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                  <text>Page-l 0---The Daily Sentinel

Meigs County agent's corner

Beef dinner·slated · tonight ·
By ,JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY -Coming EventsMonday evE'ning, March 21. th&lt;'
Meig, County Beef Cattle Associ a t i·
oni will haH• a dinner meeting at tht'
Meigs Inn starting at 7:15 p.m .
Everyone is welcome. Speaker will
be Harold· Bennett , Field Represen·
tative of Central Ohio Breeding
Assbciation, who will ta lk on heat
synchronization and reproductivr
ma nagem ent.
Wednesday. March 23 - Meigs
FFA Banqu~t at the high school at
6:30p.m.
Special !eei:\cr sa les at the Ohio
Va lley LivE'Stock in Ga llipolis on
Tuesdays, Marth 29 and Aprill2 a t
7:30 p.m . Cattle will be reeeived
from 8a.m. to:lp.m. on the day ofthe
sale.
Don't Pasture Too Soon . .With
warm weather coming we would all
like to quit feeding hay to our
livestock as soon as possible.
However. don't start too soon.
Pasture that is grazed too soon will
not · give you the production you
would like to have. Bluegrass s hould
be up four inches. Tall grass such as
fescue and orchardgrass should be
eight to 10 inches high. A tall grass
with legume such as clover and
alfalfa should be at least 10 inchE'S
high . Do not graze the bluegrass ·
down a ny closer than two to two and
one-half inches high, the tall grass
two and one-half inches, and the tall
grass and legume two and one-hali
to three Inches.
As soon as you have reached this
level let the pasture rest30ro35days
before re-grazing. If pasture gets
ahead of this and can be cut and
baled. rule any excess pasture
growth.
As a sidelight you might be
interested in when you mow or
graze you never get 100 percent of
what you attempt to harvest. The
closest we come to harvesting the
entire crop is when we harvest it a s

_ Obi~_

legislature
now moving slow

grass silage. We can recover 8S to94
percent. When we harvest it as hay
we recover 78 to 85 percent. If we
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API- After
rotationally graze our pasture, not
nearly doubling the state Income
only will the pasture produce more
tax because of financial woes,
for us but we will recover more of it
lawmakers say this year is no time
as well, up to 60 or 65 percent. If we
to push costly social programs.
permanently graze animals on a
· One top leader saidprivatelythat
pasture field we can expect to only
the s low pace this year is deliberate
recover 50 percent of the forage that
because lawmakers ieel a low
Is there. So much is lost by
profile Is best iight now.
tramping, uiine and manure.
Niow laws often mean new
what About Dormant Oil Sprayprograms and the Democrats, who
When I S!IY a dormant oil I am not
control both houses, do not want
talking about some dirty old motor
voters to think taxes were raised for
oil that you have saved, I am talking
that purpose rather than out of
about a superior oil. Superior does
absolute need.
not meap a high grade of oil but a
.Nearly three months into the
type of oiL Superior oils are contact
session, the House and Senate have
insecticides that interfere physi·
enacted only two significant billscally with insect respiration. They
a 90 percent increase in the income
are used to kill scale insects, mites,
tax along with some other smaller
plant bugs, psyllids a nd certain
tax increases and a measure
moths.
implementing a · voter-approved
Early Spring Strawberry Carestatewide housing program.
As soon as new growth starts to
The House goes into Its Easter
develop on s trawberry plants, it's
recess Wednesday (tintil April 6)
time to begin removing the winter
and the Senate will put a moratomulch so the plants can come
rium on floor sessions from March .
through. Place the mulch between
29 until April7. There probably will
the rows. as this controls· weed
be sbme interim committee meetgrowth, conserves moisture, and
ings in both chambers, however.
helps keep the fruit clean. If there is
Although Democratic Gov. Ri·
a danger of frost after the beriies
chard Celeste's two-year budget
begin to bloom , some of the mulch ·
will not be introduced until March
can be-raked back over the plants.
30, advance work begins this week
And So It Grows - Those of you
as agency heads and others explain
who have been over-anxious to get
their needs to finance committees.
your shrubs a nd landscape trees
pruned can get with it now.
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, R·
The best time to prune is just
Cincinnati, following Celeste's State
before new growth begins in the
of the State speech to a joint sesSion
spring. That would be February,
Tuesday, noted that the governor
March, April and even May for
some plants. All woody . plants,
including roses, should be pruned at
this time. A lot of people think roses
should be pruned in the fall, but that
Is wrong. Also, prune all everThomas G. Parker, Kate A.
greens. ornamentals. shade trees
Parker to Board ofCountyCommlsand other landscape plants, includ- sioners of Meigs County, Right of
ing your fruit trees. Pruning of Way;Salisbury.
flowering shrubs should be done
Lydia pel.ong, Harriet Thompafter the spring bloom.
son to BoardofCountyCommlssioners of Meigs County, Right of Way,
•
I
Salisbury.
Ruby M. Spurlock, deceaSE'd,
Rockford Spurlock, Affidavit,
Mlddletiort.
expansion of minority businesses
Mutual Fedf'ral Savings and
and suggested a one-stop licensing
Loan
Assoc. of Zanesville and
center for the state's small
Logan
Fed. Sav. and Loan Assoc.,
businesses·.
Cert.
of
Merger, Pomeroy.
The governor said specifics about
Robert E. Shain, RuthE . Shainto
job training and changes in business
W. Floyd, Donna M. Floyd,
Orland
taxes will be spelled out in the days
one-half
aci-e. Sutton.
before he present~ his budget
Willard
Hines, Elsie Hines to
proposal to the legislature on March
Emery
G.
Haggy,
Lelia J. Haggy,
30.
Lot. Pomeroy.
WayneO. Cobb, Patricia A. Cobb.
Donna J. Branham, Bobbie Branham to Gregory Keith McCall,
MeetS.tonight
Debra JoMcCaU, Parcels, Bedford.
Diamond Sav. and Loan Co. to
Middleport PTO will meet this
Frank Houser, Terii Houser, .35
evening at Middleport Elementary
acre, Rutland.
School at 7: :JJ p.m.
William H. Welsh to Regina Y.
Welsh, .55 acre, Olive.
Rita J. Whitlatch to Terry Shawn
Whitlatch, Lot, Middleport.
Marriage licenses
Cariie E. G rueser to Don K
Marriage licenses were issued In
Grueser, Parcels, Sutton.
Meigs CQunty Probate Court to
William B. Ledlie, Emma A.
Michael Lawrence Triplett. 22, Rt
Leadlle to Richard L. Fetty, Glenna
2, Pomeroy, and Barbara Rae
M. Fetty, one-hali acre, Rutland.
Custer, 17, Middleport; cllarles
Merrill O'DeU , deceased, to Vera
Edward Johnston, Jr. 19, Racine,
B. O'DeU, Cert. of Trans.,
and Deborah Ann Lyons, 23,
Middleport.
Racine: Kenneth Robert Harris, 27,
Village of Syracuse to General
Pomeroy, and Mary Cathern
Telephone Co. of Ohio, Easement,
Crossen, 25, Gallipolis.
Sutton.

Property

Baseball meeting
Adults interestE'd in assisting with
the Racine Baseball Summer
League program are invited to
attend a meeting Tuesday , March
~2. at 7 p.m. at Racine Elementary
School.

·•

Area deaths
Laura Lenora Spencer

Carl W. McQuirt '

.

Emergency runs

AT
CROW'S
·fAMILY
RESTAURANT

Over 10,000 Palrslll
Direct From Factory To Youl

GIGANTIC

Faetory lrreplan. ·

·ANTIQUE SATINS
·OPEN WEAVES
·INSULATED l MORE
·MADE IN AMERICA .

Saturday Admissions--Clara Riley, Middleport; Carl Schultz, Jr. ,
Racine.
Saturday · Discharges--William
Kennedy, Albert Hostetter, Bill
Kennedy, Elizabeth Roush, Helen
McCle.llan.
Sunday Aqmissions -- MIIdred
Fisher, Pomeroy; Norma Goodwin, Pomeroy.
SundiiY Discharged--None.

Plnch·Pitettd

DRAPERIES
Reedy to her.;
VIIUII · from
124.00 to S1~ . 00

TaUortcl

ShMr

PANELS
~ · WIO.• •

a.··

long

Reg . t\1 .00

KITQIN
CURJAINS
Reg . II to 12-i
ON SALE

Twln1,
Fulla,
Queena, I&lt; lngs
RIG. 136. Ia 1110.

•2.10 UP 1
Now '310
•

Clip

e."'-'""' Ad lor on oeldltlonoi!Dpor-tllvlnvo.

Ptllll Plnunt, W.

. GALVANIZED
FENCE FABRIC
.

$325

Served with Whipped Potatoes,
chicbn Gravy, COle Slaw, Hot
Roll, Butter and Coffee.

Sony. No substitutes exc:ept bevefii&amp;IS which 11M an additional

FREE ESTIMATES

price.

Every Wednesday 'Night

*FENCE INSTAll AllONS
*HOUSE PAINTING .
*AWNINGS INSTALLED

BAKED STEAK DINNER
DINING ROOII ONLY

Served with Mashed Potatoes,
Choice of Salad, Roll, and
Drink.

AuthoriZed CataiO&amp;IIercha.nts

·

'

.,.... TUESDAY ONLY, MARCH 22rtd FREE P•RKING bON'T MISSIT·
ftllltll lQ A.M. TO 5 P.M.
OPENTOTHEPUBLIC
Pl•c•t POINT PLEASANT NAnONAL GUARD AIIIIORY • Rt. IZ Narljl •

FENCING

FOR JUST

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

BEDSPREADS

Craw's
Family
Re~urant
228 W. Main
PH. 992·6432
Pomltroy, Oh.

Greg.&amp; Patty Gibbs
108 W. MAIN ST .. POMEROY, QH.
HOURS:·
PHONE: .
Mon.·TIItii.-Wed.' Frl. 9:30 to 6
(Ohio)982-21 78
Thul8. 9:30 to u
Va.) 773-9577
s.t. 8:30 to 2

cw.

.

.,

Pa!-('t&gt; 10

-e
. Voi.Jl,N0 .227
C.py•ighted I 983

•

•

at y

enttne
2 Sections, 18 Page~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 22 1983

20 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. New1pape1

•

No imprOvement fouDd In Syracuse test well
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel staff
A new water test well drilled recently by the village
of Pomeroy on Its property located in Syracuse
showed no improvement over the present wells
according to reports Issued at Monday's bi-monthly
session of Pomeroy Council.
Larry Wehrung, councilman, said tests made by
Ohio Drilling Company and water ~upertn tendent
Reed Will, showed the water to be as hard as the
present water.
Wehrung reported Kim Shields had suggested that
thE' viilage try to obtain additional property in
Syracuse eith&lt;'r from Jack Williams or Carroll Norris
to drill other wells. ·
If council is unsuccessful in obtaining other
properties, Shields suggested council approac,h EPA
with plans to rebuild the old water works and rerum
to using water from the river.
Wehrung Indicated funds from the grants that
council has In reserve mu~t be committed or the

mon~yw!ll

have to be returned by the end oftheyear.
The reserve money from the three grants can only
be- used for wat~r or sewage or related problems,
Wehrung said he has been Informed that none of the
reserve funds can be used for the restoralion of
·Pomeroy.
Again, it was reiterated that the EPA requires
council purchase a certain amount of ground which
would allow only one well to be drilled on each site. It
was noted additional ground is needed at the well
sites.
·Wehrung suggested council, members of the Board
of Public.Affairs, Shields and the drilling company
meet to .dlscuss alternatives. Purpose of drilling new
wells Is to try to get softer water.

Leonard reported it would cost approximately
$92,400 to build ,new lines on Second Street from
Butternut to ,Simmol)s Oids, plus.the removal of 16
lights (400 watt) on Main Street.
In addition, it . would cost $53,630 to establish
underground lights, 40 lights 100 watt, on Main Street.
Leohard said the report was a preliminary one and
added, if council decided to go ahead with the project
his company would. develop a detailed cost a nalysis.
Leonard asked that someone represent council on
the lay out to work with the electric company. Bill
Young, counciiman Is to meet with the electric
company representative time and date to be
determined later:
Young suggested that Instead of lights being on the
parking lot they be placed in the area where th&lt;'
railroad tracks are located.
Last month, representatives of General Telephone
Company met with council to answer a complaint
filed by the village.

· Meets with cooncil
Lonnie Leonard of the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., present!'Q a cost estimate for
changing the street lights in the downtown area as
part of the renovation project.

RepresentativPs of the phone company wen' a gain
present at last night's meeting.
. According to phone company representatives,
problems aired at the February meeting have
Improved and the company is working on all
problems. A spokesman for the company.tntroduced
Gary Bates, who will be the new superv ior for the
Pomeroy area .
It was announced that new directories would be out
in July a nd it was suggested that a new nwnber be
considered for the police department along with an
additional line.
Council will consider the cost for a n additional line
and notify the company. The phone company, in tum ,
will keep council posted on its progress as I hey go
along.
Mike Noel. architeet from Athens. m et with council
in regard to the renovation of the second and third
floor of the present city building in order that they
may be leased for office space.
(Continued on page 6)

Gov. Celeste outlines jobs plan
·cLEVELAND (AP) ·...:. Gov. Richard Celeste says his biennial budget
Includes $1.6 billion to create new jobs and keep the ones now in the state.
In a briefing for business and labor leaders in Cleveland on Monday,
Celeste said the state hopes to attract more tha.n $1 billion In federal and
piivate money to pay for most of his jobs creation plan.
The job program calls for spending nearly $1.6 billion over the next two
years. Celeste said the state would put up $335 million. most from the
general revenue fund.
.
"Our obligation is to lay a solid foundation on which we can build a
steady recovery for the state of Ohio," Celeste said. "We ni.-ed to be
cautious, conservative and prudent about what we have to deal with in
Ohio.
"It Is tempting to leap to the assumption that tomorrow Is going to be a
neW day for Ohio. It is very important to have In mind where this state is
and where we're going with it," the governor said.
. Celeste proposed:
-Increasing from $1 million to $5 million the amount spent to push
travel and tourism.
-A $15 million fund to spur cooperative efforts between business and
colleges and universities.
·
-Adding $25 million to the state loan fund for minority business
expansion and venture capital.

-Establishing one-stop Ucenslng centers for small businesses and
.
creating smaU business action centers.
· ~Teams made up of executives on loan from companies, who will be
.
assigned to help troubled businesses.
-Setting up coi!Offiunity adjustment programs for areas h1t ha rd by
·
plant and business closings.
-Reorganizing the state's international trade efforts.
.
-Creating an information base ·from Ohio industries anq educational
research.
The plans are part of the governor's two-year budget. which he will
present to the Legislature March 30 . .
Celeste talked about his "Buy Ohio" program.
"Did you know that our own road map was made out of state last year? I
can't believe we don't have printil)g firms in Ohio who can do that job," the
governor said.
Frank Valenta, district director for the United Steelworkers of America,
said he was pleased Celeste offered his plans before fE'deral job-crea I ion
legislation is enacted.
Celeste said hopes of getting the $1.2 billion are realistic. "Most of these
dollars are set aside in formulas that Ohio has not taken advantageof in the
past," he.said.

Pomeroy pilot dies ·in plane crash., son injured
EXPLAINING THE INVESTMENTS- Gov. Richard Celeste ·
holds a cban explalnlnl his plans for spending the state's new re.- ; .
venues from a tax lncreBJJe. Celeste apeared In Toledo, Cleveland, '
Lbna and elsewhere In a swing around the state to explain his 1
plans. ( AP Laserphoto)

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
. CHICKEN YOU ·CAN EAT

•1111 SU. &amp;Colon oRIIIIJ To llln1
TREMENDOUS BARGAINS:

Page 5

Veterans Memor-ial

Every Tuesday Night

Brin1 Window Mt~~~~rements

Page 3

Meets

TUESDAY ONLYl

Qullity, FICtory a-outs,· and

New clothing shop
will open Friday

wishes

PUBLIC NOTICE

1111 MerchMdlse MUST Be Sold M
MlU WHOLESALE PRICESII SM
Up To 7K Below Rtllil On 1st

Hoeflich's Beat
of Bend .....

Easter

. ·'

Drapery &amp;
Bedspread

Hepatitis bout puts
Householder in bed

.*'''--l.

Laura Etta CornwcU. Charles
Edward Wildermuth to Melissa
Ann Ihel, Lots 33, 34. Sutton.
Garth Sovel, Dixie Sovel to Garth
Sovel, Lots 11 and 12, Olive.
James R. Reeves. Bernice M.
Reeves to Charles E. Wheeler,
Martha K. Wheeler, Parcels.
Scipio.
Dolphus Burke, Jr. , Wanda C.
Burke to 'Thomas E. Thompson,
Nancy J. Thompson. 30 acres,
Columbia.

•·

•

plans to look at the pos$lbility of
more taxes -this time on business.
Laura Lenora (Babe) Balley
(:arl W. McQuirt, 61, 26500
Aronoff, who said the income tax Spencer, 73, Route 2, Pomeroy, was
Rutherford Road, Rt. 3, Albany,
hike by Itself Is excessive, said, "It dead on arrival at Veterans
died of an apparent heart attack
sounded like there will be a series of Memoiia) Hospital where she was
whileworidngathlsfannSaturday.
.business taxes to jac;k up the
taken by the Pomeroy Emergency
Mr. McQulrt was preceded In
spending level."
Squad early Sunday morning.
death by his parents, Walter and
Aronoff and other Republicans
Mrs. Spencer was bam May 17, Edith Holycross McQuirt, twf?
who voted against the permanent
1909 In Meigs County, a daughter of brothers, Ernest and Gerald, and
tax increase say It will create a
the late William anq ·Sadie Wan- three infant brothe~s and sisters.
surplus instead of only erasing a
dling Bailey. ShE: was a retired
He was a retired truck driver for
current deficit of $511 million and . employe of Veterans Memorial
Consolidated · Freightway, a
keeping bills paid In the next
Hospital.
member of Teamsters Local . 413,
biennium.
Surviving• are a sister, Mary E.
Columbus and an Anny veteran.
Celeste and his budget advisers
Shaeffer, Pomeroy; a brother,
He II\ survived by his wife, Lulu
say the recession is far from over: Wilbur Bailey, Pomeroy; three
Mae Puckett McQuirt; one son.
The governor said in speeches late
brothers-in-law, Guy Jones, PhoRo~rt. Columbus; three grandin the week that unemployment will
enix, Ariz.; Lester Spencer, Woos- children; four brothers, Richard,
remain at least 12 percent or more
ter, and Francis E. Shaeffer,
Robert, Donald and Harold all of
for many months and 't hat welfare
Pomeroy; a close fr-iend, Joseph · Columbus: one sister, Vada Ash;
costs are continuing to rise.
McNabb, Pomeroy, and several Jacksonville, Ark.
•·
Depending on whoie projections
nieces and nephews.
Friends may call at the Bigony.are accurate, and no one's has been
Besides her parents, she was Jordan Fruneral Home in Albany
the last two years, Ohio either will
preceded in death by her husband,
this evening from 7 to 9. Funeral
have a surplus of $3.5 billion at the
Chester Spencer, a brother and a ser-Vices will be held Wednesday at i
end of the next biennium or will
sister.
·
p.m. at the 0. R. Woodyard Co., 255
·break about even with increased
Funeral services will be held at 2 E . Stat eSt., Columbus with the Rev.
revenues from the income tax of
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral Jerry Leonard officiating., Burial
about $2.5 billion.
Home with . the Rev. Richard ·wtll be In Obetz Cemetery. Friends
Veteran Rep. Robert E. Netzley,
Rothemich officiating. Burial will may call at 0- R. Woodyard Co.,
R-Laura, a conservative and
be In the Mount Herman Cemetery. Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to9.
·
member of the House Finance
Friends may call at the funeral
Committee, made the $3.5 billion
hOme from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
estimate. "The income tax grows
Tuesday session
today. ·
even during a recession," he said.
Cristina Sale, director of the
The American Legion Auxiliary
Office of Budget and Management,
of DrewWebsterPost39, Pomeroy,
said that had the Income tax
will meet at7: 30p.m. Tu~yatthe
Eight calls were answered by
increase not been approved, the
hall. Mayor Clarence Andrews will
state would end the 19&amp;H!lffi local units over the weel\end. the
be the speaker.
Meigs County Emergency Medical
biennium with a $2.5 billion deficit
SerVIce reports.
On Sunday, at 4:18 !l.m., the
71 ~n-ed dinner
Pomeroy Unit took Lenora Spencer
from Cbester Road 'to Veterans
Ell Denison Post 467, American
Memorial Hospital Mrs. Spencer
Legion, Rutland, presented a char·
Anna F. Nease to John E. Lyons, being dead upon arrival; Racine at
ter to Sons of the American Legion,
Janice M. Lyons, Lot 6, Racine.
1:31 p.m. went to the Leonard Stone
a new auxiliary group which has
Elmer Tom, deceased, to Carl resident In Letart fora structure fire
been formed, following a dinner
Tom, Harold Tom, Grace K TOm, and was on thescenefor25minutes;
Sunday afternoon at the post hOme
Affid. for Transfer, Bedford.
Pomeroy at 5: 55 p.m. took Norma
In Rutland . Dinner was served to71
Goodwin from her ·home on Brtck
persons attending.
Grace K. Tom, deceased, to
St., to Veterans Memorial.
Harold Tom, Carl Tom. Affld. for
Saturday, at 10:lla.m., Pomeroy
Transfer, Bedford.
iook Stanley Bass, Monkey Run, to
Alfred Yeauger, Hilda E .
Veterans Memorial: Pomeroy at
Yeauger to Alfred Yeauger, Hilda
2:03 p.m. took BiU Bly, Chester.
E. Yeauger, Lot, Sutton.
Road, to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Jay Hall Jr., Lillian Marlene Hall
Racine at 5:12 p.m. ·took Carl
to Mitchell H. Meadows, Debra F.
Schultz. Jr.. Mile Hill Road, to
Meadows. Parcels, Middleport .
Veterans Memorial; Rutland at
· Mildred Maxine Dyer to Herald
5: 15 p.m.. went to Columbia
Oil and Gas Co., Right of Way,
Remember friends and
Township for Carl McQulrt who
Rutland.
loved ones with a
died of a heart attack while
Mildred Maxine Dyer to Herald · operating a tractor; Pomeroy at
Hallmarl&lt; catd ·on
Oil and Gas 'Co., fUght of Way,
8: IJ7 p.m . took Eva Dessauer from
Sunday, April 3.
Rutland.
Cave St., to Holzer Medical Center.
~~--&lt;fJo. (~
Edda J . Thompsons, Beverly
·7.t.:Fl
;=;···-r
Thompson. Phillip Tl1ompson to
tonight
Leading Creek Conservancy Dlst.,
Right of Way, Pomeroy.
Racine Village Council will meet
Richard w. Vaughn, Ruby A . •
Vaughn to Donald E. Vaughn, this evening In recessed seSsion at 7
Pamela L. Vaughn. Parcels, p.m .
Pomeroy.

transfers~ •. ·

Governor discusses jobs plan
CLEVELAND, Ohio (API Gov. Richard Celeste today said his
plan for spending nearly $1.6 billion
in the next two years on a variety of
jobs projrets will get Ohioans back
to work .
In a briefing for business and
labor leaders In Cleveland, Celeste
said the state will spend $335 million
of its own funds to generate
rnalching federal and private .
money for the projects.
Among specific proposals he
made · was a pledge to boost
spending for travel and tourism
from $1 million to $5 million and
create a $15 million fund in 1984 on
cooperative efforts between business and state colleges and
universities.
He also proposed putting $25
million more in a s.tate loan fund for

Monday, March_21' 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Eastern, ,Meigs
juniors chosen
for ·girls'.state
years, played basketball one year,
hadfouryearsofband,andhasbeen
active In both the Girl Scouts and the
4-H program.
She is a member of the Freedom
Gospel Mission Church where she Is
active with the youth chorus and the
:youth group.
Jenny Meadows, d&lt;lughter of Dan
:Meadows of Middleport and Ina
i Mea~ws of Florida. Is a junior at
·Meigs. She is oh student council,
·active with the Spanish Club and the
'yearbook staff. She plays varsity
volleyball, basketball and softball.
Pam Riebel, ~laughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John Riebel Sr., Baum
Addition, Is a junior at Eastern. She
is a member of the National Honor
Society, the marching, concert and
pep bands, and pas been selected to
be In the all-county band this year.
She has played volleyball. three
years, IS on the yearbook staff and
the prom committee.
She was a girl scout seven Years
and this is her, ninth year as a 4-H
member. She was ·selected as the
4-H girl to represent Meigs County
. at the state leadership camp .at
Utica. She Is' a member of the
Middleport F]irst BaptiSt Chureh
and Is employed by the Valley
. Shopper and the Skate-a-Way.
l&lt;ris WUson, daughter of Gall and
Dennis Eichinger, JteedsvWe, Is ,
active In sports at ;Eastern having
lettered In basketball two years and
played sottbi!U and volleyball. She
has been in band for nve y~. and~
Is actlv'e In tpth scouting and 4-H.
. (Continuec1 on page 6)
•

Ronald J. Browning, 48, well·
known Pomeroy resident, was
killed Sunday night when the plane
he was -flying crashed into the side of
a mountain near Crossville, Tenn.
Browning's son Kim, was injured
and is confined to the Cumberland
Medical Center at Crossville with
bums of the hand, abrasions and
other possible injuries.
Cumberland County Sheriff Charles Shad!Jen said ,the Brownings
were flying from Louisiana to the
Mason County, W. Va.,alrportinthe
Piper Cherokee 140 single engine

plane owned by the elder Browning,
who was an experienced pilot and
had served as a flying Instructor in
this area.
•
Sheriff Shadden reported the
plane apparently ran into a weather
front and Browning was attempting
to fly under it .when the plane
crashed into the side of Hinch
Mountain. Browning was apparently killed In the crash which
resulting In the plane's cockpit
burning.
Kim was a pparently thrown from
the plane when it crashed and \"as

CHERYL RIFFLE

B~ADEFI'ER

TERRE WOOD

knocked unconscious. Regaining
consciousness, he apparently found
his father's body in the plane. He
started walking off the mountain
and came onto an unoccupied
A-frame home in the mountains. He
crawled under the porch and spent
the night there.
Sheriff Shadden said that although no one obServed the crash,
the plane had gone down between 5
and 6 p.m. Sunday. Kim had lost
consciousness several times, but
again on Monday morning, started
walking to locate help. He was

PAMREmEL

RHONDA JEFFERS

spotted by a worker who was
enroute to a Federal Aviation
Authority observation tower in the
area. The worker took the younger
Browning to the Cumberland Medical Center.
It took deputies and the Cumberland County Rescue Unit about one
hour and a bali getting to the
mountain side where the plane had
crashed. Browning's body was
removed from the wreckage and
was taken to the Cumberland
Medical Center.
(Continued on page 6)

TERRI TIIOMA'&gt;

KRf'l WILSON

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�Tuesday, March 22, 1983

Commen~~
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The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slrt!t'l

Pt•mrruy, Ohln

lt ..m·l l~

Dt: \IOTED TO THE lNTERF.ST OF THJo: MEI~MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'M' .
Publltttkr

f'AT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

As~ti~LIInt Publi!iherfCuntroiWr

Gt-~1111 f..tliii•J:tr

DALEROTHGEB, JR.
Ne:wr~Edltur

A Mf.MBER 11f Thto A!IIHI('i.lalttt' Prws. lllland Dallly Prl'S~ 1\ssn••h&amp;tlun .1111d tbt"
Amt:ril 'ltrl N!:W~'SJMlpt'"r PubliiJttl"'l AIISU('iation.

I.F:nERS OF OPINION lillY 'lll'drumcd. Tky 11buuhl be &amp;asllwa- word!llun,~t;. All
ldtt&gt;rs ltn' ~ubjert Ill ~ltin~ and rnust bl" 11lgt1ed with ume . addi'HII ancl tel~ne
numbrr. N•• urutiK~ I~I~N will bt&gt; pubiUIIwd . Ltt~n !ihnuld lw UII!)Jnd iPir. .11ddmuunc
ihUOJ , n\)t per~rwliliet~.

Page--2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepott, Ohio · ·
Tuesday, March 22, 1983
''

What's wrong ·w ith silence?
WASHlNGTON
President
Reagan made a renewed push the
other day for his constitutional
amendment to authorize prayer In
public schools. Down in Tennessee
the state legislature came up with a
bill that could make such an
amendment unnecessary. Twenty
years after the landmark Engel
case. this whole lamentable con·
troversy Is ~ck in the pews. ·
Thls is the presiden~'s amend·
ment: "Nothing in this Constitution
shall be construed to prohibit
individual or group prayer in public
schools or other public Institutions.
No person shall be required by the
United States or by any state to
participate in prayer.''
The effect of such an amendment
would be to overrule the Supreme

James ]. Kilpatrick

Court's 6-1 decision of June 1962 in prayer program officially estabthe Engel case. The case fuvolved a lishes the religious bellefsembodled
,
brief prayer composed by the New ir(the Regents' prayer." ·
I thought the Engel case was
York Board of Regents. Under the
New York law. the prayer was to be wisely and properly decided for all
said aloud In eirery class at the the reasons spelled out in Black's
beginning of every school day. opinion. To sanction even an
Puplls who asked to be excused Innocuous official prayer is to invite
the kind of religious dissension that
could be excused.
Speaking for the court, Justice ought to be avoided in a free society.
. Hugo Black found the law " wholly Nothing In the Engeldecislonand its
Inconsistent" with the Fli-stAmend· progeny, eontrary to the implica· .
ment;s prohibition of laws respect· lions In the presiden's ·proposed
amendment, ever .has prohibited
ing an establishment of rellg1on. It is
no part of the business of govern· "individual" prayer in the schools.
ment, said Black, · to compose All that is forbidden is the kind of
school-sanctioned prayer that beofficial prayers to be recited as part
of a religious program carried on by . comes a religious exercise. This is a
dangerous and divisive territory, as
.government.
"There can be no doubt," Black history tells us, in which the state
should not intrude.
concluded, "that New York's state

·' Cut-price' options
in housing industry
Though housing prices remairi stable and interest rates have fallen,
millions of families wishing to own a house still maintain they cannot
afford one. They might be wrong.
Discussions with builders, lenders, owners, sellers, and real estate
people repeatedly bring up many "cut-price" options available to those
·
who really want to own a house and don't mind working for it.
Here are a few of them:
-The fix-up house remains, as always, the first choice. While nothing is
certain, many such homes have appreciated enormously in value. But a
buyer has to take a risk - and then work hard.
_The two-family or three-family house remains a favorite of those who
are strapped for funds. In many if not most instances they cost no more '
than single-family houses, but' the income usually makes a big dent in the
monthly payment.
-In recent years the full·slze factory-bullt home has.become more of an
alternative. Once scorned by many would-he buyers and prohibited by
some towns, they are now built to meet all building codes.
A factory built house can be a so-called mobile home, but it rreed not be.
Full -size, three bedroom, two-bath homes are now built indoors and
shipped to the site. There they are lifted onto the foundation by crane and
locked in by the local agent's cr:ew, while plumbers and electricians makfi!
their connections. The nextday orsoonafter, the occupants are handed the
key.
·
Some bullders can deliver small, three-bedroom. one-bath furnished
units for about $25,&lt;XXl. The buyer's additional costs are for land, site
clearing, foundation and water and sewer connections.
·
-Big savings are possible if you build your own house. It doesn't mean
you have to be skilled at various tradeS, butitdoes require that you assume
the role of general contractor.
It means you must find lot. develop a set of plans with an architect or
engineer, obtain a construction mortgage, find and schedule
subcontractors, inspect the work, obtain the certificates.
Unless someone is familiar with the procedures, or can contract with the
a rchitect or engineer for regular visits to the site.' it is best to take a
homebuilding course. The investment can be worth it.
-Since land is so large a factor in the price of a house, often costing more
than 20 percent ofthe final product, the person who obtains a good low-cost
lot begins with an advantage.
·
.
, .
Such lots exist, but you must search them out. A typical 'situatiqn is a lot
in a settled neighbo~ood tha.r has remained unsold for what appear to be
obvious reasons. such as steep grade or rock outcroppings. Such problems
aren't always insurmountable, as a · good engineer can sometimes
demonstrate.

a

Berry's World

e1;:::i~~~j...

The president's ameildment got
nowhere In the 97th Congress and It
almost certainly will get nowhere in
the 98th. No hearings have been .
scheduled in either HouseorSenate.
It is wholly unlikely that the
amendment could corrunend the
necessary two-thirds majority in
each chamber.
If that is an accurate forecas t, the
situation will remain in status quo.
Fine with me. But Tennessee may
have come up with a compromise
that could f;!ase the tension. A year
ago the Tennessee legislature
adopted a law permitting a minute
of "prayer." The federal courts
promptly threw It out. Now the
legislature has passed a blll,
expected to become law this week
without the governor's signature,
that mandates a "moment of
sllence" at the start of every school
day.
If the court.s ever should hold that
law unconstitutional, the courts will
contribute to the impression that
our courts are, in the p ·
olite word, nuts. Surely a "moment of silence" could not be
interpreted as an "official prayer"
or a "religious exercise" or as. the
indoctrination of "religious beliefs," all of which were forbidden
under the Engel case. The Tennes·
see statute does not refer even to
"meditation." All It requires is a
moment of "silence." Every pupil
would have to observe it.
What could be wrong with that?
The children who wanted to engage
in silent prayer would be free to do
so. Other children could concentrate on the seven-times table.
Tennessee's approach may not
satisfy the advocates of formal
prayers - the kind of prayers that
are said aloud. with bowed headsbut such prayers are the prov ince of

was FBI informant Gary Thomas
Rowe.
Internal FBI flies seen by my
associates Indy Badhwar and Tony
Capaccio show that the woman's
murder might have been prevented
- if FBI officials had acted on
in forma tlon Rowe had provided.
In fact. within three weeks of the
LiuZ2D slaying, Rowe's "handler, "
special agent Neil P. Shanahan, was
quietly censured for failing to pass
along ~hat Rowe had told, him
before the shooting.
A memo to FBI Officials in
Washington, dated April15. noted
that Rowe had given Shanahan
"certain Items of information" on
Klan activities that were news tot he
FBI and local authorities. For
example:
On March 16. Rowe told Shana- ·

han that Klan leaders were plan·
nlng to drop hand grenades on any
civil rights marchers in
Birmingham.
On March 18, he reported that
Klan leader ·RDbert Shelton was
planning to have two activists
beaten up on the forcoming march
from Selma to Montgomery. ·
On March 21, he reported that he
and thiee other Klansmen had
delivered a load of weapons to
Selma: two Browning automatiC
rifles with 12 clips of ammo, 25 hand
grenades and six land mines.
Finally, on March 25- the day of
the murder - Rowe called Shana·
han and told him he was leaving for
the march area with three Klans·
men, including Eugene Thomas ,
whom he had earlier identified as
armed and violent.

Yet the only information the FBI
gave local pollee was description
of Thomas' car. its tagnumbersand
the message: "Purpose of trip not
known. These only known Klansmen of Birmingham In route to
march."
Alabama police, in fact , flagged ·
down the car shortly before the
killing. Not having been told the
men were armed and dangerous,
the pollee issued a ticket for a noisy
muffler and let them go.
The memo recommending Shan·
ahan' s censure said that he "deeply
regrets his failure to have made a
full and immediatedisseminatlonof
the Information,'· and stressed that
Shanahan "has been made fully
aware of his dereliction."
The public, of course, was never
made aware of it.

.

"Yes, sir."

t~!.
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" WhO would have thought morning happy-talking network news would be better than no talking at all. "

Letter to editor
Concerned miner
1 am wrltlng this letter regard·
lng illngwall mining. I have been
a co•! miner for about 30 years.
My father and grandfather were
miners before me. We have
mined coal about every way
there Is to mine coal, from hand·
loading to loading machines to
cont nuous miners to longwall.
•Tllls Is known to me as pro·
gres~ In mining. Mrs. Wells and
COAl. people · talk bout losing
their• farms due to longwall min·
lng. flfOBt of these people say the
fa~s have ~~ee:· In thflr family
for ~ars.
.
, M~. Wells andathe a !tourneys
Of
AL suggeJt that Southern
Obi ' Coal go back to conven·

tiona! mining. Would these people go back to horse and buggy
for transportation and working
their farms?
Mrs. Wells talks about their
homes and the possibility of losIng their homes, but what about
the people working .at the mines,
If they lose their jobs permanently. We have no Southern
. Ohio Coal to offer ·to pay darn·
ages or to save our homes; most
of the miners have bought their
homes on &amp;heir own, and not had
them handed down through gen·
ertlons as Mrs. Wells has said the
farms have been In their family
for years.
·
Robert L. Richmond

"Your orders are to train the
government forces to search out
and destroy the guerrllla hl!leouts,
and give the troops moral support
when they are ipcombat. But under
no conditions are you to engage in
the fighting yourself."
"I understand, sir. I go in with the
troops, but I don't fire my own
weapon."
"Except, of course. If you ate
fired upon."
"I got you, sir. What kind of
·weapons do the guerrillas have? "
"Mostly American. They got
them from Vietnam or captured
them from E!Salvadoran troops, or
bought them from the same troops.
One of your jobs will be to see that
the goverrunent officers don't sell
their weapons to the other side."
"Yes, sir. Am I supposed to do
anything to win the hearts and
minds of the Salvadoran people?"
"Of course. That's why we're
sending you there. One of your
missions Is to make sure the
government troops don't ili1l too
many peasantS or bum down too
many villages that are suspected to
be hlu"boring·left·wing fighters."
"How do I do that?"
"The same way ·YOU did It In
VIetnam. You explain to the
government soldiers that rape,
murder and pillaging wlll not be
tolerated by · President Reagan.
That should stop them."
"It certainly should. AnYthing I
ought · to know aboUt .h uman
rights?"
"We're not sending- you down
there to train anyone In human
rights. · The government ot El
Salvadorhasjustbeenglvenaclean
blll of health on human tights by the

American government, so I don't
want to see anything in your reports
on human. rights violations on our
side. But 1,f you see any corrunitted
by the other side, we want to hear
a bout them pronto."
"I understand , sir. How is the
morale of the El Salvadoran
troops?''
"Excellent, although there have
been a number of desertions. Your
job is to see that the government
troops don't go over the hlll."
"Can I shoot them?"
"No, but you can authorize one of
the officers you're advising to shoot
thetn. But, forGod'ssakes,don'tput
anything in writing."
"How do we know if we're
winning the war? "

"We're working up a body count
system at the Pentagon that will
soon go into effect. We'll expect
body count reports from you every
day. "
" It sould more like Vietnam a ll
the ttme."
"This Is not a Vietnam operation.
and you're not to refer to it as sue h.
This is a rescue operation to uphold
a democratic government In Cen·
tral America, and to protect a
freedom-loving people from being
taken over by the Corrununlsts."
"I gotcha, sir."
"Stop winking. I'm serious. Now
you were chosen to be one of 110
American qdvisers to turn this war

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games later thlll week were Wake pas5 from 'I'yn)ne Co~bin and let fly ·
Forest, Texas Christian, Mlssls· for the winning basket.
sippi, South Carolina, N·e braskaand
DePaui held a52-49 lead when Jim
Oregon State. Wake Forest beat Stack tied It with a three-point play
Vanderbilt 75-58, TCU tripped a nd Northwestern, led by Stack and
AI¥ona State 78-76, Mississippi Gaddis Rathel, shot the Wildcats
defeated South Florida 65·57, South into a 59-52 lead and then63·54 before
Carolina stopped Virginia Tech the rally by DePaul.
75-68, Nebraska trimmed lona 85· 73
"Coach (Ray Meyer) wanted
and Oregon State walloped New Tyrone !Corbin ) or Bernard (Ran·
Orleans 88-71.
dolph) to take the final shot," said
Monday night's results set up Patterson, explaining that he was
quarterfinal pairings for Thursday the "third choice."
and Friday nights.
"But they overloaded on both of
On Thursday, 'tCU plays at them so they threw the ball back to
Nebraska, Wake Forest meets me figuring the worst It could be
South Carolina ai Greensboro. N.C.. would ~a tie."
and Fresno State travels to Oregon
Although Northwestern had
State. On friday, Mississippi m eets
taken a 63-54lead with less than four
DePaul at Rosemont, Ill.
minutes to play and the s hot clock
Kenny Patterson's 35-foot shot at
turned off, Meyer said, " We still
the buzzer capped an 11-point
thpught we could win It, even when
comeback for DePaul as the Blue ·- we were nine points down, really. It
Demons caught Northwestern at was one of the few times this season
theend. Patterson tookthe inbounds
that we retained our poise. Northw·
.

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a

Sen-d in the troop..__s_ _;________A_rt_B~uc_hwa_L_d
"Sergeant, we are sending you to
El Salvador to advise the govern· '
ment troops there how to fight the
left-wing guerrillas who are win·
ning the war."

DePa~l p~st~ . NIT, w.i11;_Spartans ~pset

..,.
.
' - · :Sy KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
• : The Big Ten's stock dropped a bit
in the National Invitation Tourna·
· ment when the Minnesota Gophers
.lost last week.
' Monday . night, the bottom
'dropped out completely for one of
'tile nation's strongest basketball
leagues as both Northwestern and
·Michigan State were eliminated.
• DePaul rallied · to pull out a
dramatic 65-63 victory over Northw·
estern and Fresno State upset
Michigan State 72·58 in two of eight
NIT games Mooday night, leaving
the Big Ten without a team to
'COmpete in the nation's oldest
post-season b&lt;lsl&lt;E:tball tournament.
·It was the second close victory over
a Big Ten team In this tourney for
DePaul, which beat Mlnnesota76-73
in a first-round game last Tuesday
night.
.. · Also advancing to qua rterfinal

the church and the family . They
ought never to be the business of
school boards.

FBI-murder connection____---:-J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n
WASHINGTON- This week the
Justice Department has loosened
the guidelines that govern the FBI's
use of Informants and undercover
agents who Infiltrate domestic
political groups.
The discarded rules were adopted
In 1976 after evidence showed that
the G-men had clearly gotten out of
c&lt;lntrol in their zeal to satisfy the
whims and personal prejudices of
the late J . Edgar Hoover. The
danger, of course, is that the FBI
will interpret the relaxation of the
rules as a license toretumto the old
practices. •
Perhaps the most scandalous
mishandling of an FBI informant
involved the murder in Alabama of
civil rights activist Viola Uuzzo on
March 25, 1965, by a carload of
armed Ku Klux Klan. Among them

Pomervy-Middlepoot, Ohio

around ."
"That's not a lot of advisers for a
full -scale guerrilla war."
"It's only a bargaining. Once we
get enough of you in there, Congress
will be In no posltioin to stop the
president from sending In more
American troops to support you."
"I hope so. I don't want to get my
keister shot off."
'
"Sergeant, I have utmost confl·
dence that you can do the job. And
one more thing, don't talk to the
press. They'll only write how
lncomptent and corrupt the El
Salvador military officers really

are."
.. Are thc&lt;y~ "

"That's top ~ret information."

'

GOING THROUGH - Fresno State's Tyrone
·, Bradley (number 4) goes around Michigan
State's Scott SkUes (number 25) during first pe·

rlod action In East La~slng M:onday nlgbt. Fresno
won the game 72 to 58 In second round NIT play.
( AP Laserpholo)

..
estern played a terrific game and
t()Qk us out of our offense. We got by
with a very JXlOr shooting night."
Ron Anderson and Des! Barmore
scored 16 points apiece to lead
Fresno State over Michigan· State.
The Spartans maintained a flvepoint lead throughout most of the
second half, but the Bulldogs rallied
to outscore Michigan State 8-2 and
grab a 53-52 lead.
Fresno State's Orne! Nieves
scored the go-ahead basket with
3:47 remaining. Michigan State,
meanwhile, could hit only one of
nine shots in the stretch.Fresno
State sank 15 of16 free throws in the
final three minutes to put the game
away.
Wake Forest's Delaney Rudd
scored 15 of his game-high 21 points
In the second half to rally the Demon
. Deacons over Vanderbilt. The loss
denied Vanderbilt a chance to post
the school's first 20-vlctory season
since 1973-74. The Commodores
finished the season with a 19-14
record.
"This was probably our biggest
win," said Rudd, who led tl)e
Deacons from a 37-29 deficit to a
50-39lead duri!lg a 21·3 spurt early in
the second half. "I think psychologl·
cally this will give us a big lift and
allow us to get to New York and the
NIT's final four."
Wake Forest came back from a
32-25 deficit at the half.
"Coach (Carl Tacy) told ine to
just go out and play hard in the
second half," Rudd said. "He said
we needed a big lift from the guards
and more defense on (Phil) Cox. I
wound up getting a lot of shots on the
fast break and I was hitting them."
Darrell Browder scored 29 points
and Doug Arnold had 20 of his 26 in
-the second half as TCU held on to
beat Arizona State. The host Sun
Devils were kept In the game
throughout by the 33-polnt effort of
Byron Scott.
"TCU played a solid, error-free
game," Arizona State Coach Bob
Weinhauer said. "They maintained
their composure even after
Browder fouled out and Arnold took
over the game from there. It's a
tribute to them that they didn't get
flustered."
Carlos Clark's ~ points led
Mississippi over South Florida.
Clark keyed a 10.0scoringspurt that
gave Ole Miss a 21-lllead It never
relinquished. It demoralized South
Florida, which got nocloserthansix
points in the second half.
Mike Brittain and Brad Jergensen Scored 15 points each as

.

Taggart, Walke,-Lane chosen to All Ohio teams
Williard of Columbus Bexley, for
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) ...: C~rtis
Wilson, Akron St. VIncent St.Mary's
the No.I player honors.
Those three stars, plus the
slick·passing guard, has been
selected The Associated Press' Ohio Duke-bound Nessley, led a n eight·
player all-state first team. All four
Player of the Year in Class AA boys
high school basketball.
are seniors. Christie ave raged 21.4
Russ Gregg of top-ranked Colum- points. Williard 20.1 a nd Ness ley 19.0
bus White hall earned !heAP's Class during the regular season.
Also making the first team wet'!'
AA Coach of theY ear honors.
• The selections wet'!' made with 6·1 Thomas Howard of Ge rman·
the recommendations of a state town Valley View, 5-11 sophomore
Jay Burson of New Concord John
panel of sports writers and
Glenn. 6·1 Brad Wa lke of Wheelers·
broadcasters.
The a ll-a round perlormances of burg and 6-5 Chris Kelley of Lorain
Wilson. a 6-foot·l senior , have Catholic.
Second-team berths went to 6-3
helpPd St. Vincent ·St.Mary reach
Tom Taggart of Nelsonville-York,
the slate semifinals this week .
Wilson signed with Ohio State last 6·3 Tom Sandry of Coshocton, 6-4
Mike Daniels of Marion Pleasant.
fall a nd then went out and posted
averages of 21.1 points, 9 assists, 4.6 6-10 Mark Boddy of Cleveland
rebounds a nd 4.5 steals this winter. · Orange,S-2 Marc Streeter of Clyde.
Gregg guided · Whitehall , built 6-4 Tilman Bevely of Campbell
around 7-l senior center Martin
Memorial, 6-2 Scott Bive ns of
Nessley, to 20 straight regular- Spril1gfield Northeastern and 6-3
Rob Munyan of G reenfie ld
~ason victories and the Rams ' first
McClain.
AP state ratings championship.
On ,the third tea m were5·10Chuck
However, Whitel)all was upset In
the Columbus District finals by Allen of Martins Ferry, 6-foot Don
O'Shaughnessy of Cleveland Uni·
oft &lt;beaten Columbus East.
versity, 6-foot Brian Kegerreis of
Wiison edged two other quick,
Bellevue, 6-2 Rick Junkins of
good-shooting guards, 6-1 ' Dan
Newark Licking Valley, 6-5 Mark
Christie of Oak Harbor and 5·9 Steve

McClendon of Youngstown Rayen,
6-3 Jon Home r of Cincinnati
Madeira, 6·6 .Jamie Lane of
Gallipolis and 5·9 Fred Neil of
f'OI.l'MRUS. Oh in o\Pt - T hP i\:-..~lfi
I 'tP'"". l!tl.'l ria"" 1\A AJJ .O hiu high

;tied

~·hool 001 ~ t:J;t~ kPib;tll l'l'kl('lion K m :uk•
wilh thf· ~~~nmmf'ndution• of a s l:tlt• pan
d nl ' 11011... '&gt;'l"ih ·t" ;tntl hmac k·a!'ll't'- :

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Mm·tin 1\:t"-~k'\ . ( 'ct lumhu!&gt; Whi t••h:tll , ':'·

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foot·l Sr. . l~.o:' Du n Chl'i~1it '. O.tk tlarhor.
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:I!Hi: Rr.td " 'ulkl', Wb.1.·k•Mll.1111;. &amp;-1 Sr..
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( '0 1\( 'H OF \ 'F:\R lumt&gt;us \\'h l!i·h;ill.

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l'ahi('S\"ilk· HWTI" : l A'\'\' Wlt lx'r~J)«)n.
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Slf'\'f' 1-:}-1. !\;~milton A.;ulln: I\_\ It • Parkt' l'.
Pot1 ~uth : 1\Ju Ht'Cinwn. "': uJ~on

fourt Ht-..:•.
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T&lt;++'kt•ll . Rlrcrn -Curmll : T im MiiiPr.
rlairl
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1'\'1 Dansh\·, ]):'(lfnlli ( ll:tn+'l: l'aul WI! !&gt;~ ln . .

PULLS IT LOOSE -Scott Sanderson (rlgllt) ofthe University
of South Carolina gets his arm linked in the arm of Norris Gurley of
VIrginia (center) and pulls the basketball loose as Tecb's John '
Dixon (left) looks on. South Carolina defeated Virginia Tech 75·68
during second-round game action of the NIT Monday night at Car·
olina Collsum. ( AP Laserphoto)

South Carolina defeated Virginia
Tech. The balanced Gamecock
scoring overshadowed a strong
performance by Dell Curry, who
scorec! a game·high 27 points for
Virginia Tech .
Stan Cloudy's 24 points lifted
Nebraska past lana. It was the
second consecutive game in which
the 6-4 junior had a season-high
point total. In a first-round NIT
game. Cloudy had 20 to lead the
Huskers past Tulane.
Oregon Stati' forward A.C. Grren
had 18pointsand the Beavers led all
the way to down visiting New
Orleans. The Beavers had five
players in double figu res.

r.===========~·

For Home
Insurance

~
&lt;/)'

HOW
MUCH IS
ENOUGH?
Chances are your home is
worth more than you real·
ize ... and would cost far
more to replace , perhaps
50% to 60%, tha n ;ust a
few years ago . ·
Has your home &lt;11surance
kept pace with .the steady
rise in construction costs?
We'll be happy to help you
find out It 's part of our
service as an independent
insurance agency re pre·
sentlng State Auto.
Give us a call You 'll find
we ·re fne nds you can
depend on.

The Public Utll!tjes Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No. 82 · 162 · EL · EFC
(Subftle A) , to review the
fuel procurement practices and policies of Col·
umbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Company,
the operation of its Electric Fuel Component and
related matters. This
hearing is. scheduled to
begin at 9:30 a.m. on
March 25 .' 1983 at the of·
flees of the Public
UtilitieS Commission of
Ohio, 375 South High
Street, Columbus , Ohio
43215 .
interested

~

~ ;{:)

LE\iAL NOTICE

All

!&gt;
•

parties

will be given an oppor·

tunity to be heard . Fur·
ther Information may be
obtained by contacting
the Commission.

~epresenltng

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES

COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: David M. Polk,
Secretary.

State Auto Insurance
A l rlpna \l(lu Caf' dl'pena on

r'.nrain c:ltholit': Dan'yl Harr is, l'alm'!oi ·

1'1111' Hul'\'1'\': .lim l·: hrh.:u·, ('lt•\l •lantl
Huh- f'anl(': 'l'• 'l 'l1 'fln' I :. ,~ '11. i\nd0\11'
P;&gt;.m:+lunlnJ! \'all1 ·.' : Smrt ...: ~1 ,1'. r :tmnl;
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l l r('lll'l', [ loyii'!'IIM 'n C' hlpp!&gt;U':J : Slt '\'1'
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11rookfil'ld; \'l rn ~llh·. Cli'111t l.

Man

Sulhan. ('a)o1ttll&lt;•

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k•nJ:dr.,.,·~ ki . Swanron: RC's Adu m~. Will

tlnl: Mik1·

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lli•W\ Mllt'l'. Thtlrmilt· Sb.·rtdtm: 1'111 Wy
C'lnskl. Nt'U. lrxlngmn : fjj•rukl l'lll~.
Pt1rl"'llllllllh: TIMid ~llkl'f', Wht'\.. MII~.

Hepatitis shelves Householder, causes concern
TAMPA, Fla. tAP) - Cincinnati
Reds players, coaches and office
personnel were being inrn;x:ulated
against hepatit is after outfielder
Paul Householder was stricken with
the disease.
Householder became the 91st
diagnosed case growing out of an
epidemic centered at the Fort
Mitche ll Country Club. just south of
Cincinnati in Fort Mitchell, Ky.
Householder, Manager Russ
NJxon and Reds President Dick
. Wagner attended a sports s tag at ·
thecountryclub onJan. 26.
.The disease has affected persons
wnoateordrank at the country club
in 'January and February, accord·
ing to Dr. Dennis Molony, chairman
·the Northern Kentucky Health
District.
Thecountryclubwascloseddown
M~rch 3 and the facilities must be
dbinfected before It can reopen,
·
Molony said.
Several club employees and
BlshopWIUiamHughes, the Roman
Catholic prelate, alsowerestrlcken.
The bacteria was traced to the food

o'

i•Maybct what we
around here."

nHd Is a little gue'rrllla warfare to get 'some attention.
.

·

' .

at'l'a and ice machine. Molony said.
Dr. George Ballou, Reds team
physician, innoculated about 50
Reds personnel on Monday with
gamma globulin, a blood component that offers some protection
against the disease.
Householder told the club last
Tuesday that he was feeling listless,
and tests were begun. The results
were revealed Monday .
"It's not compulsory. If they don 't
want a shot. they don 't have to take
it," Nixon said. "If anybody's
already infected, the s hot's not
going to help them.··
But Nixon said he had been
advised that the shot should take
care of any exposure the players
received in training camp.
"Jt gives you concern. To doubt
anything like thl$ would be foollsil,"
Nixon said. "Paul came down sick
on the 47th day of his exposure.
Usually, it terminates oil the 50th.
day. I don'1 think he's going to be
able to open the season."
"I got my appetite back yester·

,,

day, " Householder said. "I've lost
between 10 and 15 pounds and I've
still got tbe yellow In my eyes. I've
got all the symptoms. What I need is
rest.
"I had been tired all through
spring training and I didn't know
why," the outfielder said. "I knew
the workOuts weren't that tough."
The thoUght of a needle appar·
ently had some Reds heslta ling to
get innoculated.
.
,· ·
"There's no oral medicine, so
some guys are having a hard ·time
deciding" whether to take the shot,
said third baS('man Johnny Bench.
The shots are given in the hlp.
First baseman Dan Driessen
endured the shot but was skeptical.
''I'm a real man. Real men don't
get sick,"· he quipped.
The Reds have 37 playe rs left In
camp, Including non-roster pitcher
Charlie Leibrandt, after cutting
seven players.
The seven were transferred to the
Redsland complex for · reassign·
ment to the minor leagues.
They included roster pitchers

Mike Dowless, Ron Robinson and
Jeff Russell. The four non-roster
players well:' catchers RaS' Corbett
and David Miley and pitchers Brian
Ryder and Bob Buchanan.

Super Sale
Prices on
Famous 721
Steei-Belt11d
Radials!
'

Over 40 million 721
radial' already produced for America 's
cor owners.

Double belted with
steel cord In
Firestone's famous
"7 over 2 plus 1"
construction .

Long-wearing,
rood-gripping
tread; easy-rolling

fuel efficiency.

Whitewolt

SALI

Sile

PltiCI

1"175/70tl:13
J&gt;175/BOtl:13
1"185/ BOttll
1"205/7011: 13
P175!7.5Rl.tl
PI85/7.5AU
P195/75R1-tl
1"205!70tl:l.t!
1"205175Rl.tl
1"215!7511:1-'1
P22.5/75Rl.tl
J"20.5/ 75R 1.5
P215!75R15

UJ.tJ

H 70

"·"

_,_qo

57.tS
63.9S
59.ts

60.95
65.ts

...
"·",

'71 .91

...,

F.E.l
1.83

2.01
1.87
2.00
2.1 3
2.2-4
2.3-'1

73.95

2.49
2.67

'71.95

2.4-'1
2 ..59

1"2'25!7511: 15

'7S.9S

2.7-4

1"23517~15

'79.91

2.96

.

ru. ~a

ends April 30.
ends April 30. ' All pr icei' plul fOil . No lrado -l n needed. ..,.._Sale
__;.::.,.:!~~:._

POMEROY HOME 1&amp; AUTO
505 E. Main

Ph.992-2094
Pomeroy, Oh.
Front End Alignment Most Car5
Brake Service ·
.
•

Paul Holl!leholder

c

�. ,.
·.

. ·...

. ..-.:·-:-.:·~·~· ~·;

'

..

·./..&lt;·&lt; .:~&lt;·7:-.: .i&gt;~~y-Middle~rt, Ohi~&gt;

Page-4....... T"e .Daily Sentinel

. :. ·/ NCA~tBasketball

NCAA
tournament
·.rourriarnenJ-'---.--_.-·_ _;·_. _.......,.
· ·
. Regional Semifinals
resumes Thursday

_.Ohio
Sportlight

Holfston '

'

-

Meml)his St.

By George Strode

VIllanova
COLUMBUS. Ohio 1AP) -The 12 competing coaches have esta blished
Delphos St.J ohn's as a n ovetwhe lmin~ Class A title fa vorite. but found it
much mor0difficult in foreca sting ot her cham pions for the Ohio high school
boys bask£'tballtournamen1.
The thtw-day spe&lt;·tacle begins Thursday night with the 'Class AAA
semi!inals in StJohn Arena.
For the first time in the annual Associa ted Press pre·tourna ment
ptw ictions, t hP coaches couldn 't come u p wllh a Class AAA favorite.
Middletown. Akron Cent ral-Hewer a nd Toledo St. Francis each received
four firs t-place ,·otes.
·
In Class AA. Columbus Bexley rated a one-vote edge ove r Akron
St. \' inccnt -St .Mary . the Lions' semifinal opponent Friday night.
Five coaches picked Bexley. four went for St. Vincent -St. Mary a nd three
for Oak Harbor. which plays Wellsville in the other Ciass AA semifinal
Friday night.
Eight coaches selected St.John's to follow its AP poll cha mpionship with
its second sta te tourna ment crown. Three coaches picked New Washington
Buckeye Central a nd one favored Old Washington Buckeye Trail.
Buckeye Central faces Yellow Springs while St.John 's draws Buckeye
Trail in the Class A semifinals Friday.
Bob Arnzen. St.J ohn 's coach of 33 seasons, also had the pre-tournament
favorite a year ago, but lost his semifinal game to eventual Class A
champion Middletown Fenwick.
Arnzen was asked for his reactlon this time.
'' ! consider i.t an honor. but it's just a bunch of people voting who haven't
see n you play: You 've still got to go down there and win it on the floor,"
replied Arnzen. the AP's Class A Sta te Coach of the Year. His teams have
won 522 games in his long career .
.
Gene Milla rd , Bexley's veteran coach, grinned when told of his team 's
fa vori tism ... Anybody can win this thing at this stage,'' he finally answered.
" lt 's nice to think we have a chance to win it. but it doesn't really mean
anything, .. Millard said of his first state tournament en(ry. ' 'I'm sure this
impresses the heck out of St .VincentSt .Mary."
Medina was the only Class AAA school npt to draw a single vote. The
Ball ling Bees take on 1~ state champion Central-Hower at 9:30 p.m.
Thursday. following the M!ddletown-St.Francis opener at 6.

Walker's struggle
continues in USFL
EAST

RUTHERFORD. N..J.
1API - Herschel Walker, the
highest pa id player in professional
footba U, has yet to return dividPnds
on the $5 million , three-year
contract he signed with the New
Jersey Generals.
Walker has struggled in his first
three games in the fledgling United
States Football League, gaining
only 164 ya rds on 48 carries. That's
only 3.4 yards per carry. not the kind
of numbers expected of him by the
Gene rals.
He was expected to hoist t;\e
USFL's credibili ty, a fabled He t'·
man Trophy winner who would
spr int from the Univers ity of
Georgia to the new
league and just keep going.
But he hasn't dominated the
USFL. not by a long shot. He's been
outgained by opposing rookies in
each oft he Generals' three losses. In
the Generals' 32-9setback Sunday to
. the unbeaten Tampa Bay Bandits,
unheralded Sam Platt 114 for 61
yards ) and Greg Boone !18-721
outgained Walker, Who was held to
39 yards on 19 carries.
·
"Everyone compares Georgia
a nd this league. but it' stwodifferent .
things," Walker sa id Monday. "I'm .
not running the ball the way Tran a t
Georgia because l'm somewhe re ·
else. I'm starting a new leaf.! came
in here. a nd I want to leam."
Pa n of the blame lor Walker's
ineffectiveness can be placed on the
Generals' offensive line. said center
Kent Hull.
"You can't put it all on Herschel
and you can 't put it all on us," said
Hull . a rookie from Mississippi

.-

-

State. "We can take most of the
blame. We're not staying on our
blocks long enough. The defense
almost declared for him which way
to go, Instead of the other way
a round .' '
Until the offensive line improves,
said Generals President and Coach
Chuck F airbanks. Walker may
continue to struggle.
"I don't think the offensive line
can stay the same all season.! don't
think any back .can run without
blocking and thequanerback can't
throw without blocking," said
Fairbanks. whose line consists of
three rookies, a first-year player
and tackle Greg Murtha, the
veteran of the group with two years
of bouncing around with four NFL
teams.
"It's just an enormous amount of
work to bring them along," he said.
"I can't put a timetable on it."
"He looks like a tremendous
prospect," said Tampa Bay quar·
terback John Reaves, who threw
three touchdown passes lor the
Bandits Sunday. "I played with
Houston (Oilers of the NFL) and
they have trouble popping Earl
Campbell loose."
Walker, however, is not singling
out the offensive line for his
problems.
"There's a breakdown teamwise. The re's no breakdown in the
line. You can't blame anyone.
You've got to blame everyone,"
said Walker, who had eight receptions against Tampa Bay and has
caught 11 passes this season, tying
him for the team lead with wide
receiver Larry Brodsky.

Stars dump Stallions, 17-10
Harvin scored
the Stars'
other
touchdown
on a 2-yard
run al'OIIJid
left end in the first quaner. The
score capped a 73-yard, 10-play
drive which came after Birmingham took the opening kickoff
but was forced to punt.
The Stamens answered after
swapping interceptions. Reggie
Collier was intercepted by Mike
Lush, but Philadelphia's Chuck
Fusina was intercepted on first
down by Frank Reed .

Monson leaves ldalw job for Oregon
E UGENE , Ore . lAP) -Oregon years.
Monson. 49, knows what faces
was looklng for someone to restore
him at Oregon. Under Coach Jim
some energy to the Ducks' sagging
Haney, the Ducks had a 53-82 record
basketball program. Don Monson
over five seasons. Atteridance at
came with just the right credentials.
Monson posted a 100-41 record in games was poor.
Haney, 33, resigned two weeks
five seasons at Idaho, which had
won only 26 games in the lour years ago amid rumors that he was about
prior to his arrival. He led the . to be fired. He said he would seek a
new coaching job.
Vandals to two NCAA tournaments
and one NIT tournament 1,n three

WITH WARM WEATHER COMING UP, A NEWSPAPER
·ROUTE IS AGOOD IDEA! YOU EARN MONEY WHILE BEING OUTSIDE, WINNING GREAT PRIZES, AND MEETING
GREAT PEOPLE.
ROUTES IN POMEROY, MIDDLEPORT, SYRACUSE.
CALL•US TODAY AT

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156

I
Kansas City. Mo.
March
.25·27

Iowa

I

Louisville

Albuquerque. N.M.
April 2

Arkansas

I
Knoxville. Tenn.
March
I 24·26

KentuckY
Indiana

.

~~·ti=----&lt;'l-~~F~

=~==~~--,1

Utah

l£.hampionship
Alb

uq~erque

Apnl 4

24·26

I

Albuquerque , N.M. j.._
Aprit2

St. John's

t)

Georg,!!!la!!..---..JI

1--;":

Ohio St.

..._.

~~~~ Ill

- = ~-==="

I

BostonColleae .J
Ogden, Utah
N.Ca'rollna St.
March

_.

National

__j ~L
·' .

VIrginia

__.

Syracuse. NY!---'
March
I 25-27

North Carolina

1

AP

Scoreboard ...
~ f:W

NBA results

Y ORK • C IANT"-SIWll,'d

.lohn

Taulolo. offt' n.&lt;;h-r• J:Ua!'d . J ohn Or&lt;; nll! o~ l
and .John Nll li, t'UnninA back :o~.' Mike Rul&lt;
ll'lnfl\'t'i'. n&lt;N ' UJt 'klf' . and .ll'lf Bru· k.hi lu.~.
plu('(' kld :C'I'

Natlontl 1\l.L'ikt.'lha.U ,\SOIOt:lalkln
MCJnda~ ' ,.; Gun\(""

No J!triTIC':- srh«lult'd

l 'Nit'd ShUt'!'&gt; FootlklliiA!".&amp;JUl'

THt-.;di&amp;J'iO H tun~'!i

WAS H t NC;TOr\'

Phll.idc'lph \a at N1•v; York
Atl t&amp; nla a l Indiana,

Ff DF. RA I. S-

Sl~ nf&lt;l

.lo. • &lt;aJI~rm. quanC'rhark .• lC'ff M r' lni\TC'.
lint"bJ&lt;'kr'f. a nd \ ': ruj.!l\n Ho rman. J;:uard,
.md pul lhC'm on lht ' dt'\'C'IopmC'nl ~ uad .

. Ula h ut Wa~h inj!lo n
Bo~lon

at M liw&lt;~uku·
Ol'&gt;l m it ill fllic&lt;~go
Coklf•n S ltl lf' al Dalkr ~

C'Ou.EGE
IS f) I ,\ !"\ A

C'k-vf'lund al Kan.,al'&lt; C'itl
Phcntix il l lXTrlt'r
Hoosron at San Dii)..'O
S:rn An tonio al Por1land
SPa Il k' &lt;.~ I Los An,cl'k'S
" 'l-drM'!Olia.v':oo GanM,.
Atl;mta a1 Boston
U!&lt;ih ;tl Nl'w .ii •Tl't'\'
Milwa uk('(' al Phil~dr iph i;:r
Nl'w Yor k w fk'wl&lt;l ntl

By~ Press ·
Lou Ci!mesecca of St. John's Is
speaking for the 16 college basketball coaches left in the quest for the
national championship. The NCAA
tournament, he says, Is like a
merry-go-round you want to keep
riding even when it's time to get off.
''This Is an exhilaration I haven't
felt in 33 years of coaching,"
Camesecca said Sunday after hls
third-ranked Redmen 'had dispatchedRutgers66-55·toadvance to
the East Reglonal semifinals at
Syracuse, N.Y. ·
In reality, it stops a t Albuquerque,
N.M., where Carnesecca and the 15
· others want to go.
He has a good chance.
For the most pan, iorm Is holding
in this tournament with 13 teams
seeded by the NCAA selection
committee in the round of 16 that
starts Thursday at Ogden, Utah,
and Knoxville, Tenn. If it continues
to hold, St. John's would go to
Albuquerque for the Final Four,
along with the other three seeds - ·
LoulsvUleintheMideast,How;tonln
the Midwest and Virginia In the
West.
But before that, there will be a
number of intriguing matchups.
"We are down to the final16 teams
now and I think most of the coaches
involved feel his team can win on Its
oWn merits," sa ld Guy Lewis. coach
of top-ranked Houston.
The Mideast regional holds the
possibility of the long-anticipated
meeting between 12th-ranked Ken·
tuckyandNo.2LouisvUle.whohave
never met on · a basketball court
despite being only !Kl mlles a pan.
But first Kentuckymustsurvlvea
rematch Thursday ·night against
Bobby Knight's No.5 Indiana Hoosiers, who defeated the Wildcats62-59
at Bloomington. Ind. in December.
And LouisvUle's balanced Card!nals, led by brothers Rodney and

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·The Daily Sentinel

Exhibitions
Mowd,v·,. GanM..,.

\ 'all«lu\ 'l"' r 7. PillsburJl"h :1

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Arlb Au&lt;·hiJn;tn. Mikr • l)w•h':'O~. Ho m Rrrbin .
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NIT results
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Soulh f;uull na T.1. VirJ!i ni&lt;J T f' ·h fill
F'r'C'!o.m Sta U' 7'1 . Mlrl'l.lj:!an Slatf' ~
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Monda~ · .

sentative, Sranham Newspaper sales ,
733 Third Avenue. New York, New

York 10017.

address to The

Dally Sentinel , 111 Court St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

PRAC'fiCING Wl11l ANNIE- Pomeroy students
learn CPR on" Anatomical Annie" under the
direction of Emergency Medical Techtniclan Margaret Eskew. Students are Kim Klein, Scott Barton,

One Month ....... .. ............ ........... $4.00
One Year ................. ............... $!52 .80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES

Dally ................. .. ............... 20 Cents

Duane Jolmson, Dennis Harris, Amy Blake and Jeff
McElroy. EMTs Sue Zirkle and L.B. Vaughn also
a.s.~isted the cla.s.~.

Robert Deeter; formerly of Ra·
' c ine, .has recently completed warr a nt officer night tra ining at Ft.
Rucker , Ala. He was appointed
warrant officer I and awarded his
wings. Prior to his flight training,
Deeter served as a military p
.
ollceman in Bremerhaven, Germ a ny a nd was later assigned to
general intelligence product dlvlsloniatFt. Bragg, N.C.
He is presently assigned to the

SALES • SERVICE
LEASING • TRAINING

Class reunto·ns being planned
It doesn ' t seem like spring, but

plans are und••n.,av
annual reunions
of high school
alumni associa·
tlons across the
county.
The Middleport
High School Class'

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. Work wUl be
in E.A. degree. The FeUowCraft
Club will meet at 6: :ll p.m. for
election ol officers. Refresh:
ments will be served.

.subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
rler may remit In advance direct to
The Daily Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit wlll e given carrier each
No subscriptions by mail permitted In
towns where home carrier service ls
avallable.
MAIL SUBSCRII'TIONS
ln.t~kle Ohio

NOW SAVE

E,
EFFORT AND ssoo ·

de n Is in India na. the Ohio Dethe evening of May 28. Charlotte
. partment of Health will allow
Hanning Is taking an active role
In that reunion and Is trying to measles vaccine to be used for
adults up to 26 years of age.
track down five addresses. If you
The Meigs County Healt_h Dehave the addresses of Larry
partment has ordered a limited
Bl.aney. Carolyn E rvl , Rlchrd
(Hed ) Hays . Sandra Porter and supply of vaccine- the straight
Paul Sprouse, would you please m easle vaccine and the three-In·
one shot for measles , mumps and
give Charlotte a ring at 985-3932 ?
Rubella. Students at risk are
Becuse of the recent outbreak those who were never Immuof measles among college stu- nized. those immlln!zed ·only
with Inactivated vaccine, those
diagnosed as having measles but
did not see a physician and those
who were immunized prior to 12
months of age.
If you need information, give
of the Eastern Star, wUI meet
t he health department a call at
992-6626.
Tuesday at7: 30 p.m. in the home
of Mrs. Thelma Dill. All Past
The Pomeroy Safety Patrol is
Matrons are invited to attend .
.moving along wi th Its trip fund
driv e a nd will stage a flea marHACINE - Adults interket- indoors , too- from 8 a.m .
ested In assisting with the Rato 3 p.m . Sa turday at the school.
Those of you who would like to
cine Baseball Summer Leasell your own items . can rent a
gu•~ program are Invited to a
space for $5. For more info call
meeting Tueda y at 7 p.m . at
992-7180.
Racine Elementary School.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Wome·n's Association of the First
United Presbyte rian Church,
. Middleport, will meet Thursday, March 24. at 7:30p.m. at
the church.

RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
SYRACUSE - The · SyraF &amp;AM will meet In special .
cuse Third· Wednesday Homesession Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m.
make rs will meet Thursday,
Work In the master mason
March 24, at 9 a .m . at the city
degree.
buUdtng. Work on a quilt will
· be completed . Persons to brPOMEROY - Ohio Eta Phl
ing· darning needle a nd yarn .
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phl will
Pot luck lunch willl be served.
meet at 7: ll Tuesday night at
Pomeroy United Methodist
CHESTER - There will be a
Church for the annual ritual of
weekend revival at Chester
jewels. Members w111 also vote
United Methodist church,
. on thegtrloftheyear. The social
Thursday through Sa turday, becommittee will serve
ginning at 7:30 nightly. Guest
refreshments. ,
speaker will be the Rev. Frank
Crofoot of Athes. Special music
POMEROY - Chap~r 17 of
each night and the . pubUc Is
the Ohlo Association of Public
-Employes will meet at 7:30p.m. ' ln\1ted.

13 Weeks .. ......... ...................... 114.01

26 Weeks .. ..... ............. ............ SZ7 .30
52 Weeks ................................. $51.18
Ouhlde Ohio
13 Weeks .. ...... ......................... 115.21
U Weeks ............. .. .. .... ..... .... . $29.64
52 weeks ............... ........ .......... m .21

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Two different short
forms this year.
H&amp;R Block can
uncomplicate
them for you.

Tuesday at Meigs Junior High
SchooL
POMEROY - The ladles
auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital wUI meet Tuesday at I
p.m. There wUI be an executive
meeting at 12: lJ p.m. !il the
conference room . All members
are urged to attend .

Cif

•

Uyou own your own home, chances are you're a lot
richer than you think. Just look at how much your home is
worth today. The difference between its present value and
your mortgage balance is your equity. And vou can
~ro~ably borrow against that equity from City Loan and
Savmgs any ttme you need money.
·
·
How much can you borrow' It could be a substantial
amount -$20,000.$50.000.$100.000 or more.
Uyou're house rich and money poor, City Loan and
Savings has the money to help you even things out. Contact
us today to learn more about our reduced homeowner loan
rates.

1:1·1 ;\ CITY LOAN &amp;. SAVINGS
~- r:!/ a Control
. D.lta Company .

Deeter ·finishes
training
.

Beat of the Bend

RACINE - Southern Local
School Board will m('!'t Tuesday
at 6: :ll p.m. In the high school
cafeteria.

One Week ,, ,, ,.,,,,,., ,, ., , ., , ,,. ,,$1.0Q

Mond"-f, Mu1:h 121

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Ro\x'rt Dee ter

.

Airma n F'irst Cla ss Christopher
M. Self. son of Dlanl' Troy of Mason.
W.Va .. hasgradua tC'd from thcU S.
'Air Force munitions ma inte nance'
course a t Lowr~· Au· Force Base.
Colo.
Gradua tes of the co urse lea rned
how to in spect. as:;embiC' and
dispose of cxplos iv0 munitions. and
C'arncd cred its towa rd a n assoc ia te
dcgre0 in applied s&lt;·il'nn• through
the Communit y Col lrgC' of the Air
Force.
Sfolf will now "''"'&lt;'at Nellis Air
Force Base', Nev. He is a 1982.
g-rad uate of Wahama Hi ~h School,
Mason.

..

POMEROY - American As·
soclatlon of University Women
will meet Tuesday In the Meigs
Inn at 7: :ll p.m . A silent auction
will be held.

and t' rld.:iy
,\t Nt&gt;W \ '01'1!

. 9:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
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268th attack helicopter battalion at
St. Lewis. Wash ington where hewiU
serve as a scout !Jilot. Deeter also
obtained his commercial pilot's
license and plans to obtain his fixed
wing engine license.

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Two dlffentnt ahort forma •net new cMduc:tlonl make
short form flllng more compllceted thll '(llr. Our
prepat'lfl know thtt new tax laws ind forma. We've
studied them for montha.

The Pomeroy class is the first in
Meigs Local to take the course as a
pan of its health unit. Next week
Mrs. Eskew will begin · a simila r
course for sixth graders at the
Rutland sc hool.

0

month.

8,\SE&amp;\U.
NaUonal l .o~oa lotlt• ·
CL'AS-Sml

k. ChiC'a,co tAL l S.'-' 7

Eight hours of training were
completed a nd the written test
given · to the students. Those
successfully com)lleting the course
will be certified for one year.

~ember :

!&gt;;o n Dk:-2n \'s.

Transactions

As part of their health study unit,
Pomeroy sixth graders of Darlene
Amott have completed a cardiac
pulmonary r esusc ita tion course
given by E mergency Med ical
·TechniCians Margan ?! Eskew, Sue
Zirkle and L. B . Vaugha n. · "

class as well as the 20th reunion

send

Tuesday, March 22, 1983

Students learning
CPR techniques

Published every afternoon, Monday
throu'h Friday, Ill Coun Street, by
tile Ohio Valley Publishing Commpany
~ ~ Muftlmedla. Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, 992-2156. Second class postage
paid at Pomeroy, Oh.lo.
The A!iSQclated Press, Inland Dally Press AssOCiation and the
American Newspaper Pullshers Asso-

Se ntinel~
Page -S

ot-1963
is p~a•; ~i~~:~~
noon party for
of that

.POSTMASTER :

The Dail y

By The Bend

(USPS Itt-NO)
A Dlvis~a or M~tlmedla, lac.

ciation. NaUonal Advertising Repre-

Mondu,.y 's Cianws
Nrv.· . ll" r~· t !\\' Ra ngl't'!&lt; 2
Edm" mon -1. T tllllnlo 1
Mlnnt 'liD~ a -4. (lliC'ago :!

CII ICAC;o

Scooter McCray, must get by No.9
Arkansas, paced by 1 the guard
tandemofDarrellWalkerandA!v!n
Robenson and massive center Joe
Kleine.
Another game Thursday, to be
telecast nationally by CBS, pitting
No.4 VIrginia and 7-4 Ralph
Sampson against the 11th-ranked
Boston College Eagles, a helterskelter gang featuring a Mut.t and
two Jeffs - 5-10-waterbug Michael
Adams, 6-8 power forward John
Garris and Jay Murphy, a 6-11
center whose deadly long-ral)ge
shooting could draw Sampson away
from the basket.
Friday nlght, in another national
telecast, Keith Lee and No.17
Memphls State meet Houston's
bruislngfrcmtllneofClydeDrexler,
Larry Michaux and Akeem Ola)uwon, the Hoot Nigerian. "I don't
think there's any doubt that
Memphis State thinks they are as
goodasweare,"Lewissald. "Jtw\U
be quite a game."
Also, Friday night there Is No.l8
Georgia against St. John;s, a
matc.hup that gave the inimitable
Carnesecca another opportunity .
"The only thing I 1p1ow about them
Is thatthey stole a kid !rein our back
yard," he said of the Bulldogs' star
guard, Vern Fleming, who grew up
five miles from the St. John's
campus in New York.
Finally, -there is the battle of the
longshots-Utah,whichopenedthe
tournam!"nt with a 16-13 record, the
worst mark of any team, against
North Carolina State Thursday at
·Ogden. Utah upset seventh-l'llllked
UCLA, second seed in the West, and
the Wallpack beat Nevada-Las
Vegas, the West's third seed.
The other non-seeded team left Is
Iowa, which upset Missouri 77-63
SundayandfacesNo.13VUianovaln
a Midwest semifinal Friday at
Kansas City.

T im
MC'4 ;uin• ..ts dC' Irn..,h·C' I'(I)Ni inalor.

lndlana ii i DPirull
San A m onlo .rl ~l\ r t!ll •

b:rt'k&lt;'L

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) Kelvin Bryant ca rried 27 times for
177 yards and one touchdown
Monday night in leading the
Philadelphia Stars to a 17-10 United
States Football League victory over
the Birmingham Stallions.
Bryant' scored the Stars' second
touchdown on a 1-yard run with
12:23 to play in the third quarter. He
carried all five plays in the drive
that was set up by a 67-yard return
by Allen Harvin of the secoild-ha if
klckof!.

Tuesday, March 22, 1983

POMEROY - The Royal
Arch Masons, Pomeroy Chapter · 80 will meet Thursday at
7: :m p .m . for the annual -In ·
spPctlon. Work in the most excellent master degree.

MIDDLEPORT - Twin City
Shr:lnettes, Thursday, 7: 30p.m.,
POMEROY - Past Matrons . hom~ of Jean Moore, Middleof Po!Jleroy Chapter 186. Order pont.

Happenings
Middleport CubScoutPack245
will hold ltsannualBlueandGold
:_ Banquet Thursday, March 24, at
the Masonic Temple in Mlddlepon from6 to8 p.m . Badges and
awar~ wUI be presented.
Those attending are to take
theil: own table service and
covered dish. Anyone needing ·
more ihtormatlonshouldcali bhe
respective dean leader.

and the public Is invited.

TI1e Rev. and Mrs. Ray Lassell
of Brownsburg, lnd. will be in a
revival at Ihe Rutland Church of
the Nazarene March 22-27. 7p.m.
each evening, 10:30 a.m . on
Sunday morning.
Tt.te Rev. Lassellls a graduate
of the Union Bible Seminary,
Westileld, Ind. He began his
min~stry in 1967.
His weekly radio program,
Instrumental students of ..
"Ray
of Hope," Is heard on a
- Meigs, Sollthern and Eastern
dozein
stations
and the minister
High.Schools will take part In the
publlishes
a
J!l-monthlypaper.
He'
·second annual county band
festival at 3 p.m . SUI)day In the authored "Seven Wonders of
Meigs High School Auditorium. Hell and Other Sermons." The
public Is invited lo attend.
1bere will be a guest conductor
'

.

-

.

Reg. 2295.00

~

Out Chester way , the siXth
grade safe ty patrol 'ls also raisIng fund and will hold a garage
sa le a t the Chester F irehouse. 9
a .m. to 5 p .m . Friday and Saturday.

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Did you know that you can
purc hase a rose bush and
through tha t purchas e make a
don a tion to the Ame r ican Heart
Association .
The rose. for you television
fans , ts the J e nnifer Hart.Rosethat's right from the Hart to Hart
Show. It was Introduced on an
episode on Oct. 6, 1981 and is said
to be quite beautiful - ' a velvet
r ed with an occasional dabbling
of black.
You can buy the rose at Stahl's
Nursery whic h Is located at Lit·
tie Hocking on Routes 7 and 50.
The firm has about lOOof them on
ha nd .
Incidentally , I have not heard
of Stahl 's but I'm told It 's a fascinating place - a year-round
Christmas s hop of quite unlqtle
items and a variety of stock.

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Bookfair
conunmng
The .Cheste r Elementary School
will sponsor a student book fair
from now through Friday. Students will be able to browse and
pun;hase books. The book fair Is
open during the hours of 10 a.m .
to 2 p.m. Books are on display on
the stage at the school.
,
The book fair committee Invites all students, parents and visitors to attend the fair . The fair
will encourage student interest'
in reading and in building home
libraries, and . will also contribute to a worthwhile project.
·
The Chester PTO is sponsoring
this ·event.
The book fair display includes
attractive new books from many
major publishers In all popular
price ranges - books to read or
to give as gifts. All readlnglnter,
ests wll be represented, Including classics, fictlbn, biographies
adventure stories, science, na:
ture, crafts, mystery and reference books. The committee Is
working with Educational Read·
lng Service; a professional book
fair company, to furnish and Individual selection fo books lor
the fair .
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DIVISION OF TANDY COitPORATiON

PRICES MAY VARY

AT INOIV .DuAL STORES AND DEALERS

�Daily

Committee wants
to keep employees·
.

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By

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NEW LISTING -'CommerCial
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make up this ex~lent
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36,~~ ,~.... ,_;,_

much more."

He said the board should keep five staff members and make further cuts
In the futu re if necessary.
One staff member blasted the !Joard for following the review group's
. recommendation.
Marstulll Gordon .said tbe decision to cut staff was an "uninforn'led,
emotional response based on a report."
The personnel committee's recommendation is more informed because
it is based on a thorough study, Gorcton said.
Staff member Dan Schwendeman said tbe board shOuld make a decision
soon concerning whai positions It will cut because employees are gQing
through "mental anguish" not knowing if their jobs will be abolished.
Another recommendation made by the state review group- to fire &amp;18
ROBIN CAMPBELL ..
TAMMY CAPEHART .
TAMMYBIACK
ANNE. DIDDLE
board executive director Maxine Plummer - was not acted on or
discussed by the board Monday night. ·
·
. By a 6 to 5 vote Jan 24, the board voted to request Plummer's
resignation. but she has refused.
Plummer is currently ifi the hospital and was not present at Monday's
meeting.
(Continued from page 1)
concert, and pep ba~ds, a member
and Mrs. Jerry Black, is a 1J1emt.er . her freshman year was In the band.
In other matters, the board discussed:
; She Is a student . of the Upward of the National Honor Society, and
of the Ohio Office Education She attends the United Penteeostal · '
-Tile $12 lawsuit Plummer tued against board members and state and
Bound Program at Ohio University. was selected fortheall-county band.
Association at Meigs High School· Church In Middleport.
local officials In U.S. District Court. Board attorney W. Joseph Strapp sald
Terre Wood, daughter of Mr. and She is a member of the White's and belongs to the Steno Club, the
Robin Campbell, daughter ot
he recently filed an answer on behalf of the board denying the allegations
Mrs:Robert R. Wood, Long Bottom, Chapel Church.
ARts and Crafts Club, the Concert
David F . Campbell, and the late
Plummer made. Among other things, the answer claims the court lacks
is a junior at EasTern. She was
Brenda K White ~ the daughter Choir, the Collegium Musicum
Ernestine Stump, is a member of
jutisdlction lh the matter, that board members have Immunity frorrt suit • re5erve cheerleader her freshman of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brunty and a Choir, the Chorallers, the concert
theclericalandaccountlngcluband .
under state law and that Plummer has DQt exhausted her administrative
year, a varisty cheerleader her junior at Eastern where she is bane!, and the rifle corps. She Is a
OOEA at Meigs High School. She .
,
remedies.
has been a member of the Junior .
sophomore year, and has been both active with the FHA Hero Club. She member of the Rutland Church of
-Applications for vacancies on the bOard. Fiscal officer Mary JoThaler
a class officer and on the student currently attends the accounting the Nazarene.
American Legion AilxUiary, has :
said 16 persons have applied for the four openings on the board. Aprll8 is
council. She studies gymnastics at and computer technology voca·
Paula Jean Swindell. daughter of
held all offices In the local unit and
the deadllne board members set for submitting applications. AlthOugh
Glendale In Vienna, w. va. and · tional program at Meigs. She is .Mr. and Mrs. E: Ned Swindell of
is a past Eighth Dlstriot president. ,
state mental health officials are pressurifig the board to help fill the
attenc!s the Racine J3aptist Church.
active with St. John Lutheran Shade, is active with the Collegium
Robin os a member of the ·Laurel ,
positions immediately, Strapp advised members :hey are not obligated to
Rhonda Jeffers, daughter of Mr. Church, and In the past has been · Musicum. treasurer of student
Cliff Better Health Club. She makes
act now.
and Mrs. Roger Jeffers, Pomeroy, active with the Girl Scouts.
council, a class officer, plays
her home With her aunt and un~le, '
-A response to the Department of Mental Health concerning tbe review
is a junior at Meigs where she is f __T_amm
__v...,.B_Ia_c_k_. _d_a_:
ugh::_t_er_·_of_M_r_._v_:o:.:ll:.:e.::.y.:ba:ll:.an=d:.:s:.:u:.mm::.::_:
er:.:s:.:o~ft::ba:ll::.·::a::_n::d__.:_M.::.r.:.:a:::n:::d.:_M::r:.:s::_. .:_:W.:_a:_::U:ac:::e:.:F:_e::_:t~ty:_:.___
group's final report and recommendations. The board approved a
active In the concert band. the rifle
response drafted by Strapp which says the board. "is pleased to report it
corps, the concert choir, the
· has taken action on many of the reconunendations" made by the panel. It
Collegium
Musicum, treasurer of
also states the board expects to "take further action on the review group's
the
FHA Club, juniOr class editor of
recommendations."
·
the yearbook, an offiCe assistant.
Or Write Dallly Sentii1tl Clanified Dept.
111 Court St .. Po~~tror. Ohio 4516!
student council representltlve, a
member of the Spanish Club, and on
the prom committee. She is a
student at Carpenter's .Dance
Steve Hartenbach, meterman,
Studio, and twirls with the Ruffles
a;=
(Continued from page 1)
reported
from
he
issued
and
Fourishes
685
tickets
Baton
Corps.
1,,._ ... ,..
1:/"~~ifi• · rl "n~:• · • , .., , ,.,. rlto·
1 Clod Oili'•..,Ulllllld•neclwlr&gt;el l
Noel reported a feasabUlty study
12 , . . . . . . ....
!lol·CII. TV': PIMiia f q .. _nt
;,.,.,.
....1-d on.,.v•••&lt;O I l223--Mo"''
to
Cheryl
Riffle, daughter of Mr. and
from
Mareh
1
through
March
;n.
'"""U' III~ /r•f,., ,/,,,, , 1' 1t' hllll l:f '' ...
l'f&lt;lllll ...,,,.,, ... .., ..
7:t.v... t.4WD
53··"'""'"
would cost approximately $1,(0).
....,
14-Mooarc'f&lt;:*
54· Mioc . "-&lt;&lt;t..n&lt;to••
""? 1 a I
Also meeting with council was
Mrs. Charles Riffle, and a Meigs
,71·A..to
ss.a...wonv kwlo•
s ""'" lhh
'The !easabUlty study would include GaryWUUamso!Aaron'sProducts,
..•toloAccotuo,.o
M •&lt;pCow"''
3 1 Homn!Ot'SIIo
55-f'•'"
''"'
'*
A•. . Cocloil &amp;
. ,.......t ....... . . -...
7 v.... SMI,.;.I in • - "&lt;• I
student, was majorette with the ·
l7•..to"'lOt' 5 .._
........
,
what has tobedonetomeet the Ohio
JJ.,.,..,,,.,,s-..
ll·c-p.o•
...
51-F•"'•••V•••ble•
•n "..,....,,
5o0t(&gt;01
&lt;otlo
Huntington who demonstrated a
Meigs Band of which she has been a
aM
~~
' " Mul"'l.....
34 aw .....utl~'din""
!t.¥11-.0IOIW
367 CM-1
...,_.."'
Building Code.
l5· Lt&gt;1o&amp; ... co 4!.1 ' """'
J
M
Vioooon
IIIlo
C,_.,.,
!&gt; /'fo ......... G &lt;1 ""
21
member three years. She belongs to
246 llo&gt; Ot""O.
Hl ,.., .. .,o&gt;d
1l
'The issue was referred to the copying machine. The price of a new
lW G..,...,; D·•1n ,.,,,. f'!lto
1-' If-H. , .;..
the Spanish Club, serves on the
6U ..., ..... O..•
1141 Anon&lt;
bulding commltWE! who will meet copter is $5,895, a reconditioned
1 9!. · ~· ..,
ot1 Hou .. olo• ll..,l
'U I
•• 11_• ._._.....,...
,.,. - - ·
, . , """"""
prom·commlttee, has played on tbe
t1 . MtllpW..,1otd
42 · Mo l&gt;h HOifiH !"' 11 ... 1
,,,....,_... -....
,,, c .........
. wlthNoelonMonday, March28, at8 copier costs $1,695 and $1,570 with a
17· !WO,...... W.,.o&amp;J .hr..,.l ot '""'
......
13·-flf'ICI
girls' reserve softball team, and has
&amp;&amp;.Apao tm.,t ""' R•n l
trade in.
f-----------~ ----li&amp;. H .... u...
............
,._..'11
lloomo
p.m . .
!!I
Uplu1\o-do
On•"""''•"""'
••- o..-·11~
1 &amp;-Sdtoolo
been
on
the
student
council.
·She
is
Council
decided
to
lease
the
oti·Slltlce tor"-"'
Uplu\i-do
i.,,,.• ...,,.., _ _ .
""'
16·MH 1'1-•
,,.,.....,rv.csR_
..
&amp;7 w..,,.,u.,R ...,
Council, In other business, trans·
U.,ooti.,ooft
SoaN,,_,..,.,
11
u,.-.,...,
""
,,111W.,IIdh0o
...............
&amp;8·£.,..,,,...nl loo Ao,.1
also a member of the Meigs Riding
copier
for
a
two
week
tri'al
basis
at
""
1111--·
-·-""•1
&amp;9
roo
looM
!erred a Uquor license from Joe C.
Club and a member of the Junior
the cost of the paper only.
Gloeckner to Charles Gloeckner;
Bob
Barton,
president
of
the
Quarter Horse Association. She
approved a resolution to Install
Real Estate General
Public Notice
Pomeroy Youth League·, asked that
attends
the Middleport Church of
Public Notice
Public Noti~a
siren and necessary attachments on
Christ.
a building owned by Thea Smith council donate toward the program
·Terri Thoma, daughterofMr. and
as
it
has
done
In
the
past.
Council
PROBATE COURT OF
NOTICE OF
known as the Sugar Run Flour Mill
PROBATE COURT OF
Mrs.
agreed
to
purchase
equipment
In
Guy Thoma, a student at
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
DRAWING JURORS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
and enter into a contract with Smith.
Es:TATE
OF
HAZEL
V.
THOII!I·
Meigs is majoring In accounting • Office · of Coonmillioners of
ESTATE OF GAY P. GIUEN·
Council ·passed an ordinance the amount of $.'m.for the program
SON, DECEASED
Jurors, Meigs County, Ohio
WATER. DECEASED .
since
they
are
no
longer
&lt;tllowed
by
and
is
active
with
the
school's
Case No 24028
advertising for bids on an annual
Man:h 21, 198.3
case No. 23792
Vli&gt;Gil B. SR. REALTOR .
and
crafts
accounting
club
and
arts
law
to
make
donations.
NOTICE OF
To
All·
Whom
It
May
21• r.. 7nd St.
·
Nm:u:E
OF
basis for lll!lintenance work at
APPOINTMENT OF
Following the meeting council club. She has beena4-Hmember for Concern:
APPOIMTMENT
Beech Grove Cemetery.
Phone
FIDUCIARY
On
Fr1dav..
the
8
th
day
o1
Apr
1l
OF FIDUCIARY
went
into
executive
session
with
two
years
and
was
In
the
marching
On
February
23.
1983
1n
the
'The first reading of an ordlnan~
1983. at 9 00 o'c lockA.M . I he
1·(
614
)·992·3325
On Janunrv 1 4. 198 3 . 1n rhe
Hank Cleland, David Gloeckner and . band for a year. She attends the o ff 1ce ol th e Co mmiSSioners of Me•gs Cou nty Probate Cou rt. Mc1gs
Coun ty Pr oba t(• COtll l.
was approved that provides for a
Dan Morris concerning the restora· Middleport United Pentecostal · J urors ol Me1 gs County, Oh1o. Case No 24028. Roben M
"EW LISTING - 3 acres in · ·•
Case No 23792 Dnnu'!l c
bulldlng Inspector and inspection of
Jurors wil l be publ1 cly drawn f or Thomson. 409 Ce rwan Bldg .
Suttordownship. 3 bedroom · . ,
Gl!lenwotnr Star Routf!. Box
Church Sunday School. ·
lion
of
Pomeroy.
buildings lor Safety.
th e May 1983 Te1n of the Akr on. Oh10 44 308 wa s ap ·
240 A. To•m do. W Vo 25202
home. woodbumer, ITlldern '
POW11ed ExeGUIOr o J t,he es tal e
Com mon Pl eas CoUll of sa 1d
was JPP01n1Cd ExAcu tor of the
kttchen, tap water· on good;
of HaLe! V Thomson, deCounty .
rstatc Ol Gay P G1 llenwmer.
Alternates
b~clttop road. Asking $27,500.
ce
ased:
la
te
olAF
0
No
·1.
Box
Lauren HoHman
decnascrt. lp!c· ot Bo&gt;t 77
Sherry Renee Arnold, daughter of
33A. Bradbury Ro ad. MiddleW allace Brad ford
RutiJnd , Oh1 0 4 57 7 5
·
tconttnuedtrompage1)
NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom• '
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Arnold', Horner
CommiSSIOners pa n . Oh10
Ro iY! n E Bw 1c
AoQen E Buck
insulated ranch. Wood~urning
of Juro rs
Hill Road, Pomeroy, Is In the MetgS
Probn te Judge -Clerk
Probat e J udqe-Ci e rk
firep~ce, carpeting, equipped
131 15. 22. 29. 3ic ··
Marauder marching band and (31 22. 1ic
131 15. 22. 29. 3tc
This morning the FAA was occasions as a singer providing his
kitchen, gass furnace, garage •
·concert band. She has been selected
and nice lot on west end of &lt; ,
having an autopsy performed at own guitar accompaniment.
Public Notlca
to participate in all-county band.
Besides the son, Kim, .there are
Rutland. For $36,000.
Morristown, Tenn. The body is
Sherry
is
a
member
of
the
Arts
and
two
other
sons,
Dale,
who
is
. exp!Cted to be released following
PROBATE COURT OF
NEW LISTING - I year ~d
Crafts Club. She is an eight year
MEIGS COUINTY, OHIO
v&lt;tcationlng In Florida, and Blll.
tha:t autopsy.
80%
finished 2 bedroom home.
ESTATE
OF
R•'LPH
C.
HILL.
member
of
4-H
and
now
serves
as
Both are of Pomeroy. Rufus
It was reported the Brownings'
Full
basement
carpetin~ · nice '
DECEASED
president of the Mountalrieers Club.
rught had started in TeXas where Browning of Route 3, Pomeroy, is a
Cue
No.
24016
kttchen
.and
5
acres
in Salem
COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS .
She a!tends the Zion Church of
brother. He was an employe of
NOTICE OF
Township. Want only $19,500. ' ·
KJm had been living.
APPOINTMENT
Christ and is active In the teen youth
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!
Browning was well known In Kaiser Aluminum at Ravenswood.
OF. FIDUCIARY
NEW LISTING - 84 acres .
The j;:wlilg Funeral Home will be group and the summer youth camp
·Meigs County, notoniy for his work
On M arch 16. 1983. m the
near Hemlock Grove wnh 'h
program.
·
In
charge
of
arral]g!'mentswhen
the
Me•gs
Co
t,.mty
Probate
CO
urt
In !light InstructiOn, but as an
By 1hilppllii In your home 1re1 you 11ve on
mineral~ Nice modern~ed 3
Case No 24 1)16. Rulh C
Tarnniy Capehart, daughter of
entertainer appearing on numerous . body ts released by the FAA.
pi, the wear 1ncl tear on your Air and 1vold
b!l!1room home. Natural gas
Stmpson
of
Bo
x
2
13.
Racme.
Patricia Cape}1art, 'Pomeroy, has
furnace, hardwood floors, large
Oh1 o 45771 and Mildred M
·
.the
hazard1
Of
hlchwly
1nd
freeway
bee!) an active girl scout for 10
Ca rn ah an o f Box 173.' Racine.
barn and other b~ldings.
travelinc. It liBJI to 1hop whete you llvel
. years, served on the Junior Fair
OH 4 57 7 1 were appomt ed
$75,000.
•
An c•llaty Co -Admm•slrators of
Board for three years, was In FHA •
the estate ot Ralph C Hdl.
ON RT. 143 ~ One mile off Rt
lor a year and has played girls'
Five calls were answered Mon· Herbert F. Moore
deceased . )a te o f 827 Leahman
7.
With 10% down, will carry
day and on Tuesday morning by
basketball for tbe past five years ..
Street l eban o n Pennsylvania
the
balance. ll\ baths, several
1704
1
Herbert
F.
Moore,
well-known
.She is the leaderofSeniorTroop 12f)l
local 1units, tbe Meigs County
garages,
Heatolator, carpetin&amp; '
Ro bert E Bu¢k
Emergency Medical Services . Pomeroj resident, died Monday artd attends the Flatwoods Metholarge kitchen, dining and one ·
Probate Judge.
night a! University Hospital In dist Church where she sei:Ves as
reports.
acre. Only $40,000.
.'. '
.' Cl t:Jrk.
At 12:09 a.m., Monday, Pomeroy Columbus. He resided at :.U Wright vice president of.the youtp 'group.
131 2'2. 29 141 !i. 3ic
EXCELIINT BUY - Gravel
took John Thabet, Mason, W. Va., St. Arrangements are being made
Ann Diddle, daughter of Mr. and
H1ll, 6 roomhorne. Lots of ·:
Mrs. Don Diddle, . Pomeroy, is a
from the scene of an accident on by the Ewlhg ~eral Home.
.Public Notice
•
remodeling, carpeting, ·~rge •·
member of the Eastern Chapter,
West Main St. to Veterall!l Memor·
----·~
· :......,..
eat-in kitchen, dry basement, .•
National Honor Society, treasurer
1ai H06pital; at 5 p.m. Tuppers Meets Wednesday
PROBATE COURT OF
natural gas furnace, front ,
of tbe Art Club, a member of the
MEIGS COUN'TY, OHIO
Plains, took Beverly Gaul from the
pon:h and level lot 101 only •
ESTA11: OF HENRY OTIS
$21,500
.
•
marching,
concert
and
pep
bands,
scene of an auto accident on Route 7
Gallia·Meigs FOP Lodge 95 will
SMITH.
DECEASED
to Pleasant Valley Hospital;. at 9: !II · meei In special session Wednesday, and plays basketball. She has been
C.. No. 2~177
FIVE POINTS -'.122 acres of . 1
p:m .. Pomeroy took.Dorothy Wyatt March 23, at 7: :rl p.m. at the selected for all-county band. In 4·H,
. · I\IOTICE OF
n~e laying land. New garage, .
APPOINTMENT
Ann sei:Ved as treasurer of the
from her oomeon Lincoln Heights to Pomeroy City BuDding.
concrete Hoor and a like new 2
That's
right!
When,
you
u'ae
a
column
OF
AI&gt;UCIARY
Country Cousins. She Is active In the
Holzer Medical Center. On Tuesday
bl!droom Schulz trailer. Gas •
On January 1B. 1983. 1n th e
inch or more In newsp1peradvertising, .·
Mt. Hermon United Brethren
morning, the Racine Unit took
Me1gs County Probate C011rt,
furnace, T.r. water for
be It dlslay or classified, you reach
Case No . 23977. Jessie CurtiS.
Church,. teaching In :Sunday school
$26,500.
1 ·
Debbie Smith from tbe scene of an Veterans Memorial
39522 St. Clair Rd . Pomeroy.
'.
&lt;tnd
is
president
of,
the
Christian
thousands of potential buyers that ira
auto accl~t on Route · 124 to Oh10 4 5 769 was appo1nted
WE ADVERTISE OUR LIST- 1
.AdmJtied..John Thabet, 1\{ason, Endeavor.
VeteranS MemorlalH~Ital and at
eager ta recalve .'your monay·llivlng ·
Executn)( of the estate of Henry
INGS 4.TillES AIIONTH. · ,
Melissa Scarbrough, daughter of
Oils Sm1th. d-?Ceased. late of
12: 33 a.m., ~ Syracuse Unit took W. Va.; Karen Brown, Langsville; ,
maiiBga •.
Reedsv•lle,
Obio
Housing
· Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Scarbrough,
Jeff Proffitt from the scene of the Linda Carpenter. Rutlarxt ·
.
'
·
Robert E_Buck
i
DIScharged..Etta Ellis, Walter Coolvllle, is a junior at Eastern
same accident to Veterans.
Probate -J udge-CI !rk
Headquarters
· where she Is in tbe marching,
King, Peari Little.
(31 15. 22. 29. 3tc
''
· ~rial.

~

PHONE 992-2156

improv~ment

.. ___

21 -fl u&amp;&gt;nUI 0 .... DIIYNi y

!O I · H""'Mifloi~ G-•

uoa~·

l·i~...,_.,

6• L .,. 1-d~ .,..M

...

32 · M&lt;&gt;b~e ~""'n

~MI[IOIOIIWofttotd

.,~

&amp;~fur11•f&gt;ed

-

ft

II

~

·

MARY C. KEBLIR-MER

l

~~!~.!~~M
LaBONTE'S

ctell LaBonte; s•..o..,. ••,
.:,~,;(·~
· ·"""· ·

'.· '-&lt;~~\

'

NEw LISTING - POIIEROY - Stafl!ty older home will! onginal
wOOd -~ lreoch doors. bay window, and incinerator. 8 rooms
plus a lull basement, and a large
. attic. Ner.l1 painted. $35,000.00.
. .
'

NEW LISTING - .. IDDLEPOI!T - Large brick on a comer lol
with a huge/retty ive-in kitchen that has afire;:jace. ~orne hass4
bedrooms, fireplac!l5, and a 3 non apartment $25,000.0\1.

· NEW LISTII«l- MIDDUPOI!T- A 2 story frame home with 8
A~. a 3 bedroom garage apartment
$39,900.00. . .

· rooms, and all furnished.

IIIDDLEPOI!T - .One floor plan home with 2 bedrooms. dining .
room, front deck, chain link renee Real cute home on a ni:estreet

· ~ ·' I .
~ , -"Mat~re Quail now being
sold. Egs available w~h
notice after May I. Da1 old
chicks available with depo·
Sit after
H ·l mo.

'

)

.

.

.

PRICE REDUCED - BRICK ST. POIIEROY - 111)% fixl!d rat!!
. available. This 2 bedroom home, in Pomeroy can be yours with
$2,400 down. Pa1ments of $92.66 monthly for 20 years_ Goo:J
condmon! Total price $11,(0).00.
REALTORS
Htnry E. Cleland, Jr., GRt ................................ 992-6191
J1111 Trussell ................................................... 949-264i0
Dottie Tu-........................ ,.......................... 992·5692
Jo Hill .. ;........ :............................................... 985-3335
Office .. ,............ ................ ;...................... ,..... 992·2259

m
IIULTOI ;

New Construction - Rt·
modelin1 _; Custom Pole
8arns.
·
·

4

.

FREE·
EXTIMATES
'Chain link Fence.
·carpetlnl ·Paintin1

ISearsl

vlncinltv of Sliver Bridge
Plaza. PonderOae , Jonea

Boyo and Foodlend Rt. 36.
Call 448·46 1 2.

.

992·2196
. MiddlepOrt, Ohio

12·20.tft

l· lltfc

1

INSULATION
VINYL&amp;

SIDING

BISSELL
Sl Dl ·NG c·0,

.

ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnoulolion
•Sto•m Door•
•Swm Windows
•Roptaoc...,ent Window•
•N•w Roofino
FREE ESTIMATES
JA.MES KEESEE
PH 992 '2772
· ··
-

"
· Beautiful, Custom
. Built ~rages"
Call for free siding es·
timates, 949·2801 or

949·2860.
N .5
0

d

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
s·ERV. ICE

•Lowest Rates
Around
•friendly Service
GIVE.·
A TRY

Jacklo"n, ,

814·384 ~ 6160 .

LOST br-n a· track tape
cue. full of ttpeo. Felt· off
car bttween Crown City ll
Gotllpollo. Reward. Call
814·268·9382 . .

17 Miscellaneous

~m. 6

8

un ay

Remodelin&amp;.
·
•Insurance Work
•Custom Pole Bides.
&amp;R Garages
·
• oofina Work
oAillllinllll &amp;.Vinyl Sidinp
15 Yoors EKperience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992 •7583
or 992 •2282

Long Bottom. OH.
.· HOME BULDING
ROOM ADDITIONS
REMODELING
ROOFING &amp; SIDING
"FREE ESTIMATES"
REFERENCES
PH. 985-4141

9

t

9

RENTAL &amp; ONE-WAY

Local and OOt-way, low rates.

top maintained tJucks. Rillrt
sizes, right equipment Hand
IM:ks. furniture pads. Na·
tionwide Rnecl Service. Mov·
itlllips and insurall(e.
Riverside VW Inc.

6 p.m.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Makes
•Wolhoro •DIIhwo·ohe
· ro
Rangeo
, •Refrigerator•
•Dryera •Freezero
PARTS ancf.SERVICE
4-S.tfe

CEMENT
FINISHER

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION

Richard Garfield

Roofing, Spouting

•p k. · L015

ar mg
•Driveways
•easements
•patios
R
. easona bl e Rates
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, OH.
PH 614 985 4464
•
•
•

Complete Home
R
d I'
emo e mg
14 Years Experience
AII Work Guaranteed

742-2324
.
773 • 5684
.

H-1 mo.Pd.

t-----------~-+---------'-----.J.---~---------~
EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
·sidin1
•Roofinl
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
•Remodelin1 .
20 Years Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

. Call 843·5425

MILLER
... ELECTRIC
SERVICE

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS
Sites start fto1112'd&amp;'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from &amp;'x&amp;' Up
· to 24'x36'
Insulatd Doa Houses

For all your wiring
needs: fumacas repair service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
. Call 742·3196

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
!lac!~~· Oh.

Ph. &amp;14;843-5191 10-S.tfi '

3·7·1fc

S.H. F• 111u•

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION CO.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE .

271 w. lllin

l'omlro,. 011.

3rd. ll Olive St., Gellipoilo,
446·31 69 between 9 end 6. ·

Wantad To Buy

want~d

do plumbing, "'
roofing. remodeling •
&amp; b.ulld1ng , Free est . .NO Job
to large or to amall. Call
alect~•c:

WANTED TO BUY Old furnl·

ture and Antiques· of all
kinda. call Kenneth Swain,

the ever11nga.

614·246·6114 or call col· :
teet 1·286·2962.

Buying Gold. Silver. Plati·
.num .&gt;Gold ·lr:ld Silver prices

nabla

446·3169 or. 266-1967 in

Odda and ends jOba. Reaso·
rates. Call '8 14·742•

are the highell in two years, _2_6_0_2·..,...-----'--~-­

.ch&amp;ck our prices ·on gold &amp;
silver. scrap jeWelry. Buying
Old coina; scrap rings &amp;·
&amp;

FOR FUTURE USE"

Sma.ll 8ngine repair, lawn
mowera. i'.iding mower•, ro•
totillera . Reaaoriabla ratea.

~~~~ seT!~~~io;:~~ome.

2-28-1 mo.

11-11-tfc

and dependable. Cell '448·
3169.

Conolgl)ltnll of . new and lawn Mowing no yard to big .
uood merchandise alwayo .or small . Rallableand dapan- ·
walcol)lo. Richerd Roynoldo dable: for estimate oell
446·3169 .
Auctioneer. 276-3069 .
AUCTION every Saturday

~~

BUILDERS·

General Hauling and Tr.alh
Service. R~tliable

remov~l

~'::!~~n~~~ckt~:::Y o~:;::

7.42-2328

J ESCQ

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - Extensive

p.m. 3.04·11711·

18 Wanted to bo

Sale
&amp; Auction.

Auc!ion every Fri. night 11
Hertford Communhy

us

Call1

::::=.:·:: ,... ,_. . . .

~::::~ ~;::~~g4~6:aos:l';i:~
446 8026
.
·

1

Gardena plowed with la'ii• ·
rototiller six inchea deep.
Reedy to plant. Reut8r·614·

992·2490. .

.

~iii' ·

.

:e~·J.;:·:.::.r late modal I.,..._M_o_n~e_v_to_Loa_n_
F
1
~~r.C:::~o~':.'.~~ HOME LOANS 12% fl~ed

3 Announcements

rata. Le8der Mortgage. 77E.~
44&amp;-oo&amp;s
SWEEPER ond ll"!ing mo· 1--~--'----- State, Athans, Ohio. 1·814•·
.
chine
Pay cash
for uead mobile 592·3051.
ouppliesrepair,p,·ckparts, and
· d homes
or travel travel trail·
.
up an ers.Prefer1966andup.'Call Business &amp; Second 'Mort• '
delivery.· ·Davis
vacuum
Cteane.r, one half mite up 17
6~14_·~
44~6_·_0_17_6_.~----- gage l~ana. Equity Rasour-'··
ces. In Ohio 1·800·992·
Georgao Creek Rd. Call 1
Beeaball carde. Call 446· 2361 , out ol Ohio
446·0294 ..
4149.
1·800·641-5288.
'
PRIDE IN TOBACCO An- .1---------------tiqua &amp; Flea Market. Hun-

tlngton, wv. Go North on
28th St. Outoida and inside
avory Saturday S. Slinday,
BAM to &amp;PM. Over 160.000

Mobile home .axlas. tireS
whaale.
379·2322.

&amp;

BEDS-IRON. BRASS. old
furniture, goid, silver dot· 1-----~---------

sq .h. and gettln·g bigger ian, wood' ice boxes. ato·na

avery week. Electronic

18 •

curlty, advance reaervation
foreeleCted 1pota. Random

opots avalloble upon srrival.
Cao otart oat up Friday
evening. 15 till 9PM. March
lpocltloot up 83.00. ttblae
a. racko for rent. Crafte
people welcome. Soma·
thing for evarvono. Door
prizes, for more Information

cetl304·623·2131 .

WANTED·Studonts for be•
ginning oll painting clooo.

Professional
· ServicBs

1~------------­

Jero, antiqueo, ate.. Com·

plate households. Write:
M.D. Miller. Rt. 4. Pomeroy,

Oh. Or 992·7180.

ca. LBookkeeping

Short formo f6.DD
Long forme f20.DO end up
Gold, oliver, · otorling, ia· Carol Neal
446-.3882
walry, rlngo, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Barber PIANO .TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Shop, Middleport. 992· Call Bill Ward for appoint· ~ ·
3478.
4':6'.'4a~~rd'o Kayboord,' .
l~;;;;;;;;i7.;''b.;;.l;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;
•-----------------.
I W.Onted to buy.
1
property. Call
5858.

1-------------Wanted old Pianos. Paying

$20.00 end $40.00 each
f~oor only. W~ite givinG
Lod\VIck. Call 986·3692 or dlrOCIIono. Witton Pianos. Excellent condition a. ,
986-4118.
Box 188 Sa&lt;dlo, Ohio
43946. Phone 614·483· location--all ready for imme~
diate occupancy-·lntereat ·
·1806.
ratea are down and probably•..
F!rtt

won ~ t

be lower.

--- --· ··- --· --·--. --- ...
Home

Authorized John Deer,
Nflw Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

~N

9 ID 5 MON. tlvu SAT.

a...-os. Tune-Ups, ole.
SPECIAL

ONLY

J.J.tft

131.95

l·l&lt;·Hc

11

Help Wanted

ANY ·PERSON who hao

anything to give .way and
does not offer cir attempt to
offer any other thing for aale
may place an ad in this
column, Thera will be no
charge to the advartiHr .

To give away diaplay caa,a
with 6ft. long by 3ft. high .
Cell 446-2310.

.

and

·o.r

terital

Broadway-Middleport.
... --· ... ... -·- --- --···-·
Modern buelnou bldg.
Court St.. GaAipolio.
. -· ---·-- -·· --- ·-· ......

All Types of Auto Ropalr,

TRANSMISSION Fll TER
AID FLUID CHANGE

~

Tax Ret~rna &amp; bookkeeping
for Individual• &amp; buainea .....

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

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

.

Burtlng:ton_ Rd.,

Oh. Call 614·288·3074 or

!ho

Ciaaaes ev&amp;!Y Fridi!IY after·
no~n" evening. Children or
adults . . ln4tructor · Juanita

EAFORD

Karate tlie ultlmilte In olli
defence all prlvote teooono.
Men, women, a. children.
lnotructlon .thru bi8Ck btlt,
Aloo ovalloble Karole unl·
formo puchlng and klcldnt
bogo, and protecttv• equip· '"
~ont . Jerry Lowery a. AIIO· :
c1ateo Karote Swdlo, 143

With aeveral atones. loat. in

~tUi~I:.':!,C:,':;

.· Schools .
Instruction ·

----------------~·:••

.REWARD Loot lodleo ring

We Cltn
_ _.18n!pllir and nt- .
core ..,
tornnd ' - ·
'-'-·we can 1110

o.. Tria.
PAT HILL fORD

Roote 1
L9n1 Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992·3067

J·H· mo. pd.

a

11?

·· ... qiveii,WIIY

1

ll~lloiO

Pomeroy pilot ·

..

-..

available.
AlsoDaily
coins quot~s
coin
r==::;~~;;=::;t========:;'t========:.lL-------....._---i
silverware.
"CUT OUT
supptleo lor oale. Spring

~24,500.00.

J

.

.

~~~~~~;I~-V~·2~m~·~~====~~~~J~·2~1~~~-~~~~~~~~~~I~l·tlc~ ~~~~;;;;~~J~· lO~· I~m~o.~ night, Mt. Aho, WV.
Ph. 985-4345

NEW LISTING- N~R RUTLAND- Approximately 5 acres with
a 2 story frame:home tllat ~ mostly reniodeled. Has 2 wei~. 3
bedrooms, and a family room. Fireplace and a woodburner set up.
$26,900.00.

t

Mooo~

lllisineqn &amp; l'ltblii$hips

NEW LISTING - lETART - Fantastic vie~ ApproiCima\eiy 19 '
wooded ~itd wih 2·~ bedroom m!)bile home. Greenhouse,
ne~ block root ~l~r! outbuilding. Minerals iocluded. $25,(0).0(). ·

~~

0

. POMmoY
lANDMARK

acr~

5~f l&gt; •

• ALM:!ot&gt;n

AU OTHER APPLIANCES

60fi. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259 •

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

~

618 E. llttln, Pomeroy, OH.
PH 992 3795
• · •
We .DO Boold!eepi~W For
Small, Lalli and Corporate

,,

:======R:•:a:I:E:•:t:a:te::G:•:n:e:ra=l:::==::::;
r

Eastern, Meigs juniors chosen for brirls' state

The Daily Sentinel

WE ALSO WORK ON

·-"'.74r31n'
.9·. "'
o:..·
~ · ._ •
· 61 992 2181
P
===..='=:~=';::::;:~[=:=======~
.YIIINI Nlclnsky, .Assoc.
~.
..... .
1 742

.

.

~~==::::::::;-t====~===:=;t========::i-==========4 Wodnaoday
LOST Femele Dobarm.en 11---------~--Memorial
•
Field. Fawnnear
color,
name Wanted
ride tot;tuntin."'on
J&amp;l BLOWN
Vinyl &amp; Al11minu.m
~~'gn1~·4 :;:~~e. Cali 446· flva dayowoek. Arrivea::m. -

rr------='-~i'J I ~=======~
rr.
AUTHORIZED
· TRI•COUNTY
FACTORY SERVICE
BOOKKEEPING
· famil1roomw/woo~burner. 3 1 GENERALELECTRIC
bedrooms. 2 -bath!, kitchen
&amp;JIOTPO.INT
SERVICE
features a double. oven and
•

Utldtng.
3 bedrooms,
um siding,
storml doorsalumi·
and ·
tndows.
20
000 look
A at
1 this· one.
b Only
11
00
T.
i43 ~ t\0aacr~lwith
·
, otal electric home. Add ,on .

ista nd range. Owner anxious to ·

.

· AUTO &amp; TRUCK · . CHARLES SAYRE
REPAIR .
AND SON
~oofirw &amp; Siding Co.
Also Tranamlnion

.

se1I and is willing to help on this

•.

Freouerden' ptot. '3o4-&amp;75·
tr~===;;=~::=9ifl~;,::::;::;:;::;:==;~=r1F========;-,-;:::====:::=~~
H
·
11
Kitchen C.bintts - Roof·
2482.
.
Roger yse · inc- Sldin1- Concrete
ISearsl
RADIATOR
6 Lost and Found
Patios - Sidewalks .
.
SERV
. ICE

Rea11,Eatete General

OVP staff
The personnel committee of the Gallla-Jackson-Meigs 648 board has
c6ntradicted a vote by the fuli!Joard by recommending the agency keep
· five of Its eight full:lime employees.
·
The full !Joard voted Jan. 24 to reduce staff from eight lull·time
e(rlployees to four ot•fewer as recommended by a slate review group. The
board directed the personnel committee to study how to implement this
proposaL
However, Jake Koebel. chairman of the personnel committ,ee. told the
board Monday night he Is unsure if it caq operatewith feWer tMp five staff
members.
Board members sa id they will resolve the issue at their April meeting.
Meanwhile, they asked the personnel committee to prepare two possible
sets,of j&lt;;lb descriptions for the 648 board- one with four positions and one
With five.
The issue arose in January when a panel formed by the state
Department of Mental Health concluded in its final report tbe 648 board
"has too many staff for the duties for ·which it is responsible under (Ohio·
law )."
The review group recommended the 648 board get rid of all but three
staff positions.
· However, Koebel said "we don't know if we can reduce the staff that

No

Business seMces·
.

.

.lEFf' GRABMEIER

March

Ohio

1

For Agri Business-Saleman ;
general office secretary.
Send resume to P.O. Box

·

&amp;a'

1.12+ acres with 2 home1

.

Galli e County.
..
------'"·· ··---· -·· .... .
Call 992·3267 or 676·261&amp;

·-·

eveninga.

Owner desperate tb sell 2 . :

444. Rio Grande, Oh bdr. home, carpet through46674.
.
out, FP . 1f.i: acre. gard_en, city

Aeliebl&amp; babysitter for 2
Children day shih . Must
have references . Prefer 160
Spring Valley erea. Call

446·7693 efter 4:30.

schools. 6 mi. from. town.
Can assume 9'h% mortgage
with . only $2,600 down "
~aymenta under 8260 mo:''
Includes tax~s &amp; Insurance.

Call 446-8681.

'

SHOP LOCALLY

Emergency runs

I Area death

SUCCESSFUL
BUSINESS
IS.A CINCH ·
IF YOU USE
THE 'INCH!

The Daily Sentinel ·
·,.· .

__

'

,,'

,,

,.

'

I

�March 22, 1983
Pcige-8- The

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

31 Homes for Sale

KIT 'N' CARL YLE'•

by Larry Wrlghl

51 Household Goods

Tuesday, Marth 22, 1983

They'll Do It Every Time

54 Misc .- Merchandil8

r--,------~---""":"-:-..,...---:r

Atiri - ft•mo wiih . 8 car·
. • LAYNE' S FURNITURE Solo , chair, rockor, otto· trldgn. 1296. Cell 614·
~876
man, 3 tableo, lutra haovy _2_&amp;_6-_8_2_1_11_. - - - - - - - : by Frontier) , 11185. Sofa, 1 Quality lo~uotpootoforoolo.
TH R ~E bedrorn h ou se. full
choir ond loveoNt. 1275.
baaAment. well •ns ulat&amp;d.
Sofao end chalro priced from _. Coli daY or night 1114-258 ·
coal ot wood tvmece elumr 1286 . to $895. Tsbleo, f45
8702 or 1114-2511-1148 .
l'um .sidi"O new root 5 07
and
up
1o
$125
.
Hlde-a3r6 'st fi\few Have-n Con Firewood, opllt. UO.OO a
beds , t440 . end up to
tact Gtef'tn H1rrah Parkers truckload , t35 .00 dall·
*526
..
Recliners.
*176
.
to
burg 304422 -3117
vared·. Ph . 181 4) 992-2770
1360 .. Lampo from 128. to
or
13041 882 -2194.
HS . 6 pc. dinettes from
ONE 11cre 3 bedroom fam
e99
..
to
t435
.
7
pc
..
•1
89.
itv room w ood ·burM r . 2.
lind up. Wood table with 1fx
beths ga rage, 2 outbuild chairs $426 . to t746 . Daok
•ng• call 304 -895 -345.6
1110 up to 1226. Hutcheo,
1660.
and up, maple or pine
1
8 ":t A..SS U MABLE loll'lln p.sv·
linloh. Bunk bed complata
m&amp;nt ·$ 239 00 11 month
with mettrtlltl, 1260. and
Three bedroom 1 \-:- bath .
up to $396. Baby bodo,
tenced rn vard Call 3 0 4 ·
1110. Mattresses or box
6 7 6-6889 oft&lt;!-r 4 30
opringo, full or twin, $68 .,
firm. 168. and $711. Ouaon
lOW down payment 8 '~
oato,
8196 . 4 dr . chests, ·
pe r cen t as11umable loan ,
e42
.
5
dr . cheoto. t64. Bed
p&amp;yments at $275 . month
framto. 120.ond •26-. 10
includu taxes &amp; insurance .
gun - Gun cabinets, *360 .• ·
Nice 3 bedroom home w ith
dinettechaira e20 . and $2!5 .
garage &amp; basement . Phone
~ ~...
G11 or electric ranges, $325
304 - 675 -3030 or 675•~
up to 1376 . Baby ma·
343 1
ifAtlilfr , trOIIOI, e26 &amp; $36, bed
I~::::::;:::::::::===:;::~:·:"':::':~:-:"';:;"':;:';:'~··~·::;';"
frames $20, $25, 6 $30,
king frame _160. Good seloc32 Mobil e Homes
tion of bedroom auites.
for Sale
cedar che•t•. rockers, metal
44 Apartment
cabinets. swivel rockers. ·
for Rent
Uaed Furnitur~ -- bookcase.
TRI - STATE MOBILE
JACKSON
ESTATES
'Equal
ranges,
chairo, end tables.
41
HOME S. USEO -. CARS ,
waehers, dryers, refrigera Houaing Opportunity '
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
tors and TV's. 3 miles out
one bedroom •p•rtmantt Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to
Sharp Mlc.rowav• oven with Loader-Moooey Forguaon 1
CHECK OUR PRICES .
3 bedroom . home loc»ted rent st~rting at S167 per 6pm, Mon . thru Fri.. 9am to
stand. All touchtooe con- wk. 368 with lorko. can
CALL 446 -7672 .
S
near Golf couru. Shawn by month and twQ bedroom
trols with browner. u.~ 81 4-2415-5804.
epanmonto rent oterting at :ra': ~~­
appoint
mont
Rent
f275.
very little. peid '649. will
CLEAN USED MOBILE
sell· for t460. 304-676- Farmoll Cub with cultlvatoro
HOMES KESSEL 'S OUJ&gt;,l- deposit $200 . No pets. Call e193 per month . Call 446- 1 :::;;=~;;=::;;=;:=;;:=.:==
2746 or loavt1 maooaga.
1CB,TV, Radio
7363 alter 6 p.m.
all axe. cond .. *2,200 firm .
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES, 446-2573 or 446-1171 .
62
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS, 1- ------:------:--- 3 bad . opto. All include
Call alter 8, 614-379-2868.
Equipment
Brown egg a 86 centa dozen,
Modern 3 bdr. ranch, gar- individual carportswtth stor· 1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;,.._ _
RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274 .
will deliver once a week. Rt. F1rmall · cub cultivat.ore.
age, carpet. Rodney area. · age building• • fenced beck •2 &amp; Pt. Pleaoant. 304-896· turning plow, belly mowor,
New 14x70' s being sold a1 Oeposi1 &amp; references re- yards . Rental to . suit all
3395 .
coot and under- Cell 446·
quired. UBS per mo. Black- budgato. 304·273-3344 in
olde mower • blade, *2850.
11_Y_-C
14_4_6_-_
Dill' pi..W *276 . Mixer
9662 . Kana~ga ·Mobile _h_
ur_n_R_•_•_
_•_1_
o_o_o8_- Ravenswood between 9
1
For oaie, baby bad , play grinder e775 . can 448·
Homes S81es . Kaneuga , Oh . House for rent 160 mo. _._.m_._t_o_4_,3
_0
_ p_.m_._ ·_ _
pen,&amp; • potty chair. All for 4157.
1
$20. 304-468-1042 .
19 80 Redman 14x70, 4 $76 deposit. Coll 614 •246 • Apartment in Pomeroy .
Maooey Ferguoon 50 form
Trailer in SYracuse . 814·
bdr , 5325 clown. S15Bmo . 9315 .
Wanted couch and chair. tractor. llka now U,OOC.
Muot hove good credit. Call 1- - - - - - - - - - : - : 992-7611 .
. 614-388-9776.
4 room a end bath, full
Free or cheap. 304·675· new tires. new paint. rebuilt
7821.
basement. •II new JJ'Iint. Ap-artments . 304 - 876 engine . Call 8 14· 2411 ·
1980 14x70 Buddy Mobile carP.tod . No lnoide pets. 6548 .
6B18 .
64 Misc . Merchandise
home . furnished, 2 bdr.,
Deposit and 6 months lease
55 Building Supplies
largo bath with garden tub, requi'od. 614-992 -3090.
APARTMENTS , mobile~ ~~-------NEW • Uoed Horveotore
Structurea. Automated libuih-in atero, round kitchen
-homes. houses . Pt. Pleasant
with double ovens. central 2 bedroom hou•. Large and · Oeftipolis . 614-446- Cut ·UP slabe for ' firewood
vestock feeding-computer
air end · wood building in· living room. kitchen • bath. 8221 ,
e 1 5 pick up load. Call
feedoro. Coli collect 81 4·
Building materlala
cluded . located in Green Furnished . Overlooking
614 -245-6804.
block. brick. tewer pipes, 685-22110. John L. Botts.
Terrace Mobile Home Court. Ohio River. Adults only. UNFURNISHED apartment 1 ~-----:---:-------:--:­ windows. lintelt, etc .
call 446 .94 8 6.
Brown 's Trailer Pork. 614- for rent , 1 bedroom , 1 c o f f o a t a b I o Claude Winters. Rio Grande. For oale 520 JD farm tractor
992-3324.
*2 ,000. 304-878-2784.
1180 .00 Call Automotive 47'hx18Yox 16V. in . and 1 0 . Call614-246-5121 .
1- --------::-;:-:--::--6 304 67&amp;
end table 25x18 %x20 Y2
19 7 5 Holly Park Mobile 3 bedroom houoe, Middle- Supply, 8 - ·
"th I'1 ht
I tf' · h 130
Home, 14x70 with cen~ral
2218, 676-6763,
WI
9 wa nu lOll
•
TO All CONTRACTORS 32x63- 174 p·iaces brown We are able ·to give contrac· 62 Wanted to Buy
air , new drapes, new carpet. port are-a· 8276 month ·
Owner willing to 18ese pres- Fenced yard. air condition, ONE bedroom apartl)1ents underpinning for a mobile tors price On all building
._
61_4_-_7_4_2_
-2_4_3_5_._ for the elderly. All utilitieS home Used juat 1 year came materials. ·Delivery avallabe.
ent location, including pas- , _c•_r_pe_t_o_d_
ture on SR 554, Bidwell. •·
paid. Tenants pay 30 per· off ,a 14x70 mobile home, Gallipolis Block Co .. 1 23V. Tobacco p"undage. Call
Call 446 -9786. 8 :30-3 :30. 1--=---:-::-:-'7:"'-:-::---- cent of their adjuated in- long pieces measure 32 ", Pine St ., Geliipolio. Oh 446- 446-1437.
67 71 50
42 Mobile Homes
comeinthioHUDouboldized ohon pieceo 21" and 10 27B3 .
Wanted 1983 tobacco
Evenings . 3 ·
·
for Rent
epanment building . Twin inches acroas, enterlock in a
poundage. INIYing 25 canto.
2 14 60 K. k 1- - - - - - - - - - Rt'vero Tower, phone 304· metal frame. wood grain
· Coll614-26tl-1379.
197
x
" Clean Mobile
wood
home,
gao
676· 8879. Equal opponun· finish. Cell after 6PM. 446 - 56 Pets for Sale
3 065 .
heat. 1 lA baths. front and Eureka : Riverfront lot, 1 ity housing.
reer bedrooms. $7900 . Call bedroOm. fum .. adutta. Ref.
63
Livestock
614-992 -5732 .
&amp; dep. • 100. Call614-643- Mt. Vernon Ave. 2 bedroom Now 1983 White oewing HILLCREST KENNEL
2644.
aponmont. 304-675·1 982 . machine free arm model , Boarding all breeds. AKC
Grevely attachments-rotary
$2 ,950 . up used mobile 1 - - - - - - - - - with built-in straight atich, Reg . Dobern,ans pups afd
homes for sale. 2 bedroom, 2 bdr. mobile home ref &amp;
zig 1ag, panerna, make Doberman Stud Service. plow U60, tiller flOC.
ridlnll oulky t75 . Call 4411completely furniohad. dep. roq. Cell 614-266· 45 Furnished Rooms button holeo, monogremo, Cell446 -7795 .
Ready to move in. Brown' s 1922.
much more. We are over 1----------:-:::---:-~ 4149 .
Trailer Park, Minersville, Oh . 1------------:-_ Sle~ping room et16. utili- otockad with thlo model, we DRAGONWYND CATTERY
614-982-3324.
2 bdr. trailer for rent, all tie, pd. single male. share must decrease our inven - . KENNEL. AKC Chow pup · Baby Holotoln calf *110. Call
electric. Call 446-4480.
bath. 919 2nd Ave., Gallipo· tory. Factorv 26 yr. guar•n · piea. CFA Himalayan, Per- 446-2814 • .
Corner . lot wit h mobile 1---'----:-::--::--· k:lio. Call 446-441 6 alter tee. Reg . price over $300. sian and Siamese kittens.
For oalo 2 Reg. Anguo bullo 1
home . New carpet, central 2 bedroom Mobile Home in 7PM .
cloarenco price only S80 . Call 446 -3844 alter 4PM .
yr. old ond 3 Anguo holfero 1
Call 614-386-891 B out of
air , large pat io, larg~ build · Racine .
month.
town cell collect. Free deliv- 2 mala full blooded beegle yr. old. Call 614-2511·11210 .
in g. 5th &amp; Pearl. Aacme, Oh . $100. dap. You pay utilities.
ery to your home .
614 -949-2719 .
Kitchen otove &amp; refrldgora- 46 Space for Re11t
puppiea . 6 weeks old. $50.
4 Rogiotored Poled Hare·
tor furn., reat unfurnished.
61 4-992·3644.
Firewood aplit e.. cut to
ford Sullo brooding age.
USED MOBILE HOME . 614 -367-0288.
lenght. Pick or delivered. We AKC regiotered Shatlsnd 446-2109.
676 -271 1.
Mobile home space for rent honor HEAP Vouchers. Call
2 bedroom trailer. FurSheepdog, 1 year old, male,
1 972 1 2x65 mobile homo , nished. Adult• only. near HMC. Cell448 -3817 . 614-256-6245 .
Non Regiater Quarter horn
8125. 304-876-3538.
2 bedrooms. $4,000 or best Brown's Trailer Park . 8141 0 yro. old. very oplritlod,
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Garimatic No. 9 wench,
offer. 304-6 75-6694not for 4 -Her'o, •11oc. Col
992-3324.
Park, Route 33, Nonh of new. Never been uted. Call
alter IIPM. 614-378-2144 .
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call 81 4· 388-9681.
14x70 THREE bedroom 992-7479 .
Regiatered Quarter HorH.
par11y furnished. all electric
A-1 cond ., new paint Inter·
33 Farms for Sale
Ruth Reeveo. Aloo grade.
trailer, built on room, woodnational 21h ton cab &amp; AKC Doberman puppi11, Seddlea, brid••· winter
coal burning stove. OM ~~ere,
chaasie, long wheel base, blue bloodline, black and hor11 blankets. Western
outbuilding, *25 0 . 00 47 Wanted to Rent
~· 2,600. Will cpnsider trad ·
Farm for sale 26 acres month. $100 . deposit, Jertan. Call before 4:30p .m. or booto . 614-698-3280.
ing on anything of value. altar 9 p.m . 304-675-1B22.
mostly level. good hay ry's Run Road. 304-876Would like to rent fumlshed Call614-379-2617 .
Stud oervlce. Reglotored
. fields, $45 ,000 . Must sell. 2366 . .
blonde Belgian Stallion .
rea!Jonable offer. 3 bdr. 1---:------:----:-:--:--:: or unfurniahed house or
Resonable rates. 814·949·
home . new furnance, 2 bedroom fumiahed. 1 trailer in country. Cal 992- 8ft . meat case. 8ft freezer, 57
Musical
14ft. produce case. other
2465.
county water new bath child . no pett. $160 . per 6416.
Instruments
misc. store equipment. Call
carpeted , new alum . siding month, New Haven . 304614· 367 -0378 botwoon 10
50 loving heno for oalo.
coal &amp;. woOd burning stove. 882 -2468 .
48 , Equipment
&amp; 4.
$1 .00 each . 614 - 742 Good barn &amp; other out 1- --------:----:---:
1 Hammond Organ . 614 · 3146.
for Rent
bldgs. garage . Located on 2 bedroom homo fumlohod.
For Salol 10 new quality 949·2477.
old 1 60 near Porter . . Call located below H~chlng Poot
built 4 'x8' flaahing aiTow
APPALOOSA horoe, good
614 ·388 -9060 .
on St. Rt. 2. You pay
utilities. $1 60. per month, Backhoe endloodei digo 8 ligna. Complete •2.600. WANTED : Reoponolbla breeding more. Gontlo with
207 aero form. Langsville, $100. depooh. 304-576- ft ., large bod pick up heula· Call collect, Mr. Calhoun party to take over low children, 1500.00 . Call
monthly payments on spirtet 304-1176 -41611 oftor 5 :30.
mineral rites included, no 9084 between 9 · 12 or bla. oporate youroell. $90. 602-663-9926 .
piano . Can be ••n loctlly.
house $12,000 down wil evening 7-9 .
per day. 304-895-3841 .
PU toppers. aev,ei'al different Write Credit Monagar: P.O. YOUNG laying hono, 304 corry reot . 614-388-9346.
colors and sizes. $75 to Box 33 , Friedeno, PA 896·3319.
ei36. B &amp; D Motors, 16641 123.02 acre farm, 2 gat
For
Lease
49
446-7322 .
wells, Y2 mineral rights. 2 44 Apartmennt
64 Hay II&lt; Grain
for Rent
ponds &amp; water well . Appro)( IJoed 2200 Ditch Witch 58
Fruit
imately 22 acres farming
Country Store for loeae trencher. Call 1-614-7842.
8o Vegetables
balance timber. S31,000 .
Hey. Large baloo. Will de• 100 per . mo. Cal 614· 1- - - - - - - - - - - - : : - :
614 -992 -6909 .
2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apen- 246·9316.
liver . 614-992-78215.
Honda
750
K,
Suzuki
TS
ments e200 per mo. or if
400. ten ft . aluminum John Potatoes U.S. No . 1. f6.00
53.29 acre grass land~ nice income Ia $10,000 o; le11
FIRST quellty, 2nd. cutting
boat. Call 614-246 -6211 .
mature timber . All m1neral HUO available., A-One Real
100- lb. bog, 83.26 50 - lb. hov aloo Timothy hay. 304·
rights. 2 gas wells. free 9~1 Esta:tes, Carol Yeager, Real·
bog. 304-676-3762 or446 - 273-3447 .
10 gallon acquarium with B247
hool&lt;up. 20 by 40 _
2 story tHe tor. Call 304-675·6104 or
.
fioh,
2
hilmatero,
2
Chiclid
block building , other out- 676-6386 or 675-7786.
fish - 446-6632.
buildings , water tap .
STOBART ' S
65 Seed II&lt; Fertilizer
t41 .00C . 614-992-8909.
Furniohad apt. 1 bdr .. 920
GREENHOUSE -For oala·
Air
conditioners
2
yrs.
old,
4th Ava.CleHipolio. Adu~o.
12.000 BTU, 110 Emanon :Cabboge, cauliflower. bro- LEASE-OPTION TO BUY 3
e226 mo .• utllltieo paid. Call
head lettuce . In bedroom houH. For inforQuiet
Cool, U25 ea. Call colli.
446-4416 alter 7PM.
Racine.
mation coli 304·878·6689
814-387-0378 .
oltor 4:30 p.m.
35 Lots II&lt; Acreage
3 rm . and 4 rm . unfumi1hed
apartments. Utilities paid,
59 For Sale or Trade
Wanted tobacco poundage.
no pete, no children. Call
304-875-88215.
Wanted to lease tobacco 446-3437 .
poundage. Coli 61 4-268· 1-------:-:--::----::--6606 after 7PM .
Furnlohed apt. 807 2nd ..
. ...............
'
Galiipolio. *226 , utllitiao
pd.. 1 bdr.. odulto. Coli
446-4416 altar 7PM .
Autos for Sale

4 acres . 6 Mom house . fDf
· more '"fOrmation 614· 985 -

..

MRS. B-B eYEs .••

400 KDX w-llathora end - •
halmeto. oxc. cond. 400
mll11. 304-875-87118.

3/22/83
EVENING

1880 KX 1215, good condl·
lion. 304, 875·3308.

78
II&lt;

Auto Parta
ACCIIIIOrllll

Motofl Homea
8o Campers

"'=1

1tlf FI~ST U:9501J lD l~ARIJ
I~ 'TilE: Af;r OF t;;r:;L..F-

03

*

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

•zoo.

&amp;Jv...

1978 Pontiac Trana -Am
10th Annlvoroary-Only a
Home
f - made. T-top, AT, PS, 81
PB. EW. DH , low miles.
Improvement•
garage kept. Coll4411-9278. 1 - - - - - - - -- 1977 Dodge Colt AT. vinyl
top, cl•n. e:~~~oeUent gee
mllaago . Call 614' 388 ·
·9809 or 114-388·9911 .
1980 Pontiac Phoenix, 2
iloo;, front drive, outomatic,
am~fm, e.c., lhlfP. Econom ical. Only UI50C. 446·
7438 .

STUCCO

PLASTERING
commercill and residential. free
Htlmateo. Coli 814-258·
1182.
----------PAINTING - intOt'lor and
ellterior, plumbing. roofing,
IOnio remodeling. 20 vr•oxp. Call 814-388-9852.
t~tured

ceiling~

1978 Chev. Monza. excel. Marcum Roofing &amp; Spoutcond., 4 opeed. *2.700 . Ing. 30 yeerosexperlonce,
Phone 4411-2874.
apecielizing in built up roof.
Call 111 4·388-11887.
1982 Dotoun 200SX .
Loaded . 1114-992·8137.
Home Maintenance Handyman Sorvico. Aloo remodalHARTS Uoad Coro. New lng &amp; room oddltiono. Call
Havon WHt Virginia . Ovor 448 ·491 II.
20 le11 expenaive ~fl In 1-:----:---------:--:-otock .
RON'S Teloviolon Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
JEEP. 1979 CJ5, 211,000 Motorola, Quazar, and
mllao. n - INIInt. oxcahnt houoo callo. Call 871-2388
condition, UIOO. Conlider or 4411·24~4 1tado, phone 304-273 3574, 304-372-9329 .
F &amp; K Troo Trimming. otump
,.moval . Call 11711·1331 .
1979 COUGAR Xf!7 ,
loaded. low mileage. 304 - RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpe·
6711-3868.
rioncod roofing , Including.
hot ter application, carpon-79 PONTIAC Sunbird, 4 ter, alectrlcian. maeon. Call
cyl., 4 _ . t, with air, 304-678-2088 or 878 AM-FM . 12998. 814-448- 4880.
1387.448-8064.
Water Walla. Commercial
1 118! CORVAIR, priced on and Domaotlc. Toot holoo.
ino..-lon. 2801 Uncoln Pumpo Saloo and Service.
Ave . Pt. Ploaoont, WV .
304-8811-3802 .

8/JGHWfl I YOU
flON'T &lt;50
1/'ITII !fOTHIH'

J/111 TOOti'T
lri!IKE

80/)(if{r IT..

-

'

78 Fairmont otatlonwooon.
II cyl., Pl. PB. AC, cruloe,
clean. *2,8815 . Call 441·
2488 .

Real Estate
Wanted

Buying houooo and apart·
ment•- Noed properltu Willi
favarallla p - and 18fme.
Box 1 108 Gallipolla, · Oh.
41831 .

New 5 drawer dren•••82.
omall deok e&amp;9. 4 drawer
cheat t60, unfinished harveot gold refrig . frost free
8260, white 2 dr. rofrlg.
lrootfrH t9B. electric rongo ·
.... ... hlnp ••1. 2 pO.
IMntroom eu!M . .! , 8 (lei.
dlrie&amp;. eel .Ill. lltl ••i
Aptllanc•e, Uptoot Rlv• Ril,
OaMIP«&gt;ilo. Oh . UI•?JII.
Open 1·1. Man,·lat.

llffYTHI/f(i, F1DO..
JUST ANOTHER

MOUHTIIfN ..,

BUT IF THIS BUNCH Y'CALL CONGRESS NO ... SECAUSE .
PA,SSES All TH' 1-I&gt;.WS AN ' STUFF,
YOU'D HA.YE
YII?Ui.llN'T I LOSE MY RIGHTS AS KiNG?
A VETO!
&lt;

1---------

1974 Ford Pinto. •350.00 . Got you; carpet In ohlp
Cali 304-1175-1212 beforo ah•pe. Water removel, FREE
4:30 .
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAPTAIN
1978 More"" Bobcat oteti- STEAMER 1114-441-2107 .
onwagon •1 soc. 2 blocko
from Moplo Drive Inn. 304· E &amp; R Tree Service. fully
675-7308.
inaured . free estimetea .
Phone 614-3117·0631. call
efter 15.
72 Trucks for Sale

Here!

Plumbing
1 978 Chevy II cyl . outo, PS, 82
with or without insulated
II&lt; Heating
camper top. Call 814· 258· 1 - - - - - - - - -1 371.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
1978 Dodge P.U. with
AND HEATING
topper. Ylt 1on 226 II cyl .
Cor. Founh and Pine
Stendard. 614-948-2657.
Phone 446-3881 or 4464477
Vena

!o 4

Enjo~ ~ou r

83

good old
days!

The

storeroom

brouqht

back old
memories,

W.O .

that's all!

Excavating

WINNIE

-- ----::----

50/IT WAS
MNNY Pfl'lii.£$
WORK 1 TOOK
CREDIT

FOR/

PAN;VY 0~1/.L.E'S
WORK THAT M155
WINKLE LIKED

50

MUCH.

THANK GOODNESS

hiE FIRST!
HE'S YOUNG. NAIVE,
UNSUSPECTING. HE
CAN 6E MANIPULATE'D...
HE CAME TO

IF I PLAY MY CARDS
DEPENDABLE WASHERDRYER REPAIR . GuaranI - work- Coli anytime
814-2156· 6620 or 814·
1972 Ford von. e cyl . a.t . 258·1207.
good aond . muat Mil . 8• at
1214 Colonlol lone N . 1'1. SEWING Mochlne fiiNIIro.
Plaaoant. New Apertmonto. oorvlca. Autllorlzild Singer
Saloo &amp; Service Sharpen
Scloooro . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 992-2284 .
74 Motorcycles

1982 Honda 450 custom
exo. cond. Call 448 -23150.

RIGHT.

.'

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE cell City Furniture
304 -8715-2808 .

1980 Honda CR 1211R. •• · 85
General Hauling
cond
..
*700.
Call814-256'
-----1378.
,.

.,.

·•.

KE 10C on-off rood bike.
Now hauling llme1tone for
Call 4411·4803•'
drfveweys, top aoll for yards
1911 Suzuki dirt cycle RM· &amp; fill din. Call 1114-38710C. bought now In 1982 7101 .
'
rtdan very little, never raced,
A·1 cond. teoc . Call 446· DEPENDABLE WASHER DRYER REPAIR . Guaron·
3788.
toed work. Coli anytime ·
' 1980 Kawaookl 440 l TO 1114· 266·6620 or 614llko naw. 3,1500 mlloo. Prica 21111· 1207.
t1,000 . Call 814-192 ·
JIMS WATER SERVICE .
8317.
'
Call Jim Lanle•, 304-8711·
'·r.
1911 Yamaha Maxim 1180. 7397 .
'·
Shalt drive, Mlco - . exc .
•'
cond. 1148 octual mHeo.
&lt;f
87 Upholstery
114-882-15884.
•'

..

..

.
,.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 183 Soc. Ave .• Galllpollo
441·1133 or 448•1133. ·
MOWREYI Upholitory ll r
1 l~x 1 24, pt, Pleailin
.
304-11111-4184.

••

min.l
([)Ql~9to5

9 :45 . ([) TBS Evening News
10:00 0 (I) (1) St. Elsewhere A
pregnant woman holds the
staff hostage until she finds
the doctor who performed
her husband's unsuccessful
vasectomy . (60 min .)
(I) MOVIE: 'Sayonara'
(l) Q G2l Hart to Hart A hi1
lady assigned to kill Jona ~
' than takes the Harts hostage. 160 min _) [C losed
Captioned]
(jjJ Newswatch
@II INN News
10:30 (])Star Time
(]) Firing line
ill) Inside Washington
@II In Search of___.
11:0C 0 CIJ (l) 0 (l) (1D Ill ~
News
I]) MOVIE: 'Escape From
New York'
(J) ESPN SportsCantar
Cl) All In tho Family
(1) News/Spons/Weather
ill) Sign Of!
@II Banny Hill Show
1 1 :30 0 I]) (1) Tonight Show
(]) Another Life
([) MOVIE: ' Killers of
Kilimanjaro·
(l) Benny Hill Show
0 (]) Quincy Quincy f1nally
decides to remarry - IR) 160
min . ~

tl74 Yamaho Enduro din JONES BOYS WATER SER·
bike. 2.900 mlloo. Call 458 - VICE. Calli614-387-7471
or 814-367-0681 .
1987.
1178 Suzuki 1550 hao - n
*kod, mako offer. Coli
411e-1887.

80 T Bird AM-Fm caiN1to,
new radiale. bralt... ••·
hauot. Coli 1114-3117-04157.

~-·

.• TH/5 I!OC~ THAT'S 5'F!JSEI7
T' BE "8Ef!R CLf!W'S FI~Eff'
15N'T POINTIN' AT

ALLEYOOP

1----------

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

.. THt NEED FO~ IILL THE Bll51C ~fmlS,
IRON, LEAD. ZINC, ETC "' IG WAY
DOI'IN .. . !fEW TECHNOLOfiY
15 TAK tNq OVER! TH/ 5 MINE
WA5 L051N(j MONEY I'IHEN I

1----------

73

0 CIJ CIJ 0 CIJ (1D G ~
News
I]) MOVIE: 'Tho Earthling'
I]) MOVIE: 'The Beasts
Are On the Street'
· (]) Tic Tac Dough
([) Andy Griffith
(1) News{Spons{Weather
(]) (fi) 3 ·2·1. Contact
@II Charlie' o Angela
6 :30 0 CIJ (1) NBC News
(]) MOVIE: 'Man Eater of
Kumaon'
(J) ESPN's Sportalorum
([) {)omer Pyle ,
(]) Ql .GII ABC News
0 (]) ®I CBS News
(])Dr. Who
(jJ) Over Easy
7:00 0 CIJ P.M . Magazine
(J) This Week In the NBA
([) Carol Burnett
(]) Entertainment Tonight
(1) Charlie's Angels
0 (f) Tic Toe Dough
(]) @
MacNeil- Lehrer
!lepon
®News
Ill G2l People's Court
@II Star Trak
7 :30 0 CIJ lie Detector
[!) ESPN SponsCenter
([)
NBA
Baske1ball:
Adanta at Indiana
Cl) 0 Cl) Family Feud
(]) Business Repon
® You Asked For. It
(jj) This Old House
Ill ~ Entenalnmant
Tonight
8 :00 0 CIJ CD A Team The A
team is hired by re~ i donts of
a ghetto block who are
being v ict imized by extortionists . (60 min .)
ID Five American Guns
The stories of five people
who used guns are told in
this documentary .
ID MOYIE: 'Eye of the
Needle'
·
(])I Spy
(!) Gymnastics: USGF
Single Elimination Championships: Men' s Final
Cil Ill ~ Happy Days Fonzie tries to woo Heather and
the Cunninghams are visited
bv their niece . tRl [Closed
Captioned)
0 (I) ® Ace Crawford
Ace infiltrates a nursing
home w hen luana 's grandmother fears fo r her life.
(])ill) Nova 'FaI Chance in· a
Thin World.' Tonight ' s program looks at the question,
'Why can 't l lose weight?'
(60 min .) (Closed Captioned)
@II
MOVIE:
' Battling
Bellhop'
8:30 (I) Ill ~ Laverne 8o Shirley
Laverne visits a gypsy to get
rid of her bad luck . IR)
!Closed Captioned!
® Gun Shy
(]) (1) Remington'
9 :00 0
Steele _
(I) MOVIE: 'The Beast
Within'
(]) 700 Club
Cll Ill ~ Three 's
Company
0 (I) ®I MOVIE: ' Other
Woman·
(]) American Playhouse
'For Us , the living .· The life
of slain civil rights leader
Medgar Evers is portrayed.
{90 min.) [Closed Captioned I
ill) Great Railway Journeys
9:30 [!) FIS World Cup Skiing:
Men's 86 Miner Jumping
Coverage of the Men ' s 86
Meter Jumpihg is presented
from Oslo, Norway_ (90
6 :00

Cor trailer for oala. 304· ·
871-7348 .

79

The

Television
Viewing

OF THI!! I
OF THa 01..0 HOUIII!-~AT
' IT 0NC11! BI!L.ON&lt;SEO TO

74 • Motorcycle•

h••

36

Ohio ·

DICK TRACY
DID KNOW

,,.'

·•'•

.

~.

PEANUTS

I CAN'T

BREATHE

FLAP 'r'OUR WINGS AND
PANCE AROUND.. ACT LIKE
A REAL PELICAN THE
FANS LIKE LOTS OF ArTI•n~W

WHAT WE REALLY NEED
IS SOMETHIN6 SPECIAL
FOR OPEN IN6 DAV...

(])Sign Off
® All In the Family
G (jJ Nightline
• 411 Gunsmoke
12:00 ill !lumo • Allan
(J) USFL Football: Philadelphia at Birmingham ·
Cl) Nlghtlina
® MOVIE: 'Return ·from
· the Ashes'
Ill ~ Laat Word
1 2 :30 0 I]) CllL.ato Night with
David Lettermen
CII HBO Rock: Blondle This
. 'New Wave' group performs all of their hits .·
(I) MOVIE: 'Mendln9o'
ill Jock Benny Show
Cll Last Word
0 (]) MOVI~: 'McMillan
and Wife: Secrets lor Sale'
Sign Off
·
1 :00 (]) I Married Joan
Gl ())News
1:30 0
CIJ Nile . News
Overnight
_
(I) II/IOVIE: 'Shoot the
Moon'
(]) My Uttle Margie
Cll MOVIE: 'The Tall Blond
Man • With One Black

a

Shoe'

·

Cl) Sign Off
·
(1) Newa/Sign Off
Gl (jJ CNN Headline News

···-~....
~--

rEfEj tl J

t
I I J

.tRUBBUS

)

j

ISHAGATt

_ I I I __
Answer here: A ( I l I

Now arral)ge the cirded letters to

form the surprise answer, as sug·

geslad by lha above cartoon.

I

Yesterday· a

XXX)" .

j''( I

(AnsWers tomorrow)
Jumbles: SUEDE MEALY JURIST KILLER
Answer: Whal those coin collectors always got
togelhar lor...!OLD DIMES' SAKE

Jumble Book No. 20, conlalnlng t 10 putzlas, Is available for $1 .95 poatpald
lrom Jumble, do this newspaper, Box 34, NorwOOd, N.J . o:r~ . Include your
name, addreas, zl c:odt and make eMats 1 able lo News a rboOkt.

. ·'

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Pete plays it safe
t he normal best trump .play
to score five or six tricks in

NORTH
+K 9
3
.AK7 64
4A Q 8 3

•s

WEST
+QI0872
.QJ94
+JIO
+97

3-22-83

.

EAST

-- --

.Al07 52
• Q 8 53
+10 6 54
SOUTH
+AJ654 3
.K6
+92
+K·J 2

Vulnerable: Both
· Dealer: South
· Wen

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

North

East

South

2+
3+

Pass
Pass
Pass

2+
3+
Pass

· tt

I+

Opening lead: •Q

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
On a good day South bids
all the way to six spades and
makes his slam because he
finds East with queen and
one or two smaller trumps.
In other words, he takes

the

suit

and

leads -to

·~

·

dummy's king to start oiL
. ..
In today's hand South can .
alford to lose two trump
tricks_He can be sure of the
contract if ~e takes the sale- "
ty play of leading toward
dummy and pulling in the · •
nine-spot once West follows.
A match point player can't
afford the luxury of t his
safety play. He mu_;;t assume
that the safety play is too
likely to cost him a trick and
·a lot of match points. Even a
rubber bridge player can be
excused for leaving this
safety play atone.
N everth eless, our ol d
friend Pessimistic Pete, who
is the epitome •f caution,
would cer tainly make that
safety play.
Today he would be
rewarded _ Not only in personal s;llisfaction, but also
with the material gain of
plus-620 instead of m inus'100.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~'r*""r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
40 Fell behind
1 How droll! 41 If not
5 Candidate
lists
DOWN
11 Hebrew
I Refuge
month
2 Venerate
12 Univ. in La. 3 Quibbling
13 Non existent 4 Suffix
14 N .J. city
with cow
Yesterday's Answer
15Gowrong
5 Filched
16 Viva
6 Enticed
19 Tissue
27 Fastened
torero!
7 Wing
22 Gennan
29 Belgian city .
17 Steinbeck's 8 Southern
-lancer
30 Store
uToa• football
23 "Brewing"
attractions ·
setting
Unknown''
device
31 Specter
18 Cuddled up 9 Ovetfill
24 Spanish
36 Droop
ZOAssam
10 Shabbier
seaport
37 College
silkwonn
16 Palm leaf
%5 Floating ice
in Iowa
21 Hy~nn
of praise
22 Compulsion
23·COW1tup
%5 Aviator
26 Director

Kazan
27 Scheme
28 Quantity
(abbr.)
29 Elsa is one
32 ''lager
33 Common

suffix
34 Nonsense!
35 Originated
37 Soft drink
flavor

.

1---t--1--I' ·,·

38 Printed
material
39 Indebted

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
II

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to

work

It :
,.

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A 1a •
used for the three L's, X for lhc two O's, etc. Single letters.
apoatrophes, the length and formati on of the words are all :
hinti. Each day the co.de ietlers are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
.IN

J

A K X

NR

TM

C -E O'R

NR

AYX

AYX

RAJ TOP

OEAKJX,

EOQ

W ZTRRTCNOP

R A X C 'CKRNV
TM

I N J A K X .•
VTOMKVNKR
Yesterday's Cryploquote: STUHBORNNESS IS THE; '
CHEAPEST SUBSTITIITE FOR CHARACTER - FRIEDRICH "

HEBBEL

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

March 22, 1913 :

Grand op~ning set
for Middleport store
. Grand opening ot Midd leport's
Lane, are being ha ndled .
ne west women's clothing and acWhile this Is Grueser ' s tlrst
cessory store, Ctnza, will be held
venture Into the r etall business,
Friday and Sa turday.
he has been In mercha ndising
Owned by Don Grueser and
since 1968 after serving In the U.
managed by Don na McFarland,
S. 'Air Force a nd attending
the grand opening store hours
Franklin University In Columwlll be 10 a .m . to 9 p.m. on Frlbus. He will combine his buying
day, and 10 a .m. to 8 p.m . on Safor the Middleport store, with
turday .
that of a ma jor department store
Six $25 gift certificates will be
_In Akron where he Is e mployed.
awarded as· a part of t he grand
He sp!ike of the evolution ln retailope ning .and In addition to the 25
lng which Is taking place where
percent standard reduction over
name brand merchandise Is being
regular department ~tore prices,
put Into locaoons wtth reasonably
severa l specials will be offered. .,low overhead ando!fered to customThe store which will carry both
ers at prices considerably under dejunior and women's sizes Is
partmen tstDreprtces, and gave that
located on the "T" In Middleport
as his concept lor the Middleport
In . a building owned by Bill
stnre.
·

Grueser. ·
GRAND OPENING - Glnza, Middleport's newest clothing
and accessory store owned by Don Grueser a nd managed by
day.
Don na McFarland will have. Its

.

'.

JACKSON &amp;PERKINS

ROSE BUSHES
Quality rose bushes in Superooted
or Redi-plant packaging.
~
_

Twenty-five varieties of tea roses,
climbing roses and , floribunda

·roses.

three new roses for
1983: SWeet Surrender, Tribute·
and Sun Flare.
Featuri~

The name, ' Glnza", came
4

Moderate priced m er cha ndise
lines, Includin g Chic, Lee, Al!red
Dunne r, Eccobay , Tomboy, Act

from Japa n, expl ained Grueser,
who was stationed there for two
year s with the Air F orce, a nd en-

Jordache,
Mellssa
name .
g~:a;n~d~o;ep;n~i~n;g~F~r;ld;a;y;a;n;d~Sa;t~u;r~-::di~ers, ~S~{Only,
u~f~fe~d~S~
hl~r~t,~F~r;l~tand
z~le~,~M~e~
m~b~-::Jj~oy~e~d~a~sh
;o~p~p;ln~g~s;tr;lp~b~y~th~a~t::~::::::::~~~~~~~~§~~;:;:;:::::::::::~

Council wants
funds withheld

CODYfloht J9eJ t&gt;y Kmort•' cotporation

You've got what It takes.

In recessed session Monday
night, Racine Village Counc il
passed a resolution requesting the
Farmers Home Administration
hold loan money designated to the
village for improvement of the
village water system . The amount
is not to exceed $501 ,OOJ at .five
percent interest.
In other business, council set a
tentative date of Aprilll, a t6p.m. to
interview three consulting fir ms
concerning proposals for the wa ter
system improvemnt project. The
consulting firms · are to ma ke
recomrnanda tions to the village on
how it s hould proceed.
Council a uthorized the street
commissioner to order gasoline and
filters for the backhoe.
They also authorized thE' clerktreasurer to request a n advance
draw on the Fe b. sett lement of taxes
from the county treaurer.
Council extended a vote of thanks
to Bill Hayman and Fritz Teaford of
the Racine Gas and Service Co .. for
assisting in install ing a dra in on
Pearl Street.
A letter was read by Mayor
Cha rles Pyles from Ed Tinkle of
Commonwea lth E ngineers. The
letter stated tha t a fina l inspec tion of
the Syrac use-Racine Regional
Sewer Distr ict will be made on
Wed nesday. Aprll l 3 a t 10: 30a .m. at
the sewer treatm ent building loca ted on Yellow Bush Road.
Council will meet in regular
session on Monday, April 4, at? p.m.

Woman-stable
after accident
A Racine woman was adm itted to
Veterans Memorial Hospital after a
single-car accident on Ohiol24 ear ly
th is morning.
Deborah S. Smith, 26, is listed in
sta ble condit ion, a hospita l spokesperson sa id.
According to the Ga llia-Meigs
post of the State Highway Pa trol,'
Sm ith was eastbound at 12: 18 a.m.
when she lost control of her vehicle,
we nt off the right sideof the road and
struck a utility pole.
Troopers cited her for drunken
dr iving . .A passenger in her car,
.Jeffrey Proffitt , 'n , Racine, was
reportedly i njured but refused
trea tment.
, The car recived heavy damage,
pa trolmen said.

c:=-.--.
The Saving Place ®

Variety Of Sweet Treats For Baskets And laking
Our 1.27, Malted Milk Speckled Eggs, Pkg. 68~
6 Chocolate/Peanut luHer Eggs ..•.••••. Pkg. 1.22
Our 1.97, Nestle®laking Morsels •..•. . ••. Pkg. 1.48
"Netwt.

'

·Share the spirit
Share the refreshment

I.

.,
.

. ~-· .-

;,:...

. ::'

/~/

·;:

i
•

.•

'': . _;·::::~.:(··
.

. ;~:}. . ~.&gt; '

"

,. , ,

Choice Of Men's And Women's Timex"' Watches .

Select analog or digital watches In dress or sport
styles to fit every occasion.·Some wllh quartz movement. In gold or silver-tone ftnlsh. Save at K mart®l

Announce TB clinic ·

PreHy Spring Dresses

Mrs. J oan Tewksbary, R. N.,
Meigs County Tuberculosis Nurse.
will be conducting a community
tuberculin skin testing clinic a t the
Pomeroy F ire Sta tion, Butternut
Ave .. Pom eroy, March 28, from 5: 30
p.m . to 7: 30 p.m. or until all testing is
completed.
The fire station was chosen for its
central location to assist mem bers
of organizations whowlU be serving
food. Thiswill be theonly night clinic
offered.
Members ofboosterclubs, PrO's,
church groups, scouts, auxiliaries,
etc., are urged to take advantage of
this service. For additiona l Information call992-3722.

$

OUr
7.97

s1oOur
. 15.97

$120ur
15.96

Infant 81rls' Dresses

Styles For Tot Girls

.81rts' Easter Dreuei

Polyester/cotton or polyesterI Avril® rayon wltll
loce, ruffles .and bows.

Polyester/cotton dresses
wHh polyester lining in
soft spring colors. Save ..

Adorable styles. trims. Variety of fabrics. 4-6X. Save.
Our 17.96, Sizes 7·14, 13.88

• Avt elc Flbers1nc.. ReQ. lM

Our Reg. 1.37, 81rls' Snowflake Nylon Tights, Sizes 4·6, 7-10, $1

.............._ ,.,f?At-,.,.. f
....-.o&lt;F:

Weather rorecast
Partly cloudy a hd cold tonight.
Low around 20. Winds northwester ly about 10 mph. Wednesday,
partly sunny a nd a little warmer.
Hlgh 3844.
.
.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Thursday through Saturday:
Fair and cool through lhe period.
JDghs In the upper 30s to mid-4j)s
Thursday ~ In the low to mi!HOs
Friday and Saturday, Lows In the
20s 'lbur8day morning and mld-2noi
to low 30s Friday ·and Saturday
mornings.

Sale Ends Saturday, March 26

__(fGft!s .
Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

Joos

'

i.• .

•

.,
.• I.

Our Regular Low Prices
Preclous14·Kt. eold Jewelry For Now And Forever

Serpentine. herringbone, cobra, "C" and rope styled
gold chains In 16", 18", 20" and 24" lengths. Choice
of bracelets, popular script Initials, charms and ear
rings. Some .. cubic zirconia to dazzle. Save now!

�</text>
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