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Sentinel

Page--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~dt 7,

Monday,

' .,

ttW·'

Strategy mapping seseion ~et
The Vete rans Of Foreign Wars
will map strategy at a regional

rch 13 in Ga!Upolls t_n
---~~~~~- Ma
CongreSS' l or tmprovem ents In vetera·ns entitlements and
a doption of a Vetera ns Administration budge t assuring veterans their
needs wtll be me't and their
programs protected.
According to Veterans of Foreign
Wars, Department of Ohio, dele-·
ga tes from District 12, representing
more than 4,!m overseas veterans
In Athens, Ross, Vinton, Pike,
J ackson, Meigs, Scioto, G~d

Lawrence coimties, will meet at 10
a .m . at Post 4464, 134 Rear Third
Ave. Johnnie Jackson, 704 Second
Ave ., commaiidi!r.
· Gordon Curtiss, 58 Gregrey Rd.,
Waverly, dlslrtct conunander, said
Agent Orange and other herbicides
which were sprayed In Vietnam
causing dlsabWties will continue to
be a major concern for the VFW.
He said the VFW has askect
Congress to authorize payment ot
comper.satlon for these health
problems until the full study of the
effects of exposure Is completed.
Curtiss said the VFW also has

Area death s
Clyde Carman
Clyde Carman, 87, 1506 Tracy
Circle, Cohpnbus, formerly of
Meigs County, died Sunday afternoon at Gr&lt;1nt Hospital.
FUneral arrangements will be
announced by Ewing Funeral
Home.

Iva P. Capehart
Iva Phllllps Capehart, 88, New
Haven. died Saturday in Weirton.
Born J une 11, 1894, in Rusb, Ky.,
she was thedaughteroftheiateRev.
James and Margaret Barber
P htllips.
Her husband, Lawrence Ray
Capehart Sr., preceded her in death
in 19ll Also·preceding her were a
daughter, Wilma Morgan; and two
sons, George Capehart and Joseph
Capehart.
She was a member of the First
Church of God, New Haven, and the
Cherokee Homemakers Club.
Surviving are a daughter; Mrs.
Dorothy Murphy, Weirton; three
sons, Lawrence Ray Jr., Columbus,
Ohio, F1oyd, Moundsville, and the
Rev. Herb Capehart, Leon; two
sisters, Mrs. Lillie Wagner, North
Canton, Ohio, and Mrs. Mayme
Armbruster, Bucyrus, Ohio; 11
grandchildren and 18 greatgrandchildren.
Ftmeral services will be con·
dueled at 1 p.m . Wednesday at
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
with (he Rev. Dave Fields Jr.
officiating. Burial will follow in

Lo ne OaR Cemetery, . Point
Pleasant :
Friends may call Monday from
7-9 p.m. and Tuesday from 24 p.m.
and7-9p.m.

Inez A. Cunningham
Inez A. Cunningham, 84, Letart,
died Sun~y morning in Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Born June 7, 1898, at Letart, she
was the daughter of the late W.M.
a nd Nora Adkins Ball..
Her husband was the late Donnie
E. CU!mingham who died Dec. 16,
1954.
She was a member of the Oak
Grove United Methodist Church.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Lyda G. Rainey, Point
Pleasant, and Mrs. Marie Wright,
Huntington; three sons, Harold,
Letart, Paul, St. Albans and
Charles, Rt. 2, Point Pleasant; a
sister, Genevieve Roush, Letart;
two brothers. Charles Ball, Letart,
and Iris T. Ball, Pomeroy, seven
grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.
FUneral services will be at 2 p.m.
Tuesday In the Oak Grove United
Methodisi Church with the Rev. G .
Bryan Blair officiating. Burial will
follow In Suncre!it Cemetery.
Friends may caU at the CrowRussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, after 2 p.m . Monday. The body
will be taken to the church one hour
prior to services.

Emergency units tak'e 20 calls
'

'

Local units were kept on the move Ohlinger, takentoVeterans Memorover the weekend answertng some ial; 4:44 p.m., Pomeroy Fire
20 calls, the Meigs County Emer- Department to Darwin area for .
gency Medical ServiCe reports.
brush fire; 4:51p.m., Racine Fire
Several of- the calls were to , Department, Great Bend, brusb
extinguish . brush fires In various fire; 5:03 p.m., Middleport Squad
spots about the county.
_
for Mildred Moore, taken to Holzer
On Monday morning, the Pome- Medical Center; 5:08 p.m ., Syraroy Emergency Squad took Pam
cuse Fire Department assisting
Ailey, 312 Condor St. , to O'Bleness Raciile Department on Great" Bend
Hospital in Athens.
Brush Fire; 5: 15 p .m., Middleport
Fire
Deparbnent, brush fire near
Sunday calls Included 12:49 a.m.,
Middleport
•Hill Cemetery; 6:22
Racine Fire Department, a brush
p.m.,
Rutland
Squad, Route 143, for
fire at Bald Knob Road; 4:55 a .m .,
Ida White, to Veterans Memorial
the Chester Fire Department,
brush fire on Eagle Ridge Road; 4 Hospital; 9:07 p.m ., Middleport
a.m., Pomeroy Squad to Poml!roy ' Fire Department, Vine St., brush
fire threat; 11: 17 p.m. Racine Fire
Health Care · Center for Henry
Department, returned to Great
Cunningham, taken to Veterans
Bend for brush fire.
Memorial Hospital; 9:21 a.m.,
Middleport Fire Deparbnent,
brush fire on Vine St.; 1:40 p.m.
Veterans Memorial
Pomeroy Squad, Second St. for
Jerry Ha rdwick, taken to Veterans
Saturday Admissions--John SteMemoria l; 2:47 p.m., Racine
wart,
Pomeroy; William Goodnlte,
Squad, Portland Grade School for
Tulsa,
Okla.; Shirley Rousb, PomeKe ith Fitch, taken to Veterans
roy;
Dora
Roush, Pomeroy.
Memoria l Hospital; 8: 13 p.m .,
Saturday
' Discharges--Charles
Middleport Fire Department to
Arthur
Scholderer, Ralph
Hall,
Alma Miller residence, 6&amp;) S. Third
Kern.
Ave., structural fire; Racine, 9:38
Suixlay Admissions--Henry Cunp.m.. Racine Unit for Christin
ningham,
Pomeroy; Shirley EwHensler, taken to Holzer Medical
ing,
Coolville;
Benjamin Carroll,
Center.
Eshelman ,
Columbus;
Louise
Saturday runs Included: Rutland,
Penny
Biggs,
Pomeroy;
Pomeroy;
8:~a.m .,for RalphSwan, to Holzer
Keith
Fitch,
Portland;
Jel'emy
Medical Center; 10:02 a.m., RuCombes,
LongBottom.
tland Fire Deparbnent to New
Sunday Discharges--James ColLima Road, brush fire; 10:35 a.m.,
burn, Eunice Nutter.
Rutland Squad, route 124, Charles

asked Congress to elevate the VA to
cabinet level. The VFW believes,
he said, that the adrnJnistrator ot
programs tor28;5 riilllfon veterans
should be a secretary and the VA
should be a department.
Curtiss satd the VFW would
rontlnue to urge Congress · to
provide funds for aging veterans,
"We want' the VA to have comprehensive geriatric and extended
care programs and funds for state
nursing borne care," he said.
Russell Haynes, Cambridge,
state surgeon, wUI l'e(li'esent. the •
Ohio VFW at the meeting.

· Page3

at
e
en tine
Well drilling set; body· bid approved

.

Judges to participate
T4RGET EPA - Jobo DlupD, D-Mlch.,
chalnnan ol the House Energy and Commerce
Committee aad Its lnvestlgatloll!l Sllbeomml&amp;tee, Is
lmowa as oae of the most powerful men In Congress
aad the man wbo bas pu1
lldmlnhtrallon

ReaPn

trtai • ._:

envlraamental pollcie8 oa public
summoaecl Mrs, Ailae McGm BurtiN, ' ~ ·
administrator of the , EnVIromn~eJ P1 1! II 1
Agency; to !IPPe&amp;r this Thlll'!!day. IWb
111owa Iii ·
recent Die photos. (AP Laserphoto).

.

.

WASHINGTON ((\f) - Administration .officials are trying to quiet
speculation. that Anne McGUl Burford will be fired asadm!nlstratorof
the Environmental Protection
Agency, hoping that will make it
easier for ·her to resign gracefully.
One administration official said
Sunday the president's advisers are
trying to convince the president and
Mrs. Burford that she must leave
" without creating a stonn ...
without pushing the president and
without pushing her.''
The official, speaking on condition he not be nanned, said Reagan's
advisers have adopted a strategy of
"gentle persuasion," aimed at both
the president and the EPA chief,
with the view ' that "hopefully
something wtll happen .''
Reagan still supports his embattled EPA chief, but that backing,
at least In private, may not be as
solid as it once was, sources said.
One administration official said
that Wbite House aides spoke with
Reagan about the issue Fiiday and

Thursday meeting
Preceptor Beta Beta Sorority will
meet Thursday, March 10, at 7:45
p.m. in the Riverboat Room at
Diamond Savings and Loan.

~ts this evening
Racine Village Counil will meet

this evening at 7 p.m. at village halL

SEOEMS

Shooting incident
under investigatwn
A Bidwell man was shot once In
the arm Sunday evening, appar·
ently during a domestic disturbance, the Gallla County Sheriff's
Department reports.
Rona ld Reynolds, 38, was treated
at Holzer Medical Center for the
shooting wound, a hospital spokes·
person said . Reynolds was brought
in at 8:55p.m. and released atlO: 50
p.m.
According to the sheriff's department, Reynolds was at the home of
his ex -wife, Florence Baumgardner
at Rt. 1, Vinton, when the Incident
·
occurred at 7:45p.m.
Reynolds was shot once in the
right forearm, reportedly with a
.38-caliber handgun . The bullet
passed through his arm and hit a
.
dog, deputies say.
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department has apprehended a Meigs
County man who was allegedly
Involved In the shooting. However,
no charges had been flied as of
Monday morning.
Meigs County authorities have
also discovered the weapon al·
legediy used In the shooting.
Sheriff's deputies in Gallla
County-are continuing Investigation '
into 'l!e Incident.

"It was the flrstt!me he budged a tall
from the all-out support" ne has
offered Mrs. Burford In the face of
calls from Democrats and Republi·
cans In CoiiJ!I'ess that she resign.
Reagan was "still fairiyadamant
In support of her," but recognizes
that "this thing Is getting pretty
bad," the official said Sunday.
He referred to allegations of
mismanagement a nd wrongdoing
at the EPA, centering around
operation of the $1.61;lillion "super·fund " hazardous waste c leanup
program.
Reagan, who Is el&lt;pected to meet
with Mrs. Burford this week, said on
Saturday that she can remain as
EPA administrator "as long as she
wants to.''
"The president meant what he
said .. .. when he remarked that she
could stay on as long as she likes ," a
high-level WhltP House official said.
"He Is simply not of a mind to as_k
her to go. He has absolutely no plans
to ask her for her resignation or to
relieve her of her duties."

releas~s

"Everybody wants t1&gt; ca11n tills
thing down for tactical l't!alldila,"
said one source. "Pressure Willi
building up on her and pUtting hlt'll ·
a very difficult situation."
.' '
Mrs. Burford faces &amp;• 3 I
"difficult situation" 011 ~.
when she Is schedulEd CO 4$ · 1
before one of six Cllllgteo , '
committees investigattDa the EPA.
Mrs. Burford has '--cadallllll
produce sensitive EPA doculiiiJits
about the "superfutld" •I F4
program for a House IIJues''P•*"
subcommittee headed by Rep.Jtlll
Dlngell, D-Mich.
Mrs. Burford. citJIIC R
orders, previously bas ('Ia' Ill
executive privilege to wllhhakt Ita!! ·
documents from Caner-. Sill'*
cited for contempt as a !'e!UII; . .
has since ur!lW Reagan lowliM!IIa
claim of executive Prlvlleae IUid lit
her deliver the documeats ..
Mrs. Burford, meanwhile, saldill
Denver "I will ·a lways follow the
directions of the president."

~venswood .

The bid for the Chevrolet chassis totaled $19,106
while the Ford chassis bid came to $19,4ll.

a' . '• ·

However, Rice said this does not mean the board wtll have acteq on a u
recommendations made by the Community Services Revlew Group. Rice
made the comments after a special meeting of the 648 boaid.
· In Its 32-page final report, the review group recommended sweeping
cljanges at the 648 board , partly because of the Joss of public confidence in
the board.
'
The review group charged the 648 board staff with "extravagant
spending" and poor management.
. Some of the more controversial recommendations of the panel,- such as
the resignation of 648 board execullve director Maxine Plumme r and a
reduction In staff, have not been Implemented.
The board voted 6to5Jan. 24torequest Plummer~s resignation, but she
Immediately refused. The board has not taken action since then.
W. Joseph Strapp, attorney for the 648 board, said the issue has been
complicated by the $12 million suit Plummer filed against the 648 board,
state officials and county commissioners.
In tile suit, Pl.u mmer charged some of the defendants have ''pressured
members of the 648 board to demand t her) resignation" and are trying to
"Ulegally stack the board'' with new members who will support firing the
executive director.
Strapp said "Because the suit is so broad and wide-ranging in scope, it
00es take ttrne to discuss it. "
The board has gone Into secret sessions during the past several meetings
to disucuss the s uit.
The board "has not established any deadline" to make a decision
concerning Plummer, Strapp said.
Board members are waiting for a directive from the. personnel
oommlttee before Implementing a review group recommendation to cut

GRIM TASK- B•Ma w . . a .,....,. llle ' OOr&amp;ieiUIII'... a...,..ullla .... _truellac
wredlap of a c - lit *PIMe Iii ftlcll tine · fnlm BowUua G~ S,., to Patz·M, K7., IJiale
people were Idled OD SldanlaJ niPt- The erub
pollee lUI. (AP I.• n-,llato).
'

Riverview; Travis Newlun, Eastern Junior High
School MIIUier-up; 'Lesley Carr, Pomeroy Elementary, third; Stacy HyseU, Rutland; Cindy Maynard,
Salem Center; Heid!Caruthers,Sallshury; blu!k,ltor,
Sabrina Mahhnaa, Portland; Michelle Barr, Meigs
Jwdor High; Cindy Arnold, Southern Jwdor mgh,
champion; Kristen Pape, Syracuse.
Not present for the picture was Carol Fisher, Letart
School champion.
'

At Its Jan. 24 meeting, the 648 board voted to cut staff from nine to four or
fewer.
However, Jake Koebel, chairman of the personnel committee, saki
Monday night the boar d may need more staff than was approved In
January because of a major change in 648 board policy.
The board' s declsipn to use purchase-of-service rather than

·'

Weather forecast
Muchcolderandcloudytonlghtwltha40percentchanceofdrtzzie.

.Low in the mld-:lls. Winds westerly to northwesterly 10-15 mph.
Wednesday, much colder and cloudy with a 40 percent cllance of
showers. High near 40.
.
Extended Ohio Ji'oreallit
Thu~ through SatUrday:
Cltance of showers nortlieaal haH of state ThunJday. Otherwise,
fair tbrOOgh the pertod. Dally highs ranging from the upper4&amp; to the
mld·51l!i. Lows at night mainly In the low to mld-308.

"Gently shape
for a natural,
more youthful profile.''
•

CHAMPS-Meigs COunty Schools Superinte.t
Robert Bowen Monday night presented awanls to
. champions at the annual Meigs County Spelling Bee.
Cindy Arnold. daughter of Bm Arnold, Pomeroy, and
Rita Amold, Syracuse, Is pictured receiving her first
pla&lt;!e trophy as county winner and she wiU represent
Meigs County at the state evenl next month. She
represented Southern Junior High SchooL On the left,

Is first MIIUier-up, Travis Newlun, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Newlwt, Eastern Junior mgh School
fOlpresentattve, who also received a trophy .
Prooouacer was Tom Kelly, Eastern mgh faculty
member, and Bobby Ord, Richard RDbens and Dan
E. Morris, local superlnte~nts, served as Judges.
Russell Moore of the county offtce was In charge of IJie
annual event.

· ,,S enate recession ·relief · bill contains less money

200/o Refund
if you ·like the bra,

..

Your Money Back.
if not completely satisfied.

flurrlee malal,v noriheasl Friday,
mg~~s mlcl40s to tow • Wednesday
aad low to mid 4GB 'lbunday and
Ftida,y. Lon In lhe . . eai'ly
Wedneadaylnlheupperlla to lower

• 'lbul'!lda,r 111111 Friday,

,-

.,

'

. L __

'•

BEE-seventeen champions from Meigs County
schools "battled" for weD ovet' two hours at the
Eastern mgh- School Monday night at the annual
speUing bee before a oounty champion emergect. The
champions and the schools they represented include:
front, I to r, Michelle Malhotra, Chester; Amy
Harrison, Racine Elementary; Catlaa Lee Wolfe,
Middleport Elementary; Angie Murphy, Tuppers
Plain.~ Elise Meier, Bradbury; Jarod Sheets,
Harrisonville; ·second row, Ito r, Michael Martin, '

atafl.

LOVELY LOOK.

~

'

night.

In_..,

Tonight: showers and thuderstorms likely. Low ·50 to 55.·
Southerly winds 5 to 10 mph."
Tuesday: variable cloudiness with
a chance of showers. Not as warm
with a high around 60. Chance of
rain: 60 percent tonight allda ~
percent Tuesday.
~
Ohio Extended Forecast
. Wednesday lhrough Friday: ~
chance of showel'll Wednesday aad
'lbul'llliay and po8llible showers or

Boerger
pleads
guilty

. By JEFF GRABMEIER
OVP staff
~ Gallta-Jackson-Meigs 648 board will prepare a formal response to
allegafuns made by the state-appointed review group, probably at the ··
board's riext meeting In two weeks, Chairman John Rice said Monday

an.nual report.

I

assistant.
Bruce Reed and John Ande~n . council members,
were absent at the last meeting when council voted to
accept Schlvinskl's resignation and the termination
of the contract.
At last night' s meeting, Reed suggested that the
minutes of the last meeting be amended and accept
only the resignation of Schlvinskl and not the contract
~!nee work on Phase II Is not completed.
A second vote was taken with the Issue passing 3 to
2 to accept the resignation and termination· of the
contract. Voting no were Reed and Anderson.
Council agreed that no other work will be
performed unless approved by council. Any
additional work would cost $35 and bour for the
engineer,$~ and hour for the assistant and 20 cents a
mUe for travel.
· ,
It was Indicated that council had been overcharged
f()r the work performed by the firm noting that It paid
out $50,000 last year In engineering fees.
Ron Ash, manager of Ohio Power Co., Pomeroy,
through Harold Brown, councilman, asked council to
place in writing what lighting changes It wishes to
have done.
(Continued on page 10)

G-M:· J board
will answer
allegations

mileage due to the fact that
$20,400 on repair and replac!!lll•
GALLIPOUS ' - The Southeast
Jackson
has
but
one
small
hospital
,
parts, Including $1,700 on tln!l.
Ohio Emergency Medical Services
at Oak Htll , whlle Vinton has none ,
Ambul a nce vehicle• IH
(SEOEMS) logged 8,292 emerequipped with a number of
necessitating patient delivery to
gency runs during 1982, one-third of
hospitals in surrounding counties.
a nd exterior lights, two air
which required advanced type of
The two Vinton vehicles traveled
condltlon,heaters, complex rldiD
paramedic procedUres to victims,
50,630 miles during the year on 1,011 systems, and medical trea~
including drug adminlstralton, acruns.
equipment requirtn&amp; electJbl
cording to Greg Fuller, the sys·
power. Maintenance ~ that tqlllpThe
five
vehicles
in
Athe!IS
tern's opera[\ons director.
me
nt totaled $5,020 .,. 1!112, Jt
County,
where
there
are
two
These types of procedures are
general hospitals, recorded a total
percent of total malneeaanot 1114
used on persons suffering shock
mileage of 69,120 in the delivery of
the largest single ma!ntrroee
and trauma, usually caused by
approximately 2.~ runs.
expense.
serious Injuries, or on the seriously
A separate report on vehicle
It &lt;,$s followed by $4,'7a •
ill, such as those su!fering,strike or
mainten'\Jlce cost was released by
engine repair; $3,333, or 12 I*
f
heart problems, he said.
In brake malntenance; aDd ah. ,
FUller, showing a steady decrease
Logged mileage on the system's
since 1979, when the Ohio Valley
$2,000 In maintenance Gf the diM
19 vehicles was 302,300 mlles whlle
Health
Services
Foundation
was
train. Tire replacement, at 15serving the counties of Athens,
contracted by the SEOEMS Board
percent , wa5 the remaln!ng 1ar1e
Jackson, Lawrence and Vinton. ·
maintenance expense.
to. operate the system. A mainteTwo-hundred eighty-six thounance cost of over $40,000 per year
· Preventive maintenance nsand miles was run by 16 vehicles
pense has steadily ·l ncreul!d dur,
was experienced under previous
permanently located at 12 stations
rna!'agement The. Foundation in- lng the years, Fuller stated, bat
and approximately 16,400 by three
stitUted a rlgtd preventive mainteboth repair and overall rejiM'
regional ambulances which back
nance
program
durtng
1979
and,
expense has declined. Thil a
up the _regular ones, Fuller stated.
despite lnfiatlonary Increases of goal of tbe preventive JII'OIII'Itll, lie
These figures show an average trip
said, with the maiD lnletlll ..
auto mechanical labor and parts,
distance of 36 ~ mlles and Include
reduced that cost about 40 percent
reasonably malntalnlllil \elilt:lw
transfer trips to distant major
through 150,000 rnil8 befor. Nby the end of last year.
medical centers as are located In
For 1982, $27,000 was spent ·on . placement rather t)lan reptaot.
Columbus and other metropolitan
~tenano;e and repair, $6,600 of
ment ~t about 60 to !ll,OOO mlleJ, u
cities, he said.
which was · tor · prevention and
has been the case In past years. ·
SEOEMS year-ending disclosed
that 37 percent of the runs, 3,072,
weredellveredlnLawrenceCounty ~---------~-------------·
where five vehicles located there
~
· Playte•·
logged approximately 75,900 miles.
The most mlleage compUed by one
county's vehicles, 90,487,located In
Jackson County. These four dellMinimizer Bras bviBHOUA ·
wred 2,238 runs, or 27 percent of the
system's total runs.
Fuller noted that both Jackson
'
I
and · Vinton counties log high_

W eatherforecast

Legar recornmende(! council ae&lt;;ept the bid of Pat
Pomeroy Council. Cleland asked that John Anderson
Hill Ford for the chassis and the Ford body bid. Legar
and Bruce Reed be named 'since they have been
explained that eight iilches In length artd five inches
working on the project. Council mimed Mayor
on the cabinets would he lost If council purchased the · Clarence Andrews as the third member.
Chevrolet body.
Cleland also announced Greg Gibbs John
Council approved the Ford bids..
Anderson and Jim Frecker had been ch~ by
Hank Cleland, chairman of the revitalizatiOn
Pomeroy's · Chamber to serve on a Merchants
committee, presented councll with the commmunity
Association.
Improvement plan and requested council study the
Also meeting with council were Orville Wiles, Jack
proposaJ,s noting it may find some proposals
Seideilable and Trell Schoenleb, trustees of Beech
rontroverslal.
Grove Cemetery.
For the program to be successful, someone would
Council has discussed several times contracting
have to be responsible, Cleland said. One of the
the maintenance work at the cemetery. The village
proposals suggested is that a coordinator for the plan
wollid stili sell lots and open and close waves.
be hired.
COuncll told the trustees It would put the work out
Cleland noted a coo.r dinator .could be hired for
for bids with-certain. specifications.
l!pproxlmately$12,000to$15,000ayear.Itwouldbeup
Followirigadis~usslon, thetrusteesagreed to meet
to the person hired to apply for grant monies and If
with the Fred Crow, village solicitor. concerning the
state and federal funds are received a portion of the .
proposal.
money could be uSed to pay the salary of the
Council. at an earlier meeting, had voted to accept
coordlantor.
the resignation and termination of a contract with
The proposal also suggested that a Pomeroy
Jim Schlvinskl of Mohican Engineers and Associates,
Revitalization ,committee . be composed of three
Mansfield. Schlvinskl had worked on Phase I and II of
chamber members and three members from
the Kerrs Run Sewer project with Jim Frecker as

II

!

.

WASHINGTO!'! tAP) - A $3.9
,billion recession-relief bill moving
flrwgh the Senate contains $1
lttllllon less !hail a similar proposal
liiProved by the House, and even
lnorecutsare likely when It reaches
the Senate floor.
'·
·The proposal, approved Monday
lly the RepubUcan-&lt;.'Ontrolled Seate ApprOpriations Conunlttee,
-~ more moJI!!Y
food and
lh!lter
the unemploYed than the·
Rouse bill. Qut there Is less for

roc

'·

roc

so-ca-lled ''brick-and mortar" public
works projects.
Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ote., the
commliteechalrman,saldwhenthe
full Senate gue5 to work on ·the
proposal on the floor, probably
Friday, he'wlliseektoknockout$373
million from the portion desillned to
provide federally fb\anced jJbs.
Sources, who spoke on condition
that they not be ldentlfled, said
Reagan personally askl!d Hatfield ·
to make the addltfonal reduction

20 C.nll

A Muhimedia Inc. Newspaper

.

.

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel staff
Weather permitting, drUll_ngofanewwaterWellfor
the .vntage of Pomeroy will begin tqday. , That
Information was announced at Monday's meeting of
Pomeroy COunciL
Council, has for sometime; attempted to purchase
property in the vtllage of SyracusetodrWotherwater
W!!lls because EPA regulations requ~ a certain
amount of ground be purchased.
The well to be drilled$ill be located on property
owned by the village in Syracuse where the present
Pomeroy water wells are located.
Charles Legar, Pomeroy Fire Cblef met with
councU regarding bids received for a rescue van for
the fire deparnnent.
.
COuncil received two bi~ for a chassis one from
SimmOns Olds, Cadtllac alld Chevrolet for $9,11» and
another from Pat Hill Ford totaling $9,715.
COuncil also received bids for the body of each
chassis from Mountaineer Associates of

ar:e

2 S•c:tions, 18 Paget

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 8, 1983

c.pyrightod 1913

·

EPA officials trying -to quiet·
Burford fir,ing speculation

Two Meigs County Probate Court
issued marriage licenses to Ronnie
Merle Pickens, 26, Racine, and
Minia Roberta Conger, 17, Portland; Thomas Joemart Moore, 19,
Pomeroy, and Teresa Ann Burgess,
16, Pomeroy.

Page 10

PageS

· V•il.li ,No. 217

Marriage licenses

eounty-:A-genis
Comer ....

•

Meigs County
happenings
Ali three Meigs County judges
wUl be a part of a panel which will be
on hand for a meeting of the Meigs
County Ministerial AssoclatlonCitlzenry Group at 7 this evening ln.the
Meigs High School Cafeteria.
The panel will address problems
confronting them with alcohol and
drug abuse from legal and enforcement aspects.
MakingupthegroupwillbeJudge
Robert Buck, Probate and Juvenile
Courts; Judge Charles Buck, common pleas _court; Judge Patrick
O'Brien, county court; Sheriff
James J . Proffitt, Special Sherlff's
Investigator Gary Wolfe, and Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Car- ·
son Crow. The public Is invited to.
attend the. ~sion.

Redmen advance ·
.t o NAJA District 22
basketball finals

Southern's Beegle
isSVAC'sMVP .

duringaplanerideonAirForceOne
from Oregon to Wasb!ngton over the'
,weekend.
Senate Democrats, 'meanwhUe,
are expected to offer their own,
more expensive emergency jobs
btll when tlle Republican plan
reaches the Senate floor .
'
Reagan has repeatedly ex.
pressed his opposition to what 1te
sees as federally funded "make
work jobs."
Among major provisions of the

there Is pressure to get the entire
package though Congress quickly,
-Some $2.1 biUlon will be
- Besides $3.9 billion in jobs and
eqlergency humanitarian relief · targeted for areas with t!Je highest
unemployment rates, lnclud!ng ·15
money, It contains $5 billion
designed to rescue 29 states from
states ·which had jobless rates
default on unemployment benefits
higher than the national average in
due mUllons of their jobless
1982. They Include Alabama ,' Illiresidents.
nois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Michigan and Mississippi, Ohto,
FUnds to loan money to the states
Oregon, Pennsylvanla,SouthCarolfor unemployment benefits are
injl , Tennessee, Washington, West
expected to run out
week. so
Vlrglnla and Wisconsin.
bUJ as approved by the committee:

next

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Allsoclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP)
Ex-state cashier Elizabeth Jane
Boerger and her bandleader friend
Robert Yeazel! pleaded guUty today
In the embezzlement of$1.15 mUllan
from the state treasury.
Ms . Boerger pleaded guilty to
theft In office and three counts of
tampering with public records.
Yeazell pleaded guilty to five
counts of falling to file state income
tax returns. The state dropped an
additional charge of receiving
stolen property.
Their pleas came just minutes
after assistant Franklin County
prosecutor David Jo_hnson told
jumrs that Ms. , Boerger "embezzled cash from the inner safe in
the vault In , the (treasurer's)
office."
Johnson. In his opening statement
to the jury, said Ms. Boerger spent .
the stolen money to finance yeazell'smusicalcareer.
·
Ms. Boerger, 49, of Fort Loramie,
had been charged with theft In office
and tampering with public records
in the disappearance of $1.15 mllllon
from the state (rea•ury between
1977 and .J.an. 16, 198l, when ; he
became UJ and was hospitalized for
what later was diagnosed as ·
hysterical amnesia.
Yeazell. 53, of Springfield, was
her co-defendant in the tria l.
In his statement to the jury,
Johnson said, "There was an
inordinate amount of currency
spent by these people."
The prosecutor said Yeazell, whO·
operated, the Buddy YoungOrc h~·: .
tra, bought trucks, some $16,0CO:
worth of jewelry and paid thousands'
of dollars to cut a recot'd- !n
Tennessee.
Allbaugh chf'Cks Yeazell wrote
sometimes bounced, "Bob YeazeU
always made them good and paid
them In currency, " Johnson said.
Johnson outlined for the jury the
scheme by which he said Ms.
Boerger was able to take the cash
and cqver up the loss ·with
unsupported ledger entries made tn
her handwriting.
She would remove cash froin the
vault, he said. "Then she made a
ledger entry to make H appear the
cash was deposited In BancOhio.,.
The prosecutor indicated that the
schemE' may have dated back as'far
as 1973. He said the FBI had
uncovered a 1973 check for S54.!m
written by Yeazel! to the state. The ·
cbeck was deposited' in the bank a,s
an apparent.a ttempt to cover a cash
shortage, Johnson said. ·
.
Johnson said the scheme came t ~
an end In January 19!ll, when Ms.
Boerger became ill and reslgnt'd
.her treasurer's office post.
"The whole thlnR came crashing
down because Elizabeth Boerger
was no longer able to steal money,
no to~ able to mak_E' cover-ups,"
Johnson said.

�Commentary

·,;se-2_:_,..;. D..;·S.nttrill

The Daily Sentinel

_

P11Mt'r11y, OltiM

,1 ..992:-215i
ll f: \ 'OTEDTO THE INTERF_.ST OF THt: MEIG~MASON AREA

A~

f!o!m~

I"'T"-',_..,..., ,.,.,.,c::~,,.,.

~v

ROBERT. L. WINGETT
Publi~h t&gt; r

BOB HOEFLICH

· P-AT WHITEHEAD
A,s1~ Wn l Pub lislll'r/Cuntrullt•r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
N.. Wf!i Editor
1\ ME MBER ul Tht' As sm ·iulrd Prn);, lnla!ld Daily Prl"l''S i\);StH'iatiun otnd lht'
Amt'rin m Nt·"''!!;Jl&lt;'pt'f }'\Ablisht'r¥ Assu.-1~\iun .
'

.J

•

0

I.F.TTERS OF OPINION .11rl' •rl1·umed . They ~hould bt- Ins lhn 300 V.'llrtls lunll, . Al l
lt&gt;lh· r~ • rr subjt'f'l tu ~::ditim:: 1111ld mu!J\ OC sitt:netl with namt', addrt'Ss and lt'l~hnllt'
numho:r . N11 unsitt:ned lt&gt;tl.t:~ v.·ill bto puhli!iht'd. l.etlt&gt;n should bt' in ~nud Lash-, addri"Ssi~
f~&gt;S UI!'S,

n••t per~na l i lil'S .

WASffil'IGTON - The Supreme
Court of the United States Is in deep
trouble. For purposes of discussion,
I ask you to accept that premise. If
something is to be done about the
situation - something along the
lines recently suggested by Chief
Justlce .flW'ger ...:. Congress must
be prodded by publlc comment Into
remedial action.
Simple statistics tell a part of the
story. Thirty years ago the Court
had 1,463 cases on its docket; It
handed down 65 signed opinions.
Last year the CoW'! had 5,311 cases
on Its docket; there were 141 signed
opinions. The statistics do not tell
the whole story. As one who has
covered the Court closely for this
same period, let me ask you to ac·
cept this premise also: J\5 the volume of work has gone up, the

Not without
•
JUSt reason
According to a top aide, President Reagan does not believe in tossing an
embattled aide over the side for political benefit- unless there's a reason
to do so.
The case in point was tha t of Anne M. Burford, the heavily investigated
head of the heavily_jnvestigated Environmental Protection Agency.
That observatibn by White House chief of staff James A. Baker III can
be read either of two ways. One is as he intended it, which is to say that
Reagan isn't about to jettison Mrs. Burford as EPA administrator without
just reason.
The other is that political benefit, or an effort to contain political losses,
can become a reason for parting with an administration official.
Polltlclans dori't say that out loud, but it is so, it has happened, and there
isn't necessarily anything wrong with it.
The time can come when a president decides to seltle a controversy like
that surrounding EPA in order to get on with other business, even If it does
:mean accepting- or encouraging- the resignation of the aide primarily
involved.
·
.
'
That time may not come in Mrs. Burford's case. She may weather the
investigative storm of six' congressional conlmittees and the Department
of Justice. and stay at EPA. But it also possible that the diversion, and the
continuing defense, will exact a higher political toll than the
administration is willing to pay.
Should that happen, Mrs. Burford would get a very nice note from the
president one sprtng day. It would thank her for distinguished service,
express full confidence in her ability and integrity, and close with regret
that she had decided to leave the government. ·
Later, Reagan would say that he certainly did not seek her resignation,
but that he respected her decision. That is hypothetical as to Mrs. Burford,
but the script is not. !t's been used before.
. The requisite beginning is an eKpression of full confidence in the official.
Reagan has covered that. When appropriate. such a declaration may be
followed by the dismissal of a subordinate official or three, and by
management changes ..Reagan has fired three lesser EPA officials, and
the White House announced a management shakeup there.
But that did not placatE' congressional investigators.
The balance of t~e Burford script wUl depend on what the investigators
find, and how long they keep at their inqulrles. In the Democratic House, at
least. that is likely to be a long time.
: "The president does not believe you just toss somebody over the side in
order to achieve some PQlitical benefit," Baker said after briefing the
president on the EPA siiuatiol).
, Baker said "the only thing that's been suggested- and they are just
.vague, general . suggestions - is that somehow she'.s guilty of
mismanagement." Should they become more than vague suggestions.
_that may become reason for a change.

Berry's World

•

r.

,r elief-

WASIDNGTOI\ . - Secret evidence has been gathered that the
White House rtgged its Conference
on Agtng ln late 1!*!1 - an event
that had an impact on the national
Social Security debate.
It was a defensive damagecontrol operation, Intended to keep
the conference from beComing a
political embarrassment 'to President Reagan. But the tactics were
reminiscent of those used by the
Nixon White House to manipulate
the press and lnfiuence public
opinion.
Some participants in the canter·
ence complained that it had been
packed with Reagan supporters,
who controlled the outcome. White

.

By The As!i001• 1ed Press

quality- of the Court's output has granted.
sounds, the litigation raised First
gone down. Struggling agalust a
Just a couple of weeks ago, on
Amendment questions \hat had
flood of pape!Work, the Court's nine Feb. 23, reporters saw a striking
been decided differently by the sevmembers simply do not have time eKample of bow the Burger plan
eral federal circuits.
for thoughtful reflection and care- might work In practice. Seven
A second case dealt with a knldful writing.
signed opinions were handed down
napplng and rape In Connecticut in ·
In his speech of Feb. 6 to the that day. FoW' of them Involved the
1975. At the def~ant's triailn 1976,
American Bar Association, Burger kind of intercircult conflicts that
the tria! judge lustructed the jury ·
called upon Congress for rellet. He Burger would li!ve to the new appelthat "A person's f1Jtentlon may be ·
proposed that for a period of five late court.
Inferred from his COnduct, and evyears, two judges from each of the
One of the four cases had to do . ery person Is conclusively preJ3 federal circuit courts be named with a dispute ln:Volvlng rival
sumed to Intend the natural and
to a special pool. From this pool, teachers' unions in Perry Townnecessary consequences o!. his
seven or nine judges a year would ship, Ind. A union known as the
act." Three years later, In what Is
be drawn. This panel would hear PEA won exclusive bargaining
known as the Sandstrom case, the
and decide alllnterclrcult confllcts. rjghts. As part of its victory, the
Supreme CoW'! held that such an
The Supreme CoW't would reserve PEA also won exclusive rights to
Instruction violates the 14th
a right to review these decisions, • JlS&lt;' the teachers' mallboxes. The
Amendment, bUt the Court lett
thus preserving the constitutlonai other union, known as the PLEA,
open the question o! whether the ·
mandate of '"one" supreme court, insisted on access to the mailboxes.
giving of this Instruction may be
but Burger made It Implicit that This titanic Issue went to court, and
"harmless error." Since then the
such a final review would rarely be the PEA won. Tr!Vtai as lt all
circuits h{lve divided oil the 15sue.
The Supreme Court ruled, 5-4, that
the error was not harmless.
A third opinion on Feb. 23 Involved the circumstances under
which an applicant may be denied a
license to deal In guns. Some circuits had ruled one way, some
another. The fourth case dealt with
a complex situation, of Interest ai·
most solely to lawyers, inyolvlng
litigation under the Federal Employees' Compensation Act. Again,
the circuits had dlvidetf.
Now, none of the four cases was
of earthshaking Importance. The
constitutional questions raised lri
Indiana and Connecticut were .
molehills, not mountains. The other
two cases lnvolved "statutory Interpretation of llrn1ted application. Nevertheless, the lntercircult confllcts
had to be resolved, and under the
present setup, only the Supreme
CoW'! can resolve them.
11te proposed new panel would
relieve the higb court of 35 to 50
such cases a year, ahd thus migllt
achieve a reduction of more than 25
percent in the laborious work of •
preparing full-blown, signed opinIons.

House officials stoutly dented the
charges. But I can now report that
the charges not only were true but
that the complainants didn't go far
enough.
The General Accounting Office
has been quietly Investigating what
happened . My associate Indy
Badhwar has seen the sworn tes·
tlmony and supporting documents,
which are locke&lt;' In secret files.
Here are the highlights:
- DW'lng the planning stages,
every new member of the confer-.
ence advisory board was OK'd by
the White House only after lengthy
political screening.
- HI the late spring of 1981, 400
additional · delegates were ap-

.Beegle

'

conference. ' '

one

staff.' '

'

'

streets. 'Now people are worried · they destroy the world.''
about nuclear weapons. The Queen
"Those ~uclear weapons must be
wants some installed in her country
worse than bullets. Tell me about
and the rest of Europe. She and
them."
President Reagan have formed a
"One nuclear tnlssUe flr'ed Ill
mutual admiration society and
western America could have
she's ·here now visiting him in · enough . warheads to destroy sev"
California.''
eral Russian cities. The Russians
"Whom are they afraid of•"
could do the same to us. Theie are
"They claim they're afraid of enough nuclear weapons_ alteady
Rlissia so President Reagan is runmade to kill every man. woman
ning the biggest money making
and chUd In the world. Still they are
project In the history of the peace
making more here and In Russia.
time world and calling It National
It's senseless, Grandpa."
Defense. It's to make money for
"I'm glad you're following Tom
Industry."
Jefferson's principles. He was a
"I gather you don't approve. Ire- good president.''
member George Washington
"Most of your descendants have
warned us against such a mllltary·
been Democrats as far back as I
industrial complex before he left can trace. I know my gtp.ndfather
office."
was. He named his oldest son after
"! don't approve. I believe in the Andrew Jackson."
prtnclples of Thomas Jefferson
"If things are so bad maybe I'm.
who thought the common people
better off where I am. It was bad
should be protected frotn the rich. I enough dodging bullets."
also believe In a nuclear freeze !or
"Move over, Grandpa! "
s. and
both

in history

MVP

blockedtw~shotsduringthesti'eak . Hefinishedthegamewithl4rebounds

and tout blocks.

fmward · Jeff Moles, and juniors,
Brent Love and J.D. "Bradbury.
. Third place Hannan Tl-ace had
two players chosen, juniors Jeff
Barnes and Rob Brumfield; Paul
McNeal and Roger Wells represent
Southwestern whlle North Gallla
and Eastern placed one player
each on the squad. They were
Anthony Blackburn for the Pirates
and Eastern's Roger Bissell.
Participating in the balloting
were coaches, Carl Wolfe, Southem; Keith Carter, Kyger Creek;
Mike Jenkins, Hannan Trace;
Lloyd Myers, Southwestern; Bruce
'Wilson of North Gallla and Dennis
Eichinger of Eastern.

'ALL SVAC DREAM TEAM
. PLAYER- SCHOOL
Zane Beegle, Southern
Rod Llttle!leld, Southern
. Nick Bostick, Southern
1
: Jeff Moles, Ky~r Creek
Brent Love, Kyger Creek
J.D. Bradbury, Kyger Creek
. Rob Brumfield, Hannan Trace
Jeff Barnes, HaMait 'j'race
Paul McNeal, SoUthwestern
Roger Wells, Southwestern
Anthony Blackburn, North Gailia
Roger Bissell, Eastern.

Lowell Wingett
A talk with grandpa
---------------------------------------volutlon they would have had
plenty to worry about. Buliets flying everywhere and nbt enough to
eat; out shoes were weartng out
and those popinjays In the Continental Congress didn't give a damn.
It's a wonder we didn't give the 13
colonies back to the Indians."
"Well, If you wlil remember, you
were pretty busy taking the coun·
try away from them when you wer·
en't fighting the British. Now, the
Queen of England is visiting us and
we're afraid she'll get caught ln a
California mudsllde. You know
what that would do tO relations with
England, not to mention Canada,
Australia and the Falkland
Islands."
"Wltat's an-English queen doing
liere? We j~t got through licking
the British a second time at New
Orleans.'"
"There have been a good many
changes since you've been gone,
Grandpa. People are not so afraid
of bullets
on the

cho~en

· Southern guard Zane Beegle, a
6-0 senlor, was voted the SVAC's
Most Valuable Player Monday
evening during a meeting of league
coaches at Kyger Creek High
School. ,
Beegle, In leading the Tomadoettes to their eighth straight
SVAC championship and another
sectional title, averaged 22.9 points
per game. He succeeds another
Tornado MVP, Kent Wolfe.
Other Tornado players chosen all
league were senlor folWard Nick
Bostick and junior guard, Rod
Llttlefleld.
• Second place Kyger Creek
placed three players on the all
league tea~. They were senior

asked questions carefully designed
to " get a handle on the Ideology of
the delegates to determine the actl\al political climate of the
- "The telephone polllng o! the
delegates was to be kept secret
from (conferenCe staff people. The
rooms were kept locked, and had
only one entrance - though a top '
executive's office: In the reception
room in front of these phone roonns .
was ·a line of masking tape on the
floor in front -of a desk. The tape
marked. the line which no
bUt
the Internal staff should cross, un- '
less specifically escorted by a
member of the Delegate Services

ROGER BISSELL

NICK BOS'DCK

Jack Ar~.derson
pointed. Most were chosen from
Reagan campaign-donor lists and
other politically oriented sources.
- On demand. conference off!.
clals surrendered a complete list of
delegates ln advance to the Republican National Committee, whose
top officials were in constant contact with the conference staff. They
even used code names !or their
phone calls.
- A hush-hush telephone bank
was installed at conference headquarters to poll potential delegates
and predict "how much of a political embarrassment the 1conference) was going to be to the
president," according to sworn testimony_ . White House volunteers

this week's Top Twenty despite a gaudy 21-5 record.
And up there In Pu_llman, Wash., just eight mlles frotn the Idaho border,
they don't get many headlines, either.
But the Cougars of the Palouse- that area between the moist forests of
the ROckies and the dry scablands of Washington- are 22·5 today after
preventing fourth-ranked UCLA from clinching the Paclflc-10 basketball
crown by upsetting the Brulus ~Monday night on sophomore Bryan
Pollard's tip-In at the buzzer.
·
"Sooner or tater, those LA writers wl1l realize we have some talent,"
said WSU Coach George Raveling. "It wasn't the most thrilling win for
me, but W years from now when I'm sitting around somewhere, I'll
remember it."
Washington State led 68-64 on a pair of dunks by Pollard, but two
jumpers by UCLA' a Rod Foster tied the score atffiwlth39secondsleft to
play.
The Cougars let the clock run down to five seconds before calling a
timeout. UCLA knocked the ball out of bounds on the first throw-In, but the
Cougars finally got lt tn to Chris Wtnkler, who missed a shot from the
baseline and Pollard tipped the ball in at the buzzer.
"At the end, with three second$ left, we didn't havell)uch recourse. I just
told Winkler to go to the ball and shoot,'' Raveling said.
Pollard scored 21 points and grabbed 10 rebounds, but UCLA's Foster
'ed ali scorers with 26 points. Washington State kept its Pac-10 title hopes
alive with a 14-3 record, just behind UCLA's 14-2. The Bruins are 224
,
overall.
The triumph, the Cougars' 16th straight in Friel Court, sent · a
school-record 12,422 f!Uls tnto dellrlum.
·
·
t'I've heard the WSU crowd this loud before. They get sky-high for us;"
said UCLA Coach Larry Farmer. ''Their fans really get up for the Bruins
and George really does a good job of getting the fans behlild the team."
In the only other game Involving a mem!Ji.r of The Associated Press Top
Twenty, Patrick Ewing and David Wingate keyed a second·haif explosion
to lead 15th-ranked Georgetown University past No.W Syracuse 80-75 at
Landover, Md., ln a preview of Thursday's Big East Conference
tournament matchup.Georgetown, 21-8 overall and 11-5 In the Blg East,
will meet Syracuse, 19-8 and 9-7, In the first round of the conference
IOUrt'11m1enl in New York.'.
Wingate scored seven points in the first four minutes of the second baH
as Ceorgetown turned a 38-JO 1\alfttme deficit Into a 46-42lead.Ewing, who
led all scorers with.26 pol,nts, controlled the boards, scored four points and

ROD LllTIEPIELD

liT.
6-0
5-ll
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-4
5-10
5-10
6-5
6-0
5-6
5-10

YR.
4
3
4
4
3
3
3
3

4
3
3
4

Ohio
•
Sportlight
By George Strode
CINCINNATI (AP) - A star on Xavier University's championship
basketball team of 1958 admits the caliber of play has Improved
dramatically in the last quarter-century.
"We couldn'thold a candle to these teams of today," said Joe Viviano, a
standout on the 1958 National Invlta tiona! Tournament championship club.
"lbey're so much quicker now and they jump so much better.
"I think we handled the ball qulte well, bUt I don't belleve we played
defense any better than they do now.''
Viviano's team did gtve the present-day Musketeers a target of glory to
shoot for. His 1957-58 team beat Dayton 78-74 In overtime to take the NIT
tournament with a 19-11 record.
VIviano, a 6-foot-5 forward, was voted most valuable player on that
championship team, and went on to repeat the bonor the next season. His
1,338career points and 16.1-pointaverage make hlin thentth-leadlngscorer
in Xavier history, and his 906 career rebounds put him foW'th on that list.
VIviano was recently Inducted Into the Xavier Urilverslty Athletic Hall of
Fame for his play between 1956-59.
"Hecoukln'tjump more than a half-inch and he was really slow," joked
Don Ruberg, a fanner Xavier assistant coach. "But oh, could he shoot that
jump shot, and he always seemed to be in the right position !or the rebound.
"Sure, he was one of the greatest players in xavier history. He averaged
aboutl6 points a game and 11 rebounds, and he was always therewhen we
needed him."
Vlvtano, 44, started a mac~~Toni business with his father after graduation,
and now Is ·preskk!i)t and chief executive officer of a subsidiary of the
Hershey Chocolate Co.
"I owe a great deal tciXa vier,'' Viviano said. ''I learned many lessons here
. that stood me in good stead In the business world. l had the opportunity to
travel with )he team, and 1admit I couldn't jump much and was definitely on
,
th('slow side.
"But, boy, could I sh90tthatjump shot." ,
Anthony Hicks, guard on the current xavier squad, beCame the
university's all-time teading scorer this season. VIviano was Impressed by
Hicks' play.
"Not only does he score, but he runs thelr·offensesowell and plays such
·great defense," Vlvtano said. "Wouldn't It be terrific If this team went to a
tournament and did well, just like we did 25 years ago?"
·

Houston, Virginia, Louisville,
remain atop college ratings
The Associated Press
Houston, Virginia and Louisville
held onto the top three spots today in
The Associated Press' next-to-last
college basketball poll, while UCLA
climbed from sixth place tp fourth
-only to lose Its next game- and
defending national champion North
Carolina jumped from eighth to
fifth .
The Houston Cougars, who defeated Arkansas and Baylor last
week, received 43 of 52 first-place
votes and 1,().}) of a possible 1,040
points from a nationwide panel of
sports writers and sportscasters.
The other nine first -place ballots
went to V.irgtnta, whleh defeated

By GEORGE STRODE
AP spans writer
Ohio University Coach Danny
Nee Insists the fact his BobCats dld
not win the regular season IItle has
nothing to do" wlth his liking the
· Mid-American Conference basket.
ball playoffs.
Ohio, second behind champion
Bowling Green·, makes Its league
tournament debut against visiting
Eastern Michigan in one of three
/trst-round Mid-American playotff
contests tonight.
"I think the tournament and the
format is good for fan Interest and
the entire conference. It gives
everyone a second chance. I would
say the same thllig lt we were ln
seventh place or lt we were
champion," Nee said Monday.
It there were no playoffs, Bowllng
Green would own the league's
automatic berth to the NCAA
Tournament and the Bobcats, 12-6
in the league to the Falcons' 15-3
mark, would be hoping for an
at-Jar~ selection to the NCAA or an
NIT spat.
With . tongue In cheek, John
Weinert, Bowling Green's coach,
said, "For three years I've strongly
supported the tourndment . This
year I think It's bleep."
Seriously, Weinert believes the
league tournament is good beCause
It keeps everybodycompetltiite late
In theregularseason.Sevenofthe10
teams . quality for the l\1ld·

Local
bowling
IIIQ1IDe _.., . . M....... Giol1el
..-....,.~~,,.

'hom
1'11Two's Qlmpall)' ....... oo.oooo oo oooo oooo oo r oo• ••ool43
CUstom l'rlllt .
133
00 . . . . . . 00 00 00 00 00 • 000 00 00 00 00 00 • • • 00

Simmons Olds, Cadlllac
and &lt;llev .............·............................. ~
TheFabl'lcSIIop18
The Metp Inn
Tl
0000000 00 00 00 0 0 0 . 0 0000 0 0 . 00 0000 •• 0000.

Men1 Amlblry
. ' Halr Designer ....... oooooooooooo.
H18h Ind. aame - Jtme Lambert 179; Sue
00 0000 0 0 . 0 0 0 0 0 . 7 4

.Sign-up SatUrday
.

~&gt;(,

~ l/j84- )?..

n.£ A~ (:NirAL ~ 'WiiliWI~ - ~r~o ~$tON Of na&lt;m ro
tlil~ atmCAL{; ACIP RAIN ~ ~ V., Wtf BE AA7ARtlaJS TO Ywe 1$.1.T~.

I

,

The Pomeroy Youth Baseball
program wl1l hold slgnup day
Saturday, March 12, at city hall
from Wa.m. to 3 p.m. Slgnup tee Is

fl.

The

program

~- '·•des

pony

league, little league, pee wee,
minor, T-ball and girls' SOitball.
For additonal ln!otmatlon can: tact Bob Barton, president at
992-5531 or Mike Wright, vice
president at 992.a!OO.

Wake Forest and Maryland and
received 987 points.
Louisville disposed of Murray
State and Vlrgtnla Tech before
going into overtime to nlp Memphis
State and preserve Its No.3 ranklhg.
The Cardinals received 919 points.
· UCLA, which knocked off Wa·
shington last week, received 837
points. But the Bruins were upended
70-68 Monday night by Washington
State. North Carolina climbed to
fifth with 739 points by trouncing
Georgia Tech and Duke.
Last week's No.4·5 teams, Villan·
ova and Aliwn!las, !ell to 13th and
sixth, respectively. VUlanova lost to
Syracuse, whlle Arkansas was ·

OU's Nee likes
,
upcoming ,playoffs

WaDcor 173; Carol WauiJII 1119.
H18h Ind. IJu!e.pmeo- Carol wa..,U91;
Harriet Wallace 411:. J~~~te Lambert~
H18h team pme - Men1 Amlllory, Hair
Iloll1po&lt; Tl6; O.tcm Prtnt m; Merrl
Amabacy, Hair I:1o11ni1Pr ant The Mt!lp Inn
'!In

H18h IHm---Merrl-ry,

:rm:

Hair Destcner
CU.IDm -Print 2229;
Slmmot1J Oldl, Codtll1c IIIII Cltov. 2222.

American playoffs .
--Ohio: 19-8 overall, was the
tournament's second seed while
Eastern Michigan,. 12-15, was the
No.7 seed.
In other firSt-round game$ to. hi, flflh·seeded Miami (.13-14)
rug
plays at No.4 Bail State (16-111, and
No.3 Toledo (16-11) entertains No.6
Kent State (16-11).
Bowling Green will take on the
winner between Miami . and Ball
State. The Kent State-Toledo and

beaten by Houston. Howl'ver,
Arkansas, Houston and ninth·
ranked Nevada-Las Vegas are the
only major college teams with only
two losses.
Arkansas receivE'(! 690 points,
followed by seventh-place Indiana.
which was N:o.11 a week ago, with
656 points. Rounding out the Top Ten
are St. John's, UNLV and Kentucky
with 646, 575 and 544 points,
respectively. Last week, St. John's
was lOth, UNLV ninth and Kentucky seventh.
The Second Ten consists 1 of
Wichita State, Missouri, Vlllanova,
Boston College, Georgetown, dhlo
State, Memphis State, TeMessee·
Chattanooga·, O~lahoma and
~racuse.

Monday night: Georgetown defeated Syracuse lll-75.
Last week's Second Ten was
Indiana, Wichita .State, Missouri,
Ohio State, Boston College, Georgetown, Memphis State, .Syracuse,
Chattanooga and Purdue.

llde on the floor of the highest seed
·Thursday ntg
' ht.
The victors in Thursday's semlfinals will meet Saturday night at the
highest seed for the league
championship.
This markSthe first seaSOO fbr the
league· playoffs to be staged at all
Mid .Arner lCan campus s i ..,s. n ts
first three years, the tournament's
•- I i
semifinals and finals were played in
Crisler Arena on the University of
Michigan campus.

For Home
Insurance

Chances are your home is
wonh more than you real·
ize ... and would cost lar
more to replace. perhaps
50% to 60%. than just a
lew years ago .
Has your hom~: insurance
kept pace with the steady
rise in construction costs?
we·II be happy to help you
lind out. Irs pan ol our
service as an independent
insurance agency representing State Auto .
G1ve us a call. You "lflind
we're lriends you can
depend on .

•

Top. Twenty
n, 1'tko AltiOIIilaiA'CI rr.:...
'Th" Top Tw('J'Ity trams 1n rt.- As."Q·J.
at('(! Prrs.~ rollfW' 00SkC1ball poll. ....1th
first·pli!rr- l 'olf'S in Jliln:\ru~. rn'Ord'l'
and total points. Polni Mbil'ie'd on 11'1· 19-1 ~
n '~""· "'U· ll · """'
1. Houston t4.'11

..' ·un
:.!!).:.!

' · v, ...,,. ,,,

:!&gt;.1

lLoolwll~e

'"· '

' · Nor&lt;h '"'"""'
•7.' 1ndluna
""""'""
, ,._Jo,., .,

"'
2:.!·!'1

:.!'.!:'

' · UCLA

Eastern Michigan-Ohio victors col\_

.•.....·

The Orangemen were hainpered by the absence of forwa rd Tony Bruln,
who..was out.wlth a sprained ankle;_JJruln.is expec.ted.to be.ready for- 1M&lt;
tournament . Erich Santlter, the team's high scorer, was slowed by a :
sprained wrist and scored only slJc 'points. Andre Hawkins led the :
Orangemen with 15.
''I'm pleased as I can be with what went on out there, but there are still a :
lot of things we do Inconsistently," said Georgetown Coach John :
Thompson. "We've got to play with more consistency because In ·
tournament play one letdown and it's a summer vacation. It's not an :
advantage to play a team twice in a season and beat them and play them :
again. Everyone knows the big game is Thursday."
. :
For Syracuse Coach Jim Boehelm, the defeat, !allowing an upset I~to •
Connecticut last week, was especially hard to swallow.
~
"I'm very disappointed," he said. "Not only in the way we played, bUt
withthelackoflntelligenceweshowed. Youdon'twinga!llesbytakingthe ·
ball inside and trying to shoot over Ewing."
.
At South Bend, Ind., John Paxson scored 20 points to power Notre Dame ·.- - over Dayton 534lln a battle between two independents struggling for a :
berth In the NCAA Tournament.
.
·
At Cedar Falls, Iowa, Brent Carmichael scored 22 points as Northern
Iowa knocked Southwest Missouri out of first ptace in the Association of
Mld-Contll)ent Universities Conference 66-00.Northem Iowa never led
until Carmichael scored to make It 48-46 with 8:42 left. Southwest
Missouri's loss let Western Illlnofs move into first place.
In the first round of the Southwest Conference tournament, freshman
Carl Wright scored four points in the final two minutes and Southern
Methodist survived a Texas tip-in thai was disallowed at the buzzer to
defeat the Longhorns 4948 at Dallas.
'
The Lorighorns led 48-39 beforeSMU scored the last lOpolntsofthe game
to hand Texas Its 22nd defeat against six victo_rles, the worst season In the
school's history.
.
In another SWC first-round game at Lubbock, Texas. Quentin Anderson
scored 22 points and Bubba JeMings added 19 to pace Texas Tech over
Baylor 5Ui5. The Red Raiders survived despite blowing a 14-polnt lead
early in the second half. And at Fort Worth, Doug Arnold scored 22 points
and all-conference guard Darrell Browder added 17 as Texas Christtari
trounced Rice 7449.
,
·
At Pittsburgh, Craig Helms hit a short jump shot with eight seconds left
to !:lve George Washington a 71-70 victory over Duquesne tn an Atlantic 10 .
Western Division first-round playoff game.Mike Brown scored 32 points to
lead the Colonials to their first victory in seven years of postseason play.
At Amherst, Mass., freshman John Hempel scored 18 points and pulled
down 13 rebounds to lead Massachusetts to a 91-74 victory over Rhode '
Island In another Atlantic 10 contest.

--'&lt;-~he..W.ash!Jtgkm Statentugars.don:t.get..much.respect._They aren't-in-

lames J. KilpiiTriek._ --.

A rigged conference

If you can believe that Ora! Roberts talked \o Jesus ChriSt for
eight hours then YO!Ishould have no
trouble. believing that I talked to
Caleb Winget, my great, great,
great grandfather for an hour or so
the other night. The only difference
Is that Caleb didn't tell me to ask
each of your for $240. He wanted to
talk politics!
Before I tell you about my
dream, perhaps a little lamlly history ls In order. Caleb, who Is credited with starting our branch of
the Winget family in America, was
born In England and came to this
country with two brothers when
they were young men. Because
trouble with .t he colonies was brewIng even before they. left England,
they had changed their name from
"Wingate" to the Scotch form ofthe
name, "Winget." They settled in
New Jersey In the 1760s, married
and started families. In 1776 Caleb
bought two parcels of land In what
Is now Washington County, Pa.,
'
. and moved west whe•e he teared
five sons and a daughter . Four of
the sons and their families came to
Ohio. In 1!00 while it was still a part
of the Northwest Territory. Caleb
: : Today Is Tuesday. March 8, the 67th day ofl~. There are 298 days left in
died ln 1817 and was bW'ted at
t{Je year
Prosperity, Pa. If you are wonder:
' Today's Highlight in History:
.
lng about the extra "t," my oldest
: On March 8. 1917, riots and strikes broke out in St. Petersburg, Russia,
brother added lt while he wa5 In
marking the start of the Russian Revolution .
high
school and lite rest o! us went
: On this date:
.
.
along
because he was biggest.
In J71i5. the British House of Lords passed the Stamp Act to tax the
been studying up on geI
have
.\lnct·ican colonies.
nealogy
which
probably accounts
• Jn 1Y50, Marshal Voroshilov announced Soviet possession of the atomic
for
my
dream.
It
seemed I was vt•·
bomb.
itlng
the
ancestoral
grave at
: In 1965. the United States landed 3,500 Marines in South Vietnam.
Prosperity and said, "How are you
And, in 1971, Joe Frazier became undisputed heavyweight boxing
doing,
great, great, great
champion of the world with a unanimous 15-.round dec.islon over .
GraJ!(Ipa?"
Muhammad Allin New York.
A voice answered, "Forget the
Ten years ago: The wife of author Clifford Irving was ~ntenced to two
'greats,'
boy." You'll just . get us
years in prtson in Switzerland for her role in the HOWjlrd Hughes
both
confused.
How cotne I've been
autobiography hoax.
here
tor
166
years
and nobody ~r
, Five years ago: The United Mine Workers bitterly denounced the Carter
talked
to
me
before?"
Admlnlstratlon's invoking of the Taft-Hartley Act .to send striking coal
I said, "Well, Grandpa, this Is a
miners back to work.
_
trying world now and they probably
One year ago: The Reagan Administration accused the Soviet Union of
had too many worries o! their
killing at least 3,(0)' people ln Afghanistan with polson gas B.!•d other
own."
.
cbemical weapons:
"Fiddle sticks! It they had been
:Today's birthdays: Dancer-actress Cyd CharisSe Is 60.
with
me when I was with theW~­
·'Thought for today: "Do all the good you can and make no fuss about lt."
moreland
Rangers durlng the Re_;Charles Dickens, British author (1812-1870) .

~oday

Cougars upset No.4 Bruins

Pom-y--Middlepart, Ohie
• Tuetday, March 8, 1983 .

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1978 OIEVY PICKUP, YzT•• ,........................... $395
1968 FORD PIC&lt;UP, T-100 ................ ............. '295
•

�Sentinel

Tuesday,

thing is to relaJ~ on the mound.
"I just try to relax, not to worry
about who's at bat, who's on base,
who's up next or what the score is."
Hume hasn't always won his
battles with the butterflies. He
remembers his first big-league
start - when he surrendered five
runs in a third of an inning - as one
of - hls most nerve -wracked
moments.
"It was aWful. "Humesa!d. "I had
an upset stomach beforehand, the

whole works."
Hume eventually began taking
things more in stlide, and sut'CeSS
followed.
"It took me a couple of years. I
didn't learn that until probably 1979,
maybe toward theendol '78," Hurne
saiil. "It was just gradual, something you work at,"
Hiune followed his 17-save season
of 1979 with 25 saves In 19!Wl ahd 131n
the stlike-shoriened 1981 season.
Last year he was ·On hls way to
another innpressive season when he
tore cartllage in his knee and lost
some of his effectiveness. He had
surgery on July 30, prematurely
finishing his season with 17 saves in
46 appearances-.
With his knee repaired, Hume
pronounces himself ready for 1983.
He's trying to blot the Reds' 101-loss
season of 1982 out'of mind .
''Why think about it? You're
already defeated if you go into the
season thinking, 'Shoot, we lost 100
games last year,"' Hume said. "I
don 'I worry a hout it. I don't worry
about anything."
RED&gt; NO'l'E'i
TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- Cincinnati
Reds Manager Russ Nixon isn't
placing lmportance on the club's
intrasquad games scheduled for
today and Wednesday.
Nixon says the games are just a
way to make things more .interesting for his pitchers, who have been

in camp since Feb. 19.
"Our pitchers have been ' down
here almost three weeks," Nixon
said. "They're in shape to pitch,
whereas in past ~ars they've been
trying to get In shape at this point.
Things get boring to them now. It'll ·
be.a change of scenery a little bit."
Weather pennltung, the Reds
will play a nine-inning lntrasquad
game today and a seven-Inning
game Wednesday. The!rexhlb!tlon
season opens with a game against
the Qllcago White Sox Thun&gt;day in
Sarasota.
Some of Nixon's predecessors
disdained !ntrasquail games, figurIng players could get more accomplished In a regular wotkout. Nixon
said he can't remember the Reds
holding an iiltrasquad game since
he joined the organization In 1970.
Pitchers s&lt;;heduled' for the nineinning !ntrasquad game today are
Jeff Russell, Ron Robinson, Bob
Buchanan, Brian Ryder and Tom
Hume for one squad; Frank
Pastore, Mike Dowless, Bill
Scherrer, Joe Price and Brad
Lesley for the other hall.
On Wednesday, half of the squad
will be led inaseven-inninggameby
pitchers Rich Gale, Charlie Leibrandt and Ted Power. Power also'
will toss for the other side, along
with Greg Hams and Bill Dawley.
Asked how much weight a good
showing in the games would carry in
the manager's mind, Nixon replied,
"None whatsoever."
Nixon's starters for the first
half-dozen spring training exh!bi·
tlon games are, in order: Marlo
Solo, Bruce Berenyi, Pastore, Gale,
Power and Soto.
A. downpour that started at 11:30
a.m. and lasted the rest of the day
cut short the Cincinnati Reds'
practice Monday.
The heavy rain aLso threatened to
was.h out an intrasquad game
scheduled for today.

RUNNEJIS.UP - 'l1dA Jlarrillonvllle team was
nu111er-up In the sixth grade baaketbaB championship lor the Meigs Locai School Dl8tttct Satumay at

the hlgh schO!II . auditorium. 'lbll team members
Include, I tor, Kenny Haradon, Mait McCourt, KeVIn

'

Eichelberger said his off-season
conditioning program has helped
hinn stay In shape.
"I worked out three days a week
since Nov. 1 with Broderick
Perkins, (Detroit's) Alan Trammell and a few other guys," he said.
"We threw, llftedweightsandieven
was throwing a football. I feel in the
last two years, I've been in the best
shape of my professional career."
The 6-foot-3 right-hander's finest
moment came last lastJune2, when
he threw a one-hitter against the
Chicago Cubs.
After the all-star break, however,
he was sent the the Padres' bullpen,
and then he strained his shoulder
trying to "show them they made a
mistake putting me out there ...
"I pretty mqch figured I would be
traded, but to whom, !didn't know,"
he said, "You can sense certain
things when you've been around a
while. There was no one more
disappointed than I was last year.
That previous year In winter ball, I
was doing all the right things and
was looking forward to a big year
with San Diego."
Ferraro said he last watched
Eichelberger in 1978 in the minor
league Pacific Coast League.
"One of his problems has always
been throwing stlikes," Ferraro
said. "Hls problem is consistency,
but the raw ~ent is there. If he
doesn't make the starting rotation,
I'll use him in long relief.''
Meanwhile, Ferraro, still weak
from kidney surgery last month,
says he would probably be more
excited ahout his debut today as .
' manager of the Cleveland Indians il
he felt better physjcally.
The Indians were to host the
Chicago Cubs in · their Cactus
League exhibition baseball opener

"If I had my appetite and my
strength, I'd be more excited about
It," Ferraro said. " I wish !felt a little

better."
Ferraro underwent surgery to
remove a cancerous kidney nearly a
month ago. Nonetheless, he has
been superviSing the Indians' camp
since .pitchers and catchers began
workouts Feb. 24.
Ferraro said right-handers Lary
Sorensen, Bert Blyleven and Dan
Spillner would pitch for Cleveland.
The Cubs were to CO\Inter with
left-banders Steve Trout and Craig
Lefferts and Iight-hander Paul
Moskau.
Ferraro, who coached for the
New York Yankees last year, was
hired to replace Dave Garcia as the
Indians' manager thls season.
The Indians' tentative lineup for
the exhlbltion opener had Julio
Franco leading off and playing
shortstop, followed by Alan Bannls·
ter, third base; Mike Hargrove, first
base; Otto Velez, designated hitter;
George Vukovich, right field;
Manny Trillo, second base; Rick
Manning, centerfield; ChrisBancjo,
catcher, and Miguel Dilone, left
fielc).
Right-hander Len Barker will
ml.ss five days of work beCf\use of a
strained muscle near his rib cage.
Manager Mike Ferraro sai~ . .
Barker was examined at a
Tucson hospital Monday, and
X-rays revealed no 'serious damage. The same problem bothered
hinn at tinnes last season.
"This shouldn't set him back too
far," Ferraro said. "I'm glad It
happened now and not later on."
Barker, 27, was 15-11 with a 3.90
earned run average for the American League team last yi!ar.

ROCK SRINGS - Bradbury
proved to be a hotbed for future
cagers as It walked o!f with
championship honors in both the
4th, 5th and 6th grades In the Meigs
Athletic BOosters Elementary Bas·
· ketball Tournament here
Saturday.
Bradbury Baker notched the 6th
grade championship with a 28-ll
win over Harlisonvllle.
Matt Baker paced the winners
with 1B while Luke Burnette rounde
out the scaling for the SaUsbury
township club with 10 . . Kevin

Meigs alumni plan
March 19 contest
The Meigs Athletic Boosters wlll
sponsor an alumni basketball game
on Saturday, March 19.
There will be a game involving
men over ~ years of age and one
with men under 30 years of age.
There will be a girls' game trl there
is an adequate number who wish to
participate.
Former cheerleaders from Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland
Interested In being a cheerleader at
the games are to contact GaU
Hovatter.
Those interested In participating
In the games are to contact Gene
Wise, Middleport. Admission will
be $2 for adults and Sl for students.

Plan tournament
A softball tournament will be
held at Coolville March 26 and 27.
The entry . fee is $00 plus two
softbalLs. Four additional information call667.J350 between 8 a.m. to 5
p.m. or 667.&amp;116 after 5 p.m.

Uded S.~ FooUtall lA'IIC\M'
SUNlay'!i GIUI'MII

Tum~

~ 'llit·H,~:o

Bay 21 Jb;ICII

I?

:tl. Washington '1
Phlladclphla 13. [){lnv£&gt;r T

ill\ An~les 1&gt;. NN

Jerse:v 15

Ollkland :l4. Al'iZOn:l o
Ml:ntay'" Game
Mich~rul 9. Birmingham 7
.
s..turdly, Miaft:h 12
Mictl~an at Tampe Bay
Ollc&lt;~~W

........ ""-e~
E.\ST

P.rmy

-

9t Cent Connectk'ut

OT

F-'RWFBT
WQhlrllfon St. 70, UCLA&amp;!

.,._

Massachuset1i 91. Rhode llland 74

B:lston at Denver

GE'OI'Re Washington 11. Duquesne 70

r....eo.c........

Exhil;lition scores
EdiNUHSeMOII

MM'":-'•0_..

Awnta ~
ChJclfiO 4AL 1 1. Drtrolt 0
Kafllti CUy 16, Ed1Jm JC 0
ieus 12. Nf'w York (ALl 1 ~
MonuoaJ 6, l.ol AftiPiel D
v1 . St. t...fD Coil. ~.• rain
• .....,,...,,, GI'IIIMj Clr\YUI Cdl. 0

Batttmore- 7,

On.&gt;xel

~.

Lettlgtl 62,

Marls!

1'DWIOI1 St. fi1

_

Lablyt"'~

fjJ

ECAC,__.

00. Siena :'i9

....

W-aner tn, Sl. Frandl. N.Y. 65
S.Js a c iii' :aOE

'fl'XU Chriltlan 74; Rkf tt
Southern Metll:ldS&amp;t e. Teua
1Ecu 'l'lrll 57, Bll.ykr ~

iiiW~

OWmWs East tB, Lanca.,.er •Falrfteld

Chicago II PbO!Kk&gt;lptlia
w~hlil.Jtlon al NPw Jen;ey
Bun'alo at Mlnne;ota

&lt;U!S.
AI. c..a.. JI'Wd ....
Newblry 61, Berti:~ Ceruer Wt'Stem He-

l..os AnRe!es
NY RanRf&gt;l"'l at Vancouver

Whl!Phal..l 79, O...bUn !'16

.

Toromo at Montreal

18

Transactions

NBA results
~

•••••• A=eda'hn

......... o....

DlMn 121. Nf!w .Jene:y 114
PhiadeiDNa Ul, Detroit 114

,....,..o.na

SNttlf. II NN' Ycrlr:
Portland at Allrltl

tdafta at DMrolt
f'tOI!n)l; at Dallu
CleYellnd at tt.NilOn
s.n A.ntmD .. Dlnwr
U. AJ1i111!a at GokiM !tate

played Ills ..Sua! good Door gSn.e. Defiance delender
IS Ron Schomaeker. Rio will play Wabjl In the
Dl.strlct 22 llnals Wednesday.
·

WOLFECALU; PLAY -Freshman guard Kent ·
Wolfe (left) calls play during Monday night's District

10 of 16 at the foul line for 62 percen t. The Jackets hli
SIX Ut12 fOF50 percent.
~.- Defiance had 10 turnovers, Rio five .
Tht&gt; Jackets bowed out with a 20-10 season record.
Wednesday's contest a t Canton wlll begin at 7:31 p .'

m.
Box score:
DEFIANCE (60) - Sc homae ker , 448; Frank, J.D-6; io1oyd. 9-4-22;
~~~oeller, ~ 1 - 11 : Renollet , 11 ·3: Wingate, 5-0-10. TOr~

RIO GRANDE (66) -Cuny, 7-0-14: Malsch . 6-3-15: McNichols,
1.()..2: Mowery, 3-1·7; Penrod, 44-12; Shaw, 1..0.2: Fri tz. 1.0.2· Wolfe
TOTAL'l28-IIH6.
. .. '
HalfUme score ·- Rio .'\4. [)(&gt;rJance :J-1

~ 2 · 12 .

.

I

~··8porla~Uo•

.

.........0.

I

Stanley topped the second place
Harlisonvllle team with 10.
In the battle for third place,
Salem Center edged Pomeroy
Barton 32·26 in overtinne. K. Oller
put on a tremendous performance
In netting 24 points for the winners.
Scott Barton paced the losers with
10.
4TII·5TH GRADE
Led by Randy Shafford's 32
points, the Bradbury Meadows five
carried home the first place honors
In defeating Pomeroy Wright 44-~.
Jason Wright led the second place
finishers with 12.
The consola tlonJ game saw a third
Bradbury team, Bradbury Gibbs.
win third place with a 29-18 decision
over Pomeroy Hawley. P . J. Gibbs
led the winners with 12 and S.
Cassell adding 10. R. Hawley paced
the losers with 10.
1'111 GII.U&gt;I': CIIAMPIONSIDP
Bradbury Baker
12 6 4 l:i-28
HaniSOllvllle
7 .3 4 6-l"l
CON80LA110N GAME
Salem Center
4 7 7 8 S-.ll
Pomeroy Barton 10 6 12 8 0-26

1'111·1'111 GRADE CHAMPIONSHIP
to lB 10 ~
Pomeroy Wrtght
4 4 4 1!!-:JJ
Bradbury

CON80LA110N GAME
Bradbury Glbbo
10 9 6 4-29
Pomeroy Hawley
8 I 4 5-18

.

AaM!rtalll ~.e-..
BALTIMORF.
ORIOLES-Signed

(USPSitUII)
A 01.- ol Mulllmoc..., Inc.

Fighting Irish defeat Dayton

Published every a(lt'moon, Monday.
through Frlday. 111 Cow-t Street, by t~
OtUo Valley Pubiishil"€ Company · Multtmedta, Inc .. Pomeroy. Ohio 457m. IJJ'l.
2156. Second class postaR:e paid at
Pornt'roy, Ohlo.
·

By The Associated Press
Notre Dame's game against
Dayton was crucial to both schoolS
independents with identical
records - which were trying to
make · the post · season NCAA
basketball tournament.
Monday night's game had added
$\gnHlcance for Irish senior John
Paxso.t-...
Both hls father, Jim Sr., and his
brother, Jim Jr., a four-year
veteran of the National Basketball
Association with the Portland
Trailblazers, went to Dayton.
Paxson also remembered last
year's 79-72 loss to the Flyers at
Dayton.
" It was a very special game for
me tonight, esJieclally after our poor
showing In Dayton last year," the
6-foot-2 guard said after scoring 20
points and leading the Irish to a 53-4; .
victory. ''We shot poorly in the first
hall, but we knew we'd eventually,
catch them."
Down 27-25 at halltinne, the Irish,

Member: 1lle Associated Press. Inland
DaUy Pres.~t AssociaUoo and the Amen·
can NE-wspaper PubUShers Assorlatlon,
National AdvertLslng R~re-sentatlve .
Branham Newspaper Sales, 1l1 Third
Avent..:-, N(tw York, New York 10017..

P&lt;E'TMASTI':R: Send add«"5S to The
Daily Sentinel. U1 Court St., Pomeroy,

01\10 &lt;5169.

StJIISCRIP'llON RJ\TES
By Cal"''ier or Motor Route

an.. w.,.,k .......... .. ....................... Sl.oo
On£' Month

...... ...... .. ....... $1.40

One Ye-ar .................................. $52Jl)
SINGEL OOPV •
PRIC~ .

Dally .... ...................... ........... 20 C..rits
Subscribers not d~lrlng to pay thPcarrler
may remilln advan("(&gt;direcl to The Dally
Sentinel on J . 6 qr 12 month basis. Credit
will tx&gt; given can1~r each m:&gt;nth.
No subscrlp!lons by mall pCI'T1lifted ln
towns whPA' home carT~ servict' IS

avaiLable.
MAIL SllBSCRII'TIONS
lmldr'Ohlo
13 Weeks ........... , ............. , ........ S14.ot
26 Weeks .......................... .... ... Sl1..ll

52 Week" .................. ................ $51.48

-~

now 18-9, tied the game at 27-27 just!
15 seconds into the second hall on a
basket by freshman Tim Kern pton, ·
who finished with nine points and a
game-hlgh eight rehour\ds. Paxson
then took the ball the iength of the
court and pqt the lrishahead29-27at
19:19. They were caught only once
after that. at 11:47 when Dayton's
Ed Young sank two free throws to
P\tt the Flyers up 31-30.
''I thought we did an excellent job
of running our delay game," said
Iri~h Coach Digger Phelps. "We
knew that Dayton was not that quick
along the front Une, and we
exploited their lack of quickness in
the delay."
Dayton, 17-10, was held to just 14
points in the &amp;ec::and hall - hall the
Irish scoring effort,
Roosevelt Chapman sank all
seven shots from the field and five
free throws to lead the Flyers, 17-10,
with 19 points. He was held to just
four points in the second half,
however.

13 Weeks .... ..... . ........................ $15.21
26 Weeks .. .
.. ...... ....... $29.64
52 Weeks ................... ........ ..... $56.21

'

There are over
100 changes in
this year's tax
laws and forms.

.

_

__

"'""'-· 10.--.. . . .

!II'. LllUIII ~ OoVOI

slowdown contest

throws for a total.of 21 of 29.
In other Ohio ccillege basketball
action, Rio Grande earned 'a berth in
the NAtA District . 22 finals by
defeating Defiance 61Hi0, Mlped by
jun)or guard Rick Penrod's eight·
point blitz in the final two minutes.
John Maisch led the Red men with 15
points, Dan Curry had 14 and
Penrod 12. Rio Grande Is now 26-10&gt;
for the season.
Jerome Floyd of Defiance led all

Panthers top Stallions
iri defensive struggle
Birmingham had 12 tackles and the
Stallions' Mike Raines sacked,
Michigan quarterback Bobby Hebert twice.
,"Any win is a good win," Stanley
said. calling It "a good football game
for both sides."
Coach Roll!e Dotsch of Birmingham, however, said, "The
disappointment Is very severe."
He noied that the Stallions "had
several opportunltes to win but we
failed to take advantage of those
opportunities. We wUI get better. I
arr1 confident of that."
Although Colllerwas the heralded
quarterback, Hebert came out
betler in the air, hitting on 11 of 20
tosses for 131 yards with no
interceptions. Colllerconnected ori6
of 14 . for 49 yards and had three
p!~ked oU. He led Birmingham's
runners with 76 yards on 13 carrtes.
Michigan's Tony ElliS !I'Ot 74
yards on 20 carries.
The .Panthers' No. 1 draft pick,
wide receiver Anthony Carter,
picked up nine yards on an
end-around and returned one punt
for 16 yards. He caught no passes.
In the league's other opening
games, all on Sunday, It was Boston
21, Tampa Bay 17; Chicago 28,
Washington 7; . Philadelphia 13,
Denver 7; Los Angeles 20, New
Jersey 15, and Oaktand 24, Arizona

scorers with 22 points. noug
Schimmaeller had 11 points and
Brett Wingate 10 points for the
Yellowjackets, now 20-10 for the
season.
Rio Grande's opponent In the
' District 22 finale Wednesday will be
Walsh. who pushed Its winning
streak to 33 with a 94-75 drubbing of
Tiffin.
Walsh's 6-5 senior Ricky Williams. scored all of hls game high 30
points in the first 25 minutes to lead
the Cavaliers. Eleven of their 13
players scored. Jeff Szczepanski,
Walsh's 6-7 center who sat out
nearly 20 minutes of the game ,
scored 21 and Billy Jo Wllllams, had,
14.
Tiffin closed ltsseasonwitha 17-11
mark. John Clapper led the
Dragons with ~4. Frank Carda had
20 and Elmer Jackson, 15.

.

.APPOINTMENTS AVAilABLE
618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY. 01-'.

~

•;
DAYTON BA8KE'I'IW!.L- UalvertJly of Dayton'• Kevin Conrad
. *Iva around NoVe Dame's Jaaep1t Price ( 40) during .wtlon at Notre
. ' ·' , Dame MCIIlday. (AP Lllllerpboto)
I I

I

TOLEDO, Ohlo (AP) - Tom
Baker lead 'the pack today in the
second round of the $:nl,OOlToledo
T r u s t · P B A Na i 1o n a I
Championship.
,
Baker, a 28-Yl!ar-old righthander
from Buffalo, N.Y., totaled 1,876. He •
openedwltha247,fora3j&gt;-pointlead.
TraUing Baker 'In second place
was non-champion GU Sliker, a .
12-year veteran froin Washington,
N.J. with 1,840.
Completing the top five were .

The Public Utililies Commission ol Ohio has sot
tor public hearing Case
No . 82-161-EL·EFC (Sub·
·tile A) to review the fuel
procureme~l practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company, the opera lion
ol its Eleclric Fuel Com·
ponent and re~loo matters.
This hearing is scheduled
to begin at 12:00 p.m.
on March 1t , 1983 at City
. Council Office, 216 Cleve-

land Avenue, S.W., Cantoo,
Ohio 44702.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
lobe heard . Further information may be obtained
by contacting the Commission .
THE PUBLIC UTiliTIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By : David M. Polk,
Secrelary

We'll set all adjustable angles to manu facturer 's original specifications. No
extra charge lor cors with factory air
or torsion bars . Please call lor an
appointment.

MOST
CARS

FRONT D.ISC BRAKE SPECIAL
SAVE .$20!
We do all this:
•Install new front
disc pads ,
•Resurface rotors
•Repack front wheel
bearings

0.

Ke.1n Gillette, Florence, Ky., with
1,834; defending champion Earl
Anthony, Dublin, Calif., with 1,82'7, .
and Kent Wagner, Allentown, Pa.,
1,797.
Two more rounds of qualifying
wUI follow today and Wednesday to
trtm thefleldof360bowlers. The top
90 ·'bowlers wlll roll eight more
games ThUn&gt;day morning-and the
top 24 will move jnto match play
Thursday night.

LEGAL NOTICE

EXPERT CAR SERVICE
Front End Alignment

Baker leads pack in $200,000 event

-'-

,._, _..

"When Notre Dame went to a
match-up zone after they got the
lead, we wanted to go to a motion
offense,'' said Flyers Coach Don
Donoher, "and that wasn't well
suited for Chapman to get the ball
inside."
·
The Flyers, who shot a perfect
nine for nine from the foul line, got
into foul trouble themselves In the
second period and saw the IIishgo to
the line 20 tlmes and sink 16 free

Bentley was a main reason It was
a good ' defensive game. He had
another interception and led hiS
.team In tackles with 10.
Linebacker Larry McPherson of

tllortltop. Mid Leo llernlndec.
' third bller'nlll, 10 anttyear' COIW!'ICtJ.

CHICAGO CUBS-Named Llw'Ue FOK
tp1C.'1a1 a:..d~Mt to 1M G1CU1tW
., vta1

•
In

BIRMINGHAM; Ala. (AP) Coach Jim Stanley had no trouble
describing the United States Foot·
ball League debut of his Michigan
Panthers and the Birmingham
Srollions, and neither did the 38,352
fans.
·
"It was a good defensive game
first and foremost," Stanley said
after the Panthers defeated Birmingham 9-7 on three field goals by
Novo Bojovic, two for 49 yards ·a nd
onefor48.
The hometown fans had only one
chance to cheer, when Birmingham
quarterback Reggie Collier skirted
right end on a bootleg keeper for the
game's only touchdown.
Other than that, the most cheering occurretl before the kickoff
when a parachutist delivered the
game ball at midfield.
All the scoring occurred in the
first · l!alf althOugh Birmingham
threatened twice after the intermis·
slon. Scott Norwood missed a
27-yard field goal attempt on the
first play or the fourth period and
Ia ter Blrnningham drove from Its 39
· to the Michigan 32 . but linebacker
Ray Bentley Intercepted at the 19.

c.i

~~ .

22 NAIA COl)test at Rio Grande. Wolfe taiUed 12 points
as the Redmen won, 66--60. - Keith Wilson pbotos.

The Doily Sentinel

OPEN WEEKDAYS
9:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
PHONE 992-3795

NY blandfors' at St. Lwls
Cal~ary at

AI 81t ..utt. . "'-a
lJriclsepG I 8J, ZanesvtlJe Roeemu\s ~
Freepa1 l-akeland M. Gn~ysvUJe SJI;y.

......

MOWERY HEW TO SEVEN POINTS Dellance h~ld Rio Grande's high-scoringguaniJerry
Mowery to seven poinls Monday, but the Rio IW!

' '

Mopklrr ftl. East Cantm ~

N""" JetSPV at Ptllladtlph.la

at Qakland
MnrdaJ. MArdi ...
Washington at La! An~leN

~MG».meK ,

Boston at Quebrc
Edmontoo at Hartford

""""

..._,.
.,._

'I'OlJRNAMENTS

BlrmiJl~arn

AtC)

UNon 63

N. lOYr'a 66. SW Misulrt Q}
NOIIl' Dan"\fo ~. Dayton U

a1 Artzona

su...,., Mardi 13

R),

Qoor,(lelown M. SyraCUM&gt; 'i!i

NQ RameR SCheduled

CJASBM

MIIN"f'5~

little over a ·minute left in the contest following four
-stralghtfree-throws-by Rick" PPnrod .~Maish paced the Redmen with 15 points. Curry
added 14 and Penrod and Kent Wolle 12 each.
Jerome Floyd captured game-scoring honors with
22 points. Doug Schlmmoeller added 11 Brett Wingate
had 10.
Shaw led Rio on the boards with eight rebounds.
Rio outrebounded the Jackets, 30-27. Wingate had
eight for the losers.
.
Rlo shot 28 of 59 from the floor for 46 percent .
Defiance hlt 27 ot 61 for 43 percent. The Red men were

prep.,.,•

N•lorud Het.il.cy IA!~f'
Monday'11 Glllllflrl

OND IUih &amp;.._. llllillllethll
llo)'111M1ntct 'J"ou..-nent
Mualky'll . . . .

Monday night, Rio Grande came out smoking,
buUding up a 30-20-advantage on seven unaRswered , points with just under 10 minutes left In the first half.
The"Yellow Jackets Scrapped back to cut the ·
margin (o 34-28 at the halftlme lntennlssiOn.
The score was tied five times during the early
minutes of the second hall before the Redmen took
the lead for good 5048 on a tip by Bob Shaw with 6: 31
left in the contest.
John Maish connected on an eight footer anp Dan
Curry on a turnaround jumper for a slx·polnt Rio
advantage. Rio led by as much, as 12 points with a

H&amp;R Block
have received special training to
halp you this year. Did you know there are two different
short fotms, lncreaiefl deductions for an IRA. and in·
creased child care credits ... and manv more changes?
We've done our homework on the new tax laws. so you
don't have to.

NHL results

~scores

College scores

• Rio Grande College's Redmen adv~nced a step
closer to a berth In the national tournament Monday
night with a ~ victory over visiting Defiance
College In t)le NAJA District 22 playoffs at Lyne
Center.
The Redmen will face undefeated Walsh College
Wednesday night in Canton for the Disttict 22 title and
a berth In the NAJA national tournament in Kansas
City, Mo.. next week.
J'l.lo Grande wm enter Wednesday's r-ontest with a
26-10 season record. The Cavaliers are 33-0, and
ranked second In the nation.

S&amp;anley, Tommy KJn&amp;, Andy White; hack, J.r, eo.cb
Greg McCan, Jared Sheet&amp;, Weii!J Howard, J811011
~. Bryan Branham, Jeff King, Coacb Jim
Sheet$. A~t were team member, Usa Butcher.

this afternoon .

High school
tJSFL results ·

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

CHAMPS - Qradbury Bakel: waa tbe lllxth Kauff, Md Baker, Scott Melton, Carla Kautl; lid, I
p-ade championship team In the Melp IAieal School : tor, Coach LarTy Baller, JoeH.U, BretLIUle, Robin
Dlatiict elementary tournament Saturday at tbe high Qu.US, Scott Nelgler, Luke BQI'dette, Coach Bob
IIChQol. Team members were
I to Tamrn.v Melton.

Long hall, control, problems·
Bradbury
captures
for Indians' Eichelberger
championship 'h onors

TIJCSON, Ariz. !API- In trying
to conquer his toughest opponent a lack of control - Cleveland
Indians' pitcher Juan Eichelberger
says he may have unlocked a n
equally distressing problem.
"Last year, I had my best walk
' ratio," he says, "but I gave up the
most home runs I ever had. I threw
the ·way they wanted me to. I cut
down on my aggressiveness and
became more of a passive pltchero
"I would let the guy hit it and try to
make hlm hit it on the ground. But
when I'm pitching aggressively, I'll
throw it in on hlm and make him hit
it on the ground."
The 29-year·old Eichelberger
came to the Indians from the Saf!
Diego Padres in an off-season deal
along with Broderick Perkins in
exchange for pitcher Ed Whitson .
In 2Y2 seasons with the Padres,
Eichelberger was 20-25 with a 3 .~
earned run average. He was used as
both a starter and a reliever last
season, when he finished a disappointing 7-14 with a 4.20 earned run
average.
The trade to the Indians, he said,
represented "a new beginning and a
different situation."
"I asked (pitching Coach Don )
McMahon iltheywerelookingatme
as a starter or as a reliever,'·
Eichelberger said. "He said as a
starter, although (Manager! Mike .
· Ferraro didn't know for sure."
. According to Ferraro, Eichelberger must beat out veteran
left-hander Rick Waits and youngsters Neal Heaton and Jay Baller for
the fifth spot in Cleveland's rotation.
Bert Blyleven,llhisam1hasbeen
p[Operly repaired, _is the leader
ofthe staff, and others virtually
certain · to start are Len Barker,
Rick Sutcliffe and Lary Sorensen.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohia

Redmen top Jackets, ·face Walsh Wednesday

Reds' top relief ace remains
low-key,_ easY-. going pla_xer .
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
TAMPA, Fla . lAP)- Cincinnati
Reds' relief ace Tom Hume 'was
asked how he kept his s pirits up
during rehabilitation from knee
surgery last year.
Another player might have
shrugged off the question"wlth a pat
a nswer; instead, Hume silently
pondered the question for a few
seconds with the same calm
seriousnPSs he takes to the mound in
the ninth inning.
Finally, he just shrugged.
"I don't know, " the bespec~cled
pitcher said. " I had my family
there; that helped, although I'm
s ure my wife got sick of me hobbling
around . I tried to move around. I
had to do something."
· That'sThomasHubertHumeJr.
Althoug h he's made a name for
hlmsell as one of the game's best
reliever s. the 29:year-old righthander remains low-key, approachable and generally easy-going.
Hume, who's recovered from
mid-season surgPry of 1982, admits
the calm manner was somet hlng he
lacked when fir st promoted to the
big leagues in 1917.
Hume struggled to a 3-3 mark
with a 7.12 earned run average In 14
appearances that year, then fol lowed with an 8-11 record and 4.14
ERA in 1978 while dividing hls Iinne
between the starting rotation and
the bullpen. ·
His breakthl"ough came in 1979,
when he chalked up 17 saves, a 10-9
record and 2.76 ERA. That was the
same time Hume was learning an
imPortant principle for succeeding
as ·a big-league reliever: don't
worry.
" It took me a while to quit
worrying about situations, about
thlngs I couldn 't control. It doesn't
make any dilference if you worry;
things are going to happen ·anyway," Hume said. "The hardest

March 8, 1983

Most
US . cars

•In stall new Iron!
grease seals
•In spect master cylind er
•Inspect brake hoses
•Add flu id, as needed ·
•Road lest the car

$69

Single piston system. Add $15 when semi-metallic
·disc pad s needed . Deduct $6 for cars with GM lile·

time sealed bearings.

POMEROY HOME &amp;-·AUTO
600

East Main Street
Phone (614) 992·2094
~omeroy, Oh. 457611!

�I

Tueulaiy; Man:h

The ;Daily Sen,tinel

By The Bend .

Tuesday,
.

8·· 1983

"

The . Daily Sentinel

Business services

March
8, 1983
,
I

-·

New Officers were elected when
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta '
Sigma Phi Sorority met Tuesday
night at the Middleport F ir!'
Station.
Elected were Charlotte flann!itg,
president; Linda Rlffie. vice pres!·

•
Metgs

~rea

qent; Ruth Riffle, recording secre- . Meigs County Fair.
tary; Ubby Sayre, corresponding
Carol McCullough •. social chair·
secretary; Carol Adams. treas·
man, announced . that- the next
urer; and C11rolyn Grueser, city
meeting ~ be A dinner partY at
council.
Sebastian s · In Parkersburg. The
Debble.Flnlaw, ways and means . . cultura l ;eport was given by Kay
chairman. paSsed out ln!orrnatlon
Atkins who. talked on govemment,
local, state. national and lntel'lla·
for the sorority members to solicit
premium book advertising for the
tiona!. She also conducted a quiz. A
recipe auction was held following
the meeting.

happ.entngs
•·

·
Parents' information

Parents' Informatlon Night will
be observed at Meigs High School
Thursday night.
All parents are Invited to attend
but parilcularly e ncouraged to be
there are the j UJ!lor high school parent. Guidance counselors and other
personnel wUI be there to discuss
scheduling and activities and to
take parents on a tour of the
building.
The meeting will be he ld in the ·
cafeteria beginning at 7: 30 p.ll).

Poppy Princess ·
Kim Haggy has been named
Poppy Princess by the Americ Legion Auxiliary junior unit. Drew
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy. Shew111
serve wit)!. Laney Hankla, the Jun·
lor Miss Poppy, through Memorial

u ay when Awdllary ~embers w1ll
be on the streets of the vUiage sei·
ling memorial poppies.

Grange banquet
Plans for the annual banquet of
Meigs County Pomona &lt;;;range
were made when the group met
recently ~t the Rock Springs hall.
The banquet will be held on Aprll15
at the . Salisbury Elementary
School. A . steak dinner will be
served by the Sailsbury PTO.
Tickets for the banquet may be
purchased from any Meigs County
Grange master until April10.
Plans · for the May meeting
include annual Inspection and the
Nattonal Grange sewing and needlework contests.
Columbia Grange members
were hosts for the 43 attending.

Calendar
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Work wlll
· be in the fe llowcraft ·degree
when Middleport Lodge 363.
Free and Accepted Masons,
meets a t 7 p.m. Tuesday a t the
temple. Refreshments will be
served following the m eeting.

LETART FALLS - Letart
Falls Trustees wUI meet Tues·
day at 7 p.m . in Letart Falls.
SYRACUSE -Syracuse PTO
will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at
the school. The students w1ll
present a variety show.
~·

MIDDLEPORT Middleport Lodge 363. F. and A.M. wm
meet Tuesday , 7 p.m. with work
in the . fellow c raft degree. All
members are asked to attend.
Refreshments will be served
following m eeting.

RACINE - Reglilar meeting,
Racine Masonic LOdge 461,
F&amp;AM, wUl be held Tuesday; all
members asked to attend.
. POMEROY - Otito Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sor. ority w111 meet Tuesday at7: :.!
p.m. at Meigs Inn . ~ Spen~er
will have the cultural repori and
Linda Faulk and Sharon Ste·
wart w1ll handle refreshments.
EAST MEIGS Eastern
band boosters will meet at 7::.!
p.m . Tuesday in band room of
Eastern High School.
CHESTER - Chester Town·
ship Trustees regular meeUng
will be at 7: 30 p.m. Tuesday at
Chester Town Hall.
POMEROY - Meigs High
School band concert will be at 7
p.m. Tuesday at high school
gymnasium with music by both
the symphonic and jazz bands;
admission Is free. -

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter 8l R.A.M. and Bos·
worth Council 46, R. and S.M.,
7:30 p.m . will meet Wednesday
at the Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Amateur Gardeners wUI
m eet Wedhe5!1ay at 8 p.m. at the
horne of Mrs. Edward Burkett
188 North Third Ave., Middle:
port. Mrs. Harry Davis wm be
co-hostess and Mrs. Margaret
Ella Lewis will present the
· program.
POMEROY - Past Councl. lors Club of Chester Councll323.
Daughters of America, will
m eet Wednesday night at the
home of Mrs. Erma Cleland.
Mrs. Dorothy Myers wUl be the
·
co-hostess:

THORSDAY
POMEROY Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F. and A. M., wUI hold
a special meeting Thursday at 7
p.m at Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Work iii the master mason
degree will be exemplified. AU
master masons are Invited to
attend.

Astrograph
March 9, 1983
You could be rather fortunate this coming year In picking up
projects or ventures which others have abandoned and bringing them
to fruition. You'll know how to add the touches to spell su~ess.
PISCES (Feb. 00-March 20) Try not to let associates put you in a
position today where you may be partially blamed for their errors, or
requested to help pay for their mistakes.
ARIES (March 21-Aprlll9) Do not enter into agreements today
haUheartedly. It's besttosay "No" upfrontratherihan to.leaveanother
hanging with a "Maybe.''
·
· · TAURUS (Aprll 00-May ~)Little of value w1ll be achieved today if
you and your coworkers can't get toge ther on the way things should be
done. Syiveforharmony.
·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your prudent judgment may find itself
In conflict with your extravagant urges today. Unhappily, the more
wasteful side of your nature may prevail.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You could miss some warm human
experlenees today if you let your practical' nature prevail over your
~haritable instincts. Let your heart rule your head.
·
- · LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your good Intentions and your Industrious
drive .might not be up to what" neects going today. You could seek
reasons to put aside your duties:
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your ability to assess the value of mer·
ch.andlse .will be on·track today. However, you may disregard your.
pru!lent judgment in order to. achieve temporary gratification.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) H you are too demanding of others today
chances are they'll comply with your wishes; but will do as llttleforyou
as possible instead ofreally helping.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) When seeking favortoday, .b edlrect
and sincere. H you beat about the bush or embellish your stqry, you
might l)e rejected.
SAGI'ITARRJS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Don't be stingy with friends
today. By the same to~n. don't be the only one who grabs the tab. Be
fair to them as well as to yourself.
.
. CAPRICORN (Dec. :n.Jan• .19) Study lrilportant matters thoroughly today to avoid miscalculations. There's a chanee you'll comprehend the bold·face type but misread \he fine print.
·
. '
AQUARR!S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Beware-of tendencies today io mag·
nlfy that which yo)l do for another. If your contribution Isn't what it
should be, It wUl cause you embarrassment
·
.

a

I

G
1 · 1 Soc·
enea ogiCa . Iety

Meigs County Genealogical Soclety met ·at Meigs Museum on
Feb. 20. ·
1
President June Ashley presided.
Marga~t Parker, liaison between
the genealogical society and the
Meigs County Pioneer and Hlstori·
cal Society reported that 217 CQples
of the 250 copies of the Larkin's his·
· tory of Meigs CQunty are now sold,
It Is anild pated that all o! these
books will be gone by summer.
Also, 279 copies of Hardesty's his·
tory of MeigS County have been
sold. Copies 0f this .are stlll
available.
.• . It was announCed there w111 be an
· Ohio Genealogical Society miniconvention at Marietta In July and
anothe r conference In Athens,
Ohio, on Oct. 22 featuring research
in western Pennsylvania and southeastern Ohio. It was also announced that the Ohio Genealogical
Society's annual convention will be
held at ihe.Quality Inn In Columbus
on Aprll 29 and :.! .. Non'members
may also attend this convention. H
a nyone wishes· Information on this
convention, contact June Ashley
for Information.
Several members gave reports
on thE' progress made In copying all
the Meigs County cemeteries. It
. was noted that many of tl)e local
cemeteries have been llleg!lilY
abandoned by the townships and
munlclpall ties . In dlvld ual
members announced that they w1ll
be making Inquiries into the prob.!em of cleaning these abandoned
cemeteries.
L,oulse Eden announced that her
cousin, who Is the past president of
the National Genealogical Society,
will be visiting Meigs County. Plans
are being . made for tl)is society's
president to meet the past national
president. The National GeneaJogi.
cal Society Is an Independent organ·
~atlon and has no afflllation with
the Ohio or Meigs County Genea·
logical Societies though CQOpera·
tion between . the groups Is
emphasized. ·
The speaker for the meeting was
Mrs. Beverly Schumacher, vice
president of District 6 East of the
Ohio Geriealogieal Society, of
which Meigs County Chapter Is a
part. Mrs. Schumacher presented
the society with the locatons of varlous genealogical materials avallable in Athens County. The Ohio
University houses an archives sec·
lions which contains many Meigs
County court records .. Also housed
· there are the Draper Collection, the
Peter Papers of Athens County.
and the federal records collection,
MlcrofUm and some genealoglcill
books can be borrowed through
Inter-library loan to be used at the
library. This library also houses
collections of historical records of
each state of the continental states.
Mrs. Schumacher gave a tip on
copying gravestones . She suggested using a dilstlng powder mit
on a stonelnordertomakethedete-

'

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Public Notice

'

Energy REigulatory Co mm1sand is avai lable for p~blic;::
tnspectton:
a. Type of Application: Preli-

minary Permit
b. Projeci No. ~90QoiJOO
c. Date Filed: December 1.

1982
d, ·Applicant: City of New
Mar11nsv1lle;. West V1rginia
.
e. Name of Pqoect: Bellev1 lle
Locks and Dam
f. Localion: on the Ohio R1ver
in Wood County. West Virginia
and Me,gs County: Oh•o
·
g. F1led Pursuant to: Federal
~~~5~~t. 16 usc ss791 ial
h. Contact Person: Mr. M1chael Francis. City ol New
Maninsville. Brenner &amp; Francis.
P.O. Drawer 98, New Maninsv1lle. West Virginia 26155
1 9e~omment Date: April 20.
J. Description oi Project: The
propose.d project would utilize
theex•s1ingCorpso1Engmeers·
Bellev•ile Locks &amp; Dam and
would consist of: I I I a pro..
po •ed
, powerh ouse conta1nmg
fiNO or more generating units
having a tmal rated capacity of
53.000 kW: 12) exiSting public
utility transmiSSIOn lines: and
131 appurtenant facolit•es. The
Applicant •St•ma~es that the
average annual energy output
would be 325.000.000 kWh.
k. Purpose of Project- The
energy derived at the proposed
project would be ut•lized by the
~plicant.
,
I. Th1s notoce also cons•sls ol
the follow•n~ Standard paragra phs Ma. Md. 8 . c and 02
m. Purpose oi Pro ect: A
prelim•nary perm1t. 1f 1issued.
does not authoriZe construet1on. The term ol the pro posed
prel •m• na ry . perm11 is 12
months. The "&lt;&gt;rk pro posed
nder the prel1m1'naru. perm11
U
ld .
·•
wou me 1ude economoc analySIS·. preparatiOn of prelimmary
englneenng plans. and a. study
of env1fonmental 1mpacts .
Based on results of t.hese
stud•es Applocant would d~ide
dwhether
1 to proceed with more
eta1ed srud•es. and the prepa·rauon of an , applicauon lor
l1cense lo construct. and oper-

Happy Harvesters

Meigs County and area residents record birthdays
•

Guess

made of white chocolate.
Games were played with prizes
· going to Jodi Caldwell, Anita
Calaway, David Koelng, Scottaand
Randy Burke.J)thersattendlngwereAmy; Ann
and Jeremy Carr, Melissa Harris,
Sonia and Bradley Keirns, Melissa,
Mlkle and Mendy Guess; Terrt
Curtis, Jamie Chapman, Teresa
Courtney, Red and Rose Carr,
grandparen~. and Sally Caldwell.
Sending gifts were Helen and nm
Dorst and Nora Eastman.

Jeremy, Jerry and Barb 'eotmer ~
and sons, Bill and nm, Mamie
Stephenson. Jim and Randy
Snider.
. Out-of·IOWJI guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Farley and .sons, Davy,
Jamie and Rick!. Marietta; Mrs.
Peggy Duckett of Clendenin. w.
Va. J. R. alsO received a call from
his grandmot!Jer ln.Charleston, w.
VII., Ruth Blac)&lt;well. Mamie s~e- ·
plienson was atso honored on her
. birthday at the same party with a
Ms. Mac Man cake. She Is J.R.'s •

Gardner

'

Amber Marte Gardner cele,brated her first birthday recently
with a party at the home of her
parents, David and · Wanda
Gafdner In Rulland.
·
Ice cream and · cake was served
to her brother, &amp;:ott David, her
grandparents', Helen .Riggs ll!ld
Alva and Adra SwiCk. Also attend,
lng were Uilda Smith, Stephel),
:arent and Rebekah, ShaWn Car·

Guess
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Guess of
TuiJpers Plains entertained recently with a party In observance of

their daugllter, Mlcbelle Lynn
Guess, on her seventh birthday. .
A wiener roast was beld toUowed
by cake; decorated .by her aunt,
Sonia ~. and Kooi·AI!i. The
cake decoratlonll featuted
. lambs

dlllo, Robert and Randy Lambert,
Crlssy and Angel, Jessie Might and

A party '\'ali held recenUy In .
observance of the fourth birthday
·of J. R. Blackwell at the home of
Mr. and . Mrs. Jerry Colmer,
Pomeroy. The party was halted by
his fat)ler and stepmother, Steve
·a nd Shari Blackwell.
Games were played with prl22ll
going to Shawn Whltteklnd, Amber
Blackwell, Rick! Farley and Joshua Duckett. Daniel Whltteklncl
won the door prize.
.
Gifts wen: opened and refresh·
ments of a Pac Man cake tnacie by
Mrs. BlackweU was served aJqna
with sundaes, chip&amp; and Kooi·Aid to .
J .R. 'a lllatera, Amber and Arlca,
Tammy Johlllon ll!ld 1101111, Jeremy

and Scott, Nancy Whltteklnd and
80111, ShaWII and Daniel, GaU
Di1ckett .and 80111, J«lMua and

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POMEROY
LANDMARK

_.

61 ...992·2J8f

0

I

SERVICE

U.S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE . OHIO
Athld
u or ze . John Deer.

New Holland, Bush ."
•rua

Farm Equ ipment
.
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1·3·«&lt;

&lt;

We Do Booldleepl" For
Small, Latp ~
Pull~ f. Partnenhips

•

•

MARY C. KEBlER-CIWNER

j.m mo.

SERVICE
11
• .•

3-7-UC

Gold_- ollvor. st•lng. ~- ·

will romomber tho nome of
lho Lord o.. God .
20
=7
,Poalm

INSULATION
VINYL &amp; .
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnaulatton
50
• torm &lt;&gt;oro
•Storm Windows
•Replaacement Windows
•New Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEES.EE

3 Announcements
. SWI;EPER end oewlilg ml·
chine repair, pens, end
aupPUas.
Pick up •nd
dollvory. Davia Vacuum
Clooner. ono holt mil.. up
Georges Crook Rd . Coli
448-0294 ..

·

·

ROOM ADDITIONS
REMODELING
ROOFING &amp; SIDING
"FREE ESTIMATES"
REFEREN"ES
v
PH . 935.4141
.~. • ., . od.

3-2-1mo

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

BISSELL
Sl 01 N
' G co..
"Beauti'Iul, Cust.om
Built Garages"
Call for free siding es-

949-2801
949-2860.
N0

2 1
LO

•

3f(!

ANNUAL
SPAGHml
DINNER
Sponsored by Meip
Vocal Music lloo$tirs
SAT MARCH 5
At ihe Rutland
Gil~ School Gym
5:00 P M to 8:00 p M
'l.OO. Adult.:_,2·.oo Ch.1·ldren
· .
Dinner includes: s.tietli,
Salad. Roll, DrinhndOiaert
En!ertainmtllt by
n.. Cholll'-s
"'"
-

THE
KOUNTRY KLUB
· •
•New Grips ·
•Refinishing
oRe-weighting
•Balancing
oGolf Trips
For Younc People _ I

oPre-Sea~on Sale. •

20 % &amp;lO% OFF
· JOHN TEAFORD
Chester. OH.·

2-9--1 mo.

59

P6-ll'tl().

or

sund ay Call1

P~intlng
Sandblastinq
Mortarblasting
p k'
L S . .
ar mg ot tr~ppmg
Spray Paintir)g
Textu~ Coat(ngs
. Folly lnsuod-F118 fstiimotes
CALL 614-949-2686
2-3-2 r~~o.

1-----------f----------f-----.:...-----1

NEW LISTING- BRADBURY- Nice home sfte. AoPrQKiniately
4.6 acres, wfth walef and electricitY available. $6,000:
·
NEW LISTING- MIDOLEPORT- Commm:iallol on Hartinger
Pkwy. 100 xIOO' Iotwrthsewer, water and electricity on site. Small
building wrth 'h balll $21.000.

NEW LISTING- HARRISONVILLE- Most unusual older home.
Has 7 rOOITfi.Lof wlichonly one.~ limr!;,Jlar.Nicelevellotnextto ·
the schod :,rorage building and garage: $25,500.

RUTlAND .,. 6 room home wfth 2·3 bedrooms, garage,
woodlumer set up, alum. &amp; vinyl sklin&amp; nice kitchen. Reduced to

·

PH. 992-6851
349 N . 2 nd St.
. Middleport, OH. ·
Mon Th
ll 30
.•. urs. 4:00 • : ·
Fri .·Sat. 4:(HH2:00
CLOSED SUNDAY

Pizzas-Pizza Bread

· Italian Bread-Subs ·
1
"' ·' ..

·
·
TUPPERS PlAINS~ Log ll!me with 4 rooms, bat~ fiJI basement
and apprOKmaiely .12 acres. Home has a rustic flavor.
Wooc1bu
d ba $3J500
. r~ an a rn.
, .
.

'

J&amp; F

PIZZA

·

K't h C b'
R f
1 c en a Inets - oo •
in&amp;- Siding- Concrete
· Patios
- Sidewalks N·
ew onstruction - Re·
modelin&amp; -Custom Pole
Barns·.
.C HARLES SAYRE

c· ·

REALTORS
Henty L Cleland, Jr.. GRI ................................. 992-6191
=·T'fsell ............. :..... : .............................. 949929·=
.. UIT'itr . ............ .......... .-~: .... .......... ...., •. .;.
•
.
Offi!» ..................... :..................................... 992·2259

m·.

Court

11•

Pomeroy, OH.
Open 9;00 to 6:00
Mon. •Sat.
Closed
. thura.
2·11Hroo.

CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LIMESTONE
.
• ·
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS. RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAN!) CLEARING.
CONCRETE WORK
~DED &amp;WORK GUARANTEED
PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992 2
·7 01
J.l-tk

ROUSH
.

C. ONSJRUCTION
New Homes - Extensive
Remo4eling.
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole BldKs.
&amp; Garages
•Roofin&amp; Work
oAluminum &amp; Vinyl Sldines
15 Yean Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·7.583
or 992-2282

CEM E NT
1

•p

WANTED to IIOite. Toblcco
quota, wll give .115 lb.
Morgana Woodlawn Farm~ ·
Pliny 304·676-2275. 304-.
623•5143.
·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:.

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

leero 't o teve money ex ·
c hange re fu nd form• end

•'

R•· l-:-::-c-:-:-:--:-;.,.:--..,-~

coupons.
~u~7 .Ciub,JOin
call Fr•n's
61.4· 448· 11 · Help Wanted

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

I

au.

3·11 -tlt

GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.
Industrial. Commercial.
Residential, Interior and
Exterior .

AN GIE'S

Trophyo. good u•d old . WMI
pay t2 .60 a up. Any kind .
. Coll614·742· 3008 or814·
992-8138. .

. or .Trade: will t•de
For S•le
ACCOUNTANT l\llultl ·
lot
In Northup
for bpet
of location Southern Ohio ·
eque!
vel-.a. e4800
. · Cell
ven(llng cor'npany' It sieking
26 4
dlndiYidualto
_44_6_.8_
~~·- - - - •baltlf-niovatio
reapponeible for all aicRoclnoGunCiubhOidlocon ·
tinued gun llmota until covnti"lg end gMiet-•1 office ,
functions. ReaponalbtiltiOI
Sept.
include preparation of jour·
n111, finan~l•l statements. ·
Alcoholics Anonymous . Coli •n d au pe rvllio" · of llaff.
446-0276. 304· &amp;76· 3647. College edu~»lion o piua.
McDenielt Cult om Butcher· _Salary comro8n1Lnata with
ing will cloie Merch 31 til experience . Send resume
Sept. 111. 304-812·3224. end aolo.rv hillary to P:O.
So•
McArthur. Oh
46661 .

SIDING - .

timates,

CUrl8ncy.. Ed Burkett Iorber
Shop, Middlopoit . 11923478. .
.

'

PH. 992-2772

r----~~---+---------+..:..--~~--~-~--~---~-----'14

NEW LISTING MIDDLn.nRT I
..-v - n tcrwn and convenient, a
nice 3 bediOOm lllmewith many kwely features- Nice let Garage.
See this one. Only $21,500.

$21,000.

Long Bottom, OH.
HOME BULDING

Residential
8&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3196

. S·E. MA. IN·.
60
992 22

J·Esco·.
·BUILDERS

or a your wtr.ng
needs; furnaces repair servloe and In•• stallation. ·

1

Giveaway ·

Regio"'red Phormltt tor 111 ·
bed hoopitll. Located in Oak
Arot( . PERSON who hot Hill. Ohio. Full tme , 40 hra .
,. .
par week. day ahlft. Wlleanythttig to give away end kendaofi.Eacottentaalarylo
doBI not offlor or attempt to fringe benefill. con ....l Adoffer ony o1her thltig foraale min i*lrotor 614-682· nn
moy place on ed In · this
·
column .. There ·will be no or· eend re~ume to Oak Hill ,
charge to tho odvertloer.
Commun~y Medical C.nt.or.
360 Charlotte Ave.. Oak
66
3 bo• apringa full tile, 2 fuii _H1_11_,
·0
..,_..h_4_6_6 _
_·-~-­
alze mattrelan, good -co_n d. 1 You .cen mokomoneyaallin~ ·
Call 446· 7884.
AVON
. Call 448~~368.
.
'
.
Fomolemb&lt;od b""'dpuppies E•peritlncod tonnia lnrtrucabout 3 inontho old. 876· ·
6702.
tor for Saturday m«nlngo. ·
Spring
OuM'ter.
Pleoao Porkl
oppty
immediately
Golipolla
12 YEAR old Border Collie
61
to good home in the country . and Recr•tion Dept
441 ..17 8
Good companion for older Second.
· 88.
24 Ave.
people. C•ll 304-676· ext.
·
6788.
IN. R.ATION GOT YOU IN A .
TO give owoy to good home PtNCH? Euo tho aquoozo- :
in country. male Cocklr soli
614 Coli
2982Avon.
88 814·843- ·
Spaniol. good wit~ ki~·· 814 992
•
·3 · 9046. or
3690
mull bo allowed to run free.
'
'
·
304-882-26'73.
TRUCKING:No e•""rianca ·
P
304 676 3964 8 tt
noceioary . For Information
uppy.
i
.
or
cell:227
-81
I
6
or
2276
0494, · 9 :a.m.·9 p,m. MonTwo mole mi•ed brood pup · dayothru Friday. Adami En·
pies. 3 montha-old. 304· torprlaea. Inc. .
.
676-6702.
Sales Management Tralnae .
11
Two malo pook·o·poo pup·
you ore •g-livo,
goal1
pin. ano apricoi · a. 11r1e oriented. hove ;
poaltlva
white After 7 304 882 mental attitude- need firll·
· ·
·
·
• year eornlnge of up to
2382 or n3·9166 o
$20,000 and wont unllm·
lted lncolt)e lncre11111 e.::h ·
Brown male puppy to good succeeding Y81 r, you m•v be ~
home only. 304·676 -9782. the p•aon for whom I'm _
Puppies. 304-182·3264.

looking . Duo
to oxpanaion. ·
1
wo
have
oatea
open thot aflora poaition
llfotmo
financial sectiritv. protoi:ted
1
1
8 ~

fiNISHER

~ichard Garfield ·

6

k' L
ar llig ots

Lost .a nd found

:~~~i~ .:'o o~yha~Mi':ci~DJ'~

t ,block and ton mole coon · opouae. Wetureacompony
oorivewa·ys
hound in Ewington -area. contributed ' ltOCk bonue
AND SON
'Basements
Reward offered. Can 614· pion . Career poaitiona. Ilia
'Patios
381-1636.
overnight trovat. ln•m•·
RoofingR&amp; Siding Co.
. Reasonable Rates
tio;.nhal NYSE litttedlnclnompandy
LOST: Gr•v a. white male w
proven ra
I In
oute 1
Rt. 3. Pomeroy. OH.
cat. In vicinity of Pot Hill marketing svllom. Call or
Lone Bottom. OH. 45743
pH. 614·985-4464
F rd M"1ddl
614 949 write now lor • confldont~l
... Jill .
985 4193
°
·
aport.
·
· lntervlew:1·814· 1132·4951
·
Or 992-3067
2496 ··or 614·949 ·2491 .
12-20-tfc
11 -11 -ttc
l-7-1 mo.Pd.
Reward.
or . P.O.Box 276. Ironton.
___________ ...;.:.,,..; .
.
I~O::-h_._4_5_&amp;_3_8 ·_ _ ___,_
'f
---------~ f-------,-,--,--"+---------'-f---------~-....j FOUND : Iarge white cat,.
1.
I
Appeara to be part Angora. Eam extr• money for El~tr .
I·
"CUT
OUT
Coli
304-676-1672.
Sen Avon. 304·876·142$.
1
1
1·
AUTOMATIC
ALL STEEL &amp;
Large while mote Angara 12
Situations
I
~ · ·
1 ·TRANSMISSION
FOR FUTURE USE"
cat. 304-676-1672 .
POLE BULDINGS
Wanted
I
I 271 w
.
llaill
" " -, Ott
Sl'zes start from 12'xl6'
I
·
·1
'~'~"'
BdPublic Sale
1
·
I
UTILITY BUI.LDINGS
TREE TRIMMING a REMO·
8&amp; Aucition
I
VAL. CALL 814·949·2129
II
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
OR 81 4-992·6040.
I
,
985 356
to 24'x36'
Auction
every
Fri
.
night
at
1~-------­
I
I
OPEN 91115 MON.IIIu SAT.
•
I
lnsulatd Do• Houses
the H•.rtford Community Will plow or disc garden• In
'I
I
AII·Types of Auto Repair.
All Makes
•
Center. Truckloads of new Racine area. Call949·2277 .
I
.Bnbs, Tune-Ups, etc.
•Wa8her1 •DIIhwllhera
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
marchendise every wee_k.
Write. your own ad and order. by mail ·;,.lth . this I
SPECIAL
· Rangaa ·
Con1ig mentt of new and The elderly Is my concern, I
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get 1
TRANSMISSION FILTER
•Rotrlgerotora
Racine, _Oh.
used merchandlte always h41ve one v•~ncv for an .
results. Money not refundable.
·
1
· AND FLUID CHANGE
•Orvero •Freezers
- 614 ••3 5 9
ONLY13 I.95 H•·•&lt;
PARTS end SERVICE
rn. "'" - I I10·&amp;-tlc
welcome. Richard Reynold• alchriY men or woman In my
home .. Good experience. ~
I
Auctioneer. 276·3089.
• -~•'
ratonable rat••- can 687 ~ ·Name·-------------1
8329 or 887·_3 402.
1------~---t----------+----------f
•·
9 Wanted To Buy
Vac.-.cy in b91rding home ·
A.d dr&amp;U-------------·EUGENE LONG
WANTEDTOBUYOidfurni· for116
elderly
only.
·
8 0RoiGnsble.
22
1 4 9 92
SUPERIOR VINYL
ture lll)d Antiques of au 1_ea__ _ _._ _· _ _ _·_ _
kinde. call Kenneth Swain, Will care tor tho eldo~y 'on ·
CARPENTER
.
448-3169
or 256·1987 In our ho~e. Trained &amp; axpe.
"
SIDING
F' 1 t
·
SERVICE
r n one word In each
'SI'dl'ng
·
tho evenlnga.
ri
d LPN
1
space below. Each In·
----=-----~ once .
care g wn,
titial or group of ligures
'Roofing
-·Addoni and ,.motlaling
Buying Gold. Silver. Ploti· L&amp;_1_4_·_99_2_·_7_3_14_._ _ __
counts as a word. Count
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
-lloofio1g ond gvttor woolo
num. Gold ond snvor prlcea 1name and address ·or
'Remodell' na ·
~r..olo-'c
""'
· tliehighaatlntwo-ra
MEATcuttorormonogor.20
nd
r-- . yeer1
experience. w•ntl to •
Ph one
b
num
er
If
Used.
~·-·a
check
our
"'i:ea
o.
n
gold
e.
'II
be
20 Yea rs ;.experience
·
,..
rat ..n to Pt. Pleuam or '
oloctrkol woo1o
aiiYer. acrop jewelry. 8 uyo·n g Gallipob. OH . Writa: 701
IfY ou getd fter
~~- results ---+-+..;;.:..::j-..;.:4-...;.":
vau escr ~ tully,
In Home Area
A TON
(F-Iorlmates)
Old colna. scrap rings a North Maple, Eaton, OH
I ~~:r~;~ceth~her~e~tlnt~I_T;:;o~tr!t--:-ffiii01;;;--;;;;1r-i
FREEESTIMATES
YOUNG
:~::~:~·All~~~~. r:~~~ 4_6_3_2_0.,.·- - - - - 1'cluslfy, edT! or reject'
Cali 843-5425
PH, 992-2280
992·6215 or 992·7314
ilijijltlea tor iotli. ·Spring ,-Will plow gardena in Point
an.v ad. Your ad will b@ 3• ·2· mo. pd
Pomeroy, Ohio
V•lley Tr8dlnt~
2-23 tfc
... Co .. Spring· Plea1ent area. Phone, 304·
35
pu t In th e proper T
T~o~L:_~~~:!!J~~~
.
·
11·26-•,
Volley Plozo. 448·8026 or 875 . 7233 .
·
classification if you'll I------:-----+----------.J----------l-4_4_8_-10_2_&amp;_._.....:.._ _ _ t~-------These cash rates
P lowing o•rden11 and doier
1 check
belo the proper box
I
w.
inclu~e discount
. I.
We pay coah for Iota modal work. 304.676.11912.
I'
'
'nRICE
.
cle•n Ulad CUI .
I ( ;wanted
RADIATOR
r
Frenchtown Cor Co.
13
Insurance
( ) For Sale
1:
IIII ·Gene John ton
( )Announcement
.I
SERVICE
CONSTRUCTION
446-0069
&lt; )Forl&lt;ent
l? . --,--...:__ _ _ _ li
We can rapalrand re18. --~.......:_ _ l i
C01818d1Mola and,__
Roofing, Spouting
St Rt 124 Pomero• OH
Coah lor uaed mobile hom•• SANDY AND lEAVER In :·
I
·
·
•
''
·
or
travel ttollon . Will con· 1urance Co. hal bfe~ed
19, ..,-:......_ _ _____,
ter - ·
can 11180
Complete Home
A. UTO
TRue·
aid• damaged or bum outs. HNices for fire ln1w1nct
1. - -=.:-,----'--20. --~---- I
adil-bollandrodoutra·
Remodeling
Coii448·01'Z6.
coverage in Galli• County ~
2. - - - - - ' - - - 21. _ __ _;__ __:_ I.
dltttora. W• alto ntpllir
REPAIR
_for almost • centwy. F1rm,
0
3.
I
0ea Tttnka.
15 Years Experience
ood uud pi:kup lruck. home and penonal proporty
22. _ _ __ _:____:c._ I
'
All 'Work 'Guaranteed
Call 448·4063.
cov"ragn ere 1VIil8ble_ to
4. - - - -- 23.
I
HILL FORD
Also Transmission
meet individual neecllt Con··
5. ~-----2~. - - - - - - - I
742-2324
PH 992-5682
40 QrC51081HP outboard taet Eugene Holiey. ogant .
, 6 , -,,--:----:--·
992-2196 '
·
motor. •
4· 268·8840. Phone 381-8890.
· "25 · - ' - - - - - I Middleport, Ohio
773-5684
or 992-7121
'7. - - - - . , - - - ~. ---~--- 1:'
1·11"''
l•·lmo.
J·&gt;l-''
. Gonduaedholpitolb... Coll
16 . Schools
, s. - - - - - ' - I!
1
'
.
.
.
.
.
t
814-318·9807 .
27
· _...:...._____
p·----------+--:-~'-------1----------....l-......_
Instruction
9 · · --~---28 . - - - - - - ' - - I.
.Wonted tobitcco poundage
10. - - - - - - 29 . . -~--'--"--- I·
for 1813 aeooon. Colt 814· - - - - - - . . . . , . . - -'-'---1
"Somethin&amp;
New"
.
·
COMPliTE
379-2B1S lit• II.
·
K
,.
,
11 .
30
31
:
RACINE 'I

.· A

Curb I nfla tlon ' .
p ay cas h .., or
Classlfle d s an'd
Save J J.J

CO.

KEN'S
·APPLIANCE
SERVICE

MINE RUN

Phon•------------------

YO.UNG'S

STRIP

COAL

__.
.
,
.
.
.
.
_
000.
·
.
$3
v. c.

c..;..;~-+...:.;.+:.;.::~--!

,_

lit

Roger Hysell
GARAG.E

K

&amp;

we

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

PAT

_______

15.
16. --'-~'---'--

tht~=~:~:,. -·

Blackwell

F

Real Estate G.eneral

~i~~~~?,~~~b~~t:~~d~~~~; :~:
~~~P~~ 1,~n~P~~~~o~ d~~~t: 1 ~.

Federal. State: aod loctl agen·
cies are •nviled 1o Iiilo com·
ments on the described
application. lA coP'( ot the
application may be obtained by
.agen~ies direc1iy from the

~ERVICE

ALI,.OTHER APPUANCES

PH

to be performed undSr the
prel1mmary perm1t would be
s300 .000
A4a. Existing Dam or Natural
Water r d6~ · ~ ft ·.ProJeCt Anyone de&gt;!:.&gt;ng 10 f&gt;l e a
· - I'
co.mpenng app 1cauon 1orprelim1nary perrM lor a proposed
proJeCt at an eiCIStlng dam or
natural water featu re pro. 1ect.
musr submit the compet1ng
ap phcat1on to the Comm1ssron
on or befor• 30-days aher the
spec•loed com ment date fo r the
part•cul~r appl o cat~on 1s11e 18
CFA 4.30 \0 4 33 (1982)). A
nOtiCe of . ontent to lile a
· competmg appliCation for prelim1nary permrt Will nol be
accepted
for iillng of a timely
A4d. SubmiSSIOn
notice of Intent to lile an
applica\lon lor prelim, nary permit allows an •nterested person
to file an acceptable cOmpeting
appilcanon lor prelimi nary per:
. mit no later than 60 days alter
the spec1f1ed comment dale for
lh e panicula r application. 1
B. Commemo. Pto-. or
Moliona to Intervene Anyone may submit comments,
a pr01est. or a mo1ion 10
1ntervene m accordance with
the requ1r~ments ,of the Rules
of Pracuce and Procedure. 18
C.F.R. SS385.2 10 . .21 1. .214
( 1982) . In deter min1ng the
appropriate action to take. the
Comrn1SS10n w111 consider -all
protests or other comments
flied . but ontv tnose file a
motion to 1ntervent in accorda nce 'Nit h the Comrniss1on's
Rules rnav become a party to
the proceeding. Any com ments. protests. or motions to
intervene must be recetved on
or ·before the spec1fied commen! date for the particular
application.
c . Flltig end SONtco of
oocumentl _
.......... Any lil•ngs must bear in ali
capital letters the title "C OM MENTS'. ' NOTICE OF INTENT
TO FILE COMPETING APPUCA·
TION . 'COMPETING APPUCATION"."PAQTEST"or "MOTION
TO INTERVENT'. as applicable
and the Pr01'1Ct Number of the
pari!CUiar applica\IOn \0 whi Ch
lhe filing is in response. Any .ol
lhe above rtamed documehts
must be fil eiil by providing the
ong•nal and the number of
cop1es reQ uired by 1ne com·
mossoon·s re,guialions IO: Kennelh F Plumb. Secrelary. Federa I Energy Aegula.t o ry
Commission. 825 Nonh Ca·
pilei Slreet. N.E.. Wasbinglori.
D.C. 20426. An additional
copy must be sent to: Frad E.
,Spnnger. Chief. Applications
Branch. Division of Hydrop·

lion to 1ntervene musl also be
salved upon each represent&amp;·
tiiiOofthaApplicantspecified•n '

BOOKK'EEPING

POMEROY OHIO.

n--•..

Blackwell

WE ALSO WORK ON

.

. ~:~~~~t;,oi~r~~~~;~h~~_:~;

Reed '1}e
Builders Club

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
dENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp;HOTPOINT -.-

MILLER
ELECTRIC

TRI-COUNTY

618lllain, Potwou,
OH.
J
PH. 992-3795 .

64 Misc. Merchandise

~ion

was

J)avid, Vickie and Rick Metheney,
Ricky, Latlcla and Eric. Sending
gifts were Marvin and Berdena
Gardner and RDn Dean.

n

been filed· With the Federal

D of A .

Gardner

·' '· -'- ·
Mature Quai!' now being
sold. Eus available with ·
notice after May I. Day old
C:hiclcsavailablewithdepo·
s1't after· May....::
.,,
l-2·1,.,

SALE.S...&amp;

.J&amp;l BLOWN·

Wanted To Buy

welry. r1 nga. old colne a

In ch•rtou.
hor1e1~
but WI

'-;:=====;::::::==:;i::======:::;::::::t========:::-t========::l

were

I

•

Public Notice

.
P-11900.()00 Applicant.) 11 an age~ev does
not file comments w•'lh,·n the
UNITED tfrA'T&amp;$ ·
·time specified for -filing coni·.
OFAMERlCA '
FEDERAL ENERGY
ments,
will be p resumed
tq · II
have noit commenls.
One copy
REGULATORY
.COMMISSION
of an agency's com ments must
Notic8 of AI&gt;PIIcliti&lt;!n Filed also be sent to \he Applicant'•
repre5erJtatives.
willllho Ccimmllliot:l
IFobNery i I. 19831
Ken neth Secretary
F. Plumb
Take notice that the fo llowmg
hydroelectric applicattOt'\ haS 131 8 15
3tc

at

omeroy OES

·
1\.1

,

Legion AtJXiliary

·

·.·,..·"",\
.'~~

'

BOGGS.

EXCAVATING
-DOBIS
-lllckhoes
-Dump Trucks
L B
-o-oy
-Trencher
- Water
- Se. wer
-Ills Lines
-Septic Systems ·
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH . 992-2478
1·12·3 mo "'·

· clolltoBonoe, $r ..owner
. ~' ;i:~

ot

p

9

In Memoriam

····- ..

PULLINS

Ph . 985-4345

Riverview Garden

,.

c•

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
long Bollom, Oh.

rior11ted lnscrlptlllll!' easier to read.
Midkiff was Installed as ~e(&lt;uty
Pickens, Maxlrie and Ernest WhlteThis does not llarm the stone ltseU. by Dale Smith, past patron.
head, and Grace and Denver
She alsO announced the forma·
· . The Instruction commltteefunctl·
Weber. .
·
·
lion of a new honorary arm of the
oned and Cathy . Workman. assoThe next meeting w111 be at the
Athens County Chapter called the
elate conductress, gave her lecture
Myers' home. .
FlrstFamlliesofAt)lenscounty.In
In chapter: ·
order to be acceptecl, you 411ust
Past m;~troll$ presented Included
prove the p~nee of an ancestor
Thelma DUI, Sue, Soulsby, Joartne
In the Umlts of ali lands originally
Kautz, Sylvia Midkiff, Mabel
Riverview Garden Club held Its
Included In Athens County by the
gleln, and Marge Crow; and past
February meeting at the home of
year I&amp;'J), This area would lnclqde
patrons, Dale Smith, James , Mary Grace Dowdery, 'aSsisted by .
the DQrthern tier of townships .of
Soulsby and Denzil Goegleln.
.,Janice Young and Jan~t Connolly.
Meigs County. Annual Jl(l.id mem·
Refreshments were served In the
Devotions, using "love and faith'\
bershlp to the AthenS County Chap. · &lt;lining room by Chlorus and Roger
as her topics, were presented by·
ter Is ~ulred for membership and
Gaul, and Debbie and . Rodney
Ella Osborne. The devotional proan appUcatlon tee
$10. Many Of - Chevalier.
gram was closed ·with prayer.
the county genealogical societies
M~mbers responded to the roD cau·
by naming a patriot.
·
ilreoformlng thesf First Famtly or·
ganlzations though MeigS County
A business session was con·
An Easter partyforlhepattentsat .
does not Presel\tiY have one. These
dueled by President Grace Weber-.
the
Arcadia Nursing Home was
orgaitlzatlons are an Off-shootof the
She welcomed a gue5t, Debbie
planned with members to tneet
First Families of Ohio, which reGilmore. ThankS .were extended to· .
the hall on March 20 to rolor ~ · the club. for the candy and fruit .
quires .that a person's ancestor
must have been present In Ohio IJe.. . when the Ladl~ Awdilaiy !&gt;f · received by Mabel Hetzer, Naomi
Feeney·Bennett Post 128, Ametlfore ~.
Pickens, Herman Gro5snlckle, and
can
Legion, met Wednesday-night
TWo members, June (Holter)
Gladys Williams during the
at the hall.
i
Ashley and Frances (Ible) Roholidays.
The
Auxiliary
for
the
past
year
berts, are planning to submit their
For the program. Marilyn Han·
has staged monthly parties at n\Jm told of the home health service
applications for First Famllles of
A,Cadla. There on Feb. 21 to
Ohio. MrS. Ashley's eligible anees.
that Is avallable , to all of. Meigs
conduct
games and serve refresh· .
torS are David Curils, Sally (Grow)
county citizens that need profesments to the 74 patients
Erma
Curtis, and Josiah Curtis. Mrs. Rosional service In the theme under·
bert,s' ellgjble ancestor Is Geo~ . Hendricks, Sonll! Wayland, Nettie
doctor's orders. She distributed'
Hayes, Ethel Hawk. Becky 'I'yree,
Roush.
·
leaflets on home health service and
Grace · Welsh, Callie .Richmond . . · recipes for diabetics. Mrs. Hannum
Downey Kennedy. Lois Roush,
demonstrated to the group how to
Quarterly birthdays wUI be ob~ed Parsons. Christy Richshampoo
a bed patient's hair.
served at the March 15 meeting of
mond, Sonia Parsons, VIrgil Par·
·
Games
were conducted by Mar·
Chester Council 323, Daugl)ters of
sons. Gene. Gilmore, Peggy Caton,
lene Puttrian and Cathy Spencer
~rica. at the hall.
. and Gerr.Y Parsons. The Easter
with several winning prizes. The
' lilans for the observance with
party wUI be held on March 21.
door prlzi! went to Pulman.
.nCif#;hments to be served by the
Buckeye Girls Stale was disRefreshments using the Valen·
!ll!tcl&amp;. ~mmlttee were made cussed with the selection of a
tine
theme were served buffet style
'When· the Council met Tuesday delegate and alternate postponed
to
Debbie
Gilmore, Mary Allee
· night. Mary K Holter, councilor
until the co-sponsors have selected
Btse,
Margaret
Brown, Dolores
p~lded at the meeting attended~ theirs. A report was given on the
Frank, Margaret GfOSS!IIckie, Ma209 members. Reported m were
recent Girl State orientation and
rilyn Hannum, Pau(lne Myers. Ella · ·
Esther Smith. Thelma White and
appreciation for cookie donations
Osborne, Marlene Putman , Cathy
Ruth Smith. A meeting of the Past e xpressed.
Spencer;
Grace Weber; Maxtne
Councilors Club was announced for
The unit served the bloodmobile Whitehead, Nola Young, Opal
Wednesday night at the horne of
on 'Feb. 23 at the Senior Citizens
Harris, Margaret Cauthorn and
Erma Cleland With Dorothy Myers
Center. Working on it
Mrs.
~th Anne Ba41erson. The next
as c o-hostess.
Roush, Mrs. Caton, Mrs. · Tyree,
meeting will be March 17 at the
There will be a layette shower for
Crystal Richmond. Callie Richhome of Grace Weber.
Susie Pooler Pptrte at the April 5
mond , Mrs. Wayland, Sonia Par·
m eetll)g. A cake walk was consons, Mrs. Welsh, Carolyn Shuuler,
ducjedbyMargaretTuttleandMrs.
Etta Wll. Mrs. Hendricks, Martha
Holterfortl)estatewaysandmeans
Hunnel, and Diane Jarvis.
committee with the cake being won
Mrs. Wlllpresldedatthemeetlng
A luncheon honoring Ruth Mas·
by Dorothy Ritchie. Mrs. Ritchie
with Mrs. Caton giving the prayer
sar, who Is moving to Columbus,
c ut the cake artd served lt to the
was held recently at Trtnitr Church
. and the pledge to the fiag being
members including those named
given In unlslon. Officers· report$
by Hapw Harvesters Class. Host·
a nd Margaret A:mbetger. Betty
were given.
Ctaft day was
lnlr the luncheon were Genevieve
Roush, Lora Damewood. Charlotte ·
announced for March 16. Reported
Meinhart and Ada Holter .
Grant. Doris Grueser, Marcia . ill was Jim Tholl)as. The door prize
Erl)'la Smith opened the class
Keller. Ethel Orr, Pauline Riden·
brought ty Mrs. WlU was won by
meetln~wfthprayer.anddevotlons
our, Erma Cleland, Everett Grant
Loretta Rogers. Get well cards
were given by Bunny Kuhl who
Carolyn Holley, Ada Morris, Zel~
were sent to Patty Mossman and
used a poem, "No Longer'' with
Weber, Penny Smith, Faye Kirk·
Vernalene Kelly.
members repea tlng the Psalm 231n
hart, Jo Ann Ball1h, and Goldie
.
unison. otflcers' · reports were .
Frederick.
r~
· given and a report on the Lenten
. SVI
~mmu.nity breakfastwasgtvenbyMlssSrnJth.
Plans for the kitchen renovation
. Communications from Cancer
were
reported completed. A rum·
Reedsville COmmunity Builders
Research, the Hospital Circle, and
mage
sale was set for May. WUma
Club held Its · February meeting
the Ohio Department of Highway
Terrell
was reported . Ul and a
with Roy and Marilyn Hannl.im.
Safety were read at Tuesday night's
get·well
card
sent to her. A repart ·
Ronald Osborne. president, con·
meeting of Pomeroy Chapter 186.
was
given
on
the World Day of
dueled the business meeting.
Order of the Eastern Star, held al
New offiCers elected were presi- Prayer service held Friday.
the Pomeroy.Masonlc Tetnple.
Georgia Watson w1ll be devoPamMassle,worlhymatron.and · dent. Roy Hannum, vice president,
tional
leader for the Aprll meeting.
HarUss Frank; secretJlry, Dolores
Jim Soulsby, worthy patron, preand Edna Slusher will be
Mrs.
Kuhl
Fr11nk; treasurer, · Ruth Anne
s ided at the meeting with Mabel
hostesses
at that . meeting. . The ·
Balderson, and Community Flower
Moore collecting the sunshine
travel
prizes
were won by Neva
Fund ChairwOman Grace Weber. •
offering of $11.81.
The cheer
Seyfried.
Eva
DeSsauer, Edith
Community· projects were
committee noted that c!lrds had
Lannlnj!,
and
Erma
Smith. The
discussed . .
been . sent to Kathryn Oliver and
Refreshments were served by hymn, "God Be With Yoil" and the
Lynn Armes.
Lord's Prayer in unison closed the ,
the hostesses ~ Pauline and
Invitations to' inspections were
meeting.
Maxine Myers, Ella and Ronald
received from Harrtsonvllle, Ivy
The Busy Bee Class of the church '
Osborne, · Dolores and Harllss
LeagueChapter,Galllpolls,George
also
entertained at the home of
Frank, ,Ruth Anne and Lyle
Lewis Bearems, Kokosing. arid
Mrs.
'Dale
Smith with a luncheon
Balderson, Marll&amp;ret and Walter
Franklin. A thank you note was
honoring
Mrs.
Massar.
Brown, Lillian, and Warren
read from ·Texanna Well. Sylvia

aoe,

2

Daily Sentinei-Page--7

~=~~:=;~:;;~==i!r==:;;::;;:;:==;rrr========~Ti~~~~~~~:;;~~someIJ
d - 101118trU11:
In

Meigs County organizatio.n · · m~m~rs ·gather for · meeti;ngs, . even't~ .~.
Xi Gamma Mu

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-~----- 11.

~!: =-. - ·- - - - -

34.
35· - .-__:_ _ _..:
., ,...
,

1

1 :·

I1 '

M
Thl ·c
ltll R ,.. tt
1.
, I 11
I · oupon W
erri1 lftCe
I:
The Dally Sentinel
1
Court St.
1;
p 111
I
om troy, 0 h. 45769
1
1,
,...,,.,_,__,_,_ ~-.,..-~------~-~.~~.,.).
n

GUN SHOO:r.
.

FIRE DEPT.
Bas han
.
EVERY

Building

'Jeans
·
'Blouses
'Swim Suits

'lf:~lnl Golllls

SAT· NIGHT

6 30 p M

:
• •
Factory Choke 12
GaUlt ShotKUnS Onlv
.

RA~=~a~~~~cs F~~':u~r !::r!.'~:.:V4:::~;e"~ ~:! ~E~~:::,E!~i~~~::,.;~ :
ou~1:~~~;11ty
f::.•
~~~'"~~~~~~r;uK~~~~ ':,",~: :

•

t....,........._.._.;;__ _;;_2·1:.:.~.:•';.,~

Open Tlas.·Sit.
·
10 00
:. to 5:00
204 Wuhlncton St. ·
~IVtnSWood, W. VI.
3-4-1 mo.

to the Larrest Radii·
Radiator Speclalst
NATHAII BIGGS
35 y E
1
rs. xpar tnca
SMITH NELSoN
MOTORS

6.
·
Would ' llka to buy • good to""' puchlng 1nd kicking ·
. uoad portable dlllhwoahor . . bega. end protective equip·
Phone 4411·91121.
· '1'0nt. JeriV LoweryloA-BEDS·IRDN. BRAss. old
rum•on, ,old, alv• dol·
lora. wood .. boxn. atone
jora. antlquoa, etc .• Com·
plota houoahotdo. WrNo:
M.D. Mltler. Rt. 4. i!Dmeroy.
Oh. Or 882-7710.

·1nc•
•

PomoNy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174

2.2G-ttc
~

=::::~~~!,"~·t~d~.''1!;k!,4:,

Oh . Col 614·2111·3074 or •
1114-384·11110.
;,-:--------Plono lo•ono tar beglnnera
and intarmodlote. 304·11711·
1124.
~

0

�•r

'

The
18

March
Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Wanted to Do

411

March

154 MIIC •• Asrchendiae

Sp•ce for Rent

LEMLEY ' S DR!J.LING Water
Wellt. Shallow gas and core
drilling. Mvera •nd Gould

- -~

~HII~ST

Ges and oil well service . Call
614 -388-8543 .

~IVE,

....

$TOfoiE. MOO~,.,,

Lawn Mowing no ye rd to big
or sri"'al!. Reliable J~nddepen ­

48

Small engine repair, lawn
-mowers, riding mowara. ro -

ing . Ref . a&gt;Jaila bla.
446 -8369.

Call

1

coffoo

tobl.,

end toblo 211it 18'11x20'11
with light woln.u t llnloh 130,
olto light wolnut 7 drawor
d - with Iorge minor
e&amp;8 . 32xtl3· 171 plocoa
b&lt;own undorplnnlng for •
mobile homo
Juot . 1
.,.., oamo off • 14x70
mobllo homo. long plocoo
me11ure 32", ahort piec••
21" and 1 0 lnchoo ecrou.
entertock In 1 metel frame,
wood groin flnlah. Cell oftor
5PM. 448·30611 .
.

Jack's locksmith Service .

glasa StarCraft motor homo.

Corri mercial - Do masticAutomotive. CoH 304-8822079 .

304-675-3666 .

Maple btidroom aulte com·
pleta. Coli 446· 3346.

33 Farms for Sale

Moving ovoryrhlng must go.
Uving room aulte, dining
room table, dishes, drea~e~.
hope chMt. muchmore. Cell
446-8129.

1---------43

21

Business
Opportunity

Farm for tale 26 acres
mostly level , good hay 80 acres. wtth 11 tillabte.
fiolds. $46.000. Muot sell, Bottom lond. Along $bode
reasonable offer. 3 bdr . Creek. Loceted 1 "h mllea
home, new furnanca , welt of Atfred on CR 231 .
counJY water new bath Call collect 1-6,3-885carpeted, new alum . llding 20&amp;0.
cool 8o wood burning atovo. 1 - -- = - - - - ' - - : - Good barn 8o · othor out PASTURE for rent. phone
bid go. garoge. Loceted on 304-676-6110.
160 n•r .Porter .. Call I·
old
614-3BB·908b

work on dairy
farm . E~~:perittnwd , dependable, non-drirMer. Write
Box P 26, Pt. Pleasant
Register, Pt. Pleasant . ·

WANTED

22

1-=;: ;: =:;: ======

Money to loan

44
36 Lots

HOME LOANS 12'1\ fixed
rate . Leader Mortgage, 77E .
State. Attas, Ohio . 1 -614·
692 -3061 .

23

Farms for Rant

&amp; Acraaga

Building lot in Northup on
concrete road . With city
water. 127'x120'. 14BOO.
446-6254.

Professional
Services

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. Rogoncy Inc. Aport·
ments e200 per mo . or if
income is .,0,000 or lea
HUD avoiloblo. A· Ono RNI
Est1t,11, Carol Yeager, Realt&gt;r. Col 304·8711·15104 or
8715-63Be or 6711-7786.

10.8 acres on Bulaville Rd In
Gallipolis Townlhlp . Asking
139.000. Call 814-446Furnished apr. 1 bdr.. 920
C&amp;L Bookkeeping
4570 after 5PM .
4th Ave .Galllpol\o. Adulto.
Tax Returns 8a bookkeeping
water 8o electric pd. 1200
for Individuals &amp; businesses. 1.17 acreo Cur~a Hollow, mo
. Cell 446-4418 attar
Short forms $5 .00
Near Forlcad Run Lllke Dock ?PM
Long forms $20 .00 end up
8o Gun Club. $3,500. 614·1 - - - ·-----':--:-'--:
~rol Neal
446-3862. 378-6301 ·
3 rm. and 4 rm. unfurni 0 1wd
apartments.
Uti ~ties paid.
PIANO TUNING 8o REPAIR
1 acre in Porterfieldsarea. · nQ pets, no children. Call
Call Bill Ward for •ppoint- Near Rt. 339 . 614-378 · 446-3437 . .
ment, Ward's Keyboard , 6301 .
446-4372 .
Nicley fu 11 i1hed mob . home
in city. Aduho only. Coli
36 Real Estate
448·0338.
Wanted
Furniahod 3 rmo. with pri.voto bath, tat. floor. 845
Buying hou•• and epart· 2nd . Avo .. GalipoWo. Coli
menta . Need properties with 448-221 6.
favorable price and terms. 1----:--::--::=-:--::--::-Box 1109 Galipolia • . Oh . JACKSON ESTATES 'Equal
45631 .
Houoing Opportunity' hu
Excellent condi~i on &amp;
one bedroom apartments
loa~tion-- all ready for immerent starting at 8157 per
diate occu pancy-- ln·m rest
month and two bedr(]IQm
r•tea are down and probabty
apartments rent atarting 11
wo'n•t be lo\N8r.
$193 per month . Cal 44841
2746 or leave meu-ue.
Home and or rental
6 nn . house &amp; bath . Inquire
BfOIId-y·Mid dleport .
at 918 2nd . Ave .. Gallipoli1, Furnlahod apt .. 2 bclr .• 1176
mo., water paid, 2nd . floor.
0
M'~;i;~--b;;~;~;~;--bl~ . sa _h_._-'---:----- 131 4th Avo.. Golipollo .
cou 11 St., Gelipolis.
6 rm. house 2'Amiles out Rt . Cell 446-4416 otter ?PM .
688, carpet thru out. 1200
112 + acres wi1h 2 hom81 mo.
Coli 448-3045 dey, UnfurrWsr.d apertment no
Gollio County.
chi~ren or pall, 1160 per
446-2602 evenings.
mo .. piUI uttlitils, 18C. dep·
Cell992-3267 or676-251 6
osit roq. Cell446-2129 .
2 bedroom houae on ,ard.
eveninga .
AVe., Galllpolla. e21 6 mo. Furniahed apt. 807 2nd ..
NEW 3 bdr . house. family plus uti. One bedroom GellipoUo. 1235. utllitln
lOP m, 2 baths. central heat fumi 0hed affiency In town, pd.. 1 bdr.. aduho. Coli
&amp; air. 2 car garage, 2 mi. W. 1160 mo . Inc . water. Call 446-4416 after ?PM.
of HMC in Sunkist . Cell Wi~eman Real Estate, ·4483.6 43.
446-3617 .
2 bdr. apt. unfumi1h&amp;d
IXCipt r ..rlg. 8o ~0\lt , t138
3 bedroom V:t stone up front , 4 bedroom remodeled home mo. Moln St. Vinton. Call
yellow vinyl siding. 1 milo in Cheshire. Nat. gat H-W 614 ·246·5B18 .
heat. garage, basement,
out of Flledsville. 1 ocre
8226 mo. Call Wiseman
ground . $3.000 . down .
EHiency apt. In Rio Grande.
Real Eo tate. 446-3643 . ·
$160 . month lond contract.
fum . all utilltiea peid . Call
10 pet. interen $16.000.
HouH for rent nMr North 446-0167.
otraight out. 614 · 423·
Gallia School . 446 · 1798.
1 bdr. apt. near HMC. Call
6967.
446·3617 .
3
bedroom
1
~ bath home
House, building sites and
ecr•ge. Marahall Allison, for rent or sale. Allo 1 2 bdr. apt . unfurn . except
2400 Lincoln Ave.Pt. Pl . Admiral refrigerator 8o 1 'refrig . &amp; stove. Large yard.
Tappen goa range. 614- garden spot, Main St., Vin·
wv.
992·8309.
ton . Coli 614-246·6B1B.
Houae, B'l2 pet. asa~mable
House for rent or
loan, 2 years old. Warwick Located
Apartment .2 r. 8o both
in syr·a cuu, Oh.
Rd. Pt.PI . 304·676-1468 bedro9111 with carport. one- include• water , electric
1138. Coli 44e-4222 be·
alter 6 p.m.
third acre lot . 126.000 . Will
consider house trailer u part tween 9 8o 11.
payment. 304-7112-84B8.
32 Mobile- Homes
Apt. for rent. HaH doublo-2
bd.room Apt. Adults prefor Sale
ALL electric home on Ohio
tarred
. No peta. 814-882·
StrMt for rent. Very reasonably priced. Coli oftor &amp;:00 2749.
TRI - STATE MOBILE p .m .. 304-676-11711.
Efficiency apt. In Sug1r Run
HOMES. USED· CARS.
area. Ground floor, utlliti ..
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS . Two bedroom houa, fur- 6. cable paid. Free perking.
nlahad, o.c., 1 chHd, nopota, 814-992-6738.
C'HECK OUR PRICES.
0All44e -7672.
11110 par month, NHavon. 304·882·2488 .
'cLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES. 42 Mobile Homes
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
for Rent
RT 35. PHONE 446 ·7274.
riverfront 12x60,
1:978 Schult 1 4x70 very
1160mo.. 1 bdr ..
htce, central air, 2 full bathl,
mo. Aef. 8o clap.
$,3,000 will conalder
Cell81 4 · 643-2844.
owner financing with down
payment . Call 446· 1842 2 bdr. mobile home fully
9 :30 io 2:30 ·Or after 5 fumiohed. adulta only . Coli
304-743-3333 .
448 ·41 10.

1__

1Oicl!iO New Moon com ~
pletely . furn . one bedr,
woodburner, new· carpet.
11,900 . . Coli 614-3888,01 . Muat see · to
oppreclote.

USED MOBILE
67e-2711 .

HOME .

19711 TWO bedroom mobile
homo ond 411 ocrn located
on Thomoo Ridge R~ad . Coli
304-675·3 280 end ask for
Ron Hickman.
Two . bedroom. ~ ·I f fur_ _. 1173 Hol.y Pork.
s.ttlnti an 1OOx1 00 lot with
._r1 aMin link fenoo ond
lturfy Hllu•, In Oll.polll
~· ., 4,000. 'hon11304·
171-1331.

-'ii

SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
62 Olivo St., Gollipolla. King
I
coal &amp; wood heaters with
fon 14119, Ht box opring 8o Sala·trode D7 Cot dozer,
mottrtll $100. firm 1120. Ford loader, 77 .,. Dodge
aofa-lovoHat 8o choir 1199, 4x4, 6 rrollere, hauoo .a.
love Hatl t70. new coal a. ocreogo. Coli 446-1798.
wood heaters aa low ••
8399 With blowers. Uted Firewood, oplit, • 130.00 •
coal &amp; wood heater1, new ·truckload, 131i .OO doll ·
dlnot IOh 1100 8o up, verod. Ph. (&amp;1 41 992·2770
or (3041882· 2194.
ref~lgerator1. ranges, bunk
becli complete 1199, bun·
kill mattresses 840, chlsta. Wo~d Book 8o Child Croft for
drenero. TV's . Call 448· oolo. Call 849 -2277.
3169.
Kenmore autom•-tlc WfllherGOOD USED APPLIANCES 186. Moytog electric d,.,...
- waahers. dryers. refrigera- 186. Auto. woahor ond
toro. rongea. Skoggo Ap· dryor-1126 . Movtag portopllancea, Upper River Rd .. blo 1 1 0 dryor-green.IB6.
beside Stone Crest Motel . Coli 814-742-2362.
446-7398.
For 1ale-New Idea Manu,.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
oprooder. 36 ocroa Timber.
Sofa, choir, rocker. otto· Mootly Ook. Col 843·&amp;1 86.
man, 3 tables, (extra heavy
by Frontier). 1$86. Sofo, 4 -Modol 37 Wlnchntors.
chair and lovesNt, t276 . 12·16-20 guago model n
Sofas and chairs priced from Remington .12 guage. 8141286. I!&gt; $B96 . Tables, t46 992·39QO . .
and up to 1121i. Hlde.-abodo,l440 . and up to
11125 .. Reclinaro. 1176. to
$350 ., Lllmpa from 128. to
t75 . 6 pc. dinette.• from Frigidaire retrlgerotl''·
199 .. to 1436. 7 pc .. $189 . freezer on top. 2 doors.
and up. Wood table with six e14· 992·3090 .
choira $425 . to t745. Deok
. $110 up to $226 . Hutchoa, MUST oell. naw living room
8660. and up, maple or pine auita, 304-876-6182 eftar
finish. Bunk bod complota 6 :30 p.m .
with mattreues. t250. and
up to 8386. Boby bodo, TRDYBILT ROTOTILLERS
$110. MottroiMI or box Dlscounto. Avoid April price
springs, full or twin, · $SB .. incrMM. FrM Hiller Infirm, $68. orid $78. Queen eluded . lmmodioto ohlp·
aets, $196 ; 4 dr. chetta. ment. Parte, englnea. Trade
$42 . 5 dr. chesto, 1114. Bed ino occaptod . 703-842fromer, ezo.and 126 .. 10 3871 Hickory Hill Nurnry •.
gun : Gun cablneto. 1360.. At. 1 Bo• 390 A, Hahorovlllo,
dlnone choirs 120. and 1215. VA 22939 .
Goo or electric ronan. 1321i
op to . 8316. S.by mo· GIBSON frost-free rofrigertresaes. t26 &amp;. 136, bed ator, avocado green. Sylva·
fromoa $20, e21i, 8o 130. nil TV. block 8o white. 20"
king frame 160. Good Mlec - acreen. Antique pie ufe.
tion of bedroom Iukes, 304-876-2017.
ceder chasti, rockera. metall - - - - - - - - -- cabinoto. owivol rockoro.
USED COPPER TUBING
Used Fumiture · - bookca1e, "h" &amp; fittings, 160'·260',
ranges, theirs, end table•~ 126.00. Gas hot air furnace
wethers, dryers, refrig•a- with duct work, •210. Gu
tO&lt;o ond TV's. 3 mllea out hot water tonk, 1211.00. AN
Bulovl\\e Rd. Open &amp;om to ltomo hove to be romovoil
8pm, Mon . thru Fri .• 9am to from damaged houM. 3046pm. Sot.
876-97B2 .
44e-0322
Twin bed, with mattreuGE auto waaher in perfect box apringo. • 1 16. Entercondition et 10. Call 448- tslnment center-room dl·
8181 .
vidor shelving unit, 1100,
304-676-46,6B.
Whirlpool evacado washer
ex. cond. 8126 and Whirl· Prom 4rlls, size 9. 304·
pool harvest gold dryor 196. 675· 3626.
30 doy warranty. Call 814·
266·1207 .
New Eureke IWHper. aH
onochmonts 140. 304-e?&amp;·
Sale Items. 30 in. electric 7262.
range •96, 40 in . electric
rongo $96, 30 ln. goa rongo Buuty ohop equip. 2 unlto
$116, li piece bedroom Ht complete, 2 hyd cholra, 3
$160, color TV cabinet dryer cholro. oupplloo. 304·
modo\ 11150, 6 piece dinette e75-6083 or 304·675·
oet teli, Whirlpool woohor 4444.
•as. GE refrigerator hiiVIIt
gold frostfreo t126. 2 piece Tr1ller wheels, tlrea, axle •
llvlngroom oulte 166. front hitch. 304·896-340&amp;,
Skoggo Uaad Appliance,
Open 9 to 6. 446· 7398.
New Campus Ridge Mool
Replacement Diet Plan In
Uving room suite, like new, three delicious flavora.
and drapes for picture· win- Comporo to tho Combrldgo
dow. Call 266-8402 otter Diet at Hockenberry
2:30p.m.
Pharmacy.

1---------

Hoover wether a. rinca tub
1221i. Llldy Kenmore dry'!!'
1160. All t32&amp;, no chocko.
Coli 814-388-8133 .

79

Practically n•w bunk bed1.
Orglnolly 1400 will nil for
1280. CoU oftor e, 44f·
4737.

Early American sofa and two
chalro, very good condition .
Call 614-446-3882 .

66

Currier plano Uke new. pur- 1880 Dotoun 200-SX, A -1
choood locolly, 1eoo. Con cond. 40 mpg. Col 44e' 814-387-01133.
409B.
Baldwin plono for Nit. 1 'II 1978 Z·2B low mlloogo.
yeors old. G - condition . 1..-. ou. cond. IntO&lt;·
e14-t48-2477.
oltad buyor cell e14·387·
Oli7B.
1881

-

I

'W Rt:AD TO

ME' 'M-!It.t: r ~.~­
lt.t-LAW~

Home
Improvement•

... THESE .. EH .. W
5PIR!T5 IN REI/
C~HYOM •• WHAT
tl' THEY £001/
li~E,

OH,

WHOO •• YOU'RE
. Efl ..5URc THIS
IJEIIR CUIW
NE~LACE I'IILL BE
EHO/J6HOF A
PROTECTION AQAINST
EM? -

50METHIN' FIERCE,
ANNIE! Y' HllVE T'
~E

AN IHDI/111:. OFI

AT LEA~T HIILF

HONEYBUN?

~. .AIT---n-:;;~

HOWARD' l. WRITESEL
ROOFING COMPANY .
Guttoro·Do-uti·N -Ropolr-.Gunor Pointing Storm Dooro &amp; Wlndowo.
F - EotllftlltH. Phone e14 848- 22e3 or e14-992·
2781.

Carpenter

INC/IAN

LIKE ~...

I·" V()t:::&gt; IT HAVE
T' DO ~ITH 'BEAR
CU!W'S F/N1~cf?"?
~HAT

IS

ANY'IIAY? f\,~~:::-,:::::=:i~~~' !i

~ork.

·Repaira or1
remodeling~ Ceiling tile ·~
woll ·ponolihg. Roooonoble . ·
...... e14·982· 27!19.

.'

'RON's T~violi&gt;n Sorvico.
Spacloblng In Zenith ond
Motorola, Quaza;, and
houoe cello. Coli &amp;?e-2388

...
-.... -_-·
. ....
'

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

'

OH, YEAH? WELL,WE'LL
SEE ABOUT· THAT I

F &amp; K T - Trimming. stump
,.movol. Colle7!1- U31 .
1874 Novo. B.S. Hotch
bock. p .o., p.b .. good oond.
e14-371-e348. 3150 euto.
17811.

'

1880 Dido Coulon
8roughom, Low mllooge.
-~--------1 Eac. condltlon . Call 114·
loador·MtaMY Ferguoon 1 912-1821 .
,
wk. 381 with forllo. Cell 1974 Novo SS 310 auto ..
e14-248-11804.
good cond., p.s.. p.b .•
Buo hog In g - ahope 8o buckllt 101ta. 81,000. 111 •·
older model lntemotlonol 8815-31e8 e p.m &gt;
tractor lnoodo w o r t l l - - - - - - - - - 11.1500. Coli 44e-081115 1978 Olds 88. 4 dr .. p .o.,
p.b., e.c., am.fm atereo.
d.y. •· ... 4215.7 0 ~
• -v·
·-·
13, 186. 114·892·1130.
For ula-1 0 ft . John Deere
tronoport dloc-1700. " bot' HARTS Uood Cors, N tom Oliver ·p low-•1100. Hoy- Hov.., Wnt Vlrglnlo. Over
round boln. 843-!218..
20 len u-olvo oare In
ltOck.
Form tractor. Fo""oll M.
·
New point, good . tlrea. 7e FORD G,.nd T~rino.
11,200 . .114-8815· 38e8 of· noodo body work, 304-88221B1 .
tar av p.m.

61 ·

SORRY,OOP!
lHOSE AlL GO
111110 THE MOO ·
VIM! TREASURY!

or44e ·2~ .

19715 Buick Electra 2 dr..
PS . PB. AC. AM-FM otero
t1 ,8110 or trode for cottlo.
farm ~~qulpm•t of equal
voluo. Coli 44&amp;·4837 .

Farm Equipment

CHEVY oedon, 11100.
Forma II oupor A • p Iowo.
304·1178· 21102 . Coli
dloc. mowing mochlno •
blade . 304-8711-81530
· _o_n.:ly_l_ll::nt:-1::...,-:-ted=.-:--:-304·e?B-334e.
82 CHEVROLET Citotlon.
8,000
mlloo, 1!11195 .00,
Rotery plow lor Grovely
tr•ctor 82211 . 304 -8911· 304-11711·30114.
3974.
1878 Cornoro, 310 engine
11100. 304-1715· 2894.
Livestock
1878 MoUbu 4 door, 3011
engine, auto . P.8 . &amp;
bra..... 41.000 mi. 12.000.
304-1715·10118.

63

RINGLE 'S SERVICE expo· ,
rl•ced roofing. induding :
hot tor opplootlon. oorpon·

tar. electrician, muon. Call
304-e7!1-2088 or e76· :
4&amp;eo..
'
Woter Wallo. Common:lol :
and Dom•atic. T•st hiMa'. •
Pumpo Solea ond Service.
304-B9!1-3802 .

rn

Got yaur korioot In ah\p,
ahapo. Woter removol, FREE
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN
STEAMER e14-448-21D7.
STARKS Tree Tflmmlng &amp; , •
A•moval. Munl-backho•
115. hour, inll\,.d. free
ntlmoteo, 304-6141·201 0 .
E' &amp; R TrH Sorvico, fully
lnlured , free eatimetel .
Phone l14-3e7-0II31i. coil
after&amp;.

82

He fell o~t!

The police found Mrs. 81.1m
car under the old b,..,·,I"'\I'ID
She and
Pablo were
in it... ·
Ljnh1.1rt 1

~e's

qone
forever!

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

WINNIF:

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phono 44e-3888 or 448 ·
4477

84
II&lt;

10:15

WHOEVER DID
SKETCHES
I.MPRE&amp;SED

10:30

8055 THREW
IN MY
WASTEIM.SKET.

EIBctrical '
Refrigeration

10:45
11:00

C!1

SEWING Mochlno Npeiro,
Mrvice. Authorized Singer
Soloa 8o Borvli:a 6h.,pon
Scla1ora . · Fabric Shop .
PORMWOy. 992-2284 .

66 Building Supplies

RAR NF:Y

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE coli City Fumlturo·
304-&amp;76-2&amp;08 .

86

I GOT TO GO
MAKE A HOUSE
CALL OVER AT
~•vu•rr·.., '5,

General Hauling

DON'T . fORGET

a

TO TAKE ALONG
A BOTTLE OF
TRANQUIL PILLS,

DOC

K'
12:00 (I) Burna 8o Allen
(!) USFL Football&lt; Michl·
gon • · at
Birmingham
(SEASON PREMIERE!
(I) Nightllne
(I) Sign Off
® MOVIE: 'Tho Devil'a
Eight'
G (jJ Loot Word
•Gunsmoke
12 :30 D (f) Ill Ute Night with
Devld l.ettormon David's
guests are Mr. T. Aon Ho•
ward and 'Dave's Believe It
or Not.' (R)(60 min .)
I]) Jack Bonny Show
(I) Loot Word
G (I) M.OVIE: 'McMHian
&amp; Wife: Greed'
l1lJ Sign Off.
12:46 C2l MOVIE: 'Nighthawks'
1 :00 (I) I Married Joan
~

Now. hauling llmootono for
drlvowoya, top 1011 for yordo
• IHI din. Coli e14-367· '.
7101 ,
Gravel or fill dirt. Do livered .
Call e1.4 -992-38&amp;8.

· pEANUTS

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Call Jim Lllnlor, 304-6767397.

· I HEAR A HELICOPTER !

87

Uphol•tery

RESCIJE IS AT HANO...

I SEE PARATROOPS-!

,.
'
I'

''

46

FurnlshBd Rooms
'

Blooplns , - . 1125, utili·
!In pel, llntl• malo, ...,.
beth• 811 2nd Ave .. Glllpo·
llo. Call 448-4418 aftor
?PM • .

,

__

C1J llil il2l Hart 'to Hart.
(I) American Challenge
fi'IINN News
(2) Not Neceosarily The
New1 This show promises
to be everything the current
news is not.
\])Star Time
® Great Performances
@II In Starch of....
(I) TBS Even\11_11 News
Q C2l (I) 0 CIJ ®liD GJ
News
(2) MOVIE: ' I Ought To Be

in Pictures'
ESPN SportsConter
C1) News/Sports/Weather
@II Benny Hill Show
11 : 1 5 (I) Dave Allen at Large
1 1 :30 Q C2l Ill Tonight Show
Johnny's guests•are Charles
Nelson Reilly . Argus Hamil·
ton and Judith Blegen . (R)
160 min .)
C2liiii""IE : 'Death Wish II'
("" . 1no ter Ufe
~ uuoooiY Hill Show .
(I) Quincy Quincy tries
to e)Cpose a plastic surgeon
and his incompetence. IRI
(60 min.)
Ill All In the Family
Ill (l2l Nightline
81 Medamo'a Place
11 :45 (I) MOVIE: ., Assignment

Oopendoblo wuher -dryor
ropolr. Guo,.ntood work .
Coll814·211e-11820 or e14·
25e-1207.

12xe&amp; 2 bdr. I 160 clop ..
Clark Chopol Rd. Coli 614·
388-83ee.

~....,.

'1111'{

----::, -..--:--;-

2 Bedroom. fumloMd ..446·
44BO.
•

2 bedroom In Mobile home
In lyracun. Furnlohad.
110. month, You lillY utili·
. Employed -~~~· or
omall family, lt4-U2f918 or e14·1112·8238.

BORN !.OSF.R

~.

HILLCREST KENNEL • ~~-------­
Boordlng oil breado. AKC 1·
Reg . Dobonnono pupo old 1B?ll B lck Elec- 2 d
Dobormon Stud Service. ·
· u
uo
r.,
Coll44e-7788.
PS, P8, AC. AM·FM otero
11 ,810 or trade for cattle,
DRAGONWYND CATTERY farm equipment of tqUIII
1144 4 11 37
· KENNEL. AKC Chow - · l·v~•-lu~•~·_C:-•_ -:_e_.-:::-_ _·--::plea, · CFA Hlmolayon, Per· 1 879 Pontile Trono Am
oian ond SlomaN ldttona. 1 Oth v-or ..nnlvereary all
Coli 44e-3B44 ofllr 4PM.
ovailo.b lo option e. ehow
room condition, low mllee.
AKC Roglotorod Cocker can 448.927..
.
Sponlololx pupploo. 8 W k a . l - - - - - - - : - - old-dytogo • • 100ooch. 1 BBD Dido Cutl01a
Coli 44e-1824.
· Broughom 211 ,000 mlloo.
excellent condition . Cell
44e-3882.
57
Musical
lr111trumanta
19B1 Rod Dodge Colt.
3e7-7822.

68

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

... ..
.. "''.. .... ........ ....

Pets for Sale

2 bdr. ••llor Upper River Rd.
Ref. 8o dopoolt, odulta only.
no pota. C.ll446· 82112 otter
li 44&amp;-2491 .

Nico 3 bdr. mobile homo
modern furnished ; convenient location on Rt. 7 . Cell
61 4 -2411-11818 .

C2l (I) Ill (I) ® Gl riZ
News
C2l MOVIE: ·Adventures of
the Wilderness Family
Part II'
(I) Tic Tac Dough
(I) CArol B'u rnett
Ill N-o/Sports/Weather
(I) ® 3 -2· 1, Contact
fll Charlie's Angola
$:30 Q C2l (!) NBC No'IV•
\]) MOVIE: ' The Ring'.
(!) ESPN'o Sportaforu!n
(I) Bob Newhart Show
(I) Gl (jJ ABC Nowa
0 (I) ® CBS N-s
(I) Dr. Who
® Over Eaay
7:00 Q C2l P.M . Magazine
(!) This Woek In tho NBA
(I) Gomer Pyle
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Ill Chlflle' s Angels ·
0 (I) Tic Tac Dough
(I) ®
Mac:Neii·Lehrer
Report
®News
Gl G) People' s Court
@II Star Trek
7 :30 IJ (2)lie Detector
(!) ESPN SportaCenter I
(I) Andy Griffith
·
· (I) 0 (I) Family Feud
(I) Business Report
· ® You Asked For It
l1lJ This Old House
CD G) Entertainment
Tonight
8 :00 Q
(2) MOVIE: 'The
Swarm'
(2) MOVIE: 'The High and
the Mighty'
(2) MOVIE: 'Ticket to
Heaven'
I]) I Spy ' 11
(!) Auto Racing '83:
NASCAR Warner Hodg·
don Carolina !!00 from
Rockingham, NC
(I) MOVIE: 'The Sons of
Katie Elder'
(I) CD IDJ Happy Days
Chachi is torn between his
music and Jeanie. (Closed
Captioned(
Ill 0 (]) Billy Graham
Crusade
(I) ® Nova 'City or Coral.'
Tonight 's program takes a
look at a coral reef. (60 m1n .)
[Closed Captioned(
® How B. Bunny Won the
Wast Some less fortunate
prospectors trv to outsmart
Bugs Bunny for his gold. (R)
fill Children Between life
and Death
.
8:30. (I) Gl il2l Laverne &amp; Shirley
Laverne decides to become·
a Playboy Bunny . !Closed
Captioned(
® Bugs Bunny Mystery
Bugs tries to clear his name
after he is suspected to be
the force in a mjni-crime
spree . (R)
9 :00 (I) 700 Club
(]) Ill G) Throe's
Company Jack and Terri
suspect Janet is dating a
teenage boy. [Closed CaptionedJ
(!J To Be Announced
0 (I) ®I MOVIE: 'The
Mirror Crack'd'
American . Playhouse
'Who Am I This Time?' An
' actor and a actress in a small
town play ran in love. 1Rii60
min .)ICiosed Captionedl
(fi) MOVIE: ' The Last Nazi'
Iii Children Caught in the
Crossfire
9 :30 (]) Gl (jJ 9 to 5 Violet tries
to hide her stay in the .hospital.
10:00 Q C2l Cil St. Elsewhere
Drs . Annie Cavanero and
Ben Samuels help a porno
star e lude a process server
and Drs. Fiscus and Ehrlich
play in ~" 'Odd Couple· situation . {60 min .)
Ill MOVIE: 'The American
Succeos C9mpany'

ftfl~Nl fii)ft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~~

TR,S:rATE
UPHOL8TERY SHOP
l 1 e3 Boo. Ave., O.lllpollo
448-783:J or 44f-1833 .

&amp;I S.d. •

MOWREYI Uphol~lory Rt.
I lox 1!4, Pt. Plunnt ·
304-878-4184.
'

'.
'.
''

...

·-~-News

'.'

-·

-;

,,

';
•.

• Sign Off
. 1:16 (f) MOVIE: 'Endless love'
1 :30. D ' (f)
NBC
News
0\lemlght
. \

,.

I

by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscromblo thou lour Jumbles.

o~oltlior.lo eoch square.lo rorm

b
I I b
I

lour ordinory worde.

I TEENA

I

.,,..,,_e........r.,_
...
......... ....,_

6:00 •

u-

Equipm•nt
for Rent

Mobile tlome, 3 bedroom,
12x60, cBn1ral air. fiber-

3/8/8~

47\U18~x1&amp;'11 ln. ond 1

Backhoe ondlooder dlga ·a
ft .. Iorge bod pick up houla·
bit, operata younelf. 190.
per dey. 304-896-3841 .

Wanted t o do House Clean-

,,TRAc:;.y
.

Cut up aloba for firewood
115 pick up lood . can
814·2411-11804.

totill$rl. Reasonable rates .
3rd . &amp; OINe St .• G811ipolit.
446 · 3169 between 9 and 5 .

WAY

Television
Viewjnp;
EVENING

SPl.lf~S

ON···/WiiSS ·
WHAT?

BEIN"' CHIEF ltl
SAN\ litE MINDS L.IZZ.
I THINK I'VIi QOT A
TO

Motorcycl"

The

C.ll ~ 448. 1408 .-

LARGE troll• lot, with
gerden spece, 304· 11711·
2017.
.

. 711Eiol SHE

dabla. For eatinate call
446 · 3 159 or 266 · 1967 af ·
tor 6PM .

1983

For 1011 lump c.oal &amp; flro,
wood. linn Coal Co., Inc.

FOR rent-gorden plou.
plowed 8o dlaood, 120.00 ..,
unemployed-free . Phone
304-117&amp;-2028. H-y Hoi·
low Fruit Farm.

.ntollt JOi!'ISON,

pumps . Sales and Service .

'N' CARLYlE •u

Ohio

.

.
COUNTRY \IIIOIILE Homo
Porlc, Rouu 33, North of
~omwoy•...J.Jrgo 1-...._cau
882-'1478.

KIT

1983

l I I
J

I K J·
:,)(

] ()

J

Prlnranswerhere:

Now arrange the circted leners to ;
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gesled by lhe above canoon .

x, tCCL

"t I 1 I

(An~wera tomorrow)

I

Yesterday's

Jumbln : CLOVE BLANK FESTAL IMPOSE
Answer: What the diner at the fish restaura nt had lots
of-BONES TO PICK

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
1

Make your own luck
•

NORTH

3·8·83

+K 9 8 3
'Q 109

tAKQ 53
+Q
WEST
EAST
+AQ 10
• 762
• J 7 54
'K 6 3 2
tJ7
• . 10 9 4 2
+ K 10 8 5
+st
SOUTH
4J54
•As
+86
+AJ973 2
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Wesl

w...
I+

I'

Pass
Pass

North
Obi.

East

South

Pass
2•
Pass

Pass
3 NT

"Jlass
2NT

Pass

Opening lead: •2 ·

By Oswald Jacoby
and Jamot Jacoby
West was mighty lucky to
get o£1 the toasting fork
· after South passed to his
partner's takeout double of

one club. Still. his one heart
escape struck oi l. East gave
a very unsound raise to two
and if South had doubled, the
slaughter would have been
terrific. South decided to go
after his own game and wenl
to two no-trump, which
North ,raised to three .
South rose with dummy's
queen of hearts at trick one
and led the queen of clubs to
West 's king. Wesl led another heart to South's ace.
South took the ace-jack of
clubs while discarding two
spades from dummy and
stopped for long study.
He could lead a spade.
Surely West held the ace, but
that would have been an ·
acceptance of down one and
no one wins by accepting
penalties. So South tried for
game by playing diamonds.
He would have made an
overtrick if the suit had
broken , but it failed to ·
behave and South 'was -d'own
two for minus-200 and a
very bad score.
East and West were lucky
indeed to have gotten off the
toa sting fork, but East had
made his own luck with his
raise to two hear ts with a
balanced one-point band .

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

~

tlua•~•,r

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Noisy closing 1 Dross
5 White sauce
ZMonk parrot
10 "Damn
3 Arabic letter
Yankees"
role
11 Have pity
13 Se!',d coating
· 14 Pffsoner
1514d the way
17 Escape
18 One'of

4 African
republic
5 Brittle
6French
annuity

7Tree

.

8 Eating hour ·22 Fort in
9 Required
Calif.
12 Disposition 23 Intel- .
16 Bombastic
ligence

Tarzan's
playmates

19 Garcon's

outburst

gratuity
28Seemed
28 Excruciation Zl "Society is
Z3 Stratagem
a means
Z4 Big spender
to a-... "

32 Coarse file

.

33 Venezuelan
.
copper

' center
34 High-

Z4 Asian deer

Z5 High-strung
pitched
21 Black eye
sound
29 Operatic
35 Brink

·.

37 Rest

segment

•Z5 Clocking

·.

device

%6 Footless
animal

21 Surfeited

·

Z3 Gniduate
school
' (abbr. )

%9 Old Chinese
kingdom
30 French dance
31 Citric acid

salt
:MI Appeared
:MI Barren
3tSmelt

• '"l'heWood~ peeker

.

41 Discourage
42Swnmon .
I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE II

Here's

how

to work it :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFB. LLOW

ofte letter simply .l londe for tmother. In this sa mple A· is

wed for lbe lbne L'a, X for ·the two O's, etc. Single letters,
opoeltophee, the leneth and •formation of the words are all '
hlniL ~eb day the COda letter.- are different.

taYP'l'OQUOTES

QXRV
l.HP
'
LHP

CXR
FOW

ABUUBHV
LHPTOkUZ

XF I R

DRVOPTR

FKKUFPM,
QXFC

QXRV
L H P,

QXF C

DXFTURO

XFTA
CXRL·

SHHM . - .

D.
DHUCHV
Yee!er*y'1 Cl)opteqgote: YOU HAVE NO IDEA WHAT

A:.

POOR OPJNIOtfl HAVE OF MYSELF AND HOW lirrLE I :
.DESERVE IT.-WIWAMGILBERT

•

�10-The

Sentinel

·Well drillingslated;counci)

Meigs County agent's corner

. . es .·. . "_"

Mini-park.... ·.

Estate planning awareness

1n:

~--1----"''" ~" 0-.&amp;li.S--.., 1:!-Jue~u .March 9
By JOHN RICE

Extension Agent
Agriculture, "Meigs County
POMEROY - Dr. Paul L.
Wright, O.S.U. Extension Economist, Ag. Law. will be the resource
person at an estate planning awareness class to be held Wednesday,
March 9, from 9:30a.m. to3p.m. at
the Jackson Area CeriPr. Topics
will Include federal and Uhio estate
taxes; the marital deductions, unified credit, gifts; forms of property
ownership;·!ffieof trusts and life est·
ates; Installment sales of real estates; use valuation of property for
both Ohio and federal estate tax
purpose; content of wills; and
granting of a power of attorney . .
A light lunch wlll be served at a
cost of $2"50. Advance registration
IS requested. To register, call 2865CM4 or 992-6696.
An opportunity to obtain higher
yield guarantees, payment for replanting expenses. larger Indemnities for total losses and increased
protection against quality damage
are among the improvements recently announced for Federal Crop
Insurance policies on corn and
soybeans.
According to Ray McCracken,
District Director of the Federal
Crop Insurance Corporation, the
changes were made following extensive diScussions with farmers
and producer organizations and become effective for policies covering
1983 crops.
One major change enables pollcyholders to obtain production gurantees based on 10 years of above
average yields even though they
may have yteld records for as few
as three years. Growers who produce corn to fee to their own llvestock may be able to qualify with
complete records for only one year.
Information concerning the program, known as Individual Yield
Coverage, is available from the
County ASCS Office.
ATI Career Day
The Agricultural Technical Instl"
lute at Wooster, Ohio. is having a
career day on March 23, 1983. This
Is an excellent opportunity for high
school students to explore technical
and management careers "In the
City and On the Farm." This.year's
new format. focusing strictly on

,

'*-

!J811ts

e

a , ! '·-;
ct...
...rf&lt;·- ·1 .

!li1r .. .. ·
.a.«

!J

u.-

Willi•

Spring
Flowers

g,e

Our
Reg.
2.17
Underal!~ Panty Hose
Nylon, coHon panel. Rein-

-DRIED EUCALYPRJS:

-SILK FLOWERS .

G-M-J board

-ARTIFIIAL FLOWERS

programmatic contracts with area
more work for staff, Koebel said.
The personnel committee will probably have a recommendation for the
full board at its next meeting, Koebel said.
Meanwhile board members extended the deadline to submit
applications for membership on the ·648 board.
.
Four vacancies exist on the board. and interested persons wiii now have
until April 8 to apply for the positions.
The original deadline expired Jlec. 12, but the county commissioners in
Gallla and Jackson counties, at the urging of the Ohio Department of
Menta! Health, have since nominated persons for the vacancies.
Department of Mental Health officials will select the new members, but
the 648 board first recommends which persons it thinks should be chosen.
Plummer charged some defendants In her suit are trying to illegally
stack the board against her, but Strapp said she has not filed for a
restraining order to prevent appointment of new members.

Cheshire; a great-granddaughter,
Rebecca Minor, Cheshire; a sister,
Mrs. Roy (Ciatre) Lewis, Dayton; a
half brother, Robin A. Love, ·
Columbus, and several nleces and
nephews.
Mr. Minor was a member of the
Dexter Church of Christ.
' Funeral services will be held at 2
. p.m. Thursday al the Rawlings- ·
Coats-Blower Funeral Home with

Veterans Memorial

'1st Floor - · Housewares

· Admltted--Ceorge N'esselroad,
Jr., Pomeroy; Donald Covert,
Pomeroy; Julia Simpkins, Middleport; Kelly Thomas, Vinton; Ulah
Swan, Tuppers Plains.
DIScharged--Bernard R.airden,
John Hbuck. ·

ltr.tch lootle Socka
Oflon® acrylic/stretch
nyton. In Infants' sizes.

.

.

2 77
•

0UrReg.
3.88-4.58

Underwear
of 3 briefs or
l :~~~c:;offon
SIZes 2 and 4.

~l~o~rc~ed~.t~oe_..•sa
. .nct
..a...
too
. .t•.I-..··~-~
..·.·~~- M ~--------~--~~~----~~~~

.-

'

2 . ,-,

60 Tall Kitchen lags
13-ool. capacity, I ~-ml~
thick plastic. With ties.

1,621,282 Shares
I·

M-oz. · Safllo-r 011
Hollywood"' on for fry.
and cooking. Save.

1 97

Each
•
Limit 2
Rich Prell• Shampoo
16-oz. • bottle liquid or 7oz. • • lube concentrate.

·.

•

Multimedia, Inc..

'

..

."

\

.

. ' '·

...., 1••'
'

~'
~

Common Stock

·'

..... • J'

(par Yalue .1 per •haN)

)"

,
97
1.4?
77$
$

..

.

'·

.

)!

Price $31 Per Share

-r.
•.

.

I

'..
·
•.;

f

·"

The Firat Boatoa CorporatioD

Blyth EalbllaD PaiDe Webber ·
Incorporated ·

.pilloD, Read 1: Co. IDC.

DoDaldaoD, L•fkin 1: JeDrette

E. F. HDIIOD 1: Company IDC:.

Lazard Frerea 1: Co.

Lehmu Brothers KuhD Loeh

S.CurUIM Corporation

Kidder, Peabody I; Co.
Incorporated

~errill

lncorpout4HS ·

L)'Jicb, White Weld Capital Markets Group

PnadeDtiai.Bache

M..-rill Lyncb, Plerc., Fenan 6 Smltla lacorpOI'at..t

Salomoa Brothers lac

L. F. Rothschild, UDterberr, Towbia

Securitll1

Smith Barney, Huria Upham 1: Co. ·
)IU:IOI"por.ted

Wertheim I; Co., IDe.

.

·~ ~tl

'

.

I'

Goldmaa, Sacha &amp;Co.
Bear, Steams 1: Co.

~

' ;!

WarbDrr Paribaa Becker ·
A. C. Becker

Deu Witter ReJlloldaiDc.

J. C. llt:adford 1: Co.
IIKOrporated

March 1,1983

• If

'

'l)

'

'

'.1.:!~:.1...~ LlrnH 2

IL
Our 10 rap•r Dlnn.r Plates

1.47

, Reg. Grease-resistant plates idedl
1.54 lor use In microwave oven. 9",

..

.

t

Upon requo1t, a copy ot"the. Prorpectu• doteribin4 theH securities a.r:u' tho buaine.. ol the
Company trUlY be obtained within any State /rom any Underwnter who may le,ally
diatribute it within auch State. The .ecuritiea are aRered only by means oJ the Proapectua,
and, this announcement · ~· neither an offer. to ~11 nor a .olicitation of any oHer to buy.

THE
MATTEL INTELLIVISION
CLEARANCE SALE AD
Featured in TOday's Lucky 7 Sale on
Page 4 should state that there is a
minimum of 10 units per store. We
Regret any inconvenience this may have
caused our customers.

Pr.
- OUr 96¢

g~Our
~~~-

'

If the country maintains Its
reliance on foreign oil, several years
from now the ou producers could
•'pull the strings around our throats
the way they did In '74 and '77," he
said.
.
Trumka, In Morgantown for hts
first address to the UMW's 24member International Executive
BOard since hts November eleCtion,
said he was lobbying Congress for a
re-lndustrialization program that
would encourage industry io replace Its oll·fired furnaces with
coal-fired ones.
"We see the continued erosion of
our Industrial heartland as a threat
to national. security;"' he said.

$

.

•

to Brighten Your ltollll!

UMW leader issues
false security
advice
'
MORGANTOWN' , W.Va. (AP)The Urilted States must not become
trapped Into a false sense of energy
security by declining oil prices,
Un!ted Mine Wor~rs President
Richard Trurnka said Monday.
U the nation forsakes its vast coal
reserves, Americans will find
themselves held captive by foreign
oil producers, the union leader
warned.
.
"We see the decline right now In
oU prices as a faisesenseofsecurity
for our people. I'm afraid it's going
to lull us Into the belief that
everything is copacetic and that we
should continue to Increase our
dependence on oil," Trurnka said. '

•lrrt '-tl;.
tl

(Continued from paae 1)
PuJllOSe of the meeting is to show,· ·'.O ~rwas read from
Brown stated thaf after meeting · Bill Young annOUiiced that a
that council was still interested
Hrglt School l3and . . . . M',
with the revitalization coinmittee
$19,1XXJ matching grant for · the · pursuing the project. It • •wa~ donation of money. CGullilll'¥7 f11
- fonned·bythePomemyehamberot - --mini·park Clan_~ill be · received
!l~fit!Sted that-Kim·Shlel~accorn·.. toallowWahama'slleNW'tUII('fCommerce that group was Inter· through the Ohio Department of .pany Brown to the meeting. · • , · day in Pomeroy · and lf4 Pi I Ill·
agricultural careers · and indus·
estedinrel~atingpowerllneslnthe Natural Resources (ODNR).
,, . Co~U.inotherbusin~s,agreed Wahama Band b&gt;
»-t III ,..
tries, should be of special interest to
downtown section of Pomeroy. This
Young said asetofdrawlngsmust ... to n~tlate a ra~ Jldfustment for festMtles .in ~-.
""· •
__ would include Main, Second and be submitted toshowwhat~rogress
high p~re sodlllrrt:
throU·
AI$0 :1!J1!etlng wtdl •
C:
many students.
Proving that exciting agrlcultuCourt Streets. Purpose Is to make . on !he park has been made~. : gout th~ residentiaJ.atea\pf POme- JetfHIIJ~- Hllle.-y........
.,
ral careers .begin on the farm and
the power lines Jess noticeable
' Brown has an appol)ltment
roy, with Columbus and S6uthern · use«~fUdltoriumlor~ ''
extend far beyond is the goal of the
·
·
Thursday at 3:.llp.m. withODNR.
Ohio Electric Co. The rate adjust- and p~tatlons of a ~.~
three-hour, open session. Students
ment would not Include the down· ~U'i!.- ~
:·.- :.. \
may ' talk informally with more
townsection.
· :' ; ~em•fsald he
than twenty .Industry representaCouncil discussed .contacting, an · . pniSE!Jt .:fWo plays
tlves. They willlearn·about avallaa~hitect for the utlllzation of the ~ tMt a ·portion
ble apport unities and the
secondfloorofthecity '/Ullding. 'J'!Ie :cOOld be donatl!d to tliir &lt;JIIIIae
day-to-day activities of technicians . Elizabe
' th M. Yost
the Rev. Amos. Tillis of!lciatlng. . matter was referred ti:J the building other portions to ln.,XIM 411 ... · ·
andmiddlemanagersinbuslnesses
Burial will be in the Staridtsh
collUl}ittee.
plays dnc! poss!I:Jiy
from the !arm to the supermarket.
Cemetery at Dexter. Friends maY.
Anderson asked what ('Ollncil's perfOrmers.
' ' ' • . " i'
At the same Ume, ATI faculty
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Yost, lr/, 661
call at the funeral home from 2.1o 4
general feeling was on putting
Council Informed. til~
I •
and staff will present continuous,
North Second Ave.. Middleport; and?to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
unusediRJD!undsintotherevitali- wouldhavetoillveotti ! 2 ·
thirty-minute demonstrations of died MondayattheHoizerMedical
zationproject.
liabilly coverage, bufT 1 Itt
typical activities of tttese careers.
Center.
Charles L. Smith
Mayor Andrews · stated . that proposal was good alld~ - •
Students will receive a career InferMrs. Yost was born in Columbus
before this could be done council
to proceed with his pla!IS.
·• '
matico guide to use during the ses- on Aug. 21,' 1895, a daughter o! the
would have to find out if It could
George Stitt, pollee- etac, · ' ':
slons. A box lunch will be provided late William Henry -and Agnes
Charles L. Smilh, 103•ofG67Sotith
legaUytransfer the funds. It was the formed council his
"'
opinion of couricll to do everthing It · during the month of
compliments of ATI.
Hamilton Allensworth. BesideS her Second St., Middleport, died at his
The program Is aimed at high .• usband,shewasprecededindeath resldenceTuesdaymoming.
couldtohelptheproposedcommunmade 55 arrests and diM
,
school juniors, but sophomores,
by her first husband, Oscar WorkHe was born Oct. 22 • 187!!. in
tiy improvement plan.
miles.
i} '.
Jackson County. one of 10 children
.
,
. .
i
freshmen and undecided sen ors man, a brother and as1ster.
born to. the late John Smith and
It was announced that an ordiStitt asked that an appl!l:oilloiUt .[
may also attend. Groups of stuSurviving are her husband, E. R.
nance for unsafe building will be
sent to the state to audlotilzlt' eli ;·
dents are welcome. Reservation
(Dutch) Yost; a sister. Nellie M. Mary Stevens Smith. ·
submitted tocouncilforstudyatthe
purch;lse of a used stafll. Pami
·
f
He married Iva Guthrie of Gallla
and. they had three
next meeting.
vehicle.
.
·.
deadline is March 11. CaU us at 992- Price, Middleport; two oster CountY In
1907
6696 if you want more information. brothers, LouiS Smith, Columbus,
Also meeting with council were
Steve Hartenbach, ~
Garden Tip For the Week
and Ralph Smith, Johnstown, two · sons. HIS wife died in 1970·
two Interested members of the
issued 702 tickets during Fttlnuy
First of ail let me say that cab- stepdaughters, a stepson, a stepHe is survived by one son, Clemit
Meigs County Boxing and Youth
and collected SL5'T7 ttom
bage has been planted In the river granddaughter, four step- S. Smith, Columbus; one sister,
Club. Harold Willis, spokesman.
parking meters.
.bottoms this past week so hopefully grandsons, four step great- Mary Saunders, Columbus; one
asked council for any financial
Jack Krautter, street" mpi!rtii.
springmustbehere.
granddaughters , four step nleceandtwonephews.
suworttheycouldgive.
tendent, said addltioalll . ...._ •
Pruning Trees- Prune trees ev- great-grandsons and several
Smith attended school In Gallia
• cOuncil advised it must seek
limestone are needed on
d
County and worked with Miller
ery year . . Remove all dead, ts- cousins.
BrothersContracters. With them he
Information on how to proceed in
and Pleasant Ridge. 0
dl •
eased and broken branches and the
ServiceS will be held at I p.m. hel...,.. build old Route 11. which is
making donations. _Council noted It
proved the purchase of lluahl'lf. _.
. weaker of two crossing branches Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
"'-u
was not allowed to make donations
Counciiapprovedtherepmtotdllf
Re
Willi
now S.R. 35. He was a member of
v.
am Providence Baptist Church, Galli·
without going through a certain
Mayor showing rece1p1s ·tor ._
that are rubbing together. Remove Home with the
upright growth, Including water- Mlddleswarth officiating. Burial
procedure.
month of February in theanloulltaf
sprouts and growth excluding light will be in Gilmore Cemetery.
polis, for more than 70 years. ·
The same situation came up when $4,070.50.
from the center of the tree. Droop- Friends may call at the funeral
Servioes will be "held at 2. p.m.
ing branches that interfere with home at anytime.
Friday at Providence BaptiSt
Church
with Rev. John Johnson and
traffic or mowing should be re- John G. Minor
moved. Make cuts to gtve, the tree
Rev. Vance Watson o!!iciating.
the desired direction of growth.
Burial wlll follow at Providence
John
G.
Minor,
77.
Roush
Lane,
Cemetery
Soli Prepara lion - Don't work
- Callinghoursarefrom7
garden soli when too wet. The soil Cheshire, formerly of Dexter, died to9 p.m. Thursday at Miller' sHame
structure will be damaged to the TuesdaymornlngatHoizerMediSal for Funerals In the former Wareextent that valuable pore space will Center following a llngerlrig illness. him e Funeral Home b uildlng . The
be lost. If worked too wet, clay soils
Mr. Minor was born Sept. 19• 19ffi body will lie In state at the church
atDexter,asonofthelateSherman
on·e hou r p no
· rto services .
become hard and difficult to work
S. and Lillie Persall Minor. He was
thwughout
growing.season.
also preceded in death by an infant
Police cite driver
Soil dry enough to work shatters sister and two half brothers. ·
easily. Determine if soil is dry
He was employed .as a bridge
Charles Thomas of Route 1.
enough by squeezing a handful of maintenance worker for, a railroad
Middleport, was cited for assured
soil gently in your fist. If the soil for a number of years and was a
clear dlstancefollowine an accident
crumbles when released, it IS dry farmer.
. Mondayat4:42p.m.
enough to work. Soil too wet to work
Surviving are hiS wife, Frances
forms a mud ball as pressure ts Rice Minor; a daughter, Mrs.
Pomeroy pollee report that Thoapplied.
Orville (Geraldine) Bratton, Che- mas struck the rear of a car dri~en
•
shire; a son and daughter'in-law, by Lowell Greer of Syracuse. wbo
John and Nancy Minor. Cheshire;
was stopped for a stop sign. There
(Continued from page 1 ) three grandchildren, Earl Thomas,
was moderate damage to both
Rio Grande; Jack Ray Minor,
mental health agencies may mean
Beautiful Spri~ Colols
Cheshire, and Stephanie Minor, vehicles but no injuries.

.

Reyaota8 Wrap Aluminum FoH ·
Sole For baking anc1 freezing fooct.
Price wrapping leftovers. 12'x75" roll.
Facial Or lalhroom 111sue
Your
280 Kleenex8foclalllssuea; 4 rolls
Choice Delaeye bathroom lluUe. 2..ply.

157

~~Reg.

~7

0UrReg.

1.88 ..
. Limit 2
•
Llmlt2
M-oz.' ........,Spray
16..a.' Uqlllcl Woollte · .
Waxed beauty as you &lt;N"'I For line waahables; no fad·
Regt liar or lemon scent.
lng, atretc:hlng. shrinking.

........

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