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                  <text>New pastor for
Middleport Church
of Christ....

Two of three
SVAC teams lose

Fans say farew~ll
to Karen Carpentet·
PageB

Page4
Page6
'·

•

at

e
Vol.l 1 ,No. 198
Copyrlfhtod 1983

•

enttne
1 Section, 12 Pages
20 Cenh
. A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 9, 1983

'Legal action imminent' ......
· Plumm~r's attorney
·WweetheAI"t

Wale
19.97

Special ·Gifts

19.97~~~

MacGregor" Lightweight Warm·up Suits At A Special Prtce
Look great while you warm up, jog or just plain reiOx. Lightweight
polyester/nyton/eotton washes and wears welt, lime &lt;ilter lime.
In sporty, yet fashionable. colors. Sizes lor both men and women.

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

However, he Indicated the suit Involves alleged
atteinpts by some county commissioners to Influence,
votes.by&amp;l8 ,boardmembers,
Some commlssloners may have threatened to·
remove &amp;l8 board members who did not vote to fire
Plununer, Young said.
He said It Is "absolutely not right" tor the
corrunlssloners totell648 board members how to vote.
Such actions "lie at the heart of the wrongs
perpetrated against Mrs . Plummer," Young said.
He said his !Inn Wlllprob;lbly take depositions from
the county commissioners to see ll any of them told
board members to vote a certain way or lie removed.
"U It's true, there Is going to be a price to pay," he
said.
The suit may be f11ed In federal courtorettherGllilla
orFrankllncountyconunonspkascourt, Young said.

By JEFFGRABMEIER
OW!!Iall .
A Colwnbus attorney said he will fUe suit within two
weeks against "those who have caused sertous
damage" to Maxine Plurruner, exeeutlve director of
the Ga!Ua-Jackson-Melgs &amp;l8 board.
Pluminer's attorney, DavldJ. YoungOfthelllwflnn
Mutphy, Youllg and Smith, sent letters to the
commissioners In the three counties warning them
"litigation Is Imminent."
''
In a telephone Interview Tuesday night, Young said
some persons have been "tremendously careless and
callous with (Plwnrner's) reputation" and have
"trampled upon her rights.
"That's what the lawsuit Is gplng to address," he
said.
YOU)lg would not reveal who the suit will be brought
against.

The Gallla County commissioners said the letter
from Plununer's attorney will not affect their actions,
but would not comment further.
The Jackson and Meigs county cOmmissioners
reportedly will refer the letters to their county
prosecutors.
The &amp;l8 board has already voted 6 to 5 to request
· Piwnrner's resignation, but she has refused.
A Monday meeting has been scheduled by the board
to discuss what Its next action should be.
The board's decision to request Plwnrner's
resignation carne In response to a report by a
state-appointed review group which accused the
director and her staff of "extravagant spending" and
other questionable activities.
.The review group said board members should ask
Plummer to step down In order to restore public
confidence In the 648 board.

Stornn drain -bids
under advisennent
'

Slufw &amp; Holter, Inc., Lancaster,
was the apparent low bidder for the
relocation of approximately !ro
feet of storm drain for the VIllage of
Middleport.
Bids were opened on F.eb. 8 according to Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman. The project Is on villageowned property on General Hartinger Parkway.Bids received were: Shaw &amp; Holter, Inc., Lancaster, Ohio, Sf0,417;
Robert Day Co ., Columbus,
$42,49U4; D. V. Weber Construction, Reedsville, $43,586; Morris
Exeavallng, Lancaster, ~.158;
Malden &amp;

Jenkins,

Nelsonville,

$46,592.50; J .M.L. Construction,
Wl!lltervllle, $47,442.50; Hemlock
Pipeline, Inc., Racine, $48;&lt;ii&gt;.,lll;
Holley Broa., Rodney, $50,005; 3-Ft
Industries, Langsvtlle, $50,642.50;
Tom Mayle &amp; Sons, Cutler, $51,6.'1i;
Welding, Inc., Charleston, W. Va.,
$55,949; and A &amp; 0 Construction,
Gallipolis, $67,079.
E. R. Woodside of F1oyd Browne
Aslloclates, Lmtd., conducted the

Commission accepts
two ambulance bids.

.

bid opening as representative of the
engineering firm In charge of the
project. Engineering estln\ate on
the proJect was $53,&lt;XXJ.
F1oyd Ilrowne Assoctate will re- ·
view the bid documents and .make
reconumindatlons on awarding of.
the contract which Is expected
within two weeks. Construction
time Is anticipated to be two to
three weeks.
Advertising for bids ·tor f1lllng of
the area Is expected to take place
within the next two weeks.
The mayor stated that this property was purchued with mJP
funds and the vlllaie was allocated
approximately $350,00&gt; for development of the site If used for housing.
An additional $60,00&gt; has been
made av.allable from the Appalachian Regional Commission If the site
Is developed for housing JllllllCIII!S.
Hottman said it is anticipated
that the property Will be filled and
leveled off tJ:,date spring with the
village council then to decide wh8t
uses will be made of the land.

Fairboard sponsors
two demolition derbies

Our Reg. 13.88 .

7.97

Eight-pieCe Wrench Set
SAE or metric open/
boxed end wrench set.

8 (1-6, 12) .

our Reg. 149.88

OUr Reg. 34.88 Pr.

s.119 26.88

What's better than one demolition derby? Well - two demolition
derbies, of course.
·
This Is apparently the thought of
the Meigs County Fair Board which
has decided It will stage two demolition derbies at the 1!&amp; Meigs
County Fair.
For the past several years, one
demolition derby has been staged
on the opening night of the falr and
, the alteDdance has '-II huge.
Last year, there were 76 entries
taking part during the one night
eve!lt. This year, entrtes will be limited to 40 cars for each night and
the events will be held on Tuesday
and Wednesday nights of fair week.
At the Monday night meeting, the
fair board, presided over by Bill
Downie, president, also came up
with ano~er new feature for the
1983 fair.
This will be women mud
wrestlers, known as the Chicago
Knockers Mud Wrestlers and they
will be the Thursday night feature.

Also on Thursday ·ntght, the annual horse show wt11 be taking
place In the show ring and the horse
pulljng contest will be held In the
tractor area, On Friday night the
truck pull will be held along with
the junior fair animal sale and the
closing nlgbt feature will be the
tractor pnlllng contest.
The board also furthered plans
for quarter horse racing at 4 p.m.
on Saturday with Jennings Beegle,
local race participant and a chain
!BBW contest at 2 p.m.
Bob Byer, administrator of the
Meigs County Emergency M!!(llcal
Service, was on hand to discuss
emergency coverage for the 1983
fair.

The board also discussed new
scales which have been placed In
the centerfield at the grounds for
use In weighing In livestock and
equipment taking part In fatr
events. The scales were given to the
by the oravo C«p.

ooaro

~ Governor wan~s

quick ·
·action on.PUCO_.panel.

COLUMBUS, O)llo (AP) -Gov. been presented to me that I will
Richard Celeste has asked a forward to the COUIICll and others
mmlnallnli: councll to act quickly In whomayhavecometotheatteiltlon
• Jli'OII06Ing candidates for the Public otleglslatlve leaders," he saljl. ·
Utilities Commission. and the state
One name that will not be among
consumera' co\m.Sel has withdrawn thein Is that ofCo~rs· Counsel
hlmllelf from consideration for the Wllllam Spratley,
Spratley, who last month offered
PUCO.
.
The 12-member panel has a
himSelf as a candidate for appoint· ·di!adllne of March 11 for giving the ment by CeleSte, did an abOut-taee
govenwr a llst ot qualified persoils ' In a letter to thenomlnallnli: cpund). ·
from wlllcli he must chooae to fill
"I respecttully request ihe nomithJ'I!I! VIICancies on the PUCO.
nating councn not to coilslder my
. Celelti!, who must decide by April name ra- non'llllatlon to a ~
11, said Tuellday he hopes to see the
sloner's seat at this time,'' he wrote.
ttmetabie S(.'CB)! I a, IIOrlle of wiKm
Spratley lllld he may eventually
wt11 cmne folward ~.
s.tt the PQ1t "If I feel that what I've
s001Id Whom are names that !lave been doln&amp;ll not the best~~~e« my'
talellts."
-;:;---_..._-~-. ·-:-

.-.-..:...- -. -·

-- -------.~ -· -· ----- ·__..-· -

Meanwhile, the authoritY of the Department of .
Mental Health to name review groups such as the one
which Investigated the trl-county 648 board has been
called Into question by a state organization.
The Ohio Association of Conununlty Mental Health
(&amp;l8) Boards recently hired an attorney to review the
department's authority to set up review conunlttees.
However, notall648 boards in theslateagreed with
the action.
'
The executive conunltt.ee of the Seneca-SanduskyWyandot &amp;l8 board released a statement saying they
"decry the behavior of both theGallla-Jackson-Melgs
&amp;l8 Board and their execulve director Maxine
Plurruner."
The board's and Plwnmer's "total disregard" for
proper management has "cast a dark cloud over all
(648 boards)," the &amp;l8 board's committee said.

Execution followed
Valentine message
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Perhaps more than any other occasion, Valentine's Day Monda,y, Feb. 14 - Is a chance to renew an old relationship, open a
gate to frtendship, mend a rift, or tell someone, "I Jove you."
Valentines can say a little or a lot; they are not for lovers only.
In fact, the first publisher of valentines in this country, Esther
Howland of Worcester, Mass., a graduateofMountHolyokeCoUege,
was a spinster till the end of her days.
Valentlnes have evolved considerably since the first was penned
more than 16 centuries ago by Saint Valentine,.a Romanprtest who
sought converts to Christianity . .
Jailed for his beliefs by Emperor Claudius In 269 A.D., Va. :Je
was befriended by his•Jailer's daughter. the glfl, blind from birth,
brought food and can1ed messages to the cleric.
Shortly before the eve of his execution, she was suddenly given
the gift of sight. Her vision was considered a mlracle and testament
to the priest's faith and prayer. But there was no staY of execution.
On the eve oJ his execution, he wrote the girl a note of appreciaand ·slglied It, "From your v alentlne." And from that first note,
a tradition was born.
·

tion

Firebomb sets blaze
.to traveler's vehicle .

By KATIE CROW
Upon the reconunendatlon of the board of trustees of the Meigs
Emergency Medical Service Melgs county commissioners Tuesday
accepted bids for two ambulances.
Bids were accepted from the Horton Company, Colwnbus, for a 1982
ambulance In at a cost of $28,549, and the other, a 1983 ambulance In the
amount of $31,260.50.
,
Meeting With coll1flllssloners concerning the bids was Bob Eyer,
administrator of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
The commissioners, county engineer, Phil Roberts, Byer and Scott Lucas
will meet at the Senior Citizens Center Feb. 11. at 11 a.m. regarding a
heliport pad being constructed near the center. The heliport Is to
accomodate a helicopter to be used for emergency transfers.
Also meeting with the commissioners were Phil Roberts, engineer iiiKI
Ted Warner of the county highway department.
Roberts Informed the commissioners that a road count was being made
Tuesday on county roads 'rl and 28 to altl him In obtaining federal aid from
the on systems roads. The count Is taken todeterrnlnethewldtlJOftheroads.
Roberts told commissioners he will meet with Ohio Department of
Transportation, District 10, engineers nextTuesdaytodlscuss what criteria
has to be met to place roads.on the on system.
Roberts also noted that the county highway will purchase a portable
concrete mixer at a cost of $1,700 and a copying machine , with a $200
trade-In, at a cost of $2,500. The Items were Included In the 1983 budget.
Upon request of the commissioners, Jim Cornell and John Stahl,
courthouse janitors, meet with the board In order to go over their job
descriptions.
Richard Jones, spokesman for the board, explained that an additional
man will be helping the janitors for approxlmatley five weeks.
He advised Cornell and Slahi that the extra helper be given the proper
equipment and supplles so he can clean Individual offices.
Jones suggested that whomever Is cleaning the offices to stay with the job·
untlllt Is completly cleaned.
Jones expialned the commissioners wanted every office In the building
cleaned, "a winter house cleaning so to speak," Jones said,
Jones also stated Sheriff James Proffitthad requested janitorial service.
He advised that the sheriff's office is to be cleaned beginning this week.·
Jones suggested that possibly someone could clean the offices after
closing hours.
Jones also said commissioners wanted all thermostats checked at 4::.!
p.m. and turned down."Utility bllls are eating us alive," Jones noted.
Jones also asked that within the next :.!days a complete review be made
and a detailed report on any capital Improvement needed be submitted to
the board.
Comnrlssioners, In other business, announced that general relief workers
are avatlable for govermental bodies.
·
Attending were David Koblehtz, president, Jones and Manning Roush,
commtssloners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk and Martha Chambers.

Couple faces multiple charges
'

.

Robert Riffle, 28, Pomeroy and and were arrested for possession of
Tanuny Mash, 21, Pomeroy have thei&gt;tolen vehicle.
On Feb. 8, Mason and Riffle were
beeri arrested In connection With the
lodged
In Meigs County Jall. They
theft of a !ape player, tapes and a
·
admitted
to the thefts
have
check book from a car owned by
Susan Zano, Pomeroy ori Jan. :.!, according to the sheriff, and wui
according to the Sheriff James J. appear In court today.
Gary Wolfe and Paul Gerard,
Proffitt.
Charges will also be fUed against . Investigators for the sheriff and
prosecutor respectively are crethe pair In connection with the theft
dited
with solving eight felonies with
of a truck from Ray Riggs InChester
the
arrest
of Mash and Riffle.
onJan.31.
The sheriffs department reMash and Riffle were arrested In
Gallla County by the Ohio State ported that a 1~ foot aluminum boat ,
Patrol from post'rl when the vehicle was found fl&lt;iatlng In the Ohio River
Sunday. If the owner wishes to
was stopped for a possible OWl.
· A computer check deterinlned claim the boat he must contact the
they were driving a stolen vehicle sherltf's department.

..File suits to recover $115,000

CINCINNATI (-AP) - The fed~
·Barnes said each of the debtors
the blaze. TheStateHighWay Patrol eral government has flled39 suits in had been sent final notices, adding
A woman driving on lnErstate80 waslnvestlgattngbut"notcalllnglt an attempt to recover' $115,00lln that the government could sell off
west of Youngstown told autholitles a firebombing yet," said Lt. Charles defaulted dlsilster loans, many of . the debtors' personal property If
· wblch were made following torna- they don't ·pay up: However, that ·
she escaped Injury afterhercarwas N:tshwitz.
'
Nishwltzsaidthewomandroveto doesln1974.
set ablaze by a firebomb apparently
would first require a judgment
.Christopher Barnes, U.S. attor- against the debtor.
meant 'for ·a non-striking trQcker, thesideof~rodeandtrledtodouse
theflrewlthsnow,
neytortheSouthemDistrlcto!Ohio,
state troopers 5ald today.
,
"The suit Is a surplse to me. I
"There are no arrests. We're still said Tuesday -that the suits were . certa~ don't W!lllt any problem!
Elsewhere, twO shooting Inci~ filed In federal dlsirlct courts 1n
dents and three arrests were · Investigating It," he added.
with . the federal government With
Since the strike began at 12:01 Cincinnati, Columbus and Dayton.
reported. But . offjc;lals said the
all the pi;'Oblems I llave now trying to.
They rep~t the firSt phase of swvlve," said Jerry Zannbus of
state's roads generally were quieter a.m. Feb. 1, the state patrol has
CQIUited 122 shooting InCidents, 22 the federal Small BuslnessAssocta- Cincinnati, who accepted a $1,5ro
than on previous nights.since the
lnJurtes, 60 arrests and 4li8 trucks lion's disaster loan collection plan loanln 1974 at 5 percent .Interest.
Independent truckers' strike began.
damaged.
'
for Ohio.
'The woman's auto was gutted by

By ibe A'I"'"'a*M PreM

�Wednesday, February 9, 1983

'

Commentary
Ill Court Strnt
Pumt!rt~y.

Ohln
aJ ...t92-U51

Ut::VIlTEi&gt;TOTifE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT.
Publlstkr

I'AT WHITEI:IEAD
A ~sls LHn l

BOB HOEFLICH

Publisherf Cuntrullt·r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt'Wii Editur
A MEMBER uf The Assltdak'it Prt'lis. lnh111d Daily Pn-ss Assndatiun 11nd lht'
Aml'ril 'l.lll Nt'\n;papt"r Publiidlt'T'i Assnt latiun.

LF:TIERS Of' OPINION a~n: ~· drumed. Th.:y should bt- l~s lhln 300 words lou~ . All
lt'ttt&gt;n• l:lft' subjl't't tu rditin~; and mut~t tw siJ(n~ wllh namt!. addrt'Ss and lt'lt'phnut'
numht-r . Nn ulllii!l~ lt: ttrrs ,.·illbto publh;ht'd. Lt'Ut!l'll shnuld bt- in ~:nod la..'~k. addre!i!ii"lssut'~ . nul per:tOrwlltit'S.

,.

..

II

I

Good news Is so rare one Wonders
why there aren't more parades
when there ts something to parade
about. Last year Inflation dropped
below four percent, but you would
think It was a national seeret. Andropov should tell Alger Hiss to
blurt It out. At leasi then The Nation
magazine .would believe lt. Then
there Is the relatively recent d~elopment, I mean the shambling of
OPEC. It could not have happened
to nicer people. And when one
thinks back on It: 1973-1982 - 10
years during which a few bureaucrats on whose subsoU the geologl·
cal gods smiles durlrig the
Pleistocene Age or whenever,
meeting In Geneva. and telling the
world what we were all going to pay

was a lree market, I think I would
go on a long pout and stop coming to
And It worked. OU that had sold
the rescue of the world. so fed up
for $2 per barrel was for a while
would I !Je by the way the Ideofetchlngover20tlmes that much on
logues speak about me. But no mat·
the spot market. The lesson for toter how often the tree market Is
day Is that aU the k!ng's political
denounced, It comes along and prohorses and aU the klng's men manvides. In this case, theeroslonotthe
aged to accomplish exactly nothing. We built a huge DeJ)arlment monopoly priCing of aU.
Mexico Is not the aggressor In the
of Energy (Why doesn't somebody
matter of hopped-up on prices. ln
do away with It?): we talked about
fact, the originator of the cutllilg
synfuels and sunspots. We took only
edge of OPEC was our old trlend
two decisive polltlcal steps. We put
the shah of Iran. But soon the lead
the brakes on nuclear fuel, which
·
was
taken by the Saudis and their
prolonged the agony and continues
eplgonl.
But they didn't hold their
to do so. And we decontrolled au ranks. And when.the Iran-Iraq war
which reduced consumption and
ends, another war, only of the kind
raised production.
·
that benefits consumers, will take
What then happened was that the
place.
free market came to the rescue. If I

for oU.

-~'-11~1U1111 •198Hopl~r~--

:: Scouting celebrates
~. 73rd anniversary
As well known as Santa Claus and as American as l)a.seballls the Boy
~ Scouts of America which was 73 years old Tuesday.
~
:
It seems as though Scouting always has been around and most are
: : aware of Its outdoor activities and fun-tuled events. But there Is another
. side to the movement.
.
Scouting Is a Cub Scout learning about wildlife conservation, a Boy
- Scout discovering the technical world of computers, or an Explorer seek. lng knowledge about a medical career. Some 3,300 young people are
, registered with the Tri-State Area Council w!Uch serves the Tri-State Area
- · of West VIrginia, Kentucky and Ohio. And they are enjoying the learning
_ experience BSA programs offer.
.
-.
But there Is a sometimes unsung hero who pla}rs an Important role In
: : getting the programs to the youth - the community group chartered by
: the Boy Scouts of America. The Tri-State Area Council has more than liD
: · groups holding charters for .Cub Scout packs, Boy Scout troops and Ex.
.
. - plorer posts.
On a dally basis, churches and synagogues, schools, service clubs,
. Industry, labor unions, and others tum to Scouting as a resource program
- :· to stimulate and train their youth. Because.those organizations have differ: ent needs anci our world Is changing, Scouting programs constantly are
· being studied and Improved to fUI those needs.
·.
· ··
&amp;;!cause of changes In the American famlly structure, the Tri-State
• Area Council Is Introducing "Today's Family." The project Is designed to
• help children In single P3rent homes or households where both parents
- work become more self-reliant.
Through these and other programs, the Tri-State Area Council and its
· chartered organizations join more than 400 other councils across thecoun: try In spreading the Scouting spirit. "Catch the Scouting Spirit" Is the
- · theme of this year's Scouting Anniversary Week, Feb. 6-12, and we salute
: : the organization and Its 4.4' mllllon members.
:
For the benefit of boys too young to become Club Scouts, the Tiger
· _ Cubs program has been Introduced to Involve In Scouting seven-year-old
:. boys and an adult family member.

;:~ Letters io editor
. -.-.

::-·----Limousine liberal----Is worse off than ever.
The philosophy and goal of the
Celeste Administration to me is socialistic. That means to tax and
give away. The ones who profit
from this hooey are the ones promoting lt. It Is a Dr: J.e kyl and Mr.
Hyde scenario. Dr. Jekyl gets In the
sad,dle and Mr. Hyde Is off to the
races.
There really Is a difference between our polltlcal parties worth
keeping alive. Stalwarts expect
more than a sixth grade Intellectual
level presentation as to what Is to be
done for people. To survive In this
political maze today a person has to
act ·like a rabbit In a briar patch.
Stuck H he sits; shot H he runs.
We shall see Hour new goverror
has any original Ideas. Right now
he seems to be acting like the rest of
the .limousine Democrats - prayIng Republican, but acting like a
limousine liberal. - Gayle Price.

;__----Help yourself!----, America, the free. We say that
pnd we work .and get taxed and
taxed and taxed while some lay
around and get paid to be lazy. Our
tountry Is growing up a lazy bunch.
• People need help. If they can't
help themselves. But our government Is going to extremes now.
Let's look at it. I work every day,
seve11 days a week, but this guy In
his twenties hasn'tgota job but gets
welfare help. Well that's floe. He's
maybe laid off or can't find a job.
Years ago; people would look for
work but not now. They're lazy -

:Tod~y-

too · dependent on welfare and In
many cases wouldn't trade It for a
job. I think the time Is here people
better take any job open and do
their best.
America Is the greatest - but
don't depend on her frOm the cradle
to the grave. If we try to make It on
our own we can say we tried any
· how. When you get up tomorrow
just once try to .help yourself In·
stead of looking for a handout.
Floyd H. Cleland
Rutland, Ohio 45775

in history

' : Today 1s Wedl'iesday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of1983. There are 325days left
:tn .the year.
• Today·~ highlight In history:
_
· On Feb. 9, 1825, the House of Representatives elected John Quincy
~dams president after a national election that faDed to give any of the
·candidates an electoral majority. ·
·
' On this dat~
: In i718, F"rench ealonlsts arri~ed In Louisiana,
.
In 1849, ROme was pniclalrr)ed a republic under Giuseppe Mazzlnl. ·
Jn1943, theWorkiWarllbatileo!GuatlalcanalendedwithanAmerlcan
. victory.' .
ln 1971, an earthquake In the Los Angelescarea kllled 64 people.
Ten years ago: The U.S. Court of Appeals In Washln~n blocked the
tssuance of government permits for construction of a trans-Alaska oil ·
pipellne.
I.

4.

\.

.

THE NEW REAUSM

IQ ,.

By A=d•le!! Press

Although Mexico, as noted, was
not the aggressor,!! rode happlly on
the coattails of OPE;C. And now the ,
news Is that for every dollar reduc·
lion In the lnternatlcmal (rice of oil,
Mexico stands to Ji.&gt;ole $500 million.
On the other hand, If statisticians
are calculating fori every ,percent
drop In Interest rates, MexiCO will
be relieved of $7IX) mllllon In obllga·
lions. Back only a ' few years ago,
everyone wa~ telling us - 'Democratic politicians and CB&lt;; com·
mentators (H there Is a difference
betw~n them) - that the reason
for Inflation was ~ high (rice ot
on. Well, we will see now whether
we can trace a logical reversal. WW
Interest rates come down, and also
Inflation?
The principal beneficiaries, ol).
viously, are tho&amp;e countries that do
!lOt export significant quantities of
oU, butbon'owlotsofmoney.Brazll
Is probably foremost among these.
:The posted price of oil ts still $34, but
there are people out there talking
about sal oU around the comer.
This upsets the plans of a lot of
drillers. But the consumer had
been paying for the OPEC spree,
and there Is cause for rejoicing.
A suggestion. Since taxatiOn Is on
everyone's mind, there Is one tax
that commends Itself for other tMn
the usual easons, these being tO fl·
nance government extravagance.
A tax on Imported ou right now
woUld help to tear OPEC apart,
which Is In the International Inter·
est. And It would not be so keenly
felt by the American public In that
Its etrect woulCt be simply l.o absorb
some of the downturn In tJ\1, price of
ou. There would be marginal bene!·
Its In that our strategic reserves
would ~ discreetly attended to.

On one occasion, a senator, no
longer In Congress, accepted a
payoff In a Capitol Hill bathroom,
relates the source. Fearlul of discovery, the senator Insisted that he
and WUson's courier crowd Into a
stall, where the swag was passed to
the sound of a nushlng toilet.
One thing ts certain: Wilson knew
at least baH a dozen members of
Congress :;e felt entitled to ask for
favors. One former associate said
WUsori sometimes paid off his congressional pals by picking up the
salaries ol various secretaries.
In most cases, the Initial contacts
were made at Wilson's sprawling
Vlrglnta estate, where the hunting
was considered some of the best In
the W3$hlngton area. Intoxicated
by the camaraderie of the sporting
life, and impressed by the other

' movers and shakers who knew WI!·
.son, the congressional guest would
'figure that his host must be all
right.
At least two high-level om~lals In
the Carter White House got to laiow
Wilson that way. One of them may
have delayed the lnvl!$tlgatlon of
Wilson because of their trlendshlp
-or because the prosecutors were
getting uncomfortably close to
Billy Carter's Ubyan shenanigans.
On June 25, 1!&amp;, I reiXJrted that
the Justice Department had evi·
dence that Wilson and his partner,
another ex-CIA man named Frank
TerpU, were "known to bribe U.S.
government omclals to enhance
their businesses." I referred to a
former Energy Department off!·
clal who subsequently was convicted of taking Illegal gratuities

GOING AT 1T - Two boxers lbat participated In la8t Saturday's

Melp Boxing Card at LaiTy R. Morrison Gym 110 at II during lids Hank
Clelaad acdon pboto. Meigs fared weD winning five of six eveata.
• '1-

that, In my opinion, neither has the •
charisma to head the Democratic
ticket In 1!*!4. Without doubt both
men are eminently qualified for the
jobs of preslden,t and vice president
IF they could get elected. Ronald
Reagan Is not a sitting duck who
will be easily defeated If he fimilly
decides to lle a candidate. While the
economy and the Reagan policies
have adversely affected two-thirds
of the voters, remember there are
one-third who have never had It so
good. That one-third has the money
and It Is a nauseous fact of life that
money wins elections. Just because
the administration seems to have
lost touch with reality, Is no reason
for the Democratlt party to do
likewise!
. Former VIce President Walter
Mondale now Is the leading contender for the Democratic nomination. He Is also the .anly candidate
who has had the experience of raisIng the vice presidency from a
purely ceremonial position to be an

active part ol the administration.
During the Carter years, Mondale
occupied an omce adjoining the
Oval Office and had ready access to
the olflce of President Jimmy Carter. He was part of the dally routine
of the presidency and shared the
problems and the occasional triumphs during the troubled years of
the Carter administration.
Some Democrats seem to think
that Mondale's close association
with Jlminy Carter will have a negative ettea on bls candidacy for the
top job. I don't think so. The longer
Ronald Reagan occupies the Oval
Office, the better Jimmy Carter
looks! He at least. had the courage
to change a pollcy when It was not
working. If the chaage was not for
the better, he was not set In concrete and was wUI!ng to try something else. It was not Ro!lald
Reagan who defeated Jimmy Carter. It was the OPEC nations, the
Shah of Iran and the'AyatoUah Kho- .
melnl that d ·!lvered the fatal blow
to the Carter
Because

,

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs 128
pound Brian Nltz was voted the outstanding boxer as the local boxing
club scored five wins among six entered here last Saturday night.
The 16-year old Nltz, now 20-9, declsloned 1'l4 pound 15-year old .
Jimmy Hudson of Parkersburg
and later 133 pound 19-year old
Sander Wolfe of Athens.
Other Meigs boxers coming out
winners were 124 pound 15-year old
Bud Falrrow over 112 pound 14year old Jess Gibson (Parkers·
burg) by decision, 153 pound
19-year old Charley Whittington declsloned 21-year o)d 177 pound
Denny Alexander (Parkersburg) ,
and 19-year old 146 pound Marshall
Green knociled 'out 1&amp;-year old 155
pound Steve Goings of Parkersburg
In the second round.
Brian WIJlls, Meigs' 100 pound 5year old, lost a narrow decision to
16-year old 115 pound John Gibson
of Parkersburg.
Na tlonal Silver Gloves Champion
Charley Hatcher of Ripley defeated
an Athens entry.
Fighting an exhibition match

from Wilson.
A former employee of Wilson's
told my associate Dale Van Atta
how his ex-boss' bribery worked:
"Ed always carried thousands of
dollars In his pocket," the source
said. ..He would often drag me to
the bathroom of whatever restau·
rant we were In and hand me wads
of hundred-dollar btlls, Instructing
me what particular job he wanted
dooe.
Some of Wilson's secret, Illicit
lines of communication Into the fed·
era! government were almost unbelievable. For example, without
too.· much trouble he could get a !u1l
financial readout oil J.ust about any
American taxpayer from at least
one contact In the Internal Revenue
Service, whose tues are supposedly
the most careluUy guarded of any
federal agency.

--------.--

Walter Mondale was part of the administration during one of the most
trying times ,In the history of the
omce Is all the more reason to capitalize on the things he learned durIng those bitter days.
It Is unfair for the administration
to attempt to lnfiuence the Democratic primaries. Who ever said the
Reagan administration Is fair
about anything? Reagan himself
said It when he Introduced the 1984
budget the other day. He called his
proposals to Congress ..fair and
reaBstlc" but then he Is naturally
prejudiced. It was grossly unfair to
'that segment of the population that
can least afford lt. His proposed
budget penalizes the poor and elderly for being poor and elderly. He
rewards the rich for being rich by
opposing the deferral of the 10 percent Income tax refund due In JtW
and the repeal of Indexing tor future years. He hopes to reward the
rich long after he has been replaced
In the White House.
What's fair about that?

Young Marauders
upset Big Blacks
ROCK SPRINGS - THe Meigs
Marauder freshmen upset the
highly-touted Pt. Pleasant ninth
graders recently, 36-27.
Coach Tim Saunders' Utile Marauders pulled away In the final
three minutes as Chris Kennedy
made three straight free throws,
Lee Powell stole the ball and lald In
two, and then In the final minute
Chris Shank made both ends of a
one and one to sew It up.
Shawn Baker led Meigs with 14
white Powell had eight. Shank, six,
and Kennedy and Brian Houdashelt each had four. Kelly Riffle led
Pt. Pleasant with 12. Meigs, playIng their finest game of the year,
made 12 of 18 tree throws while Pt.
Pleasant made seven of 10. Meigs
moved to SO with the win while Pt.
Pleasant falls to 13-2. Pt. Pleasant's
other loss ~arne against Ripley.
Meigs competes In the Mlller
freshmen tournament at MWer
High School tonight at 6: 30 against ·
Athens . The championship game
will be played 'lbur¥Jay at 6: 30
Withthe
theMiller-Crooksville
Meigs-Athens winner
lac·
!ng
winner.

·
•
were eight-year olds Dave Darst
and Mark Haley, both of Meigs. No
decision was awar:ded.
The Meigs boxers, coached by
Roger Stewart and Harold WW!s,
put on an exhibition-In frOnt of the
Meigs · High School students last
Monday.
.
Match-ups Included WW!s vs.
Bruce Martin (Ripley), Nltz vs.
Green, Falrrow vs. Tim King (Ri·
pley) and Whittington vs. Charley
Hatcher (Ripley). No decisions
were awarded.
The Meigs' boxers will compete
at the Ravenswood High School this
Saturday at 7:30p.m.

I

MASON, W. VA.

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ADOLPHS
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THE SEASON

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A 20'foot jumper by Leonlil-d
Wright with three seconds to plBy
gave Albany State an 81-79 victoly
over Florida A&amp;M.
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Dwayne Johnson's 16 points,
Including· two free throws with 26
seconds lelt, gave Marquette a 53-50
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A freshman fmward, Walker had
12 polrtts and 10 rebounds In the first
half. Derrick Hord added 15 points
for Kentucky, whUe Jeff Malone,
the SEC's leading scorer, led the
Bulldogs with 26 points.

.'

Pomeroy-Mason Bridp"

•'

r~~~~;~~~~~~;u~;;~~;;;~i~~;J~

zone."

FOR

..·

.remalning In overtime cafried
Niagara to a 79-78 North Atlantic
Conference victory over Holy

· This school is sponsored by Panasonic Microwave Ovens.... A Special Home Economist will
demonstrate Microwave CoOking.

"Watch for Our
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PH. ·992~2556

•

vlctor1ou.s
Wildcats,
now 15-4
overall
and 8-21n
league play.
Connecticut, 9-11 and 2-7, was paced by
freshman guard Earl Kelley with 20
point$.
KennyWalkercameoffthebenc)l
to score 23 points and lead
Kentucky's Southeastern Conference victory over Mississippi State.
Kentucky Increased ltl! record to
15-5 - :Hi In conference play.
"The other players are really
gaining a lot of confidence In Kenny
Walker," said Kentucky Coach Joe
B. Hall. ''They are taking the ball to
him and looking for him In the

CINCINNATI (AP) - Pitcher
season·•
Ben Hayes and five minor leaguers
-outfielder Dallas W!Wams, 24,
have signed one-yearcorttractswlth
who batted .:mat Indianapolis last
the ClnclnnaII Reds.
seasonwlth7homerunsand74RBI;
Hayes, 25, pitched In relief In 26
-Infielder Tom Foil, 23, who hit
games for the Reds last season. The
.2m with 8 homers and 63 RB!s at
righthander had a 2-0 record and
Indianapolis;
1.97 earned run average. He also
-catcher Steve Christmas, 25,
played for the Reds' Class AAA
who batted .~With 7homersand37
fann club at Indiana palls.
RB!s last year at Indianapolis;
The five minor leaguen; signed
-pitcher Ron Robinson, 20, who
Tuesday were:
was 13-7 with the Reds' Class AA
-third baseman Nick Esasky, 22, Waterbury team with a 3.28 ERA.
whohlt .264withZ7homerunsand62 · He was the top winner In the Reds'
runs hatted In at Indianapolis last farm system last year.

· disc~.

AND
..

three-minute stretch, to spark
VWanova over Big East rival
Connecticut. John Plnone added 16
and Mike Mulquln 13 lor the

1

Tenns of the contracts, annoimced ·Tuesday, • were not

DOWNING-CHILDS · .

.

SeftiOI' guard Stewart Granger
scored 24 points, Including 10 In a

Cincinnati sign six players

Culmer.

Dybzlnskl, 27, was the team's
· starting shortstop at the beginning
of 1982 before· being demoted In
favor ot Flschlln. Dyb:zlnsld hit .231
In 30 games for Cleveland and .2991n
·30 games for the ' Class AAA
. ·CharleSton Charlles,

TopTwenty

Johnson's free throws gave the
Warriors, l5-5, a 51481ead.
Old Dominion, 12-7, was led by
sophornre Charlie Smith, who
scored all but two of his 18 points In
the second half.
Reed Watts' 12-foot jumper from
the right baseline with two seconds

win

PICKENS
HARDWARE

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Indians have reached
· agreement on contracts for the 1983
' season with Infielders Jerry Dyb- ·
zlnsld, Mike Flschlln and Jack
Pet;conte and outfielder Wll

Qt1. the bench to score 20 points and
Sllnvold ~dded 17..

Mlssouri'sRonJones.
r----~--------1
"This Is the
atest win In Iowa
. State's hlsto;reand one of my
greatestwlnsasacoach," saldiowa
State Coach Jolmny Orr. "We had to
have a good night out of Barry and
' we got It. He was phffiomenal "
a31 .JACKSON PIKE- 1ft 3&amp; WEST
Mls!Durl had a chance to
the
Phone 448-.ts24
arne· In regulation when Jon
&amp;UJOAW IIIATtllf.ES SAT. IUN
ALL SEAr! I Z.OO
~ld an 88-pen:ent tree throw
ADtfiS!tON EVFRY nlf'SO.W 12.0 0
shooter f~r the season, stepped to
the line for two shots with six
seconds remaining. He made the
flrsttotlethescoreat65 but missed
the second
'
Steve Stlpanovlch led Mlssourl,
184 overall and 6-1tnBili Eight play,
with26polnts.PrlnceBrldgescame

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NEED,
SEE US!

Indians sign players

~l&lt;.'fo, 50N~Y l

1 Tlollt.lK 1 ·CAl-l
lAAKE. IT ~OW! :

.

Meigs boxers in good showing ~~w~=~hed~~i

Ronnie vs .. Herbie""-________L_aw_e_u_w_in_ge_u
President Herbert Hoover put
the Republican party on the polltl·
cal shelf for 20 years. Whether or
not Ronald Reagan wUl do the
same Is a question the next two years of his term In office wUI decide.
One thing Is now certain - he has a
hell of a good start toward breaking
the Hoover record!
While the president and his associates are peddtlng the Pollyanna
view that prosperity Is sprouting
out aU over, the sad fact remains
that unemployment Is still In double
digits, that soup llnes are forming
an an ever Increasing number of
cities and thousands ot homeless
and hungry are joining ihe ranks of
the hopeless every week. To hear
our nation's leaders predict good
times just around the corner whUe
people are homeless and hungry Is
a slap In lhefacethatfewwlllforget
when they go to the polls In future
years. No one did more to bun&lt;! the
Democratic party than Herbert
Hoover until the advent on the natlof¥il scene of Ronald Reagan and
his ~ ?Ply-side economics. The
preser. administration will have a
negatlw effect on the Republican
party for years to come.
So divorced Is the Reagan admln·
lstratlon from reality, they are
even trying to Influence the Democratic primaries In 1984. .APParently relying on their old trick of
starting rumors early and repeatIng them often enough to be accepted as facts, they are
attempting to Influence the Democratic prtmarles to secure Democratic candidates pleasing to. them.
In the Feb. 71ssueofU.S. News and
World Repoli, the following little
gem of political yearning appears:
"Toughest Democratic tlckei for
1984, according to some White
House advisers, would be Senators
John Glenn of O!Uo and Sam Nunn
of Georgia. Glenn Is seen as poputar 1n the IiJast and Mldwes~ Nwin
. ,big In the SQuth _ thus depriving
Reagan of support trom the nalion's n1011t populws areas." ·
I do not mean to detract frdm the
. fine records Senators Glenn and
Nunn have made as members of
theUnltedStatesSenatewhenisay

Everything went In for' Iowa
State's Barry Stevens,·evena18-foot
"prayer shot" at the 'buz2ler tllat
gave the Cyclones a 73-72 overtime
upset over lOth-ranked Missouri.
"We had a hand In his face on the
last shot and It still went In," said
Mlssourt Coach Nonn Stewart. "It
looked short, but tt got there.
tried everybody In the dugout, but
couldn't get Stevens siQpped."
The sophomore forward finished
with 40polntsand halted Missouri's
record string of 11' Big Eight
victories on the road. It also snapped
Iowa State'~ 10-game losing Streak
to Mlssourt .as the Tigers drOpped
their first conference game of the
season.
"As I was fading away,! was just
praying It would go In," Stevens said
ofhlswlnnlngshot, "andlhadagut
feeling It WoUld."
In other games Involving ranked
teams, No.12 VUJanova beat .Con·
nectlcut 86-79 and No.l3 Kentucky
crushed MlssJsslppl State ~7.
Iowa State gained possesslon of
the ball for the !ina! shot after
Missouri's Mark Dressler nilssed
the first of a one-and-one tree throw
opportunity with 12 seconds remainIng In the extra session. The
Cyclones called timeout with nine
seconds left, then worked the ball to

we

Palming right peop...__le_____---:--Ja_ck_A_n_de_rso_n
WASIITNGTON -With a habit
he developed In the CIA, renegade
agent Edwin P . Wilson was able to
lubricate his Ullclt International
business deals by greasing the
palms of key officials here and
abroad.
I reported last week the allegations by a former Wilson aide that
he wllnessed Sen. Strom 'lbur·
mond, R-S.C., accept cash payoffs
on two occasions. The Justice Department Is Investigating the allegations, which Thurmond fiatly
denied.
Another ex-associate claim~ he
witnessed payoffs to several
members ol Congress. One was actually bold enough to visit Wilson's
corporate headquarters In Washington, D.C. and pick up envelopes full o.f cash.

Sentinei-Page-3

Cyclones upset Missouri, Wildcats win

Poge 2-The DailY. Sentinel
P'vn-f Middlepou·; Ohio
Wednesday, FebruatY 9, 1~3

. ..
.~~------------~~~--------------------~

Our born-again governor says he
.Is treading on an economic bed of
coals.
. The good governor wants to
; make education take the brunt of
' the money cuts he says he needs.
; How come the education lobby is so
; quiet? Isn't that 'iobby a staunch
ally of the governor? Any time poll·· ttclans have breathed cutting the
::money outlay for schools In the past
. 'the O.E.A. has yelled to high
; heaven . How come . they are so
' quiet now? There is something In
: the woodpile somewhere and It's
: something the Celeste Admlnlstra::tlon will just happen to find when
· their smoke screen clears. '
: 1 am scared of Dick Celeste. I am
~ dubious of his !ogle. We are just be: ginning to move out of the recession
: )vhen ·he jumps up to practically
: double the state Income tax.
::Jimmy Carter told us he needed a
· goad, big Increase In social security
tax~. He got it. Now social security

. l·

0 PEC: 1973-198-.2_ _ _ _
wu_lia_m_F._Buc+. kl_er_Jr.

The Daily Sentinel

.·

The Daily

1 .

sPECIAL PRICES ON MICROWAVES AND
ACCESSORIES

�Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedrwday, ~ 9, 1913

Wednesday, Nbruary 9, 1983

r=============M=~=H~=s=sE=crr=oN=U=cr=~============================~~f~r,,a-f!--~--a-r~t~a!cr-c-e--Jl~l~s--~-.-.~
·sAT

, , Peb,l9 - 1 :00 p.m.

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OSU scholars.h ip

/&gt;-- - - --------,

""'

_,.,

MON • , Feb. 21 - 7:00p .m.

BYE

tt

I J&lt;fd&lt;f

Wimer to

Sat., Feb. 26, 3:00 p.m.

:District/Athens
Match 5, 19f

KON·, Feb. 21 - 8 : 45 p.m . .

SWHS streak ends;
Wahama tops Pirates

Ohio
Sportlight
By George Strode
O)LUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Under Gov. Richard Celeste's budget plan,
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources ~ lose an estimated $1.9
mU!lon In the next five months.
However, Celeste says he will not close any of Ohio's parks.
Ron James, the department's deputy director, also says the governor
does not plan to establish admission fees tostateparks,despltereports to the
contrary.
"We are totally against that concept," James said.
James, a three-term Democratic state representative frOm Lawrence
County, will supervise the Divisions of Wildlife, Parks and Recreation,
Natural Areas and Preserves and Forestry, as well as the Offices of Utter
Control and Civlli;qt Conservation.
·
James concedes there could be layoffs in the department under the
governor's 5 percent cut in its budget. "I'm not sure of It," he said. "We're
looking at program cuts with as much concern as possible for personnel."
The resources department official doubts If there will be any salary cuts
for ODNR. "I suppose there could be, but only If the other cost-cutting
programs Q.o not work," he said.
'The Parks and Recreation Division, deriving about half of its money frOm
the state's general fund, has been hit with budget cuts of25percen tIn the last
tWo years.
The division runs 71 state parks, with about 1m employees to handle
yearly visitors of around 52 million.
Of the agencies in the Natural Resources Department, only the.divisions
of Wlldllfe and Watercraft and the Office of Litter Control generate their
oWil Incomes, through license fees, state and federal gasoline taxes and
oJ1ter sources.

:fort Fyre dumps
Eastern, 60-44
By ScoU Wolfe
BEVERLY- In a well played
basketball game at Fort Frye High
School Tuesday evening, Eastern's
Digles finally bowed down to the
host Cadets 6044 after suffering
through first and third quarter
offensive droughts.
Eastern fell behind 14-2 after
period one, but fought back to within
8 at the half, but suffered through a
sluggish third frame before coming
baCk with a strong finish.
Eastern's Roger Bissell led all
Eastern scorers with 17 points, Jim
Newell added 8. EHS was playing
withOut the services of consistent
starter Troy Guthrie. ,
Cadet Terry Ayers netted a
game-high 22 points, while Brian
Dyer and Jerry Anderson clipped
the nets for 13 each.
Fort Frye shot out to an early first
period lead, taking advantage of its
height advantage on the offensive
boarclS enroute to a 14·2 score at the
buZzer. In the second round, EHS
settled down to outscore the
powerful Cadets 14·10, closing the
gap to eight at the half, 24-16.
Eastern's inablllity to get out of
the gate in the first and third rounds
proved to be crucial as the visiting
Eagles executed ·a · fine overall
' offensive threat. Fort Frye's edge
· 'on the offensive boards gave them
54!CQnd and third shots, also playing

three-point lead by host
Symmes Valley In theopenlngofthe
second period of Tuesday night's
non-league game with Southwestern was erased before the Highland·
ers went on to p6st a 72-49
non-league triumph.
The victory snapped a SW loss
streak, placing Its overall record at
5·12, while the Highlanders remain
3-5 In the SVAC.
SW' s Roger Wells led all scorers
for the night with 22 points, while
Ron Carr · posted 15 for the
Highlander · effort. Paul McNeal
and Jeff Meek also contributed 10
p()lnts to the win.
The Vikings' game fell apart In
the second quarter as SW moved
ahead to make the score 40-271n Its
favor at the closing buzzer. High·
lander defense and effective shoot·
lng from the free-throw line (16of22
attempts for 77 percent) limited
Coacn Paul Pettit's squad to 16
points l1i the third canto and six In
the final period.
Leading In scoring for SV was
Todd Robinson with 20, while l;'aul
Fulks notched up 14 markers for the
evening.
From the floor, the Highlanders
sank 28 of 58 tries for 48 perceQt.
Wlth30 rebounds, McNealwasSW's
top rebounder with 13. The High·
landers also had 12 turnovers and 13
assists.
John Woolum's 16 points and 15
from Mike Bailey helped sw· s
reserve on to a 49-43 win over the
junior Vikings. John Thompson
paced the Highlanders with 13.
SW returns to SVAC play Friday
when It hosts Kyger Creek. They
play Wahama at home next
Tuesday.
Meanwhile, by keeping down
North Gallla center Matt Kemper,
Wahama reversed an early Pirate
lead In the first quarter and went for
a 60-53 win over the Gallia County
team Tuesday night at Mason.
Despite the lead, NG kept the
scoring In each quarter relatively
tight. The White Falcons, . who
dropped a 59-56 decision on the
Pirate court in January, kept the
A

an Important factor In the game's
outcome.
In the third round, the Eagles kept
pace with the hosts, staying close at
a8polhtdeficlt. Wlthachancetocut
the lead to six, EHS conun!tted
three straight turnovers that FF
drove In for scores and a 14 point
margin that swayed the momen·
tum back In favor of the winners.
After three rounds the score stood
39-21.
In the

last stanza Eastern
outgunned ltsfoe23-21, butfell short
of victory 6044 when the final
curtain fell to end the game.
Eastern h!t15or 42attempts for 35
percent arid 14 of26 at the line, while
the winners hit 25of50foir50percent
and 10 oi 18 at the line. · ,
EHS had 33 rebounds, Collins 6,
Gaul6, Malson 5, and Carpenter 5;
had 13 turnovers, and 19 personal
fouls . FF had 39 rebouhds, 10
turnovers and 22 personals:

Despite a good game from the
young Eagles, Fort Frye claimed a
6148 win In the reserve contest.

visitors In check from the floor and
the foul line for the rest of the night,
with NG gaining only a single try at
the foul line.
Mike Mays led In scoring for NG
with 23, while Eric Penick had 12
and Ken Neal chipped In 10. Ron
Bradley paced the Pirates with 19,
while Donnie Van Meter and Eric
Embleton each added 14.
The Pirates' were 26of49fromthe
field for 51 percent, and recorded 27
rebounds, with Mays credited for 10
rebounds. There were also 23
turnovers, 14 assists and four steals
In the Pirate record book.
In the reserve game, the little
Bucs went to 47-43 defeat at the
hands of their White Falcon
counterparts.
NG goes to6-lloverall this season
and is 2-6 In the SVAC. The Pirates
travel to Eastern Friday In a leagu~
game and host VInton County next
Tuesday.

SouthWI!&lt;tern

18 22 18 14-72

Symmes Valley

21 6 16 _6-49

•

Beit\"'!r I.Dcallll, Oak Glen , W.Va . :18
Berlin w. Reserve lB. Peterbra

Sprtn~ -..

CUSPS I - )

Brlstd 69, Grand VaL t8
Buckeye S. 98. Unbt Loetd 81

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Garrettsvtlifo 64. Waterloo~
Gilmour 5.1. Clew'. Unlvtrslty 51
Girard 79, Broo~ 72. 01'
Gff.'f"nE'Ytfow '-1 E . Oink:fl 48
GI'O'Vl' C1ry 86. Col. Eastrmor 63
Har«n N. 6J, McComb 56

• Kt'ttl'I"Yig Alter 63. Falnnom w. sc, 20T
• KWrm ctu-. sa. Mnsl&amp;n Chr. 47
• L!lkl' ~ 53. &lt;..1l'Ye. Griswold 51
• L.OOanon 68, Franklin :Ill
~ U!retonJa ~ . Upltl!d L.ocal 74
Lemon-Monroe 66, Fenwkk 52 '

Uslnl

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, Logan Elm 'lU, Amendl~ ts
Lorain Brwleslck&gt; 78, 1..«* Cll"atvk'w

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l..ordatown 73. Flll"mlll«ttn 3:1

: ~:;:Yi~i ~=54"
111, w. umn

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• Manltltkl &amp;1, l..aaln ti7
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Top Of
The Line

....

' ) MaJittt.lll
6J. ~-"
Wanl'n U:Jcal 57

l
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' Ma§Won 88, Akron

. CINCINNATI (AP) - Wide
receiver David Verser bas all but
ruled out leaving the Cincinnati
Bengals for the new United Siae
Football League.
Verser, after two ' seasons, has
'Played out his option with .

CHAPMAN SHOES

! · Heandhlsagent, MlchaelR.eedof
· Los Angeles, visited a practice
session ot the USFL' s Los ·Angeles
Express last week and came away
feeling it wasn't the Ideal situation
for Verser.
"We' were pretty much unlm·
pressed with their organization,"
Reed said Tuesday. "You can really
see they're having their growing
pains . They're kind of
unorganized."
The Express, who had Invited
Vl!f'&amp;er, apparently were never very
Interested In him, according to
:
Reed.
Tom Fears', Los Anl!eles' director
of player personnel, said the wide ·
receiver jlos!tlon was near the
bottom of the team's priority list.
Reed said the Express can afford
to sign two big names. They'vebet!n
talking to former National Football
League running back Chuck Foreman and have indiCated an Interest
In UCLA quarterback Tom
. Ramsey.
"Unie5s things chaitge drastl·
· cally, we really want to live tile
Bengal.s first shot,.. Reed said,
adding that
Is romfllrtable In
Cincinnati and wants to return.
· "But nothing 1s ruled ouj entirelY
until we
what the Benga1s have
to say," he added.
HoweverJ. Reed can't otlclally
represent Verser In NFL negota·
t!ons
he'attends a semlllar and
receives certlftcatlon from the NFL
PlayerS ~ton. .
"We'fl! jUst going to go~ by
their guidelines," Reed .... He
said Verser IS .tree to talk to NFL,
clubs himself.
Verser's chances ot signing will)
another NFL team also lookl!d dim
because of the n~ regulatloi!a.
. Verser made 1m estinall!d
SllO.OOllast 11e11110n. U I» qned b'
a11 average arinual saJary.at$:mD,OOl
with another NFL ~ 1t CDuld
cost that team flrst·and thltd-round
· draft choiceS: u IllS awrage salary
aver the lellgth of the contract was

'

•\

IF REQUIRED .

yerser

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untn

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Also, have a 1111 heldli- 11111 willla lube, oil chlnp and
filter on all Cll11nd Yt ton trucks.
·. The• Speclalsl!xpiM .March 11 1983

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PH. 992·6614
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SIMMONS
OLDS.-CAD...atEVY, INC.
308 &amp;. MAIN ST •

POMEROY, OH.

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

Sliced
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Pork Steak or Roast •..
MIXED

Fryer parts......... ~
GRADE A·

Turkeys..... :~~:.~·.....~8;

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Navel Oranges......
FLAVORITE
59
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4 LB. BAG

PlASTIC GALLON$

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Mr. GoodwNnc:n giveo 1 complete front·ond
ollgnmont jab for 1 opoclol prico. Ho ldjuot1
-· ond -.tn 10 lootory opecitlco.
uo,..
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II for oil Americon con
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hltf*. 4--ollgnm.,t ...llobloforJ. K. ond
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Tndo Our front-ollgnmoM II by Vlnco Knight who
hoo 20 - ·
ond 11 1
groduoto of tloor Alltn"*'l Schoo!.
Col! for your •PPDI- tlld&lt;~y.

Hobin iJ

Verser won't
leave Bengals

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• Day. WaytK' 87, SpriiiK- North 86, 01'
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No subscriptions by mail permittee! 1n
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available..

50 MONTH
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Col. H.amlltm Twp. II. CMal Wtnc!WR-

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, Col. Wehrk' '17, Mlaml1'roce ~

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The ~tf·IOd•WIIer. no-worry Deleo Freedom II Cln
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One of tl'le wanlt th1ngt thtt can happen to vou on 1
cold wmtlr moming •tthlt your old battery 11 dead.

.PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEBRUARY 12, 1983

Oe\lt'. G lenville 98, C)eo.&gt;e. Hayes ~
Cle\le. Hawken !II, ~ 47
Oe\:'f. Tech Q!, Oeve. Hay 1'i

PRlCEs
Dally .... .... .. .... ...................... ~ Cents

.NOW DELCO QUAUTY FRONT-END AU
COSTS LESS.
.
$}4!5 . =-~

56-50 71·50 15-50 1N0

Canton Heritage 61, Howland Otr. 57
Canton McK!ftk;&gt;y 64. CJeo.oeiall4 Hts. t1i
Carlbif. 71, Mason ~
CedarvWe 62. Clirllon-Massie 58
0\ampion .59, Cortland LaJI.CYiew 4J
Olanel 73, Otswtn Falls 6J
an. Elder 11. an. Pwwn z
ctn. l.aSaUe 74, ctn. Wal~t Hills 7l
an Moeller n. an. McNicholas il
C1n. ~ Hills 12. Xmta Wlbon fill
Ctn. 'l'wlin 56, Amelia 4.1
Cln. Woodward i7, Cln. Withrow 66
Cleve, Rapi:l.'it 73, Lutheran E . t)
OeYe. -Eiencdktine 00. Ck&gt;ve. Linmln·W.

(lcoyc. Colllnwood 72, a eve. East 51

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REGUI.AR ...... $74'.95

TraU Ill , Meadowbrook 47

Cadtz 53, -steubenville C&amp;th. !U
Cam~ll Memorial M. ~ruthen !0

Member: The A!soc!aled " ' - Inland
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SUIIBCRIP'I10N RATE&lt;!

•298 SECOND ST.
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PoMEROY, 0.

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8lacm.carrou ~. Lancaster FISher 54
Bradl'ord Tl. Mencbn Unb1 56
BrtocksvWe 70, Normnia 59

I

A DMIIon ol Mulllmedla, Inc. '

.

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Beaver Eastern 70, S. Webs!E'l' 49

¥OC,

17; Gaul' 2-0-4; Malson 2-H: Grllllth 1~2.
TIKalo111-14-44• .
By quarters: ,
Fort Frye
14 10 1.1 21-oo
Eastern
2 14 S 23-14

n.

Avm Lake 00, Avm 56
BadR'l'!' 61, Neowton FalJs 47

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

throogh Friday, 111 Coun Street, by the
Ohio Valley-Publlshq Company. Mul·
tlmedla. Inc .• Pomeroy. Ohio 451119, !182~~o.class postage paid. at

STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm

63

AllrOI'a 7%, Crestw'Ood 70, OT

"Next to Elberfelds In Pomeroy"

Rio Grande's Redrnen outscored
Mount Vernon Nazarene by an 18-2
margin during one stretch of the
first half Tuesday night and rolled to
a 94-58 Mid-Ohio Confernce victory
over the Cougars.
The win moved the Redrnen to
21-7 on the season and 9-1 on the
while Mount Vernon dropped
tll1-9and4-17.
It was the Redmen's 12th victory
In their last 13 decisions and 22nd
win in23gamesatLyneCenterslnce
last season.
.

Akron St. V-St. M Tl , Akmt Kl'nrmre
ArehtDid ~. st!yker ~
Ashtabul;t Harlmr
LaBrae tli
Ashtall.lla St. John 56, ~ 45

Aus~town Fitch 74, Nl&amp;es Mc Kinley 56

1

The Daily Sentinel

"'

.,

I

Rio dumps Cougars

PART NUM8EAS:
41-!0 5I-50 11-50 81·50

.

bwy, the AP's No.1 Ohio back In ,
Class A, says he will play at l
Michigan State. ~ G-foot, ID 1
poundAdamshad1,400yai'dsand15 !
touchdowns In his senior season.
,
"He cuts against the grain very :
well," Coach Jeff Warnlcke said of ;
Adams,aiHihlghjumperln\he1982 i
state track meet.
•

Akron E\Jet 615, Akron Spr'tDg. ~
J\kron FirestCI'It 54!. Glpley !il
Akron Manchester ID, Akron Covenuy

Jackson !II. Wellston 5t
.lOOn Glenn 66. RJvf"t V\tow 62
Km!!tc. 91, Chara::ln 7G

16 8 1.1 14-53
18-m

JOHN~trA.
.

I

~-e 7'2. C\ICA 67, O'J'
I~ 71, C\(,yahop H&amp;ll. -1i

~ 10 28 14

Wahama

.,_.,..,_

. , . r*-e!ririP,..

Hudson W.

s.... by l)1lai1&lt;n;

North Gallla

j

· Howland ftt. YOIII'"ft. UrsullrM' 62

NORTH GALLL\ CAl- Mays 11-1·23: Pen·
lck ~Hl-12; Neal~~ Lee~; Diddle~~~
TGtolo 16-1-53.
WAIIAMA (Cit) -Roush 1~2; Bradley7-519; Embleton 6-2-14; Van Meta- 6-2·14; Mit·
chell U4 ; Kimes 3-1-7. ToCals 111-,lHf.

,,
'

far."
Steve Adams of Lakeside Dan·

SOIJMIWI!8TEHN (12) - Mcl'leal ~
10; Wells 7·8-22; Layton 2~ ; Baker 2-3-7;
Meek 4-2-10; Corr 6-J. 1.1: l'l!l!rey 2* TGtolo
%8-lf-7%.
SYMMESVAU.EV 1411) -Burcham2-04;
Fulks 7.0.14; ROOinson 11)1).21! Waugh 3-1-7;
Miller 2-0-4. Tvlolo 24-1-411.
Sc .... b y q -

FORT FRYE (110) -Engle 1·2-4; Eltwlck
2-2-6; Dyer6-1 -13; SlillllngU4; Ander.on6-1·
13; Ayers S+ll. TllCalo 111-lll-«&lt;.
EASTERN Clll- Colllns~; Probert1-57; Newell 3-2-8; Carpenter ~H; Bissell 6-5-

WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

By (OEOKGE STRODE
. AP Sports Writer ·
Only oneofThe Associated Press'
Ohio Players of the Year, tight
end-linebacker Ed Taggart of
Akron St. Vlncent-St.Mary, has
chosen Ohio State for his college
football career.
Of the 16 players who had
coniml\ted to Ohio State. before
Wednesday's opening signing date,
. 11 were from Ohio schools.
Committing to the Buckeyes
Tuesday were linebacker Fred
Ridder of Eaton and defensive back
Ray Jackson of Akron Central·
Hower.
For example, theAP'sCiassAAA
. Players of the Year, running back
IDawatha Francisco of Cincinnati
Moeller and llnebacklng tearrunate
Shane BuUough, have opted for
schools outside the state. ,
Francisco, whose runnliJg led the
crusaders to a state playoff title last
fall, will follow his old coach, Gerry
Faust, to Notre Dame. Bullough,
the son of clnc!nnat! Bengals'
defensive coordinator Hank Bul·
Iough, has chosen to follow his
father, playing at Michigan State.
The Class AA Back of the Year,
Urbana's Jeff Rogan, will enroll at
Coffeyville (Kan.) J~or College
because of his 1.5 scholastic point
average. The 5-foot-8, 160-pound
Rogan accounted for 5,985 yards
and 89 touchdowns In four seasolll!.
"U he had had the grades, he
could have played almost anywhere. Alabama, Nebraska, Oklahoma, even the Buckeyes were
Interested In him," Urbana Coach
Ray DeCola said of Rogan. "He's
the best back I've ever coached, by

HighSchool
cage results

$ 29 EGGS . ..
••••••••••••••••••••
GRADE A EXTRA LARGE

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8 PAK, 16 Ol; BTLS. • • • • •.• • •

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Crackers..... ~ ...... ~.
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MAXWB1 HOUSE

·coFFEE
3LB. CAN

~.IXKI. thenewclubWialldOM!the

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Benga1s .llrst-and seccJIId..IWIIII
draft clio~.

"

...

DOZ.

..

•'

'

...
'
'·

.,_

..

¢

·.'

�~The

Daily
Sentinel
.
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, FebNGry 9, 1983

Helen help us
•

Most benefits requtre marrtage
BY HELEN BmTEL
DEAR HELEN:
Gary and I have lived together 24
years -faithfully, I might add. We
have a stronger marriage than the
average couple but we aren't al·
lowed a legal ceremony because we
are of the same sex.
·
~lng gay deprives us of benefits
ot her mates take lor granted. Gary
can 't share my company-paid
health Insurance. If I die first, he
won't get survivor's benefits from
my pension.
We'D be together all our Uves,yet
we can 't flle ·jolnt Income tax.
When will this country recognlze
that a longstanding homosexual relationship deserves the rights given
even to marriages that too often
end In divorce? Wben wliJ It let Us
legally marry? - DONALD
DEAR DONALD:
.. . Not soon , but possibly sometime. And when that time com~. I
predict the promiscuity rate
among homosexuals will show a
marked down..jard curve. - H.
DEAR HELEN:
Our neighbors' dining alcove win·

dow faces on our living room. Mr.
Jones .(we'U call him) eats llke an
animated garbage disposer. He
shovels In the food, c)rlpptng and
drizzling. taking time out only to
scratch his bare beUy as he slosheS
down beer. His wife Is nearly as
bad.
They eat late; and with the elect·
ric lights on, people In our house
can see the hog wallow aU too
clearly from our side window. I'm
tempted to take pictures and send
them anonymously. Otherwise How can we stop this disgusting
show? - REPEllED

Helen, tour years ago I had to
have a hysterectomy, andistiUfeel
Incomplete, though I'm getting
over tile worst of .it. (LuckUy, I
never wanted children aU that
much.) It I leU Josh, the old "emptl·
ness" will retUrn. My way offaclng
this Is to pretend the operation
didn't happen. I guess I'm a little
ashamed I'm not "'whole."
Is It dishonest not to mention that
I can't get pregnilnt? I cringe at
explaining why! - ROSE

AI Hartson, a natiVe of Indianapolis, Ind., has been narnE!d new full·
time associate pastor of Middleport
Church of Christ.
A 1977 graduate of Kentucky
Christian C9Uege, Grayson, Ky.,
Hartson was pastor of Christian
Church In Indtapapolls for four years alid has been located In Pitts·
burgh, Pa., for the past year or so.
At the Methodist church, Hartson

Hartson
DEAR ROSE:
There's nothing shameful about a
hysterectomy. Discussing tt with
Josh might be the therapy which
finally washes away the last traces
of your "InComplete feeling ."
So stop worrying and share the
secret. I think you'U discover Josh
considers It as unimportant as weU - as I do. - H.

..

DEAR REPELLED:
Pull your drapes. - H.
' DEAR HELEN:
I've tauen In love with a wonder·
fill man. We're both In our early
30s, and I assumed he didn't want
any more children. (He has·two by
his first wife.)

Got a problem? An adult subject
tor discussion? You can talk It over
In her column tt you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this newspaper.

Last nlght he asked me to marry
him and In a kidding way, mentioned "the patter of little feet"
might again be heard In his house.

The Ohio Society to Prevent
Blindness and the Tri-County Lions
will co-sponsor a free glaucoma
screening Saturday, Feb. 19, 1 to 5
p.m ., In Coolville City BuDding.
Society-trained volunteers will ,
use non-contact, risk-free tonometers to measure pressure within the
eye, often a clue to the presence of
glaucoma. This vision-robbing disease Is the leading cause of 1rre-

verslble blindness. It Is most often
found In adults over 35 and those
, with a famUyhistoryofthedlsease.
The Society rep!Jrls that progress at
the disease can be stopped, how·
ever, with early detection and
treatment.
The painless procedure takes approximately three minutes. Per·
sons fo und to have a
higher-than-average pressure are

Chester D of A

BREDDER

HARTLEY SHOES

.

qs

FHA/HERO Week observed

..
I •

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR VALENnNE
'

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2 (8x·10s) 3 (5x7s)

83 MIU ST. .

15
wallets
t:s.',~.~~~-=- 2ts- s-a
FEI. 9-FEB. 13
.
. . . l.unchl-2
WED.-SUN. 115 UPPE.~ RIVER ROAD, cWuPOUS ·

1

·

. ·.•

· Po.-a our ..-lectoon. Btiautoful backgrounds availablE&gt;: ·
Groups $1 .00 extra per per10n.

'

RACINE - Southern Local
Band Boosters will meet Thurs..
day at 7: 31} p.m. In the band
room at the high 'school.

RCX::K SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange wm meet at 7: 30
Thu~ay night at the grange
hall.
..
'"

FRIDAY
Rl.JT AND - Sons of Ameri·
can .Leblon wtU hold a sweethearl dance Frtday beginning '
at 9 p.m. at Rutland American
Legion Hall. Admission Is $2 a
single alid S3 a couple.
POMEROY- DAR Friday,
1: 30 p.m . . at the Meigs Inn.
Members to take recipes for
cookbook; · heirlooms for display. Meigs County American

History contest winners will be
announced. Hostesses, Eleanor
Smith, Mrs. Thome Cottr111,
Mrs. Clinton Fisher, Mrs. Gerald PoweU, and Miss Lucille
Smith.
POMEROY - Free clothing
day will be held at Freewlll Gos·
pel Mission C.R. 31, BashanStlversvllle Road, from noon to3
p.tn. Friday. Residents needing
clothing are welcome.

. ORDER A
DECORATED CAKE
FOR YOUR VALfNTINE

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
'
PH, 992o.6342

317 N. 2r.~

Middleport

Join In
The·

referred to an ophthalmologist for a
complete eye exarnlnatlon.

KROGER
WELCOMES
YOUR
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

Cupid ·

2nd Big
Week Of
Kroger's

KROGER

Hi Nu 2%

Lowfat Milk

Margaret Amberger, Letha Wood,
VIrginia Lee, Opal Hollon, Alta
8allard, · Esther Smith, Penny
Smith, Ruth Srnlth, Erma Cleland,
Marcia Keller, Ethel Orr, Zelda
Weber, Elizabeth Hayes, AQa
Neutzllng, Goldie Frederick, Leona
Hensley, and Ada Morris.

88
Gal.

Ctn,
This year

OPEN SATURDAY
FEB. 12 FROM ·11-2
OPEN MONDAY
FEB 14 FROM 9 5
'
FOR VALENTINE'S DAY

·

give your special

Valentine rOses to last
forever from our ,Miniature

Rose Collection . In 14Kt.
gold overlay from
Krerttentz.

ANN'S

KROGE ~

.

·

Grade A Extra
Large Eggs ......... ooz.

69 C

'

CAKE DECO'"' TING

Avondale.
Sweet Peas

Avondale
Fruit Cocktail

SUPPLIES

71 7 F

Rt. 7

MA IN

P O MEROY

Tuppers Plains

SLICED BACON ....•.... !~~~ Sl.43
ECKRICH

17 -oz.

16·01,
Cans

Kroger " ·
A
pplesauce.........

·

SMOKED SAUSAGE •....• ~·. $1.97
HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD ................~;s1.59

Cans

3 $J
1

16·oz .
cans

.

KROGER VAC PACK
10 LB. IIAIRE fAliNG

Kroger
Tomato
Soup·

·

.POTATOES .. .......~. 11.59
16 OZ. CEUO PloCIC

UIICH

CARROTS ..........! ..... 394

8 OZ. BANQUET OR MOORTON

12 OZ. WELCH'S

BO

IN THE DELI·BAKERY
APPLE , CHERRY, LEMON OR PEACH

·Fresh Fried
F it Pies

5

12-ol,

10.5·01.
Cans

GRAPE JUICE .................... ,.~.~~ gge
.BANQUET 32 OZ., 10-PC. FRIED ·

Whole
Kernel
Corn

&amp;

POT PIES ............................. 2/~

MUSHROOM . Pf:PPUONI OR SAUSAGE 2· ·12·1NCH PllZAS ... $6 .50
DElUXE PIZZAS 2·· 12·1NCH PIZZA!L .$7 .00

For

Cans

U~'Day

CHICKEN DINNER ................ ~. '3.09·'

tf F~ •
~omo •
M
6-lnch $599
Flower1ng ums .... Pot

lOlfz OZ. CAMPBELL'S

day; Tuesday Is schooldaywtth the
loekers to be cleaned and decorated; Wednesday Is teachel"!!' day
with the members to prepare a nutritional snack for · the teachers;
Thursday Is fundaywtth the girls to
dress up; Friday Is chapter day
with members to wear red and
white, and Saturday Is service day
with members to babysit for tree
and
elderly residents.

· MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE'

POMEROY - ~ta Sigma
Phi Sorority, 7: 45 p.m. Thursday at the Riverboat Room, Diamond Savings and Loan.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

.Hartson and his wife, Donna, reside In the church parsonage at 675
High St. In Middleport. They have
two children; a son, Jeremy, five,
and a daughter, carrte, three.

·--~

After Christmas
Portrait Special

' •NAPKINS .

1HURSDAY

Calendar

~===========~..:::=========:=:

Chester UMW

•CARDS
-.JEWELRY
•PARTY GOODS

. CHESTER -Past CouncUors
Club, Chester Council 323,
DaUghters of America; meeting
7:llp.m. thlsevenlngathomeof
Elizabeth Hayes with Goldie
Frederick, co-hostess.

m~tings

"Sleep On, America" which decoming year.
The group will death of Nettle Hayes' aunt was
tailed the dangers of a lethargic
sponsor a bake sale and bazaar on reported. It was also noted that
country.
Aprtl21atGaul'sMarketinChester Esther Smith has a new grandson
In
the
legtstattve
report
for
Doris
to help furnish toys for children at and Mary K. Holter has been Dl.
Two contributions, one to the
Smith,
"the
discussion
centered
on
the Veter!l"s Memorial Hospital.
Asilentauctlonwasscheduledfor
displaced homemakers fund and
bills
passed
which
protect
Next
meeting
wlJl
be
March
3
at
the
the
Feb. 15 meeting by the Good of
getting
the other to. the USO, were made ·
the
medical
rights
of
Veterans.
The
church.
the
Order
Committee and members
when the American Legion Auxll·
schooling
for
veterans
today,
burial
were
asked
to take Items for the
lacy of Drew Webster Post 39,
benefits, alid pensions to the wives
auction.
Members were also
Pomerey, met Tuesday night at the
of
veterans
were
discussed.
reminded
to
turn In thequUt money.
hall .
Peggy
Harris
talked
on
the
·
Participation
In
the
fund
raising
Keith
Ashley
was pianist for the .
In addition to the unit's contribuchildren
and
youth
program
noting
projects
of
thesprlngdlstrlctrally
to
meeting.
·
tion to the homemakers fund, Mary
thattwoboysattheXenlahomehas
he
held
on
Aprll30
at
the
Carleton
The
past
councUors
club was
Martin who gave an extensive
been
remembered
with
gifts
of
School
was
dlseussed
at
the
announced
for
Wednesday
night at
report on the program, made a
money tn February. She talked
Tuesday night meeting of Chester
the home of Elizabeth Hayes, 7:ll
contribu tlon as a memorial to
about theAmerlcanLegionconcern
CouncU323,0aughtersofAmertca,
p.m. wiih Goldie Frederick as
Eulelia Webster for whom the
tor suicide 1n youth, the spectal
heldatthehall.
co-hostess.
charter was draped during the
olymptcs, Infancy hearing assess·
Members ·were asked to begtn
Others attending were Margaret
meeting. Several members at·
ment,
and
the
children's
hear!
fund
making
Items
for
the
various
sales
Tuttle,
Ada BiSsell, Lora Dametended memortal services for Mrs.
as
well
as
thewelfarefoundattonof
tablesattherally.
VlrglniaNewlun,
wood,
BettyRoush,CarolynHolley,
Webster. Mrs. Marlin also rethe legion.
associate councilor, Presided at the
Mae McPeek, Dorothy Ritchie,
quested members to save pennies
Poppy
Day
was
announced
with
meeting
during
which
time
the
Doris Grueser, Charlotte Grant,
during February for the fund.
E llen Jane Rought to order the r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
As explained by Mrs. Martin the
displaced homemakers fund Is an
poppies.In Elbertelds
placed
Awlndowdlsplaywillbe
window for the
emergency fund which IS used to
Memorial
Day
weekend.
Anita
assiSt women either widowed or
Smith
was
endorsed
by
the
Junior
divorced who have no source of
unitforEtghthDtstrictpresklent.
FOR WORK AND CASUAL UVI~G
Income and who are Ineligible for
Plans
for
the
annual
birthday
public or other private assistance.
party to be held In March were
Brown Leather UpP!Ir
The fund also provides one-time
discussed.
Iva
Powell,
Mrs.
Cambtelle
Lining
grants to ~ used for developing or
Rought, Marjorie Fetty, M!ldred
Cushion Insole
Improving ma r ke table skills
Hudson,
and
Veda
DaviS
were
Steel
Shank
through t raining.
named
to
the
comrnlttee
to
plan
for
It was voted durlhg the meeting to
the March 15 party.
purchase three legislative bulletins,
Mrs. Tiemeyer served refresh·
one for the local library, one for the
ments.
The Febraury meeting wW
Meigs High School and the other for
feature Florence Richards on
the unlt.
Americanism, while In Marth,
The Buckeye Girls State tea to be
community
service by Jane
held on Feb. 20 at the Middleport
Snouffer
will
be
emphasized.
Legion hall was announced.
Delegates, altei"Il'ltes, and their
parents will be Invited to attend the
"Many Kinds of Parents" was the
tea. It was noted that Unlt 39 will
program topic when the Chester ·
sponsor one gtrt, and that XI
United Methodist Women met
Gamma Mu Chapter of~ta Sigma
recently at the church.
Phi Sorority wlJl co-sponsor one
Leaders were Mrs. Elizabeth
STORE HOURS
with the unit
POMEROY, OHIO
Hayes and Mrs. Eva HoUon with
Mon.-Thurs.-Sat. 9-5
Loretta Tiemeyer, president,
PH. 992-5272
Mildred Gaul, ~rnice BaUey, and
Friday 9-S
noted that copies of "Need a Lift"
E
thel Orr taking
A Christian
had been sent to the high school.
perspective
statedpart.
that parenting
Is I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Reporting for Rhoda Hackett,
earing and nurturing, and represnational security chairman, was
ents a commitment to another
Mrs. Martin who talked on civ ic
human being. This comrnltment, lt
The Saving Place •
defense preparedness, the need for
was pointed out, IS Important to both
upgrading shelters, making prepa·
the provider of care and their
ration ·for health problems relating
recipient. Scripture was taken from
to shelter confinement, and the
John, Ruth, Isaiah and Exodus.
proposed shifting of population In
Mrs. Hayes closed the program
the event of a nuclear attack.
with a reading, "On the Wings of a
Mrs. Marlin alsotalkedonenergy
Prayer."
conservation and the work of the
Mrs. Mildred Gaul conducted the
Auxiliary In serving the canteen at
business meeting with 22 sick calls
the American Red CrOss bloodmobeing reported.
Improvement
bile. She concluded with a poem
projects were discussed for the .

•

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Olapter 80 Royal Arch Masons
and Bosworth CouncU 46 Royal
and Select Masters will meet
Wednesday at 7:3op.m. Temple
Association. meeting following

councU.

Free glaucoma clinic set in·Coolville

American Legion
Auxiliary

Feb. 6-l2ls National FHA/HERO
Week ·and wlJl be observed by the
Eastern Chapter of Future Homemakers of America.
The local chapter has 17
members . with Janice Kestner as
the advisor.
Sunday was designed family
· unlty day with the members going
to church, out to eat, and afternoon
Monday was publicity

EAST MEIGS - EaStern Local Board of Education will
meet In special sesslonWednes·
day at 7 p.m. to' disCuss the !I·
nance budget.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

/

Meigs organization members gather for

t-

Wednesday, Febrvary 9, 1983

WEDNESD4Y

will be conducting the youth pro- ·
gram and working In educational
areas as weU as sharing some of the
ministerial dutleaofthe pastor, Rober! Melton.

a

' !
I

Indiana native named
full-time associate
at Middleport church ·

•

.

'

VEG ..BEEF SOUP ..•• ~ ...... 2/99$
32 OZ. WAGNER'S
ORANGE DRINK ........... ~~~ 69~
17 OZ. DEL MONTE
FRUIT COCKTAIL .......... ~ .• 79e
15 OZ. DEL MONTE
.
SPINACH .•••....•..... ~ •..• 2/$1.19
30 COUNT BOLT
''
PAPER TOWELS ......... ~.A_O.L~ 99e
8 OZ. IDAHOAN
.
· .
·1NSTANT ·POTATOES ••~~c.K~. 2/99~
12lfz OZ. MORTON HOUSE (WITH MEAl)
·
GRAVY MIXES •.•.•••••..• ~~~. $1.09
3V. oz.
JELLO PUDDINGS ••• ~ ..•.•. 2/894
12's-CARNATION HOT RICH CHOCOlATE
COCOA MIX •...••••••• ~ •.~~..s1.49
32 OZ. VIASIC POLISH
·DILL PICKLES ...... ~ ••. ~~~.*1.29 .
,,

\

SHELLED

LARGE It 3 SIZE

Pecan $299
Halves . lb.

California
Navel Oranges

c

U.S.D.A. GRADE A

Holly· Farms
·"'thicken Breasts

C·

"'

ASSORTED

Colorful Tulips ...... ~~~h
6

30 SIZE

Florida
·Celery

·Each
U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED ,
tiRESH GROUND

Any Size .Pkg.
Ground Beef

c
,,
.•

'·

$499

�I

Sentinel

· Democrat~

reject GOP amendme,nts

COLUMBUS, Ottlo (APJ Majority Democrats on the House
Finance Committee rejected. all
Republican a~ndments and pleas
from utilities in recommending
Gov. Richard Celeste's tax
increases.
(
"We didn't get a single amendment adopted. We're in a new era," said Rep. Michael A. Fox, RHamilton, !oUowtng the 1:&gt;-9 party
line vote Tuesday night.
The vote cleared way for a House
floor vote, ei !her today orThursday,
on. the measure which raises the
state income tax 00 percent and cuts
spending by $282 million to wipe out
a $528 million budget deficit.
Fox and other Republicans of!erect about two dozen amendments
during a five-hour session.
Utility spokesmen pleaded unsuccessfully for rejection of a temporary, 0.5 percent increase in the
utility excise tax.
With Democrats standing fast
bettlnd their newgovernor, Republicans sought to make the Income tax
increase temporal)~, wnding deUb-

eratlons on the state's 1983-1985 ·
biennial budget wttlch is due July 1.
Rep. Raben L. Corbin, R-Dayton,
went further and offered an
amendment to adopt the 00 percent
boost and retain it untll Jan. I, 13!4.
"This would allow us time to debate
the merits of a permanent tax," he
said. His amendment was defeated
17-7.
Fox sought to change the Celeste
blll to earmark proceeds of the .
income tax for education.
Although hts idea Is one wttlch
often gets lip service approval!rom
members of both parties, the
amendment lost 13-8.
Rep. Jo Ann Davidson, RReynoldsburg, offered an amendment which would have retUrned to
taxpayers, when they file their tax
returils in 1984. any amount raised
by the income tax increase in excess
of the size of the state budget
problem. She was voted down 17-9.
Among scores of technical and
substantive amendments adopted
by the Democrats was one placing
the functions of the Energy Depart-

'' '

Wedru ciCtr, Fabrucay 9, 1983

-----Property transfers .. - - - - Judith Kay McHaffle to HaZel
McHaffie, Part of Lot 3,

ment in the Development Depart,
ment. The Energy Deparimeilt as
such Is being abolished by the bill.
Also going out of business, as part
of tbe Celeste austertty package, is
the board of tax equalization. Its
functions would be assumed by tbe
Tax Department.
Along with those moves and the
income tax, which is expected to
produce $246 million in additional
revenue by Jwy 1, a11d a 5 percent
spending cut for most state agencies, the governor said Ottlo can
enter its next biennium in the.black.
Republicans say the governor
overestimated the size of the fiscat
problem and that the income tax
Will spawn more government
spending.
Rep. Waldo Bennett Rose, RLima, assistant minority leader,
said he doubts if there will be much
GOP support for the bill on the
Hause floor, where Democrats
prevail.
"I'd be surprised if there is a
handful unless the income tax is
made temporary,'' he said.

Ohio

Middleport-8allsbury.
Jiunes W. Carpenter, PatrlciaA.

.Carpenter to James W. Carpenter, ·
Patr1cla A. Carpenter, .90 acre,
Orange.

Charles w. Radford m. Jeanette
Mae Radford, Helene Elizabeth
Sayre,, Enuna C. Radford to RIchard A. Radford, Parcels, Meigs.

Jeny L. citne, ph)oll~S M. Cllne to
Dayton Tackett, Mearleile Tack,
ett, C, J . Tackett, Diane Tackett,
David Tackett, Jennifer Tackett,
Parcel, Rutllmd. ·
John T. WoUe, Joan WoHe, Dan
P. Smith, Donna Jean Smith to
.Terry Varney, Fatty Varney, Parcel, Sutton.
·
Walter A. WDson,,Betty Lou Wil-'
son to Walter A. Wilson, Betty Lou
WDson, Parcel, Chester.
lrvlri Cox, Sharon K. Cox to Gre. gory Lee Walborn, Jacqueline Ann
Walburn, 30 acres, Rutland.
Lawrence M11rt1n Wilcoxen,
Carol Young, Dorlha Brown, Helen

SWEE!"EA ond uwlng
mach Int. rep1ir, pan a. and ~
ouppl .a . . Pick up ond

dellve y. Oavi1 Vacuum

Cloano;. ono holt milo up ·
Goorgto Crook Rd . Coli
448-02.04 ..

Will glvooway to good homo
mole Bene h Leg a.. gto. Coli
814-388-9766 after liPM.
Mixed puppies Rot Torrlor •
Beagle 8 wko old . Cell
814-2.4 6-9626.
1

MEMORIAL SERVICE -' Compo~~er Herb Alpert, seooad from right front, aiOIJI with otber pallbearerS Including his brother, Dave Alpert, and
musician, Gary Sims, C&amp;n'Y the casket of singer

__.

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

children.
1343.

vwage council, In regular session Monday evening
wrapped up business maUers for the first month of
1983. Members discussed future plat!onns for the
remainder of the year. Current members of oouncD
seated are (l•r), Dan Sayre, Frank Cleland, president

Meigs County
Asked towed
Two rnarrtage licenses were
tssued in Meigs County Probate
Court to RoPer! Marvin Powell, 38,
Racine, and Mary Joyce Clark, 48,
Racine, and Howard Michael
Ferguson, 21, Langsville, and
Cheryl Lynn Clark, 24, Lang~.~::t:.

To end marriages
A suit for divorce and an action for
dissolution ofmarrtage were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Forest Alan Lee, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
filed for divorce against Bertha
F'aye Lee. Rutland.
Dixie Savel, Tuppers Plains, and
Garth Savel, Tuppers Plains, filed
for dissolution of marriage.

of councD; Carron Teaford; Margie WoUe, clerktreasurer; and Mayor Charles Pyles. Back row CouncDman Scott WoHe; Glenn Rlzer, stred
commissioner; oouncDman Bob Beegle; Alfred
Lyoll!l, chief of police; and Ben Petrel, councilman.

happenings~.

reports.
At 5:57 a.m. Wednesday, the
Pomeroy Unit took Fern Smith
from Route 681 to Veterans Memorial Hospital and Racine at6: 18a.m.
took Homer Graham from Antiquity to Veterans Memorial.
Tuesday at 6:56 p.m., Pomeroy took
Jerry Swartz from the scene of an
accident at Laurel St. and Mulberry
Ave., to Veterans Memorial and the
Tuppers Plains Unit at 11: 11 p.m.
took Dustin Milhosn from near
Reedsvllle to St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Harold Dewhurst, Rutland; Thomas Scally, Middleport.
Discharged--George Cummins,
Richard DeMoss, Lydia Davis, Inez
Snyder, Frances Alkire.

Emergency runs
Four calls were answered by local
units Tuesday and early Wednesday morning, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service

Report accepled
At the meeting of Pomeroy
Council Monday night Mayor Clarence Andrews reported collections
for the month of January in the
amount of $7,369 wttlch was
accepted by councll.

BATAVIA, Ohio (AP) -The jury
was expected to get thecasetodayin
the trtal of Richard L. Weston.
accused in the shooting deaths of
Bethel fireworks magnate Bi11ie
Stevendson and three family
members.
Weston, 43, Brookville, Ind., is
charged with aggravated robbery
and four counts of aggravated
murder in the deaths of Stevenson,
tt1s wife, son and brother-in-law in
1981.

Weather forecast
Cloudy tonight and Thursday. Lows tonight between Z7 and 32.
Highs Thursday between 38 and 43. The chance of snow is 10percent
tonight and 20 percent ThurSday.
Exb!nded Ohio Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
A chance of rain or snow Friday. Fair Saturday and Sunday.
Highs through the period between 32 and 42. Lows between 15 and 25.

-

followed at Forest Lawn Memorlal
Park in nearby Cypress.
Several hundred fans who were
not allowed inside the church stood
quietly outside, some carrying
floral tributes and cameras.
The traditlonal45-minlite service
was marked wJ.th reminders of the
many Carpenters tilts that made ·
Miss Carpenter's clear, full-bodied
voice instantly recognizable.
As guests entered, a pianist
played such songs as "Oose To
You," "We've Only Just Begun,"
and "Superstar."
Neal, a Dallas pastorwho became
close to members of the Carpenter
famtly durtng their years in New
Haven, Conn., sprtnkled his eulogy
with lines from the songs and at one
point quoted the entire lyric to
"We've Only Just Begun."
He described Miss Carpenter as
"one of God's truly talented and
gifted persons" who "captured not
only our hearts but the world's
hearts with frlendsttlp and love and

DOWNEY, Calif. (AP)- Karen
carpenter. singing half of the
popular 1970s brother and sister
team, was burled following a
funeral that drew hundreds of fans
as well as famlly, friends and fellow
musicians.
"The world is weeping because ·
Karen's story graced this world
with life and with song," the Rev.
· Charles A. Neal said Tuesday in his
eulogy · at the packed United
Methodist Church in Downey. the
Los Angeles suburb where Miss
Carpenter and her brother Richard
rose to fame in the early 1970s.
The singer was found dead of
cardiac arrest at age 32 in her
parents' Downey home Friday
morning.
About 650 invited guests, including entertainers Herb Alpert, Olivia
Newion-John. Burt Bacharach,
John · DaVldson, Toni Tenille and
Dionne Warwlck crowded into the
church sanctuary and an adjoining
hall for the service.
A private interment ceremony

\

Jury will gel case

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write Dlilly
Classified

joy."

Area deaths

Elva H. Courill

.........,

•·fl_, ...
..l't_..._.....,.
.......... .............l
&amp;lat .... , _

..........
··-

· Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Wllllam Curtis; two sisters, Lelia
Roush and Clara Satser and a
brother, Marcus Roush. Mrs.
Curtis was a member of the
Reynoldsburg Baptist Church.
Surviving are a sister, Ada
Warner, Pomeroy; two brothers,
Stanley Roush, Sprtngfield, 'Mo.,
and Edison Roush, Racine, and
several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 1: 30 p.m.
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Mark F1ynn
officiating. Burlal wlll be in Carmel
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home at anytime.

\'

.

INVEST- tlere is 2 houses
that need a handyman. All
utilities, bath in each, basements. garages and level
lots. Only $21,000.
VIEW OF RT. 7- Enjoy the
traffic from yr ur living room.
Just off Rt. 7 at Bradbury. 5
rooms, bath. cellar and garden spaces. 3 acres. Will
take $15,000.
Denver Curt1s
Eugene Long
Elson Dailey

Court~ l

121 9. 10. 21c

I

., l

Three \(efendants were fined In ;. •
thecourt~,MlddleportMayorFred ; :
Elva H. Cottrtll, 82, retired Meigs
Hoffman ~ay night. They are ·". :
County school teacher, died MonJohnA.Sa~r,Raclne,andMichael · ;
day evening at her home on 'the
Nelson,
!Ville, $250 and costs ;. •
Pine Grove Road near Minersville.
each
and
days in Jail, both . ;
Mrs. Cottrtll was born Aug. 26,
charged
wi
driving
whDe intoxi-"·i j
1900, a daughter of the late Theocated
and
othy
Jilstls,
Middle- ,
dore and Lenora Holter Hamm. Beport, $50
costs, disorderly j
sides her parents she was preceded
manner. Ne n was also fined $50 '
in death by her husband, Thome F.
and costs on charge of driving :'
Cottrtll, and a brother, VIctor
while under s
nston,·
~Hamm.
Surviving are two sons, Thorne
One defenda was fined and six •
M. Cottrtll, Carroll; John H. Cotothers
forfeited nds in the court .
trtll, Fort Worth, Tex.; nine grandof
Pomeroy
yor Clarence ·
children, six great-grandsons; a
Andrews Tuesrui night
.
sister, Virginia Thoren, MinersFined $500 and osts and given a
ville; a brother, Harold H. Hamm,
three day jail sent ce on a charge
Syracuse; two nieces, a nephew, a
of
driving while toxlcated was·
grand-niece and t wo grandRobert
L. Mtuer,
ine.
nephews. ·
Forfeiting
bond
were John.
Mrs. Cottrill taught public
Higgenbotham,
Po
roy, $63 al,,
schools in Middleport, Logan, Ohio
lowing a dog to
· loose; Scott. ,
and in. West Virg!nta. She was a
Pickens, Pomeroy, 13, destruc·
member of St, John's Lutheran
tlon of property; J
H. Smith,"
Church, American Luthera n
Racine, $63, passing~a
double·'
Church Women, the Meigs Retired
yellow
line;
Tony
Pie
Syracuse:
.
Teachers' Association, and Return
WASHINGTON
'
(AP)
States
$44;
Mathew
Weaver,
ddleport;
:
Jonathan Chapter, Daughters of
burdened by economic problems
$52, both ori speeding c .
, and' :
the Amertcan Revolution.
Jane M. Oldaker, Poll)erOY, $63,
Services will be held at 10 a.m. and ttlgh unemploYJT1ent need relief
failure to register a motct·vehicle.
Frtday at the Ewtng Funeral Home irom interest chafges on the
with the Rev. Willtam Middieswart massive unemployment fund debts ·
\
they
have
built
up,
Ottlo
Gov.
Loltery
winner
·
officiating. Graveside serv'"es will
be held at 2 p.m. Frtday . ~ ··.e Oak Richard Celeste told a l:louse
Grove Cemetery in Logan. Friends subcommittee.
CLEVELAND (AP) -Ttewlnntni -~
may call at the funeral home after 7
In a letter introduced at a hearing
numberdrawnTuesdayri~htin the" ~
p.m. on Wednesday and any time Tuesday on unemployment com- Ohio Lottery's daily gan\e, ''Tiw
on Thursday,
pensationleglstat!on,Celesteasked N\unber,"was595.
" ·
: . 1
that the federal government waive · .In the ''rick 4.. ga~\Pla'\o.ed pyt. 1·
Interest payments retroactively on· limes a WI!€~· the wlru:tll,lg nl!.ffi!lef. •
loans to state Wlemployment funds. was 1025 . 1 ·
~
Katie R. Curtis
.· ,.
1'urul
Ottlo's unemployment
debt . The lottery reported rn1ngs ((!
totaled $1.8 bi11ion as of Feb. 3 and · $398,388 from lhe wagel'ing on ttl! ~
Katie Roush Curtis, 83, Racine,
dled Tuesday at her residence.
the interest payments are running ' dailY game. Eamingscameonsales ~
She was born AprU 15, 1899 at nearly $1 million a week, Celeste of $978,346, whDe holders pt w1nn1ng ~ _
told theWaysandMea!lSunemploy- tickets were entitled to share .•
Ra~lne, a daughter of the late
· Francis S. and Mirutie Smith Roush.
ment c&lt;)mpensation s~bcommlttee. ;, ~79,958, officl~is said. : ''
. : •" ~ -

Vei1111 Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092
Chelyl i.lmley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT
WE ALSO WORK ON
All OTHER APPUANCES

i

~

POMEROY

LANDMARK
. 614-992-2181

-·

.

I

.

NEW POUCE CIIJEii'-Romlie R. Raasell, lhoWii above, wu ~Y appoiDted New Havea Pollee Cldef
lel)fwiDC tile nib emeat of Tommy Pano111. R111sell was appointed to tbe po.ldoo by New llavea Maror an,._
wllllam-.(Photo by Tim Davis:)

Pa1'80118 retirement.
RUBIII!ll, who is a 1975 graduate of
Wahama High School, Is married to ·
the lonner Donna Louise Kearns.
They have two children, one son,
Pwayne (~) and one daug~ter, Amy ·
(3). The RuaseU's live along Rl 1,
near Letart.
The new chief hill six years of
JIOll~~lj~..He~flveyears
In New Haven while serving one·

r

RU8SeU will also h e.IO weells ot, police training sometre In ~u~. . .
.. ,..

'

'

J

·i2'14'
RUBB£R BACK

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

V. C. YOUNG Ill '

Rt. 3. Box 54

Female Plckaneae,8 yeara

Racine. Oh.

992-6216 or 992-7314
Pomeroy. Ohio
11-28-tll: .

Ph. 614-843-2591

old, not full blooded, very
good with chlld,.n . 304•
468·1636 .

10-6-tfc

•

12'xU'

BUCKSKIN

$210
Of

RUTLAND FURNITURE
:

I

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259
NEW LISTING - CHESTER AREA - Approximatey 100
Acre farm with an older I\! story frame house, with 8 JOOms,
4 bedrooms, and bath. Old barn, shed, and garden space.
Needs some work.. $29,900.00.
PRICE REDUCED - POMEROY- Two stroy frame home
with 4 bedrooms, large living room and afireplce. forced air
gas heat Now $20,000.00.

. Offt~• ............................ .............................. 992·2259

TO 010051 FROM ·

·RUTLAND,

st. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH •

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR ·
3-24-tf c

Answera to Duke. Call

. 614-266-6471.

Lost-Giaaa•u·mana . On
Veterans Memodal perking

Also 'Transmission ·
PH. 992-5682
or992·7121

!IONDm &amp; WORK GUARANTEED
PHONE JAMES CUFFORD
992-7201 2-3- 1 mo.

1

lot or in hoepital . Brownwi'e
framea in brown ceae. Call
614-992-6096.
LOST ; Block • ton, molo
German Shepherd, age 2.
Csmp Conley vicinity .

Anewers

to

"Max".

Cat/304-6711-6947.

AUTOMATIC
TI!ANSMISSION CO.
271 W. llbin

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION·

P...o..y, OH.

New Homes ' - · Bll:tensive
11modafin1
o£1actric oork
.Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
oRoQiing Work
'1\luminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinp
15 Ymrs Experience

~
OPEN 9 5 MON. i1ru SAl
to

T~s ol Auto.Repair,
i~~UeS. Tune-Ups, etc ..

AI

sPECIAL

.

GREG ROUSH

TRAI'ISMISSIOI'I FILTER
AND FLUID CHAI'IGE

11·11-Hc

1-14-tfc

PULLINS
y,
EXCA"AJING

SALE

DISCONTINUED
PERM. STOCK

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WVa State Champion AuctiRick Pearson . Eetetas,

on~r

antiques, farm , household1.

Licensed Ohio-WVa. 304- •
773-6785 or 304 -773- 1
9186.
•
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hertford Community

Center. Truckloads of new

PH. 992· 7583
or 991-2281

Ontv '31 .96

$1]00

merchandiae every week.
Consigmentl of new end
used merchandise always
w81come. Richerd Reynolds
Auctioneer.
276·3089.
AUCTION every
Soturdoy
night •. Mt. Alto. WV, II p.m.
Conaognmento wolcomo.
Emma Bellauctionoor.

9

NOW THRU MARCH 5th

~~:~·Lines

-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JO~S
PH. 992-2478

Wanted To Buy

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

WANTED TO BUY Old
furnitul8 and Antlquea of all
klndo, call Kenneth Swoin
448-3159 or 266-1967in
tile evenings. .

992·2725

Buying Gold, Sliver, Plotlnum. Gold end Silver prt:11
are the highe.tln two' ve-ra.

169 N. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT. OH.

1·12-3 mo. d.

CARPENTER
. -.FOR
RENT

1-26 -1 mo.

PH. 742-2328

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service

Buy raw fur end boo! hldoo.
Goorr Buckley, &amp;14-884-

1----..,------f----------1
COMPLETE

RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest Heater
COfe to the urgest Radiator.
· Radiator Specialist ·
' NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

Vocal llusi&lt;; 11oo1t1n
SAT .. IIAIICH 5
AI lilt Rutland
Grado Schoeit Gym

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

5:00 P.M. lo 1:00 P.M.
'3.00 Aduft-12.00 .,._

Dinntr lnctudn: Spqtletti,
Slild. Roll. Orinl and DnH(t .
2·!1-1 mo.

supplies for Jilt . Spring
Volley Trading Co .. Spring
Volley Plaza. 448-8026 or
446-8026.
We pay caah for late modal
clean UIBd care.
Frenchtow:n Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson

1·3-tfc

SpCIIISOIIII by IItts

check our pricet on gold •

u.s. Rt. so East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere.
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

l-31-1 mo.

3rd ANNUAl
SPAGHETII DINNER

.

silverware . Daily quote•
available. Alto coi'lt • coin

SALES &amp; SERVICE

YOU NAME THE PRICE
YOU MIGHT GET LUCKY

Pomeroy, 011.
Ph. 992-2174
1-26-Hc

446·0069

478 . Woekdayo 5 to 9
wookondo 12 noon to 9PM' ·

deer hidet and gln•ng enci
trapping supplies. Rt. 2 .
Athena.,
Feb. 12. Oh . Laotdaytobuy
Cash for uaed mobile homes
or travel trailers . Will
consider damaged or ,bum
outs. Call 446-0t76.
ATTENTION LOG PRO. DVCERS: Wo neod grodo

logs and veneer, we are
paying top prices for quaility
material delivered to our
m'lll. in the following
species : The oaks Aah
Cherry , Haird Mlpl~ . end

Walnut. Blaney Hordwoodl
ot Ohio, Sr. At. 339 NorthBarlow, Oh 81'4-&amp;78 -2980.

Good ua.ed plano &amp; email
Ooochund. Cell 448-811511.
BEOS·IRON. BRASS , old

. . ~HEEN'S
PAINTING INC.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Industrial, Commercial,
Rnldantlal, Interior and
Exterior.

BISSELL
.SIDING CO.

Pointing .
Sondblooting ·

" Seautiful, Custom

Watetbloatlng
Parking Lot Stripping ·
Spray Pointing
11.·

Tellture C.Otlnga

oH:

LOST Redbono Coon dog .
Lost on 1 Bulavlllo Rd .

BOGGS

REALTORS . ·. .
·
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GRI ..................:.. ;...... 992·6191
Jnn Tru.s11ll ............................................... 949-2660
. Dqllle Turner .:... ....................... :...............;.. 992-5692

SHAG $12;95

GAR~GE

Lost and Found

Real Estate General

NEAR POMEROY- Sunken foyer, upstairs balcony, sewing
· room, fr6nt &amp; rear porch, &amp; a two car garage makes this 3
y~ar old home with 3.bedrpoms, diling area, and large living .
room a nice plate to live. Approximately 20 acres, mostly
wooded. $52,000.00.
.
·

12'xlU'
·COPPER GLINT

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEP11C SYSTEMS
•UMESTONE
•WATER , GAS and
SEINER UNES
•PONDS, RECLAMATlDNWORK
•LAN D CLEARING, CONCRETE WORK

6

1----------+----------1 oilvor,ocropjowllry.
Buying
Old coino. acrop rlngo •

RUTLAND -Sits on a rolling bank and has a nice front sit. ling jJorch. 3 bedrooms,larg~ utility room, 2 baths, set up for
a woodburner, garage, and storae bUilding: $28,500.00.

P£1 YARD $500
'

·~oger Hysell

MOBILE HOME - with large add -on building, also asphalt
driveway. Locatd on quiet. clean street out of high water in
Racine. The living room is extra large. There is acement walk
and large covered porch, also ametal storage building. You
can be in this one in two weeks for only $16.900.
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
NANCY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 843· 2075

MINERSVILLE- Approximately 4\! acres with an older 4
room house and an old traier. $,5,400.00.

SAVl

'742·2211

,._,....J

CENTRAL
REALTY
Residential Investments

TRAILER LOT- Approximatey 2·113 acres, of which most
are wooded. Has aseptic tank. Water and electric are availa·
ble. $5,000.00.

.•

other year with'~e 'MasOn Pollcb\.j;
. Ileparbnen_t. He ,Is also an ictlve~ • . 1
member of 1!\tJ New -J!aven .. 1
Volunteer Fire pai'tmenl ' . '1" I
RU8Sell's duties ill include r!JIIli
I
· patrol and lUling t regular pollce- ;;d
department paper r11 and report
forms.
·

l

RACINE - Trailer lot or building lot with approxmatey I
acre. Has a new 2 car garage, septic, well and public .water.
$8,000.00.
.
.

1

New Haven Mayor Grayson
WllliamSO!l has recently appointed
Ronnie R. RUSBell Chief of Pollee
for the town, replacing . Tommy
Parsons , who retired on Dec. 31,
1982. Parsons, was chief of pollee
for approldmately 15 years.
ile was officially appointed Chief.!
during the Jan. 10, regular Belllllon ·
. of the City Council Meeting
fOllowing the &amp;Mouncement of

Puppioa. 304-676-6347.
Puppioo. 8 weeki old, holt
Garman Shepherd , half
Collie. 304-8B2-2004.

i~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ t;:========::-1;::=~=====:::;~
Rentals: $175·$220 - Racine
1200-Middlep~rt

Celeste feels
states need
more relief

I

WISE PEOPLE ARE NOW
BUYING AT A BUYERS
MARKET. FOR YOURS CALL
992·3876. ~RUCE. HELEN
OR VIRGIL.

Housing
Headquarters

I

Russell named police ch;ie( · _ :

Sizes from 6'd ' Up
to Z.4 'd6'.
lniulltod Doc Houses

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

2

o

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Pupplaa to good home,
betw11n 12 noon ond 9 :30
p.m. 304-875-1838.

l

I. Ma or's

Block end whlto bird dog,
mole. 304-411B-1882.

Sizes start from 1Z'd6'

!Free EllllmotBs)

~

Mote puppy. mixed brood,
11 wooks old, 304-87&amp;6080.

,All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

- Addooa and nHnodofiilg
- Roofing and gutter work
-Concrete work
- Plumbing and
oloctrical work

·:.-1

..._..

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

1

'

2 female puppleo, 6 moo.

4a....... ..,

Not1n11: that tiJr Carpenten; sold 60
million
earned three
.Grammys, eig~tld albums, five
and 10 goldplatinum alb
singles, Neal satd There ism place
on earth that Kar~ is not singing~ . .
· ·- · .'
singing, singmg." ,
The service also 'ieatured music :
from tbe chorus of California State 1
University at ' Long Beach, where
Miss Carpenter had been a student.
On the sanctuary. l bettlnd the
gleaming' ivory-cotorea casket, a
floral arran~ment of. Mickey
Mouse- sent by Miss Garpenter's
· parents because she •h8d always
been fond of the cartoon character
I - struck a colorfUl note in tbe ·
otberwlse simple churc,h (lecor.
Neal referred only · in general'
terms to the tragedies in Miss
&lt;fpenter's life - her battle with l
aJI?rexla nervosa, a con41tlorl"! l
mat-ked by compulsive self·
stalvatton, and her tailed . ~
age to Newport Beach mlllJo: • •
Thomas J . Burris.
" ~
,pastor said she had known ' ,
"limelttand loneliness ... loveand , ;
bearta
.,. laughter and tears." .: : j

Call 6'4·266 ·

1----------f---------~ old. Colt 448-0770.

1·C-•tn......... ,...._.l

Carpenter funeral draws hu

English Sheep dog very

gentle and good with

Setltirtel
Dtpt.
Ill Caurt St., Pomtrowo. Ohio 457&amp;9

I

RACJ:Nli; VILLAGE COUNCll.. - The Racine

Business services

Wilcoxen, LaWt-ence Wilcoxen,
Cert. of Trans., Lebanon.
Lawrence Martin Wilcoxen,
Carol Young, Dortha Brown, Helen
Wilcoxen, Lawrence Wilcoxen,
Cert. of Trans., LebanOn.
John R. Peyser to Leslie A.
Scballer, Leslie Peyser. aka, 6
acres, Bedford.
·
Bonnie Sue St. Clair aka Bonnie'
.Sue Lascar, .J:obn J . Loscar 11&gt; Paul
V. Baslm, Opal M. Bastm, Pl. Lot,
Olive.
t;:J!arles :ti;. Hoback, Irene Hoback to Cllartes E. Hoback, Irene
~back, Lots, Syracuse.
Lawrence D. Hartinger to
George Z. Stitt, Lot 102, Pomeroy.
Dan P. Smith, DoMa J. Smith,
John T. Wolle, Joan Wolle to Douglas W. Uttle, Connie L. Utile, Parcel, Sutlon.
Allee Faye Curtis, Larry Curtiss
to Ronald H. Ritchie eta!, Barbara
A. Ritchie eta!, Julius A. Wagner,
Mary E. Wa!P)er, ParcelS, Chester.
James Buchanan, Virginia Buchanan, Richard D. Gilkey, Karen K.
Gilkey !0 ·Betty Gilkey, .Part Lots,

The Daily Sentinel

~

The Daily

FULLY IIISURED .
FREE ESTIMATES
CALL 614·94.9 -2616

SuilfGarages"
for free siding 1
estimates, 949-2801
949·2NO,
No sunday Calls

Call

I!
N

~

•

J·ll ·lfc

furnitur:e , gold, silver ·
'dollar~, wood ice boxes,
atone Jara, •ntlquea, e1c ..
Complete h·o uaeholds·.
Write: M .0 . !\'IIIIer. Rt. · 4,
Pomeroy., Oh . Or 992·
7760.
.

Gold , si lvar, st erll ng
jewelry, ringa , old co ina .;
currency. Ed Bwkett Barber
S.hop, Middleport. 91234711.
.
Wonted to buy. Good uHd
10 ot 1 2 inch tobleaaw.
' 814-992·3110.
)

·
·

�Page .. 10--The

Sentinel

Ohio

Do It Every Time

44

11 · Help Wanted

Efflcloncy o.,l .. Third Avo.. 3
rmo. ond both. o171i pluo
utllltloo . Ail op pllonuo
Included . Coli 446·4222 .
eAM toiPM.

An you aeriaua about
working 1 Give u 1

•

try- Tri -

Chem Craft Damonatre tiona . No leyoffa.
inter~ i ew i ng

Apartment
for Rent

POMEROY - 2 bedroom
unlurnlehed apt .. •uo. 2
bedroom houao t181i .
Dopolil t1oo : con 11148e2-22BB.

in the area ,

Feb. 1 1 ,12. Write Tri-Chem,
P.O . Box 2256. Columbuo
Oh 43216 or ce ll Econo
Travel 446 - 7071 after
11 :OOAM the 1 1th, ook for

Apt. for ront. Holt doublo-2
bd.room Apt . Adulto proforred . No polo. 1114-9922749 .

Tri-Chem .

Cen work 9to 5 . SeliA VON.
Work when you want. Call
446-3368 or 446 -2156.

61 HouMhold Goode

711 Ford van 11,380. 71{
Ford van t2,600, 79 Ford,
von t2, 780. Call4411· 7322,.
B • D Motora.·
· (

3 place ooctlonol Llfolorm
couch , block, t1oo . oo.
(3041 876-311118.

f972 Ford Bronco, 302 ,
V-1 . 3 opeod, oxcol. cond .
u .ooo. 388-8713.

Color TV 231n. conoolo •ell.
Zenith color TV 231n. •ell. 3
table modtl TV'o, Mognovox
color TV conoolo ti&amp;O, 30
In electric riling• 11lf clean
avon Horveotgold t171i, 30
In . electric range almond
•1&amp;0, 30 ln. oloctrlc ,.ngo
whlto tllll, 40 In, oloctrlc

1980 Joep . E•collent
condition . Block. 814-992,
3847.
·:

74

Double dre...r with mirror

Reg . o320 · -now .176 .
Single drel8er with mirror

Rag. •220--now •166 . Nlte
table Rag. t90--now •eo.
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furnhure.
866 2nd Avo .. Golllpollo,
171 .

64 Misc . MerchandiM
For oole lump cool • firewood. Zinn Coal Co .• Inc.
Coli 446-1408.

lease~~~~~~~~~~~

3

1

'-=:;::;:=:;=======-

Slob1 cut-up 115 tulllongth
•1 0 PU load. round wood,
large truck load . Call
814-24&amp;-11804.
Firewood lor ulo opllt &amp;
delivered I 30 pickup load .
Coll446-2716.
REPOSSESSED SIQNI
NOW DOWNPAYMENTI
T•k• over p1ymenu of
o49 .60 per month . 4x8
flaohlng arrow olgn. Comptete w-new bulbs &amp;letters.
Cutllff olgno. Toll free
1-800·561-3070 . Aak
ebout REPO.
Reconditioned video
c"Mtte recDrdere. Predolon VCR Soloe end Sarvlca.
Cell 448-81188 . ·
Locuat post tor 'aele . For
further lnform•tlon call
814-258-1146 or 814268,11S68.
Firewood. U6 . truck load.
•1111. o cord . Split ond
delivered. 814-B43-3803 ,
Firewood d•llvered •eo. •
cord. Cool dollvored 1411.
ton. Coli Tom Hooklno
814-949-21110 or 814742-2834 .
Firewood. opllt, t30 .00 e
trucklood , •311.00 dellvorod. Ph. (1114) 9e2-2770
or (304) 882-2194.
For aale-Welnut lumber.
reaon1ble price, It County
Rd. 1e. Phone 614-98211922 ot 12:30 p.m .
REPOSSESSED 81GNI
Nothing down I Tek• over
poymonta •&amp;t .OO monthly.
4 x 8 fleahh1g 1rrow sign.
Now bulbo, lottoro . Hole
olgno. Coil FREE 1-80011211-7448, anytime.
1 wood and gl111 inclosed
gun cabinet, hold• II rlfltoln
ve&lt;y good condition . Alao
matching plltol colllnat. will
••II aeparete or together.
Cell814-992-3221.
TROYBilT ROTOTillERS·
Dl•counts . Free hiller
Included. Immediate ~hlp·
ment. Parts , englnea .
703-942-3871 Hickory HIH
Nuroery, Rt. 1 Box 3eO A.
Flohorovllle , VA 22939 .
Trode-lno occaptod .
10'x30' AWNINQ, u11d 8
monthe, llke n•w. new price
woo t1 ,696 .00 now ooklng
t1,196.00, 304-87114424.
Whirlpool electric etov•.
Kenmore heavy duty
woohar. 304-1176-71173.

c•l Bookkooplng
:rex Return•• baoldcooplng
for lnclllrlduols &amp; buolnoo""•·
Coral Nsol

446-3862

PERMANENT HAIR
:REMOVAL- Profenlonol
Eloctrolyela Cantor, Inc. ,
A.M . A. Approved. Dr .
llottrrolo . Qlft Cortlflootes,
n - houni. IV tiJIIIoln-nt,
304-11711·1234.
. .. .

207 aero firm. L8ngovlllo.
Mln•ol rtghto lndudod. No
houoo. •12.000 down. Will
corry root. 1114· 3111-e3411.

3&amp; Loti S. Ac1'811ge

LOVELY bluo floral platform
swivel rocker. Excell•nt
condition . Exc•ll•nt buy .
•200. flnm . Phone 304·
BB2-2334 after &amp;:00.

Building metlrltllo
block. brick. oowor plpoo ,
wlndowa . llntala, ate .
Claud• Wlntera, Rio Orand•.
0 . Collll14-24&amp;-6121.

68 Pail for Sale
HILLCREST KENNEL Boordlng oil broodo. AKC
R•g. Dobarmana pupa afd
Dob•rman Stud Service.
Coli 4411-77911.

7-1-83
; and
equipment
until on
9-1forage
-83; on

grtndor mixoro and monuro
oprooders until 8-1 - 83 .
Kotfor'e Service Center, St.
Rt. 87. Loon, WV . 304·8963874.
63

Liveatock

76

Boata and
Motora for Sale

' .1

I 'LL. 60 DOWN TO THE LOTTERY
·OFFICE, CARQ~. We WOULDI&gt;l'T
'WANT TO SU&amp;JECT THE t&lt;ID5 TO
,. ALL THE: REPO~TER5.

AND EASY,,. YOU'l-L HAVE TO
?TIC I&lt; AROUND HERe TO MAKE
SURE NO SOUVENIR HUNTERS.
START TAI&lt;IN6 PARTS OF

1978 1B' Bojo. 1978 1&amp;0
HP Mercury Motor. '18711
Tenne.. ee trailer . A11um.l
loon . ctllanytlme 304-876•

(() Bob Newhart Show
C1J tB ~ ABC Nows
1!1 (I) t!D CBS Newo
.(I) Dr. Who
·
(fi) Over Easy
7 :00 II()) ~ ,_M,__!I,1@W!zin!.,_ ·
CIJ NCAA Basketball:
Maryland at Wake Forest
(J) Gomer Pyle
(I) Entertainment Tonight
CD Chartie'o Angelo
1!1 (I) Tic Tac Dough
(I) (fi) MacNeil-lehrer
Report
C» Eyewitness News
D ~ People' a Court
·7:30 0 (]) Ue Deteclor
(]) Making Love Better

B••••tt Pupplea-r•ady for
Volontlntl Day . t80.00 .
Phone 1114-8e2-1184B .
R•glatered Quart•r Hone
goldlng. Rod Roan, 4 white
foot, blonde mono • toll,
w•ll menn- . 4 yoots old.
1114· 742-2274.
Regiotorod Boogie pups .
Phone 304-89&amp;-3138.

67

Muaical
· lnotrument1

Mooo Rite. ooUd body gult.r
with hard lholl cooo. 12110.
Phonell14-992-7463 .

68

a.

Fruit
Vegetables

64

Hay

AU1o Parta

~-----------------;
vw engine front axle.
tronoulo, •360, Call
448-1839.

..

77

J

car Micheaux , Film Pioneer.·

,l

This 1930s film producer/

I:;;:=;==;;:=;==:·
Auto Repair

Farm Equipment

J ' IVIDEN'S FARM
EQUIPMENT
448-18711
Long trocto,.,' Vonnoor
bolero II Hoy equipment,
bolo loodero • movwo.
toboooo aott.... wogone.
rottry dl... • outtoftl,
oultlvotoro,

woodbum...

dlec~

pi-•' • .

An- uo to got a com....,.
llno of porto 6 oomool
UIIED··IH 71, MF 1311, Ford
110, Ford Jublloo, 800
Filrd, IN Pord, 10 Maa,.y
Homo Jtonoy, JD hiyttdde!t
I'CitiiY .hoe. plowo, liM, olu
l!l•nure ~p~aoder Ill round
hay. biller, oom plantar.

Atlanta at Philadelphia

(I) CJ (I) Family Feud
(I) Buoinasa Repon

CORN for ulo, o2.&amp;0
buohol, 304-117&amp;-2788.

a.

1978 'Buick Century 2 bdr.
auto . , P1, AM - FM atero
caaaette, IJL cond. Cell
4411-2133.
1880 Chovotte. Coli 44114179 .
1979 Hondo Ul, 8 opd., UHI
any a••· gurantHd 30 miles
per gallon. Tlra1 like n•w.
Cell 982-114110.

J

Byerly ond Feltl Autometle&gt;
Tr•neml11ion Repair. NQW
OPEN. Corner of Kemper
Hollow &amp; Kerr Bothel Rd .
Coli 4411-111138.

':., ANNIE WA5 5UCH A(SoOo
''Ffr!EIU? TO LI~Y-1 fiOPE,
SHE 170E5N'T t10LO HER

I WOULt?N'T
1\QR~ ABOJT
THAT, MA'G.
FEEINOOIC

.. F1170'5 KIND
OF N/C!, ISN'T
HE, Ai'li'I I E~ ..

ER -11MNOT

~Cii5, 'fl(;fr5 0111/Y,

REALLY 5/JRE
't'ET,

/INN!/:! I

T!/1{£ !iOI4E

6ETTIN' 1/ml ~I
KlfJ!If TIIIJT/

night's program features a
ski club for senior citizens, a

.

Cili\"OVIE: 'Super fiuzz'
(]) IIOVIE : 'Man Who
Loved Women'
())I Spy
(I) Gl IDi Fall Guy

I!J CIJ Seven Brides For
Seven Brothers
()) (fi) National Geographic
Special 'AuStralia's Animal
Mysteries.' Tonight's program looks at the strange
creatures found only in Aus-

1.8711 Comoro II cyl .. otd .
ahlft. 02,1 00. Coli 441113~3.
)'
HARTS Uoed Coro, No.,
Heven W••t Virginia. Ov•r
20 le11 expen1lvt cera In
otock.
72 OLD&amp; Delta 88, good •
elton . condition, 4
door. •1100. Coli 304-1'71122811 or 1175 - 1304 .
· Rolioblo.

s--.

'77 Pontlo'c Bonntvlllo,
brown, p-wlnd-o. p--ta,
P·d · lock, cloth Interior,
good condhlon. 304-111122BBII. ·

~ :00

Trucka for Sale

')!II Chevy Luv.' .1,1100, 78
Subaur PU t1,100, 78
Dodllo U.OOO only 31,000
mi. Call 4411•7322, 8 • D
Moton.
1e72 DATIUN truck ·with
topper arid boot rock.
l~o!llont ao,·n.dltlon,
•1,1110.00 flnm. 304-171114lo!1Yflmo.

State 'at Wisconsin

j
I

CIJ Ill

2-9·83

+6
.KQ I07 2
t AQ8 3
+765
WEST

EAST

+QIOII32
• 965
• IO 2
+32

+A J 7
• AB 4
• 54
+KJI08 4

SOUTH
+l( 9 4
.J3
tKJ976
+AQ9

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
West

North

Pass

2•

East
I+
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass 3t
Pass - Pass

Soutb
It
2NT
3NT

Opening lead: +5

~

Winds of War

tlea.u•~•,.t

Ever; the baq is fake! Cheap
plastic!

baq o'

mone4!

entenainer sets himsetf on

DOYOUHA~

10 GET 10
THE OFFICE

A4EAIVWNILE, t.14CK AT THE OFFICE,

7NEI?t='S·A l?.t"A.l EAI?LY AI?!?IVAL /

I KNOW I WAS
TO &amp; •u.ENERAJ.J.Y

EARLY TODAY,

DEAR?

(IS£FliL,"' BUT 1 00

''
.,'
. -&lt;

I&lt;NOIW HOW TO 00

.+lOR~

SORT MAIL AND
ERRANDS •

----------- ....
~
CARTER 'S PLUMBING " j
t

••

~·­

,
;

r

BARJIIF.Y

A

't'OUR

ot:·cow.

LOWEELV?

SOME. FLATLAND PEDDLER
JUST GAVE ME A FREE

"'')-....,. SAMPLE OF NON·DAIRV

------=------=~~~~
ED'S APPliANCE REPAIR ~·::

IE" VICE coil City Fumlttlre l'
304· 875·2808 .
: ~·~,!
~;:=::;::~
86 General Haullflg .~.

. . .._,.
.,

-------------..,...... i·
., ·· i

JONES ' BOYS WATER_ ~;
SERVICE . Co!loll14-3117·.• 1
7471 or 1114-387-0IIe1. · J:

----------:-:-:--···
..',.
'
87 .
JIMII WATER SERVICE . I
Coli Jim Lonltr, 304-1171', ~
73e7.
,.

=.;:;::;:=::~

~
•f

TRI STATE
UPH OI.BTE IIY IIHOP
1183 Boo. Avo .. Oollpollo . ~
4411·7133 or 4411-1833 .
r
·
·
•
MOWRI!n Upholilorv ~ ·.
1 . Box 124• .Pt. Plooooht,
304-1171-41114.

t

1

{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

Spec. Mark Russell presents today's news in his
own unique comical way.
ill) Constitution: That
by THOMAS JOSEPH
DeliCate Balance 'Discrimination and ,Affirmative Ac' ACROSS
3 Crazy
tion .'
1 Famous
4 Schedule
9 :30 I) Cil (I) Family Ties Alex
Venetian
blank
tries to open a brokerage account under his father's
5 Fake
5 Strand
name .
9 Drooping
5 Hebrew
([) 'It's Your Move Eric
10 Wading bird
school
Sykes ' presents another
one of his hilarious silent , 12 Attractive
7 Region
films.
13 Poem
8 Oldest
9 :45 (l) TBS Evening News
15 Thug
11 ¥ore in want
10:00 D (]) (I) Quincy Quincv is
Yesterday's Aoswer
16 Book fan
14 Thirty (Fr. )
shocked at widespread acceptance of drugs when an
17 Cervine
18 Dutch
22 Legislative 30Siuggish

l.jOU S

Electrical·

North's jump to two
hearts was a strong bid, but
not a force. South was strong
enough to try two no-trump
and to continue to three no-

Lewo'

You can't refil
charqes
aq'in' me!
I qive

a. Refrigeration
---------------:- ';

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

trump after North showed
his diamond support.
South looked at the unexpected five of spades lead
and thought he would have
been wiser to bid either
three hearts or four diamonds rather than three notrump. It looked as if four
hearts or five diamonds
would have been a supe rior
contract.
East played. the jack of
spades and Sou!h stopped to
do some high-powered thinking. He could take his king of
spades, go to dummy for the
club finesse, cash his live
diamonds and get out for
down one.
Then he toyed with the
idea of taki ng the s pade and
trying to sneak a heart
through, but gaye that up as
hopeless.
Finally, he came to the
winning decision. East needed the ace of spades a s part
of his opening bid and had
ducked to try to clear the
suit for his partner . So South
let the jack of spades hold
the first trick .
East continued with the
ace and seven, but South was
in control . Ali the defense
got were till! two spades and
the ace of-hearts.

(I) Mark Russell Comodv

GASOLI NE Al.l.EY

G•t your k1rp•t In ahl~
shape. Weterremoval, FREE'
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN ·,.
STEAMER 1114-4411-2107.

______

Strong South control.s

Part 4
1!J (I) MOVIE: 'The ln-

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

Upliolatery

0(]) Cil Facts of Ufe Tootie's brother takes the girls
for a 'night on the town .'
(l)700 Club
CIJ NCAA Basketball: Ohio

l

Need •om•thlng hauled
eway or iomathlng moved? ,
Wo'll d!l it. Col 448-31119or' •
l14·21111-1e87 tlttr II.

72

at' WIKonoin
'Cool Hand

aLuke'MOVIE:

Water Wella. Commerchil
and Domtltic. Tut holoo .
Pumps Sal•• 1nd Service.
304-8911· 3802.

-=-=

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

tioned]

HOWARD L. .WRITE&amp;E q
IIOOFINQ COMPANY .&lt;~,
Gu ttera-Downapouti -New-~;.
Ropolr -Outttr P•lntlng- r
Storm Doors &amp; Windows . '
Fr11 Estimates. Phone
1114-949-2283 or 1114 9e2-2791 .

BE WINO Mochlno ropolra,
aervlce. Authorized Slng,r
Selea &amp; Service Sharpen
Sclsooro . Fabric Shop ..
Pomeroy. 982-2284.

BRIDGE

1111 NCAA Bas-all: Ohio

---::-:--:::-:::::-:~ '

84

Jumble Book No. 19, containing 110 puu les, is avall ~ bl e fOf $1 .95 postpaid
from Jumble, c/o thlt newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include wour
name, addresa , rip c ode and make checks payable to Newspapetbooka.

trahe. (60 min.) [Closed Cap-

Anything to beautify your •
home . Call Art Bryant. ~
4411-8289 .
'

AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
Phone 448-38BB or 448 •
4477

(Answers tomorrOw)

wedding anniversary . (60
min .l

~=~ ::n':,\'::":~~'::41:~::.;

a.

Now arrange the cirded letters to
form the surpnee answer, u suggested by tho aboVe cartoon.

Vostorday's/ Jumbles: .FILMY MACAW DOUBLY MYSTIC .
4nswer: Provides a short break, for a writerACOMMA
·

director is remembered by

·

Plumbing
Heating

KJ
Print answer here: ''[I XXI XXJ"
I

NORTH ·

two of his stars. (R) [Closed
Captioned]
.
tB ~ Entertainm&lt;int
Tonight
li:OO II Cil Cil Real P_.a To-

Man:um Roofing • Spout· :
ing . ao.yearas•xperlence , :
opoclollzlng In bult up roof. ,.
CoH 1114-388-98117.
~

82

rJ

You Asked For It
(fi) Were You There? 'Os-

.

1•

-R~O~N-.-~-T:::.-:,-,v-1-ol:-o-n-::S:-o-rv-::1:-c-e. ~
Buy ownor 1982 Ooilgo Spoclollzlng In Zenith end :
Mirada ox . cond. 13,000 Motorola. Quozor, and
mllu , 318, V-B, crulso . houoo call. Cell 6711 -2398 ·
,.
many oxtroo. •&amp; .832. Coli or 4411-24&amp;4.
4411-0047.
F &amp; K T- Trimming, otump '
·
78 More . Zephatt1.800, 7&amp; removal. Coll875-1331 .
chovy lmpJtlo 1780. Coli
RINGlE'S SERVICE expa- ;
4411-7322, 8 • D Motoro.
rlencod roofing. Including
78 Plymouth Volont 3 opel .. hot tor application. corponllont II -Int. 47,000 orlg. t•. electricien. me.on. Coill
mi. , ·very good cond . • 304-11711-20BB or 871141180 . .
U ,400. Coli 448-2297 .
1876 Monto Corio run•
good . Coii4411 -77B1 altar
&amp;PM .

MAJC:RIED.

®

tr••

1 ~73 Oldo CutillO 8u·
promo, good work cor. Coli
II14-B4e-2170. .

81

..._l.DIIf£~CARE

.'-'-

FlnPATRICK ORCHARD .
You con IIIII buy opploo at
our orchord and otoroge .
Locotod o" llt.Rt . IIBe . ,
Dhone 8119·37B6.

--·

•

Compare your -vieWs wrth
the experts on this HBO spe-·
cia! .
(J)
NBA
BaoketbeU:

STUCCO PlASTERING·'
t ..turod ceiling• com~
clel and realdenti•l.
Condition•d hay • • ., corn . ootlmot.o. Col 614-28&amp;·,
Caiiii14-949-2B70.
1182.
•
_P_A_I_N_T_I_N_Q-.-,-nt-.- r-lo_r_o_n..,d:
Hoy. o1 .24 bolo . 843-2332 .
exterior, plumtMng, roofing,
Hoy for oolo. Vornqn Noesa. oomo remodeling . 20 yre.
1114-94e-211118.
oxp. Coil 1114-388-ellll2.

FOREMAN'S USED CARSFor Ius upen~ve cara. On
SR.124 In LonJjlvllle, Oh .
Phono II 14-742-2734.

.:· ...::· :. ·

e#Fm;
Wit) 1-10

a. Acceasories

a. Grain

POTATOES .8 .00 100 lb.
bog No. ·1 Wioconaln Ruo11t.
Coil 4411·8247 or 1171137112.

1e711 Buick Eltctro 2 bdr ..
.P I, PI, AC, AM-FM otero
U,8110 or trodo lor cottto,
form oqulpmont, or mobile
homo. of oquol voluo. Coli
4411-41137.

~MBoL ~

~

..
. l
- ,,

..-. ...

AKC Reg. Qorman . Shepherd, 3 moo. old. t1 00,
Cell 448-4472.

.. :mE SEX
c:.- ~-

78

"CONFI.Je;ED"
I..OVER c:;o;

Cll MOVIE: 'Trapped'
CIJ ESPN SpomCenter

'

31~7 .

iHI~

of their top hits.

THe HOUSE.

e

----~----------~ ----~--._

r

,

hang-gliding dog and a couple celebrating their 75th

66 Seed Fertilizer
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
• KENNEl, AKC Chow .- - - - - - - - - puppleo, CFA Hlmolayon ,
Peroltln and Slomaoo kit·
. .' .. .............
......
tono. Coil 448-3844 oftor
4PM .
71
Autoe for Sale
Alrodolo Tefritlr pupo, lorgo
typo, AKC. Loyol, pt'Ot..,thre, obedient . Family peto. 19711 Buick Eloctro 2 bdr .,
Coll1 ' 1114 - 1192-2170. PS, PB, AC, AM·FM stioro
Atheno. Oh.
11 ,8&amp;0 .,.. trodo for cottlo,
or mobile
farm
AKC Doberman pupo taO home.equipment,
of equal velue. Cell
oech. 4411-n9&amp; .
4411-41137 .

••re.ltlldell,

Nlcloy lumlohod mob. homo
In city. Adulll only. Coli
448-0338.

~A PT AN EASY
I

Motorcycles

66 Building Supplies

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

° :::::::::::::::::::1=========~

33 Farma for Sale

Qulltod oofo with blue end Farm equipment for aale.
beige print. After. 4, 30~.- . Sterling every weak we wiH
hovo weekly fl nm equip·
87&amp;-6288.
mont opeclola. Thlo wollk ' o
Poutoes, 18. per hundred opeclale oro: 2-moclal 847
lb. bog, t3.2&amp;: &amp;0 lb . bog, round baiera . Dealer coat
U. S . No . 1 Wloconoln •7.300 .~ 1·modol3&amp;3 Now
Ruooett . 304-875 -3782 or Holland 80 buoholl grlndor
448-8247.
.
ml•or. Doole&lt; coot U ,300.;
Now HoHond 10,000 foot
191111 NOVA . bedroom bolor twlno U4. par bundle;
1utie, bar ·• 2 1~oola, ltareo 18.000 feet round baler
&amp; record player. swlv•l twine t25 . per bundle .
rocker. Phone 304-773· lnteroot free financing on all
9147.
Now Holland hay tool• until

63&amp; Rigid t11100. Throodlng machine with ottoch·
manto, Homollto pump 100
O.P.M. 2 hOIH end OCCOl ! •
oorloo, 1344, 1e72 Hondo -::
350 t2&amp;0. Phone 304-1171169 For Sale or Trade
8420.
Qlvo your Vtlontlno 1
trllt, A coke for 01 low eo
t3.00. 304-773-&amp;01&amp;.

Farm Equipment

NIMEC

a

~

DAB IT SHOP PRE·
ANNIVERSARY SALE on
bloque • plaoter croft. 10
percent to 40 percent oft
moet merchandl•• · 2101
Jtfforoon, Pt. Pleooont, WV
304-117&amp;-7720.

tll I

· 8 :00 IJ (]) Newscenter
()) Tic Toe Dough
CIJ Ski School
(J) Carol Burnett
(J) 1!1 (I)
~ Nawo
CD Newo/Spons/Weather
(I) (fi) 3-2-1 , Contact
® Eyewitness News
ell Wonder Woman
8 :30 II (]) CD NBC Newo
· (]) HBO Rock: Air Supply
In Hawaii This Australian
pop rock group performs all

datollo.
304-876-1780.
~==========;:========::::~ --;;:=;:::::::=;::::==
1 1110on.
Call titer 11:30·f!&gt;r:

81

LURRAI

2/9/83

1981 Kowaokl KX 125, rode ·

Misc. Mer~handise

Unscramblto 11-. lour Jumbles,
one letter 1o each square. 10 form
lour ordinary words.

EVENING

Maytag wringer wa1her
•110, Whirlpool waahor •
dryor U211, othor weshera
&amp; dryoro _,. nlct. Guoron t - . Coll1114-21111-1207.

54

l}j'}~f.'\0 fi)~ 'jjlTHATSCRAIIBLEDWORDOAIIE .
~ \9 ~~ "
byHenriAmoidandBoblee

WEDNESDAY

luv'
condition.

your home.

ClOSE-OUT

•eo.

V-B

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Television
.Viewing.

Trucka for Sale ·

I

1 brown floral couch • choir
t1 00 and 1 gold velvet choir
no. Cell 448-4274.

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

72

, Pomeroy:_Middleporf, Ohio

1e73 Ford pickup. Solo or.
trodo for cottlo, 304-5711,
277e .
.

· 111-1',/o.IK Yo&lt;ll~- CDMroTeR·l:lAfoNC:!
~ice Mf.l)t AM;~INee. CAIW/Li!
i~ 01'11.'( A Ki1'1'eN.

Applloncoo Upper Rl- Rd .
Oolllpolio, 448-739B.

6 rm. houoo &amp; both. lnqulre ·l - - - - - - - - - - - -Call992-3267 or676-2518 ot 91 B 2nd. Avo .. Otlllpolio,
KOUNTRY MOBILE Home
evenings.
Oh.
P1rk. Route 33, North of
t100 down 18lerveo con- 11 Room Houoo just outolde Pomeroy . Lerge loto. Coli
I H!07-U'"
dominium. Depoolt ls1 00% . city lfrnftl. 4411-04118.
refundable . Choose now.
See John Ecker. A iveralde 2 bdr. tumiehtd ·houe• on
Toxso Rd. Contact Stolfo 48
Equipment
Torroco. Col 448-11211 .
Arnold, 4411-07&amp;11.
for Rent
3 bedroom hou11 for 1111.
New corpsting throughout. EXECUTIVE HOME-Thlo
Locotod on Boohon Rd . and contemporary 4 bedroom, '2 Btckhoe andloodor dig1 8
olu on 3 ocroo of lend . both home with flnlohod ft . • lara• bed pick up
Excellent terms to right family room, ottochtd hl!lulllble , operate youraelf.
Insurance
13
party. MAKE AN OFFER. 30 garage locotod noor Pomoper dey. 304-Peliyear financing available . roy Ia av•llablt. for imrTMI!· 3841 .
Contact Bank One of PomeSANOV AND BEAVER
roy. 814-992-2133.
end
option to purch11e
dl1teoroccupancy.
A
lnaurance Co. he1 offered
con bo orrongod. Cell RCS
aervlcea for fire inaurance 2 bd.room home In Racine. REALTORS at 1-814-&amp;83coverage In Gallia County Fully carpatod, goa furnace. &amp;671 .
61 Houoehold Good•
for alm011 1 century. Farm, with aome air-cond .• full
home .,d poroonol property
basement , chain link fence Uncoln Helghto. Pomeroy, 2
SWAIN
coverages are available to
yard , excellent location . bedroom houee~ bath,
meet individual nee.dl . Aoki~g 127 , 600 . Coil basement . ell Clrp•ted. AUCTION. FURNITURE
Contact Neal Ina. Agency, 814-949-2643 or 843- Adulto p,.forrod. No poto. 82 Olivo St .. Golllpollo. King
ogent. Phone 448·1894.
4081.
Depoolt rqulrod. Coil 814· coel &amp; wood heat•,. with
fen o4118, lit box oprtng •
982-3014.
mottrooo 1100, firm t120,
MOBilE HOMES Compare 3 bd .room home. otone holt
oofo-lovoooot • choir •188,
our comprehen1i~e mobile wey up front. whh yellow
lovo soota 170, now cool •
home coverag• with vinyl aiding. Appt'OX. 1 mlo 42 Mobile Home•
wood henan 11 low ••
anyone . Foremost lnau · out of Roodovllo by Forked
for Rent
U9e with bloweu, uoed
ronco. 448-9340.
Run . 116,00 . or •3. 000 .
coal &amp; wood heaters, new
down with 1160 . month
. land contract. Sits on 1acre 3 rma. • tlllth, furnished, no cMnot sota •76 &amp; up, rofrlgtr·
16
Schools
ground. 10 percent lnt. .at. palo, no chlldron . Coil aton. rang••· bunk bada
,complttl t179, bunkloo
Instruction
Coli 423-5987 onytime.
U8-2223.
mattre•••• e40 . chiatl,
drw110ro, TV'o, Coli 4411K1rate the uhlmate in aelf In POmeroy , 7 room•. 2 bdr. mobil• hom•, r.t. •
31111.
defence oil privata leooona, booemont. 4 loto, good dep. Collll14-2811-1822.
Men, woman , &amp; children·. location. Aoklng o17,000.
QOOD USED APPLIANCES
lnotructlon thru block bolt . Coll61 4 -992-7284.
1 unlumlehodtralle&lt;. Rt. 311 - weahera, drya,., refrigerl·
Aloo avolleblo Korote
Waot. 1 lumlehod trille&lt;ot toro, rongH. Skogga Ap·
uniform• puching and ONE acre, 3 bedroom Chtohlre. Cal4411-4229.
pllon~eo, Upper Rlvor Rd.,
kicking bogo, ond protoctlve houoe, garoge, 2 bulldlngo,
booldo Stona Croot Motel.
equipment. Jerry lowory &amp; phone 8811-3468 . ,
2 bdr . troller In Cheohlre 448-7398.
A11ociate1 Karate Studio, 1.-N-,-w-tr--_ -v-,-,-.--b'-e-d_r_o~ocm
1 d ulta preferred, Call
1 11
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
143, Burlington
Jock- with don • 1 'h both on 'h ._8_14_-~3_8_7_-7_3_2:-8_._:-:-oon
Oh. Coli Rd.,
814-286Solo.. choir, rockor. otto1
3074 or 814-384-8160.
ocro, 7 mil eo from Pt . 2 bdr. trollorBulovllePortor man. 3 tableo, (extro hoovy
Plee11nt . Coli alter 4 :30, Rd .. o180 plul o100 dop. by Frontier), o8Bii . Solo ,
304-87&amp;-6889.
Coli 448-71124.
chair end loveeeat, *2715 .
18 Wanted to Do
Sofooond cholro priced from
PRICE reduced on boeutNul 3 bod room Mobile Homo.
Oonerel Hauling end Troeh brick. 4 bedroom, 2 beth, 2 Apprqxlmotoly 8 miiH from t2811. to •as&amp;. Tobloo, 146
removal Servic•. Reliable car garage. On 9 acrea with Pomeroy or Middleport. and up to •1211. Hldo-obods, •440. and up to
and dependable. Coli 446- out buldlngo, 2 miles from 814-882-118&amp;8.
3169 after &amp;PM 256-1967. New H•v•n on· Union Rd . 1-------:-::--:----- tll2tl .. RocUnoro, t178 . to
t3110 .. Lampo from 12B. to
•74,000 . Dick larch, 2 1
M bll H nr
orge 0 1 0 •• on t71i. &amp; pc . dlnettu from
Want to do bebyslttinginmy 713 -735-9392 oftor 5:30 Individual
late neer Harrt.on- t9e .. to 1438. 7 pc., t1 89.
homo ony houro . (304) p.m.
villa. Heat lurnlohod. 1 3 and up. Wood toblt with olx
876-3868.
bedroom, 2 fun botho; othw · cholro •42&amp;. to 07411. Dtok
70x14,
2 bedroom. 814- 1110 up to t225. Hutohto,
Jack '1 Lockamlth Service. 32 Mobile Horpe•
742-3033.
111110. end up, meple or plno
Com merclel ~ Domestic·
for Salel
Bunk bed comploto
finloh.
Automotive. Coli 304-8822 bedroom furnilhod , o17&amp; . with mottr•-· t21i0. end
2079 .
'
month. o1&amp;0. d-~. Plus up to t39&amp;. Baby bodo,
TRI-STATE MOBilE utllltl•• a 11wn care. 111 0 . Mattre•••• or box
HOMES. USED- CARS, 1114-9811-3848.
sprlngo, full or twin, t&amp;8 .,
TRUCKS . GAlliPOliS . 1---------:- firm, tll8. end o78. &lt;luftn
CHECK OUR PRICES . 8 room mobllo homo for · ooto, •ua. 4 dr. cheoto,
Business
CAll448-7572.
·
ront . Antiquity . Rt . 338. 142. 5 dr. cheoto, til4. Bod
21
.
814-94e-2424.
fro moo, UO.ond t211 .. 1 0
Opportumty
CLEAN USED MOBILE 1 - - - - - -- : - -gun • Gun co.b ln-. UIIO.,
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL- TWO moblt hornao for rent dinottt cholro no. tnd t28.
,
I1 Own your own Jean- ITYMOBILEHOMESAlES. on Rt. 2 about II mlnu•a Gao or oloctrtc roneos. t32&amp;
SpartowNr, lnlant· Pr-n 4 MI . WEST. GALliPOLIS, from town. Coil altar II. up to 137&amp; . Boby ma-.
or ledlso Apparel Store. RT 36. PHONE 4411-7274. 304-11711-11277.
trtU81, a2&amp; &amp; o3&amp;, bod
from•• uo. 1211, • no.
Off or Ing oil n It Ion oily
known bnnd'a such •• · MotMie hom• •lots torula, I
king fromo o&amp;O . Qood
Jordocho, Chic, Lao, Lovl, 1987 Buddy mobile home 44
Apartment
stloctlon of -room sultoo,
Vanderbilt. Colvin Klein, 14x80, ~ bdr. goo hoot. rurol
for Rent
cedar cheltl, rockera, met1l
Wrengler ov•r· 200 o~h•r water, aet up with 2 or 4
ooblnota. owivol rockoro.
bro"do. H,900 to 118,800 loto. Coll448-1240. ,
Uood Fumlturo -- bookcosa,
Include• boglnnln!l lnvon- . 1----'----:::--bdr
.
Ragoncv
Inc.
Aport·
roneoo,
ond tobloo.
2
tory, olrforo for ono to 1878 Schuh 14•70 vory mente f200 per mo. or if walhtn;chalro,
dryere, refrlgeraFaohlon Con tor, training, nlco. control air. 2 lui bothl.
tora and TV's. 3 mllea out
flxturu. grand opening t13 , 000 will conoldor In como II U 0,000 or looo Bulovllo Rd. Opon Btm to
promotlono. Coli Mr. Ko• owner flnoncing with down HUD ovolloblo. A-Ono Rool llpm, Mon. thru Fri., 9om to
poymont . Coll4411-1 842 E lilt to. Carol Yoogar, llpm, Sot.
tacky 1501) 327-8031.
9 :30 to 2 : 30 or after &amp; Rooltor. Call 304-11711- 4411-0322
304-743-3333.
111 0 4. or 117 &amp;· 113 B 8 r 1
22 Mcmey to Loan
87&amp;-7788.
· ~
11'8 Pork Eototos · 12xll&amp;, 2 bdr. unfumlohod opt . In
oxpondo, 2 bdr.. woohorHOME lOANS 12% flxod dryer. AC. goo furnonce. Cr-n1 ·c ity. Coli 814·288·
.
rete . leader Mortgage, axe . oond .. U . IIOO . cell 81120.
1-1114-&amp;82-3061.
448-9380.
Fumlohad opt. 1 bdr.. e20
Good
uood
bedroom
4th
Avo.OoiiiPOIII. Adulto,
Buolneoo • Second Mort2
gage loono . Equity Re- mobil. ho moa . Furnlohod . wotor .&amp; oloctrlc pd, ' 200
eour••• · l .n Ohio Brown'o .Trolior Pork, Rt. 7mo.M Coli' 4411-44111 after
1 -800-992-2381 , out of 124, Minorovllle, Oh . __P_.______·~·--1 Fur~lohtd o pt : t1.4 8 no
Ohio 1-.&amp;13-2&amp;8-0i12.
1114·182· 3324·
utllltloo pd, 3 roomo. 701
USED MOBILE HOME. 4.th Avo ., Golllpolla. Coli
. 23 ·Profenional
878-2711.
448-4418 tlt8r ?PM.
Service•

by Larry V1/rlgh1

'N' CARLYLE 1M

Now 1813 Nice hi oowlng
machlno froo-orm, dltll· o·
matlc. Equipped to zig zag,
mohogrem, HW on buttone,
moke button holto. Coot
now t43e .. ea , yur and
clooronoo oolo o1211 . Coli
814-3811-8e18, out of town
coli colloct. FFM delivery to

waoher
· •ea.WhirlPOOl
Moytog wrlnauto .
range 08&amp;.
ger
woshor
til&amp;,
dlnotte
11t
with 4 cholro 07&amp;,
Skoggo

Accepting applications. p•rt
time help . $116 . weekly,
10-12 hro. weekly . If vou
have spare time and can use
extra mon.ev. we may have a
position for you in the
Mooon. Gollle , Melgo arao.
Showing 1 safety film for
our company . 2-part time
milnagement poaitiont
available. Muat be married
1nd employed In •rea .
304-273-61176.

Wednesday, February 9, 1983

9, 19113

P EANUT'S

I'M NOT

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(]) MOVIE: 'Star Wars'
Cil MOVIE: 'Tho Poetman
Alwayo Rings Twice'
()) Kanawha County On
tho Une
® Laverne and Shirley
(fi) Newswatch
fJ)INN News
10:30 ())Star Time
&lt;1) M•A•S•H
ill) Todd Duncan: Mighty
Voice Baritone Todd Duncan and his wife recollect
their past' and tell of their
fight to allow blacks in
Washington D.C.' s Nat ional
Theater.
·
• In Search oL .
11 :00 II (]) Newocenter
m ESPN SDOnsCenter
(I) Woman Watch
(1)1)(1)8(l)News
CD News/Sports/Weather
()) Dave Allen at Lerga
® Eyewltnois News
(fi) Sign Off
• Benny Hill Show
11:30 1J W CD Tonight Show
(I) Another Ute
(I) MOVIE: 'The Gatling
Gun'
(I) Benny Hill Show
1!1 (I) Hart to Hart The .
Hans are trapped in a test
chamber by a female scientist who has discovered a
powerf)JI narcotic . (R) (60
min.)
(()Sign Off
® AU In the Family
. G ()) Nlghtllne .
• Madame's Place
12:00 (]) MOVIE: 'Thief
.
(]) MOVIE: 'Carnal Knowleclae'
(l)llumo &amp; Allen
. C1J NCAA Basketball:
. Maryland at 1/YIIke Foreot
(I) Nlghtline
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Office' · · ·
1 :00 Clll Married Joan

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body

ZO Swnmarization 20 Wild
Z3 Harness strap
parties
Z4 Tread
21 High Arab
the boards
office

23 Turncoat
25 Wager

32 French port

34 Astringent

substance
29 Deadly Sins, 35 Check
by nwnber 36Sacred
~r:--r;--r.--

Z5 Assail
28 Creeping
plant
Z7 Beiween (Fr.) 1;;-+-t--11-

28 Work unit
Z9 Location

31 "The Sea
Wolf"
·33 Cut
3'1 Ship's

derrick
38 Countertenor r.:-+--+--lr---39 Chemical salt t..+-+40 Affair
of honor

41 Dismissed
42 TV award
DOWN
1 Twinge of

conscience
· 2 Potpourri

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CBYPTOQUOTES

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NEW FRONTIERB, WATCH A BOY RING ·THE FR.ONT
DOORBEU. ON~ FIRST DATE.-QI,IN MILLER

�•'

Page-12-:The Daily Sentinel

'

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Febniary 9,

1913 '
-·

Quick verdict rendered in ·bigamy trial..
.
PHOENIX, Ariz. &lt;API- A jury
deliberated just 00 minutes before
returning fra ud and blgarriy convlc·
!Ions against a man Who admitted
marrying more than 100 women but
didn't "keep score"- andwhowas
brought to justice by one of his
victims.

Giovanni Vlgliotto, 53, was convicted of two felony charges
Tuesday In Maricopa County Superlor Court by an eight-man , four·
woman jury.
,
The fraud and bigamy charges
against Vigliotto stemmed from his
marriage to Patricia Ann Gardiner,

.

'

43, of Mesa, Ariz., who had testified
that he vanished with $J6,500of her
cash and property two weeks after
their Nov. 16, 1981, wedding and.
abandoned her Ina San Diego motel.
"The romance was quick and the
courtship was short," Ms. Gardiner
testified. "! made an impulsive
decision."
Ms. Gardiner brightened :when
the verdict was read and hugged a
female employee from the county
. attorney's ofl'lt:e sitting next to her
in the gallery. " Both counts," she
said, beaming.
Vlgliotto was arrested ~. 28, -·
1981, in a Panama City, Fla.,

Marauder wrestlers, gil;~
capture victories Tuesday•••P.4

'

'

Inside today...

.illopplng center. Sharon Clark, of pan, N.J. another pl'CIECUtlon
Ray, Mich., had tesllfled she . · witness, had testified ¥lglloU6 lett
tracked him there In a six'mooth,
her and her three children stranded
llo,mlsearchbasedonamapheleft in a F1ortda motel and "I realized I
behind when he deserted her.
had been vi::tlmlzed and ~prince
Ms. Clarksaidshewas managing turned Into e frog."
a campground and nea market ln
She said hl.ml worth of m~­
Indiana wliea she met and married chandlse tram her retall store
Vlgllotto. Shesald$49,mlofhercash vanished after she entrusted it to
llndpropertyvanlshedwlthhimtwo two trlen&amp; of Vlgllotto.
weeks after their June 1981 mar· ·
During the trial, Vigllottotestlfied
rtage In Tennessee.
he maiTtedllliwomen butllf'Vergot
Contacted by telephone after' the a divorce. ''I don't keep smre" he
verdict was announced, Ms. Clark . said when asked how. many women
said: "All I can tell you Is I'm so he rriarrled In a six-yel!r period. He
glad."
·
denleddE!fraudlnganyofthewomen
Joan Bacarella, 45, of Manala- who testified against him.

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e
Vol.31 ,No.199
C yrighted 1983

Department of Natural Resources.
The total cost of the project,
including improvements, severance damag~ . relocation benefits
and administrative costs, would be
$2.3 mlillon, according to a 67-pa~
document called a design memorandum prepared by the corps.
"The area to be acquired will be
known as the Glenwood Bend
Management Area and will be
managed to provide wetland breedIng habitat and quallty waterfowl;
migratory bird and farm game
habitat," the design memorandum
says. "Development features associated with the marshes wllllnclude
construction of dikes, nestlrig sites
and water level control structures,"
the document states.
Other items wlll Include road '

Three short films giving the pubHe tips on street and home safety
will be shown at 7 this evening at
the Middleport Village Hall by tfie
Middleport Pollee Department.
The rums, running about 10 minutes each, wlll be showli in the
former council chambers on the
first !loor of village ,hall. They Include "Safe on the Streets," "Home
Security" and "Nobody's Victim."
The public Is invited to view the
presentations.

•«

QUICK VERDIUI' - Glovamd VlolloUo, II, lilt '
lmp0 lvei:J
durin« earUer teaUmooy, wa,!JfoundiUIKyTuelldayofblpmy udfraud.ln
his Nov. 18, 19111, marrlage to a Mesa. Ariz., womaa. Vl«&lt;looto tellllled he
had manied lOii wOmen In the United Slalelllllld elllewhere over a s:J.year
period but denied having defrauded the'Mesa wamlin. 'lbe jury hearln«,
the trial, In Phoenix, Ariz., took 1- than two llours to decide. (AP

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=~

manage
the land.improvement wlll riLMe;;;;;;;;rp;;;;hoto;;;;;;);;;
.
The dam's
consist of a Jllain,l,:Jl).foot kx:k and

~re:;::~::s~~~

;:::,~ain

lock and a 300-foot
A four-year corps study released
in 1900 concluded the dam is unable
to handle present and future
increases in barge tr&lt;\ffic.

SALEfMEN'S
WRANGLER JEANS

THURSDAY. 2110-MEAT LOAF
FRIDAY, 2111-CREAM BAKED CHICKEN
SATURDAY. 2112-SPAGHETTI
SUNDAY, 2113-PORK CHOPS WITH DRESSING
MONDAY, 2114-SOUP BEANS &amp; CORN BREAD
TUESDAY, 2115-.-BAKED HAM &amp; SWEET POTATOES
WEDNESDAY.• 2/15-PORK ROAST

Basic Denim Jeans in
sizes 27 to 42 waist 30 to 36 inch lengths 14 314 oz. No Fault
Pre-Washed Blue Denim. Won't shrink, wrinkle or pucker. Straight
leg or Boot flare.

Valentine's Day bouquet that comes in
a romancic red ceramic heart. So ir's a
special gifr - because the heart is a
keepsake vase, · one that will be cher~hed long af1er Valemine·s Day io
1
gone.
Stop by or caU Pomeroy Flower Shop
early. Then take your hean or send it
almJSt anywhere in the coomry. It's

FORT LEWIS, Wash. - Gurkhas, the small but tough Nepalese
warriors who have served the British army with legendary courage
for more than 150 years, are training for the first time on American
sou.
The 1st Battalion, 7th Duke of Edinburgh's Own Gurkha Rifles600 troops strong - arrived In early February and will train through
March 10 before returning to England.
Tiley came armed to the teeth - with $al souvenir battle knives
for sale and T-shlrts bearing the legend, "Falkland islands 1982."

Gennan magaziqe gets story
'

SALT LAKE CITY - The family of artificial heart reciplen t
Barney Clark has sold the rights to their story to the Geiman
magazine Der Stern, a hospital spokesman says.
The newsmagazine planned to fly a reporter and photographer
here from Germany today, according to John Dwan, spokesman for
the University of Utah Medical Center.
.
Clark. 62; the first recipient of a pennanent artlflclal heart, wlll be
photographed and a reporter will talk with Clark's wife, Una Loy,
Dwan said Wednesday night. But Clark Is still too weak to be
interviewed, he said.

easy. Just ask for Pomeroy Flower

Shop's All-My-Heart Bouquet for Valentine's Day. Because with Pomeroy
_flower Shop, r~c flowers always ro~
in something as preny as the flowers
rhemselv~

Fo
POMEROY
ROWER SHOP

HEAP official seek extension

THIS LmER TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
SHOWS THAT THE FARMERS BANK IS CONCERNED FOR
THE WELL BEING OF THE PEOPLE THEY SERVE. WE URGE
YOU TO WRITE ALETTER TO PRESIDENT REAGAN TO ASK
HIS SUPPORT TO REPEAL THIS PROVISION TO WITHHOLD
TAXES AT THE SOURCE.

Farmers
Bank

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Officials of the Home Energy Assistance
Program have asked the administration of Gov. Richard Celeste to
extend some benefits for low-Income utillty customers beyond
March 31.
Dave Knowlton, a HEAP fiscal officer, said today that the
administration has been asked to approve a four-week to six·week
extension of a HEAP program. The emergency program permits
one-time payments of up to S:nl to litllity customers facing shu torts
because they have not paid their bills.
·
The Public Utllltles Commission of Ohio has prohibited utilities
from disconnecting service to nonpaying customers between Dec. I
and March 31. Knowlton said HEAP officials fear there will be
widespread shutoffs after March 31.

February 7th, 1 983

Way America
' Sends Love... .
106 Butternut I
Pomeroy, OH.

1"The

The Pre~ident
The White House
Washington, D. C,

PH. 992-20391
or 992·5nl
We accept all major credit cards, and
"" wi11 !lowers ~··

Winning Ohio lottery numbers
20500

As you know, the tax ' law passed last summer contained a provision calling
for banks and other financial institutions to withhold 10 percent of our
customers' interest , and dividend earnings beginning July 1, 1983,
I'm writing to urge your support of legislat~on to repeal this provision,
This 10 percent withholding measure is unfair : 95 percent of the taxpayers
already pay the taxes they owe on interest and dividends subject to
reporting, It's unnecess'a ry: banks and other financial institutions
already provide the IRS with the information . they need to catch those few
people ·wno do cheat on their tax returns, but the IRS seems unable or
unwilling to do anything with it.

BISCUIT AND
SAUSAGESAND~CHES

$} 29

BREAKFAST HOURS ONLY

Expireo March 5, 1983
·
~------------------------------~
· ·

.

Coupon

SANDWICH
SAVE 89¢ SPECIAL6
TOPSHEF"

2 .SANDWICHES
ONLY 229

Very truly yours,

l

'I
·1

_

Nowhere else

1

-L_ ___ -~~!:'.:.!~.!!'!!f:.r!h!.:,!!,!l!,_ ___ ~J·

By The Associated Press
A nationwide strike by lndepend·
ent truckers seems to be losing
steam, an Ohio Independent says,
and an aide to a ~ngressman from
Ohio says it may be near an end.
Strike leaders were meeting
today In Washington, where an aide
to U.S. Rep. DouglasApplegatesald
they planned a vote on the strike.
The IIldependent Truckers AsSociation called the nationwide strlke
Jan. 31, and Ohio's independents
joined it Feb. 1, to protest Increased
fuel taxes ·and truck user fees.
Independents have been discussing
ways to end the strike with
congressmen.
"We have come to a mutually
agreeable position as to a request to
review the entire situation," James
R. Hart, an aide to Applegate, said
Wednesday.
Hart said Mike Parkhurst, na·
tional president of the ITA, called
the ITA's 39 state presidents to
Washington for a vote.
Hart added, "It's a little premature to say the strike is over."
In Cleveland, an Independent
trucker said he obtained a parade
permit for a truck caravan to drive
through the city Friday but that the
motorcade was canceled .
"I've been Invited to Washington
for a victory party," said the
trucker, who would not be identified, but thensaidthestatementwas
premature.
Meanwhile, the head of a group of
Independent truckers In Licking
County said truckers planned a

"truckcade" protest to COlumbus
this afternoon. Protest organizer
Jeny Holtonsaldabout70independ·
ent drivers meeting in Heath on
Wednesday voted against returning
to work and voted to stage the
protest.
The strike seemed to be losing
support, and Ohio Independent said.

"It's everybody's concensus that
they're straggling back" nationWide, said Richard Martin of
Zanesville, a member of the ITA's
task force. ''I'd say we haven't lost
that much In Ohio. They're holding
pretty tight."
The Highway Patrol's count of
strike-related incidents shows 122

-~

CONVOY- Part of a truck oonvoy moves along
the Mas&amp;achusetts Tumplke In Boston Wednesday In

a show of support for striking independent truckers

TH£ Fl\11

'

0

,,

~ ~er.

....,.. Warm -.w" Occluded ..,... Stationary

lheN~wei!t

-- '

'

(APieerpbtto).

AWAmJ VEBDICI' - alchard Wl!lltoll, a, ~. Ind., II
--ril"kdod bJ a de;;Q rr.m the Clei iiiUil&amp; COIIII&amp;yCaurt- where lbe

,_,lie

ava*edm....,c+eawead-•'Gbbeli
oo.- Ill ~ ...... wlllllbe 1181 ~ of laeww• dealer B111J
8th• t• 11114111ne lamiiJ membeaw. 'lbe --..entered J'illl' wu to
rea l'*.llelbenlone todaf. (AP leurphoto).
u

. . ,_. ....

---- .. --.-- . . . - .

.,
.,

- -

'

-

124 in Syracuse

Mayor Eber Pickens told Syracuse Vlllage . Council' Wednesday
night that SR 124 In the vlllage qf
Syracuse · · .will be paved this

I'OMEIIOY, OHIO 417W• AI: 11..-a·llll .

'•

across the nation. The convoy traveDed aci'OI!IIi eastem M•••acliusellll from Sturbritjge to Boston's (]o.
venunent Center. (AP Laserphoto).

.

WEATIII:" FORECAST - 'lbe National Weather Service
rOreo: &amp; ~bowen for F'ri111Q' In lbe 8uuil ea• ~ llun'lel are ·
tar• art frlm lbe Mlclwert to,..._. 8aow II e•jNded from the
0b1o VdeJ toOt f ah RaiD 1111111!111" llunleure lone8rt lor

. i-k

cles could be canceled.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hearings Into the gas purchasing
Those hearings are part of a
policies of Columbia Gas Transm!s·
seven-year state attempt to monitor
slon Corp. wlll be held despite plans
the operations of Interstate natural
gas pipeline companies.
to abolish Ohio's Depa:(!ment of
Energy, an aide to Gov . Richard
As originally submitted, Celeste's
Celeste says.
bill would have abolished the
"The governor Is committed to Energy Department. Its functions
havblg heat'ings take place no would have been reassigned to other
matter where the Energy Depart· agencies subject to approval of the ·
ment Is folded into," Paul Costello, Controlling Board.
the governor's press secretary, said
Those plans were changed as the
Wednesday.
bill made its way through the House
"He Is adamant about that and Finance Committee.
they will take place, no matter what
Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D·
happens to energy. That is his Cleveland, won approval of an
commitment," Cos.telio said.
amendment making the agency
Part of Celeste's pending tax another division qf the DevelopIncrease· budget b~lanclng blll ment Department.
would abolish the Energy Depart·
" It leaves au the major responsiment and make it a division of the bllltles oftheDepartrnentofEnergy
Development Department.
·· tntact," Sweeney said.
· .That ~parked predictions from
He said the Energy Department
some energy staff members that has a budget of about $8 million,
hearings set for October on Colum· most of it federal funds. It has an
bla's natural gas purchasing poll·
(Continued on page 10)

•

IM BAHK 6 IAWtGa COMPANY •

1
j;

Columbia hearings
still on-schedule

'

Fronts:

shooting Incidents In Ohio and 474
trucks damaged by one means or
another.
---·
On Wednesday, the Highway
Patrol said, it had one report of an .
object thrown at a truck, In Wood
County; a truck burned in Elyria;
and tires slashed on four others In
no!theast Ohio.

·~

· Periods of snow with significant accumulations possible tonight.
Lows between 25 and ll Cloudy with a chance of snow Friday. Highs
between 33 and 38. The chance of snow is 80 percent tonight and 40
percent Friday.
Extended obki Forecast
Saturday through Monday:
A slight chance of Dunies ~.Fair Sunday lllld Monday.
11J«bs throop the period between 30 lllld 40. Lows from between IS
and 25 SalurdlQ' to betWeen 20 ud 30 Sunday and MondlQ&lt;. ·

.

fiscal year.
In addition, Celeste Is seeking a four-month, 0.5 percent Increase In the
public utilities excise tax to generate $54 mllllon. Most of the money, $44
milllon, would go to the state's emergency school loan fund.
The House postponed a vote on Celeste's bUI Wednesday and prepared to
consider it today. Expected approval would send it to the Senate, wher:e
hearings would begin Monday.
·
Word that House action on the m easure was delayed came after a
Democratic caucus.
Finance Chairman Wtlllam Hlnig, D-New Phlladelpl)la, whose
committee approved the bUI after two hearings, said the decision
sterruned from concern expressed by some legislators that the House may
have been moving too fast.
There was speculation that Democrats did not have the number of votes
they wanted to pass the tax package, but Hinig said that was not the case.
l;louse Speaker Vernal Riffe, D-New Boston, refused to discuss the.
matter as he left the podium during a recess.
·
He was apparently jostled as reporters tried to question him .
"~n't be holding m e up like that. And do!l;t ever bump up against me
like that," he said.

Truckers' strike: end in sight

.,.....------- . - ·' "").

Theodore r, · Reed, Jr.
President
TTR,jr/jac

Present this coupon When orderin1 at ;my
partlcipatins Burger CheP restaurant .
One coupon ~ customer per visit.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov. Richard Celeste's $.llO mlllion tax
increase blll will face much rougher sledding in the Senate than it has In the
House, a Senate Republican leader predicts. ·
Democrats hold a sllm 17·16 edge in the upper chamber compared with
their 62-37 majority In the House.
Sen. Stanley Aronoff, assistant Senate minority l~ader , said Wednesday
that this iS only one of sever~! reasons why passage of the bill will likely be
more difficult in the Senate.
"The obvious one Is the numbers game. It's a ~azor thin Democratic
majority and I suspect there's a lot of nervousness In the Democratic
caucus," Aronoff, R·Cinclnnatt, said.
"Constituent anger Is ~teadily mounting as the tax becomes more and
more publicized," he said.
" (And) the opposition is surfacing from some unexpected sources such
as the League of Women Voters, schools and public employees," Aronoff
said.
Celeste proposed a permanent 00 percent Increase in the state personal
Income tax, replacing a temporary 50 percent surcharge that Is to expire
March 31.
Revenue from the tax increase, combined with spending cuts, would
offset a $528 rnUlion state budget deficit expected by the June 30 end of the

·'

Thank -you ve{y much.

2 Sections, 14 Page• 20 Cenu
A Multimedia Inc. News aper

Stt1t.e 'to pave SR

~/ ~t .

5

enttne
Tax hill faces big battle

Weather forecast

'

Please let_ me know your positton on this - isy6e;

at

$187.

Most important. this requiremenr is a costly, administrative nightmare.
Our country's 80 million savers and investors will lose a conser~ative
,$1.5 billion on foregone interest and dividend earnings, It's going to
cost the financial industry at least another $1.5 billion just to implement
the withholding, and .t hat doesn't include the per.sonnel ;.-training that's
going to be required so that our employees can try to explain to the
taxpayer just why 10 ,p ercent of his interest and dividend earnings is
be il).g withheld.
By the time you take the interest earnings away from the people, add the
cost· to the government and. to t 'he private. sector to implement this program,
the. ·net el:fect of interest withholding wi11 be . negative,
·

•

CLEVELAND (AP) - The winning number drawn Wednesday
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally game, "The Number," was 555.
In the "Pick 4" game, played five times a week, the winning
.
number was 2653.
The lottery reported earnings of $478,039.50 from the wagering on
its dally game. Earnings came on sales of $967,2;19.50, while holders
. of winning tickets were entitled to share $4ll9,200, officials said.
In the parimutuel "Pick 4" game, salestotaled$173,797. Holders of
winning tickets were entitled to45 percent, or$79,728. Any wlnning$1 ,
straight ticket earried $4,41l8, and any wlnnlng$1 boXed ticket earned

Dear Mr. President:

r------------------------------1

ONLY

COLUMBUS, Ohio- Majority Democrats In the House havefllled
two vacancieS In theit ranks created by the appointment of two
members to posts In the Celeste administration.
Mark A. Malone, a Lawrence County commissioner, was named
Wednesday to succeed Rep. Ronald H. James, D-Proctorvllle.
James was appointed as deputy director of the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources.
Walter R. Fortener, Mercer County treasurer, was appointed to .
take the House seat of former Rep. Dale Locker, D-Anna. Locker
was named by Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste as Ohio's new
agriculture &lt;jirector.

.Warriors train on American soil

HOURS: MONDAY-THURSDAY 5:30 A.M-8 A.M.
FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY 5:30 A.M.-11 P.M.
. SUNDAY 8 A.M.-4 P.M.
.

V~ith

this bving floral gift l&lt;'s a gorgeous

Mc~naid ' s

2

Malone succeeds Rep. James

INCLUDES SOUP AND S~LLAD BAR

Employes assaulted
CINCINNATI (API - Three
restaurant employees
took it on the chin when two
customers objected physically to
the chain's policy requiring a $1
deposit to use restrooms.
Police said two dowritown assist·
ant managers and a third employee
were assaulted early Tuesday by a
man and a woman who objected to
the requirement.
Michael Coleman, . 19, was
charged with assault in the incident.
A female_J;ompanion fled, pollee
said.
Employee Lucy Wright suffered
a broken nose, said Fire Division
Paramedic Capt. ~er Crauder.

locks. Another 10.8 mllllon cubic
yards would require disposal.
Higman said construction would
destroy or .degrade the lower 2.5
mlles of F1atfoot Creek and five
archaeological sites.
Plans \0 buy"ecologically valuable' • wetland&lt;; In th~ DOOdplliln near
Glenwood were also annoonced at
the hearing, with the state DNR to

DAILY SPECIALS

Touch your Valentirl(''s heart

Safety film· showing
,slated lhis evening

construction, landscaping and land
acquisition. The total cost Is
expected to l;le $lll,OOl excluding
land acquisition. Operations costs to
be borne by the West Virginia
Department of Natural Resources ,
over · the first five years are
estimated at $217 ,O.ll.
The corps is planning to rehabilitate the 45'year-old Gallipolis Dam
and build a new two-lock canal on
the West Virginia side of the
structure. -T he corps says -work
should start next year and be
finished by 1~.
At a public hearing held In
Huntington in December 1900, Col.
James Higman, then-district engineer. said awroximately 13 mlllion
cubic yards of material would be
removed in constructing the new

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February I 0, 1983

W.Va. swampland purchase studied
LESAGE, W.Va. (AP) - The
U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers says
it' s prepared to pay $1.5 mllllonfora
choice piece of West Virginia
swampland near the Ohio River.
The corps wants to buy the
Lesage-Greenbottom Swamp and
surrounding area to provide an
840-acrewildllfe habit to replace one
that will · be destroyed if the
engineers go ahead with a $313
million. nine-year plan for improv·
lng the aging Gallipolis Locks and
Dam on the Ohio.
Construction of new locks between Point Pleasant and Hunting·
ton wot~ld destroy a wildlife habitat,
so the Corps of Engineers' Hunting·
ton office has proposed replacing it.
The area the corps Is considering
iS a . strip between t he rallroad
tracks and and- the river from the
mouth of the Guyan Creek on the
Cabell:Mason county tine, extending dowruiver about 3.4 miles. The
area includes an unnamed iSland
close to the shore.
Two houses, three mobile homes,
one modular home and a small barn
are located In the area. The corps
has projected a cost of $33,00l for
relocating the slx families living
there.
The corps proposes to buy the land
at an estimated cost of $1,521,00l,
and sell or lease it to the state

Portland exchange system
begins operation Sunday..•P.l4

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Conllea .......................:•••••••••••••••••• ;........................... Pare u
U*orlal ~················· ··· ···· .. ················ ..............·.. ~ ......., Pap 2

.

----·- -

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'

--·--. .

The State Department of Highways wlll resurface a length of
l2,8.Jl.4 feet with a ).vldth of 19 feet,
total length 2.43 miles Mayor
Pickens stated.
The state route going throilgh the
vlllage is betWeen 15 and 16 feet in
width at the present time. The
highway (SR 124) will be widened ID

19leet.
Council also discussed itS partie!·
patton In the regular phase of the
National Flooc! Insurance· Program. Under this phase residents
can obtain milch higher amounts of
.flood Insurance than are cutrently
avaUable. ·
Council will aci on the Issue at the
next reglar meeting .which wlll be on
the first Thursday In March.
Council approVed a temporary
budget
the Board of Pubiic
Affairs in the &lt;\ITIOUnt of $2,500.

ror

•f

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