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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
•'
'

·Mayors conclude 16 cases

.

Five Middleport men were fined
on charges of disorderly conduct
when they appeared Tuesday in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman.
In the group were Shane Smith
and Keith Musser, $50 and costs;
Rick Ebersbach, two charges with
fines of $25 and costs on each one;
t.ance Hermann and Lester Wise.
$25 and costs each.
·Also fined in last night's court
were Debbie J. Pridmore, Pomeroy, $25 and costs, no driver's
license; Bryan Whaley, Shade, $l'i
and costs, speeding; 'nmothy
RDbert Roush, Letart, W. Va., $10
with no costs, failure to stopat astop
s ign; and Her'ilert Dalton, Middleport, $15 and costs, speeding, $25and
costs. no operator's license; and $25
and costs. failure to appear in couri
last week.
Forfeitures in thf' court Included

I

~. -JUDGING -Posters entered as ftnal first place
winners from fourth graders at all of the Southem
Local School District Elementary Schools were
judged by this panel at the Meigs C&lt;lllllty Health De. pariment Monday altemoon. P~es wiD he awarded

- ..- ...

winners of the best posiA!rs whlc.h deal with dental
care. From the left are Rhoda Davis, John Jacobs,
Nonna Torres", Max McGee and Dr. Margie Lawson.
Winners wiD go to state level lor judging.

Jets' emergency landing succes_sful
MIAMI lAP) - An airliner
carrying 67 passengers and seven
crew members made a successful
emergency belly landing Tuesday
night alter its landing gear falled to
fully retract after takeoff.
"As far as I know, he's in good
shape," Eastern Airlines spokesman .Jim Ashlock said alter the
Boeing 7'll landed at 8: :xJ p.m . at
Miami international Airport. " It
made a belly landing.
"He pulled all of his gear up a nd
sUd her in on her tummy - her
belly."

Eastern Flight 19o1 touched down
on foam-covered Runway 9R.
sparks flying, and slid to a sale stop
as emergency equipment stood by.
Earlier, the jet had circled
overhead as officials prepared the
runway, which runs along the
Dolphin ·Expressway, for the
landing.
The plane was en route to John F.
Kennedy International Airport in
New York and on to Albany, N.Y ..
when It experienced problems,
shortly after takeoff from Palm
Beach International Airpo!'l at 5: 50

p.m.
"Right after he took off he had an
indication that something was not
right with his (landing) gear,"
Ashlock said. "Apparently when he
recycled his gear it didn 't come
down."
Boeing 7'ns have made such
emergency · landings successfully
before, Ashlock noted.
"All final decisions rest with the
pilot. But he doesn't make them on
his- own," the spokesman said.
"He's had a whole wealth of
techfilcal advice."

COLUMBUS. Ohio lAP! - Gov.
Richard Celeste says he' s doing a ll
he can to avoid an avalanche of
utility s hutoffs this spring when a
moratorium on shutoffs ends . but
that consumers must also do their
pat1.
Utility executives blame I he ban
·I on shutoffs, ordered by former Gov.
·:· James Rhodes last year. fora sharp
increase in t he number of delin·
quent accounts this winter.
Celeste said Tuesday that consu-

Area death
Mildred Zahl
Mrs. Mlldred Hill Zahl, 77, 2'\0
Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, died
Tuesday evening at Veterans Mem · '
.orial Hospital.
Mrs. Zahl was born Aug. 12. 1905
at Pomeroy, a daughter of the latr
Laban and Ethel Hill. She had been
a school teacher during her life and
she was a member of the United
Methodist Church.
SUJviving are her husband. Aaron
M . Zahl; a son, William Martin
Zahl, Grovepor1; a daughter , Mrs.
Leo (Jean) Smith of Ber rien
Springs, Mich .. ; six grandchildren,
two great-granddaughters; a s ist er.
Goldie Bigelow, Orang&lt;' City, Fla.:
a brother-In-law, John Prentice,
Louisville, Ky.: two sisters-in -law,
Molly Hill, Hamilton, and Lucille
Hill. Fort Mye rs, Fla .. and several
nl('C('S and nephews.
Besides her parents. Mrs. Zahl
was preceded in death by two
brothers, Alien Hill and Ra ymond
Hili. and a sister. Oma Prr ntic&lt;'.
Services will be he ld at 10 a. m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Harne
with the Rev. Carl Hicks officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friend' may call at the
funeral home anytinle after I p.m.
ThUrsday.

Emergency runs
Eleven calls were answered by
local units Tuesday. the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reports.
Pomeroy a t 11:45 a.m. went to
Dead Man's Curve for !;:Iizabeth
Guess, taken to Veterans Memorial
HospitAl; Middieport at 12:30 p.m.
took Evelyn Mains from Stonewood
Apar tments to Veterans Memorial;
Syracuse at 12: 57 p.m. took Ottie
McKinney from Maplewood Lake
to Holzer Medica l Center; Rutland
at 1:06 p.m . took Joe Denison,
Rutland, from his residence to
Holzer Medical Center; Racine at
2: 47 p.m. treated Rebecca Phillips
at the scene of an auto accident on
Ro4te 338; Middleport at 2:57 p.m.
took Clarence Swauger from River·
view Drive to Veterans M€1Jlorial;
Middleport at 3:44 p.m. treated
Harry Knapp at the bank; Rutland
at 3: 50 p.rn.' took Gilbert Maynard
from State RDute 124 to Veterans
Memorial; ?orneroy a t 6:46 p .m.
took Mai;Jel M!lier from Pomeroy
Health care Center to Veterans
Memorial: Syracuse at 9:32 -_ p.m.
took Becky Lavender from Waier
St. to Veterans Memorial and at
IO::ll p.m. Middleport iook Harold
Scarberry, Jr. , from Rlvervlew .
Drive to Holzer Medical Center.

..&lt;

mers may not understand their their utilities on through the
obligations.
winter," Celeste sa id.
"I think many people who don't
"A shutoff is in no one's intPrest.
have the money f~l that the
It's
not in thr interest of thP
moratorium was forgiveness." Ceconsumer.
first a nd fo remost.
leste said. " tThey) don't understa nd that there needs to be a good
faith effor1 to do wha t they ran to Marriage li('enses
pay their utility bills in order to
qualify for assistance that they're
Marriage licenses were issued in
entitled to. "
·
Meigs County Probate Cou r t, to
At the same tinie, Celeste said the ' Robert Lynn Riffle. 28, Pomeroy.
state is not "a collection agency for and Ta mar ia Kay Mash. 21. Rt. I.
utility companies." He said many Middleport; John Roger Ward . 38.
people find it dUficult to pay utility Middleport, and Josephine Pauline
bills even in a relat ively mild winter. Morton. 26, Pomeroy ; Robert Paul
Celeste said he agrees with Bauman, 52, Middlepor1, an~herri
Rhodes' decision and would have Jean Barringer. 24. Middleport:
made the same one. "!don't know Mitchell Norman Judson, 23, Little
.what the circumstances will be next Hocking, and Tammy Lynn Creyear in terms of how we work means.17. Rt. 2. Coolv ille.
together to insure tha t people have

PTA sponsors movie

'
ca ted; Lonnie Barley: no &amp;lldre8i; ·
open flask, $88; ,lllid
Alva Will,·I'
I
Pomeroy,$63, leftqJ~:f'l1ter,and$63;
failure to reglslqf· his vehicle.

(Continued rrom

pa~

•

a1 y
. Voi.J'I ,No.204
Capy~ighled 1983

-

(2.3 litersj

TRIG' tEA
KETTLE

S~CIAL

LOGAN - Only one detective reported for duty today at the
Hocking County sheriff's office, where deputies, jailers and clerks
were staging a job action, officials said.
The job action, to protest a lack of manpower and equipment,
began Tuesday night. Eleven workers are off the job.
According to Detective Ray Davis, llbe department was being
manned by himself, Sheriff Jim Jones, chief deputy Lanny North
·
·
and a probationary deputy .
Jones said only IUe-threatenlng calls would be answered.
A lawyer representing the deputies, Dan Stohs, said they were
taking compensatory time off.

$'· 99

Should adopt program - Miller ;

Admitted : Elizabeth GuC'ss,
Pomeroy: Cla ra Milier, Pomeroy:
Evelyn Ma ins, Middleport; Clar·
ence Swauger, Midd]C'port; Gilber1
Maynard. Langsville.
Discharged: J ohn Metzger, J .o hn
Motley, J onathan Double, Joseph
Pro!Iitt. Linda Crites . and Fred
George.

-----------------------~
SPECIAL OF THE WEEK . ~

~

~

RSH-N-CHIPS
$114

.

~

I
z .

-·ADOlPH'S

, /,

~-

DAIRY VALLEY

,,

Mandell , 16, of Athens, were
reportedly injured but not treated .
At 7:40p.m .. troopers were called
to an accident at Ohio 143 in Me igs
County.
According to the patrol. TimOthy
D. Tomlin.l9, Rt . l , Langsville . was
southbound when he lost control,
went off the right sideofthe roadand
struck two mailboxes.
Tomlin's vehicle received moderate damage.

.,

Save 30c: NOWI

COLUMBUS - Ohio farmers should ·a dopt the payment -in-kind
program to help strengthen grain prices by bringing supply into line
with demand , says David 0 . Miller, president of the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation .
"Agriculture's problem won't be solved U farmers spend hours
figuring to the penny UPIK will help their own situation," Miller said
in a statement. "Farmers need to enter the program witll the
realization that PIK will help make a1stronger agriculture. with
grain prices that more than equal the cost of production."
The program calls for farmers to idle production and receive
government-held grain s tocks as payment. It is hoped the program
wlll reduce the stockpiles whlle increasing the priee of grain .
"PIK makes good economlc sense," Miller said. "In the short run,
most farmers w,lll be helped , but the real strength of the program is
its long-run potential in he lping every farmer receive a better price
for his production. "

Arrest two demonstrators

~ '$

"At The End of the Pomeroy·Maoon Bridge"
POMEROY OH.
PH. 992-1556

PIKETON -Two demonstrators were arrested at a protest at the
Goodyear Atonnic Plant at •. t&lt; ·,ased after pleading no contest to
charges of criminal trespass. the Sheriff's Department says.
The Pike County Sheriff's DePartment said in a prepared
. statement that Erny Davies, 40, of-Athens and Erin Salva, 25, were
, "part of a small group of protesters at llbe plant Wednesday.
They wer;e jaUed Wedlnesday, appeared in county court, pleaded
no contest to criminal trespass, were sentenced to one day in jaU and
court ·costs and released alter being placed on probation, the
sheriff's department said.
About 25 protesters gathered at the fence of the plant and the two
walked through the plant's gate, said Tim Siemer, who said he was
one of the protesters.
He said the group opposed activities of the plant, which enriches
uranium for use as nuclear fuel, because this is the first step in
developing nuclear weapons.

Could get congressional flak
WA.SHINGTON - A Rockwell Corp. official says the B-lB
bomber may get more flak this year from congressmen seeking cuts
In defense spending.
The $~ bl!Uon-plus bomber project came uruler verbal attack
. from some congressmen last year, but when it came to voting funds
no 'opposition appeared .
.
With the Reagan admlnistrat lon trying to freeze spending for
many non-defense programs this year, there has been increasing
pressure in Congress to hold down defense spending.
"With the mood of Congress to cut the defense budget, we can see
having some problems," Bastian "Buz" Hello, head of Rockwell's
North American Aireraft Opera lioils, has told reporters.

\

'

Two hurt in Meigs ac«;ident
Thr Gallipolis post of the State
Highway Patrol invrstigated two
single-car wrecks in Meigs Cou nty
TuC'sday.
A car driven by Lee M. Wilson .16.
The Plains, received hmvydamage
In an accident ori U.S. 33at 8: lOp.m.
Wilson was southbound when he
reportedly lost control in a curve,
went over an enbankment and
overturned.
Wilson and a passenger. Denise

Hocking lawmen stage job action

r

Vett'rans Memorial

Pomeroy

;

.y$u forJet good,
the lib ea:'•
·~-tes 50

Ohio lottery winners
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lott1&gt;ry's dally game. "The Number," was 069.
In · the " Pick 4" game, played five times a week, tile winning
number was ~5.

· In 2 Cldkious fl~vprs .
De\~; Raisins&amp;. Walnuts and

Apples 1, ~inll&lt;\mon. TRY THEM BOTH I

''

'

OUR BIG

PRESIDENT'S DAY SALE

WEATHEK FORECAST - The NMiooal Wealher Service fore.

cuta ebowen for Friday for lbe Norlltwelt and northera I'Wns. Show·
en are allo foreeut lor the weltern Gull and norlheutem ooaetal
-·Snow 1!1 f~ for-norihem New E..pmd. Cold wea&amp;her Is

•

/.'

:

~from lbe norihem Plalnstltroup the Great Lalleslllld Mldw·

eet Into the

Northeast. (AP LMerphoto Map).
I

··State forecast
'

BAHR

, Part~,cioudy tonlght. Low 25-:xl. Winds llght and variable. ~ostly
· sunny Friday. High in the ml(l-401;:
.

Extended Ohio forecast ·
. ·PH.

'

enttne
1 Sedion, 12 Pag es
20 Conh
A Mult imedia Inc. N ew~pa .per

Thursday, February 17, 1983

By JAME'! GERSTENZANG
Associated Pl'E88 Writer
WASHINGTON (APl - President Reagan, vowiilg to fight for his
clloice of a chief arms negotiator,
says Senate ·repudiation of the
nomination v;ould hurt efforis to
build support in western Europe for
U.S. arms control proposals ,
At the same time, the president
declared his desire to keep out of the
West Gerrn;m election campaign in
&gt;l(hich arms reduction has become
an issue.
He added , however, that if the
new German government rejects
the Pershing 11, it "would be a .
terrible setback to the cause of
peace and disarmament."
Reagan, at his 16th nationally
broadcast White House news con·
terence , had strong words Wednesday night for both the Senate
opponents of his nomination of
Kenneth L. Adelman as director of
the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, and for suggestions
that the planned missile deployment in Europe might not be
completed. ·
The Senate Foreign Relations
Committee voted 15-2 on Wednesday to delay a vote on Adelman 's
nomination. The move was said by
Its sponsors to be an effort to spare
Reagan the embarrassment of
·
seeing his nominee cleleated.
"! don't believe that they in
delaying this have done anything to
help us in ciur efforts to get an arms
reduction agreement, " Reagan
said.
He said it would be destructive to
the effort at buDding western
European support for the U.S.
position "to see me repudiated by a
Senate committee" on the Adelman
nomination.
Reagan vowed to support Adel- .
· man despite the senators' opposi·
!ion, and sald, "I will try to be as
persuasive as I can and make them
see the light. If that falls snort,
· maybe I will try to make them feel
the heat."

IT'S YOUR TURN- PresldentReaganpolnlsto
aclmowiedge a reporiA!r Wednesday night in the East
Room of the White House .during his nailonally' teie·
When asked themnsequences of a
possible refusal of a new Gern'lan
government to deploy the I~
Pershing !Is that NATQ decided to
place in that country starting in
December, the president said it
would cause a setback to peace. l;lui
tllen he added:
"We're not going to inject
ourselves into anyone else· s internal
affairs or elections at all. "
In the March 6 Wes t German

- Reagan

vised news conference. The president said he retains
full confidence in his EPA chief, Anne M. Gorsuch.
(AP Laserplloto).

elections, Chancellor Helmut Kohl
is being challenged by Hans-Jochen
Vogel, the candidate of the Social
Democratic Party.
Vogel has said that only "llnder
~xtreme circumstances" would he
station the Pershing II missiles in
West Germa ny.
· Tlie progress of disarmament
talks in Europe is an issue in the
election campaign, and Reagan
said that Vice President George

Bush found "great support a ll over
Europe" for the administration's
"zero option" arms reduction plan.
Bush returned from a 12-day
European tour one week ago.
Under the "zero option," NATO
would cancel its planned deployment if the Soviet Union dismantled
its intermediate range missiles in
Europe.
In the news conference, Reagan
(Continued on page 8)

Some gasoline priees drop under $1
By The Associated Press
Prices charged by some Ohio service stations for gasoline have
dropped below $1 a gallon for the first time in more than three years,
but station operators aren 't sure how long It will last.
"It's .really dropped sharply in the past 60 days. Everyone was
predicting it would be $2 a gallon by this time," said Gene St ein,
executive director of the Central Ohio Gasoline Dealers Association.
The international oil glut, combined with reduced demand for
gasoline, has caused a steady drop in oil prices for the past six
months.
Stein said many members of hls association are paying more tha n
$1 per gallon for wllolesale gl~Sf)line, and other station operators said
they·can ' t charge less than $1 and still make money.
"The stations that have prices below $1 are either owned by big oil
companies or are true independents, who buy gas from anyone at
the cheapest price," Stein said.
Certified Oil Co. spokesman Dean Walcutt said some of his
company's stations have dropped prices below $1. " We'll continue to
do everything we have in order to remain competitive, wlthln
reason," he said.
A Clark service station on Cleveland's west side was sellmg
regular leaded gasoline for 99.9 cents Wednesday.
"To tell you the truth, It's been slow," said John Babin, an
employee at the station. "Gas town across the street is a little busier
than we are. It could go lower. We'll find out this weekend when It's
busier."
Al Bishop, owner of Blsbop's Friendly Service station in

Cincinnati, said some seif·set;;Ve a nd convenience stores are down to
a round $1.04 for a gallon of regular in southwestern Ohio.
"We haven't gotten below a dollar yet. I don 't anticipate that for a
while," Bishop said. "With full-service it 's a little di!Iicult. We
wouldn't be able a to do that for quite some time."
However, Bishop said his gas prices have dropped. "It's come
down a nickel. a penny here and a penny there. "
The largest oil company in the state, Sohio, has no company owned
stations selling gasoline for under ~1. said spokesman Randy
Walthius.
"Our dealer-owned stations set their own prices. bu t I don't think
any of them are below $1 yet , either. q ur pollcy is to price
competitively in the market. which is why prices vary with
location," he said.
.
Dennis Jazwieckl, manager of a Union 76 gasoline distribuling
company in Toledo, said his stations are sellin~ regular for $1.01 to
$1.02.
"We're barely at the point where we can surv ive now, and I don't
know what we'll do if the price goes to99cents," said Jazwiecki. "U
the price goes down again, we'll lose money for another month."
In Findlay, Marathon Oil Co. spokesman William Ryder said
some of the company's secondary brand service stations are selling
regular for 99.9 cents. He said he didn 't know if Marathon-bra nd
stations, which are Independently owned and opera ted, dropped to
that price.
Marathon markets secondary brand gas under Speedway,
Bonded and Gastown labels.

Meigs jury
indicts nine

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
.
AND MONDAY
.
WITH DISCOUNTS UP TO

.

•

JO. tOSJ

CONTINUES

ON MEN'S AND WOMEN'S
WEARING APPAREL

Middlepc~rt, O~io,

Broncos upset OH... Page- 4

Rejection would hurt efforts

Retardation for the current year, a session to hear a n appeal on a
'
standard procedure each year, was student expulsiOn . Returriing to
the open session the board unanimrenewed . The board voted to
request a n audit by the Ohio ously voted to affirm the expulsion.
• Fade and stain
Auditor's Office to determine if
After a second executive session
res istant ex1eriors
there will be a deficit within the last night, the board granted the
• Durable fas(-heating
district during 1983.
extens ion on Morris' contract and
al uminum con~truction
J ane Wagner, treasurer , re- set a special meeting for 7 p.m . on
ported that thP permanent approF eb. 28 to discuss personnel and
priation for the year mu st be finances.
approved by April 1 and the audit
It is reported also that several
supplementa l contracts are open in
will be helpful to determine the
financial situation of the district.
the district. These include a girls'
The re are state loans available if the
varsity and a girls' reserve softball
coach and a drama teacher. Anyone
district appe;u-s headed for a deficit
operation in 198.1.
with certification in theseJireas Is
Near the opening of last night's
asked to m ake application With
regular m eeting, the board moved
Supt. Morris at the Central Office in
into an aimost hour lang executive .-M-id_d_Ie.:.po_rt_be_f_o_rc_f_e_b_._28_._ _ _-l..._ _ _ _ _ _ _--,._ _ __

Brian E . Johnson. Middleport and
Brenda K. Johnson, Middleport,
filed for dissolution of marriage in
Meigs County Corrunon Pleas
Court .

'

21t2 at,

1)

Cla.MHied. acts ..........•..••..••..•... ,..•...•."........................ Page ~10
Coml!!!i·TV ........... .. ................................... , ................ Page ll
Deaths ................. ................................. , ..................... Page~
F..dltorial •.•.•.•..•. ......•..•...••..••. :·•..........•..•. .. : .... .. ............ Page 2
Society ................. .. ..... , ........................ ........... , ......Page :1-6-7
S)Mlrts ................ ... ....................................... : ....... ..... Page a-4

Wc.ather fort&gt;Cast

Mostly c loud)· tonight and ThursThe Pomeroy PfA will sponsor a . day. Low tonight 3.o40. High
Walt Disney movie, "North Avenue
Thursday 45-50.
Irregulars" Friday, 7 p.m. at the .
ExiA!nded Ohio Forecast
Pomeroy Elementary School.
Friday through Sunday:
Mostly fair. Hi giL' in them. to low
Meeting can('elled
50s Friday and in the upper 3Qs and
-10s .Saturday and Sunday. OverA meeting of the Democrat
nlght lows in the 20s early Friday
Central Executive Commltteescheand in the mid·20s to mid·30s
duled for Thursday night has been
Saturday and Sunday.
cancelled .

'

Foreign aid cutback .•.Page 2

Two defendants were fined and
six others forfeited bonds in the
court of Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined were Ruth Boggs, Racine,
open 'flask, $Ill and costs; and Diana
McDaniels, Cottageville, W. Va ..
$49 and costs, speeding.
. F'orfeltll)gbonds in the court were
CeceUa G. Lisllr, Syracuse, $46,
speecting; Stanley Berta, Cheshire,
driving under suspension, $63, and
failure to register vehicle. $63; Asa
Westfall, Ripley. W. Va., $:\2,
speeding; Jerry Swartz, Middleport, $525, driving- while intoxi·

Meigs board

Seek divorce

Consumers must do their part too

Gary L. Davis, Springfield, $375,
driving whlle Intoxicated; Keith A.
Johnson, Wesl Columbia, $375,'
driving while intoxicated; and
Frank F;. Young, $40, Pomeroy,
speeding.

Inside today...

•'

Saturday through Monday: Fair through the period. Highs in the
upper lls and 40s. Lows in tbe:Mls'Satunlayand near~Sunday and
Monday.

Nine indictments were handed
down wllen tbe Meigs County Grand
Jury conyened Tuesday.
Indicted were Unda Williamson,
. also known as Linda Johnson, for
grand theft involving the ft by
deception of welfare benefits, a
fourth degree felony; James E .
Jackson, Jr., Robert Troy Schoolcraft aitd Michael E. Bennett, an for
breaking and entering, involving an
lnclden t the Reedsville Service
Station in January; Randall J .
Johnson and Danny G. Johnson,
receiving stqlen property.involving
property stqlen fro!n the Thom~s
Gannaway residence in October
·
last year:
Jimmie Lee Derenberger, receiving stolen PI~ ty, involving a
stolen chain saw; Robert Riffle,
.grand theft, two counts, and four
counts of forgery; TaJ'Illlly Masll.
sam~ Charfii:'S of Rltne, Involving
(Continued Oh page 8)

WINNERS .- These four .&amp;udenia were top the Fanners Bank and Savings Co., George Hot..on,
wtmen In their respective vocational 1tudles at wlmer of the band·held computer competition. Oth·
Melp Wgh Scltool and wiD represent the achool In ers from the left are Todd Cundiff, electronics
reponal competition lo he held on Manlh Sal the Pike ;winner; John L)'ons, wei~ winner and he received
Couaty Jolat Vocational School. On the left, Gary 'welding equlpmem provided by the Twin City Ma·
Walker,lnatructor, present&amp; a compnter, provided by chine Shop, and Lisa Allen, COI!metoloJlY winner .

�The

Commentary

2-The Daily Sentinel

Page

College basketball

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thunday, February 17, 1983

~' t&gt;GIMIIQ''Iol ( :nll('lf'

lli&amp;Kkdtd Pk 'O" 'K

BY ~· "-"toc.i!IINI ,.,,..
FAST

What rights?

The Daily Sentinel
'

having a nlcenolsyOapln Washing- tographs In a college annual. In
ton this month over a quE'Stlon both another It Involved vulgar words In
perennial and universal: What are · a news story. In yet a third, It IntheFlrstAmendmentrights,lfany, valved some allegations unfavoraof the editor of a student news- ~le to a major ben~factor of the
paper? Is such an editor entitled to univerSity.
"freedom of the press?"
·The consequences aiso followll
. The Issue pops up all of the-time, uniform pattern: The student edlnot only In colleges and unlversltiE'S tor Is dismissed; fellow students
but at the high school level also. Tht&gt; rtse up In wrath; a cry Is raised of
facts are almost always the same: "freedom of the press"; and colJ1le young editor either has pub- legetrusteestearoutwhateverhalr
!!shed, or Is about to publish, some they have left. The Incident winds
editorial or story to which the up In court, and rroreorten than not
school' administration objects. In the student editor prevails.

111 Cour l Slr~t· l
p,, mt'ruy, ()hin
&amp;lt-992·!15&amp;
IIE\'f,YEDTOTH E I NTER F..ST tW THf': J\1EICS..MASON A. RF.A

;I~

.

..•
•
•

'•.

ROBERT L. WINGETI

.

~v

'

PuDi is ht•r

BOB HOEFLICH

I&gt;AT WHITEHEAD
A~ .. hta nt l'uhlisho•r/('nll ln oll t·r

DALE ROTHGE B, JR.
'·

.,

'•

'•
'•

James ]. Kilpatrick

A ME I\o1 8 F:R uf Tht• A:;s• •~·iu(t'it l)ft'SS, Inla nd Oail ~· Ptt'S.~ /ISSIM'iatiun and lhl'
A mt•rio ·un 'lo·" spapl'f l' u b l i~ h t•rs A s~ • w lati• •n.

these classic lines. At Howard Unlpaper. Miss McKnight played It to
verslty, the student Universliy Is
the hilt, to the great discomfiture of
known as The Hilltop. Its editor, 23Howard 's • prE'Sldent, James E.
year-old Janice McKnight, perCheek. Dr. Cheek ordered Miss
sisted In giving prominent
McKnlghttocut!tout.SherefUSed.
coverage to a ' lawsuit Involving the
Then, by amazing coincidence, the
unlv~rslty's attorneys. It appears , university's admlnlstratloll discothat a staff attorney filed a com- ''verect that Miss McKnight had "fal·
plaint with the Eqilal Employment
slfled" her admissions application
Opportunity Commission. He conback In 1979: She had failed to dis·
tended thatHoward'sgeneralcounclose that preytously she had at·
set was dlscrlmlnatlng In favor of tended Syracuse University for a
female employees in pay and
year and had left In poor academic
promotion.
_standing enrolling at Howard.
By any objective yardstick, t111s
Selzlng upon this heinous offense,
Dr. Cheek thereupon expelled her .
The students erupted In protest.
True to form, the matter ·went to
IS
court, and a ju!lgf ordered Miss
McKnight relnstallid both as a stu-;;- ·
dent and as editor. Moreover t the~!f
university was ordered to stop-In' •
lerterlng with "her exercise of!ree
press rights guaranteed by the
Constitution."
') '
The reason given by the unlver- •!;
slty for the young woman's expuF · ~
slon Is what Is lo!own In Latin as the' " o
phonus bolonus. That reason Is un· ·.'
believable. She was fired because · ~;
or her edltorlallnslstence. But there
Is more to be said. My own conten- ,Uon Is that Howard's president
clearly had the power to remove '"
her as editor. In my own view, the ..•
- rights of an edl tor . end where the
~wer of his publisher begins. In ~ .
lhE'Se student cases the school or .")
college plays the role of publlsher. it r'
caMot be otherwise.
" ...,
Where dld Miss McKnight get the , ''
right and power to publish whatever she damn well pleases? ne ::'f
answer Is, nowhere. ne Hilltop Is-·
not her paper: she has lnvE'Sted not a dime In Its costs of publication.

IN A/MDCART ANI&gt; TAKINI

VJ

~ITH IT~

.): T he old and
;:the new...
. In th~ pell-mPII search for something new, in the quE'S! for things, bigger,
: better, bright f? r', America ran right on by a lot or old-fashioned products
·:_:a nd opportunitiE'S.
. Suc h as trolley cars a nd watE&gt;rwhE&gt;els, and picturesque waterfronts and
·'grand old buildings that could be converted to housing. mar-kets and
; mu seums. And windm Uls for power and subways to take t raffic off the
:· stl\'ets.
, The futu re. it was thought. was perched at the forefront of technology
•. and electronics. But now. with high costs forcing individuals and
:- institutions to look inward, bit s of the futu re may be found in the past.
Some or the most imaginative uses of yE'Sterday are developing where
• waterfront piE&gt;r s a nd buildings once decayed ..
:· Once seedy a nd sometimE'S' dangerous areas now attract throngs or
·_- ramiliE'S to Baltimore' s Harborside. Boston' s FanE&gt;uil Hall Marketplace,
" New York's Soutll Str!'!'t Seaport. Seattle 's Pike Place Market and San
Francisco's P ier 39.
In every city of America abandoned buildings are being rediscoverocl
and a ppreciated . The motivation, in many instances. is economic as well
as E'S thetic. &amp;&gt;tt cr to fix up the old than bid up the new.
Where City planners onCE' may have env isioned expressways, they now
plan or build subways. Atla nta 's is underway. Washing! or is expanding its
subway . New York too. Others are considering them. ,
i
Trolleys are back, even if thE' systE&gt;ms are called light mil trans it and the
old-fashioned trolley wire becomE'S a more complex catenary.
Buffalo is building a new system , and a year~ld line runs from
downt own San Diego to the Mexican bol}ler . In a huge undertaking,
Pittsburgh's 50-year-old transit system is being expanded.
The thrust behind such activity is the rea lization that light rail systems
provide sale. efficient transporta tion. a discovery made by many
municipalit ies only afler they had investigated more sophisticated
"peoplP-mover " system s.
Trolleys are 19th century rreations. Windmills are oock becauSE' thpy
are relat ively low cost . high rtf.iciPncy producer s or power.
So are small d ams, E'S pecially on the old mill streams of New England
and the Middle Atlant ic states, a nd In part s of the WE'S t Coast, where
irrigation locks can be fitted to produce power.
A lew years before hE' died . David Llllentha l. chairman of the TennE'Ssee
Valley Aut hority and later the Atomic Energy Commission . and by virtue
a! this an authority on JX&gt;wer production , lx&gt;gan advocating small-dam
'power.
As Lilienthal put it . he used to be a "big dam" man. having headed the
TVA when some of the most powerfu l struc tures of aU were built. Bullate
in life he urged tiny dams on local streams and ca nals.

•1983

II'•

I

Cooler- Sorrioo

Show helps boost' court load
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAPl - A that tthe TV showl ishowthey found
out about it," he said.
'
television program filmed in a
" It 's a little more dramatic, but
California sma ll claims court is onE&gt;
it' s fa ir ly accurate. I. think it helps,"
reason businE'Ss is up in Franklin
Stroefer said.
County sma ll cla ims couri , officials
Stroefer said thE' program has had
say.
,a
positlve
effect. Hesaidpeoplewho ·
- CasE'S jumped from 4,609 in 1981 to
appear
court now are more
6,16.5 last year in the small cla ims division o~ Franklin County Munici- fa miliar with the proceedings. ·
• He said the increased workload
pal Cou.rt,1an increase that forced
also is lied to the economy and high
the court to add a !ourthrefereeto Its
interE'SI ratE'S, which have led to
staff.
Increased financial problems.
Officials said the economy and
Small
business have bficome more
expanded jurisdiction also Were
aggrE'Ssive
In collecting delinquent
responsible for the increase.
accounts,
he said.
"The People's Court," a syndiAlso, fewer claims are being
cated televiSion show that began
settled out of court becauSE' the
airing In Columbus last year. has
court's voluntary mediation proalerted people to theexistenceofthe
gram was canceled due to budget.
court, said John Stroefer, an
cuts.
·
administrative assistant.
" A lot of. oeoole come In and say

m

n:

I

Void where prohNad b-,. law.

Coi1..,ter
READY FOR SOUTHERN TRIP ...: Coach Larry Cook ol Rio
Grande Colege bas announced his U83 baseball team. 'lbe squad wiD
depart next wee!( for an eight-day tour ol Florida. Membem of the
squad are (front row, from left): Steve Little, Maurice Hamey, Kent
Wolfe, Sam Toppins, Mike .MIDer, Paul HaDer, Joe DeCamp, Mike
Milllpn, Kevin Bryant and Eri&lt;: Frazier. Second row, Dave Sw~.

RIO GRANDE -Two seniors at
Rio Grande College and CommunIty College have been named undergraduate assistant' coaches for the
1983 baseball season, according to a
.recent announcement by head
coach Larry Cook.
Karl Hochutl, a senior from Gal·
ena, OhiO, and Steve Green, a senior from Westervtlle, Oltlo, are the
new Redman assistants. lloth are
Sales and Marketing majors.
"These_two men exempltty the
people we have In our program,"
Cook said ." "They're lmowledgab1e,
hard-working, and dedicated to the
successor RloGrandeCollege baseball. I can't say enough good things

Foreign aid cutback
Should the United States continue only knows how bit a patsy we are
to play the benevolent Santa Claus now! The present administration
has made a policy of gtvlng freely
to half of the world ai the ex~nSE' of
to any country that might be giving
its own citizens? Rene Bosshardt of
a a coy glance at the Soviet Union or
Centerport, N.Y., Is one who
Cuba.
What we are doing now is
doesn't think so. In the February
buying
other countries' allegiance,
Issue of the American Association
which
Is
a poor way of guaranteeof Retired Persons (AARP) News
ing
lasting
friendships.
Bulletin, he has the following
Let's look at two countries that
Reader Forum letter:
"The proposals being considered have been much in the news the last
two years. El Salvador and Honduin Washington on Social Security
ras.
Even before ex-Secretary of
reform obv1ously circumvent the
State
Alexander Haig drew his line
core of the problem. A sound arid
against
communism in El Salvaequitable solution Is not to be found
dor. we had already supplied that
In reduced benefits and higher
little Central American country
taxE'S.
·
with $240 million, about half in aid·
"Rather, the answer lies ln. a
and lhP other half In direct loans.
drastic cutback In the huge approThey stllllowed about $00 mlllion on
priations being allocated to foreign
·
their loans when the Reagan adald. Congress should enact emerministration started sending mll·
gency legislation to divert funds
ltary
aid and advl!jerS to that
from this non-productive area, In
and bringing their troopS
country
order to meet the financial requlrPhere
for
training. Although the
ments of the Social Security
president has certified to Congress
program.
that there has been progress on hu"It Is high time the urgent needs
man rights there, an estimated
of American citizens be given first
priority. A realistic solutio!) to this
dilemma Is available, provided our
government leaders accept the fact
that the U. S. taxpayer can no
longer afford to subsidize the rE'St of
the world."
Bosshardt's letter. was enough to
send me scurrying to m.y reference
books, what few I have. I couldn't
find statistics later than Jan. 1, 19111
but as of that date, I found that Uncle Sam had magiumtmously given
$256 BILLION to 118 countrie; and
only seven of thoo;e countries had
even paid their outright loans In
!ull. Only $80 bllllon or the total had .
been In loans. The remainder was
In military assistance: economical
arid technical aid for which I could
find no record that any repayment
w~s ever demanded or received.
,This leads _to only one \-'l)ncluslon:
While Uncle Sam's IRS keeps an
eagle eye on c;ltizen taxpayerJ,
when It comes to foreign transactions he Is one hell of a sloppy
businessman.
Remember, this was as of the
close or business for the decadte or '
the '708. Maybe the countn' only
looks at Its financial condition dur·
lnll census years but If we were
play
such a patsy J!ln. 1, 19111, the lord

· "The

.

Dale . van Atta · by Intelligence , )
sources.
But Ghazala, a sold~r·s soldier, '··'
.Is not the man to let Qaddafl sucker ' .,,
-'
him Into a war with Israel - In . ,
which, of course, Egypt would bear · '7
the brunt or the lighting.
··•
Ghazala Is staunchly pro· - ·
American and speaks fluent Eng· '
llsh. He made many friends in '"'
Washington while lfeo-.as mtttlllry '"
attache at the emll¥fY Jlere f~ : '• :
l!n6 to 198l. He also reportedly de: _•.;:
tests the Soviets, apparently dating .:;
back to the nearly four years he ·
spent at a senior offlC!!fS' war col'
lege lri Russia whe~Kremtln
was Egypt's overbe
· ally.
'" '
Ghaza Ia prof esses '
verlng tt '"•
support for Presldtnt
n1 Mu- ';;
barak.
,,

""

Lawell .Wingett .'&gt;"
,,

II

40,001 people have been murdered
by warring factions in a country
about the Site of Massachusetts In
the last couple of years. I have no
' :- - --z:; on the total amount of ald
ihe Reagan administration has lavished on El Salvador the last two
years but It has been substantial.
Now there is a movement In Con·
gress to declare "null and void" the
president's certlflcatlon and cut off
or reduce mllltary ald.
The United States has a consider·
able numrer of troopS on Hondu·
ras, another trouble spot in Central
America. It Is another country
deeply In debt to Uncle Sam. In the
198l report, Honduras owed this
country $123 million on direct loans.
Since coming to power In Washing·
ton, the administration has also
treated Honduras like a prodigal
son, dispensing mllltary and economic aid, training and advising
troops and holding joint mllltary exercises with Honduran soldiers. Because Honduras' neighbor,
Nicaragua, Is friendly with Cuba,

was a bomb tl

the admlnl.'itratlon has used this · ,;
friendship and fear ol Cubant,
h!
Soviet Influence as an exc\{5€ tlJ ex- .
tend Honduras an invitation to e''!
make use of the U.S. Treasury far .'__._
In excess of their polltlcal·and milItary needs .
On the 'president's trit to South -;{
and Central America he s!jed ou't "'
al(! with all the restr nd of -a
drunken tooth fairy . In praztl he
promised that country a ~efty loan •.,.
although they were already head
over heels In debt to the rest of the
worid, Including Uncle Sam. In 19111 '"''
they owed us about S3 blllion and '." '
that sum has certainly grown slgnlfican tly over the past three years. I agree with Mr. Bosshardt that
Congress should take a long, hard .• ..
look at foreign ald as a way to help
our own domE'Stlc problems. Be- ,
cause the Reagan administration Is ;
paranoid over Communism Is no '
reason to hand out keys to the U.
Treasury lndtscrtrnlnately.
Cbartty begins at home!

roo .

., ...

:"o

about them."
Hochull and Green ccrcaptall)ed
last year's Rio Grande squad that
won 13 of Its flilal19 games to finish
16-21 overall and 9-5 In the Mid-Ohio
Conference.
Hochull paced the team and
league In earned run average at
2.51. He also had 33 strikeouts and
just 14 walks In 43 liUllngs of work.
Hochull had complete games In
each of his six starts and had a 3--3
record.
Hochull.was a three-year letterman at Rio Grande and earned all·
district honors once . He
transferred to Rio Grande from Sin·
clair Community College.

I
(

More than 50 years of Meigs
County cage representation In the
stilte's oldest prep conference, the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League,
comes to all end Saturday night af.
ter Meigs completes regular season play against the Jackson
Ironmen.The Marauders, completing 16
years of competition In the SEOAL,
jump to the Trl-Valley Conference
next year. Meigs County was re---preSE'nted by Pomeroy and MiddlE&gt;port High.!rom the mld·twentlE'S to
1967 when they consolidated to
form Meigs.
· Coach Greg Drummer's local
five host both Galllpolls and Jackson this weekend. Meigs has lost 25
consecutive SEOAL games. The
Mamuders are winless in 10 league
games this year while posting a 2-15
overall mark.
The defending champion Blue
Devils faltered early In the season,
but have come on like gangbusters
· lately. GAHS!s 12,.;on the year and

6-5 In loop action. GAHS defeated
M~igs 6l-37 earlier in the year.
AmQng thE' high points of 14-year
coach Jim Osborne's Devlls' season came two weeks ago with a 4439 upset over hlgtlly-regarded
Wheelersburg and last Tuesday's
70-46 win over Ironton.
Leading GAHS Is the third top
SEOAL scorer, 6-5 senior Jamie
__ !Jne (16.8) . Other starters are 6-0
senior Steve Skidmore, 6-4 senior
Tim Madison, 6-3 junior Chris Ellcessor, and 6.() senior Len Sheets.
Lane Is the league's top FG shooter
(58 percent).
·
·
Jackson, Saturday's opponent,
comes In at 7·11 overall and 3--7ln
SEOAL play.
The Ironmen bring In the loop's
fifth top scorer In AI Collins, a 16.7
per game point-producer. Jackson
beat Meigs 72--40 earlier.
The Marauders' Nick Riggs Is
lOth In the league In scoring with a
12.8 average.
Starting for the marauders wlll
be Rick Edwards and Riggs,

ALBANY
Jenny Meadows
scored 28 points and grabbed 13 re-bounds to pace t1!e Meigs Marauderettes to a convincing 59-41 w1n
over the Lady Spartans ol Alexander here Tuesday.
Coach Ron Logan's lad!f?s fln·

!shed their regular season at a suprising 8--12. Meigs plays this same
Alexander five Saturday at 1 p.m.
at Athens In first round sectional
play.
In addition !o Meadows' 28, Paula
Horton had 1 and Denise Stegall

I

Girls tournament basketball scores
Ofllolll~

Sl'hMit (ilrk

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llt• t ·~hu_l7. S p1 '1n ~ '~'- Stanloo l.l)('&lt;tl :~

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M1'Ctlna H l ~h l and :'iK. Mldp.wk illi
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Wllmln~lll O

l)u m&lt; · ~ . ( Yf

Green was the team's regular
catcher before being sidelined with
lnjurtes and forfeited his senior
year of competition.
Following Is the Rio Grande

roster:
RloGnade

~~~~~--

Name-Romefow~POI .

Kev!Jl Bryant, Sunbun;-, P
Penny Compton, Amanda, P -SS
-Joe DeCamp, Wheelersburg, OF
Al Pettwtller, Mc!lermott, P
Eric FrazJer, Cqlumbus, 2B
Jf!!f Gongwer-, w.,tervUJe, OF
PauJ Haller, Jackson, c
'
Maurf&lt;lll Harney, North Olmsted, P
John Kalman, Twtn&amp;burg, p
Pan Knost, Martella, 38
Po"'l Koeplle, Mason, P
Kevin Kramper, New Riegel, P

3
1

1

$35

Jf!!f I-eeth, Chillicothe. OF-IB

Steve Little, POI11froy, lB
llr1an Martin, McArthur, p
J. D. Merrttt,-LucasvWe, IF
Mike Miller, Sabina, SS

j

I
I
1
1
1
' 3
1

Mike Mflllgan, Pelaware, C-DH
Ban;- Schuater, Batavia, OF-IB
DaveSweatt, TWUw~. p
Flint Tackett, Lucasvtlle, p
Sam Toppins, Sclo!Ovllle, p
Ctorts Veldt, Logan, 3B
Jell Wayland, Mldlleport; p
John Weaver, Wbeerrsbw-g, C
Ken! Wolle, Racine, OF
Greg Zlckafoose, ClltUicothe. OF

With Gold Lance

IN RING
OPTIONS

I

Class Ring purchase.
For the Classes of
'83, '84 , '85 and '86.

Choose from a
big selection at
custom options
including : gold

letter on stone,
3-0 mascot, sports

2
1

emblems, tireburst
stone, your name on
the ring ... and others.

I

I
I

I

Bring this ad to our store now
to receive these great free offers.

Tilt rescheduled

F1ee oilers good wil h

The Southern-Hannan .T race
SVAC basketball contest has been
rescheduled for Saturday, Feb. ' l9,
at Hannan Trace High SchooL The
game was postponed last Fiiday
due to the snow storm.

Tick-ets for the EasternSouthwestern sectional tournament game scheduled for Monday
evening at Rio Grande College's
. Lyne Center are on sale at the high
school. Contact Dennis Eichinger
for further ·Information. All tickets
are $2 per pe'rsol).

G al~

Lana• Class Ring purCh11se s lhrou9h June 30

•VISA
•MASTER
CARD
•LAYAWAY

113 COURT
POMEROY, Oil
992-2054

Gold l.Hce Clus Rlnp • 2·4 Week DeliYery • Full Lifetime Warranty

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

FEBRUARY '83 SALE

-------

CLOSEOUT SALE
MEN'S

(RESERVEj\)

186 10.9

W.9
!16 6.0

SMALL &amp; MEDIUM

REG. PRICE 16.88 EACH

SALE
PRICE

$·4 00

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BAILEY SHOES

NOW

MIODlli'ORI. OH
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1lfj

!16 3.9
62 3.6

D. Fisher .................. ... 17 16 11 43 2.5
N. Bush ....................... l5 10 15 35 2.3
' L. Pow.U ..................... l
I 0 2 2.0
T. c.... u.. ................... l2 o o o o.o
·C. Shank ...................... 1 0 0 0 0.0
Others ................... ... -

TOI'ALS

1

11 •

0

2 --

tn rn ;18.7

overlime
contest
(• '

~

- !jOuthern 's freshmen edged Galli·
. poliS 43--39ln overtime on the GAHS
. h~wood Wednesday evening.
Gallipolis ended Its l'l!illlar sea.
sorr with a 7-7 record.
Strait paced the Galllans with 17
polilts. Grant added 10.
J;urell paced Southern with 10
points.
'!be regulation game ended In a
3J.33 tie.

MAGNAVOX 25" COLOR CONSOLE

chipped In 10. Bartlett led · Alexander with 15 while Martin had 10.
The Marauderettes made 25 of 65
field goal attempts for 38 percent
while Alexander made 18 of 44 for 41
percent. Meigs canned nine ol 19
foul· shots -for 47 percent.and Alex·
ander hit on five of16 for 31 percent.
Meigs completely controlled tl)e
boards, 47-18. Trlna Reeves had a
season-high 12 whlle 'Stegall added
11. Meigs made 11 turnovers while
Alexander lost ihe ball 12 Urnes.
The Marauderettes, who played
only eight games this year with
their original starting five due to
lnjurtes and Illness, played without
starter Cindy Crooks and resenoe
Cllthy Dean due to Illness.
- Coach Logan's crew, who lost
lour starters from last year's tear,n,
have won four of their last six.
In the reserve game, Meigs
· showed much promise for next year's lady cagers with a :ll-24 win to
finish the year at 13--7. Harrison
paced Meigs with 11 while Dalley
led Alexander with 10.

REG. 1698° 0

NOW

Wlllc!Uj!h"'· K til. Wll'kiKIC' ~:1

COUPON SAVINGS
FOR A PRESIDENT'S DAY

CELEBRATION!

ALEXANDER (II) -Burton 1-0-2; Hawk
2-2-6; BartiPH 7-1-15; Payne 1-0-2; Crabtree
3-IHi; Martin 1-2-10. 'IDTALS 111-S-11. , ·
MEIGII &lt;•)- Horton !1-~-11: SwtsherO-O-ll;
MeolJOWS 11-6-28; Stegall 1-2-IO: Reeves W.:

8clft "'
Meigs

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10 l2 10 9-4.1

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GRADUATION
KEY CHAIN

WORK JACKETS

MEIGS CAGE SCQRING

I
tV.O.RSll'\')
PLAYER
G FG fT TP AV.
N. Rlgxs ...................... ll 86 77 249 14.7
R.l:dwants .......... ....... 17 77 42 196 11.5
R.Chancey ..... , ............ l7 51 16 liB 6.0
G. Taylor ................... t7 42 31 115 6,8
J . Evans ..... .. .. ............. 17 21 11 53 3.1
B. Hotcomb ... .. ...... .. .... . l7 15 13 4.1 2.5
M. Kennedy ........ , ...... .. 16 7 2 16 1.0
G. Hobson ................. ... l5 0 4 4 0.3
Othen ....................... - 11 2 24 - TOI'.US
17 310 118 818 1!.1
M . Chancey .................. 17 !II ~
R. Wise .. ..................... 17 71 :r7
S. Gtoeon ...................... l6 39 18
J. Well&lt;er ..... .. .............. l 7 24 18
D. Thomas ................... l7 20 22

UPTO

Tickets on sale

guards, Greg Taylor and Rick
Chancey, forwards, and BUl Holcomb, center. Jay Evans sees a lot
of action off the bench.
Seniors playing their final game
at Larry Mortlson Gymnasium are
Edwards, Taylor. Chancey and
Holcomb.

•

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Yr.
3
1
1
I
2
2
4
2
1
2

Allen Azar. Marietta , OF

Alexander

• •

~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Marauderettes cop '59-41
•
win over Lady Spartans

l

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Joho Weaver, Grec Zlckafoose, J. D. Merritt, Terry Wayland, Jeft
Leeth, QtrJs Veldt, Kevin Kramer, Barry Schuster, Doug Koepfle, and
Dan Knost. 'lblrd row, Karl HochuH (es+tant coach), Larry Cook
(bead' coach), ADen Azar, Joho Kalman, Denny Comptoo, JeH Way·
land, F'Hnt Tackett, Jeft Gonper, Brian Martin/ AI DettwiJier, and
Steve Green (•ssWant coach).
·
.

Meigs plays final SEOAL
cage contests this weekend

Jack Anderson •

to war over border differencE'S [or
four days In 1977, arid when Sadat
was finally assassinated In October
1981, Qaddafllndulged in a tasteless
display of public exultation.
But even during the years of hostlllty, Qaddafi repeatedly made secret overturE'S to Cairo. A secret
CLA report noted that, while he was
sending out his assassination
squads, Qaddafl stlll ''trted privately to reach a reconclllatlon
with Sadat, believing that theE~
tlan leader eventually would see
the error of his ways."
The Libyan was also trying to
butter up Ghazala durtng that per'tod. He evidently thought he had
succeeded, as shown by his secret
phone call, the details of which
were disclosed to my_ ilssoclate

Register flt our store to win an ATAAI400'"'
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Rio names assistant baseball -· coach~s

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WASHINGTON- Libyan dictaAs a young pan· Arab zealot, Qadtor Muammar Qaddafl made an dati was an admirer of the chartsembarrassing mistake recently. malic Egyptian leader Gamal
He put In a secret telephone call to Abdel Nasser, who at one point
Egyptian DefenSE' Minister Abu
tried to unite Egypt and Libya as
Ghazala and suggested that Libya
the first step In creating one gl-eat
and Egypt go to war against Israel. Arab nation. Though Qaddafl was
Qaddafi had misjudged his man. ance close to Nasser's successor,
Marshal Ghazala 's reply to the U. Anwar Sadat- he even lived for a
byan strongman's suggE'Stion was time In Sadat's home - the libyan
diplomatic but succinct: Egypt,
strongman came to believe that SaGhazala pointed out, has a peace dat had betrayed Nasser's pan·
treaty with Israel and does not In- Arab dream.
tend to break 1t.
The Camp David accords beIf nothing else, Qaddafl's aston- tween Egypt and Israel seemed to
ishing phone call shows that he is set Qaddafl's hatred for Sadat In
not mellowing, a5 has been rP- concrete. For years, the two of
ported. His goal Is still what It has -them engaged In shrill rhetorical
always been - to destroy Israel exchanges, and each plotted coupS
_and united theArabworld underhls and assassinations against the
own banner.
other. The two countriE'S even went

•

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-

Qaddafi's call for war

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PH-.992-211 t
MON.-SAT. 8:00 TO 5 :00

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�Thursday,
Pomeroy-Middlepc:rt, Ohio

Thursday, February 17, 1983

Tar _H eels,
Iowa surprises ·Indiana five
By KEN RAPPOPORT

'

KITCHEL STOPPED - Indiana's high scoring
Ted Kitchel (center ) Is tied up by Iowa's Greg Stokes
(left ) and Bob Hansen (right) at the closing minutes
of the Big Ten match In Bloomington Wednesday

night. Iowa held Kitchel to six points and upSet the
number two ranke d Hoosiers, 58· 57. ( AP
Laserphoto) ·
.
.

AP Sports Writer
As far as the North Carolina
basketball team was concerned, the
Maryland Terrapins picked the
wrong time to find the three-point
range.
. Relatively Ineffective for most of .
the season with their. long· ran~
bonus shot s. · the Terps suclclenly ,
couldn't miss Wednesday night as
they bombarded the nation's third·
ranked team·t06-94.
·
"The shot was there. so I took It, "
sa id Adrian Branch , who sank two
of the long-range baskets tolaunch a
29-8 Maryland streak at the start of
the second half. "Only this time. I
made them. "
All told, the Terps hit half of their
18 attempts from beyond the
three-point line afier coming into
the game with a .297 average.
Branch, who had been 4-lor-27 from
the three-point range. hit5-of-10 thls
time.
"We owed them omi." said
Branch, referring to North Carolina's six straight victories ove r the
Terps. "I guess the law of averages
caught up with them ." .
North Carolina Dean Smit h
tipped his hat to Maryland. •
"Mary land deserved to win . They
outhustled us and quicked us to the
loose balls during their stretch run.
They were well prepared. They
·knew what they had to do, a nd did

Broncos shock OU Bobcats
ByTIMPUET
1\S...ciated Press Writer
Ohio University' s Bobcats may
have
on a~ emotional high
Monday night after upsetting De·
P aul. bu t they were brought back to
earth quickly with a · shocking
Mid-American Conference loss to
last-place Western Michigan on
Wednesday.
The Broncos knockedOhiooutofa
tie for the MAC lea d with a 6!\-59
victory and enabledBowlingGreen.
which downed Kent Sta te 74-65. to
move into sole possession of first
place w ith a 1Q.3 conference mark.
Ohio and Miam i are tied for
second at 94. The Redskins. who
meet Bow ling Green on Saturday,
edged Centra l Michigan 59·57 in
overtime. In another overtime
contes t. E astern Michigan got by
Northern Illinois 56-53. Toledo
posted a n 84-66 victory at Ba UState
to round out the conference
schedule .
Ohio tra iled 38-27 a t the half. but
tied the score at 53-53 with 6:42 to
play. But the Bobcats ran out of gas
after 'that and were out scored 12-6

been

down the stretch. It was only the
third win in 13 MAC starts for the
Broncos. who ar~ 5-18 overalL Ohio
is 16-6.
Cordell Eley paced Western
Michigan with 22 points whill' John
Devereaux had 14 for Ohio.
Winning Coach Vernon Payne
said he thought Ohio. pla yin ~ its
third gam e in five night s. might be
tired : "We wanted to [as t -~rea k
against them in the first half and get
a lot of opportunity baskets. which I
thought we did very weU." he said.
Ohio m entor Da nny Nee said the
Broncos ·'played hard a nd we were
just totally outplayed.' '
Bill Fainescored 21 point s to pace
Bowling Green to it s victory over
Kent State. 6-7. Dave Zeigler had a
game-high 22 for the Flashes.
The Falcons converted 28 of 38
free throws and Coach J ohn Weinert
sa id. "Kent prevented us from
setting up inside. That put us at the
free throw line, but we converted
quite a few of them."
•
"We shot very poorly," sa id Kent
State Coach Jim McDo nald said.
"Bowling Green was probably

it.''
It was the second consecutive loss

respons ible for much of that. They
wen" fly ing out a t Ziegler on the
baseline ...
Freshman Ron Harper led Miami
with 16 points, including four of its
s ix in overtime. Melv in McLaughlin, the MAC's leading scorer. was
held to 18 points, six below his
average, for Central Michiga n, 4-9.
"We jus t wanted to keep
McLa ughlin away from the
bas ket, ·· said Miami Coach Darrell
Hedric.
Ken Epperson scored 25 points
a nd grabbo;!d 14 rebounds to pace
Toledo against j3all State. John
Green and Mitch Adamek had 20
apiece for the Rocket s while Ray
McCa llum ta llied 21 [or t he Cardi·
nals. Both tea m s are 7-6.
Two free throws · by Maurice
Adams with 14 seconds left in
overtime clinched victory for E as t·
ern Michigan. 4-9 . .
Northern Illinois. 6-7. played
without . it s head coach, John
McDougal. who was admitte&lt;;l td the
local hospital for observation. It was
the first game he had missed in his
33-year coaching career.

OklahomaState~. ,

Top Ten
Greg Stokes scored 22 po~!s and
Bob Hansen snapped a tie late in the
game and then protected Iowa's
s limleadw!thtwofreethrowsinthe
closing ml!tute as the Hawkeyes
edged the Hoosiers.
·

Randy Wittman. who scored a
game-high 33 points for the Hoosiers
on 16 of21 shootillg. hit a three-point
field goa) with six seconds left ahd
the Hoosiers had one more chance to

Berenyi
·loses case

.

'

Tanya McNeal paced South west·
er.n with 17 markers, Tanya Adkins
netted eight. Tr11-c1 Huff five, Carrie
1
Wa lker four. Diana Nlda four.
Traci Huff five. and Penny Taber!
one.
Southern raced to an 18-6 first pe·
r!od lead, then blitzed through the
second round with 21 points and a
39-18 halftime lead.
Southern had a slow third round.
but held a 49-24 edge before eruptIng in the last round for the 76-39
finale.
Lare11 Wolle, Debbie Michael
and Cindy Evans were credited
with fine defensive efforts and control of Southern's inside strategy.
L!ttlelleld led SHS with 12 rebounds, Wolle grabbed seven. Ml-

Meanwhile. second-ranked Indi·
a na was up~t by No. 16 Iowa 58-57.
In other action invoivtng the
na tion's Top Twenty, No. 8 VlUanova stopped Providence 64-58: · No ..
17 Syracuse trtpPecJ Seton Ha ll96-68
and No. 19 Oklahoma edged

.~

chael five , a nd .Evans four .
Southern hit 27 of 67 from the field
a nd 22 of 28 at the line , while SWHS
hit three of 17 from the line.
Southern next plays in the Gall!a
Academy sectional tournament on
Tuesday, Feb. 2. beginning at 7
p.m.
In the nig htcap, Eastern faces
Federal Hocking at 9 p.m .
Southern (16) - Mel Weese J-6.12; Tanya
Salser B..Q-1G: Amy Littlefield 9-11·2J: Laren
Wolfe 1-24: Clndr Evans 2M: Debbie Mlc hael l -24; Jenny BentJey 3-0-6: Julie Houdashell 0.1-1. Totals 27-22-76.
~
Soutbwt!Stem (39) - Saijdfa Patric k 0.()..0;
To(lya Adklns 4-Q.S ~ Ca rrie Walker 2-0-4; D l·
ana Nlda 2-04: T rac! Huff 2-1-5; Penny 1'a·

bel1 IJ.H T onya Mc!'eal B-1-17. 'r.talo
1!;-:1-:11.
'
Sc ore b)' quarters:
Southern
18 21 10 27-76
SWHS
6 12 6 15-39

CINCINNATI (AP) -The t in·
cinnatl Reds now have a 5·3 record
in three years of arbitration of
players" salaries. They are 1-I this
year with one still at bat.
Pitcher Mario Solo. 14-13 with a
2,79 earned run average and whose
274 strikouts were second In'. the
National League. won his salary
disputE' with the Reds. The club said
Soto will earn $625,000. The Reds
offered him $450.00).
Last year he made $295.000 alter
winning another arbitration.
But pitcher Bruce Berenyi. who
wanted $229,00) despite his 9-18
won-loss record, has to settle for the
$150,tnl the Reds originally offered,
him .
Ironically. the Reds had offerro a
last-minute compromise of $175.00)
but Berenyi's agent . Justin Hirsch
rejec·ted it. .
"I offered him a package of
$175,00) to settle the thing. That's a
$100,00) roise for a man that lost 18
games," said Woody Woodward,
Reds' assistant genera! manager.
The decision on relief pitcher Joe
Price is still out. The hearing
washeld F r iday in Chicago before
a n arbitrator.
Solo. who is represented by Tom
Reich, may be the Reds' second
highest paid pitcher ever .

1-------------·':

.----~-r-:--:--:--~ ,.;
The Daily Sentinel
I(
(USPS l!HIII I
A Dtvillotl ol MullirMda, lac.

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a

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PCSI'MASI'ER: send addl't'SS to 1be
DaUy SOntlnel. 111 Court St. Pomeroy. ...
Ohlo 415769.

One Year· ...... .................. .... ....... $52.80
SINGELCOPY

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o.uy .. ... ............................. 211 cents
Subscribers not destrW!: to pay the carrier
may remit In advance direct to The Dally.
sen.Unel on 3, 6 or 12 month basis. Creclt
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Southeastern Ohio

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~ ~=~ :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

52 Weeks ....... ........................... S.~:U8

.,,

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Outolde Ohio
13 Weeks .. ..... ........................... 115.21
26 Wreks ................... ....... .. ..... 129.61
52 Weeks ................. .. ..... : ......... 156!11

Double-figu re scoring by Kyger
Creek's.J.D. Bradbury, Brent Love
a nd Jeff Moles 'p aced Kyger Creek
10 a 67-57 come-from-behind v ictory
over host Southwestern in a SVl\C
makeup game Wednesday nighl .
KC upped its SVAC record to 7-2.
The BobCats are 154 on the season.
The Highlanders dropped to ·3-6 In
loop action and are 5-13 overall .
borne court, SW
Oefendl·ng thel·r
·
jumped to a quick advantage over
· the Bobcats, end!ngthefirstquarter
with a 15-13 lead . Despite a recenf .
Illness. Roger Wells exploded for 27
points and, helped by 18 from Paul
McNeal, SW"sleadwasincreasedto
33-30 at the half.
·'
·
·The Highlanders still kept KC on
the run in the third quarter, leading
by &lt;i single point as both teams
entered the fina l period. But that
quavter told the tale. as KC
regrpuped and outscored SW by 14.
Th•gamesawbothteamspeform
well '[rom the foul line, with each
recoidlng an identical 11 baskets
from 13 attem~ts for 84 percent.

From the field, the Bobcats led with
46 percent on 23 of 50 tries,
compared to SW's 39 percent (23 of
59).
Bradbury scored 19 for KC, with
Love contributing 18 and Moles 16.
Bradbury was also credited with
eight of KC's 21 rebOunds. McNeal
was aga in SW's leading rebounder,
snatching 13 or his team's 29
rebounds.
The record book also showed the
Bobcats had 16 turnovers and 16
· of those aos Ists were
assJsts . Seven
provided b~ Keith O ark, and 'KC

a lso notched six stea ls. SW had 19
turnovers a nd eight assists.
KC ends regular league play for
this season Friday when it hosts
Eastern. The Highlanders take on
Southern on the Tornado court the
same night.
KYGER CREEK (87J -Clark 2-Z.6: Motes
~6- 1 6; Bradbury 7-5-19; LOve 6-6-18; Stroud
142, R. Manln 2-1- 5; o. Manln IJ.l-l. 'r.talll
%1-!1-n
SOtmiWESTERN (~7J- McNeal ~lB;
Well!i 10.7·27: Layton 2-0-4; Baker().4.4: Meek
142; Pelfrey 1.0.2. Totals 2:1-11-~1.
Score by quarteni:
Kyger Cret:k

!Southwes;.im

13
15

17 13 24-67
lB 14 10-57

r'___;;....__S~....;.~.------:.~------...,
.,
Wt·tkl~v· P~ Sport~&gt;

'l'nu\.'i&amp;W:tiOr\'i

By 'Tht• ~h.. t.&gt;d ~..
BASEBALl.
1\nlf'ric;aln LeU«tn'

CLEVF.L\ND 1NDIAN5-.~i~rwd Jul io

F'nlllm. lnfll'ld&gt;r. and Cnrmf'n Castillo.
KM·In RhomiX't'fl!:, IRJtllcltrrs. to OIK'-.Y"ar
rontrn c t ~ .

MINNrnarA 1WINS-Si,t!ned Ran¢.·
.Johnson. ck's~atrd 11111er, and Jock
O'Connor. pltC'hl&gt;r. 10 'onc&gt;-~"-'ar t'OOI n.cl:oJ.

N!Uinn.ll.l
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ANGF.I.~

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OODI ;f·:Ks--SI J.!'I~

Rick Rod:.!~ . pll ch('l·, to a onE-')IPar ron·
tn u.' l .
NF.W \'OR!\ MF.TS--Signcd B rl~m G ilf'S

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and .ICW' Oq lJI•r~dO. lnflt&gt;idt&gt;f'!l , and

Trrry
l..&lt;'och.. pltl'l\(&gt;r, to 01')1"'.\l("llJ' rontrattii,
i'"amf'li Strw• Garland, ~is.s lr;;rant tralnN.
RASKE'I1lALL
Nutlorwl &amp;Hkttbi&amp;IJ t\J;fooclatlon
I ND I ANA
PACERS-Tradrd
Clm10n

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HIGH POTENCY
VITAMIN FORMULA
WITH MIIIIERALS .

30 FREE With 100

,$6.19

The ll9th· birthday of Mrs. Edna
Reibel was obSt•rvcd S&lt;J turday with
:a party at her hom&lt;•.
Gifts and cards wrrr.presentcd to
Mrs. Reibel. Attending were Mrs.
Steven Craig and Sarah. Mr. and
Mrs . Jim Shato a nd Kri stin. Mr. a nd
Mrs . Donley Reibel . a nd Henry
Reibel.
Mrs. Shato baked the
birthday ca ke for hPr grandmother.

MAKE
heritage house

AND .

our work.

- -·" rr: '
Simpson

This year whh over 100 changes In the tax lawa and
forms, you have more chances of making a mletake..
And that could mean an IRS audh. If H&amp;R Block
prepares your taxes and you're audited. we go with
you at no added cost. Not as your legal npra·
sentativa, but to explain how your taxes wan prepared. 11 we maka a mistake and you owe addhlonal
tax, you pay only the tax . We pay tha panahy and
intarast ,

Announcements

OPEN WEEKDAYS

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

.

~·

$i•"aiKiparents are Mr. and Mrs.
H. James of Route 31
and Mr. and Mrs.
J. Jenkins, Route 6, PortS,
Great,grandparen!s are
Anna James. Portsmouth;
and. Mrs. Hubert ' Early,
Lllisv!lle, Ky. , and Mr. and Mrs.

BOLD.

B!llee Renea Pooler, daughter of
Nellie Borgan has returned from
Sharon and WUUam Pooler Jr .. , a five week vacation. Sh&lt;' visited In
Chester, observed her third birth- WC'st Palm Beach . Miami. and
day Feb. 10.
Orla ndo. Fla.. and then bclol'&lt;'
Attending the observance were returning home visi ted her sister in
her grandmothers, Mrs. James In·
Port Ashby and Springfield .
gels and Mrs. Inez Pooler, her
Visiting Mrs. Borgan ove r the
brothers, Randy King and Terry
weekend wel'&lt;' family members.
Pooler, her sister, Debbie Pooler, Michael and Dominic Borgan. Gary
an aunt, Bobble Pauley and Wendy
a nd Terry Borgan, P hyll!s Borga n.
Elkins.
Julie a nd .Jamie. Reynoldsburg;
James a nd,Betty Borga n, Lancaster; Rosella and Debra Birchfield,
Albany; and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Teresa Devin Simpson, daughter
Birchfield
D. W. and Denise,
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Simpson Jr.,
Albany.
celebrated her !l!th birthday on

. I'

••

••'!;

l
I

'

AND STANDARD

PIATURIS
LIKI TIIISE:

-temiO-

TO WANT IT!

; 5.811ter Y:e -'ne and automatiC
.
transmitiiOn wnn 1oa1ng torQtJe

converter•
I"ICII-PIIItonsteennv • POwer

·

front dire brakes • Rectlnlnv front .
bucl&lt;et seats • Illuminated QUartZ
dock.

,Johnson, ('('fll&lt;'r. and a th.ln:l·roulld druft

FORD

. "Your

headQuarters for

461 S. 3rd Ave., Middleport, OH.
,I .

ONLY

$3 24

$} 99

ONLY

Reg. '3.33

GAVISCON

Simpson

I!
•

•

l

'

.

,.'

ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY

~xt!Miefy 85% ot 1111

AEP !lyatem'a 110"' 118M&lt;·
allnQ capacity 11 coal·llred,
10Y, Ia nuclear IIIII the remainder Ia oil· or gu-llred,
or hydroelectric. The Co""

!.
t

t

..

CAPSULES

FRIDAY

OF SHOES

.18

TRIAMINIC
EXPECTORANT

believes that Ita coat
aupptlea are adequate to
enable ttto meet the antlcl·
patecl atectrtc -.w ,.qui,.
~~any

menta iii Ita cuetomn during
the year:
·
·

.'

.

S795
PLUS TAX

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

Triamlnk:
...... ....
..,~

2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH.

4 oz.
Reg. $J.85

·
.
$211
ONLY
'

.

-..... 0019

..........
... " . ...

.

SATURDAY ,

PKG.
OF 10

TABU

COLOGNE
v••oz ..

ONLY'$1 49

Reg. 11.50

IG
WHITE FISH
POTATO
VEGETABLE
ROLLS
SALAD BAR
DESSERT
NON-ALCHOLHOLIC
BEVERAGE

$313

heritage house

WTH NEEDLE ·

\

.

'

EXTRA STRENGTH

U-1 00 DISPOSABLE
INSULIN SYRINGE

March 18, 1981 , the Company
hereby apprises the public
of the state of electric supply
In Its service area.

The· Company's electric load. Reserves of at least this
po,wer supply facilities - ln- level are expected to be availcl~dlng power generating
able throughout the year ·and
plants, major tranamtaaton to extend at nea~y the aarne
facilities and lnterconnec· level Into the peak load period
tiona with neighboring alae· ol next winter (19113-1964).
trlc utility syatoma - are
ad~uate to provide reliable.
Generating-capacity ree(oj:trlc aervlce to Ita cua· serves are required In order
toillert. Currently, excludtnv . to~ unexpected tncraasea
temporary power aatea tO' tn system load, to provide
'other utility ayetema, gon· tor an effective program of
orating-capacity reaorvea of · preventive matntenanct of
. thti American Electric P.o- genlt"atlng facllltlea and to
(AEP) System, of whiCh 01110
allow for random llltutdowne
Pow"! Ia a part , are approxl· : and loading curtailments of
matelr 39 percent of puk generating unlta.

I

TYLENOL

Feb. 11 at her parents' home on

PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY

PLrsuant td the Company's
Capaclly and Energy Emer·
gency Control Pr9gram
approved by the Public Utll·
It lea Commlaston of Ohio on

$4e39
50's ONLY

'

!

GOING

6 OZ. WITH SPRAYER

Reg. 15.23

Your
.Family
Shoe
Headquarters

.'

'r,

BEAUTIFUL
WHEN YOU

MOUTHWASH
&amp; GARGLE

6 oz.

:;..~~

'

CHLORASEPTIC

FORMULA
·COUGH
MIXTURE

lOO's

'"'· Clo.

PAT

THERAGRAN M

ANTACID
TABLETS

I'F'S THUNDERBIRD
FOR 1983 ...

AT

WE'VE GOT THE SOLUTION:

Reibel

.

;

we guarantee

plck in )9f'4 to tbr Philadelphia 7firPrt fOr
Rus..&lt;; &amp;hoenl'. foN1an:l. and a flnt .ltiJnd
M1LWAUKEF. BUCKS-Pb.n'od Br1lill
Wlnttn, «Uard, on lhr lnjl.lft'd IIIII, M11·
vatt'CI Olarlk&gt; Cr1JS. RU&amp;rd.

Pooler

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES

a-&amp;rt pll'k In 1!11.1 and a S(&gt;COO(j.round
tr,dt pk'k . Jn 1!114.
'

•

At H&amp;R Block

High school scores

ports transactions ,

·

Rose Hill in Pomeroy.
Celebrating with Teresa were
Ertca and -Randy Roble, Jennifer
and Darre,ll Stewart, Jason and Jan
Sheets, her sisters, ValerieanclJoanie and her · grandmother, Mrs .
Jane Simpson.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii~~~~;;~·
I

Rellever Tom Hume won a
$59o,!Ol salary arbitration last year
and signed a multi-year conractt his
winter.
"I don' t think there is a ny doubl.
Both sides presented strong cases
and we're ta lking about a quality
pitcher, and quality people are
making the presentation" said
Woodward.
"The decision was made based on
comparative salaries around the
leagues. He is a quality pitcher .. At
this point in his career we. think
$625,00) Is too much. We think
$450,00) is more justified," said
Woodward.

""'.

Harold Chase. Middleport.
SRA James Is stationed at the
Elmendorf Air F~rce B!lse in
Anchorage. He and hls wife. the
former Beth Jenkins, were recently
visited by her parents, David and
Ruth Jeni&lt;IJ\s.

, ,

e

.

Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Stivers of
Middleport are announcing the
· bltth of a daughter. Emily Jean,
.bqrn Jan. 18 ln Holzer Medical
~nter, Gall!pol!s.
The Infant weighed six pounds.12.
ounces. Grandparents are Mr. and \
Mrs. Donald F . Stivers, Middleport.
arkt 1'!1r. and Mrs. Hugh Custer.
P6meroy. Mrs. M.L. French ~ Mld.dlfix&gt;rt. is a great-grandmother.
.

mves
OtOOHI·fi~·Mol~!&gt;oBa."'k..'lhd
F ourth per1o'd rally ~~
~z:..::;~~:=~~~"''"
"""~" w-·"""'
.
:I.:I~•;.:R-..:B=-~-o
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Kyger Creek 6 7-5 7 loop win r__:~::~~~:f:,;:~:~:~~w;~·-~·:,:~:~~"~::~~~~r:~·~=-~~~~~~~~~~~:.~--~I'ICI~IOII~·~to~go~to~HII~·~·~ck~.~~
•

UNDER THE WEATHER?

¥eigs ·residents record area's births and birthdays

·one Month ................... ..............suo

OfI

lions were received this year than
in any past year. More lndMduals
made contrlbutlons than ever be·
lore. And more people than ever
before attended the PPSEO annual
meeting."
·
·
· Churches and govCI')tm~hW units in each of the counties also make
substantial cash or lnk!nd contrtbu·
Uons, such as space and u till ties. All
In all, PPSEO Is recognized as a
valuable community resource.
Though there are nearly :.nl
Planned Parenthood aff!l!ates nationally and 13 in Ohio, PlaMed
Parenthood of Southeast Ohio coordlnates·1 percent of all the countybased clinics In the U.S.
PPSEO Is a private non-profit organlzalton which provides conli.dentlal family planned services.
Over 15,00) families have been ·
served In Its eleven years of operation In a seven county area which
includes Gallla, Jackson, Meigs,
Athens, VInton, Hocklitg and Lawrence counties. The county offices
are staffed full time with patient
services assistants who can be
reacbed by phone to make an
appointment:

'

''

StJIISCRlP'l10N RATES
8)' Canter or Motor Route
One Week .... .. ........... ................. $1.00 '

awa\lable.

""'""":~

ntie

Avenue. New York, New York 10017.

The Sports

uo.

cent. Staff were trained as patient and ex~eeded hopes. Thfs enables
sevlces assistants to do all the Inter·
PPS!':O to rontlnue to provide ectu·
viewing, counseling, 81)d lab work.
cation, medical, ahd counseling
The benefits of this consolidation of services In the area of reproductive
service delivery Includes more ophealth for au women.
itons for apPointments, shorter
The federally funded Title X prowaiting time untU the appointment, ' gram was developed to provide ac-·
and less Ume walling on the apcess tq family planning services for
pointment day, In addition, the pa- women who would not otherwise be
tient Is seen by few staff people, so
able to afford this. health care. One
that the famUy planning services of the conditions mandated ln. ac·
are more personalized nad ceptlng this money Is to make famdignified.
Ily planning services available to
Modlflcatlon of the new effective- low-Income families. The reduction
ness model system has continued of Title X funds means more of
through regular staff meetlogs in
these people have to pay lor the ser·
which a!) staff have participated. vices they receive, a hardship for
many. ·
The work of transition has con·
tlnued throughout the year.
The success of 1982 is due In part
The willingness of patients to pay to clients being willing to take more
The board and administration de- for services: .$3,001 In 191ll, $:1p,lXXJ respons!blUtv lor their own health
In 1!181, $62,00) In 1982, graphically care. They come to PPSEO more
s~ed to· plan to ·change the way
services were offered. In order to . demonstrates both the desire of knowledgeable, and thus more :wil·
sttetch the agency's money and area families for family plaMlilg ·ling and able to make decisions for
stJU provide quality reproductive services, and their satisfaction with their own ·health care. PPSEO ser·
vices are available to people of all
health care to as many. persons as PPSEO.
Income levels.
The
beginning
of
1983
reveals
a
pOssible.
According to Kay Atkins, execusuccuss stocy. The caseload for all
~e public health model of ser·
tive
director, "the communjties we
vice delivery was replaced by an counties has Increased over 1981. by
serve also contrtbuted to this suce!tectlvenE55 model. Clinic staffing ll percent. The adjustments that
cess story. More private contribup;jtterns were reduced by 50 per- were made accomplished goals

· Call Your
...
COMMUNITY
MENTAL HEALTH CENTER
*992-2192*

&lt;

door to tile world of structured per·
$40.
·•
· techniques In color selection and
" will teacha:hildren the 1value of
formance. Herdman has perAdult dance will be Instructed by
application of paint on the canvas.
recyclables as well as an\~terna·
formed In a variety of theatrical
Cindy Nau. This class is designed
The'class will run six weeks at $18.
tlve to boretlom on rainy d;ys and
groups In southeast Ohio.
toward the adult ages and up deslr·
:'Making Somethln" from Nosummer m9nths. Old gloves, sandYouth dance Instructed by Cindy
log Instruction In baste movements
thln'O will be taught by Jody_~·
paper and egg-cartons are a few' of
Nau. Beginning, preschoolers beof ballet. The advancement of this
kenship. For adults It will Include , the rna teril$ ~ to Introduce the
tween the age of four and six - will
course level will be determined
how to design arid construct tunc- world of llnaglnatlon. The class
be taught basic movements and
through _the development of the par·
tiona! objects for the home and lor
runs for six WPP.ks at $15.
•
warmups Involved In dance !or 10
tlclpants. lt offers a chance to fref!m with recyclable materials . Deweeks at $32.50. The Intermediate ' shen up youth ballet !nstrucUon or ·' tailed directions will be given lor
Enrollment lor classes will con·
jevel will be determined through
develop beginning techri!ques In
producing objects such as a clbwn
tinue through Feb. 26. For further
age and development of a student
mobile, clothes pin dolls, kitchen . lntormatlon on these programs and
dance fo~ 10 weeks at
after the beginning levels for 10
Painting Instructed by Margaret helpers. The class wllllastlOweeks
their time schedules, contact
weeks at $37.50. The advanced level
Brimm Is a continued Instruction or and the fee is $25.
Campbell~Eaton at The French Arl
will be determined through age and
the baste painting level. Mrs.
For youths, ages seven and up,
Colony, P .O. Box 472, Gall!polls,
development of a student after the
Brimm area
Is a artist
well-known,
prates- r "Making
Somethin' From Noth!n'
Ohio 45631.
446-3834.
s!onal,
and Instructs
________________
. . :._(614)
. . :._______
Intermediate level for 10 weeks at

During the month of February,
Planned Parenthood of Southeast
Ohio Is celebrating the completion
of1the first year anniversary of Its
new style of clinic operation. 1!182
h¥ been a year of change and suc~ for the ageilcy, and launches a
new approach 19 low cost family
pll!Ming·services.
~ 1!1111, It became apparent that
at. least 25 per cent of
X fund·
Ink from the federal government
w~uld be cut. Then, In 1982, Title
XX funding was altered by the Ohio
Department of Public Welfare so
that It was no longer a feasible
source of reimbursement for fam·
Uy planning services. This represented ·a further loss of Income.

. ,.
Sometimes your kids may · -~
seem impossible
COUNSELING CAN HELP "
COMMUNICATIONS
'"

.

rangements at Ohio University Opera Theatre as well as completing
72 hours of lnd!vldual vocallnstruc·
tion. These lessons are open from
the beglnn1ng vocal. Interest to an
advanced, trained voice. Youths
under the age of 14 are advised not
to participate. Instructions are
taught by the hour at $12orone-half
hour at $6. These lessons may begin
any time.
Youth Expression ,workshop .
taught by Rob Herdman, This cla5s
Is designed to introduce children to
the perfOrming llspect Ot sell·
expresslori. Techniques In mime
and theatrical
expression opens the
.

Planned Parenthood marks first ·year of clinic

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

Member: The Associated Press, Inland
Dally Press A.ssodatloo and thE- !Jneri·
can Newspaper Publishers AssoclaUon.
National Advertising · Representative.
Branham f'i~ saJes, 733 Th1rd

Your
Station
For
High School
Basketball
And Ohio
University

Tile Frencll Art Colony Is taking
enrollments for the lli!COnd quarter
classes trom March 1 to May 10,
according to Director Connie
Cempbell·Eaton. Enrollments ln
tho;o following classes are now being
accepted:
Art Swvey taught by Dr. Lawrence James, a hlstm1cal view of
the fine art development between
the period of Egyptian era to contemporary times. This coui,'Se will
be taugl\t In )wo·sections, each seC·
tion 10 weeks at Ul per secilon.
Voice Individual InstruCtion by
Robert Allen Saunders. Saunders
has performed various operatic ar·

win atter Hansen missed the first of '
a one-and-one free throw opportunl- "
ty .However, Iowa stole a Winston .'
Morgan pass to protect its second ' '
trtumphover the Hoostersthlsyear. "
''Both teams played·reallyliard,"
said Indiana Coach Bobby Knight. .~
''The . basketb;lll Is not nearly as .
gQOd as tho;o htistk;'. Iowa took '
advantage of more things than we "
did and those three straight baskets '•
by Hansen down '!he stretch, that . '
kind of broke our back.·' .
Indiana led 5046 when Hansen ·
went on his tear. with his final ''
basket giving Iowa a ·lead it never
gaveup.
'.
"It was a great win for our guys," ~­
said Iowa Coach Lute Olson.

Published every afternoon ... Monda,y
through Friday. 1l1 Court Slnol&gt;t, by the
Ohlo Valley PubUshl~ Company • Multimedia, Inc .• Po""""Y· 01\lo 4571i9. 9922156. Second class postage paid at

Se tinel Page--5

The Daily

French Art Colony .offers variety of classes for ·residents

,

Pomeroy. Ohio. ·

Southern girls end regular·
season play with . 17-2 mark
RACINE - Southern Tornadoettes whipped up 27 fourth period
points en route to a 76-39 lambasting
of the Southwestern Highlanders
Wednesday to complete a perfect
8·0 season in the league. Southern
claimed its fourth consecutlv~
sv AC championship.
Coach Connee Enslen' s girls
ended regular season play with a
17-2 record.
Eight Tornadoettes broke into
the scoring column led by Amy Littlefie ld's 29 points. Senior Tanya
Salser added 16, and point guard
Mel Weese canned 12. Jenny Bentley was next in line with six, Laren
Wolfe had four, Cindy Evans four,
Debbie Michael four, a nd Julie
Houdashelt one.

for the Tar Heels, 21·5, and their first
defeat in the Atlantic Coast Conference this season alter eight
victories.
Maryland, 15-6 overall a nd 44 in
theACC, traUed4640at halftimebut
took the lead for keeps with a
13-polnt string to go up .5548.A
three-pointer by North .Carollna's
M a tt Doherty broke the strtng, but
·the Terps ~dded another eight in a
row to make It 63-51 and they
extended their lead to 6,q.54 with 10
minutes remaining.
Maryland's staggering 66-pbint
second half helped the Terps run up
their highest point total evl"r against
a Tar Heel team. The previous high
was 105 In an ACC tournament
game In 1974.
.

Pomeroy Middleport, Qh,.,..

i

.
•
•'•

Marylan~ j~lts

'17, 1983

8 OZ. NEW Y.ORK STRI_P
POTATO
VEGETABLE
ROLLS
SALAD BAR
DESSERT _
NON-ALCHOLIC
BEVERAGE ·

HUMIDIFIER

ON~Y49¢

~e~llon
I

CANDY BARS

5/$}00

99¢

COOL MOISTURE

.LIGHTERS

REG. 30'

ONLY

ONLY

$}495

SCHICK

· DISPOSABLE RAZORS

$1 09
____ _________ _
SUJISHER LOHSE
I
:~_- of 5

.
ONLY

11.98

....._

S795
. PLUS TAX

.

DINNER SERVED 5·9 EACH EVENING

Pharmacy

K....,. M&lt;&lt;••-· • -••·

c...''"""''"· • -••·

R_.lll Hani,.., R. P" .
Min. ttwu sat. l lOia.m. to• p.m .

SuftdliY 11 1 •t.1t ~ ••nc1 Uo' .m.

PIUSCRIPTIONI
II!. Mllln

--

.

p,ttfMIIy $M'VIct

,_H , ttHtU

Pom•ntv. 0 .

-·- ----

0ptn Nilhb till t

1.

~

�Page-6-The Doily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Thursday,

Thullday, Fs4J..,ary 17, 1983'

Meigs County organization members gather for meetings, .eveJ;ltS
Past Officers Club
Th&lt;:&gt; a nnual family di!Uler of the
Past Orricers Club of Racine
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star,
was held at the Country Restaurant
in Racine Sunday afternoon.
Bernice Carpenter presided at
the bus iness meeting following the
dinner. New officers e lected were
Louise Stewart, preside nt; Chlorus
Grimm, vice president ; Gretta
Simpson, secreta ry; and Maxine
Philson, treasurer.
.. •
It was dl&gt;cided to hold meetings on
the second Thursday of each month.

Modern Wcxximen
Valentines a nd fruit baskets were
sent to hospita lized members a nd
cheer plates taken to shutins as a
special project or the Modem

WOOdme n of America , Camp l&lt;ml.
Members met for a valentine
party at the Coolville cafeteria with
prizes for the oldest, funntestt and
most unusual valentines going to
Frances Henderson, Coolville; and
Ida Livingston and Naomi Graham,
Brimstone RJ~e.
The !&gt;ledge and creed service to
open the meeting was led by Geor~
Donovan, Alfred; Frank Kerce!,
Ra lph Henderson, and , George
Nutter, Coolvllle. Marlene Donovan, Alfred, read letters of appreclaton for contcributions from CARE
and the Salvation Army. A sliver
offering was taken for the Heart
Fund.
Cassie Alece Gillian, daughter of
Richard and Usa Gillian, Coolville,
was welcomed as a new member.
Group singing was led by Heather

Calendar
11-JURSDAY
POMEROY Middleport
Child Conservation League will
meet Thursday at 7; :xJ p.m . at
the Episcopal Parish House,
Pomeroy. f'eggy Houdashelt
will have devotions, and Mary
P owell will present the program .
Peggy Harris and Helen Black·
ston wi ll be hostesses.
POMEROY
Episcopal
Churc h Women will meet at
Meigs Inn Thursday at 12: :xJ
p. m . Guest speakers will be
Dottie Glower and Marjorie
Newma n or Portsmouth.
POMEROY - Magnolia Club
wi ll meet Thursday at7: :xlp.m.
at the home or Mrs. Dale Smith.
A "bakeless" bake sale will be
held .

CHESTER - Chester Shade
·River Lodge 4!i3 wlll m eet In
specia l session Thursday at 7: 10

Nuttl&gt;r, Michelle Donovan and
Marjorte Malone, Coolville.
Dates were set for the matching
funds benefit for local fire depart·
ments. The potluck dinner will beon
June 26, with the victory party on
June30.
DoOr prtzes were won hy Glenn
Robinson , Alfred and Betty Dunfee,
Little Hocldng. Group singing was
led by Marjolie Malone and
Heather Nutter, Coolville, and
Michelle Donrivan, Alfred,
Contest prtzes were won hy
Asilley Russell, M\Chael Mollohan,
Brenda and Heather Nutter, Coolville; Chlist Woodford, Albany;
Dorothy Robinson and Michelle
Donovan , Alfred; Jimmy Deeter,
Tuppers Plains; Henry SaYre,
Jimmy Barber and Bruce Livingston, Brtmstone Ridge, and Val
•
Dunfee, Parkersburg, W.Va.

Xi Gamma Mu
.

.

p.m . Work will be In the entered
apprentice degree.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Mary Shrine 37,
Order of the White Shrine of Jerusalem, wtll meet at 8 p.m. Friday .at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
HARRISONVILLE Youth
League and PTO will sponsor a
Valentine sock hop .on Fliday
from 8 p.m. until midnight at the
Harrisonville Elementary
School. Music wUl be frOm the
60s and 70s. Proceeds wtll be
used to purchase uniforms for ·
all teams at Harrisonville. Ad·
mission Is $1.

The annual " hearts and hands"
meet lng of the Xi Gamma M u
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorortty
was he ld Tuesd!IY night at the home
of Carol McCullough.
·
Ha ndmade items were . ex·
. changed by secret sistE&gt;rs.
Ronnie Ritter, vice president.
conducted the meeting at which

Girl Scout diary

Civic Center
Committee

' Several county-wide programs
havp !Jeen planned for the Meigs

been

Correspondence

County Girl Scouts.
On Feb. 26Internationa1Thinking

RACINE - A square dance
will be held Saturday at Racine
American Legion hall from 8: :xJ
p.m . to midnight. The Guy
Thoma Band will present music
with Red Carr as caller. The
public Is invited.

Astrograph

Honor rolls
The third slx weeks grading period honor roll of the Pomeroy Elementary School has been
annouJICed. Making a grade of "B"
or above In all their subjects to ·b e
named to the roll were:

grandmother, Daisy Lawson,
Cheryl Hysell and Joan Dally.
Among the other guests were the
bride's great-gnandmother, Mattie
Beaver HUl, Columbus, formerly of
Racine ; the ·groom's greatgrandmother. Mrs. Ocal Doering,
grandmother, Mrs. Pearl Wallace,
brother, Dennis and sister, Shelly,
Lancaster; the bride's brothers.
·Jim and Jason, a nd her sister,
Larra Black, Carroll. Others attending were Michael and Joyce
Wolfe, Mike, Jr., and Paul , Clark
and Betty HUI.

HIDE-A-WAY BEDS~: IIFaullttrelssll
Ret. S399.95

$29995
SAVE flOO
W"llh Queen Size

lattrtss.

Rec. '499.95.

S39995

SAVE Sl()O

FREE

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Area churches represented at Trinit}r
Church's annual Lenten breakfast meet

According to Dr. Margolese,
.p rocedure Is Dr, Richard G. Margolese, Director of the Division of there Is no reasonable evidence
Oncology, Department of Surgery, supporting claims that the two-step
of the Sir Mortimer B. Davis biopsy procedure reduces chances
Representatives of 24 area
Jewish General Hospital of McGill for long-term survival. In the abchurches attended the annual
University, Montreal.
sence of medical evidence favoring
Lenten breakfast and quiet hour
Both Dr. Kinne and of. Margo- Immediate mastectomy, he recomhosted by Trinity Churc h Wednes:
lese base their arguments on recent
mends physicians consider the twoday morning.
studies comparing patient progno- step procedure's advantage In
The service of Lenten medltatlori
sis for the two biopsy procedures . . terms of cost and thepatient'semoincluded
special music by members
Dr. Klnne claims that studies tional well-being.
·
of
Trinity
Choir under the direction
showing no overall harm to pa.
As Dr. Margolese points out, the
of Alice Nease .. Ralph Werry was at
tients who had the two-step proce- · two-step procedure gives patients a
thepiano,
'
dure are· flawed. Numbers of chance to discuss their treatment
· The Len len reflect ions were
patients analyzed · were small, he options and make an Informed chopoints out, and the studies were Ice. This might result In inore pawithout adequate controls or comtients entering clinical trials, which
parisons of stages of the disease.
can help expand knowledge and ul·
However, these same studies have
tlmately improve treatment of
shown lhilt when there Is a pro- . breast cancer, according to Dr.
Middleport scouts will have their
longed delay between biopsy and
Margolese.
annual
blue a nd gold banquet on
mastectomy, usually more than
" Opinion/Response; The Onetwo weeks, long-term survival for
Step Vs. The Two-Step Biopsy Thursday, Feb. 24, a t Middleort
Masonic Temple, 6 p.m. Those
·
patients decreases.
Procedure For ·Breast Cancer"
Dr. Kinne advocates that untU ortglnally appeared In the January- · attending are to take their own table
service and a covered dish. Besides
further studies are conducted with
/ February '821ssues of "CA·A Jour·
the scouts, the parents are Invited to
adequate follow-up on controls, a
nat for Clinicians." For further
attend.
. Questions concerning the
one-step biopsy Procectlll'e should
lnforma tlon call 992·7531 or stop at
banquel
are to be directed to the
be planned for patients with suspithe office on Mulberry His. In
leaders
or
the.scout troops.
.
cious or obvious breast cancer.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Saturday Pack 245 will have a

given by Maye Mara. who In her
commentary, paid tribute to deceased members of various
churches whose Inspiration and
challenges of their devotion remains ever with us.
The program was detllca ted to the.
late Rev. Robert L. McGee, pastor
of the Pomeroy United Methodist .
Church, with the thought '' the
measure of a llfe, after all,ls not· it s

durat ion, but its donation."
There was group singtng of ''The'
King of Love My Shepherd Is" and a
benediction in unison .
Erma Smith a nd Genevlev~
Meinhart were co-chairman for the
breakfast served to 125 persons.
The Lenten breakfast and quiet
hour has been continued annually :
by Trinity Chu rch s ince 1961 .

Blue, Gold Banquet set for next week

Gn.de 1- Deanna Soother Tr-enton Oeland

howl·li·thon at the Skyline Bowling
Lanes in Kanauga with the scouts to
be here by 1:15 p.m.
At a recent meeting of Pack 245,
several cubs were advanced to the
webelo den. In the group were Jason
Smith. Todd Naponea, Ken Reynolds, Todd Anderson, Matt Van
Meter, Eric Hayes, Van .Klein, arid
Ken Van Meter. !3obcat badges and
beads were presented to several

cubs , and
se1ved.

Marine Staff Sgt. Stephen P.
Chapman, son of Martin J . Chap.
man. R t. 2, Pomeroy and Marcella
C. Chapman , 324 P1;1Imer St.,
·Middleport , has·reported for duty at
Marin~ Corps Base Camp Butler on
Okinawa.

Bradley otnruss, Tracy Fife • X, David
Hardwick. JoshUl Heck, Lort Mautz, Cassie
Neue, Brad Andenan • x, OanJeUe Crow . x,
J . P . O.vto · X, Aadrea Dillard · X. Jeremy
Grimm - x; Stepllarle See · x, Emmanuel
CUndW. Ronold Dileo, Brad flllay, Salllly .
Morris.

Grode 2 - Jamie Bfal, DenliO Hysell,

-r

Chris Kn!Jiht, Both Roush · x. Amy Satter·
lleld, Rusly1'r1plott • x, Katrina '1\uner, Vlcld
Womer, Sleplwde Prtce . x, ...,..... AbOOtt,
~ Atldn!, Condy All&lt;leraoo. Kandt Bach·
tel,
Bornhan. Denn!s Boyd, Amber

Mr. and Mrs. Les Frank and
Sarah Beth were Thursday visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning
and Ronald and Mrs. Gladys
Tuckerman.

Davll, Serena O.vta, Lee llenclenon, Ke\111
l.ul&gt;bert. Melissa Maynard, Lynette Neece,
Tammy

Day will be observed by the scouts
with a rally at . the recreational
buildl1111 at Royal Oak Park. Troops
wlll present various countlies l!Sing
skits and games, costuming and
posters as well a s native fOOds.
On March 12, a skating party will
be held for all r.egistered scouts. Big
Bend East scouts will skate from 11
a.m. !o1:30p.m. and Big Bend West
scouts wlll skate from 2 to4: 30 p.m .
Girl Scout Sunday will be observed on March I~ with scouts to
attend the church of their choice in
unlform, a nd on March 18, the
· Brownies or the 'county will have a
.s lumber party at thl' Carleton
School In Syracuse.
Pomeroy Brownie Troop 127l
Pomeroy Brownies enjoying
maldng their own pizzas during a
\1sit last wE&gt;ek to the Pizza Hut .
The scouts were Urst taken on a
tour of the kitchen and then were
,::[ven the ingredient s to prepaf{'
their own pizzas.
Twenty·two
Brownies participated In the pizza
maldng with some assistance from
parents, Annie Chaplflan. and
Bernie Anderson, Lura Swiger, and
Debbl Buck, leader.

Queen.

Elsie

Bulltn!lt&lt;!n.

Kelly

Dokt&amp;":
Grade3--Andenon· K,JooyMcEI·
roy · x. Stephanie .Hagy, John Harrison,
Tammy Kletn.'Racllet Roush, Jull Buck, Me·
Unr;lo Dalley, Heromy Heck, Jobnny Slrgent,
Keith Smith.
Prtmary EMR - Susan Goode.
L. D. - S&lt;olt Whobrey.
Grade 4 - 1lm Hall . x, Eric Heck . x,
Amanda lloolll, Sl&gt;tey Shank, Brenda
Wrta!lt. JUOII Wrta!ll, Scott 1111nlcer, Kim
Ewtna. 8ollbl Jo Kullman, Shane PIIUUpo.
Soon Walton, Jetllll Weny.
· Grade 5- .Jennller Newman . x. Jobn And·
er01, Cary Botzlna. Greta RIIDe, Shelly 'Trt·
ple!t, O)rls Alldro, Nancy Boker • x, Dennis
Boothe, liaJIIc Clela.nd. Bocl&lt;y Peenon, Joey
Roush, Jeny White, Tara Wolle.
Grade 6- RJclly Ellll, Terry F'1&lt;&gt;1ds,
Foultrod, Todd Powen, Don Waqh, Miss)'
Woods· X, llelh Ewlrlg, S&lt;olt Banoo, Lesley
Carr · x, Leah tlotdae, .Penn! J&lt;flen, Jell
McElroy · X, AJwel Odorn, Monica 'l'urnor · x,
Laurie Way~. Brent Zirkle.
X - Dmotes all A's.

s"""

The third slx weeks grading pe. rtOd ·honor roll of the Salem Center
Elementary School has been announced. Making a grade of "B" or
above In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were;
Ftnt grade - ·J .... Ge&lt;qe,

Second grade - NeU BarTen, AWion Gan·

naway, RandaU Johnston, ·Vlrgt.Jila Lucas,
LoreM Oller, Ricky ~. J...lca Sllv.rs,
Michelle Youna.
'l'hlrclgracle - Shayne Asplo. Andrea Hale,

Matl Hayneo, Beth Clark, Kathy WWlarN,
Be&lt;:lly Ockerman, Teny McGuire.
Fourth grade - Bobbie BarTen, Stepi)anle
llam!tt, [.etgh Estrtdae. Cathy Lambm,
Jea~ Mcllona)d, April Napper, JeMy
Peyton, Rlchlnll'l!yton, Can1o &amp;art&gt;erry.
Filth grade - Brandl DIIJM, Wendy Gil·
key, Mary llale, Tammy Lambert, Natale
Lucas, Ann Wllllamo, Theresa Pllllllpo•
Sixth grade - Tara Clark, Jody Lev\1'1!·
'ston, Cindy Maynard, Renee Young.

~~
FLORIST

E.

PH. 992-2644
352
Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

The thlril slx weeks grading period honor roll ol the Salisbury Elementary School has been
announced.
.
Making a grade of "B" or above
In all their subjects to be named to
the.roll were:

. ~~ili"3~~~

lCtVli9Jl VJlD

F1nt grade -

~a

Hoffman. Ca.SJW
Hubbard,"'*'" Teaford, Brtan Walker, Ja·
oiln Wllhel'etl, Marlo White. ·
5econd grade - Cl!Tie Bartels, Elizabeth
Downie, Trevor Harrison, Jason Huffman,
Courtney Mldktll. Sholley Smith, Yvette
Young.
Thin! grade - Mhty Butcher, Tanuny
JMH, Jeremy Shockey, C'lu1s Sloan. Roger
Smltli, Mary Stewart . .Jeue Stock. Jeffrey

ll]j-;111,

Welborn.
Fourth grade -

!a t__ ~---..--

WASHER

t

diagOnal

RCII

~I ~

'7

dOOf!J)tfL.tU1!!
JllfdJ:IJ! .

Flrlt grade - Mewan Carman, Chad Des·
- · . Cryotal DQnobue, M-h Durham,
Meroe Gru""', Beth llanbti, Shawn lnclel,
Jamlo Keruted):u, Ronda Raymond , Jarta·

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WHIRLPOOL
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O.vtd Frymer, Missy

The third slx weeks grading periOd bonor roll of the Hariisonvtlle
Elementary Grade School has been
anoounced. Making a grade of ." B"
or above in all their subjects to be
named to the roll were;

Model

RCA 25'dtaganal Color TV ,
with Slgnalock electronic tuning ·

$249

ntler Taylor, Amy Warth, l'am Whaley.
Filth grade - '!'rae! Bartels, MelonlellEe·
glo, Heidi Caruthers, Ketly Dougla.•. Jay
Humphreys, Kristin King, Sandra Whaley,
JaJK' AM WIJIIams.
Sixth grade - Melodi 'Carl, Jody TaylOr,
Wesley Young.

cj)j7JIUJV2['

Whirlpool
ModellB3000XL Washer
• New 24" Design 2000 Mod(
• 2 Automat1c Cycles :
AEGULAAtHEAVY
and SHOAT
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delivers a shorter, fa ste r
stroke for high-frequency
washtng action
• 2 wash:nnse temps bui lt
1nlll!he timer
,
• Sell-Balancing Inner Baske:
• Heavy-duty motor and
pump
• Automatic Se ll-leveling
rear legs
.

RCA
25"

Leach, Teny Rl'llteor, Krtsten Slawten, Jen·

SYLVANIA
COLOR

DRYER
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• Choice of Hear or Air drying
• Extra-large lint screen
• Large 5.9 cu. ft. drying drum
• Push-to-start button
• Automatic door shut-olf
• Bac·Pakt Laundry Information
Center

• 19" diagon~l Blact.; Ma111x Chroma-Line,..

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• AFC
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Thlnl grade - Mark Stanley, Anthony Six,
Bobby Vance.
.
fourth vade - Jennifer BarTen, ·Stevo
Martin, Mlcholle Mal1hews, Aaron Sheet~
Fllth!lfllde-AnlleDonollle, KI!UyHamtl· ·

•

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IDJI, Marc Howard, IJoll)' Ketlnetly.

Stxt1l Jl'1lde - Clirll1lna lluo, O.vtd b ·

.,.., Juon Dodlon, Wesley Howard, Jared

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VILLAGE PHARMACY
• Middleport, OH.

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PH. 992-6669

__._,_ .___ ·-- - - - ···-·

~

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Living Room
Suite

ior . Hlgb Sc'llool ha~ been
ariaQunced. Making a "B" or above
1n
their 111bjects to be named to

:au

Reg. $299.95

~roll

Sl9995

-

..
SYRACUSE

MEMBER FDIC
.....IIIIIJI!IIIIIII_ _ _.._._ _ _ _ _... ..
·'

were:
lfOde -

Jennlle&lt; Arnold, Shawn
Atj1ot1, Pam Alb, C1trt1 Bae&lt;, RDmlt Bur·
ha/nmlr, PatrwceCirclo, Wendy Fly, Anile
Scott Mcl'llall, IIICic Bethn, Dllli
Sillier, Heatllor.Stoiler, Kim~ Weadl&lt;

a..-

Gas or .Electric

THIS WEEK!

.

third
Wl!!?ks grading periOd bonor roll of the Sou~hem Jun-

2 pc. E.A.

•

'

''

.

M~V~.

'

were

Reports for duty

than Vance.
Second grade - Melsaa Durham. Shane .
HYsell. Beelcy Snowdell, Courtney Rlus.

WE NOW ACCEPT
BOILER.
MAKERS ·
.
INSURANCE CARDS.

refreshment s

• X,

Your "Extra Touch"
Flori1t Since 1957

Mr. and Mrs. Poling
Jerri A. Black, Carroll, and Pvt.
Sean E. Poling of Fort Knox, Ky.,
were marlied on Dec. 18 by Rev.
Ray Dunlap at the home of her
grandparents, Charles H. and
Helen R. Wolfe, 3490 Kauffman
Road, Carroll.
The bride Is the daughter of
Larry and Linda Black, Carroll,
and the groom Is the son of Don and
Pat Pollng, Lancaster. Penny Hel·
mlc was the maid of honor and Phil
Hoffman, the best man.
Attending from Meigs County
were the bride's grandparerlts, Rl·
chard and Helen Black, her great·

new

Philathea ·

SATIJRDAY

February 18, 1983
Give yourself lofty goals and objectives this coming year. You are
now In a cycle where you can scale new heights. Begin now to blueprint
your future.
AQUARWS (Jan. 2G-Feb. 19) You have the ability today, If you
choose to use it, to make the best ol bad situations. Seek positive
alternatives instead of negative probabilities.
PISCES (Feb. 2G-Mai'Cb 20) Do not let negat!ve thlnklngdlluteyour
potential today. Major accomplishments are possible II you believe
they're within your reach.
ARIES (March 21-AprlllB) Be hoth patient and practical In !tnan: clal matters today. You could encounter resistance If you respond
• t.ritprudently. Avoid unnecessary errors.
TAURUS (April 2G-May 20) Unless your gOOd Intentions are
brought to the surface and put Into ·play today, they'll count for little.
Don't be sorry for what you didn't oo.
·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Guard against tendencies today to
. operate against your better judgment. Try not to let others lntluence
: you to do things you know you shouldn't.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your greatest opportunities today wUl
be In productive areas. However, there's a chance you may Instead
~~ on flivolous pursuits.
·
·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Situations you normally manage with ease
rould be proberna tical today. Keep a cool head Getting ruffled wUl
· make matters worse . .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Even though you'll be accutely aware of
: the shortcomings of others today,lt's best not tocriitctzethem. Instead,
· try ·to be complimentary.
·
LIBRA (Sept. %3-0rt. 23) Your Inclinations will be to treat others
generously today, yet your prudence may veto these noble Impulses. In
order to get, you must give.
.
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In flnanclalsltuatlons today you should
'))e both lucky and effective. Unfortunately, youmaynoterijoythesame
: success In personal relationships.
SAGfrrARWS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) This is one of those days when
: you're not likely to perfonn well under pressure. Keep a positive a ttl•
· tude and don't let trifles oilerwhelm you.
CAPWCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 18) You could be responsive to peer ·
pressure today and, In order to please others, you mlght feel obligated
to do things contrary to your best ln~rests .

Which diagnostic procedure Is
best lor a breast cancer patient; the
one-step or two-step biopsy? Two
differing viewpoints on this subject
are offered In a
American
Cancer Society publication, "Oplnto.ntRespo~~~e; The One-Step Versus The Two-Step Biopsy
Procedure For Breast Cancer." In
a one-step procedure, biopsy of a
breast mass is perfocrned, followed
lmmectlall'ly hy surgery If cancer
Is found . In a two-step procedure, If
the biposy reveals cancer, treatment Is carried out at a later date.
Stating the ease lor the one-step
procedure is Dr. David W. Kinne,
Associate Attending Surgeon and
Chief of the Bteast Service of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Cen·
ter In New York.
Arguing In favor of the two-step

A report on Improvement to the
gyrnnasiW)1 was given. The Door
has been refinished again, the root
sealed to prevent leaks, and currently new spouting is being added.
It was also noted that an electric
placed on
adverllstng sign has
the front lawn.
It was voted to purchase an add!·
tlonal ~ chairs and 12 tables for
the center. Memorial donations are
st!U being accepted and shoulcl be
sent to the Rutland Civic Center, C-&lt;l
Rev. J , Snowden, treasurer.
Next meeting will be held Feb. 22
at 7: 30p.m. The public Is Invited to
attend.

.Girl Scouts plan county-wide programs

17' 1983.

Breast cancer diagnostic procedures

valentine re~ctl.l'#ncl'.
·.
~
Dorothy Roach presided at the
meetl~g with officers' reports being
given by ~'arlt&gt; Cole and Grace
Hawley. ·
Thank you was acknowledged for
the "thlnklng of l!DU" box for Jay
Carsey and the appreciation dtnrter
given by the church for the Kevin
Loving family.
The Phllathea voted to serve the
Iilrchfjeld-Wllford; wedding recep.
t!on on June 18 at the church. Clyde
AIIE'nsworth and· Clarice Erwin
were named to the nominating
committee· to report a 1 thr March
meeting.
Mrs. Erwin, Mrs. Butcher, Mrs:
Haggerty
Bailey, and Martha
A Community GOOd Friday ser·
.
served
refrcsllrrll'nts.
vice and several fund-raising pro
"Row to Get Rid of the Blahs" was
jects were planned during a recent
the program topic presented by
meeting of Rutland Civic Center
Sharon Stewart when the Phllathea
Committee held at the center.
Women met recently at the MiddleJoan Stewart and Robert Eads
port Church of Chlist.
WOLF PEN
were named to have charge of the
Mrs. Stewart gave a facial
Tuesday afternoon visitors of
April 1 evening Good Friday ser- .massage to Becky Loving, and also
Mrs. Iva Johnson were Ruby Diehl
vice with all local churches to be
gave Ups on the right way to apply
and Stella Atkins of Harrisonville.
Invited to participate.
makeup.
Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl of
Plans were made for a variety
The . Phllathea Song and t~
Harrtsonvllle were Tuesday cB.ners
show In the spring with Mrs. Ste- . Lord's Prayer opened the meeting.
of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Warner.
wa:rt, Judy . Hart, and Judy
Using "Today" as the theme for
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith,
Snowden to serve as chairmen.
devotions including poems, readKanauga, were Tuesday visitors of
Weekend dances wtll . continue Ings, serlpture and prayer were
·
·
Charley Smith.
through February and March, and
Clarice Erwin, Margaret Butcher,
Mrs. Iva Johnson was a recent
skating will be held on the !trst Sun·
and Mary Bailey.
Sunday guest of Mrs. J. R. Murphy
day in March, 2 to 4 p.m.
Roll call wa s answered with a
and Peggy.

time II was announced that the
election of officers wtll take place at
the next meeting. Debbie Flnlaw,
ways and means co-chairman,
reported that a recipe auction wtll
also take place then.
Mrs. McCullough. reporting for
the social committee a nnounced a
dinner party on March 15.
For the c ultural rPport, Tun!
Redovian and Lynn Shul~r . conducted a practical art .l earn-how
clinic. Refreshments were ·s erved
by Doris Ewing and Linda Riffle.

febl\lary

RANGE

'

'..
.'-

t-~:-·~·w~E.~RE~NT~V~ID~~~RI~~~;~s"~~~~-·----~S:~~~~f~~~~:L~$----~l.--~~\--~----·$~~~·;.~::1;!=~~~-J~
WE HAVE A COMPLETE
SERVICE DEPARTMENT

OVER 46 YEARS OF SERV.ICEI..

~·.,ade- Kim Adami,Ondy Armtd,

c.:;ra.-,,
MaU - · .....,. Har1,
n.d Huliblrll. Plio J~ Racbael

-K4rla ihnnh,
Joe-·

Ten111cUoll. Krll!!elllrl,
Tammy 'l1leiJI, Wendy Walle.

'·

,,

r

'·

�;~

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

,.

Thunday, February 17, 1983 ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~==================~~~~~~~~==~~-~~
Mahoning
sheriff
receives
~.
Committee supports tax hike
.

.

By ROBERT E . MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Gov. Richard Celeste's
:snJ million tax hike bill was recommended for
passage early today by the Senate Finance
Committee.
The 7-3 vote, strictly along par!y lines with
Democra ts prevailing, came a t 1:15 a.m. after a
marathon session at which Republicans were unable ·
to make a dent in the proposal.
Senate President Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, .
said he expects 1the measure, which also cuts
spending by $282 million in the remainder of!he fiscal
year ending June30, to be brought to a floor vote in the
Se!late early next week.
Republicans offered 10 amendment s to the
measure but were voted down each time, and
essentially- with minor changes - II Is the same bill
which passed the House last week.
Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Concord . offered the most
far reaching amendmentwhich would have scrapped
Celeste's proposal for a 90 percent permanent
increase in the state income tax.
Claiming Celeste overest imated state revenue
needs and that more study should be given to a
permanent tax boost, Speck proposed retaining a 50
percent surcharge on the incoine tax, at least until the
next budget is studied by the Legislature.
· The surcharge is due to expire March 31, and
Celeste is due to submit the two-year budget to
lawmakers in mid-March. The 50 percent add-on,
enacted last July to deal with an earlier budget
crunch, would be boosted 40 percent and made
permanent under the .governor's proposal.
It Is designed to raise $246 million in additional
revenue between now and the end of the fiscal year.
Coupled with the spending cuts, and a 0.5 percent
increase in the utility excise tax, the package is
des igned to erase a projected budget deficit lor the

" ...
R €J"ect;on

&lt;Continued from page t )
._:__..,.--_:_:::._:__~

also said he had complete confi·
dence in Anne M. Gorsuch, the
Environmental Protection Agency
administrator.
The House has cited Mrs.
Gorsuch for contempt, for withhold·
ing'on Reagan's instructions about
100documents involving the '.'super·
fund" program to clean up toxic
waste dumps.
In his f~t public discussion of the
controversv · surrounding EPA,
Reagan said. "We will never invoke
executive privilege to cover up
wrongdoing."
He also ordered. the Justice
Department to investigate all
allegations of possible mismanagement of the "superfund" program.
But he said: "I think the splendid
record that has been accomplished

I

current fiscal year of $511 mUllan.
The total revenue gain, however, is estimated by
Celeste's fiscal advisers at $582 million, which would
give the state a $71 million cushion going into the next
biennium.
Speck, as Republicans had done In the Democrat·
controlled House, Insisted Celeste asked too much,
and that some of the appropriations In the bill easily
could be put off until the next budget.
His amendment, by del.aylng some or those
obllgillions, would have reduced current obligations
by $194 million, he said. "It Is clear th!lt this kind of a
reduction can be made and our constitutional
obligations be met," he said, referring to a
requirement for the budget to be balanced at the end
of each fiscal year. . ·
Sen. Charles L. Butts, D·Cleveland, reminded
Republicans that two previous budgets in this
biennium, over which they presided, had to be
balanced wlth temporary taxes. Speck's amend·
inent, he said, Is that 'here we go again' approach.
Ohio's fiscal problems "are not going to go away in
the next biennium," Butts asserted.
Among other things, the Republican amendme~ts
would have salvaged the energy department, belr\g
abolished in the governor's bill. and taken$:Jlmillion
out of a $44 million school loan fund to soften budget
cuts on programs for disadvantaged pupils in the
state's major cities.
Although set upon earlier in the day by nursing
home lobbyists and several hundred enlisted
patient-demonstrators, the committee pretty much
held firm on an estimated $18 million in cuts affecting
their appropriations.
One exception was an amendment by Sen. Steven
Maurer, D-Botkin, which exempts from the cuts
those intermediate care faciLities which take care of
mentally retarded patients.

by EPA in these last two years is
being overlooked In the flurry of
accusa tions that have been made
now.''

Reagan also said that U.S. forces
conducting military training exer·
cises in the Mediterranean Sea off
the coast of Libya, which has
conducted a military buildupappar·
ently aimed at Sudan, had the right
to fire back if fired upon.
But he said he was not contem·
plating using U.S. forces in theevent
of a clash between Libya and Sudan.
U.S. radar surveillance planes
have been sent to Egypt, and an
aircraft carrier bpttle i:l:Oup was
moved to the area. Pentag'on
sources sa id.
The President opened the sesson
by discussing the economy.

Mrs. Ruby Margaret Dolin Spur·
.Jock , 69, 338 Williams St., Middleport. died Wednesday evening at
University Hospital in Columbus.
Mrs. Spurlock was bOrn in Boone
County, W. Va., daughter of the late
Jehue and Roxie Ann Pauley Dolin.
She was a homemaker. Mrs.
Spurlock was a member of the
Mlddlepon United Pentecostal
Church.
Surviving are her ... husband. :
Rockford; three daughters, Mrs.
Kathryn Richards, Albany; .Mrs.
Sue· Flynn, Hamlin, W. Va .. and
Mrs. Betty Mitchell, Riverside,
Calif.; a stepson, yvalker Spurlock,
Baltimore, Oh.; ·· a sister. Ethel
Saltzman, Nonh Carolina, and a
brother, Charles Dolin, Ripley, W.
Va. Besides ller parents. Mrs.
Spurlock was preceded in death by
two brothers and a sister.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the Bjgony·Jordan
Funeral Home in Albany with the
Rev. Clark Baker officiating. Burial
will be in the SchOOl Lot Cemetery in
Albany. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Friday.
Thirteen grandchildren and 15
grandchildren also survive.

Olive Walkins
Olive Watkins, .61, Clifton, died
Tuesday in Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born Dec. 3, 1921, in Cox's Mill,
Gilmour County, she was the
daughter of Harley D. Spiers,
Weston, and the late Lizzie A.
Flesher Spiers.
She was a member of the Clifton

· "The recovery is beginning to fiex
its muscles,' ' he said, as he called for
a bipartisan effort for a jobs and
recession relief bill he wants
delivered to him by Congress next
month.
The measure includes $4.3 billion
in spending for accelerated federal
construct ion and repair projects,
which he said would provide 470,000
jobs; $2.9 billion for unemployment
insurance. and $:nl mllllion in
"humanitarian relief" for the
particularly needy.

!Meigs ...

(Continued from page 1)
theft of blank checks and allgedly
forging and j}assing them in last
January.
Warrants have been issued . lor
those indicted.
.
Common Pleas Judge Charles
United Methodist Church and the Knight administered the oath to the
United Methodist Women's Club. grand jury and explained responsi·
She was also a member of the billties. Presenting the cases was
Rebecca Lodge No. 101 of Weston.
Prosecuting Attorney Fred W.
She was married on Nov. 4, 1945, Crow Ill.
to Rev. Kenneth G. Watkins, who
Duririgthesessionthegrandjury
survives. Other survivors include Inspected the jail. Sheriff James J .
two daughter, Mrs. Russell (Bev- Proffitt conducted the tour of the
erly) Rogerson, Harrisville, and , , facility and answered juror ques·
Mrs. Stanley t Donna) Bak,.er,' Hans. The grand jury reported that
Columbus; a son, Kenneth· G. ttfoundnoproblemsandthatthejall
Watkins II, Miami, ,Fla. ; four was being operated in accordance
grandchildren.
wlth rules set fonh by the coun .
,_ f'lmeral' sel'Vices will be held at
Floyd Funeral Home, Weston, . . rem~nS
Friday at 1:30 p.m . The Rev. ·
Russell 'M. Cremeans, 19, Cool·
Charles Roth will officiate. Burial
ville, was sentenced-to a term of not
will follow ln Friendship IOOF
less than six months nor mol"f&gt;than.
Cemetery, Berlin, Lewis County.
flve ye.a rs in the Ohio State
Friends may call at the funeral
Reformatory when he appeared
home from 24 p.m. and 7·9 p.m.
before Meigs County Common
Pleas Judge Charles Knight Mon·
day afternoon on charges of
breaking and entering.
Ora Young
Cremeans had been scheduled for
·F uneral services were held Monday morning but failed to
Wednesday for Ora D. Young,&amp;l,of appear as ordered. Judge Knight
ll'(lllledlately Issued a bench war·
Rt.1, Letart, who died on Sunday in
rant for his arrest and Cremeans
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born Oct. 2, 190'1, in Cottageville. was taken intocustodyaroundnoon.
According to Paul Gerard, proW.Va. , tothelateJamesl. andNona
secutor' s Investigator, ·cremearis
M. Brewer Warner.
She was a member of the Mason was charged In a bill of information
prepared by the prosecutor's o!flce.
United Methodist Church.
Following Cremeans arrest he
Surviving are her husband, Leo F.
was taken before Judge Knight and
Young, Sr.; three sons; Leo F. Jr ..
after review of the failure to appear
Pomeroy, Ohio, Lewis R., Letart.
and James P., Letart; two daugh· Knlght sentenced Cremeans.
The offense to which Cremeans
ters, Mrs. Mary K. Shiflet, Colum·
had earlier entered a plea of guilty
bus, Ohio, and Mrs. Leora J. Krebs,
was an offense for which probation
Point Pleasant:· 23 grandchildren,
was available as an alternative
and 19 great grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted sentence. The court, in sentencing
Cremeans to the State Reforma·by Foglesong Funeral Home,
tory. evidenced a coneern about the
Mason, and burial followed in the
increase
In ruralcrlmeandltseffect
Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
upon Meigs County as well as
Cremeans' failure to obey a court
ordered appearance notice.
Cremeans was remanded to tbe
custody of the sheriff for transportation to the State Reformatory.

I

Area deaths

Ruby Spurlock .

_______;,--'--

C

·
d
Sentence

By BRIAN TUCKER
ASIJOCiated PreM Writer
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) Mahonlng County Sheriff James A.
Traficant Jr. Is now prlsoner .'No.
553.
The sheriff, aiready .facing fed·
eral cha~ · of accepting bribes
from reputed gangsters, was taken
to Youngstown clty jail Wednesday
after refusing a court qi'der to carry
out property foreclosures.
Common Pleas Judge Charles
Bannon sentenced Traf!cant to a
total of 100 days on 10 separate
contempt charges.
Traflcant said he was not
surprised by the judge's action and
would not appeal.
·
Traflcant was jailed for his
refusal to slgn foreclosure deeds on
10 vacant properties that were
auctioned at a ·sheriff's sale last
month.
Under state law, a county sheriff
must sign foreclosure deeds after
property is sold at a sheriff's sale.
After a 40-mlnute break at theend
of the two-hour heartng, the judge
gave Traflcant one final opportun·
tty to avoid jail.
"At the risk of being melndra·
ma lic, sign these deeds," Bannon
asked.
·The 'Sheriff refused, repeating a
statement he made several times
during the hearing. "I will not sign·
these deeds until I find out the
disposition of thilse people displaced
from the homes, .. be
Last week, despite an order
signed by all four common pleas
judges, Traflcant refused to sign the
deeds and said he would hold no
more sheriffs sales .of foreclosed
properties.
The judge ordered Traficant to
serve 10 days (n the city jail on each
contempt charge and to begin the
sentence immediately. Acting Chief
Deputy Phillip Chance said he
would command the sheriff's de- .
partml)nt while Traflcant was In
jall.
Robert Henkin, an attorney for
fow- lending institutions, sought the
contempt citations after Traficant
announced he would not sign the

I

.

.

'

I

foreclosure deeds.
deeds and carry out . the "
After Wednesday's hearing, Hen· foreclosures."
·t~
kin said he would request the
Traflcant faces trial ln . U.S.
appointment of an administrator to District Court In Clevel.and March
handle future foreclosures .
23 on charges of accepting $163,000
"There Is no question that the from organized crime figures
sheriff knows he·s In violation of the during his ltl!O election campaign. '.,
He faces a secqnd contempt . ,
court order,'' Bannon said.
TeUing Traflcant that "this ls a hearing March 2 in a suit by two
government of laws, not a dictator· Akron lawyers over foreclosures. i "
ship," Bannon chided the sheriff for Their suit asks the court to decl.are
demanding an "explanation," such Traflcant Incapable of perfornilng •
as the location of people displaced in his duties and asks that he be
foreclosures, before carrying out removed frorri office.
.
Traflcant, who acted as his own
his duties.
'
"Ifthe explanation suits him, he attomeybecausehewasangrywlth
'
'
w!ll sign the deed and carry out the Prosecutor Vincent Gilmartin,
••
foreclosure," Bannon said. " If lt · broke Into exchanges several times
•
doesn't sult him. he will not sign the with Gilmartin and the judge.,

•

..'':!

lll COurt St..

··•·'-,]---.....--·.....
u .. - .

•''

...,.. ...

...._.1

................
·-·-__

'~

•

l

,,_...,.
,,,,......_

~

...............
,,..
.......,_
.........,..
,

l
••

:::..._,_,

-·
...'

.. ....
,=-·
.... -.-.-;-·-.,-............

-

•.

~

. ,..,_,.""
4tfflt"lM ..

ON THE STAND - Mal!onlng CowSy
.James A. 'l'nlllealll
Jr. took the witness stalld In Wedaesday's contemp&amp; beariDg ei!'IMI
him In Mahonlng County Common Pleas Colll't. He was qoiestloaed by
Robert Henkin, attorney for four lending lnslltullons JW •ln&amp;Tratlcant
to carry oat 10 property foreci08Ures. Traflcant refused 111111 was ~t.­
eoced to 100 days In jail. (AI'\ I $8erphoto ),

PROBATE COUt'T •

'

Metgs County Probate Court
Case No. 23407 . Carolyn Searles, R\. 1. Bradbury Ad . Mid·
dleport. Oh•o 4 5 7"60. was
appolnled b.ecutm: of th e est·
ate of Peggy Hoflman. de·
ceased. late of At. 3. Pomeroy,
OhiO...
Charl es H Kn1ght
Act•ng Judge

theast Ohio were closed for the rest
of the week due to !lie flu.
Maplewood Elementary In Johnson
reported 88of311 pupils were absent
Monday and Tuesday. In Mahonlng
County, the St. Nicholas Elernen·
tary School in Struthers was closed
after 157 of about 500pupUs became _,
ill.
.
'
:•·
"SchOOl absenteeism and reP!Jrts
of patients visiting the emerkency
'·~
rooms seem to be the best l'o(ays to
monitor how the flu Is sprealllng,"
'•
said Halpin. "Eight schools were
''
closed In thl' southwestern p&lt;~,rts of
•,,
the state in late January. We saw
increase(l absentee rates in Butler
and Hamilton CIJuntles. Preble
•(
County had absentee ratesofupto33
•
percent in some schOOls and the
~
disease is now moving Into central
•
•
and no'nheastern Ohio."
• •
. Halpin said the flu is not
'
considered dangerous except for
~
elderly patient s or those with severe
{
respiratory or ca rdiac problems.
(
He cautioned parcntsaga!nstglvlhg
•
•
children asp!rln to relieve f).u·
related headaches and sore mus·
cles because of the · potent) a! .
~
development of Reye's sydrome, a
~
disPase that can be fatal.
·

121 3. 10. 17. 3tc

.

Charles H. Kn1ght
Act1ng Judge

mau~

with this

Nam.• ---------Addreu----------------

. ..
,
'

Phon•--------~--~--Print one&gt; word in each

..

I

us derogatory namt.os and stuff like
that. "
"The man that died was quilt&gt; a
.gentlemen." Russell said. ·"He
would never curse or say a lJUd
word. He'd speak to my wife. He'd
speak to my children. He was just a
swell person." ·
Russell said that before the victim
had retired fou r or five years ago,
~&gt;
his brother would stay alone in t~
house all day ..
"He'd sll in the house and didn't do
nothing except holler out, ·; Russell
. said.. "Nobody paid him any
~
attention."
•
RuSsell sald Richard · L. Ollwr
~
nwer ·seemed · to be able · to
"conform to the fact that he was ' ~•
living with people of opposite race."
The Olivers are · white and the
neighborhood · Is predominately
•
black.
"I was always frightenectofhlm."
Russell said. "I had to leave my
••
family here when I go to work. ~
long as his brother was alive I didn't
~~
worry . too much. because his
brother could handle him. But I
-~ .
guess he couldn't handle a gun. "

I

. (
1I

•

I

21. - - - - - - 22 .
23.

4.

1 s.
I 6.

i

I.

t

Ill

25.

'·
10.'

I
I

13.

I

14.

_.J,.

29.

11.

,'

I1:

32 .

11 ·

'· '

33 . .. - ·I•
34. __ ·_______ I
35. _ - - -·

I•
II

t

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'

•

I

c_.......,

e·~·..11.1o

uoo

o.... ....,_.... _

. . _............
, ...... ...., ..... . _

s •• ,.,-,.._.... ,

290

1
I

Mall Thll
coupon
RtmiHtnce
Tht
Dtllywith
Stntlntl
·
111 Court St.
'
Pomeroy, Oh. 45U9

1I·

. Public Notice

949-2860.

1

. ,.

··N
· o Sunday Calls ~, ·

center on the south side of and
adjo•ning the stone wall whi ch
crossespremises
said lot. The
above
cnb~d
laying
anddes·
be·

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

1h

.""~30
fn.·Sat. 4:00-12.

u;.M•

"""':,· In. 4:...,., :

Goiodwot~hdog, 'hGormen :
Shepherd, '11 ehoep dog ; ;
304 882 ·2e13 or 304· :
882 3415
'
12 YEAR old Border Collie . ~
lj'.U,':t0 ~~::,~:~~;~·1 ~~u~:;:; . ~~
people . Call 304-876·

r

pizza$....;.pizla Bread
'Italian 'Bread-Subs .

6

Lost and Found
LOST on Spruca St . aroa

:
o

I
1

f

i

PH. 742·2328
1·31 ·1 mo.

2·11·1 mo.

1

In Rio Gronde Vlllege · ,
mole dog. block &amp; white, ,
long hair, name Boomer , ·'
Call 614-246-5882.
FOUND: A ~altmark pencil, . 1
at Clerk's Jowotry Store. 1
Possibly lost during Chrllt· ·
maaruah. Identify to claim.
Ct ar k' • J ewe 1ry St ore,

You Name The Price .
You Might Get W:ky

CLOSED SUNDAY

, 271 w. Jloil

Faqoomy, 111.

'~t~sr~~~JOM~~R .
' · 0NLY '31 ·95

1·1&lt;-ltc

F

~ouoo

ELECTRIC
SERVICE
11

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Charm with chitde picture. 1
Ca11 ,614 · 992 - 21~6 to · '
clelm.
. -:
•
FOUND-Rod Coon hound, - ~ ·
~~":::'!'o~d n;::~d~~o~~ .~~ •
338 . can 843-6376. .
.,
WANTED: People who took · ., ,

985-3561
, All Makes
•Wa-e •Diohwoohero
Rangel
•Rotrlgorotora
•Dryora oFroezora
PARTS ond SERVICE

S30.133.00

Sa 1d prem•ses ap pra1sed at

-4 ·5-tfc

=·

aw,ay
in L•tert
eree
at . .;
247· 3314,
Dog Wll
regia·

terod and otolen. Chlldron'o
949-2&amp;46.
•, • ·
' '
LOST: white haired torrlor, .· ·

DINNER

s=··

~

black female pit bull given·

cherishe11 pet : Phtase cell '

,.·

•---'
"'I'V'•.utau
.viiS
Vocalllusit:
.
SAT., MARCH 5
At the Rulllnd
, Glide School Gym ·
5:00 P.ll.to 8:00P.M.
13.00 Ad!M-'2.00 Children·
D'
· tudes
. Inner UIC
:
'
Salad, Roll, Drink an lltsHrt
Enterlllinment by
The Chonliers
2·9-1 mo.

pet. If found, piHea

Found -near Sentinel Office.

or a your wrng
needs; furnaces re·
pair service and in·
atallatlon.
.
Reaidantial
&amp;, Commercial
Call 742·319&amp;H ·Oic

SPAGHffil

~

~..-~:m:. 1 4 .• 9 9 2 · 7 8 3 0

11

3rd ANNUAL

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

was waering a red collar. •!'•

an 1 w ora to "~ e n r y" : .,,
Reward . 304·8B2·364~ . . •,.
'
.fl'
8 . Public Sala
- 1,,,1
8&amp; Auction
. ", !
",
•
WVa State Champion Auctl· "
onoer Rick Pearaon. Eotatoo,

lit.
104
Pomeroy, OH.
Open 9;00 to 6:00
Mon.·Sat.
Closed thurs. _

304-

antiques, farm. households. · ·~

2-lQ..l mo.

~~=======~tr====~===~~~~~~~~~~~ Licensed
773- 6786Ohio-yVVe
or 304-773.
91.85. ·
TERMS OFSALE: IOPercent
R0ger Hysell
J&amp;F
All STEEL &amp;
------Cash or Cerhl•ed Check on the
CONTRACTING
POLE BULO INGS Auction every Fri. night It
sold lor less than
and two·
cannot
th•rd s be
of
th at amount.
,

GARAGE

day of sale. Balance upon re-

ce1pt of deed

JAME S J . PROFFITI.

St. Rt 124, Pomeroy, OH.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
.REPAI.R
·

Raal Estate General .

Als!l Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

HOBSIEIIER REALTY
Georce S. Hobstatter, Jr.
Broiler
Office: 992-5739

Center. Truckloodo of new '
,
Consigmonto at now and
used morchandlee otweyo
welcome. Richerd Reynold• •
Auctioneer. 276·3089. ., ;. '
•
·AUCTION every Saturdioy '
ci~~~i~~...~~~~ "!~·,:o~~: ;, . .
Emma Bell ouctlonoer.
,
merchandise every week.

P&amp;S Racine,
BUILDINGS
Oh.
Ph. 614-343-5191

~

COMPlETE
. RADIATOR SERVICE
From he Smallest Huter
Core to the l.ar&amp;tlt Radia·
tor.
Radiator Specials!
. NATHAN BIGGS '
35 Yrs. Experience

SPECIAL - We can o11er this .
home a a imited time only. on
these greal tl!rtr&amp; Orly
$4,000.00 down and $310.97 a
month, payments include taKeS
arr:l il)stnnce. This home ~
situated on 1 acll!, ~ has 4 bedrooms, livltg room nas.spKelor
woodbooler, fireplace in famiy
room. Look at th~ one IDday!!
Price is n!duced to $31,500.00.
EXrM GOOO BUY - Nice 2
say home, 2 lx!drooms upstais, livltg rocxn w/wood·

SMITH NELSON
M()lORS, Inc.
Pomo10y, Oh.
Ph. 992·2174

B.OGGS

burner, lt.lchen bath ard bedroom doWnstliiS. Situated on

SALES &amp; SERVICE

nice Itt l'oitlt out!Juikling. .Sells
i

Velma Nicinsky, AssOc:.
Phone 742-3092
·Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-3171

•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK
B«UllD &amp; MIIIK lltARANliED
PHONE JAMES CLIFFORD

the Herttord Community •...;

Sizes stari from 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sl I 6, 6, U
res rom X P
to 24'x36'
lnsu.latd Dog Houses

~:::::::::::::l:':•':''~;:::::~99~2~-7~~~1~,·~l·l~·~··;-r=:::::::::::::":*:'''~~

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

lor $20,000.00.

•DOZER
•B•CKHOE
""

U.S. RT. SO ·EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

-'

Authorized John Deer,
New llolllnd, Bush Hoe
Filrm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
f.).fic

num. ·Gold and Silver pricer
'
are the highelt in two V81rl r ~~ ' .
check our pric•• on gold &amp;·oo~ •.:..,"\ ·
silver~ scrap'jewelry. Buying ·•
Ol .d co ina, · scrap rings • . ~~,~ ';
. silverware . Daily quotee-~ ·i ..,_ ..
available. Also coin a &amp; coin , ~ :~ ·.
supplies for sale. Spring ·. ',
Valley Trading Co .• Spring •, ' .'

For

Small, llrp end Corporate
Businesses &amp; PdltiShips
MARY C. KEBLER-OWNER
1·21-2 mo.

GHEEN'S '
PAINTING INC.
Industrial. Commercial,
Residential, Interior and
Exterior.
Painting
Sandblasting
Waterblasting
Parking Lar,.Stripping
Sproy Painting
' '8.
Texture Caatings
FULLY INSURED
~
FREE ESTIMATES · ~
CAU 614-949-2686 &lt;'&lt;

.... .. .. .. ..'
.....
. .................

2

Valley Pion. 448-802&amp; or ...;

flEW USTIIIG - IIIDDLEPORT -Corner let, beautiluly remodli~ 3 bedroom home,' eqlipped ltitt:hen, central aif, many tAAer
leetuii!S.
. Will sacrifice at $36.500.00.
flEW LISTING - IIIDDLEPORT - ~wr view, large lot, 3 bed·.
room home. Must have orly $16,000.00.

..

umNG -

4

lEW
PWL ST. - lllDDLEPORT - Remodeled
· bedroom heme with many featuii!S. New plumbine, roof, and
· sidin' Remodeled beth, tots of new carpeting.lhsWt!ed. N.G. heat,
. lui baement. $50,500.00.

PUT All END TO HIGH GAS BillS! This 3 bedroom ht~~M is energy
elllcient IIIith awoodburnif1 set up and fireplace. Fully insutaled,
I \1 bltbs, ~ ltldlett. In town. $45,000.00.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

-Dozers

-Bickhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy.
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
-Gas lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SIIALL JOBS
PH. !192·2478

In Memoriam

&amp;4 Mlec. Merchandise

AUTHORIZED
FAC'Il)llt SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC

home, lUI basemert Yllll' own private Wiler inlet ~ car plfle.
SMIII campsites w1tlt ulilia $68,!il0.00.
,

&amp; HOTPOIN'i'

flinty

B.·,·.

~lUI.~·~.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
M!dcllopart, Ohio

In Loving Mem'o~ of our

WE ALSO WORK ON

Hl·ttc

•N•• Grips
•Rellnishltll
•R•Wti&amp;htin&amp;
•Bilancinl
OGoll Trips .
Fot Yoena Poopto 1
•Pra-Stason Sale i

Mother l11betlo Cozart, Feb. 448·0089
17, 1977.
.
The gift at love, Time t!o
Teart are treeaured memories of yesteryears,

Fom.!ly.

outs. Cotl446-0176.

LANDIIAIIK

614-992·2181

;,

j.

II

' .J'o'•

.

'· · :

ATTENTION LOG PRO· .. ,,:
DUCERS : We need grede

SWEEPER on/sewing
machine repair. ports. and
eupptioe . Pick up and
delivery, Davie Vacuum

Gun shoot. Racine Gun
Club. Every SunCtay starting
1 p.m . .Factory choked guns
only.
------ · ~-

logs and veneer, we ., 1 '·'
paying top prices for quail tty
material delivered to our
m_ill ,_ in the following
speceea : The o•ka, Ash
~
Cherry, Herd Maple, and~· ~
Walnut . Blaney Herdwooda
"

ot Ohio, Sr. Rt. 339 North. ,
Barlow, Oh 814-e78-2980 · •

- : - - - - - - - - -- -- - -·

11 '

BEDS ·IRON, BRASS , old ,• ,

furniture , gold . ailver •
dollau. wood Ice boxea, : ~
stone jars : antiquea, etc., •
Complete houaehold 1 .. '" 1~
Write : M .D. Miller, Rt. 4, · ·~·-~

GINGER BREAD STUDIO·
Art lo11ono . JON! Pomeroy, Oh . Dr. 992 · .• ,, ,,
CAR RIN.GTON-698-3290. 7160.

. :~C:.~~~:·.A3no"4'-~~~~i;~~ •

11

gemes . F_inal jeckp ·ot a
t60.000 . Coverall. Febru-

transportaUon • motel. Call
Lucas Tours, Charleston.

."

'

JO~~slfr~K9.RD

column . There will be no
If the Son therefore aha II

!roo tndood.
John 8:3e

~·

·~

' .

,.,

·~. \t ~
;

Giveaway

cha'll• to the edvortloer.
mo.

Pliny 304·676·2276. '304:
823-5843 .

'

~­

WANTED to leaae. Tobacco
quota . will give . 16 lb .
Morgans Woodlawn Ferm ·

wv, 304·348·7642 .

ANY PERSON who hae
anythln• to give a"(a't end
doll not ofttr or lttempt to
off• eny otoorthlng for ufe
may piece en ed lnthlo

1

Gold , silver , sterling·,
'
jewelry, rings . old coina &amp; ..., ~ ·
currency . Ed Burk.tt Barbef : of'J

BIN GO trip. Cherokee North Shop, Middleport. 992- ,:.,
3476.
·
n
14,000. plua 4 jockpot ~:-:::=:--------"---:.
• . • .,.r

ALL OTHER APPUANCES . 1----..._______~ moko you ''"· Yo ohell be
POMEROY

'·t

Cash for used mobile hame1 ~ :
or travel trai lera . Will "' !
consider damaged or bum ~ •

~~~~---------- ·

3 Announcemqnts

4

20% &amp;30% OFF
2-16-1

We pay cash for late model '.~ ',
clean Ul8d Clrl.
·' ' r'
Frenchtown Car Co.
•1 .,7
Bill Oene Johnaon
-

Carolina , 20 games at

THE
'KOUNTRY KWB

FREE GAS! Approxii11118Y II beaiJiilt,tl wood~ ilcii!S. 3 bedroom

Olllci ., ............................................:............ 912·12!19

dlliton. VVe aleo nipeir
G•T•nb.

. ·•

'

1-------......;,:-----:;-~-;::=======::;:::~ ory
19th . • 20th . 1983.
I
*75 . per peraon Includes

house. l!tm. other lluidiltp. IJI a;., •• t'Kriii l:ell on thiS one! .

.
IIEAI.TORS
.
E. Cllllld, Jr., GRI ................................. 992,&amp;191
Dotlfi T.._ .......... ~ .................................. ~ •••. 91Z..5112
. - TIUIIIII .................................. :.... :............

We can repair and ,.
001'1 .radiltOII and 1'11111·
tsr COIBI. Wa can 11110
add boll and rod out 1'1·

l-12·l mo. pd.

IIIGGSCIIEST - 2 acre leA IIIith a beautiful 3 bedroom ranch. 2
. blh, lamiy room, lorma~ dinina. 2411. pool inct.uded. $55,000.00.
LETMr FARII - 75 tmS, tots •:.. ~ tf;et frilntle, 3 btllroom

RADIATOR
SERVICE

,,_! ~ i?..

446·8026 .

George•
Cleaner, one
Creek
half
·Rdmila
..Call
up

PH.992·2259

•

I

PH. 992-3795
llookkeepi~

..

_s___vv_a_n_t_e_d_T
_ o__a_u_y___
WANTED TO BUY Old ·.

Buying Gold, Silver, Pia11· ·· '

618 E. Main. Pomeroj, OH.
We Do

-==;:;::::=:;::;;::;:=
../ .
:;;
furniture and Antiques of ell : •
kinds, call Kenneth Swain . :.
446·3169 or 266· 1987 I~ .. ,~
the evenings .
,, ••

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

~~======~~fr=~~~~~~~~ 448·0294..

~OMEROY, OHIO

~
·
. :-:- 'L..---------:------------......1 11--------------J

I

1 tomato puppy a moo. old
hu hod ohota. Cell 44e- ·
7729 .

~OST

r:=======t:i-;::=;::;::::;::;;:;;:;:;:;:==j";::====;::=:::::::;1
p
...

mg in the First Ward of the
Village of Pomeroy. M e1gs
County. Oh1o.
REFEREN CE DEED· Voi.
267. Page 803. Me•gs Coumy
Deed Records. .
Sub,ect to all easements and ·
rights of way of record.
Sa•d prem1ses located at 846
E. Ma•n Street. Pomeroy. OH.
AT.AELLUNS0HERIFFSSALESOPER·
ER THEDOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR. THE MEIGS
COUNTY SHERIFF MAK tS NO
GUARANTEES AS TO STAWS
OF TITL E PRI OR TO DATE OF
SALE.

608 E. MAIN

..4 .·.

I
1

~~~~i.
·~~~ar~. '1:~\l" 4~~: ,
41615 or 446·9424.

Hl ·t1c

R1111l Estate General

.

349 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, OH.

"Beautt'fui,Custom
,
· OPEN 9·m5·MoN. thru SAT.
Built Garages
All TyJies of Aulo Repelr.
.Call for free siding 85, 1 '
Bnhs.: Tupe-Ups, ott.
timates, 949-2801 'or
. · SPI!:CIAL

"00
"00

'

31. ~ ·

30.

1 16.

I
I
I

26.
II:
27. ------------'
28.
. . Il ,

7.

8. ---' ·,

I. u .

,
•

t

lowmg descrtbed real estate.
snuated 1n th e County of Me•gs.
State ol Oh1o. and 1n the V1llage
of Pomeroy, and bounded and
descrrbed as follows. to-w1t:
A P•ece ol ground liftv feet
Wide out of . the southwest
corner at Lot No. '12 1n the plat
ot Dillsburg, now Lot No. 290
1n Pomero y. Ohto. wh1ch 1S
bounded an d des cr1 bed as fol·
lows: Begtnn•ng on the west
s1de of sa1d Lot"No. (290 ) Two
Hundre d and Ntnery - cit .the
· sou th s1de of the stone Sidewalk
on the nort h s1 de ol From
Str eet Thence nort h With the
west s1de of sa•d Lot No.
to
th e face ol the rocks or bluff;
'thence easr !501 fifty feet w1th
-the rocks and parallel 'Mth
Front Street: thence south to
the south side Otthe sto ~e Sidewalk l1lty feet east of the place
of beg.n nmg: thence west With
said s•dewalk to the place of begtnn.ng. ReseN •ng a· nght of,
way for public use twelve feet
w•de through said ,lot near _11s

I
1.

24.

' 112.

., I

,rl

1983. al ) 0:00 AM.. the fof·

17 . -----'--~
'18.
1
~~ .
II
20. - --------- t

1 .1.
I 2.
I 3.

!

In purs uance of an Order ol
Sale 1n the above ent1tled ac·
t1on. I w•ll offer for sa le at public
auct•on. at th e fr ont door of the
Court House •n Pomer oy.
Me1gs County, Oh10, on Satur·
day. the 26th day of March.

I
1
1
I·

t · I Wanted
( )For Sale
.
&lt; )Announcement
)ForRent

BISSELL
Sl Dl NG Co •

..

Ill , "'""" • ...,,..

'"'
U7

'

CASE NO. 1.7.789 ·
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE

Circle
space below. Eoch In·
lllial or group ot figures
Ad Wanted
counts as a word. Count
1 name and addres~ or Wo•"'"
phone number If used .
You'll gel befler results --~~F~~~,_-;
If you describe fully,
.
give price. The Senllne~ Tots
reserves the r lght to -;;:-;;f-_;_li;:;lr.;-.;;t-"""i
classify, edit or reject .,;T,.;o,.;2.;.5.J.--1f-~---il--!
any ad. Your ad wilt be
put in the proper -T~o~J~sj__J.!!~~~E~
classification if you' II I
check the proper box
These cosh rates
1
below.
Inc tude discount
1

,.

n :t ...,_

. . ..... · -

CARPENTER
fOR
RENT

TRANSMISSION CO.

SIDI'NG

._o.....,

~ 11i

Dltendent.

.

results. Money not refundable.

" •.

'

DEPARTMENT

Sealed Proposals 'NIII be re·
ce1ved by the Me1gs County
Comm i SS ioners . POI'fleroy .
Ohio. at tne Clerk"s Office unt!l
1 2 noon on the 25th day of
February. _
1983 . . and at that
t1 me opened by the Clerk qf
sa1d Board. for insurance for the
M etgs Countv Welfare Department. accordtng to spectll cauons of sa1d Board of County

coupon. ca.ncel your ad by phone when you get

.

-·

·\Ia-

614·379-27215.
. t: ·: •
Fe mote Collco cu to Jood
homo ptooao. Coli 44e. ;
7&amp;97.
•

---------------~LOST-In Pomeroy, on Union '

Sheflff 0 ;
Me• gs County. Oh•o
JAMES D. McDOUGAL. ET 121 17. 24. 131 3. 3tc
AL,

COUNTY WEIJ'ARE

Write vour own ad and or.der by

.-: ..
.

INlHE
COMMON' PlEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
THE DIAMOND SAVINGS •
LOAN COMPANY,

_______________ ______ ..,.
.
I
Curb Inflation I
Pay Cash .for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

..

•

,.,_.,.

Public Notice

R~PURCHASE
,.;
·

.,..,

.

·.

U.t1111-o4•
0.111 , . _ . .

CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY 80ARO
. Of COMMISSIONERS
(211 0.17. 2tc

Of ..suRANCE
FOR lHE MEIGS

RDUClARY
'On Jaouarv 26. 1,,983. •n lhe

.

.

••1

Separate and independent

OHIO

'

•.. ,..
no t"'......Pttt-•

1 4l ...........

Commissioners.'

1213. 10. 17. 3tc
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Public Notica
OHIO
ESTATE OF PEGGY HOF- 1---N-O_:rJ_IC:.E-TO
_ __
FMAN. DECEASED
IIOOER8

'1 \

.

,

I

Colt

.
.
l
~~=======~fr~=~~~~~=~fr~~~~~~~~rl448·2891
Vinyl &amp; Alumin11m
AUTOMATIC
MIUER
Ave. Tom Cat. Coiled CeHy. I
Black fluffy with green eyee. ,

lb .. c-. l04 '

, . , Jl•c-

PubUc Notice

.

OF MEIGS COUNTY,

23407
C.. No.NOTICE
OF
APPOINTMENT

197 .....,..,.:,

147

lJI - ·

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........ c .. . wv

JU , . , _

....... o...

17·..........

- .. c.......,
...... c... at•

~---.

.

·- ··.

••&amp;r•*
O...•Dn•

~

. Public Notice

I

,,.,,.,,,,f"U' o •. ~t ·lut~~ ~• · .• ...

.... -~
c,..;,. .

t l·l " -.......

· ·- -··.-!~···

P~bUc Notice

-.'

Russell said the victim was "quite
a gentlemen" but that his brother's
behavior frightened neighbors and
that there were violent arguments
"
between the two. '
Russell said the victim had to!d
him he had been stabbed In the back
and cut In the leg durtng fights with
his brother. 'Russell said there were
Incidents at the Oliver residence
constantly arid that be had summoned pollee on one occasion. ,
"He (Richard C. Oliver) didn't
want his brother to \!rink because
when his brother would drink the
was)'· veJY unruly, handling weapons and SlUff like that,'' R1188eU
said. "When he'd go on a drinking
blnae,he'dcomebackalldralseheU
aver there and raise bell with us, call

z•
z•
• .,

:::
.-:....:::.....
...=.......

Oh•o 45779

Elderly .~rother ·. kills ·twin
in argument over TV show

~·

N
o.·23995. W
.

''

I

317

I

a:;r .................

14 - 11-v•Ot•~

"•"'

--

=--0-%...,_
11 ·" -

I ). U...todo

••·a.-a let"-•

/&lt;~llnll"illjJ.

l• v-

..,_ .,, ..,
"'-"·~

...

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

bids will be recei11ed with reESTATE Of ELEANOR K. . spect to the Insurance requ ired
Will bo &lt;!&amp;rolf .... puiJIIc ...
to be purchased as prov1ded by
llle prern-. cor BANK ONE OF CROW, DECEASED
23111
1
the specifications. Specif1ca·
POM!:ROY •I NA. Ccurt and S.. c- No.NOTICE
.. Of
tions and instructions to
ooad su-; l'or!loroy, ONo, ...
APPOINTMENT
bidders may be ob1a1ned at the
S.tunlay, 111e 11111 day cor FebruOF FIDUCIARY
office ol the Cierlr ol the Me;gs
ary, I!I8S ot 1~110 A.M. EST.·
On January 26. 1983. 1n the County ·CommiSStoners, PomeTonno cor Solo: Cull. 19'19tuwasakl Moft:Jrcyclo, - 1 KZIOOO.
Melgs County Probate Court.
rav. Oh10.
Items moy bo IOid In untt.or .,.... Case.
Fred
Sa1d Board of Com m•ss1on·
eels anti u.. oellor '""""" the
CroW. Jr.. 1 Frog Blvd .. Syra- ers reseNes the nght to wai\16
cuse. Qh1o 45 7 79. was ap- ~ormal1at•es to accept and reright to ~~ any and aD ·
Fob. 16, 17, tp. 31c
po•nted Execu tor of the estate , ,J~Ct parts or all of ~nv and all
of Eleanor K. Crow. deceased.
bidS.
MARY E. H08STETIEA.
late of 1 Frog Blvd , ,Syrac vse.

'·'

ment today In Franklin County
Municipal Coun .
NelgJ:tbors said the brothers, both
retired, had lived together since the
mid·19f1Js. Harvey Russell, 51, who
lived next door to the Ollvers since
1967, said Richard C. Oliver had
promised .the twins' mother he
would take care of his brother.

••·••...••v.....-

.
, . ..
....
-·
....
.
....
-,
..,•..,...-..
_.
.......... _
•:..•-

( ."{lu~i/i t·riiHI~•·~ ,., , l:,.r r '' ''

.,.,
.._"'""'"
"II-C...,.. E . , . _

, ,_,., Sa61Gf , ....

4J .. . . . . ..__, _ _ ,

"jl1 .- -.......
~

II'-........

sa........... .......,.,
ll-l.,.oaac...,.

I!WUCMU:
n..-,.d&amp;utlbedllem(li

•••
"'

St. Joseph Elementary School in
Fremont was closed Tuesday
because seven of 16 teachers were
sick with the flu. Sister Mary
Delmar, the school's principal, said
she closed the school because both
pupils and teachPrs were infected.
"I figured the day off would give
everbody a chance to get better ,"
said Sister Delmar. Less than 10
percent of the school 's 425 pupils
were absent , she said. 1Q .January,
St. Mary's Elementary School In
Mtllersville was closed for a day
because more than 30 percent of the
pupils were slc;k.
Two elementary schOols in nor-

14-Mitc . ,....~.

) I. J _ ... ....

, ....... tvi.ct ......

'"

years."
Health officials said th(' nu is
sweeping north from southwestern
Ohio, where an outbreak was
spotted about two to three weeks
ago.
Limited availability of substitute
teachers seems to be the reason that
parochial schools have been first to
close due to the flu outbreak, school
officials said.
In Fremont, a Sandusky County
elementary schOOl closect for the
second time this year due to the flu .

...
.................. ·'
................
I•-•

J:tlrlll ................. , ...

NanCE OF.

.

TY.fl_.l..,_,..

u -c•.
u .........

' ,,_..__,

PubNc Notice

-rUf

tltlio 45769

.'

72·
·-·-....
n-'"""•••wo

. , ... _ ....... CoM.

, ,......~&amp;- ....

l·tt_, ...
7.,........ - .. ..._1

'

,,
.......,... o_""""'
,,......, .. l _

New Homes - Extensive
Remodeling.
•Insurance Work
.Custom Pole Bldgs.
· &amp; Garages
•Roolinc Work
oA!tnirun &amp; Virl)1 Sidin&amp;s
15 Yearo Exporianco
GREG ROUSH
· PH 992 7583
· ·
or 992-2282 11-lJ.Nc

Clhsifttd O.,t. t

~o...oay,

-,
I&lt;C-•In.......... ;.. ... _ l

ANGIE'S
pIZZA
PH. !192-6851

CONSTRUCTION

Dlilly

'

.

:Colli~~::·:::.!.

~==:;;::;:~~~f=:;:;;:;;~~~~=======~ _15~7~8~8.~;;;;;=~;;;;;i=·~

PHONE
992-2156 ~.i
Or Write
Sltltintl

•'

,.'
•'
,.'

KAY'S
8EAUJY SALON

;'!"'.;;:alii)

The Daily Sentinel

Northern .·O hio flu outbreak
driv~s up school absenteeism ;.· .
By JACK A. SEAMONDS
Associated Press Wrller ·
Absentee rates of33 percent.and
higher arP being reported in schools
across Ohio, where pupils and
teachers are being plagued by the
flu.
Health officials say sick pupils are
showing up at hospital emergency
rooms around the state in lncreas·
lng numbers, but there isn't IT)uch
medically that can be done.
"With the flu. about all you cando
Is follow the time-honored traditions
of plenty of rest and liquids - and
~tay at home." said Dr. Thomas
Halpin, thief of the Ohio Health
Department's bureau of preventa·
live medicine In Columbus. .
Halpin said the flu virus that has
been isolated by health officials Is
Type A Bangkok, a variety that 's
been around for a few years: He said
the outbreak is widespread, but not
at epidemic propontons.
"I would say an epidemic would
be a situation where we had a new
strarn of flu thflt people haven't buUt
up antibodies against, such as the
Hong Kong flu a lew years ago,"
Halpin said. "We only expect to see
a new strain about every 10 to 20

·,YOUNG'S

~::;.

-~

sam.

By JAMFS HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
. COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP)- Two
71-year-old · twin brothers, . one
described as a gentleman and the .
other as a troublemaker, argued
about a television program and
today one faced arra lgnment on a
murder charge flied In the other's
death, pollee said.
Pollee said Richard L. Oliver told
All Middleport VIllage funds as of bond retirement, no receipts, no
Name omitted
officers
that his brother, Richard C.
Jan. 31 totaled $457,893.76, accord· disbursements, $14,589.40; plan.
Shannon
Counts,
fourth
grade
Oljver,-threatenedhlmwlthasword
tng to the monthly report of Clerk· ning commission, no receipts, $5.04,
Treasw-er Jon .B11ck.
, . $63.82; sanitary sewer escrow, no. student at Racine Elementary, was Tuesday night. The twins argued In
. their .home on the city's north side
Receipts and expenditures re... receiptS ,' no . d\'s'tlUrsements,
unlntentlonallyomlttedfromtheUst about which television program to
spectlvely from each village fund $136, 717.29; fire house improve- . of honor roll students.
1 watch and thesurvMngtwlnsa,ld he
and the end of the month balance ment, no re,ceipts, $21,082.85,
.
shot his brother In seH-defense with
follow: general, $14,088.43, $21,082.85 deficit; water tank,
·
a plsiDI, pollee l'!!Pilrted.
$16,9a6.87; $29,816.28; street mainte- $1,000, no disbursements,
1
Richard L. Oliver, 'a weapons
nance, $1,972.94, $5,397.04, $2,335.41, $176,32~. 93; water, $8, 701.12,
~eterans Memorial Hospl!al
colleCtor,
"said he just got tired oflt
detlclt; HUD. $40,000, $34,359.19, $10,107.08, $21,750.16; sanitary
AdmntEd·-OH!J:yl Hysell, Pome- and shot,hlm,'' said Detective Julie ·
$9,794.09; federal rewnue sharing, sewer, $6,641.02 ; $5,610.82,
roy; Pricey Tackett, Ewlngton; J.o!ieph. "He doesn't remember
$2,252, $1,177.75, $6,482.05; street $8,088.21; swimming pool, no reGoldie Roberts, . Racine; Herbert what the tell!vlslon program was or
lights, no receipts, $1,291.84, ceipts, $22.85, $1,283.95; cemetery,
Gilkey, Middleport; Juanita Chap. what the argument was about"
$9,341.68; street levy, no ~pts, $875.47, $926.77, $945.78; water meman, Clltton, w. va.; Jeanette
Richard C. Oliver died about 11
no dlsbunements, $13,747.32; fire ter trusts, $210, $140, $8,827.65.
Diles, Pomel oy.
.,.m.
'nle9day of a stJJ111e lfinshot
, equipment, $3,625, $2,067.54,
ReCeipts ror the month totaled
Discharged--Shirley Frazier, wound .to the bead. Rlchard L.
$1,669.48; fire truck, $5,000, no dis· $84,365.98 while dlsbw-sements · , Mary JOIIBI, Eunll.'e Nutter, Edith
Oliver was cbqtedwtth ~.
buraements, $41,866.93;
general
~unted In $99,135.64.
'
.
.
Spencer.
He W8l ICbedu1ed tor arralan·

·M~ddleport village funds total
$457,893.76 as 9f Janl!ary 31

ley, Kitty L. Whaley fol' Harold D. . ter District, RJght or way, Letart. t;========;r;:=JE':~:,.
~,:::===:;-r,:::::======:;"'
Whaley, deed., Frederick 0. WhaO!arles Manuel, ·~velyn Manuel
SAL'E
Kitchen Cabinets·- Roof·
ley tD Herald 011 and Gas Co., Par- to. TUppers Plains Chester Water
"
•'
Inc _ Si'dln~- Co-rete
DISCO,NTINUED
...
cel, Scipio.
District, RJght at Way, Letart.
CARPENTER
Patios ldewalks Larry R. Walker, Kaye A.
RobertS. Shaw, Ruth E. Shain to
SERVICE
PERM: STQCK
New Construction - Re·
Walker to Anthony Kopec, Dawn
Tuppers Plains Chester Water Dis·.
··::. SlJOO .
model inc - Custom Pole
trlct, RJght r1. Way, Letart.
• 1' • ancl .Omodollnt
Barns.
Kopec, Lot 4; Chester.
Dorothy L. McGuttln to Steven'
Doris J. Haynes to Tuppers
-··-..-NDWTHRUMARCHSth
CHARLES SAYRE
Lee McGutfln, N. half Lot 318,
Plains Chester Water District, · ~=~
AND SON
RJgbtorway, Lebanon.
~-·-..
.'
,.
Mlddleport.
Clinton Randall Faulk, Brynda
Olarles E. La~n. Hazel E.
.
.Roofilll &amp; Sidilll Co.
Faye Faul to· Warren J;&gt;. Blljck, · Lawson to Tullpers Plains Chester
y. C. YOUNG Ill
169 N. f2nd
Route I
Esther M. Black, Parcel, Rutlaild: Water. District, Right of Way,
·
_.
or
•
•
t
MIDDLEr~RT~
OH.
lone
Bottom,
OH. 45743
92 73 4
992 215
Che!lter,
.
Sylvan J. Clelalul, Dolly F. CJe. · Letart.
.
I
Pomoroy, Ohl~l·26·Hc
, . 992 2'12;~1·26-lml.
985-4193 or992·3~~Hc
William Reid Easterday, deed., land, and Warren D. Black, Es~r
to John Wllllam Eal!terday, Cert. of . Black, Rliht of Way, Rutland.
nahue
ppers . olnsna CMhes
ter,'.
BW Jt.o DoTunahue,PMl.a
. Do-·,
trans., Sutton.
.'John E . Ander!!m, Luda I. AnderDistrict, Right of Way,' ,
ROUSH
B. D. T. Resources, Terry Wha· son to Tuppers Plains Chester Wa.
lleucy Bahr eta!, Eileen Bahr.
Donald Pigott, &amp;!san Elizabeth PI·
&amp;Ott tD HeJiry Bahr, Eileen Bahr,
Paroels, OUve.
Hemy Bahr, Eileen Bahr, Qo.
nald Pigott, Susan Ellzi.betb Plaott
to Dmald Pigott, &amp;1111111 EIIWieth
Pigott, alca .Bettie PiggQtt aka
Betty Pigott, Paroels, OUve. .
Fred C. Ridet', Verdle M. Rider to
Linder A. Dains, Mildred L. Dains,
Betty MUboan, Pegay Moore, Heidi
Ewln,l, Rhett Milhoan, . Parcels,

"

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.~

Busin~~~'fsenices

Meigs County property transfers...

'

"
,.,

I 0-day jail' stay for contempt

;Th~un;:·~Y:·~~~m:u:m~y;1~7~,~~~~------~------~--~~~--~~~~~n~~~~~y~~~ud~diler:~·~Oh~io~--~:---~~~~~--~;-~~--~T~~~Da~i~ly:~:n~ti;~:I-=;P~===9·'~

il

r

' .....

Direct Care St•H to Work on ' · .,.,
'' :~i
mentally retarded adult a · .J.\
with bah avo rial dieordera.
""~
~ntereet applicanu must be ·ioJ
ent•r.getic, patient end be ,~~
able to work flexible hou,., · ·J•
Prevloua experience work·
· ·~
11 1
ing with people required. If
'
lnt•eatld send resume tO ~ ''"
Qhlo Raoidentoit Service• • ~~
Inc., Attn . David Brown,
\

In es needed baa is wlt·h

j

Two nice 7 wk. old 'pupe,
nlco lor children . Cell ' P.O.Box93e:Golllpolio, Oh '•;~
e14·387·7&amp;00.
4&amp;831 .
,J

•

1

�..
•

10-The
11

Sentinel

Can ' t work 9 to 5 . Sel l
AVON . W or k when you

S7A1li4:XIft····

want. Call 446 -3 368 or

446 -2t58.

II 1 Houuhold Gooda

wanted . Fu ll or part time .
You must ha.ve or get

KIT 'N' CARL VLE '"

3 rm . end 4 rm. unfumloMd
epenmonto. UtllltiM pold,
no poto, no children . Cell
US-3437.

..

REALTY , Box 100 , C -0

1177 Chtvr PU 4•4. 310
onlll!le, 4 opel., rnochtnloolhr
A·f ' 17 ft. flotbod '"'llor.,
ft. floor width, • •· cond.
loth for 1 prl011. Mull 1111.
meke offer. Cd 114-318·

. PLeASe SI'A$ ~­

we ~A'Ie u:sr

'

• I

THURSDAY
2/17/$3
EVENING

toto.

AIL 'fQJa-1 WilH

ReAJ:,ry.

For ront urrfumllhtd opt .. 4
rooma and beth. lnqulnt •t
S7 VIne St., Golllpolio.

license . We ' ll help . Send
resume to STR OUT

6 :00

1171 ford Courier 4 cyl .. II
spd ....w milooeo. foctory
4x4 oonvorolcln, Coil 614•
2411•110111.
'

'

_,._--"'

Tribune, Gallpolh. Oh

Cil Tic Tac Dough

I]) F. A. Soccer:· Rood to

Wembley
(I) Ctml Burnett
(I) D Cll II (iJ News

mlluge . n . 'o oo . Coli
614-181· 3890. .
'

4563t .

Cil Nows/Sporu{Woather

CAfYI'I\N F.I\SY
IS. THERE A
BACK DOOR TO

T~IS C~CKEil­

BOX f'

WHO ARE

THE PROT!l!&gt;TERS
THeY~ WHAr
f!JAY HE STOLE THE
00 THI:Y
TA)(. MONEY. THAn;: '
WHY THEY DON'T
WANT 1 THeY'Il-E .
HAVE ' THE Ill
UNEMPLOYED
.JOBS.
CITY WORKER?.
MA~OR'.o

WASM,

t.'I~N GAll RND
1\H~IR WA'{ 10
I

ll{EMCQJ .....
HE brroS- I..05T
01J HI? WA'I .

'

1181 KAWASAKI KX 125,
ridden 1 ••••on, good
condition, for detail• call
304-S76·1780 oftllr 4 :30.

The Meigs local School
D i strict has the following

extra-curricular coaching
va can cies : Girls' Varsity

Softball , Girls ' Rese 1rve
Softball and Drama . Any
individual who possesses an

and
is inrerested
in
Ohiowho
Teaching
Certificate
making application for the

vacancies should contact
Dan

Morris, Superintend·

WILL do ·house cleaning
Monday through Saturday.
Have reference if needed.
304-675 -7263.

li~iiiiiiii
21

23, 1983. telephone 614992-2163 .
The West Virginia Depan•
mont of Health is soaking a
full-time Hospi1:al Administrator for its Fairmont
Emergency Hospital. loc ated in Fairmont, West
Virgin ia . Requirements :
Baccalaureau degree plus
two years of experience in
hospital or heahh services,
or business administration .
This 44-bed facility provides
long -term skilled nursing
services and outpatient
.cli nic services. Applicants
should submit resumes and
applications to : L Clark
Hansberger, M.D., Di..,ctor
of Health, 1800Washington
Street. East. Charleston,
West Virginia 25306. by
December 16 . Salary negotiable . Equal Opportunity
Employer-AA Plan-M-F · H

Business
Opportunity

ent. on or before February

1- - - - - - , - - - - OWN your own sportswear
shoppe. Training, inventory,
fixtures all included .
115,600. Call now! Mr. Tate
704-763-4738.

!-;;:;:====;:===
122 Money to Loan

1- - - -- - - - - HOME lOANS 12% fixed
rate . leade r Mortgage,
1·614-592-3051 .

1---------Busine11 S. Second Mort·
gage loans . Equity Re ·
1 o u r s e s . in 0 hi o
1 -800 - 992-2351 , out of
Ohio 1-613-258-0112.

23

Professional
Services

LOOKING for a part time job·
C&amp;L Bookke-ing
that has good pay , ,life
- ..
insurance, retirement plan, Tax Returns &amp; bookkeeping
that will teach you a valuable for Individuals &amp; buslnell&amp;l .
Short forms 15.00
lob skill, plus help with a LOng forms 120.00 and up
college or Vo-Tee educe - Carol Neal
448 -3862
tion? There's only one
around! High school seniors PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
or graduates. you may even C
qualify for a cash bonus .
all Bill Ward for appointContact the West Virginia ment , Ward"s Keyboard,
Army Notional Guard . For l -4-46_·_4_3_7_2_.- - - - more i nf or mation call PERMANENT HAIR
Sergeant Sergeant Lutton at REMOVAL ..- Profeuional
304-676 -3950 or call toll
free 1-800-642-3619.
Electrolysis Center. In c.,
A. M . A. Approved, Dr .
Referrala . Gift Certificates,
Rawleigh Distributors new
hours. By appointment,
wanud . Full or pan lime.
304-676-6234.
Exce llent opportunity for
e.Mtra income. Cat1304·676 ·

~:7~·
.;·-; ii·c-ciAST.iNTiiti: ~~~!~~!~~~~
NA TIONAL COMPANY is I:

now expanding in your area 31 Homes for Sale
and is in immediate need of 1--'--- - - - - --two sales persons to learn
our business while simul· $100 down reserwa1 con·
taneously training for dominium. Oapo1it i•100%
management position. Must refundable . Choose now.
have·some sales experience. See John Ecker, Riverside
a High School Education&amp;·• Terrace . CaL446·1 126.
'- - - - - - - - - strong desire to lead a sales ,force . Call collect at 304· For sale house , 2 Iota,
733-0708 .
chain-linked fanco In Rio
Grande . Will consider land
Bartender . Anchors. 320 contract. Call 814-246 6034.
Main St. 304-676-9769 .
12 :

Situations
Wanted

Have vacancy in Boarding
home tor elderly. Resonable
ratos. 614-992-6022 .
TREE TRIMMING &amp; REMOVAL•. CALL614 -949 -2129
OR 614-992 -6040 .
13 •

Insurance

3 bdr. 1 car garage, central
air , located 1h mi . out
Cleo rgo's Cr""k Rd. Owner
moy finance, $37,000. Coli
367 -7743.
3 bedroom house for 11le .
New carpeting throughout.
located on Beahan Rd. and
siti on 3 acre• of land .
Excellent terms to right
porty. MAKE AN OFFER. 30
year financinJI oval! able.
Contact Bank One of Pome·
roy. 614-992-2133.

84

Hay

a. Grain

Building mo~lols
block , brick, otwer pipes,
wlndowa, llntele. etc.
Claude Winters, Rio Orondo,
0 . CoiiS14-248-8121 .

WA?I-li?COA.

.

Byorly ond Fltlts "uton11tic
Tronoml11lon Repair. NOW
OPEN. Corner of Kemper
Hollow • Kerr lethtl Rd ,
Cell 44S-88.38 '

Conditioned her, tor com .
2 bdr. houae on lower Rt. 7 .
Coil 814-841-2S70.
Deposit required. Call · Unfurnished upstairl apt far
rent, good location. 304·
614-258-1413.
Ht'l' fo,r oolt·E •collent
66 Pet• for Sale
676-1302 .
exc••• at leah• F1rm In
3 bdr. 1 car gorogo, control
64 Misc. MarchandiH 1-------------~ Rutlond. FO&lt; more lnlormol)ir . located Y2 mi. out ONE bedroom apartment•
tlon coli F. Goilbtl I t
George's Creek Rd . Call lor tho elderly. All u111itleo
HILLCREST KENNEL· Coolvlllo . 1·'114-S17paid: .To,.ntl poy 30 per367-7743.
Boordlng oil breodo . AKC 383S.
cent of thei ·r ldjusted For sale lump coal &amp; fire- Rog. Dobormons pups old
Largo brick houn 5 bod· Income in thil HUD aublid· wood. linn Coal Co .. Inc. Dobermon Stud Servloe. Hoyfor-. 614-843-11380
1 ·
Coli U8· 77811.
rooms with fireplace, family ized apartment building. Cell 448-1 408.
room, also 3 car garage 6. in Twin Riven Tower. phone
Horf~~&lt;- - 614-9B2· 5S18
ground pool . *376 mo. plus 304-875-84!79 . Equol Slobs cut-up 116 full t.n9th DAAGONWYND CA1TERY efttrll p.m.
I 1 0 PU lood, round wood, • KENNEL . AKC Chow
opportunity housing .
nc. dop, Coli 4.4 6-7677.
large truck lo1d . Call pupplu. CFA Hlmoloron , TIMOTHY hoy U.OObole. 8
81 4-2·5-6804.
6 r.m. house 'tn Courrtry'.
Ptlrolon and l!Uomooo kit· Milt from · town. ht. Quol2'h mi . from town eat-in 46 Furnished Rooms
teno. Cell 448·3844 after lty, 2nd. orophoy f2.10btlo
kitchen." l. RoOm ,· w-wood
For aale new diemond 4PM.
delivered by true" load .
Ph
'"04 27•3
burner, 3 bedrooms, utiity Sleeping room I 125. u1ili · engagement ring, ain I. •
1 ----------Ilk for Ferrell polr of Chinchllleo . '-::::O:'n:'e_
..__
• _-_44_7_.room a. bath, carpet thru tie• pd . tingle mala, share Coii814·367-7KII4,
v
.
1
out, 1 yr. loan ond deposit. bath. 919 2nd Ave., Gallipo· Toni.
Coil 441-0188.
MIX hoy, clover a olhlfo,
Col1446 - 3046 day or lis . Call 446 · 4416 ofte•
&amp; c -....,.. boln
Firewood delivered flO PU NO 1811 klneno, grondfothtr timothy
446 -2602 evenings.
7PM .
f2.00 . 304-812-2422 eftor
load. Coli 446-2716 .
II wild Bobcat. Vorygontlo a 4 :30.
Farm house lor rent 1100
offectlonete. block with 1-;;;::;:::;::;::::;::;::::;::;::::;;:::::t ====
Moving: Muot oell color TV. whitt foot a morldngs. *711. 1:
mo. plus dop'. Call614· 245- 46 Space for Rant
9315 .
otero,
bedroom
&amp; llvin· or best offer. 304-871- ~~~=~==~~~=
groom furniture
. Mony
mon1 6S94.
lc
Autoa for
Vary nice 2 bedroom hou• KOUNTRY MOBILE Homo items. Coli S14- 387 - 0~et . · 1-:-:-:-::---:---:--:---:--in .Middleport. Furnished . Pork. Route 33, North of
PHEASANTS. 304 -885- ,.
'~--------------1260'. month. 614-992- Pomeroy . Large "lots . Call Now 1983 White oawing 3972.
machine
free
arm
model
6304 attar 5.
992-7479.
187S Buick !lec:tro 2 dr.,
with built·ln -stretch atich,
PS, PI, AC, AM-FM otero
zig zag pottorno, mokes 1 68
Fniit
2 bedroom house near
t 1 .810 or trtde for Olttlt.
Langsville, Dh. References 47 Wanted to Rent
b~tton hOIOI, inonogromo,
• V-atabltl
term oqulpm~nt of ,oquol
much more. We ere over-•
roqui 'rod . Call 614 -742 vtluo. Cltl1441'41137.
stocked with this model, we
2541 .
mull decree• our Inven 2 bedroom in Syracuse . Went to rent hay fiekb or cut tory . Foctory 20 yr. guoron- Pototooo, IS. por hundrlld 1878 lulcll Century 2 dr.
11 SO . month plus utilities. and balo on shores.' 614- tM. Reg. price over 1300, lb. big, 13.21: 10 lb. b ... auto .• Pa . AM ~ FM ater~
Employed coup! a or small 992-7409 or 614 -992 · your coat only 185. Cell U . S. No . 1 Wisconaln caaaette , ex . cond . Call
S14-386-B918 out oftown Ruuen . 304-S78-3782or 446·2133.
family , 992-6965 or 992- 6182.
coli collect. Free dolivery to 44S-8247.
6238 .
your home.
~~~~;;~;~~~ 1-riO&lt;,
18SO T-Bird.
A.C
.. velour
AM-FM
cou.,
now
Equipment
TWO bedroom hou11. base- . 48
69
For
rodlols.
broku.
e•houst.
for Rent
ment. 1 child or 2 small
exc. cond. 111991. 367children, couples only.
0417.
304-876-,301'
1975 Buick Et.ctro 2 dr .. l-,-y-o_w
__n_e_r__I_8
__2_D
__o_d_g_e
Backhoe andloader digs
1
1
SIX room house. full boto- ft . . large bed pick up
PS, PI, AC, AM -FM storo Mlrode e•. cond. 1I,OOO
ment. garege. nice location. hauleblt, op•rate yourself. cord. Coal delivered t4&amp; . 11,860 or trodo lor ctttlt. miles,
311 , V-B. cruloe,
t226 month, 304 -8 76- f90 . per day. 304-895- ton . Call Tom Hooklno term equipment of oquol meny extru.
•7.932. will
3841 .
614-949-2180 01 614- value. Cell 44S-4537 .
1090.
NCriflce. Cltll441-0047.
742-28;S4.
8a36 houoo troller. Bolt or
Firewood, split. t30 .00 o tiodo . Would moke nlco 18BO Plnlo outo, olr, PB.
42 Mobile Homes
trucklood. U6.00 doli- compor . a 1 4.7 42 .zooz . Pl. r •1 remoto mlrrows.
for Rent
ReOf defrost, wiro whotlo,
vorod. Ph. 18141 992-2770 *1.800.
or 13041 882 ·2194.
-:-::--:--::--::--:----- AM-FM otero. Coli S14·
1982 510 pickup. V-8, 4 , _31_8_·_88.._1_1._ _ _ __
2 bdr . near Ponderosa ,
TROYBILT AOTOTILLERS- a.,-, rtdioll. sliding back ,.
private , ref . a. 1ec . dep.
Diocounto . Free hiller glou. 4,000 mlt.o.IS,9811. ~~-N ov; • cyl .. *360. Coli
SWAIN
Adu~o. no poll. Coli 446,_
__
-•09
- -0 · - - - - - AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE included . Immediate ship- 814·882-3617 evenings.
2491 after 6 .
ment
.
Parts.
englnea
.
•·
S2 Olive St .. Golllpolio. King
coal &amp; wood heetera with 703· 942-3871 Hickory Hill
3 bedroom Mobile Homo . fon *469, ost box oprlng &amp; NurHry, Rt. 1 Box 390 A,
'.,
' .
ApproJCimately 6 miles from
Flshonvillo, VA 22939 .
P omeroy or M'1ddl epor t . "'""'"" *100, firm 1120, Treda· ina 1ccepted.
..
.
oofo-lovoMot &amp; choir 1199,
614-99~·6868 .
lov1
170. new coal &amp;
12i;d,;:;;;;;j~;i;;;.;:-;~ wood heetera •• low es
2 bd .room
1150. 1389 with blowers. uaed
dapo1it. $176 . per month coal II wood halters, new
plus u'lllhles end lewn cere. dinot 1011 f76 &amp; up, refrigorCell 614-986-3949 .
atora, ranges, bunk beda
12b,;;h.;;;;;;;i;'i~idl,;;.;;; complete 1179, bunkles
I 2 bedroom in
mettre11e1 e40 , chests .
Ful nithed , prefer
a. d,....ro, TV's. Coli 448 $226 . monthly. Pluo dop- 3158.
osrt. utilities paid . 814·992·
8610.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
1---------------~
· waahera. dryera, relrigereTWO mobile homtl for rant ton.
rangea. Skaggs Apon Rt. 2 about 6 minutaa plioncea,
Upper Al_vor Ad.,
from town. Cell after 8 . beaide Stone
Cre1t Motel .
304-676-6277.
448-7398.

•. IS IT 5.4FE T' LET
FJ{)O FLY 'IlliG

IIW, TH!iT'S OHIIY,

ll/'INIE/ IT ~GT 0'
PLANE, ·~DOY'?
6/VEtl YO/J II SmRT
ElL 'SCUSE ME
SEEIN' (X' FJtJO
FOR 115HIH'1 "'"'J•.. l. ilT Ttl' CONTfiCX.S.'

'

8~~F~1· ro~w~oo~d:_!d~ol~lv~o~re~d~l~8=0!:_.

F a K T,... Trimming, stump
romovol. Clll .l711-1331 .

'

i· "' '

..

.,

82

Navarone'

I THINK THE GIRLS
N.,A5 LOOKING FOR
REPLACEMENT, ~T NOW

LOOK AT THEM • ••
BUSY A6 BEES .

..

.

THAT THEY HEARD IT

,,

FROM Mf ...

'

111!1 (jJ It Takes Two
10 :00 II (I) Cil Hill Street Blues
First o.f three parts . Joe Cof·
fee is under suspicion when
a prisoner dies and Joyce
must choose between a
high-paying job and her love
for Capt . Furillo . 160 min .)
(I) MOVIE: 'The Seduction'

!lUCK LING
DOWN

AND TRYING

TO GET THE
,.---;t{r "~··~· RING, EH?

Haat_ing

CARTER;S PLUMBING
t'ND HEATING
Cor, Fourth ond Plna
Phone 441-3888 or 446- ·
4477

84

1~----,-------

TWO bad•oom trailer kitchen furnished, couples
only, one small child accepted, referencaa, 304S76-1076 , 1180 . 00
month .
1 - - -- - - - - - 1-:7'-::-- - : - - : : - - 43 Farms for Rent
1 - - - -- - - - - -

1: . \ H~EY

Electrical .
&amp; Refrigeration

vouiRE
COOK IN'
SUPPER
TONLGHT?

VEP-· MAW ,WENT
OFF TO VISIT HER
I SISTER. ZONEV

I
~

·- AN' BLESS
THIS FOOD

pLEEZE!!

£
~

•

•

86

General Hauling

-=:;.--..-1

. •'

i

~

j

•

J

2 bdr. Rogoncy Inc. Aport"
ments t200 par mo . or if
Income 11 .,0,000 or lou
HUD ovolloblt. A-0 ne Roal
Est11tt1. Corol Yeager.
Rooltor. · Coli 304-675 5104 or 876 - 63B6 or
675-7786 .
2 bdr.
Crown
8520.

1--------'--Furnlsh•d opl . t146 no
utilities pd, 3 100m1. 701
4th Avo., Golllpol ... Coli
441-4418 otur 7PM.

Need eomething hauled
away or something moved7
Wo'll dolt. CoUUS· 3159or
114-261· 1gl7 eftor 8.

3:30.

1 970 ChtVIIHt Sl IIUtO·
metlc, new eahauet, n•w
tlrol\ now point . f1800 .
304·8711·U81 oftor 4:30
p.m.
1

mlshed opt . in
Coli 814-261-

Furnished opt. 1 bclr .. 820
4th Avo .Golllpolls. Adults.
wour • electric pd. t200
mo. Coli 441 · 4'1 B otter
7PM.
.

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. ColloS1 4 -367 .
7471 or S14-367-0591 .

71 .Monto Corio, outomdc,
GC. 304-8711-1828 ofler

JIMB WATER SERVICE·.
Cell Jim Lonior, 304-675 7317.

ALL ltiYtln Vllhlcle, 111:11', 8
wheel drln,lood condition.

:104-02-28 7.

12

WanUd

to

Buy

w.,...

finn rnochlnory,
tD
buy. JuRk, lnternotlonel
form troolon, cob, . . - A.
or c. 104-743-7171.

87

.

SHARP 1172 Yollls-gon
··
- · ., 100. 304-17117380.
1871 MERCUIIY !!Jfher
w_,o, oiiDIIIont c
lion.
low mn . . ,o, .1 ownor,
tMn.oo. fiiiOM 304-171-

MOWREVB Upholotory Rt .
1 lox 124. Pt . Pleount ,
304-871-41114.

1104.

1/
.

'

'.
.

..

•

"

•
PF:i\Nt.:TS

l

"'
'''
•..,'

. •.'
\

I'

}
I
I
I

.. '

•f

c

•"

•

WHAT COIJLD I 00, CHARLIE
8ROWN ?V0Ul515TER FOLLOWS
ME AAOON~ CALLING ME
HER 'SWEET 8ASSOO"

I NEVER sAID I WAS
601N6 TO 61VE HER A
VALENTINE! IT WAS ALL

IN HER IMA61NATION !

([) TBS Evening Newo
Cll Qli]J 20/20
D CIJ ® Knots Lending
CIJAvengera
(jj) Newawatch
Ill INN News
10:30 Cil St8r Time
(fi) Crou Country Ski
School ·
• In Search of....
1 1 :00 II (I) Newsconter
I]) ESPN Spor1sCenter
(I) AH In the Family
Cll D Cll D (jJ News .
Ill Newa/Spor1s/Weather
(I) Dave Allen et Lorge
(iD Eyewitness Nowo
®Sign Off
eBe•· · Hill Show
1 1 :30 IJ · ' ' •) Tonight Show
Johnny '" joined by Mac
Oavis . 160 min .)
III MOVIE: :Man Who
Loved wom,n'
CIJ Another Ufa
Cil MOVIE: · ' Piranht,
___ _
Plianha'
CIJ Banny Hill {hOw :...
Ill CIJ Quincy Quincy discovers typhoid in a corpse
washed from its grave by
rain . IRI (60 min.)
C1J Sign Off
® AH In the Family
(JJI NitJhtline .
DMedemo's Piece
11 :46III MOVIE:
'Siuirlty'a
Machine'
1 2:00 CIJ Bums &amp; Allen
. C1J Top A.,k lo•lng from
LaaVeaea._NV
·
CIJ .Nightllne
.
· ill MOVIE: 'Br LJwo.
Poaualtd' '

15 Officiate
14 Ruffled
16 -standstill
temper
17 Snuggery
1S Ruffle
,
18 Japanese coin 211 Marked
Yesterday s Auswer
19 Beer, for some by hesitationstl Pollux's 34 Jinuny
Z3 Baton
21 Di.scl011ed
twin
J or James
:U "MASH"
ZZSaint(Port.) 29Menu
35Gennanic
corporal
23 Pale
32 Jeopardi2e goddess
25 Literary
25 Greek
33 Division 37 Sununer
great

letter

WIN DON'T I .AJST HOLD
.MV FiST OUT, AND nlEN
YOU WALK INTO IT?

Wonl
III CD Lut
Cil
(jJ

Gunamalte
1-2:30
Late Night with
David
David is
joined by Viva. 160 min .)
CIJ Jel:k Banny Show
CIJ Lut Word
D CIJ MOVIE: 'McCloud:
Tilt 42ncl St. Cevtllry'
1 :00 ()) I Morried Joon

Lett'""""

I

(JJI Newo

Sign Off

word

in

•, '

.

•,'

.

. '·

·'

.

'•

'

%6 A Lincoln I·

27Hub

Z8 New Ze•alal•dt~+--t--t--

tribe

29 "Silent-"

.. '

30 Rest
31 Str~lddlE:back
38 Performer

.'

38 Reach
39 Dutch town
40Impala

noahu

windstonn
DOWN
1 Coarse file
2 Asian
' river
3Contend
··"Spanish

"
(l966song)

-"'--'----L;~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to

•

l

work iJ :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

b

e

,I'II!~"1 ~

I

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 1 U Stc. Ave .• Oolllpolis.
448·7S33 or 448-1833.

.....,,·,

...
...

...

Plum~ing

a.

.....,

l!!l~llo'· ~·,

Got your ktrpet In ship
sbapo . Woter remove!. FREE
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CL EA NINO ,, C APTIAN
STEAMER 814·446· 2107.

~

a

.

W1ter Walla . Commerclel
1nd Domeadc . T•at holea.
Pump1 l1le1 1nd Service.
304-181-3102.

I=========
-.. ·
--····-···"·
--- .....
--'

.

Lucky South slams

..

RINGLE'S SERVICE e•porlonced roofing, Including
hot tor eppllcotlon, cerpen·
tor. olectrlcllln. mooon. Cell
304-S76-2018 or 1764180.

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

BRIDGE

I.

YEAH, THE LINK!
WE'LL WIPJ: 'I:M
OUT! 1\~'H!

Mobile Home Roof Probt.ms? Would you like to ond
roof lttko, roof rumbt., •oaf
coeting, coMing condonootion spotl ond oovo 30 to 40
porcom on your heeling bill?
Coli 982-7034 ond uk'
about our New Roof
Product.
RON'S Televloion ·Servlco.
Spoclellzlng in Zonlth ond
Motorola, O.u aa1r , 1nd
houH coils. Coli 671-2388
or ,46-2414.

'
..

•u . .

Repolr-Guner. Pointing Storm Dooro • Windows .
Free Euim•t•• · Phone
S1,·848-Z283 or S14 88:l-2781 .

1----------

I I)" :··;

.K•u•

LOGGEV OVER 200 HOU/1$
IN THISPLANE, ANNIE!

'.

;

SANOY AND .BEAVER
ln1-urance Co. has Offered
services for fire insurance
·coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century . Farm, 32 Mobile
home and peraonal property
for Sale
covarapu are available to l -~-------­
maet Individual needs .
Contact Neal Ina . Agency. TR 1- STAT.E M 0 BILE
agent. Phone 448 - 1~94.
HOMES . USED , CARS,
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES .
16
Schools
CALL 448-7672 .
.. Instruction
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV
MOBILE HOME SALES,
Karate the ultimate in self
cktfence all private lessons, 4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
Men , women , &amp; .chi ldr en . RT 35 .. PHONE 448 ·7274 .
Instruction thru black belt .
Also available Karate l\lloblle home &amp; lotolor ule ..
uniforms puching 1nd 1967 Buddy mobllo home
ldcklng bogo, ond protective 14•10, 2 bdr. 1111 hoat, "'"'I
equipment . Jerry Lowery a wotir. ott up with 2 or 4 '
Auociotu Koroto Studio, lots. CoN 441 -1240.
143 Burlingtcin Rd .. Jockson. Oh . Call 61'4·286 · USED MOBILE HOME .
578· 2711 .
3074 or 614-384-8160.

HA HA,1•• F100'G .ALREIWY

Morcum ' Roofing • Spout Ing . 30 yeer818xperlance,
opociollzlng In buUt up roof.
Colll14-388·88117.

CJutter~· Downapouta-New ­

I)-(

•u

PAINTING· Interior ond
oxtorlor, plumlllng, roofing, .
aome remodeling . 20 yra.
011p. Cell S14-381·9SU .

HOWARD L: WRiTESEL
ROOFING COMPANY .

II

.,

STUCCO PLASTERIN1G taturod colllnp commerclol end residontlt!. free
totlmotllo. CoH 614-2681182.

1--- - - - - - - '-:::=----=_,.,:----

••tt

lD lHIS

Auto Repair

) I I XJ

CIJ (jj) 3-2- 1. Contact
CON~CCORANI~O-IWCJ:Dt
{lD Eyowltnooo Nowo
. 'THAT 'THE TlfAIN
• Wonder Woman
HAC'I!IEEN 17ER"AILED.
6:30 II (I) Cil NBC Ntwa
CIJ MOVIE: 'The Ladr jlays
No'
Now orronge lite c:lrcltd to ..
(I) Bob Newhan Show
lorm lite ourprlao · u ougllllltdbr lite tbove cenoon.
C1J 8 (jJ ABC News
II CIJ ® CBS Nowa
I]} Or. Who
I
(jj) Over Eoay
7:00 8 (I) P.M. Mogozino
I~ torroofrow)
I]) ESPN's Sportaforum
''='
Yoslorday'ol JumbiOI: BLESS · MONEY GUIDEO BAMBOO
(I) Gomer Pyle ·
CIJ Entertainment Tonight
: Gin llldom "provides " sources of weallh.
"GOLD MINES"
· ...
Cil • Charlie' a Angelo
D CIJ Tic Tac Dough
Jumble aoak No. 20, Contlln
t10 puulet, fs•t~llablelor 11 .i5 poatpald
· ..
CIJ (jj) · MacNoii-Lthror
tft:lnl Jumbll, cto this newspaper, 10111 34. Norwood. N.J . 07&amp;18. Include your
Report
name, ilddNU; zl code al1d rri1ke ctMcks
abtl to Newt
. 1.
® Eyewitness News •
8 (jJ P-'o' 1 Court
·.
7:30 II (1). Uo Detector
(I) Consumer Reports 'The
Smart· Shopper Show .'
Sports cars. kitchen de·
aners and peanut bUtter are
, some of the products exam-ined .
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
I]) ESPN SportsCentor
([) Andy Griffith
.
llll!llll Family Fe~d
CIJ Businooa Report
® Vpu -Aoked For It
South said nolhing at all,
(fi) Ulat Chance Garage
but he rather wished he had
Ill (jJ Entertainment
NORTH
1·17-IS
elected to pass as dealer or
Tonight
+KQ98
lhat North hadn't been qui te
8 :00 D Cil (IJ Fame When Doris
•Au
so
ebullient. Still, there are
tries to promote a 'Friend.AKQ9
ship Cay' she loses most of.
worse slams around since
+J 1.0
her friends . 160 min.)
South started with i 1 easy
WEST
EAST
(I) MOVIE: 'Cannery Row'
tricks and there ought to be
+AJ32
(I) MOVIE: 'Sapphire'
•to 7 5
a good play for a 12th some104
(I) I Spy
.J7H
where.
.•
• J 10 7 2
I]) NFL Theatre : Beat Ever
Also, the opening lead
.6&amp;2
+u
Runners
gave South a lot of hope. It
. Cil MOVIE: ' Pueblo'
looked as if West was mak·
SO\JTH
. , (I) , NCAA
Baske1ball:
' 'I
lng :l.:afe .lea·d to protect
Northwestern at Ohio St. '
'' l
honors in the major suits.
•Qu
Ill CIJ ® Magnum, P.l.
Therefore, South won the
.,
Cll (jj) Sneak Previews Co•nQt7s
trick in his hand and led a
hosts Neal Gabler and Jefspade. West ducked and
frey lyons take a look at
Vulnerable: East-West
dummy's king held that
·,
what 's happening at the
Dealer: South
trick.
mOVIBS .
West
Nortll East
Soutb
Could East be . holding
Ill 11! Condo
back w;th the ace·jack . or
g) MOVIE: 'Red Sun'
Pass · 2•
Pass 3+
ace-!O? South thought that
8 :30 (])·Good Neighbors
Pass
l•
Pass 3NT
over for while and decided ·
(jj) Enterprise 'Chef's Spe·
Pass 6 NT Pass Pus
if East had done that; Jie was
cia I.' This program profiles a
PaBS
well-paid chef who decided
going to cook South'~ goose
to enter the high·risk busito a frazzle.
ness of opening his own re~ ·
Then South ran •hii clubs
Opening l..d: ~·
tauram.
discarding a spaM. two
'•
Gli]J Amende's
hearts and a diamond from
9:00 II (I) Cil Gimme A Break
dummy . Then heled '·his secNell is reluctam to renew her
ond spade. West produced
By Oswald Jacoby
friendship with her old singthe ace and South had scored
udJ.....,.Jocoby
ing group .
his lucky slam.
Cil 700 Club
It was lucky, ind~. Give
North put down the dumI])
NCAA Basketball:
East the king of hearts and a
my
and
remarked,
"
I
Kansas at Missouri .
couldn't bid any less with 19 heart lead would. have sent
' ,
Ill CIJ ® Simon &amp; Simon
the slam to oblivion.
high-card
points
plus
a
10
'•
A.J . becomes infatuated
.
!NEWSP~PER ENTEnPR~E~SSN .)
and three nines."
with a murder suspect. (60
·min _)
' .,
CIJ . (jj) Mystery! "Agatha
· ~
Christie Stories: The Man·
• "I
hood of Edward Robinson .'
' '
A chance mistake at a coun·
·
try roadhouse sets Edward
' I• I
Robinson on a madcap night
•
-I '
of adventure. 160 min .)
.!&gt;Y THOMAS JOSEf'H
[Closed Captioned]
ACROSS
5 Relative of
'• '•
111!1 (j} Too Close· for
COmfort Henry tries to exi "The - isnot acurvebaU
· '•
plain away a naked woman
to the swift..." • Fabric
·, '
in his bedroom.
5 Rebuff
7 High (mus. )
9 :30 "D (I) CD Cheers Sam en'
9 Chinese port 8 Agreeable
ter s Diane in the Miss 8os·
ton Barmaid contest .
10 French cily 1U'riendshlp
III MOViE: ' Force 1 0 From
12 Oversee
13 lfoneman

Answer."( I I)-[

-'
74 Hondo mofo•eyct. 380
CC. Nns • - · oxc. cond.,
1800 firm. Cell 448-3027.

'THE PA55Et.JISCRG

A PPEA~t' WHEN

'

THEY WANT THE

.

1J (I) N-scentor

(I) MOVIE: ' Dirty Tricks'
(I) MOVIE: 'St. Helens'

..

------·lc77 Dodge Pick-u p. 'Low

Whirlpool washer llnd dryer
coppertona pair, very nlc"
*226 . Good uoed dryoro
elsa. Col-814-258-1207.

The

Television
Vie,Ong .

17, 1983

Nlct.r fu mllhe.d mob. homo
In city. Adults o~ly. Coli
448-0338.

Real Esute sel es person

Ohio

IJ!('I-; TI 1.\( 'Y

Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

Help Wanted

17, 1983

' ·' 1
' . .. J

'

.....

~" '

ODe )~ller limply ,•lands for another. In this .sample _.\ 15 ... ~~
used for the three L 1, X for the two O's, etc . Si ngle letlers ., .. .
1 , .:
apoolropbe1, tho lenllh .and formation of !he words are
blnts . ~b doy the eodo ,letters ore differ en !.

aii

z..

caynoquorES
.
ZVWJ

BZ"ZWK

FW ,W

HRS

GFVH

HZ

GFVH . H Z

HAES :

H:-.!FL S W

KSVK APWS

FNNALS . - LZV

L s V ...:

ES HHSNV fiYR

·-

..

,, 0

Y. . . .y'I·Crfpl ; lie: 'l1IE Ta\CHER IS IJ!CE THE CANDLE

WHICH LIGHTS OTHERS

ITSEJ.$.-G.RUFFINI

IN

CONSUMING

.'

;.\

., '

. ,. .,

F "'

�"/

Page--12 The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 17, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.....---Local briefs:----Funds are distributed
State Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson reported the February dtstrtbutlon of $10,386,!m.85 in local government fund money to Ohio's
88 counties and 454 cities and villages levying local inCOme taxes.
Meigs County's share was $18,750.

Infortnation session on nursing program March 18
RIO GRANDE- An lnforinatlon Friday, March 18, a school spokessaid.
session for anyolll' ·~terested In en- ·
Detailed Information atiout the
rolling •in the Rio ..:rande College
institution's two-year Associate Deand Community College-Holzer
School of Nursing wtll be held on
gree Nursing Program,.appllcatlon
procedures, and Financial Aid wtll

be discussed during a general session from 1-3 p.m: In the Fine and
Performing Arts Center. Tours of
the campus and the Nursing Skills
Lab will also be provided following
thl' session.

man

For aMltlonal Information, contact the Olfice d. A(lmlss!Qns and
Records, Rio Grande College and
Community Collegt!, Rio Grande,
Ohio 45674 (614) 245-5353.

OSU moves closer
to Big Ten leader

Letters to editor

Middleport Chamber to meer
Page2

A meeting of the Middleport Chamber of Commerce has been
set lor 12:15 p.m. Tuesday at the LaSalle Restaurant.

Four. calls were answered by local units Wednesday and early
Thursday, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 6:01 a.m. Thursday, the Tuppers Plains Unit took Joyce
Cowdery from Indian Run Hill to Veterans Memortal and at7: 32a.m.,
tne Rutland Unit took Ronnie Zerkle from an auto accident on ROute
124 to Pleasant Valley HospitaL
Wednesday's runs included the Racine Unit at 7:45a.m. to Fourth
St. for Todd Cox, taken to Veterans Memorial, and the Racine Unit at
4:37p.m. to Bashan lor Hazel Thompson, treated at her residence.

Robert Hill has surgery
Robert Hill, Fairborn, formerly of Rutland , has undergone
four-way bypass open heart surgery. Cards may be sent to ~mat
Miami Valley Hospital, 1 Wyoming St., Dayton. OH., 4~24- H1il was
employed with The Ohio Power Co. In Pomeroy during hiS residency
in Meigs County.

ALBUM AND TAPE .
SALE

SALE! MEN'S

SWEAT SHIRTS

Special Sale Prices on LP Albums, 8-Track
and Cassette Tapes. Pop, Counby, Reli&amp;ious. Rock, Instrumentals, Movie Sound
Tracks.
·

'16.95 Hooded, Zipper Front.. ... SALE 112.70
llatchinc SWeat Pants ........ SALE '7.40 .
Craw Neck Style ............... SALE '7.40
119.95 HOQded, Thermal Lined,
· Zipper ......................... SAI.E 114.90
124.95 Hooded, 'thermal Lined.
Zipper ........." .............. SALE 118.70
19.95
19.95

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

. Sheriff probes complaint
The sheriff's department Is investiga ting a complaint lodged by
Bonnie Barringer, Reedsville.
Barringer reported that her house was entered several times and
change and groceries were taken.
Entry into the house was made through a window.
The department received a reported of a m"}or accident involving a
sc hool bus and car that occurred Wl'dnesday at 8:10a.m.
According to the report 0 . T. Pullins, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, was
driving a school bus for Eastern Local and as he backed up the bus ·
struck the left front fender of a vehicle owned by Glenda Hunt ,
Boatright Road, Long BOttom. The car was parked and occurred as
the bus driver was turning in thE• driveway. The re was no damage to
the bus and a very small scratch to the Hunt car.

Racine council to meet Monday
Racine VU!age Council will meet in recessed session Monday at 7
p.m. The final reading of an ordniance raising the water rates will be
given.

Church plans youth revival
The yout h of the Racine Church of the Nazarene will hold a youth
rev ival Friday through Sunday.
Friday evening a filme "Ordinary Guy" will be showp and on
Saturday evening and Sunday mornillg and evening the Rev . Fred
Brown of Reynoldsburg wtll be speaking.
A vocal group "Harmony" will be fea tured on Saturday a nd
Sunday. Evening services are at 7: 3D p.m. and Sunday morning
services are at 10:30 a.m.

FEEDER BULLS, good and choice. 250 to

Dllbo. 51i-M; :mto4Wtlx!. 57.~.00; 400to
51'100 Ill&amp;. 55-62.!50; 500 to 600 lbs. 53-61.50; 600 to
'100 Ills. S!.iil){l); 100 to 1100 lbo. OO.M.ril; IJXl to
over 45.50-53.
Holstein Steen; and Bulls, :m to 800 lbs ..
43-48; Bulls l,rol lbs. and up, 43-00; Slausftter
Cows: uUlltles 41 . ~. canners and cutters

60%

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

60%

-.ce

THE ORIGINAL
WALKING SHOE.
lllfcn pooplo wtut to can - . "' . shoo with shoct·lbsofbi~ ciiShian.t Cf1Pt soles.
And Ioiii~ support;,. stool sl&lt;onb. And hlhin'
BMf&gt;od Piplio- to fla- I •tkilwfaot

· And "' allod - Hush Puppies• . And"'
prind tllom alfoodobty. AIKI wo stiR do. Wt loiw
wftlt you ...... •ll•tona.

-

Veal CalVes. choice apd prime, 87-97.!50;
Cows 310-3115;
Cows and CallieS ComblnaUon 400-495.
Top u 0115 no tom Ills.~. Boars 41.ro-43,
Su,vs 400 II&gt;!. and up 57.50-59.ril, Pigs by the
head 32 .50-60.

WINTER COATS
Snowsuits, Jackets and Coats
Broken Sizes .

-SKIRTS
-DRESSES
-BLOUSES
-CORDUROYS

18.00

REG. '20.00 ....... :................ SALE
REG. '28.00 ................:... SALE 111.20
REG. 139.00 .............. ...... SALE '15.60
REG. 147.00 ...... .............. SALE 118.80

SAVE

BASIC JEANS

-

Uvellock Saleo
· 8......,, F~. 12, I9S3
CATILE PRICES;

Sizes 27 to 42 waist, S. M, L. and XL
Length. Wlz ounce blue denim pre-washed
stJaiglrt leg and boqt fl•re styles. Your
choice.

Feeder Steers: (Good and Choice) ID500
IllS. 57-62; 500-'100 lbs. 53-59.

Slaughter Bulls: (OVer 1,000 lbs.l 48-53.5(1

Slaughter Cows: Utlli lles 40-45.1.); Cannen
and cutters 31.50-38.85.
.
Sprtngor Cow" (By the Head) 2!!hll0.
Veols: (Choice and Prlrrel 7'2-!11.25 . .
.Baby Calves: IBy the Head l 25-15.
Baby Calves (By the Pound! 35-60.
HOG PRICES:
.
Hcp : (No. 1, Barrows and GOts200-230lbs.

57.50-58.35.

.
Butd~er Sows 55.75-58.
Butcher Boars '-1.S0.58.
F - r Pigs tBy the Head) 25-51.

SHEEP PRICES:
Slaughter Lambs ~.5().:)9.

ttlKL M

$400

THE
SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SWEAT SHIRTS

---&lt;:OATS
-SWEATERS
-KNIT ACCESSORIES
-BLAZERS

Economy outlook:encourgaging signs

M

JACKETS AND
VESTS

Slipovers - Vests - Cardipns.
S, M, L and XL Sizes.

Knits, Flannels. AffNt Sweaters, Westerns.
Sizes 8 to 18.

Save

Save

WASHINGTON - New reporis
Labor Departmt'nt said . Claims
on jobless claims, factory use and
had risen the previous two Wl"K'
auto layoffs. gave. more evidence
but had !a llen ·sharply jus t before
that the recovery has begun, while
that.
Ford Motor Co. announced its third I
Allen Gutheim, a senior eeonostraight unprofita ble year - with
rnist with tht' private research firm
1982 losses reaching $657.8 million .
Wharton Econometrics, said recovAccording to thTEe reports issu€1;1
ery should mean Increases in
Thursday, claims for unemploy·employment before lQng. But he
ment benefits were down, factory
also said the national unemployuse was up and the number of
ment rate could still lise slightly
autoworkers on layoff has declined.
!rom January's 10.4 percent of the
InitiaL clatms for unemployment
civilia n wprk force before starting
benefits 11'117 ,llXl to a total of 510.llXl
back down .
in the first week of February, the

SWEATERS
•

REDUCED

60o/o

$282 milllon in spending cuts. It Is

traffic accident.
·
.
designed to offset a projected $511
"Oliver 's been a real strong and
million deficit, pump more m~ney dedicated senator a nd I think 1n
into an emergency school loan fund spite of what is a real tragic
. an&lt;:l give·the state a fiscal cushion .
circumstance he will do what he has
. Democrats control the · upper to do," he said .
chamber 17-16 but ~an e~t no
Celeste defended proposed Medihelp from Republicans because of catd spending cuts an~ objected to
opposition to the permanent InCOme attempts bY nursing home owners
tax boost.
to sway opinion through newspaper
Celeste said he had talked with ads and a rally of patients and
GOP leaders, "but to me you don't employees.
compromise on thelssueofpermanCeleste is proposing Medicaid
eqtor temporary and that defines in : cutsof$38.9rnillloncompared to $82
their minds what you could mllllon that could . have been
discuss."
imposed under law. Budget ana·
Democrats will need a ll17votes ln lysts said the cuts are lnadministratheir caucus including that of Sen.
tive, general and profit categories
OUver OcaseJ&lt;, D-Akron. He has
instead of patient care.
remained in Florida with his wife,
"The reality is if we didn't pass
who was seriously injured in a
this bill I would be obllged to cut.

THE REFUND -Ohio Gov. Rlchanl Cele!ile
pre!lents Development Director Paul Dielzel with

a

ceremonial check lor $1.117 million at a press confer-

I Section, 10 Pages

20 Cenh

A Multimedia Inc Newspaper

. them significantly more," Celeste ·
said. "I think that when you pay for
full-page ads and pay to ship people
down for demonstrations you raise
real questions. Particularly given
the fact that the cuts would be more
severe without (the bill ). Tha t's the
wrong kind of effort to ma nipulate
public opinion."
Later Thursday, in Cleveland,
Celeste said he hoped personal
incom e tax exemptions could be
raised after 1985.
"In that next 'biennial budget.
we'Uhaveanopportunitytoaddress
the tax pOlicy Issue," Celeste said.
"We have a committee studying the ·
issue now and (the exemption
increase is) one of the things they're
considering. "
Celeste told about 400people in the

ence In Columbus. Celeste will lise part of the money,
a refund fi'OII'I the U.S. Energy Department? ror
emergency fun• for tlie Home Energy Assistance
Program. (AP Laserphoto).

Father dies in vain attempt to save children
da ughters, Jennifer, 4, a nd
Amanda, 3; and a son, Harold Jr., 2.
_,Spencer's wife, Sharon, 23, was
treated at Mercy Hospital in
Portsmouth for burns and cu.ts.
Firemen said the woman apparHarold Spencer, 26, and the three ently had broken through a window
.c hildren died in the 5:45a.m . blaze,
to escape the flames.
which destroyed the house that sat
Mummert Said neighbors Tl'
across the street from a rural
ported that Spencer, his clothesvolunteer fire station, authorities
burning, escaped with his wife, but
said.
·
then returned to the house.
McDermott Fire Department
His body was round near a rear
member Nathan Mummert identientrance of\ the single-story, frame
fied the dead as Spencer; his two . house. The1 three children were
McDERMOTT, Ohio (A:P) -His
clothes on fire, a fa therra n back Into.
his burning home in an ~nsuccessful
bid to rescue his three young
chlldren today, witnesses sa id.

found In a front bedroom. author!·
ties sai&lt;:l.
"We belleve (the cause) might be
an overheated . !wood-burning)
stove. ,but we're not sure," Mum·
mert sald ..
Neighbors said . the family's
electricity had been shut off for
some time. They heated the house
with a stove and used candles lor
light, ne ighbors said.
Mummert said there was no one
at the volunteer station when the
blaze was reported.

Cleveland Public Library's downtown auditorium that the state~ust
)lave the tax Increase to "get our
house in order and our people back
to work ."
Celeste, asked about the apparent
discrepancy between the education
cuts a nd his statements about the
importance of education, said,
"Even after the ·cuts I proposed.
education is stili getting 19 percent
more than last year. It's just not
what they expected, but it's ail we
can do."

OSP CI·t.·e's
bUS

dri•Ver

A Meigs County school bus driver
was cited a fter a collision on Ohio 124
just west of Ratland Thursday.
. The Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol cited Esther M.
Black. 57, Middleport, for failure to
yield.
Troopers say Black was turning a
school bus from a private driveway
onto Ohio 124 a t 7: 15a.m. when she
pulled into the path of a car driven
by Ronald Zirkle, 32, Point
P leasimt.
Zirkle's vehicle struck the bus,
then went off the road arid hit a tree.
He was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital where he was treated for
·
contusions and released.
There were no children on th~ bus
when the acciden t occurred, accoroing to a highway . patrol
spokesperson.
The bus was slightly da maged
and Zirkle's vehicle susta ined
moderate damage.
A car driven by Ben A. Va ndergulik, 30, Stow, Ohio, received
moderate damage in a mishap on
Ohio 7 in Meigs County a t 11: 10 a. m.
Thursday.
Vandergulik was southbound
when he struck and kllled a deer
which ran into his path.

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy tonight. Low in the
mld-JOs. Winds southe r ly less than
iO mph. Partly cloudy Saturday.
High 50-55.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
Chance of rain SWiday. then
turning colder with scattered snow
Ourrtes Monday. Chance of snow
flurries northeast Tuesday. IDgitiin
the 50s SIUiday and in the mld-30s IAl
low 40s Monday and Tuesday. Lows
in the 30s SWiday and in the 20s
Monday and Tuesday.

I

SAVE .60°/o
BOYS' WINTR

WINTER SHIRTS

Includes flannels, velours. knits, Van
Heusen dress shirts and sport shirts.
Sizes S, M, L and XL.

JACKETS
AND VESTS .
Not all sizes 'from 8 to 18. Limited
Quantity.

60%

DANSI(IN~.

16.95 CREW NECK SlYLE .......... SALE 15.20
'11.95 HOODED ZIPPER FRONT .. SALE 18.90

SAVE EVEN MORE!!
MEN'S WINTER

BOYS'

New!

Sizes S (6-8), M (10-12), L (14-16), XL
(18-20). Solid Colors.

60%

Save 60%

60o/o

$1280

SALE! BOYS'

brands.

MEN'S SHIRTS

TO

I

Size S, M, Land XL Wrangler and Campus

Pay Your
Columbia
Gas Bills At

Meeting In regular session Thurssecretary at the Riverview Ele!llenday night, the Eastern Local School
tary School.
Dtstrtct Board of Education aclt was ~ided to seek bids on new
. cepted bids on two 66-passenger
windows for both the Tuppers
schopl buses.
Plains and Chester E lementary
Gibson Trucks and Motors, Inc.,
Schools and Supt. Richard Roberts
Athens, was given the bid on the
was authorized to proceed with the
chassis at a base prtce of $13,500
installation ·of new front doors at
whlle the bids on the bodies went to
both the Chester and Tuppers
Edwin Davis and Son, La ngsville,
Plains Schools and securing new.
with a bid of $8,llXl. One of the two blackboards for the Riverview
new buSes will be delivered in about SchooL Feb.4 and 11 were a pproved
. four weeks while the second bus is as calamity days in the district. A
expected to be available for service distric t Is permitted flve such days
in about eight weeks.
without makeupbetngrequiredand
. The board issued supplementary so far, the district hasclosedschools
contracts to Dennis Eichinger, . only two days due to weather
boys' varsity track; Scott Wolfe, conditions.
·
boys' varsity baseball, and Pam .
Mrs. Mary Rose, lunchroom
Douthitt, varsity girls' softball. supervisor, was a uthorized to ,
Ad~ to the substitute teachers llst
attend an upcoming nutrition meet. were Roger Spencer a nd Kevin lrig. A trampo)ene not used in the
Sheppard. The board accepted the dlstrtct was sold to Thomas Carr
re;lgnation of Yvonne Sisson as
(Continued on page 10)

SALE PRICED

WINTER
CLOTHING

MEN'S WRANGLER

baby calves 40-95; Springer

lbo. 52.al: 5110-'100 Ills. 4857.00.

Our remaining stock of winter gowns,
robes and pajamas.
.
REG•.s10.00 to '32.00

'6.50 .......... ................... SALE 12.60
IJ.60
1
'12.00 ............................ SALE 4.80
118.00 .......................... SALE S7.20

entine

Bus bids awarded
by Eastern board

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

19.00 ............................. SALE

CHILDREN'S

60%
.GIRLS'

Corduroys, Sweatpants
and Kni.ts

~39. 00.

Feeder Hel!ers: (Go00 and Chotcel l»5(1]
· Ills. 45-53; 500-'100 lbs. 4149.50.
Feeder BuDs: (Good and Choice! JX1.511J

Andrea Sport

WINTER PANTS

Pajamas, LOng gowns and Robes, Waltz
Length Gowns and Robes. Sizes: Petite
thru XXL.

SAVE

Douglas Marc, Bradley, Devon, .

SAVE

at

Pomeroy' Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 18, 1983

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Celeste said Thursday in an
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste
interview with The Associated
says Republicans mao!' up their
Press.
minds a long time ago to oppose his
The -GOP Is mountllig a radio
proposa1Corapermanent90percent
campaign aimed at persuading
increase In tncome taxes and that
Democratic senators belleved to be
his pi'OpOSed budgetcutsaregettlng
politic~lly vulnerable to change
unlalrcrltlclsm.
their votes.
Tile House-passed measure to
"The person who has to carry the
raise taxes and cut spending is
responsibility on that leg!slatlon is
heading for a vote Tuesday or
me," celeste said . "There's an
Wednesday in the Democraticeffort today to focus on some of the
controlled Senate, where Celeste
members of the Senate. That'sflne.
predicts approval despite unifi€1;1 · But believe me we· will focus on
others who fall to provide ·the
Republican opposition.
The bill emerged from the House
resources to carry this state
with no Republican support.
thro11gh: who fall to meet their
"My impression 1s the Republi- , constitutional responsibUittes, and
cans met with their state chairman
then we'illet people be the Judge."
and made that declsli;m a long time
The governor has proposed a $.lXl ·
ago :.. not to even consider votes,"
million tax increase package and

COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR ·

-CORDUROYS
-COATS
-DRESSES
-MATERNITY
-PRE-TEEN

•

Gov·•.Celeste feels tax opposition pre-planned

¥2 Price ·

LITTLE GIRLS'

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

Voi.Jt ,No.20S
Copydghtod 1983

'17.95). Good color selection. .

60% Off

LADIES'

do!!:

In walk.i~~~t !'oboe8
bd.o re people knew
whalla call them.

Top

!13-61.

46-57.

WINTER CLOTHING

REDUCED

JEANS

LADIES'

:m

Feeder HeUers, good and choice, ZiO ton
lbo. rii·M.!IO; lXl to too lbo. 00.:115.!50; 400 to 500
lbo. 49-56; 500 to 600 Ills. 48-5:;; 600 to 7tllllls.
46.ro-52; '100 to 600 lbs. 45.00.53.50; IJXl to over

WINTER
CLOTHING

-LITTLE BOYS' TOPS
-LITTLE BOYS' PANTS
-SWEATERS
-KNIT ACCESSORIES

CORDUROY

LADIES' WI

JUNIOR
-SPORTSWEAR .
-SWEATERS
-BLOUSES
-KNIT TOPS
-SlACKS

e

BOYS'

~ Price Sale on boys' replar and slim sias
(were '14.95), husky sizes 10 to 18 (we
116.95) and student sills. 28 to 30 (we

55.79 ................... SALE S4.65
57.79 ................... SALE 56.25
59.79 ...... ,............ SALE 17.85
512.79 ................ SALE 510.25

CHI LOREN'S

-GIRLS' TOPS
-DRESSES
-SPORTSWEAR
-LITTLE BOYS~ OUTFITS

I Market reports I
OJUO VAU.EY UVESI'OCK 00.
February 12, 11M3
Feedt;!r Steers: good and choice, 250 to
lbo. 57-tl!; :m to 400 lbs. 58.5C).Ql; 400 to 500 !IX!.
~-!50: 500 to 600 II&gt;!. 58-lli.!IO; IIJO to '10011&gt;!.
57-4&gt;1.!50; '100 to IIII II&gt;!. ii'J.OO.:il. 75; 600 to over

'

'

Emergency runs

Wheat bread, cakes,
muffins rely on
kitchen &lt;'hemistry

Reduced
.FOR THIS SALE

WINTER
HEADWEAR

MEN'S.and BOYS' s1.59 ·

TUBE SOCKS
· Boys' Sizes 7 to 11 - 'Men's Sizes 9to
15 White with colored tops. Many
school colors. Made by Springfoot.

Bras and Panties

200/o off~

$119

The efl.llre Donskin bra and panty collecHon

Is now on sale...lncludlng new lightly lined ·
and underwlre styles.

,.\WAJUl8-Carot ObHnlft', ceater, and Cella McCoy, rtpt, receive
_..... p . J11e1!1ben ol lbe Melp IAielil Tel1ehen _.\poolp,._ '
'l1llnllay evfllllnl. Ollllncer fteelved ope ol a IIUIIIber of memhenldp

...._!lie

- RJ riiiC....,.. 1fve11 IUid McCoy received a ...... ~
aWard.
ptt ! mt...._, left,ii.JudyKJeJrer, amemberoUhe
0111o F4ncallon AMoelallon Membe:nhlp Adlen Team.

SCHOIARSHIP-PIIIIIa WNU, ceater, 11118 been awarded a
.IICbolanldp by lbe Melp Local School Dlllrtd Tmdler&amp;A-odetton,ln
won on her muter's dep ee In elem lary ........,..., Wllllt, a lldrtl
....... 'lllllthe ..... u,yEiemelllarySelloal,labelnJptt
_.lbe
1ICbolanldp ebeck by &amp;ale Flllber, ariltlilberolllle MLTAScholanrhlp
~-On the left .. Jack Slavin, preaiden1 of the MLTA.

TOP AWARDiS'-Top awards for membership work in the Meigs Local
Teachers Assoclatloa- porUollos and pens containing digital watcheswere pre~~ented Thursday night by Judy Klelfer,left, a member of the
membership actiOn team of tlie Ohio Education Association. Receiving
the awards from the left are David Bowen, membership chalnnan;
Bonnie Flsl.er, committee member, and Jack Slavin, president of the
· Mi..TA.

•

'

,,
.

\

i'
'

.

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