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Reds' president
feels team will
· be very competitive

California oceanside
battered by storms

Beat of the Bend
Page 9

10

Page 2

•

at y
Vol.31 ,No.213 ·
Copyrighted 1983

en tine

•

'2 Sections, 14 Pages
20 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. News~per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 2, 1983

''

~

Zoning,
regatta,
outlined

COAL

BY KATIE CROW
Sentbtel staff
Plans for the revitalization of
Pomeroy and the upcoming Big
Bend Regatta were discussed at
Tuesday 's luncheon meeting of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
Hank Oeiand, chairman of the
revitalization committee, speaking
briefly on noted the community
improvement pian was In the
development stage.
Cleland displayed a rough draft of
the plans and asked chamber
members for input Into the project.
Plans wUI be completed within a
week for presentation to Pomeroy
VUiage Council.
Atty. Fred Crow said the pl'Qo
posed zoning by the committee, In
his opinion, would not be possible.
Cleland reported the reason for
zoning was for appropiate land
usage. He feels a zoning expert is
needed, adding that zoning may or
may not be beneficial. Cleland
'IWO JNJURED - Two persons have been admitted to Veteran's
pointed out that 50 out of 88 Ohio
Memorial Hospital foUowing a head-on coUislon on Ohio 7 at Meigs
counties have zoning laws Including
County Rd. 3Tuesday afternoon. Marlene F. Matheny, 34, Langsville, Is
the vlllage of Middleport. ·
in stabe condition suffering from a fracture. Gregory Wbtehrenner, 25,
Crow alsosuggestedthattheC&amp;O
Rt. 1, Coolville Is listed in satisfactory condition with multiple
Railroad tracks beginning at the
upper parking lot and going east on
Main Street should be filled with top
soil In order that the cleaning and
cutting ofthetopofthe bank could be
GALLIPOLIS (OVP)- The Ohio an Investigation.
maintained.
Attorney General's office has
Cowles said Tuesday he does not
Concerning. the Regatta which
agreed to investigate gasoline know what- form the Investigation
wlll be held .June 23, 24. 25 and 26
pricing In the Gallipolis area, City will t;1ke or when it will be started or
several chairmen were asked by
Solicitor Douglas Cowles said completed.
Joe Clark, president .' what progress
Tuesday night .
has been made.
Cowles said he recently received
The attorney general's letter did
Ron Ash. Regatta queen chair·
a reply to a letter he sent at the not give details on how the probe
man, reported he has notified ail
request of City Commissioner would be conducted, Cowles said.
.three schools in the area of the up
Richard Moore.
coming event for the benefit oft hose
Moore, at the Feb. 15commission
Howeve1·, he said the letter
·
girls who wish to participate.
meeting. claimed local residents indicated the attorney general's
Clark noted the cost to rent space
were "getting ripped off" by high office is currently understaffed and
tor concession stands is $75.
gasoline prices In the area. He asked
may have some trouble assigning a
Tom Reed , chairman of the car
Cowles to send a letter to the person for the investigation
show said he needed information to
attorney general's office asking for immediately.
distribute at other car shows in
order to obtain participants.
It was decided to again have Don
Day of Marietta, provide the public
address system.
Bruce Teaford, chairman of thE'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl ing the extra money from Ohioans'
motorcyCle show suggested it be
Senate President Harry Meshel paychecks.
opened up for ail classes of
says the 90 percent state income tax
If there are surpluses (rom the
motorcycles. American made as
Increase could cause a surplus and tax, Meshel said the money likely
well as foreign madP. No decision
that the extra money likely would be will go for improved state aid to
was made.
used to help schools and small schools and loan programs for
It was also suggested that
businesses.
small businesses.
improvements be. made to the road
The Youngstown ~mocrat told
Meshel also said corporations are
going under the Pomeroy-Mason
the Ohio Association of Realtors likely to pay a larger share of the
Bridge to relieve congestion on the
Tuesday that the income tax income tax if lawmakers succeed In
bridge approach.
Increase "has left a lot of emotional revising the current tax system.
Reed, Ash, Bill Quickel and Paul
scars around the state." He said.
Simo!l are scheduled to attend the
however. thE' increase was needed
He said the Income tax on
Ohio Legislative Conference on
to save the state budget.
Individuals now provides roughly
March 8-9 in Columbus.
Meshei's remarks came. on the twice as much money to the state
Area chambers are sponsoring
day that employers began withhold- treasury as the corporate Income
"The Hocking Valley · Suite" to
promote tJ. s. 33. Theme of this
year's suite is "33 Is The Key."
Attending will be chamber
members from Nelsonville, Athens,
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
1950, the Commerce Department
Middleport and Pomeroy.
government's main economic forereported.
Thirty-two members attended
In addition, the arcompanylng
casting gauge took its biggest leap in
the meeting Tuesday.
nearly 33 years In January, the
Index of Coincident Indicators,
government said today, adding to
designed to measure current condirecent evidence that the nation's
tions, rose 0.6 percent for the month,
~ea~erforecast
the second gain In three months and
recovery may be stronger than
a new indica lion the fl'!CCSSion has
modest administration forecasts.
Clear tonight. Lows between 35
ended.
The 3.6 percent gain in the
and 40. Mostly sunny and warm
forward-pointing Index of Leading
Most economists already assume
Thursday. Highs between 70and75.
Economic Indicators - the fifth
an economic rebound has begun,
The chance of precipitation is near
monthly increase in a row- was the
and top Commerce officials said
zero tonight and Thursday.
bllggest since the 4.1 percent of July
Tuesday the recovery almost surely

group
•
touring
•
rntne

'

.

By DALE LEACH
AP staff writer
Wll..KESVILLE (AP) - After
months of just imagining what was
causing the earth to rumble beneath
them, some southeastern Ohio
residents decided to go underground for a first-hand look.
Members of Citizens Organized
Against Longwalling, a group
formed to protest the mining
process. say longwalllnghascaused
their soil to crack, their water
supplies to dwindle and their houses
to buckle.

lacerations. According to the Gallla-Melgs post of the State Highway
Patrol, Matheny was southbound on Ohio 7 at 2: 10 p.m. when she
swerved Into the opposbtg lane to avoid a collision with a car bt tront of
her. She struck Wbtebrenner's northbound car head-on. Troopers cited
·
Matheny for driving left of center.

Attorney General·will investigate pricing
Because of possible delays In the
attorney general's probe, Moore
said he will try to arrange a meeting
with Gov. Richard Celeste to
discuss gas pricing in the area.
Moore said he will ask Rep.
Jolynn Boster, D-Gallipolls, to help
set up a meeting with Celeste.
"This has gone on long enough,"
Moore said. "They've gotten higher
prices for over a year."
Moore claimed at the Feb. 15
commission meeting that gas
prices here were the highest In a 125
mile radius.
At the time of that meeting, most

Today they were to viSit the Meigs
No. 2 mine, where coal was mined
by the iongwall method until
reduced demand forced the mine to
shutdown.
''That'$oneofourrlghtsunderthe
law that we can request permission
to go down before the permit
application is approved," said
COAL President Betty Wells.
"We' re just trying to get all the
Information we can, because I've
never seen a longwall machine."

self-serve stations In the city were
charging $1.12.9 for a gallon of
regular gas. Since then, the price
has dropped to $1.11.9 per gallon.
Gas stations in Pomeroy, Huntington and other cities are currently charging less than a dollar for
a galion of regular gasoline.
Several area gasoline dealers and ·
their disllibutors, while agreeing
prices here are relatively high, have
said they are not to blame.
They have claimed they are
following the laws of the marketplace and try to keep pri&lt;;es close to
the competition.

Longwaiilng was Introduced in
the southeastern Ohio mines about
two years ago. ·In longwallin~
shearing machine removes coal
from the face of a wall as much as
500 feet wide In about 22 minutes.
The machine then advances Into the
coal face and repeats the process.
As the machine advanCE'S, the
mine ceiling collapses behind It
almost immediately. Residents
complain the effects on the surface,
about :nlfeet above most southeast
Ohio mines, are just as Immediate.
The Meigs mines are operated by
Southern Ohio Coal Co., a subsidiary of American Electric Power
Co. AEP spokesman Warren Widenhofer said the company agreed
to let COAL members tour the mine
so they could get a better idea of the
Legislature along party lines.
'
.
iongwalllng process.
Democrats supported
the governor,
Widenhofer said visitors to the ·
but Republicans complained the
mines
must take a 45-minute
Increase was excessive and refused
training
course on safety and wear
to back it.
protective
clothing.
Meshel said the tax increase
"We will" provide the hats, the
provides a long-term solution to
lights and the belts," he said.
Ohio's economic problems, caused
Ms. Wells said six COAL
primarily by declines in manufacmembers
would go on the tour.
turing lndustrtes.
As
residents
tour inside the
"Ohio's economic problems are
the Ohio ~rt­
mines,
officials
of
structurally based because we are
ment
of
Natural
Resources' Divstructurally deficient In the creation
ision
of
Reclamation
will be
of jobs," he Said. "We have a
'
e,xamolnlng
the
surface.
long-term rebirth ahead of us in
ODNR, which must approve
terms of economic development."
Southern Ohio Coal's mining per. mils, said it has receivedmore than
70 protests agains granting the
permits since iongwaUihg !Iegan.
Bob
Rothwell of the department's
As for the leading Indicators, a
reclamation
division said a public
single month's gain In Itself is not
meeting is set for Sunday to hear
considered significant. The Index
those objections.
rose last February, for example,
The company currently ~operat­
though the recession had nearly a
ing under a temporary pe~it. '
year to run.
AEP officials have . said that
is a · safe ~s of
iongwalllng
But a long string of increases t)..x~ausethe.Qrlng
removing
coal
such as the present 10-month run,
machine
provides
its own ceiling.
broken only by moderate declines
Longwalllng
·also
removes coal
last June and August- would seem
more efficiently tha"· ':ither meto Indicate a sustained upturn.
thod_s. the company say;~&gt; .
tmsed on past experience.
·

Any surplus funds will help schools, businesses •
tax. Hepreqicted that would change
if the administration of Gov.
Richard Celeste succeeds In Implementing tax changes.
Other possible changes mentioned by Meshellnciude the restructuring of tax brackets, easing the
tax burden on families where both
spouses work and file a joint return
and elimination of the income tax
for those who earn less than$5,!XXla
year.
The tax increase, proposed by the
Celeste administration as a means
of eraSing an anticipated $511
million budget deficit, divided the

Econo:riiic gauge takes biggest leap in 33 years
will be stronger than the administration's forecast of a 3.1 percent
overall business expansion from the
fourth quarter of last year to the
fourth quarter of 1983. Private
analysts have been saying much the
same thing.
Such a view was reinforced by
Tuesday's governm!'!nt report that
U.S. construction. hit a record total
In January, with Increases In nearly
every category of bt.fildlng.

• •

•

Full Hous~ 01ust decide retirement age raising Issue
WASHINGTON (APl -House tax writers have
embraced a $165 billion package to make Social
Security solvent again, but they are leaving it to the
full House to settle a squabble over ·raising the
retirement age.
The House Ways and Means Committee was
wrapplng up work today on the rescue package which
embodies the bipartisan recommendations of the
National Commission on Social Security Refomi. It
goes to the House floor next week.
The commmlttee was deciding today whether to
attach to the bW provisions to revamp Medicare and
extend unemployment benefits for up to 16 weeks.
The committee, going over a measure drafted last
week by its Social Security subcommittee, has
virtually rubber-stamped commission tecommenda-

,,

lions for higher payroll taxes, a freeze on
cost-of-living Increases, a levy on retirees' benefits
and mandatory coverage ' for new federal workers
and employees of non-profit organizations.
However, the commission left it td Congress to settle on a .method to wipe out Social Security's
anticipated deficit over the next 75 years as well as
devise a !'fall-safe" mechanism to carry the system
through hard times.
The Democratic majority on, the subcOmmittee
last week sidestepped the Issue of whether too raise
the retirement age to keep the system solvent Into the
next century, wting instead to gradually reduce
retirees' initial .benefits 5 percent over eight years
beginning in :nxl, and raise the payroll .tax 0.24
percentage points beginning In

:ms.

'IJ

While the full committee left that provision Intact,
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-lll., the committee
chairman, offered his personal guarantee to his
colleagues that the House Rules Committee will allow
the full House to vote on the retirement age Issue.
"We have 98 percent of our problem settled, except
that one Issue," said Rep. J.J .. Pickle, D-Texas,
chairman of the Social Security subcommittee.
"That issue, I think, appropriately ought to be settled
·
on the House floor."
Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fia., the 82-year-old
chairman of the Rules panel, which sets the
procedures for legislative debate, fiercely opposes a a
change In the retirement age as being a benefit cut.
Pickle, however, has repeatedly pressed for
raiSing the retirement age from 65, and said he would
~

•

.

offer the amendment on the House floor.
Pickle said last week that he also opposes the
subcommittee formula of reduced benefits and
higher taxes and would allow an amendment that
would rely solely on a payroll tax hike In the next
century to wipe out Socliil Security's long-term
deficit.
·
Those two amendments, Rostenkowski said' "would allow those who feel strongly on either side of
this debate to have a clear vote on the floor, but would
assure in any event" the bill would carry a long-term .
~
solution.
Meariwhile, the committee's Democratic majority
refused to allow amendments that would have
changed the reform·commission provisions.

'

�\

W,dnesday, March 2, 1983

r

Commentary

Pag•

Middleport, ()hio .
Wed•• by, Maich 2, 1913

Ill CGUr1 Sl!'tt't

Pumeruy, Ohiu
&amp;11-tft-1151
DEVOTED TO ntE lNTERESTOF THt: MEIGS-MASON AREA

I know less about Mr. Harold Wa· ceeded to vote; and that of that 85
shlngton, the black gentleman who percent, ~ percent voted for Mr.
upset Mrs. Bryne and Mr. Daley In Washington. It Is the assumption
the prlmary race for mayor of Chi· that this Is automatically good
cago, than Walter Mondale knows news that challenges common
about economics, so understand sense.
that I do-not pose as an expert on
To talk at all about "black" vowhat kind of a mayor tie will be (his tets as d,l$tlnguished
"white"
.defeat of the Rl!publican Is a for- voters doesn't make any sense un·
mality very nearly on a Bolshevik less a point of racial of ethnic lriter·
scale) . What is worth commenting est Is being stressed. In as much as
on is the news his election is mak· It Is taboo In America to make any
lng. "Chicago Vote Results Seen as such point when the resultant, as
Sign/Of Growing Black Political the mathematicians put It, Is l.wf'
Power," is one headline. It trans· dlous, then It logically folio~
pires tllat in Chicago, 75 percent of the observer Is Intending to say
eUglble blacks registered to vote, something complimentary. Here
that of this body 85 percent pro- would be an example: No newsCl'rA 019•~RlU WORrn\Wt-1ELEG~ .

from

ROBERTL. WINGE'IT
Publh1htor

11AT WHITEHEAD
,\ssista nl

BOB HOEFLICH

Puhli~~r/Cuntrullt&gt;r

C".ot&gt;n~nd

Manal(er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt&gt;WIEditur
A MF.MBER uf Ttw

A~"1K'iuh."Ct·

Prt'!is, hlland DaliiiY

Anu~rinn• Nt""~papt'r Publbht'l'll All."'uclathut.

~~~

ASSIM'iHtloo lind lht"

·

I.F.TIERS OF OPINION~~~ Wt'l('tlmtd. Th~)I IIIK!a ld ~ l~tt Uum 38G wunl!l: lunl(. All
urt" !iubjel't lu rdilinl( and mll8t br ,;lgnrd with llllme. addre~tll and kllephune
numht'r. Nu ul\l:il~j:Ded letk'rs will bt' publi111teit. Ltttt'1'111ibl'luld be in gu•ld lask!. addrH~~Itt«
i~sue11, nnt per!tUIUIIitit$..

lt' U rr~&lt;~

paper publisher lM!uid helsltate to
publish the sentence, "The Jewish
population of New York, as usual,
voted in higher proportion tlian any
other group to Its populatlo:t." By
observing this, It Is intended to say:
See how the Jews tend to disCharge
their civic duty? By contrast, publishers might be reluctant to pub!ish, "Jewish voters came out In
overwhelming numbers against
Proposition 23, which would have
authori2Jed busing for racial lntegration." Why? Well, because the
casual reader might be encouraged
to suppose that the Jewish voters
were less concerned than average
voters to right _
wrongs beingdonl! at

: TAMPA, Fla . . (AP) -AlthOugh
,
1tlsteam is coming off the only
101-loss season lri the franclltse's
&lt;&gt;-•-' .,___._iden1
history, Cinclnnatt-""""-.--..,;,
Dick Wl).gner_ Is upho
, ldlng the
prlngtralningtroldt
dl tonof tryIngto
~k
on the brights e.
·Wagner said he'spleased with the
youthful
team's
In
d h progress so far-this
fi ld
spr g, an e expects to e a
"good hall club" this year.
-- "I like the general attitude of the
people here in uniform,'' Wagner
said. "I think they have shOwn that
theretsgoingtobekeencompetltlon
far the avallab!e jobs, and that will
be so for the first ttmewlth this-ball
club for many years. ,
'"I see us .coming out of Florida
,.

NE"

•·'
-·

~enate heading for

filibuster
season
,.
.

"" The Senate may be headed
.
for a season of filibusters, with one nominee

)nd one natural gas bill a lready targeted lor talk by liberal Democrats.
e may be more, because nowadays, everybody gets Into the act that
to be the primary weapon of Southern conservatives bent on blocking
.
rights bills.
' Everybody includes some senators who say they dislike the tactic.
.
Sen. Paul Tsongas, D-Mass., is one of them, and he Is threatening to
organ~e a filibuster against Kenneth Adelman's nomination to be arms
control director.
"I have never in my life filibustered," Tsongas said. "I have a disdain lor
the process. But I am not sure I have a chOice."
Tsongas and other foes of the nomination say Adelman Is not qualified
for the top arms contrqljob. President Reagan says lie Is, and promises a
fight. The nomination is due for Senate action beginning in mid-March. It
may take a while.
The Foreign Relations Committee sent it to the floor for a vote with a
lonna! recommendation that it be rejected. SupPorters didn't have the
votes to recommend approval, and opponents lacked the strength to keep
the nomination on the committee shelf. So they compromised and agreed
to send it to the full Senate.
Reagan probably can win approval there. Even opponents acknowledge
that. "The president will probably get his nominee," said Sen. Larry
Pressler, R·S.D. Pressler said he wouldn't vote to end a filibuster, but
didn't know whether he would join one. He said that "depends on the
creativity of the filibuster and how it's formed."
That is a nove! guideUne. Filibusters are not creative; they are the last
Senate weapon available to a minortty seeking to block action that
otherwise seems assured. What they create Is delay.
It takes 60 votes to stop one, whereas a majority of the senators on hand
for a vote Is enough to pass on legislation or nominations.
There also is a filibuster threat pending against Reagan's proposal to
remove all price controls on natural gas by 1986, a step he said would
assure abundant suppl~ at reasonable prices.
That Issue has been around tile filibuster track before, Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, said he'd take it there again. Metzenbaum said at
least 10 and perhaps 20 colleagues would join him in trying to tli!k the gas
decontrol proposal to ·death.
When President Carter proposed decontrol in 1977, Metzenbaum led a
l!l!buster to .block it. He said that one "will be like a Sunday school picnic"
compared with the one.he envisions against Reagan .

E

"My folks have found out about us and we have to stop meeting like this
but thanks for the memories."

;/

" Oh, yeh? Well, 1 say television does NOT contribute to a violent society."

Today in history·
Today is Wednesday, March 2, tile 6Jst day of 1983. There are 304 days
left in the year.
Today' s Highlight in History;
On March 2, 1836, Texas declared Its independence from Mexico.
On this date:
.
"
In 1176, American Marines fougllt their first battle, capturing a Brttisll
tort in the Bahamas during the Revolutionary War.
In llll1, the War of the Oranges between Spain and Portugal began.
In 1949, a U.S. B-50 plane landed In Fort Worth, Texas, after completing
the l!rst non-stop flight around tile world.
Ana, In 1956, France recognized Morocco's Independence.
Ten years ago: Arab gunmen holding the Saudi Arabian embassy In the
Sudan killed U.S. Ambassador Cleo Noel and charge d' affalres George
Moore.
_
-.
Five years ago: Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith and three black
leaders announced an agreement for an Interim goverrunent that would
place the nation under black-majority rule by the end of 1978.
One year ago: The U.S. Senate adopted a measure to virtually eliminate
busing as a tool for Integrating schools.
Today' s birthdays: Television producer Des! Arnaz Is 66. Actress
Jennifer Jones is 64.
Thought for today: "Undoubtedly, the desire for·load has been, and still
Is, one of the main causes of great political events.'' - Bertrand Russell,
English mathematician-philosopher (1872-1970).
~.'

SPECIAL

WASHINGTON - The murky
world of ex·CIA agent Edwin Paul
Wilson was one of constant Intrigue
and murder-for-hire. His Indict·
ment for plotting murders In prison
Isn't his first encounter with
assassination.
According to my own lengthy investigation of Wilson, he ordered
the liquidation of at least a da&lt;en
onetime associates, including his
former _business partner, Frank
Terpll, himself an ex-CIA man and
a flamboyant cutthroat In his own
light. :'Hit" lists traced to Wilson
also Included one of my reporters
and ex-President Carter's ram·
bunctlous kid brother, Billy.
Since hewas tricked Into the U.S.

Marshals' clutches from his Ubyan
hideout. Wilson has already been
convicted of smuggling arms and
explosives to Libyan dictator
Muammar Qaddafl. He Is now on
trtal for another explosive incident.
He also faces charges that he of·
fered $1 million for the murder of a
Libyan dissident and $1.2 million
for tbe murder of two federal prosecutors nad six former assocla tes
who testified against him.
My associate Dale Van Atta,
whose own namewasononeWilson
hit list, located the man whO was
supposed to rub out Bllly Carter.
The kWlng, Intended to punish BUly
for reneging on a deal with Qaddafl,
was to have been accomplished by

C'an't heat

We llave rounded the comer to
prosperity; happy days are here
again. That was the Impression
President Ronald Reagan wanted
to give the people of Washington,
D.C .. London, England, Tokyo, Japan and Zurich. Switzerland, In a
televised broadcast from the White
House In observance of Newsweek's 50th anniversary. He said
his domestic policies are beginning
to bring rich rewards. Whoopee!
Whee!!
That was news straight from the
horse's mouth or vice versa, depending on which side of the unemploymerit or welfare counter you
are standing. It Is the same old stuff
he has been peddling the past two
years every time he gets close to a
microphone . I could become
mighty excited over such news If It
weren't prompted by the vagartes
of the ·stock marl&lt;et, OPEC oil prl·
ces and the Federal Reserve sys·
tern. Any of these questionable
business barometers are beyond
the president's control. To b;lse his
prediction on such weak reeds
makes them of no more Importance that anyone else's guess.
For the last lew months we ecooomlc laymen have been mystified
by the actions of.the stock market. I
don't understand how gambling ori
bits of paper on Wall Street can
make a weak company strong and
poor prOductivity better. A company Is actually worth only what It
would bring at a forced sale and no
amount of Wall Streetwtzardry can
change that fact of life. Yet last
week, in spite of high unemployment and the high Incidence of business failures and farm
)lankruptcles, the market zoomed
to a record level. While Inflation decreased for the consumer, it In·
creased in tbe business community
with the stocks of companies losing
lOOney or barely breaking even
soaring In greater heights than
ever before. It defies all the mathematical principles I have ever
learned. I remember the stock
market crash In 1929 when the sidewalks of Wall Street were littered
with the bodies of millionaires who
high dived from their sumptuous
skyscraper offices rather than join

sending e presidential brother a ·uterally explosive oil painting.
Another Wilson enforcer has
come forward and traces his exboss' assassination orders hack to
1975. He asked that his Identity be
protected, so I'll just call Hit Man.
He was htred by Wilson to investl·
gate three employees who had dis·
appeared one weekend with some
important Illes. Wilson found dozens of canceled clleclls Indicating
embezzlement, and told Hit Man:
"Take care of the Illes, and then I
want the S.O.B. dead." He was ref·
erring to the ringleader, an elderly
man.
·
'
So the hired gun, armed with a .38
and accompanied by a sidekick

carrying a lead pipe, walled outside
the ringleader's Virginia liPBr!·
rnent. But the anasslns chlckened
out at the last mlhute, went to a bat
and got thoroughly drunk.
Hit Man then lied to Wll8on the
next day, telling him they had been
unable to find the old man. He subsequently stalled Wilson unW the
kill order was forgotten.
Hit Man's next target was Douglas Schlachter, whom·Wilson ooce
treated like a son, but woo appar·
ently got too big for his brltcbes. As
Hit Man remembered It, Schlach- '
ter decided to "ea8e out of the oper- :
a lion." Schlachter and a formner-·
high CIA official began ''talkli!g op- :
enly about murdering Ed and takIng over."
'

fact~I.;;L __________L_ow_e_ll...;:_!f_
.ing;_e_tt·;

the soup lines with their lesser
brethren. That precipitated the
Great Depression!
The oil producing countries
(OPEC) are even a· less reliable
business and political barometer
thim the stock market. Ronald Reagan has reason to feel ob!!gated to
OPEC. They put him In office!
Without their strangle hold on the
American economy by raising aU
prices from $2.50 a barrel to above
~- They provoked tile long gas
lines and high Inflation which drove
Jimmy Carter from the White
House and made way lor Reagan
with his untested supply-side eco- .
nomic theory. In two years it has
had sufficient time to be a proven
failure and OPEC with a stiff oil cut
at this time could send oil prices
plummettlng and finish the job·
supply-side ~n__omlcs has sta~
As I write this, they llave announced an oil price cut but have
not yet announced how much. An
oil war now would only be a minor
nuisance to the Arab countries but
could have disastrous consequen·
ces for oil producing countries with

billions of dollars indebtedness to dent Reagan's recent threat to:·
Amerlcanbanks.MexlcoandVene- "turn theheat"ontheSenatelfthey :
zuela borrowed bllllons on what did not cmflrm Kenneth Adel.: '
seemed to be a rosy future for their man's nomination to be U.S. Arms ;
oil Industries and an oil war now Control Director. In making his·:
would force them and other oil pro- public prediction of good times •.
duclng countries to welsh on their coming, perhaps the adrnlnlstra· . :
loans: This could cause wide- tion plans to twist some
arms ~
spread financial panic In the United on the Federal Reserve Board!
In spite of their glOwing predlc·:;
States. The Reagan administration
and country are not out of the !Ions for the next two years, the ad- .
woods yet and such optimism as ministration Is battling with Its : :
they are peddling is not based on back to the wall. With the president real facts!
still unwilling to give up his pet the- , :
Public confidence In the Federal ortes for government. Although be :
Reserve Board was badly erroded lias consented to a bi-partisan jobs ;
by the Fed's actions before the Nov. bill to ease unemployment a minus-- ::
2 election. In an effort to drive Inter- cule amount, he still maintains that i
est rates down and thus ease the they are jobs the government · ~
Republican lossses at the polls, the would have oone anyway, only :
administration prevailed on the stepped up. Heclalm!!thatthepres· Fed to ease Its tight money policy. ent prospective scandal in the En·
This was denied by the admlnlstra- vtrorunental Protection Agency Is
tion and the Fed but ttiel!rop-i.lno---7
only somethlngthenewsmedla·has ~­
interest rates light before the elec· dreamed up. But the fact remains
lion was too convincing to be over- 'that there Is still 163.6 mWion yet
looked. The Federal Reserve -unaccounted for in the EPA superBoard is by law a non-partisan body fund and six Congressional combut no governmental organi2ation mtnees are now investigating the
can ever be wholly Immune to pre- Agency.
sldent!al pressure.
You can't beat tile facts , Mr.
As an example, remember Pres!- President! ·

''There w
_ Ill be
. a battle there, and
wemlghlbeabletogowlthjusttwo,
_since Indianapolis Is so close
geographically to Cincinnati,"
Wagner said.

Par

3

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THE WEEK ....._
~

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113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342
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FROM 7:00 to 11 :00 P.M.
For Yo~:-~r Dining and Dancing Pleasure

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PH.

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POMEROY OH,

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ALEX TREVINO

DOWNING-CHILDS

APPEARING TONIGHT
THRU SATURDAY, MARCH 5

$1.39

EO MILNER

. .games &lt;lnd led tlie' club with 18
113
stolen bases:

Reds Manager Russ Nixon is
thinking of putting MUner in center
field this season and moving
As for possible trades, Wagner
veteranCesarCedenotoright.
sa,td, "We don't have any deals · Walker, 26, spent the first siX
c(jjkiflg_ We are working, and
weeks oflast seaSon with the Class
things are on the back burner. I've AAAindlapapolisfarmc!ub,hi!ting
talked with 18 of the 26 teams, and
.'JZl. He was promoted to the Reds
we'll talk with the others ... W~ will
onMay24andhit.218w!thflvehome
probably a ll lay a little !ow and see runs and 22 runs batted In while
when the position players get In
appearingln86games.
c'amp (Wednesday). Then we'll talk
again. "
Meanwhile, The Cincinnati Reds
signed outl!elder Eddie Milner to a
one-year contract Tuesday, leaving
outfle!derDuaneWalkerastheonly
unsigned player In training camp.
Milner, 28, played all three
outfield poslt!ons for the Reds as a
rookie last season. He batted .2681n

11 PC. SHRIMP

m-2S!i6

f!

Harrah
only Indian
missing Jr:.om
camp .--------_l________.,...-________,..J___:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____,,-

Orders to _kil.a. l__.____;
. ;,. .:-_______
..
Ja_ck_A-,-nd_~_rs_on

yOU

Berry's World

the expense of blacks.
- Now then, Inasmuch as we are
familiar wilb the general voting
pattern of American blacks aver
the past generation or 110, we kDow
that they have voted with the Democrats, and that they hare attr acted to I eft . sound Ina·
Democrats. Why? Oh; beca\ISI!·tensounding Democrats haVe above.
all developed the knack c( advertls· ·
lng general.prosjlertty as the doing•
not of Individual Amertcans, but of
the government. And blacks whO
are economically dlscoural!ed, and
this Is a pheoomenon that relates in
part to the bondage whence blacks
were sprur.g, tend to look for econmlc manumission to Washington,
D.C.
as they lOOked to Washlngton (quite plausibly) for the
political manumission. So now they
turn against Mrs. Byrne toward
l'yfr. Washl)lgton, EXC1U$1vely because he tS lilack? Most apolo!Psts
for democracy wink a little at that
exercise In ethnocentrism, but are
not surprised by it.
The happy Idea that all blacks
should vote together for socialist
programs (that, unhappily, Is tile
vector of Jesse Jackson's thought)
Is In the first place not a happy Idea
at ·all; In the second place, It Is an
invitation to those racial generalities we have struggled, with fait
success, to reject. It 15 worth reminding ourselves at least once a
year that there Is a proud ora8111Za· .
lion around called the National A&amp;soclatlon of Advancement of
Colored People. No such organlza·
lion would have any mandate to
perform jt It were not aclmowl·
edged to begin with that colcnd
people need advancement. 1be beginning of disillusion with democracy Is that notion that such
advancement can be etrected by
government action.

will

with a competent, yourig ball club'
"There
be some real beat on
wlthenoughelqierlencetobeagood
thesefellowstomaketheNo.4and
ball club."
No. 5 starting spots and some of the
The Reds have several positions
relief jobs," he said.
liP for ,..
urabs. Manager Russ Nixon
ffle
Wagner said one of the club's
has Indicated he !r)tends to shu
biggestshortcomlngslastyearwas
his .outfielders, and he'll have to
at the catcher's spot. Alex Trevino,
choose from 20 pitchers In tralnln!li given the starting job after he
camp.
arrived from the New York Mets in
w
ball xi
agner used a base
a om to
the GeolllF Foster trade, went on to
describe the team's crowded pitch- ·. lead National League catchers in
lngsttuatlon.
errors with 17. Back-up Dave van
"You can never have too much
Gorderhitadlsmal.I82.pitching," Wagner said. "Barring
"We have to decide. If] was to say
lnjurle;, we will have some fine - today, theanswerwouldbethatwe
pitchers to put at Indianapolis (on
will carry three catchers,'' Wagner
the Reds' Class AAA farm club),
said. "Trevino ts going to be our
and most of our roster moves can be
regular catcher, I'm sure." _
madecomfortab!y.
Van Gorder ts expected to have
the inside trackontheNo.2catchlng
job but wUI be pushed by minor
· leaguers Steve Christmas andDann BUardello.

even

1-\ULME

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

·No deals cooking, but Wagner expects 'good ball club'

2-The Daily s.ntlnel

f'qmetDJ'

Chicago.u .p_s~e_t---:----:-~----:-~:-:----:-:-:-~W-:--il-:-:-lia_m_F_.
.
_B_uc_kl_ey_J_r.·

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

'

j

l

•

TUCSON, Ariz. (API - All but
one of the 46 players scheduled lobe
In the Cleveland Indians' camp
showed up for the American League
team's first lull workout, and the
one late arrtval was expected In
camp today.
Missing from the workout Tues·
cjay was third baseman Toby
Harrah, who was given permission
·- to arrive lateso hecouldtakecareof
·
some personal business.
Harrah 's llousewasdamagedlna
fire 10 days ago, and his lather was
ktlled in an automobile accldentthe
following day.
Outlielder Bake McBride, who
missed most of last season with an
eye Infection, worked in the batllng
Ci'ge for nearly an hour Tuesday
with no apparent problems: accord. ing to Manager Mike Ferraro.

.'

On

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8otiiCloAW MArr.tR'S SAT I SUN
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�Ohio

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March 2 , 1983.

March 2, 1983 .

· Ohio

•
'

SOUTHERN

Boys

Baske~baU ·

Vs.
·Bishop Flaget
WED., MARCH.2
·, At 7:00 P.M.
At The Chillicothe
High School

TO THE .
SOUTHERN
TORNADO
Boys &amp; Girls Basketball Tearns
And The Meigs Wrestling Tearri
On ~1heir Sectional Championships
'

SOUTHERN

·MEIGS
MARAUDERS
· WRESTLERS

··-·--Girls ·Basketball
Vs.
· Portsmouth Clay
rH~~S., MARCH 3
·.. .. ;. ~ 'r · r~A~)8·00
.
P
M
,
:
~
r.t:·t
il.:
•
• •~ '
'.At &gt;~.··~ Waver Iy tflg;'ih·..·
1:. . l:F., School ·. · ' .

'

,

...
..
;

DISTRICT TOURNAMENT

SAT.,

1.: •

MAR. 5th

f·i! '

,

AT 12:00 NOON ·

.

At the Washington Court House
High School
GOOD LUCK
COACH &amp; WRESTLERS!!

STICK 'EM MATMEN
.Pin. to Win!!

Shirley Priddy, Debbie &amp; Jim Riso ·
and Gary &amp; Araca Priddy

. GOOD LUCK WRESTLRS!!
We're Proud of You

GOOD LUCK, 'WRESTLERS!!

Ken, Carol, Laura
&amp; Steven McCullough

Paula,

·-

p~~~· ~:· Margie

Mrs. Sprague, Mrs. Vennari, Mr. Redovian
and Mrs. Gaul

~----------~--~~M~o-w~'-em-a~t~Co-u~rth~o-u~·.--+---------------~~--G~O~FO~R~IT~G~U-YS-!--~
PIN 'EM WRESTLERS!!

Matmenl
GOOD Luc.KI.I. .

Jim &amp; Marie Snyder

·We're Proud of You, David!!
GOOD LUCK WRESTLERS!! .
..,.d
From Doctor &amp; Mrs. A:---.....
venon

Robert and Iva Sisson

MARAUDER.MATMEN
PIN TO WIN!
GOOD LUCK,_MIKElL Bill

Van &amp;

Good Luck in Districts, Craig!
- - IPIN &amp; WIN!!

GOOD LUCK, SECTIONAL CHAMPS!
M.H.S. MATMEN

We're Real Proud of Our
Marauder Matmen ,
You've Come A Long Way!!!

Larry, Sharon &amp; Michelle Barr

David &amp; Edna Davis

GET 'EM GRAPPLERS

•

· Coach &amp;Twila Childs
"

Marla and Melanie ·
f

We Support Marauder Wrestlers
GOOD LUCK!

.

George, Cinda &amp; PJ Harris

GOOD LUCK COACH GRIMES
. &amp; MARAUDER MATMEN .
~et fired up. Pin

'em &amp; WIN at WCH
Lloyd, Eva, Brian &amp; Phil King

We're Proud of MHS Matmen
GOOD LUCK AT W.C.H.
Karen,Jiobin, Kim and Debbie

GOOD LUCK
MARAUDER MATMEN!!
Michael.• Vicki &amp; Joseph Hughes

.

Mr. Gerlach, Mr. Bentley,
Mrs. Bentley, Mr. Gibbs

From Rowena! Sue and Maria

GOOD LUCK WRESTLERS
AT DISTRICTS!
.

and Mrs. King

·

POMEROY OHIO

'

Good Luck, Meigs Wrestlers'

CONGRATUlATIONS
·
.

From Cathy, Mae, Mary, Mepn,
Anaie. Jenny and Lora

r 219 ·

Star Supply
RACINE, OHIO

. 1'

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· Wagners-Hardware-

Swisher &amp; Lohse P.harmacy

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

POMEROY OHIO

The Farmers Bank

Gravely Tractor Sales &amp; ...a ....

POMEROY OHIO :

· POMEROY OHIO

Ohio Valley.Plumbing &amp; Heating

Village Pharmacy .

-

OHIO· ·

POMEROY, OHIO

New York Clothing House

·

ns-·Mul
.
RACIN OHIO
t----~~~~----~..,.:.:n.::::S:,:Ura:.:.::;nC:,::e:..:.,:
· POMEROY OHIO
.
.
..
Kingsbury Homes
R~ Craig Mathews, D.D.S.
.
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Racine Home Nat'l. Bank
POMEROY OHIO ·

Meip Jr. High School Staff

OHIO
RAe IN OHIO

'

ON A FINE·SEASON!!

Hubbard's Greenhouse

·

•

'

•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Eber's Gulf

POMEROY ·OHIO

From Sherry &amp;Amy

Ewing Funeral Home

SYRACUSE, OHIO

Veterans Memorial Hospital

..'

POMEROY, OHIO

Valley lumber

Syracuse Dairy Bar

J&amp;D Drilling

Sharon, Robin &amp; Brian·
Buffington

Elberfelds

OHIO

OHIO

OHIO .-

j

POMEROY OHIO

_G&amp;J ·Auto Parts

MIDDLEPORT•.OHIO

•
'•

Francis Florist

Store
.

OHIO

. Good Luck, Troy and Mike!! · We·Support Marauder·Matmen · . · .
· And All Meigs Wrestlers
•
We're Proud of You!
GOOD LUCK AT DISTRICTS!!
'

POMEROY, OHIO

Spencers-Fas-Chek

GOOD LUCK AT DISTRICTS

Ms. McCoy, Mrs. Crow, Mrs: .Proffitt,

Middleport

Funeral Home

Mr. Harrison, Mr.·Miller,
Mr. Saunders, Mr. Fisher

Hobert and Lorena Goggins'
and Karen

···

Pat Hill Ford

'

POMEROY

POMEROY, OHIO

Hartley· Sho·es·
.
''

K&amp;C Jewelers

The Daily Sentinel

'

POMEROY OHIO

CONGRATULATIONS AND .
· GOOD LUCK!!!

Congratulations on Sectionals!
- Good Luck at Districts!

Take Down a VICTORY!
GOOD LUCK, WRESTLERS!!

Mrs. Blaettnar, Mrs. Hagge rty,
Mr. Blaettnar, Mrs. Kessinger

li

POMEROY OHIO

Pomeroy Flower Shop
.

l •t.~tt ...

Crow's Family Restaurant -

POMEROY, OHIO

·

..

. AT DISTRICT

Adolph's Dairy Valley

· GOOD LUCK AT DISTRICTS

GO FOR IT, WRESTLERS!

-· Paul, Carolyn &amp;Brenda Sinclair

Willford

, .~

..
-•

(

· POMEROY OHIO

· Meigs Inn /Pizza Shack ·
POMEROY OHIO

Bank

OHIO

'

Simmons Olds. -Cad.-Chevy

Central Trust Co.

POMEROY, OHIO

Mark V
•

J

'

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT OHIO
I

of Pomeroy

•

•

•

�' The

~issouri
·
cJinches
fourth
.
.
.
.
ruse lniproved Its record to 19-6
•. Syracuse's Erich Santlfer stole a
By The Associated Press

:bangame for the Syraruse Orange·men- literally .
: Santlfer not only scored his
:ream· s last basket after his sixth
:steal of the game, but twice
.connected on a pair of clutch free
:thows in the last 79 seconds. as
:tSth-mnked Syracuse, · playing a t
-home, upset fourth-mnked Villan·
!&gt;va 79-70 In a Big East 1Coilference
,:,asketball game Tuesday night.
· "II was a special win; it gives usa
ilttie momentum for the end of the
~ason and it's important to have
momentum going into the Big East
tournament," Santifer said.
: In theoniyothercontest involving
a member of The Associated Press
TopTwenty.JonSundvoldscored22
points, Including a game-winning
20-footer with one second left, as
No.13 Missouri staved off an upset
bid and clinched its fourth straight
Big Ei!!/lt title with a 4947 victory
over Kan5as State.
· The Syracuse victory ended a
frustrating string of losses for the
Orangemen against three of their
key conference rivals- VUlanova ,
St. John's and Georgetown.Syra·

Wedne~:by,

March 2, 198! •
••
-----

Ohio

Sentinel

.

overall and 9-5111 theconferenreand
kept Villanova, 21-5 overall and 12-3
In the Big East, from clinching the
title.
VIllanova's John Plnone Jed all
scorerswith23polnts,butSyracuse
tooka63-55leadwlth5:02remainlng
when Santlfer, who paced hls team
with 21 points, stole the ball from
guard Gary McLain and drove for a
slamdunk.Thatwasthelastbasket
for the Orangemen, WhO connected
on 16 of 21 from the free-throw llne
down the siretch.
• "Downthestretch,adlfterentguy
made the key play every time, but
Erich was the difference," said
Symcuse Coach Jim Boehelm.
At Manhattan, Kan., Sundvold's
bucket capped a second . half in
which there were eight lead
changes and seven ties. Kansas
State's last lead was 47-45 with 4:43
to play on a Tyrone Jackson jump
shot.
Sundvold tied the score 4747 with
a 20-footerwithl:47remalning, and
Mis~url, 22·6, regained possession
for the winning shot when Kansas
State guard Jim Roder threw the
ball out of bounds with 51 seconds

straight Big F;ight title
.

'

'

·-

Owner George Steinbrenner, who
has promised to remain silent even
if the New York Yankees lose every
exhibition game, has indicated it
may be different once the season
starts.
"If Billy Martincan'twin with this
te;un, we can never win," Stein·
·brenner said Tuesday at the
Yankees' spring tralni(lg camp In
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Steinbrenner said he would "have
to shoulder some of the blame for
our poor showing last season,"
referring to the Yanl!;ees' finish one
game out of last place in the
American League East. "I proba·
bly demanded and meddled too
much .
"I think from ,the top down the
whole team is embarrassed and
disgraced by the performance. I get
the feeling that all the guys are
eager to redeem themselves. I
sense a different attitude out there.
Guys like Goose Gossage, John
Mayberry and others coming in
with their weights down. They're all
businesslike and working hard .
Personally I think this team has as
much all-around talent as the 1977
!world championship) team, which
I have considered our best- mayhe
even more.''

Meanwhile,.in West Palm Beach,
Fla ., Atlanta's Bob Horner passed
his first test as a left fielder and
showed that nomatterwhatposltlon
he plays he can stili hit. Horner had
only one chance defensively in an
intrasquad game and handled it
Dawlessiy. At the plate, he smacked
a home run- off Phil Niekro- and
triple in two at-bats.

months."
Tuesday was second baseman
MannyTrllio'sflrst full day with the
Cleveland Indians and he said he
could feel the spotlight on him.
"It was stmnge.!goteverybody's
attention," said Trlllo, who was
acquired from Philadelphia in an
off-season trade. "It's not like the
first day with the Phillies. Everyone
was with Pete (Rosel or Mike
(Schmidli ."
The trade of five Phillies for
outfielder Von Hayes stU! bothers
Trillo, for more than one reason.
"Right now, for us it is really a
good deal." lie said. "It would have
been a good deal, me for hlm
!Hayes ), straight up, one on one. I
really t!Jink I got thrown out with the
trash. I sli11 consider myself a good
ballplayer. At least four of us should
make the team."
Atso, Trllio indicated he is
concerned about the Indians' ability
to sign him once he becomes a free

agent at the end of the season.
"I would like fa play In Cleveland
if the money is there," he said. " If!
don't sign by the end of spring
training, then I won't be bothered
during the season."
Elsewhere, several teams still
had key players missing. Joe Rudl
and Carney Lansford were absent
from the Oakiand A's camp. Rudl
has had an Achilles tendon problem
and Lansford was house-hunting.
Both were excused by Manager_
Steve Boros.
At the Sun City, Ariz., training site
of the American LeagUe champion
Milwaukee Brewers, first baseman
Cecil Cooper and designated hitter
Roy Howell were no-shows. Cooper
had permission to .be late and
Howell's son 'was ill.
At the Chicago Cubs' camp, third
baseman .Ron Cey, after his first full
workout with his ·new club, issued
some parting salvos at his former
employers, the Los Angeles

"*"luthlll.l Scolw.

Class Rings .

&lt;) .,n(l('tiru1 ~ - Sf&gt;lon Ha ll 67
Hofsl ra ~,. Falrld~h Dlcklnson Iii
Ha\'f't1 9~. "'''"' HamJJ-hir&lt;' !H. OT
S\&lt;lllCUSC' 1.1. VIIIMova

. !'\,...,.

m
soum

Alu.-Birmln¢1am M . Sam ror"d R"1

Auburn R2. l.llssl&lt;&gt;llippi !1!1
.JS('k...onviiiC' Sr. lfl. Mli~..-. . Cull.
N. Alubama 70. Ll\"ln~lon F,l;

Uma 61. Wapakont'la M
Lorain TI, Lakrwood St. t-:ct\\·urd !1.1
LoraLn Kinp; 6'1. LakPwood 4il
"M11h1bur !lti. A.,hlillid 5."

7-1, Blanchc'SI('r 42
Cln. Mci"''icholas 7-t HamUttm Rc:J;.~ ~
... - C'l!&gt;l.·r. Trinity 5.1. Ck'\"f' . O'fltml C'a rh.
:t~~

Co!dwa!('t" 'ifi, Kmton 4!1
Day. Jclft&gt;rS~:.n M. Natbnal Tmll 41
F..astwood W. or~ 611
F.di!!On $1", Sanc!usk:'-· Sl. Ma~ · IW1

nm;&gt;ntlf'ld 67. Wa ~ hln,l(lon 1"' . H. .'"~l
Kan.o;as Lakota 41\, l.cnoa ~
l.lmll Calh. !11, Van W&lt;'n ~
Napoloon r-A , IX&gt;Ita 47
Oran-"' m. Twnc;boli! ·17
Parma HOly Nanw 6.'i, BIJC'keyf' !'f&gt;

Ponsrmuth

.,

i

CcwinL&gt;ton 4';. W. l.ib.·rty·Salml i"t
Cr1dl'!-s ~111r ~11..,. 1M. Allm F. . 7~

:J

O..' lptm

.

Huatler polyurethane

sole and comfort cushion
~th Cambretle • lining

Ashoe that captures the spirit of your

Levi's' jeans. Rugged leath~r goes easy on.
your feet A hea\l}'·ciuty sole packs plenty of long
wear. Check out a pair: tod~.
·
.

STORE HOURS
lloii.'Thuts,-Sit '-5
9-8

HARTLEY SHOES
POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-5272

I

~· ... ftftulb,

..
.Cin.

-&lt;Jn.

ll. Sprtnj;t. Soulh
Haml!loo ~- Lroaoon .11 . ""

""Da~·· SfC'btlln~

l
:

I'

I
I
I
I
I
I
1

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II
I
I

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I
••

0aapoa

\

T~o

1o- OZ. CHIO&lt;EN WITH RICE

PBELL'S SOUP ..... -~~~. 2/794

,.'., ,

FINDLAY, Ohio lAP) -Ricky
WUilarns of undefeated Walsh has
bee() selected the Most Valuable
Player in NAlA District 22 for the
seron'd stmig!lt men's college
basketball season.
'J'tle 6-foot-5 Williams, a senior,
averaged 18.8 points in leading the
Cavaliers to 32 stmlght regular·
season victories and the Mid-Ohio
Conference title.
Walsh's Bob Huggins was named
as the District 22 Coach of the Year
after leading the Cavaliers to the
'
r
No. 2 national ranking and the top
seed in the district eliminations next
week.
Joining Williams on tbe coaches'
all-district first team were 6-1
Elmer Jackson and 5·11 Frank
Carda of Tiffin, 6-7 JeffS=epanskl
of Walsh, 6-5 David Carr of
Cedarville, 5-8 Jerry Mowery and
~7 , Dan Curry of Rio Grande, 6-2
Randy P'Deli of Findlay, 6-8 Brett
Wlnga te and 6-3 Jerome F1oyd of

'.

..

I

32 OZ. WAGNER'S .

ORANGE DRINK ........•.... ~!~·.694
30 OZ. oa MONTE
.
.. ·
FRUIT COCKTAIL. .........~~.s1.09

Deflfhce.

49 OZ. CHEER W/25~ OFF

SOAP POWDER ........... -~~ .s2.39 ·
31 OZ. SHOWBOAT
CAN oc ·
6 .·.
PORK-N:BEANS .••..•... ........
~·

-

'

•' •

4

.'

..
'

·&lt;

15 OZ. ARMOUR

RNED. BEEF HASH .•..£~~- Sl.09 .

OZ. ARMOUR W/34 OFF

POITED MEAT .......... -~~~~. 2/65~
·.

SUCCOTASH .•.........•£~~~.2JS1.39
.,

$ 29

Bacon•••••••••••••••••••••
LB.

'

•

.

Rio players
.chosen all league

''

FACIAL TISSUES~ ........ ~ ..~~.97

~ Marob a. .ua
--------~---------------~------J

:

.JUICE.:-:..•.........£!!-.~

'

1

Mok'on t:aslt ·rn Hl. Rip~· -11
Mi(ttlf'IO\ol'n FMWk'k ~il . TWin \ ";till'\" :-..- .
:l-1
.

•

CABBAGE ......~. 25$

17 OZ. STOKELY

CRISPY SERVE

GrorJil{'trWn -~. Wllllamstlu ~ :u
14tdom·Uif' ~..:! . &amp;rlin W. Rl'!&lt;;(liW ~

' 0

•

I

~
BuQJer

••

I

NEW GREEN

I

Fryer Parts ......~; ..
BOCKB
$ 49
Cube Steaks.....~8~

Nt""·ark C'l11h. rt-1, Fh"df'rk-ktO\ol'n ~":.!
Rk'llmt:.n&lt;i Oalf' SF: +l , Palm V&lt;~ ! . t.!

POTATOES .. ~~.Sl.69

. . .f t

(:t.. A Thumun"M'nt.'i
fool (;nl\"1' .XI, Oak Hill ,1(
F:. Canton '1'1. MapiNuld :lt
E . CllnTun til. NN.• Miami ~l1
E. Knox ~7. FN'l'r ."fl

MIXED

.

200 CT. KLEENEX WHITE

Nowhere else Oief

Rlvrr Vk-1.1· 'i.' l Wlnll'f.'i\1llf' -II
Strultl£'1'!1 -fl . F:. POif'.'illnt• :tl
Wl'l!lnj..'1on .fti. Otmo;tf'd FalL.; 41

10 LB. IDAHO BAKING

..

~

'FtlvPr \'at..-,. &amp;&gt;x~ ·11

I

BIG RED BOLOGNA ........ ~·. 9ge
QJDAHAY OtOPPED HAM
LUNCH MEAT ............ ~·.sl.79
HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD .............•. ~~ Sl.59
ECKRIOt
E • • • • • \B.$199
••• •

·~

Vandillla ~'l. Dclv. Wavnolll
n-MT~
AshtatxJid Harbor 7H. Akron Hol:s.m
' OiKI~· ~~. GanrtlNtlk' :r;
Brook1lrkl !t!pampion -17
Ch!llin"ln F;~lf~ m. El,vria W. :t"1
C1n. RriJding; ft.\ N. C'o£k'IU' H l n ·: ~l
C1n. yromhlu.~ 71. Al&gt;lhC'I-Taw .n
Coj..&lt;fW.t•• 41. Dubl.ln l1
tt!Ytn11k- bi, Sl . C'la!r'SVUlC' ~

•

'1.89
'

4"1IHii t\M T~lN
Hu~ 41!. Cln. M(lrcy -tl

s,,"f'art'IOIT' -M. FDITht Park ..0 ·,
'Cin. WIUV"'OIIo" 7~ . an. An~ ';2. m

BIGSHEF ~·
SANDWICHES

Present thit coupon when orderina at any
participating BUller Chet' resta-urant . .I
One coupon per customer per visit."

Fam ! ~;&gt;·

lH*J HIP 1-W.•hliol 101,.. B&amp;tKkrttllill
By 'fhll AJNt.Uk•d Proifoi.

CHAPMAN SHOES

PH. 992-6342
317 N. 2nd
Middleport

ONLY

7.l, Akron Hal;&gt;·

Girls scores

SANDWICH
SAVE 89e
SPECIALS.:
.

Rrt.o;I OI ~~1
Wi niDrd 'i!+. ~'ll~a F. . ~i

Rlplw- St-w.on

.. .

49
¢ GroUnd Chuck...~·~.

Van Burm .f,', Cory·Raw'IOO -II
Windham~.

TTlnt~·

$ 29

29
8
Ground Beef.....~ ~~

~

Jotrl 's !Wi, Pat"kwav

s. f &lt;'fl lral -&amp;-1, Norwa l ~ Sf . Paul :t;
Steytwr m. Hk'k.tn·Ur., 4~

Cantoo

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

2

~il.

Hardin N. fio', UPPN" Sclolo \'~1. .'J.I
Huttop 711, f:d$:t-rton 5ti
HulgutP ,r,' . Maumfl(l Val. li6
MUk'r C it~· ~- F'ort .Wnnln~ ~..:.!. (1f

Pandora-Gilboa 01. l..i'tpsk' Rl, CIT

Coupon Explrell March.Ill, lBII3

om. OUT Of' IITYU:

Man.'&gt;. Olrl.,tlan

Russia !10, Skt!C'\" l..rttman -lit
St lit 'Ill')' !Ll ohto Cl~· :WI
SbmundJah !i4, Ca i&lt;M'f'll ~

BREAKFAST HOURS ONLY

0Uifo4.1T'f ~fll

~.

Onawa Hille; li.l Ttnora 2!1

BISCUITS &amp; GRAVY
Only 99e

'""- ...

ri'Nit\·k'\1·

Mlnslrr !;I , Fcrf ll«'ovf'IV h",!, OT
~· Rk}!PI \\ Old F'or1 ~

SPECIALS
SAVE SOC
•·.. ,

Pork Roast .......l~~

(1..,. ,\Tw~

A~and

Irrlln W Rf'!U"\"l' t&gt;'l. Columl:iana ft),
Ca~ ffi. 111\"rrdaJ,. -l!i
C'Oiumli;lf'la \r('si\'\M:' .JK. Sctlrln~ ~ 1
COO\"IJ;Io" Cn-.,;1\ok""· tl. Ani14"C'rp 41

OZ. HUNT'S

o(.. ~/
,r r .

FRESH BUTT STEAK

Rock Hlll-11

Springborn ~~7. 1.11111' Miami 47
Wuyrw&gt; TrM"f' till. A11.'hi.I:IId ffl
WIM'f'lre;hui""J:! 7'l. lron1on :II
. _WUiard ~. BuryN'i .J~

Hush Puppies ,
So comfortable anyth~g goee

~-

P!'rbk' Shi!Wnf'(' ti.1, Cnrll'&gt;l(' -li

That's because they're so
cushiony comfortable. From
morning to evening the look is
right. Easy on your budget, too.

·---------------------------,

,Suited
for jeans ...
naturally.

n .. AATou~

• r1n. MarlrmOrlt

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

I' , .

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 5, 1983

l7

: "" ~'OOsaJ)("ake .';.\. Coat Grol:f' ,'~

CAIIDY MAKING WORKSHOP
LEARN HOW TO IIIAKE YOUR
OWN EASTER CAIIDY.
CALL FOR D£TAIIS.

---------

C'lt\'

.. ., Badin 1:1. BMibrook &amp;I
.., • Carlisi«' 6.1, Prfoble Sh~WI1('(' 47

r:;=::;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;::;;=:j

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

POMEROY, 0.

• ,. Rprin~t. North 00. Gr(('n\'llk' a9
• '"' Svrvanla Southview ii6, Tol. wtrllm!'!' lil ·

· .. '

Cey, acquired in aJan.20 tradefor
two mtrior leaguers, said the
Dodgers would suHer this season for
losing veterans like himself and first
baseman Steve GarVey, who signed
a lucrative free-agent contract with
San Diego. .
"That was their fault," Cey 5illd.
"They made it plain and clear early
that they wanted to make some
moves. They were moving in a new
direction, changing faces, bringing
in new people.

• J.OOOO 212 E. Main, Pomtray

~-1

298 SECOND ST.

Mansflrtd 60, Man~." MDdtson ~~
Normand,\· rti, Ck.'l.·l'. East -17

• Wunhinp;too 11. Gro.rt'

'

-

Sunday 10 am·lO pm

S.\llvanla Non_
h \"IN' ~
. • Tol. Mar-ombrr Kl. Tol. Waltf' 4fi
• Tol. St. Francis ~. Tol. ~1 : John ~

Dodg~rs .

·

.tl, OT

·: ~ fu . Bou.!it.&gt;l" fr&gt;,

1·
~RTfARVEIJ
I Q!~ \(J,~··~···~ Ql

By 1bt- ~\=~d ~

Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm

Ch·t•. ~ - JO'ifoph 7R 1 Maytk&gt;ld hi
Col. Mlmln f.fi, CoL F.u.~trmor ffi
Da .~·. M(&gt;lldc:JIA'dak' 'l'l , r.m•non &amp;II
Elh:lu ~ - Bow lin..: r.rwn .r.\

- ..I

.

~·~~ ( 'oUtop:t•

Wlllr~~t Hil ls f.;! , Mllford -1!1
O.~:c&gt;. R~ !'t.'i, Purma PttdU&lt;i

Cin .

Hush .PUPPl!!J. easy on your feet

Now·s the time lor super savings oo your ArK:;or&lt;'ed 14!&lt;
gold class ring. ArtCorved backs each ring with a Fult
Lifetime Warranty. This offer.expires May 31. t983 and is
to be used only for the pUrchase oi14K gold ArtCorved

STORE HOURS:

r..

r,::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::::;!;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:===i-1

.CHECK DIE

College scores

Ohio Hid! ~tlool Boy,. IIMroluiltall
Ry '1111• A.Miod;~~t'CI ~
n..wt,.,•,. RM.IMI!
('lwtl AM TourtiiU'IltJib!
Bllr lll'rfoo !n AkrOO
~
Cln . Baron In, Cln . La.&lt;iallf' ~,'j

HOURS: ,
Monday thn.o Saturclay- 5:30a.m. to 8:00 p,m.
Sunday- 8:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.

Quiet George puts monkey on Martin's ,back
At Winter Haven, Fla., the Boston
Red Sox welcomed 43-year-old Carl
Yastrzemski to camp for his 23rd
major league season. Yastrzemskl,
whO SilYS he will retire after this
season, said that move could come
sooner if he can't contribute.
.
"If I can't help the ballclub win a
pennant, there's no possible way
I'm going to hang on," he said.
"There's no way I can sit on the
bench and pinch hit once in a while,
no way. What I've done in 22 years
I'm not going to tear down in one
year or two months or three

Boys scores

THURSDAY-% Lb. Ground Beef
FRIDAY-Beef Bar·B·Que
SATURDAY-Lasagna
SUNDAY-Fried Chicken
MONDAY-Beans &amp; Cornbread
TUESDAY-Beef Noodles
WEDNESDAY-PolK Chop &amp; Dressing

'

By The Associated Press

Tournament
•
results

DAILY SPECALS

Kentucky ~ Sou~asiern Conference charnplonshlp.Kentucky had
clinched a tlt!etleonSundayandOie
Miss was the only team that
retained a mathematical shoi at a
tie. ·
Auburn was in control til!! whole
way, bursting to an 11-0 lead as
Mosteller scored seven points and
Barkley the other four.Aubum's
biggest lead of the night was 00-52
withl:23 left.
r'
At New York, Randy Cozzens
scored 26 potnis, Including 19 to lead
a second-half surge, as Anny upset
Manhattan 74-69 in the opening
round of the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference playoffs.
At South Orange, N.J., Earl
Kelley scored 25 points to lead
Connecticut over Seton Hall~ in
a Big East game.
At B!nnlnghS.m, Ala., !reshinan
Anthhony Gordon scored 16 points
and pulled down seven rebounds to
help Alabaina·Bin1llngharn nip
crosstown rival Samford 6&amp;65.
At Rutherford,. N.J., Myles
McPartiandscoredacareer-hlg!l22
points, Including 16 In the second
half, to lead Hofstra, 18-7, to a 75-00
victory over Fairleigh Dickinson.

left.
•
"A lot of people thoug11t our kids
would play lackadaslcal tonight,
having alreadycllnched a tie for the
championship," said Missouri,.
Coach Norm Stewart. "But I don't
thlnkwedld.Ourkldswereintense;
theyjustplayedgreat.I;msoproud
of our ballclub- all of them ... you
have to enjoy the moment, and this
is great.''
At Milwaukee, M&amp;re Marotta
scored the go-ahead ·points on a
jump shot from the key'with3: 52 left
In overtime and Marquette held on
to defeat Stetson 69-66.Glerm Rlvers, held to one field goal in the first
32~mlnutes, finlshedwithl5points
to lead Marquette, 18-8. Stetson,
18-9, was topped by Mike Reddick's
16 points.The game was tied at 60.ffi
at the end of regulat!Qn and
Marotta's jumper put theWarriors
ahead tostay62.00. Stetson'sRoland
Rucker Sflllt !he gam&lt;: intoovertime
wlthadesperation30-footsh0tatthe
buzzer.
At Auburn, Ala., Odell MQSteller
scored 20 points and Charles
Barkley had 17 points and 17
reboundsasAuburncruahedMlssis·
slppl82-59 in a game that gave Idle

The

1983

March

Williams, JackSon, Szczepanski,
Carda and Wingate were atso
first-team district sele&lt;;tl011S in
1981-82.
Meanwhile, Linda Fltto of Wll·
mtngton, aG-1 sophomore, made the
coac!tes' women's all-district first
team for the second season in a row.
PattyLong,whoguldedMaloneto
a 27-2;ecord and the district's No.I
seed, was voted as the District 22
Coach of the Year in the women's
sport.
Fltto's teammates on the ' audistrict squad
&amp;1 Gloria
Banlls, 6-foot Debbie Grant and
i-foot Mary Jo Swartz of Malone,
. ~10 'L rl Harris and 5-11 Darcy
Rollinson of Deflan\.'8, 5-10 Shannon

NAVEL

••

.••
•

NU-MAID

Domino
SWEET SUE

Sugar~
I .

..
•

..

¢

I

Margarihe.:....... ~8~.
FLAVORITE
$ 79
Homo. Milk~~!l!~~~L..

DARK .·LT. BROWN or lOX

•
•
"

••
•

. .•
•

......

&gt; •

·-

..
••
•.
'

.......• '
...

19
Ice Cream.......~.~A·L·~

13.5 oz.

'

.•.

FLAVORITE

Chicken Broth ..

'

.;

i

." .
.I

·

•

I

.•

I

• I
• I

••

were

SchrockofWalsh,6-1MaryKusanof
Ohio Dominican, 5-7 Teal Baker of

...~

5LB.

R.AVORITE

JOAN OF ARC LT. RED

GALA

SUGAR

KIDNEY BEANS

PAPER TOWELS

BA~

$}49

15.5 oz: CAN

4f$1

·JUMBO ROLL

•..•
•
••

2/Sl

•
••
••

.......
'

Limit Two l'tr customer
· Good Only At

Limit One Per Customer
At Powell's
Mar. 5, 1983

•

' •

Olflr &amp;DIM ...

_ T .... ,

.

State and 5-6 Kathy
Detllllon of Rio Grande.
Central

·~

lr

·.-•

�Page-8-The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

Meigs
correspondence
;

By NELLIE PARKER

Sunday School attendance Feb.
13 was 21; church attendance was 2.
On Feb. 20 Sunday School attend·
ance was 38; church attendance
was 22.
Alfred Churth welcomed visItors, Debbie Ross, Parkersburg;

Rev. and Mrs. Stephen St. Clair and
Stephanie, Mr. and .Mrs. Jim
Archer and Jonathan, Lancaster;
Mr. and· Mrs. Jackson and Doug,
Reynoldsburg.
Guests of Clara Follrod and Nina
Robinson Feb. 13 were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Robinson, Julie 1\nd
Brlan, Belpre, ·and Bill Follrbd,
Athens.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Yost and
Ann, Lancaster, visited Genevieve
Guthrte Feb. 19.
VIsitors ai the Parker-Poole

home Feb. 20 were Louise Michael
and Mr. and Mrs. Howard parker.
OIJie Atherton spent a week With
her grandson, Paul Vineyard, In
Belpre while hi· 'ather, Ernest
Vineyard, went tu Columbus tor
treatment of a back Injury.
Thelma Henderson received
word !bat her brother-In-law, Au·
bra Bailey, Florida, had undergone
leg surgery.
Alex Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Sammie Brown, is recoverlng from
pneumonia.

Wednesday, March 2, 19&amp;3

ByMelodyRo'-ts
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Larkins ot
Gallipolis are announcing the birth
of a son, Wesley Michael. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Dorset Larkins, Loqg Bottom.
Patti, daughter of Mrs. Joanne
Lawrence, Long Bottom, suffered
an al)k!e spain in a fall In
Parkersburg recently. The same
week while attending the Parkersburg Beauty College where she is
working for her West VIrginia
manager's license, she injured a

l'y1r. and Mrs. Paul Hauber afKI
Melody Roberts visited recenvy
with Mrs. Ora Sinclair and Chad,
Sumner Road.
;
Meetings of the Long BottoJn
Senior Citziens continue to be held
on the second and fourth Tuesday of
each month at the Long Bot.toin
Methodist Church. Free bloOd
pressure and weight cl inics are held
monthly. Thoseattendingmeetings
enjoy lunches together and work on
quilts along with other fund rais!Jig
projects.
'.

finger.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Gillespie and

family Were recent guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Lawren~ and
famUy.
Dougte Ball, Montgomery, was
the r~nt visitor of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. "Mlllard Ball. He tookk hls
mother to the Holzer Medical
Center for treatment.
Weekend guests of the Clyde
Adams family were Mr. an Mrs.
Herb Cairns, Hebron, and Joe
Evans, Columbus.

.

.

SAVE IO""fO 40" :
COMPARED TO
OTHER BRANDs•
AT
KROGER
•FORSOMESOOPERCOSTCUTTERSNO
COMPARABLE ITEMS ARE STOCKED

ADVERTISED ITEM POLI CY
~

E..ct1 of thwe

11ems cs reqwed to be
rt!llldlty Ava•lable for saM •n 8iteh Kroger Store , except •
IPiClfic;lly nci'Uid "' !tW «1. If we do run out of ., llll:t.."tillld
item. M will offer you your c~ ot a comparab'e item.
wf'wl h'adabift . ref\ect •ng rl"wl same YW\91 0 1 a raincheck
~h Will ertllde vou to purchae the ed\lll!lf'tiMd 1tem at the
~IMd pnce W'lt'htn .JJ CJCI't"
·
0

'

Cost ·Cutter
Pinto Beans

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUA RANTEE

Everythtng you buy at KrQ®r ~ g~ranteed fOf your total
111tasfawon rngardless of mahutact urer . If you fire not satis·

fleet Kroger will replace your 1t em With the Mme brand or ~ .

compai'able bfand

Of

refund your pui c hase pnce

CO PYRIGHT l !J83 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRJCfS
COOD SUNDAY , FEB . 27 . THROUGH SATURDAY . MARCH

S

1~13 .

2

IN GAlliPOliS AND POMEROY

WE RESUVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOlD TO DEAlERS .

COST CUTTER

White
Bread

16-oz .
.... . .. . . Loaf

33

Cost Cutter
Saltines
1-lb~

-lb.
Bag

c

Cost Cutter
Cheese
Food

2% Milk

41

PASTEURIZED PROCESS
CHEESE FoOD
AVAILABLEONLYIN •
STORES WITH
DELI·BAKERY .
HOT FOODS
AVAILABLE
11om TIL 7pm DAILY ,

~Hgetable -:.~139

COST CUTTER

lb .

ggc

Pick Of
The Chix

. . . . lb.
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,
BEEF .

Boneless
Rib Eye Steak

Cut
Green Beans~~::·

-lb.
Bag

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A . INSPECTED
GRADE A
.

$

.Tab, Sprite
qr Coca ·Cola

$399

38

'
-

29c

Fresh Mad
Cheese Pizzas

PINT RETURNABlE BOTTLES

i

lb .

POMEROY - The Voices of
VIctory wiD be speakers at the
• regular missionary meeting at
the Hysell Rurt Holiness Church
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m . The subject wiD be the work done In
Halt!,. The public Is Invited.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Mason -Gallla Marshall
Alumni Chapter, In cooperation
With ·the admissions office of
Marshall University, wiD host a
party for area high school jun. tors and seniors wanting Information about M.U. on Thursday
from 4 to 5 p.m. at Mason County
Library. Parents and interested
adults may attend 7 to 8 p.m.
session the same day.

a

MIDDLEPORT -

Evange-

line Chapter 172, OES, wiD !TEet

at Middleport Masonic Temple,
7: 30 p.m. Thursday with lnltla·
tion for three candidates. Auction for cancer research has
been postponed.

16SUCES

INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED

KROGER U.S .O.A . GRADE A FROZEN
16·LIIS . AND UP

'

EAST MEIGS - Open Fo~
at Eastern High School Thursday at 7 p.m. Kent Minor, Ohio
Department of Education, 001\sultant on course or study, will .
be the speaker. Residents of
other school districts are invited
to attend.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Fox Chase~ Assocta tlon will

COST CUTTER

U.S.D.A •GRADE A 16 ·LBS . AND UP FROZEN
BUTtERBALL TURKE YS .. . l~ . 79&lt;

1HURSDAY

FRIDAY

NETWT120Z 340g

Wishbone
Turkeys . ...

POMEROY - Bible prophecy lecture, Pomeroy
Seventh-day Adventist Church
at 7 p.m. Wednesday on the topic
"Fu~Y\'Ithout Fear." Take
Bibles, study book. provided.
Public IS Invited.

POMEROY - Plans for an·
nual banquet to be made at 8
p.m . Friday when Meigs County.
Pomona Grange meets at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall With
Columbia Grange as host unit.

amencan

\

WEDNESDAY

POMEROY -There will be a
~ at Wesleyan
Holiness Church on S.R. 143 With
Mr. and Mrs. Paul White of Ohio
vllle, Pa., as speaker; services
will be at7: 30eachevening; special vocal music nightly. Rev.
Earl Fields, pastor, Invites
public.

INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SLICES
IMITATION

8

-&lt;-

~

Pak1

12-ln.
Pizzas
PEPI'IIONI. MUSHROOM OR SAUSAGE PIZZA
2 .. J2.1NCH PIZZAS • .• $6.50
l&gt;tLU~t PIZZAS ·2· · 12-INCH PIZl!AS.

KROGER
WELCOMES
YOUR FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

All Meat
Bologna ... ..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bf3at of the bend.

Drug abuse will be discussed by local . authorities

meet Friday at 7:30p.m. at Ea·
gle Ridge.

By BOB HOEFUCH ·
Sentinel stall
The next meeting of Meigs
. County Mlnistertal Association Cit!zenry Croup will be held at 7 p.m.
Monday In the
School
cafeteria.
Looks like an
interesting sessian with those
having m ad.e
commitments to
answer questions
from the
branches of local government
including Common Pleas Judge
Charles Knight; Juvenile Judge .
Robert Buck; Assistant Prosecutor
Carson Crow; Sheriff James Proffitt and Sheriff's Investigator Gary
Wolfe.
These gentlemen wUI sit as a
panel to address the problems
confronting them with alcohOl and
drug abuse from legal and law

SYRACUSE - Revlvai servl·
ces wiD be held at Asbury United
Methodist Church, Syracuse;
Frlday, Saturday and Sunday
With Mark Morrow , evangeUst.
Special music Friday wiD be,
"Harmony"; Saturday," "The
Harvest Trio,"; and Sunday, the.
Asbury choir and other local tal·
ent. Public Is invited. ·
RUTLAND - There wiD be a
dance at Rutland Civic Center, 8
toll p.m. FrldayWlthMuslcUn· ·
limited, $2 for singles, $3 for
couples.
PAGEVlLLE -Scipio Town·
ship trustees meeting wiD be
March 4 at 7 p.m. at town hall in
Pag~.

MIDDLEPORT - Lad!~
Auxiliary, United P.entecostal
Church of Mld!ilepoort, wiD hold
public chicken and noodle
supper 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Frlday;
will deliver lh Middleport and
Pomeory; also public can eat at
church; everything homemade,
chicken and noocles, cole slaw,
green beans, roll, choice of pie,
$3. To order phone 985-3564, 992·
3824 or 992-,15(11.

· Yellow Onions ~. Kaiser -

Potatoes

FULL liNE BAKERIES

5 -$

·

Bag

'-lb.

Bdg

Fresh
Broccoli

RED RIPE

California
Strawber-ries

$

99
'

Mr. anci Mrs. William B=~~
observed their 25th weddln!; annl·
versary on Feb. 23. A CPI:,oration in
observance of lhe occasion was
hosted at their home on Feb. W by
their daughters, Teresa, Kelly and
Karla, all of Rutland .

4-HHf8hnews
notes
Flying 4-H

The
Club met on Feb. 5 at
lbe0leot2r Convnunlly Building. Th""'advt·
mn and U members attended. Items otb.JsiQe. dlscuaaed were the buying or scra,ptxlok,
.......,Ions lor upcomlrc activities, and the
.eledlon of ur new ottlcers. The
orttcers
.are u follawl : prealdalt, John Edwards;
·Vire praldent, Betty Jo Hunt; &amp;eeretaJj',
J•et Stlltner; trees~r. Jenny Lee; news
oej&gt;crt..-. Mary Edwmls; recrE&lt;Itlon leaders.
Dovld Edwards and Todd Lee: health and
40'0\Y chairman. Tmy Lee: oong leader, Rl·

new

c:lle

Meigs Soil and. Water Conserva.
tlon District is sponsortng a poster
contest and an essay contest In all
Meigs County Schools. It will run
through March 21.
All fourth graders in Meigs
County are eligible to enter one pos·
ter In competition with their own
school mates. A first place, Winning
a blue rlbhon and three dollars; a
second place, Winning a red ribbon
and two dollars, and a third place,
Winning a white rtbbon and one dol·
tar will be chosen from each school.
All participants will receive a con·
servatlon dis trict pencil. Two
county champins wiD be chosen
from aD first place posters, and will
receive a tropby.
All sixth graders in Meigs County

POMEROY - SalisbUry
Township Trustees will meet at
7 p.m. Friday at home of Clerk ·
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff,
Road; meetings open to public.
. -·-

SATIJRDAY

RACINE - Soup dinner by
Racine Volunteer Emergency
Squad will be from 11:30a.m. to
6 p.m. Saturday at flre station;
homemade vegetable soup,
bean soup, corn bread, cake, pop
and coffee; proceeds go to purchase of heart monitor for
squad.
RACINE - Square dance will
be held at Racine American Legion Hall, 8: 30 p.m. to midnight
Saturday. Guy Thome band will
play. Caller will be Red Carr.
Public is Invited.

IJnda Edwards. -

Aglo~

Among ·tl)e numerous dinners
and soup suppers coming up is the
third annual spaghetti supper of the
Meigs Local Vocal Music Boosters
from 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday at the
Rutland Grade School gymnasium.
For $3 adults illld $2 children, you
get spaghetti, salad, roll, dessert
and a beverage illld the "Chorall·
ers" will provide entertainment
while you eat.
Incidentally, the Boosters report
that there is ashortageof plesat the

are eligible to enter an essay of not
less than 200 words nor more than
400 words . A first place, Winning a
blue ribbon and two dollars and a
second place WlnniJ1g a red rlbbon
and one dollar, will be awarded In
eacb school.
The theme for both contests are
"Plants, How They Improve Our
Environment."
A film erilltled "Sun, Plants and
Animals" are being showed In all
elemerttary schools and booklets
"Plants, How They Improve Our
Environment" are being distributed to all fowih graders, In prepara lion for the contest as part o! the
educational program of the distrlct.
The posters and essays will be
judged by the Meigs SWCD .-Ladles
Auxiliary.

moment for the Saturday night
event" so you· re a~ ked to respo!ld to
the note brought home by your
student.
The Ohio Cancer Information
Service has a new· number, toll
free, 1·8Xl4·CANCER which you
can call to ask any questions you
might have about cancer. The first
couple of days, ·the number had
some "bugs" in it, but it's working
fine now - do ease your mind illld
get an answer to a question which
rnighl be bothering you.
We all - or mosto( us, at leastsaid goodbye to M·A·S.H Monday
night. I think so many of us could
relate to rather sad military
farewells as we left the ~ervlce to
get back to our lives. Monday's
M·A·S·H farewells were louching. I
know it'll ·be through a tear, but
keep smiling ...

•PAINT _.

•BRUSHES
•LADDERS
•ROLLERS
•PANS

•DROP

sets meeting for next wee

CLOTHS

.

PICKENS HARDWARE

Mr. and Mrs. Brown were
married on Feb. 23, 1958 in
Middleport by the Rev. George
Davis. He is the son of the late
Pauline Brown Marklns and Roe
Brown. Mrs. Brown, the former
Myrvllle Stewart, is the daughter of
Iva Stewart and the late Clarence

'Pst·ew·art··
------~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
II

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

mlttee merntli!n. the 4-H committee bake

tiel. 'lbe P,eaaure Riders a)!o selected project bo:*&amp; The electtoo of otttcers wlll be
planned lcr the next """'tlng, the project
bookl wlll be hantled out to the members. and
the club wiD work on saddles.

. WE HAVE OVER 100 REMNANTS AND
SHORT ROLLS, SOME LARGE ENOUGH TO DO
A LIVING ROOM, HALL AND STAIRWAY OTHERS THAT WILL DO A BEDROOM OR
BATHROOM - AND WE WILL GUARANTEE
TM YOU CAN BUY ANY ONE OF THESE
PIECES FOR LESS THAN FACT~Y COST.
WE ALSO HAVE ROLLS OF CARPET OF AU
JYPES. BRING US A QUOTE FROM OTHER
CARPET STORES IN THE AREA AND WE
GUARANTEE WE CAN BEAT THEIR PR~CES.

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLE'RGIST

News reporter Mary

1ale, and report forms and county f.H actM·

~ice

Hours by Appointment Only

CALL (614) 992-2104
.or (304) 675-1244

Open Daily 10-9; Sunday 1-6

Wed. - Sat. Sale

c:::.
The Saving Place "'

'

'

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

Save

Bunch

. when you buy Crush

1lx 12-qz, c•n••-eight 18 oz.
return8ble bottl••• ... 18-oz.
non-returnllbl• bottlea; or one
2·1ter bottle

•

1:

Fresh Whole.
Pork loin .. •....

••

I•

·

. . . , . OFPU -·- ; Col.pon il good only on lhl "-.15 SPtQfle&lt;IIIMIItl'rCICU p!O\III'IQ IIUI'dMstS ol ~rhcent stock to cover COUDOnl mu11 k Shown 111110n rtQutst CvSioiT'I!r
11ro111 PlY., Ut..S tnn n ~ - (all ........,. vM 1121 or tc Lint OM coupon pt1 PllltriiSI Owr SIIH11W!
redllm lhrs coupon in uorlhnc:e With ttl~ I!tiM
01 oftillllltll,.. 1• ........ Of INiiiO: . . . . . . . . ~ • . , - ................. ...,.,

w•

I

------------------·------------------------',.

ArA'
"
.
=-~-

Buy 2 Gallons Of Pre'stone "'~ ll At K mart"' Sdle
Price And Receive A Rebate Direct From
Prestone "' For The Cost Of 1 Gallon

·· ·Here's
$to try the
irresistible taste
and all natural
"
flavors of •••

SLICED INTO ONE CONVENIENT
TAU HOME PACKAGE •

0

P. C. King, son of Linda and
Curtis King, has taken a turn for the
worse and has been transferred to
Children's Hospital, from St. An·
thony Hospital In Columbus. The
room number is A-420 West.
Incidentally, Vernon Weber has
been home since undergoing
surgery at Holzer Medical Center.
He reenters the hospital thJS week
to begin hls first four days of
chemotherapy. He will be at the

p.m. Saturday at temple With
work in master mason degree;
all master masons welcome;
past masters of Harrisonville
asked to be present.

Hunt: and hlst&lt;rlan. Joey

tdw•nls1be Metes t-H Aeasure RldersQubmeton

t

.

The three band directors of
Meigs County high schools are busy
planning their second annual all·
county ·band festival. . The trio
includes Marllyn Goodnlte, Meigs;
Jolut Van Reeth, Southern, and
James L. Wilhelm, Jr .. Eastern.
Date of the event hasn't been
established but we'll keep you
advised.
·

HARRISONVILLE Lodge

!:¢Nards. Refroshmenu were se!W&lt;I by

PINT SIZE •• , $1.09

lb .

hospital on Thursday, his birthday,
and his family will ~. on hand for a
small observance of the occasion.
Janet Korn has been returned to
her home on Anne St., Pomeroy,
folloWing surgery at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Janet has an
arm in a sling and Is unable to
wrtte. Do you mind If I sUp Ina little
thanks on her behalf for your
kindnesses iowa$ her?

411, F&amp;AM meeting Will be 7: 30

Hunt: phone chairman , Tom Mon1uey;

11.1c leade&lt;, K&lt;lth

Quart

$149

enforcement aspects.

Meigs Soil and Water District
sponsors poster and essay
. contest

FRESH BAKED

Winesap
Apples

The Daily Sentinel-ltage-9 ·

Browns observe thier silver year

Feb. 2lat the St. Paul Luthel"an Onrrch. The
club atsc\aaed the duly c:-. otncers and e&lt;m.-

SLICED TO ORDER

-

Calendar

revival March

Box

Springdale

-Wednesday, March 2, 1983

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I'
I
I
I
I
I

I

Rebate umned ro mrr.'l sflpuloUon

Kmart®
Sale
Price
less Moil-in
Rebate
Direct From
Prestone®

Your
Net Cost
·After
Moll-In
Rebate

2$4
·.
For

rpMffONru~uhR~~M~~~oo~~~
To recenre ttlll' relund ot the lult pnce o l one tUQ ol PRES TONE II se nd
th•s cornplete(l cer t•hc ..e along wu ~ proofs ol purchilse to
•
'

F'" PRES TONE· Ca•h R.•tund Offef', P.O. 8011 4044.
Young A-k:•. MN 553ft

Mr ..,.,5 U s - -- - - - -- - Adelress - -- - - - - - - - - - - -

C•y - -- " - - ---''---

State - - l •P

SIOI'e W here Purcnased - -- - - - - - - -

A.mount to t&gt;e retUnded -----,------~
Prootr. of purchue are ast~s '
• Twu ompronte,d tod sea ts trom the mouths 01 twO PAESlONE II Jugs.
FJLUS
b Stofe •o.tnlll•ed c.a1h ~ster roceop4 "''th thlil d•t• Of purch"(.a.tch 1 thrOuah .._,... 4 , 1M.)~ •nd tne prtee ot eKh

Pf:IESTONE ll,ug c•rc'-d
Lrm. l Ql'le casn r otund ~ t•m•IV per &lt;Kidress Aetunc:t mqu A5t 'ft'WIII!'il
oo madft on tMrs o lhc••• IOf'M Reproctuctrons unactcptaOic v o od
pron•blted. tocenH d . r estrocl'ed Of •••ed A.tlew 6 to 8 wt!ells tor '-'-nd
AEFUNO REQUEST MUST BE POSTMAAKm NO LA.TIEA THAN
APRIL 4 , 1-.3.fAEQU£STS POSTMARKED .. FTEA THIS I:MTE

....,..P.

1,!"!!;_~.!,.~N!,!:

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.

1H~l lJPPtH HIVEH fHlAD G;\llJP()[

1~;

�IG-The

Sentinel

March 2, 1983

Heavy rain£~11, winds batter
California's oceanside area
. l

By Associated Press
California, more than 500 people 'evacuatedalong the Sacramento
More than 7,00J people fled had to be evacuated.
River, including the entire town of
flooded neighborhoods as heavy
Reserve Officer Stuart Tiara was Tehama, a.nd at. least 300 homes
rain and high winds pounded killed and two other police were were flooded in Red Bluff.
Ca!lfornla for a second straight day, seriously hurt when their helicopter
"We were rescuing people off
battering oceanside houses, block- · patrolling a tornado-damaged sec- roofs," said Red Bluff pollee
Ing roads with mudslides and tion of south-central Los Angeles hit
dispatcher Susan Myers.
sending a freak tornado through power lines and crashed Tuesday
About 500 residents of Santa Ana
downtown Los Angell'S.
in Southern Californla, including
night.
The wind and ra in stretched the
And a n alrplan!' carrying two occupants of city hall, the YMCA,
lengt h of the West Coast, from San men disappeared from radar
and a small retirement home were
c •• Diego to Seattle, but the Golden
evacuated after after 3 inches of
shortly after the pilot radioed he was
State took the brunt of Tuesday's experiencing problems with the
rain fell during the morning.
stqnn. Nine people were dead in weather, the Civil Air Patrol in
In Huntington Beach, 40 miles
weather· related accidents since the Bridgeport, Calif., said.
south
of Los Angeles, 1,(XX) homes
weekend; two other people were
Mudslides,
floodwaters
and
falflooded
when a flood control
were
missing.
ling
redwood
trees
ravaged
the
channel broke. Residents were
Winds gusted upto84mph, up to}O.
narrow Palo Colorado Canyon· on allowed to return home when the
inches of rain fell In places, power
was knocked out to 210,000 homes the Big Sur coast, smashiing more rain stopped in mid-afternoon.
Disneyland was closed Tuesday,
and businesses and parts of the than 20 homes and forcing several
residents
to
flee
on
foot.
hundred
as
was the famed San Diego Zoo for
Slerra·Nf'vada were smothered by 7
Army
helicopters
airlifted
28
people
only
the second time in its history.
feet of new snow.
to
safety
using
winches.
can hardly see out there, it's
"We
Meanwhile, two minor earth·
At
Stinson
Beach
near
San
coming
down so 'hard," said zoo
quakes rattled the Los Angeles
Francisco,
fierce
waves
up
to25feet
spokesman
Jeff Jouett.
: .' area . adding to the confusion but
high
exploded
against
the
coast,
causing no major damage.
Three Coast Guard helicopters
"I understand March is supposed destroying eight homes and leaving
equipped with baskets managed to
at
least
15
others
"uninhabitable,"
to roar in like a lion, but this is
rescue 10 workmen stranded on a
getting a little ridiculous," said officials said.
400-foot sewer project barge pulled
The
Los
Angeles
tQrnado
cut
a
Inglewood, Calif., RQiice Lt. Dan
loose by the wild surf about a mile off
thrre-mile scar of destruction in a
Cooke.
· '
the San Francisco coast.
. The wea Iher also delayed Queen 10-minuie rampage that damaged
Ill Lake Tahoe, Nev., building
Elizabelh Il's progress up the about 100 harries and a hospital as It
inspectors reported the snow col ·
ripped down walls and roofs and
.. ·California coast, as she canceled
lapsed
several roofs, but no injuries
•
tossed
cars
like.
leaves
In
the
wind.
- '.today' s plans to cruise to San
were reported.
The
twister
"overturned
huge
. . Francisco in the royal yacht in favor
trucks, tore telephone poles in half
.· of a flight from Long Beach.
A lire df'partment unit was
and
twisted steel, '' said Los Angeles
' · The queen and Prince Philip
dispatched to the Ramirez Canyon
Police Chief Daryl Gates. "It looks
.. needed a four-wheel-drive ve)iicle
in the Malibu area where a number
like a war zone."
• for a strepclirnbup a flooded lane to
of
"really big" homes were threaA second tornado hit Pasadena, 10
reach President Reagan's mountened
by mudslides, said Dick
miles north of Los Angeles, lifting
~ -~taintop ranch in Santa Barbara on
Friend
of the Los Angeles county
one car at least 15 feet into the air
• Tuesday for a lunch of enchiladas
fire
department.
and injuring the driver.
.. and tacos.
In the Santa Clarita Valley about
"I saw this black twisting cloud
The storm was moving eastward
35 miles north of Los Angeles
and said, 'Could this be?' when all of
today, with heavy snow forecas t for
several homes in the Lost Canyon
a
sudden
it
started
knocking
me
the southern ROCky Mountains and
area weresilppingintotherampagaround," said the driver, John
rain expected for the res t of the
lng Santa Clara River, Friend said.
Baker, . 44, according to eyewit·
·_, :nation's western third. the National
The Southern Pacific Railroad's
nesses. "I thlnkmycarwantedtogo
~ . ,Weather Service said.
coastal
route was blocked when 50
to heaven and I didn't."
·- · "We're looking at.continuing bad
feet
of
track
was covered with 4 to5
The tornadoes left :!5 people
· .'. weather into Thursd ay,"sald Nolan
inches
of
mud
70 miles northwest of
Injured, none of them serious.
Duke, of the National Weather
Los
Angeles,
Storm-dr iven waters crashed
Service's Severe Storms Cente r In
The railroad's main inland route
through
a levee in the tiny shoreline
Kansas City, Mo.
to
Los Angeles was blocked when a
community of Alviso in San Jose at
·: ·. Swollen rivers and creeks routed
bridge
in Newhall was closed by
dusk, prompting the evacuation of
. • more than 6,500 people in Northern
high
water.
In northern California, a
alll,700 residents.
California, including nearly 3,00J
240-foot trestle washed out at
_ people from the Mobile Parks West
Tehama County Sheriff Ron
Gerber, halting Amt rak passenger
trailer park in San Jose. In Southern Koenig said 500 to 800 people were
trains.

,.. . • COLUMI)US, Ohio (AP) - An
·• ·attempt in the Hou5e to place a
·.: ·moratorium on foreclosures has
" drawn support from consumer and
'"" •la bor groups as well as farmers
c ·confronted by the loss of their land.
Members of the Family Farm
~ .Movement and · the Ohio Public
Interest Campaign are backing a
bill that would permit courts, under
certain conditions, to postpone until
Jan. 1. 1985. foreclosures and sales
· of agricultural property and residential real estate.
Farmers wearing signboards
that said "The Farmer Is Not For
Sale .,;,. Stop Foreclosures" took
their case before the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Com" .mittee on Tuesday.
David Jordan of Pickaway
· County told the panel his financial
' ~ problems began with a hall storm
that devastated his crops.
.
That touched off a series of
; : e ncounters with lendf'rs that he said
: , eventually led to sale of his
equipment, bahkruptcy and sale of

·~; Meigs

his twofarms.
"They knew all along they were

going to put me out of business. That
was one of the hardest things~ had to
go through in my life, work on those
farms for 12 years and see them
sold," Jordan said.
"I The bill I is too late for me. But
there are a lot of people out there
who are going to need this blll," he
said . .
Doug Dailey, the Madison County
man whose farm was sold to pay off
loans and who is now jailed for
failing to turn over documents.
testified by video tape.
"The bill is needed because of the
failu re of the credit institutions to
work with (armers through hard
times," Dalley said.
Leaders of the Ohio Public
Interest Campaign said In Cincinnati they would testify In support of
the blli at a March 8 hearing.
Jim Grossteld, associate director
of the group, said statistics put Ohio
at the top nationally In loan defaults

'

County happenings •.

Emergency runs
-- . Six calls were answered by local
units Tuesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
-· reports.
At 10:'21 a. m., the Pomeroy Unit
' :·took Earl Smith, Union Ave., to
~: Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at
'' 11;02 a.m. took Lela Shenefield,
' ·: ·: Main St., to Veterans Memortal
.•: .Hopsltal; Middleport at 2:38 p.m.
transported Marlene Lecne and
Greg Winebrenner from the scene
: ' Ot an accident on County Road 3 to
•~ Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy at
' 8:03p.m., tookJamesBraley,Pearl
,, . St. 1 Middleport, to ,Veterans Mem; t. :Orlal andat10:28p.m., the Pomeroy
•· 'Unit took Mary Hood from Rock
''Springs to Holzer Medical Center.

I
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r·

.

.tom

12.

mw. ...

-Dozers
-8ackhou
-Dump Trucks

~~!~er
See Classified Ad under
Classnicition 47 in Want
Ads.

results. Money not refundable.

Nam•------------------Address~----------~------

-Wiler
•-r.;!inll
-Septic Systtms
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992· 2478
. 112.3 mo.

·"""*"r, !Ill.

PH. 992-6851
349 N. 2nd ·51 .
Middleport, OH.
Mon.-Thurs. 4:00-11:30
fri Sat • 00 12 00
CLOSED\uND~Y

OPEN9 ti5110N. t1ru SAT.
All Trpos or Auto.Rtto~lr.
Brokts, Tune-Ups, etc.

SPECIAL

and cats. fr'l!O to ~Ood
homos. 304-675-2254.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

6

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

coma to leek and to aave

Route I
lona Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
IH~Hc

•

Pizzas-Pizza Bread
Italian Bread-SUbS

TRANSIISSION fiLTER
AND FLUID1 CHANGE ·
ON.LY 31,95 1-1&lt;-Hc

.·

New Construction - Rt·
modtlina .,;,. Custom Pole
Barns.

l·ll ·l mo.

Lost and Found Fbr the Son of man ia

that which was loat.

luko 19:10

Real Estate General

r · ..

Phon•------------------Phone
1-(614)-992·3325
NEAR POMEROY - on hard
Jllld. Large blilding tor gatage,
fru~ of flea maftet large 3
bedroom home thitt has nice

7

Yard Sale

carpetin&amp; IIi baths, furnace
and heatolator for ony
. $40,000.

NEW LISTING - Coal ml'ler.;
a 3 bedroom tanch
home 3 or 4 yrn. ~d. Bath,
carpeting and an electric. S.W.
of Saen Center. Has 4.8 acre
and pfivate. Only $39,000.
th~ ~

CALIFORNIA JOGH WATER - Homes In lhe
Brea are surrounded by Oood
waters from the Sacramento Blver alter heavy rains

Red Bluff, Call!omla

intmdaled the northeni part of the stale Tuesday, ( AP
Laserphoto).
Public Notice

· 18 ACRES - With newly.
drilled gaS well ·nearRu11and. 5
room home, one ftoor, bath, Gn
good country road. Just
$22,500.
.

LAFF·A·DAY

NOTICE OF
FlUNG OF AN
APPUCATION
TO MERGE

RUTLAND - Lar&amp;e lot for the
children. 8 rooms, tmh, nat
gas, tity wate1 near school out
of all floo:j~ Only $25,000.

Nouce 15 hereby g1ven that
applicahon has been made to
the Comptroller of the Cur·
rency, Wash mgton. 0 . C
202 19 for hts co nsent to a
merger of BanK One of Pomeroy. NA. Pomeroy, Oh10 with

Bank One of Southeastern
Oh10. National Assoc tatton.
• Athens. Ohio.undflr the charter

of Bank One of Southeastern
Ohto. Nat1onal Assoc ,at1on and
with the IItie Bank One of Sou·
t h east~trn OhiO. Nati onal Assoc•auon. Th1s appltcat•on was
accepted for f1 ling on February
ces of the a bove- named banks
w1ll cononue to be oper ated.

PUBUC NOTICE

rency 112 CFA 5). Th1s notice

will appear weekly. on th e same ·
day~. beg1nnmg March 2 .
1983. and end.ng March 30.

1983.
Asly person desmng to com ment on th1s apphcat1on may
do sa by aubm 1ttu-.g wntten
O ~r ect or . Bank
Organ•zat•on and Structure D•V•s•on. Compuolle ~ of the Currency, 4'90 l 'Enfa nt Plaza. Eat.

comments to:

causing extensive daunage to ·commercial and residential structures. 'lbe cars were aJ the garage for
servicing when bricks from the building crashed
down on them. (AP Laserphoto).

SW.Washonglon. D.C. 20219

w1thm21 daysOfthedate olthe
last publlcat•on of th•s not• ce.

The public file 1s ava• lable for
mspec t•on m the Aegtonal Of-

f•ce, One
l~nd .

Ene~Aew

Plaza. CleveOh 10 44 1 14. dun ng

regular bus1ness hour s

BANK ONE DF
POMEROY. NA'

Freak tornado hits LA area
LOS ANGE LES (AP) - A "You know we worry about
terrifi e d ho s pit a l p a ti e nt
earthquakes, but never this."
"screamed and screamed.. as a
The Los Angeles twlstercausedat
freak tornado smashed windows . least $2.5 rnilllon in damage as it
and tore down walls when it cut a
struck the huge Convention Center
3-mlle path of df'struction through
roof and Orthopedic Hospital.
the City.
" It looks like a warwne," Police
" It went black and everything
Chief Daryl Gates said.
went flying through the air outside
Although tornadoes occur every
- huge pieces of wood," said year in Southern California , NaPatricia Goodman. 52, bedridden at
tional Weather Service specia list
Orthopedic Hospital after hlp
Dieter Crowley said they are "veJy
surgery. "Just like 'The Wizard of . rare. Everything has to be just in the
Oz."'
right sequence."
More than 100 buildings were
No one was killed by the twister
damaged Tuesday and 25 people Itself, but Los Angeles rese1ve
suffered minor injuries as a rare
police officer Stuart Tiara, 26, was
California twister careened through
killed and two others were Injured
the southern downtown area.
when a helicopter apparently hit a
Ten miles away in Pasadena,
power line and crashed while taking
another twister lifted a car carrying off .from an emergency tornado
one motorist at least 15 feet in the command post Tuesday evening.
air, eyewitnesses- said, whit~ the
More than 200 officers spent the
National Weather Service said a
night patrolling a 250-block area
third tornado may have touched
that was c!O$ed to ail but residents
down in SSanta Ana.
and businessmen, and police Of.
"It's unbelievable," said Gerald fleer Sergio Diaz said the depart·
Baker, a resident of the tornado- ment planned to send In officers on
ravaged section of Los Angeles.
horseback this morning. However

he said there was only one
confirmed report of looting, at a
shoe store, and no arrests.
Meanwhile, about 60 to 70 pepple,
including one woman nine mcinths
pregnant and another who l•
epileptic. bunked down in an
evacuation center at the glrl's~
in Manual Arts High School after
eating fried chicken from a fast food
restaurant , sa id Red Cross spokes·
man Joe Coria . .
''We've got some people who are
pretty shaken up," Coria said.
"We've had volunt eers talking to
them and keeping their children

active."
Mayor Tom Bradley declared a
local st at~ of emergency and said he
asked. sta If' and federal officials to
declare the commercial and lowincome residential section a disas·
terarea.
The tornadoes occurred amid a
storm that dumped 2.94 Inches of ·
rain on downtown Los Angeles and
more than 10 inches on Mt. Wilson,
about 10 miles to th&lt;' nort heast.

Lawmakers looking at .changes
to subdividE' lor 'the election of
members, bu I few have don&lt;• so
"because I don't think it is n::alistlr
to exrlect the members to gi;:c up
their power," he said.
Under hiS proposa I. any person or
group could circulatP petitions to
obtain signa tures of!Qpercentoft h&lt;'
voters to Ioree the lssuP onto the
ballot.
Hartley provided the commit tee
,with figures showing lack of
represmtation among women and
blacks on big-and medium-size city
school boards m·ound the state.
In Toledo, there are no blacks on a
five-member board which oversees
a studf'nt population which is 3.1
percent black, he sa id.
In Akron, !her&lt;:' are two blacks
and three · women on a scv£"n-

member board which Hartley said
"comes the closest "'itl'fdir repi'Nf"
entatloo among any ot the nea tly
two dozen district s 1\•hlch would he
affected by his k&gt;gislatlon.

Pomeo ry. Oh•o

BANK ONE OF
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO.
NATlONALI\SSOCIATION
Athens, Ohto

' 131 2. 9. 16. 23. 30. 141 t . 6tc

•
'

··1.

so cloee to the side of the
Pl'ale'?"

Public Notice

and Part 5 of The Regulations
of,the Comptroller of the Cur-

IDTI1NG THE BRICKS- Macarlo Hemandez,
owner of the Mexico Gar..., In central Los Angeles,
surveys cars heavUy damaged by bricks when a
Tuesday momlng tornado ripped through the area,

._ ... ___ - - -

"Why do manufacluren persist
iD deolping CAn! with fenden!

23. 1983
tt 1S contemplated that all offi Th1S not1ce 15 publ1shed pursuant to sect1on 1 828 (c) of the
Federal Oepos1t Insurance Act

The board of commissioners
Tuesday received notification that
two applications for liquor permits
were filed with the Ohio Depart·
ment of Liquor Cant rol.
Filing for liquor permits were ,
Charlene R. Doczi, dba Pick and
Shovel, Rt. 1, Salem Township,
Langsville, and Charles Clinton
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) to other matters.
Calaway, dba Circl C. Drive Thru, . Lawmakers who raised taxes at ihe
Re p. David Hartl ey, D·
Orange Township, Reedsville.
state level to fund.schools and other
Springfield, is seeking passage of a
Commissioners. before taking
programs are trying to Improve
blll that would extend the "one man
action, will receive public com·
school funding at the local level.
one vote" principle to schooi
ments on the two applications uatli
The House Education Committee districts in larger cities.
March22.
. heard testimony''I'uesday night on a
Tiiat means big-and medium-size
. bill the sponsor 'says can make local
Meets Thursday .
city
school distrtcts c~mld be divided,
voters more willing to support
SOutheastern Ohio Residents As·
on
an
equal population basis Into ·
often-defeated school board Ielrles
soclatlon will meet Thursday,
sub-distrtcts,
if voters approve, to
and bond Issues.
March 3, at 7 p.m. in the Athens City
assure that each neighborhOOd in
Building, Athens.
House memtlers held only a brief the· dlstrtct ·ts represented on the
An Introductory discussion of
session earlier in· the day, with school board.
surface land and owner's legal
Hartley told the Education Com·
members 11pproving 9().0 and sendrights wlli be featured.
rilittee
that In Springfield, MansIng to the Senate a bill requiring
field
and
other cities, school board
,
prosecutors tonotlfythestateBoard
Lottery winner
members
come from wJilte-coUar
of Education of 'convictions of
neighborhoods
after being eleCted
teachers on sex· related offenseS..
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
at-large.
Senators met only in skeleton
winning number drawn Tuesday session.
"Minortty and lower imccme
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
With Gov. Richard Celeste's$3)0 people are intimidated. M~ny
game, "The Number,' ' was 7ll.
mllllon taX Increase package out of parents and taxpayers feel alieIn the "Pick 4" game, played five the way and now - as .o fTuesday- nated and a·re less likely to support
times a week, the winning number In the collect ion process, the Senate levies," Hartley said.
was7006.
'
and House sta,rted to turtt atiention ' Present Jaw allows school boards

:.: Accept cruiser bid

farm land and farm
equipenent.

coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you gel

Admitted .. Char!es Hail, Middleport; Betty Carpenter, Racine;
James Colburn, Pomeroy; Nellie
Groce, Long Bottom; Hany Wyatt,
Racine; Lela Shenefield, Pomeroy;
Luia Jacks, Rutland; Noanni Floyd,
Pomeroy; Gregory Winebrenner,
Reedsville; Marlene Leone, Wilkes·
ville; . Kathryn Philson, Racine;
Eunice Nutter, Reedsvllle; James
Braley, Middleport.
Dischargect ..Lois Cornf'll, Cllfford Plantz, William Butcher Lena
Baxter, Radle Hatfield:
'

...

Giveaway

t;:=======:::;,-;:=:::::;;:::;;=;:::=;-t~::::::::::::::::::=:;-t::::=::::::::::::;;:::::;-ralonde male304Pomeranian
to
ULLI NS
AUTOMATIC
Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
givo away.
' 876· 3381 ·
· TING
TRANSMISSION CO
· ANGIE'S
Ina- Sidina- Concrete
3 month old. mixed brWant to buy or lease
EXPCAV_A
.
p1ZZA
Patios - Sidewalks puppios. Gentle adult dogo

'
,I
I
f
- I Write your own ad and oroer by mall' with
this

Applicalions filed

Represents Pomerov.

4

WANTED!!!

I

'I

Sentinel-Page-II

The

Business senices·

Wanted

'

Curb Inflation ·· ·
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell. I

I

Veterans Memorial .

Tuesday's edition of the Daily
Sentinel stated thai'LesleyCarrwon
the spelling bee competition at
Eastern High School on Monday
night. Carr Is spelling champion of
the Pomeroy Elementary Schoo!
' .. .
and wlll represent her school at the
1 ,.. · The bid or Pat Hill Ford
.
annual
Meigs Coun_ty Spelling Bee
Mkldleport, ·for a cruiser for true:
to
be
held
next Monday evening at
i :; :shPritt' s department was accepted
Eastern High School.
•..when bids were opened by the board
·' 'Of county corrunlsslol\€1'S Tuesday.
Sign-upset
1·• ' Hill's bid was in the amount of
$9,845. Other bids received and the
Middleport Youth League will
.· •'llmOUnt of each were
Rue .
have
signupday Saturday, March 5
' ::,'Motors, $10,058.ll and Simmons
the vUiage hall from 9 a.m.
and
1 · ·Oldsmobile,
Cad!Uac and Chevuntll noon . Entry fee Is $7.
• role!, $10,'197. .

.'

and foreclosures.
Grossfeld and several labor and
consumer leaders blamed the
foreclosures on high unemployment and urged legislators to
investigate ways of protecting
homeowners who have lost jobs.
"We've been following the problem in Ohio cities with home
foreclosures , problems that arc
facing oftentimes young, working
families; people who bought a home
in the last10 years depending on two
incomes coming In and now,
suffering under 'R&lt;'aganomics,'
with no income coming in,"
Grossfeid said. "Oftentimes they're
facing default , facing outright
foreclosure."
Rep. Harry Malott, D-Mount
Orab, said he hopes his moratorium
bill can be ready for a vote by the
House before the end of March.
"1 don't want to hurt the lending
inst itutions. I just want to give
everybody a chance to see if we can
survive this problem ," he said.

-~--~---

....

'I

'

.:·F oreclosure moratorium bill
-~~:given support in Ohio House

Ohio

Notice is hereby given that on
Sa tUi day. March 5th, 1~83 , at
10:00 a.m . a public sale will be
held at 105 Un•on Avenue .

Pomerov. Oh to, to sell for cash
the fol low•ng collateral;
1973 Holiday Travel Trl., Mfr.

Senal No. S734 t 90 2416 t
Model - 1 90 VAC

The Farmers Bank and Savtngs Com pany, Pomeroy. Ohio.
reserves the nght tO bid .3t thiS
sale .. and to withdraw the above
veh1 cle pn or to sale. Furthe r'.
the Farmers Bank and Savtngs
Company reserves the right to
re,eCt any or all b1ds submtned.
Further. veh1cles are sold '"
the cond1t 10n th ey are tn with
no e)(pressed or tmpli ed warrant •es g•ven.

121 27. 131 2. 4. 3ic

...-------'1
AUTHORIZED ·
FACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT
WE AlSO WORK 0H
ALL OTHER ~PPLIANCES

~

-·

POMEROY
lANDMARK

614-992-2181

RIVER FRONT - One beat.mfui place to live and enjoy. nice
carpetin&amp; 4 bedroom, remodeled home. Gas furnace and
wood bumin&amp; fireplace. Dining
room or den, and basement
$45,000.
FIX-IT - Looks nice btt can
use a few things. Has shop
room, endosed frunt porch,
carport and IIi acres for just
$12,000.
. .•

.
MODERN -

1 Card of Thanks

VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING

340 ACRES - ~ for caltle,
hunting and !Of!lelanring. Has
a I!IXJd I0 room i bath home
with free gas, or will seN any
part Want $175,00J.
THINKING Of SEWNG, CAll
TEAFORD'S. NO ONE CAll DO
IT BETTER AT 992·3325.

NEW
RJRNITURE

Pine Dresser W/
MatchitW Bed ".1149.95
3 Pc. Bedroom

Suite ...............179.95

2 DIIW8r Broyhill
Ni&amp;Jrt Stan! ...... 165.00
I ·,,

White
CanojJy Bed ...... 199:95

Complete ·
BunL Beds ...... .1219.95

USED
R,JRNITURE
3 Pc. Bedroom
Suite .. :.......... '99.95
Boxspring
&amp; Mattress ..... l99.95
2 ~r, Almond
Refr1emor .. '299.95
Matchine
Elec. Ranp'.. 1119.95

40 ln. Frigidaire
Elec. Ranee .. '250.00
20,000 BTU

Warm Mom~ ·
Heaters ..... .. 149.95

aloclrtealwook
(Fr• Eslimalll)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Auction every Fri. night at

service on 2-West. Holzer

used merchandise atwaya

Housing
Headquarters

sit after May 25.

l -2·1 mo.

KEN 'S
APPLIANCE
· SERVICE

manyprayeraandcomfortin

985-3561

•Wuhan •Diahwaahara
. Rangea
•Refrlgeretora
•Dryers •Fraoze11
PARTS and SERVICE

-tcIn memory of Danny
Crouch, who was taken
so suddenly March 2,
God only knows how

H-!lc

Roger Hysell
l ;;~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~lr~~;~i~~F~f::~~~~~l~
CENTRAL REALTY
GARAGE
:~~~~~oE
J8iF

much

we

miss

you.

Grand·

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.

ivinoroomisextra~Jge.There~acementwalkandlargec-ed

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

...
h'
·
pon:h, also a metal sorage building You can be int IS one rn !We
Melts lor only $16,900.

Also Transmlsiion

NEW LISTIIG - 4 bedroom home l'llhe country, ~nyl siding
stordndows, on 3 acrE!$, lots o1 fru~ trees, of good water,
iiSSIJme klan of $18,500 with mortthly paymentof$258 or artange
a new klan.
NEW LISTING- 3or 4 bedroonls possible onthisorte.Ttailerwith
laJge adHn on nearly an acre lot Includes stDtage bu~din&amp; Lot
can hne second trailer as em-a income. Call for more dellli~
.Asking $12,1XXJ.

PH. 992-56 82

U::rJ:~~iiTEED

or 992-712 1

PHONE JAMES. CLIFFORD
992· 720 I HI ••·

~2+11• ,

I

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OH 10

mother,
Mom. Dad,
Nieces and Nephew.

Valley Plaza. 446-8025 or
446-8026.

3 Announcements

We pay cash for" late rri'odal
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co

chine repair, parts. and
Pick up and
supplies.
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Call

Joy's Salon of Beauty. Now
Open. By appointment only .

Good uaed pickup truck.
Call 446·4053.

Georges Creok Rd.
446-0294..
I
No Saturdays.

1 p.m. Factory choked guns
only.

E:CCLEStA FELLOWSHIP·
NON -DENOMINATION .
128 Mill St. Middleport. Dh.

New Holland. Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment

448·0276, 304-675·3547.

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
-

l:JtlC

Bill Gene Johnson 1
446·0069

Cash for used mobile homes
or travel trailers. Will consider damaged or burn outs.

Sunday-10 a.m . and 7 p.m .
Wednesday -7 p .m . Located

D.. ler

Buying Gold, Silver. Plati·
num. Gold and Silver prices
are the higheat in two year~,
check our prices on gold •
silver, scrap jewelry. Buying
Old coins, scrap ringa &amp;
silverware. Daily quotea
available. Also coins &amp; coin

supplies for aale. Spring

Authorized John Deer,

FULLYESTiliAI.EL
INSURED
FREE
CAU 6 I 4·949-2686

Wanted To Buy

Alcoholics Anonymous. Call

BINGO trip, Cherokee North
20

games at

gamea. f:inal

jaGkpot a

Carolina.

84,000 plus 4 jackpot

Celt 446·0175.

BEDS -IRON, BRASS, old

furniture , gold, silver dollars. wood ice boxes, stone
jars, entklues, etc., Complete households . Write:

M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Oh. Or 992-7760.
:

Gold, silver,

stertin~ :

je-

welry. rings. old co1ns &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett BMber

Shop, Middleport. 992·
3476.

WANTED to leaso. Tobolcco
quota. Will give . 15 lb.
Morgans Woodlawn Farm.

Pliny 304-675-2275, 304·
523 · 58~L

$60,000. coverall. March
19th. a. 20th. 1983. $75.

per person includes trans:!~~;::=======::;t========:;-1 portation
&amp; motel. Call

'

POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

I

CX&gt;MPlETE
RADIATOR SERVICE

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

From he Smallest Htltir
Core to the Lilr&amp;tst Radia·
tor.
RtdiatoJ Speciaist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

NEW LISTING - Rt 33 - l floor block house, 2·3 bedroo~
approKima1ely I acre IIi Equal housing opportunity. $14,600.00.
NEW Llsl'! NG - RUTI.AIIID - Nice 6 room ranch home with 3
bedrooms on 4 lots. Hardwood flooJS and ca1peting, gas foced air
heal Equal oousing opportunity. $32,000.00.

618 E. Main, Porn!my, OH.
PH. 992·3795
We Do Booltketpq For
Smal, lJtJt and Cor]IOIIII
Busi- &amp; Partnerships
MARY C. KEBlER-OWNER

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

NEW LISTING - Acre lots in Five Pants area $5,000- til
$8,000.00.

Pomeroy, Oh.

Ph. 992·2174

H7·2 mo.

2·26-Uc

PRICt REDUCED -MIDDLEPORT- DupieK rental investment
2 nmtal units witlr$300 morthiy income. House 11 good con dillon,
insuated, some fumitute..Just $19,000.00.

Lucas Tours. Charleston.

wv. 304-346·7542 .
4

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has

anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for sale
may place an ad '" thia
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.
Clean news papers. Call

446-0772 .

Puppies to giveaway. Call

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

PRICE REDucED- EASTERN DISTRICT.:._ 4 bedroom roodem
home witf1 full basement II! baths, insulated, FA_gas .heat
carport, above groond pool, on 2 acres. ~educed to $35,000.00.

=

New Homes - Extensive
Remodelina.
•I nsuranct Wott
.Custom Pole. Bldp.
&amp; GIIIIIS
•Roolln&amp; Work
~inunt &amp; Vinyl Sidinp

UliiG BOTTOII - AllPro~mately 71 acres Mxxled land with
remodeled farni house, 3 bedroo~ forced air heat, plus
burner, insiJaled. New 2 car flllll!le. $55,000.00 for al or
Ol'lner w• sell house, ptaflll, small acreage for $35.000,00.

104

REALTORS
Hertiy E. Cleland, J1., GR! ................................. 99H191
Jell Ttultlll ,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,, ...................:..... 949·2&amp;60
llottlt Tufltlt' ............................... ,,,, .. .,,,,, 992·5192
Office ................................ ........................... 992-2259

1S. YeC.n Experience

Pomeroy, OH.

GttEG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992·2282 11 _11 _1"

Open 9;00 to 6:00

m
~~·

Mon.·Sat.
Closed thu111.

'

A. __
.
~

.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Industrial, Commercial,
Residential, Interior and
Exterior . .
Painting
Sandblaoting
Wa'-rblasting
Parking Lot Stripping
Spray Painting
Texture Coaling•

9

Valley . Trading Co .• Spring

SWEEPER and sawing me-

BOGGS

GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.

Consignrilenta welcome.
EmR\1 Bell auctioneer. ·

Brother, Sister, and fami-

t:========:'J;========~ Club.
Gun shoot, Racine ' Gun
Every Sunday starting

r-====::::!~~~~~=~::::;;:;;::;;:;;::;"
.608 E. MAIN

•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS 1nd
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
• LAND CLEARING ·

'

AUCTION every S.turday
night, Mt. Alto, WV, 6 p.m.

lies. Aunts. Uncles. Cousins.

CONTRACTING

MOBILE HOME~ with lar&amp;e add·on buildin&amp; also as~aH drive
way. located art quiet, clean street out olhi&amp;h water in Racine. The

Consigments of new and

any way. Linda McWittiama WANTTED TO BUY Old
-Young. wife. The Family of furniture and Antiques of all
Frank Young, Jr.
kinds, celt Kenneth Swain.
446-3169 ar 258-1967 in
the evenings.
2 In Memoriam

All Makes

2-16·1 mo.

'

Medical Center. Also VFW welcome. Richerd Reynolds
Poat 9926 and Auxilliary. Auctioneer. 276-3069 .

...,

•New G1ips
•Refinishin&amp;
•Re-wei&amp;htinc
•Balancing
•Goll Trips
For Youn1 People _i
•Pre-Season Sale •
20% &amp;3o •Vo OFF
JOHN TEAFORD
Cheslar. OH.

M'atuJe Quail now being
sold. Egs available with
notice after May L Day old
chicks available with depo-

CALl US TO BUY OR SEll
NANCY
- ASSOCIATE

SUNDAY'S AD SHOULD HAVE READ

---Cc.aa.C wot4c

KOUNTRY KLUB

Long Bottom, Qh.
Plo. 985-4345

THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY-7:00P.M.
At coiner of Depot &amp; Main
Rutland, OH.

CORRECTION

our, sincere appreciation . A
special thank you to Mark

992-6215 or 992;7314
This 4 y1. dd
New Haven American LePomeroy, Ohio
2·28·
1
mn.
p.j_
'
gion 140. New Haven
home ~ in tile counuy Has 3
11-26-lfc
l2-1 mo
Rescue Squad. Mason
nice bedrooms, 2 lui balh~.
iol'ely family IOOfTI with wood
Emergency
Squad. Father
.
Raymond Jablinske.
Mi buming fireplace. Llts of nice 1~========:;i;:====::::::===;tr:;~:;;:;:;:;:=::;l
'
T
H
""',
~CUT
OUT
-choet
Pekar
end
to ott who
carpetin&amp; 2 car gaf!ge and
LaBONTE'S
"
provi
one acre. $62,900. ·
FOR FUTURE USE"
ed beautiful flowers. food,

,QUAIL FARM

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Welker M.D., S. l. Herder the Hartford Comm.J_nfty
M.D., Carol Sholtis M.D., Center. Truckloads of new
Edward Berkich M.D . and merchandise every week.
especially to the nursing

-l'lumblnt and

E

8

concern; we wish to expr~ss

.-u...

"FREE ESTIMATES"
. REFERENCES
PH. 985-4141

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE ·
PH. 992-2772

in our recent bereavement
by your friendship , love and

-Addona and
ltng
-looling and guttor work

ROOM ADDITIONS
REMODELING
ROOFING &amp; SIDING

•New Roofing

BECAUSE you have shared

CARPENTER
SERVICE

HOME BUILDING

•Storn1 Doors
•Storm Window•
•Aeplucement Windows

AUCTION

SHERMAN TIWS: Owner
RODNEY HOWERY: Auctioneer
Terms of Sale: Cash or Check with Positive
I.D.
'

YOUNG'S

Long Bottom, OH .

•Insulation

NEW LISTING - 19731railer in Middleport, 2 bedroom, ~urJdry
room, underpinnl'l&amp; insulation, tii!Jl electric hoOkup included, can
be moved til you1 lot or rental at present locatioo. Appraised value
more than asking price. $6;950.

S&amp;KAUCTION

JESCO
BUILDERS

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

,,

1-------L-+--------i
J

l' •

"

I

I

•

.' ,

I,

CL~SSIFIED ~DS

448-7283.

Beeutlful block mate part
Cocker Spaniel, haa had all
ahoia. tun grown. 448·
9839.
6 month old yellow &amp; white

otriped kitten. Very playful.
814-992-7408.
9 part German Shep. puif·
pleo. 1 mo. otd. Ready to go.
614-992-3949.
.
12 YEAR old Border Collie

to good home in the country,
Good companion for okler

Immediate employment day

t!o night ohift on weok~ndo
working with mentally
retarded edulto with bfh•·

voriot dlaord. .. lftntere,olld
contoct Mike Rife, Qhio
Raaldentiet Sarvlcea. ·toll
441-47118.
Someone to do hou•wo~k.l

days a woek. OffonWoll.or
Thurs. &amp; Sun . Colt G..;ver
Crerneano, 814·3117·741v t.

Reglo,.rad Phl!rmiot ,.,;: 118
bodhoapltal.loclltod tn10ak
Hilt, Ohio. Ful ttme. 40 Jlre.
per week, doy ahltt. l'JM·
kanda off. Excellent aatory 1

fringe benefits. Contact

Admlniatrator 1114-112·
7717 Of IMd roaumo to Ook
Hill Community Medical
Cent•. 360 CMrlatte Avo ..
Oak Hill, Oh 411111 ,

'

INR.ATION GOT YOU IN A
PINCH? EaH tho .......
lilt Avon . Call 111 4·1!143·
2982. 814-388-9045:' or
814-992·3690.

AIR AND ELEcT-illpeople. Call 304, 675· HEAT,
ClANS No ""Pilrto.I\Po
ne .. aeary. For intormftion
678B.
.
catl: 118 - 227-81 11 oo
Two ulld mattres-. 1 bo• 118· 227·0278 , 8 a ...... .
apringa, full olze. 304·875- p.m. Monday thru Frldliy.
4828 .
Adama Enterpri•a. Inc .

�t -.

Ohio

11

They'll Do It Every nme

Help Wanted

EXPERIENCED, permonent

leqelsecrehry want.e d .
typing &amp; shorthand re -

44

r---~'THE

MOfnHSOf!

UNFURNISHED oportrnont
for rent, 1 bedroom ,
t180 .00 Calf Automotive ·
Supply, 8 · 1 . 304-876 ·
2218.• 876·8763 .

&amp;48eS .. ·•

quifed . &amp;,;nd rnume to Boll
P22. The Point . Pleaun t
A"1!1111or . . 200 Moln St. Pt.
Pleionnt, WV 2&amp;550 .

ONE bedroom apartmenta
for tho elderly. All utllltln
plid. Tononto poy 30 par·
cent of their a~justed
Income in this HUD aubtic:l'lzed epertment building .
Twin Riven Tower, phone
304 · 876·68'79 . Equal
opportu nlty houolng.

t200. to$400 . weakly
wOrking 'pertand fuii -Umeet
home , nO experlance. all

•u••· national company .
Free lnformati on . Send

aelt -add reseed stamped
eri,;.lopo t:&gt; L.R.G . 606 4th
St., New Haven, WV.
MATURE women to live in&amp;
cer.e for elderly lady in '
RavenswOod , 304 - 27 321 1 9 or 273 ·4667 .

12

Apartment
for Rent

ONE bedroom unfumlo,.d.
e176 •. month, •II utllltloo
pa i d , except alactrlc .
304· 875- 1371 or 676·
3812 .
·'

Situations
Wanted

ONE bedroom apartment iri
Henderson, newly painted ,
phone 304·876·1972.

TREE TRIMMING &amp; REMO·
VAL. CALL 814-949 · 2129
OR 814·992·6040.
Racine aroo . Call949 -2277 .
Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER
Insurance Co . has offered
services for tire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a centwy. Farm,
home and personal property
coverages ar~ available to
meat individual nee'da .
Contact Eugene Honey.
ag ..u. Phone 38B ·8690.

15

Schools
Instruction

Karate the uttimate. Jn self
defence all private lasso ns,
Man, women , &amp;. children .
Instruction thru black belt.
Also available Karate
uniforms puching and
kicking bags, and protective
equipment. Jerry Lowery S.
Auocietes Karate Studio.
143 Burlington Rd .. Jack·
oon. Oh. Coli 614-286·
3074 or 614 -384-6160.

18

Wanted to Do

NEW 3 bdr. hou• . fomlly
room, 2 baths. central heat
&amp; air, 2 car garage. 2 mi. W.
.of HMC In Sunkllt . Coli
446 · 3617.
Sale or Rent . 2 bedroom
house, kttctMm. living room ,
bath , utility room . $160 .
month . 304-676 -4369.

LEMLEY'S DRILLING Water
Wells, ShaUow gas and core
drilling . Myers and Gould
pumps. Salas and Service.
Gaa and oil well service. Call
614 · 388· 8643.
Dependable washer· dryer
repair . Guaranteed work .
Coli 614 · 268 · 6820 or
1114·266·1207.
Lawn Mowing no .,.rd 10 big
or small . Reliable and
dependable . For estimate
coll448· 3169 or 268· 1987
oftor 6PM.
Jack'• Locksmith Service.
C1Jm mercia I- Oo'mestic Automotivo. Call 304,882 -

291'9·
W-ANTED work on dairy
f4rm . Experienced. dependable, non -drinker . Write,
B~q)l P 26 . Point Pleuant
R'egis'lllr, Pt . Pl•sant.

Eure~a riverfront 12x60.
fuW&gt;Iohad, t160mo ., 1 bdr.,
8100 mo. Ref . &amp; dop .
Aduho. Call614-843· 2644.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Nice 3 bdi' . mobile home
fumlohed. Upper Rt. 7. Call
614 ·246-6818.

TR·I·STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED· 'CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446 · 7672 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
H0 MES KESSEL' I&gt; QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT36. PHONE 448-7274 .
66 Now Moon 10x50 luly
furniohod, $3 , 200 . Call
614·246·6082.

ONLY ONE New 12ft. wile,
2 bedroom., all electric,
mobile home. only 17;996,
bank financing avallabla. All
State Modular Homes, half
way between Pt. pteasant &amp;
Huntington- on ST.RT . 2 .
304 -676·2711.
1 976 TWO bedroom mobile
home and 46 acres locatad
on Thomaa Ridge RoaC:I . Call
304-876·3280 and aok for
Ron Hickman.

Business
Opportunity

own . Featuring nationally
know brands lzodm levi,
Calvi1 Klein. Gloria Venderbit. Chic. Oc•n Pacific and

over 200 others. 87,900 to
$14,900 includ• beginning
inwntory, round 1rip ticket
for 2 to the Falhion Center,
in-store training, beautiful
Celitornia' redwood &amp; Cedar
Shakes fixtures instal«&lt; and
Grand Opening promotions.
CaR Prostigo fashion 601 ·
329·B327, .... 7 .

22

Money to Loan

. : C&amp;. L Bookkeeping
T-ax Returns Ia bookkeeping
to:r Individuals • busine.aes.
Sllclrt form• $6.00
Lonv lormo $20.00 and up
Carol Noel
448-3a82
PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
CaA Bill W•d for appoint·
n\ent, Ward ' s Keyboard.
448-4372·. .
p;e AM ANENT HAIR
REMOVAL - ProfoiSionol
Ei'e ct rolysls Center. I ne .•
I''. M.A . Approved , Dr .
Rltflrr'als. Gift Certificetel,
new hours. By appointment,
304·176· 6234 .
MID -TOWN Profeulonol
Eli'ctrGiyolo Clinic, Parmon·
eht hair removel . A. M.A.
opprovod. Doc(or retorrola.
B'( oppolntrnont. T olephone
394 - 871·1111118. Bonn•
Hondlav. Eloctrologlat.
t .

a.

&amp; Acreage

1 .17 acres Curtis Ho.l~o•~.
Near Forked Run Lake
&amp; Gun Club. 13,600. 614·
378-6301 .
1 acre in Porterfield area.
Noer Rt. 339 . 814·378·
6301 .

-

,.

SMALL 2 bedroom fur·
ni ahed trailer. Burdette
Add,ltlon . .,25 por mo~th
plua utilities, deposit
required . Cell Ro1alie,
304-676-4800 Monday·
Fridoy, 9-4.

44

Video cas1ette recordari for
ule. Reconditioned preciolon VCR. Callot448· 511811 .

Space for Rent

KOUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Perk . Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy. large lots. Call
992·7479 .

47 Wanted

For sale lump coel • fiN·
wood . Zlnn Coal Co., Inc.
Cal1446·1408.
·
1976 Plymouth Vole in
stationwagon &amp; 1978
Starcraft crank-up camper.
Call446 ·1662 after 6 .

to Rent

Wanted to re"t hey field Or

pastures for cows. Clll
814 -388·8234.

Mattei lntelivlaloii .' exc .
cond ., 9 cartridges, $260.
CoH 448· 1155 oftor 1,
Cut up elaba for firewood
t16 pick up lood. Coli

WANT TO BUY OR LEASE· 61,~·241·8804 .
Farm of any size. Tillable
land within 25 miles of Portable Hoover waaher ,
Ravenawood . WV . Also like new, $100 . Coil ll4·
need to buy term equip- 245-6142 .
ment. Send inqui'iea and all
info rmatlon to : FARM -Box Homemade Macrame Ealter
741. Ravenswood. W.VA . ..B.••keta. Various sires and
colors . Order now. Phone
26164.
. 3.11,·8801 .

48 ·

Equipment
for Rent

Backhoe endloader digs 8
ft .. large bed pick up
haulable, operate you.stlf.
$90. per day. 304-896 ·
3841.

49 ·

For Lease

Guinan, 446·0738 Homer
Baker.
Electric hospital bad, good
condition . Cell 614-245·
6691 .
Moving Sale Queen s!ze
hide·o · bed. buff'ot , olngle
bed complete with motchlng
drenar. night ltend, Annie
doll houu. ceremic gr..nwara, end misc. itama. Call
676·7671 .

2 bdr . unfurniahed apt .
city park. 8176
por mo. Coll446 -1819.

overbold~

Large unturn 3' bdr .. 1100nd
floor apartment, overlooki_ng the park. 1 year Ieese
$260 po r mo. Call 446·
1819 or 446 -4426.

1 - - - - - - - - -2 bdr. RagMcy Inc. Apon.
ments $200 per mo. or if
Income i1 t1 0,000 or leaa
HUD IYIIiloble. A·Ono Roal
Eatataa, Carol Yeager,
Realtor . Coli 304·6 76·
610 4 or 676·638 6 or
87e -7786 .
Furniohed apt . 1 bdr .. 920
4111 Avo.Golllpollo, Adulto,
water &amp; electric pd, e200
mo . Call 4411 · 44111 after
7PM .
3 r~~ and 4 rm. unfuml1twd
apartments. UtilitiM paid.
no peta. no children . Call
448-3437.
Nicley futnilhed mob. home
In city. Adultl only. Call
446·0338 .

Buying houses and epart·
menta. Needpropeniaswlth
favorable price end tarma.
Box 1109 Gallipolis, Oh .
46631 .

I :_
:---------3r . &amp; bath apartment,
partially furnls.hed . Call
4 ·46 · 3733evenlngacall
448-1071 .
JACKSON ESTATES 'Equal
Housing Opportunity' hu
one bedroom I!Rtrtm•n.t l
rt~nt , ltlrtlng It e167 per
th and two bedroom
.
rent starling at
193 por month. Call
48 - 2746 or leave

6 rm. house &amp;. beth. Inquire
at 918 2nd. Avo .. Gallpollo,
Oh .
Furnlohed apt .. 2 bdr .. t176
mo .• water paid. 2nd. floor,
On BulevillePorterAd, 4rm . 131 4th Ave .. Golllpolio .
&amp; both . Call 448· 4732.
Call 446·441 8 oltor 7PM.

1 . coffee tabla
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker. otto- 47'1u18\olx16\ol ln . end 1
man, 3 tables, (ei.tra heavy end table 26x181hK20Yi
by Frontier). $886 . Sola , with light walnut flnl1h UO.
chair and loveaeet. t276 . also light walnut 7 drewer
Sof11 and cha.lra priced from dresaer with large mirror
t286 . to t89&amp;. Tablet, t46 865 . 32x63 - 174 ploceo
and up to 8126 . Hide·• · brown underpinning for e
beda , e440 . end up to mobile home uaed juat 1
8626 .. Raclinero. 8178 . to year came off a 14x70
1360.. Lompo from 828. to mobile home. long pleco1
875 . 6 pc. dinettes from mauure 32 ", ahort piecea
f99 .. to $436.7 pc., 8189 . 21" and 10 inche• aero11,
and up. Wood table wJth six enterlock in a mat1l frame.
choiro f425 . to t746. Dook wood grain finish. Cell after
t110 up to 8226. ttutchos, 6PM. 448·3018 .
t660. and up, moplo or pino 1 - - - - - -- -- tinlsh . Bunk bed complete Firewood. split. e30.00 a
with mottrouoo. f280. and trucklood, t35 .00 doll'·
up to t396. Baby bodo, vered. Ph. (814) 992-2770
t110 . Mottreoooo or box or(304)882· 2194.
springs, full or twin, $68 .•
firm. UB. and 878. Ouaen REPOSSESSED SIGNI
sets, *196. 4 dr. ch11t1. Nothing down! Teke over
t42 . 6 dr. chooto. t64. Bod poymento UB.OO monthly.
framea. $20 .1nd $2&amp; .. 10 4 x 8 fleshing arrow algn.
gun - Gun cabinets, 8360.. New bulbs, letters. Hale
dinette choiro f 20. and e28 . Signl . Coli FREE 1· 800·
or electric ranges, 8326 828~ 7448, anytime.
up to U76. 8oby ma·
tra11ea, ez&amp; &amp; *36, bed 3 cord seasoned aplit oak .
framoo UO. Ue. &amp; 130, teO. cord. Call 814· 992·
king !rome t&amp;O. Good · 3869 .
·
selection of ~room sult.ea, - : - - - -- - - - - coclol""heoto. rockora. metal World Book &amp; Child Croft for
cabinets, swi~l rockers.
aale. Call 949·2277.
Uaed Pumlture = b~&gt;kc""'·-11 :;:;::::-:-::::-:-:-:--::-:"--rangea, chair~,
tibias , MUST sell new living room
woahero, dryaro, rafrlgoro- oulte, 304·1176 -6182 olter
tors and TV ' a. 3 mi18s out 6:30p.m.
Bulavlllo Rd . Open 9om to
8pm, Mon. thru Fri., lam to ELECTRIC range, Kenmore,
6pm, Sot.
Corning top. good condl·
448· 0322
lion, t176. 304·896·3494.

G••

2 bedroom furnlahed Apt.
'Nioa 2 bdr . houoe 2'11 mi . Coli 814·992 · 6434 or
from HMC f195 mo ....100 1·882·2!81.
dop. Coli 441 ·31117.
5 rm apt. thower, Pomeroy
3 Mdroom home for rent. shop'plng area, adult a. no
11-11 botho. Lorvo level lot. peta, newly carp-. tl eo
Nice nolghborhood.' 814- mo. pluo utMitloo. 814·992·
992·1308.
3201.
.

THREE bdrD a

uoo.oo

mo• ••·

1·,~--m-.-be-t_h_fu_m_lo_h_od_o_pl_.
Utllltlea pol d . 381 N. 4th
St., Mld,..port.

·

•• . 304 · 676 ·

1

Vi~wing

0

7:00

Boat• and
Matoq for Sale

Boot. t 178 Sllviii'IIM 20ft., '
170 h .p. 1· 0. Cutty cobln
temden t,.n.,. 814·9g2-·
6949.

0

CAPTAN EASY
... U&gt;JP iil-N'T PAT VHAT' VE

78

&amp;

M'{ NAMf!; I!&gt; HERR TU8!1!&gt;,

VANT! 1\

COMMO~ .O R:DINARY
PER,OII/ FOR MAVOF:. ~

Auto Perta
Accesaorlea

MV FRIENPo; CALL ME VA!&gt;H.
l VANT '(OUR VOTE!

2 · Bf.t PU toppero·cholca
UO. 'Aiao PU tool bo• t31,
flto Chevy Luv, Douun,
Toyo•. Cell441· 7322 .
·
Gt&gt;od Wlnaor outo. trono.·&amp;

IJo:::========:;:::::::::::::":':•·:"==~
64

lo

Mi8c. MerchilndiM

SNro weight bench w'·o..r
2.0 0 lbo. welghtl. Sell or
trade for good gult•r .
304·1711· 29011 .
'
HOOVER upright vocuum.
t311. 304-1171-4192. •
-7b)(( 78(CDPPER TUB·
lNG Y.'' • flttlngo, 180'·
280' . t21.00. Goo hot olr
furn1ce with duct work,
UIIO. Gao hot wotar 71nk,
t26.00. Allltemlhllvato be
removed · from damaged
houoe. 304· 871·9782.

parte
Wlnaor
motor,
311 ....
Hove for
block
oloo
for t71
814· 742-22113.

Fertilizer

79

I••••

Wantid to
tobacco
poundog1 far 1983. 814·
281·1134.
'"'

71

Motors Home•
lo Campara

1972 22ft . Starcr•f•·
camper In eJtc . cond . •
t2,800 . Coli 8711-2&amp;04 or
171· 1824.

...-. . .. ...... ......
' '

\fLL. HIM TilAT
~EO ~RIJATIQl'?
. ~OJR
vJEO~I&lt;fND
nHORQHD ~A\/E

Auto1 far Sale

81
.Home
1975 Sulek Electro 2 dr ..
Improvements
PS, PB, AC, AM·FM otol o
• 1,Beo or trade far cottlo,
farm equipment Qf equal
STUCCO PLASTERING · '
WHIRLPqOL ol~c rongo. voluo. CoH 448· 4137.
tu.tured oeillnga .commer'
excellent conllitlon. 'Cell
304 -176-4824 ofter 4 :30 1880 Pinto 2 bdr. hitch· cial end realdentlal. free
back, 4 cyl., eUto .• air, aottm•••· caa 114-288·
p.m .
1182.
·AM-FM ltaro,' PS. PI, R
remote\ mlrron. ,..r wlndclw dofi'Ditor, wire- , PAINTING : Interior 1nd
65 Building S.upplie•
radiale. 2 lone paint. only extorlor. plumbing, roofing,
111 ,600 mllu. Prlca only aome rentodellng . .ao yn .
U .OOO. Coli 814-388 · exp. Collll14-381·1182 .
Building mo...tolo
9811 .
block, brick, aewer pip...
Mon:um Roofing • SPQUt •
wlndowa, lintela, etc .
lng. 30 yeenae•perlence ,
77
Chevy Mollbu 2 dr.
Clouclo Wlntora, Rio Grando • V-8 outo, PS, olr, good opeciellllng In buHt up roof.
0 . Coli 814·2411·&amp;121 .
cond .. •1 .781. B &amp; D cen 1114·318-9187.
M~oro. Coft 4411·7322 .
HOWARD L . WRITESEL
66 Pets for S1le
1871 Ford Mulling II, 4 ROQFING COMPANY .
cyl .• auto .• 11 ,000 actual Guttero·Downopouto-Nowmilu. Cell 448 · 0061 Repolr- Gutter Painting·
HILLCREST KENNEL · anytime.
Storm Dooro • Wlndowo.
Boarding all breeds. A
Free Eatlmetea . Phone
Reg . Dobarmano
HATFIELD AUTO SALES; 114· 949· 2283 or 814 Dobermon Stud $;~;~~~~ At. 2 Potriot, Oh. 814· 379· 912·2791.
Col 4411-7781.
2322.
1971 Chavy C10 PU 3&amp;0 RON'S Telovlolon Bervlce.
V · B. 1180 Chevy C1 0 pu Spoclollalng In Zenith ond
dlaa., 1978 Ford 2 dr. 302 Motorola, Quazer. and
cyl, 1971 Ford 4 dr. I, 1878 houM caUl. Coli 8711 ·2391
Chavy von 360 V·l, 1972 , 441· 2484 . .
ten a.
Dodgo von 310 V-8. 1980
4PM .
Cedlllec 4 dr. Ill now tlroo. F • K T - Trimming, otump
1977 AMC Pocer, 1972 - v i i . &lt;;olll78· 1331.
Plymouih D uator. 19118
57
Musical
IIINQLE'I SEI'IVICE eapo Opel n.w rebuilt engine.
rienced rooftna , Including
lnltrumenta
1978 Chevrolet Malibu hot tor oppllootlon. co.,.....
otatlonwogon t2 .800. Coli tar, oloctrlcian, m -. Coli
304·171 · 2081 or 1178 814·218·1781.
46110.
1978 Chevrolet M•llbu
atetlonwagon $2,800 . Call Weter Walla. Commercial
and Domeatic . Teat holea.
1114·2118·1788.
Pumpe S.leo ond 8orvloa.
1181 Buick Iuper 1 mi. out 304-89&amp;· 3802.
Georvn Croolt. McCully Rd.
Get your karpet In ahlp
111. trollor on loft, •800.
ahape. Wllterrwmoval. FREE
1978 Sulek Electro 2 dr.,
1980 Monz:e ex . cond . ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
PS, Pl. AC. AM · FM otero
CLEA ... ING. CAPTIA"'
f1 ,8&amp;0 or trade for cott~ . t3,998 . Cell 448· 3148 .
STEAMER 814·44.. 2107.
farm equipment of equel
1874
Vogo
wogon
AM·FM
volua. Coli 4411·4537 .
radio,' AC. • rldl1l tires, rwar ITARKS Tree Trimming.
Removal . Mini - backhoe ""
defo~gar , rear speakere.
good cond., great on gu, *11 . hour, ~naured, free ,
tlleo. Coli 378 - 2708 eotlm•••· 304·1578·2010.
··· ·-'" .'"
enytlme.
.....
E • II Tree Service, fully
1873 Oldo Cutlooo Su· Insured. free eatlmatel.
61 Farm Equipment pftlne . Good condition . Phone 114·317· 0138. coli '
Make• good work car . after 6 .
All hyd. loodor fill MF 136 t400. 949·2870.
troctor t271 . Aloo • trip 1 - - - - - - - - -'-•
Plumbing
loader flu ford tractor 1813 Pon~oc . Portly roo· 82
t110 . MF 38 - I tractor torod. Wllltrllde for·c-per
lo Heating
U ,400 . CeU 4411·7322 .
of oquol Vlllue. 814·992·
6949 .
Loader-Maaaey Feiguson 1
CARTER'S PLUMBING
wk. 311 with forko. Coli 1974 Auotln Morine, 4 op ..
AND HEATI ... G
814·248·6804.
ood cond. 30 m.p.g. ti&amp;O.
Cor. Fourth end Pine
-----'---·le14·247·2192.
Phone -441·3818 or 441·
For ulo-10 h . John D. . .
,'
4477
tronoport dloc · f70D. 4
bottom Oliver plow· tiOO.
Hay -round bales . 843·
6211.

BEE:-1&lt;1
C.Ot-IARMW.

.l

Of? AND
l'iHAT COOE
IS THAT,
I

IT'$ TH' Oi.C1 TIC TIIC TOE COllE,
SEE '? TH' FIR5T ONE 6ET5 A
LETTER, Tt1' 5ECONC1 A i!TTJr!R
AI( A007; AN' TH' THIRD A
LETTER AN' TWO DOTS.•

63

Liveatock

1177 FORD Maverick ,
power tt.. rlng, automatic
tranaml•lon. eir condl~on·
lno 40,000 octuol mlleo.
304·77)·8170.
77 Ford Gronodo, 302

.a

a

IF VERA ALLGOOD FINDS MY
DISCARDED FASHION SKETCHES
IN HER WASTEMSKET, SHE'LL
KNOW I'VE ElEEN USING HER

WITHOUT PERMISSION.

TOO tAT£/

SOA1EON£~

8EA7'A1E
TO IT/BUT
WIIO??P

Hay 2 .00 a bale. alto ear
corn t2.21 1 bu1hal. Cell
4411-4199.
Conditioned hoy, eor corn.
Call 814-948-2870.

"
;,:,
.;

Newo

&lt;Il ESPN

Truclq for S1le

:~3~0~~:-6:7~&amp;~·;2~1;0~8~.~~~;;

Int. 2" ·T cab • choolllong

· General

_ _O"'s;_w...;.a.;..;ld-'J" a"...;.
co.;;.;b'"'y'"'a:;.;.n,;,:;dc...:J""a""m.:..:e..:..s..:..Ja::.c:...:o:..::b:.&lt;.y_

_

Down two but winners
NORTH

3·2·!3

+'763
· · ,A.K43
tl076 54

·+J
EAST

+,!{

• J 10 7 6

+A K98
+Q95 4
SOUTH

+QJII41
.Q5

ts

+8763

:Vulnerable: Neither
~ler: West

Norlb

Pass
3+
· Paas

.East
I•

Dbl.

Pas$

'

t•

'

•

·BY O.w~d Jacoby
alld) ,._
Jacoby .
I

J•-

·',

Bill Root and John Pavli·
cek, the other half of the
team that won the 1982
Relslng~r. are Florida
teachers and wrlters. Like
Kaplan and Kay, Root has
played suc~essfully for
many yeal'! and is a former

..

"

.....

.

..

.

internationalist, although he • .
has never finished better . .
than second in a world championship. .John is the
youngster at age 38, but has • '
done remarkably well.
In today's hand we find
them bidding away merrily
with the gpade suit and very . · ~
few cards. They did jam : :~
their opponents so that John
wound up at three spades ,' ;
doubled.
His two-spade call was .... ;
one of those weak jump
overcalls. In fact, it was so
weak that the opdoslte "'
South, who also use t~at
type bid, merely passed.
''
Bill raised John to three
spades. East doubled to ;-:-;show good cards and. to ask
West to bid. But West con· -. verted the double into one .. . ,
· for penalties by passing.
He opened the five of ::.·
spades. East took his king · ·
·and led back a club. West .
won and played ace- I 0 of · _
SRades to·get rid of dummy's .. •
trumps and eventually John · was dQwn two tricks to give ... .
East-West plus-zoo.
"· ·
At the other table, Edgar
and Norman bid along with·
out interference to reach . ..
three no.-trump. This made .. ,
for an overtrick and plus· . . •
430 . T~is was a.clear win for the team in this board·a· · :
match event.

'·

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .) - ..
1\0. '""

~----------------------------------------~··· ··
4 7 Sunflower
· ototo (abbr.)
1 Befuddled
.48 Ploin
5 Snatoo
51 Coral ialondo
9 Triton
&amp;5 Aunrollon
12 Smallmouth
bird
13 Croving
58 Irritated
1411ctoi Walloch 58 ltolion
11 Vardoni
gretdng
18 Ragoh'o !other 59 Noun aulfix
17 Cu1 ohort
80 L1rg1 knife
18 Lady of
61 Rtlotivo of
Sholott
bingo
211 Rol11111
82 Smlll cuba
22 Long time
83 lnfirmitiao
23 Speed
84 Winter bird
mees~o~re
food
(abbr.(
24 Borge in
DOWN
28 Bill ol foro
1 i=it
32 For hoorlng
2 Ki11g of Isreal
33 Unulod
34 Dog'" (obbr.) 3 Wtothor
buroou (abbr.)
35 Spanilh for
one · · 1
4 Sootier
5 Former Chile
38 Printers
prooidonl
meoouro (pl.)
8 Pltition
39 Four quam
(obbr.)
7 R1llgious
poom
40 MitChel
42 Shaky
8 Ra1or
44 Dine
shorponer
ACII088

Answer to Previous Puzzle ..... ,_,,

9
10
11
19

21
24
2&amp;
·
28
27
29
30
31
37

Electric fish
Piece of ice
Toppl..
Subject of
verb
Electrical unit
Egg (Fr.)
Romanian
currency
Goit
Water pitcher
Border
Natiy
Homoly
E.,..,..or of
Japan (pl.)

Go away
En'llis ion
Hits
Legal dofen•o .
46 Alpine ·regiOh •
48 Take notice ~
49 All (prefix) '··
50 Speechl011
52 Instead
•· '
53 Country by. . ..
' ,.,
way
54 Dirt
57 Building 'win~· :

38
41
43
45

~~~':'"""'

13

14

. 16

17

Oravet or fill dlrt. Delivered.
Celll14·992· 38119.

' PEANliTS

--::=---:-:-:-:-------:;
., '•,·
87 Ul?hola~ery
• '
~

Mlxad hly !Gr .•••· t1 .eo.
8oybeon hoy. f1 .eo. Coli
114-992-11793.

1871 Dodge pickup, 318
motor. e2.000 mlleo .
304-178-8480.

TAl STATE ·
,;;:
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
;;
1113 .lac. A.... O.Nipolto. , ..
448 ·7833 or 441-nU.
~:-

,...--i-----------.. .:1:

CELEIIRITY CIPHER
~Ciptw01 ill C• • . . CINitld lrunt qiiOt.IOIW Dy ~ peop., puj

Mine'

JIM8 WATER SERVICE .
CaH Jim Lonler, 304_-871·
7397.
- ~

77 Ford T Bird exc. oond.,
711 Dotoun 1 ·21 0 rune good,
88 Muotong w-od . Coli
441-IIH-Ingo.

·

a

---------lc-

:

Mdprlillnl. hah ..... lf'IIM.,_,...,_for~. TocM}o 't~; F'~ V

•r.!:!:ord
'12:30
&lt;ll.CIJ ~ NtehtDovid l.ettermM
' (ljJ.clt......., Show
IJl~.o.tWord
·
e (J) MOVIE: •c -

\

'

I

Girlt'
1 :00 (J) I Merrlod .loon
1: 30

-

eCBNSign Off
. ·
Ill · .,.ac·

I

(J)My Little.MMale

••

.

KFU~

UWW

EQ

UWECB

'"~·.

JQASH

KfiUK

KFSA 'KfEHCQ

TEZZBOSHK ."
N-

O.&lt;ern~g~~t

'...'•

''Kfl XOGGZ

QHI QZ

UOS

. ,.

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.' .
~

QFS'Q

~ VEWW VENVM

~

'•

,_

SPSOM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : " In Hollywood, all marriages are
happy. lt'o1cylng to lh111logether eherwardsthal csuoes all lhe
potlla:t•." - ShiMeyWtntWI
·-llrNIA, ....

cfi MOVIE: """ .,_.r
·(I) MOVIE: 'Enclooot ._,

-::!rt;:O;::W=II::!:::Y::-1:-:I!P-;,h-!11:-llf":lty-:'11-:"t. • :
1 BOlt 124, Pt. Pie•• ant , ' ;
J04·1;711·41114,
. ' 1 "
'
.
'
,,

..

BRIDGE
---------------

a -···· ,

MONKEY SEE,
MONKEY DO

Exoallent qllliNty hoy. About
700 bol,o whh •"'' • ot Loahor form In Rutlond.
.About 400 ...... 't o..Anguo Form In Coohrllle .
Celt evenlnga or weekends
ot 1·114-117·3838.

;',h:.~7~~~~1 ; 2.1_00 . Coli

Now lrTOngO lhe clrdad letters lo
lonn
.. - · .. BUg'
ontod""'bvourprj
thecartoon.

SportoCenter

(I) Woman Watch
(!) New,/Sporbi/Wulhor
()) Dtiv" Allen ot Lorge
(jj) ~ - !J' ' ff
HHI Show
11 :30 1J ()) CD Tonight SIM&gt;w
C2)
MOVIE:
'Chanel
Solltalnl'
()) Another Ufe
(I) MOVIE: ' Guno of the
I Tlmbettond'
C1J Banny Hill Show
8 I]) Hort · to Hort The
Harts inveatigota the death
of an anist . (R) (60 min .) _
CIJ Slllfl Off
illl All In the Femily
{)]I Nlghtllne
8 Moclome'o Pleco
12:00 C2) MOVIE: 'Hot T·Shlrto'
()) Bumo • Allen ·
&lt;Il NC.AA . Baok-t:
Michigan ot Wlocanoln
CIJ Niahtllno
··
illl MOVIE: 'Your Piece br

1877 Muotono Cobro 1 1 , 1 - - - - -- - - - 302 1nglne. 4 opeod.
•-lent cond. 304-6'11· JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Collo814 ·317 ·
2018 .
7471 or 1114·387·0&amp;91 .
72 OLDI Dolto 81. good &amp;
clean condtflon. *140. Need something hauled .,
eway or something moved? ~,·
304-87e-2295 evanlngo.
We'll do it. Col441·3110or •:
711 FORD Gr-nd Torino. 814·2&amp;8· 1987 ofter 1.
naodo body work. 304·812Now h•ullng Jltneatone for •'
2181 .
drlvewaya, top 1011 for yarda '0'1
&amp; 1111 din. Coli 1114·3117· -•
7101 .
.;

72

t)

e

SEWING Mochlne rapolro, aervlce. Authorized Singer l
81111 • Service Sharpen .. ~
Scilaou . Fabric Shop. •
84
_Po_m_or_o_Y_
·9
_ 9_2_-_2_2 _
_·_ _
1
, ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
IERVICEcoiiCIIyFumlture

outomulc.
olr,
om·lm
.. a
trock t2400
. 304·
1178·
7111.
1

) I I

~.

to
..
hosts
at
ous movies he's
four decades. Guest sto·rm~-.;
Rosemary Clooney.
Russell and· Dorothv La•
mour . (2 hrs.)
()) 700 Club
Cll• (it Fall Guy Colt pursues a bail jumper. '60 min.)
Cl) MOVIE: 'YQur Place
orMine'
•
(ll) R - n Fed...Uom:
The Battle of the Buck Tanight's program looks at Reagan's proposal to turn
special programs over to the
statos. (60 min.)
9 :30 (I) Todd Duncan: Mighty
Voice Baritone Todd Duncan and his wife recollect
their past and taO of their
fight to allow blacks in
Washington D.C.'s National
Theater.
9 :45 C2) Not Neceourily Tho
New• This show promises
to be everything the current
news is not.
10:00 C2) MOVIE: 'Ticket to
Heoven'
&lt;Il Buobolt ttlghllgl!1a
'The 1982 Ph~adelphiol'l\il·
lies are ·featured .·
, (I) TIS Evening Naws
Cll
{)]I Dynuty Blake
hopes to find Steven alive in
Singapore and Ak!xis and
Krystle are stung by Mark· s
involvement with Fallon. (60
min.)JCiosed Captioned)
Cll Suporvlews
ID Seven Brides for Seven
Brolhora Adom Is drawn
away from his high school
reunion to search for some
cattle rustlers. (60 min.)
(ll) Newswotch
atNN NeWI
10:151]) Rich Ullle'o Robin
Hood The master lmpres· ·
sionist brings the Sherwood
Forest characters to life.
10:30 ()) S1ar Time
&lt;Il ESPN' 1 Sportoforum
(ll) Tony Brown'o Joumot
In Seorch of....
11 :00 • (I)·(J)-8 -1]3 illl • ClJ
1•

Wanted to Buy

1971 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill,
power 1t1erlng. power
brokaa. olr oondltlonod. cell
304·112-24U. - -

I

9 :00

I

Wanted: Tobacco Poundage
lo! 1983. Will 'poy 20 conto
lb. 814-2158·1146 .

··~
WHAT U\SINIS SLICH
A ,.ENCIL /5.

I I

.,,

____________________

Refrigerlt l on , washer :
dryera, rang11 . dla hwaahera. Serive &amp; repair of
all makes &amp; models . Call
448·8111 9 to&amp;.

PEELO

..

1----------... - -·
. ...
--- .-

62

(I) P.M. Mogaztne
· (]) Here Corneo the USFL
'Pacific OiviS'ion Preview.' ·
(I) Gomer Pyle
CIJ Entertainment Tonight
(!) 8 Chorfle' o Angelo
II (I) Tic Toe Dough
CIJ NCAA llaokotboll:
Furman ot Maraholl
ID Newo
Ill&gt; MacNeil· Lehrer Report
II {)]I People'a Court
7 :30 8 (I) Uit Detector
&lt;Il ESPN SportoCenter
(I) Andy Griffith
CIJ II ()) Family Feud
iD You Aokod For It
(ll) Were You Th8re7
'Spons Profile.· Two unsung Afro-American sports
greets. Anie Wilson and AI·
ice Coachman. are profiled.
(R) [Cios'd Captioned) ·
Ill {)]I Entertainment
'f&lt;inlght ·
8 :00 8 C2J (!) Reel People To·
nlght's show features a look
at a 'talking' cow , a W9f'\&amp;n
inducted into the National
Chili Hall of Fame and some
amazing rollerskaters. (60
min .)
(I) MOVIE: 'I Ought To Be
in Pictures'
C2) MOVIE: ' St. Helena'
())I Spy
&lt;Il NCAA Baoketbell:
Michigan ot Wi•conoin
CIJ Smuggler, Port II Second of 3 parts: (2 hrs.)
CIJ
111!1
{)]I
High
Performonc:e (PREMIERE)
The High Performance team
try to capture back a stolen
prototype for the car of the
futuro . (60 min.)
CIJ Seven Brldeo tor·
Boven Bnothoro Adem is
drawn away from his high
school reunion to search for
some cattle rustlers. (60
min.)
® NCAA llaoketboll:
Michigan ot WIICGnaln
(ll) Volc:eo of Our'-'" 'In
Cele~ration of Black Poetry.·
The
of Maya Angel
.

.'

t

8

a

ope ..

l

±

SNIFI

EVENING

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

·•

lour ordinary wonle.

:f/2/83

tlcin, extroo. t4200.00·, .
304-372 -2980.
••

0

Unocoambla , _ lour Jumbloo,

one'- to..,.. oquara, to form

WEDNESDAY

78 HARLEY Low Rldor.dreo. 80 cu. In,. A·1 condl- '

75

~llJillmU!*T~'::~W:Oa!~:

Television

---------- .

2 bdr. good vlncinity In
Evergreen, t180 mo. Pay
own utilitiea . · CaU' 4483824.

6 rooma &amp;. bath. Modern
ki)chen. 861 Third Ave .
Depo1it raqLired . Cell after
8PM 448 ·2391.

DICK TRACY
Motorcyc:IM

7&amp;0 cc . All under . . . . . .
ht• lionel• loin, Upper lit.
7, Kanauga, Ott.
7..

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- w11herl. dryera. refrlgeretora, renge1. Si!caggs Ap. pUenc=aa. Upper Rlve.r Rd .,
beolde Stone Croat Motel.
448·7398 .
CB.TV. Radio _
Equipment

Uhio

•
10 uaod blkoo from IIOcc to

'
t

54 Misc. Merchandise

46

74

by Larry Wright

Mcud1 2, 1983

------,~-- ·

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
82 Olive St., Golllpol!o. King
coal &amp;. wood heatera with
fan t4&amp;9, ,., box aprlng •
mottr..o t100, firm t120,
sofa-loveMat &amp; chair •119,
love ..... t70, new coal •
wood heatara •• low ••
U99 with blowero, used
coal &amp;: wood heetera. new
dlnot 1011 t1 00 &amp; up,
refrigerators, rani••· bunk
complete t199, bUn·
"mettreaus *40, chaeta,
oaaro, TV'o. Coli 441·
3119.

Apartment ·
for Rant

·Furnished 3 rms . with
privata bath. 11 t floor. 846
2nd. Ava .. Galllpolil . Call
448-2215 .

2 bodroomo, 304·171·
6323, 302 , , .. StrMt.

~~-,m. .

THREE bedroom furnished
all-electric trailer, built on
family room. coel·wood
burning atove. on acre,
garden plot, outbuilding ,
Jarrya Run Road , raterencea, 8276 month, plus
dopoait. 304-876-2366.

Real Estata
Wanted

36

Two bedroom, 302 Flf·
teonth St.. 1711·1123.

' ocru, houM. bern &amp;
3A7
t+~ao ollot-nt . 2 • • •
L.owrenae co ...ty,
r'lll• Wot.-lao • . Cill .114-

on Rt .. 2 about a minutes
from town. Call after 6 .
304-676-6277.

PASTURE for rent, phone
304-876·5110.

•

Pro1assional
Services

TWO moble homes for rent

Farm for sale 28 acra1
mo1tly level. good hey
fields. 846,000 . Must sell,
reasonable offer . 3 bdr.
home, new furnance,
county water new bath
carpeted. naw alum. siding
coal &amp;. Wood burning stove.
Good barn
other out
bldga. garage. Located on
old 180 near Porter. Call
614-388·9080 .

HOME tOANS 12% fixed
rife. leader Mortgage,
1 •614· 692· 3051.

21_

Mobile Home for rent . 2
bedroom . 12x80. Anattrac·
tive country aettlng n•ar
Cootville. City water. Free
gal. w..her-dryer hookupa.
Cell eveninga or WHkend•
614-887-3838.

43 Farms for Rtint

35 Lots

Have a higNy profitable and
t.autiful Jean Shop of your

2 bdr . mobile home fully
fu11lohed, edulta only. Call
446-4110.

33 Farm~ for Sale

207 .::ra farm. laingsvilla.
Mineral rid1ta inclu.ded. No
houoe . $12.000 down. Will
carry rasl. 61 4·388·9346.

.21~

2 bdr. moble home In city.
unfurnished, deposit req .
Aduho only. Coli 446 ·3791
after 6:00PM .

House. 1 1/J acre , 6 trailer
hookup. 304-773 ·6083.

USED MOBILE HOME .
676 ·2711 .
General Hauling ·and Trash
remove! Service . ReUable
and dependable . Call 4463169 after 6PM 266·1967.

2 bdr. Mobile Homo rof. &amp;
dop. Call614·258-1922.

Slaapinv room $126 , u~ll ·
tlea pd. aingle male, share
bath . 919 2nd Ave .. Galllpo·
lio. Call 448 · 4 'l,1 6 after
7PM .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

Copportono Whirlpool
woahor &amp; dryer motph peir,
extra nice, 30 day warrenty,
UIO. Cell 114-211-1207.

· 52

WID plow or disc garden• in

13

51 Household Good1

Wednesday, Morch 2, 1983

·~

·,

I. '

.,

�Pa~ 14-The

J)aily Sentinel

~ayor's Co~rt
Thn'(' defendants forfeited l)onds
and five others were fined In the·
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoff111an Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Rocky J. Good-·
nite. $375. posted on a charge of
driving while i.nt~cated1 and $100,
possession of mattjua'na; ..tletty
Mankin, Pomeroy, $375, driving
while intoxicated, and David Tyree,
Middleport, $100, disorderly
manner.
Fined were Roger V. Athey,
Cheshire, $250 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while intoxicated; Lance Herman, Middleport,
$50 and costs, disorderly manner,
and $100 and costs, resisting arrest;
Charles M. Walker, Jr., Middleport,
$100 and costs. possession of
marijuana; $50 and costs, disorderly manner; $100 and costs,
resisting arrest; Bill Powell, Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner. and Roy Bareswilt, Middleport. $25 and costs. disorderly

manner.
Ten defendants forfeited bonds
and three were fine&lt;! In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Sherrie Farley,
Parkersburg, $88, running a traffic
ltght; Terry Andrew, Racine, $45;
Jeffrey Jones, Pomeroy, $45; Lawrence Eshenauer, Point Pleasant,
$47; Eleanor Lawson, Racine, $50;
Doy Nitz, Pomeroy, $47; Sara Hall,
Columbus, $.54; Jeffrey Smith,
Pomeroy, $51; George Pierce, $44,
all on speeding charges; Linda
Hayes, Mason, $43, assured clear
distance.
Fined were Raymond Little,
Pomeroy, $500 and costs, driving
while intoxicated; George Goff,
Terra Alta, W.Va., $56 and costs,
speeding, . and Terry Warner,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs and six
months probation, possession of a
controled substance.

•

Area deaths
Arthur M. Hoyt
Arthur M. Hoyt, 71. Union Ave.,
Pomero~' . died Wednesday mornIng at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Hoyt was bornSept.17.19llat
Gallipolis the son of the late Albert
M. and Mary Stone Hoyt.
He was a service station owner
and security guard for Wackenhut
Corp. at the James M. Gavin Plant.
He was a member of the Pomeroy
United Church, Morning Dawn
Lodge number seven F&amp;AM, Galli·
polls, Eastern Star Chapter 283,
Gallipolis, K of P Lodge, D.O.K.K.
Lodge, Gallipolis and PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club.
He Is survived by his wife,
Virginia Hoyt; two daughters. Mrs.
Thomas (Mary Ann) Crawford,
Baltimore, Md., and · Judith K
Morris, Pomeroy; one son, AnselM.
Hoyt, New Richmond; one brother,
Harold S. Hoyt, Butler, Ohio; one
sister, Mrs. Harry (Ruth) Pitchford, Gallipolts; five grandchildren
and one great grandchild.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Carl Hicks
officiating. Burial will be In Mound

Hill Cemetery, Gallipolis. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
Morning Dawm Lodge Number 7
will conduct Masonic Services at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the funeral
home.

GENERAL. STORES
atislaction ··Guaranteed

SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY, MAROt 2ND

OPEN: 9:00 to 8:00 Mon.-Sat.
1:00 to 6:00

202 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY OttiO

Adult Sweatshirts
and

rJ!. .

(

~

\ \'

SWEATSHIRTS

Jogging Pants

~~t
Shirts
·t . •Assorted colors

,

• Assorted c.olors
• Sizes S,M,L,XL.

S350

eAdultsizes S,M,L,XL

Homer A. Powell
Homer A. Powell, 64, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, died Wednesday mornIng at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Powell was born May 14, 1918
at Chester the son oft he Ia te Wllltam
J. and Anna Frederick Powell. He·
was also preceded In death by six
brothers.
· Mr. Powell was a truckdriver and
a prisoner of war In Germany for
eight months during World War II.
He Is survived by two sisters,
Mary Showalter; Rt. 2, Pomeroy
and Elizabeth Jeroleman, Tuscon,
Ariz.; one brother, Philtp Powell,
Middleport and several nieces and
nephews.
.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home . Burial will be In
Chester Cemetery. Friends will be
received at the funeral home Friday
from 2 to4 and 7 to9.

Pants
• Assorted colors
eSizes S,M,L,XL

ADULTS'

TERRY

Bath Towels

Coaching Jackets
• Flannel lined
• Snap front
• Assorted colors
L, XL
• Sizes S,

• Assorted solids
and prints · ·
• Thick &amp; Thirsty

M;

Ohio's warm weather will continue
Normal high temperatures range
By The ~iated Press
The northern Atlantic and south- from the upper 30s In northern Ohio
to the upper 40s In the south.
ern Pacific coasts may be battered
by strong storms. but Ohio will
continue to have unseasonably
warm. dry weather.
The East Coasf storm was To end marriages
centered just off Long Island this
A suit for divorce and an action for
morning and was causing rain from
dlssolu
tion of marriage were fll~ In
Chesapeake Bay Into southern
Meigs
County Common Pleas
Maine&gt;. The western edge of the
Court.
cloud shield that accompanied the
Joyce Raynolds, Long Bottom,
storm was over Ohio on Tuesday,
.
filed
suit for divorce against Nelson
dlminishing to some extent the
Reynolds, Long Bottom.
sunshine'ln the state.
Mary Ann Older, Rt. 3, Racine
A fairly strong southerly wind
should be well established by and Jimmie Older, Pomeroy, flied
Thursday and this, along with for dissolution of marriage.
In other court action, the marplenty of sunshine once again,
riage
of Trudy Jeanette Roush and
should drive temperatures Into the
Roger
Franklin Ro!!$h was
60s throughout the state, with some
dissolved.
readings In the 70s In southern Ohio.

LADIES'

LADIES'

Fashion Sandals

Deck Shoes

.
L
• Assorted colors in
Genume leatnt;:r upper Tho &amp; B kl t 1
Leather sock
. ng
uc e s Y es
• S•zes 5-10

• Canvas upper
• Comfortable sole
• Sizes 5-10

.'

Spring Re-Opening for Baton Classes

STYLETTES TWIRUNG CORPS
DANCE TWIRL-PARADE CORP.
JA11 &amp; AEROBICS

3-5 years old - 2:30
6-9 years old - 1:00
10-18 vears old - 11:00

HANDI • lAG. • PLASTIC

TRASH BAGS

MOAL

PHOTO FRA ES
• 5 X7

EVERY SATURDAY BEGINNING MARCH 5
RUTlAND CIVIC CENTER
PH. (304) 675-1999
Classes taught by Pem Gillespie

• 8 X 10

Member of N.B.T.A., U.S.T.A., l.C.T.T. and T.U.

$
e30 gallon
•8 count

®

.

.

Fiesta

TOOTHPASTE WITH FLUORIDE
MEN'S MATCHED SETS
·3 oz.

Desip •.d&amp;nbility and pel looks are yours
in these lllltc"-d sets of helvyweipt polyester/cottCII blend. Needs no ironirw.
&amp;ell backed by a one-year WIITinty. Shirt
slas 14V!-20; pant sizls 32 to 50. Available
in a wriety of colors.

• Cavity fighter

• 6.4

oz :

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