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                  <text>r's Court
Ten defendants forfeit~'!! bonds
and three were fined In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
,
F'orfelting were Sherrie Farley,
Parkersburg, $88, running a traffic
$375. driving
light; Terry Andrew, Racine, $45;
Oav'!dl'yrt&gt;e- -:--Jettrey Jones, Pomeroy, $45; Lawdiso rd er ly
renee Eshenauer, Point Pleasant,
$47; Eleanor Lawson, Racine, $50;
Ooy Nltz, 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,
Pom£&gt;r&lt;iy, $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.

'IP&lt;IIn,.dav morn'""Vlrl;•t Hospital.
Sept.l7,1911at
or the Ia te Albert
Hoyt.
sta tion owner
for Wackenhut
M . Gavin Plant.
of the Pomeroy
Morning Dawn
F&amp;AM. Ca lliChapter 283.
Lodge, D.O.K.K.
and Pomeroy-

by his wife,
daughters, Mrs.
Annl Crawford .
and Judith K.
oneson.AnselM.
one brat her.
l:!ullll'r, Ohio: one
tRuth) Pitchgrandchildren
wlll be held
Ewing F uneral
Carl Hicks
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 tlle funeral
home.

Homer A. Powell
Homer A. Powell, 64, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, died Wednesday mornIng at Veterans Memori(ll Hospital.
Mr. Powell was born May 14, 1918
a t Chester tlle son of the late William
J. and Anna Frederick Powell. He
was also p~eded in death by six
brothers.
Mr ruwellwasatruckdrlverand
a prisoner or 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, Philip 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.

Press

stonn was
Long Island this
causing rain from
Into southern
roge of the
IICCQillpanled the
on Tuesday,
extent the

·•••

/ .•

Voi.3J,Na.214

.

Adult Sweatshirts
SWEATSHIRTS
~
and
C~- Jogging Pants

WAl;HINGTON ( AP I - The bipartisan Social
Security bailout bill, lifter clearing tlle Ways and
'Means Committee, heads to tlle Cull House where a
'decision Is expected on whether a higher retirement
age should be part of the package.
But' first tlle. House was considering a $4.6 billion
recession-relief blll, which some Democrats want to
increase while some other lawmakers contend Is too
loaded down with regional "pork barrel" spending
projects.
· The recesslon-reiief measure 'faced debate today,
with House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. saying he
hoped any additions to the bill would~ small enough
to avert a veto by President Reagan.
The measure Includes money for projects such as
repairing federal buildings, along with $1 bllllon for
~mmunlty development grants, and emergency

• Assorted colors
• Sizes S,M,L,XL

~ 1~ •.Adult
Assorted colors
sizes S,M,L,XL

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southPrly wind
t'Siabllshed by
long wllh
Oil(."(' again,
-ah•mc IillO the
l 1 , wllh some
UI!IOUIIhem Ohio.

A suit for divorce and an action for
dlssolu tion of marriage were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas ·
Court.
. Joyce Raynolds, Long Bottom,
filed suit for divorce·against Nelson
Reynolds, Long Bottom.
Mary Ann Older, Rt. 3, Racine
and Jimmie Older, Pomeroy, filed
for dissolution of marriage.
In other court action, the mar·
rlage of Trudy Jeanette Roush and
Roger Franklin Ro4sh was
dissolved.

$350

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DANCE TWIRL-PARADE CORP.
JAil &amp; AEROBICS

3-5 years old- ao
6-9 years old - 1:00
10-18 years old - 11:00

Page 8

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,

the House Ways and Means Committee endorsed
s imilar legislation, improves chances that Congress
wlll resolve the tax problems surrounding the
payment-In-kind , orPIK, program before a Marchll
deadllne for farmers todeclde whetherto participate.
On another front, President Reagan offered access
to documents for congressional committees Invest!·
gating the Environmental Protection Agency. But
one committee chairman said Reagan stU! was
imposing limits- and called the otter unacceptable.
In other congressional developments:
' -A Pentagon official , appearing before a House
Armed Services subcommittee, said most members
of Congress and the Joint Chiefs of Staff have not
studied the "de nse pack" method or basing MX
mlsslles ':Yell enough to justify their opoosltlon to it.

ADULTS'

Coaching Jackets
• Flannel lined
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Reagan's offer unacceptable
WASHINGTON - Congressmen lnvestiga ting the Envlronmenlai Protection Agency say President Reagan's offer to give them
restricted viewing of agency documents Is "totally unacceptable"
beCause of growing evidence of wrongdoing.
Chairmen of four House subcommittees Involved in tlle dispute
rejected Reagan's otter Wednesday and said they will continue to
press the White House for full and unrestricted a~ to tlle
documents.
Meanwhile, White House chief of staff James A. Baker III, In an
Interview wltll The Associated Press, would not commit tlle·
' admlnist.lll.tJon to ~.P.Jg~~b, ~dr)1lnlstrator Anne Mcqill.Burford • .
on the job permanently.
"There are no present plans" to fire Mrs. Burford, Baker said.

Fire destroys three buildings

lADIES'

NEW PHilADELPHIA, Ohio- Three buildings were destroyed
.and a firefighter injured today In a downtown blaze, authorities said.
The fire, which struck a , half-block area adjacent to the
Tuscarawas County Courthouse, was brought under control just
before dawn, fire officials said.
,
One fireman was hospttall2ed with Injuries suffered, apparently, r,
when a wall collapsed, officials said. He wasn't lnunedlately
Identified.
All firemen and fire equipment In tlle city and all firemen from
neighboring Dover were called In during the pre-dawn llwrs as tlle
blaze raged out of control.

Fashion Sandals
.
·
• Assorted colors in
eGenume leather upper Thong &amp; Buckle styles
Leather sock
• Sizes 5_10

. COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
has launched a stlitewlde tnvestlgatlqn of service stations that may
be putting leaded gasollne Into vehicles designed for unleaded only.
Such !uo;-1 switching Is prohibited by federal law, whlch sets a
maxlmuin penalty of $10,1XXJ per day for violations.
Robert Maynard, Ohio EPA director, said Wednesday tlle
Investigation could help reduce air pollution. Leaded gasollne
creates more pollution ·tllan unleaded. ,
Mayna('d said the Investigation would check 1,41Xlgasollneoutlets.

Pope visits Central America

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SAN JOSE , Costa Rica- Pope John Paul II took his message of
hope and peace to violence-racked Central America on Wednesday,
saying he came to "share the pain" of a region In which 100,IXXI
people.have been killed In tlle last five years.
The pontiff's plane touched ground at 3:24p.m. (4:24p.m. EST)
after a t4hour Olght from the Vatican via Portugal. Sirens walled
and bells tolled to mark the papal arrival as his custom Alltalla
jetliner taxied down the tarmac.
Fifteen hundred schoolchildren waved nags as the pope
. descended from the jet, then kissed the ground, repeating a gesture
from his tllree previous trips to Latin America.

• 8 count

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Winning Ohio lottery number

Aim.~

Richard D. DeLauer, undersecretary of defense for
research and engineering, was ref('rrtng to Congress'
vote last December to deny $988 million In production
funds for the Intercontinental nuclear weapon.
-The Senate Finance Committee voted . 18-0 In
favor of Margaret Heckler's nomination to be
secretary of health and human services. The
committee voted 15 to 4 In favor of the nomination of
John A. Svahn"s, now commissioner of Social
Security. for the department's second-tanking
position. The nominat ions now go to the Senate floor.
-The chief of the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration was grilled by House Investigators
about why It took three years to get General Motors
Corp. to recall X-body cars with a serious braking
defect.

Judge upholds
aholishments

HANDI • lAG 8 PLASTIC

MRY SATURDAY BEGINNING MARCH 5·

1 Section , 12 Pages
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. New1paper .

Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 3, 1983

shelter and food for tllose hardest hit by the recession.
"There is a lot of pork In here, " complained Rep.
Del Latta, R.Ohio. "It Is not a national blll,:' satdf!,ep.
James Howard , D-N.J.
In late action Wednesday, tlle House passed a bill
providing $425 million to strengthen matll~matics
and science education tllroughout the nation's
schools.
It voted 348-54 for the measure after administration
supporters failed to trim Its size.
Meanwhile the Senate Finance Committee
approved legislation overriding a n adverse federal
Income tax decision threatening success of President
Reagan's plan to swap surplus crops for idled farm
land.
The committee's action, coming only a day after

Ohio EPA launches major probe

TRASH · BAGS

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:B ipartisan bailout hill goes to House

ADULT HOODED

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Normal high temperatures range'
from the upper 30s in northern Ohio
to the upper 40s In the south.

To end marriages

"

Page 3

weather will continue
iriAo•flr and SOUth·
may be battered
but Ohio will
unseasonably

Panthers eliminate
Tornadoes, 67-55

,,

ma nner.

forfeited bonds
fln('d In thP
Mayor F'red
t.

CLEVELAND - Thewlnningnumberdrawn Wednesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's (!ally game, '''l'he Number," was 162. In the "Pick 4" game, played five tbnes a week, the ·winning
number was 1072.
,
I ·
The lottery reported earntnis of $652,
from !he wagering on Its
dally game. Earnings came on sales of $1,002,154, while holders of
wJnnlng tickets were entitled to share $399,377, citrlctals said.

Fiesta

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TOOTHPASTE WITH flUORIDE

I

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.· Weather forecast

-

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Mostly clear tonight. Lows aroond 50. Fair Friday. Hlgbs between
65 and 70. The chance of precipitation Is near zero tonight and 10 ·
percent Friday.
.
ltxtmded Qhlo Forecast
Sldurdu $llrituP Monda)':
.
.
.
"
· A',.,._ oi~Mwen lllroulb the period. Hlp. from llle.,.ln the
.nodlalolle ,.. .......... ~. lllllltlyln the . ......_, 111111 bi
the HI MuadaJ. Lenllllaap the period In lie tiL
·

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FILES - Republican Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Is pictured Wednesday as he filed his petition for the Republican nomination
to seek reelection with Fl'ances 'nlornas, Meigs County Board of Elections deputy. 11 appears that Mayor Andrews will be opposed In his bid
for the Republican nomination U petitions of other possible candidates
being circulated are filed.

Auditor Ferguson
recommends 648
board strengthen
au~iting controls
The Gallla-Jackson-Melgs Men·
tal Health (648) Board should
. strengthen Its Internal accounting
controls over expenditures, partie·
ularly In the area ortravel reimbur·
sements, State Auditor Thomas .E.
Ferguson's office said today.
Ferguson's office released today
a special audit of tlle Mental Health
Board for the period June 1, 1981
through October 4, l!ll:l. A special
audit ' was requested by Gall!a
County Prosecutor Joseph L. Cain,
Gallla County Commissioner Lon·
nle W. Burger, and Ment\1 Health
Board member Roberta W. Holzer.
State examiners said tlle execu·
live director of tlle board did not
approve each 'voucher prior tJJ pay- .
ment, vouchers for payment of con·
tract services did not always
· contain an Itemized statement or
what services were rendered or
when tlle obligations wete · In·
curred, certain liabillties Incurred
In 197ll, 19!l0 and 1981 were paid
from succeeding years' appropria·
lions, and the Meigs County Audl·
tor's certification of available
revenue was not received prtor to
the obHgatlon of !unds for goods ·
and services.
· In the arei'- of travel reimbursements, . examiners saki travel expense l-eports Often were not signed
by tl1e Individuals claiming retm·
bursement, reports did not contain
receipts In some Instances, and
board members and employees
~lalined reimbursement for dally .
mealllllowance!l, although no writ·
· ten bOard policy provided for these

GALLIPOLIS (OVP) - A state administrative law judge recently
upheld the abolishment of 12 positions at tlle Gallipolis Developmental
Center last July.
Judge Richard J . Levine concluded that the CDC administration "has
established a sound rationale for the decisions it made In this wave of
abolishments. Therefore. I recommend that all of the job aboltshments be
aftinned."
Levine's recommenda tions will be sent to the Sta~ Personnel Board of
Review which \\111 make a final decision concerning thE' abollshments.
The judge's recommendations are connected with the abolishment of 48
jooo at the center July 20.
The posit ions were a bolished due to "the great decrease In the number of
people residing at CDC," center Superintendent Robert Zimmerman said
at the time.
Levine's decis ion concerns 12 e mployees who appealed their job
abollshments.
There is a "'~rmanent lack of need" for · the positions that were
abolished, thE' judge said.
He noted the client population at CDC had declined 39 percent between
October 31. 1979 and July 31, 1982 as clients were deinstltutionallzed.
CDC had the right to abolish positions beCause of the reduction of clients
and r esulting lack of work, Levine said. He also said GDC fo llowed proper
rules In abolishing positions.
Since the job abollshment s began last July, some employees have
charged GDC administrators have used the job abolishments to get rid of
employees they do not like .
Two employees whose iJ.ppeals wer e ruled on claimed such "'bad faith"
on the part of the CDC administration. One said a personality conOict with
an administrative assistant led to his job aboUshment.
However, Levine ruled against the two employees and said CDC acted
properly.
The l2 employees tllat a pj]ealed tlleir a bolishme nls included seven
activity therapists, two hospital a ide supervisors, a maintenance repair
worker, a holler maintenanCE' worker, and an activity therapy
administrator. ·
01\ F eb. 9, 104 more CDC employees lost the ir jobs due to the
abollshments. The Ohio Department of Mental Retardation Is expected to
announce. the elimination qf 51. more positions sometime this month.
Some of these employees are also expected to appeal · their
abollshments.

tlley received during the audit
period.
State examiners said tllat al·
though there was no board policy,
four persons were reimbursed for
meals at a rateof$35perday. Also,
board members and employees
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- Gov.
were paid expenses without supRichard Celeste plans to lay off1.500
porting receipts, two employees
state employees as part of his plan to
were reimbursed for tuxedo ren·
erase a state budget deficit,
tals , and the executive director's
administration sources said tody.
husband, who was not a board em·
"From tlle beginning he (Celeste)
ployee, had an airplane fllght paid
has
acknowledged there would be
for by the board.
U!yoffs
In state government." said ·
Ql_UII_ty records showed thjlt all of
Paul
Costello,
Celeste's press
the flncliilgs were repaid Into tlle
secretary.
county treasury In October and NoCostello added that tlle adminisvember, 1982. .
tration's position has been that "tlle
Examiners said the Mental
state government would need. to
Health Board gave the executive
pare back just as every citizen" In
director the authority to spend
these tough economic times.
board funds within the line Item
A source- within the admlnistra·
budget; however, a review of the
lion today told The Associated Press
paid bills indicated tllat, In many
that about 1,500 people would lose
Instances, this authority was deletlleir jooo.
gated by the executive director to
·· A report published by pe
other employees In her absence. It
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer said the
was recommended that bills be apdepartments
of mental hea lth and
proved , O!JlY by a majority or the
mental retardation wlll be the
board or by the executive director.
hardest hit by layoffs.
In another area of the audit, exa:
Layoff notices will go out In three
miners said, "During this Invest!·
galion It was brought io tlle · weeks, and those affected will begin
losing tllelr jobs In late AprUorearly
examiners' attention that the last
ye81' of a tax levy for the GalUa·
Jackson -Meigs Mental Health
Board was reduced to zero by tlle
A 1977 Ford station .wagon
Gallla County Budget Commission
reported
stolen Saturday from the and has not been collected by the
Ray Riggs Used Car Lot In Chester,
Gallla County Auditor's office for
was recovered abandoned lnAtllens
the year l!ll:l. The leVy Is stlll being
County Monday tlle Meigs County
collected In Jackson and Meigs
Sheriff's Department reported.
.allowances.
.
Counties."
.
ThevehlclewaslocatedonSiU44.
· Flndlnp for recqvery tolallng
The executive director told exa·
$1,6418 w.-e ts'suecl aialnlt six board · miners "... she had Informed the
The Incident Is under Investigation.
A doe deer was kllJed Wednesday
rnemben, the execuuve director •. Gallla County Commissioners that
eveningwhen It ran Into the path of a
and the executive director's hus· .the Gallla-Jackson·Melgs Mental
car driven by Charlotte Wilford,
band for travel reimbursements
(Continued on page 8)

1,500 state employees
getting layoff notices
May, the newspaper said .
Sources said the layoffs are In line
with a ~ percent spending cut that
Celeste ordered last month.
. "It is the beginning or an attempt
to pare back a nd get government ·
expenses· under coot rol," one
source told the newspaper.
The a dministration estimates - · tllat the layoffs, aU in the clv·ilservlce ranks. wou ld sav£&gt; $18
million in payroll expenses in the
first Cull yeaL
The Plain Deal£&gt;r .also sa id
agencies that help produce jobs or
revenue. such as lhedepartmentsof
development a nd taxation, will be
exempt, and !hat corrections and
public welfare personnel would be
spared.
Celeste did not specify how many
of tlle state's ~7.000 employees
wouldbe laid off when he Ordered
the spending cuts last month to
.accompany a $300 million Increase
In taxes that Included a near
dou~Ungof thepersonallncome tax.

Stolen car found in Athens County
Rutland, as she was traveling on SR
124 west of Rutland. There was no
damage to the car.
Michael Cullums, Rt. 2. Albany.
reported Wednesclay that his car.
that was parked In a driveway on U.
S. 33 at Enterprise, drifted
its
parking place and coasted down the
driveway, across the highwa)•
coming to a stop in a creek. Th£&gt;re
was light damage.

from

\.

�•

Comme~

Page 2-The Daily Seririne!
,.,_~

••

111 Court Sll'ftt
PmMTUf. Olllu
III-IIZ-!111
D F. \'OT~DTOTIIE IN'fERESTOFTifF. MEIGS-MA.~N AREA

.

B!m~ r"T"'1.....1a--r• ~c::t.F=I!
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publi.Hhrr

BOB HOEFLICH

fiAT WHITEHEAD
Aslitb.nl Publishf;r/Contrtillt&gt;r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nrw1Edibir

A MF.MBER uf Thr Au•~~t•ialt.loct Prnti, lnJalllll 0.11~ Pl'nJi As•u•·iatioo ilnd llltAmeri•·a n Nrv.·!!pilper PllbUIIht'n A.uurlatiun.
I.F.TTER.fi OF OPINION In! welronwd. They t~~huukl bto In• lht~a 3110 w•H'lls lonJC. All
kttc&gt;no llrr 1Ubjet&gt;C b1 t!dl1ll.ll and mut tw MIJM wl&amp;h 111me. addms11 and teol-..mbtr. Nn IIDIIK!Wd ldkN will bl' pubU11hed. Let1ml1houkl iw in ll)jKI &amp;lUI \e. adchu~
i.:5liH, ~~ttl perwMiitiQ:.

.Letter to editor.
Political layo.ffs

~

In response to an article In the
· paper on Monday, February 28, on
superintendents of Ohio's developmental centers.
·
~- , Th&amp;y say they ba\'e been asked to
. resign, and they ·say It Is political
· pressure. But when the ru!mlnlstra: tion had a mass layoff in January
and February of other employees,
they dldn't think It was political. I
feel it, too, was a political layoff.
The Individuals at the develop. mental centers have had their Uv-

ing area staff moved around so
many times_that they CaiU!Ot get
much from the programs the administration has for them.
Other emplOyeeS feel ilie sanie.
The administration didn't ask us to
resign. They just sent us letters lind
told us what day we were to leavesenlortty did not count, only retention points.
Mary Burnett
Gallipolis

Berry's World .
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Today in· history
Today Is Thursday, March 3, the 62nd dayof1983. Thereare303days left
in the year.
. TodaY' s Highlight In History:
·
On March 3, 1974, a Turkish airliner crashed in a , forest near Paris,
kllllng 374 people.
On this date:
In lll45, F1ortda became the 17th state.
In 1861: the Russian czar emancipated the serfl;.
Jn 1944, U.S. flghter planes bombed Berlin tor the first time In World War

. .

And, in 1979, President Jlnuny Carter and Israeli Prime Mlnlster
Menachem Begin met privately in an etfor:t to resume negotiations toward

a Middle East peace treaty·
~ ~ars ago: Feder!'! oHiclals said :ll rtiUIIds had been !Ired at one ot.
their annored personnel carrierS by mWtant Indians holdJng !be
settiiiYienl al WOWided Knee, S.D.

.,.., Coplor--

' alive, who l)a8
brightest women
committed the sin of dlstlpiUlshlng
between totalitarian and dictatorial
regimes, should be pennltted to
speak!
II Is a very odd busllless, this
commencement-speaker business.
Have you noticed that lett·mlnded
speakers never have any trouble at
' all? A predecessor of Mrs. Kirkpatrick at the United Nations was a
·gentleman who said ainong oth~
things that ..the British were all racists, that probably Ian Smith of
Zimbabwe had contrived II) get the
missionaries shot so that be coUld
discredit his opponents: Indeed,
Mr. Andrew Yowig broke so many
.polemical records that he never
traveled without a representative
ol Gulnness' book, dictation machine in hand. But at commencement lime Mr. Young was
. everywhere, and was riever Interrupted. ·
,
I have deUvered, oh, maybe !50
commencement addresses, and
both I and the audiences have come
out alive. Only one was espectally
·eventful, along the lines we discuss.
On .that occasion the president of
the student body deposited a catdboard case on my lilp; IJislde ·of
which was a live pig (gel it?) . And
one young lady, dressed In academic robes In .line to receive ber
diploma !rom the chancellor
elected the rroment· the chancellor's hand was outstretcQect to dtop
her gown, under which sbe Wore
nothng, revealing a.mong other
things that she had nothing at all to
reveal.
Some sort of a loose code should
crystallize, the tenns ol. which are
that no college should Issue an lnv!·
tatloa unless ltleels tbat Ills relpOn·
slble enough to ensure tbat Its guest
will be treated with minimal decorum. And then tt the guest II threa·
tened . the ceremony · should be
canceled. The deprived can always
tum on a record ol. a speech by
Andy Y:oung at lxlme while they
read their diplomas. I say that Mrs. .
Klrkpiltrlck, by her courage and el·
oquence, has proved that KnowNothlnglsm Is by no means
confined to the Third World.

•·
CHECKINGDEFENSE-Soulhem'sZaneBeegle(l4)appearsto
, , be checking the Bishop Flaget defensive set-up as defender Jim White
· (10)' draws closer. The Panthers eliminated Southern from further
" · district
competition with a 6'1·55 victory. Bishop Flaget remained un&lt;;~ ·
'
. beate.n with a 23-0 record. The TomadoelteS closed their. season at m-3.
':' '11m Tucker photo.

.. .

WASHINGTON -OQeofthefederal laws most detested by the oil
consortiums js theonethatrequtres
them to report detaUs of their finan·
clal dealings to the Energy Information Administration. IIi fact, the
on companies fought the reporting
law all the way . to the Supreme
Court - and lost.
But now the Reagan administration has overruled the Supreme
Court, In effect, by a simple ruse: It
has cut off funds for the office that
collects the flnanctal Information
from the on companies. No money,
no way to enforce the law.
The legality of this sUck maneuver has been questioned by the
· statt of the Ho.use Energy and Com'· meree· ComJnlttee."'A confidential

mPmo to the committee chairman,
Rep. John DlngeU, D-Mich., minces no words.
, "The administration appears to
be at It again," the memo says, "doIng favors for Its oU industry friends
at the expense of the consumer and,
Incidentally, breaking the law in
the procesS."
So what It the financial reporting
law Is subverted? So this: The F1nanclal Reporting System Is "the
government's only comprehensive
and consistent source of financial
information on the major on com·

panles.'' the memo notes.
It adds: " H the administration Is
successful in Illegally elinninatlng
the FRS, It will be much more dlfll·
cult for the Congress to estabUsh a

sound energy policy, because It will
lack major and objective tntorma·tlon on the major oil companies."
Yet EIA Administrator J. Erich
Evered recently admitted to Congress that he cannot comply with
the reporting law because the 01·
flee of Management and Budget did
not allocate enough money for It
Since It began gathering Information in 1971, the Ftnanclal .Reporting System has provided Cmgress
and the public with Important data
on the oU Industry's Investments
and revenue trends. For example:
- The FRS slxlwed that oil companies pay minimal taxes and that
they pay more lal!es to foreign governments than to Uncle Sam.
· ~.:.. The FRS disclosed that Big

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Eric
HUlon hit two free throws with 34
seconds left for the winning margin
Wednesday night as Ohio University staved off a furious raJJy to edge
Eastern Michigan 62-foO and clinch
second place In Mid-American
Conference college basketball.
The Bobcats, 19·7 overall and 12-5
in the league, led 5441 with 8: 12 to
play. Eastern Michigan then scored
the next 12 points-eight by Marlow
MCClain -to cut thedeflcllto54-53.
The Hurons took thetr only lead of
the game at 57-56 on a jump shot by
Maurice Adams. John Devereaux,
who led Ohio with 21 points, 11
rebounds and five blocked shots,

Players of week

ou.

having qersuaded Congress
that It needed tax breaks for devel·
opment and exploration, actually
spent miUlons on mergers and corporate acqtilslti01JS - from copper
mines to department stores.
It the FRS Is allowed to lapse or Is "suddenly and needlessly
trashed," In the committee staff's
words- valuable continuity wiD be
lost and the federal government
will be sertously handicapped In
dealing with future energy crises.
Yet the staff concludes that
" when an administration chooses
to serve the interests of Its powerful
triends by simply refusing to enforce the law, there Is very little
that Congre5s C.!!!) 49 &lt;!~tly '19
compel action."
· "'

GIVE IT
ME- Bishop Flaget guard Nick Corcoran (28)oeems
''lobe telling Southern's ROO Littlefield (12) 1o give hlni the ball during
action from Wednesday's Class A District game at ChDDcothe; The
·: Panthers l'l)malned unbeaten with a 117·55 victory which ousted South·
em from furiber action. Littlefield led Southern's attack with 24 points.
Ttm Tucker pholo.

A9.ol\t 10 Y.f\\\'5, ago a fellow came
througl1 and sprayed on mixed with
!IJDxln on the~I'OlliiS' to settle the
dust. Thedloxin'sallovertheplace.
"That's why you see so many "For
Sale" signs on people's lawns.
Over tbere Is the schoo\, and right
behind It Is w,here some chemical
company dumped all Its PCB in
thii!E big on drums. ·The chemical
company' s out of business, and the
stuff Is. now ~ping Into the playground. Funny,' you don't ever see
any kids playing there any more.
Well, as I said, It's just alxlut
morning. Here's the mayor: How's
It going, Charley?
MAYOR: Not too good . I been
calling the EPA for two weeks tryIng to find out what they're going to
do about all11ur hazardous waste.
They clatm they st111 have no Idea
whet)ler our soil samples are bad
for human health or not. Even It
they lind the stuff Is unsafe', they
said they can't do anything about
·cleaning the waste up until they do
a study. They also said U their study
shows we got a problem, their tint
c0ncem iltoflndthechemlcalcompany and make a deal with them to
pay lcr the cleanup.
STAGE MANAGER: WeD, have
a DICe day, Mayor. lfereCOIIlii-Doc
Glbbl: You ._ ldnd 'ol IJI!8)Ied,

Doc,

-:;:=

Southern (M) - Beegle &amp;4-16; Llttlc!leld
11·2·24:· N. Bostick 2.{1.4; Brinager 1·1·3; Tf'a·
ford 2.{}.4 ; Kevin Curfman 2·04.
Blshop-f'lalet 167 )- White 1.0.2: Stark 2·0.
4: Taylor 4-0-8: Austin 9-4 ·22: HJrsch 7-l-15; P.
Corcoran 0.1·1; N . Corcoran 5-6-16. Tot.als 28-

ll-BI.
B)lq~rs:

Southern , ..................... , .. .. 13 7 12 23-~
B. Flaget .... ....................... 15 13 1S 24-67

~ 25 thru MARCH_:]
FRIDAY thtU THURSDAY I

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Bowling Green's Bill Faine and
Caroline Mast of Ohio University
are the .players of the week in
Mid-American Conference
basketball.

'

-EBERS BACH
HARDWARE
110 W. MAIN ST •• POMEROY. OH.

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PH . 992-2811
IION.·SAT. 8:00 TO 5:00

:• CINCINNATI (AP)- Cincinnati
,Bengals tight end Dan Ross may be
headed for the Boston Breakers of
'ine United States Football League

'In 1984.

'

agoodsenseofhwnor. Yougotnlito
about the
write another
sludge?
HIRAM: I'm
reporters from
keep saying
Seven Corners
STAGE MANA(
me, Htram, I want
a word
,'11\.th Sam' ~ters.
audience)
~IS our'!il!rtaker, ~ ! gu~
l!i\1s ibou~ ~I mloi\1Ultowi\.
li&amp;m, can I 118\re a word with you?
SAM: Sorry, I don't have time.
i. STAGE MANAGER: Don't l!fl
~·estOP.~. Sam. Well, It's getting
on to bedtime. Moot of the folks are
tucked In lorthenlghtatt.eranothep- ·
uneventful day. Ltke I said, nolhtni ·
much ever happens In Seveh
Corners. If It wasn't for the lead ih
the river which killed all the flsl!,
Seven Corners would still be a re~
line place to live.
1
'

caroms. Dennis Teaford had six for
Southern.
SHS had 14 turnovers, six steals.
and 18 foul s. while the winners had
15 turnovers &lt;~nd 11 fouls.
,,
Score by quarters:

conference, tied for seventh place
and the final spot In the league
tournament.
HUlon had 14 points and Hicks 12
for Ohio.

, Ross headed
to USFL

A.;.....r___,t~'iftu.....
,,c.,..hwa_ld

DOC: I never saw so many sick
happened?
people in a town In my llte. Them
TAD: I don't lmow. They just
that Isn't sick Is scared silly they'll
keeled over and died, like my dog
get sick. I haven't slept in months.
did last wee,k. I'm oil myway to the
STAGE MANAGER: What's gonewspaper to P,UI my farm up for
sale, If anyone's stupid enough to
lng on at the bospltal?
DOC: Mrs. Henlg;!n gave btrth
buy II.
."
last night to a preJ.llalure baby.
STf!.GE MANAGER: Good luck.
'That's the 14th ~remature baby
Here comes the editor of the
Tve dellvered · thls, ~&lt;1, sy..~ i""'
way, ltyou're·stlll ua!ngwellw ter, • ici
be sure and bQ!IJ~~
· • "':
of your f~ 4rilllli~:lf 111 '·
.d lfr!Q!t?
, ,
STAGE MANAGER: ~niCs tor
ljusi talked to the govthe tip, Doc. FeUqw, IM!I',. t"'- tp, ·• emor allo!il:our pqlJutton pr9blf.. ·
Tad Jones. He'-s a ~·ari4'~ ~'"' ~~~:!411ke' IO' tlili&gt;put.'bu lJe ~
l!Xl acres of grazJllf'lil'lll f'igl!t11rit
Clll6ll't •hav.e eno'U~ milley to · y ~
to the. Cloverleaf Acid Pit. You look . up every IQirVIII[\ tile ~ He ld ;
the fedS have a Superfuild just for '
down in the dumps, Tad. What's
up?
cleaning up places like ours and we
TAD: Five of my cows dled last
ought to talk to Washington.
nlgbt.
STAGE MANAGER: Well, you
STAGE MANAGER: What
can't say the governor doesn't have

then hit a basket to give tbe Bobcats
the lead for good with 1:12
remaining at 58-57.
The teams each made a free
throw before HUlon got his free
throws to make It 61-58. Maurice
Adams narrowed the gap to 61-60
with two free throws for Eastern.
Devereaux hit one free throw to
make lt62-60. Easternthenmlsseda
field goal try and Ohio failed to
connect on a one-and-one free throw
sltilation with nine seconds left.
Eddie Hicks blocked a jump shot by
Adams to end the game.
McClain scored 22 points and
Adams 14'for Eastern, which fell to
11·15 overall and 7-10 In the

Now

Our loWDL~._·_. .:_______----:_,...-____
STACiE ~A:GER: The name
of the town ls.Seven Comers. It's a
nice town, you knoW what I mean?
Nobody remarkable ever comes
out of lt as tar as we lmow. We're
just plain simple folk here and we
can't clatm to be nothing more than
just another' town along Route 16.
I better show you around a bit.
· That nice white house for .sale on
the corner ·l)elongs to the Jorgen-

By scbrr WOLFE
first scoring honors to take a 2~
momentum.
CHILLICOTHE - Before a edge, but quickly ·feU prey to a 2·2
Southern came out the second
standing room only crowd of more score at the baods of'the Tornahalt with an enthused destre that
than 2,500, Southern's Tornadoes does . The ftrst pertod was highlighnetted them the ftrst two baskets of
fell victim to the Blshop-Fiaget · ted with close competitive action as
the stanza, tlghentng the score to
Panthers, ti7-55, here Wednesday both clubs tested the strategies of
28-24. Flaget came bllck to thwart
evening In the Class "A" Dlstrtct thetr opposition. . Although both
that challenge with eight unans·
basketball tournament at , Chllll- teams traded baskets most of the
wered points and a 36-24 advancothe High School.
frame. Flaget held a sllgbt 15-13
tage. Flaget carried that
With just three minutes remain- edge after the Initial buzzer.
momentum to the end of the round,
Ing Southern erased seven points
Three-fourths of the· second 43-32.
from an 11 point Panther lead to frame was just as exciting as the
Going into the ftrst round SHS
pull within four points, 55-5t That first, but Southern never came
trailed by 11 points, but a dramatic
burst o! momentum gave Southern closer than a tie despite a hustling
conteback bid pulled the Soufans one last bope, but aU came to effort. In lac! the ftrst quarter was
therners close going down the
an end when senior guard Zane an omen, foreShadowing the fact
stretch.
Beegle was called for a charging that Southern would never lead at
SHS had cut the panther lead to
foul.
any point in the game.
four' then regained possession for
Three Panthers hit 'doubleMidway through tbe second another chance to score. In a deterfigures, while another came close round Southern's Littlefield knotted
mined drive to notch a score Zane
to breaking into that column. Se- the score at1!H9, but three consecBeegle was whistled for an offennior guard Pat Austin lived up to his . utlve SHS scoring drives r:esulted In
sive foul, later exciting the game
credibility . with 22 points, high· · ·turnovers as SHS faced a disas- via five fouls.
jumping Nick Corcoran added 16, trOus ending. Down by folU' points
One key in the game was the fact
Steve Hirsch 15, and Tony Taylor In the last minute and a half SHS · that on at least five different ceca·
added eight. The Tornadoes were
Ignored a warning to pressure the
slons Southern gralibed the reled by their dependable duo of Bee- Flaget spread offense, resulting In
bound, but tilmed It over under the
gle and Rod Littlefield. Littlelleld a technical foul in which they capiFlaget basket, giving the Panthers
canned 11 of 19 field goals for a
talized on.
several unchallenged lay-ups. A
game-high 24 points, while Beegle
One of the biggest turning points balances F1aget attack proved to
netted 16.
of the game came when SHS went
be unstoppable and proved to be a
Southern ends the season with a
for the last shot of the quarter, hopdeciding factor in the fin3.i result.
very respectable m-3 recqrd, while
ing to get to the locker room down
The winners blistered the nets
Blshop-F1aget continues Its quest
by just four. With :ll seconds left
with a tonid 28 of 49 night from the
with a perfect 23-0 ledger. Flaget
Lltllefleld and Kevin Curfman
Door for 57 percent, whUehltting ll
~dvances to the district finals
started a passing game to set up the
of 17 at the line for 65 percent. SHS
against the winner of the Unlotolast play, but the fleet-footed Austin
hit 24 of 52 tries for 46 percent and
Trlmble game.
snagged the pass and drove It In for
seven of 11 at the line for 64 percent.
a lay-up to give his club a 28-20 haltB.F. won the battle of the boards
Opening the'game, Flagetgalned time lead and an added boost of
30-22 led by Nick Corcoran with 10

OU Bobcats clinch second in MAC

Easy life for Big'-'-_O_il__. ---'----Ja_ck_And_e_rs_on

"!11'"· It's ,a•ilfllal ill"!' bhl\t~f~
fj)J#·IIllfid I~~ -~of
41ox!D:'•Oh: I forgot to tell you.

'~

;

D.

UNEMPLOYMENT

RJREClOSURES

'

March 3, 1913_

William F. Buckley,Jr.

exact meaning of that statement. I
think It says that It anyone within
the Smith community desires · to
give a speech which would echo the
thoughts of Mrs. Klrkpatiick, that
person would be permitted to do so
=~ut disruptive protes} Big .

The

Bishop Flaget ousts Southern

. Middlepolt, Ohio

~unday,

'•

FARM

Something we haven't seen much of over the past few years,
cooperation, has reappeared on the economic scene, sometimes in very
unlikely places.
In the White House and Congress. for example. where there seems to be
some understanding about the nature of a jobs bill, and in the ranks of
steelmakers andsteelworkers, where each have fllade concessions for the
mutual good.
Cooperation Is international, too.
Japan has agreed to extend its restraint on automotive exports to the
United States. and the big central banks and commercial lenders are
working to ease the problems of ttuitr foreign borrowers.
The underlying assumption in all instances seems to be that there Is a
common goal to be achieved, and that former antagonists had betterbaog
together or else they might hang separately.
That Is another way of saying that all the groups involved have had a
glimpse Into a future as bleak as a black hole, and therefore have become
strongly committe&lt;! to letting in the light of reason.
Argus Research Corp. commented in a report this week to big investors
that "the level of coopel-auoq in recent months between debtors. and
. lenders and between the prtvate and public sectors Is unprecedented ."
· The economists at Argus referred mainly to efforts to forestall collapse
: of the lnterna tiona! financial system, but thetr conunents could apply also
to the agreement between steelrnakers and steelworkers.
'
The U.S. steel industry has been closing down, by management design
and because of the reallties of foreign competition. Last year the industry
operated at less than 50 percent of capacity - a dimtnlshed capacity at
. that.
· That meant losses to both management and labor, a situation that these
: traditional antagonists agreed could be alleviated by '266,00! workers
· taking an immediate $1.25-an-hour paycut.
Adding to the urgency was what some in the Industry considered to bean
ultimatum from General Motors and other carmakers for steel people to
settle up and avoid strikes or face additional loss of business tb foreign
·
·
competitors.
: Such cooperation is rare in labor oegotlations, especially over the past
: decade, when hundreds of major agreements In various industries were
· reached without consideration for the impact on productivity.
.

;:

Rogers. On learning that a majorIty o! the graduating class had
signed a petition of recall, I retracted my previous acceptance,
and did not give another commencement address for a whole
year.
. I received a telephone call at the
It I ant understood to be speaking IIJlle from Sen. Daniel P . Moynl·
with some personal passion, .I ant . han, who had canceled his . own
correctly understood. NDt long ago
scheduled appearance at the Unlverslty of Pennsylvania having run
I had an experience exactly like
that of. Mrs. Kirkpatrick, only my
Into the same kind of flak (Senator
lxlsl was Vassar College, whose seMoynihan's problem . Is that he
finds dumb people b •espectt've of
nior class Invited me to deliver the
commencement address, and then,
race, color or creed) . And, I am
reminded, the following year the
In ,a burst 9f polemtcalllllteracy not
same college In W ashlngton, D.C.,
matched since the annual conven·
bright enough to have hired Jeane
tton of the Ku Klux lOan, the girls
and boys a !tacked as beneath thetr . Kirkpatrick as a professor eased
ber out of her scheduled role as
dignity anything they might hear
commencement speaker. She did
from me, which I found quite exgo on to speak at Georgetown, but
traordinary given that I speak the
oh; my, what tension! To think that
most refined thoughts of.Aristotle,
Jeane · Kirkpatrick, one of the
Aquinas, Kant, BIU'ke and · Will

The news Is that Jeane Kirkpatrick wW not after all dellver the
commencement addresS at Smith
College, because some creeps there
(spelllng: c-r-e-e-p-s) have lhre~ to demonstrate against her If
she goes. The authorities have wei·
corned. her withdrawal, on the
grounds that they cannot guaran·
tee ber securtty. Apparently the au·
thcrttles at Sinlth College can
guarantee only the security of the
students and teachers who threaten
a derronstratlon.
Did I forget something? Oh, yes.
The president of Smith College,
Mrs. Jill Conway, told the press
that the Smith community was
"strongly committed" to freedom
of speech, and was absolutely Cj'r·
taln that the principles of free
speech would be "upheld at any In·
temal college event.'.' Cryptographers may Qr may. not spelld
time In the future declphei'\Jig the

Cooperation
for a change

.

.~

Spitball time

The Daily Sentinel
~~~

Ohio

•

·. ·Mike Brown, Bengals assistant
'general !1)anager, said Wednesday
'that Ross' agent , Tom Toner, told
him the Bengals hnd until 2 p.m.
\''&gt;day to buy Ross out of his USFL
contract.
• · Brown said he declined the offer.
.lie said Toner told him that Ross
' had been offered $1 .5 million by the
-Breakers.
.. .However, a spokesman for the
,,?reakers said Ross had not signed a
contract, though he conceded that il
1
Was a possible In the near future.
, Ross, who grew up In the Boston
:.wea, has one year left on his conract
"wlth
, Cincinnati. He set a team
. record 71 catches In 1981 and lied
'trls CoUinsworth for t1e club lead
'with 47 receptions last season.

'

11 PIECE WOOD

GROUP
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Sofa, Chair, Rocker., 2
End Tables, Cocktail, Ottoman. 2 Lamps, Bar, 2
Stools.
REG. $120'0-

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Page

4

Tl'lursday, March 3, 1983

Thursday, March 3, 1983

"Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

PREPARES FOR BOXING MEFI' - ~
Meigs Boxing Club has been working hard In prepa·

ration lor upcoming matehes. A romplete ll'alnlng
schedule and dedication has made the clu'b one of the

most notorious In the bi-t&amp;ate area. Getting prepu-ed
are members, Iehto right, Mark Farrow, Brian Nltz,
Brian WUUs, MarsbaiJ Green and Cbarlle Wblttlng·
ton. Tim Tucker p)loto.

Bench concentrates on hitting
TAMPA , Fla. (AP) - Jolmny
Bench figures he won't resemble
Brooks Robinson at third base, but
he can do a pretty good imitation of
Johnny Bench at the plate ,
Bench's hitting started out slow
last season. while he devoted a lot of
time to taking ground bails in his
new .role as the Cincinnati Reds'
third baseman.
This year, the 35'year-Qid Bench
wants to come out swinging.
"I will spend my spring this year
hitting, hitting and hitting," Bench
said. "I willlet the fielding take care
of Itself. I am not going to be a great
third baseman."
Bench made 19 errors In 107
games at third base last year for a
.917 fielding percentage. But his
hitting was the major disappoint·
ment on a club that was counting
heavily on his run production.
After the first month of the 1982
season, Bench was batting just.200.
He then went on a seven-game
hitting streak and batted .'1:71 the .
rest of the season, a point higher
than the career average he brought
Into the season.
However, Bench clubbed just 13
home runs and drove In only 38 runs,
both full-season career lows. That
explains his emphasis on hittlngthis
spring.
Although Bench struggled last
year, Manager Russ' Nixon doesn't
plan to move him to another
position.
"Bench Is our third baseman
now," Nixon said. "He looks great.
His attitude Is great. Not that the
way Isn't ·open for two ·other

prospects; we will give Nick
( Esasky) a good look, and we still
have Wayne (Krenchickl) for
defense."

Esasky Is a power-hitting minor
league prospect who slammed '1:7
home rWlS an&lt;l drove In 62 runs with
a .2lij average last year on the
AAA Indianapolis farm club. Krenchickl was acquired before the start
of last season to back up Bench
defens ively.
Bench played first base for part of
the 1981 season, before breaking his
ankle. Nixon plans to use outfielder
Cesar Cedeno, not Bench, as his
second-string first baseman behind
Dan Driessen this year.
Asked whether Bench would
work out at first base this spring,
Nixon said, " Bench has enough
problems at third; not really a
problem, but all of his work should

aass

be there.''

Bench , who racked up Hall-Qf·
Fame credentials In 13seasonsasa
catcher, stands 23rd on the all-time
home run list with m. His 1,322
career RBI rank 39th, and he needs
31 hits to reach the 2,00J mark.
Bench noted the dramatic change
between the power-laden "Big Red
Machine" that won world championships in the rnid-1970s and the
youthful club that lost 101games.last
year.
"The old team Is no more. This is a
new team," he said. "It will be a
different team. Now we are
pitching-oriented , not hitting
oriented."
Meanwhile, the Reds will lose

drove In 57 runs, tied with Driessen
for the team lead. But the Reds'
cleanup hitter rappe4 just eight
borne runs - fifth highest total on
~ olnb · ' PrchttoJe,l~ bases.
· The switch to right field Is part of
Nixon's pian to get more speed and
offensive ·punch into the lineup to
help !lim a,round the 101-loss season
of 1982. To that end, Nixon Is
conducting a more rlgol'OI.IS train·
lng camp this spring.

pitcher Charlie Puleo for at ,least
two weeks after he underwent an
arthroscope operation on his right
knee Wednesday.
Puleo, who came from the New
York Mets In the trade (or Tom
hitters and baserunners In the1970s. This wiU Insure the boxer for the
Seaver, has been tryingtowlnaspot
Milner,
'1:7, impressed the Reds with rest of 1983 tn any sanctioned boxIn the Reds starting rotation but has
his
speed
and arm last season and tng event.
been hampered by the knee
wound
up
playing 23 games In
Admission to the tournament Is
Irritation .
The Reds said ''foreign bodies"
I did a bad job
and $2 for students (to
were fOWld In the knee joint and
there,"
Cedeno
said,
"But
if
th~
were flushed out by the· artroscope
procedure.
like the move, I'll go along with it ...
"I don't mind, and I'm willing to
The Reds said Puleo was placed
help out. Icameoverheretohelpthe
on a rehabilitation program that
club
out where l can. I know that
will take about two weeks. The Reds
Eddie
Is going to do a good Job In
said they were not sure when the
center
field. He's still yoWlg, and
righthander would return.
he's
got
the speed."
Puleo was thought to have
After
spending his major league
suffered a sprain because fluid filled
career
In Houston, Cedeno was
the joint.
acquired In the December 1981
Trainer Larry Starr said Puleo
trade for third baseman Ray
was referred (o phys!cans when the
l&lt;rtight.
Cedeno batted .289, best by a
knee fa iled to respond to
Reds'
regular
last season. and
medication.
·
.-----------------------~---1

~~o~~dults,

Leather Uppers With
Padded Insoles.
Navy Blue

Rio Grande jumped to a 20-12
lead , was leading 45'31 a t halftime
and never trailed.
Rio Grande ends its regular
season at 25-10. Findlay Is 15- 14.
Meanwhile, junior center John
Marx came off the bench to score 22
points and four other Redsklns'-"ere
In double figures as Miami defeated
Northern !Uinois 73-59 in a Mid·
American Conference college basketball game Wednesday night.

Miami. 13-13 and 1().7 tn· conference m a intained ' its third place
position. )'lorthern IUinols, led by
forwards Tim Dillon and Ron
Lindfors with 18 paints apiece, is last
In the conference with a 7-10 record
and 10-16 overall.
Northern Illinois traded leads in
thefirsthalfbut sank back to3526at
the end of the stanza and never
threatened again.
Miami buUt leads ofupto17points
in the second half. Both teams hit 29
field goals but Miami hit 15 free
throws and Northern Illinois had
only one.
Other Miami scoring leaders and
their points wre Ron Harper and
time Kroeger with 11 and Craig
Tubbs and John Willoughby wi\1110
each .

OPEN WEB&lt;DAYS
9:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 9:00AM. TO 5:00 P.M.
PHONE 992-3795
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

n. ... taxlciWI.

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l1lll yeal'tlllllllber one IMIOn to go to HMIIock.
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BenefOfdalne 72. Spring. Shawnt't'

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Bryarl ~. Wauseon ;m
• Ckat ~ork 63 , laklf~!on til. OT
' Clermont NE tO. O n. W~oming ~
Fn~:tor!a 49,_ElmwOOd "&gt;
Hlllsb:J.'o 62. Waverly 59
- Huron Pt. Pl'f'kin!l ~
' N. Co~JeRt&gt; HUi 73, Costen til
Norwalk 72. MaqtarE'tta :14

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a- A. Tt.J1IIIIflefU
Artingi:OII 64, McComb 6.1
A~le 54, Llbm\• Center t9
Bluff'IM ~. Rl~l 56
8~ 74, MlnlilO 46
Buclteyt&gt; Caural 79, 1llfln Calvert 4'1
C'hllliocctw&gt; Flag{'( Si'. Racine Soulhem

Uncobwk:w 'i. Spcnm'\IWc 52
Mans. St. P£oler 11, NC&gt;W l..onOOn 48
Maron Local 49. New 8Mll('ll :n
, Mont~il'r i'U, Ecbn -12
New K'noxvtJk. 62, MenOOn UniOn 23
r , Newark Cath. If!. N_ Union 86. CJ'
a , N(l"tlmor S.1, Cardlnf;!ton 51
• ' OttO\Itlko )1, ()(&gt;lptos .lf'tfersc.r. 24
' • Pettisville ~ Tal. Northw'ood 47
: St. Wendelln 46, F'rmlont St Joseph 44

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POTATO
VEGETABLE
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SALAD BAR
DESSERT
NON-ALCHOLIC
BEVERAGE

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~ 1 OMo ll.lr;h
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~ Ba.rbenon tli, W006K&gt;r :ti
1 ' Bl·e t·b vllle JR, W11dsworth 28
~ Col. Nonhland 56. Gn:weport 49
c : ()(&gt;laware n , Westervllk.' s. :ll
•, E'.aslli~u· N. 113, Sofoo ftl
j Lorain Klitg 5.1. l..akewood 28
~ Massillon Perry 62, Un1orltawn Lak(' «1
' Niles McKin~ «l, Hubbard l1
.. Parma Valley Forxe 51. MMIM Higtt.
l.ibtd41
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ICE
MAKER

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canton Cath. 52, Lou~ AqLlinu
~ · Granvilk&gt; !16. W(l!;l fall 55
Kmtoo. Rid$1:,. Jli, ~rtnJI. Cath. l5

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23

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$795
PLUS TAX

Many Cabinet

, N. UniOn 51, Col . ~47
~ ,Orn1lle «), ~ieii(Min Jl
' Tri·Val~ 10. RlvPr .'\9
f W. Hollnl'5 62, Steuberwllk&gt; CattL !»

\ Rktunood Hts. Sl. Akron
~

La~·

TRADE IN
SPECIAL

of Elrn'i

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scores ·

111J 'l1le .' meelde" ...,_
I

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IU.

Geor~own ~.

LOW PRICE
TRADE-IN

~~~

OT

. TRADE-IN PRICE

Colpte 49

Navy 86. Brooklyn Coil. ~

S659.00
-50.00

OUR REGULAR

TRADE-IN

: t Canlskq Ell. St. Bma\Tflture 74
• , ~ 93, W'-'31 Vlrlidnla 1U
IOna ~. Ma~nt&gt; 5f
~ .. u. Satlf!63. Drexel 61

.. • Lftlrta _.,

25" COLOR TELEVISION

$799.00

OUR REGULAR LOW SALE PRICE

FAST

!, · Amforlc~U.-71
. Waw.er !II
ArmY St. FrarldS. N.Y . TI
~ Bolto,t '

Many Cabinet Styles
to 'Choose From .

10 .Year Wa111nty on Compressor

.

w~~~ ~~Scorte

J ..
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TRADE-IN PRICE

Many Cabinet Styles
To Choose From.
25" COlOR TELEVISION
OUR REGULAR

••
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TRADE-I.N PRICE

ssogoo

25" COLOR TELEVISION
SUPER SP£CIALII
OUR REGULAR
LOW PRICf

TRADE-IN

$]99.00
-100.00

TRADE-IN
PRICE

8.1. l.&lt;&gt;'ola. Md. 63

82, fUI)dp Jaland 73
SC . J~l1' s 92, ~ Washlngtrn
Ru~

S659.00
-50.00

LOW PRICE
TRADE-IN

.. Rkll'r Ill. .a~. OT

SPRING SHOES AND SANDALS ARRIVING
DAILY ·

\

.Styles to Choose From

: l.l:nhitown 5t. Mlnf'ral ~ 41

ON FRIDAY FROM 4-6
IT'S T.G.I.F.

'01'

82.

: · Sima titi, Marbt 64

hou~e

heritage

Load
Capacity

19.0 Cu. Ft. Frost*Ciear
Refrigerator·Freezer

•
'

S339.00
-50.00

TRADE
IN

$

, 91adysldP 55, lk'rlolflOiz SprinJrl. ~. OT

. I

White
Only

OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9:00 P.M.

OtJr 'Low Sale Price

AUTOMATIC
WASHER with

$449.00
-50.00

CollinS W. Resefw ~. Lucas 4:.!
Col . Al"ademy 78, Utl.&gt;rty UnlOf'l :56

Kalida W. Patrick Henry ~

'

DRYER

Sale .Price

Contlnmtal m, Columb..is Gmve ~
Gl bMmbutR 63, WOCO'nore- 61
Grandview 64. Amanda-G:ai'Cf'e(lk 54

•---··•92lli!l i i.li l li·•·· ·!li:•': iii'•·-~ ;.

SATURDAY '

low ·

~JWrod Falr\1~· 69, PauldlnR 48
Sprln~ NortM:tstprn 41, U rbana &lt;16
Str11Ch 52; Mlllburv Lake ·U

I

~

MATOiiNG

Our Regular

!)ttawa&lt;CianOOrf 71, St. Marys ~
Pet~r"R Spring, 00, Unltl'd Local !;l
Plktotoo 68. McDerroon NW 00
Port CUntoo 82. Clyde 7-1
Ro8stord IJ), F.."'Vergrt"en 48

•' Sutrolk !W, Br.mdl&gt;ls il

·'

I

•; Tmtpk&gt; 91. Mas.sactlu..rts 64
•, WWJam 1 Mar:v 70, Delawart' fill
.,

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OF SHOES

I'

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MIDDLEPORT

••

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SAVE

RCA

RCA

!IOll'l1t

Alahama Sl . 84, Mlu. Valley 73
{."'('msm 93. 0\lke 86
Jatllsonvllk&gt; St . n , N . Alabama ll6
.lamr.:-5 Madison Ill, U.S. lnt1'1'1Utlonal ~
Kentudcy St. 64, Transylvania'· 0'1'
LllLII.Mlle 73, Vl.r»nJ,a TI:.'Ch !W
Marsnall 78. F'umwl at
NICholls St . 75, Texa~ SOutllt'rn 74

XL-100.
25"

· XL-100

25"

~

RCA
ColorTrak

ciagcnaj

~ North Carolina ll'i, Georgia Tl'dl 73
, Swth C&amp;roUna 52. DePaul Sl

-

25" .

Tt'nn. Wl'llleye 71, MWU!;an 70

, Valcbita St. 7'9. Tmll ·Manln 76
~ Vlrldnla 107. Wake F~ 74

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS

,,~ Ball ~1. !U, K@llt St. 65

$100
ON

THIS
SET!!

diagonal

Bowlinii!: Grl'tfl 00, Certt. Michigan 8:2

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//Sour TN£

(Active and Retired)

•UNION BOILERMAKERS
·•MEDIMET ·.
eCOMPENSATION
eOHIO WELFARE

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---SU--JISHER
--·----·---·
! OH5 E
~n I&lt;: I

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·-...c.o-.
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--···"'·
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......
;

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Maifl

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a.iill........

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''

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.mACUSE ·
MEMBER roiC

ROll

Various
Cabinet Styles
To Choose From. .

Our Regular Low Price

RCA 25':.-.o...l XL-100
color TV with
Signa lock.electronic tuning

' ';

,,.

guards Aqthony Hicks and Victor
Flerrung had 13 and 12 respectively
to lead Xavier to a narrow 76-73
victt&gt;ry over Nlagra In· a noncon!erJ1C!! coli~ basketball game . .
Wetlnesday night.
Xavier, 19-7, fought Its way back
frol'\'1 a 28-19 deficit tp a 'Si-'SI
hal(tlme tie.
Nlagra, 10-17, was paced by
forWard Rick Townsend's 22 points
arut·Joe Alexander's 12, but ran Into
fou~ trouble In the second half.
'l'he lead changed bands half a
doZen ijn)eS !n the second half until
Xayter Went up 6S-63 on a 25-foot
jurtiper by Steve Wolf.
ihen Townsend bit 6 unanswered
po~ to put Nlagra up ~ with

Oui Regula' Low Price

TRADE-IN SPECIAL

3:

left ..

ks ~ hit a 17-foot jumper to
put} Xavier back on q, and the
M•tk 1 nrs hwUr on to wtn.
.

SYLVANIA
COLOR .

~

·- -------_,
-

'

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LOW PRICE

• 18' dlogonoi811ct&lt; Mllllt1 ClwotN-Lint'"

• --~100'111 .~.d :..... ctiwts
• AFC

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-

$J29

-~

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RCA VIDEODISC PUYERI mRT
ULOWAS

$29900

..
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NO TRADE-IN
NEEDED.FOR
THIS ONE!!!

•'

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CHOICE OF CABINETS

CINCINNATI (AP) ~Forward

'

'.

'659.00 .
-50.00

Je~' Jenkins scored 16 points and

. ,_;-

I

ROll

Xavier wins 19th

~
y." ~;,,., . 111111"4" J~~-=~~ ~
J'l'tVING /

Wright S1. lll. St. JOI!oeph's, Ind. 92
X8\1er, OhiO 'lti, N'-ara T.l
SOU11IW!liT
:\ Baybr lil, Texa! Tl'dl 61
~ OkLahoma St. ~. Colorado 73
ll Oral Rooms 70. St. Lo.lls 57
t Swt~n Me100dls1 fit, Tf'la.~ C'tuisllan

..

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\._,
~} .

•UNITED MINE WORKS

", =~:~=~~~lOT
Wl5coostn 82, Mlchif!an 'XI

•

-rHINIC

Dayton 97, LonR Island U. lfi ·
Dl.-01~ 90, E.. Il.UooiJ T1
Miami 73, N. Illinois 59
'
Nebraska Ql, ~ll .58
Ohio U. 62. E. Mlchi¥M 00

Q

.

'

HIP Schaelllo)'JI B.ukeUw.ll

OaM.4.1'ol~

AND DO
THE BILLING
FOR
THE
FOLLOWING:
This year you're faced with over 100 changes in the tax
laws and forms . Old you know that working married
couples may deduct up to $1,500 for the first time?
There's even a new . entry for charitable deductions on
the 1040A short form . And that's just the beginning!
We know every change on every form .
· ·

THURSDAY, FRIDAY
.and SA
. lURDA y

"-"M.,._

t

DINNER SERVED 5-9 EACH EVENING

Mowery paces Redmen win
RIO GRANDE, Ohio (AP) Jerry Mowery scored 18 points to
lead Rio Grande to an 81-73
non-conference basketball victory
over Findlay Wednesday night.
Findl ay was led by Randy O'Dell.
with 16 points.

3 DAYS ONLY!!

' AUStintown F'ttdl ·M, HCM'Iand ~
Bay 71, BruMWtck !'J
Cantoo. Mcf(jn&amp;ey 65, WOOiiter IR
Clevf'. South !l.'l, CIP.re. Gk.'llVUk&gt; 91
Col. lndepm&lt;i:'nre m. Col . West 00
DB~~W&amp;re 56. Gahanna 44
Elyr1a 81, Lorain Swthvlew :'.10
E!)Ciid !"J9, W ." Ceauga ~
F1Adlay tfl. Lima Sh.awroi .11
:
~~ Ross 73. Shelby ~
\
Mark:ln Hardlrlg 71. Dt&gt;flan('(' £1
r Pl&gt;rrysburg 46, Tol. Stan 45 ,·
: . Sandlsky 61. Vermilion 48
• To!. Ce11ral 64, Tol. Dt&gt;Vllli'i!i 57
'
Tol. Rogers 91, Tol. Ultlfoy 64
~ Tol. Wooctwan:l 61. Maurr'le(l5:2
Walsh Jesuit fll. T-.dlmadge .56

For
High School

PLUS TAX

\

W~' sRMIIIII

•

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Station

$795

()hiD

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The Daily Sentinei.;.-Page-5

Boys results

w- .._.

FRIDAY

Ohio

I

tourney '1
scores

"If you-look at It one way, a whole l
lot of Improvement has to be done.
But this ball club just Isn't that far
off," Cedeno sad. "This type ot •
training will,, .._.Qodjef In ~Jtette."- •
shape, and we are i9jng fo ~ •
1
hard on fundamentaL
"I don't think It~ very hard ~
to Improve on
s I'I!COI'd•. •
Definitely, I would/lijy')'le were a '
better balrteam last yellf lhiJ!JlW' ;
record showed. A lo~qfy~~s
had more experience. We WID be a
betterclubthatlastyl!jlll:" ·
·;

~~a~;u~~':o~:mm~~t~~c= ~=[y$~~~~~~~~~C:

ce~:e~~:!tthtnk

,

Golden .gloves
event slated ,_..,.------"this weekend Your
Plans tor the eighth annual Southeastem Ohio Golden Gloves Boxlng Tournament which will be held
In the Trimble Local School Gymnaslwn In Jacksonville have been
completed . . The tournament wiU
begin with the ellmlna'tlon hours at
6 30
Frid
March 4 """:
p.m.,
ay,
.
· '""
championship bouts will begin at
·6: 30 p.m. Saturda y, March 5. All
boxers who plan to participate
must attend the weigh-In at 5::ll
p.m., Thursd ay, March 3, In the
Trimble Local School Gym.
A physical will be gtv~ to each
boxer at that time. Each boxer

Pomemy-Middleport,

High , sch~l.

Cedeno okays switch
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Cesar
Cedeno, reluctant to move from his
center field position last year, says
he's willing to switch this season.
Cedeno ha&lt;l,. a-. meetlnll wi~.
Manager Russ · NIXon iietore the
first full-squad workout Tuesday
and agreed to movetorlghtfleldthls
spring. Nlxonwantstoputdefenslve
standout Eddie Milner In center.
When the move was suggested
last season, Cedeno balketl. But he
.s aid he's more receptive this time
around.
"I have no reaction to the talk
Nixon and, I had, '' Cedeno said.
"Last year when he asked me to try
the new position during the season, I
told him I wanted towalt Wltllsprtng
training ... I reaUydldn'trefusetodo
It (last year). bull didn't agree to It,
either."
~ time, Nixon found him more
willing to make the outfield switch,
aimed at getting Milner In center
and rookie Gary Redus In left.
"The meeting went well," Nixon
said. "He was receptive to everything-we wanted him to do.
"We talked about him playing
right field and to expeci to fill in
some at first base because we only
have .one first baseman in (Dan )
Driessen, and we can't afford to run
him Into the ground here."
Cedeno, 30, failed last season to

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UTTON

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�Thu~y.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

March 3, 1983

'n _yak

Following the Sunday evening
church service at the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene. the
Snack· ' n~ Y ak group met' In the
parsonage basement for a party.
At}ending were Lori Stewart,
Regina Lee, Beckie and D&lt;lug
Lavcndar. Richard and Rochelle
Davis, Robbie and Shawn Cun·
ningham, Mary a nd Paula Winebrenner, Carol Mitchell. Ear l
Pickens. Chr is Grindley. Tim
Haynes. Virgil. J)enzll and Richard
Hudson, Linda Grindley, Linda
Stewart, John Powell. Bud Kittle,
Jeff, Brenda a nd Serena Davis, and
the .Rev. and Mrs. James Kittle.
. Refreshments were served by
Bu b and Je nny Lou Davis a nd Ora
and Leonard Bass.

recent meeting of Third Wednesday
Homemakers Club held at the city
building in Syracuse. ·
Mrs. Salser presided at the
meeting and also gave the secretary's repart. Irene Parkergave the
treasurer' s report.
Devotions
entitled "NoRegrets" wasgivenby
Ada Theiss with Goldie Radcllff
reading 'Slow Me Down."
For roll call members displayed
their baby pictures foj ldentlf!calion. Others attending were Linda
F errell, Jane Teaford, Sara ~Wush, .
Ma rgaret Bailey, Genevieve
Schneider, Ura Sargent, Esther
Ha rden , Donna Smith, Elva Dalley.
Next meeting will be March 16with
the day to Include a visit to the .
Carleton School and working on a
quilt.

Sanborn Missionary Society of the
Middleport First BaptiSt Church. .
Rhoda Hall was in charge with
letters !rom various locationS being
read by Texanna Well on Zaire and
Trumbull Christian Center· Sara
Owen, Bacone Clege and ' Haiti;
Miss Hall on the Hispanic Church
and the Philippines; Sarah Fowler
on South India a nd Cardova,
Alaska.
.
.
AlwUda Werner presil!led at the
meeting with Lillian Demoskey
giving devotions using scripture
from Philippians A report on the
scholarship fund was given by Miss . Hall. Mrs. Werner read an article
on spiritual growth and family life.
She also announced the World Day
of Prayer by Church Women United
of Meigs County to be held at the
Middleport Chureh Friday.
The love gift dedication was
conducted by Mrs. Owen. Refresh·
ments were served following the
meeting.

· Sanborn Society
Mis

Third Wednesday
program on criticism was
presented by Virginia Salser at the
A

slonary work around •.he
1 ~as the themeoftheprogrruu
word
a t the recent meeting of the B. H.

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

THURSDAY
EAST MEIGS- Open Forum .
at Eastern High School Thurs·
day at 7 p.m. Kent Minor, Ohio
Depa rtment of Education, ron·
sultan! on course of study, will
be the speaker. Residents of
other school districts are Invited
to attend.
POMEROY - The Voices of
VIctory will be speakers at the
regular missionary meeting at
the Hysell Run Holiness Church
Thursday at 7: 30p.m. The subject will be the work done In
Haiti. The public Is Invited.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172, DES, will meet
at Middleport Masonic Temple,
7: 30 p.m. Thursday with lnitla·
tion for three candidates. Auc·
tlon for cancer research has
been postponed .
POMEROY -There will be a
revival March ~ at Wesleyan
Holiness Church on S.R. 143 with
Mr. and Mrs. Paul White of Qhi(}
ville, Pa .. as speaker; services
will be at 7: 30eacli evening; special vocal music nightly. Rev.
Earl Fields. pastor, Invites
public.

FRIDAY
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.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Fox Chasers Associa lion wUI
meet' Friday a t 7:30p.m. at Ea·
gle Ridge.

.'

SYRACUSE - Revival services will be held at Asbury United
MethOdist Church, Syracuse,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
with Mark Morrow, evangelist.
Spel;iaj music FrigaY, ;.v'll be,
''Htftitibn~ ;. Sdtlii'daf, ''The
Harvest Trio:·' ; and Sunday, the
Asbury choir and other local tal·
ent. Public is invited.

RUTLAND - }'hfl,'e .'w'ill be a

public chicken and· noodle
supper 11 a.m . to 4 p.m. Friday;
will deliver In Middleport and
Pomeory; also publi~ can eat at
church; everything homemade,
chicken and noocles, cole slaw,
green beans, roll, choice of pie,
$3. To order phone 916-3564, 992·
3824 or 992-3507.
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet at
7 p.m. Friday at home of Clerk
Wanda .Eblin; ·'' Laurel . Clift,
Road; meetings open to public.
HARTFORD - Hymn sing at
Father's House Church, Hartlord, Friday at 7: 30 p.m. Featured will be Journey's End and
Voices of Love. Rev. Clyde
Fields, pastor, Invites the public
to attend.

Drew Auxiliary
Plans for the annual AIJ)erlcan
Legion birthday party, to be staged
March 15, were made when the
auxiliary of Drew Webster Post No.
39 met recently at the hall.
Ellen Jane Rought is general
chairman for the observance and
wUI be assisted with the preparation
of the dinner by Mary McAngus.
Mildred Hudson, Iva Powell and
.,. Loretta Tiemeyer.
Serving wUI be done by the
juniors. Veda Davis and Erma
Smith will have charge of decorat·
lng, and Mrs. Tiemeyer and Mrs.
Rought, flowers for distinguished
guests. Entertainment will feature
Armand at the organ.
American History Month was
observed ~~ the meeting with
Florence Richards as · guest

SATIJRDAY
Soup dinner by
Racine Volunteer Emergency
Squad wUI be !rom 11: 30 a .m. to
6 p.m. Saturday at tire station;
homemade vegetable soup,
bean soup, corn bread, cake, pop
and coffee; proceeds go to PW'·
chase of heart monitor tor
squad.
RACINE -

ALSO

JUST ARRIVED - A NEW SELECTION
OF BABY GIFTS!!
LAYAWAY NOW WHILE SB.ECTION IS GooD

SUNDAY
RUTLAND ~ Skating at Ru·
tland Clvlc"Center·Sunday, 2 to~"'
p' m: Take your own skates, $1'.
for children,
. $2 for adults.

....

· Your "Ex~ra Touch"
Florill Since 1957

PAGl!!VI~E.~ Scipio Township lftlstees meeting will 'be
March 4 at 7 p.m . at town hall in
Pageville.

''MIDDLEPORT - Ladles
;\uxlllary, United Pentecostal
qurch of Mldd)et&gt;Q9rt. wtU oold

-~-

·, FL~IUST ,
'.
' 111:i. 9,~~644 .

352 ~: Main~· itomeio~'
i Your

Buy-1 Enlargement
Get 1 FREE!!!

In H""'lon
Cover

2 pc. E.A.
Living Room ·

*Sx7 or Sxl 0 ONLY

Reg. $299.95

p--------------Buy 1 Get 1 FREEl----1

SAVE •100

1

I
I Buy one enlaiJIIIltnt at the regular Pnce and Ill the
I same enllrpment printed apin FREE, from color
I neptive or slide.
I
I
5x7 or 4xl0 ONLY
I
I
Coupon MUST accompany order
I
I
Effectiw llrch 3-10, 1983
I

PH. 992 6669

Ott.
• I

N- Sealy. Quilted
Top. lnnerapring

MATTRESSES

VIUAGE .PHARMACY

N. 2nd AVI.

$19995
FIRM

L---------~-----------~

r

Suite

Bring in your favorite color neptivt or slide, but oneenlargment at
the regular price and gat the same eniQment printed apin,
absolutely FREE!

New officers were elected when
the TOPS OH 1456 Club met at
Rutland.
Elected were Sandy
Walker, leader; Nancy Vance,
co-leade r; Cindy Hartenbach,
trea s urer ; Sherrie Darst.
secretary.
.Frances Hysell was the week's
best weight loser with Nancy Vance

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Slinderella
Beverly·Smith and Janet Sigman
were the top losers of weight with
Judy Wolfe as runner-up In the
Monday night Five Polnts·Exerclse
Class. .
·
At the Tuesday morning Mason
class; Nadine Justis and Mlldr~
Hudson lost the most weight with
Jackie Fields and Kate Stone bellig
the runners-up. Vicky Abbott and
Cathy Workman tied for the most
weight lost and Joan Vaughan was
runner-up at the Five Points
Wednesday morning class.

Scholarships
Three area students ,In ceramic
engineering techoology at Hocking
Technical College have heen
awarded scholarships amounting
to $300per student. The scholarship
name and student are as follows:
The Davis Refractories Scholarship was awarded to John D. Jacobs of Rutland. Jacobs is the son of
John and Anita Jacobs.
The Brick Institute of America
Scholarship was awarded . to Tl·
mothy Bentz of Racine. Bentz Is the
son of Henry W. and Dorothy E.
·
Bentz.
The A. P. Green Refractories
Scholarship was a warded to Eilts
McMlllan of Racine. McMillan Is
the son of Ellis and Phyllis
McMlllan. ·

Cantata
WOMEN'S &amp; MEN'S

GOLF
SHOES
$1995 &amp; $2495

Plans are underway for an Easter
cantata bythechlldren'schoirat the
Middleport First Baptist Church.
The cantata, "His Fleece Was
White as Snow"; wUI be presented

Rev. Gary Haines, evangeUst
and singer, will be guest speaker at
Meigs County Holli!ess Association
aMual Indoor ·camp to be held at
Rutland Church ot the Nazarene
.MarCh 7-13. Services will beheld at
7: 30p.m. eacp day wtth musslc will

Nursing information ·
session set at Rio

BAILEYS SHOES

Rev. Haines

FREE

Addition ·
Myron and Melanie Fields partie·
!pated In the youth program at the
Sunday evening worship service of
theMiddleportFirstBaptlstChurch
on Feb. 13. Their names were
unitentlonally omitted from the
listing of participants.

~his

is a safe c~nvenient way to have your ears pierced for the
first or second t1me. Persons under 18 must be accompanied by
parent or guardian; Age limit 6 years old.

PH. 992-2054

~[ofo. JJ..:J,v

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, Ohio .

N. 2ND AVE.
PHONE 992-3307

@e.tfP'(!STORE

entertainment.

Rev. Haines, former renowned
nightclub slDger and ente rtainer In
Detroit's top clubs and elsewhere in .
the midwest.- began evangelism In
1972 after 14 years as a professional

Following his conversion and call
Into full-time evangelism, Rev.
Haines a ttended Nazarene Bible
College 'tn Colorado Springs, Colo.,
from which he gradua ted In 1975.

' Buy Chic jeans : pa nts. shorts or a
skirt now' You 'll gellh e best In lashion , fit and labnc . Plus our best bonus
offer eve r'
It's a fashi ona ble and functi onal
nylon windbreaker that tu c ks a way
into rls own Irani poc ket. Which . in
turn . zips into a clever little ca rrying
case,
So hurry in for details and your
orde r for m. Send it 10 h.i.s a long with
lhe siz e ti cket and sales sl ip from thi s
store . h.i.s will send you th is wonder·
lui sky blue all -weathe r Chi c-J ac free t
ll's an offer you won't wan! to mrss t
Oile r valid Ma rc h 1, 1983 1hroug h
' Ma rch 31 , 1983.

PIERCING

WITH THE PURCHASE OF A $3.95 PAIR OF EARRINGS
THIS IS A REGULAR $7.95 .VALUE

113 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OH.

being provided.

It's a $20 value, and it's yours free,~••·h any Chic purchase.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY

EAR

Page-7

freeI

SPECIAL

PR.

STOP IN TODAY
AND LOOK OVER
OUR SELECTION OF
COATS AND SPORT
COATS WE HAVE
JUST RECEIVED.

on Wednesday, March 30 at 7 p.m.
ahd Friday afternoon, Aprll1.

An ·· Information session for
anyone Interested In enrolling In the
Rio Grande College and Commu·n:
lty College-Holzer School ot NursIng will be held on Friday, March
18, a schoolsJ,iokesman said.
f?etalled lnfonnatlon about the
lnstltutiQn's two-year Associate Degree Nursing Progra!Jl, application
procedures, and l."lnancial Aid will
be discussed dlirlng a general session from 1·3 p.m. In the Fine and
Performlng Arts Center. Tours of
the·camPII$ and the Nursing Skills
Lab will also be provided following ·
the session.
For additional Information, contact the Office of Admissions and
Records, Rio Grande College and
Community College, Rio Grande,
45674 (614) 24S:5353.

The Daily Sentinel

Speaker set for indoor camp in Rutland

EAR ·PIERONG

FOR MEN ARRIVING DAI'-Y•

PANTS

'

~oPS
J.'

as runner-up. Members sang In
their honor. Information on the club
may be obtained by callln
,
'742-2233.
g,

AU. NEW SPRING FASHIONS

INFANTS-0-24 Months
TODDLERS-2T-4T .
GIRLS-4-6x
GIRLS-7-14

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Youth League slngup will
be held Saturday, March 5 and
12 at Middleport Village Hall
from 9 a .m . until noon. Entry fee
is $7.

.,

tock, " Lincoln"; Sherry Fox. "Wa-

auxlliary.'s emergency fund for its
members bringing the totalto $25.
A report was given on field
service noting that gifts had been
delivered to Jerome Cook and Bill
Rovnak on Valentine's Day with
remembrances for other veterans
attheAthehs MentalHealthCenter
and the Arcadia Nursing Home.
Mrs. Martin, state hospital representatlve , reported that she and
Pearl Knapp, Mrs. Tiemeyer, and
GarrettWerryheldapartyTuesday
a t the Athens center.
It was noted that the unit needs 10
for memberShip. As a community
service proj~t. house slippers were
provided for a veteran.
It was announced that the Legion
will sponsor a dance with the
George Stewart orchestra to play on
March 12 at SIO a couple. The post
wUiaisohaveanEasteregghuntfor
post and auxiliary families.
Betty Wiles. foreign_ relations,
and Jane Snouter, comrimnity
service will givetheAprllprogram.

shington and the Flag" ; and Lana
Hankla , "Washington's Prayer."
Iva Powell had a prayer for
F ebruary. and Catherine Welsh
r~IOOLli'Uill Oil
played '"America " and "America,
theBeautiful."
r--~--------,..-L----------Smlth reported on the Buckeye
Girls State session hosted ri!Cently
by the American Legion Auxiliary
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Middleport. She said that 14 girls and
several parents attended the meet·
· ing held for all candidates.
·Members contributed to the

The Look Of Spring
Has Arrived!!

dance at Rutland Civic Center, 8
io 11 p.m. Frtdaywtth MuslcUn· - - - - - - - - - - - - '
limited, $2 (or singles, $3 for
couples,

.

·

'.

RACINE -Square dance will
be held at Racine American Legion Hall, 8: 30 p.m. to midnight
Saturday. Guy Tilome band will
play. Caller will be ·Red Carr.
Public is Invited.
HARRISONVILLE .Lodge
411, F&amp;AM meeting will be 7: ll
p.m. Saturday at temple with
work tn master mason degree;
all master masons welcome;
past masters of Harrisonville
asked to be present.

speaker. She noted thatFebfl.lary Is
known as the patrtotlc month as
PresldentsWashlngtonandLincoln
were born in February. Noting that
America was fmindedon freedom of
rellglon, shecalledforthelegtonand
the auxlllary to continue carrying
the banner, speaking out for God
and country.
Mrs. Richards made reference to
the work of Madelyn Murray
O'Hare a nd her converted son who
has written a bock, "Belleve In
America ."
She outlined various programs of
the legion and its auxiliary, menUonlng the Buckeye Boy and Girl
State programs, special olymplcs,
scholarship and education and the,
get-out-the-vote project.
In conclusion, she called for
members to get active and stay
active In the various programs
which promote all facets of Amerlc·
an ism, and gave a poem, "In the
Morning of-My Live."
Erma Smith, who is co-chairman
of the Americanism committee
with Mary Martin, presented Mrs.
Richards with a gift.
Also participating on the Americ·
anism program were several jun·
lors with readings, Robin Campbell,
"Americanism"; Er ica McCUn·

3, 1983

Meigs County happenings_

Meigs County and .area organization members hold meetings
Snack~

Thtorsday, March

.VISA

-MASTERCARD
ei.AYAWAY

•

c:/!Uc

~h.i.s·

�I

Page

8 - The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, MOtm, 3, 1?83:

·Shaky' .earthen dam thr~atens
9,200 people in Simi Valley
By KIM MILLS
A...oclated P~ Writer
An earthen dam above California·s Simi Valley threatened to
break under the strain of a week of
rain, willie pounding sun crushed
oceanside homes and 9,200 people
had to nee as a stalled Pacific storm
continued to torment the Golden
State,
Officials ·issued an order late
Wednesday to evac uate up to 1,200
people from the Simi Valley,
northwest of Los Angeles, after
deciding that the earthen Sinaloa
Dam could give way.
"There's6 1nches ofwater coming
over the dam and both sides of the
dam are corroding," Ventura
County fire dispatcher Kathy Whit man said.
"We ha,ve engineers out there
cull ing off the flow of water, trying
to lower the level of water," said
police Lt . Dorsey Cullen, who said
the water behind the darri was6feet
above normaL
The death toll from the West Coast
storms that began over the weekend
rose to 16, with mol'!' than 50 people
Injured. Forecasters predicted
another powerful storm would hit
California this weekend.
··The state is just absolutely
soaking wet right now," said Alex
Cunningham, director of the state
Office of Emer gency Services. "It's
like a completely saturated sponge
that can 't hold anotherdropofwater
without a drop running out
somewhere."
Forecasters said the storm also
spread eastward .today to Colorado
and Arizona . Storm warnings were
iSsued for Colorado.
. In Southern California, 10 piers

•i

I
....:,

collected.''

.

.

'

The audit also showed the Mental
Health Board entered Into a $15,!XXJ
agreement with Bren-Tru Press on
September 19, 1981 for the publication of the hook "The Mountains
and Valleys Are Mine." Examiners
said the publisher's records showed
that 3 copies of the hook were sold
as of September 18, 1982, for a total
royalty payment dueof$1,889. HoweVer, no royalty check was received by the Mental Health Board,
according to examiners.
"In the future, the GalllaJackson-Melgs Mental Health
Board members should be cognizant of the cost/benefit of any futuf!'
publications," examiners said.
Examiners said a contract be. tween the Mental Health Board and
the Gallla-Jackson-Melgs Mental
Health Center, Incorporated for
mental health services and facilities d4rlng the period July 1, 1982 to
June 30, 1983 was not signed until
November 12, 1982 and funds disbursed to the contract agency prior
to a signed contract may have been
In violation of state law. Examiners
said a draft contract wassubmltted
to the mental health center, but was
rejected by the center. On October
7:7, 1982, an Interim agreement was
entered Into to disburse federal
block grants to the center through
December 31, 1982, according to\"X·
arnJners, and on November 12,1982,
a eontract wasslgned.
The audit report was reviewed
with the loUowtngofflclalsatapostaudlt conference held on February
22, 1983: John C. Rice, chairman of
the Mental Health Board; David
Koblentz, preslden t of the Meigs
County Commissioners; James C.
Saunders, Gallla County Commls-

stoner; Donald Cox, assistant Gallia County ProseCuting Attorney;
Mark Ochsen Beln, Jackson

·-

Three emergency calls
Three calls were answered ~Y
local units Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 7:56a.m .. rutland took Ruth
Darst, HarrtsomiUle, to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine answered a
brushfire call on Perry Run Road at
1:04 p.m. and Pomeroy at 2:19p.m.
transported Wanda Stafford from
Wolf Pen Road to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.

CAT'It.E PRICES'

Feeder Steers : (Good and ChOice)

msoo

lbo. 59 . ~75; 500-700 lbo. 53-511.
Feoder Heller~ : !Good and Chclrel :rosm
lbs. 116-57: 1!00-0IXIIbo. 47.50-:D.l'JO.
Feoder Blllls: !Good and Choice) :rosm
lbo. 158~25; 1!00-700 lbo. !12-58.
Slaughter &amp;lis: {Over 1.000 lbo.J 44-48:u
Slaughter Chws: UtlUtles 37-45.10; Canners
and Cutters :n.:E~.
•
Springer cows! (By tile Head\ - ·
COw and Col! Pairs IBY tile Unit 1 270-QJ.
Vetil: (C'"*"' and Prime) 75-Si.l'JO.
11t1by Calves: {By lhe Head) 42-72.
11t1by Calves: (By the Pound) ~71 .

-----HOG PRICES:

·

Hqp: (No. I, Barrows
lllo. 112JS4lt.!IO. .
.

and GntsJ ID23!

-

_,.. 4Ul.!IO.
F- ~
: (By 1l1e Heed!
SHEEP PRICES:
Slalllftlel' Limbo ~58 ..
Feeder Limbo :II,!D«).!IO.

.,

..

I

.

ZH9.

.. .._,
....__

I:I·C:I. l'&lt;ll"- 1 ~

1:..-•••wo
..·~-,,

_

.......
....•_.......,
_............

:!:.~M;

...................
......,,..... ...
,,....,..
'-"

.,.,

.,~

.,.~ r-

ll·f'• . . •T•..

11·.._......,._
.,.__.....
.............

••·a..• "-'"""'

-

Olio.......

CASE NO. 17,789
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in the abO&gt;w"e entitled action, I will offer for sale at public
auction. at the front door of the
Coun House in Pomeroy.
Meigs County. Oh10. on Satur·
day. the 26th day of March.

1983. al 10:00 A.M. the fol -

lowmg descnbed real estate.
situated in the County of Meigs.
State of Ohio. and in the Village
of Porreroy, and bounded and
described as follows. tO · WII:
A piece of ground fifty feet
wide out of the southwest
corner of Lot No. 12 in the plat

Evans, Tonja Salaer and Mel Weese. 'l1le team wiD •'
face Portsmouth ClllY in the Class A District oompetldon tonlgbt ln.Waverly.

are,

Judge O'Brien ends 31 court cases ...
Twenty-two defendants were
fined and nineothersfonelted hands
In Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Robert Couch, Pomeroy.
speed, $43 and costs; Betty Burgoon, Logan, speed, $22 and costs;
Earnest Stockton, Hemlock Grove.
failed to yield from a private drive,
$10 and costs; Rex Thornton,
Racine, speed, $20 and costs; Paul
Miller, Rutland, speed, $21 and
costs; James Rose, Akron, left of
center, · $10 and costs; Patricia
Clarke, Pomeroy, speed, $22 and
costs; PhUllp E. Wells, Reno, Ollio, ·
speed, $23 and costs; Johnny
Johnson, Bidwell, speed, $21 and
costs; Charles W. Moore, Reedsville, Improper backing, $10 and
costs; Clarence Barber, Cheshire,
speed, $23 and costs; Mark Smith,
Reedsville, speed, $22 and costs;
Robert Keaton, Pomeray, speed,
$21 and costs; Eugene Walkeri,
Whitehall, speed, $20 and costs;
~ger Randolph, Shade, speed, $16
and costs; Gary Eynon, Syracuse,
DWI, $250 and costs, five days
confinement, license suspended for
60 days, left of center, $25 and costs;'
Kevin Payne; Pomeroy, possess an
Illegal deer, $225 and costs; Terrance Matthews, Pomeroy, takiliga
deer with a gun from a motor
vehicle with the aid of a spotllght,
$225 and costs; James Schuler,
Middleport, non-support, costs, two
years probation and pay current
support; Eric Belkden. Logan.
speed. $25 and costs; Mary Swisher,
Cheshire, speed, $22 and costs;
Roger Barnett, Gallipolis, speed,
$22 and costs.

Forfeiting bonds were Willard
Moo!'!', Middleport, DWI, $.li6.50;
Nelson Newell, Gallipolis, Ronnie
Roberts, Cleveland and Thomas
Peterson, Stow, Ohio, $46.50 each,
speed; Esther Black, Middleport,
failed to yield, $41.50; Yancy Roush,

Ardel Forrest Smith, 72, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, . died at 12: 15 p.m.
Wednesday in Holzer Medical
Center.
Born April 17, 1910, in Gallipolis,
son of the late .Otho H. and Minnie
Otis Smith, he was a retired
carpenter, was employed in the
Kyger Creek school attendance
area and was a member of the
Kyger Creek Local Board of

Wins spelling bee
Michael Martin, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Martin, Reedsville, wpn
the spelling bee at the Riverview
Elementary SchooL Runner-up in
the contest was Lisa Driggs,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I,.arry
Driggs of Long Bottom. Both are
sixth grade students at Riverview.
The champion will participate in the
Meigs County spelling bee to beheld
Monday night at the Eastern High
SchooL

ringues never dry out in the micro-

.

the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No. 24034.

Wanted

·Rummage sale

.

MILLER
ELEctRIC
SERVICE

' ··

LANDMARK

614-992-2181

Curb In'flatlon
Pay Cas h .f or
Classlfleds and
Savel I . I-,

'

I

rl

• ];=
OPEN 9 m5 liON. li1ll1 SAT.
All Trpas of Aoto Rapalr,
Brakes, Tune-Ups, ttc.
SPECIAL
TRANSliiSSION FILTER
AND FLUID CHANGE
ONLY 131.95 l·t••c

'

ANY PERSON who
' hu

Clean news papers. Call

446-0772.

Puppies to giveaway. Call

ANGIE'S
pIZZA

3 part Garman Shepherd
male puppies about 4 mos.

Depreseion. Fiesta, Hummel
figu reins. cut glau lndudlng
23" cut glass lalmp . Ben •
Judy Guillemetle Auctlo·
neara . Pl\one 304·778·

614-992-3949.

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

Blonde male Pomeranian to

give oway. 304-675-3361 .

3 month old , mixed breed

puppioo. Gentle adult dogo

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

bcine, Oh.
Pit. 61W4HI91

6:30 P.M.
Ch k 12
0 e

Factory

-· ·~

Gauge Shotguns Only

$3()00

A TON

PH. 992-2280

BISSELL
Sl DING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for freesidinges·
timates, 949·2801 or

949-2860.
No Sunday Calla

ALuMr~~v.k :IDING
•lnoulation
•Storm Ooore
•Storm Windows
•Aoploacomont Window~
•Now A00fing
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

,

I· IJ.tfc

YOUNG 'S

LaBONTE
QUAIL fARM

THE

lostandfound

Luko19:10

v~~ic,!::s

LOST Air Force ring in
Holzer Hospital perking lot

SAT, MARCH 5
At tilt Rutland
Grade School Gym
5:00P.M. to 1:00 P.M.
13.00 Adult-•2.00 Children
Dinner includes: Slillhelli
SUI, Roll, Orinkend Disseri
Entertainment ....
The Choreliers"'

Saturday Feb . 26th. Ro ·
ward. Coli collect 61 4-632•
·6619.

· !~~~Po!.~~

FOU NO: Pit Bull. Vicinity of
Crow'a Steak Houoe. 614992-3297. Muat ldentWy.
Found 14' aluminum boot in
Contoct814-992-7254.
19791n tho Ohio River .
LOST-Lldloa billfold. Brown
clutch. Ploaoereturn. Area
~~~~;:~-~~~.In Pomeroy.
7

HOME BUILDING

ROOM

Yard Sale

I

Goopol

28.

I lO.
n.

29
30..
31 .
· • 32.
33.
34 ·
35:

11

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

1
I
I

1
1

12.
13.
14. _
15·
16.

¢}

1

,I

.r

-

4 tomlly3-4-IS.
baoomont
oaloFri.,
ot
Morch
IThur\.,
-{Ill
Sot .! 9·7 . Loll of nice
I ~;::=======~~~t===~~~=~=jt========J~==~=~~~~~
ROUSH

-- - -- -

.I

Mill Tills Cou""n
..~ with RemiHance
Tilt D.lly Stntlnt!
111 Court St.

I"

I 1....----~~':.~~:_~:,~~'~--~---I

the Leny O'Brien raal.nce.

CONSTRUCTION
New Ho1111 - Exltnslve
Rtmodtlinc.
1 •Insurance Wort
Pole Bides.
1· .Cu1to111
&amp; Gar1ps
1
1 •Roofl11 Work
1 • tliltlnlnln
Vin,l Slcliws
U Yea"&amp;hperlonco
I
GIIG ROUSH

'"· 992·75J3

IL__.._m_-_2_2_a2_,:.:.t·::;ll;:::
·•:..•l .

,,

618.£. Main, I'DIMOJ, OH.
PH. 992·3795
We Do lloobtlp.. For

Sind, llfiiiiiiiCaqaa
~ &amp; l'ltlwllllpa
IMIIf c. KEBUif.OMIER

1'----~-.:.;1·21:.·:. 2"":::.J

RADIATOR SERVICE

[.. ~

clothing, bodapreado,

-~..

curtllint, 18m pi, etc. Go paet
Raci.ne Locka • Dam.• tum

From ht Smalleat Hllltr
Cort to tht Llr~tst Rldlator.
Rldlator SptciliJt
NATHAN BIGG$
35 Yrs. Exptrltnct

SMITH NELSON

MOTORS, Inc.

Pot~~eNy, Dh .
Ph. 992~2174 ........

WANTED to Ieese. Tobacco'
quota, will give .16 lb.

Morgana Woodlawn Farm ~

Pliny 304-676-2276, 304:
..
523-5843.

11

Help Wanted

Garage Sole Butovlle Rd-1 retarded odulta with behemt. past Lavno'a Furnitu10 . vorial diaordm.lfintereatad
contact Mike Rife. Ohio
Thuro., Fri. lo Sot..
Rooldontlol Servlceo. Cell
Garage Solo Mar. 6th 1o 6th, 446-4768.
9 till 5. Otaoswaro, books,
records. lamps. razors. Someonetodohousework6
Soulona mantel chime daysaw•k. DitonWod.or
clock. typewriter, adding Thurs. lo Sun . Call Grover
machine, bella, kitchen Cremeans, 614-367-7411 .

j ·'

COMPlETE

Shop, Middleport. 992- '· '
'.3476 .
. ,.

Immediate employment day

BOGGS

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

~J!j .

~~·~
' ••

working with mentally

I

_ _
- '---~
· ____;c._ 11
__ _
1
. ___ .
1

Gold, ailver, iterllng;
jewelry, rings, old colna &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Barber

&amp; night shift on waakend1

..

9.

\

Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , Oh. Or 9927760.
'
.

1812 East-

Churc~

_____

1

BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old

furn lture, gold, silver ~.
dollan. wood ice boxes.
atone jara. antiquee, etc.,
Complete houaeholda :'

em Ave. Next to Willis Tire.

I

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

40 or 50 HP ·outboord
moiOr. Call 614-266-6640.

R,ummage Sale Wad .• Thurs.
lo Fri. 1OAM, Apostolic

ADDITIONS
REMODELING
ROOFING &amp;Sl DING
"FREE ESTIMATES"
REFERENCES
PH.
985-4141
1

one

"'I

We pay c.. h for 111e modal
clean ulad cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson
Caah tor use~ mobile homea
or traVel trailers . Will
conaider dame'ged or bum

KOUNTRY KLUB
CARPENTER
Long Bottom, Oh .
KEN'S
g'adgeu. flower veaea,
Print
word in each
0
space below. Each In·
SERVICE
Ph. 985 _. 345
NRefewnGJ.shripnsc
~~·~
.
wicker, furniture . picture
0
1 1
a" • -~ ---~•.....
ctoll LaBonte, 5r.,Ownor
· ~}\
APPLIANCE frames. dolls. hand &amp; garden
tltlat or group oHigur•
cpynts as a word. Count
-·'
---..
~
3ij~
•Re-wti&amp;htinc
SERVICE
tools. wheelbarrow, lawn
name and address or
,
. .R,. cnlguttwwedc.
~ · -:--..·
•Balancing
mowers. weehtubs. vases
Phone number II used. Wortl~l .~.. 1 . • 1..~~.
C..colo-tl
: :m
.?_..,::~. '
·'
b.
y Hull, old Garmon beer
8
.
9 5 3561
-t'lumWngand
,
•Golf Trips
,, '
stein, baga of ono•ted
You'll get beHer results _:..:.ll~
···~~~~~~~
-·~··!
olectlloal-tc
~1 ·
ForYouncPeople _I :lo
All Makes
clothing, Muh purse,
If YOU describe fUIIV,
lu"' , • ~
(Proe htlmate•)
ll•ture ~~aii ;~ bei_n.
•Pre-Season Sale •
•Woahera •Diohwaohora
Depi81110n glaoa, II&lt; a now
give price. The Sentlne~ To 1S
• ' ·"'
sold.~-~~~·
wtt~
20%
&amp;30%
OFF
Rongeo
couch
1o cha.lr. motel bod
reserves the right to -;:::-;;t"-t;;jjjijt;';--;;;;lr--!
V. C. YOUNG Ill
· r:. ;:;_~;·t o.. 0id
•Rofrlgerotoro
with bran trimming, Clark's
classify, edit or re1ect_T":..:..:o25::...t_ 1,.;;.;.
"'"'-f·;.;tIJ.,;,;,;.OGI---!
4
any ad. Your ad will be
992-6215 o• 992·7314
~nofhti~Ce~e~i ••r ••Y' ~·]_
JOHN TEAFORD
•Dryen •Freezer•
O.N.T. threod ·coblnot, lots
Pomeroy, Ohio
·.-.:~_- .,. , . . :
Chtst01. OH .
PARTS end SERVIC.•E
of Items to numorouo to
put in the proper •T~o~3~SJ_-~'!!"':.!!j
Nl~....
~';.!!
~~ir.·~··~
11·26-tlc
· •iiY ~a·.
3·2·1 mo.
2·16·1mo .
• ....ttr
mention. Paul Denney'i,
classification If you'll ,
Jcheck the proper box
Th•se cash rates
Bidwell. Ohio. 1-614-388I below.
Include discount
L------------------1----------~-------t:::::::::::::::::;ir=·=====:=:=:=:=:::;1_9_8_3_o.___________
r
I
Wed. Thuro. &amp; Frld. 9:00 to
J&amp;F
GHEEN'S
I &lt; &gt;Wanted
3:00. Sheeta. curtalna, rugs,
Sale
PAINTING INC.
I II &gt;For
jeane,
and cloths. 2 miles
17. _ _ __ __
CONTRACTING
Industrial, Commercial,
SALES &amp; SERVICE
east of Porter on Rt. 664 .
I I llAnnounc•ment
For Rent
RE~Id ential, Interior and
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
•DOZER
5ltll~
18. - - - -- Yard Sale Friday &amp; Satur·
••"
or.
GUYSVILLE.
OHIO
St.
RL
124,
Pomeroy,
OH.
19·---~-day. Buck R14ge Apt 97,
Painting
I 1. _ _ _ __
20. _ _ _ _:.__
behind Spring Volley. Baby
nd
Sandblasting
Authorized John Deer,
II 2.
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
2t . _ _ _ _ __
ftems, curtalne, .badapreada,
.
drauee.
•POI~DSR, RECLAIIAlTl.IOONN
!la~lblastlng
New llolllnd, Bush Hog
- I 3.
REPAIR
22. - ' - - - - - -WORK
~=:.::~~·! Lot Stripping
Farm Equipment
Yard Solt Friday March 4.
1 4.
23. - - - - -Also
Tranaminlon
oLAii-D
~p•ur -;.:
li
Dealer
9-6. SR 325, a mi. North of
1· 5. - - ------ 24. _ _ _ __ _
,.
Farm Equipment
Rio Gr~ndo. Clothoa,
PH.
992-5682
FULl
"
whaela, boaoball ohooo ,
I 6. - -- - - - ·25. - -- - - or 992·7121
PHOIIE
FFORD
FIE(~l]~~!.E.s. ;;;;
Parts &amp; Servi~~"'
mloc. Follow tho ligna.
1 7.
26. - - - -- 3-24-tfc
'-1. 1 ....
c:Alf6
~
1 8.
27. ---'-- - - -

i

Volley Trading Co., Spring
Volley Plaza, 446-80211 or
446-8026.

TWO male doge, 1 mr•od

For the Son of man Is
come to aeek end to seve
that which was lost.

1
~::::::::::::'~·
2
~
&gt;t~lc;i~======~~~~~~lt~
~~~============'~·
2
~
1~mo~~==~
·
~====~'·~n~.J~·~·~~=·~
~
'S

Phone

Old coinl, acrap rlnge
silverware. Dally qqotee
available. Alao co ina It coin
aupplies for sale . Spring

outs. Cell 446-0176.
Lobradorpuppiea. 304-676 Good used pickup truck.
3828.
Coli 446-4053.
-

~~====='~H~.,~~======~~~~~~~'~·"~-"'~~===~2-~g.~J~mo~.j
MINE RUN Vinyl &amp; All!minum
J&amp;L BLOWN
JESCO
INSULATION

are the high eat in two Y..rt,

446-0069

breed·1 part Labrador
Retriever. Seven pert

DINNER

FIRE DEPT. .

Buying Gold, Silver. Pleti:
num. Gold end Silver prlcoo

and cats . Free to good

homos. 304-876·2264. ·

HILL
.

the avenin gs.

a

~nE~~~ re-

Middleport, Ohla·

446-3169 or 258-19671n

White w~h block opou. Coil check our prices on gold •
silver. scrap jewelry. Buying
614-992-6866.

12·20-tfc

2·11· 1111o

Bashan Building

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

.

3 month old puppy . Part
Cocker Spaniel, part Terrier.

Routs 1
Lone Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

Bread-Subs

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sim from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
lnsul1td Doc Houses

child• rocker,

1920's all natural doll
EJect ric water heater. C811 buggy. Also aline collection
of cup &amp; saucers, Nippon,
446-9473.

kinds. call Kenneth Swain,

992-2196

1·12-3 mo. pd.

iten~.

446-7283 .

9 part Garman Shep. pup ·
pies. 1 mo. old. Ready to go.

Pizlils-Pim Bread
Italian

WICKER, round table,

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

Fri.·Sat. 4:00·12:00
CLOSED SUNDAY

4:00-11:30

the t reaaures you will find, •
few highhghta include: Oak
lea box, round table , prened
beck chairs. wa1h etand,
telephone•. maple butchers
block. cherry parlor aet, 8 '
roll top desk, pie safe with ·
pineapple tins. prened b•ck
rocker. claw footad drauer•.
wal cupboard , epool ca binet, bran bed, rail road
lanterns, bedroom tuite.
churni. buckboard aeat,
·quilta, ·sliver plate, pewter~

3 Border Collie puppltl 2 2828.
female, I male, 7 wka old .
Coll614-379-2116. ·
9 Wanted To Buy
6 month old yellow lo white
atripod kktan . Very playful. WANTED TO BUY Old
furniture and Antique• of Ill
614-992-7406 .

cora IIICfiatorll end heatar C01811. We can also
acid boil end rod out 11!·
dlaton. We also repair
G• Tanka.
PAT
FORD

Mon.·T~urs.

Primatlve• a.· collectables,
thil aucti ,on Is for you.

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofina - Sidina - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodelinl - Custom Pole
Barns.

VVe

.PH. 992-6851
349 N. 2nd St.
Mi~dleporl, OH.

· AUCTION every Satuutay
night. !\'t. Alto, WV, 8 p.m.
Co 11ignment1 welcoma .
Emma Bell auction"r.
'

sewing

12 YEAR old Bolder Collie
"'=========:;lr.:========;l'ogoodhomolnthocountry.
h
Good companion for oldo1
RADIATOR
m~te Call 304-675 -

RACINE

STRIP
COAL

AddreUI------------

.

-,Lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water-Sewer
-Gas Lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

SIDING

Nam•------------ 1I.

''

:~~~O:~cks

Giveaway

old. Call 446·2896.

' .r _.... _l: -~

·

Although we con not llat oil

anything to give away and
does not offer ot attempt to
offer any o'lherthlng fore ale
may place an ad in this
column . There will ·be no
charge to the advenieer.

m

POLE BULDINGS
Sizes sbirt from 12'116'

Write your own ad and ·order by mall• with this
coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

j

4

~~============~~~==============~1r.~~~~~~~~~~~-·~3 ~~~~~~~6
ALL STEEL &amp;
GUN S}iOOT
;/,A~~g

POMEROY

·

...--------'--&lt;

H ·l1t

Luca1 Tour1 . Charleaton.

wv. 304-346-7642.

LDNG BOTTOM - Approximately 71 acres wooded iand with
nicely remodeled farm house, 3 be&lt;iroms, folttld air hea~ plus
wood burner, insjjatoo. New 2 car gara&amp;e. $55,000.00 for all or
owrer wil sell house, garage, small acreage for $35,000.00.

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION CO.
Z~- loin
l'omlloy, 011.

Conalgments of new anil

ANTIQUE AUCTION SUN•4,000 pluo 4 jackpot DAY MARCH 6, 1 p.m.,
gam eo . Fine l lackpot a PUTNAM AUCTION
$60,000. coverall. March HOUSE, WINFIELD WV .
19th. 1o 20th. 1983 . H5 . located next to new Win·
per person lncludea trans· field High ·school . If you
portotlon lo motet . Coil enjoy top qualty Antlquoo,

IIULIDI
,. . .

PULLINS
J!£AVATING

For all your wiring
need•; furnaces, repair 1ervice end in1telletlon.
Re•ldential
a. Commercial
Call 742-3196

~----------~-----·------~

.'
.i

must be dissolved, or the meringue
CooL
To Assemble the Torte: 2 oupces
won't turn out pmi&gt;erly. Check to
Home Economist
A meringue is a confection that see U the sugar Is dissolved by rubsemi-sweet chocolate, grated or1·
. ,
Pickled, holled, fried, baked,. combines egg whites, beaten to 7 to bing a bit of the foam between your shaved.
chopped, scrambled, whipped or 8 times their volume with some aid" fingers. If you can feel sugar crysOne-half pint cream whipped, ~ ~
frozen, eggs are wonderful. Eggs like cream of . tartar, vinegar or tal, then you need to beat It longer. With"2 tablespoons sugar added or ,; ;
are loaded with protein and can lemon juice as well as sugar added
Meringue should be added to the abo~t 1~ cups prepared whipped:~ ;
form the basis for many egg-citing to stabilize the mixture. The foam top of hot pie fillings. Swirl the metopping.
• jq I
foods for your family.
Is baked and the protein in the egg . ringue to cover all parts of the fll· ' Shave 1 ounce chocolate aver the-.
At 79 cents a dozen, medium eggs whites coagulate around the ex- ling. Meringue can be used as a
meringue torte shell. Spread half of .',I i
only cost 00 cents a pound. Where panded air cells. Thls foamy mix·
"crust" for ples or as a basis for
the whipped cream over the choco- -~ t
else can you get Individually pack- ture can give volume to cakes, light desserts. One egg white late. Spread the orange fllllng on ! ~ .
aged, protein-rich foods for under a souffies, and fluffy omelets as well
beaten with ~ cup sugar to create 2 top of the whipped cream, spread· ~ t
A rummage sale will be held at
dime each?
as mering11es.
Individual meringues has a total of the remaining whipped cream oi(11 '
Forest Run United Methodist
I'm becoming quite an expert on
A properly prepared meringue 210calories, or 105foreachserving. top and shave the remaining ounce- ~ 1
Church today and Friday from 9
eggs. As some of you may know, will not weep or fall or have beads Try topping baked meringue shells of chocolate on top of ihe pie.'" ;
a.m. to3p.m. inthebasementofthe
my famUy has recently caught the of sugary moisture on top. To avoid
,
with berries or fruit for a light Refrigerate.
church.
"chicken" fever. We care for seven these pit falls, begin to prepare meHave you ever wondered what to '
dessert.
The church is located on county
feathered creatures and we are ringues by choosing a dry day.
A meringue recipe that has al- do about leftover egg whites or i
road 30 and is one mUe from SR 7.
bombarded dally with giant brown Humid weather Is not good for
ways been a favorite with me is this yolks? Place egg whites in a' coeggs. Storing three dozen eggs a meringues.
Interesting Orange 'i'orte. It's vered container and store In the reweek Is quite a feat! As an update
Choose metal or glass bowls for
really just a meringue crust with frigerator for 3 to 4 days. For longer
on the cost-efficiency ofourcllicken heating the egg whites. Plastic
layers of orange custard, chocolate storage, freeze egg whites. To
operation, I thougllt you might like bowls of\en have a greasy film. Any
freeze, carefully stir the egg whites
and whipped cream.
to know that due to increased pro- greas~ or other bits of food may
Mary Allee stou•8 Orange Torte
with a fork and place In an air tight
duetion,. our eggs are costing us reduce tlj,e volume of the egg
Fbr the Crust: 4 egg whites, ~ t. container. Use 2 tablespoons of froonly $12 a dazen now. There are whites. Make sure all utensils are
salt, ~ t. cream 01 tartar, '% cup zen egg whites for one fresh white
omo vALLEY IJVEIIJ'OCJi oo. ·
many
rumors
arouJ!d
our
house
squeaky-clean
and
free
!rom
.fats,
:
sugar.
'
and use stored eggs only In cooked
,
• Fe!Jiuary •• 1113_
about the wisdom of eating seven too. ,
FeederSteon: {goodandclmlce\2Silto300
Beat egg whites and cream of tar- dishes. Egg yolks can be stored In
tbo. 62-81, :m 10 «Xllbo. 60-71.50,400 to OOOibo. ·chickens.
Separate
the
eggs next. Separate
tar
wlw foamy. Add salt and beat the refrigerator for several days.
62110-71.50. 500 109Xl lb• 58.50-70, QXliOJQ)Ibo.
I've learned · a lot about eggs eggs when they are Coid, making
unW !lOft peaks form. Add sugar Place In a container and cover un58-8).50, 700 to llJJ hs. 53-GL tD1 to over !1!.5().
60.
lately and I've bec9me proficient tn sure that no yolk gets tnto the
gradually, beat constantly. Con- broken yolks with water. Cover.
Feeder Hellen: (good and Cltolcel 2SO U&gt;
planning
meals
around
eggs.
One
o!
whites.
Use
a
aepatate
bowl
each
tinue to beat unW stiff peaks form. Pour oft wat.er befOre using. Freeze •
:m lb• ~ .l'JO, :m 10 100 lbo. !IIHtl.l'JO, 400 to
501 lbo. !12.63, 500 to 1100 lllo. 51-8l.l'JO,IIOO to 'IIlii
my favorite ways to use eggs Is to · time )IOU separate an egg !10 that an
Grease and flour a 9" pie pan. egg yolks In the same manner. One
lbo. !18-56. 'IIlii to IIXllbo. ~.IIXl to over 43create dishes uaing egg whites. Me. error won't contaminate the rest of
Spread meringue evenly In the
tablespoon !roien egg yolk equals 1 ·
55.!10.
.
the
whites.
Let
theeggwbltescome
ringuesparealtrNt!ormyfam·
gieued
pie
pan,
formlllg
a
crust.
egg
yolk. '11law only under refrlger.
Feeder Bulls: (good and cltok:e) :110 to 300
tbo. 60-76. :m to 40011&gt;! ..6(HI8.5(), ~"' 5001bo.
Uy and l wanted to share some to 1'00(11 tempellture before beatBake at 2'15 degrees lor one hour or
ation and use onl~ in thoroughly ·
57. ~.l'JO, IIOOto IIXllbL IB«!.l'JO,aDU&gt;'IIllllbo,
-.l'l0:700 U&gt; IIXllbo. 5L50-57.,,1100 lo.over ln!ormatlon about meringues with Ing. 'Illllwlll ~about a half hour. until browned llgbiJy and firm. cooked foods. Using home frozen J
.!18-!K.!IO.
you .
At room temperature, egg whites
Cool.
eggs In partially cook'ed foods Is
\
Holstein s-. and Bulls :m to IIXl ....
wiD
beat
to
a
lfl!llter
volume.
There
are
two
Jilnds
11
•
meFor
the
Oranp
I!UIIag
.
·
dangerousllecause of the egg's sus49.50-56.50, Buill l,llOO lbo. Aup 16.50-61.
1
ringues: 10ft inermcuee. lllre lbe
4 egg yolks, ~third sugar, 1 L
Wilen ._.tlllalbeea~.add
~blllty til salmonellae.
·•
SJauebter, Cows: utWUes 38.5().47! r.a._n
and C\lllm 3U(h19.
.
IIJilPiq oo a lenQI ~ Jlle, aupr llkllfl¥ llllllfldUally; aboutl
~ rtnd, 1 L oranae rind, 2 T.
I wUI lleDd you lntorlnatlon and j
Veal CoMo &lt;choice IIIII pdme) IIUI, blby
ttN
•paoa
at
a
time.
If
you
add
the
01'
1
111111
Juice,
1
T.
IemOa
Juice.
recipes
uatna eas U you will con- 1
and lw'd .......... Bard cafwo 3&amp;81, opriqt)er&lt;VMI 3JO.GJ,"""" and
calves oombbtalkln CJG!Illi.
1'llllu. IN billed or clrtad Ill lbe 11J118r tao qulddy, the egg 'l'blta
Combine aD~tsandcook tact Dale Stoll at the Meigs county Top Hop 210 U&gt; 231 lbo. !11.50-5121, Boon·
aver hot water until thlckened. Extenalon Office, at 992~.., . ~ ·
OYIII.
tall be billed won't tOim Plopetly. All 11111111!'
.!10, -.Gilbo. and up!D$~ Pip by till
lteod:ll~
Ill tile mbOWIYt
but .Jwtl. ..

._ T

used merchand i se alw•v•
welcome . Richerd Reynolds

BINGO trip. Cherobo Nonh

REAlTORS
Henry E. Cleland. Jr .. GRI ........ .... :................. ... 992-6191
J111111 Trussell ................... ..............................: 949-2660
Dottie Turner .... ............................................. 992-5692
Office ...........................................................992-2259

Daily Sentinel

Gun ahoot. Racine Gun
Club. Every Sundly starting

Carolina, 20 gamaa at

PRICE REDUCED-' EASTERN DISfRICT- 4 bedroom modem
home w~h full basement I~ baths, insulated, FA gas hea~
carport, above ground pool, on 2 acret Reduced to $35,000.00.

.

r

•,

Auction every· Fri. night ot
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloodo of no"'f
mtrchondioo every week .

Alcoholics Anonymous. Coil
448-0276, 304-675-3547.

PRICE REDUCED- iliDDLEPOIII- Duplex rental investment
2 rental units with $300.1110nlhly income. Hoose in gopd condition,
insjjated, some fumittn. Just $19,000.00.

e

a.

SWEEPER ond nwlng
mochlno repair, pono, and
oupplleo. Pick up and
delivery. Do vii Vecuum
Ctooner. one hill mile up
Goorgeo creak Rd . Cell
448-0294..

only.

00

uoo

1--------""'!---------...l
Business
•
...
T'Ices
Se .a

• Middleport OH. 45760.
/ A/ Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge / Clerk
131 3. tO: 17. 3!c
.

~·

11 00

S.•Hf"-.,."

THE INCH!
Th~

cutnx of the estate of Walter
.Emerson Jones. deceased .
late of 3 70 Grant Street.

- ·

.

u

Upoo16W.,. • ...

n ~ e ss,1q£1 .

ALL OTHER APPUAIIC£S

Ads.

u. 10 It ..... o..• ...., ioto.eriion
U••o16 ...d• n,,.....,;,__

8 Public Sale
Auction

t p.m. Factory cholclld gun a Auctioneer. 276-30119.

NEW UmNG - Rt 33 - 1 floor block house, 2·3 bedi!Kims.
approximately I acre let Equal hcnJSilg~pollunity. $14,600.00.

NEW LISTING - N:re lots in Rve Points an!a $5,000 1D
$8,000.00.

l ..t lale

rhM' s riqht! When vot• use a columlt
mch r·r n 1ore in ncwspilper .1dvertising
be tt n " p t,l v or class 1hed you rt'.lCh

07960. was appo inted Exe-

Want to buy or lease '
&amp;HOTPOINT
farm lind and firm
equipment.
WE ALSO WORK ON
Clldifk:ltlon f1 in W1nt

.

pie Lan e, Morristown. N.J.

Sea Cllssifild Ad tl1der

lH~

IF YOU USE.

Sharon Da,.;dson. 1 Gilles-

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE .
GENERAL ELECTRIC

WANTED!!!

Max of Dayton, Roger of RtHland
and David of Tucson, Ariz.; three
daughters. Oebbie Cren~w of·\he,
Phillipine Islands, Tonja Smith of ,
Dayton and Kelly Sayre of Point
Pleasant; seven grandchildren and 1
a great-grandchild; four brothers,· ~
Cordle of Centenery, Audra · o~' j
Kanauga, and Oenver and Wilbur, • 1
both of Toledo: and three sisters, J
Mrs. Hazel Blankenship, Mrs.
Edith Eltlneare and Mrs. Thelma ,
Jeffries, all of Toledo.
He was also preceded in death by
a brother. Aubrey.
Funeral services wiUbe held at 1
p.m. Saturday in Miller's Home for
Funerals ir1 the former Warehime
Funeral Home, with Rev. John j
Evans officiating. Burial wUI be In i
Addi son-Rey nolds Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral ;
home 7-9 p.m. Friday.
l

Public Notice

Front Street thence south to
the south side of the stones1dewalk ~ltv ieet eas1 of the place
of beg1nn ing; thence west wnh
·d d lk h 1
fbe
sa1 51 91Na to 1 e Pace 0
•
g1nning. Reserving a right of
ww-t tor publiC use tvvelve f6et
Wlde throug h sa1d lot near Its

wave overt.

Meigs Coualy Extension

Cash or Certified Check on the
day of sale. Balance upon re·
ce1pt of deed.

12) 17.

"""-"-n

IN

1 ..
8 ]7

thous,llld' r i potcnti.11 bvycrs th&lt;ll ilre
P.rlQ(' r
t£1 r cceiVl' vour money·saving

TERMS OF SALE: 10 Percent

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On February 25. 1983. in

Also surviving are three ~sons.

.~

sold tor less than -two -th1rds of .
that amount.

Street: Thence north with the
west side of sa•d Lot No. 290 to
the face of the rocks or bluff;
thence east (50il•fiy ieet woth
the rocks and parallel woth

19l!.

•

$30.133.00 and canna\ be

Hundred and Ninety at the
south Side ot the stone Sidewalk
on the north s1de of Front

Education. He was also a member
of Hula ville Christ ian Church andn
Elks Lodge No. 107.
He married Nancy Ludlle •
Brewer, who survives, on April 17,

.. '
.
Eggs a source of many egg-citing recipes
(

Sa1d prem1ses appra1sed at

side of said Lot No. (290) Two

Area deaths
Ardel F. Smith

ALLSHERIFFS SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF .
CAVEAT EMPTOR.'THE MEIGS
COUNTY SHERIFF MAJ&lt;.ES NO
GUARANTEES AS TO STATUS
OF TITLE PRIOR TO DATE OF
SALE.

JAMEsJ. p:~:r~:r.;~
Meigs County. Ohio
24. (31 3. 3tc

"·~c...........

" ..... ....

_1 •

NEW LIST!Ml -' RUTLAND- Nice 6 room ranch home with 3
bedrooms on 4 leis. Hardwood ftoors and carpeting, gas foced air
heat Equal housing ~port111ity. $32,000.00.

1"1 ........ .

4!11 leo"
!HI Appolo a .o..
113 ..._

IS ACI_NCH

Deed Records.
Subject to all easements and
rights of way of record.
·
sa·id premises located at 846
E. Main Street Pomeroy, OH.

· ~90

in Pomero-y, OhO. wh1ch is
bounded and described as fol lows: Beginning on the west

Pomeroy, failed to display valld '
license, $41.50; James Nelson,
Pomeroy, · speed, $37.50; Mark ;
Holter, Long Bottom. and Scott
VanMeter, c riminal mischief, "
$43.55 each.

What's cookin'?
By DALE M. STOLL

ol Dillsburg, now Lot No

1 41
417

611

BUSINESS ~

REFERENCE DEED. Vol.
267. Page 80~ . Meigs County

JAMES D. McDOUGAL. ET
AL,

,

'P'U

Co . ...,

SUCCESSFUL

adjoining the stone wall which ·
C(osses said lot The above des·
cribed premises lay1ng and be·
ing in the F1rst Ward of the
Village of Pomeroy. Meigs
County, Ohio.

PlM&gt;tlff.

TORNADOETrE SENIORS- Seuiol' members

11· u,ot~ot•....,

center on che south side of and

OHIO

-..

'"" Chn••
l4l " " " ,.., hi..-.F ....

ll'l · - ·

11-Mfi. A....,

Public Notice .

THE DIAMOND SAVINGS 1o
LOAN COMPANY,

'

Ill ••

Ani CGN l 04

Ul.........,.

Ctot-•
~·

• .., Ao.-o..•.

14-l!lllclnc••tt.~rillr.....,

~~

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

THE
COMMON PI£A8 COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,

·-

13·1!-•1111

4'l'-W.,.t114toiWII

n ot' r•r

-

... o..., ... tJ;o,

IJ.Lioifttlldl

"-•

IN

t :louif i••rl JNt1'.f'11

fuiiiiM 'fll ll. II''I'Jihouu• f' ff ', tiii J!I'" ..

1 . . AO. G•••.

•,.,_f....,_,
.....
, 12·
,,_..,...,,
·--.. . . .
__
.... "". ...
..."".Grill"
...........,.,....,...
.......
..........

.

PH.992-2259

H1
, . \lilo-

--~:~::-..:::::::
..

Public' Notice

·POMEROY, OHIO

•

) t.. .. · · - -

to be tried in Ohio, Gov. Richard
Celeste must stipulate that hewUlbe
returned to Florida after he stands
trial Florida authorities have
agr~ to the exchange, he said.
Judge Elliot Bucher In Adams
County Common Pleas Court on
Wednesday lifted a gag order he
Issued shortly after Henderson was
Indicted a year ago.

~.

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

• , ........... GeM~

3 Annou ncaments

608 E. MAIN

-

~
2."-11•_..._.

ollhe Southern Tomadoette sedlona1 championship
learn
left w rldlt. Mlcbelle John!!on, Cindy

"eat

. -45769

··

s....................

during February the Gallipolis
Post Troopers made 753 traffic
stops, 83 persons were found using
seat restraints and 979 were not.
Thls shows that eight percent were
wearing restraints during February. Our survey shows that during
Januazy nine percent were wearing belts.
The Ohlo State Highway Patrol
ha5 an operational objective of 30
percent seat belt compliance by the
end of 1983.

~

lit Court St., Po•

l2·-----,
......
la.r_..,....,

County Prosecutor; and, Edward
Mlch;Iel : Jackson County
Commissioner.

9!1t---

..

}

OtWr~oO.illyS..tiooiCiall~i!4o.,l-

lJ . ............

Market reports ...
Alhelllll Uvealock Sales·
Markelllepon
F~!Jnuuy !1, 1113

•

•

21-..._........_.

Wants to return Henderson
WEST UNION, Ohlo (AP) Adams County Prosecutor Elmer
Spencer says he wants to prosecute
Robert Dale Henderson for three
counts of aggravated murder even
though Henderson is under a death
sentence in Florida.
Henderson is in the Florida State
Prison convicted of three murders.
He is under sentence of death plus
two life sentences.
Spencer said that for Henderson

'

, . ......, .. l _

Child's seat law effective March 7
Effective March 7 the new children under four years old or weigh
under 40 pounds goes Into effect.
Lt. 'Ernest Wigglesworth of the
Gallia-Meigs Patrol Post advises
that a regular seat belt Is not sufficient. All inquhies about chUd restraint systems manufacturers
should call the Ohio Department of
Highway Safety hot line: . 1~
KID-SEAT (toll free) for this
Information.
Lt. Wigglesworth reports that

Rh~~3~,~1~~~~~~~~~==========~~~~~~-~~:=iiT~··
~~~Oh~~~~~--·~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~T~he~~Da·
i~ly~~~·~a~-~ft~r~-~-~-~~~·. ~The
Daily Sentme
PHON. E992 _2156
1--- -----21 · ..._..~ .....

were undermined or $heared off by Callfomla, said Mount Wilson,
pounding surf and at least 1,124 · Call!., had received 8 inches of rain
homes and businesses were dam- in 24 hours, bringing Its total for the
aged or destroyed, Including six week to 16 inches. And no end was in
Wl'!'Cked by Mallbu surf and 12 by a sight soon.
"We've ·got bands of showers
downtown Los Angeles tornado.
In northern Callfomla, flooding spinning off a weather system
and mudslides swept houses from s!3lled offs~re. and that pattern
their foundations and trapped 90 likely will continue into Thursday,"
people in a canyon.
said weather service forecaster
The Sacramento Rll(er, which Ron Wagner.
Among the homes destroyed in
has already driven 2,001 people
the exclusive Los Angeles suburb of
from their homes, was expected to
crest at 10 feet above Hood stage Mallbu was one owned by tennis
today.
·
star Blllle Jean King and ·her
Helicopters plucked more than 80 husband Larry. The house was so
people to safety, 10 from a wayward
damaged by surf that it was
barge off a San Francisco beach
condemned and torn doWn. The
Kings had retained the home in a
Tuesday and 28 !rom a narrow
celebrated "pallmony" suit filed by
Monterey County canyon swept by a
Ms. King's former lover, Marilyn
wall of mud that one witness said
was 15 feet hlgh. Another 43 were
Barnett, who claimed she had been
promised the house.
brought out by Army helicopters
Wednesday, said Art McDole,
The man-made oil well island
emergeney operations coordinator
Esther, about three-quarters of a
for Monterey County.
mile otf Huntington .Beach, was
"There are still some people in
destroyed by sun, and 2,100 gallons
there, we think around 20," McDole of oil was floating on the sunace,
said. "But they are all safe and
Coast Guard spokesman Tom
warm ... well-stocked with food."
HeOick said. Only one derrick
Among those killed In the storm remained of the 150-by-178-foot
Wednesday was a 3-year-old boy
Island and "aU other structures and
buried in Clear Lake, about 125
most of the landscaping ... were
toppled and washed away," he said.
miles north of San Francisco, when
a wall of mud 300 feet wide swept
In Santa Barbara, the Harbor
down a hillside and crushed his
Patrol abandoned its office on a
home.
jetty after 15-foot waves submerged
Three at her people died near cars in a beachfront parking lot,
Indio when their car skidded on a
washed away pavement and broke
a natural gas main, causing several
water-logged road and slammed
into a tractor-trailer rig and
small fires.
exploded, the California Highway
Half the" pier at San Clemente, 65
Patrol said.
miles southeast of Los Angeles.
The National Weather Service,
washed into the ocean Wednesday
noting tha:t Wednesday was the
night and a 100-foot section was torn
eighth consecutive day of rain in
from the Imperial Beach Pier In San
Diego County, authorities said.

·Auditor Ferguson recommends
(Continued from page 1)
Health Board was requesting the
commissioners to put · the additional levy ... on the ballot. At a 1a ter
date, she stated that she had told
the commissioners that the board
would be putting the levy on the
ballot themselves, so she requested
to withdraw the original request.
Slle stated that at no time did she
request that ihe commissioners re.
move the .20 mill presently being

i

):_

Rogisterod Pharmlat for 68
bed hospital. Loclllod In Oak·
Hill, Ohio. Ful time, 40 hr.:

per week, day ehlft, wee.

kendsoff . E•cellentoalo'Yio
fringe beneflto. Contact
Adminlurator 614-882·
7717 oraondiOIUmetoOak
Hill Community Medico)
Canter. 360 Charlotte Ave.,
Ook Hill, Oh 46866.

------~-Ledie to live in 8t aha reliving

.'

••ponsoa, Vinton area. Coli
614-388-8412 or 614388-983t .
INR.ATION GOT YOU IN A•.
PINCH? Ea10 tho oquaezo.
sell Avon. Cell 814-8432982, 614-3BB -il046, or
614-992-3890.
HEAT, AIR AND ELECTRI·
ClANS No experience
necessary : For information

call: 919-227-8116 or
919-227 -0279,9 a .o. -9
p.m . Monday thru Friday.
Adams Enterpri•s. Inc.

EXPERIENCED, permanent
legal aecretary wanted
typing 8a shonhand ,.:
quired. Send r11ume to BoN

P2 2, The Point. Pleuant
Raglat111, 200 Main St. Pf.
Pleannt, WV 25550.

loft ot ftrll lone. 2nd houoo UOO. to $400. weekly
on ~ghl.
working pert and full~time It ·
Firat of the season. Trash to
treasures. Boe o residence,

Greot Bend. F1i., M11. 4to 6.

envelope ., L.R.O. 808 4th
YARD ull, 2317 Jofferoon St., Now Hevon, WV,
Aw. pt, Pl..sent. ThuredoyFrldey, March 3·4, tO tUI 7. MATURE woman to live in 1o
Lou of odull &amp; chlldron'o care for 1ld1rly lady In
clothing coneole stereo, Ravenswood, 304-273·
dlahoa.
2119 or 273-4557.

1

Potrwroy, OH.
Open 8;00 to 5:00
Mon. -Set.

c~ thu~n.t mn .

home. no experience. ~II
ages. national compeny .
Free information. Send
aelf · addreued 1 tamped

.

•

•

.,

�,~

..

· ·- ·:·~·-.:

Thursda , Mardi 3, 1983"
~P~ag~e~~lG-~-~The~~Da~i~ly~Se~n~ti~ne~l-=~-:~~~:-~-:~--~---r-:;:::::p:~:~~~~==·Ml~~d~~~~~ri;·~Oh~-~~~~~~~~~~~-----~--~-=~=::::Thr:y:nda::y:·:Ma::~::-3:·:1:9~83;
12

They'll Do It Every Time

Situat.ions

47 Wentad to Rent

Wanted

Will ptow or disc gardena in

Ra cine area. Call949 · 2277.

48

Insurance

SA NOY AND BEAVER
Insurance Co . has offered

Equipment
for Rent

Bock hoe · endloedar digs B
ft., Iorge . bed pick up
hl!ulab.l e, operata·youf"'elf.
890. per day. 304-896. 3841 .

services for · fir:e inaurance
coverage in Galli a County

fo r almost a centliy . Farm.
· home e,nd personal P"operty

coverages are available.,,
meet individual needs.
Ccintect Eugene Holley.

49

For Lease

agont . Phone 388-8690.
2 bdr . unfurniat1ed a_p.·t.

15

overlooking city park . e1 76
per 'mo. Call446·1819 . ·

Schools
Instruction

~-rga ~nfurn · J . bdr;, .-cond
floor apartment, overlook·

Karate the
in self
defence
all ultimata
private lessons.

Men , women, &amp; children .

lnatruction thru black belt.
Also available Kara -te
uniforms puchlng and
kicking bags, and protective
equipment. Jerry· Lowery &amp;
Auociataa Karate StudiO,

143 Burlington Rd ., Jack·
ion, Oh . Call 614 -286·
3074 or 614-384· 6160.

18 Wanted to Do

8250 par mo. Coil 446 ~========::===~:::~~~~~::=::.~~in~g~the~~p~ar~k~.;1~ya~a~r-l:ea:a~e
1819 or 446-4426.

and dependable . Call 446·
3169 after 6PM 266 ·1967.
LEMLEY'S DRILLING Water
Wells. Shallow gas and core
drilling . Myers and Gould
pumps . Sales and Service.
Gas and oil well service. Call

614-388-8543.

33 Farms for Sale

after 6PM .

Jack's locksmith Sarv~e .
Com ma rci a I· Domestic ·
Automotive. Call 304-882·
2079.

wANT Eo wo rk on dairy
farm. Experienced, dependabla, non-drinker . Write ,
Bo.11 P 26. Point Pleasant
Register, Pt. Pleasant .

22 Money to Loan

bldgs. garage . Located on
old 180 near Porter. Call
61 4·3B8-9080 . .

207 acno farm , LangavHia.
Mineral righta lndudad. No
house . $12,000 down. Wil.l
corry root. 814-3BB·9348.

35 l-ots &amp; Acreage

Near Forked Run Lake Dock
&amp; Gun Club. $3, 600. 614·
378·6301 ,
1 acre in

Portertiald~ra~.

Near Rt. 339. 614-378·
6301.

I~3;6;=:::;R=e=a;l~E;•=.td=a=te===
. Wanta

Buying hou•• and ap..-t·
menta. Need propertiM with
favorable · price and terma.
Box 1109 Gallipolis, Oh.
46831.

HOME LOANS 12%flxed
rate. Leader MOrtgage. 77E .
State, Athena, Ohio . 1·614·
692·3061.

41

23

5 rm. house &amp; bath . Inquire
at 918 2nd. Ave .. Galipolil,
.
Oh.

Professional
Services

Houses for Rent

On BulaVilla Porter Rd. 4rm.

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Tax Ret~ns &amp;. bookkeeping
for lndi\fiduali &amp; buain&amp;ss-..
Short forms $6 .00
long fOrms $20 .00 end up
Oorol Neal
446·3B62
PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
C.ll Bill Ward for appoint·
I mant. Ward's. Keyboard.
448-4372.
.

&amp; beth. Call 446-4732 . ·
5 roOms &amp; bath. Modern
kitchen. 661 Third Ave.
Deposit required . Call after
8PM 446-2396·.
Nice 2 · bdr. house 2'h mi .
from HMC 8196 mo .. 8100
dep. Call446 , 3817.
6 rm. hou~e21hmilesout Rt .
588, carpet thru out, 1200

P:e ·RIYIANENT HAIR mo. Coli 448-3046 day,
II[EMOVAL- Profesaional 446-2602 oveninga.
electrolysia Center, Ina ;.
A•. M. A . Approved, Dr. 3 bedrOom home for rent.
Retlri'lila . Gift Certificate1, 1Yz baths . Large level lot .
new hours. By appointment, Nice neighborhoOd. 614~04-876-8234.
992-8309 .

31 Ho,.,es for Sale·
3.67 acral, house, barn &amp;
· tobacco allotm6!nt. 2 acre•

THREE "bedroom house ,
s2oo.oo month. 860.00
dapoait. Reference required.
304-676-4433. 675-2138 ,
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

woods. Lawrence County.
near Waterloo. Call 614·

·843-2422.
~ (NJiW 3 bdr. houae, family

'32 Mo bi.l e Homes

. 10x,60 fuly
66 New Moon
turniohad . S3 , 200 . Coli
614-245-5082 .

In Syracuoe. Furn lohod .
$160. monih . You poy
utilltin. Employedcoupleor
omall family. 814-992 ·
898&amp;· or 81 4-992-8238. ·.

1978 Schult 14x70 very
· nl,., cent,.loir, 2 f~ll baths. THREE be.droom tumlshod
$13 , 000 will conoid or all -electric trailer, built on
ownilr financing with down h.mlly room , coal · wood
. paym"'ent .. Ce11446·~ 842 burning stove~ on aCre.
9:30 to 2 : 30 or after 6 . gordon plot, outbuilding ,
304-743-3333 .. ·.
Jerryo Run Road, reforonceo , 12 76 month ;' plus
USED M 0 Bl L E H 0 ME · depoolt. 304-678-2358.
1178-2711 .
SMALL Z badroom fur·
OlliLYDNEN- -12ft. wido, nlahod trailer, Burdette
2 bedroom .. oil ot,ctrlc, Addltio·n . 1126 per month
mobile home. only 17,996, plua utlllttu, dopcn!t
blnkflnenclngovallable. AII required. Colt Rout Ia,
Sta!o Modular Homaa, half 304·675 : 4800 Monday·
woy bo!Wioon Pt. Plooaant ll Friday. 9·4.
Huntingtbn on ST.RT . 2 .
304-1178-271 1. .
43 Farm•..._for
Rent_
1176 TWO bedroom mobile . ____
___
horne Md 4i • ..-located
on Thofnal Ridge IIOiid. Cell
304-871-3280 •~ eok for
Ron Hickman.

1

PASTUIIE for ram. phone
304·176· 6110.

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
.AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olive St .. Gallipolis. King

coal &amp; ' wood heater~ with

3 room&amp;bethfumiohadapt.
Utilities paid. 366 N. 4th
St.. Mlddlopon.

Coppertone Whirlpool
washer Bt dryer match pair.
•xtra nice. 30 day warranty,

8260 . Call 814-268, 1207.

Apartmonu. 304-876·
5648.
AIIARTME NTS. mobile

12x80 Trder. furnished, 2
for Sale
bedroome. gal heat.
_&amp;250.00 month, &amp;100.00
l R 1- ST ATE MOBILE .deposit. Gaund water paid•
R
1· 614·446·61183.
D
HOMES . US!' • CA S . 1:---....--------:
TIIUC KS · GALLIPOLIS . Mobile Home tor rent. 2
CHECK OUR PRICES . . be&lt;*'oom. 12x60.Anatt,.C·
CAU 446·7672.
tive country setting near
E Coolville. City water. Fr'ae
tLEAN USED MOBIL
uea.Weohor·dryerhook~pa.
HOMES KESSEL'S _QUAL· Cell ovonlngo or weekend•
SALES. I:-:-:---::-:--:'C814·687·3838.
. WEST.HOME
GALLIPOLIS,
4ITYMIMOBILE
RT 36. PHONE 446-7274 . 2- bedroom In M.oblle ·h omo

'

~~·~::s~ .~"42~

hoM••· houaea. Pt. Plauant

22 bdr. mobile homo fully
fumiahod, odu~o only, Call
448-41 ·1 0.

'

fan $469, set box opring &amp;
mattno11 $100. firm 1120,
876-7786.
oQfa-loveaeat &amp; chair 1199.
love seats $70, new coal &amp;
Furnished apt. 1 bdr., 920 w"ood heatef"' a• low a1
4th Ave. Gallipolis. Adults, $399 with blowero, uoad
water &amp; electric pd. 8200 . coal &amp; wood h•tera, new
mo. Call 446-4418 after dlnet oetl81 00 &amp; up, refrlg·
7PM .
pratora, rong01, bunk bacia
•~omplote $199, bunkla.o
3 rm . and 4 rm. unfurnished .,aureeaea $40, cheltl,"
apartmentS. Utiliti8f paid, dreuers, TV's, Call 446no pats, no children. Call 3169.
448-3437.
1------~-GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Nicley fumllhad mob. homo · wuhero. dryero. rotrigerein city. Adults only . Call loro, range1. Skaggs Ap·
448-0338.
pliances. Upper Rhrar Rd ..
bealde Stone Cr8ot Motel.
Furnished 3 rmo. with ,446-7398 .
·
private beth. ht. floor . 8461 ' - - - - - , - - - - - - - 2nd. Avo .. Gallipolis. Call
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
448-2216.
·
Sofa, choir. rocker. otto·
man. 3 tables. (axtra heavy
3r. It balh ap~u:tment,
partially f .u rni1had . Ca.ll
448-3733 evenings call 'Sotao and chairo priced from
448-1071 .
1286. to 1896. Tobias. $46
ond up to 1126. Hide·•·
JACKSON ESTATES 'Eq\181 belh,8440 . and up to
Hou1ing OpportUnity' hal 1526 .. Racllnor•. $176. to
ona .. bedrDom apartmenta 1360.. Lampo from UB. to
rent starting at $157 per 175. 6 pc. dinattea from
month and ·two ti•droom •99";. 10'4436. 7 pc .. 8189.
epartmanta rilnt .rartlng at and up .- Wood table with aix
$193 per month. Call chalro 1425. to $746. Desk
441$·2746 or leave 1110 up to e226. Hutches,
I'Ttelllge.
1560. and up. maple or pine
finish. Bunk bed complote
· F~rnlohedapt., 2 bdr .. 1176 with mattreasea. $260. end
mo .• water paid. 2nd. floor, up to 1396. Baby bedo,
13.1 4th Ave .. Gallipolis . $110. Mattreaaes or box
Cell 44~·441 6 altar 7PM .
apringo. full or twin. $68..
firm. 188. end 878 . Queen
· Unfurnlahed apartment no sail. $196 . 4 dr. chests,
chll&lt;*'en or pets, 1160 par f42. 6 dr. cheats. 164. Bad
mo .. plus utllltleo. aec. frames. 820.and t25., 10
depoolt req. Ca11448-2129. gun : ·Gun cobinota, 1350..
dinetta chairs 120. ond f25 .
Fu'rnlshod opt . 807 2nd .. Gu or electric fangea, 1326
Gallipolis. U36, utilities up to 1376.. Baby mapd., 1 bdr .. adult&amp;. Call traaaea, 826 &amp; 136, bad
448·4416 after 7PM.
framu no. 125, &amp; 130,
king frame 160. Good aelec·
2 bdr. apt. untu rnlshed . lion of bedroom aulteo ,
except refrlg. &amp; at ova: 1136 cedar che~tl, rockers, metal
mo . Main St. Vinton. Call cabineta. awivel rockers.
61 4-246· 6818.
Used Fu~iture •• bookcase,
rangea, chairs •. and table•.
Apt. tor rent . Half double-2 waahera. dryer~, refriger~~­
bd.room Apt. Adulta pre- toni and TV's. 3 mile• out
ferred , No peto. 814-992· Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to
2749.
6pm, Mon. thru Fii., 9am to
6pm. Sat.
2 bedroom furniohad Apt . 446•0322
Call 614-992 - 6434 or
1-882·2666.
1~ Cu.ft,. Amana upriQht
freezer t126. GE frost free
6 rm apt. shower, Pom.eroy rOtrlgarator white 8175, GE
•hopping area, adults. no electric dryer green 891\,
peta, newly carpeted, 1160
mo. plus utilities . 814 -992· ~':'';;~, -;2~.;· ~.:;&gt;4~~:
3201.
8191 .

unfurnished, d"epoait req .

House. 1 1/4 acre. 5 trailer 1 : - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. mobile ho""' In city,

Aduita only. Cell 446-3791
~m. 2 baths, central heat after 6:00PM.
·
,._··air, 2 car garage. 2 mi. W. 1----------:~:-:l ~t HMC in Sunkiat. Call Eureka riverfront 12x80,
!446.3817.
fumilhed. 1180mo .. 1 bdr..
8100 mo. Rat. &amp; dop.
~Sale oriRant . 2 bedroom Adults. Cell614-843-2844.
houoe. kitchen, living room,
bath. utility room. 8150 . Nice 3 bdr. mobile home
month. 304-676 -4369 .
fumlohed. Upper Rt. 7. Call
•
614-246-6818 .
11ookup. 304-773-6063.

44

Farm for aale 26 acre•
mostly '•vel, gpad hay ' 2 bdr. Regency _Inc . Apart·
fields. 846,000. Must soli. manta. 1200 p"r mo . or if
r~aaoqf3!ble offer . 3 bdr .
income IS 810,000 or laaa
ho .me, new furnance , HUO available. A-One Real
c ounty water new bath Eatat11. Carol Yeager.
carpeted, new .tum. aldng Realtor . Call 304-876·
coal &amp; wood burning stove. 6104 or 6'76-63B8 or

Lawn Mowing no yard tn big
' or small. Relia bla an.d
dependable . ·For estimate · 1 .17 acres Curtis Hollow,

call446-3159 or 256·1967

'Motoc•
• • for Sele
------------ :

and Qalljpolio.
8221.

GE auto washer In perfect
condition 81 10. Call 448·
81B1.

:::=::;:=:::::;:::====
614-446· I·
1

54 Misc. Merchandise

$100 . Call 448·4648.

biltt home. long piec.•

grain finl1h. C•llafter !PM,

•

67

Sleeping room 1126. u~lltloo pd, single malo, share
bath. 11'9 2NI Ave.. Galllpo·
llo. Coll448-4418 after
7PM .
..

46 Space for Rent
KOUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Rou• 33. North of
Pomeroy. Largo tau. Coil
99.2·7479.
47 Wented to Rent
WANT TO BUY DR LEASE·
form of any slzo. Tillable
lend within 2 6 miles of
Revonowood. WV. Aloo
,..,.. to buy f•m equipment. 8 - lnqulrlle aNI all
lntolm!ltlon to:f~RM-Iox
741, Rnonl-od, W.VA.
2e114.
.

,, .

OJA tlOAADING HOUSE

Mu1ic8l
_ln1trumen.t 1

71

REPOSSESSED SIGN I No·
thing down! Ta~o over pay.
manto •&amp;8.00 !"Oilthly. 4 X
8 ftaahlng arrO¥V oign. Nb~lb.o. letters. Hole Sign1.
Call FREE 1 -800· 828·
7448,an~lme .
·

Low,.., Mogle Genie 88 orgon with bench. Hu double
koy boend, pedelo, rythm,
upper • to- keybolnd 1978 Chevrolet Malibu Ill·
pl'eHt8, plua other fNture1 . tlonwogon U,900 . Colt
Somo .booltolncluded. 814- 814-2118-1786.
982-768.7.
1978 Chevrolet Malibu Ill·
tlonwogon U,IOO . Call
814-288-1786.
. .
59 For Sale or Trade

3 .cord seasoned aplil oak.
core~. call 814-992 ·

;:ga.

World Book &amp; Child Craft for 19711 Buick Electro 2 dr ..
. PS, PB, AC, AM·fM aterv
sale. Call 949-2277.
11,860 or trade for c-..le,
Colonial Beosett maple term equlpm•t of equol
hutch with glus doora. · voluo. Cell 448-41537.
$360. 814·992-6293 after
.

- .... - ......
~~:.

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

RCA atereo phono. conaole.
Maple cabinet. Exc . conct.
New car radio for Citation or

...

61

Chavatta. 814-992-3442 .

Farm

MUST Mil new living room Loedar· MIOMY Forguoon 1
suite, 304-875·5162 after . wk. 368 .with forka. Cell
814-246-5804.
,6:30p.m . ·

--------

UMd keroMne hollero. Like
now. 304-876-3939.

o-·

1 . ·--,--~--. tc-

Moving Sal.e . 2312 Jeffar·

eon Ave. Ueed furniture.

For sale· 10 ft. John
troileport oloc-1700 . .4 bot·
tom OIIIMr pl-· 1800. He_y.
round beloo .. 843-6218 .

Avon bottl11~ miscellaneou•
items. Everything muat go.

Tractor for ule. John Oeera

Saara weight b8ilch w·owr

p.m.

Modal_L with pl-. 11,200.
Coil 814-992-81101 otter 6

20Q lbo.
waightl.
Soli or -;;:;:;=~::;::::;;===
trade
·tor good
guitar. 304· -;
676· 2908 .
62 Wanted to Buy
.
.
HOOVER upright vacuum,

136. 304-875·4192.
7b}(( 1B('COPI'ER . TUB ·
lNG W' • flttlngo, 160'·
260', $25 .00. Goo hot air
furnace with duct Vlork,
S260 . . Gu hot water 71nk,
$26.00. Allltomo have to ba
removed from damaged
houae. 304-878-9782.

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

WHIRLPOOL electric rongo,
excellent condition. , Cell
304-876,4124 : after 4 :30
p.m.

COKE machine, 304· 773·
5942, 9-6.

SEASONED .firewood ,
810.00 your pickup. 304·
676-2010.

lis Building Supplies
ilulldlng material•
block, brick, oewer pipeo.
windows, lintels. ate .
Claude Wlntaro. Rio Grande.
0. Call814·246,-5121 .

'
with M~jor Hoople '

1979 V.W. Rabbit. 4 door,
an,·fm. rMr def(lgger, 1
owner, low mlluga, exceh
lent condition. 12,895. Ac- 1
capt !rade. I14-6B7-J085.
1963 Pontiac. Portly reotored. Will trade for com~r
of oquol value. · 814·992·
8949.
1 974 Auotln MoriNi. 4 IP •·
good cond. 30 m.p.g. 1850.
814·247-2192 .

~~--------------~ !I
STUCCO PLASTERING • i

'

Morcum Roofing • &amp;'p outIng. 30 yeoreHxporlence. .
specializing in buih up roof. ~
Call814 ·388-9867.

'L~ A1A/'KT()U' GOLII

Mixed hoy. •1.60 bale. Cell
814-379-2817.
Conditioned hoy, ••• com .
Colt 81 .4 -949-2870.

72

Trucks for Sale

Int. 2\h T cab • cheolo long
Excolllftt q~elty hey. About wl)eel baoe, 12,800. Cell
700 bela whh
eccno 81 4·379-2117.
ot Lalhor form In Rutlond, 1 - - - - - - - - - About 400 .baln et G-1 77 Ford T Bird ••c. cond.,
Anguo form In Coolville. 711 Dotaun B-210 runs good,
Colt ev111lngo or wwkendo . 18 Muateng -ecked: Cell
·
441-8&amp;18 -lnga,
ot 1·814-H7-3838.
Mlxod ~ey for oole. •1.60: 1""1_9_7.,.4_K_I_rk-w-oo-d....-m_o_b_ll_o

••ov

Soybean hey. 11.60. Cell
814-992·8793.
.

homo 12x80 ond occeaoorln. Ce11441-4792.

Good queiHy Hey. Nover
wet. Contlet Opel Fltzpe.
trick, St. R!. 119. Ph..,.

1971 lntornetlonol 1800
Sorleo 348. R~nl good .
.1.000. 814-992-1181.

HAY tor 'Hlo. ~quoq •
rvund bola. cell 304·882·
3110.

19711 Dodge _ P.U. with
topper. 'h ton 226 8 cyl.
Stendord. 814·949·2857 .

WllkaovMio1114-1111·378~ .

66 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

1978 Dodge plcikup, 31 8
motor. 82,0QO mHoo. 304875·11490.

1978 CHEVY pickup, IWW
Wonted to looM tobacco engine,
_cyl. at 0 ndilid.
1
d
to
1.
9
83
114
12
•oo
CeU
after •g p • m •
poun 11"
r
·
•
,g
·
268·8634.
I
304·075-3470,

e

..-. . ........
. ... . ....
'
" '

73

Ven1

&amp; 4 W .O .,

MAYIIEGO

LOOHIN' FOil
iT?

• MOVIE: 'Heller in Pink
Tighto'
B:30 (I)
Cit Amanda' s
· (I) Good Noighbora
llD Enterprise 'Hong' Kong
DresSes Up.' Hong Kong en·
trepreneur S.T. King and his

a

TRE/ICHEROIJ6
COUI'ITliY! 6TIU-

popular

Motorola , ·ouazar, ·· and

houoe calla. Cell 5 78 · 239e

the red signal ahd tonight he
knows it means danger. (60

... AND LINK SPIKES IT'LL TAKE ~LF

DANG! THERE ISN'T ANY
~~THIS BIG

F ll K Troll Trimming. otump
removal . Call 878-1331 . ·

min.}!Ciosod Captioned]
9:30 B (I) 'Cheero Diane's
nlother. pays a visit to
Cheers and announces that
Diane Should marry Sam.
I]) Top Rank Boxing
(I) Gl Cit It Takes T~

RINGLE'S SERVICE e•pe· •
riencad roofing, induding ;
hot tar application, carpen· '
ter, electridli'l, muon. Call

304- 876 -20BB or 876· •.
468Q.
~

b'

10:00

rambling comjc.

·Bathroom?

lllJ NeWIWatCh

&amp;II INN Ne1 0:30 (}) Star Time
llD Croas Country Ski
School
• In Search of.. ..
11 :00 1J (f) Cll D Cll 1D Gl G2l
News
(I) All In the Family

CD

llD Sign Off
1111 Benny Hiii 'Show
11 :30 1J C1J (7J Tonight Show

WINNIF.

WHAT'D 1 DO

(}) Another Life
(I) MOVIE: 'Winchester
.73'
(I) Bonny Hill Show
U (I) Quincy Quincy tries

THE E!&gt;IG 0055

SURELY
CONSIDERiNG N\E
WENDY'S JOI?&gt;?

SENT FOR VERA.
l WQNDEI&lt;!

WHAT'S UP.

to Jrack down a prostitute
who
has a penicillinresistant strain of gonor-

rhea.

Gl Cit Nighdlne
&amp;II Medamo'o Place
12:00 Cll HBO Rock: Fleetwood

1

Depondeblo · waohiir · d'r~'o /' '
repair. G1111rant~. wortc.
Cell 814-288·8820 or 114·
2&amp;8-1207.

Mac In ·Concert Captured
live at the LA Forum, this
group performs old and new -·~
hits .

·•

SEWING Machine ropolro,
1ervtca. Autht;trind Singer
Sale a .a. Servk:e Shar,.n
Sclnon. Fabrl~ Shop .
..
Pomeroy. 992·2284.

(}) Burna lo Alton
I]) ESPN SpomCenter
(I) Nlghtllne

Bt\RNEY

l'

HERE'S MY BODACIOUS
50UP·OF·TH'-OAV1 PAW

:

'

I

General

Ha~ing

~-

THIS IS Tfl'
SAME DADBURN
SOUP WE HAD
l.fESTERDAV ·

1D MOVIE: 'Pickup on
10F·
e Cit Leat Word'
·
&amp;II Guntlftlolto
12:15 Cll MOVIE: 'The Lady In

I NEVER SAID ·
WHiCH DAY IT WAS
TH' SOUP OF

.

Rod'
12:30 II (I) (7J Late Night with

-

'

·

David t.otterrnen
· (}) Jack Benny Show
CD NCAA Beaketbell:
Kamucky at Mlnlaalppi
(I) Lalt Word
8 (I) MOVIE: 'McCloud:
Sharks!'
1 :0() (}) MOVIE: 'Super Fuzz'
l1J I Married Joan .... ···- .
8l ilJI News
·.-,
Sign Off
11 :30 U
(f)
NII'C
Newll

JONES BOYS WATER SER · ' ~'
VICE . Calls614-317-1.471
·•'
or 81 4-387-0591 .
Need aomethl·ng

hauled .'

away or aomathlng moved7 ,!

1

J

i

e

..J

•

••
•

PSST!

...R

'' DEAR SPIKE, WE A~E

~:s

HERE! SUPPI.IES TO 6E
DROPPED 8V i-IELICOPTER II

-~

1

,..-:._

/ ' .•

I'

ll

.. .'

--

~

- ·. .
~

1 :46,
2 :00

2:30

-_CI-IOP
. CIIOP
CI-IOP

I

J~

Oli'""g"'

.'

~

87

IRI (60 min.}

(I) Sign Off ·
· (jJ All In the Family

,_

SERVICE call Clty Furniture
304-875 -2808.
\

Newa/Sporta/Weathor

(I) Dove Allen at Large

VERA. WINNIE WOULD
LIKE TO SEE YOU IN HER·
OFFICE ... A5
AS

APPLIAN~E '\EPAIR

Kay KOs Canadians .
NORTH

3·S·8S

+a

'"

UKQJ17 5

WEST
+Q7
.KJ91
tl32

+A95 2
EAST

+KJI0854
.Q65
tiO
+J743
· 4K86
.SOUTH
+A 96 2
• A 10 7 3 2
• 86
+Q 10

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West
Nor1b Ease
It
I+
Pass 2+
Obt
Pass
3t
Pass
Pass Pass
Pass

Soutb

2.PaSs

\3 NT

Opening lead : •Q

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
There is nothing sensa·
tlonal about today's hand
except that il shows Kaplan,
Kay, Root and Pavlicek at
their board-a-match best
against the Canadian team

that finished second in the
1982 .Reisinger.
The bidding and opening
lead were the same at both
ta bles. · Both ducked tlie
spade, won the continuation
and ran off dummy's seven
diamonds. East discarded
the six and eight of clubs,
two hearts and two spades.
Root chucked four hearts
and one spade . Now he led to
his ace of hearts to come
down to a three-card ending .
He knew East still held two
spades so had therefore
come down to a singleton
club.
Was it a small one, the
jack or the king? Root decid·
ed it was · the king, led to
dummy's club ace and made
his 11th trick with the queen .
It was_n't too tough a ,play
for Root. East had made a
vulnerable overcall. Note
that if East had held on to
two clubs, Root would have
thrown him . in with the
,.
spade king for an end piay.
At the othe r table, Normail Kay made one of his
standard genius-type plays .
He put the. king of spades on
Edgar's queen , at trick · one . ...
South ducked and Norman ' '
shifted to a heart to kill the
end play, hold declarer to 10
tricks and win the board.
.(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A.:JSN .)

..,

min .}

Valene is jailaB after con·
fessing to Ciji's murder. (60
min .)
(I) Avengera

Sorlve llo r8poir of ell mlkoo -~
• modelo. Colt 4~8-8181 9;J

85

c~o

(}) MOVIE : 'The Pride of
the Yankees'
(I) TBS Elfltning Newo
(I) 81 Cit 20/20
D (I) ID Knots Landing

Al.I.I:;Y

Rafriger~~tion , ·washer, dry ..• ~~
erJ, range1, diahwa1han it~

ED'S

,

Fire'

:-

,

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby ·

Cll MOVIE: 'Chariots of

Electrical

.

BRIDGE

LaRue finds a stage for a

&amp; Refrigeration

to 6 .

II CI&gt; (7J Hill Street Blua_a .
Capt. Furillo's ex-wife de·
cides to ha~e. her baby and ·

CARTER 'S PLUMBiNG
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine • ·
Phone 448-3888 or 446 ·
4477

84

compariy

(}) 700 Club
(I) ID Gt Too Close tor
Col)&gt;tort
D (I) ~ Simon &amp; Simon
(I) llD Mystery The Red.
· Signet.' Dermot West sees·

ALI .EY .OOP

!II' 4411·2464 .

um tng
Heating

~lothing

· Wearbest is examined.
!Closed Captioned]
9 :00 IJ CIJ Gimma A Break ~··
·mantha finds out that her·

Specializing in Zenith , and

Autoa for Sele

*·

SAN17~ AN' l

· HMM~REV CANYON ,
IS il115T NORTH C1'
~E, &amp;IJT 11'5 VER'I

.,-......,-..,.-----'-"
RoN•s Televiaioit $eMca:

1.981 CJ 6 Joop. Bl8ck. Wo'lldolt.Cal448'· 3159or ,,
1974 liold Su~rbug v.w. 814·268-191'7 oftar 8.
·'
f\,000. 114'74~·2308 af. Now hauling llmntone for,
·
cklvow•yo, top eoll for yordo
1880 Pinto 2 bdr. hatch· tor 4 p.m.
beck, 4 cyl .. outo.. elr, AM· 1'977 TOYOTA Lend ' . ftll dirt. Colt 614' 387·
FM atoro, Pl. PI; R • L
7101.
.'
Crul-. herd top. 4 opeocl, I 1 - - - - - - - -·lc'- '
ra~t• mlnon. rear win·
dow ~rolter, wlrw whHI , cyl.. oxoellont condition, Grovoi·Qr fill dirt. Dtlivared .
Cell614-992-38118 .
redlalo, 2 tone paint, only 13186. 304-178·20119.
1 1.100 mn..,. Prjco only
13.000. Call 814·388· 74
JIMS WATER SERVICE. I
1811.
.
Call Jim Lanter, 304·876· l
7397.
HATFIELD AUTO IALEI,
Rt. 2 Potrtot, Oh, 81 4-37f. 1 il uaed blkoo from Bocc to 1:;;~::;;:=;~===::=:::. I
2UZ.
710 oc . .All uNiw 1199.
Upholatery
I.
117.1 Chevy C10 PU 310 V· 8 ... H-a Beleo, U-lli.
8, 1110 Chevy C10 PU 7, .......... (' ''·
.
dllo.. 1178 Fold Z
302
TRISTATE
eyl. 117ll'old 4 clr••• 1178 710 HOI)da K , _ - e x ·
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Chevy tllln 110 V·l; 11'71
tNa." Col 441·211t. ·
· 1181 SH. Avo., Galtlpoli,
•
Dodgo vall 110 v.e. 1110
441· 7833 or 441·1133.
'
CH-.o A dr. Ill MW IINI, .,. HAIILIY Lew llldor, . . .
1117 AMC ,_,1e111'1¥• · tltft, 80 111. 111·., A-1 eDndl· M0WIIIYI Upholat_., II
lnoulll D-. 111U o,o1 11on, olltroa, 14100.00, 1 1 ox 124, Pt. Pl•un •
1114-171·2180.
304-171-4164.
.
Nllullt 01111111!·

71

TERRITORY?

-- ~-ER­

father's job is not ·like police
jobs on. teleVision .

82

1971 lUlCK atotion wagon.
gooc;t running co.n ditlon.
$200. 304·876-1117.

Y!ELL, 60/.1) SURE Y' TIIINJIGD,
VIAS vtiAT THEY ."OAWI'"? IT'S
S'POSED T' &amp;E
I'IE!IE AFTER, 50
THERE (l'{tY 8E
t"IDI7EN IN A
S()(IIE TRIITH TO PLACE CALLEI7
IT ...
"REf) CIINYON".1

ders.'

Fnaa Eltlmatao. Phone 114- .,
949 -2263 or 814·992-' ~
2791 .
•

72 OLDS Delta 88, good &amp; '
cloen co~tllon. 1540. 304"
876-2296

Hoy 2.00 • bolo, oloo ear
com 12.26 o buohal. Cell
441-41599.

r XI XX) "

prepare

NCAA lleeketball:
Illinois at Ohio State
D (I) .ID Magnum. P.l.
TC 's chopper is hijacked for
u.se in a pfison break . (60
min .}
(I) llD Sneak l'revl"wo Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jef·
frey Lyons take a look at
'Enigma ' and 'The Outsi·

Repilir - Outter . Painting - ~
Storm Door.. • Window•. ~

&amp;

I

CD

CtlfQIJS

E .• R Tree. Service. fully In· •
oured, frM eotimewo. Phone·
:8;1;4=·=3=87~·;0=8=3~1~,=ce=l:llfl=or=6, -'!" ·

78 FORD Grond Torino,
nMda body work, 304-8822881 .

DRill!:'~ ~

ROOFING COMPANY ,
Guttera.Downepouti-NIW· :

PI

'Fame'

elusion. 12 hrs .)
(I) G Gt Condo

FI!Oiil TH' .. ER- COlt..

--------------"
HOWARD. L. WRITESEL •,'

WIIO&lt; Wollo. Cominerclail"
HARTS UMCI co'ra, Now and Domntlc. Teat hole1: ·~
Hoven Welt Vlrglnlo. Over · Pumps Salal and Servi'ca.
20 I•• Upenaiw c.ra in 304·B95-3802 .
ltock. .
.
G•t your karpat ifl ship
1977 fORD Mevorlck , ohopo. Wotorromovel, FREE
po-r atMring, outometic ESTIMATES . FURNITURE
trenomllllon, oir condition- CLEAN lNG . . CAPT I AN _
lng' 4().lle)o _e ctu,t miles, ST,EAMER 814·+41·2107. ::
304 ' 773 "5170 ·
STARKS Tnaa Trimming &amp; ~

-"'Ill·

WA?

•• THE Ol: .~TOR'S CONOOI5TADORE5?
n:us. lfaw T11' THE~IAIWS
I itblw WERE 5'P05EI7
WHO Flf!5T
T' HAVE HIPOEN T11'
COtQJERED T~l5

i

1 977 Muotang Cobra 11,
302 onglne, 4 1p0ad, excellen! cond . 304·878;2019 .

Hay &amp; Grain

bET IT

ANNIE

Removol. Munl·beckhoe !J
•1&amp; . hour, inJured. fr•eati• _.;
motel, .304-678-2010.
•

64

ALL lll~ MILE? IT

LOW

•

AT atud: A.Q.H.A . . Peper
Uon, grondeon of both Joe
RHd and Thrwler•, prov'n
producer. limited booklngo. · "17 Ford Granado, 302 auto304-484-4221. 304-474- matic~ air, arn·fm, a trec:k
3403.
12400. 304-876·7181 . .

SINGER Golden Touch and
Sew deluxe faShion dioc a~
floxl atltch dlac aawing 1'111·
china In bakeroflold dalk
with choir. Uoed very little. LARGE ducl&lt;o, 304-878·
Bunon . holer and all other 1138.
· attachmonto Included. Coet
over t800. naw. Asking 'TURKEY heno. iorna, 304·
UOO. Call 304·876-2846. 678-2218.
Chuck Lanier.
TWIN bed and oprings.l76.
Exarcloe cycle. 150. Boby
otr!)ller, UO . Cali 304-6751672.

Makea good work car .
1400. 949-2870.

I GOlJl.O ~f;'o/1:12:

1JSEo~,~DI
~oil:~ ll-((':

PAINTiNG ·Interior end ax ·
terlor. plumb~g. roofi~g; •
oome remodeling. 20 yra .
oxp. Call 614-388·9652.
,

Good condition.

1'7 l«AT 4€:0 RE:ALL'I

of

themSOives for a tou·r ·of
Great Britian. (60 min .}
(f) MOVIE: 'Shoot . the
Moon'
(f) MOVIE : 'The Magician
of Lublin'
(})I Spy
· (I) Smuggler. Pan Ill Con·

,....___·

1974 Vega -acin AM -FM
radio, AC. 4 radio! tlreo. rear
defogger. · roor opoakon. ·
good cond.. groot on goo,
1160. Cell 379 -2708
enytlma.

1974 Nove. S :S. Hatch
beck. p.a., p.b .. good cond .
814·378-8349 . 360 auto.
17 6
Wonted: Tobacco Poundage .,._ _9_ _·- - - - - - for 1983, Willpey20centa 1980 Old a Cutlell
lb. 814·268· 1146.
Brougham. Low mlloago .
Eic .condltlon. Coil 81 4·
992-6821 .
63
Live~tock

· lcReglitered Cluon• Horu.
R~th R..voo. Also gr.do.
Soddleo, brldln. winter
horee blankets. We1tern
boota. 81 4-898·3280.

~·-rq TRADE-IIJ
~~~~71' C;f.Sif::'su

teRtured ceiling• commer ~ ~
clal and raoldentlol , ' free ,
aotlmateo. Cal 614-2116 · •
11li2.

pr•~•·

Equipment

~I?TI:'II, I~ ~T

•
'
•'
,

Home
Improvements

cast

I.OS~:R

I

81

OlliE 1\5 "1716T(J~6ED"
I!JY iH!: PIN.

- crt ·

1980 Monzo ex. cond .
13,196. Colt 448-3648.

1873 Dido Cutlau Su-

'

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

BUY Factory Direct. light· :
weight. flborglen Scamp
.
.
I
1 3' &amp; 1 8' trivet trot"'" • ;
19711 Buicik Elect,. .2 dr., new
19' 5th Wheel. Cell now
PS, PB. AC, AM·FM otero tot! free 1-800-348·4982 1
11,8110 or tf8de for cattle, · for free brochure and HVel
farm equlpnient of equ•l
value. Coil 441-4637.

Plano . Ktmbitt console.
aloctric plono rvlls.
Naw. Phone 814-992·
11949.

l'l•vo

I I I J

~re:

Autos for Sele

Firewood, split, UO.OO 1
truckload, 136.00 delivered. Ph. (8141 992-2770
or (304} 882-2194.
·

Charlie'• Angelo

IORFALL

•

-;;-=;;:==:;====~· .

~~ph;o;rw::;.~-::::;·=.:;.:;=.;::'·~ ~===;::::::==::..l.::::::::::::::~===~
Furnished 'Rooms

,.,.

...

· Report
1D New•
I . Now arronga the Circled toner~ to
. .( )
· Gl Gt People's Court
form the au..,.. onawar. ~· &amp;ug·
7:30 II (f) Ue Da!edor
I
L-...-1-..C...-'1-...L.__,·L......J1 ~sled t&gt;v lhe above cartoon.
I])
NCAA Buketball:
Kentucky at Miaaloalppi
(I) , NBA . Beoketball: ' •
Print answer
."
Waahlnj!ton at Atlanta
'
(I) U (J) Family Feud
(Anawofllomorr!&gt;w)
ll) Buolnon R•port
Yeatarda~··l Jumblao: FINIS ELOPE CROTCH SYMBOL ,
ID '(ou Asked For It .
.
~.An-: What using such a pencil ls-POINTLESl)
llD Laat Chance Gange .
a~
Entertainment
Jumble loOk No. 1f, conlllnlno 110 puzzlel, II •venable lor $1.ts pottplkt
Ton~ht ·
·
.
train Jumbll,. W. nelnpeper,llox :W, NorwOod, N.J._07MB. Include
. JOUr
8 :00 II CIJ Kida From Fame The
IIIIM, lddNM. . coda lnd makl checks payable tO NI\1\'IPipett&gt;oakl.

. ft.. atove and refrlg. tur.;...
nlohed . 1750. 814' 687- ':
3085.-

1I'~- ="~"':'":..:•:":·:··:"'::":'~··::;"~":"";:;;:::;::;::;::;::;:::::;::;:~-::79

Top quality hatching while
ailky eggo .1 7.00 a dozen.
Off 218, 2 'h mi. on Little
Bull Skin Rd et J.M ." Taylor.

6.

CD •

U (I) Tic Toe Dough
(I) llD ·MacNeil-lehrer

1974 Cilmper-sliopa 4. 14 ~

-

.

(I) Gomer Pyla
(I) Emortalnm4!flt Tonight

--------- '

m•-

sura 32". short piocea 21"
and 10 inchea ~crou, . .terlock in a nietlll frame, wood

hits .

CD I'SPN SportaCenter

CAL-L. CAROL.. I Ml!i-5- M.'/ KIP!)•. !
CAN'T GO ON L-IKE- THI!).
Camping
Equipment

.

group perfOrms old and n.ew

t'VS GOT TO FIND A PHO"'Ii\ AND

. 78

tuurordlnary-.,

Mac In Concert Captured
tiva at the LA Forum, this

814-742-2263 .

and table 26x1 B\h20'h
with light wel.nut fln.loh 130.
-aloo light walnut 7 dro-r
dreuer with large mirror
$66 . 32x63· . 174 places
brow·n underpinning for •
mobile homo .uaad juot 1
year come off a 14x70.mo·

Jurnblll.

one toatr to OICh equaro, to form

(f) HBO Rock: Ftootwood

JI

Good Wlnaor auto. t~ns . ..:;
plrtl for Wlnaor motor, 351 ! ...
Have block al1o for 876 .

1 c o f I .e ,a t a b I a
47Yax1BY2x16"12 in. and 1

AmoldandBoblae

U (])P.M. MagUino

7 :00

-~

•f

not home leave number.

~'-lour

t&gt;v

EVENING

1

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

t'

New Hoqver apt. size
waoher • dryer. Call 814·
387-7268 ..Ntri Edwards, If

Auto Part•
&amp; Acceasoriel ·

ftf}gN} ID~ ~THAT ICRAIIIILED WORo oAiiE

~ ~ ~~·

3/3/83

•!

76

11

nfURSDAY
...

tt.,l•

170 h.p. 1·0. Cutty cobln t ·
tamden tf811er. 111f·992;.
6949.

h·o atfree, ·cOppe rto·n e ~

UNFURNISHED apertment
for rent. 1 badro·om . ..For ule lump coal 8&amp; fire·11B0.00Call"utomotlvo wood. Zlnn Coal Co .. Inc.
Supply, 8 -8 . 304 · 676 · Cel1446-1408 .
2218. 876-87,63.
uP alaba for firewood 56 Pets for Sale
ONE bedroom apartmanto Cut
$16 pick up load. Call 614 ·
tor .tha elderly. All utilitl81 246-6804.
paid . Tenantl pay 30 percent of their adjuoted,.
HILLCREST KENNEL
income in thla HUD oubsld- Moving Sale Quean olze Boardi~g alt . bl1itods. AKC
ized apartment building . hida·e·bad. buffet. olngla Reg. Oobarmeno pupo afd
Twin Rivera Tower, phone bedcompletawithmltching Dobermin Stud Service.
'
"
304 · 876 · 8879. Equal dfUiar, night atand. Annia Coil 448-779".
g
opportunity housing .
doll houH. ceramic greenware, ond .mloc . itama. Call ORAGONWYND CAnERY
ONE bedroom un~mlohad. 876-7671 .
• KENNEL. AKC.Chow pup·
t176. inonth, all utilities 1 - - - - - - - - -· plea, CFA Hlmoleyen, Per·
pi Id. except eleotr!c • . Now rear sliding back glaoo . sian and Slamo• kittono.
304·8 76 . 1 371 or 57 6 . for pick ups, textured black Call441)-3844 ~Iter 4PM.
frame, full rodluo fit. For
3812 . .
American or foreign trucks- AKC Regiater1ed - Cocker
ONE .bedroom apartment in tinted or cleoro $79.85 in· 9panlal olx puppies, 8 wko.
Handoroon,nawiypeintad, stalled. lrwln'o Glaoa oldready ·togo,. l100oach.
· 304 876 1972
Service, 814·268-6644.
Coll448-1824. .

45

.Boat. 1978 Slhrerllne 20

Seara Cold1pot refrlgentQr,

448-3085.

Good barn Ba other out

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service . .Reliable

' by Larry Wright -=7=6:---:B::'"o-e:-ts-a:-n-d-:--.........;, :

Electric hoopitot bad. good
Wonted to rent hay field or condition. Cell 614·246polturu ,f or cowo. Call l-=6-89_5-:-.---------;,==::
814·388-8234.
Ten hor• po-r Wootom .
Auto Wlur:d rifting mower.
o~~- cond. Cell 446·3981.

TREE TRIMMING &amp; REMoVAl. CALL 614·949 · 2129
OR 614-992 -6040.

13

54 Misc. MerchandiM KIT 'N' .CARLYLE"'

·,Television
___ yieW:ing..

' · 1M, Daily Sentinel

2:fti5

.

(}) ~ Utile Margie.. . .
(I) MOVIE: 'All Beba end
the Sovon Beraconi' ·
(I) Sign Off
CD Nowa[Sign Off
ilJI CNN Hlilldllno Nowli
(I) MOVIE: 'Pretty Baby'
(}) Bechelor F......
8 (J) Sign Off
.. ·
ill CIS New~ Nlghtwatch
8 (I) Sign Off ·
I]) Lifti oi Rlltv
·
I]) ESPN SportaContor ·
~OVIE: 'Shoot tho

e

·3:00 (I) 700 Club
· ·
.3:111 ([)
MOVIE:
'Country ·
. '!'!&gt;•lc Helldly'

(.11~"by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

1 Plucky

U Jackson
or Harding

5 Tea variety DOWN
8 Tentmaker 1 "Madsma
9 Boss (sl.)
Butterfly"
13 Indian
character
pi1nce '
ZCity in Iraq

itliYJIIII
i5 Spaniard's

3 HigiH'anking

gold
11 Tart

t Time periQd

officer

5 Carriage
17 "Juatthe
8 Sweetie pie
Way You ...,. " 1 Hill dweller
18 Merchant- 10 He's "a
ship
goodman"
10 Elec. unit 11 Upon this
ZlFinlsbed . 1Z Egg dish

zz Floating ·

Yesterday's Answer
1&amp; Still water
19Urge

29 Duplication.
30 Little Fays,
by nwnber

Z2 Till
Z31nfraction

34 Father (Fl.) ·
24 Vituperate
36 Convened ,
!5 Remunerated 37 Grassy •
rr Of posies
ground :::..

ice mass
23 Cash (sl.)
!5 Makeup
!I Wrest
rt Taxi rider

_..

Z8 "All About
10 Sceles
31 Expose
I! Israeli
airport
33-Cravat
fabric
35 O!ltcry
f7 "To Sir;
With-"·

38 'Montana's
capital

38 Pitcher
40 - Aviv

DAI!-Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here~s how to work 1i:·
·

AXYDLBAAXR

II

L 0 N GF B L L 0

,

w·

One letter oimply slanda for anolher. In this sample A Ia.
UMd for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten'
apoetrophl!l. the lencth and formation of the words are aJi·
hlniL Each~ doy the code lettera are dllerent.
.,
C8YPTOQUM'l!S

FHGHJ

AP

I

AYQQYZRED,
SHJMPF

UYEE

UXP
W HID

DXYFK

CPR

QYFAM
CPR

·'

.

WHZIRMH

IF P D X H.J ~

..

YD

H 1M: c ·

I 0

D X ij ,

.'

•

KIVH. ~ UYEEYIV , VPJJYM

Yaterd!i)'• Crytaqaole: ALL IT TAKES TO MAKE A' .
CAPITAIJST

·FIEIIIEMAN

OF A. MAN IS MONEY. - JAMES K •
.'

. •'
;

'
)'

&gt;

\

�..

'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page---12-The Daily Sentinel

Thul'lday, Match 3, 1983

Meigs County's ·'battle of words' scheduled Monday
Seventeen school spelllng bee
ChaJDP!ODs.wW go Into the battle of
words for top honors when the annual Meigs County Spelling Bee Is
staged at 7: 30 p.m. Monday at
Eastern High School.
A champion and an alternate
have been selected In each of the
schools through school contests. In
case the champion Is unable to participate, the alternate will represe nt the respective school at
Monday's event.
Champions and ;llternates, respectively, Include: . Chester Elementary , Michelle Malhotra,
fowih grader:. daughter of Mr. a,nd
Mrs . Raj K Malhotra; Amy Ruth
Mann, fifth grader. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. David M. Mann; Eastern
Junior High, Travis Newll!n, eighth
grader. son of Mr. and ·Mrs. Ernest
Ne.,lun; Renee Kaylor. seventh
grader, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Musser, eighth graaer, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John M~~SSer; M!ddlepQrt
Elementary, -Cat!na Lee Wolfe,
fourth grade, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Wolfe; Geoffrey Eugene
Cogar, fourth grader, son of Myrtle
St. Clair, Middleport.
Pomeroy Elementary, Lesley
Carr, sixth grader, daughter of Ronald Carr and tloMa Carr, and
Laurte Wayland, sixth grader,

Terry Kaylor; Riverview Elemen_tary, Michael Martin, sixth grader,
son ot Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Martin;
Lisa Driggs, sixth grader, daughter
ot Mr. and Mrs. Larry Drtggs;
Tl!ppers Plains Elementary, Angle
Murphy, foUrth grader, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Murphy, and
Michelle Frash, foUrth grader,
daughter at Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Frash.
Bradbury Elementary, Elise
Meier, sixth grader, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Meier; Amy
Luckeydoo, sixth grader, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo;
HarrtsonvWe Elementary, Jarod
Sheets; sixth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Sheets, and Marc Howard, fifth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. ElwoOd Howard, Jr.
Meigs Junior High, Michelle
Barr, eighth grader, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr· Steven

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jelllllngs
Wayland.
Rutland Elementary, Stacy Bysell, sixth grade, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard HyseU, and Billy
DoCz!, tltth grader, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Andy Doczl.
Salem Center Elementary,
Cindy Maynard, sixth grader,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mickey
Maynard, and Jody Levingston,

Chest clinic slated March 10
'

The Meigs County '1\rberculos!s
Chest Clinic with Dr. Roy L. Donnerberg of Ohio State University
Hospital In cl;latge has been rescheduled tor Thursday, March 10, from
l.p.m. to 3 p.m . .
All patients who have been notlfjed of anearllerdatearetonotethe
change. The clinic Is held at the TB
office In the Multi-PurpOse Build·

ELBERFEL

log, Pomeroy.
Thesk!ntestingscheduleforfood
handler cards Is as follows: Monday, '1\resday,Wednesday and Frtday from 8: 30 a.m. till noon until
March 11. After March 11, !twill be
necessary to call for an appointment as the TB nurse will be worklng In schools In the county. For
more Information
992-3722

sixth grade~', daughter of Mr. and
VanMeter.
Mrs. Daniel LeVIngston. ·
' ' ·' Solithiirii
Salisbury Elementary, Heidi ca.
nold~ eighth
ruthel'S, Mh grader, daughter at
Bl!l Arnold
Robert Caruthers and Diana CaKarla
ruthers, and Mike Parker, Mil
ter of Mr. and
grader, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Syracuse
Parker.
Pape, sixth graldel
Letart Elementary, Carol
and Mrs. James
Fisher, sixth grader, daughter of . Stout, sixth
Mr. · and Mrs. Drew Fisher, and
Mrs. David
Crystal Hill, sixth grader, daughter ·
Tom
of Mrs. Patrtcla Hill. .
·
Eastern High
r prOPortland Elementary, Sabrina
DOWlce the words and
wiiiJie
Mahlman, sixth grader, daughter · Rii:hard Roberts,
DistriCt
of· ·Mr. and Mrs. Wade Mahlmari . Superintendent; .
Morrtii,
and . Becky Evans, sixth grader, . Meigs 'L ocal Su1li!' J1leMI!llt: aild
daughter of Jo4r. lind Mrs•. Denny
Bobby 0 r d,
·.. Eva Ill&gt;.
·
Supertittendent.
. Racine Elementary, Amy HarrtThe county wlnnerl:wll!
son, tltth grader, daughter of Mr.
state event on AprU
and Mrs. Craig Harrtson, and MeCenier In ~-~:~1:~::~
lanle VanMeter, sixth grader,
te
daughter ' of ·Mr. and MrS. Roy .

Kl''"""

Littlefield paces
Tornadoettes victory
in district tourney

Middleport native's
project gets praise
from Pres. Reagan

Page 3

Page3

11
·

NEW SPRING STYLES
LITTLE GIRLS'

4th

Voi.31,No.215
Copy•ighted 1983

DRESS SALE

SPRING
JACKETS

3 ~ece coordinates, pinafore dresses, 2
piece skirt outfits and coat and dress
styles. Poly/cotton blends and knits Sizes
Newborn to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to Gx, 7 to
14.
REG. $9.00 ..................... SALE $7.19
REG. $12.00 ................... SALE $9.59
REG. $17.00 ................. SALE $13.59
REG. S22.00 .................. SALE $17.59

V2 Price

SALE PRICED

FROM ONLY

. LAY-A-WAY FOR EASTER!

LADIES'

SPRING
DRESS SALE

MEN'S
LIGHTWEIGHT

LADIES'

UNIFORM
SALE

JACKETS

All whi1ll unif01ms, all white separate pants
and sllirts. WMe and jllstel tops Dresses,
jllnlsuits and s~it leg big styles. Jr. sizes
5/6 td 13/ 14; Misses sizes 4 to 2fr, Ha~
Sizes 141-'l to 261-'z.

SAVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Men's $22.95 Jackets .. Sale $18.35
Men's $24.95 Jackets .. Sale $19.95
Men's $29.95 Jackets .. Sale $23.95
Men's $34.95 Jackets . Sale $27.95

REG. $12.00 .............. SALE $9.59
REG. $18.00 ............. SALE $14.39
REG. $24.00 ............. SALE $19.19
REG. $31.00 ............. SALE $24.79

LAYAWAY FOR EASTER
AND SAVE!
Reg. $23.00 ............... Sale $18.39
Reg. $29.00 ............... Sale $23.19
Reg. $35.00 ........ :...... Sale $27.99
Reg. $42.00 ............... Sale $33.59

SALE!

-.

JUNIOR

MARCH

SPRING
DRESSES

IN HOME FURNISHING DEPT.-1st Aoor
20" in diameter, 25" tall. Quaity wood componen1s,.' easy to assemble. Perfect for any room.
Regular $11.95

CHAIR
SALE

2 piece poly I cotton mini looks, 2 piece
plllirie looks, belted styles, sleeveless
and ll sleeved. pullovers. Beautiful
spring cOOrS. Junior Sizes 3 to 13.

sggg

Wall-Away Recliners - Rocker/Recliners - Swivel Rockers.
FAMOUS BERKUNE QUALitY

~~ED
$}759
FROII ONLY

SAVE

KNIT SHIRTS
Our new spring selection of styles and colors
you'll Ike. Sizes are from S·through 20. Crew
neck styles, tank tops, see through shirts,
cut-offs, rugby styles. Buy what you need now
at these sale prices.

SPECIAL TABLE OF. PINS,
NECKLACES, EARRINGS AND
BRACELETS.

You'Hlove this new spring selection in
sizes S, M, L, and XL Crew necks,
styles with collar.;, tank 1Dps, number
shirts, cut offs, dressy styles il1d casual kloks. Solids and stripes.

Boys $6.95 Shirts ................... $5.67
Boys' $8.95 Shirts ................. $7.37
Boys' $9.95 Shirts .................: '8.17
Boys' $12.95 Shirts .............. $10.57

¥2 PRICE

len's $7.95 Shirts .......... $6.29
len's $9.95 Shirts .......... $7.89
len's $12.95 Shirts ...... $10.29
. len's $14.95 Shirts ...... $11.89

'

MARCH FURNITURE SALE

SALE! WRANGLER

ROWE SLED ER SOFAS

BASIC JISANS

BRAS and PANTIES

atoose stnli&amp;lrt lee or boot lllre style in sias 28 to 42
Wlist. Pre-washed 14\1 ounce No-Fau~ blue denim t1111
.won't smnk, wrinkle or pucker. AeaUar price $22.95.

-S&lt;* cup, ooderwire, front closure and ightly lired bills.
-Bikinis and brief styles panties.
'

~een and Full Size All hive Serta Perfect Sleeper lnnerSIJfil'll Mattresses. Early American, Modem, o1 Contemporary' Styling.

REG. $756.00

YOUR
CHOICE

$499

$}688

TWO DAY SALE

¥4

JEWELRY
CLEARANCE

KNIT
SHIRTS

DANSKIN

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel sWf
An ordinance combining the
offiCes of clerk-treasurer effective
May. 1, was approved when Syracuse Councll met In regular session
Thursday night.
·George Hobnan, treasurer, will
resign his post to assume duties ,as
lTUillllgEI' at London Pool. Janl~
Lawson, clerk, will assume the
duties of the office of the 'treasurer.
Holman, who attended a two day
nlanagemen!,-IIIChool, received a
certlftcate for satllfactoty completIng a counre or Jnstruetion In
. swtmrniDg pool ooperatlons conducted by Hydrocepls, Iflc.
Council also !!PProved three

-Popular Sizes and COors.

OFF

SHOP FRIDAY 'TIL 8:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 'TIL 5:00P.M.

'

. ,,

c

I

'

'(

.,

.

plane so there will be room forreporters, and Instead of piloting the
plane, he plans to sit in the
passenger section talklng politics.
Glenn doesn't plan to formally
enter the race for the 198&lt;1
Democratic presidential nomination imtil April.
Four Democrats - Sens. Alan
Cranston of California and Gary
Hart of Colorado. former Vice
President Walter F . Mandate and
former Gov. Reubln Askew of
Florida - already have declared
their candidacies.
One of the sites being considered
for Glenn's announcement is his
hometown of New Concord, Ohio,
pOssibly' In the gymnasium of John
Glenn High School.

.

~.a

.

Glenn 's schedule next week
includes a combination of set
speeches, party events and fundraisers.
In addition to Boston, he plan s
appearances In Atlal)ta, where he
wUI join other presidential · aspirants at a Georgia Democratic
Parw·• dinner; Jackson, Miss.,
where he will addresss a joint
session of the !eglslature; New York
City for a dinner speech to the Bond
Club and then to New Hampshire for
appearances on Friday evening and
Saturday.
Glenn concludes his week's
travels with a speech to a party
dinner Saturday night In Richmond,
Va.

In testimony prepared for the
congressional Joint Economic Committee, Janet L. Norwood, commissioner of labor statistics, noted that
"In the two months between
December and February, payroll
jobs rose by 150,!XXl.''
Ms. Norwood said there was
likely no further ct'ecllne In civilian
unemployment because businesses
were assessing prospects for an
economic turnaround before recalling laid off workers.
Altogether, 11.5 million people
were· unemployed last month, an
Increase of 44,!XXlover January that
bureau analyst Deborah Klein
called ''negligible."
Total employment also held
relatively steady at W.1 million.
·Despite burgeoning signs of an
economic recovery, only 5,00)

, They said s he blames the president's position on "poor guidance,"
primarily from the Justice
De~rtment.

Anson Franklin, the assistant
White Hou se press secretary travel·
lng with Reagan In California, said
there would he no comment on those
remarks.
In a related dt'&gt;velopment, The
New York Times reported that
Deputy Attorney General Edward

C. Schmu!ts told Mrs. Burlord
Thursday night that the Justlce
Department would no longer repl'es('nt her or the agency In matters
reia ted to congressional subpoenas.
The report quoted unnamed admlnlstra tion officials.
An administration official told the
newspaper the Justice Department
could no longer represent EPA
officials because the president had
ordered the department to Invest!-

Pine Grove resident burned
while escaping hazing home
'

The Roy Frecker home at Pine
Grove was destroyed by fire f!arly
Friday morning.
The Chester Fire Department
answered a call to the residence at
2: 23 a .m. Friday and was on the
scene until 6 a.m. The two-story
frame home was practically gone·
when the deparbner\t arrtved. A
. neighbor spotted the blaze and

called the fire department.
Frecker received bums In escapIng from the burning house and was
taken to Veterans Memortal Hospi-tal for treatment by a Meigs County
sheriff's deputy.
Cause of the blaze was not known.
A monetary figure for loss of the
home and its contents had not been
set this morning.

gate charges of agency
mismanagement.
Therefore, representing Mrs.
Burtord, who is under a contempt of
Congress citation for withholding
documents al Reagan's request,
would represent a conflict of
Interest.
An EPA official said Mrs. Burlord
was extremely angry about and
decision, and felt that the White
House and Justice Department
were leaving her "high and dry" to
defend herself, the Times said.

J,

the largest monthly rise since July
1950.
.But these same analysts cautjoned lhal the retum to t~e labor
force of large numbers of Americans seeking work could put
pressure on an economy that has not
ye1 created new jobs or caused the
rehiring of people laid off during the
18-m0nth recession.
Ms. Klein agreed with that
assessment, saying "I guess we
should walt 10 see another month's
figures. If people perceive therE' are
jobs out there and re-enter the labor
force, that (heightened competition
for work) could slow the growth of
employment. "
•
A separate bureausurveyshowed
thal total payroll employment
declined by 18J,!XXl In February,
following a substantia l 330,00J gain
in January, producing the net
150,00J rise over the period. Bureau
analysts had · said earlier that
unseasonally warm weather In
January had swelled tarat employ(Continued on page 12)

Meigs' jobless rate
climbs..two percent

'

From Associawd PTL'SS
OVP staff Reports
While Ohio's unemployment rate dropped for t11c second st raight
month to 13.6 percent in February. the Labor Department reports
the jobless rate in Meigs County- and throughout southern Ohio-Increased by approxlrilately two percent between December and
January.
, The January rate for Ohio was 1,4.0 percent. December
unemployment was a record high 14.5 percent , with 727,(0)
unemployed. That number dropped to 700,fXXJ in January and 686,(0)
1
In February, according to government figures .
In Meigs County, the Ohio Bureau of Employment SeJvices
repo\'led a January jobless rate of 18.5 percent. Me igs ·
unemployment rate· for December 1082 was 16.7,percent.
Reported unemploy!llent !e&gt;vels In sun'Oundlng counties for
January were as follows (December 1982 rates In parenthesis):
Gall!a, 15.9 (13.5); Jackson, 20 (18.71; Vinton, 21.2 (17.6); a nd,
Lawrence, 18.3 (16.61
Adams County recorded the state's highest unemployment ra te
for .January at 32.5 percent, the OBES reported Thursday.
Scioto County had a jobless ra teof23.8 percent, Huron and Monroe
counties had rates of 23.6 percent. Ashtabula County recorded 23.3
percent. a nd Harrison County had 23.0 percent for the month.
All but three Ohio counties recorded double·digit jobless rates. The
lowest jobless rate was recorded by Hancock County, a t 9.2 perr·ent,
the bureau said.In February,. Ohio continued to have one of the highest
unemployment rates In the nation.
Among the 10 large -Industrial states for which figures were
released today, Michigan had 14.8 percent in February compared
with 15.5 percent In January a nd 17.1 percent In December. A year
ago, Ohio's unemployment rate was 11.4 percent.
Pennsylvania had 13.2 perceht in February, 13.6 perCPnt in
January and 12.6 percent In December.
·

.
:
:.
.

Mrs. Burford's aides' disclosures
came on the same day that Sen.
Rudy Boschwltz and Rep. Vln
Weber, both Minnesota Republicans, urged Reagan to replace Mrs.
Burtord with a "politically Independent person of nationally recognized scientific qualificatiOns."
A day earlier, White House Chief
of Staff James Baker said "at the
present time" there were no plans to
dismiss the EPI\ chief.

·syracuse council combines cle•k-lreasurer's job

'

200/o

.

.

W~ll"GTON (AP) -AnneM.
Burford. trying to restore public
confidence In the Environmental
·Protection Agency, Is asking President Reagan to give congressional
Investigators full access to agency
documents, her aides say.
One close aide said Thursday
nignr that Mrs. Burford, the EPA
administrator, has repeatedly
urged the White House togo further
than It has In letting lawmakers k&gt;ok
at all documents. She has so far been
rebuffed, aides said.
"The key is to restore coiifldence
In the programs. Aslongastherelsa
perception by the public and
Congress that some Information Is
being withheld, that Is going to be
impossible to do, " said one aide,
who like the others asked for
anonymity.
,
Mrs. Buiford believes the EPA
controversy can only he solved by
giving congressmen complete access to documents, so long as they
keep .sensitive rna ter!al confidential, the aides said.

.

MEN'S
SHORT SLEEVE

BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE

.

Director Burford backs full disclosure

LAYAWAY FOR EASTER!

Decorate With A
70-72 Inch Round Table Cover

111ey are, from second left: Alan Cranston, CaUfornla; Edward Kennedy, Maasachusetts; Ernest Hoilings, South Carolina; . and Dale Bwnpers, Arkansas.
(AP Laserphoto).
',
·

WASHINGTON (AP!- With aU
the •trappings of a presidential
campaign but a fo,nnal candidacy,
Sen, . John GleM , D-Ohio, has
chartered a plane and laid on a full
week of tra ve ling and
speechmaklng.
.Glenn aides called politiCal reporters on Thursday to line up
~sengers for the Glenn campaign
trtp which starts Monday In Boston
with a lUncheon speech to hi-tech
executives.
The former astronaut nonnally
flies his own small plane back and
forth between Washington and Ohio
or for speaking engagements In
other parts of the country.
But for his travels next week, the
Bl!li;ltor has chartered a 10-seat

Reg. $54.00 ............... Sale $43.19

WOOD
ACCENT TABLES

'l1IE POINT IS ... - Sen. John GleM, ~hlo,
left, lllllllesapolntThUl'lldaynlptatalund-ral&amp;erfor
the MaMacbusett&amp; Democratic State Committee In
'BostonasfellowDemocratlcSenatorssharealaugh.
.

WASHINGTON lAP)- Civilian
people re-entered the labor force,
unemployment held evlm at 10.4 according to the Census Bureau's
percent In February as large survey of some 60,00J U.S.
numbers of jobless Americans households.
awaited further slgnalsoftmproved
President Reagan and his top
hiring prospects before resuming economic advisers, while heartheir search ·or work, the governtened by the 0.4 percentage point
ment reported tod~.
drop in civilian unemployment
The unchanged' Unemployment from December to January, have
rate resumed an 18-month pattern said th~y are prepared for further
of rtslng or stand-still joblessness. rises in that crucial jobless figure.
That trend had been Interrupted
"There may be a month where It
only by last month's healthy
(the unemployment rate) might
decline.
level off or come up, say a llttl\"
When ihe full-employment, 1.7- above the 10.4," the president said
mlll!on-member U.S. mllltary work last month . " I don't think that you
force was Included, February's · will see it come above the high mark
overall unemployment rate also of 10.8" reached In December. That
held steady at 10.2 percent, the figure represented the highest.
Labor Department said.
joblessness since the Great
Government statisticians said Depression.
that, In Interpreting the health ofthe
In advance of the release of
February's jobless figures, severa l'
private analysts pointed to the
growing
signs of a business recov~~~J~~~a:.;e~n:;~:~~~~ ery, 'noting
the robust 3.6 percent
drop in January might have been gain In the Index of Leading
exaggeratedbytheBureauofLabor Economic Indicators In January,
~=~· seasonal adjustment

Senator. Gle.nn hemns ~~:i~n~~~:nt~:~~tha~;:~·i~
.
·•
stumping trips M0 n day

New lllsses and half size dresses. Sundresses, 2 pc. suits, shirtwaist style~ party
dresses, sailor styles and more. Spring
prin1s, stripes, dots, ftolllls and border
prin1s.

Ideal for Spring and Summer wear. Excellent new selection in sizes small, medium,
large and extra ~rge.

:20 Cenh

A Multimedia Inc. NewspapM

Nation.,s jobless
rate unchanged

Were $14.95 to $19.95- Most all are .
14~ oz. No-Faun blue denim pre- .
washed. Basic and fasioo styles. Regular and slmsizes 81D 14,SMentsizes
26 to 30 waist
.

, Waist length jackets, Spring coat~ hooded
jackets and parachute jacke1s. Lined and
unlined styles. Com(Jete range of lit11e
boys and ~ r1s sizes.

1 Setlion , 12 Pagu

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 4, 1983

DENIM
JEANS

CHILDREN'S

Page 5

at y ""'enttne

e

BOYS' WRANGLER

SALE!

See photo page 8

•

Special Weekend Sale Prices On New Spring Merchandise!
MAR~H

Redus will ,' ilarl ;
Walker frustra tt~d

•

MARCH SALE

SALE BEGINS fRIDAY,

Right to read
week obseroance

,\

"'

given on March 9, at Pomeroy,
lntersectio~ of .Seventh St.. and
under the direction of Legar.
·Third be moved to a different
He announced that burning ·location. Councll agreed to contact
permits must be obtained for an
the Ohio Power Co. to have the light
open burning. Permits may be
relocated.
obtained from Imboden, Chris
Councll went Into executive
Jacks, Mayor Eber Pickens or session for an hour and a half
Clyde Triplett.
following the session.
Gene Imboden, !Ire chief, reCouncil approved the purchase of ·
. ported that advancect !Ire training five gallon of foam for the fire
Council recessed and Will . meet
will he given March 10, at Syracuse 'department.
again on March 10; at 7: ~p. m. .
with Charles Legar as Instructor.
At the suggestion of Mrs. SampAttending were Mayor Pickens,
The training is mandatorY' for au son Hall, councll also
to Wlllle Guinther, John Phllson, M!ck ·
members of the fire department. If purchase blades for the tracotr.
Ash, John Bentley, Jack Williams
a·member falls to take the training
.John Bent!ey, councllman, was and Kathryn Crow, council
he or she Is automatically dropped
authorized to secure costs on members, George Holman, treasas a member of the department.
placing lights at the tennis courts.
,urel', Janice LawSDn, clerk, MUton
Imboden also reported that- a ·
Mllton V-arian, pollee chief, Varian, poUce chief, Mrs. Hall and
basic fire training course wlll be
suggested that the street light at the
Bill Cundiff.
readings of an ordniance for the
Improvement of SR 124 between the
western and easter1,1 corporation of
the village by the Ohio Depatrnentof
Highways.
An ordinance to Increase water
rates was given the second reading.

aereect

&lt;ot

F1LE8 - EDen J. Roll3ht, Pomeroy VUiage clerk-treasurer, ·.
Thunday afternoon !lied her petition eeeklng the Republican nomina- ·
t1011 to nm for lbe poe&amp;. Mrs. Roulbt wu appointed clerk-treasurer· ·
April I, 1882 !IDd has been llet"VIIIc In lbe poeltloa !!looe that time. So far, ,
Mill. Roupt Is the only candidate for the poe&amp; to file at the Meigs County ·.
Board of Elections oftlce.
··

.

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