New
EnR!and il
VIllanova S8. Geor~wwn or

Moftclay's Games
Boston no. ChlcaRO 104

C!~Nel and

~
492

13!1

.791 -

14 32

16-3
. t&gt;)
16-J

:Jl.Syracuse

19~

Por1iand
Phoenix
San Dlef!;o

ti29

an

l9.Georgta

61fl

M

9

17-1

u

.383
.182

Los Anli.'l'IC!l

Sr&gt;attk:'
Golden Sta tE'

'

J
6¥.!

.4'18

BIM

lG.IUtnoisSiall'
15-1
17 .Minnesota
13- 3
lS . W as hln l!fO n StatP

.617 -

.m

Ell!
~

J4 .Geor~ICPNn
L.,.Kerm•:ky

MldweHII Dh'Bbn

29 18
2.1 22

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Something has to give atop The
Assoclaied Press' Class A state &gt;
prep boys basketball poll this week.
Top-ranked St.Henzy, plays at No,
2-rated Delphos St.John's Friday
night.
The two powers from the Midwest
Athletic Conference have been
waging a close battle tor Class A
state S\lpremacy for *"era! weeks.
St.Henry (14;0), the leader since
the ratings began !nearly January,
led St.John's (:15-D) by three points a
week ago. Now the Redsklns'
margin Is up to ~ points this week,
267-247.

16 ·

18-1
~2
14-2
16-2

t1.towa

.326 lt Y,
Of'Ve-land
9 35
n'i 'HJ
WESTERN OONFEJtENCE

Sa n Antonio
Kans.as City

9IJ2

9'!l

-

Z3 2.3

By GEORGE S'l1WDE
AP Sports Wr!Wr ·

1,017

J.Ylratnla tl l
17.2
4.ME&gt;mphl sS t . !1 I

JYi
tOY,
.455 18
.400 DY.!

lH 'El
Central DtviUon

New York

0

Tuesday, February I, 1983

Southern ninth in Class A cage ratings;
Trojans .of Portsmouth lOth in Class ~A

Scoreboard ...
Basketball

...

Tuesday, Februal"f 1,1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. iNCLUDES ALL THIS ' .
• Insta ll ne w front
• lmpe ct mo~ter
di i&lt; pods
cylinder
• Resurface rotan
· .• In sped brCk,e h ose~
• Repack front
• .(l.dd fluid, 0)
wheel bearings
needed
Most Dohun~. • Insta l l new front
• Rood fe~i the cor
ToyotCK, vWs .
grease sea ls

$79
'69

M~t

u .s. cors

,

••
•
•

Single phton system. Add S 15 when ~mi-metallk di~c
pod5 needed. Deduct Sb fo r con with GM lif&amp;tlme
~led bft9rlngs.
,

'

AUGNMENT MOST cARS
$~3.75

~f s11tf,;

trappers many )'ears ago.

'

'•
,•
'.
'

'
•'

J

�1983

County happenings

The" Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Clarification
John Fisher would like to add his
wtte's name, Sarah Fisher, to the
Flsher-Kreuzer engagement and
wedding announcement. Molly Ann
Is Mrs. Fisher's stepdaughter.

Tuesday, February 1,1983 .
~ Page-6;

Beat of the .bend

Dial-a-van

l1page See~ers in seaFch of historic homes
By BOB HOEFLICH
J)ally Sellllnel Staff
I, perhaps, have misled you. If so,
let me make myself perfectly clear.
Meigs Qlunty
mera Club has
embarked on a
project of coming
up with photographs of Meigs
Co unty's older
l)omes and these
photos will be
presentation for Heritage Sunday,
observed ru; a part of Big Bend Regatta Weekend.
I had the Impression that the club
was looking for photographs o!
these older homes. That's not the
case. You are to ·submlt ln!ormatlon on your home, givtng Its location, description, shOrt history o!
your home, noting any unique fur· ·
nlshings and restorations along
with your phone number. The club
members will select homes for tbe
!!pal presentation and they will
come to your house and take a current photo which will be used In the
sllde show.
U you're Interested In being a
part send your ln!o to Image Seek-

ers Camera Club, c-o Randy11ou·dashelt, Box 67, Rutland, Ohio
45775.

'.

'
~' .
I have some difficulty In ac.
ceptlng the bleak economic picture and I'll tell you why .
The Dally Sentinel, for a couple o!
weeks, has had a walk paper 1'1\Ute
open In Syracuse. Circulation department personnel tell me It's a
good route. A carrier can make
about $25 a week on lt. Now, that
. seems Uke a good deal to me even lr1
good times. However, there have
been no applicants -youngster or
adult.
ba;-sn't anyone want to work any
more -or don't they have to or, Is
$25 a week beneath conslderljtlon?

Blll Young hac! quite a 40th birth·
day recently.
His wife, Ramora, Included ao
hellum-fllle«l balloons among hJ.i
gifts. After the family had enjoyed
the frivolous moment, tbe balloons
were released to the great beyond
In groups o! five. Notes were att·
ached but so far the Youngs ha'le
gotten no word of anyone receiving
any of the send-ups.

Middleport VIllage Secretary
Martha Howell came back to her
post Monday after a health ·scare
last week. Martha became ill and
was hospitalized. Surgery loomed
In the background for a few days .
and then, for'tunately, faded , How·
ever, Martha will have to watch her
diet ,.- goodies are a no, no- for a
while. That's hard - but worth It,
Martha.
P o meroy Postmaster Jim .
Soulsby Is finding quite fascinating
copies of the Democrat, a former
Meigs County newsp;lper, which
were given to him.
Could I share some of the bargains that were available II) advertisements from an Issue o! May 24,
1934?
P o meroy Bargain House was apparently thriving and offered P&amp;G
Soap (whatever happened to that?)
for two cents a bar; men's dress
shirts for 00 cents; ladles' sUk
dresses for $1.69 and $2.95, and
dress ginghams . for 771 cents a
yard .
The steamer, J .S. DeLuxe was
being advertised for Decora lion
Day. The boat was advertised as

" one o! the largest, finest. fastest.
most beautiful and most. powerful
excursion boats In the whole world
with 5,00l electric lights, a capacity
ot 2,000persons, a huge daJ!cetlopr,
500 electric tans and 400 dining ta- .
bles. There was " stlrilng, thrilling
dance music'' by Plron's Dixie Cotton Pickers, a 12-plece orchestra o!
"fun and melody."
'rbe excursion was scheduled for
Porruneroy, Mlddlwort, POO!t Plea·
sant and Gallipolis. One left Pomeroy at 6 p.m. and didn't _get back
until midnight (I believe that was
midnight If there wasn't a lot o! fog
on tbe river). Anyway - all o! this
fun cost a customer just 75 cents.
Movtng right along - The New
York Clothing House o!tered purse
worsted men's suits for $19.50; at
Rathburn's In Middleport, now tbe
middleport Department Store, evening sDk dresses were available
for $7.95 up and white sUk dresses
were avaUable for $4.95. You could
buy a new Chevrolet coach,
equipped, for $598 from the Pomeroy Chevrolet Co.
Well - It all proves tltat nothing
Is forever . So - another reason to
keep smiling ·...

Adlal-a -vanseiVIcelsbelnglnstiluted by Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene. ·
Residents of the Pomeroy·

Dale Stoll, Meigs County Exten·
slon Service agent, gave a demonstration on making soup at the
recent meetlngofThlrdWednesday
Homemakers Club held at the
municipal building.
The soup prepared by Mrs. Stoll
was e njoyed by the members as a'
part of the potluck luncheon. Ada
Titus, secretaryofthe JacksonArea
Home ·eouncll, reviewed activities
of the Jan. 5 meeting held at Jackson
which she and Carol Cur:.ll!f
attended.
Mrs. Cundiff, preslden~ read a
letter from the state president of the
Ohio Extension Homemakers Council, Evelyn Walters, regarding the
state m eeting to be held May2 and3
In Columbus· at the Ohio Union. A
c horus will perlonn at the banquet
and members are Invited to sing.
Jane Teaford had devotions ustnt
scripture from Proverbs 15. A poem
entitled "A Prayer" was read bY
Margaret Bailey . Members ans·
wered . roll call witl! "What I Uke
About Winte r." Mrs. Bailey and
VIrginia Salser gave the secretary
and treasurer's reports.
Theaftemoonwasspentqullting.
Another afternoon·was spent qU!)t·
lng at the home of Mrs. Parker.

Better Health
A report on donations from
families borrowing hospital l'qulpmeni was given at the recent
J. meeting of L;mrel Cliff Better
Health Clu b held at tbe home of Iva
Powell.
Donna Gilmore gave devotions
reading Psalms 46. Readings
Included "Christ Is the Answer",
" Recipe for a Revival" and " Brtng
Down a Son" by Marge Fetty. Mrs.
Powell presided at the business

meeting with reports being given bY
the officers.
Refreshments were served bY
Mrs. Powell and Mrs. Fetty to
Donna GUmore, Eya Robson,
Genevieve Ward, Beulah Oehler,
Mrs. Wright. and a guest, Teresa
Varian.

Department of Education.
Poston was guest speaker at tbe
recent meeting of Alpha Omicron
Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma
held at the Middleport Church of

Christ.

The speaker reported that new
state standards for education are to
be Issued In August, and that bY the
198S-!ll year competency plans
must be completed with tests to be
administered by either the state or
district. She emphasize~~ tltat local
The inlsslon goal for 1982 was
school
boards are responsible for
achieved, according to a report
the
course
of study In schools.
given bY Donna Gilmore, treasurer,
Poston talked on the state school
at a recent meeting of the Laurel
standards
Implemented In 1914 for
Cliff Free Methodist Women's
secondary
schools and 1!Ji7 for
Fellowship held at the home of
schools. She said tlta t
elementary
EmmaFox.
•
the
Ohio
State
Qlnstltution says the
Mrs. GUmore also reported on
General
Assembly
must provide
projects for the working lund. It was
time,
she said, ii
education.
At
one
announced that a film on missions
was
ordered
that
George
Washing·
will be shown next month.
ton's p; lcture, at least a 9 bY141nch
Devotions were given bY Mrs.
one,
be displayed n classrooms.
GUmore who used scripture from I
After
World War IT many eleC'tlves
Thes. 5 and readings, "Primed for
and
school
consolidations were
Prayer" , "TakeTimetoWalt",and
emphasized,
Poston
noted. She was
a "Handy Prayer Reminder."
Introduced
by
Carol
Eberts,
profes·
Jean Wright noted prayer reslonal
affairs
chairman.
·
quests and led tn prayer . She &lt;tlso
Committee chairmen making
gave a reading on "The Power of :J:J
reports
were Maxine Philson,
Days of Prayer" with members
scholarship; Margaret Benson,
choslng prayer partners for the next
legislation; and Jean · Ward,
30days.
Mrs. Fox had a reading on the membership.
VIola Gettles presided at the
Last Supper: The program was
meeting
which was preceded bY a
presented by Brenda Haggy who
carry-In
dinner.
Tables were decoused "Love Finds a Way to Search
rated
In
a
winter
motif with
Out Needs." Members took a test on
and
baskets
of plumes
snowmen
the Dominican Republic.
Next meeting wl1l be held at the and greenery.
The hostesses were Mildred
home of Mrs. Haggy. Karen Stanley '
Hawley,
Roberta Wilson who gave
was co-hostess for the meeting.
the invocation, Beatrice Reinhart,
Martha Murphy, Patty Peoples,
Smaller schools, vocational edu- WlnlfreO Naas, Avice Frecker,
LucUle Smith, Dorothy Woodard,
cation and competency tests In
and Joann Hays.
reading, writing and arithmetic are
Donna Jenkins had charge of the
the demands of the day, according
music
and Introduce«! her father
to Mary Poston of the Ohio
who sang, "Give Us Thls Day" ,
" Light One Candle" , and " I Walked
Where Jesus Walked.''
The Feb.19 meeting at 12: 30 p.m.
will be at the Robbins Restaurant,
Jackson.
Other Meigs County members
Robert Fisher at 2 p.m . Mrs.
attending were Nan Moore, Neltle
Forrest Bac}\tel will have the
Parker, Margaret Parsons, Maxine
book review.
Philson, Mary VIrginia Reibel,
Rebecca Zurcher, Jeanette ThoSYRACUSE - Missionaries
mas, Anna Elizabeth Turner.
Rev. and Mrs. Robert JI udson
. from El Salvador wl1l beat Syracuse First Church ol the NazaArrangementstoservetheAmerrene Wednesday at 7 p.m.
lcan Red Cross bloodmoblle canEveryone Is welcome to attend.
teen on Its next visit, Feb. 23, to tbe

Laurel Cliff
Fellowship

discussion was held on the mldwln·
ter conference · held over the
weekend In Columbus.
A report was given on the January
party at the Arcadia Nursing Horne
In Coolville. Conducting the party
were Gerry and Vlrg11 Parsons,
Mrs. Richmond, Mrs. Madden,
Sonia ParSQns, Lois Roush, Becky
TYree and Grace Welsh. Seventyfour patients were served a1 tjle

party.
Reported on sick call were Joseph
Shuler, Robert Cornellus, Edna
Wayland, John Metzger, Harold
Will, Emma Wayland, Robert King,
Freda Krautter, Roy Sansbury, and
Lewis Sauer. A birthday card was
signed for Thomas Turner, 78, Jan. ·

.26.

De"lta Kappa Gamma

Calendar
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM wlU meet
Tuesday at 7: 30 p;m. All
members should attend. Refreshments will be served.
POMEROY - 1Pomeroy
Chapter 186, OrdeJf•f Eastern
Star, will meet at 7:45p.m . Tuesday. All officers should wear
chapter dresses.
POMEROY - Lebanon
Towrishlp Trustees will meet at
7 p.m. Tuesday.

·-

Legion auxiliary

.

THURSDAY .
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172, Middleport,
will meet Thursday at 7: :J:J p.m.
I nl tla tory work will be ·
exemplified.

SYRACUSE - ' Sutton Township Trustees will meet Tuesday
at8 p.m. at the Syracuse Munlcl· .
POMEROY ~ Missionary
pal Building.
meeting at Hysell Run Holiness
'----..
Church Thursday at 7: 30 p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs Athletic Speaker will he Rev. Okey Cart.
Boosters wl1l meet TUesday at Pastor Theron Durham Invites
7: :J:J p.m. at the high school. the publlc to attend.
Issues of Importance will be
diScussed. · ·
·
POMEROY - MARC wl1l
· _;. meet'Thursday at 7:30p. m. Guest speaker will' be Rhonda
WEDNESDAY
who wl1l speak on nu·
Stockwell
MIDDLEPORT ~ Middle- .
trttlon.
All
IntereSted persons
port . Utenry Club · wlU meet
are Invited to attend.
WednesdaY at the home of Mrs.

.,

Senior Citizens Center, were made
when the American Legion AuxU, lary of Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
met at the hall,
It was ·notect that several legion
and AuxUlary members are In need
of bloo«l replacement Including
John Metzger, Harold Will, Robert
Cornelius, and Edna Wayland.
~pies were ordered In preparation for Poppy Days In Middleport ,
tentatively scheduled lor May :p.
and 22. Buckeye Girls' State
orientation was announced tor Feb.
~ at 1 p.m. at the hall w_ttp
candidates and their parents til be
Invited.
· A recognition dinner for tbe
· Middleport Boy Scout Troop sponsored bY the Post was set tor AprU15
at 6: :J:J p.m.
' .
WelcOmed · Into membenblp
were Callie Rlclunllld, Dillie
Jarvis and Downie

Ke!J!-.u:

. Bedford Trustees

Syracuse area wanting a . ride to
morning worship seiVIce of Syracuse Church are asked to contact
992-5126, 992·6559, or 992-3517.

A meeting of ~ord Township
Trustees to appropriate funds for
1983 has been sertorSaturday at 5
p.m. at tl!e home of tbe clerk. A
regular meeting wlU follow at 6
p.m. The public Is welcome to
attend.

Sarurday dance

•
" Music Unllmlted" will provide
muslcatadancetobestagedSatur. day from g to 11 p.m . at Rutland
. Civic center. Admission Is S3 per
couple or S. a single. On Sunday,
skatlngwillbeheldtrom2to4p.m .
atthecenterwiththosetaklngpart
to bring their oWn skates.

and dlaa,Mm·
alid• tet .
Ntedlawing
paint. You

·
BOGGS

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U.S. Rt. SO East
Guysville, Qhio
Authorized John DMre,
New Holland, Bush Hog

Far"'o~~r;~ment

,
EvangellneChapter17'l,MtddleporiwillmeetThursdaya t7::J:Jp,m .
Initiatory work wUI be exemplified.

Farm Equipment
Parts&amp;Service
1·J·Hc ,

blo . First come boo lo. Call
446-0649 atter 6P~ . .

'ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

New Homos -

RACINE
fiRE DEPT.

txton5ive

B h B .1d.
as an Ul In~
EVERY

l1t1IOdeinl

o£1octrie 110ft
.Custom Polo Bldp.

o~~oo~t:J::'
-Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidincs
15 ,., Elq&gt;Dnco

S)\ T. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

;..RE 992~J1

factotY Choke 12

GaiJIII! Shotguns Only.

«992·2212

ll·ll ·tic

1·3·1 mo

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wrihlbilly Sentintl Ctassftitcl

We · can repair · and
ntCO,. redialon and
heater cores. We can

:l:J."'-·-···. . . .
22· ·- ··~

, , ..._,.. s-.
3u
3 -J
_ _ ,.,, .... •••
- ·-~•

3 4 ·1 1 1 - · · · -....
.li·LDIII Aeroaoo

11-11--.oldGoodo
U -CI. T't I RNio ltt"'-"'

11·"-""''*

14-Uioe lol•elooM iM

74 -M«_........
Jl .............

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

U:·Tt...._l . . . . .
U ·'t•ui4WO

11- luiWi"'~
IIIII· ~IIIMI­

71 · A-~-~,_

...

,•.,......... ,,

......... c.. . WY

...,..

Il •lolll...,a/IM-tUI

71-.t.- "-''Nir

II· FIIIIIII Ytlll-0

71 · ~·~--

A•c• Cotto 304
· I~

PI ' Pio_,o

4UI
1 11

l....... c .......

11l

.......

1 11
lt!o

liiiM

1137

luttl~l

2 1· ~E•o•W•nlo"

• l· Ht:!u•OIOt MMI

,"'·'*'-..,..•-"'
•.._._.

.•.

l l -MDIMio -

.......
,.......w•c•,._...

13·, .............. .

4 ......................... .

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

14- ~oT•oiooi"'

II·Fu...-....1'1.._..

ll ·ho,.IEqu;.,..,...,

er .w.,.,..t,olur

Up to 1&amp;-&lt;h

. .. ..... . f ...l .....

.

o ... ...., ..,__

t·--·-·· . . • . .

Upto15_ ...
Up!IIS.Wortk

"I,..H hOI~

SALE
DISCONTINUED
PERM. STOCK
$1700

•••£..................... .
l f ·'6tLiuo

13 00

Tht... ol.oy l"-"""
s ..

1 4 00
•100

.u,..,_,_,

1

KAYS
BEAUlY SALON

ARD

parsonage hall.
Plans tor several activities were
discussed. Meetings wUI be held
f6llow!ngthe6p.m . Sundayeveniqg
service at the church.
Attending were Wendy Triplett,
Arnie Franco, Mary . Baldwin.
Richard and Rachelle Davis, Doug
and Beckie Lavender, Mary, Paula
and Becky Winebrenner, Eber
Pickens, Shawn and Robbie Cunningham, Lori and Doug Stewart,
John Imboden, Regina Lee, Allee
Rlffle, Earl Pickens , Shenn Cundlfl, Jeff and Brenda Davis, Uncia
Stewart, and the ReV. and Mrs.

hostesses.
AttendlngtheluncheonwereMrs.
Etch, Jane Walton, LUIIan Moore,
Maidie Mora , Clarlc Krautter,
Mary Morris, Donna Jones, RubY
Baer, Betty Ohlinger, Roberta
O'Brien, Marjorie Crow. AnnRupe,
Rose Sisson, Nanna Custer, Velma ·
Rue, Teresa Swatiel, and Janet
Theiss.

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
.,
,,

.'

·'·'

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

,,

NEW LISTING- MIDDLEPORT- Newly remodeled home
on a corner lot. Great location. great price. Want $36,500.00.

.

"

James Kittle.

Wildwcxxi Garden ·

Long Bottom
Community
Association

tram

Pentecostal Women

Preceptor Beta Beta

Mrs. Grace Elch hosted a
at the Meigs Inn for
luncheon
Plastic medicine bottles'with lids
are still being collected bY Syracuse meml;lers of the Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Nazarene Missionary Society to·be
Sorority reeently.
sent to a hOflJl[lalln Africa.
During , the business meeting
In addition the !IOCiety Is col1ectwhich
toilowed, a social for Febru· ,
tng white sbeeta which can be made
ary
was
dlscusaed. Founder's Day
Into bandages tor the African
wsas
announced
for AprU 26 )lt The
hospllal which Is chttrch iJ10010red.
Entertainer,
and
It was I)Oied that
.Residents with Items 10' donate
the
state
convention
will be held In
may ca11·992-3lll, 992-I'Al6, 992-'1011,
May
In
Akron.
or 922-5126, or they may be left with
PlBns·for serving the bloodmobile ·
· any member o! the COiigl'egatlonpr
canteen In March was made. Next
at tbe church or parsonage.
meeting will be held on·Feb. 5at tbe
Riverboat Room ot tile Diamond
Savtnaa
and LoaiiCowithJune Van
1be Snlck·'n-Yak~~ Syre·
Vranlcal
to bave tbe ~anf and
CUI8
Ql\lrcll
met
___
, atrecent
the . Betty Ollllnaer and Velma Rue to be

OR

$500.00 REWARD. FOR lNFO~tMATION LEADING TO THE ARREST
CONVICTION OF PERSON OR PERSONS
TOOK THIS TRUCK FROM THE LOT OF
SAUSAGE CO. ON SATURDAY
ENING JAN. 29, 1983. IF YOU HAVE SEEN
TRUCK
A 1979 2.574 DIESEL IN·
NATIONAL, YELLOW CAB WITH 24'
LBY ALUMINUM BED

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
· SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding '

CALL /

estimates, 949· 2801

. W. VA. SAUSAGE CO.

949· 2860.

No Sunday Calls

New Haven, W.V•.
COLLECT

PORTLAND FARM - Owners want an offer on this.fantaslic
182 acre larm. Beautilul house, double car garage, barn: im·
plement shed, grain storage. Approximately 35 acres bOttom
land ..Balance wooded acreage. All minerals. Call lor inform a· ·
lion.

Collect

' Collect

304-182-2023

304-182-2m

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNlY. DHIO
ESTATE OF CARDLYN SUE
TRIPL£1T. OECEASED
c-No. 23974
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

m

\

On December 22. 1982. rn
the Me•gs County Probate
Court. Case No. 23974, Ernest
,Trr plett 826 Prince ton Avenue.
East Live rpool. Oh o 4 3920.
was appointed Admt nrSHator of
the esta te of Caroly n Sue
Tnpletl. deceased. late of 389

IEALIDI

~ -'-----------.,.~--·------._,..,

.

.,

..·•

I

1- Curb Inflation 1;
1I Pay Cash .for . I1
I
Classlfieds and II

•

Savell! ,

.

~

Write your own ad and order ..-riTfllll' with lhis
coupon. C~ncel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

Name·-------------

Unda Vaughan, Lue and Cathe•'
rlne Shenefield hosted a babY
·:
shower recently at the Vaughan
•·
home !or Eric Montgomery.
.,
Games were playe«l with prizes · ., •
going to Anna Halliday, Connie
';
Jones, June Wells, and RubY
·
Lambert.
Refreshments were
••
served to the guests, Eric's mother,
Unda Montgomery, Betty Lam·
•
bert, Pam Colwell and Bryan,
NeUle Myers, Barbara I:.ambert,
Dorothy Bolen, Catherine Colwell,
Charlotte Erlewlne , Dorothy Davis, .
Sherrie Might, Nina Macomber,
h •'•
Sheila Erlewlne, Melissa and Dustin , Beulah Wright, Joan Corder,
,;
Helen Mlller, Ruby Coughenour, . .. :
Charlene Crisp, E velyn Davis,
Maxine Dyer, Opal Dyer, Mandy,
'
Stepanle and Tanya Jones, Bernice
Midkiff, Crystal .and Bridget
·'
I
Vaughan, Laurie and DenlseShene'·
ttel«l. Others presenting gifts were
Bonnie Scott and Pauline Gorby.
"• I

1 Addreu'---....,.-----

W•lhams Street

Oh•o 457 60.

Pu bile Notice

I
I

REVENUE. SHARING
PUBUC ND11CE
. The Board of Orange Town Ship Tru stees, Me•gs County.
has submitted rts Form OH-3 to
State of Oh10 Audttor.
A copy of the repon and t he
suppOrt•ng documentation are
ava1lable for publrc tnspect•on
at the ho me of the townsh ip

I

1
I
I
I
I

clerk. Ntna Robinson. At. 2. Box
1 7 1. Coolville. 0 . January 31.

19B3 lhrough Februal'/ 5.
19B3

REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For Flocol vEnding o-t.bor
31 , 1982

.

~Townohlp

Melgo County
Rt. 2 lloJc 171

-·.,

( )Wanted
&lt; l For Sale
&lt; &gt;Announcement
I l For Rent

....
..'
••
.•

..'.•

J.

22.

F"~:.;~tecl•on

4. - - - - - ' -

23. --,---~-

u. - ----- I

8. _ _ _ __
9 ----~-

·••

10. - - - - - 11 ..

I.

-~----

25. - - - - -26. - -- - --

28. ----~29. - - - - ' - - -

30.
31 .

12. - - - - - 13. - -- .14.

33.

15. - - - · - - -

34.

16.

35. - ·- -·- -

1

m

·

.

S 37.536.97
.Less: Checks Out-

li

n - - -- - - II

32 .

1: Mall This Coupon with '-tmlttance
·t .
Tht Dally Sentln.t l · •
1

1,

CourtSt.
Pomeroy, 011.• 45769

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I'
I

1

·I·
I.

!1

. lnaclive}

Siand,ng

6.787.73

Total Assets

30.7 49.24

Fund Balances

30.7 49.24

uA~unEs:

Tolal
L•ab!ltl\es
SCHEDULE 11

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

2·80 1.1 5
4.7 49,92
82.106 .82

2 4

. ~~~Y p:
. ·

Expendlturw

General Fund

18.592.46

Motor" Vehtcle
Ltcense Tax

YOUNG'S

AND
APPLIAr«:E
SERVICE

6

CARPENTER
SERVICE

o-ovn• Wls,.

LOST : Male black Doberman. 5 yrs. old. Middleport
area. Last sean wearing
bl.ack spike collar. Call
614-992-6302 or contact
City Limits.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Antonno I,.!OIIfli&gt;n
HouH colla ond ahop

992-6216 or 99:!- 7:314

aorvio&amp; available
1-5·1 mo: Qd.

Pomeroy,

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

Fund
Road and Brrdge

16.656 .98
16,656 .9B
3.281 .06

Federal Revenue

2,650.43
3.554.14
51.358.58

Shanng Fund

llllanco
Dec. 31, 1982
General Fund
5.75 8.20
Motor Veh1cle
Lrcense Tax
Fund
Gasoli ne Tax
Fund
Road and Bridge
Fund
Fire Pmtectron
Fund
Federal Revenue
Shanng Fund
Total

1. 1tc

South 3rd .. Middleport. Oh .

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Free coffee. for
customers.

Fund

P1oteci ion

j ~.,.-------------------~._;~ IFecleral Revenue

1;386 ·70

82.22

-Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water'
~sewer

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
R .d , .
eSI en Ial
&amp; Commercial
Call742·31

-G •s Lln es
- 5eptiC 5ystems
LARGE or SMALL jOBS
PH. 992·2478
1·12·lmc.

CARPENTER
FOR
RENT
YOU

NAME THE PRICE

YOU MIGHT GET LUCKY

PH. 742-2328

1·31-l mo.

9.7686 1
12.3 10.92

,........._,....
·-•·

.

773 -5785 or 304 · 773 9186.
Auctiorl every Fri. night It
the Hartford CommunitY
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week
Consigments of new and
uaed merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynotds
AuCtioneer. 276-3069.

9

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE

Wanted To Buy

and leadin&amp; Creek Area.
"You Call, We'll Haul."

PH. 992-3194 or
992-3305
d

UO ay

C II
a S
I·S·I mo.

BUY Old

furniture and Antiques of all

AUTOMATIC

TRA
. NSMISSION rn.
211 W. loin

r'

Pomeroy. OH.

Weekly trash pickups in
Middleport, Bradbury,
OPEN M.!ION. tlru SAT.
9 ••
All TJIIISTof AutoU Ropaet ir,
sPEcm"' une- ps, c..
. TRANSMISSION FILTI;A
AND FLUID CHANGE
Only '31 .96
1-14-tlc

-Concrete

inc-

2

In Memoriam

Patios

New Construction

-

Re·

model inc - Custom Pole -

Blms.

i:HARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp;Siding Co.

kinds, call Kenneth Swain
446-3169 or 256- 1967 i~
the evenings.
.
G 1
8 uylng
o d, Silver. Plati·
num . Gold and Silver prk:es
ecrhe thko high a~ in two vearo.
a,c our procos on gold •
silver, ocrapjowolry. Buying
Old coins. scrap rings •
1erbwl ••Ae1. Dail.y q&amp;uotes

:ilv:

s~~;~~:~ f~~os~~:i~P~~i~

Valley Tradmg Co ., Spring
~=~"loileze, 446·8025 . or
.
·
We pay ce/!11 for late modo!'

150.72
1.195.78
30.749.24

,,
• 1·

clean u1ed cars.
Frenchtown Car Co .

Jam11 P. Snider departed

thlollve Fov. 1, 1970.
Sodly mined by wife.
children, grandchildren .

Old stoneware jars, juga
crocks &amp; milk pitchers, 111~
old wicher baskets . Call

614-367-0138.

1--------Buy raw fur and beet hides.
George Buckley, 614-664·
4761 . Weekdays 6 1o 9
weekends 12 noon to 9PM '
dear hides and gin~eng and
trapping supplies './ At . 2 ,

Athens., Oh .
Routo1
and sewing s
Long Bottom, OH . 46743 , SWEEPER
machine repair. parts, and
tanding timber. White oak
986-4193 "' 992-30117
ouppllea. Pick up and red oak, walnut. poplar . Any
Call 614 -388d e II very. Davio Vacuum amount.
9906 .
Claoner, one half mile up -:-::::-::-'::::-::-::--:---Gtorgea Creak Rd. Call BEDS · IRON , BRASS, otd '
448 ~0294..
furniture, gold , silver
dollars, wood ice boxes
Gun shoot , Racine Gun

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT

POMEROY
LANDMARK
614-992·2181

.
Roger Hysell

Club. Every Sunday starting
1 p.m. Fa.c tory choke"d guns
only.

GARAGE
51. Rt. 124 Pomeroy,

D~

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Phone 882-3121
New H aven. WV

3·2Hfc '

"CUT OUT

FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE .
'SERVICE
.
· 985·3561

·Afl Makes

•w.twi•DIIh-

.,...,.,....,..
•llohluowwturo

.~
_,,.,.... -.- 1

INCOME TAX SERVICE.
Federal end State Income
ta
Qua

I

Also Transmission·
Pt:t. 992-5682
or992-7121 '

-·
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~IW~~~~~~====;;;;;;;::::=~

•

WVa State Champion AuCti ~
one:er Rick Pearson. Estates,
anttquas. farm, hou1eholds.
Licensed Ohio-WVa . 304-

1----------4-----..._----1
1,565 .0 1

~

Gl

Public Sale
&amp;. Auction

Bill Gene Johnson
446-0069

General Joon.
Fund 1. 11827.956.18
M01o1 Vehicle
License TaK
Fund
5.4 33 .55
5.279.26

EXCAVATING
:~~::~"

'------,..-----ll---------~ -=---'-

Now renting 25 one bedroom apartment
units, renting for 30 percent of your ad. ed Inconie
.
lUst
under the De partment of
Housing &amp; Urban Development Sel:tion. 8
program. A11 utilities included

Fund
Road and 8rldge

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

PULLINS

2·26-Uc

Sumrrwy of Clah

Gasoline Tax,

our

614-992-2181

0

RIVER B~ND APARTMENTS
HOUSING FOR THE ELDERLy

B..,_, R...,_
And:.----lanco

Yard Sale

Big in1ide·yard &amp;. bake sale .
Thul"' . 8t Fri .,. Feb . 3 &amp; 4.
10 -3 p.m. in basement of
the United Pentecostal Ch .• ·

At

$199.95

N S

WE ALSO WORK ON
All OTHER APPLIANCES

30,749 24

304-675-5186 .

7

6.622 .51

Ta• Fund

LOST: set of keys on 6th. St .
Name Fay on the ring ,

LOST: 1 Beegle, white-black
spot a. 1 half Beagle, black •
tan, Rt . 2 near Flatrock.
304-676-1577 .

SALE ON
SPACE HEATERS
Prices Start

..

446-1 672.

electricalwortc
(F""' Eotima1811)

• Scottie :Smith
All mok• .rid models

Lost and Found

wired hair Terrier. Found in ·
vincinl1y of lincoln Pike .
Northup Bridge area . Cell

- Roofing and gutter work
- Concme wort&lt;
- Plumbing and

Ph. 98~269

•'

FOU NO Small black female

-Addons and ramodeting

a.st•.orOhio985-4382

r

Fund
Gasoline

CooMIIe, Ohio
I
J-aoy 26, 1983
I
I certify 1ho folloymg repon
I to bo conwct.
Nina Robl.-,
I
T~Ciellt
I
Tal. No. 121
I 614-9815-3869
I
SCHEDULE I
1
Ctah .......
I
sD - 3 1 . 1982
I
ASSETS:
I Cash qn Hand
·II ' Depos ttory Salances ·
(Act1v:e and

5. - -- - - 6. - - - - - 7. _ _ _ __

.....

':
''
:;
;;
••

2.

17. -----~
18. - -- - - 19, - - - - - 20. _ _ _ __ _
21. _ _ _ _ __

1. --~----··

'...

"•
'•

2.718.93
r
2 6 13 00
·
·
59.831.99
COMPLETE
T'"-' Recoipta
RADIATOR
and
ExpenditurH
General Fund
24.350.66
From tileSERVICE
Smallest Heater
M otor Vehtcle
L&lt;eense T••
Con to tile IJIIMI Radiator.
Fund
16.39 1. 12
llldN*iaTHto!NSpec:BIGiaGISist
Gasoli ne Tax
,. "
Fund
.
.
35
YB. Experience
.1 1
28 967 90
Road and 8ndge
Fund
4.846.07

Federal Revenue
Sha nng Fund
Tolal

..

Small bread puppy about 4 ·
months old, vary lovable
female to good home .

'----------l.._--------+-------,.--j WANTED TO

Fund
.
Revenue
Sharing Fund
Total
Federal

Total

..
,..

...

2.136.92
618 E. lllin, Pomeroy, 011.
22 .274.83
PH. 992-3795
TOIIII Roceipta
General Fund
16.394.48
We Do Boollketpinc For
Motor Veh•cle
Small, IMpanel Corpomt
L'cense Ta.
Fund
10.957 57
Busi- &amp; Part11111hips
Gasolme Tax
Fund '
23.688.64
MARY C. KEBLER.OWNER
Road and 8ndge
1-27-2 ""·
F"~u~~tection
3.459.37 IL..---------1

Fund

ANANCIAL

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

Shanng Fund
Total

Fire Protectmn

Public Notice

These cash rates

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
10·6·Hc

8

Public Notice

Fund

121 I . lie

..

Junior girls recommended bY
tbelr respective high schools as
candidates for Buckeye Girls' State
and tbelr parents are litvtted to
attend an orientation meeting
scheduled for Feb. ~ at the
American I;egton, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Middleport hall, 1 p.m.
Also Invited to tbe meeting are
representatives o! any organizatiOns Interested In co-sonsorlng a '
girl to Buckeye Girls' State slated to
be held June 18-25 at Ashland
College, Ashland, Ohio. The tee this
year Is $lOOper girt
· MeigS High School has eight
junior girlS on Its list ot qualltled
students, while Eastern HighSchool •
has ten girls on Its llst.

Roben E. Buck

11) 25. (2 )1. 8. 3Ic

.

Orientation meeting
set for girls' state

Middleport

Proba te Judge/
Clerk

Phon•----------------

include discount

Rt. 3, hx 54

304-822-3194 After 5 p.m.
After 5 p.m.

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI ............................ 992-6191
Dottie Turner. ............................................... 992-5692
Jean Trussell ....................... ............ ............ 94H66o .
Office ........................ ................................. 992-2259

'

fn :tlc

Between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

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

,,

1·26·1 mo.

-~.oo REWARD FOR THE RE'rURN OF THIS

EXCELLENT HORSE FARM! Completely lenced! Appro&gt;ima ·
!ely 21 acres. 3 bedroom modern ranch home with free gas!
Large barn lor stable, fruit trees, garden space. Asking
$68,000.00.
.

.,

Puppies to g clo d home .

304-675-9782 .

1--------,--+-------- -+ - - - - -- - --l

. I

'

·'

OH.

992·2725

NEW LISTING- RUTLAND -1 \\ story Ira me home with 2·
3 bedrooms, aluminum siding, woodburner set up and garage. $22,000.00.

Layette showers1
A layette shower honoring Kellle
Rought Knight was given In her honor Jan. 26 at tbe American Legion
Hall, Pomeroy. HoSting the shOwer '
were her mother, Mrs. Gerald
Rought, and her aun~ Mrs. LaMy
Jenkins .
A decorated cake Inscribed
"Baby Knight" was served with
punch, coffee, nuts and mints.
Games were played with prizes goIng to Jamie Sts&amp;on, Gem Hamil·
ton, Carla Carter, Sarah Johnson,
and Sylvia Roush. 'The door prize
was won by Lena Nesselroad.
Others attending were Florence
Hamilton. Donna Koehler, Tina
Collins, Margo Martin, Anita Umbarger, Jodie Sisson and Kathy and
VIckie, daughters o! Mrs. Carter.
Others presenting gifts ·to Mrs.
Knight were Mrs. George Nesselroad, Sr., Thelma Lytle, Pat
Thoma, Betty Whitlatch, Stell!lan·
nle Barnett, Mrs. Bob Waldnlg, and
Martha Howell .

169 N. 2nd
MIDDLEPO~T.

PH.992·2259
.,•

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

S&amp;WlV

NOW THRU MARCH 5th

Real Estate .General

VALENTINE - This Is "heart and tlower" month and those shopping
for their "valentine" should have no trouble In coming up with a suitable
remembrance. Dee Dorst, daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dorst of near
Shade, holds one o! tbe " blggle" valentineS offered this year. A five pound
box of candy, the "remembrance" sells for for $4.9.50.

old. Mixed. 304·675 -6863 .

304-675-6146.

lliJ-u .,..,.,..
llii· Hoy l Go-lin

47-W.,.tolll &lt;rR..,t

··---loPe&gt;
17 -

.. '"' llot\1

Male puppy, eleven week•

t.o 24'x36'.
Insulated Do1 Houses

Middle0i1. Ohio
1·13.(fc

Mother Borderline Collie
and 3· 5 week old puppies .

304-468-1 092 .

Silos from 6'x6' Up

992-2'196

j11llull"it1;: lf•l••tJh.,w · ,._,dtf/1/J.!I "• ...

Call 378-6172 .
collie. part german shepard .

Puppies free to good home,

UTILITY BUILDINGS

iapelr Gas Tanks.
PAT HIU. FORD

Clnuifi•·oltmli''l&lt;i ,..,..,.r //.,.

2 Beagle pupp ieo . Call
614 379 2116
.
·
1 male and 1 fe mal e kitten.
1 o week s old . To a good
home. Only pet lovero need
to apply'. · Call 614-992·
2631 altar 6 p.m.
9 month old German She·
phard . Phone 614 -949 3093.
Froo puppieo- par t bordir

Mi~od bi8ed . Phone 614 ·
992-7713.

Sizes start from 12'xl6'

lleo acid boil and rod
out radlaton. We alto

I:..... TT

,., ......-.d

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

RADIATOR
SERVICE

hpt
·Ill Coun St., P-lOY, lllllo 45119

211uo0Mu~Of'luftil '

Giveaway

;:;======::::::;rr;=====:::::::::::;r;::========;-1
U~d
GUN SHOOT

t.

Meets Thursday

The Daily ·Sentinel

"Taster's Choice ", with
members tasting each others favorIte recipes, was featured at tbe
Wednesday night meeting of tbe
Wildwood Garden Club held at tbe
home of Marcia Arnold.
The foods brought bY the
members ranged from a variety of
relishes to unusual health foods.
Mrs. Arnold demonstrated the
preparation of the spaghetti squash
and told of several toppings that can
be used with It to make a meal.
Kathryn Miller gave devotions
using a reading, "SirnpleSennon."
For roll call members reported on
A report on construction of the
their most successful houseplant.
community buldlng was given bY
Thank
you notes were read
Tom Haymanattberecentmeetlng
residents receiving Christmas fruit
of the Long I)ottom Community
baskets.
Association.
Doris Grueser gave gardening
Hayman noted that the grading
tips
for sprtng suggesting that now Is
around the building · had been
the
time to order from seed
completed and that the next step
catalogs.
wUI be Installation o! beating.
Refreshmentswereservedbythe
Francis Andrew was appolntedJO hostess to lhe15membersatlendlng
check on Insurance for tbe new
and
guesds, Jennifer Arnold and
building.
Sarah
Harris. Betty MUhoan won
A card of. tltanks was read ·from
gift.
the
hostess
the Eunice Pullins family. By-laws
were read and members wreurged
to submit revisions applicable to tbe
new bulldlng.
Several fund raising projects
Officers' reports were given by were planned during Frklay' s
Mae McPeek and Ernestine Hay· meeting of the Ladles Auxiliary of
man. ·VIrglnlaNewlunreadPsalm9 the United PentecoSial Church held
with the Lord's Prayer and pledge
at tbe church.
being giving In unison to open tbe
A quUtlng party was planned for
meeting.
Tuesday at 7 p.m . In the church
Refreshments were served by ba,sement. Ayardandbakesalewlll
VIrginia Newlun and Pearl Powell.
be held on Feb. 3 and 4. In March a
The next meeting wlU be hosted by chicken noodle dinner will he held.
Ernestine Hayman and Melody
Secret sister names were exRoberts.
changed. Barbara Pooler opened
Atlendln~ besides those named
the meeting with prayer and Tresa
were Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Shaffer had the closing prayer.
Nesselroad, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bonnie Baker presided at . tbe
Barber, VIrginia and Tract Newlun,
meeting. Next meeting will be held
Mary Andrews, Harold Brewer, onMarchll.
Pearl Powell, Ada Bissell, Phyllis
Larkins, and Leon~ Hensley.

Snak-'n-Yak

Business services

4

-=============2:========================:f~========t~=======~~=====~~~~

The door prize brought by Mrs.
TYree was won by Jean Gllmore,
chaplain, who gave the prayers to
open and close the meeting . Etta
Will presldect at tbe meeting which
was preceded by a matzettt dinner
for the auxUiary members and
legionnaires.

Missionary Society

The

~

Meigs-County area · organization members gather for meeting~
Homemakers

Ohio

,.

PARTI.-ncl SERVICE
4-5-fc

'·

.'
•,

...
·:·

stone jars, antiques. etc. :
Complete households

Write : M.O. Mlllor. Rt . 4 :
Pomeroy, Oh .

7760.

Or 992-

Gold , si.lver, sterling,
je)Nalry, nngs, old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Barber

Shop , Middleport . 992 347.6 .
GINGER BREAD STUDIOA rt It 1 1 a.n 1 . J 0 N I
CARRINGTON-698-3290.

11
done
or begun
a genealogy
GRUESER
: Haa
onyono

atudy oftho GruoHrfomily7
Contact Dr. Star Gruoaor
Dometrlon, San lllmerdlno
Volley Collogo. 701 South
Mt. Vomon, Ban Bomordlno, ,CA. 82403.

4

Help Wanted

Ea.rn eXtra money and
receive free houuthold
products everyone u ae s

doily . Supply 3 · 5 . Cell ·
448· U88.
•,

'

'

Giveaway

ANY PERSDN who h ..
onythlng to give awoy end
doll not oflor or onampt 10
off•·•nv ....,,hl,..ftll'tile
moy ploco on ad In thlo
column. Thlft will bl no
chargeJo 1ha odveniMr.

..,..
."'•' I

�8 The Daily Sentinel

Page

11

Help Wanted

Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

43 Farma for Rent

46 Space for Rent

Farm for Rant. 8 room hoU..
Ill ... h. 814-892-6908.

Trailer apace for rent in
Mason . Located on Horton
St. Cell anytime 304-7738180 .

HAVE FUN pay ing your
Holiday bills . Sell Avon and
earn good •• •· meet nice

people . Coli 614 - 843 ·
2982. 614 · 38.8 · 9045 .
614·992-3690. .
Bar maid .

~uat

THREE bedroomfarmhouM
with garclen plot. t260.00
month. Coli 304-675-3030
or 676 ·3431 .

be 21 . Send

resume to Box 729-M, C·O

48

'1913.

44

Apartment
for Rent

The Wast Virginia Depart-

1--------Bulinass &amp; Second Mort-

SALES AGENT WANTED. gogo loano. Equity R eNationallv known calend111r s o u r s e s · I n 0 h i o
manufacturer and specialty 1 · 800 - 992 - 2361. out of
advertising company offers Ohi&amp; 1 · 613-25B·0112.
an opportu nity for an
industrious self ·~t1uter for
full or part time work . We 23 Professional
need a sales oriented person
Services
to present our exclusive
calendar•. busine es gifts
C&amp; l Bookkeeping
and extensive advertising
Tax Returns &amp; bookkeeping
specia lty auortmant to for Individuals &amp; bualne11es.
firm• within the business
community. The Thos . D. · Carol Neol
446-3862
Murphy Co . is a pioneer in - - - - - - - - - the advertising field since PIAN 0 TUNING Ill .REPAIR
1888. so you know we're Call Bill Ward for appoirithere to stay . If you can l"'f"ent, Ward's Keyboard ,
organize your own time and 446-4372 .
determine your own s uccess. write: Pat Mu rphy, PERMANENT HAIR
P .0 . Box 382 , Red Oak , REMOVAL - Profe11ional
Iowa 61666.
Electrolyeia Canter, Inc .,
A . M . A. Approved , Dr .
LOOKING foro part time job Referrals . Gilt Certillcahls.
that has good pay , life new hours. By appointment,
ineurance, retirement plan , 304-675-6234.
that will teach you evaluable
job • kill. plus help with •

[;:;;=::;=;======

USED MOBILE HOME.
578·2711.

1 bedrOom . Apartment for

nmt . CoR 446-0390.

33 Farms for Sale

·3 rm . and 4 rm . unfurnished
207 acr.e farm . langsville. apartments. Utilities paid.
Mineral rlghtt induded. No no pett. no children. Call
houae . $12.000 down. Will 446 ·3437.
corry rest . 61 4· 3B8-9346.
2 bdr . partially fu rnishad
newly remodeled. gaa heat.
riverfront view. watar paid,
34
Business
8176 mo . Cell 446·3919.
Buildings
Modern 1 bdr. apartment In
For rent or 1ale store quiet location , cloee to
building Corner Or Bu ..ville town. no pet a. security clap.
Rd. Ill Rt. 160. Call 446- Cell 446-2065 .
3BB8.
2 BR Apt . with 2 lui baths,
Bu1in8u for ole in Middle- 86 South Third St .. Middleport. Carousel Confection· port. Available immediately.
ery. Cake decorating and 992·2679 .
candy ouppli01 . CoH 614992·8342 or 614 · 992 · Clean &amp; cozy convenient
6601.
location. Utilltieo paid, dep
Ill rof. req . 8195 mo. Call
448·7482 .
college or Vo· Tee educe ·
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
tion1 There ' s only one
POMEROY ·2 bedroom
around ! High ·school seniors
unlumiohed apt .. f160 . 2
or graduates. you may even
36 Acreaat Rodney on W. T. bedroom house 8185 .
qualify for a cash bonus .
Watson
Rd . Owner Financ- Depooit 8100 . Cell 814IN TOWN 3 bdr. e-c with
Contact the West Virginia
992-2288 .
garage, quiet location. Low ing available. 448·8221 .
A rmy National GtJard. For
more information call maintenance. $48.000 with
Apt. lor rent. Half double-2
11% FHA toqueiNfied buyer.
Sergeant Sergeant Lutton at
bd .rOom Apt . Adu Ita preCell
446-4431
alter
5.
304·675·3960 or call toll
ferred.
No pets. 614-992free 1·800-642-3619.
2749.
3 bedroom house for sale . 41 Houses for Rent
New carpeting throughot,rt .
AVON Good territories
In Middleeport-2 bd.room
located on Ba1han Rd . and
available . Millstone &amp; Mud
sits on 3 acre• of land . Modern 3 bdr . ranch. semi-furnished Apt. $180.
Run Roads , Henderson .
plus uti'lities, and dapo1it
Beachh ill , Pliny , Hurricane. Excellent term• to tight garage , carpet, Rodney
required . Phone 446-1788 .
Creek . Call Miss SaundBrs, pai1y . MAKE AN OFFER . 30 area. Deposit a. references
year
financing
available
.
304·676-2318 or collect.
reguired . 8286 per mo .
bedroom furnished aport·
Mrs . Stanley 1 -767 ·6900 Contact Bank One of Pome ~ Strout Reolty. cell 446- 2mont.
Call 992 - 6434 or
roy. 61 4 -992· 2133.
after 5 p.m .
0008 .
304 -882-2666.
ROUTE nlasperaon for new PARK Drive. One story with 2 bdr. houee unfurnished on
hom&amp; deliv&amp;ry product . Get finished garage, 304· 675- lower Rt. 7. Dap. required . Furnished apartment on
ground floor . Utllitle1 end
paid ever day. Five days per 4444 alter 6 p.m.
C.ll614-266·1413.
cable paid . ·Cooking focili ·
week. dependable transporties and free perking. Cell
tation a must. Call for Settling estate , 6 room Small furnished house in 992·6738
.
interview time . 304 - 676 house, lot BOx130, 2122 town . 2 b d r · a. pay own 1- - - - - --::-:-:--:c:-::Lincoln Ave . 304-675·2671 utllitiea. No pett. Dep . req. Apartments. 304-675·
17BO.
or 304-676· 2924.
8180 mo . Cell 446·7886 . 6648.
5 cell 446-4046.
1----::-::--:--:---:-::after
114 ACRES, bern , new
Situations
12
APA·RTMENTS. mobile
houSe, mineral rights. Just House 6 rma . &amp; bath . homes,
Wanted
houaea. Pt . Pla1aant
11 miles from town. Call located 110 4th AVo .. and Gallipoli t . 814-446 304-676-3030 or 676 - Gollipolit . Good garden 8221 .
3431 .
opece. $176 mo., 865 dep . I-:-----::----0 u mp truck for hire . Will
Coll446 -3870.
2 room efficiency apt.
haul g&amp;·avel Or most any· 11·304·B82·2566 or 1-614thing. Call 614· 992-3B69 .
32 Mobile Homes
Smoll 1 bdr. home. Neigh- 992· 7206.
for Sale
borhood Rd . Ref . Ill Sec . 1- - - - - - - - - dejl . required. Call 446- UNFU RNISHEO' aportmant
Insurance
13
for rent . 1 bedroom ,
TRI - STATE MOBILE 0264 eveninga.
HOMES . USED - CARS ,
e180 .00 Cell Automotive
SANDY AND BEAVER TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS . 3 bdr. lormhouae new doxol Supply , B-8 . 304-676 Insurance Co. has offered CHECK OUR PRICES . ges furnence. dep . &amp; rof . 2218, 675-6753.
1-----~-~-raq . Call 614- 246·632~ .
services for fire inaurance CALL 446· 7672.
Unfurnished upstairs apt for
cqveraga in Gallia COunty
Remodeled 7 rm. houae . rent . good location, 304for elmoat a cent\M'y, Farm . CLEAN USED MOBILE Con
walk to town . cjty 676 · 1302.
home and pereonal property HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
water, g~a. 8200 mo., 8260 1 - - - - - - - - - ·covareges are available. to lTV MOBILE HOME SALES, lumished.
Call 614-245- OPTIONAL 2 or 3 bedroom,
· meet individual needs. 4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS. 9320.
RT
36.
PHONE
446·
7274.
ltove It refrigerator fur·
Contact Neal Ina . Agency.
nished , 9 miles from Pt.
agent .Phone 388·8690 ·
Mobile home &amp; Iott lor sole, In Pomeroy 8175. month Plo~•ent, 304-876-124B.
MOBILE HOMES Compere 1967 Buddy mobile home plut uUitiet. 860. depotit .
FOR r.-.·t, furnished apart·
our comprehensive mobile 1 4x60. 2 bdr. gee heat. rural C.ll 614-992-7284.
mont, 304-676-1 302.
home coverage with water, set up with 2 or 4
anyone . Foremost lnsu- _1o_ts_._c_•_ll_4_4_6_;_1_2_4 _o _
. _ _ 3 bedroom home in country.
Depoait end relerencu FOUR room upstoiro aport1
renee, 446 ·9340 .
12x60 mobile home, would required. Phone 614 - 992 ~ menta, Henderson Trailer
consider selling on land 7201 .
Park. t126 month . Troller
contract . Call 446 -1167
Spaces.
Phone 304-676·
Schools
16
6 room unfurnished Apt . In 2946 .
alter B. 614·246·5830.
Middleport. Equipped
Instruction •·
Reduced 198 0 Oovernor Kitchen, 81110. month. Call ONE bedroom opertment in
14x70 with 10x14odditlon . 61 4·992-6692,
Henderson. 304-675-1972.
Karate the ultimate In self Do not have to move
defence all private Ieason&amp;. $11.000. Cell 1-643-2675 . THREE bedroilm hou"" !01'
rent, nice location. 304, · Men, womi n, &amp; children.
·:.: . t'nstr~Jction thru black belt . 19'l1 Elcone 12x38 875 ·1090.
·.... -A lao available Karate 84 ,000. 1964 Champion
46 Furnished Rooms
:. uniforms puching and 20x44 4'7,600 . 1974
' ~ kickiflg bags. and protective Shamrock 24x64 $18,500. 42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Sleeping room •126, utili·
· equipment. Jerry Lowery &amp; 1980 Liberty 1'4x80
; _ Auq ciatel Karate Studio, $8,995. 1971 Freedom
ties pd . lingle male. sh,re
bath. 919 2nd Ave .. GoiUpo143 Burlington Rd .. Jack - 14x85 $7,996 . 19B3 Man..
ton Oh . Cell 614-288- ti on 14x70 813 . 600 . 2 bdr. unfurniahad mobile llt . Call 448-4416 after
Kan aug a MobUa Home home on Rt. 36. Call 446- 7PM .
·: · 30i~ or 614-384-8160.
Salu, Kanauga, OH , 4411- 4229 .
9B62 .
18 Wanted to Do

1-----------------

1----------

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

1----------

.-

~~----

:.. . ·Ganfral Hauling and Trash
·~· refn vel Service. Rel!able
• &lt;' end J~ependable . Cell 446·
: .:: 316~efter6PM268 - 1987 .

. .,__,:r-----::--

Want to work on Dariy or
Beefpoarm . Work long hours.
Can run machinery. expe·
:- -rlon, ad. Call 614 -3 8B·
. 823,.

.

.21

l

Business
Opportunity

MUF,LER SHOP Profitable
·,, mull or dealarthlp ovollable.
.• High career income. Bual·
•. nell jncludaa equipment.
atoc-. warrantY program.
fiiCtorY tulining. edvartioing
oupport . Total price
•4,8911.00. Over 300 thopa
coast to coaat. For more
Information celltoll·free
.1-800-336-6014.

22

46 Space for Rent

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

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman. 3 tables. {eXtra heavy
by Frontier!. t686 . Sofo .

Living room aiutr,. beige
background with blue
floworo, $376. Call 814367-0636.

828!1. to 8896; Tablet, 846
end up to $126 . Hide·•·
bods,t440 . end up to
$625 .• Rocllnera, 8175. to
t360 .. Lampo from $28. to
$75 . II pc . dlnetteo from
899 .. to 8435.7 pc .. •189.
end up . Wood table with alx
choira 8426 . to 8746. Deok
f110 up to U25 . Hutcheo.
$650 . and up, maple or pine
finith . Bunk bed complete
with mattre1101, U60. end
up to 8396 . Baby bedt .
f110 . Mottreueo or box
spring•. full or twin. •ea..
firm. 868. end $78. Queen
sota, f196 . 4 dr . chelle,
842.. 6 dr. chute. 864. Bed
from01, 120.ond U5 .. 10
gun • Gun coblnoto, 8350 ..
dinette cholrt UO. end 826 .
Gat or electric rongeo, •326
up to $375 . Baby ma treooes, U5 &amp; t36, bed
frames 420. 825 . &amp; $30 ,
king !rome e50 . Good
selection of bedroom ~itea,
cedar chaau. rockers, metal
cabineta, swivel rockera.
Used Furniture -· bookcase,
rengea, ch.aire. end tablea.
washers. dryers, retrigera tora end TV' a. 3 miles out
Bulovillo Rd. Open 9em to
6pm. Mon. thru Fri .• 9am to
6pm, Sot.
448-0322
Avacaj:lo Norge washer 20
lb. capacity very good
condition *110 and also GE
dryer $100 . Coli 1114·21161207.
Twin size bo~ springs. Cal
446-4179 .

54 Misc. Merchandise
For aewe lump coal &amp;
firewood . Zlnn Cool Co ..
Inc. Cell 446-1408.
Firewood split.scut to
length, you pick up . We
deliver . We accept HEAP
cardo. Cell 614-266·6245 .

Slab• cut ·up •16 lull length
e1 0 PU load, royild wood.
Iorge truck load . Call
614-245·6B04.
'New coal burning furnance
haotl 2600 aqlt. WHitelllor
'h price. Cell 614-211111216.

8 ft . pool table &amp; aCCOIIO•
rie•. good co ., 8200 . Call
446 -1168.
Chilled thot •1 0. 98 per
1 Olb . beg . Sp•ing Volley
Troding Co., Spring Valley
Plaza. 446·8026.
Smith Ill Weuon 1,000
auto. thotgun. 20 gauge. 28
ln. vent rib modified berrell .
lilt price *469 .95 , tole
price •321 . 46 . Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring
Valley Plaza. 446-8025 .
Chartered Arma revolver 38
opecial 2 in. barre)l, list price
8190, aale price 8139 .76 .
Spring Valley Trading Co ..
Spring Volley Plozo, 44118025.

I-Fi_re_w_oo-.d-..~.~3-6-.-t-ru_c_k_lo-a-d.
f66. a cord. Split end
dolivorad . 814-843-3603.

Firewood .doliverod $80. •
cord. Cool delivered •45.
ton. Coli Tom Hookint
1114-949-21110 'o r 614·
742·2834.
1----~---:-:-­
Firewood.. split . $30.00 •
truckload, f36.00 doll ·
vered. Ph . 16141 992-2770
or 13041 882-2194.
1-----:---:--~­

FOR SALE · $66 . 40 in.
electric range-•&amp;&amp; . Electric
dryer-886. G.E. woohorheavy duty - f1 00 . Wa ohor&amp;Dr¥Or 'lOt ' ' 1 2·11·.
742·2362 .
New. heavy · duty Reese
hitch. Fill any Ford pickup.
Long John five antennae
Beam . Mark II A watt meter.
Mork VII' pre-amp. Siltronix
VFO model 90. Coli 992 7349 .

SWIMMING pool. 24 lt .x4
ft ., above ground, ..with
dock, $900.00. 304·B823672.

.
Did luhionod bedroom

suite, Eureka sweeper, floor
model. Chevy en$Jine parts,
Coli 304-773-9147.

1981 Fai.r mont mobile
home. 14x62 on lot at Quell
Creek. Cell 814-245·92B3.

1981 Ventura VIlla 14xll4, 2
bdr .. exc·. cond .. $13.000
financi n g available . Cell
814256 -17B5.
Good utod 2 bedroom
mobile hom eo. Furnlthed .
Brown's Trailer Park, Rt.
1 24. MIn ersv lilt. 0 h .
33 2 4_·- ---I·C1-6_14
_·_9_9_2_· __
1 971 Star· 12x80 . 2
wi...
• elrl
bd .room
m otove, r g.,
a .c . . LP gea. porch and
awning . Very good cond .
Sot up on rented lot.
.a.&amp;oo. Call 1114·849 •
2123 or 614-992,11841 .
Now irl-lavol, 3 bedroom
with den &amp; 1 'h bath on 'h
aero, 7 mllea hom Pt.
Pleuant. Coll .altar 4:30,
304-1171-111189.
.

2 bedroom• In Middleport.
·Furnlohed. •1&amp;0. per month ·
plut depotit end moreno•.
Pay own utllltlet . Call
614-992-6610.
2 bedroom lurnllhed traHer.
•uo . depoe it. U 71 rent
, lut utilltlet &amp; lawn care. . •
fi14 -9811-394g.
TWO mobMo ·hom• fOI' rent
on Rt. 2 about II mlnutlt
from town. Call oltor e.
·304-876·112.1:7.
ONE bedroom moble homa,

e1110. 304-11711-41114.

I::=;;=~==~~=====;====
For Sale or Trade

1976 Buick Electra 2 bdr ..
PS, PB. AC, AM -FM otero
e1 , 960 or trade for clttle,
farm equipment. or mobile
home of equal' value. Cell
446·4637 .

. .....·-·.
-_ .......
.....
'.

~
~

'

Vans

CIJ Nawo/Sporte/Wutltor

Want· to trade-John Deere
310 Backhoe. good condi tion. for • 680 Case. Call
992·2618.

Livestock

55 Building Supplies

Hay . •1 .00 bole. 814· 742 2126 .
Hoy. f1 .55 o bela. 614 ·
86 3949

Building materiel•
~ "
·
block, brick, uwor pipeo , HAY . 304-4118 ' 1866 or
windowt , llntelt , etc . 304·11711-71141 .
CloudeWintera, Rio Grande, I---------~
0 . Coll814-246·5121 .
HAY 82. bole, 304·882 2422
Adkino lumber Co .. Wo oall
·
barns, garage, houaa pan·
erns &amp; other buildir\g
material. Call 814-633 0848.
BUILDING MATERIAL. Flat
metal ahaeu porcelen ·
enamel coated , 4ft. by. 8ft .
thru 4ft. by 12ft. •7.00 to
•9 .80. odd oizet •3.00 to
e&amp;.oo. 614·887-3085 .

1 2 paaaeneger Ford van

1976 model, euto .. air .
ltoro -radlo, $1,995. Call
446-4141 .
1976 Buick Electro 2 bdr .•
1'8, PB, AC, AM -FM otero
et.860 or trade lor cattle,
form equipment. or mobile
home of equal value. Call
446-4537.

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNEL·
Boarding oil breedo . AKC
Reg . Dobermine pupa efd
Doberman Stud Service . 1973 Pontiac Catalina 4 dr ..
Call4411-77911.
PS , PB. air . very good
condition. Call 448-404a.
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
• KeNNEL. AKC Chow 1971 Ford LTD t800orbelt
puppieo. CFA Himalayan . offer. 1978 Chevy Malibu
Persian end Slam•• kit· otationwogon f 3.995. Call
tone. Cit II 448 -3S44 alter 6142611-17811 .
4PM.
Buy ownar 1982 Dodge
Mirada ex . cond . 13.000
mllet. 318. V- B; crul 0e.
many extrot . *8.932 . .Call
446-0047 .

Musical
I nstrumenta

row

PLUb IT IN~

.Bid up and double

19SO '· Dauun 200 SX
loaclecl, aliCellent oonditlon,
priced for quick oale,
e111100. Peoplea Bani! lot.

HU~ COHTINUE.

FOR PETE'S GAHE.
LIHY! y• ALMO$T

~5.

11/U..!htE! DON'T

FEEff. HE'S JUST
COIIF1Rr6 MY
~NEM/Ia i'""'ii"-1-1 SUSPICIONS••

HAVE 'tOO

STUCCO PLASTERING •
tutured cellinge commercial and residentl•l. free
lotimatoo. Coli 1114-21111 1182 .

Y' REALIZE THAT?!

NATHANIEL?

DON'T HIT ME, AN~IE!

IT WASHT IHTENT/011/l~
HOI'i COULO l ~NOW
'10U'P GET YOOR FOOf
5TUCK IN THAT

I MERELY HAO mSHOW MAMA
THAT YO/J COULD qET I
JUGT A5 MANY fJtiMB
IICCI(I[HTS AG I IXJ!

.

PAiNT.I NG · Interior atld
exterior. plumbing. roofing,
1ome remodeling . 20 yra .
oxp. Call 614-388-96112 .
Marcum Roofing • Spout ing . 30 yelrtleJC:r,erlence ,
opeclallzlng in bu t up roof.
Caiiii14-3B8-9857.

•

ALLEYOOP

GENE'S CAJPET CLEANING . Deep Iteam cleaning,
Scotchgeurd . Fre1 enl moteo. low retu . 1114-992 ·
11309.

HURRY 'EM UP, SARG!=l THERE'S
THIS WAY,GUZ!
NO TIME 10 LOSE IF WE'RE GOING WE'RI: ALMOST

10 SlOP THOSI: LEMMIANS!

lHERE!

+K

HOWARD . L. WRITESEL
ROOFING COMPANY .
Guttera-Downapouta· NewRapali · Gunor PaintingStorm Dooro &amp; Wl~dowo.
Free Eatimetll . Phone
614·949 -2283 or 814992-2791 .

uses

RON'S Televlolon Strvlca.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola ,: · Quazar . and
houoe callt. Cell 11711·2388
or 448-2454 .

GASOLINE ALLEY

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump
romr ·el . Cell876-1331.

A court hearin'
What
do you

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing, Including
hot tar application, carpenter. electrician. maton. Cell
304-1175· 2088 or 6711411110.

· · li~·~-

mean?

Water Walla . Commercial
end Domootic. Teot holet .
Pump• Sales and Service .
304-885 -3802.
Ga.t your karpet In ahlp
thepe . Water removol, FREE
ESTIMATES , FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN
STEAMER 1114-~40-2107 .

M&amp;B Septic tank cleaning
11rvlca. Raa~onabte rates.
Call any doy altar 1 p . m ..
304·675-4843.

AND WE
WEREN'T MUGGED,
MO~ESTED OR

Plumbing
&amp; ·Heating

23

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 448-3988 or 448·
4477
Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
SEWING Mechlne repalrt,
urvlco. Authorllod Singer
$alee &amp; S~nvlc• Sherpen
Sciooort . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Callt014-3117·
7471 or 614-3117-01191. ·

·

ALMOST A
1411frP61ER?!

Home
Improvement•

1979 Hondo LX, outometlc,
uMa any
guranteed 30
mllei )lor gollon. Tirol llko
now. •e.uo. C.ll 9926480.
.

u••·

\fOU JUST
MISSED

HIM

THAT MAKES
TWO OFUS

noaa'
Cll Bonny Hill Show .
1iJ Cll Quincy Quincy tries

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE call City Fumltura
3,04-876 -21108.
Genera( Hauling

Need something hauled
away or oomethlng movecl7
We'll do it. CaH 448·31119or
114-266-18117 alter II.

Ji"EAIWI'S . . .

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Cell Jim Lanier. 304-6711·
7397.
.

~

.....

.'-·

...

,.

l------:-----87

xI I I r I xr WITH IT

BRIDGE

Camping
Equipment

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

1974 Malibu, 4 !loor, good
tiret. •300. Phone 387011111 .

1 yr. old Whlt·ney·oplnat
plano by Klmba.ll , good
condition , walnut linleh,
e1110. Coli 4411-81144.

Mswer: "t

Auto Repair

78 Cordobe axcellent cond .,
AT, AC, AM ·FM, cruiM, Iow
m llo ago • • 2 • 9 0 0 · Call
614-379-2741 .
1980 Chavatto. Call 4464179 .

Alv.r.z .lectrlc gultor with HARTS UI I d C aro, Naw
fitted caoe. looke and Playa a Hevan W•• t VI rg In I•· 0 vor
Leo Paul by Glboon. Loeded 20 lau exponeive core in
with cuotom goodl... Call _••_o_c_k._ __:__-'-.:___
1
448-77S1 altar II PM.
1972 PONTIAC . 304-,76·
Antique Krell baby grand _2_1_1_1· - - - . , - , - - - plano. good condition , 1
mahoga~y flnleh , ~eedo 117 PONTIAC Fireblrd.
I
I .2 000 C 11 II nnde tome W..rk, 304-11711~~~~~:f:.';
11eg or 11711·4230.

'

Auto Parts

FOR SALE- 1972 Continental camper.-treiler In good
condition. • 1.200 lor quick
ulo. Call Cha~eo J . Ohlin·
ger ot 992· 54111.

86

Wl-jAT PO MON5TER:5
CIO Wli'H

I

Byerly and Felto Automatic
Tranomlulon Ropolr. NOW .
OPEN . Corner of Kemper
Hollow • Kerr Bethel Rd .
Call 448-8839.

84

0 (

Cll MOVIf,: ' Dekoto'
Cil ESPN'I Sportefonlm

.1CYMALL
I [) [j

BORN LOSER

82

Wonder Woman

(I) CIJ NBC News

(JJ Bob Newhart Show
MOUTHWASH!"
Cll • Itt ABC News
1
Ill Cll110 CBS Nowo
(I) Dr. Who
(j)) Over Eaey
7:00 II (I) P.M. Mag~ine
Cil Thle Wook In tho NBA
(JJ Gomer Pyle
.
Cll Entertoln'!lent Tonight ·
Cil • Charlie' 1 Angela
(Anlwwre lomouD!W)
U (JJ Tic Tac Dough
·
(I) ClD MacNell-lahner .
Jllfrllilea~ BATCH TWICE .KINGLY UNLOAO
Raporl:
Yesterday'e I An.,;..: Th' aword twallower quit hie job with thl
110 E}'ewltnooo Newa
circus becaueelhey wanted hlin lo do this• crz People'• Court
TAKE A CUT
7:30 • (I) u. DeteCtor
(I) MOVIE: 'Star Wars'
- - N o . llfl._..lnlnCI no.,.-, la avtllablotcrr$t.ll6-lll
,
ln&gt;mJ.-,olo--par, loxM,N........,N.!.OJioll.lncfuclo;o...
Cil ESPN SportaCenter
1 narM, ecldrlll,
oode 1nd meltt checks . ..,. to N
(JJ Andy Griffith
I ! . ,_.!;".
Clllll Cll Family Feud
(I) Buolneoo Report
1lli You Asked For It
® This Did House
•
Itt Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 8 (I) CIJ 'Shogun' Part 2
SI!Cond of live pans. BlackOswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
thorne is released by Toranag a and helps him fight his ·
enemies while Lady Mariko
saves Blackthorna·s lila. IR)
(2 hrs .l
Langdon system of bidding .
CIJ MOVIE: 'Men of La
Mancha'
one more than he can make
NORTH
2-l-11
(I) I Spy
and then doubling his oppotA96
Cil Gymnaotics: USGF
nents.
91070
Slngla Elimination Cham·
The defense is simple.
tss
plonlhlp
Mike starts by leading the
tQJ76
(JJ MOVIE: ' Big Jake'
king of clubs. His partner
(JJ Gilt Happy Days FonWEST
EAST
plays the deuce, so Mike
zia is called for duty in the
tQ5
t81
shifts to the king of
Army Reserves . [Closed
. 9AQS
• 9 62
diamonds. East follows with
Captioned)
·
. tKQ987
• J 10 43 2
the jack to show the 10 and
IIJ Clll10 Walt Dionay 'The
tAK8
t95Z
South
wins with the ace.
Shaggy D. A.' Conclusion. A
SOUTH
South
plays the king and
district anomey candidate
tKJI07!2
then the jack of spades to
periodically assumes the .
9KJ8
pick up Mike's queen. Then
identity of a sheap dog. 160
tA
he ruffs a diamond and leads
min.l
t.JOO
the four of clubs.
I]) (jj) Novi ·sea Behind the
Mike takes his · ace and
Vulnerable: North-South
Ounes .' The intricate life of a
stops
to . count the hand.
Dealer• South
coastal lagoon and the vital
South held six spades, one
part it plays is presented.
West
North East
diamond and a total of six
(60 min.)ICiosed Captioned) .
cardS in clubs and hearts.
1i11 MOVIE: 'One Eyed . . ~bl .
2t
Pass
It makes no difference to
Jacko'
Pass 3t
lnbt
Mike
if the hearts and clubs
8:30 Clllllllt Laveme • Shi~ey
Pass Pass
were 4-2 or :i-3. Mike doesn't
Laverne becomes a fashion
lobi
Pass Pass
have to do anything despermodel to spy on her latest
beau. [Closed Captioned)
ate. He simply leadS his
9:00 Cll 700 Club
eight of clubP and waits for
(!)
NCAA Basketball:
two heart tricks.
Opening lead:
Kansas State at Oklahoma
While this is a book on
Stete
defense, Mike does point out
Cll Ill &lt;D Thnee'a
that South's biddmg had
By Oswald Jacoby
Company Police overhear
been frighlful , indeed. He
end
James
Jacoby
Jack's request for a pot
had been willing to play in
thinking it is ·the drug.
Here is another hand from two spades and later on
[Closed Captioned[
"Dynamic
Defense" by Mike competed to a reasonable
1iJ Cll ® MOVIE:
Lawrence.
This lime he is three and a silly four .
' Thursday' a Child'
the old
West and he
(I) American Playhouse
'Family Business.· Brothers ,
fight over the inheritance of ·
their dying lather. 160 min.l 1--------------------'---~
[Closed Captioned]
ill)
American
Dance ·
Fettival
9:30 CIJ Not Neceaaarily The
Newa This show promises
to be everything the current ·
news Is not .
by THOMAS JOSEPH
(JJ Ill [jJ 9 to 5 Doralee,
Judy and Violet vie lor the
ACROSS
DOWN
.
· same job.
•1 Prof~r1 African
10:00 ·8(1)CIJSt. ElaewhaieDr. ·
republic
Craig's former roommate. ·. ship
·
6
English
city
2
Wife
of Zeus
comes to the hospital lor a
sax change operation and .10 Hatchet
3 Icelandic
Drs. Samuels and Paxton try
handle
measure
not to let their work interfere
11
Published
t
Burl
·with their romance . 160
13
"Tile
Tempest"
5
Akin
min.l
·
CIJ On Locatlop: Carlin at
role
8 Sew
Camegle This famous coYesterday's A1111we1r 1-1
14
Gawk
7 Small island
median shares his offbeet
33 Caucasian
8 Netfishlng Z3 My (Fr. ) '
perceptions of the absurdi· U The t ies of everyday living.
24 County in Calif. language
(afternoon tea) 9 Until now
(JJ Ill Itt Hart to Hart
17 Skin problem 1! Signify
25 Pitfall ·
34 Penny
® Nowswatch
18
Allegiance
18
Nothing
27 Strain
Iii INN News
35Salver
!II Venerating 29 N .H. city
.10:15 CIJ MOVIE: 'Harold end 1S Nile
1
.
Moude'
tribesman
21 Urgency
32 Arriverderci 37 Brightest
·10:30 Cll Star Tim a
·~ Insurgent
22 Foundation
city
star
(JJ TBS Evening News
-julep
Cll Firing i.lne
® lnelde WasHington
.24 Having
.\
Ill In Search of.... .
a gender .
11 :00 II (I) Newscenter
Z5Cardgame
CIJ MOVIE: 'Neighbors'
21"Ars
Cil ESPN Spc&gt;rtaCenter
(JJ Ill Cll II Itt Naws
Amandi "
CIJ News/Sporta/Weatber
poet
® Eyowltneos News
Z'7 Dance
• Bonny Hill Show.
1 1 :30 'I J (I) CIJ Tonight Show 28ln'opposiJohnny "is joined i&gt;:Y christotion (abbr.)
pher Reave and Tom Jones. %'. Dutch liter
160 min .)
38 Mining find
Cll Another Ute
Cil NCAA Basketball: ;31 Select
Florid&amp; at LSU
. , '31 Chop
(I) MOVIE:" ;Tfio. Mlillonai: : . . into bib;

&amp; 4 W.O. ·

••o ..

81

•

8

6 :30

2 H7S-16 recap, reg. trod
tlre1. never u•ed.
t.
Coli 446-0649 alter 6.

78

(I) Nawacantor
(I) MOVIE: ' Tommy'
Cll Tic Tac Dough
(JJ Carol Burnett

h

I YEEPA
I I I
I PUGOR 1

Cll (j)) 3 · 2 -1, Contact
110 Eyawltnaaa Nowo ·

&amp; Accessories

77

8

.,

PLEASE LET YOUff

JIVIDEN ' S FARM
EQUIPMENT
448·1675
long t,.ctora. VermHr
bolero &amp; Hoy equipment.
b1l1 feedere &amp; movers,
tobacco aetten. wagons.
rotary tillero • cutters,
aeedera, bladea, diiC.
cultivotort. plowo &amp;
woodburnert.
An see ua to get e complete
line of porto Ill ""rvlcel ·
USED-·IH 78, MF 135. Ford '
880. Ford Jubilee . 600
Ford, 8N Ford, 10 MIIMY
Harrit Poney, JDhaytedder,
rotory hoe, plowo, ditc, JD
manure apreeder • round
hoy bitler. corn planter.

63

eVENirfci

Clllll Cll a Itt New•

61

rei =;::;==;:;:::=;;:::;;:::;===

157

•

FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
You con IIIII buy applu ot
our orchard B)nd etorage.
Located on St . Rt . 689 .
Phone 11119-3786.

Settling ea tate. Frig ida I
ref . 14 cu . ft . ~Ike new . 64
&amp;. Grain
304·876-2671 or 304·'-----------------676-2924.
,.

SIX month old red Dober·
man, eoro clipped &amp; ..,oto.
Muot oell, phone 304-6764873 or 814-4411-17311.

3 bedroom Mobile Homa .
App roximataly 6 miiH from
Pomeroy or Middleport .
614·992-6858.

&amp; Vegetables

Seara Port · i - crib with 2 Grain fed baby beef ~eady to
mattreaa pad• and bump,_r butcher. Cell 448-4344 .
pede $30 .00. i~fant carrier, 1 - - - - - - . , -,----ilccorHit combined, U15.00 Ragiatered Querter Horae .
304·B75-1 0.3B .
Ruth Reeves . Also grede .
bridl8a. winter
Dinette. 5 ptece , set. 304- Saddle1.
horae btenktte . Western
675-3271 .
booto . 614-119S-3290.

1975 Wind•or partially
furnished . totalelac ..
central air , fully tkirted,
wether &amp; dryer. Call 614245-9143 or 446·0404.

Money to Loan .

HOME LOANS 12% flxad
rato . Lnclar Mortgage,
• 1-114-1112-3011 .

76

S&amp;W 38 spec. model 10,
S&amp;W 38 Mpc . model 368176 eech . !I em. 22- ~60
modei78B with 12X Weever
ocope-8200. F.I.E. 211 auto
•100. Coli 814-245-50115 .

fOur ordlnlry ~.

2/tLB.2

' 6 :00

1976 4 wheel dr, Chero .....
•t.ooo . Cell 4411-2592 . ,

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- waahera, dryers, refrigerators. rl~ngea. Skagg1 Ap·
pliancea, Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Crest Motel .
448-7398.

UMmmble ' - loYr Jurntllee.

one letter 1o each equaro, 1o form

~ ------~~~~----4

1975 Ford plc~up , auto ..
with power, la~cy wheelo,
eac . tire. , tOf!per, IXtfl
whoelo. t2000. 304-11712311.
~

8399 wheaters
ith blowera.
uoed
wood
•• low
aa
coal a. Woo'd heaters, new
dinet oot1 876 &amp; up. refrlgar·
etore , ranges. bunk beds ~4 Misc. Merchandise
complete $179 , bunk lea
mattreaaea $40, cheatl ,
dnuaero. TV's . Call 448 - 7 gla11 display ceae1 . Call
3169.
446·0002 .

~l.PJ~M~T~W:=

Television
.
Yiewif!g·

1872 DATSUNrtruck with
topper and boat raclc .
Excellent condltlofl ,
•1.1160.00 firm'- 304-1176·
1 1 45 onytlm.::

73

, The Daily Sentinel-Pap• 9

I

CAfft:xlP

Back hoe endloader digt 8
ft. , Iorge bed pick up
houloble, operate you rulf.
f9Q. per dey. 304-B953841 .

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

;

I \ ..

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

Furniahed apt. •146 no
utilities pd. 3 rooms. 701
4th Ave .. Golllpolit. Call
448·44 HI eltor 7PM.

- .

Yoo't&gt;
MOOf1ke

Equipment
for Rent

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apenmenta e200 per mo. or if
ln~ome It f 10, 000 or len
............ u.
HUD ovail8ble. A-One Rllel 1-c:::-::-:-::--:-:-:--::---:Eotates, Carol Yuger. 61 ·Household Goods
Reoltor . Coli 304-676 6104 o r 876 -5386 or
676·7786.
SWAIN
2 bdr. unfu mlahed opt. In AITCTION &amp; FURNITURE;
Crown City. Call 814·256- 62 Olive St., Gollipolia. King
coal It woOd heaters with
6620.
fan $469. tot box 1pring &amp;
mottrooa 8100. firm •120.
aola-loveMat &amp; choir e 1 99.
love oeotl 870, new cool Ill

0

l WiSH
l-ei Iff.

C.OOpot&gt;l;,

roy. Oh .

f!" -

'

' Pomeroy:_Middleport, Ohio

~·

CARt..~t..e,

The Daily Sentinel, Pome -

ment of Health is seeking a
full -time Hospital Adminla·
tretor for Ita· Fairmont
Emergency Hospital ; ·located in Fairmont. Walt
Virginia . Requirements :
Baccalaureate degree plua
two yelua of experience in
hospital or health servicea,
or busine11 administration .
This 44 ~ bed facility provides
long -te r m skill a~_ nursing
ser vices and outpatient
clinic services . Applicants
should submit resum~~PS and
a pplications to: L. Clark
Hansba rger. M .D .• Direator
of Health . 1800 Withington
Street, East, Ch arlelton ,
West Virginia 25306 , by
December 16. Salart negot·
ia bla . Equa l Oppor tu nity
Employor· AA Plen ·M.f.H

DICK TRACY

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

,.

38 Pooch's name
3t Wall bracket

to save the career of a .
young black surgeon. IRII60
min. I
(I) ® Sign Off
.
110 All In the Family
• Itt Nlghtllne
.
• Madama'o Pl1te0
1 1:46 Cil MOVIE: 'Solnt Jack'
12:00 Cll Buma &amp; Allan ,
·
Cll Nlghtllne
110 MOVIE: 'Henneaaay'
• Itt l.al1 Word
•ounemoko ·
12:30 II .Cil CIJ lata Night with
-- ,. David 1.8ttermen David is
• joined by Mark $chill. 160 ·
min .l
(I) MOVIE : 'Pennln from
I

H.ven'

horse.•. "
41 Circular
motion

u Affair

2·1

DAILY CRYPToQUOTE.- Here's how to work Jt:·
Ia

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter limply 1t1nda for another. In lhie aomple A Ia
used for the thre, L's, X for the fw.o O's, etc. Single letters,
apo1trophel, lhe Jeneth and formatwn of the word1 ore ell
blilu. Each day th• code lellert ore dllferent.
.

(J)I.al1 Word

.
1J Cll MOVIE: 'McMIHon
&amp; Wife: Deadly Cure'
1 :00 (I) I Meniacl JOin

TRI STAT.E
UPHOLSTERY SHOP ,
11113 Sac. Ava .. GaUipollo .
448-7833 or 446-1833 . ;

~~

i

r

t'

..

NBC

..

Newa

Cil Thla Woo!' ln. the NBA

CEH

,

f.-

XWFKJHLC

lHFQCBDQA

~WG ~'QZCLGKL

.Sign Off .
(I)

CWHH :

rGLC

•llJNawa

!1:30 •

caYPTOQuOTBS

r

Cll Jack Bonny Show

'I

40 ''Give-

I

Upholstery

MOWREYS Upholetory Rl
1 Box 124. Pt. Pleaoant.
304-11711-41114.

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

MBAABFY

GO

· GD

CEH

FAA

FKJ
. CEH

HFWCE .

XBARBK

!Yeaterday'a Cryptaqaote: l CANNar CONCEIVE OF A·QOOO

UFE THAT IsN'T IN SOME SENSE, ASELF-DlSCIPLtNEo '
UFE.-PHllJP TOYNBEE

�'

-4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

.---Local briefs:---~ Panel...
Meigs County uruts answered three calls .Mon¢ly, t)le Meigs
Medical Emergency Service reports. At10:31a.m., RaclnetookRex
Thornton from East Letart to Veteran Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 12: ll p.m. took Beth Hendricks from the Riverside
Apartments to Veterans Memorial and at 6:03p.m.. the Middleport
Unit took Howard Wilson, Sycamore St., ID Holzer Medical Center.
,

Harrisonville Lodge meets Feb. 5
Hin-rtsonvllle Lodge 4ll F&amp;AM wUI meet at the temple Saturday,
Feb. 5, at 7:30 p.m. There wUI be work In fellowcratt degree. All
master masons are welcome.

Dave ...

'

COLUMBUS -The Controlling Board approved a $325,00J grl!Dt
for Portsmouth despite objections of some members who wanted to
know more about how It-wlll be spent. Controllers voted 4-3 Monday
to give the money to the Greater Portsmouth Growth Association to
help finance an industrial park.
Members of the panel who voted against the proposal complained
that the state Development Department did not provide enough
information about the project.
-

I

Fox chasers ineet Friday

I

Hospital News
VEI'ERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted - Kenneth Reed,
Pomeroy; Sandra Evans, Portland; Shirley Appleby, Middleport; Rex Thorn!Dn, Racine; Myr·
tie Murphy, Langsville; Clarence
McDaniel, Jr., Rutland.
Discharged - Lewis Sauer,
Jam~ Lowe, James Van Cooney.

The Meigs County Fox Chasers wUl meet Friday, Feb. 4, ;~t 7:30
p.m. at their cabin on Eagle Ridge.
· '

Square dance slated Friday
The senior citizens w1ll sponsor a square dance Friday, Feb. 4,
from 8 p,m. to 11 p.m. Music wUl be provided by the Stting Dusters.
The public is invited to attend.
·

said.
The Legislative Budget Office
wUI use Its $3l,(XX) ln emergency
funds ID help pay salar~ of neW
dlrec!Dr MattheW Fillplc, a researcher and a typist untu June 30.
As a result of the move, about 6
percentofa10percentcut~posed

on the agency earlier was restored.
In other action Monday,
controllers:
-Approved using $30,6ll In
federal funds to provide ,statewide

(Continued from page 1J

a noted author and speaker,
Active · In · numerous charity
drives and Big Brothers-Big Sisters
campaigns, Diles was responsible
for starting the annual golf tournament In 1979 In his name at Mason.
The tournament, held each
summer, usually attracts names In
both broadcast and athletic fields
has raised nearly $30,!XXl for

Portsmouth receives grant

The Salisbury Township Trustees wlll meet Friday, Feb. 4, at 7
p.m. at the home of Wanda Eblin, 4100J Laurel Cliff Road. The
meeting ls open to the public.

•

Issued marriage license
' to
A marrlilge license was Issued In Melgs County Probate Court
Benjamin Franklin Davidson, Jr., 19, Middleport, and Kathy Ann
Pearson, 19, Middleport.

Funds distributed
The office of Slate Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson reports the 12th
advance distribution of 1982 state motor vehicle registration fees
totaling $15,999,955.89 to Ohio counties, clUes, !Dwnshlps anll villages.
Meigs County's share ls $15,422.58.

be used for _special edu~atlon
programs.
-AwrovedpurchaseoflOOacres
In Athens Coonty from PattDm 1m:.
for$.ll.ln). ltwtllbecomepartofthe·
Zaleski State Forest.

Gran• for Gris
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
University ArtMIIIIeiiJJlatBerkeley
has been awarded a federal grant~
Sl50,1XXl bY the Natlonal Endowment tor the Arts ID ~ a
special retiospectlve exhibition ~
thework~cuhlstpalnterJuanGrls.

.·

.M. an. •

....

Valentines
for Kids

.
W-0-R-D P-R-0-C-E.S-S-1-N-G

FOR OFJo1CE PERSONNEL: THE FUTURE IS SPEllED

From supelheroes to

'

cartoon favorites,

•

Hallmluk Valentines are

fuD of fun. ·
Computer Technology has hit the offite
,, in a bi&amp; way.
The effect it has on office work is tremendous ...

YOU CAN LEARN WORD PROCESSI,NG AT GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE IN ONLY 4 SHORT
WEEKS. 1 AFTERNOON PER WEEK AND BE PREPARED FOR A REWARDING CAREER!

DISCHARGE'! JAN. 31

David Auxier Jr., Dora Bar-e,
Stanley Bass, Lloyd Belamy, Mareta Bevin, Margaret Bum, James
Burris, Beverly Campbell, Macy
Coates, .Mrs. Jeffrey Donnelly and
- daughter, Trafford Dunn, Newauna
Eckler, Bobby Faut, Rhoda Gibson,
Robert Landon, WUllam Goodwin,
Betty Hatten, WUllam McCormick,
Rebecca Newell, Christy OUer,
Helen Reese, Mrs. Everette Sandell
and daughter, Helen Stephens,
Jessica Wedemeyer, · Timothy
Wright, Michael Young.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Thomas, son,
Gall1polls.

emr 'oyment services ID refugees
who settled In Ohio. The project will
serve about 2,500 adults._
. -Agreed ID let the Development
Department spend another $21.3
mllllon In federal funds under the
!lome Energy Assistance Program. Receipt of the money had
been anticipated.
-OK'd a Department of Youth
Services request for a $34,(XX)
·contract With Drake Construction
_Co., Bedford Heights, ID attach a
modular buUdlng to a buUdlng at
Cuyahoga Hills Boys School, It will

I
charities in Meigs l!Dd Mason
~ (Continued from page 1)
•
counties.
. DU!!S' Meigs County roots stem on Monday, Feb, 28, ID permit a
Breaking and entering Is a felony
from'hlsfather, whowasalongtlme . pre-sentence llivestlgatlon and re- ~ the fourth degree with a possible
presldentoftheMiddleportEoardof . port. King was released·on a $1,1XXl · penalty ~six months ID five years In
personal"! ewgnlzance bond.
Education. At the t~e the DUes
prison and a maximum posslbleflne
The charge, contalried In a biU of ~$2,500.
celebrity tournament began, Diles
.
Information
prepared
by
the
office
also purchased a home in Racine
and commuted between there and
of prosecuting at!Drney Fred w. r;:=::t=======~
Crow m. resulted from a break-In
h1s television worJ&lt;:,ln Detroit.
which occurred Jan. 26 at Barr's
He has two children - Beverly,
-ftou........L
23, -a graduate of Ohio State Ashland Station In ReedsvWe.
Assistant prosecutor I. · Carson
University, and David, 21, soon ID
Crow represented the State of Ohio
graduate from Ohio University.
· ln Monday's hearing.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Salisbury trttstees to meet

February 1, 1983

(Continued from qage 1J

"EverbQdy else Is being required
ID tlghten their belts,'' said Netzley,
RLaura. "He obl•":luslydldn't need
the money last : ear. What's he
going to use It for next year?"
Ferguson ortglnally sought a
transfer of $1.3 mllllon, but the
amount was reduced. Spokesman
Fred Knlppenburg said It will solve
part of the problem.
.
"This will help us obviously but
It's only about half of what we
estimate we need," I&lt;nlppenburg

Squads answer three calls

Tlleldoy,

CLASSES START SOON
REGISTER NOW - ENROLLMENT UMITED

CAll. TODAY!
614-446-4367
GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE
529 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Violence.. .__(_co_n_tln_u_ed_r_ro_m..;page_;;.._1.;..J_ _ _ __
damaged by rocks overnight at the
Ten Four Tn!ck Stop In Leavittsburg, near Warren, a State High·
way Patrol spokeswoman said.
"To teU you the truth, It'll
probably get worse," said Joyce
Csolanay. a dispatcher at the
TrumbuU County post.
John Randolph, a driver for the
Good Earth Produce Co. In Warren,
said he was driving out ofWarrenon
Route 5 when he passed about 50
people around bum barrels at the
Ten-Four.
He said a rock slammed Into the
windshield at about 4:15 a.m .. and
he drove on to a toll booth on the Ohio
Turnpike where he sought aid from
state troopers.
"I never thought . they would
bother little guys like us," Randolph
said.
The Starli'Cc:mty sheriff's office

I

said a large chunk of asphalt
slammed through the windshield of
a Marathon OU tanker truck on
Route 30 near Minerva.
Lt. WendeU WebboftheMassillon
Dtstrtct state patrOl office said a
truck was set ablaze in Navarre
after someone poured gasoline on
the back end and tires of a parked
rtg.
"If last n@lt was any Indication,
I'd say we're going to have serious
problems," Webb sald.
In Qerrnont County In southern
Ohio, the patrol said a Tennessee
trucker's windshield was smashed
by bricks thrown from a passing
pickup truck.
Marvin Hlclanan, president of
Ohio's Independent Truckers Association, said about 75 percent of
Ohio's estimated 10.1XXl independents had shut down.

Area deaths

Hazel Thomson

Services for Mrs. Hazel V. Lyons
Thomson, 76, Bradbury ij,oad, who
dled Sunday, will be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower FuneralHomewlththe Rev.
Mark McClung officiating.

PUT
YOUR
LOVE
ON THE

-a•. I'm 1dll hed·owr·bN.. In lon

- --Y'I"·

W1her

of Plf'lfttl In thll

For

--IO""f.'l·-

Worw. ....,. •

HIPPJ Vllentine'1 Day.

z.

M. . llnd luo

.

Clip This Ad., &amp; Fi.ll Out Coupon

~ 1-

___ !•.!!1~.!.0!!~]~·!!!.'~!~!:!~~5~~-..: ..

;1

l Address

. ;I IName ............................ ~ ....,......................... I
1

.... ... .. .... ... ....... .. .. ... .. .... ... .. ........ •. ....

1Phone .......................................................:.: 1
I·Make &amp;Year of Car ...............,.. ;... :............... 1
I L'tcense. No...........--,..........._. ... ,....................... I

1

1

+•"inibir5iii;F.;;•s.25:.&amp;-;,'Q:---s10.so:.-y;~

r-------------------------------- .
-

I
I
II
1
1

J"

:1 Plan Ahead!!! What would you do if you b~oa down after hours?
.:.
--~--. .
'·

.

'

loughnaclct' luOic.t Or lcrubbln' Tub
12'h-Qt. bucket or 24-qt. tub. Choice of colors.

TO MOM AND OAD ..-.
We oould't Mw p6ebd 1 ntoer ,...

After 1.4 Wonderful.,..... of manl·

.; .

H~ur

,I

2

,PJI.CE
AFTER
REBATE

8 97 .
·

•

·.

Hea~oduty Roughl'lectce Trash Co'.jfatne.r
Larae 30-gal.. with handleS and lid'. Plastic.. ·

hbc&amp;hllhld to mtr,'a sttplialton

.

l

'

'

----~-~---""''lt--1

I

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BELOW AND BRING IT .
OR MAIL IT WllH 51.00 BY FEBRUARY lOth 10 1HE
DAILY SENnNEL, P.O; BOX 729, POMEROY, OHIO

j:·1"24
r fieo's
ROAD seRviCe -1
Service"
· PH. 992-6897 I

---•

Your Net Cost
After Rebate

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love You?" Our Happy
Valentine Ads will be pubished February 14th, and oHer you a
truly unusual way to proclaim your love and best withes.

OH.

- -·-

PRICE
AFTER
RElATE

THEM! -·

TO MY WIFE ANN . .

124 W. Main St.

-

Rebate

10.97
-2.00
8.97.

'

DAN UTTLERB.D'S MOORE'S STORE

-

less Factory

Rebate

'

JAN. 31 THRU Fe. 5, 1983

:I
;I
.J
.:I
:1

Sole Price

less Factory

.LOVE

1_.

k mort~

.K mort&gt;
Sole Price

YOU

LINE ...

Survivors of Mrs. Thomson not
earlier reported lnchide three
nieces, Mrs. Nettle Hayes, Middle- ·
port; Mrs. Feme Roush, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Ethel Hawk, Minersville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home at a!)ytlme. Burtal wm be In
Riverview Cemetery.

*CONVERSE GYM SHOES "'rPAINT
*APPLIANCES *GUNS &amp; AMMO
*TOYS *SPORTING GOODS
*BIKES *HARDWARE

·1

Tell That'
Special
Someone

16 WORDS st~ WITH ORDER

1

I

I
I·
I

,

1·----1
1
4.
'
5. _ ___,,.:-~. I. - - - - - 7,'-----l-----,-1
•
I

I ~3

l1to. .

11s1.

.

. .PHONE 992-2156·

I'

·.

• 11
11.

.

.

I
I

~--~---.------ ---------------------~---·------1
'
-

THE DAILY SENTINE-L
I

•

'

~

•

240z..

I
C

~fete.-.·~
"~ec·l~l
1 '-f .....
'-f

'-f

·I

-~.~..,.

.Jf,._ :.:": .;~-

1 57
•

Chockenonddumphngswothcoieslow.
rol: w•lh bultc:r A hot, sal1sfyong meal

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="117">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2686">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="42822">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42821">
              <text>February 1, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1247">
      <name>lyons</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7216">
      <name>thomson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
