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                  <text>Porueto~

12-The Dally Sentinel

Page

Area deaths
Norn1a Robinson
Mrs. Nonna Robinson, 85, 35
Stimson Ave., Athens, died Thursday morning at the O'Bleness
Hospital In Athens following a brief
Ulness.

Mrs. Robinson was the wife of the
RE&gt;v. L. A. Robinson who has spoken
at numerous Meigs County
churches over the Years. Other
survivors are two sons, Chester,
Phoenix, Ariz., and Carroll, Crooksville; .a daughter, Ruth Lorn,
Glendale, Ar1z., 13 grandchtldren

and 19 great-grandchlldren. She
was preceded In death by bel'
parents, Elmer and Mary Leslie, a
son, Oyde, and a brother, Earl
Leslie. Mrs. RObinson was born at
Kilgore, Ky. and resided In PelT)'
County before moving to Athens.
SeNices will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the Hughes Funeral
Home,168 Morris Ave., Athens with
the Rev. C. E. Haliksand the Rev. N.
L. Russell o~lclatlng. Burial will be
In the men Cemetel)' at Croc:lksVW.e,
Frtends ID&lt;lY ca.ll at the funeral
home any time after 2 p.m. Frtday.

Residents donate II 0 units;
Baxter joins five gallon. c~ub .
. Oue-hlindred . and ten Wilts ol
blood was donated. Wednesday at
the Meigs County Bloodmobile held
at the Senior atlzens Center,
Ptmeroy.
In all, 84 replacements were
made and 116 peaple attended.
There were 12 first Ume dooors.

Homer · G. Baxter was a five
gallon don'or and Julia Qualls, KeW
Clelland and Gloria K Riggs were
one gallon donors.
Doctors assisting were Wlbna
Mansfield and James Witherell.
Nurses asslsllftg were Ferndora
Story and Lenora Lelfbelt.
In char.ge of. the canteen was
American Leglon•Post 128. ~
port. The members of. R.S.V.P ..
employes and senior citizens placed
chalrs.and tables. .
Massachusetts.
Clerical workers were Mary
There Is less money for construc- Nease, Jean Nease, Enuna Clattion of highways and mllltary worthy, Enna Roush, Vlrglnla
housing than Reagan wanted. The Buchanan, Carrie Bearhs, Peggy
president had suggested $600 mil- Harris, Jeanie Braun, Allee Wolfe,
lion. for highv;ays; the approprla- . Mace! Barton, Vernon Nease and
tl.ons committee chairmen set the
Martha Nasb.
amoi.mt at $33 million:
Also.assisting were members of

Jobs relief bill heads
for House approval
WASHINGTON (AP) - A $4.5
bliUon t'EC{'ssion relief bill, sponsored by Democrats and containing
moremoneyforthepoorandelderly
than proposed by President .R£&gt;agan, Is heading for almost certain
House approval.
·
Democratic leaders of the House
Appropriations Corrimittee agreed
Wednesday on the quick-fix legislation providing jobs and emergency
help' for victims of hard economic
times.
The committee is 't!xpected to
fonnally approve the proposal
Friday and send It to the House floor
' by next Thursday.
. "We've tried to get jobs that are
:necessary and things we can do."
:said Rep. Jamie Whitten, D-Miss.,
·the committee chairman.
: Whitten declined to disclose
specifics, but other sources said
'House Democrats made a number
:Or significant changes to a $4.3
:billion jobs measure drafted by
.senior aides to R£&gt;agan earlier this
month, and proposed to House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. of

~ Meigs

The Democrats are also agreed

ongreaterspendlngforprogramsto
feed poor mothers and their·
chlldren, to Insulate low-income
housing, to provide jobs for the
elderlyandforaJobCorpsprogram
for young people.
O'Neill said House Democrats
have no hesitation in revising
R£&gt;agan's legislative proposal because of mounting criticism of
R£&gt;agan's handling of the economy.
Whlle Democrats were In a weak
bargaining position two years ago,
''The ball is back In the other court,''
O'Neill said.
The Democratic plan also in- .
cluded s.'iXl,&lt;XXl to help unemployed
people threatened with foreclosures
on the mortgages on their houses.

County happenings

:Marriage license

Emergency calls

. A marriage license was Issued in
-Meigs County Probate Court to
.RodneY Lee Childress, 24, Racine,
and Patricia Lynn Kiser, 18,
Racine.

calls were answered by
local units Wednesday evening and
on Thursday morning, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reports.
The Pomeroy Unit at 8:10 p.m.
took Henry Cunningham from the
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 11:17 p.m. took Jeremy
Hartson from High St. to Veterans
Memorial and at 12: 19 a.m.
Thursday the ~utland Unit took •
Charles Ellis from Route 684 to
Veterans Memorial.

·Name guest speaker

-

: DeMis Gregory, Lucasville, will
be the guest speaker at Pagevllle
Freewill Baptist Church Sunday,
Feb. 'l7, at 7: :ll p.m. Ralph Butcher,
· pastor, invites the public to attend.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Homer Powell, Pomeroy; Michael Hewitt, Portland;
William Weaver, Middleport; Clar, · ence McNeal, Middleport; Edith
Spencer, Pomeroy; Henry Cunningham. Pomeroy.
. Dischharged--Justin Diddle, Herbert Seth.

Plan fun auction
The Izaak Walton Oub will hold
Its annual winter covered plate·
dinner and fun auction Monday,
Feb. 28, at 7 p.m.
All members and friends are
urged to attend. Persons are to
bring own table service, beverage
and Item for the autlon.

Three

W~s hoop

shoot title

Amy Sluivers, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Bernard Shrivers,
Tuppers Plains, won the 1983
district Hoop Shoot contest at
Ironton on Feb. 19.
The event was sponsored by
Gallipolis Elk Lodge. Amy will
participate in the State Hoop Shoot
contest on Feb. 26 at Pelaware. She
Is a student at Tuppers Plains
Elementary School.

Discuss complaints

The Pomeroy Area Chamber of

Dog
WardenTaylor,
met with
theCow\ly
Meigs
Oarence
Meigs
County cbnunlssloners Tuesday to
dlscussvarlousdogcomplalntsthat
have been received and the condi-

Commerce will meet Tuesday,
March 1, at noon at the Meigs Inn.
All members are urged to attend
and bring a guest.

tlonofthedogpOund._
Taylorwaslnstructedtokeepthe
pound cleaner and to separate the
larger dogs from the pups.

Meets Tuesday

Proposed ·sales

DAN'S

UNWASHED DENIM JEAN SALE

·SAVE $5.00
pOVS' LEE, STUDENT LEES, MEN'S LEE
AND WRANGLER •.

BOYS, Was S14.99' ....................... NOW $9.99
BOYS, Was S15.99 ..................... NOW S10.49
(Sill 1-14 Reaular &amp; Slim)
. STUDENTS, Was S17.99 .............. NOW '10.99

(Sizes 25-30)
MEN'S Reg. S11.99 .................... NOW S12.99
MEN'S, Reg. sui.99 ................... NOW S13.99

.

RSVP and senior citizens. They

were Marton Ebersbach, Thelma
Diu, F1orence Richards, Pete
Shields, Bernadine Meier; Myrtle
Sisson and Bollnle Conde.
Donations were made by Quality
Print Shop, The Dally Sentinel,
Athens Messenger, WMPO Radio,

Senior Citizens program, Veterans
Memorial Hospital and The Valley
Shopper.
Donors from Pomeroy were
Janet L. Morris, Maxine Hetzer,
Walter ·Couch, Franklin Casto,
Larry Parsons, Russell H. Moore,
Bonnie Arnold, Gene Houdashelt,
Albert Roush, Diana Jarvis, James
Will, Erma M. Smith, Donna L.

Mayor Hoffman
ends 11 c~ '

Evans, Joyce Grover, LQraJnlle E.
Vanoy, Laura Harr!Bon, Mary L.
Starcher, Debra D. Mora, DennlsJ.
Gilmore, VIrgil E. Taylor, MaMn
Taylor, Robert Vaughan, Clarence
King, Leo L. Vaugllan, Janelel
Johnson, Billy J. Spencer, Mary K.
Spencer, Robert Couch, Helen
Blackston, WUUam

w.

Radford,

Fonda G. Rilpp, Racine; Naree
Hale, Dexter; Stacie Arnold and
Mary L. Voss, Minersville; Ellls E.
Myers, Langsville; Sam Boston,
Letart, w. Va.
SherryD.Roush,DonnaAieshlre,
Lura. R Swiger, Syracuse, Mary
MOITOW and Linda Grtndley, Syracuse; Rodney E. Spires, Cheshire.

LEE &amp; WRANGER
NON-WASHED DENM ONLY!!

·800T SALE

DANiS BOOT SHOP

. EPA ruckus .•• Page 2

REG. $n.95 TO $105.95

Three defendants forfeited bonds
and eight others were fined In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred

Hoffman Wednesday night.
Forfeiting were Larry D. Gilbert,
Ewlngton, $Dl posted on a reckless
operation charge; Jack Flesher,
New Haven, $375, drtvtng while
Intoxication, and Sandra Sargent,
Cheshire, expired tags, $50.
Fined were Dale McDaniel,
Mason, $250 and costs, drivlngwhlle
Intoxicated; Kenneth Jones, $50 all(!
costs each on two dlsorde~ly
manner charg~; Robert Jones,
Middleport, $50 and costs, dlsorderlymanner, and$100andcosts,on
each of two assault charges; Keith
Musser, Middleport, 25 days In )aU
on charges of possession of martjuana; disorderly manner,destructlon ol village property and reslstlng
arrest; Jack Ward, Middleport,
$100 and costs, resisting arrest; $50
and costs, intoxication, and $50 and
costs, disorderly manner; Steven
Fife, Mld&lt;!Jeport, $10 and costs,
assured clear distance; Derry
Bt;Yan, Middleport, $15 and costs,
speeding, and Bryan George, Middleport, $100 and costs, iJetty theft.

: II

e

H

DON'T MISS THIS LAST

WINTER SALE!
FRIDAY, SATURDAY,
&amp; MONDAY ONLYFEB. 25,' 26, &amp; 28 .

20o/o
OFF

AU ATHLETIC
FOOTWEAR

.

Vol.31 ,No.2'1 0

1 Section, 10 Pagel
20 Cenh
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 25, 1983

Copy.;ghtod 1983

Agency cuts ties with Head Start program
The GaWa-Meigs Community Action Agency will
sever Its ties with the two-rounty Head Start
program, tbe result . of a controversy concerning
Head Start director Christopher Zimmer.
The Head Start Polley Colincu and t!Mi CAA board
of directors have be€n locked into a battle whether to
Qre Zlnuner, .who has been found guilty of public
Indecency in Fairlie!~ County.
·
-.The CAA board voted 9 to o.Thursday night to end
Its relationship with the Head Start program, saying
It "cannot accept tl)e decision of the policy council"
not to fire Zlmrller.
The disagreement between the two bOards results
from Zimmer's arrest Nov. 30 at a roadside rest area
on U.S. 33, near Lancaster.
'
Zlrruner was one of 60 men ,arrested by Fairfield

County sheriff',s deputies between Nov. 22 and Dec. 3
!or a variety of sex-related offenses.
On Dec. 1, Zlrruner pleaded no contest lj1 Lancaster
Municipal Court to a misdemeanor charge o! public
Indecency.
He was found gullty, fined $100 and given a 30-day
suspended jaU sentence.
In separate meetings since then, the head start
policy council voted to suspend Zimmer and place
him on probation because of the Indecency charge,
but the CAA board voted to fire him.
The two boards met Feb. 10, but could not reach a
compromise on the lssue.
The CAA will fund Head Start- which provides
medical and educational services to disadvantaged ·

Glenn opposes Adelman nomination

•MEN'S SUITS
•MEN'S SPORT COATS
•MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
•MEN'S TIES
•MEN'S SWEATERS
•MEN'S OUTERWEAR JACKETS
•MEN'S VELOUR SHIRTS
•MEN'S CORDUROY PANTS
•MEN'S "SHOES .(T.C. &amp; NYCH ONLY)
•MEN'S FASHION LEVI'S JEANS
•SAMSONITE LUGGAGE

PRICE

NEW YORK COTHING HOUSE
"KERM'S KORNER"
PH. 992-2049

POMEROY, OH.
126 E. MAIN

r-r;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;
END OF THE MONTH
.

WASHINGTeN - Sen. John Glenn, D.Oblo, says he opposed
Kenneth R. Adelman , President R£&gt;agan's nominee for director of
the Arms Control Agency, beCause Adelman appears to be
uninformed on Important Issues relating to the position.
Glenn . was among me!llbers of the Senate Foreign Atfairs .
Committee who voted against Adelman's nomination Thursday.
The vote was 9-8 not to approve Adelman.
·
Glenn, an unanou.nced candidate for 'lh.e Democratic nomination
for president, said the selection of Adelman raised doubts about
RE&gt;agan's commitment to arms control.
-

Divided on retirement age
wASHJNGTON- President Reagan and House Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill Jr., allied in a plan to keep Social Security afloat.througll
the decade, are split on whether to raise the retirement age to keep
the system solvent into the ne;&gt;&lt;t century.
"I think there's a great deal of!oglc" In raising the retirement age
beyond 65, says J'!,eag'an, who Is 72.
O'Nelll, a 7().year-old Democrat from Massachusetts, declares, "I
feel strongly that there soould not be a change in the (retirement)
age."
.
.
RE&gt;agan and O'NeUI are committed to the recommendations of the
National Commission on Social Securtty RE&gt;form for getting the
retirement system over the short-term problems It faces during the
rest of the decade.

Two major banks «:tit prime rate

ARANCE
.

NEW YORK- First National Bank in

Chlc~go and Mellon Bank

in Pittsburgh cut their prime lending rates a half percentage point to ·
10.5 percent today, the rate's lowest level in more than four years.
The reductions by First National, the nation's eighth-largest
commercial bank, and Mellon, ranked 15th, reflect recent declines
in open-market rates. which reduces banks' cost of acquiring funds
for lending.
The prime lending rate has oot been at 10.5 percent since
November 1978. Major banks last lowered the charge on Jan.ll, to 11
percent from 11.5 percent, and it stood at 12 percent last October.
The prime rose to a record 21.5 percent in December 19M, and.
since then has gradually declined.

Q
.
. E

Men's Sweaters
Boys' Shirts

Women's Sweaters

Men's Shirts
Boys' Sweaters
Men's Jackets and
Vests .
Women's Coordinate .
Sportswear
'
Boys' Jackets and
Vests
Children's Tops and
"
Slacks
Children's Coats

Junior Sweaters

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday nlgbt in
the Ohio Lottet;Y' s dally game, "The Number," was 983.
.
· In the "Pick 4" game, played five times a week, the w1nnlng
nlimber was 7:f25.
·

Junior Sportswear
Gi~s·

pre-schoolers - untll program officialS can find
another fund granting age11cy. The CAA board set the
end of the school year In June as its deadline for Head
Start to find another agency.
AI Harris, CAA board chairman, said the agency
will continue funding temporarily because It does not
want the program toshUtqown and leave the children
without school.
"We have our stand on the Issue and the policy
council has Its stand and in between we have to
consider the children," Harris said.
Zimmer said he was pleased with the decision of
the CAA board.
"I think Its best for all parties involved," he said.
Zimmer said he has the support of most parents

involved in Head St;lrt and will continue as director.
Sadlcka Thomas, an independent consultant for
Head Start in · this area, said the Gallla-Melgs
program shouldn't have any dlfflcuUy finding
another fund granting agency.
· Funding for the Gallia 'Meigs Head Start program
comes from the federa l Administration for Children,
Youth and Families and will probably not he affected
by a chartge in the local fund granting agency,
Thomas said.
Any local non-profit or profit corporation could
apply to the federal goverrunent to administer the
Head Start prograJ)), she explained.
Head Start parents could incorporate and apply for
funding, Thomas said.'

-

Analysts expect even further declines as f;Oitle major exporting
Associated Press Writer
nations have cut their wholesale
WASHINGTON (API - The
prices and others ponder simllar
Labor Department, rejlggering Its
price slashing.
major measure of Inflation, said
Food prices, meanwhile, climbed
today that consumer prices -rose a
a tiny 0.1 percent after holding
scant 0.2 percent in January. Had
steady ing the two previous months.
the old calculation been used,
Medical care costs, which soared
consumer prices would have been
thourghout 1982. rose a sharp 0.8
unchanged.
percent.
Housing costs rose substantially,
Inflation last year was 3.9
as had been expected under the new
(Jercent, the smallest rise In a
formula, but gasoline and heating
decade. Under an experimental
oll prtces'posted sharp drops.
measure similar to the new one,
The old calculation had been
widely criticized for over- 1982's Inflation at the retail level
emphasizing the effect of home!1w- would have been 5 percent.
For the 12 months ending in
nersblp costs.
·
Under the new Consumer Price· January, prices rose 3.8 percent
Index formula, the department said under the new formula. If last
housing costs rose 0.5 percent In month's 0.2 percent seasonally
January. Under the former calcula- adjusted rise held steady for 12
tion; housing costs tumbled 0.8 straight months, the yearly gain
would be 2.1 percent. The annual
percent In December.
Gasoline prices last month fell3.3 rate reported by the department Is
percent. As of January, gasoline based on a more precise calculation
· prices were 10.6 percent below their of rnqrthiy pri¢es than the figure the
peak level of March 1981. Home dePill'tiDent makes public.
Under the old measure, consuheating oll prices plunged 4.1
percent. Prices for both fuels feU ln . mer prices fell 0.3 ·percent in ·
December, only the second decline
December.
· The lresb declines In energy recorded ,since 196.'i The departprices are largely the·result of the ment, revising Its calculations for
.continuing worldwide oil glut. the two preceding months, said

Sportswear

Women's Coats
Junior Blouses and
·Slacks
Women's Skirts
Junior Dresses

SHOP FRIDAY 11L 8
FRIDAY 11L 5

FREE PARKING

wEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service fore-

castS 8IIDIIY aides for l1lCJ8t of the nallon for Saturday. Cold wtllltbei- Is

expected IICIVIIS the northern ller and mDd weather lhroup lbe IOilthem half. RaiD Ia lwecaM lot; the Pacific Norihweet. (AP I:.uerphoCo).

State forecasts
Partlai'Ciel!l'tna and col!! tonlght.Lo_w 1!&gt;-20. Winds becOmbtlllght
aJI(Ivarlable.•satu~y. mosUysunnybut..contlnuectratherrold,High ·
~.
. .
,.

~tended forec~t
EtdaldedOIIIoForecut-SundaythroughTuesday: FalrSunday

ana Monday. Chance of showers mainly nor.th Tuelday. Highs In the.
UJlP!!I'«ls and ros. Lows In the mid and upper:alsSunday momlngancl
mldwupper :JlsMonday and Tuesday.

..

today .that prices )1eld steady in
November and rose 0.4 percent In
October.
The department, In refiguring the
housing cost component of the
index, Is attempting to measure
what homeoW11ers would charge
themselves If they were renting
their homes. By no longer considering current home prices an1f
mortgage rates, the department Iseliminating the Investment value of
a house.
Analysts in andoutof guvernment
said the old fonnula gave too much
weight to swings in mortgage rates
and home prices. Skyrocketing
interest rates and home prices
tended to skewer the index upward
while recent falls may have
understated inflation.
Under the new "rental equivalence'· formula, the department said
that a typical homeowner says his
costs rose 0.7 percent In January,
while a typical renter's costs were
up 0.6 percent.
The new calculations are · reflected only in the department's
Consumer .Price Index for All
Urban Consumers.
They won't be made foe two more
years in a companion Index - the
Consumer Price Index for Urban

Wage Earners and CleriCal
Workers - which Is widely used In
collective bargaining agreements
and In adjusting Social Security and
other government payments.
In its new report, the department
gave these specifics of January
price activity:
-Fresh fruit and vegetable
prices were down sharply, while
prices for pork and poultry rose.
Beef price fell but the costs of cereal
and bakery goods rose. Prices for
meals eaten in restaurants climbed
0.3 percent and prices for alcoholic
beverages were upO.l pereent.
-Natural gas prices tose 1.7
percent, outpacing the 1.2 percent
climb of December. Those prices
rose a record 25.4 percent for all of
1982.

Analysts generally attrlbutee the
surge to congressional decontrol of
new-gas costs. Since decontrol
began in 1978, natural gas customers' bills have more than doubled,
congressional investigators said
earlier this winter'.
-Transportation costs fell 0.6
percent, following a 0.1 percent
decline in the preceding month.
Automobile finante charges we~
off 2.4 percent, the sixth straight
(Continued on page 10)

•

'Paycheck deduction' begins Tuesday
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (API -Gov.
Richard Celeste has signed into law ·
a bill nearly doubling the state
Income tax and the increased
paycheck deduction wlll begin
Tuesday.
Celeste signed the bill in his office
Thursday afternoon. No reporters
or photographers were permitted to
watch the signing.
The measure retains a 50 percent
income tax surcharge that would
otherwlsehaveexpiredandboostsit
by another 40 percent, thus amountlng to a 90 percent permanent
Increase.
In addition, It levies a 0.5 percent
Increase ln.the public utility excise
tax for lour months.
Celeste's $.l)() million tax pack-

age, combined with $282 million in
spending cuts, wUl more than offset
a projected $511 million deficit in the
state budget by June30.
Most of the excess amount raised
wUI go into the state's emergency
loan fund from which school
districts may borrow to avoid
closing.
The bill cleared the Democrat. controlled Legislature In less than a
month.
"It's over and done with," Paul
Costello, Celeste's press secretary,
said. "He signed the but. He has a
full schedule. He's been In meetings
allday."
.
Celeste was to attend the National
Governors' Cooference In Washington Friday.
o
Republicans criticized the Democratic governor for the size and .

duration of the tax increase.
Nursing home · operators and
hospitals criticized spending reductions in the Medicaid program.
Some tax protest groups have
talked about seeking repeal of the
measure ina statewide referendum
or placing a cap on future increases.
When Ohio's income tax was
enacted in 1971, opponents placed a
constitutional amendment on the
ballot the following year to repeal it.
The issue was defeated by a margin
of more than 2- to-1.
Although he is opposed to the 90
percent incr~ase, R£&gt;p. Robert
Netzley, R-Laura, said a repeal
movement would probablY fare no
better now.
"They may get it on the ballot but
the result will be the same," Netzley
said. "If they try to reduce the tax

then they're in trouble."
He said backers of the tax would
likely mount a campaign and raise
the prospect of schools and state
facilities closing If the revenue was
reduced.
"The'!'motional appeal is going to
'be on their side and the taxpayers
aren't organized," Netzley said.
He p~lcted a ballot issue that
limited increases might have a
chance at adoption.
"If you just cap it I think you've
got a chance, then they can't say
you're taking everything away,"
Netzley said.
The bill Celeste signed Involves
the budget of the current fiscal year
that ends June 30. Next month he Is
to submit his budget for the two
fiscal years starting July l.

Utilities
seeking more
rate hikes

Women's Blouses

MIDDLEPORT

"'

.

en tine

By SAlLY JACOBSEN

Final Reductions on Fall Clothing at SOOk Savings! Don't miss our SPECIAL GROUPS of fine
quality clothing for Men.

~

at y

Consumer ·prices ·up scant 0.2 percent

NEW YORK QOTHING HOUSE

WINTER ,... '0THING

•

RAILfY SHOFS
",11 1 :, I I'

Southern girls advance.•.Page 3

Sport. ........................ ................................................. Page 3

Edna Triplett, Homer Baxter,

Ronald W. Hanning, John Wllsori,
Jr.. Jane V. Abbott, Donald May,
Roger Malhotra, Hornet Smith,
RaYmtln&lt;l Jewell, Susie . ~k.
Marjorlj! L. Caton, Coy E. Nltz,
Nora Nltz. Geoffecy Wllson, Vltgll
K. Windon, Ke111 L. Clelland,
Carolyn A. Jetfers, Brenda MOITI.s,
Sharon Krilght, Margaret L.
Kennedy, Jacqueline D. Brlckles,
George Nash, Ed,gar A. Abbott,
Richard Vaughan, Paul Rice, ~
Thompson, Mary A. Sordon, and
Gloria 'K. Riggs; Jack Welker,
Hemlock Grove.
Donors .from Middleport were
George Harris, Jr., Unda Haley,
Fred Hanel, Linda Carpenter,
Edward L. Daiuels, JuUa Qualls,
Richard Rathburn, Carrie Beth.
Bearhs, Joyce V. Bartnml; WUIIam
Fink, Kenneth Madden, William W.
Harris, John A. Elias, Angela
Sellers, Ed E. Sellers, Faye L.
Wallace, Leafy Chasteen, Sarah J.
Fowler Edward W. Durst, Carolyn
Schule;, Nonna WUcox, Judith K. ·
Hunter and Gloria J. Peav!ey.
Other donors were t:awrence R.
Groggel and James Foreman,
Portland; Henry Bahr and Howard
Parker, Long Bot19m; Clarence C.
Wolfe, Jr., Chester; Kevin Hetzer,
Richard Barton, Martin Hugh, and
Mace! Barton, Reedsville; Jerry D.
Eads, Lena Napper, Julia Napper,
Charlotte Wright, John Jacobs,
Mary E. Davidson, and Donna
Davidson, Rutland; Mlcheal
Brown, Loretta K. Hill, Jeanette M.
Radford, Dorothy M. Sayre, Dale
Roush, PhyUss E. Baker, and

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

a·~
Pages 7-8
E'Ailtorlal •···~·· ......................... ,....... ..................... ......... Page·2

S42.95 to
S72.95

OUR
PRICE

Inside today .. .

Area deatlll ......................... ....................................... Page 10
By tbe llesld ........................... , ........ ·. , ••.•••••. ,.•..••••.•. , . Pages U
c.ortdci-'IV ............................ ,.. ~ ... ................. ..... ......... Page 9

1

·

OPEN 9:00 TO 5:00 MONDAY-SATURDAY

·

RE!) WING

(Continued from page 1)

Interest charges. "But anytime you borrow money you're going to have to
pay Interest."
··
The commissioners can "cut comers just like everybody else," to pay off
the loans. Hudson said.
. ·
Randy Hays, Racine. a Central Trust employee who was one of the
leaders of Uie referendum drive, said there are advantages to borrowing
money.
"Of course the Interest Is gulng to cost more," Hays said.
But he added that the loan will spread out the payments for the county
and make It "easier to swallow" for the public.

.

Thunday, February 24, 1983

Middleport, Ohio

CXlLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio
utllltles filed more rate cases and
were granted more money In tbe
last eight years than companies in
any surroonding .state, a Consumers' Counsel sUJvey shows.
That ill one reason cited to explain
why· utility costs In Phl6's biggest
cities are higher than In the largest
cities of border states. ·
"Thefactofthematter Is If you're
a residential conswner It's more
expensive to Uve in Ohio In a major
city than these surrounding areas,"
Consumers' CoUnsel WU!Iatn Spra- ·
!ley said Thursday.
Spratley said a comparison by his
sfaft showed that from July 1974 to
June 1982.0hio utilities filed 73 rate
'cases
.
and were granted $2.7 billion.
Tl'iat ~xceeded the number of cases
imd amounts granted In Indiana,
Kentucky, Michigan, Penrisylvanla
'or West Virginia.
Of the six states, only Indiana
granted Utilities a higher percentage of. amounts requested during
that time. Indiana utility regulators
OK'd 77.3 pt!lt-ent of the amount
(Cootlnued on page 10)

DBFUWI'S PASS -Soutllera'• Amy Utl!ftekl
( 30) delleetll Federal llocldnl .,_ ID 'lbunclay
nllbt'a Clue A SecCional Tourllul*d cllanlpDIIdp

il '

pine lit Gllllpolla. LIWelleld _ . . 28 poblla to pace
Soutllem'a M-31 victory over tile Lancers. See story
- Pace s. - Mary Rollba phuto.

~

�' .,

Commentary

•

Reagan's land rush

The Daily Sentinel
lll Cuurl Stm:l
Ptlmt'rny, Ohio

tlwt%·!151
l) f: ' 'OTEO TO THE INTERESTOF THfo: MEIGS..MASON AREA

A~
~m~ ,..,..,__.._'"T",I"T"W'Wc::l•F=I
~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publl~t her

BOB HOEFLICH

IIAT WHITEHEAD
,\ ~~ ist.a rr t P uhlishr-r 1Cmllrullt·r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt'w!IEdltur

A MF.MBE.R .,f The Assordalnl' Prt&gt;SS. lo..lllnd Dally Prt'SS AsSIH'ialiun unci lhl'
Amt'rkun Nt&gt;w~ pa~Je r PubHsht'NA!l.'i•l('latinn.

.

U TTERS OF OPINIQN llrt' 'oll-t.' kumed . Tile)' should bto let;s. tblin .100 wnrds loog. All
ldtl'rs art• ~ubje r1 to edilinK omd mu11l bt- a:lgned with ilamt'. addrn:11 and trlq~h4mt
numbrr . Nu uru;ijlned ltttt&gt;n will bt' publis lwd. LeU.t'n shr~Uid be in ~uud !Pit, addre~IJII,_
i~sur~. nut pt'tllllnlllilies.

Recession
and
.
its changes
. The recession has had its impact in obvious ways, such as throwing
people out of jobs, but it has also changed their habits in many more subtle,
less noticeable ways.
More than a million households, for example, disappeared at one time or
a nother during the rl!(:ession , as parents. moved in with chlldren and
children with parents and singles with other singles.
They cut their spending and they repaired their old cars and tlhey ate less
red meat and they took vacations closer to home, if at all, and tlhey forced
economies on their local goveriunents.
In business, the recession taught companies how to pare their
Inventories and otherwise run a tight operation, and It made them aware of
the need for quality and of the necessity to serve rather than exploit.
It atso reminded business tlhat the latest theories out of tlhe business
schools wouldn't save any company if its management continued to violate
the old-fashioned rules of common sense and practicality.
It made non-profit organizations more aggressive In their pursuit of
contributions, congressmen more attentive to the money they spent, local
governments more aware of their dependence on the federal government.
An attitude was changed. In the 1900s everything seemed possible, and
that feeling was so real that people went out and tried the impossible.
Individuals, businesses, academic institutions, charities and governments
all got the idea they could do more than ever before, and do It effortlessly
and perpetuallyAll have withdrawn to their shells, overwhelmed by inflation and
economic shrinkage, and shocked by the realization that everything Isn't
possible- tlhat, for example, a ~0"&lt;&gt;mment cannot provide social seiV!ces
without charging for them- m ~ ' "" , •Jnning a deficit or forcing inflation on
the economy.
The recession forced managements to make the hard decisions.
Subsidiaries acquired during the great "growth" days of the lastl900s and
1970s were sold off or abandoned in the 19!Kls for the simple reason they
were unprofitable.
It forced unions to accept tlhe hard realities. Collective bargaining
settlements in 1982 provided the smallest average wage increases since
the late 1960s, when such data were first collected systematically.
Anyone can make a list of what the great recession did to them, and if
there ts any common theme it is probably that people are less assured than
before, which may be another way of saying they have lost confidence.
People have learned to stay home, say the executives of a company that
keeps a check on such things_ The development of a variety of television
channels has helped , but so. apparently, has the recession.
And investors in the stock market seem to have returned to the Blue Chip
stocks.

Letters to the editor
Zimmer support
I, as a parent, feel that Chris
Zlmmer should stay as the director
of the Head Start.
I've only seen the man two or
three times while at head start. My
opinion ls he has not dorE anything
out of the way toward my children
or any other child for that matter.

My husband feels the same way as
I do. He hasn' t seen the man but be
has heard about h1nl from me, and
he stlll feels the same.
So my vote. an&lt;i' my husband's
vote, is to keep Chris Zimmer.
Glen and Dreama McGuire
Rt. 1, Crown City

Wrong place, wrong time
I am a parent from Gallla Head
Start. I have had children In Head
Start for four years.
1 was on the Polley Council last
year and I am a Council member
again this year.
I have spent a lot of volunteer
hOurs working at the center. I think
Christopher Zlmmer has done a
line job In tbe running oftre center.
-· I · have spent a lot .of time In
meetings, discussion, and work·
shq:&gt;s with Mr. Zimmer and he has
always done a good job.
I have never seen him do
anything out c1 tbe way at aU. We
have talked to . the detective that
arrested Mr. Zimmer and I tlhlnk

a

'

this iS bunch &lt;i. nonsense, and lt
shoold be put to an end.
· My oplnlon is that Mr. Zimmer
just happened to be In the wrong
place at the wrong~ .
I feel tlhat If any ·man of this
county or any county had stopped
at that roadside rest to use the
restroom they would have been
arrested.
Mr. Zimmer has my and my
husband's fullest support In this
matter.
Linda Cox
· Chairperson of
Gallla Head Start
Parent Committee

SAN FRANCISCO (N£A) - A
pending real estate transaction In
this city cas~ mubt on President
Reagan's claim that the federal
government can reap substantial
profits by selllngltsexcess land and
property,
The Reagan administration an·
nounced with considerable fanfare
last year that It expected to ratse .
more than $17 bllllon during the
ensuing five years with a 'drarnatl·
cally accelerated program of sel·
ling off surplus 'federal land.
The president's ambttbus program called for $1.25 bllllon worth
of sales during the current fiscal
year followed by $4 bllllon In sales
during each of tbe ensuing mur
years.
The White House summartly
rebuffed critics - Including some
officials within the General Services Administration, .tbe govern·
ment's property management
agency- who suggested that those
goals were thoroughly unrealistic.
But the Reagan administration
now has drastically scaled down Its .
own estimates, suggesting that It
wtll make $408 million worth of land
sales this year, slightly more than
$1 bllllon next year and just under
$1 bUIIon In each of the ensuing two
years - and even those figures
may be high.
Several of the problems associated with the president's much
ballyhooed land sales are vividly
lllustrated In the proposed transac·
tlon Involving a prime parcel d.
land on the edge of San Francisco's
booming business district.
No fewer than five levels of GSA

WASHINGTON - Intelligence
sources believe the Kremlin wtiJ try
to goad its Syrian clients Into ·
another air battle with Israel
sometime soon - whether .the
Syrians like the Idea or not.
The RuSsians' hope of provoking
a Syrian·Israeli clash has nothing to
do with politics, Ideology or Middle
East strntegy; It's a matter of
milltary necessity. The Soviets'
high command desperately needs
to know whether the latest surfaceto-air (SAM ) mlssUe systems It has
deployed In Syrta are vulnerable to
Israeli pilots In their AmeriCa·
made aircraft. The Israelis easlly
knocked out the earlier SAM
missiles that Syrta placed In
Lebamn.
The ease with which the Is rae II

~i'rA (f)t9i' ~

· amounts of commercial space for
the regional offices of scores rl.
government departments and
agencies:
Nevertheless, GSA Admlnlstra·
for Gerald P . Carmen decided to
sell the !arid outright to the city for
$17.4- million - even tblugh the
propertY Is valued at almost $20
mllllon.
The city would act only as an
Intermediary, however, because

_ , . ,....,..esa·n-

·

the trnct is earmarked tor a new
bltel to be operated by the Man'lott
Corp., a Washington-based food
and lodging chain with extensive
ties kl the Republican Party.
Moreover, GSA records slx&gt;w
that Carmen agreed to the sale
within days ;lfter being imp&lt;rtuned
by a Marriott laWyer, a Marriott
president (a former member
of the White House staff) and othel-s
representing the company.

vlee

~uu.,e
NrA

. .I
.dl
---•

WOLFE DIUVl!8- Southenl's Larea Wolfe (to) goesllll!llde for a
layup altempt against Federal Hocking In
A aectlonal fiDal8 at
GaWpoli8 Thursday. Southem won, 6f.34. -Mary Rollins photo.

aa.

without losing a single plane. This
planps eliminated some of the
astounding mWtary feit was all the •
Russians' most advanced mtssile
more ImpreSsive when It Is remem·
batteries has the Soviet generals
scared. They face tbe appalling bered that these Syrian missiles
posslblltty that tile SAM missiles, . bad lnfiicted terrible punishment on
the Israeli air force In the 1973 war.
on which their entire tactical
What had happened In the
mUitary doctrine depends, are
intervening
nine years? The lsrllfL
obsolete as fast as tlhey roll off the
lis
had
developed
a variety of
as5embly line.
and
weapons
.:._ lnclud·
techniques
This ·behind·the·scenes Inteilllng a decoy drone called the Scout
gence story has not been told
and radar·jamming "chaff," which
before. It was given to my as5ociate
Dale Van Atta over a period of confused or blinded the Syrian
missile crews for three minutes months by intelligence sources,
long
enough for Israeli planes to
who showed him top ·secret
them.
destroy
documents.
Needlesstosay,
the Syrians were
The action began lil spectacular
stunned. So were the Russians.
fashion on June 9 and 10, when
Tile Kremlin sent Its No. 2
Israeli jets destroyed 19 Soviet·
air-defense expert to Cebanon to
made SA-6 batteries In the Bekaa
find out what had gone wrong. He
Valley of southeastern Lebanon -

The Environmental Protectbn
Agency !EPA) can't account' for
$53.6 million from the $1.6 mllllon
superfund set up to clean up
hazardous waste dumps over the
United States. The Federal Bureau
o!Investlgation (FBI) lslnvestlgat·
lng. It's about time! •
Any place' else but Washington,
D. C., the report that such a sum Is
unaccounted for would have been
cause for alerting everyone from
the local Cilp to tbe national guard.
In Washington they telld to think In
btlllons and the fact that a mere
$53.6 mllllon Is unaccounted for
does little more than raise a cynical
eyebrow. To the average taxpayer
$53.6 mDUoil Is a hefty ple::e of
change. Written out lnnumeralswe
may be better able to envision It as
$53,600,000. Just hOw .anyone, even If
they are working for the federal
government, can mislay that kind
of money Is difficult for us average
folks to understand.
The editor· of the ~alnesvllle Sun
apparently tblught lrl toO. Our

Today is Friday, Feb. 25, the 56th day of 1983. There are 309 days left In
the year.
Today's highlight In htstory:
On Feb. 25, 1913, Congress was given the authority to levy Income taxes
whe~ the 16th Ame!ldment went into effect.
'
On this date:
.
In 1570, England's Queen Ellzabeth I was excommunicated by Pope

Top-seeded Southern captured
_lower bracket honol'S In the Class A
girls' sectional tournament at Gallb
polls Thursday night wblle second
seeded Oak Hill. walked off with top
IxmOrs In upper bracket play.
Both Southern and Oak Hill ad·
vanced to the 1983 Class A Dlstrtct
.Tournament at Waverly next week
by · ellmlnating Federal Hocking
and Symmes Valley In the Galllpo.
lis sectional.
Oak HW made it to the district by
slashing Symmes Valley, 53-37.
Christi Howard paced the Oaks
with 23 points. Melinda Burnside
added 19. DenlseJobnsonhad18for
the Lady VIkings.
· Southern smashed Federal Hock·
Jng, 64-34.
· Amy Littlefield paced the Tbr~rls with 29 points. Tonja
Salser and Mel Weese had 13 apiece
for the winners.

ordered the Syrians to deploy an
even more advanced SAM system
- the SA·S. And tlhls time, Soviet
advisers woold be directly In·
valved, coordfuatlng the defense
and even manning the controls.
But on July 24 tbe Israelis
knocked out the SA-8 batteries,
losing only one F -4 fighter In the
process. Intelligence SllUIU!S have
learned that tbe battery which shot
down the lone plane was manned by
Soviet advisers, not Syrians. In fact,
when the Israelis sent planes back
In to pulverize the F -4 wreckag!!
and keep Its secret gear oot of
enemy hands, they killed a dozen
Soviet technicians. wbl were al·
ready poring over the downed
plane.

nado

L_ow_e_u_w_
.in_ge_u

IlL' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

'I

I

'

m

.

EAST LANSING, Mich. rAP)There were doubts ablut how well
freshman Scott Skiles and sophomore . Sam Vincent could play
together at guard for Michigan
State's basketball team.
Although the pair .have played
moderately wei! throughout the Big
Ten season, the skepticism was put
to rest Thursday night.
"It was the Scott Skiles and Sam
Vincent show offensively," said
. Michigan State Coach Jud Heathrote. "Great plays by Scott kept
getting us out of holes."
. The pair combined for 58 points to
lead Michigan State to a 101-94
triple-overtime victory over 15thranked Ohio State.
"Thlswasourbestgamelnalong,
long time and that's what It took to
win," Heathcote said. "HopefUlly,
this gives usa little momentum . We
might h'\ve to win four of our last
five for a tournament bid."
In the first overtime, Vincent and
Skiles combined for 11 of Michigan .
State's 13 points. Vincent finished
the game with 23 points -including
17 of 17 from the free throw line before fouling out with 1:00 remain.ingln that period.
'
Earlier, Skiles nailed a t~
. point jumper with 12 seconds
remaining in regulation to tie It at ·
74·74.
Skiles again brought the Spartans
from behind In the second overtime,
hitting theteam'.sonly points on two ·
free throws to make It 89-89.
The freshman from Plymouth,
Ind., then scored eight points In the
third overtime, Including . .six

straight free throws.
"ApparenUy he was better than
anyone else we've played against' "
said Ohio State Coach Eldon Miller.
"It was a great game by Michigan
State. Therewerealotoflittlethlngs
we did wrong that finally caught up
to us.''

Buckeye fmward Tony Campbell
pumped In 29 points In a losing
cause, including 11 of hts team's 20
poinis In the three overtimes.
Ohio State w~ behind for most of
the game, trailing 39-29 at halftime,
before staging a slow comeback.
The Buckeyes finally pulled to a
73-691ead on two treethrowsea ch by.
Troy Taylor and Granvllle Walters
with just over a minute left In
regulation .
Kevin W!Uis, the Spartans' Hoot
center, adde&lt;! 18 pointswhlle Taylor had 18 for Ohio Slate. Joe Conchek
had 13 and Waiters 12 for the
Buckeyes.
. The defeat snapped a five-game
wlnnlngstreakforOhloState, which .
Is 9-5 In the conference and 17·7
overall. Michigan State lifted Its
record to 5-8 In the Big Ten and 12-11
overall.
The Spartans will host Indiana on
Sa turday'while Ohio State travels to
Michigan.

College scores

-- -

CIM.......,

100RNAMEI&lt;Til

•

Winslon-Salern St 100. Vlrsllnla SC. 99,
0'1' Norfolk St. lfi. Elizabeth C11Y St. 12
Hamploo h~ l . ln. N.C. Cenll'llllll

Tournament cage results

Dllylestown 6.3, Aquinas 5:!
f'l:l'deliE'ktown 47. Marvsville 40

~ending

champion Soothem
wtll loCk horns with Southwestern bt
the champloll'ihlp game of the i983
Rio Grande Class A Sectional
Tournament Iii I.yne Center to-

17, Turek 2 ~ Capelle o. 2•2, Howard o. 1•1 ,
TIFFIN (58)Caroo I(}{).
ClapperlD-2.
1'olalll:l»llll
. a); Jackson S.l·
RIO GRANDE {84) - Mal"'h 10.2-22;
Curry 4-} 11; Mowecy 2-().4; Shaw :&gt;2-12;
wate 1-1-3: Penrod U10; Fritz o.n Totals
!li-12-64.
·
Hallllrne score: Rio Grande 25, TWin 25.

.

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
Phone 992·2975
FALL &amp; WINTER- HOURS
CLOSED MONDAY
TUES . thru FRI. 9 to 5
·SAT. 9 to 1

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13 HP YANMAR DIESEL WITH
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night.
Tipoff time Is 7:00. Winner of
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Chillicothe Class A DlstrtctTouma·
ment, scheduled next week.

SERVICE &amp; PARTS

LUBE,. OIL &amp; FILTER SPECIAL

Includes up to 5qts. of motorcraft oil &amp;filter,lube job, check·
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CARS ..........

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TRUCKS ............................... S16.95
TRANSMISSION SERVICE •.•.....• ; S49.95
I ••• I ••• I. I ••• I •••••••••••

, Includes bml adjustments, replace II fluid &amp; filter. (Does not
apply to trans ·ules)

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Cut out this coupon.
Good thru April 30, 1983
• PAT HILL FORD .

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PH. 992-2196

'

.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

12 HP MASSEY FERGUSON
WITH 42 IN. MOWER

Over the Counter S"pecial ·
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1 price . on parts purchased over the counter. 1

o.~ l

Ali·District candidate Jerry
Mowery, who entered the game .
averaging 16 points and seven
assists for the Redmen , got in foul
trouble early and never got untracked offensively.
Mowery fouled out in the final fi ve
minutes .with just four points. Rio
Grande held a 26-25 marginfrom the
field and connected on 12 freethrows on the Dragons ' eight. Tiffin
turned the ball over 15 times to the
Redmen'sll.
'

Play for Rio ~ectional title .tonight

I

"

the Lady Vlldngs Thtmiday. Others In pboto are rhonda Swann (13);
Beverly Wilson (40) lllld Marte Roche (24),

8 HP MASSEY FERGUSON
WITH 36 IN. MOWER

Hamlltoo .Badln ?.i. BrOOkville 48
lrontoo G2, J ackson 58
John Gk&gt;nn 89, Phllo 68
NatiOnal TraU 56, Kings 49
Norwayl'l(' 56, Sandy VaL 54
Preble Shawnee Ql, Day. Cham.JuJ 65
Stf.'UbenviUe 91. Buckeye S. ~
Twinsburg 72, Strt'etsboro li2
UUca til, John51CM•n 51
WellsvUIE' 83, C&lt;tdll: &lt;all

Oklo Hlp Sc:tu.l.Bo)'!' Basketball
By The Awodllled PIUl.K
D..ll"'ld.,ys ResWt8
ClAM AA TourTIIU'l1enl.ll
BUCkeye Val. 40. BJg Wa lnut :ll
01"\'1.'. Ornnl" !1.1, Aurora .r;
('ol. Dr.SaiC'S 48. HE'a th ~7

.

.

BuRNSIDE GRABS REBOUND- Oak HW's Melinda Burnside ·
( 42) plck.s off rebound against Symmes Valley during 53-3'7 victory over

IGRJWELY WALK BEHIND WITH
SULKY

r-----:-----~. "1""'~--· -~----------,

'.

.

RIO GRANDE_ Rio Grande jumperfromthecornerbyFrank
pushed ltswayintothefinalsoftbe Cardo.
Mid-Ohio Conference Tournament
championship Thursday night with
They held the lead untU just
a 64-58 come-from·behlnd victory beforethehalfwhenDanCunytied
over Tiffin University.
the contest with a drive. The contest
The Redmen wtll play top-seeded was tied at 25-25 at the half.
Walsh In the championship game in
The Dragons pulled ahead at47-43
Usa Miller had 12 for tlhe Lancer
Canton Saturday night. Watsh,
with just under 10 minUtej; to go in
girls. Brenda Russell added 10.
undefeated and second· ranked in the contest, but the Redmen came
Box scores:
(Ftnl Giune)
the 'natlon, upended fourth·seeded stonnlngbacktothetaketheleadon
SYMMES VALU:Y (3'1) - Marla Roche
Cedarville to advance to the f(nitls .
baSkets by John Maisch, Kent Wolfe
VI·~ Denise Jolmsm S.~JB; Beverly Wuson
·
The~
Cavaliers
are
the
only
andRlckPenrod.
J.(}(l; Delllllla McCarty 1-H; Karen lloroon
2-IJ.~ Renee Rooe 0.1-1. TOrAL'III&gt;'!-117.
rem
gun eat co ege team
sc connected on a free.
OAK HD.J..(ID)- Melinda Burnslde~H9;
a1n1n
defTheednation
,, 's 'o ther throw,
Mal with35secondsremainingto
h
in the
country.
Christl llowanl .S. 7·23; Susan Spohn 2-U;
Tern Thland 0-1-1: Sheila ll!edy :!0-4; Jeana
undef~ated team, Untver~ity of
push the Redmen in front by seven
.
SlonPO.Q.O; Rhonda Swann. TOTALSZ1·11·5S.
N evad a· Las
·
Vegas,
lost
Thursday
and
Rio Iced the win with a
B y q -:
Symmeo Valley ................... 2 13 9 13-37
night.
free. throw by Penrod and a pair by
Ook HID .............................. 9 10 14 :Jl-53 · . Rio Grande's victory boosted Its
Bob Shaw.
record to 249 overall. while Tiffin
Shaw contrtbuted aU 12 of his
(Secand Ga.-)
FEDERAL HOCKING (!4) - Brenda Rus ·
·
marl&lt;ers in the second half. Maisch
dropped to 17·10.
sell4·2-llk MarthaHuntO.H AmyJagol-1"It was a big win for,us," said Rio paced tlhe Redmen with 22 points
3; Vlclde Matlack z.Gi; Irena Bennett ().().0;
Usa Frashler 0.1·1; Angle Jago 0.2-~ Lisa
Grande Coach John Lawhorn. "We and nine rebounds. He was joined In
Mlller 4-4-12; Jnl Burdette. ror.u.s 11-12-JI.
tried to control the tempo of the doubledlglts byShawwith12,Cuny
SOU'111ERN (tl) - Mel We&lt;!Se •;.1~
game
by slowing the pace down and · with 11 and Penrod with 10. Cuny
Too] a Salser 5-J-13: Amy U!Ue!le ld 9-11-29;
Laren Wolle o.a Cindy Evans 1-:1-4; MIstopping their running game."
had eight rebounds and Shaw six.
chelle Johnson 0-0-0; Debbie MIChael 1·1·3:
The two teams traded baskets In
Carda paced the visitors with 20
.Julie Hwdashelt ~- TOTALS 20-utl.
the early going before the Dragons points, while Jackson tossed In 17.
ByqF·Hocldng .... ... ......... ........... 9 10 9 1&gt;-:11
surged Into a five-point lead at 23-18 Jackson, Craig · Turek and Doug
Swlhern ............ .........·....... 14 15 12 23-61

Buckeyes upset I 01-94 in
3 overtimes at East Lansing_

gating the agency because of
morning paper, Saturilay, Feb. 19, The Watergate affali, which cost
envlronmen
talists' claims that the
one
president
his
jo!J,
di(Lnot
had a banner headline across the
agency
was
not moving quickly
involve
anywhere
near
that
amoont
front page"EPA Can'tAcrount For
In
cleaning
up 'toxic waste
enough
53 Million," shows that he baS some of money and that was moneyoftbe
respect for money because he gets Republican party and not c1 the sites. She was also told to bring
his the hard way. He earns It! But government. But all the motives documents from the agen&lt;1' which
the superfund money don't belong that were present In Watergate are she faDed to brtng claiming that the
to anyone but the government and present in the EPA Investigation president had Instructed her to ·
withhold them .on the grounds of
that makes It fair game. Lack of now under way on Capitol HUI executive
prlvtlege. In tbe ensuing
money,
!!Xecutlve
privilege
and
bookkeeping documentation !.o r
donnybrook,
Gorsuch was cited for
money spent shows $53.6 mllllon missing tapes. I hOpe you have kept
cOntempt
of
Congress, the only
missing and all the excuses In the up to date on tbe running battle
per!l&gt;n rl cabinet rankeverso cited.
world can' t change that fact. Even between the president and six
The
agency has been under fire
Congressional
committees
which
a kid that can add and subtract
since.
The whole tlhlng came to a
asked
to
see
EPA
records
and
has
could do a better job of keeping
week when Rita Lavelle,
head
last
bretr
refused
by
President
Reagan
accounts than a government
adminls
tra
tor c1 the hazardous
execu
tlve
privilege.
That
was
citing
agency equipped with all the latest
•
waste
programs,
was fired by
the
same
"executive
prlvtlege"
that
gadgets such as computers, etc. It Is
Gorsuch
for
~~personnel
reasons."
President Richard Nixon trted to
ridiculous!
The
firing
was
subsequenUy
upheld
What has astonished me ts the use to keep the famous White Hoose
by President Reagan.
utter lack of attention that has been tapes from Congressional commit·
tees;
If
you
haven't
been
foUowlng
paid such an enormous shortfall by
the country's news media. I have the EPA Clrc\IS too closely, let me
Lavelle's dismissal touched off a
heard It mentioned on natbnal briefly bring you up to date.
The whole EPA trouble began new roond of controversy, inchld·
television news only once. That was
ing allegations rl perjury, conflict
on CBS' Agronsky and Company last December when O!ief Ann
of
Interest. political manipulation
Sunday and It was only brlefiy Gorsuch was subpoenaed by a
and
!Jossible destructbn of subpO-mentioned by one of the panelists. Congressional· committee invest!·
enaed documents . The Iate&amp;t
charge is the erasure of computer
$t'ltt·"~--.... . . - .
' tapes. Congressional committees
have stepped up thetr Investigation ,.
Into EPA's hazardous-waste programs, dozens of EPA employes
have been subpoenaed and some
lawmakers are even calling for the.
agency to Qe scrapped and replaced ''
by an autonomotis body like the
Federal Reserve Board. It Is the
opinion of some lawmakers and ,
environmentalists that Gorsuch
has had no environmental experience and In two ·years has
weakened the agency. She was a ·
two-term Colorado Legislator be- •
fore being picked by Reagan· to
heact one of the mo~ ~tlve ,
agencies In the federal
government.
The EPA has so far identUied:
14,000 potentially hazardous waSte · ~
dumps and has designated 418 a~ ::
sites for possible superfund aUoca' :,
Uons. So fa:r, only five sites ·have ~
been cleaned up and the Reagan ··
administration has adopted tiM! :~
policy of seeking to Degotlate .:
settlements with dumpers tnsll!ad · ·
ot taking tbem to court.
•·'
Nbw, there are 53 mllllon reaso 114 ::
wily the EPA deserves the closest :
. possible scrutiny and I hope it gets ;

Our OF BOUNDS - Federal llocldng's Amy .Jago reaches for
loose ball during Thlll'llday's Cla8s A sedlooal finals against Southern.
Tomado players are ~bble Michael (2l) and Larea Wolfe (40). SHS
won to advanoe to the dlstri(j loumament.

R~~..!n £~~~,!!!~ .!~~.P.?!~7se~· GRAVELY
;;;;,;;~t;;it;;l;;e
TRACTOR

Southern, Oaks
advance to Class
A District .meet

"The White House has tossed this out for whatever it's worth - a highly
placed source qver there suggests we ask the Reader's Digest to condense the budget.''

EPA ruckus

•

In 1793. the first recorded Arilerlcan cabinet session took place when
President George Wash!ngton met with the heads of various departments
at his home.
In 1919, Oregon became the first state to tax gasoline. ·
,
And In 1956, Soviet Premier Ntldta Khrushchev went before the
Communist Party Congress In Moscow and denounced fanner leader .
Joseph Stalin.
.
.
·
Ten years ago: Representatives of East and West asse~bl~ in Paris to
approve a Wasblngton·Hanoi truce agreement.
,
Five years ago: The U.S. cautioned that relations with the Soviet Unlon
could be impaired by continued Soviet mllitary Involvement In the confilct ·
between Ethiopia and Somalia.
·

professionals recommended either
retaining the land as the site for a
new federal building or trndtng it
with the city for another tract on
which such a building could be
constructed.
These alternatives would provide
substantial long·term economies
because office rental costs here are
among the highest In the oountry
and GSA currently leases large
r.
·
~

Robert Walters

Air battle neededL_____---"'-___Ja_ck_A_n_de_rs_on

Today in history
~v

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel .
Pameroy.:..._Middleport, Ohio
Friday, i:ebrvciry 25, 1983

481 S. THIRD AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH. ·

Fertilizes
1 ~'1r:;~.~our

·----

Lawn.

You can' clear up dandelions and more than tbree
dozen other common weeds ~t the same· time! as
you give your lawn a full feeding of Sc.otts® fertilizer. Turf Builder Plus 2® does both jobs at once.
Result? Your weeds fade away as your lawn grows
thicker ·and greener.
·
·

Wape-Out-Weeds SAI.E

I
MODERN SUPPLY

.

TURF BUILDER - TURF BUILDER PLUS 2
399 W. Main
992-2164
Pomeroy, Oh.
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"- FOR PETS, STABLES,
LARGE &amp; S~LL ANIMALS, LAWNS
GAROq;IS.

�Pom~Middleport, Ohio

Page-4 The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 25, 1983

.Meigs County. and regional-correspor1dence

HARP - Sister Grace, the former VIrginia Graber of Pomeroy, Is
presently located at th~ Motherhouse of the Sisters of Charity, Mount Saini
Joseph on the Ohio, 450i&gt;l. A periodic visit to Pomeroy, Sister Grace Is a
tutor, reUglon teacher, organist and music student In harp and organ. She
would enjoy· h~g from Pomeroy friends, relatives and fonner classmates. Sister Grace Is pictured at the harp.

Mr: and Mrs. Robert Gibson'imd
RObin, Columbus, were Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Alkire, HarriSonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Mlke Epple,
Harii.sonvllle, hadasguestsoverthe
hol!days Calvin Epple, Smithsburg,
Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Epple,
Evans City, Pa.; -Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Brown, Ray; Mr. and )\'Irs.
Jerry Waldeck and sons, Loudonville; Mr.andMrs.FrankEppleand
family, Middleport; Mrs. Gerry
Behrendsen, Sandusky, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Allen and Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Godby, son, Jason, Zanesville,
and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Pickering
of Columbus. Mary Leedy of Clovis,
N. M., Richard Epple, Glen Burnie, ·
Md:; and Mary Lou-Bell; Dayton,
telephoned their parents over the
holidays.
Also visiting were Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Grate, the Rev. Lloyd
Grinun, Rutland, and Ernest Carr,

-·~
.
.Hutfalo, W. Va.
Mrs. Merle Evans Is recuperat·Mr. and Mrs. David Wolfe and
1ng at home after a ret'1111t
·SON shopped at Ravenswood a
hospltilllzatlon.
recent Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert WUson and ' Mr. and Mrs. Rick Frletag, j'.tary
sons, Irondale, Ohio spent a recent
and Susan, Canton, and George
weekend with her parents, Rev. Reuter, Akron, were weekend
and Mrs. Lawrence Gluesencamp. .
of LucJlle Smith and EJma
VIsiting Mrs. Audrey Brewer and Reuter. Mrs. Reuter returned with
David recently Include Mr. and
them to 'her home In Akron after
Mrs. Kenneth Brewer a111lson, Mr. spending the past six months here
and Mrs: Mjchael Wooc!, Mrs.
with her sister, Miss Smtih.
Marilyn Beall and Mark, au of ,.
Mr. and Mrs . .Roy Christy spent
Columbus; Mrs: Emnia ~ Slm· . two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Don
meral and Tlsha and VInce Lem- Matlack In Lake Worth, Fla.
'mon, ReYnoldsburg; Mr. and Mrs. r;:;:;:;:;:;~;;~~;;~
Clyde · Close, Wateiford; Mrs.
Leanna Beegle and Crista, Racine;
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom; Mr.
r
~
. and Mrs. Dennis Dobbins, Mr. and
Mrs. ·Kerry Dobbins and Edgar
Brewer, local.
,
Mrs. Bfil Bryant, Debra and
David, spentarecehtweekendwith
./' .,
Mrs. Myrtle Lewis and famlly,
I
i Harrisonvll\e.

ruests

N·EED "JiO.

SAVE·

MONEY--.

Junior high names spelling champion

TRY·
RETREADS

Residents record birthdays

. Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil Wood,
Springfield, were weekend guests
3f Mrs. Leth&amp; Wood and otbe~
relatives.

Pomeroy-,.,iddleport, Ohio •

This
USED CARS, INC.

(VIII'S-)

-..,bc.

l'llbllsbod M.y alte.--, Monday
tMluch Frlclay. !.11. Court Street, by the

Olllo Valley ~ Company • Mul·

tlmedla, l)lc.• Pomeroy, OhiO 45'189. !112:1:15&amp; Secood clua pootap piJd at
Pomeroy, o.lo.
.
Member: Tbe Aloodated Preu. IDIIIId
llo1ly Prou Auoctatlm 1111C1 tile Amerl. can Newlpapor l'llblllben - t l o n ,

Nattoaal Advertllinc Represenu.u..,,
llranllam N - Sa/01, 733 Third
AV..110, New York. New Yort&lt; lllll7.

I'IJS'J'MASTER: SeM DoJJy Sentbiel.

Ollloi5'/m.

ID Tbe .
m eoort ·sc. Pomeroy,

'
1Ri11K:a1PnoN RATES
IIJC...Wor.._._

One Week ....... ..... ....... .. ~............ $1.00
One Month .. .. .. ..... ...... ......... .... .,.suo
One Yeor .. ....... ... : ...... ... ... ...... ... 11\!.111
SINGEI.COPY
PRIClls·
llo1ly ...... ... .. ......... ..... ..... .. .... ~ Centa.

Sl.' Rt.

R•y Riggs
'Ph. 915-410,'

Chester

and Church
·" MEIGS nRE
\ ~ CENTER, INC.

~-('f
u
.

,

Pomeroy .

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

BOOK SlORE
Church Oflice Supplies

~!~
- -s
Prescriptions

GIFTS
"Mill s't.
Middleport

complete

of the

month.

SQNS StORE
GroceriesGeneral Merchandise

Racine 949·2SSO

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

HAZEL COMMUNITY &lt;.liURCH, Near

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST. :112 W.
Main St .. NeU Proudfoot, pastor. Blbleoschool,
9:lJ a. q~. : mcrnlng worship, lO: l) a.m.;
Youth meeUngs. 6: l} p.m.; f!'venlng worshJp.
7: .! l p.m. Y(edneSday night pra)'f'r meeting
and Rlble stOOy, 7:30p.m.
.
11!E SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
Ave .. Pomeroy. EnVoy and Mrs. Roy Wining,
offtcers in charge. Sunday OOUness meeting,

20:1- 17

Monday
• Matthew
5:i· 12

Tuesday
• Manherv
Wtctnesctay
• Matthew
7: 1·12

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPl1ST,
Comer Ash arxl Plum. Leslie Hayman, .

Fn'day
• Proverbs

pastor. Sunday schl:lc:M 10 a.m.: Morning

MEIGS
COOPEM'IWE PARISH
UNITED ME'1110DIST CIIUliCII
FQ - . , Jllreetor

I didn't need God! Used to boast aoour
how I could stand on my own rwo feet.

5:17·37

Thursday
•Lvke
10:25-37

Worship, ll a.m.: Wednesday and saturday
Evening services, 7: Jl p.m.

My Own
Two .Feet

S..nday

Long Bottom, Edsel Hart, paster. Sunday
IChool. 9:31 a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Prayer meeting 7:ll p.m. Thursday.

Cotfee hour in the Par1sh .Hall Immediately
foHowing .the service. .

Then came the brof&lt;en leg. With lots of
tlme to think and llnle to dO 1began to dis·
rover another dimenSion of our existence.
I We aren't simply "on our own." SOme dl·
vine purpose lifits our life to the Creator.
~~~~lSeeking that purPose and striving to fulfill it

t

- that's

3:1-35
Saturday
•Romans
13:1·14

wnat life Is really about.

I started going to church on crutChes.

The leg ls line now, ••cept lor that ache

wi'K!ri It'S going to rain. My larger view of lile
continues to enrictl each day. ·
Cc~'" "~t !UIJ le•ltlf A~n •lol•"lf St~ ¥iu
-.d WdWIII ~Fe....,._·~·· ltw;.
1' ,0 IIDI 102• , C ~lt iOI IU vl ll e, VI . 2200f

And I'm finding it euler to an end worship
- on my own two feetl

----

A-le lllnetor.
NOBTIIEA8T ClAJI!ITER

Bov.lloldoa-

Bev. Rlt.bard ftom.M
10 .a.m.: Sunday School. Ill: Jl a.m. Sunday
ALFRED - Cburth Scbool 9::1} a.m.;
School leader, YPSiyl. Elol.oe Adams. 7:Jl·
WorsbJp, 11 a.m.: UMYF, 6:Jl p.m.: UMW,
p.m., salvation meeting, vark&gt;us SPf'akers
11llrd Tuesday, 7: Jl p.m. COmmunity !ln!t
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Oliver
p.m.: Evening Worship, 1:Jl p.m. Wedne;·
and musk: specials. Thursday - 10 a.m. to 2'
Sunday.
SwaJn. Superintendent. Sunday school 9: ;n
day Prayer and Bible Study, 7::1» p.m.
p.l)l., Lad/eO Home U!ague, all wanen tnCHFSI'ER - Wonhlp 9 a.m.; Church
a.m. every week.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST. Cltarlm
vlt&lt;d: 7:ll p.m. Prayer meettng and Bible .
S!:hool10 a.m.; Bible Study. Thunday, 7 p.m .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNlON. WIUiam
Russell, Sr.• minister; Rld&lt;Macomber.supt.
study, Rev. Noel H@l'lnan, teacher.
Crabtree, pastor. Sunday School. 9:30a.m.:
UMW. first Thursday. 1 p.m.: Communloo
Surxlay !ICOOo\, 9:3&gt; a.m.; wcrshlp service,
BURLINGTON SOUTIIERN BAPTIST
O.St Sunday.
•
evPnlngserviee. 7: lJ p.m. Wednesday pray£&gt;r
10::11 a.m. Bible Study, Tuesday, 7: l) p.m.
CHURCH. Route 1. Shacle. BibleSchool7p.m.
JOPPA - Worsbip, 9:30 a.m.; Church
me&lt;'llng, 7: Jl p.m.
REORGANIZED CHUR&lt;ll OF JESUS
Thunclay; worship service 8 p.m.
S!:hooi.10:Jl a.m. Bible Study. Wednesday.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST OF LATIER DAY SAINTS.
POMEROY WESI'SIDE CHURCH OF
~:II p.m.
CHRIST, Duane Warden, minister. BiblE'
Portland-Racine Road. WWiam Roo!lh, pas·
CHRIST. 2110 W. MAin St, 992-&amp;15. Vocal
class. 9:.lt a .m.; morning worship, 10::1)
I..ONG llOTI'OM - Church Schoo(, 9: Jl
tcr. Unda Evans, church school dtrect&lt;r:
mudc. Sunday worship 10 a.m .; Bible study
a.m.: Wo.-.hlp, 7 p.m.; Bible Study,
a.m.: evening worshJp. 6: ll p.m . ,Wednesday
church sctxxl, 9:l&gt; a.m.; morning wcnhlp,
U ·a.m.: worship, 6 p.m. Wedneaday Bible
Wedneotlay,7:Jl p.m.: UMYF, Wednesday;6
Bible study. 6:30p.m.
10:.'11 a.m.; Wednesday evening prayer
study, 7 p.m
p.m.: Communion Flrst Sunday.
NEW STIVERSVlLLE'" COMMUNITY
services, 7:Jl p.m.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
~u.E - Church School, 9: 30
CHURCH. Sunday School service, 9:45a.m.:
BITHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev. Earl
CHURCH - Clifton Lucas. pastor. Sunday
a.m.; W~ 11 a.m.
Worship seJVIce, 10:ll a.m .; EvangeiJsllc
Shuler, pastcr. Worship service, 9:ll a.m.
School 9:l) a.m. Mrs. Worley 'Frands. supt.
lVPPERS PLAINS sr. PAUL - Church . Sen..ice,' 7: l) p.m. Wednesday; Prayer meet·
Sunday school, JO:JJ a.m. Bible Study and
Preaching ....-vloes !ln!t and third Sundays
School, 9a.m.; Worship, 10 a.m.; Bible Study,
Lng, 7:.10 p.m. , Thursday.
~yer service Thursday, 7: lJ p.m.
following Sunday School. .Youth meotlng evTUeSday; 7: Jl p.m.; UMW. Third Tuesday,
ZION CHUROI OF CHRIST. PomeroyCARLETON CHURCH, KlnRSbuJY Road.
ery Sunday. 7: :II p.m.
7: IJ p.m.; Communm ftn:t Sunday.
HaJTisonvUJe Rd.: Robert Purtell, mJnlster;
Brother Marlon Wllllams, pastcr; Sunday
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST ,
Sieve Stanley, Sunday schOOl supt. Sunday
school, 9::lJa.m. Ralph Carl, supeintendenl;
Preachlrw 9: l) a .m .. flrsl and st'COOO SunCEN'J11.U.·CLV8TI!ll
school, 9: lJ a.m .; worshipservtce 10: lJa.m.:
evening W&lt;rSblp, 7:.'11 p.m. Prayer meeting,
days of each month: thlrdandfourthSundays
~veningworship Sunday, 7 p.rri. and WednesWednesday, 7::1l p.m.
Rev. S!altl'il' w. Mentllild
each month, worship services at 7::n p.m.
Rev.Ndurdii«I..ONG BOTI'OM ClffiiSI1AN. KEn Kelf..-,
day. 1 p.m.
·Wednesday evenl~s at 7: ~ p.tn.. Prayer and
Rev. - E . R o - . .
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
paster. Wallace Damewood;Sullday School
Bible Study.
a... Robort IUder, Jr.
Grove. The ~v . WUllam Mlddleswarth, Pas~pt. Worship service at 9 a.m. Bible School
SEVENfii-DAY ADVENTIST. Mulbeny
tor. Church services 9::lt a.m. Sunday School
10 a.m.
Helglla Road. Pnm~ . Michael PlanASBURY (SyraCWie) - Worship, lla.m.;
10:30 a.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH,
kllwskl, pasta: Rita White. Sabbath School
Church SChlxi. 9:45 a.m.; Charge Bible
BRADBURY CHUROI OF CHRIST. Paul
Rev. 1'hen!on Durham, pastcr. Sunday
Supt. Sabbath School Ls at 2 p.m. on Saturday Study. Wednaday, 7:Jl p.m.; UMW. first
Pratt . pastor. Sunday schooi ,9:JOa ,m .. Larry
Schoolat'9::Jl·a .m.; MorningwcrshlpatlO:ll
with ..-&lt;nhlp seviC&lt;!S lollowlng at 3: ~p. m .
TUeSday, 7:Jl p.m.: Choir Rel1earsal.
Haynes. S. S. Supt.: morni~ worship, 10:30
a.m. Thursday setVIces at 7:31p.m. .
• Rlln.AND FIRST IIAPI1ST CHURCH Wedneiday. 6:Jl p.m.; UMW, fourth SundaY,
a.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSIOI'I at Bald
Sister 11arr1et1 Warner. Supt. Sunday School,
6::11 p.m.
.
·
RACINECHURCHOFlllENAZARENE.
Knob, located on CO\Inty Road 31. Rev.
9:lJ a.m.; morntng WJ:nhip, 10:45 a.m.
· ENTERPRISE- Worshlp9 a .m.; Oiureh
Rf"V. Thomas H. Co!Uer, pastor, Martha
l.awrenreGluesmcamp, pastcr; Rev.~
POMEROY FIRST BAPTilll', David
School. 10 a.m.: Bible Study. Tllesday. 7:Jl
Wolre, Chalrman of the Board of Christian
Willford, assistant ~tcr. Preaching servtMann. minister: WOllam Snrulfer, Sunday
p.m.: UMW. First Monday, 7:Jl p.m.:
Ll!e. Sun~ay School, 9: :JJa.m.; mornlngwor·
res, Sunday 7:lJ p.m. Prayer meeting
School supt. Sunday School. 9:Jl a.m.:
UMYF. Sunday. 6 p.m. Choir rehearsal, 6:Jl
ship, 10 30 a.m.; Sunday evening worship.
W~esday, 7:31p.m.; Gary Gritftth, leader
McJr:lllngW&lt;nhlp 10: Jl .m.
p.m. Wemesday.
7:ll p.m . Prayer meptlng, Wednesday, 7:30 • , Yout~§fOO.JlS. Sunday evening, 6::rlp.m . with
~ SC(rrHERN BAPi'ln'. Pomeroy
FLA'IWOOI:6 - ~h School. 10 a.m .: ' p.m.
·
ROger and Violet ' Willlord as leoden.
Pllie Dlvld Hunt, (&gt;811&lt;r. llc!itor Thruer. W&lt;nHp. I a.m.: Bible Study, Thursday, 1
RACINE FlRSTBAPTIST.IlonL. Walker, , COmmu.-.nservlce!IrstSundayeachmmth.
~nday School Super1ntenclenl. Sunday
p.m.: UMYF. Sunday, 6 p.m.
Pastor. Robert Smith, Sunday ScOOol supt.;
WHITE'S CHAPEL. CoolvWe RD . Rev.
school, 9:ll a.m.: m&lt;rn1ng worship, 10:Jl;
FOREST RUN- Worship, 9 a.m.; Church
Sunday School. 9::ll a.m.: morning worshJp,
Roy Deeter, pastcr. Sunday school9:ll a.m.;
E"Ven1ng wcntjp, 7:.'1) p.m. Mldweel ~ayer
School, Ill a.m.: Cho~ Practice, Tllesday.
10:40 a.m .; SuOOay evening worship, 7: lJ
w&lt;rshlp service, lO:l&gt; a 1m . Bible study and
meeting. 1:Jl p.m.
. 6:Jl p.m.: UMW. !lrs/1\tesday, 7:Jl p.m.
p.m .; Wednesday evening }31ble study. 7::})
r.rayer senrlce Wednesday, 7: lJ p.m.
l\IIDWAY COMMUNITY CHUROI. DexHEAlll (Middlepcrt) - Church School.
p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF ClffiiST. Dan
ter· Rd., Lanllllvl!le. Rev. A. A. Huglleo.
9:00a.m.; Worship, 10::11 a.m.; Bible Study,
MonlW&lt;, pastcr.: Bill Nlcholsoo, Sunday
Paster. Sunday School 10 a.m. Senlic&lt;'s on
DANVILLE WESLEY AN. Sunday School,
1\tesday, 10 a.m.: UMW, second Monday,
school supt. SUnday scmol, 9::11 a.m.;
Tuesday, Thlooay and Sunday 1: Jl p.m.
9:.Jl a.m.; mornlngworshlpl0:45a.m.; yoolh
7:ll p.m.; UMM. third Monday, 7::11 p.m.
manlngwcrshlp andcommunton.10:3:ta.m.
FAITH TABERNAO.E CHURCH. BaUe:v
servke, 6:45 p.m.; evening worship, 7:30
MINERSVILLE - Wo.-.hip Service, lll
RUTI.AND BIBLE MErHODISf - Amc6
Run Road, Rev. Emmt'f:t Rawson, past&lt;r.
p.m.; W~ay, 7:30 p.m. Prayer and
a .m.; Church Scmol., 11 a.m .; UMW, third
TUIIs.
pastcr; Solll\Y Hudson, SUpt. Sunday
Praise.
Handle:v Dunn. supt. Sunday scho91. 10 a.m.
Wettlesday.1 p.m.; Choir practlce. Monday,
school, 9:31a.m. Mornlngwcrsh1p, 10:30a.rn.
Sunday evening sern.., 7::11 p.m.; Bible
SILVER RUN FREE BAPI'IST, Steve
7:Jl p.m.
Sunday evening service, 7:110. Wednesday
lelo:hlng. 7:ll p.m. Thuooay.
LltUe, Sunday ~lnol supt. Sunday schoo~ 10
PEARL CHAPEL - Wcrship Ser.1re. 10
evenlngservlre 7:110 p.m.: WMPO Program.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St.. Syra- a.m.; Church School, 11 a.in.; UMW, second
a.m.; morning worship, 11 am. Sunday
9:110 a.m. each Sunday morning.
ruse. Services, 10 a.m. Sunday. Evening
evening worshlp, 7:ll p.m. Prayer meeting
~day. 7: Jl p.m.; UMYF last 1\tesday,
services, Sunday and Wedn...ray, 1 p.m.
and BibiP stWy, Thursday, 7:.1} p.m.; youth
,
7:ll p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF TilE NAZAMIDOLEPROf CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
meetiiig Wednesday at 7 p.m.
f'\li\IEROY - Church School, 9: ~ a.m.:
CHRISTIAN UNION. Lawreua? Manle:v,
CHRTSI'IAN FELLOWSHIP OIURCH. RENE , Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm. Jr.. pastor.
Worgtup servtcr, 10: :Jl a.m.; Cholr rehearsal,
Sunday School. 9:~ a.m.; worshJp service.
p05tcr: Mrs. Russell Young. Sunday School
Wednesday. 7:JJ p.m.: UMW, second , ' 383 N. 2nd Ave:, Middleport. S~lday School. 10:30
a.m.; young people's service: 6 p.m.
Supt. Sunday School 9:ll a.m. Evening
10
a.m.
Sunday.
and
WWnesday
Ewnlng
Tuesday, 7:Jl p.m.; UMW; last Sunday. 7
E;vaDRellstic service, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday
wcnhip7:Jl p.m. Wednenday prayer meoting
Services 7: :n p.m
a .m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6p.m.
serv~. 7 p.m.
. 1:;1) p.m.
UBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 4 Ul&gt;
RQO&lt; SPRII'l&lt;:&gt;S - Church School, 9: ~
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, MUier St.
. MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF COD, Racine
erty Ave., PomEroy. SuOOay Schoo110 a.m. ;
a.m.; W&lt;JWhlp, .10 a.m.; Bible Study,
Mason.
W.Va. Eugpne L. Conger, mlnistE"r.
- I!Pv. JamEO Satterlleid, pastor. Morning
Worship
7:30p.m.
Wednesday
5ervlce,
7:30
Wemesday, 7::11 p.m.: UMYF (Seniors).
Sunday Bible Study.lO a.m .; Worship 11 a.m .
p.m.
wcnhlp9:45a.m.; SandaySchool10:45a.m.:
Sunda,y. $ p.m.: (Juniors), evecy other
and 7 p.m: Wednesday Bible Study, vocal
evening w&lt;rShlp 7 p.m. Tllesday. 7::11 p.m .•
CHESTER CHUROI OF GOD, Rev. R. E.
Sunday, 6 p.m.
·
musk:, 7 p.m.
ladles prayer m""tlng. Wemesday. 7:Jlp.m.
Robjmon, pastor. Sunday scbod, 9:30a.m:
RUTI.AND - Church School. 9:45 a.m .:
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO. Dudding
YPE.
~crsbip
se-vice,
11
a.m.;
evening
service,
7
WOf1ihlp, ll a.m.; UMW (Evening Circle) .
Lane, Mason. W. VaAtev. Ronnie B. R05e,
MIDDLEPORT FIRSf BAPTilll'. Corner
p.m.; youth servtce, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
second We&lt;ttosday, 7:Jl p.m.; UMW, second
Sixth and Palmer. tbe Rev. Mark MtOung.
LANGSVR.!.E ClffiJSTIAN CHURCH, Pastor. Sunday School 9.: 45 a.m.; MorniJI$l
Thui'&lt;IO¥. 1 p.m.
Worship 11 a.m . Evening Service 7:.1) p.m.
Suriday scbool 9:15 a .m.; Dan Whlte,.Sunday
Robert E . Musser, pastor. Sunday sdtool,
SALEM CENTER - Church School, 10
WedneSday Women's MlniSir1es 9 a.m.
S&lt;lxlol SUpt .. John Reibel, Sr .. asst. SUpt.
9::n a .m .; Paul Musser. suJX.; mCI'nlng
a.m.: Worship, 7 p.m.
(meeting and prayer). Prayer and Bible
Morning W~p 10:15 a.m. Youth meeting
worshlp, l~: 30a.m.; Sundayevenlngserv!ce.
SNOWYU..LE - Worship, 9 a .m.; Olurch
7:JI p.m. Wednesday. Including wee tots.
7p.·m.; mfd·week~vtce. Wednesday, 7p.m .
School10 a.m.
CHtfRCH OF CHRIST IN
eaaer beaven. junior astroanuts, an~ junior
SYRACUSE CH!JROI OF THE NAZASOV'I1IERN CLVS'I'm
CHRISTIAN UNION. The Rev. WIUiam
md-hig!IIIYF: cttoir()n!ct""'8:Jlp.m.
RENE
Rev.
Jam
..
B.
KltUe,
paster.
Rev.
t1ork
Campbell, pastor. Sunday SchoOl. 9:X&gt;a.m.;
Sherman Cun4UJ, superintendent. Sunday
prayer meeting and BlblestWyl
a... Mlllil W.M.F1ym
Weme&amp;day,7:Jlp.m.
,
Schoci, 9:30 a.m.: Morning Wmtttp 10:30 James Hughes, supt.; evening service, 7:30
a...
F'lorelloe Smith
CIIIJROI OF CHRIST, Middleport, 5th and
a.m.; Evangelist~ service, 6 p.m. Prayer p.m. Wednesday evening prayer meeting,
APPLE GROVE - Church School. 9 a.m.;
7:30 p.m. Youth prayer service each
Main, Bob llleltoo. minister; AI Hartsoo,
and p-aise Wednesday, 7 p.m.; yrutt1
Worship. 10 a.m. (llrst and third Sundays! ;
1\tesday.
meeting,
7
p.m.
associate minlstft"; Mike GerlaCh, Sufday
UMW, ~ntl Thes&lt;J"¥, 7:Jl p.m.: Prayer
FAIRVIEW BIBLE OIURCH, !.&lt;tart, W.
S&lt;lxlol Superlnlendent. Bible School, 9: :II
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
mee&lt;lng, Wednesday. 7 p.m.
Va .. Rt.l. Mar'k Irwin, pastor. Worship serv1·
a.m.: mc:xnlng W&lt;I"Shlp, 10:lJ a.m.: t:&gt;Vening
CHR!Sf. Elden R Blake, pastor. Sunday
BETHANY - Wonhip, 9 a.m.:· Church
ces, 9:30a.m.: Sunday SchOO., 11 a.m.; even• w~hip 7 p.m. WM1esday Bible Stwty and
Sclxlol10 a.m.: Robert Reed, supt.; Morning
School, 10 a.m.; Bible Stwly, Wedneoday, 10
Ing worship, 7~ ll p.m.• Tuesday cottage
youth (!roup meet/njJS, 7 p.m.
sermon, 11 a.m.; Sulliay night 8l!rvices,
a.m.; Dorcas Women'g FeiJooNshlp. Wednes·
prayer meeting and Bible study, 9:00 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF TilE NAZAChrlstlail
Endeavor,
1:30
p.m.:
Song"""'lce,
d~. lla.m :
RE!"E, RaY. Jim Brocme, pasta: Bill White,
8 p.m.; Preaching, 8:.1&gt; p.m. Mid-week ' Worship service, Wednesday, 7:30p.m:
CARMEl:· - Church ~hool. 9::lt a.m.;
OUR SAVIOURUJTIIERAN CHURCH- .
SUnday ..:hool Supt. Sunday school. 9:Jla.m.;
Prayer meeting. Wednesday, 1 p.m., Alvin
Wcnhlp. 10:45 a.m.: second 811&lt;1 fourth
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W. Va.
Reed. Jay leader.
•
mornlngwtnhlp.10::11~.m. ; Sandayevenli"- • Sundays!: FeU6wsltlp -dlnn..- with Suttm,
The Rev. Ge;lrge C. Weirick, pastor. Sunday
llstic meeting. 7 p.m. Prayer , meeting
HEMLOCK GROVE OIRISTIAN. Roger
third 1lairsday. 6:Jl p.m.
·
School, 9: :lt a.m.; Sur.:lay worhslp, 11 a .m.
. W-y7p.m.
Wat10n. paster; Cre~ Prat~ Sunday
CALVARY BIBLE OIURCH. now located
ScOOol supt. Momtnr wcnhlp, 9::U a.m.;
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISI'R Y
oo Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near F1atEAST
LETARTChurch
School,
9a.m.:
Sunday
sclu.ll,
lD:
lJ
a.m.;
evemtnaservtce,
OF.MEIGSCOUNTY, Rev. WaadaJalu.,n.
woods. Rev. Blackwood, pagtor. servtces on
7:Jl p.m.
Worship, 10 a.m. (second and fwrth Sun·
dh&gt;ictor; Harold Johoaoo, . director of
Sunday atlO:ll a.m. and7:lJ p.m. with SUn·
days:
UMW.
flrsl1\te!day.7:Jl
p.m.
Mr.
UNION
BAPTIST,
Rev.
Tom
Dooley:
educ.Uoo. .
·
day school, 9:Jla.m. bible study, Wednesday,
LETART FALLS - Worship. 9 a.m.;
Joe sayre. · Sunday, S,hool, Supenntelldent. . 7:
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN,
:1) p.m.
Church
School,
10
a.m.
·
SuDday
9Ctrlo,,
9:fi
a.m.;
evening
wa-shlp,
Wol'lhlpServlce. 9 a.m.; Chlfl'!'h S&lt;hool,lll:Jl
FA111! FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
MORNING STAR - Worship, 9: lla.m.:
7: :II p.m. Prayer meeting, ?. :11 p.m.
CHIUSTSt. Rt, 338. Antiquity. Pastor, Rev.
WednOiday.
Church
School,
IO:Jl
a.m.;
Bible
Stucly.
a.':liDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN~
Franklin Dickens. Sunday morning, 10 a.m.
,.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
Church Scllool, 9 a.m.; MornJna worohlp,. Thur!ICiay, 7:30p.m.
Sunday evPnlnR, 7:30p.m. Thursday evening,
MORSE CHAPEL - Church &amp;hoot 9: 30
OIRIST, VIncent C. Waters, In, mlnlst..-:
10:15. Bible Study Tueoday, 10 a.m.; Bible
7::1) p.m.
a.m.;
Worship,
f1
a
.m
.
.
Herman
mack,
sup8-lntenclenL
Sunday
'l'hurodoy,1:30 p.m.
·
.
STIVERSVR.LE COMMUN11Y BAPTIST
PORTLAND
Church
&amp;hool,
1
p.m.;
,
Sc~
9:30a.m.;
evening
..v~.
7
p.m.;
·
FIRST UNITED PRESBYCHURCH. Putor Robert Byen. Sunday
Worship, 8 p.m.: UMYF. Wednesday, 1:Jl
Wemll!day Bible Scltool, 7 p.m.
llltm:b. Church Scllool, Ill: 15 a.m.;
SchoallOa.m.: WorshlpSI'rvlce lla.m.; Sun·
p.m.
OIESI'ER CHURCH OF 11!E NAZA~. 11::11 a.m.; Bible Study.
day
rvlce. 7: ill p.m.; Wednesday
RACINE
WESLEYAN
-Church
School,
RENE,
Rev.
Herbert
Grate,
p&amp;stor.
Frank
LIIL; Junior and Senior IIIah
evening ..rvl&lt;!'. 7: Jl p.m.
lOa.m.;
Worship,
U
a.m.;
UMW,
fOW'thMon-.
Rllfle,
IUpt.
Sunday
Scmd,
9:30
a.m.
.
-,,6p.m.
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CIIUROI,
dayt 30 p.m.; HandmalclensoftbeLOnl, first
Wol"'hhp IE'I'Vk:e, U a.m. ' and 7:J) p.m.
CHURa! 011 GOD. Putor,
Inc.- PauiSI.• Middleport. Rev. O'DeUMon·
Wl!'dnemay,
7
p.m.;
Men's
Prayer
Brell:tast.
Prayer
meetJna.
Wecalllday,
7:
:o
p.m.
fte¥, Jo11t1 Evuo. ~ lthao~ 10 a.m.;
ley. put«. SuOOay Sdlool, 9:Jl • .m.; MornWednftday, 7 a.m.
~
LAIIREL &lt;1IFF FREE ME11!0DIST
!io!fdoy ....-.Np, 11 Lnt.; ~'I oburell,
-*lp 10: Jl a.m.; ewnlrw -llhlp. 7: :II
SUT'IUN - Ch.-rh School, 9:]) a.m.:
CHURCH, Re¥. Roll!rl Miller, putor; Lloyd Ing
p.m. Tuooday. 12:Jl p.m. Women's prayi,r
u
'\-1!1-i SUJtday OYeii/JII - · 7 p.m.;
rnornirle
WDrlhip. 10: «&lt;a.m (first and third · WfiChl, D1roctor of ~ EGieadall.
w~~ -ladlooaliXIUary,6
mrean.: Prayer · -d praise oervlce,
Sundays): leUowahlp dlnl..,. with Carmol, ' Sunday SchOol, 9:30a.m.: t.fomlna Wonhlp,
p.m. Wt' lay 1.am1Jj1 ~p, 7 p.m.
cl.t'. 7:;1) p.m.
third Thursday, 6:Jl p.m.
111:30 a.m.; Choir Proctlce, !lmda,y, 6:ir)

-·--

Richard H. Billman II, 0.0.
Ill Court Street
Pome1oy, Ohio '45769
PH. 992-2920

VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARO &amp; SOFT CONTACT
LENSES
Insurance and Medical
Cards Accept~d

MAKE .us YOUR
ONE STOP SERVICE

snm-~~iuJ

w•- "'·

SUGAR RUN MILLS
PH. 992-2115
Ave.

Equipment .Sales. and

Cl&lt;i!I.OL l._

Serv•ce

Ru11and, Ohio 4S77S
J . Wm . "Bill" Brown, Owner
Phone (6t4 1 741 7171

THE DAILY

Attend Church
this Sl_!nday
• E!rodu•

J""'"'

evenrna ..

w-.

RliTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
' JESUS CHRIS"l', Elder James Mllll&gt;r. Bible
study, Wednesday, 7::pp.m.: Sunday School.
10 a.m. Sunday night service! 7::JJ p.m.

POMEROY WEsLEYAN HOLINESS Harrisonville Road. Earl Fields, pastor.
·Henry Eblin. Jr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday
.School9: ll'a.m.; Morning Worship 11 a.m.;
Sunday evening service, 7:30 p.m.; Prayer
Meeting, Wednesday, 7: l'l p.m .
SYRACUSE FIRST OIURCH OF GOD Not Pent('('()Stal. ReV. George Oiler, pastor.
Worship S4'rvice Sunday, 9: &lt;:15 a.m .: Sunday
schooJ, 11 a.m.; worship seiVIce, 7: ll p.m .
Thursday prayer meeting, 7:)) p.m .
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST CHURCH.' Rev. Robert Sanders, ·
pastor: Don Will. lay leader. Located in
Texas Community oft CR R2. Sunday schOol,
9: ll a.m .; Mornlns;l worship serVice, 10:45
a.m .; evmJng preaching setvtce second and
fourth Sundays, 7: l) p.m.; Chrlitlan Endea·
vor. flr.it and third Sundays, 7:ll p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting and Bible study,
7::1) p.m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS. 37319 State Route
124 (One mile east of-Rutland), Sunday, Bible
le(.'ture 9:30 a.m.; Watchtow&lt;!r study, 10: 2JJ
a.m. ; Tuesday, Bible study, 7:l) p.m.;
Thursday, Theocrallc &amp;&gt;hool, 7: ll p.m .;
Service Meelln~. R:~ p.m.
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH - Salem St .. Rutland. Donald
Karr, Sr .. pastor: Bud Stewart, superintend·
en! . Sunday School, 10 a .m .; evenJngworship,
7:00 p.m . Wednesday ('V('nlng servlce, 7: .ll
p.m.
,
CHURCH OF COD OF PROPHECY,
~aled on the 0 . J . White Road off highway
160. Sunday School 10 a.m. Supetintendent
John Loveday, First Wednesday night of
month. CPMA services, second Wednesday
WMB meeting. third through filth youth
servke. George Croyle, pastor.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Grant
St .. Middleport: Sunday School, 10 a.m. ;
morntngworh.o:;lp, 11 a.m.; evt&gt;nlngworshlp, 7
p.m. Wedn('Sday eY&lt;'ntr~ Bible study and
prayPr meeting, 7 p.m. Affiliated with
Southern Baptist Convention.
BRADFORD OIURCH OF CHRIST Staff" Route 124 and County Road 5. Mark
seevers., minister; Sunday School Supt ..
Steve Pickens. Sunday school, 9:31 a.m .;
mornlJ'J£' worship, 10: .~ a.m.: evening
worshJp, 7 p.m. Wednesday worship, 7 p.m.

JUBILEE CHRIS1JAN CHURCH Grorge's Creek Road. Rl'v. C. J . L&lt;&gt;mley,
Jli!Sior: John Fellure, superintendent. Church
school. 9: :ll a.m .; morning worshJp, 10::11
a.m: evening service. 7 JF.ll:l:. Btble Study
Thursday, '7 p.m. Classes "for all ages.

.·

''

of Columbus, 0 .
804 W. Main
99'2·2318 Pomeroy

.

Automotive
~
-- ·-:
Service
Locust &amp; Beech Street

WAID CROSS

~urch School and nursery care provided.

The children of Mrs. Golda Wolfe
recently entertaliled with a surprise
party In observance of her birthday ·
anniversary. The party was held at
the Wolfe borne In Chester.
Attending the celebration were
Mrs. Ma rlene Thompson, Columbus; Donna and Gene Van Meter,
Granvllle; Howard and Jean Wolfe,
Belpre; Nara and Henry Hartman,•
Chester. A son, Lloyd Wolfe of

. I • ,

SENTINEL

~

~
:- · ~

... ...

tli

M•ddtcporf

Pom erov. 0 .

man on an other Sundays

BEND AREA
OPTON\ETRIC
CENTER

m

Nationwide Ins. Co. .

Bervlce as

RENE. Corner Union and MulbeJTY, Rev.
VlrgU Bymr, pastor. Glen McClung, aut. pas·
tor. Qydc Henderson, pastor emeriTUs. Sun·
day SChOOl, 9: .II a .m., Glen McOung, supt. ;
morning worship 11l:Jl a.m.: e\'l!lllng ...-vtc..
7 p.m.; mld·week seJVIce. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -~E.
Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday ...-vices Holy
Communion on the t1rst SuOOay of eaCh
month. and combined wUh morning pra)"er
crt the thlrd Sunday. Morning pra)'e!' and ser·

Wolfe

985·3944

ElliS &amp; SONS SOHIO

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

Church SchOOl 9:15a.m.; worship !efYicP
10:30 a.m. Cbolr rehearsal. TUesday 7:30
p.m
.. uOOer dlrectlon
of Allee Nease.
POME.ROY
CHURCH
OF TRE NAZA·

RIDENOUR'S

Rt. 1. Reedsville, Oh .

992 ·9921 Middleport

No aubocrtptlon,s by mall permltred In

TV &amp;APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

992 -JJlS

Pomeroy. Ohio

l'RIN11Y CHURCH. Rw. W. H. !'&lt;&gt;!Tin,
pas,tor; Debbie Buck, Sunday School SUpt.

Dena Mlcbelle Sayre celebrated
her first birthday recently with a
party at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Sayre, Racine.
A Strawberry Shortcake theme
was carrted out In the decorations
and cake which was baked by Dena's aunt was served with other
refreshmenis.
Attending were Dena's broiher,
Danny, he~ maternal grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre,
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Roger Birch, Mr. and
Mrs. Ken .Theiss, Erin and Adam,
Mr. and Mrs . Dave Sayre and
Jeremy Guinther.
She also received gifts from ber
paternal grandparents,· Mr. and
Mrs. Andrew Rogers, JoAnn Clem,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mix and sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Bryce Sayre and family, and Mr . and Mrs. Gary Norrts
and family.

216 S. Second
Pomeroy

NFN YORK -~. ~
Cl.OlHING
tiJUSE ;lv','.;;.
I&lt;ERMIT'S I&lt;ORNER

Sentlnel on 3, 6 or 12 month ....Is. Credit
wtll be aJvm can-ter E&amp;cll month.

avallable.

"For A Real Auction •

•.X•I. lithe
Real McCoy"
o . "Mac" McCoy

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR•. P. J•.PAULEY, AGENT

Pomeroy

9f2-29SI

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

I

. Middleport r ". j;l
-Phone 992-3480 ""- ~ .;1.

John F. Fultz, Mgr.
Ph. 992-2101

MIDDLEPORT
&amp;

MARK vSTORE .'!

Subocrtben notcleslrtngto pay the carrier
may romlt In advan&lt;o dln!ct to Tbe Dolly

towns where home carrer

Sayre

... . . _.

7 fXrERIENCE 111f JOY Of RELIGION¥~

. T.l!.~ _Dai.ly Sentinel
A.._.,M...

The Daily Sentinel Page-S

v!Ue - Gilbert Spencer, pastor . Sunday
school. 9: XI a.m.; morning service, 11 a.m.
Sunday evening service, 7: l) p.m.; midweek
prayer service Wednesday, 7: :-.:1 p.m.
MOUNT OLIVE COMMU/'IITY CHURCH.
Bush, pastor; Max Folmer, Sr. Su· ·
per1ntendent. Sunday School and morning
worship, 9: :rl a.m. Sunday evening service, 7
p.m.; Youth meettn~ and Bible sftr:ty, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
UNITED FAITI! CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass. Rev. Rober1 Smith, Sr., pas.
tor: Rev. James Cundltf, assistant pastor.
sunday School, 9:30a .m.; morniaq{ worship,
10:30 a .m.; evening worship, 7:l) p.m.
Women's Fellowship, Tuesdays, 10 a.m. Wednesday night prayer service, 7: ,'l) p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, meet
al United Steel Workers tJnlon Hall, RaUroad
Street. Mason. Morning worshJp 9:30 a.m .
Sunday SclmllO: :l) a.m. Evening Service, 7
p.m. Prayer meeting Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Midweek Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev. Nyle
Borden, paStor. CorneOus Bunch. supertn.
tendenl. Sunday school9: ll a .m .; second and
fourth Sundays, worship servict&gt; at 2:l) p.m.
Mr. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main Sts:, Middleport. Rev. Calvtn Minnis,
pastor. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardner, supt. Slin·
day school, 9: l) a.m.; worship service, 10:45
La~nct&gt;

a.m.

-

BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPI1ST
CHURCH, Route- 1, Shade. Pastor, Don
Black. AffUiated with Southern Baptist convention. Sunday school, l ::rl p.m.; Sunday
worship, 2::.1 p.m. Thursday evening Bible
study, 7 p.m.

PENTECOSTAL ASSEM!jLY. Racine,
Rnutf" 124. WOllam Hoback, pastor. Sunday

school. 10 a.m.; Sunday evening servtce. 7
p.m. Wednesday evening serVIce 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Don · Choadle.
Supt. Sunday SChool9: 30 a.m , Morning Wor·
ship, 10: lJ a,m. Prayer Servicf., alternalP
Sundays.
MIDDLEPORT PENTEOOSTAL, Third
Ave., the Rev. Clark Baker. Jlll!lor. Carl
Nottingham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
SChoollO a.m. - cl~ lbr all ages. Evening
'""""""· 6 p.m. Wem"'!laY. Study, 7:JJ p.m.
Youth sevlces. 7:Jl p.m. Friday.
ECCLES/A FELLOWSIITP, 128 MID St..
Middleport. Paster Is Brttlter cJox:k McPI...-soo. Sunday Sclxlol at 10 a.m. Servb!s
Sunday evening at 1 p.m. and Wemesday at 7
p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTill!', Rev. Earl Shuler.
pasta. Sunday school 9:Jl a.m.; Church
serviCe, 7 p.m.; youth rrieetlng, 6 p .m.

ll'uesday Bible Study, 1 p.m.
.
• roiL GOSPEL LIGHI'HOUSE, 300C&gt;
Nursery provided !or worship services.
HUand Road. Porn..-oy. Servic&lt;'s TUesday,
ST. PAUL LU11fERAN CHURCH. COrner
lFriday and Sunday evenlnRS at 7::li _p.m.
of Sycamore and Second Sis., Pomeroy. The
Sunday morning at 111:00 a.m. Paster Doug
Rev. WU!iam Mlddleswanh, Pastor. Sunday
Varne\
School at 9:45 a.m. and Churcb Services 11
WORD OF FAITH, 93 MIDSt., Ml&lt;l/11!(1011;
p.m.
Rlchard Stewart, paster. Sunday m&lt;:rn~ng,
SACRED HEART; Msgr. Anthony Glanna·
10:Ol!i Sunday evening, 7: Jl. Tllesday mornmote. Ph. 992·~. Saturday event~ Mas.s,
Ing J&gt;lble Study, 10:~ Wednesday everilnc,
7:3) p.m.; Sunday Mass , 8 a.m. and 10 a.m.
7:Jl: Thlrsday morning video With Kenneth
Confessions one-halt hour before each Mass.
COpeland, 10:~ Friday evening video with
CCD Classes, 11 a.m . Sunday.
.... '""': ....... Kenneth COpellirill; 7::JJ. "
,
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N. 2nd St .. MidNEW HAVEN CHURCH.OF11!ENAZAdleport . James E. Keesee. pasior. Sun~ay
RENE, Rev. Gienmn Stroud, /)ll!tor. Sunday
momln~ worship, ro a.m.; evening service, 7
School, 9:Jl a.m.; Worship - . 10: Jl
p.m .; Wednesday evening worship, 7 p.m.;
a.m.; Youth Servtre, Sunday, 6:15 p.m.;
VlsUaflon. Thursday, 6:00p.m.
Sunday evening service, 7:110 p.m. WednsTRINITY CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY, Coolday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study 7: ~.m

Parents join lobby effort
By MICHAEL WHli'E
Associated Press Writer
,
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Tearful and tight-voiced, .parents
whose children have been kidnapped, raped or murdered pleaded for
support of a bill to give Utah the natlon'sharshest child abuse laws.
"We need to get the sex offenders off the streets. They are sick
people," said Reed Davis, whose 4-year-old son Danny vanished 18
monthsago.
·
"I know one cure for them and that's to get rid of them, tum them
over to the parents of the victims. I'm sorry to be so bitterbutlt'shard
to be congenial toward people like that," Davis said at Thursday
newsconf! -ence.
.
.
Jeff Rur.,yan, whose daughter Rachel, 3, was found murdered in a
remote canyon stream last fall, said: "We are taking about an
individual who rapes a child, who murders a child, who SOdomizes a
child. It's a tough bill, !Jut Its tlnre has come."
The bill, sponsored by RepubUcan Rep. Lyle Hillyard, would create
new first-degree felony charges for rape, sodomy and kidnapping.
Upon conviction, defendants would have to serve a minimum
sentence of five, lOor l5years, depending on the severity ofthecrtme.
Judges would be obligated to sentence people who sexually abuse
children to three, six ornlneyears In prison. They would not be eligible
. for parole until the entire sentence is served and then would face a
mandatpry 10-year probation.
The bill has alreadY pass.id the Hou5e Judiciary Coinmlttee an!;! Is
now In the House Rules Committee.
·
·
Hlltyard said the Issue Is balancing fairness to criminals with the ·
needtoprotectthepubllcfromthegrowlngproblemofsexualabUseof
children.
"There Is a feel!ng we have some very dangerous people being
released from prison (too soon)." Hillyard said. "If you can't protect
soCiety then I think you need to remove those people from society.''
One motber, Majoram Martin, saki her daughter Marla was
kidnapped last summer while the family vaca tloned near San Diego.
The child was raped and molested for 10 days before pollee, faking a
ransom payment, rescued her. Her abductor, Mrs. Martin said, has
heen released tran prlson, where he bad finished serving a sentence
lor cbUd abUse only three werl(s before be kidnapped Marla.
Mrs. Martin said her fam _· spent $15,000 trying to get the child
back, and have since spent $4,900 on therapy for Marla.
"I go to bed and the child Is crying and crying. I get up and hold her
nlghtatter night after nlgbt," Mrs. Martin saki. "Shecahnot relaie 1•
meu,shecan·fl!kmget retatetomyhusbandandshelstbeappleof~ ,.
eye, hill only d~, but she can no Iongur kiss hlni'or hug him.'

a

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�Ohio

1983 '
~y.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

2

February 25, 1983

Meigs organizations hold meetings OES 70-year member honored
Laurel Cliff UMFI
by OES Evangeline Chapter
The World Day of Prayer obser·

vance to be held In early March was
pl anned during a meeting of ihe
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
Women's Missionary Fellowship
International at the home of
Brenda Haggy.
· The group will work on packages
for overseas missions to be mailed
this spring, and the CYM children
will have the program f~r Compassion Sunday on March 6 under the
direction of Karen Stanley.
Mary Miller had devotions using
the theme, ''Faith." Shirley Meadows led in prayer with special requ ests be ing given . Offi cers'
reports were given and there was a
report on missionary film shown at
the CYM meeting. Iva Powell encouraged the members to continue
reading the Bible April is the time
to renew subscriptions to Missionary Tidings.
· The mother-daughter banquet
was discussed. Brenda Haggy presented tbe program using "Love
Finds a Way to Relieve Suffering"
and a poem . "The Master's
Touch."
Mrs. Powell had an article on
"God Answers Prayer."
Refreshments were served by
the hostess and Shirley Meadows
and Janice Haggy to the 16
members and three guests attendIng. March 1 meeting wUI be held at
the horne of Donna Gllrncre.

Fernwood Garden
A rogram on propagating hOuse
plants was.given by Helen Johnson
at the recent meeting of the
Fernwood Garden Club held at the
home of Mrs. Thelma Giles.
· Mrs. Johnson brought several
plant to Ulustrate her talk, and
described the propagation methods
of blade and petal cutting, leaf
sectioning, stem and canecuttingas
. As for
well as air layering.
materials, she suggested a propagating tray, heat cable, ad thermosfate, rQQtlng hormone, . shears,
knife, pots, good potting soil, and
healthy parent plants.
She said that plants take from
three to 12 weeks to start growing
and that fertilizer Is needed every 10
days until time to repot. Any stem
that has a milky substance should
be dipped Into water then into a
rootingcompound. Plantsalsoneed
humidity while rooting. In conjunction with her talk, Mrs. Johnson
showed many pictures and
examples.
· Members brought plant cuttings
fo.exchange and discuss.
Kathryn Johnson presided at the
meeting and members repeated the
club collect. Ida Murphy had
devotions using an article, "Do You
Have Empathy?" and "A Flower
Chorus" by Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Officers' reports were given and
Mrs. Giles gave tips for the month
noting that now Is the time to
sharpe!) and clean tools, make a
planting guide, buy seeds and plant
inside to get ready for early spring
outdoor planting. Stle also said that
this ls.the time to prune grapevines
and other trees, and suggested
misting houseplants, except Afrl·
can violets and other fuzzy leaf
plants. She also said ttlat some
branches can be forced now, and
suggested that growth from bulbs
should be covered with hay for
.. protectiOn.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess from a valentine decorated
table to those named and Evelyn
Thoma, Susie Warner, and Marjorie Purtell.

was hed, she noted.
attended the valentine dinner
The proper preparatlon,-shesald,
sponsored by the men for the
means freeing It of all soil, dirt and
church. Jack Stanley had the
insects. A stiff brush under a strong
opi!ning prayer with Lloyd Wright
spray from the garden hose !sa good
reading the l2lst Psalm. Officers'
beginning. A soaking in the laundrY
reports were given and refresh·
tub with some bleach or disinfectant
ments served. 'The March meeting
is effective as Is a light sanding to
wUI be held at the home of Seldon
remove any loose bits. Some pieces
Baker.
will (jt in or over a container, a
slimmer piece o( wood wlll stand In
a needlepoint holder If the base of It
Is wrapped with hai'dward cloth..
She suggested drilling for holes or
using screws to fasten In dowels as
A blood pressure clinic was
the best method topreventsplitting.
·
artnounced
for March 8 between 10
Ms. Thompson noted that weaa.m. and noon wtlen the Senior
thered wood is a dried plant
Citizens of Harrtsonvllle met Tuesmaterial and should be used in.
day at the townhouse.
flower shows only In classes that
Nellie Borgan presided at the
permit dried material.
meeting.
It was noted that Louise
Flower arrangements on the
Eshelman
is confined to a Columbus
theme "To My Valentine" were
hospital.
judged by Margaret Parker with
The 20 attending enjoyed cake
ribbons going to Alice Thompson,
and
coffee foUowlrig the meeting.
Jane Thompson and Peggy Mqore.
Ruth Moore wUl host the next
meeting. Others attending were
Bonnie LeMaster and Jackie Brick·
A layette shower was held for
les, president.
Lisa Cook at the Syracuse Methodist Church by Bonnie Friend,
Cathy Moore and Evarnae Phillips.
Games were played with pri1Jes
A wine tasting party followed the
.being won by Pam Dlll, Kim Sayre,
Tu~sday meeting of Ohio Eta Phi
Julla Wlllls, · Kellle Holman, ·and
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
Sttlrley
WUlls.
held at Meigs Inn. Brenda Hill
Cake,
baked by Linda Friend, a
presided. Next meeting wUl be
mlnts,clllps,colfeeand
guest,
nuts,
March Sat 7:30p.m. at the Meigs Inn
punch were served. Attending were
with Dee Spencer to have the
those named and Regina Nance,
cultural report and Stlaron Stewart
Cecilia Lisle, Sharon Bentz, Sttlrley
and Linda Faulk, the refreshments.
Friend, Belinda and Blliy Soulsby,
Donna Aleshire, Peggy Dowell,
Penny Brinker, S;!.lly Holman, TraA food pantry fortheneedywillbe
cey Holman, Destiny Jenkins, June
established at Laurel Cilff Free ,Cook, Betty Willis, and Angle
Methodist Church by Light and Llfe
Friend.
Sending gifts were Margaret CotMen's Fellowship.
trill, Edna Searls, Mary ·Searls,
Meeting at the church recently,
Jenny Bentley, Grace Oller, Della
the group made plans for the
pantry. It was noted that 35
Starkey, and Mildred Hubbard.

Harrisonville
Senior Citizens

Layette shower held

Ohio Eta Phi

Light and Life

Winding Trail
Plans for tne civic planting at ttle
Meigs County Infirmary were
made with members donating
seeds during the Tuesday night
meeting of the Winding Trail
Garden Club held at the Meigs
Museum.
Margaret Parker, hos tess,
·opened the meetipg with &lt;1 prayer
and poem, ''In the Heart of a Rose.''
Jane Thompson had the garden
calendar and suggested that now ·is
the time to sow seeds for double
petuntas, clean and sharpen garden
tools, run germination tests on
stored seedS, prepare planting
guides, and spend time looking
through seed and nursery catalogs.
· Bird feeding hints were given by
.Addalou Lewis who ·showed a milk
'Jug with - cutouts for f~ing
mounted on an aluminum pan. She
said the jug can hold stale bread or
• any food ~hich attracts birds. She
also showed pine cones spread with
peanut butter and rolled in birdseed
which can be hung In trees, and
small oleo contalhers !llled with
scraps sueh as stale bread, peanuts,
cooldes. bird seed and grease.
.
Ms. TllompSOII gave a program
on weathel'ed wood which she .
desa1bed as wood which has been
WU'II by expollll'l! to the elements.
She DOted that Its fonn and texture
and even 111 color has been altered
by the lUll. wind, rain, snow. water,
J8)t and trolt Dune, wood la sand
poU•bed, drift wollrt la water

RU1LAND - Revival servi·
ces, Churctl of God In Rutland,
through Sunday evening, 7 each
.evening. Special sin¢ng. Ed
Bowling, Portsmouth. evangelist. Pastor John Evans Invites
the public.
RlMEROY - Free clothing
day will be held by Freedom
Gospel Mission Church at Bald
Knob on C.R. 31, Portland·
Bas han Road, from ooon until 3
p.m. on Friday.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - ·special
missionary services will be held
at Middleport Independent Holiness Churcn Sunday at 7:30p.m.
with Rev. Tuy Troyer of Hope
Sound, Fla., 'a s guest speaker.
Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor,
invites the public to ttend.
SYRACUSE- Rev. Howard
Lance wUl be guest speaker at
Syracuse Church of the N~­
rene Sunday at 10:30 a.m. ""d at
6:30p.m. Featured singer dur·
ing the morning service wUl be
Mary Janice Lavender and
during the evening services wlll
be Debbie Powell. The Rev.
James Kittle, pastor, Invites the
publk; to attend.
MIDDLEPORT - Rev. Guy
Troyer, Hope Sound, Fla., wUl

.
be guest speaker at missionary
services Sunday at Middleport
Independent Holiness Church.
Services will be at 7:30p.m. The
Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor,
Invites the public to attend.

MONDAY

POMEROY - A special meetIng of Pomeroy Chapter 8l,
Royal Arch Masons, wW be held
at 7 p:m. Monday at the temple.
Work wUl be In the mark master
and past master degrees.
POMEROY - Bible p~
phecy lecture at Pomeroy
Seventh-day Adventist Church
at 7 p.m. Monday on the toptc
"Blood on the Moon." Take Bl·
bles; study book wlll be
provided.
POMEROY -ThelzaakWalton Club will hold Its annual'win:
ter covered plate dinner and fun
auction Monday at 7 p.m. Per-.
sons to bring own table service,
beverage and item for the auction. Members and friends are
Invited to attend.

Sweet mr.,...mber
him once heni,
And thqfl absent

.
the Meigs County Ministerial Association Cltlzl!nry Group which has
been formed to discuss reduction of
alcohol and drug problems among
youth of Meigs County. All Interested persons are asked to be present tor Sunday's meeting.

Maret! has been declared finefree for overdue books by the Meigs
Ubrarles, Mrs. Ruth Powers, II·
brarian, announced today.
She also advises that the Ohio
Valley Office Equipment Co. will
place a copier in the Ubrary for public use at 15 cents a copy from
March 3 through March 10.

Hospitalized
Mary Jean Bailey Harrison, formerly of Middleport, Is in the Inten·

slve care unit at Fish Memorial
Hospital, New York Ave., Deland,
Fbi., 32720.

Gall Dudding, Mason, W. Va.,
and Karen Reitrrilre, Hartford, W.
. P. C. King, son of Linda and CurVa., will chair blke-a-thons this
tis
King of near Pomeroy Is In cr1ti·
spring In their respective commun· ·
cal
· condition at St. Anthony
!ties for the benefit of St. Jude Child·
Hospital,
room 553, In Columbus,
ren's Research Hospital In New
where
he
·recently underwent
Albany, lnd. 'fu! hospital, founded
surgery.
P
.
C.
Is expected to be hos·by entertainer, Danny Thomas, Is
non-sectarian, non-dlscr!mlna tory pitalized for several more weeks.
and provides total medical care to • The roa'm phone number Is ~1-3553.
over 4,:100 patients from across the
Mrs. lrls Kelton of Quinton, Va.
United States and 21 foreign
underwent
surgery Wednesday at
countries.
the Richmond Memorial Hospital.
Word
was received here by frlen'ds
to
Thursday that stle was In satisfactory condition. Cards may be sent
to Mrs. Kelton at her borne, KentAn organizational meeting for es- wood Mobile Home Park, Roote 2,
tablishment of Meigs Senior and Box 379, Lot 37, Quinton, Va ., 23141.
Junior High School chapters of Fellowstllp of Christian Athletes wUl be
held at 3 p.m. Sunday at Meigs Hlgtl
Sctlool Library.
.
Meigs CoUIIIY 4-H Shepl!etd Club mot on
Meeting with Interested parents Jan. 29 at !lie Meigs CO~mryExtenllon Olllc:e.
number at advtacn attending was two,
and students as well ·as any other The
aOO the number d. members Will nine. 1be
Individuals who wish to attend wUl club agi'I!Od to keep lbe qlll!el1 and prlnoesll
be Mike Olejarz, Southeast Ohio con\eSt as It Is. They voted to have aU tbe
banquets at one time, and the)' ek!cted new
Regional Director of the Fellow- ottlcers tor the new year. The next meeting
wW be held al lhe Melp County Extenolon
ship of Christian Athletes.
oo Feb. 16. Durilll!lhl• .-~na IIIey
Establishment of the local chap- O!lloe
pi aD to make new plans aDd to ctumaeaomeof
ter evolves tram recent meetings of the okt ones. - News reporter, Jan Wolfe.

Sunday meeting
organize athletes

4-H news notes

Sadly missed by:
MOTHER
In Memory of Joe
on His 20th BirthFebruary 25th.

We low him, ah.
no tQnlue can tell
How much we loved
him and how well;
God .loved him, too,
tho~ it best
To take him hollle
with ,Him to rest.
I

Mom,

FRIDAY

.
•.,...,. ....
) •Ann• RU

ROLLS
SALAD BAR
DESSERT
NON-ALCHOLHOLIC
BEVERAGE

S79P~us'TA~

I

4 -GN.w..,

'"~"
ll-L•t.-4,._,.
'1-YI«&lt;I .... IJtMIM - . . 1

····-····..,

0

STUFFED FLOUNDER
POTATO
VEGETABLE

I

·· 6 OZ. PRIME RIB
POTATO
VEGETABLE
ROLLS
SALAD ~R
DESSERT
NON-ALCHOLIC
BEVERAGE

Do you Uke to sew• Are yw planning a new sprtn:: sldrt, coat, d~~
or suit~ If you are planning to sew •
for spring, tllen be a part at the 1!113 :
Spring Style Show.
"Focus on Fashion" Is the theme
of the fashion show scheduled for ; ·
Tuesday, March 29, at 7:30p.m. at ;
the Pomeroy Elementary School. '
"Pale grays, 110ft blues, pastel :
plaids and perky colt0111 are just a ~
few of the fabrics' available for new !
spring clothes," accordlng to Ann ;
Lambert, co-chairman of the show.
The show will feature local models ••
wearing clothes created at horne.,;_
using the newest spring fabrics and ·
sewing teclllllques. Any one In the';
Meigs County area who ~ and :
wants to model their spring crea- :
tions is 'M!lcome to be In the show. •
Ada Nease, owner of the Fabric :
Shop, and a sponsor of the show, :
encourages all pet'!IOns to stnP by :
the Fabric Shop In Pomeroy or tbe ;
Extension Office ot\.,Mul.llerry. :
Heights to sign up to be In the show }
and pick up a description sheet. The •
'
Cooperative Extension Servloe
and '•
the Fabric Sh~ are worklnll: tc&gt;- :
gether to present the style show. l
There Is no cllarge to belli the llhow. _
A donation of $1 wUl be teqcia,ll:d at
the style show.
;
For more lnfonnatton, contact '
the Meigs Ccunty Extension Otrloe :
at 992-0096 or the Fabric !:twm at ',
992~2284.
~F ' :

$795

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104
Poma!CI'f. OH.
Open 9;00 to 6:00
Mon.·SIIt.
Clolad ttnn.

SALE

,.,.,..._,rv•u,._
II· ~

·-A- C-liM
,... c.. .-

DISCONTINUED
PERM. STOCK

uH--.i'.-ToOo
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41-t:....-111"" .....
41-forl••

Public Notice

Public Notice

--------'----:-'"~
.
I

LEGAL'

ADVER118EMENT
FOil BIDS

.

Separate. sealed proposals
for each of the requirements set

Roof repa~r/resa t u rat lon coatIng of ~ aste rn High Sc hooiAivei'Vlew Elementa ry-Tuppers
Plain s Elementary -C hester

forth below will be received. at ' Elementary.
Copies of the specifications.
the office of the Clerk of the
Board of Education of Eastern

Local School District, Meigs

County, Ohio until 1 2:00 o'c-

lock noon. E.S.T. March 10.
1983. and will -be f)Ublicty
. opened and read by the Clerk
immediately thereafter at the
usual place of meatlng of said
Board of Education: tabulated
and a report thereof made bo;
the Clerk to said Board at itll
nll!l meeting,

Description

I improvement

located at f. Jsville. Ohio:

instructions to · bidders. and

proposal forms ma•i be ob·

tained at the office of Eastern

Local Schools.

A certified check payable to
the Clerk-Treasurer of the
above Board of Education or a

satisfactory bid bond executed
by the biq~or and a security

·company. in an amount equal

mahties 1o accept or reject any
and all or parts of any and all

bids.

'

•

The successful bidder will be
requ ired to furnish a satisfac-.
tory performance bond for one

hund red percent of the con·
1ra1=t price.
.
· No bids may be withdrawn.

PROBATE CoURT OF

::

MEIOI COUNTY, OHIO • '

ESTATE OF I ERTHA 8. Nl- ·:
CHOI.S, DE¢U.SED 1
• ~

c.. No. 24002

NOTICE OF
APOINI'MINT
. OF FIDUCIARY
.

On February 7. 1983; in the' :

for at least th•rtv (301 days a«er Meigs County Probate &lt;:ourl• .1
the scheduled closing time for Case No. 24002. Carl S. Ni- .•
rece1pt of bids.
E lrd of Education chols. Sr.. Box 71. Rutland. ~
Eastern Local Ohio457751M1sappolntedAd- ·,
. .

'

School District minisuator of·the estate of Ber- :
William Buckley. tha S. Nichol&amp; deceased. late of .,
· "
President Ruttan~ . Ohio.
Robert E. Buck
-.:..
Eloise Boston.

10 f•ve percent of the bid shall
be submined with each bid.
Said Board of Education re- Treasurer
serves .the r1 ght to wave infor1
121 1B. 26. t31 4. 3tc

Probate Judge/
.
f1erk
(2) 11. t8. 25. 3tc

-·

SYRACUSE - Two lots wi1ll older i'oote that has three bedrooms.
dining room, part basemen~ alii utility room. $11,000.00.
flEW LISTNG - POMEROY - A two story home with three
bedrooms, large beautiful living room alii dining room, 1\\ baths,
balcony, patio and a wishlfli well. lois ol closet space, new
. p!uniting and new wiring. $38.000.00.

NEW LISTING - liiDDLEPORT - A nice comer lot in a good
with four bedrooms, beautiful bath, large living
room. dining room, big pantJy, full basemen~ and a one car garage.

rieighborttood

SMITH NELSON.
MOTORS, Inc.
,

ome..y, Oh .
Ph. 992·2174

Pert time b•by altt• n••d

In loving memory ot Joaeph
Sanortlold who dopertod
28, 19B2.
Thinking of you overydoy
fa hard to do, but JWmemberlng thomondortul 'tin •• fa
.,_utllu I. It wfll be hooven

a..,_..

tNA.ATION GOT YOU IN A
PINCHl EIH tha -aeza;
ooll Avon.' Coli U4·843·
2982 . 614-38B· 9046 , ...
814-992· 31190.

when we meet again . I love

LOOKING fora f)llrt tlmo job
thot hoo goo~ pay, lifo

yaul Jane Amberger.

job aklll, ptua help with 1
Saara who Plllld IWIY .
MYOin yeara ago on Fob. 26, -;:;---::-::--:--:--:--;:-- conege or Yo-Tee educa ~
tion? There' a Only one
1971.
· 9 Wanted To Buy .
otoundf High ochool aanboa
Gon a but not forgotten .
Thagrfoflaatlllwlthinour WANTED TO BUY Otd or gredu•tea. you may BVeiJ
heorta.
.furn•ure and Antlquoa of all qualify for a caah bonuo.
And wo think ~fyou every kind a. calf Konnoth Swain, Contact the Walt Virginia
day.
448-3169 or 268· 1967 in Army National Guard. For
more Information Clll
Loved S. Sadly mtued by t'he ovanlnge.
Sergeant Sergeant Lutton at
Mom, Slotl!'• a. 8rothera.
BU.,ing Gold, Silver, Pllltl· 304-117&amp;·396!) or coli toll
num . Gold and Silver prlcaa f"'e 1-800·642-3818.
ore tho hlgheat In two yoora, - - - - -- -- check our prices on GJold &amp;

ailvor, acropj-efry. Buying EXPERIENCED, permMierii
Old coins. 1crap rlng 1 8&amp;

~llverwera. Deily q·u otea

FOR FUTURE

usE"

BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd

MIDDLEPORT~ OH.

992·272:~

1·26-1 ..

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILL£, OHIO

•Woah~=~:-•he..
oRefrlgeretora
•Drvera .,.....,.
PARTS and SERVICE

auppflea tor ulo', Sprln.u P22, The Point. Pleuant
Valley Tradlng co .. Spring Ragla••· 200 Main St. Pt~
Volley Plaza, 448-8025 ori -;
PI;e:aa:o:n;t,;WV::2;6:1i~B=O=.::=
446,80 28 .
I·

· Office .. ......................................................... 992·2259
shoot, Racine Gun

Every Sunday f!artlng
1 p.m. Factory.choked guna
only.

lH

GINGER BREAD STUDiOArt laaoona. JO Nl
CARRINGTON-89'8-3290. ·

REALTOR ·

have ltl annual winter
covered plate dinner and fun

RUBBER BACK
KlTOIEN PRINT
12'x4'
RUBBER BACK
Good For BathrOOII

446·0278, 304·876-3647.

THE Proleaaionat Electroly·

ala Cent8r hera been offering
permanent hair removal to
the Pt. Pl1111nt area linea
1977. After february we
will ba offering these
aervioea in Huntington and

$500

South Cherlaoton only. We

are very sorry to leave Pt.

· Pleaeant 11 we care very
rnucl'! about our pat lints A!
the people here end want
tlwm to receiveonlytha beat
experienced profenional
cere around, ao we are

$210

offeritg our patlenta In thla

area a permanent discount
In either Huntington, 304·

RUTLAND,

742-2211

629-1922, or South Che·
rloaton, 304·744-1710 .
Sharrv a. Judy.

OH.

LOT

. GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.
Industrial, Commercial,
hsidential, Interior and
Elttrior.
Painting
1
Sandblaotlng
Watsoblaotlng
Parking Lot Stripping
Spray Painting
Tuture Coating•
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIIATES

4

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who haa

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

St. Rt 124, pomeroy,
· OH .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmisoian
PH. 992 •5682
or 99:1-7121

&gt;~•He

KOUNTRY KLUB

•New Grt' ps'
•Refinishin&amp;
•Re-wei&amp;htin&amp;
•Balancin&amp;
•Golf Trips
For Tounc Poopto _I
•Pre-Season Sale '
20o/o &amp;30% OFF
JOHN TEAFORD
Chaster, OH.

2·16·1

mo.

J&amp;f

RADIATOR
SERVICE

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

o&amp;ACKHOE
.SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•lliESTONE
•WATER, GASind
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
·
•LAND CLEARING,
COliCinE WORK
liCIIDED &amp; lOB IIIMAfffifD
PHONE

We can repair and ra-

-Dozers
-Backhoes
- Dump True ks
-Lo-Boy
'
-Trencher
-Water
-Sower
-Gas Lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or ~MALL JOBS
PH . 992·247$

.£g~TRACTING

cooe l'llditltorl and hN·
ter - · We can ilia
ecid boll and rod out 111diiiiOII. We UCI repair
...,_ T-.....
._ • -

PAT HILL fORD
. 992-2196
,Middleport, Ohio

1·12·3 mo. P:&lt;t

l-ll·11C

ROUSH
CONSTRUC.TI ON

New Homes - Extensive
Remodelin&amp;.
olnsurance Work
.Custom Pole Bides.
&amp; Gareces
•Roofinl Work
oAhlnl111111 &amp; Vinyl Sidings

PH. 992·3795

We Do Booblepl!w For

15

Snl, l.qt llld Carpotllti
sua- &amp; Plibwflips
IAIIf C. KElLER-OiliER

Year~

IJiperience

GRI!G ROUSH
PH. ?92-7583
or 992·2282

11·11-tfc

l-27·2 mo.

anything to give away and
doa• not offar or anampt to

1\!!1 Sunday &lt;;allo

Middleport, OH.

lon:·Th~s-_4:00-~1:30
Fn.-S. · 4.00·12.00

-~~SEDP:~
ltal'an

,.__;.o .,,..._
III!MI---

CHARLES SAYRE
!"
AND SON

female black kitten with
white feet end a whhe beb.

Coli 614-246-6484.

9748 otter 6.

.

~:J~:~~~r.~;-~~~il'.d

Roofi~t&amp; SidingCcl.

around ey11

~

brown paws.

814-992-8606. '

Routt I
Lon&amp; Bottom, OH. 457U
· 985'-4193 or 992·3067

to good home in the country .
Good companion for older

people. Call 304-876 ·
6788 .

992·6215 or'992-7314
Pomeroy,

BEDS-IRON, BRASS .' old 16

Schools

furniture, gold, silver
Instruction
dollars. woOd Ice boJtat.
atone jars. antiquea. etc.,
Complete houaeh old a.
Write: M .D . MiUer, \ Rt. 4 , Karate the ultimate in self
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992· defence all priva~e lellont,
Men, women. • children :
7780.
Instruction thru black belt~
Gold , oliver. otorlfng , Aho available K•rate
jewelry. rings, old coins &amp; unlforma puching end
currency. Ed Burkett Berber klckll)g boga. and protective

Shop. Middleport. 992- equipment. Jan-y Low.y •
Allocletea Kerate Studio,
3478.
143 Burlington lid., Jock·
WANTED to lean. Tobecco aon, Oh. Colt 814-2B8quota, will give .15 lb . 3074 or 814·384-81 eo.
Morgana Woodlawn Farm ,

11

Gaalmd oll-flaervfco. Call
814-388-8643.

Help Wanted

NEEOED: ·Pereona in Gallia
County to provide tempor·
ery cere In own home to

Jack's Locklmith ServiCe.
Com merclll · Do mast ic J

Automotive. Coli 304-B822079 .
.

lndivlduota with develop·
mental diaoblllcy. Receive

salary, room and bored fie

end fringe benofita. Training 1-;:;;;-;;-;-----:-;--provldod. Call Buckeye 22 ll!lonay to loan
~ommunlty Services at

bla manner, like a dealing

1--------Buaitou a. Second Mort·
gage loana. Equity Ro· ·
IOUri&amp;S.
In Ohio
1·800 · 992·2361. out of
Ohio 1-513-26B·0112.

with the public and needs

HOME LOANS 12% flxad

short hours . Late afternoon

rate. Leeder Mortgage,

working
conditions
Salary
plus bonus
. An .Equal

1-;;:::::;;:;:::;::::;::::=
.
1_

Opportunity Emplwer. Cotl 23
Mr. Tyler at 446 -4387.
GBC
Leed qu Iter plyer nMdld for

well ootablfahed country

a.

western band. Mull be 20 or

older. T
Ladfeo needed for pltuont
good paying temporary
PART Enghh Point•. port 1 Dlflco like work. no expo9 month old female, to good rience necenary. Alto need
lodlea with cor for light
h0"10 304-468·1 636.
Y2 Colie, 'h Terrier, to good

homo 304-676·6424.

THREE aota olael coif
bedapringa , 304-89 6·
3972.
6

Lost and Found

•

-·e""" gullorwook
.,..C.waro _ .

V: C. YOUNG Ill

448-2031 .

12 YEAR old Border Callie and early ell8ninga. Pleount 1-614-692-30&amp;1 .

.MALE 4 month old puppie.

(Froe.timatel)

cove rege1 ere available to
Driver aide Doorwithpower meet individual needs.
a. grill for 1 971 or 1973 Contact Neal Ina. Ag_ency.
Mercury Marquis . Call agent. Pbona 448-11194. .

6-8 waok old PIIPPiea. Slack 814·448-7109. Equal
with wgtteapot on chest end opportunity amplo.,.,.
teet. Sordor Collie type. Call
814-742-2870 otter 5 p.m. TELEPHONE LIAISON
inlaraatlng opportunity for
Puppy. Bleck with brow.n aomeono who haa peraona-

SPAGHffil
· DINNER

~~

home and poroonaf property

614-388-9881 .

pumps . Saiea and Servk:e.

Taking appilcationa to give
awoy a beautiful 4 mo . old

TWO pupplaa, y, Collie,
304-773-6888.

\::S

services for tire insurance
Wan1Bd to buy wench for coverage in Gallle County
360 John Daare . Call for almost 1 centwy. Farm.

..

3rd ANNUAL
Spon1011d
Vocal
Music:
SAT" IIAIICH 5
At t111 Rtrtllnd
Glide School Gym
5:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M.
13.00 Aduft-12.00 Childrtn
Dinner indudes: SPEII!ti,
Seiad, Roll, Drinltlnd liissert
Entertainment by
The Chonliers
2-9-1 mo.

of Ohio, Sr. Rt. 339 North- SANDY AND BEAVER
Barlow, Oh 814-878-29110. lnauranco Co. hu offered

Pliny 304-87&amp;·2276, 30418 Wanted to Do
623·6843.
offer
other
forth
lila
may any
place
anthing
ad in
Ia
column. Tharo will be no Baby bed end dresser and -or
cheat 304-876-6086.
cl&gt;argeto the advortiaer.
General Hauling and Trash
Hompater. Coll448-11832. WANTED-International removal Service . Reliable
ond dopendobte. Call 4411·
f
c s
Big _Mystery
Snaila.
Cell
orm
troctora,
•
uper
A
or
3169 after 8PM 2611-19117.
Cub. 304-743-7173.
448 3732 _
LEMLEY'S DRILLING Water
Illicit 7 wka. old;&lt;, Coeur
Wei ... Shallow gas end core
.
...
'
".-.
-'
............... .
Sf)llnlel. Colt 448-1971.
drilling . Myers end Gould

tan fnB~an.
Dobennenowearing
~::::::::::::::::~r,:::::::::::::::::~r::::::::::::::::;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~il
~a. 81Kka
'S
red colfor. CoM 814· 38BALL STEEL &amp;
VInyl &amp; Aluminum
ANGIE'S
Kitchen Cabl111ts- -oof9989.
YOUNG
In&amp; - Sidln1 - Concrete
For the Son of man Ia
.POLE BULDINGS
~ SIDING
PIZZA
Petlos - Sldewelks CARPENTER
come to Mlk end to lave
SlzH startfrofl112'xl&amp;' ·
BISSELL
New Constr•ctiow- Rt·
SERVICE
thlt which wee lost.
modelin&amp; - Custom Polt
PH 992 6851
Luka 19:10
UTILITY BUILDINGS
SIDING CO .
· 349· N. 2nd
• St.
Barns.
Atd •"""......Wine

949-2860.

8022 .

:;;::::::;::::::::::=

$

611 ~ IIi.. Purnwoy, OH.

"Buutiful, ·Custom
Built Garaps"
Callforfreesidinces·
timates, 949-2801 or

or travel trailers . Will - -- - - - - - consider damaged or bum Have vacancy In boarding
oull. Call 448·0176.
home for elderly. 814·892·

Bring your own dinner ware
2317 anytime.
and drtlk. Alto something to materiel delivered to our
auction. Come out and have · m it l. In t h e to II o w In g
apecieo: The ooka. Ash, 13
Insurance
aome fun .
Cherry, Hard Maple , and
Alcoholics Anonymoua. Call Walnut. Blllney Hardwood• - - - - - - - - -

TRI·COUNTY
BOOKIEEPING
SERVICE ·

•

TREE TRIMMINGS. REMOVAL. CALL814·849-2128
Cash for used mobile homes OR 814·992·8040.

auction ~qnday Fob. 28th ATTENTION LOG PRO· Would like to hove Sanlor
at 7 p.m. All mambera and . DUCERS : We need grade Citizen to ahara home. Must
friends urged to attend . logs and veneer, we ere be neat a. claan. 814·949·
paying top p, ic11 for queitity

4·S.Ift

1·3-lft

legal aecretery wanted,

typing • shorthand reaveilable. Al.o co"'• It coin qu lied . Send resume to Box

· REALTORS
HtfW1 l Clellnd. Jr.. GRl ................................. 992-6191
Dottte Turner ................................................. 992·5692
J• Trussell .................................................. 949-2660

The fzook Walton Club wltl

SAVE

lniUI'Ince, -r ttiremem plan.
that will teach you a valuable

In loving _memory of Roy

$50,500.00.

614-992-2181

FIVE 'PlS, - 1976 Scl'ultz
Inlier. 2 nice si2e bedrooms,
large liYin&amp; modern jg(chen &amp;
nice dirina New wood garage
with concrete fklot, walks,·lrQnt
porch, utility IIIII over one
acre. $26,500.

985-3561
A ll Makes

2581 .
8

Sf)llniel on
planll. For
814 -247-

delivery work, 911 ello wane• . Apply in penon

Professional
Services

CS.L Bookkeeping

Tax Retwna a. bookkeeping

lor Individual a a. buolnaa-.
Sh..-t fonna 16.00
long fonna UO.OO end liP
Carol Neal
448· 3882·
PIANO TUNING

&amp;

REPAIR

Cell Bill Ward tor appointment. Ward~• Keyboard.

(Aba.otu•ty no phone calla), 446·4372.

Mrs. Carter, Econol Travel 1-::-:-:~:-:-::-::-::--:-:-­

Motet between 12 and
'2:30PM, Tue. march lat.

PERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL - Proleaofonol ,
Electrolysis Center, Inc .•~

ladleo needed tor pleuant A· M.A . Ap prov ad , Dr .·

good paying temporary
office like work, no

Rettrrala . (JiftCertiftcatla;
new houra. By appoln..-nent.

rlance neceoaory. Alao
304-1178-6234.
ledlea with cor for tight
delivery work, goo atlo·
wonce. Apply In penon
(Abao!u•IV no phone calla),

Mra. Carter, Econol TriVII
Motel betw.een 12 end

12:3QPM, Tuo. march lat.

1- - - - - - - - ori

&amp;

Men to work In service

Excellent conditl

Winter's Sohio. Jeck_sa_n

Immediate occupancy-.
Interest rates are down and
probably won't be lower.

atatbn. Apply in peraon at location -- all ready for
Pika, GoHipoNa .

Public Sale
$. Auction ·

Tht Walt VIrginia O-penHome and or rental
mont of. H•lth Ia aooklng 1 Broedwoy-Middlaport.
full-tfmo Hoapftal Admlnla·
tretor for ita Fatrmont ---·-----·--·············
Emergency Hoopltal, lo· Modern buafneu bldg. 68
oneer Rlok Peoraan. Ea•tsa, ceted
In Felrmont, Welt Court St., Gollpofla. •
antlqun, form , houo-lda. VIrginia.
llequfNmanu :
Baccalaureate dogrn plua 112+ ecrta with 2 hom••
.
two ye1r1 of experience, In Gallla County.

i==~~~~~~I~D·~t~lc~~~~~~~~~~~;:::::::::::~2~-II~-I~~~-~~====~======U=·2=Gtk:·~~~~~~==~====~WVa8mteChMnp~nA~-

TRA=:co.

Vll.llaln

· "--W.tll.

•

'
'
•

~

TUPPERS PlAINS - Apgeous lwo acre lot with a one Iller plan
len year old home. Three bedrooms. dining area, full basement
witlr gatage, patio, alii nice cabnets in kitchen. Just $38,500.00.

POMEROY
· lANDMARK

12'x15.7'
COPPER GLINT

Housing
Headquarters

.

ALL OTHER APPUANCES

PIR YARD

KAY'S

:~~:i~l

,..

W£ ALSO WORK ON

$21,500.

S1700

P&amp;s BUILDINGS

.''''

l l·l -r i j

Pu bile N otic a

IIDDI.EPOIT ....: Nice con·
crete bklc~ 6 room OOI!Ie. Nat·
ural !IllS lurnace, modem
kithen, basemert and level
kit Near swimming pool. Orify

'NOW THRU lARCH 5th

lnsulatfl DOl Houses

4&amp;- ........... - .

Public Notice ·

RACINE - Next to store &amp;
schools. Has 21arge bedroomS;
mng 12x24,-ba1h, large eatin
kithen, lmnt porch alii level
kit $18,500.

KEN'S ,
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Sizea from &amp;'x&amp;' Up
to 24'x36'

·· ··-~·~.,_,

···-~~-

JUST USTED - Modern 3yr.
t*l, 3 bedroom home. 212
baths, large family room, nice
IO:hert, diriOL with ida~
docn to 5undeck. Llrge basement with 2 car pt'lllll. utility
room &amp; one acte. $56.950.

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
· &amp; HOTPOINl .

"CUT OUT

Deeler
Farm Equipment .
Parts &amp; Service

' "'J!''·' '" t·o·r ,,,,.

-.,..c"""'•
• -c-&amp;14

Harol d 0 . Graham.
owner

'

Help Wanted

In my homo in Pomeroylt&gt;r2
glrfa. 814·1192· 7894.

1 female. Pert Labador A

Farm Equipment

jllfi iiH"i ii J,IIf'lo •ttllmlf • o• ldlf!ll lo!t ' ' • .

"-~·14

·

NEW USTING - hilury :._ Motile home with expalllo, bay
window, centrll air, nice front silting porth, two car garJge wi1ll
two moms. and a beautiful laying 1 1~ acre yard. Mostly fur·
nished includiflg washer and dryer. $29,000.00.

11

In Memoriam

2

2~ackpuppleo.1~leand
;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====~~~~~~~~~~~:::::::::rf;::::::::::::::::~ f)llrt
Coale. Colt 814·388·

John Deer,
flew Holllnd. Bush Hoc

'l-4• llle1~

'IJ•A_,...._
'1~- C ......It:...,_...

County Deed Records..

64 Miac. Merchandise

Frlint he SIUlltst Htlltr
Cort to tltt llr111t Rldil·
tor. .
Radiator Speclllst
NATHAN BIGGS
. 35 Yrs. bptritnct

45751

..............., ...................
..,,•J·,.,_
......
.........--······
•J·--···- ···-,,···"··4 . ......,..._......... .

VIRGIL I. SR .

RADIA~s:v.a

Authorized

)ll-l•t••Aa-

II · ~·-..
tJ .. . - -

PLUS TAX

DINNER SERVED 5·9 EACH EVEN)NG

14-Mo oo w..ct.aMioe
I &amp;-•~ltli"f "'~"

t :l~t.•~ iJi• ·• l

record within thirtv days from

the d,.e of this publ ication, to
dedere the lease forteit!&gt;d for

LAFF-A·DAY

' '

;====:;==;:;-rr==::=::::::=::::==;-!r:==:=:::::=::::==;iTir=======:;:::;rr===::::::===ii
'THE

PHONE
992·2156
'
Ot
o.,t.

l'l· ~··lft)

the lessee does not

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

.608 E. MAIN .
POMEROY, OHIO
1
( PH.992-2259
' .

Business senices

I

_.....

Re ~

216 E. 2nd 51,

fashions in clothes

U·"--f•-•...,..

,._
,.........,.........
'/

,,.,., ....,.-.... ...... c"

~.

Dennis,
Wayne and Greg.

.

1 . ............. o..,on.,....,,
JJ·M-y to l•.,.

..;tn the Meigs County

IIIITLAIID - Ttis older home
is 111 2leYel klls 111 Rt 124. Has
3 bedrooms, I\\ baths, 1111ullll
gas, ci1y water, chimney ltir
yoor wood burner. Froot &amp;
back endosed porches. Asking
$26,000.

• itt Daill' S..tMttl CllssittH

t -C...,oln.-..1,..._ .., _ _ •1
2 .... ...._.,
1,..._ 1.. - - 1

It

the lease released of

nonpaym8"1t of rentals. there
are no producing or driliing of
County De&lt;&gt;d Records. are oil or gas wells on the leased
notif1ed that said tease is .Prerrjses. the term of the lease
expired , there are ro producing has expired and said lease 1s
or being drii!M oil 'or gas wells wid 1arid forfeited:
on the ieased premises: that
The lmd descr~bed in said
Harold C. Graham. present IMSe is situated in Scipo
cwmer and successor in title to Township. ~igs County, Ohio.
C. C. Cuclder. intends to fi le for being 62 acres as described in
record an Affid8v1t of Forfeiture Volume t92 page 360 Meigs

RACINE - 1974 Sch~.
12x65 with tipott 3 bedrooms,
I 12 baths. inter-tOOl, ~lity and
2 leYel lots out of all floods.
Want just $11,900.

focus on spring

:nsz- s =
,.,n,,.,..,.,...._
...
I I ·How ........ o-41
U ·CI. TV. ll ...ilol,. .. _ .
1)-AIIfi'lol•o

.

You as iessee of a (ease in
whi ch C. C. Cuckler is ~sor.
dated May 7. ·1958 recorded in
Volume 87 page 45 Meigs

1-(614)-992-3325

Sadly missed by:

Ill Coort Sl .. _,.,,-

--=

A&lt;ll-u

have

Phone

Style show will

The Daily Sentinel

corder

(21 25. t tc

happenin~·

Meigs County area

NOTICE
To K Drlllt::...c::'Y

is just as dear.

'

Bike-a-thon chairs

POMEROY - OH KAN Coin
Club wUl meet at 7 p.m. Monday
In the Riverboat Room of. Diamond Savings and Loan Co. A.
social hour and trading session
will be followed by· a coin auction. The group .wlll complete
plans for Its annual coin snow to
be held March 13 and refreshments wlll be served.

3 Years Ago.

members of the chapter at
Pomeroy Health Care Center
wllere she resides.
Mrs. Lewis was Initiated on
June 5, 1913, and served as
worthy matron In 1929. She has
served In other offices and on
many committees through the
years and has been a faithful tra- .
veler to other chapters through·
out the state. She )las also been
an active member of Past Matrons Club and has served as
president of that club.
During their visit Sunday,
Mrs. Lewis was presented a 70year pin and also an award in
recognition of her years of service. Pictures taken over the ye- · •
ars were enjoyed by the group. ;
Bessie King, secretary ol. Evan· · .
gellne Olapter, read minutes of
several meetings held in '1913
noting that Mary Beason was
worthy •matron, and Wililjlm J.
O'Brten worthy patron wben
Mrs. Lewis was Initiated Into the
chapter. Another interesting tea- ,
lure of that year's minu~ was ;
the notation that two I'Jie&lt;!tlngs
were cancelled due to the fiood .
Refreshments were served
from a table covered In red and
'
featuring red tapers
in white .
holders, a cake decorated with a
live point star In color and ln-.
scribed "Love Evelyn, 70th
Year." -Kathryn Mitchell,
worthy matron, poured the
HONORED- Mra. Evelyn Lewis was pramted he~ 70 year pin In a . punch, and Twlla Childs, asaorecognition program held by Evanpllne Chapter, Order o1. the E•Mem clate matron, served the calc~!.
Slar, at the Pomewoy Health Care Center~. She II JdcCw eel IB'ewiUI
Rev. Robert Kuhn, chaplain,
Kaibryu Mllchell, woriby matron, IUid James Buchanan, wortlly patrllll.
gave table grace.

public

Public Notice

In Memory Of
Kenneth Jenkins
Who Passed Away

the Eastern Star, for the past 70
yeats was homred Sunday

Fine-free month

Calendar
FRIDAY

Evelyn Lewis, a member of
Eva11geUne Chapter, Order ol.

In

The

OPEN 9 ttl 5 11011. llru SAT.
All TJIIII If A~Uo IIIJIIIr,
IIIUI. T.... Ups. tic.

SPECIAL

11Msa111101 FILTtt
AIID FWID CIIAllll
OIILY 13U5 1. 1...,

CARPENTER
FOR'
·RENT

You NMIIThe Price
You Mi&amp;hl Get lucl!r

PH. 742-2328
1.31 .1 mo.

MINE RUN

MIUER

STRIP

ELECTRIC
SERVI

.

CE

For ell your wiring
naedt; fumacn rapelr ~arvlca end IntteiiMion;

l ~~=~al

Call ;742-3191
I·Hk

COA'L

$3()00 ATON
.

PH. 992·2280

~2 2.~

'""

GUN SHOOT

RACINE
FIRE DEPT. ·
Bashan Building
EVERY
·
·. SAT. NIGHT

6:30 P.M.
FICtory Chota 12
Gaup Shotauns Only
2·18-tfn

r,::~uoh~;W:o'4-~;:

hospital or heelth servicea.

··· · ·~· -···· --· -····· · ···

Auotlon avery Frl. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Tructdoeds of new
merchendlae ev•rv wHk .

or buolneu odminlalration. Ooll892-3287 or876 -261 8 .
Thla 44-bedfaciUty pr..,ldoo evenlnga.
tong -term akllled nunlng 17.
:::::-:d-o:w-n-,.-.-..,-e-.-.-on-servlcta and outpatient 11 0 0
clinic aaNfcoa. Appllcantl dominium. Dopoalt Ia 100%

used merchandlle always

should aubmit raumes and
cat·IOna to : l. Clerk

refundable . Chooaa now;
Sea John Ecker, Riveralde

Conalgmento of new and

welcome. Richard llaynolda
~·::=r::•;i M.
Auctbne.-. 2711-311419.
AUCTI DN avery Saturday
nlgllt, Mt. Alta. wv, I p.m.
Conalgnmanto walooma. ·
EmmalellallotiMaor.

DiJWctor

~orrace. Cal 448·11211 . .
24.34 building on V. Kre. Ia
being uaad for ohurdl, could ·
be aanvanad to home. Fuly •
••poled, . au...,dad aoHlng. Colt 441· 7141. .
.

�..
Friday, F.bruaoy 25, 1983

Pomeroy-

Middlere"', Ohio

The Da ily Sentinei- Page-9

3 bed room hou• for sale .
New carpeting throughout .

located on Bashan Rd. and
sits on J acres o f l and .

S11n 12 ft. olurn. boat with
troller. 3 opd. trolling •
battory, wont 14150 . Coli
441-28411.

Excell en t ter m s to r i ght
pa rty. MAKE AN OFFER. 30
year f in a n ci n g av a il a b le .
Contact Bank One of Po m e·

roy. 614-992-2 133 .

78
&amp;

Auto Pens
Acce•sorlea

.•

32 Mobile Home s
f o r S a le
T A 1- ST A T'E M 0 B I LE
HOM E S. US E D - CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CA LL 446 -7572 .

WE NEED THE
CONHITUENT&lt;;. IF
WE U~~ !;QME OF
'IOU!&lt; MONEV TO
MAKE A FEW
TV 5 POT5-

C L EAN USED MOBILE
HOME S KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
AT 36. PHONE 446-7274 .

~s

~

14.te60
2 bdr.
heat.
ru el
wa
r, . set
up with
2 or4
lots. Call446 -1240 .
Good mobh homo 87 .500
will
sider cont,.ct sale.
c.ll .con
Sunday 446 -11.57 or
614 -245 -5830 .
1974 Kirkwood M o bile
Home. Good cond . Phone
446 -2445 or446-4792.
197 4 Liberty mobile !)orne.
1 4•70 . 2 rooms built on . On
19 ac res of ground . With.

Tupper:s Plains water .
Outside cellar , big out
building s. Ten

minut~~ts

from

Ravenswood bridge . letart
on CR 28 . Call247 -3575 .

1971 Star 12x60 , 2
bd .room with stove, refrig.,
a .c . • LP_g as , porch and
a'Nning . Very good condi ·
tion . Set up on rented lot .
t6 .600. Call 614 -949 ·
3023 .
~

974 Free'dom , 1 2x6 5 .
86500 . Appointment only.

Call BH -742-2055 .
USED MOBILE HOME .
676-2711 .
ONLY ONE Now 12ft. wide.

2 bedroom ., all e,18ctric,
mobile home, only "$ 7,995,
bank financing available. All
State Modular Homes. haH
Wav betWeen Pt. Pleasant&amp;.
Huntington on ST . RT . 2 .
304-676-271 1.

Radio
Equipment

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=;~~~
42

44

Mobil!! Homes
for Rent

1

Apartment
for Rent

2 bedroom unfu'"iohod Apartments , 304-675mobile homo.12x60, on Rt . 6548 .
35. Deposit &amp; rof. roquhed. 1- - - - -- ---'--Call446-4229 .
ONE bedroom apartmento
for
the elderly. All utilities
2 bedroom unfurnished paid.
Tonomo pay 30 parmobile home in Cheshire . c.e nt of th air ad)uo ted
Deposit 8t ref . required . inoomelnthlo HUDouboklUtilities furnished . Call
ized apartment building .
446 -4229.
Twin Rivero Tower. phone
304 - 675-6679 . Equal
2 bdr. mobile home In city. opportunity housing .
unfurnished. dopooit raq . l(iNj~;d~;;;,-:;;~~~~
,u; ~;;:: ';"_;t~
Adults only. Coll446-3791 I
after 5:00PM ,
e3~7l.!1_ ole
c 16~ 6c.
Eu reka riverfront 12xBO. :50'4·'0715· 1
or
•
fu 'ah d $160
m1 e .
mo.. 1 bd r. , 3812 ·
$100 mo. Raf . &amp; dep. 1--::-------~Adulto. Call 814-643-2644. ONE bedroom apartment,
.tficlency apartment, 3301
2 bedroom mobile home . Jack.On Avo, coll304-675 1 Ox 50. Near Roclne . Coli 3000.
614 -992-6868.
ONE bedroom apartment in
TWO mobile homes for rent Henderaon. newly painted.
on Rt . 2 about 6 minuteo phono 304-676-1972.

1

from town . Call after
304-675-6277.

1

6 . 1;;:::::;_:=:;::;~~~~
45

Furnished Rooms

TWO bedroom trailer kitchen furnished, couples
only, ooe amall child ac-

cepted, references, 304676 - 1076. $180.00
month.

Sleeping room 8126 . utiiitiea pd, lingle male, share
both. 919 2nd ,1\ve., Ga!Hpo·
lis. Coli 446-4416 o!ter
?PM.

'4 MILE out Sandhill Road,
33 Farms for Sale

26 acres mostly level.
drastically reduced . Was

854 , 000 now S45,000 .
Must 1&amp;11, 3 bdr. home, new
furnance , county w.ater.

new bath , c arpeted', new
aluminum siding , coal &amp;
wood burning stove. Barn &amp;
other bldgs. Garage located
on okf 160 near Porter. Call

614-388-9060 .
207 acre farm . Langsvllla.
Mineral rights inchJded~ No
house. $12.000 dow~- Will
corry rait. 614-388-9346.

34

Business
Buildings

For rent or sale store
building with upstairs apt.
and 2 rental trailers .. Comer
of Rt. 160 &amp; Bulaville Rd.

Call 446-3888 or 4464491 .
35 lots

8o

Acreage

1 . 1 6 Acre lots.and · or ho"::se.
Seller will landscape .
446-1798 .

8 acres of land rural water
and well, sept C. barn and' 2
buildings. Price 812,500 .
Call 614-388-9783 .
For sale-Adreage on George
Freelands property. Cell

614-992-2646 .

304-676-3834.
2 bedroom. all electric
mobile home , FOR RENT
WITH OPTION TO BUY .
Payment• $186 per mo .
304-576-271 1.

THREE bedroom furniahed
all-electric trailer. built on
family ' room , coal - wood
bqrning atove , on acre,
garden plot, outbuilding,
Jerrys Run Road, references, $276 month, plu1
deposit . 304-876-2366.

44

_Apartment
for Rant

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apartments $ 2oo per mo. or if
income is 810,000 or lesa
HUD availa~e . A- One RMI

Estatea, Carol Yeager.
Realtor. Cell 304-6756104 or 675 - 5386 or
676-7786.
2 bdr . unfurnished apt. In
CrONn City. Call 814-2688520.

46 Space for Rent
1 mobile home lot on At. 36 .
Call 446-4229.
KOUNTR Y MOBILE Homo
Pork, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Coli
992-7479.

48

Equipment
for Rent

Backhoe ondloader digs 8
ft .. . large bad pick up
haulable, operate vourealf.
e9o. per dey. 304-8963841 .

49

For Lease

2 bdr. unfurnished opt .
overlooking city pork. e176
par mo. Coll448-1819.
Went to le"ue tobbacco
poundagefor1983 . WID pay
20 cents a pound . Call
614-245-6047 .

1-:-----------

Furnished apt. 1 bdr .. 920
4th Ave.Gelllpolis. Adults,
water &amp; eloctric pd. $200
mo. Call 446 -4416 after
7PM.

Videocassatterecordersfor
sale. Reconditioned procislon VCR . Callat 446 "6666 ·
JVC turn table. Sony
cuoefte, diacouotic speak·
""'- Call 304-675-1513 .
ONE Peavy CS -400 AMP
8300.00 304-6·7 5-1393.
21 .. RCA ®lor tolovlslon,
phone 304 _675 _2815 _
54 Misc. Merchandise

For oalo lump coal &amp; firec:~r~ ~~'ilo~~·l Co .• Inc .

4

ron In woodburn ng
1-:~:--:--:---:----::--::::-

stove,
304-876-11029.
GAS O&gt;lotheo
dryer . U&amp;.
304 -468 -t 798 ·
ELECTRIC range. Konmoro,
Corning top, good condltl
$176 304 895 3494
on,
·
·
•
·
56

Supplies

Building matorlelo
bldck , brick, oewor plpao,
wlndowo. llntelo, etc .
ClludeWintero. RloGnonde.
0 . Call614-24&amp;-6121 .

66

Pets for Sale

Cut up slabs for firewood
816 pick up ·load . Call
614-246-5804 .
Firewood delivered $80 . a
cord . Coal delivered $46 .
ton. Call Tom Hoskins
814-949-2180 or 614 742-2834.

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

Firewood. split. f30 . 00 •
truckload. f36.00 doli vered . Ph. (6141 992-2770
or (3041 882-2194.

1-----:-------:---:---:---

Luxaira natural gas furnace .
Complete. Excellent condition. Coll614-992-7810 .

Swim-:ning Pool for aale .
Above ground typa. 1 8x33
lt. Complete. Like new: Cell
814-992-6949 .

•

INTERNATIONAL poot-hola
digger. U80. 1ntarnatlonal
8ft . blode. t1711 . Phone
304-743-7173.

82

1978 F d M t
.
or uo ong 1·1• 4
cYI .. outo., 111.000 octu81
inlloa. Coli 448·0058
,_on_vtlln
__e_._______
•
1978 Chovrolot Malibu
otatlonwegon t2,900. Call
4-2ll8·
11.
_
11
178

FOREMAN&amp; USED CARS·
For 1-. ..panOI.. oaro. On
8R .124 In LangovHie, Oh .
Phono 814·7"2·2734.

8 rm . hou• 2 baths, no pets,
UOO mo . plus deposit. Coli
441 -2380 .

Ytlrllng bulla. Reg . PoHed
Honoford . Cell 1114-3792171.
2 R,. Cherololabullo.2yre.
old. an ~8-81118 .

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

1--:-:---::-::--:--:-:-:--:-:::

or 446-

horae bl'lnketl. we,tern condlllon. 4 new tlua.
Kimball Arti1t conaole
piano . like new . Pecan
color. $800 . Coli 814-9923209 .
ONE Genie Mogle
organ. $660 . Phone 304676 -3238.
69 'For Sale or Tr!!!le .
1975 Buick· Electro 2 dr. ,
PS, PB, AC. AM-FM otero
e 1 ,860 or trade for cottfo.
farm equlpmont of oquol
value. Coli 446-4637.

boola. 11 4·188·3280.

REGISTERED Cheroloi.- 39 CHEVY 2 door lladon,
bull (polledl. 304-8711· hal rebuilt motor. body in
3308.
good ohopo, aoklng t&amp;OO .
304-578-2102 .

84

Hey

&amp;

Grain

1977 MUSTANG Cobro II.
302 engine. 4 opood.
elll:ollont condition. 304678-2088.

Ml•od hay. e1.10 bolo. Call I-___P-LY_M_O_UT_H_F_u_ry~lll.
814-378-2117.
1
power ueer ng. power
brokao.
olr
oondltlonod,
calf
Round btlll , dallvory
304-882-242S.
ovalloble. Coli 448-1588 .

18 7 1

Conditioned hay,, eer corn.
Call 814-9411-2S70.
Hay for ulo. •1 .21 bole .
1114 . 84 3 -II 4 86 - L . R .
Glueesncamp.

61
For oole Wheot drtllo. 2 • 4
row corn planter•. Ford buu
AWl, Ford pulleya. 8 ft. •
10 ft . wheel dlok . 3 pt.
adluoteblo dlako. uaod ootory
mower•. fertililw I,.Aeed·
era, manurer apreadert. poet
hole dlggera 1 revertible
scoopo, pull dlok, pull plowa,
New Idea No . 310 corn
picker, rakes, baiera •
mowers . 8N Ford front
looder. 1 2 &amp; 3 .bottom 3
point plowe, other field
ready equipment . Howea
Farm Machinery At. 124 In
Moyhew Rd .. Jackoon, Oh.
Call 614 -286-6944 .

1900. 304-882·2934.

71

1977 FORD Movorlck,
power 1teerlng, autometlc
tnonomloalon. olr conddonlng 40.000 actual mlloo,
304-773-5170.

!----:----::------:

19111 FORD Falcon. good
wort cor. UOO.OO 304175-77112.

72

5 rm . fum . apt., nokida. no
pets . $1 76 mo . water &amp;.
sewer furnished . Call
446-1607.

OnBulavillePorterRd, 4rm .

3r . &amp; bath apartment,

I'&lt; both . Call446-4732 .

Two bedroom unfurnished ,
carpeted, adults preferred .
1100 deposit. Neor
Pomeroy-Mason bridge,
Clifton. 304-773-6962 or
773-6776 .

2 bedroom furnished . 1
child, e160 . month . Now
Hovan. 304-882-2466 .

Truck• for Sale

1879 Blazer Kl
time. PS. P8, AC,
tilt wheal, cruiN co1ntrol
42.000 mllao, charco!. oliver
• black. oharp. 115,4911. Coli
441-1724., ·

1976 Buick Electro 2 dr.,
PS. P8, AC, AM-FM otero
e1,8150 or tnode for ootde,
form equipment of equol
1--~::--:-:-:-:-:-value. Coli 441-4537.
lnt. 21&gt;1' T cab • choolo long
By owner 1982 Dodge wheal baoo, 12.1100 . Coli
Mlrodo e• . cond. 111,000 li4-379·21117.
mlloo, 318 , V-8. crul ...
-:----~
many axtreo. 87,932, will 1917 Chevy 'o4 ton truck .
oacrlfice . Col1441-0047.
Cab end chooolo only. 327
angina. 4 - - ' trona. Call

l__...:..___

·

=11

2 bedroom &amp; yard . Pomer:oy
erao. f180. month ; 814. 992 ·11848.

I•.

I~

THAT LO!iT TllfA ~
HA5 NEVER e.EEN UP AGAINST
A COIIIPIITER! WHY OOtiT ViE
PUT EZRII EON AND FJfJO TO

..J 'LL

ER- HO,NO!
KNOW ABOUT Tlji5 COQE, OF W.IRGE
50 T~T GTILL VOESII'T .IT OOEGM'T!
MEAN l COULDN'T FIND
IN'FACTIT!
TELL YOU
WHAT/ ...

COQE, HUH? COUI-0

~E

NOTHINQ

INDIAN HIERO&amp;t.YPHG-

IlUT WHIITEVER IT 15,
IT DON'T LOOH TOO
T()(j(jlf!

YiORK ON iT?

ro

THAT

51/RE! IT'LL

HMM ... Y' KNOW,
UH· HUH.. HE MIGHT
IF YOO'RE GOIN'
LET SliP WHAT
T'BE COOKIN'
HE'5 Fi6GER IN' TOO
FOR WAR~UCKS
ABOUT m MINEffS'
TOO. HONEYfjUN... h.--:--= JOBS!..,

OLO ' l05T MANITOO ' ~E FIIN FER
LEGEND, OF COURSE, AN HIE! WHAT
5TILL- KIDS LOVE A D'YOU THINK,
F100?
TRE/l$URE H/JNT!

AU .I-: \· OOP
HE~

HE COMES, FOLKS.' THIS
SHOULD BE lNTERE&amp;nNG!

Stop!

Mobile Home Roof Prob·
lamo7 Would yau Uke to end .
roof leoko. roof r u - . roof
ooiotlng, oolllng o~A- •
lion opoto ond .,.. 30 to 40
percent on your -ling bll7
Coli 192·7034 ond aok
ebout our 'New Roof
Product.
RON'S Talovlolon Servlco.
Sp..lallalng In Zenith and
Motorole, Ouezer. 1nd
houae colla. c .. 171-2391
or 4415·24114 .
F • K Treo Trimming. otump
removal. Collll711·1•31 .
RiNGLE'S tiEIIVICE oaparlenced rooflng,lnoludfng
hot tar opplootlon, carpo~­
ter, olectrlclon, m -. Call
304·8711·2088 l&gt;r 8711 4610-

-

Water Wella . Commercial
ond Oomootlc. Toot holeo.
Pumpo Ballo ond Sarv!co .
304-IU-3102 .

Ott your klrpet In ohlp
ohape. Water nomovel, FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN
STEAMER 814-441-2107.

~&amp;en~te~~~nl~ti~--------~----~----------------FRIDAY

partially lurniohod . Coil
4~8-3733 evening a call
446-1071 .

1---'---::--::-:::-:::-::-::--

JACKSONESTATES'Equol
Housing Opportuntty' h11

ono bodroom oportmento
rant otortlng 11 •1 B7 p'o r
month and two bedroom
apartmenJI rent ltlrting It
1193 per month . Cell
4 4 8 - 2 7 4 6 0 r •••••

19ea CHEVY 'o4 ton pickup,
•1100 Rnn. 304-11711-1449.

~MOVIE:

a..,..

E • R Troo Sorvloo, fully
in1ured, free ••timet••·
Phono 814-317-0831, call
llftorl.

Loved Women'
{I) Tic Tee Dough ,
CJ) Carol Burnett

a Cil • llll News
CD Newa/Sporti/WIIther

I])

82

Plumbing
It He1ting

Cil (j]) 3-2-1, Contoct
9
•

B&amp; ,

87

. the Jungle"
(I) MeDon. Teen Sports

Scent

(]) lob Newhart ShoW .

CIJIII·flll ABC Newo
CIJIJD CBS Newt
Cil Dr. Who
[i) Over Eeay
7:00 D ~ P.M. Magazine
(I)
NCAA
Basketball

a

Report

CIJ Wlnnera
([) Entertainment Tonight
CD
Cho~le'o Angelo
D Cil Tic Teo Dough .

e

MecN•II·Lehrar
Repo\1
.
1111 9-wltneu News
(D People' a Court
7:30 ·
Lie Detector
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(I) ESPN SportoCentor
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I])
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m

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lnterts1s
Entertainment

-

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(]) Top Rank Boxing from
La1 Vegea. NV

Lltmpoon'a Animal House'

(I} MOVIE: 'Lipstick'
•
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plot against each

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Cil Legislative Weekly

[})
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MOVIE:

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I]) MOVIE: 'Georger
CIJ •• ()JI Benton .Benson
geta Kraus's help to keep a
locil manufacturing plant

in bulineas. (Closed· Cap.
tlonedL
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Bo and luke return to Haz-·
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(£) (fi) Weahlngton W..k/
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1:45
2:00 U

'Tho

Upholatery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY 8HOP
1 113 .... A..... Qolllpcllla. •
1141·7133 or 441-11331.

--,.11

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wHk's newa.

•
8:30

the

MOVIE: 'Lipotlok'

CIJ• 9 Now Odd Couplo

01cer and Felix fix up Murray the cop with e l'dy of

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Ricky is at odds with
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Mama and Eunice are ar·
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([) MOVIE: 'Cannery Row'
[]) NCAA Basketball: Ohio
State at Michigan
(I) lllllll Love Boat
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WD 8 NCAA Basketball:
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9:45 ([) TBA
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Lamar at McNeese St.
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II ()J [D) Wizards and
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end liis vessel bettie obsta·
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destructive birthday gift.

(I) Future Sport

SATURDAY

(1) (I) Dlff'rent Strokes
Arnold 's plan to help his
hand icapped friend adjust
to public school ba c kfires .
(C losed Captioned)
(I) Rich little's Robin Hood
The master impressionist
bri ngs the Sherwood Fo·
rest characters to life.

discovers that Annie had
another li fe before him . (60

CIJ

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3:15 ~ MOVIE: ' Dina~
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4:30 CIJ ,ROll Bagley 4:48 ~ MOVIE: 'The Shootllt'

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(IJ ESPN SportaCenter
I]) Ill Sign Off
3:00 U~Slgn OH

fiJ INN News

min.)

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(]) MOVIE: 'The King of
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(3) Superstars
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I]) Cllllll Fantasy Island A
singer wants to get his
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and a woman gets revenge
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([) MOVIE: 'Calling .Dr.
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10:30 III

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Arl:rona at Oregon St.

11:00 8 (}) Newscentar
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the LA Forum,

2/26/83

III&gt; MB8terpiece Theatre
'W inston Churchill : The
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to take his.warnings about
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{Cl osed Captio·ned]
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1 1:00 II C2) Newacenter
([} All In the Family
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.(!) Newi/Sporta/Weathar
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® Eyewitne11 News
fJ) Benny Hill Show

EVENING
6:00 D Ci r Newacenter
(I) MOVIE: 'Super Fuzz'
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(]) Th• Monroes
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..

Wreatllng
(!) Ood Has the Answer
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(I) Auatin City Limite
(j]) Why In/World
fit Woncl,r 'Wqmen

a

6:30

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~
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(I) ESPN SportsCenter
C!J MOVIE: 'Nicholae and
Alaxaodra'
· {]) Benny Hill Show
fl) I]) MOVIE: 'Embryo'
[[) (j]) Sign Off
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[Closed Captione'd]
D ()) De nee Fever

IREDUNEI

CIJ MOVIE' 'Weot of tho

Divide:
Cil
Cil Moo How
CD Ill M,omorleo· With

a

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([)All Creilturea Greet and

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Ill Medame'a Place

Smell

11 :461]) MOVIE: 'Force 10 From

(lJ At the Movlea

·Nave rona'
12:00 [3J Bumo • Allen
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7:30 IJ ~ lnolclo Look
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JerHy at Atlente

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!Ill Met!- ot tho Bllou
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of the Dtvide;
(1832)-The Duke poaet aa
1 w1nted killer in this elirly
Weatern atarrlnQ John

. I KJ

IBAMGELI

I KJ

• .I

Z3 Hair coloring

24 Drollery
25 Therefore
26 Hunks
27 "Stay As
Sweet
As You -"
28 Flavoring
substances
:!9 Hebrew letter
311 J~panese
volcano

36 Tease
-37 Tribesman
of Dan
38 Salt tree

h-..-t-lf--+--

1;;;-+-+-

39 Kicked

40 Subsequently1

tJ

. DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXR

A 6UY WHO ACT5
l-IKE A Wil-D ANIMAL.
MI$1-!T !'E. TAMED
WHEN 1-iE'!S TH/6 .

II

LONGFE ~ LOW

One letter limply 1tands for an oth er . in th is sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O·s. etc. !'; in t!lr l ett ers,
apostr6phet, the length and fo rm :~ t i on o ( the worrt ~ are all
hints. Each day the code letters arc cti,ff crent .

Now arrange the c::treled tettera to
foml the aurpriM anewer, a tug·
fjftlld by tho

Prlnlanawerhflre:

Vester eys

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Stone chest
I Working gang
5 Fellow
2 Whit
9 Cheap
3 Jai alai
cigar lSI. I
match, e.g .
10 Yell
4 Number
13 English school fo r Moses
H Africian
5 Rang
6 Four-bagger
antelope
15 Sherman's
7 Lofty spot
Yesterday 's Answer
" hell"
8 Keep
16 Wood core
guess ing
22 --- for Ufe" 28 Fry lightly
17 Still
li 'Mrs. F.D.R
1l.956film l
32 Unemployed
18 Old German 12 Deserter tsl. 1 23 Fervent
33 Adolescent
coin
161\Uoena's title 21 Hawaiian
35 Ufe
20 Roscoe
19 U.alian river
seaport
I com b. fonn 1
21 Shot
21 Italian city 26 1\ccumulated 36 Traitor
22 Path

:It Path to Hades

I I I

liD CBS.Newo

(jJ Nowo
IIJ CIJ Concern

Cil •

~".....," *r

:n Farceur

I·FIRRA

I GOTEB
I Kl

1J ~CD NBC Newo

(fil Nove 'Th·e Aateroid and
the Olncuur.' (A) (60 min .)

®All In tho Family

Slalom Is prtsented · from

8:00

Report
CD Nowi/Sign OH

(]] Newawate:h

ID MOVIE: 'M•A•S•H·
lllllll Loot Word
Ill MOVIE: 'Tho Powo~
12,30 IIIID CD 8CTV Network
[3J Jook Bonny Show
(II FIB World Cup Skiing:
Men'e~OIInt ll1lom Cover1ge of .the Men's Ol1nt

min .)

Overnight
(]) Bachelor Father
(!)
NCAA
Basketball

Warriors'
9 :30 C2) MOVIE: 'The Shootiat'
([) El"!terpriae 'Herd Bell:
Tonight's program exem·
ines the hard realities of
the baseball business .
(Closed Captioned]
10:00 D (I) aJ Remington St..le
Remington end Laura in·
vestigate the apparent
murder of a ·female artist.
(60 min.)
(I) MOVIE: '51. Heliina'
&lt;D TBS Evening Newa
D (I) CD Falcon Cre1t
(j) Life On Earth 'The I ~JJ~e­
sion of the Land .' Ancel·
tors of the emphibians are
examined. lRI (60 min.) ·
· [Closed Captioned}

lllllll

lected shorts. a Betty Boop
cartoon and chapter t wo of
'Junior G· Men.' (A) (90

(3) My Little Margie
I]) But of Midnight
Specials
Ql]) Sign OH
Cit Cl2l CNN Headline News
fJt Laugh Trax
(1) MOVIE: 'Hot T-Shirts•

a

nellaa

Motorcycle•

(60 min.;
III 700 Club

Tonlf11!_t
1:00 U Ill CD Poworo of
Mettl'lew Sur Matthew
and Wslt break Into 1 bank ·.
to help Wyrn.ore's spinster
aunt. {80 min.)
(I) MOVIE: ' Hondo'
~ MOVIE: 'Dinar'
11 :30 II ill CD Tonight Show
CIJ I Spy
(1)
MOVIE:
' Sherky'a
CD NFL Theatre: Super •-: ·

'·'

\

a

BuslneA Report
9 You Aaked For It

Generei ,H8ullng

•111•41•4.

. . .

I!D

([l

MOWIII!.Yil11pli0ilriary lit. . '•
~6"..,124,.1'1. lil•looont • •~- 1•

Col

Eyewitnen News
Wonder .Woman

6:30 D ~CD NBC NII('S
CIJ MOVIE: 'Daughter of

JIMI ' WATER IERV,ICE.
Call Jim Lenior, 304-1711?387.

74

' The Bod Newo

([) MOVIE: 'Man Who

Need oomath lng l!aulad
-•v or oomothlnt~ mov.cl?
We'll dolt. Con4415-3111or
1114·2118-1917 ~ 8 .

Furnlohad Apt. 3 roomo and
both. utlltlee pold. 3'h mil• 1-----~---..,.-­
oouth Mlddlop~ R-7- Call 19 cu.ft . A,;,~na upright
387-0811. John Sheoto.
freoz• f1211, GE froot freo
81X room houoe. full booerofrlgorotor white 1175, GE
ment. gonoge, nice location. 2 b.odroom furnlohod Apt. , eleCtric dryer groon US,
t221 month, 304-875- Coli 81 4·892-5434 or Kenmore waoher &amp; match•
10901 -882·2588.
lng dryer U30. Cell 4418181.
'
TWO bedroom ho.uoa for APARTMENTS, mobile
Nnt. 304-11711-4046.
homes, houMs. Pt. Pteuant Coppertone Whirlpool
ond Gallipolis. 614 -446 - woahor &amp; dryor match pair,
8221.
extra nice, 30 dey warranty,
42 Mobile H ome s
8260. Coli 814-268-1207.
for Rant
UNFURNISHED apartment
tor rant. 1 bedroom. UVIng room oulte blue anil
•110.00 Coli Automotive ilrMn flolol, coffiot and end
2 bdr Mlilllle Hoftlt rrl. ll 8UIIIIIY. 1-1 . 30. •87 I· tairllo. e110. Callt14-alldip.
114-2H·18~2·
2211, 8711-417113.
I ··~2-'~'~
· ....._.;............._~'-''"-'

hometown where he lived
under his former identity,

(f) NIWIOinter

1:00 •

Wayne
and
George
(' Gabbyy) Hayes; also se-

Garmisch, West Germany.
(90 min .l
I]) Lest Word
(]) I Married Joan
Cit crll News
(1)
MOVIE:
'National

~

CD Knight Rider
Michael returns to his

EVENING

JONES BOYS WATI!R
SERVICE . CaHoll14-387·
7471 or 814-3157·!1~81.

Q~o~een alze EartY American
otyle hldo-a : bed cou~h ; 3
mo. old. 1260. Call 44117788.

vestment m8tters.

9:00 D

2/25/83

STARKS Tree Trimming.
Remov11 , Mini-backhoe
f111 . hour. lnourod, free
ntlmetoo. 304-1178-2010.

olde pick-up, 4 op~ad ,
29,000 mllao, 1978 F-2110
CARTER'S PWMBINO
pick-up. outometlc , 61 .000
AND HEATING
mlloo, 1 978 Ford ton truck
Cor. Fourth and Pi no
with holot, 1 e,ooo mlleo,
Phono 4415-3888 or 441·
1979 F-1110 plck·IIP. auto·
44n
motlc 20.1100 mllao, 1858
Pnolrle Schoon* job tnoler.
8x30, Hom all to Earth
84
Electrical
Compector. Homellte
Tom per, lngerooii·Rand Air
&amp; Refrigeration
O&gt;Ompraesor, Hollortweidlng
machine. Oeoo Mooonry
• - · Stone Monor Ml..r.
Refrigeration. wuh•!·
aorlol luffolo 800 power
dryoro. rongu. dlo ·
lltiggy, lodevuor holot.
hwolhers. Serlvo &amp; repolr of
acofloliiJng, large lot of · all mokeo • modolo. Coli
luMber, Other numerou1
441-8181 9 to II.
toolo, equipment and 1 oltlca ouppfleo and equipSEWING Machine rapolro,
mont. Flck Contracting, Inc .
aervice. Authorized Singer
1114-9811-3381 or locotod ot
Soloo &amp; Service Shorpen
2"' mlleri n - of Chooter, Sciuoro. Fabric Shop.
Ohio. Equipment can be
Pomeroy! 982-2284.
111n et above locetlon .
Monday t~ru Friday, 8-4.
ED'S APPLIA!'ICE REPAIR
SERVICE coli City Furniture .
FORD pickup·, Ranger,
304·176-2808.
304-8711-3054.

loader- M a~say Ferguson 1
wk . 356 with forko. Coli
814-246-6804.

BONZO 'S T HROUG H THE SECONDARY, L.O..DIES AN D
IT LOOKS LIK E IT'LL B E MOOVlANS
7WQ,.Il.ND L EM, Z.IP~!

G.E NTLEM EN~

is blocked!

·maasage.

In Pomeroy, East Main St ..
large house . 6 room s, 2
large bedr o om s. $178 .
month •. 850 depo1it. Call
1114-982-72S4. __ -- -

-OH·• !~ELL, TlfEY OID~'T

.

114-9811-43~3 .

3 rm. Unturnithed "apt . on
g-:ound floor. At 1 22 Fourth
Ave .. Gallpolio. Coli 4462876.

Small house in Gallipolis
very nice. adults onty, $250
mo plus deposit . Call
446-2300.

Ill'

HOWARD L . WRITESEL
ROOFING COMPANY .
Guttero-Downopouto·N-Repalr·Guttor PointingStorm Doono • Wlndowo .
Free E1tlmete1 . .Phone
814-141-2283 or 814 992-2781 . •

Uve•tock

1----.,...-----:-1970 Plymouth, runo good,

EQUIPStyle - .

Furnished 3 rma. with
privata both. ht. floor. 846
2nd. Ave ., Gellipolis. Coli
446-2215.

·, :-t''l - -.• 1'' ·
1972 22ft. i 'torcroft•
oampar in ,.c. cond . ,
·n,eoo&gt;Jtoll t171i-21104 or
t171·,82il "

2 year old Reg!Uored L1 89 VW Boetlo AM·FM
mork Domino Hereford bull . cuestto Plonooroutflt, Nno
IIi olra woo Sr. Champion good, gOod body, easo. Call
DACHSHUND &amp; Poodle Ohio State Folr ond Stota 304-1715-3133.
·show 1878. Lawroncol----:-----:--:-:::::pupo. 304-896-3968 .
Burdell. 1514-245-11181 .
1981 VW Robblt. 304-1711·
l
c
1153.
Musical ·
57
Regloterod Quortor Horae. 1--:-:-:-:-:-:----:::--:-lnstmmeots
Ruth Reoveo. Aloo groda. 1972 Mercury Morqulo,
Soddlu, bfidlao, winter 79,000 mllao, e•collent

83

I'll\ AFF!AIDIT'5 JUST
ALOCAL lE/~EN(),
ANNIE . T"EY'VE &amp;EEN
SEEKING IT FOR A
CENTI/RY OR MORE.

lt ·Cam-

Marcum Rootio\g • SpoutIng. 30 yaer..axperlence.
llpaCIIellzing In bull up roof.
Call 114·38S·8tlll7.

Nicley furnished mob. home
in city . Adults only. Call

87 Vine St .. Gallipolis.

MotOt:a Hon\ita

1178 Chevrolet Mollbu
ltotlonwo,on u.eoo. Call
114-2H· 7811.

Wanted to Buy

Wonted good uood couch.
8nd oleo coblnettype otonoo.
04-87•-•o•o.
3
u u u

79

HARTS Uoed Can, Now
Hovan Waot VIrginia. Over
20 leu ••penolva caroln
ock
II
.

614 - 367-7712
4472.

Mattei lntelivision e)l:c .
cond .• 9 cartridges, 1250.
Call448-1166 oftor 5.

All hyd. looder flto MF 135
t .r octor U?". Aloo o trip
loader flto Ford tractor
t160. MF 311doo81 tnoc:tor
*2.400. Call448·7322.

Autoa for Sale

PAINTrN~ • hotarlor ond
exterior, Phin!blna. roofing,
oome romoilellng. 20 yro .
oop. Coli 81A--DI·98112.

Locuot Post for sale. Coli
814-388-8609.

1978 Plymouth Volaire
stotlonwagon &amp; 1978
Stllrcrah cnnk·upcamper .
Coll446-1662 alter 6.

Farm Equipment ·

1973 Ventura Pontiac .
14,000 mllu. Marthe
Vonnort. ee&amp;O. Coli IH992-11593.

German Shepherd. Call

Sat. 9:00·5 :00 dining room
table a. 6 chiars. sectional
sofa , lo~nge chair, and other
household itema. Inquire at
Hinohow. Old Rt. 7 boo.ido
Horae Creek Rd . Crown
City, Oh

81

body good, muat •• II .
1114·9811·38151aher II p.m.

delivery .to your ome.

diamond · pendant 388 ·
8801 .

rooms and bath. Inquire at

6 rm . house 8t bath . Inquire
at 91B 2nd . Avo .. Go!Hpolis.
Oh.

MONeY. HE COU"I&gt; !lE
HARD TO SEAT. ·

WH ATEVeR WE60T T O
BE DONE. QUICK.

·oo, IT'S

~~~~=~~~==~~~==~~~;~~~, --::o:-=~-~-=-'"!"--C -.. -...-.. TM ... U.I,_. ITWOII. •

For rent unfurnished apt ., 4
Houses for Rent

WHAT DO YA HAVE- UP
YOU~ 5"E EVE, MAYOR ~

Bverlv ond Folta Automatic
'Tranomloolon Repolr. NOW
OPEN. Corner of Kamper
Hollow • Kerr • - Rd .
Coli 4411-1839.

STUCCO
_sTERING .•
t•tuNd ~ ·
C9ftVtlflr~
clol o~d ·~
- entlal, free
eotlmiatool
· · 114-258.,
1182.
.

Now 1983 White sewing
machine free arm model
with built-In stretch stlch,
zig zag patterns. makes
button holes. monograms.
much more. We- are over- . DRAGONWYND CATTERY
otockad with thio model, we • KENNEL_ A KC Chow
muat decrease our lnven·
CFA H'
1
puppoeo,
om• •van.
20
tory. Factoroaoo Y . yr - Pen ion and Slomeoe kitguarantee . Rog. price over tono. Coli 446 -3844 after
8300, your coot only 896 . 4PM
Call 614-386-8918 out of
.
town cell collect. Free 4 month old mole Ren,
•
h
•

;..
4
... arpet for oole. Call 61 246-9687.
C.u t your own firewood. $6 a
pickup load . Call 614-246 6047 .

a.· lf

1 '

1-- - - - - - - - -H ILL CREST KENNEL Boarding all breedo. AKC
R~g. D o be rmana pup.• a·fd.
'D oberman Stud Sorvlco.
Cal! 446-7796 .

One% Karat Solitaire

3 rin. and 4 rm .,unfumlahad
apartments. Utilhiu paid,
no pets, no children . Call
446-3437.
.

MUST oell new living room
sulto, 304-876-61112 oftor
5' 30 p :l1) .
_O_N_E__F--k-1-----,-

446 -0338 .

41

THAT TVIJI!-!&gt; HA&lt;;

TEN MILLION IN LOTTE~Y

'

62 CB,TV,
Mobile I"&lt;&gt; me &amp; lots for sala.
1967 Buddy mobile homo

!lUT. I'VE
NEVel&lt; ElEEN
ON Hi"EVI710&gt;J
SEFOilE-

!"bbY" -

-

"t I I I I J'

(AnoWelllomom&gt;W) .
Jumbles: AESEL GRAIN CARPET OPIATE·

Answer : Held to lmproye the eyesight -

A LORGNETIE

Jumble 1oa1t . . tt, cantalnfng 110 JMID6n, II 1v....W. for 11.15 ~lpllld
fnllnJu...... clothla ......ptr,loa M, Norwood, N.J. 07NI. InelucM,aur
Mml, ......._
ood8 1ncl lnlke cMok1
_.. to
a.

CRYPT041UOTES
RNDPKZEJN~ L

YEAY

JKN O XQ

Ay TR X

GYT

A YX

.I C'IPY A

rr.o 1. :

I' F.B BL

N' O

EJ X

V "T 0 I N 0 V X Q·

TM

P'XOXJ E Z TBNONTO .- WXO M H~ OF7.N 'O
Yeslerdoy's Cryptoquole: VIRTUE WlLL HAVE NOUG HT TO
DO WITil EASE. IT DEMANDS A ROUGH AND THORNY
PATII.-MONTAIGNE

�Page-= 1G-The Daily Sentinel

Pamerof

Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February 25, 1913

--Local briefs:------ -Oil leaders -continue e~ergency _sessions
.

Boat licenses available

PARIS (AP) - Oil rnlnlsters
ling Itself to another OPEC
from Venezuela, Mexico, Algeria
conference.
and Kuwait met here in the latest
OPEC meetings in Geneva last
series of emergency contacts
month and in Vienna In December
among major oU producers worried
falled to reach a unWed position on
about rooent price cuts by three
either pricing or·production quotas.
countries.
As the Paris meeting convened
The Saudis, repol1edly trying to
Thursday, Sauili Arabian OU Mints·
win OPEC support for a$4 reduction
ter Sheik Ahmed Zak! Yamant met
In the $34
barrel OPEC price,
in Riyadh with his Libyan counter·
might boycott a special session of
pal1, Kamel Hassan Maghur, in a
the cartel, informants In Riyadh
last-ditch effort to forge a unified oU
said. An OPEC meetiog is repon·
plice reduction within OPEC.
edly scheduled next week either In
But informed sources there said
Geneva or VIenna.
the Saudis were growing increasThe leading Saudi newspaper,
ingly skeptical of reaching a new on
Al-Rlyadh, said: " The current
price reduction acconl by all 13 . negotiations in Riyadh are the last
members of the Organization of
chance to save what can be saved"
Petroleum Exporting Countries.
forOPECandtheworldeconomy.It
For every $1 cut In the oil price,
added that the "first wave of
~the price of gasoline at the pump
recession" In a price war would
could drop as much as 2~ cents a
inundate all on ptoducers.
gallon.
·
Yamanl announced on Wednes"An OPEC meeting wtll be
day that Saudi Arabia, the United
necessary," Algerian Energy Min·
Arab Enilra tes, Qatar, Ku~¥alt,
Isler Belkacem Nabl told repol1ers
Iraq and Indonesia had agreed on a
here Thursday. "It Is Indispensable
uhtfled pricing strategy, but he
that a general consultation takes
revealed no figures.
place. We want all action concern·
Besides . Libya, the Saudis are .
lng prices and production to be
encountering reslstence from some
taken within OPEC as they have
of their Arab allies in the Perstan
been for 22 years."
Gulf, Iran, Nigeria and Ecuador.
Venezuelan OU Mlnlster HumCalderon Berti said he wt11 go to
berto Calderon Berti said the
Riyadh 'today to meet with gulf oU
once-powerful cal1el, which conproducers. Another Venezuelan
trolled the international market in
delegation will fly to Oslo for talks
the 1970s, was elq)E'rtencing ·a
with Norwegian officials following
cltffJcult period.
earlier meetings with the British, he
"It is a tt;St for our organization
said.
and we will have to prove that we
He said Mexico has indicated its
cap get out oftbeseproblems, which
wlllingness to confer with other
are shon-tenn problems," he said.
major oll producer5,inciudlng those
Calderon Berti said Venezuela
outside the cartel, and that Venezufavors a meeting of OPEC on
ela and Mexico also agree on the
ministers to discuss the current
Importance of bringing consumers
market situation but that It wants
into negotiations with producers to
"guarantees" that such a meeting
establish principles for "a longwill be sucCessful before cornmtt·
term relationship.''

The Ohio Department ol Natural Resources, Division of Water·
craft, annolinced today the 1!183 boat licenses were released and can
be obtained at the Davis-Qutckel Agency, U4 Court Street, Pomeroy, across from the courtho\L&lt;e, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . through the
week and 9 a.m. to noon ori Saturday.
Boat registrations now Include the motors and .are Issued for
three years only.
For further tnfonna tlon, call 992-6671.

a

Driver charged with DWI
The Ohio Highway Patrol cited Todd B. Grover,l7, Pomeroy, for
DWI and hitsldp in a one-vehicle accident Thursday night.
The patrol said Grover was apparently Westbound on Ohio 143,
eight-tenths of a mile west of0hlo7, at 7: 15p.m. when his vehicle ran
off the left s ide of the road and struck a mallbo'!'.
Grover was not injured in the inCident and his vehicle was slightly
damaged .
A deer ran· into the path of a vehicle driven by Arthur R. Jarvis, 33,
Pomeroy, at 6:40p.m . Thursday while Jarvis was northbound on
Ohio 684.
The collision caused slight damage to Jarvis' auto and the deer left
. the scene, the patrol reported.
The windshield on a vehicle driven by Everett McDaniel, 48, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, was shattered when the tires on the vehicle threw up a
stone, the patrol said. The accident occurred at 4:30p.m. Thursday
while McDaniel was northbound on 143, approximately two rn1leS
north of 7.

Eastern Boosters meet Monday
Eastern Athletic Boosters will meet Monday, Feb. 28, af 7:30p.m .
at the high school.

Meigs Boosters meet Tuesday
Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet Tuesday, March 1, at 7:30p.m.
at the high school.

Emergency runs .
Local units answered thfee calls Thursday and one on Friday
morning, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 4:51 a .m. Friday, the Pomeroy Unit took Louise Adams,
Mulberry Ave., to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Thursday runs
included 9:42a.m., Rutland Unit took Larry Darst, HarriSonville, to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 6:07p.m. tool( Roy Betzing to
. Veterans Memorial Hospital and at 8:14p.m., Mlddlepon took Leo
Searls, 463 S. FHth Ave., to Veterans Memorial.

I

Name omitted
The name of Bobby Moodispaugh was unintentionally omitted
from the honor roll "'!tat Rutland Elementary School.
from page
Ut ;l;t;es
~ ~ ~
... -(Continued
-----1)

sought compared to74.9 percent In
$128,03 followed by Cleveland at
Ohio.
$1.27.96.
"We ,stU! have mammoth cases
Lexington, Ky., was ninth at
pending," Spratley said. As of last $126.76 followed by Detroit, $126.16;
November, there were 12 cases
Cincinnati, $122.86; · indianapolis,
before the Public Utilities Commis·
$120.67; Fon Wayne, Ind., $116.77;
slon of Ohio seeking rate increases
Grand Rapids, Mich., $115.25;
of just over $1 billion.
Louisville, Ky., $1ll9.75.
Spratley cited the number ·or
Averagecostsforthe 14 cities was
cases, the ratemaking formula and
$128.88.
the quality of PUCO regulatiOn for
Two Ohio cities surveyed but not
boosting utility costs in Ohio.
in the listing due to population were
Consumers' Counsel staffers. Youngstown, with combined
ranked average utlllty costs in the 14
monthly costs of $131.92, and Canton
largest cttles In Ohio, Indiana,
with $117.34.
Kentucky, Michigan and PennsylSpratley's survey saldonlylndlavania. The survey of combined
napolis recorded a hlgber percennatural gas, electricity and basic .tage increase In utUlty costs last
telephone costs covered cities of at
year than most of Ohio's ·major
least 170,1XXl population.
cities.
The highest rates as of Dec. 31
Rates for average electrlclty,
were in Philadelphia, where avernatural gas and telephone consuage monthly utility bills cost
mers rose 31.7 percent In Indianapoconsumers $159.42.
lis during 1982. Akron residents
Toledo residents paid the secondrecorded a 31 percent Increase;
highest amount in the region and
Cohimbus 27.8 percent; Toll!do26.4
more than any city in Ohio percent; Cleveland 25.1 percent;
$144.~.
Clncinnati24.3percent; Dayton 21.4
Columbus was third at $136.86,
percent.
followed by Dayton at $134.()3.
Columbus consumers who use a
special small-use electlic rate were
fifthat$131.93whileAkronwassixth
with average rates of $131.92.
Spratley's comparison of com. blned monthly utility costs showed
Pittsburgh was seventh-highest at

Mrs. M: Rucker (Mary Jane) Neal
and Mrs. Carl H. (Verla Mae)
Myers, both of Cheshire, and Mrs. J .
Timothy (Betty Loul Evans of
Rodney; and five grandchildren
and six great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded In death by
a brother and four sisters.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday in Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home, Middleport,
with Rev. WUliam Uber officiating.
Burial will be In Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may
call at the funeralhomefrom24and
7-9p.m. Saturday.
Pallbearers will he James R. •
Neal, David T. Evans, Jon T.
Rothgeb, Carl H. Myers, Robert D.
Huestis and Travis E . Burllle.

NancyPearleFultonRothgeb,86,
died at 6:30p.m. Thursday in Holzer
Medical Center followJng a lengthy
111ness.
Born Aug. 3, 1896, In Cheshire
Township, Gallla County, daughter
of the late Rev. Samuel and
Eltzabeth Shuler Fulton, she was a
1915 graduate of Cheshire
Academy, a 70-year member of
Cheshire Baptist Church and (aught
school for several years after
attending Rio Grande College.
She rri.arried the late Otto Thomas
Rothgeb on March 27, 19al.
Surviving. are three daughters,

Consumer ...
(Continued from page 1)
monthly decline. Piices for new
cars rose 0.1 percent while used car
prices were up 0.9 percent.
•
-Clothing prices rose 0.3 percent
after registering declines in tbe
previous two months.
-Entertainment expenses
climbed 0.5 percent after a 0.1
percent Increase in December.
All the changes are adjusted for

Velerans Memortal Hospital
Admitted--Jeffrey McKinney,
Pomeroy; RubyHalllday,Rutland;
Merle Davis, Rutland; Eltzabeth
Yost, Mlddlepon; WUllam Searls,
Middleport; Sally Holman,
Rutland.
Discharged-- Harry Swisher,
Mark Proffitt. Gilbert Maynard,
Stanley Watson, Cuha Uttle, Robert
Hyseli.

Melgs .C:Ounty's three local schoOl
districts received a total of
$441,949.57in February State SclllOI
Folll!.dation subsidy payments, ·
Amounts received by each district, following deductbns · tot re- •
tirement Includes, Eastern,
$98,509.17; Meigs Local, $239,992.52,
and Southern:, $103,447.88.
:tn addition, the county board r:l,
education received a direct allot·
ment of $19,181:26.

in business circles; HUD funds may be used

REGULAR PRICE
S26995
SALE PRICE

•

$21995
•Wall mounted or free stllnding verliatility.
!Easy to light with spark ignition pie~o system .
(no more matches)
•Variable heat in put from- 6600 to 16600 BTU.
•Convenient side mounted temperature control.
•Oxygen depletion sensor (ODS) for added safety margin . .
•Automath:; Safety Pilot for gas shut off if pilot light g049S
out .
·
•Quick, spot heat where needed .
•High•efficiency and clean burning .
•A~ractive styling with warm ' glow infrared burner.
•AGA certified on LPG .
•Meets federal standards for ODS equipped unvented-ges
heaters.
•Specifications :
Approximate Weight
30 lbs .

. '
CHECKING - Yvonne Scally, last week elected
presldeat of ihe Mldcllepori Chamber or Conunerce,
checlrll detallrl of a studY done hy Reiser and A-.
claies, Alhena, 011 .-vatlon ollhe Middleport bus!, _ oeci1on In conjuncilon wllh bnprovemenls she
and ber partner, Paul DaDey, are making at lhe uSde Bolel. A resource center bas beeo set up at
Middleport VJDace Ban wbm'llllll merchani!l and buslnes&amp; IM•tlcll"l ownero can check our !IIIII s# • for
lhelr locations made by the Helaer study.

s·~

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH

take on the educational-loaner seat progra_m sponsored by the Ohio Depa11ment of Highway Safety.
With the new child restraint law to go Into effect on March 7 , Norma
TorreS, R.N., of the Meigs County Health Depal1ment Is actively seeking
some group wUling to handle the project.
The car seats, suitable for Infants up to three months , would be
available for a nominal rental fee;a part of which would be returned when_
the seat is turned back Into the loan center.
ln many countieS, obstetric hospital units are handling the KISS project making it a pan of their information for new mothers . Meigs County's
Veterans Memorial Hospital has no obstetrlc department to handle the
role.
The responslblllty of the group taking on the project would be to
receive and store the stackable seats and to have a 10 minute educational
program for each recipient. This would include a safety demonstration on
the seat's use and showing a brief fUm, "Don't Risk Your Child's LHe."
A nominal fee, probably $10, would be collected by the ~ponsol1ng
agency, with half being refunded once the child has outgrown the seat and
it Is returned. According to Mrs. Torres the ideal situation would be for the
sponsoring group to use the rental fees to purchase car seats for older
chtldren. These could then be dlstrlbuted on the same loan basis.
The new chUd restraint law in Ohio requires all children under four
years old or weighing less than 40 pounds be protected by a safety restraint
system any tbne they ride In a parent's vehicle.
A driver wt11 be cited forviolatlngthe Jaw and subject to a $10flneand

Sends LCMt"

992-2039 or 992-5721

rI~==========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===========~

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Children's Clothing, Toddlel'l' Sizes, Lingerie and
Junior Size Clothing.

19.77 DODGE 1 TON

Auto., air, super o:ondltion.

1979 Ply. Horizon
TC·3

1978 Flreblrd

defog

SM~ll

Battery
~ IQQ~ter

-elf---

Cab, auto., 4 cyl., good
lshiiPt·

'3799
1977

llbric,
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3'k&lt;MIIICOiubO. (817·2B21

TRUCKS

1978 Dat1un

Cables

· Spedal-lvetor-guklta

cassette.

~at1un

spd., 4 cyl, Tapper.

··1996
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1979 Pinto ·
Pony-Real HoSI

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4 spd., 4 cyl .. Ecenomy Plus!

I·'•

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1979 Camaro .Z-28

ABOUT OUR EXCLUSIVE MONTH OR
WAIIRANnl CAu JOHN SANG, Jill

STAR. SUPPLY

4 Door, auto. trans., Tu-fone
low miles . •
'

1976 Monza
Auto., air, lilt raised whit• letter
1974 Pinto
tires.
973 Maverlcfr
'6182
1978 Camaro Z-21 970 Le Saltre
975 GronMa
Auto., VI, sport wheels &amp; tires.
976 LTD 1/W I
'5365

APPROVED CJDU) SAFETY SEAT - Here Jason Hudson,
small son of Robert and AprU Hudson, irles out a saleiy seat. Seats like
ihls wtll be required lor all children under four years old or weighing
less ihan 40 pounds on March 7 when the new Ohio child restraint law
goes lnlo elfeci.

'

•

SPORTY CARS

tatned and are used with new carpeting and drapes.
The LaSalle has moved into six nights of entertainment at Its lounge every week and "easy to listen"
music Is being used Fridays and Saturdays at the
LaSalle Restaurant.
At the village hall, a resource center has been
established. Merchants and bulldlng owners can visit
the center and look over the suggestions made by the
Reiser finn on_their panlcularbulldlng. Employees
of the firm when the study was first released stressed
that perhaps the study would provide ideas for business people - a place to stan.
Meantime, the chamber of commerce Is destined
to become more active. The group wUI help other
area chambers In establishment of a central location
at the Ohio Chambers ol Commerce Legislative Convention to help sell the lrtlprovement of ROute 33 be· .
tween Meigs County and Columbus and a corridor ·
· road from Rock Springs to the Ravenswood Bridge.
Membership figures of the Middleport Chamber
have completely reversed. Not long ago, membership stood at 26. Today lfs 62. ·

Gallia officials to crack
down on bad check writers

$AVE

'3975

· Auto trans., air, AM-FM stereo

•4488ll

program.

1980 Chev•tte

Red, auto., air, white letter tires.

'5495

a mandatory court appearance.lt has been emphasized, however, the new
law is designed to encourage the use of safety seats rather than to punish
violators.
The only exception to the new law Involves transportation of a small
child under !He-threatening situations, or Ha child Is riding in a car owned
by someone other than his parents and Is between one and four protected
by a standard seat belt.
The Ohio Depal1ment of Highway Safety has also recommended that
drivers cited for violating the law be given the option of having his fine and
coun appearance waived by tbe purchase of a car seat before the court
date.
According to State Highway Safety Director Kenneth Cox, it is a
proven fact a properly used child restraint could prevent 70 percent of all
injuries and 90 percent of all traffic deaths among children under four
years old.
"This new Jaw Isn't Intended to punish anyone -it's designed to make
parents and other adults stop and think about the terrible chance Uiey're
, taking every time they let a child ride In a car without proper protection,''
Cox added .
He cited the success of Tennessee's law which went Into effect in 19'78
where ony two children riding In salety seats have been k1lled in traffic
accidents.
A local check of stores found the cost of approved safety restraint seats
ranging from about $30 to $90.
Through Project KISS a hundr~ Meigs County families could have
the use of an approved car seat for a fraction of that cost.
That is, l1 some organization will take on the educational-loaner seat

ECONOMY CARS

1979 Flreblrd

'4649
AM-FM, auto., sun roof, rear

Grease

SPORTY CARS

The plan is that buildings improved in accordance
with the study would be exempt from additional real
estate taxeS. That Is, l1 a $50,1XXltrnprovement were
made to a building, the amount of the Improvement
would not be added to the real estate tax s1ructure.
The mayor has also contacted lending Institutions to see what deals can be made on loans to business people wishing to !llake Improvements. Kim
Shields, loan and grant consultant for the village, Is
looking into mm funds to help with Improvements.
Things are looking up a bit In the business circles
of the community. A new television repair shop is
scheduled to open on the "T" as well as a fashion shop
for women In the former Stiffler Store location. Recently, Angle's Pizza embarked Into business.
At the LaSalle Hotel, owned and operated by Ms.
Scally and Paul Dalley, the lounge is being etilarged
and a formal registration area is being created. AI·
ready lawered celllngs have been removed from tbe
lobby to disclose the tin cetltngs of )iesteryear.
Renovation of the second floor of the hotel is
almost complete. Antique furnlsntngs have been re-

Group sought to handle 'Kids in Safe
Seats' project; Law effective ~arch 7

18\14'

PollllfOY

99'

By BOB HOEFUCH
'l'lme8-Sentinel SlaH
MIDDLEPORT -Middleport's business secton
may be taking on an "old" look that's "new" ,H the
opUmlsm of Middleport Chamber ol Commerce
President, Yvonne Scally, Is contagious.
'
. David Reiser and Associates, architects . .of
Athens, recently completed a study on the renovation
of the business district and photographs of recom'
mendatli:ms, a pai1 of the study, basically show the
business buildings as they were In days gone by.
The photographs indicate suggestions that modern store fronts added to businesses over the past few
;Years be removed. The projected Improvements
show tbe business section, while reflecting days gone
by, would be picturesque.
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Is mcou,raglng
merchants and owners of business buildings wlook
over the study and get Ideas to put into use.
In fact, Mayor Hoffman has been authorized ID
organize a tax abatement committee Which wUl be
composed of several business people and off}c\a,ls.

•

'

27"

Overall Heights
Overall Width ·
Overall Depth

•

to help with
lmprovements tn Middleport
.

Flower Shop
'The Way .--ica

1980 Dodge
Omnl 0-24

. P!lgeC-2

Mayor Fred Hoffman ·says things looking up

Times-Sentinel Sial!
POMEROY - .Project. KISS - tliat's kids In safe seats -Is ready ID
provide Meigs County with 100car seats at no cost Hsome organization will

ECONOMY CARS

.Southern. cagers· advance lo district

·nnts
~-

-

Tll8

PageD-1

+

--- ........

COME IN FOR FREE DEMONSTRATION

$AVE

•
Oil pnces,
interest rates drop

Seek suggestions for village improvements

o·

OPEN
FRIDAY

. LeUer 011 Page A-2

10 Sections' 70
A Multimedia i

600~

FREE
PARKING

Why ·civil disobedi~nce?

0 ......

r;::::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:;;::==;====;!

SAV-E

Business .................. , ....... M
Cla88itled .. .......... : .......... D-3-7
Editorial ...................
A,-2
Locai ...................... ....... A-4-8
Stat&amp;-National , ............... , D-1-2
Sports •. ..•••...•••...••.....•.•• •C..l-7
TV guide ...................... Insert

School foundation
funds received

•Available for LP or Natural Gas

seasonal
variations.
ln all, the
Consumer Price Index
stood a,t 293.1 January, meaning
that goods costing $10 In 1967 would ·
have cost $29.311ast month.

FEBRUARY SAVINGS

-

Treasury Secretary Donald Regan said a 10 percent drop in world
· oU prices would reduce the U.S. oil
bill by more than. $10 btlllon and

Along the river ..... .......... B-1-8
Area deaths ••••••••••••.•.••••• ••• A-&amp;

ON WINTER CLOTHING

Hospital news ,

Weather
Strip
Cement

energy.''

Today's
Times-Sentinel

coul\1 increase the Gross National
Product by between one-quarter
and pne-halt percentage point. He
said a decline In oil prices "Is clearly
to be desired."

I

Area deaths

Nancy Fulton Rothgeb

Britain and Norway started the
latest round of puts by s~hlng$3off
their North Sea crude, lnakb:tg It
$.ll.50 a barrel. Nigeria, the only
OPEC member to break from the
organization's official pricing struc-'
ture, had .a $5.50 reduction to $30 abarrel.
The falltng price of oil gave
investors a new confidence and
stocks soared. In Washington,
President Reagan called the price
decline "more good news for the
world economy" and said It would
spur economic recovery and "free
vast amounts to real resourCes that
previ_ously had been devoted to

,,

...,

NEW POUCY -'- _Cwillrmel's payq bJ check Ill
dowl(!hwli 01111_,.... · lltorea C8ll aped lo be
~led u the dlei:k Is wrllten with 1118ufftcleai

+·wr

1• ted bJ ihe
2 r t21e policy 1re
DOW 1111 mciltldol'l!l, 8UCh 118 thls-!nMoum!ar'a,lnc,

fundi, aeoonUna io a policy
dQo en!lrftor'• olllce. c.rdll e•:'

I

I

By KEVIN KELLY
County, you can expect to be
Times-Sentinel St8ft
prosecuted.''
The first convictiOn on the charge
GALLIPOLIS - Because the
will be listed as petly theft, a
Incidence of .bad checks tn Gallla
misdemeanor, pun[&amp;hable by six
County "are coming through
thicker and thlcker,''in the words of
months In jail. A second conviction
City Solicitor Douglas Cowles,
becOmes a felony, with a jail tennof
autborsofsuchcheckscannoionger
~lx months to five years and ·a $2,500
expect tohavetheircasesdtsmlssed
fine.
l1 the check is paid.
, "That, people are.golng to have to
. The check must still be paid, but
look at carefully," Cowles noted.
an offender now makes an appear"People have to be warned not to get
ance In coun and lffound guUty, has
the first conviction. In the past,
a criminal record.
there seemed to be a very
Radical steps, some might think,
lalssez-fatre attitude towartl&gt;-bad
rut they are necessary to reduce the
checks."
number of insufficient funds ·
But tn order for this enforcement
charges going through local stores
to work, merchants must obtain
and courts. With the establishment
proper documentation when they
or this new policy, Cowles said
accept checks. This exiends to full
efforts are being coordinated with
names , driver's licenses, telephone
city pollee to Identity and stop
and Social Security numbers and
repeat offenders.
another piece of identification, such
"Previously, we filed charges and
as a credit card.
dldn 't follow through on conviction If
"My feeling Is, merchants have a
the check was PaJd," he explllined.
hard time In a small tQWD asking for
"If you write a had check in Gallia
identification, because it's like

they're saying, 'I don't trust you ,' "
Cowles said. "I told them, J'm
willing to take the heat for I his ...
Ohio code dictates that a check
that has not beet. Pa id withln10days
of notification leads to the presumption that the au thor never intended
to pay the check.
Randy Hays, presideni of the
Gallipolis Retail Merc,hants Association, agreed merchants must take
the initiative H they want to recover
money owed them.
Presently, . me rchants have a
system of inforrnlrig each other on
potential bad check customers,
particularly if one merchant has
already been stung, or if the case ·
has gone through coun and was
mentioned in the local media.
An idea merchants have been
considering - but ll')ay not implement - is ~ check-cashing card,
· slmUartothose-used by large retail
stores such asK-Mart, Hays said.
Ina store, a customer takes out an
(Continued on page A3)

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