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Thursday,

9.6 tnillion Atnericans hunting jobs

March 4, 1982

I

• •
•
IDJect~ons

Instructor says victim recommended
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - Mar· · came In response to her complaints
about gaining weight.
t1ui "Sunny" von Bulow's exercise
Her ~rk red hair pulled back In a
instructor testified W~y tluit
tight bun, Miss O'Neill told de!ense
the heiress once recommended she
use InJections or Insulin and llq~ld lawyer Herald P . Fahringer that
Valium to control her weight and
the conversation took place In Ma·
nerves.
nya Kahn's, the New York City ex·
Her statement came In the se- erclse salon where she gave Mrs.
&lt;.'Ond day or de!ense testimony at von .t:IUiow private lessons tor four
the trtal of Qaus C. von Bulow, 55, years.
who is charged with twice trying to
She l'ecaUed telling Mrs. von
ldll hiS wife wtth Injections of In· Bulow her weight gain probably
sulln and barbiturates during was a result of the glass of white
Christmas stays at their Newport wine she was drinking In the after·
estate.
noon and at night to relaX. She said
she told .Mrs. von Bulow she dis"She said to me 'what you proba·
liked taking pills.
bly need Is a shot of lnsuUn or
"'What you probably should have
vitamln·B ... Well, this way you
Is liquid Valium,'" she said Mrs.
could at least eat anything you
von Bulow told her. "'It's easy to
want and' have sweets and every·
Inject yourself ... The needle Is very
thing,"' Joy E . O'Neill recalled
thln and you don't even feellt."'
Mrs. von Bulow teWng her In late
1978.
Miss O'Neill did not say Mrs. von
Bulow admitted giving. herself
Miss O'Neill, a one-time princl·
InJections.
pal dancer with the American
Ballet Theater, said Mrs. von Bul·
Mrs. von Bulow. feU Into a coma
ow's remarks about injeCtions on Dec. 27, 1979, but recovered
.

I

•

within 24 hours. On Dec. 21, 1980,
she lapsed into a second coma
from which she is not expected ~
emerge.
Both episodes, the state con·
tends, were triggered by tnS_uUn In·

]ectlons that could have fatally
aggravated her low blood·sugar
condition.
Von Bulow's lawyers argue. that
Mrs. von Bulow caused the comaa
herself by overindulging In sweets,
alcohol .and barbiturates.

Toll number not yet available
A mixup in the telephone system
lor Cable Entertainment has caused
some confusion for customers of the
company, Dick Newell, company of.
flcial, reports.
Newell said on Tuesday,
customers dialing the local number
(992-2505) were advised by a recording that the number is no longer a
working number and further adr
vised callers to use an "800" toll free
· number.
Changes are being made so that
residents will have access to a · toll
free 800 number 24 hours a day,
Newell said, but that phone will not
be functional until April 1. Mean-

time, corrections have been made
and residents are 'to continue calling
.the !J!l2.2505 number until further ad·
vised.

T9 end marriages
In Meigs Common Pleas Court,
Max Wayne Wil,!on was granted a
divorce from Lois Mae Wilson and
Ray Justis from Dottie Lou •Justis, '
both granted on cha~ges of gross
neglect of duty.
A divorce action filed by Phyllis
Louise Qldle against William E.
Cadle, Middleport, was dismissed.

•

FRIDAY, MARCH 5th-SATURDAY, MARCH 6th

-

SALE I

HER STORY - Joy O'Neill, Ml'!i. von Bulow's exercise inslrucl&lt;ir
,, explalnes to court that she could use Insulin and vallum to help control'
: her weight. Claus vonBulow is on trail for twice attempting to murder his
: wile. IAP Laserphoto 1

iDates changed for wrestling clinic
= The novice wrestling clinic with awards being presented on the
~originally

scheduled for March Jf&gt;-19

:has been changed to April f&gt;.!l. It will
' be held in the Meigs High School
: cafeteria and is open to all fifth, six·
~ th, seventh, and eighth grade
~·students.

Cost of participation is $5 per boy
the week. Instructing and weigh• Ins will be carried out the first three
: nights. There will be a tournament
~ for

JEANS FOR.MEN

REGULAR '239.95

last two nights of the clinic.
Meig.s High School wrestling
coach, Larry Grimes, and Brian
King, fonner varsity wrestler for
Meigs will be the Instructors.
Grimes may be contacted at 992-5622
after 7 p.m. or at the Meigs High
cafeteria from 3:30 to 6:30 weekday
afternoons.

PADDED TOPS

Slightly fuller cut for extra
comfort.
No fault blue
denim · prewashed. Boot
style. Waist sizes 32 to 42,
length 30 to 36.

~lght~ fuller

cut In the:

$}888 '

SEAT
THIGH

Maple • Pine or Oak
SALE

RISE

$15900

RICE'S DARES TO RUN NEW
LOW PRICES.ON. ALL SIZES!
-

WRANGLER 522.95

LANE .CEDAR CHESTS

M

REG. 124.95, SIZE 44 THRU 50

SALE

MEN'S
WRANGLER 519.95

·LIMITED TIME ONLVt - -

BY ONE CF THE MOSfRESPECTEO NAMES IN ll-1€ BEOOINO INtx.JSTAY

BEDDING
EXTRA FIRM

Console
Television Sets

RCA

ColorTrak ·.

-

REGULAR PRICE

SALE! ROLFS

CHILDREN'S SPRING
JACKETS &amp;COATS

LADIES' PURSES
&amp; ACCESSORIES

Sty les for boys and girls in si1e 12
months to 24 months - 2 fo 4 - 4 to
6x and 7 to 1~ .
Included in the sale our entire
spri nq selection jackets . dress
coats · rain coa ts · swee111eart
iackefs . Lined and unlined styl es.

French purses · secretariats
· double attache · cigarette
easel
and
key
cases.
Discontinued colors and
styles. Regular prices $4.50
to $26 .00. Your c hoi ce.

Reg. '9.00 . . . Sale 16.75
Reg. 112.00 . . . Sale '9.00
Reg. 118.00 . . Sale 113.50
Reg. '24.00 . . Sale 110.00 .

WRANGLER

11~Jdl~

FLE}FJT
COMFoR'fWEAR
..

IIUCBII STIETCB JIIIS ·

1

r

il

k!

1/2 PRICE

519.95

SAVE20%

STRETCH DENIM
JEANS

Quality Wall Paper
Friday, March 5th and ' Saturday, March
6th, last two days of our 20% off on quality
wall covering. Stop in, · make your selec~
tions now and save.

Stretch denim for com·
fortable fit. Prewashed ·
authentic western cut. Waist
sizes 28 to 42, lengths 30 to 36
in.

'

SAVE·20%
WOMEN'S
DAYTIME DRESSES

SALE!

Have you· built your business local·
ly' We have, too! There's nothing
like dealing with home folks. We'd
like for you to do all your banking
here.

BOYS SWEAT SHIRTS

Our new spring selection in missy sizes 10 to 20, half
sizes 121f&gt; _to 281f&gt;. Poly /co tton ble n d s in pr int s.
str:pes and checks. Short sleeve styil's . s undress&lt;·s
and sleeveless styles.
·

Made by Springfoot - 50% cotton, 50%
polyester. Good selection of solid colors.
Sizes S (6·8). M (10·12), L (14·16) and XL
(18·20).

6.95 Crew Neck Style • • • • • • • • s5l49
5
11.95 Hooded-Zipper Front Style • • '9.49
5

.'

'12.00 DRESS!S • . . • • • • • . . • . . . • . SALE '9.59
1
18.00 DRESSES • • • . . . . . • • . . • • . SALE 114.39
1
20.00 DRESSES • • • . . • • • • • • • • • • SALE 115.99
DRESSES • • • • • • • • • • . . • • . s·ALE 119.99

OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL 8 - SATURDAY' UNTIL 5
'

3RD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

,.

enttne
.

1 s.ctlon, 121'aget 15 c.nr.
A Multlmodla Inc. Newopapor

s, 1982

Tri county surpasses goal

auctioned ort to Art Hartley of City
thanked those who attended the
Ice &amp; Fuel for $155 and two Bengals
event for their continuing Interest
T·shlrls
with the players' signa·
and financial support of scouUng,
lures
were
bid for $375 by Vltus Har·
aithough the effects of the economy
tley
of
People's
Bank.
are already being felt In the area.
Following
dinner,
the group Its·
"To me, your coming here totened to a talk by Lapham, the Bennight, means more to me than any
amount we ra~," he said. "It . gals' 6-4, 262·pound guard who said
his team·got out of "the.losing habit
shows you care."
and Into the winning habit'' to crest
Among the organizations Epling
to the dlvlston title this year and
credited for BSA support were Robmake It to the Super Bowl.
bins &amp; Myers, Central Trust, Cltl·
Lapham, 29, joined the Bengals
zens Bank of · Point Pleasant,
In 1975 after graduating from Syra·
Oscar's, the People's Bank of Point
cuse University the year before.
Pleasant and the Ohio Valley Bank.
The Sharon, Mass. native had com·
"There have been hints there has
piled an Impressive academic and
been competition," Epling said.
athletic record at Syr~se. where
"There's no competition. This says
he was football capitan and on the
we care a bout this young man who
dean's list.
·
says, 'Yes, I'm gOing to change
While the Bengals, who Lapham
things and make this a better
frankly charactertzed as a "Joke"
place.' "
until the advent of Coach Forrest
While pledges totaWng almost
Gregg, failed to achieve their uiU·
$6,1XXJ were made prior to the
mate goal of winning the Super
dinner, additional funds were
(Continued on page 121
raised after a Bengals jersey was

A total of $13,360 - more than
SBEO over the anticipated goal was pledged to the Boys Scouts of
America by businesses and civic
leaders tn the Melgs-Gallia·Mason
scouting dlstrlct at the annual fund·
raising dinner held at Oscar's Res·
taurant in GaWpolls Thursday
night.
Of that ipliOUDt, $2,300 was prom·
!sed after bids were taken for two
promissOry footballs containing the
signatures of all of the players for
the Cincinnati Bengals, the 1981
season American Football Confer·
ence division champs.
The bidders were Dr. David Carr
of Point Pleasant with $1,500, and
John Felker for Point Distributing
with $800. Another football, autographed by veteran Bengals guard
Dave Lapham. the evening's guest
speaker, net~ the BSA $900 from
Central Trust Co. of GaWpoUs.
Despite a small turnout, M·G·M
scouting chairman Dean .Epling

ELBERFELDS·IN POMEROY.

AUCTION WINNERS- Two Point Pleaaan&amp; busl·
. - helped tbe BoJS Scoolll of America's local
dbtrlct ralle more than 113,000 for the BSA cauoe at
Tblll'l!day's annual fund·nl8er. Art Hartley, left, re-

preaenllnJ Oty Ice &amp; fuel, holds the footbaU Jel'lley
auctioned ort for SIGII, whDe Vltlllll\lrtley of People's
Bank holds the two T·shtrta with the CinCinnati Bengals ptayen' signatures he won lor S375.

Customers ·c an expect higher utility bills

$sooo0fF

Sale Price
'

at

Pomerox-Midclleport, Ohio, Friday, March

CJ;loose RCA color trak Xl 100 or rempte control
models or the new 1982
GE consoles. Maple, pine,
oak or pecan finishes.

25"

Wrangler No· Fault blue
denim · pre· washed. Won't
shrink, wrinkle or pucker.
Waist sizes 27 to 42, lengths
30 to 36. Choose straight leg
or boot cut .

Sold in Sets
Only

$1988

SALE! RCA or GE

BLUE DENIM
JEANS

SEALY

occur.

•

•
.

Voi.30,No.227
. c.,,riyhted 1912

previous four months, as shown by the government's
survey of busfuess payrolls.
The report also said construction employment,
which had been severely depressed In January because of bad weather, rose by about lll,OOl In Febru·
ary. But the bureau said the Increase was not large
enough to erase the January decline In that category.
Adult women accounted for most of the February
Increase. Their jobless rate rose four-tenths of a per·
centage point to 7.6 percent- the same as the unem·
playment rate for adult men.
Economists are saying that long unemployment
Unes probably will remain a fact of lite for several
months In a recession that Reagan admlnlstrauon
officials now concede Is much worse than expected.
And no one seems certain when the turnaround might

lost their tuU•tlme jobs and have had to acCept other
work on a part·tlme basts."
The bureau also reported tluit workers who have
been unemployed for three months or more - a sign
of the long-term effects of a deepening recessionIncreased by about 325,001 last month.
Total employment remained In February at 99.6
mlillon for the third consecutive month after decUn·
lng by 1.3 miiiJon between July and December. Tbe
civilian labor force expanded by 286,1XXl last month
following a decline or more tluin nl,IXXJ the month
before, whlcl\ masked the continuing detertoraUon In
the job market.
The bureau said manufacturing employment fell
by about 45,00) In February, a decUne tluit was less
severe than the losses of 200,001 Jobs In each of th.e

Fund ·ising dinner
nets dis rict $13,360

SPECIAL··SALE PRICES
,

Since last July, wben unemployment stood at 7.2
percent, 1.8 mJIIIon people luld been thrown out of
work.
·
The bureau said the number of people forced to
accept part-time employment.rose by nearly a halt·
mUllan In February, eclipsing ~ previous record of
5.3 miiJion established In December.
Analyst Deborah Klein said the part-time figw'es
do not take Into account people who prefer shortened
work hours for various reasons.
The 5.6 mUIIon, she said, "are either people who are
In the same Job but have their hours cut or who have

e
''

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

to 57.3 percent, the loWest level In ~'h years, the Bu·
reau of Lllbor Statistics said.
More than 9.6 mllUon Americans were out of work
last month, an Increase of 29J,OOI over January.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The unemployment rate
jumped back up to 8.8 perceilt In February as 5.6
·million Amertcans - more than ever before- had to
settle for part·tlme work, the government reported
today.
The Labor Department said the jobless rate Inched
closer to a post-World War ll high last month after a
temporary dip of three-tenths ol a pen:entage point In
.January.
The rate now stands only two-tenths or a pen:en·
tage potnt below the postwar high of 9 pen:ent, which
was recorded In May 1975. Before December, the last
time unemployment was as high as 8.8 percent was In
June 1975 after the recession that year reached Its
peak.
The pen:entage of people with jobs fell last month

Eight die ~n apartment fire
LOWELL, Mass - Fire roared through a three-story wooden
tenement early today, kUling eight people, Including live chlldren,
officials said.
Two firefighters and a passerby who a !tempted to rescue some of
the bulld~'s residents suffered minor lnjurtes In the blaze, which
began about 1 a.m., authoritles saki.
Fire officials said the dead all were occupanis of the first and third
Door front apartments. The victims included two adults and two
children In the thlrd·Ooor apartment and one adult and three child·
ren In the flrst·Ooor apartment.

Reagan chooses Gen. Vessey
WASHINGTON - Calling him "a soldier's soldier," President
Reagan bas plucked Gen. John W. Vessey Jr., from obscurity as the
Anny's second·ln-command and named him the next chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Reagan's choice, which he announced Thursday during a Calilor·
nla holiday, surprised just about everyone at the Pentagon.
It was a particular Jolt to the Navy, which had hoped Its chief,
Adrn. Thomas Hayward, would be elevated to the natlon•s highest
mWtary post because the Navy figures pre-eminently In adrillnistra·
tlon bulld·up plans and strategy.
Vessey ranks as one of the darkest horses in memory in the
sweepstakes for the JSC chairmanship.

'

Priest given prison sentence
WARSAW, Poland- A mWtary court has sentenced a Roman
Catholic priest to 3~ years In prison for slandering PoUsh leaders In
a sermon delivered one week after Imposition of martial Jaw, a
Warsaw newspaper reported today.
It was the first reported legal action against a priest since mtlltary
rule was ImpOsed I;&gt;ec. 13 and the Independent union Solldarity
suspended.
The newspaper Sztandar Mlodych said the court sentenced the
Rev. B. Jewulskl following a trtal In KoszaUn. The prosecutor had
asked for six years lmpJ'/SOnment, the paper added.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - Tbe w!Jmlng munber drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally g!ime "The Number" was 013.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, tbe winning number was 74re.
The lottery reported earnings of $.ll6.010 on Its daily game. The
earnings came on sales of $1,154,733, while holders of winning tickets
are ent!Ued to Share.$848,723, lottery ortlctals said. ·

Weather forecast
Mostly cloudy tonight. Lows 23-28. Ooudy Saturday wtth snow or
rain likely by afternoon. Highs neaf 40. Chance of precipitation 10
percent tonight and eo percent Saturday. Winds variable around 10
mph tonight. ;
E~ Ohio Foreeut :
Sand•J lllroap '('! day:
C'v"Mll' Ill..,.. rna1J117 eMt lluadaJ. OCheow.., pneraiiJ fair
tbnuP tile pertod. lll&amp;M ........ from tile ntJd.all to mid .IJun. •'
da.J, wannksc to tbe low ... to low ... Tuelclay. Lon JJ.2111Iuadaf
.... iiiGIIb Ill tile • MGadaJ .... 1'utiiiJ.

COLUMliUS, Ohio (AP) - Lis·
tenlng to Bill Spratl.e y discuss rls·
tng utility bills Is no fun. Rarely
does he have anything good to say
about the subject.
Thursday was no exception.
Spratley, whose responslbiiJty is
to keep an eye oh utiiJty matters for
Ohio consumers, released a six·
month study detailing costs that
residents of the eight major metropolitan areas pay and what kind of
bills they can expect In the future.
There were no surprises In the
study, the third of Its kind con·
dueled. UWity bUts will be hlgber
by year's end.
Spratley warned tluit U the $1.5
bllllon In rate requests pending before the Public Utilities CommfS.
slon are approved, consumers
could see tbelr combined monthly
utWty bill climb as much as 18.8
percent.

So, what good . has the Office of
Consumer's Counsel accompUshed
since there appears to be no end to
ever-Increasing prices, someone
asked.
"Well, I think we accounted for a
number of savings 1n·· this past
year," he replied, adding that his
office has caused a few major
precedents to be set In the Supreme
Court.
Spratley admitted that his opera·
tlon was spread thin, especially In
light of the huge number of rate
cases being fUed at tbe PUCO.
And the OCC is spending less money than ever In eUorts to convince
the PUCO to cut rate Increase requests tiled by the major gas, elect·
ric and telephone utilities
throughout the state, he said.
BJt, ''I feel the challenge is
greater than ever and I feel that
people have got to know what this

impact Is," Spratley said, referring
to the study that forecasts what residential utility costs could be by
the end of this year.
Spratley predicts electric biJis
will go up between 10 percent and 30
percent this year . Residential gas
bills may Increase as much as 7
percent by December - not count·
lng gas cost recovery Increases.
Gas cost recovery boosted the
monthly charges to Columbia Gas
of Ohio customers by 22 percent
last September.
Spratley's biggest concern was
basic telephone service. "I don't
think many people out there know
what Is at stake with their telephone bills ," he said .
Phone rates may rise faster than
rates of the other two utilities, he
said, from 32 percent in Ctnclnnatl
to nearly 72 percent in Youngstown.
Toledo residents spent the most

on combined gas, electric and telephOne charges. Their bills rose 21.1
percent between 1980 and 1981.
Canton experienced only a 9.3
percent rise In charges, but that
won't last. Spratley warned that
Canton consumers face the grea·
test per~tage Increase It pending
rate requests are grant.e d.
Dayton foilowed Toledo with the
highest combined costs during 1981.
NeKt was Columbus, Cleveland,
Akron, Youngstown, Cincinnati
and then Canton.
Spratley urged consumers to par·
Uclpate In rate hearings, saying
this can make a .dltference when
the PUCO considers rate hikes.
About an hour later, Spratley and
a staff member left Columbus to
carry the OCC message to Toledo
- where uUIIty ~llls are the
highest.

Rhodes urged to impose additional cuts
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov.
James A. Rhodes Is being urged to
Impose more spending cuts to help
deal with state government's
budget crisis.
Senate President Paul E. Gil·
Jmor says Rhodes should go beyond
the 1 percent reduction to take ef·
feet this month.
Rhodes ordered $107 miWon In
spending cuts Feb. 1. Another $46.1
mUllan Is to be slashed March 16
under a plan tluit also involves tern·
porary Increases In the corporate
franchise and public utility taxes
worth $44.7 mWlon.
Rhooes' budget director. Howard
Comer, says more severe cuts wW
be needed unless revenues are
Increased.
"I would support the admlnlstra·
tlon making further cuts at this
time because It Is necessary," Gil·
lmor, R· Port Clinton, said
Thursday.
Across the Statehouse. House
Speaker Vernal G. Rltfe Jr. said It
is too soon to tell U tbe de!lclt wW
reach a projected $1 bOIJon by the
end of the current llscal biennium.
"There's no doubt al'lout the si1Je
of it In this arst llscal year," Rltfe,
0-New BostDn, said. "But It you're
talking about June ~. 1983, ... I've
seen 10 many things chaDge the
other way ... It could be more, It
could be leu; u:a too ion&amp; otr.''
LegiSlators were told wben they
adopted the budaet ~November
that It wu In balance. Reviled est!·
mates fA tax reveriuel depreiled by

the recession and higher-than·
anticipated welfare costs led to the
subsequent projectlon of a deficit.
Meanwhile, minority leader
Harry Meshel predicted Thursday
the Senate would vote by June on
Increasing the sales lax to help resolve the fiscal problem.
Meshel would not forecast the ·
outcome. "I certainly didn't mean
they're going to get a sales taK
passed," he said.
"I expect severe cuts and a !loor
vote on a sales tax between now and
June," Meshel, D·Youngstown,
said at a news conference.
He said he would favor lncreas·
lng Income taXes for high wage

earners aod profitable corpora·
tlons rather than the sales tax.
"But it they want to put an In·
come tax on people making $8,001
or no,OOI they're not going to get
any votes on It," Meshel said.
He also prefers selective taxeS on
business and Industry. "What
you're doing now is taxing a lot or
small-businesS people who aren't
making any money," he said.
GWmor said a Senate vote on a
sales tax hike by June Is unlikely. 1
"l think that's a posslbWty (but)
· that's certainly not a probablllty,"
GJilmor said. "I think tluit is cer·
tainly way Jess than 50-50 at this
~."

Rhodes proposes a temporary 1
peh:ent increase In the 5 percent
salel tax, but the suggestion hal
!1Je1 with what CoWer said Is "deaf·

enlng silence" In the General As·
sembly. The sales taK was raised to

Its present level from 4 percent In
November.

Syracuse council okays budget
Meeting In regular session Thursday night, Syracuse .VIllage
Councll adopted Its 1982 annual approprlatlons resolutlon totaling
149,748.
Breakdown of the budget for the year includes: general fund,
$42,560; park, $500; street construction, $28,00); highways, $8,1XXJ;
tire department, $5,001; water, $29,!188; pool, $25,001; Revenue SharIng, $37ID; current expenses, $5200; guaranty meter, $500, and emer·
gency squad, $lllll.
Council agreed to permit the firemen to fence the monument at the
park and til permit them to fly a fire flag at the municipal building.
Open burning without a permit was banned and the deadline for
receiving appllcatlons for pool manager and lileguard posts was
eKtended to March 15.
The final reading on changing the name of John St. to Carleton St. ,
was approved.

Jury returns five indictments
A Meigs County Grand Jury Thursday returned flve Indictment.~
against three Individuals.
Rex Butcher, 21, Harrisonville, was Indicted on two counts of
trafficking In mariluana and one count of permitting drug abuse In
connection with the sale of martjuana. The first count of trafficking
is a felony or the fourth degree and carries a penalty of six months to
five years and a line of $2500. The second count Is a felony of the
second degree carrying a penalty of three oilS years and a fine of

$7500.
Paul R. Steinmetz, Sr., Rutland, was Indicted for having a weapon
under disability. Steinmetz is currently In the county Jail on other
charges.
Carl A. Wilburn, Jr., Wheelersburg, was Indicted on a charge of
carrying a concealed weapon In connection with the armed robbery
of Nelson's Drug Store In Pomeroy In November, 1981. Wilburn Is
pretently being held In the county Jalml charged with the•theft of
drugs In the same robbery.
'

t

�'
The Dail'y Sentinei-Page-3

.--y=Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
Ill C..rt Strttt
Pomrruy. OliN
tlf.fH..!lil
DE\IOTED TO THE JNTERFST Of TH.E MEIGS-MASON AREA

a~
m~

r-T""L....J L-.
-r' I

F"'T"'W!!!d I c:::ll

qjV

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubU1Mr

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
A••IAI.Mal Pllblblter/Cotllro114:r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New• EdUur
A MEMRt; R uf liM! A11~la'" Prn•. lnbtnd Dilly PrHM AIIO("t.Uun aDd tJw
Amrriun Nt&gt;w!lp.ptr P\lbll•htn: Allt.ldalloa.

lEfTf:RS OF OPINION 1~ w~lc'UIMd. Thr)' 11bwkl bt lrH11lh111 Ml wturda lua&amp;. All
IPik'n am• •ubjH&gt;l w rdltin.tl 11nd mu•l br • lxlk'd with urm, llddrn1 •ad kkphorw
DUmbrr. Ntt UftiiiXIW'd W1lt'rs will br publiJbnl , Lctkn ahuu ld bto In guud &amp;ak, addrn~lq
if JIK'I, ...1 pPniUNIIIUn.

Binding the patient
to an economic bed
While the White House walls for Its tax cuts to entice the sickly private
sector Into taking a few steps toward the future, the economy's own taxing
mechanism has bound the patient to the bed.
At best It's a stalemate. Tax cuts manage to put a few more cents into
private pockets, giving rise to thoughts of expansion. Interest rates, one of
nature's taXeS, quickly and almost totally deflate those plans.
As a result, business Investment and consumer spending lag. Sales of
houses, cars, fann equipment and recreation are dismally low.ltundreds
of lenders are In trouble . And consumers and producers alike worry that
huge federal government deficits mean continued high Interest rau!s.
That's just one view of the economy, built's a growing one, much to the
disappointment of the Reagan administration, which continues to believe
that spen!llng and tax cuts will put the patient on his feet.
Reagan's optimism Is countered regularly now by those who consider
themselves his supporters. So pervasive have the frowns become that In
some groups you mlghtlhlnk the president Is the only smiling American .
"If anyone thinks tax reductions wlll tum the country aroilnd they are
wrong. Interest rates are too high," says WIUiam O'Connell, president of
the U.S. League of Savings Associations. In many respects; though,
members still feel a phllosophlcalf&lt;lnshlp with the president.
So does Julio S. Laguarta, president of the National Association of
Realtors. The Realtors, says Laguarta, give strong support to many Reagan policies, but they denounce the size of the budget deficit and the high
Interest rates they say are a direct result of the deficit.
. Both men and their organizations are in hooslng, and that industry, of
course, has been badly damaged by high Interest rates: Why shouldn't
they be upset? But their views are also shared by executives In other
industries, and underscored by the reluctance of business to Invest.
Lenders too are said to be showing their disapproval, most visibly In the
firm of an lnfiatlon premium In the rates they charge. Interest rates
historically have been about 3 percent above the lnftatlon rate. Now they
are double that, representing It Is said a fear on the part of lenders that the
Reagan program will fall, leading to more Inflation.
Interest rates of themselves do not necessarily preclude Investment,
Chase Manhattan Bank observes. '.'If demand conditions are such that a
firm's expected rate of return exceeds the Interest rate, then the Invest·
ment wlll still take place." But that situation doesn't exist.

Berry's World

ad miJ!represenled the booklet. It is
not make it wrong." The appeals
because "the representations of the judge came down on the side of Dr.
booklet were unproven and contrary. Murray: "There is no scientific or
medical proof that arteries can be
to the weight of informed medical
and scientific opinion." The
cleansed by diet alone, and par·
" danger" of the booklet is that ' it
ticularly that use of fresh food will
will deceive peole who have ar·
cure arteriosclerosis."
teriosclerotic
problems into
In the name of Benjamin
believing that they can cure the
Franklin, doesn't the Postal Service
problems by diet alone instead of by
have better things to do with its time
seeking medical help."
and money? No one condones aclual
Two medical doctors testified in
mail fraud. If some con man is adthe hearings before Judge Bervertising 1~rcent wool blankets
lhlit actually are hall rayon, a
nstein. The government had a young
prosecution under Section 3005 is enprofessor ol internal medicine,
name cf Murray, who propounded tirely proper. the defendant in this
the establislunent view. The defen- case had offered to ship adulterated
dant put on an old family-type .doc- beans by mail, II would have been a
tor, name of Warren, who "conceded · different matter. But he wasn't
that his view that arteriosclerosis · selling beans. He was selling an
can be reversed and cured is a idea . He was seiUng a little book.
minority view, but stated that did
I had supposed in my innOCellC\!

WASiflNGTON - Things never
change. There was DMSO, and there
was Laetrile, and now the governmentis breathing heavily upon a 42page bvolr.let called " Stale Food vs.
Fresh Food.'' The Postal Service
has effectively banned the booklet
from the United States mall. The
Postal Service has lost its mind.
This is the story. Twelve or 13 .
years ago, a fello1• down in
Pascagoula, Miss., named of Ford,
came up with the notion !hat a diet of
natural vegetables, properly
cooked, would keep the old arteries
clean. He wrote a booklet about his
diet, and he began advertising the
booklet for sale by mail, $4.40 a copy
plus 60 cents postage. "Makes a fine
gift. Order extra cpies tor your friends."
..
It is not disputed that his ad accurately described the conlents of
the booklet. This exciting booklet,
said tile ad, tells how "you can now
enjoy many of the rich and tasty
foods denied you by the old hwnbug
cholesterol diets while your own
natural blood flow washes your ar.
1
teries clean. It tells which familiar
foods to eat and which to avoid.''
Pretty subversive stuff, eh• The
Postal Service thought so. In
February of last year, postal inspectors pounced upon ... this
Mississippi apostle of broccoli and
brussel sprouts and charged him
with hold your breath "engaging in the conduct of a
scheme.or device to obtain money or
property through the mail by means
of materially false representations
in vilation of 39U.S.C. 3000.''
After a flurry of mnotions and
counler·m·otions, this lunacy came
on for trial before an administrdlive
law judge, name of Bernslein, who
found the author guilty as charged
On appeal to a judicial officer, name
of Cohen, the awful verdict last month was affirmed. It now is forbidden
to buy this sinister work through the
mail.
Why' is this• H is not because the

rr

that we had a Constitution, and that
the First Amendment Jo that Constilution protected a right Jo the free
expression of ideas, and that only
some truly compeijing national Interest would permit the suppression
of a book. Was any such compelling
interest present in this case? Balderdash!
As I recall, the "weight and Infanned medical alld · scientific
opinion" once favored treating insanity by drilling holes in the skull Jo
let the demons out. At one time this
precious informed opinion advocated bleeding by use of leeches.
Who knows whether today's theories
about scholesterol will yield Jo next
year's theories on therapy by
spinach? Let the ~"inds of docrine
blow! That was Milton's cry 300
yeafSago. It's still a great idea.

•

BATTLE FOR REBOUND - Eastern's Becky Ambrose (54) and
Valley'• MeiiDda Noel (35) go after a rebound during Thunday's Class A
District Tourument al Waverly. Valley won the hard-fought coolest, 57·

st.

Southern faces
unbeaten Indians

President may have to cross lines too
long weekend Tuesday, he made It
clear that compromise was not on
his mind even as members of Congress sought ways to reduce the deflctt forecast for fiscal 1983.
Th~ Republican chief of the Senate Finance Committee, Bob Dole
of Kansas, has a plan to eliminate
the 10 percent cutin the lax rate to
take e!!ect next year. Instead, Dole
would Ue the rate of personal In·
come taxes to lnfiatlon. House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, the
ranking Democrat, said It was
"something we should look Into.''
Despite that hint of bipartisan accord, Reagan continued his deter·
mined opposition.
By appearing willing to com·
promise too early, be could Jose
ground to those who want him to
back of! his proposed 18 percent In·
crease In defense spending or to
relax the tax cuts of 10 percent this
year and next that are already on
the books.
But he Is facing strong opposition
as both Democrats and Republl-

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presl·
dent Reagan, who has ·challenged
critics to cross "a line drawn In the
dirt" and work with him on his
budget, may have to cross some
lines himself before his battles on
the economy are over.
As his allies In Congress talk
more and more about the need to
compromise, and come up with
suggested alternatives to Reagan's
budget, thE' president Is digging his
heels In deeper and deeper.
A senior spokesman, David R.
Gergen, says t.!Je Reagan strategy
Is to hold to a steady course and
hope that '·as a co nsensus
emerges" on Capitol Hill, "It will
move closer and closer to him.''
fn his rhetoric, Reagan Is avoid·
lng comments on specific proposals
whlle Insisting he will stand by the
fundamentals of his plan. Because
aides are refusing to Ust those fun·
damentals, Reagan may be leaving
himself enough room to claim victory once the battlee Is over.
As Reagan stumped his way to a

cans try to whittle down the deficit
that Reagan says will be a rec6rd
$91.5 billion In 1983.
The presld.e nt and his aides say
he will listen to those who suggest
change - if their proposals do not
dilute his plan and if they arrive In a
"comprehensive package.''
II was In rowa last month that he
said "the budget we've proposed Is
a line drawn In the dirt. Those who

are serious about reducing the deficit will cross It and work with us
on our proposals or their
alternative:"
•
Now, In the nation's capital, In
Wyoming and New Mexico, he has
drawn another line in the dirt, with
his nq-nonsense, no-retreat statements about 1aJ1es and defense
spending.

·Federal government in
unescapea\)le situation .
NEW YORK- (AP) -Already
living far beyond Its anticipated In·
come, the federal government now
seems caught In a situation from
which It cannot escape without the
expenditure of further billions of
dollars .
The problem, partly of Its own
making, Involves the rescue of fall-

lng savings banks and saving and
loan associations, at a cost estimated by AndreW Carron, a BrookIngs Institution researc~r. of $8.5
billion.
"II will become Increasingly apparent that many firms cannot survive unassisted," said Carron.

Shed a tear for -OPEC,_____A_rt_Bu_ch_wa_..:..:_ld

" ...And so, In k96plng with this conservative
philosophy, /Intend for your allowance to meet
your NEEDS, not your WANTS!"

·Today in hist'!IT~.
Today Is Friday, March 5, the 64th day of 1982. There are 301 days left 1n
. the year.
: Today's highlight In history:
·. On March 5, 1953, Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin died In his Kremlin
· apartment at age 73 - after 29 years in power.
On this date:
fn 1766, Spanish troops took possession of New Orleans from the French.
In 1933, Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party won the largest number of seats
. In a German election.
: In 1966, a British airliner hit Japan's Mount Fuji, kUling all124 people
: aboard.
.
fn 1970, a Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty went Into effect after 43
nations r11111led lt.
•
Ten years ago: The Federal Reserve Board said the economic outlook
. was promising - as long as President Nixon's wage and priCe controls
• remained Intact.
~ Five years ago: President Carter fielded phoned·ln questions from
·
; Americans In a nationally televised broadcast.
: One year ago: The Reagan administration said there-.wete growing
, signs that the Soviet Union and Its allies were ready to stage mlUtary
, maQeuvers In and around Poland, where labor unrest threatened lhi
Communillt government.
,
;&lt; Today's blrl~ay: Actor Rex Harrison Is 74.
·
• . Tiiought for tllday: We are incUned to believe those we do not know
;because they never have deceived us. - Samuel Johnson Engllsh
(17011-1784).
- .
'

The last meeting of the group we nt
something like this :
The minister !rom Nigeria , " I
wish to announce that the pi~s from
Iran have lowered the price of oil $1
below the price we all agreed upon
at our last meeting.''
The Iranian representative, " We
had to cut the price to finance our
war with the infidels of Iraq. And we
will keep lowering it until we destroy
every Iraqi who put his foot on Holy
Iranian soil."
"Then we will cut our price until
we drag the Ayatollah J{homeini 's
body through the streets of Baghdad," the Iraqi representative said.
The Venezuelan representative
said, "What's happened to the OPEC
spirit of all for one and one for all? "
The Libyan man said, "Curses on
the OPEC spirit. If you want to know
who is the villain in this drama, look
no further than down the table to the
Zionist-loving oil minisler of Saudi
Arabia, whose pumps are working
dai ananig'6t1osupply the Westerh
colonial powers with enough fuel 'to

Unlike many I do not rejoice in the
misfortune of others. Therefore I
imagine I'm one of the few people in
America whose heart goes .out to tl.•e
OPEC countries, because there is
now a worldwide oil glut. This has
.forced many of ,these nations to cut
their prices, some to as little as $30 a
barrel.
Not ony is the glut culling into the
billion - dollars-a-day income of
these struggling natons, but it is
causing discord between the OPEC
countries, each of whom feels that
the other is driving down the price
by selling too much on the marketplace. This major tragedy is bein~
played out behind closed doors by
OPEC rcpresenta lives, a once hapPY fraternity of men, who in the good
years had ledged lifelong fidelity
vowing to stick together through
thick and thin oil ~ whichever they
produced.
But alas, the organization's mem·
hers ace now bitterly accuSing each
other of treachery, anaeternal frieii=
dships spawned by untold p,rosperity
have been split asunder.

put all of us in the poor house."
The minister from Saudi Arabia
spat on the table : "That's my answer to Libya . At least we have not
used our royalties to overthrow
every non-Communist &lt;Ountry in the
Arab world. We will not be bound by
pressure from Marxist members
who talk lou~ h. but are underselling
us in spot markets all over the
world.''
The Kuwaiti representative said,
" This political infi~hting is hurting
the little OPEC nations. Because of
the oil glut, we will, not be able to add
much to our $70 billion in foreign
l1oldings ti1is yea I". and may even be
forcL&gt;d to cut back on spending. We
tan'! go on this way and maintain
the lifestyle we areac'Customed to."
The man from Qatar echoed the
Kuwaiti's sentiments. "Since tile oil
glut we've had to cancel four
palaces; and make do with lhree
used 747s for our sheiks. They are
getting very restless and want to
plllt1lllt of OPEC if their allowanL'l!S

are cut."

The Algerian minister said, " My
eountry cannot t•ontinue its war
against Morocco if the price of oil
goes down two more dollars a
barrel."
"The only. solution," said the
representative from Equador, "is
for Saudi Arabia to stop drilling. so
the glut will dry up."
The minister from Saudi Arabia
overturned the taple and stompt.'li
out, leavin~ a lithe OPEC plans for a
united fronl in disarray.
Now somt• people, who haw suffered a the h&lt;mds of OPEC, are clapping theh· hands that the members
re now at ead1 other's throats . But
there are thoso· of us who weep when

we set!' an oil·producing country
have to lower its prices to kt!ep itself
afloat. Call us bl eeding hearl~ if you
will, but OPEC has been good hl us,
a1l&lt;j now that they are in finaneial
straits .we must un unto them what
they have Uo1w unto us.
As a wist• man from the Exxon
j:lltnpally once told me, "It's a
crude. crude world.''

~ESBURY

"AA" and ''AAA" competition and
won ~II except one , beating "AAA"
Point Pleasant by 26 points, who

Price wins
dog run-off

'

College scores
n....,....,.• CoUeP
8oorel
auutt.D
MBT.

Q:lncord\.8 N.Y.

NJ.

Nyadl n

MIDWJO&lt;r
Dltnois 73, Iowa 67, OT
Indiana 79, Nol"thwestern 49
MIMe~DU~

M,

Mkhlaan St. ~ l

0100 Sl. T1. Wl.k'onsln 75
PurdLII! !1), Mlchlgan

w, Ullnob 92,

n

N.lowa 13

!!OUI'IIWEIT
Brigham YO\lftg «i, Texaa-EJ Puo U

•

•

D. A. Miller will be back in
Gallipolis a~ain Sunday, March
7, 1982. Now 1s the time to act on
this ~ ~·eat opportunity. Every
lli.Hil and womun now losin~ hail'
sl1ould takt• advanta~e of this
FREE CONSULTATION .
GUARANTEED
You will he given ' " wriiten
guarantee on a pr~ratt~d basis
fromlhc bcJ.I inning to the end.
CAN'T HELP
Mule palhorn baldness Is the
o•uuse uf a great majurlty ••f cuses
uf baldness und excessive hair
' luss, fur whh'h nu method is effeetl•e. Ebb Hair Spel'lull.st.• cunnlll help th11se who are slick hald
after years of gruduul hair loss.

Many conditions can cause hair
loss. No matter which one is
causin~ your hail' loss, if you wail
until ynu a1·c slick Bald nad yOUI'

hai r mots are dead yoU Hrr • .1·
bt•yoml help. So. now is ll)e time
to do something about it before
it's too late .
CALl. FOR AN
APPOINTMENT FOR
FREE: CONSULTATION
.lust take u few mlnut•s of yuur
time on Sunday, Man·h 7. 1982,
and o•all the Hullduy Inn In
Gallipolis between I p.m. und
8:30p .m. Ask fur D. A. Miller anti
make un appulntmcnt.
There is no chargti or obli gHtion
... all c01isultati0ns are priate,
you will not be clnbal'l'a'8c'll in
any way .

Pepperdlne llfi. ~ . c&amp;ilf. l!K, OT
Portland 58. Gcwaga ~
San Dtl!go 73, St Mary's, Calif. £:1
San. Ole(lo St. 68, &lt;;:dOrado St. 62
San Fl'llfiC\K'&lt;I 91, San\a Clara K..l

.....

_

TOORN"""""'
•r EM&amp; C I ueace

Boston CoUete 9f, SyracWI(' t2
C..eorgetawn, D .C . 62, Provl.llence 48

St. Jotlll's, N . Y . ~. ConnectiCut
VWanova 88, Seton Hall 7J

~2

I!'.CAC Metro&amp;ueh

8uu ·: ·b

J...ooa Island U. St, Siena IH

...

Robeu1 Morrts !(), BalUmore '10

...

I!:CAC-

--

Nlagar.:a 76, CanllhiS ~
Northeastern *-! , Boat011 U. 48

BCAC-

Okl Oomh&amp;lon

'10, Georxe Muon 62

Riehmond .fl, E .Carol!na t2

wtwam • Mary n , Navy !Ill
Metre

~

ConleftftCe

fkm"

h

1, pnnrth F r vcr 5hfJW'i. Hl'· RI&gt;Grcw H;~ir . He Did Not Hiwt; M.ll c p .1 t
h'rn 1~,, tdnf' S'i. .

lol'll 58, Fordham M
St.Pettr'1 ~. Fi.trfleld 50
Mldwt:*lll at, Conlel"tftee
Evansvtlle.!57, DkllMma C11y il5
Loyola, IU. n, xaVIer, Ohio w
~ \lale,r CoMerenoe

Dllootl St. 56, Bra!lley 50, 2 OT

-

TuiA IIi. New MeU:o Sl. 61
p~

CMa AtiW6e • . , .......

F'retno St. 76, l..oni Beaeh St. 55
F'ullcrlon St . &amp;2. Cal -Irvine 51
8

st

1"11 c.ff'ft:~Kle

Qwwku' h

1

Atatwna 115, Geora:La 74
Kefltucky 1!8, AUbW'n filii
Mlut.lppl "· Lootslima S1. ~'l
Tt!i'lnriiE'e !57, Vanderbilt !54

-

,........Colfel"'!ftte

.....

McNeee St 78. Lou1&amp;lana Tech T1. 3

&lt;Yr

-;:'k~" ';•=

~,: ~.':;,~,;:~..,

=.

61 .

...,. _ , , • _
.,.,. .....

':,a~: ~:..';:: va&gt;. 83• ,

~.. """'"""' 10. """'"""' u. "

1975 FORD VAN ........................ S1895
Aolo: P.S.
'
1977 MERCURY MONARCH ......•... '2195
4 Dr .. 302 Aulo.
1975 FORD GRANADA •........... ;... '1395
1976
DODGE VAN ...................... '179~
31 8. Auto .. 56.000 Mile;.
1974 CHRYSLER 4 DR. ......• ;....... '1095
1976 MUSTANG ......... ;........ ;...... '1695
. Ao1o .. P.B.. P.S.
1976
FORD TORINO ··················· '1495
Auto .. P.B.. P.S.
AMC GREMUN ....................·'1295
4. DL. P.B . P S.. 6 Cvl.

a:

ERB HAIR CONSULTANT
WILL EXPLAIN HAIR PROBLEMS AT
HOLt DA V INN, 450 PI I&lt; E ST., GALLI POLIS
SUNDAY, MARCH 7,1982
CALL A. D. MILLER FOR APPOINTMENT
BETWEEN I P.M. AND 8:30P.M.

Fo\ltWI!8l'
New MexicO IIi, Utah 71

r=cl=ose=a~n=d~w=e=U·:p:la~y=l!d:ga:m:e:·_ _ _..:._~==========~~

_ Second with Minnie was John
Smith; third was Oscar Smith with
Ohio Valley Blue Tick rr. Red
Eblin's night champion, Corn
Hollow Blue Thunder, handled by
Scrap Van Meter was withdrawn
due toillness . .
At the monthly meeling of the
association' a · treeing contest was
held and winners were: · female,
·George Pierce, Pomeroy; . male,
Paul Price, Tuppers Plains. · The ·
night hunt was held after the
meeting and winners were: first,
Ken Turley, Racine; .second, Bob
Price, Long Bottom; third, Scrap
Van Meter, Pomeroy,. fourth; Tom
Buckley, Chester, and fifth, Randy
Arms, Minersville.

The Middleport Recreation CornmiBslon is now accepting applications for swruner positions at
the park. ApPlications tor ParltManager,lifegua.rda, and swlmrninC ·
inltructor are available at the
mayor's office In vw.g~ Hall.
'

..

my Hudson ddve and three s trai~ht .
buckets by cassie Shee\S pulled
Eastel'll ciose at 28-23 going into in· :
tennission .
AlthoUI(h the tough and talented .:
Valley crew led the rest of the ~a me , '
it didn't come easy as the hustling ~
Easterne1-s produced some pretty ~
anxious moments fo1· the tribe.
•
In the thi1'll round both clubs dim-:
bed aboa1'll a scoring teeter-totter,:
but Eastern narrowed the gap to ;
three at 36-33 when the buzzer had•
sounded.
'
At the sial'! of the last round:
Easte•·n tired • while at the same •'
time hilling a· cold streak from the•
field. Meanwhile, Valley unreeled
stl'in~ . of fi eld ~oats to lake its;
bi~gest lead at 53-37. Despite the·
deficit Eastern didn't ~ive up and:
SlaAed a comeback that fell short at:
the wil·e . Several youn~ Eagle ~als·
played a big role in the come hack as:
the game ended at 57-.50.
:
Valley hit 23 or 71 from the floor;
for 32 percent and canned II of 18 at•
the line fo1· 61 pc1·cent. Eastern hit 22
of 52 f•·om t11e ficlti for 42 pc1·cent and
netted six of 15 h·om the charily
stripe for 40 percent .
· Valley won tlw oatllc or the boards
51-25 led by San u11ans' 15 a1id
Raybum with nine. Goebel and AmbrOs•• had six each for EaslCI'I(:
Valley conuniltcd 17 turnovers, 1~
fouls, hat! 10 steals. and 13 assists .
Eastern had 20 turnovers and 16pel'sonal fouls .
Score by qua1·tcrs :
Vallo•y
12 16 8 21 - 57
Easlt•rn
13 10 10 17- 50

!=========================

r-~ii~~~~~~~a·l

twice defeated SEO Charrtpion
Gallipolis. Southern's only Joss came
at the hands of Tri-Valley Champion
Nelsonville-York, who completed
theil· season with a 16-game winning
streak.
Peebles meanwhile played only
seven teams with winning records
and only one team Outside single
"A" competition.
Individually, Southern matches up
well against the Indians. For.
Peebles, the JI)Stice twins and
Freeman stand an even six feet,
Shoemaker is t&gt;-11, and Scott is 6-2.
The two Wolfesand Rosebe.,:Y are f&gt;.
10, Reei! is 6-0, and Brown goes fh'l
for Southern. This will be the only
team this year with the.exception of
Hannan Trace where Southern will
not~ at a height disadvantage.
However, Southern's main assets,
quickness and pressing defense, will
be neutralized by Peebles' team
speed. All scouting reports, according to Coach Wolle, indicate
that the press is not effective against
the Indians' ballhandlers.
A look at the two coaches' records
indicates similar successes. Wolfe
has headed Southern basketball for
the past nine years and his teams
have gone to the district tournament
six straight years, to the regional
tournament two of the last three
years, and to the state tournament
two years·ago. This experience and
his expertise in scouting and
preparing his team for an opponent
will be very valuable in this contest.
Coach Myers has been head coach
at Peebles for the past 10 years and
lias established a winning tradition!
that has paralleled Coach Wolf~'s.
His teams have gone to the district
The Sahde River Coonhunters tournament the last three years and
Association held its high point dog were district runner.:up last year.
run-offMonday.
Both teams have talent. w!nnlng
Bob Price won with his night traditions, and outstanding coaches.
champion, Shade River Betty.
This should make for an exciting,

0

)

Meigs 69, Soul l).ern 33 .
The eighth grade boys ' team comEighth Grade Boys
pleted their season with a 13-4
Meigs 59 , Albany 21; .Meig s 68.
Trimble 67 ; Meigs 67. Federal
reeo1'd. Highlight of the season came
r&lt;ocklng 56.
as it captured the championship of
Meigs Junior High
the Federal Hocking eighth grade
Glrl5' Record
Me igs 17, Shade 13 ; Meigs 18,
basketball tournament. Three
Eastern 10; Meigs 13, Oak Hill 27 ;
players, Chris Shank, Rick Wise and · Meigs
15, Southern 28; Meigs 21,
Mike Chancey, were named to the
Athens 20 : Meigs 20. Eastern 17 ;
Meigs 18, Gall ipol is 23; Meigs 12.
all tournament team, while Wise
Southern 26: Meigs 22. Athens 16 ;
took game high scoring honors.
Meigs 22 , Shade 8; Meigs 22, Albanv
Chancey won trophies tor best free
23; Meigs 21. Gallipolis 19; Meigs 43,
Hamden 27 ; Me igs 9, Albany 19.
throw percentage and the tour-

The Meigs JU(lior high basketball
program was an enohnous success
this season with all three teams
having winning records.
.
The young Marauder girls' team
completed their season with an 8-6
record including touniament play.
The Meigs seventh and eighth grade
girls averaged 19 points a game and
made a great deal of progress
during the season. The total free
throw percentage for the season is a

good
indication
of this progress as
nament'sMVP.
the girls
shot 43 percent.
The Meigs cheerleading squad
, The girls put a -lot of hard work inwas very supportive throughout the
totheirseason.
year by conducting ~everal pep
Peebles has all9wed its opponents a
The seventh grade boys' team ' rallies and keeping up the student inmeager 54.7 points a game. Southern
C9Jllpleted their season by capturing
volvement. Their efforls were
has developed its "deny" defense to
first
place
in
the
Southern
Inrecognized as they were honored as
limit the opposition to a 52.1 average
vitational
Tournament.
Including
the
best checrleading squad at the
and has eight times held the optournament
play,
they
ended
the
Fedeal
Hocking Tournament .
ponent under 50 points. Give the
season with a record of 1f&gt;.I. The
Tournament scores :
defensive edge to Southern.
young Marauders averaged 46 poinSeventh Grade aovs
· A comparison of the opponents
MeiQs 52 . Federal Hoc king 46 . ;
reveal Southern has played a,
Is
a game
offensively
and gaveAll
up 31
tougher schedule. Fourteen of
points
a game
on defense.
20
Southern's 20 games have been
players saw action throughout the
against teams with winning records .
season.
they have played five games against

Coach Carl Wol{e's sixth ranked
once beaten (21-1) Southern Tornadoes take on Coach Arthur My.e rs'
ninth ranked unbeaten (22.,() T
Peebles Indians in first-round action
of the Class A District Tournament
at Chillicothe High School at 7 p.m.
Tuesday.
A comparison of the teams' season
statistics makes for an interesting
match-up between these two teams
that have the best won/lost records
in the district tournament.
Peebl~s is a high-scoring team
ave1·aging 76.1 points per game
liehind the outside shooting of twin
b•·others, Brett and Brian Justice.
This dynamic duo is averaging 20.5
and 2.8 points respectively. A thi1·d
starter averaging in double figures
is Steve Shoemaker (14.9) whom
Coach Wolfe thinks may be the best
shooter of the three. These three do
the bulk of the Indians' scoring as
the other two starters, Dave Scott
and Robin Freeman, working
around the basket, are scoring at a
6.8 and 3.6 pace.
.
Southern, in turn; has swished the
nets at a 70: ~ per game average and
is led by three-year starting point
guard Kent Wolle, who is scoring at ·
8 21.3 per gam~ clip. Wingmen
Richard Wolfe and Tom Roseberry
have contributed 9.8 and 4.3 points
per game while the inside scoring is
handled by Robert Brown at 9.2 and
Jay Rees at 7.3.
Coach Myers and Coach Wolfe differ in their philosophy of substituting. Myers stays with his starling five unless one of them gets in
foul trouble while Wolfe utilized· a
total team concept allowing more
boys playing time. Peebles bench is
averaging 8.1 pOints a game while
Southern's bench, led by Zane
.Beegle's 7.8 average, is scoring at a
18.5clip:
This comparison gives Peebles the
edge in outside shooting and overall
scoring, and Southern the advantage
in inside scoring and bench strength.
Both teams have stingy defenses.

Applicants
sought
.l

wrtre.:

scoring ice on a cassle Sheets' Jwnper with 7:14 left in the first frame.
Aftet a missed shot by Valley,
Eastern went up by four on a short
chip shot by Becky Ambrose.
.
Valley got on the board at the 6:15
ma1·k when Melinda Noel canned
two free throws. Led by seniors Hudson, Goebel, and Sheets the Eastern
crew raced to a 11).4 lead before
Valley called time out.
During this early streak EHS controlled the boards, but as statistics
show this later changed and Valley
began to dominate the boards,
giving the Eagles just one shot at the
goal on several occasions.
In the latter stages of the initial
canto Valley took a 12·lllead before
Rhonda Riebel canned a iong set
shot with 23 seconds remaining, to
give EllS a 1~12 first periOd advantage.
An exciting second •·ound saw
Valley grab a 26-15 lead, but a T&amp;m-

Southern on Tuesday.
Melinda Noel and Beth Sammons
worked the inside lane for the "Lady
Indians' ' to pace the tribe'e attack
with 22 and 16 points respectively.
Point guard Lisa Childers raiUedJor
nine markers, while Debbie
Williams canned four, and Patti
Childe1-s, Jill Romanello, and Missy
Wilson each added two.
Coach Sue Thompson's Eagles
produced an evenly balanced attack
as three girls hit double figures.
Seniors Sarah Goebel aM Cassie
Sheets netted 12 points each for the
locals,_while senior guard Tarr\my
Hudson canned 11. Freshman Angie
Spe11&lt;.-er came through with a fine
six point effort, Becky Ambrose
dropped in ·three, Rhonda Riebel
four, and Kelly Whitlatch two for the
Eagles.
.
Despite high jumping Valley grabbing the lip, it was Eastern which
shot out' of the gate and broke the

Young Marauders have good season

~~ -

,

,

WAVERLY -Ill girls' high school
district tournament basketball play
here at Waverly High School Thursday evening, the LuCasville-Valley
"Lady Indians" claimed a hard- ·
fought 57-liO win over the Eastern
Eagletles in an exciting battle.
Eastern gave the talented Valley
tribe all they could handle for more
than three quarters in a well played
contest by both clubs.
Lucasville v'al)ey's girls, now ll0-3,
advance to the districi finals against
Paint Valley Saturday afternoon.
The hustling Eastern Eagle gals of
Coach Sue Thompson end the season
in style with a respectable IU
mark.
·
In the preliminary contest Paint
Valley defeated Bishop Flagel in a
hard-fought4S-43 thriller to'advance
to the district finals.
Incidentally, Lucasville Valley
carried the second best record into
the tournament behind Eastern of
Pike County (23-0) who defeated

Let.'em eat brOCCOl.._j_ _ _ _~_J::__a_m_es_J_.K_il-=-pa_t_ric_k

The Daily Sentinel

~

Lucasville Valley ousts Eastern five

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Midcllepatt, Ohio
Friday, March 5, 1982

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Friday, March 5, 1982

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.Bonham clears first hurdle

Minniefield paces 89-6.QWildcat victocy ·
By AMoclated p...,..
It bears little physical resemblance to the Coliseum of ancient
Rome, but Rupp Arena In Lexington, Ky., was no less friendly to
Coach Sonny Smith's Auburn
Tigers.
"I felt like the Christians with the
Lions," Smith said after IN' 15th·
ranked Kentucky Wildcats defeated Auburn 89-66 Thursday night
Iii the quarterfinals of the Southeastern Cor!terence !&gt;Bsketball
tournament.
Dirk Mlnnletleld paced the Wlldcats with 18 points, giving Kentucky Its 29th straight victory at
Rupp Arena ·and sending the 'Cats
Into the semifinals of the tournament tonight against Mississippi.
The oilier SEC semifinal pits No. 18
Alabarna against Tennessee.
Mlsslsslppl defeated Louisiana
State 59-52 behind Carlos Clark's 28
points. Tennessee, which shared
the regular-season SEC title with
Kentucky, got by Vanderbllt 57-Sol
as Dale Ellis scored 26 points. Phil·
Up Lockett scored 20 points In Alabama's 85-74 victory over Georgia.
"There's no question It's an ad·
vantage," Kentucky Coach Joe B .
Hall said of playing the tournament
at home.
The winner of the tournament
gets an automatic bld to the NCAA

playotts. Mississippi Is the defend·
lng SEC tournament champion.
'fbere was action In three other
conference tournaments Thursday
night Involving ranked teams.
In the first round of IN' Big East
tournament at Hartford, Conn.,
eighth-ranked Georgetown easily
handled Providence, 62-48; St.
John's, N.Y., defeated hostConnec·
tlcut 54-52; Villanova defeated
Seton Hall 88-73, and Boston College
ousted Syracuse 94-92.
At Tulsa, Okla., lOth-ranked
Tulsa defeated New Mexico State
85-61 and llUnols State upset Brad·
ley 55-50 In double overtime In lhe
semifinals of the Mlssoul Valley
Conference playoffs.
No. 12 Fresno State walloped
Long Beach State 7&amp;-55 and Fullerton State upset Cal-Irvine 62-61 In
the semifinals of the Pacific Coast
Athletic Association tuurnament at
Anaheim, Calli.
.
All three tournaments produce
automatic NCAA qualifiers.
In regular-season action,
seventh-ranked Minnesota
clinched at least a tie tor the Big
Ten Conference title by be.atillg
Michigan State 54.51. Iowa, ranked
11th, was upset by Illinois, 73-67.
The Gophers lead Iowa by · one
game with one game left. Since
there Is no Blg Ten tournament, the

Local bowling
FIGHTING FOR POSSESSION - ' Ohio Slate players Derick Polk
(501 and Clark Kellogg. (331 and an unidentified teammate grabbed the
ball during a game agaiiJSI Wlsc 0 nsln Thursday nglht In Madison, Wis.
Ohlo Slate won, 77-75. (AP Laserphoto !-

Kellogg's jumper
defe~ts Badgers
MADISON, Wis. (API - Clark
Kellogg's 16-foot jump shot with
two seconds remaining gave Ohio
State a 77-75 Big Ten basketball vic- ~
tory over upset-minded Wisconsin
Thursday night.
After the game, Wisconsin Coach
Bill Cofield announced he was re·
· lgnlng, effective after his team's
' nal game Tuesday against Maruette In Milwaukee.
Cofield, whose job was reported
to be In jeopardy In recent days,
confirmed that University of Wisconsin Athletic Director Elroy
Hirsch had decided to replace him
as head coach for next season.
"I realize that It was a difficult
decision for him, and I am sorry he
had to make It," said Cofield, now
6-19 overall and last In the Big Ten
at 3-13.
Cofield, 41, was the first black
hired In the Big Ten to coach a major sport, replacing John Powless
In 1976.
The victory kept the Buckeyes'
Big Ten title hopes allve,lmprovlng
their record to 12-5 In the confer·
e nce and 21-Boverall.
Kellogg, the Big Ten's third leadIng scorer, and Tony Campbell'
each scored 16 points to lead Ohio
State.
Brad Sellers, Wisconsin's 6-foot11 forward. totaled a game-high 22
points and John Salley added 16,
Including 14 during a Badger rally
In the second half. ,
Ohio State, leading 37-32 at half·
time, never was able to extend Its

lead to more than eight points after
Intermission.
Throughout the second half, It
was a battle of Bailey's jump shots
and Sellers' Inside game versus accurate free throw s hooting by the
Buckeyes' Campbell and reserve
guard Ron Stokes.
Wisconsin began Its final rally
with 2: 21 left In the game on a
Sellers dunk shot that pulled the
Badgers to within five points at 7368.
.
After the Buckeyes' Larry Huggins misSed a free throw, freshman
forward Scott Roth of the ,Badgers
scored on a layup, making It 73-70
with 2: 03 left.
Another Badger freshman, Carl
Golston, made It 73-72 on an 18-foot
jump shot With 1: 33 remaining following an Ohio State turnover.
Huggins scored two free throws
with 42 seconds left, but Roth tied
the game at 75-75 with 33 seconds
left on a three-point play. He hit an
18-loot jump shot and, fouled on the
shot by Campbell, made the free
throw.
Ohio State then ran the clock
down to six seconds and guard Troy
Taylor finally passed to Kellogg on
the baseline. Kellogg faked defender Keith Mitchell, freeing him
for the 16-foot game-winning shot.
Wisconsin called time out with
one second left to set up a possible
game-tylnng shot, but Bailey's 40footer at the buzzer bounced off the
rim .

Scoreboard••.•·
.

Boys scores
Ohio

U rbana ~ . llenjnmln Logan 311
WaiTt'll Kennedy 67, Young. U berty G.1
WarK'Il LaBrne 71 , Pymntunlng Val. M
~IWI A Toum~Uuents
A.~ t1Jand Mnplcton 5:&amp;. Sm lthvllll' ~2
lladF.J('r n. Ml~l'rat ntdjjl' 6."\

tup !khool &amp;,1'11 BMIIetb&amp;ll
By The AMocla&amp;ed Pr\'811
Tblll'l!liay'll Rel!llal&amp;8

a...

MA Tuunllffit.oi.lfl
Ctn. We~~ ll!rn Hlll!i. ffi, W. Chrnlter La-

kotll 49
Cll!'\lcland Hts.

~-

!l,tlll78. M wll t •Sb.~ u l t

lltc ll rUti : &amp;r ii~S ~ Adty Whilld lrh :;3-4 , r~IUI .~t·
i&lt;,tds 48:1 , li;trl w nt Wluttul~hiii45Z.

February 17,1982
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29

C. &amp;:S. Pennzoil
24
Hi..:h individualj5ame - Carolyn Bachner 209.
PttlC.arHonl91, 188.
H1gh m! ries - Carolyn B.l:lchner , Pat Carson
522; Bctly Whitl atch 484 ; Diane Ash~ :
Team hl)(h ~(arne - Meigs Inn475.
Team hi)th ~c r ies - Meigs Inn 1390.

Slaodlagt~

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f'ebruary 23, 118.2
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High individual gurile - June Lambert 193;
Cit rolyn Bach11er 192; Pat Car!lon 171.
Hi~h :~erie:~ June I..ambert ~ ; Betty
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Tmun hi ~h WI lilt! - Meiw- Inn 461 .
T1!11m hhth !lt!ric!l - M ei~s Inn 1318.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Former
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Bill Bon·
ham has cleared the first hurdle In
his bid .to ·return to professional
baseball.
After throwing 42 pitches during
lOmlnutesofbattlngpractlceWed·
nesday, Bonham said he felt no
pain . "Everything Is fine."
The Cincinnati Reds, who have
Invited Bonham to spring training
as a non·I'D5ter player, sidelined
hlm In 1900 after he experienced sertous arm and shoulder problems.
Bonham said he has almost fully
recovered from an operation 16
months ago.
"We'll have to walt and see:
Some people have come back from
this surgery and others haven't,"
said Bonham, who won 75 games as
a major league pitcher before the
arm troubles began.
In 19111, Bonham won two games
and lost one before Los Angeles Dr.
Frank Jobe operated on his arm.
Bonham sald be tailed In his at·
tempt to return to action last season
because he came back too soon.
The stretched arm muscles take 18

the Blg Ten, whlle Minnesota 1$,13regular-season champion receives
4.
an NCAA berth.
Each team has a conference
BIJEast
game left. Tl)e Gophers host Ohio
Freshman Anthony Jones scored
19 points as Georgetown rallied to · State and Iowa plays at Purdue.
In other conlerence tournaments
beat Providence. 1be Hoyas, 24-6,
Involving automatic NCAA berths:
were down by as many as 10 points
Southwest
In the first half before Jones led
Claude
Riley
scored 17 points and
GeorgetoWn on an 18-2 burst.
Reggie
Roberts
had 14 as Texas
Freshman Chris Mullln- hit a 15A&amp;M
defeated
Baylor
64-63 In the
!ooter with three seconds left as St. ·
quarterfinals
of
the
SWC
tournaJohn's upset Connecticut. Dwan
ment
at
Dallas.
Texas
Christian
deChandler's 10-footer with three sefeated
Texas
Tecll67-6lin
the
other
conds left gave Boston cOllege Its
quarterfinal.
two-1101nt victory over Syrac)lse.
In tonight 's semifinals, Houston
Ed fllnckney scored 23 points In Vilplays
Texas A&amp;M aild 14\h-ra~ed
lanova's romp over Seton Hall.
Arkansas
meets Texas Christian.
Georgetown plays St. John's and
Southland
,
Villanova meets Boston College In
Joe
Dumars'
short
jumper
'with
tonight's semtitnals. ·
.
1: 38 left In the third overtime gave
MlMoort Valley
McNeese Slate a 78-77 victOry liver
Mike Anderson scored 16 points
Louisiana Tech In the Southland
to send Tulsa Into Saturday's final
Conference
tourney. The victory
of the MVC tournilment against Illimoved McNeese Into the semifinals
nois State. Tulsa, 23-5, the defendagainst Southwestern Louisiana toIng National Invitation
night. In the other semifinal,
Tournament cbamplon, led New
Lamar meets Texas-ArUngton.
Mexico State 42-31 at halftime and
ECAC South
won going away.
William &amp; Mary earned the right
Rick Lamb converted a threeto meet top,seeded James Madison
point play with 1: 47 left In the seIn the ECAC South semifinals by
cond overtime and Illlnols State
beating Navy 79-55 behind a disciheld on to upend the reguiar-~son
plined attack that Included the 14
MVC champion, Bradley.
points of Mike StrayhQrn.
PCAA
Old Dominion will meet RichForward Rod Higgins scored 25
mond In the other semifinal tonight.
points to lead lour Fresno State
Old Dominion defeated George Maplayers In double ligures as the Bulson 70-62, and Richmond downed
ldogs defeated Long Beach State.
East Carolina 49-42.
Fresno State built a 33-17_halftlme
lead, and Long Beach State could , - - - - - - - - - - - - come no closer than five points, 4&amp;41, the rest of the way.
Th e Uuilr Sen ti nel
Fresno State meets Fullerton
I USPS 146-tiQ))
ADivision uf Multimedia, Inc.
State In tonight's final.
Big Ten
Publis hed e\·cry afte n1oo n, Monday through
Fri~ .Y. l1l Cou rt Street, by lhe Ohio Valley
Darryl Mitchell scored 16 points,
Publishing Company - MultllllL&gt;t.lia , Inc ..
and Minnesota overcame a brief
Porrk!roy, OhJo 45769, 992·2lfl6 . Second class
pO:;lu[.(c ~id at Pomeroy, Ohio. ·
Michigan State lead with 10: 14 left
to take sole possession of the Big
M ~ mbtr : Thf As.sodah:d Pr~ss . Inland Daily Pre ss Associii ti On lind the Ame rican
Ten lead . Michigan State led 38-36
Newspaper Publishers As.sor ialiofl, Nalional
on a basket by Kevin Willis, but the
Advertlsilll-! Re presentative . Branham
Newspaper Sales. 733 Th ird Aven ut! , New
Gophers ran off the next eight
York , New York 100 17.
points.
POSTMASTER: Send aUU reliS to Tht Datly
. Seniors Craig Tucker and James
St:ntiucl. Ill Co urt St .. PouJcroy. Ol1io 45769.
Griffin led a second-half Illinois
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vlctorv. Iowa fell to 20-6 and 12-5in

FIRST - Meigs Junior High School eheerleaden
are show~ with the lint place trophy they won recently
In eighth grade cbeerleadlng com1!4!tltlon held at
Federal HocldDg. MaldDg up the group, advised by

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -When he
was first traded to the aeveland
Indians lp February, Bake
McBride talked openly about how
moving to a new league and playing
on natural grass should help preserve his tender knees.
Now that he's In the Indians'
spring training camp, however,
McBride has become a mystery
man.
Sometimes you'll see him laughIng and talking with other players,
but he Is generally avoiding reporters as though they were artificial
turf.
McBride refused to comment at·
ter he passed a physical examlna·
lion that last week completed his
trade to the Indians tor pitcher Sid
Monge. He has refused to appear on
~ Cleveland ra:dlo talk show; he has
made obScene gestures at a photographer attempting to snap hls pic·
ture, and he has declined some
Interview requests.
His behavior would not seem
likely to endear hlm to hls new fans,
although another .300 season would
certainly erase any bad feelings.
"Bringing Bake McBride here a guy like that knows whatlt means
to win," said thlrd baseman Toby
Harrah. "He can give that attitude
to the other players."
In eight years In St. Louis and
Philadelphia, McBride, known for
hls speed, hlt .300 or better slx
times.
He was In three National League

,.,

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Generous Otis

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SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) Otis Birdsong of the New Jersey '
Nets of !he NBA presented a $10,&lt;XKI
check to the Basketball Hall of
Fame to help with a money-raising
Tu~~IIY Trlpllcak
February 18.1980
campaign to build a new hall.
SI.Hndlngs
This, of course, delighted Hall -of
Teym
P o'S.
Meigs Inn
4fl
Fame Director Lee WUllams, who
No. 5
44
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f orest Run Block
34
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Ql rolyn Bachner 208: June IA!mbe11201 .
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Hi ~ h 1001rles - PHI Carl:iOn , Carolyn Bu chner
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Subsc•·ii&gt;crs 1101 desi rilt[.( to pay t he t:arrier
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I Year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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and Wetil Vlr~:labl

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Team hilo(h sc ri e:~ - Meigs Inn. Sta r Supply Co. ·
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l.a!l.

I'UMI-:IHIY IUIWLI Nfi lAN ES
Ml tR 'il Nfi fiiJ ~RII-&gt;i
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, C;J&lt;I &amp; t 'I"M ·\.
t'. &amp; D. Pt·uul• •ll

"

King advances
LOS ANGELES (API
Blute
J ean King downed Leigh Ann
Thompson 6-1, 7-5 to move Into the
quarter-finals 'ot the $150.000 Avon
Championships tennis tournament.
Earlier, the tournameht lost Its
second-seeded player when Andrea
Jaeger defaulted her match to Leslie Allen because of a groin Injury.
In other second-round matches,
South Africa's Yvonne Verma~k
knocked off No.9 seed Mary Lou PI·
,atek 6-1, 6-2 and unseeded Jo Durie
of Britain defeated Kate Latham
6-3, 6-4.

Tall family
RALE)GH, N.C. (AP) -Chuck
Nevitt, a North Carolina State basketball player, Is 7-5.
His Ia ther Is 6-7, he has two broth·
ers who are 6-7, his sister Is &amp;-3 and
hls mother Is 6 feet.
Nevitt commented recently: "At
least I have never worried about
whether I was adopted."

Taste our T-Bone

r.==========;-1
RECORDING ARTIST

DAVE DUNKEL
IN THE LOUNGE
Al; THE

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Bedford Chane! 67, ""1n.d1urg !il
C.mbr1dge TJ, John Glenn 66

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Cln. Wyomln(l 48, Ross 47, OT
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Da y. Roth ~. Day. Kt'll"r ~2
Hamilton Badin 6!1. Cn rllslt&gt; 56
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Team doctors have given him a
clean bill of health again, yet
McBride remains cautious with his
legs. His only hitting for the first
three days of camp came against a
pitching machine.
"He's a little leary yet," Man·
ager Dave Garcia said. "He didn't
want to hit against live pitching
right away."
McBride was to sit out the club's
first lntrasquad game Saturday,
and Garcia said the outfielder
would enter an exhibition game
" whenever he tells me he's ready."

I
1

Cotopoo Good

.

UPPER RIVER
'ROAD
Across From
The Airport

As he beltan his. recovery program Wednesday, Bonham did not
rush himself.
"I was throwing about threequarters :s peed. I could h11ve
thrown harder, but patience will
help. I could have gone even
further. But shoot, I've walled thiS
long, and I can walt a llttie longer,"
he said.
Bonham began his major league
career In 1971 with the Chlcago
CuJs when he appeared In 33
games. He pitched tor the Cubs
through 1971 when he was traded to
the Reds.
Aller three winning seasons In
Cincinnati, he was sidelined with

.... ·"'·... :

. .•.
...••
....
~

:f.•.

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohlo (AP) The owner of the pro football champion San Francisco 49ers, Edward
J. DeBartolo Jr., says the family
financial empire wlll make another
attempt at taking over a baseball
franchise .
Baseball's brass turned down a
bid by the DeBartolo Corp. to buy
the Chlcago Whlte Sox.
"Baseball Is definitely In the fam·
Uy!uture," said DeBartolo. "(Commissioner 1 Bowie Kuhn made one
mistake and I don't think he'll
make the same mistake twice.
"We (the DeBartolo Corp.) have
been accepted In the sports and busIness world. Kuhn doesn't have
enough·guts to turn us down again.
If he does, It may be his demise."
If the corporation lands a baseball team, DeBartolo will not be
runntng IN' tranchlse. The National Football League prohibits it.
"I respect the NFL's laws of dual
ownership," he said.
DeBartolo admits he's sWI sur·
prtsed the 49ers played In and won
the Super Bowl In his fifth year of
owning the San Francisco franchlse. "I really didn't think we'd
make It to the Super Bowl," he said.
"I thought we'd be S-8, at best."

prospect.
Garcia, though, says McBride
has deceptive power at the plate,
and that might be the advantage he
needs over ·Hayes.

.

•

••...

·-

Bob Boone, McBride's team·
mate at Phlladelphla, "could never
understand why McBride didn't hit
more home runs," Garcia said.
McBride's best home run output
was 15 In 1977.

'

..

·.

"I think I know why," Garcia
said. "He's got good speed, and
when he's got two strikes, he just
wants to put the ball In play. A
home run hitter will ~ tm wantto hit
the ball out.
"I'd rather see McBride hit .280
or .290 and hit 20 home runs than hit
.300 with two home runs."

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

"He feels line, and he looks good
to me, " Garcia said. "I said to him,
'You hit a high bouncer to shortstop. What'll happen?' and he says,
~ru be there."'
If the 33-year-old McBride's legs
are healthy, he'll still have a battle
on his hands. Traditionally a right·
fielder, he must fight lor that job
with Von Hayes, a solid 23-year-old

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12: 30

~

Nlk's Mc Kinlt')' 64, Salem
N. Olmsted 52, lAraln -L1

Knee problems arose In 1981, and
the outfielder underwe11t two ar·
throscoplc examinations. His first·
halt batting average of .366 fell to
.271 by the end of the season.

By George Strode

Appearing This Friday
&amp; Saturday From 8: 30·

ti.1.
Col. Wtrtstonr 67, Col. Mlllrlon-Franklln
f.lyrla 12. Clovrrlcaf !ift
HamUton 69, Talawandll !»
Louisville &amp;1, A.kron Sprtn~. IW

championship series and the 1900
World Series.

DeBartolo says, with pride, that
the 49ers have gone from also-rans
to championship tiber within three
seasons.
"It you have three good people In
the front office, you can get It done.
Those three wlll get the people
(players) to win," DeBartolo said,
referring to Coach Blll Walsh,
scouting director Tony Razzano
and John McKay, director of
operations.

:j;

the arm problems In 1~. There- :-{·
pair required extensive' surgery. . - . :

Mn. Paulette Harrlsoo, are, front, ~bble . Wyatt;
baCk, I to r, Julie Slssoo, Daphne Dlllanl, Jodi
Harrison, Cindy Soulsby and Holly Miller.

Ohio
Sportlight

~er just $3.69

C\C'Vc. Hawken 67, Ca rdinal 32
Newbury ffi. Richmond Hts. 57

acvc. Glenville ~

months to heal.
"Last year, It was obvious that
hadn't happened. I could pitch a lit·
tie, but It w-ould take maybe lOdays
before I could throw again . I
thought I would be able to pitch last
year. I couldn't," bf~ said.
Bonham said he needs several
more months of recovery before he
can pitch a 1ull game.

Indians'· McBride, mystery man

Cln. St. Bcrnanl1J, Fayetli:'VIllt' 47

Col. Northland Bb, Col. Llndcn -McKlnlc:oy

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ll 11.: h Ind. r:aull' - llllli;;(' Eath 198. Pdlbks

POMEROY eQWUNG LANES
EARI..V WEONF.SOA Y MIXED

Pol Carson 539. Carolyn Bachner 5.13.

1

The Daily Sentinel Page-S

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..•-~
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�Page

Friday, Man:h 5, 1982

6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Social Calendar
FRIDAY

this Saturday. Seldon Johnson is
pastor.

SECTIONAL youth services for
the United Pentecostal Church in
Middleport will be held at 8 p.m.
Friday. Speaker will be Rev.
David Kuhtenia. Rev. Clark·
Baker, pastor, invites the public.

MEN IN MISSIONS will meet
at -the Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene, 7 p.m. Saturday.

SCIPIO TOWNSlllP trustees

will meet in regular session
Friday at 7 p.m.
. A ROUND AND SQUARE dance will tie held Friday evening
from 8 to 11 p.m. at the Senior
CitiZens Center in the multipurpose building on Mulberry
Heights. The public is invited .
SALISBURY Township
trustees, Friday, 7 p.m. at the
home of tbe clerk, Mrs. Wanda
Eblin, L&amp;urel Qiff. The meeting
i.s open to the public and there
will be a discussion concermng
revenue sharing funds.

FIVE GENERATIONS- Olho Murray of Pomeroy is shown here
holding Ills great-great-granddaughter, Amber Belh Keitel, daughter
of Mrs. Keith Keitel, the former Angle Rowley, plclured right, wllh
her mother, Mrs. W. H. Rowley, Jr., (Ciaarlolte Murray) and her

DANCE AT Rutland Com·
munity Civic Center, Friday, 8 to
11 :30 p.m. with only those m
seventh grade or above permitted to attend. Music by
~~ Music Unlimited' '; admission,
$3 couple, $2 single. Dance wil be
chaperoned. Sunday, I to 4 p.m.
skatin~ at the center; $2 adults or
$1 children: spectators $1. Public
inv1ted.

lather, Charles H. Murray, all of Ironton. The Charle• Murray family
fonnerly resided in Pomeroy. Amber Beth Keitel Is also the great·
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs . Wilbur Rowley, Bailey Run Road,
Pomeroy.

Meigs County area groups hold meetings
Meigs Women's
Fellowship
Purchase of tablecloths and cur·
tains lor the Mexican Children's
Home was approved when the Meigs
County Women's Fellowship met
recently at the Pomeroy Church .of
Christ.
Ruth Underwood had charge of the
song service to open the meeting with
Elizabeth Duffy at the piano. There
was a pl'llyer hymn, "Love Lifted
Me," and prayer by Cha1·idine Alkire.
M1tzi Saltsman of t~e Middleport
Church talked about her experience
as a missionary in India. She told of
how the people in India have many
different gods to whom they pray and
concluded with a poem, " Dear
Friend."
Janet Vanqy and Mrs. Alkire sang
·'Jesus is the Son of God. " Ann Lambel-t presided at the business meeting
during which a letter was read from
Peggy Russell in rega1·d to the wo1·k in
Mexico at the children's home thm·e.
It was decided to help 'buy bowls for
the camp at Darwin and a committee
w11l check on prices and needs before
the next meetmg .
Ap1·il 3 and 20 will be cleaning days
at the camp with the Willing Workers
to be there on April 3. The women
working are asked to take a lunch.
A revival was announced for
Pome1·oy Church on Ap1·il 18-23. Don
Seevers will be the speaker. On May
27 at 7 p.m. the women's fellowship
will vl~it the Pomeroy Health Care
Celltel' r01"a Pl'Ogram .
Next meetm~ will be at the Rutland
Church with Ka1·en Story of Story and
Story law firm to be the speaker on
wills and deeds.
Dale Stoll of the Meigs County Extension Off1ce had a display of a1"ticles
made from scrap material.
Refrestunents were served by the
host church.

Eastern Star
Initiatory work for Roger Gaul
was held at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Pomeroy Chapter,
Order of ·the Eastern Star, held at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Joan Kautz and Dale Smith, wor·
thy matron and worthy patron of the
chapter, presided at the meeting attended by 21 members and guests,
Mrs. Gracie Wilson, deputy grand
matron.
I
Past matrons of Pomeroy Chapter
recognized were Pauline Hysell,
Sylvia Midkiff, Mabel Goeglein, and
Ella Smith, and past patrons in·
traduced were Dale Smith and
James Soulsby.
The sunshine collection was taken
by Mrs. Smith and donated to the
Heart Fund.
Commumcation was read from the
Order of the Eastern Star Hospital
Circle along with a ·reception to be
held in Athens, and in1pections at
Belpre. Webb, Nelsonville, and Vinton. There w1ll be a grand visitation
·
atLowell.
The cheer committee reported on
cards sent to Evelyn Gaul and
Elizabeth Well. Pinons for April are
to be made by Helen Wolf and
Kathryn Wmdon . A cake walk for
the Cancer Fund will be held at the
next meeting.
Remarks from the deputy grand
matron were made and she
congratulated Gaul for coming into
the Order and James Soulsby for his
scriptural work.
Refreshments were served in the
dining room by Cleo Smith, Pat
Thomas, Betty Gaul and Gay Ann
Clay.

Chester Council
Quarterly birthdays will be observed and' practice for the rally
next month wUl be held at the
March 16 meeting of Chester Coun·
ell 323, Daughters of America.
Dorothy Ritchie, councilor, presided !'I a recent meeting at the hall

Astrograph

)

March 6, 1982
Unusual conditions a1-e likely to develop this coming year to make it
possible for you to advance in your chosen field . Be on your toes, since
these opportunities will be of a fleeting nature.
PISCES !Feb. 20.March ZO) You' re a good producer today when the
pressure is on, but once conditions begin to a lleviate you may start to
slow down and seek reasons to quit.
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9) Enjoy yourself today, but keep in mind
not to abuse a good thing. There's a possibility you might overindulge and
later pay a price.
TAURUS (April.21l-May ZO) Something opportune could unexpectedly
develop today, but you might not take advantage of it owing to the advice
of others. Make your own judgments.
GEMINI (May 2l·June 20) Think carefully before making commitments today. Your mtent10ns at the time may be good, but you might
not be able to follow through.
.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Financial conditions are likely to be
mixed for you today. In some instances you wiii get maximum mileage
from your dollars, while not from others.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you feel inspired to take certain actions
today, do so promptly. Time isn't your ally. You could become ineffective
'
the more you dawdle.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 Persons you should treat with consideration today may not get preferential attention, while you might
shower with favors those who are lel;s deserving.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. %31 Don't be reluctant to speak up today if friends want to go someplace expensive that you feel isn't worth the price.
SCORPIO (Oct. U.NO\', 221 Be aware of the limilations of your corn·
panions' budgets today. They could be embarrassed if you insist upon
something they can't alford.
SAGJTrARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You may be able to do things with
ease today whi9J others find extremely difficult. It won't help your
relationships if you compare your accomplistunents.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) In business matters today, don't un·
derestlmate those with whom you're involved. You may go in thinking
you have the edge, then suddenly discover you haven't.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Feh. 19) In situations today which require a
joint effort, there is a chance the parties involved will be pulling in dif·
ferent directions. Plan ahead .

attended by 46 members. The death
of Fred Karshner, husband of Doris
Karshner anjl father of Linda
Fitch, was reported. Lodge
me111.bers visited the White Funeral
Home at Coolville, to pay their respects. It was noted that Evelyn
Gaul is home from the hospital and
that Eva Dessauer tell at her hOme.
A thank you note was read trom
Gayann Clay thanking the councll
for a gt1Uor her mother while hospi·
taUJzed and those members who vi·
sited her. Ethel Orr also thanked
the members tor kindnesses during
her husband's death and Opal Hoi·
lon thanked the council for her gift
while she was hospitallzed.
The past councilors' club will be
held at the home o1 Elizabeth
Hayes, March 10, 7: 30 p.m . with
Goldie Frederick as ccrhostess.
The good ot the ord~r commltteee
sserved vegetable soup, cookies
and candy. Games were played
and prizes awarded the winners.
Others attending were Leona
Hensley, Goldie Frederick, Linda
Beasley, Thelma McMannis, Goldie Wolfe, Letha Wood; Thelma
White, Ada Morris, Charlotte
Grant, Julie L. Rose, Margaret L.
Amberger, Mary K. Holter, Margaret Tuttle, Carolyn Holley, Betty
Roush, Ada Bissell, Mae McPeek,
Esther Smith, Penny Smith, Ruth
Smith, Everett 'Grant, Erma ae"tand,' Nettle Hayes, Pam Davis,
lnzy Newelli, Betty Christopherson, Marcia Keller, Opal Hollon,
Sadie Trussell, Cora Beegle, Ethel
Orr, Lora Damewood, Sandy
White, Doris Grueser, VIrginia
Newlun, Daisy Canter, Ada Neut·
zllng, Pauline Ridenour, Susan
Pooler, Vlr:glnla Lee, Elizabeth
Hayes, Zelda Weber, Betty Denny,
Lillian Demoskey, and Nelle
Werner.

Drew Webster Post
Plans tor the annual American
Legion birthday party to be held on
March 16 were made when the Aux·
lllarv of Drew Webster Post 39.

Announcements
. A teen dance will be held Fr1day
(tonight) at the Rutland Civic Center, 8 to 11:30 p.m. with ail junio1·
high and high school' students inVIted. The dance wlll be chaperoned. ·
On Sunday afternoon there will be
open skating with those attending to
take their own skates. Auctions are
held eve1·y Saturday night at the
building.
P1·oceeds from the various activities being held at the Civic Cen·
ter are being designated lor further
renovation and repair of the
buildmg.

A pap smear clinic Is being span·
sored by the Meigs County Ameri·
can cancer Society on Thursday
from 1 to 4 p.m, at the Health Department. Appointments are to be
made with the ottlce of Dr. Wilma
Mansfield at 992-0000.
The "Send a Mouse to College"
program of the Meigs County
American cancer Society will be
carried out in the elementary
schools of !he county again this
year.
Last year- the students collected
over $3,300 for the program. Again
this year school children will be
8,$klng residents to Contribute In
amounts of 87 cents, the price of one
mouse used In camcer research In
universities and colleges.

Pomeroy, met at the hall .
It was noted that the dinner will
be served by the Awdllary at 7 p.m.
with a meeting to start at 8 p.m.
Music will be by Armond at the or·
gan and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Harkless.
It was decided that a dish washer
will be hired for the party.
A committee to select drapes for
the hall was appointed. Poppies
and grave markers were ordered .
A donation was made to the nationa! security fund . It was reported that membership now
stands at eight over goal. It was
noted that members served the
canteen at the last bloodmobUe.
A report on veterans affairs was
given by Veda Davlswhonoted that
gifts for veterans at Christmas
were sent to Arcadia, Athens Men·
tal Health Center, the Pomeroy
Health Care ,C enter, the Pomeroy
Infirmary, and favors to Veterans
Memorial Hospital from the senior
and junior members.
The American Legion distlct
spring conference was announced
for Saturday at Junction. A leader·
ship training program wll be held
at Galllpolls on Apr1117.
. Members voted on the delegate
to Buckeye Girls State and the Firing Line was ordered for area high
schools. A donation was made to
the Past Presidents Parley tor the
nurses scholarship fund. Donations
were also made to the Marie Moore
Fund In memory of Zana Withrow,
Louise Harbrecht, Clara Paulsen,
and Florence Rhodes.
Loretta T!emeyeer presided at
the meeting with Iva Powell having
the opening prayer. The officer's
reports were given. Sin~ Febru·
ary Is Americanism month, the
program was presented by Erma
Smith, chairman, and Mrs. Davis
amd junior me~bers. Miss Smith
read an article from Harry Tru·
man. Other readings were "His·
tory of the Flag" by Robin
Campbell; "I am Old Glory' by Laney Hankla; had a reading by
Harry " Americanism" by Kim
Patterson. Brochures were passed
out on flag etiquette. The traveling
prize was won by Mrs. Powell . Refreshments were served by Pearl
Knapp and Catherine Welsh.

THERE WILL BE a dance at
Rutland Community Civic Center
Friday from 8 to 11 :30 p.m. Only
those in the seventh grade and
above will btl permitted to attend .
Music will be by "Music
Unlimited" and there will be
chaperones. Admission is $2 per
person or $3 a couple. On Sunday
there will be skating at the center
from 1 to 4 p.m. Admiss1on for
skating is $2 for adults; $1 for
.children and $1 for spectators.
Refrestunents will be sold.

SATIJRDAY
SATURDAY evening serv1ces
at 7:30 p.m . will reswne al the
Joppa United Methodist Churcl1

, he W,lV f!l merit·'
•.end "- 1 nv e"
IIY/I.U:J~orY'J1 571 1

OR

SUNDAY .
HARRISONVILLE Chapter
2fi5, Order of Eastern Star, will
hold a practice session at 7 p.m.
Sunday. All officers are asked to
be present.

THE Revelators of McArthur
will slllg Sunday at 7:3/) p.m. at
U1e Zion Freewill Baptist Church,
Lower PlaiDs, Athens. The .' Rev.
Eddie Boyer, pastor, invites the
'
public.

MONDAY
THE SOUTHERN Junior High
Athletic Boosters Club will meet
Monday at 7:30p.m. Ali parents
of players and the cheerleade1·s
are asked to attend. An awards
banquet w1ll be planned.

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.
.1161 S. Third, Middleport
992 ·21"

P. J.

, AGENT

Nationwide Ins. Co. 1111':
ol Columbus,

804

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f('rmerlv Athen• CoiJnty
Silvrngs &amp; LNn

Pomeroy

PLANING MILL

Warranty

ant , poster . lyde Henderson, pastor
9meritus Su day School. 9:30 a.m ..

Q!..~
lll E._Main, Pom•roy

8 Pack
16 Oz.
Returnable
Bottles

$} QgPius Deposit

Glen McCiun , sup t ; morning worship
l0:30 a .m .; e ening serv•ce, 7·00. m•d ·
weak sOPiiC~
. ednesday , 7:00p.m
GRACE EPI OPAl CHURCH - 32b E
Main ·st .. Po eroy . Sunday services or
10 30 a .m.
Commun1on on the fir st
Sunday of acxh month . and comb•ned
witt'! morning rroyer on the th ird Sun day Morn •ng rover and sermon on all
other Sunday of the month . Church

School and n~sery core prov1ded Cof -

fee hour in t Pansh Hall .mmed1a1ely
fol lowing the er'lice.
POMEROY HURGH OF CHRIST 212 W
Motn St. Ne Proudfoot , pastor , B1ble
school 9 .30 a.m .. morn 1ng worshtp ,
10:30 om : outh meet1ngs . 6 30 p m .
e'lening wor 1p, 7·30 Wednesday n1ght
prayer mee ng and Bible study , 7 30
pm
THE SALV TION ARMY . 115 Butternut
A"e ., Pam oy . En"oy and Mrs. Roy
Wining , of ers tn charge. Sunday holiness m eting. 10 a .m . Sunday
School , 10·3 a.m . Sunday school leader .
VPSM
El
Adams
7 ·30 p.m .
~olvot1on m ting , ve nous speakers and
mu siC spect Is. Tt1ursdoy -- 10 am to 2
p.m Ladies omeleague all women tn vlted 7·30 .m. prayer meeting ond
81ble study . ev Noel Hermon teocfler .
BURliNG N SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHAPEL Ro te I Shade . Bible school. 7
p m Thursd y: worship servtce p m .
POMERO
WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST , 200 , Ma;n Sl , 992 -S23S Vocal
music Sun y worship . 10 a.m., Bible
study. 11
m .: worship . 6 p m Wed nesday Bibl study , 1 p m .
OLD DEX ER BIBlE CHRISTIAN CHUR ·
CH. Rev Rdph Smith . pastor Sunday
school , 9:30t a .m .. Mrs. Worley Fran c1s .
superinten&amp;nt. Preod'llng servtces ftrsl
and third Sundays following Sunday
,School .
.GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST ,
Preochmg 9 po a.m . first and second
Sundays of~ch month : third and fourth
Sundays eo month . worship service at
7·30 p m
ednesdoy evenings at 7 30
Prayer and tble Study
SEVENT~ DAY ADVENTIST , Mulbor&lt;y
Heights Rodd Pomeroy Pastor . Albert
Dines: Sabl:klth School Superintendent.
Rtta' Whilo . 1bboth School : satu rday of ·
ternoon at .00 , with Worship Servtce
following ~ · I S
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHRUTlA
Sister Har lett Worner Supt. Sunday
School
a.m. morn 1ng worship ,
10:45a.m .
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST . Dav•d
Mann minikter. Wtll iam Snouffer . Sunday s'chool 1supt Sunday school . 9.30
a.m .. mornlflg worsh1p 10.30 om
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST
2B2
Mulberry pt.Je . Pomeroy Re'l . William
A. Newma~ . pastor. Hershel McClure
Sunday sch?ol superintendent Sunday
school . 9·3) a .m. morning worship ,
10:30: evening worship , 7 30 p m Mid·
week p r'oyer ser'lice, 7:30p .m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH , Do• ·
ter Rd ., Rd. longs"ille. Re-v A . A .
Hughes, Pastor. Sunday Scl'lool 10 a m .
Servtcas on TLe sdoy , Thursday and Sun·
day, 7:30p .m.
FAITH TABERNAClE CHURCH BaHey
Run Rood. Re\1. Emmett Rowson . poster
Handley Dunn , supt. Sunday school . 10
a m . Sunday e"en~ng service 7.30. Bible
teaching 7:30, .m. Thursday .
MIDOlEPOR CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , lawrence Manley ,
pastor: Mrs . Russell Young . Sunday
School Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a .m
EYen1ng worship , 7.30. Wednesday
prayer meeting . 1:30 p m
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.
Racine- Rev. James Satterfield, pastor.
Morning Worship, 9'; 45 o .m .. Sunday
school. 10:45 a .m ., eve.ung worship . 7.
Tuesday. ?:!)() p m ., laChes prayer
mooting: Wednesdoy . 7;30 p.m. YPE .
· MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST , Carner
Sixth dnd Palmer , the Rev . Mark Me·
Clung . Sunday school. 9: 15 a.m .; Don
White , sur.day School . superintendent.
John Reibel . Sr. , asst. supt. tAorning
Worship . !0: 15a.m . Vouth meet1ng, 7 30
p.m . Wednesday. including wee tots ,
eager ~"ers , junior astronauts. and
junior and senior high BYF ; choir proc· •
fice , 8:30 p ..,. Wednes day : prayer
meeting and Bible study. Wednesday ,
7;30 p.m.
•
,.. CHURCH OF CHRIST . M;ddloparl , Stn
and Main , Bdb Melton . minister, Scott
Saltsman associate
mints fer . Bible
School.
a . m.; morning wonhip ,
10:30 a . m .: evening service, 7:00 p .m .
Wednet dov Bible StUdy ond youth group
meetlnqs , 1:00 p.m
MID~LEPORt
CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE, Re-v. Jim Broome, pottor ;
Bill White , Sun doyJKhool .supt. Sunday
Khool , 9:30 a .m.; mormng wor~hip .
_10:30 a. m .; Sunday
e\langellstlc;
,_.ting. V:OO P·r· Proyer mHtina .
Wodnn dov 7 p.m
../ UNIUD ~RESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY1 Rov . Wanda Jahnson1
director; Horola Johnson. d~rector en
aduc:atlon.
• HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN. Wo&lt;·
ihlll Sorvlco . 9 a .m.: Church School .

e

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Pomeroy, OH.

9.30

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
J

992·2641

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with a laye r of 14
Mrat Gold on evely
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Affordably priced.
Backed by Swee t's
Lifetime Warranty.

John F . Fultz, Mgr.
pn. ,2- 2101
Pomeroy

Phone 992-6304

eattnor
Carry Out

116 E . Main

Phone 992 -3480

WAID CROSS
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MtddleportPomerov,

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Middleport, Ohio

K&amp;C JEWELERs·

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212 E . Main Street
992-l78S, Pomeroy

'o•-

SY RACU SE ClUSTER
Rev Stanley Merrif 1ed , Minister
' ~OREST RUN. Worship 9 o m Church
School10o.m.
MINERSVILLE . Church School 9 o.m
Worship lOam .
ASBURY · Churc h School 9·50 a m .
Wors htp 11 o .m B•ble Study 7 30 p m
Thursday . UMW fi st Tuesday
SOUTHERN ClUSTER
Rev James Clork
Rev. Mork Flynn
Re\1 . Florence Smtth
Re\1 Carl HICks
BETHANY , (Dorcas), Worsh ip 9·00
om . Church School 10 00 a .m. B1ble
study , 1st, 2nd. 3rd and 5th Tuesdays
7: 15p.m : youth fellowship , 2nd and 4th
Tuesdays , 6:00pm .
CARMEl and SUTTON (Worship Sun day School and most other a\lents held
jomtly.) Sunday School9 :-45 end Worship
11 ·00 at Sutton first and th ltd Sundays
end at Cormel second and fourth Sun·
day s. Bible Study second, fourth and fif th Thursdays. 7 :15 p .m . Family Night
Fellowship Dinner third Thursday, 6·30
p.m.
APPLE GROVE, Sunday School 9·30
o .m Worship 7.30 p.m . ht and Jrd Sun ·
-doys. Prayer meeting Wednesday 7.30
p .m . Fellowship supper f•rst Saturday 6
p m UMW 2nd Tuesday 7:30p .m.
EAST LETART . Church School 9 o.m
Worship servtce 10 o.m Prayer meeting
7.30 p .m . Wedne$day . UMW second
Tuesday 730 p .m .
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school
10 a .m .; worsh1p 11 a .m. Chotr proct1ce.
Thursday , 8p .m.
LETART FALLS- Worship service ~
a.m. Church School10 a .m .
MORNING .STAR . Waroh;p 9;30 a.m .:
Church School10:30 a .m .
MORSE CHAPEl . Chu&lt;eh School ~ 30
a. !)'I . Worship 11 a.m .
PORTlAND . Sunday School 6:30p .m .•
Evan1ng Worsh ip . 7:30 p.m Vouth
Fellowship, Wednesday . 7 ·30 p m
NORTHEAST ClUSTER
Rev. Richard W. Thomes
Duane Sydenstricker, Sr
Sheldon Johnson
John W. Douglas
JOPPA . ' Worship &lt;1:()() a .m Church
Schoo/10;00 a .m .
CHESTER. Worship 9 a.m . Church
School 10 a.m. Cl1oir Reheor1ol 7 p .m ,
Thursdays . Sible Study , Thursdays.
7:30p.m.
lONG BOn OM . S..nday Schaal al9:30
a.m . Evening Worship at 7.30 p.m . Thur ·
sdoy Bible Study , 7:30p .m .
REEOSVILLE: Sunday School 9:30a.m .
Morning Worship 10:30 a.m. E'lening
Worohp 7:00 p.m . Bible Study Wod·
nesdovs at 1:30 p.m .
ALFitEO , Sunday School at 9:45 a .m .
Morning Wonhip at 11 a .m. Vouth , 6.30
p.m. Sundays . Wednesday Night Prayer
Moeling. 7;30 ~ . m .
ST. PAUL, (Tuppers Plains}: Sunday
School 9·00 a .m . Morning Worship at
10 00 a .m. Blblo Sludy, 7:30 p.m .
Tueodav.
KENO CHURCH Of CHRIST , Otivor
Swain , Superintendent. Sunday schoOl
9.30 evel'\' woelc
HOISON CHRISTIAN UNION. Sundov
School , 9:30a.m.: evening service, 7 :30
p.m. Wednfldoy prayer mHttng , 7 :30

p.m .

p 'omeroy

SENnNE~

SYRACUSE
FIRST ' ' UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN Church . Chuoch School
I0 15 o m ., morning worsh1p II 30 a
m .. Bible Study, Tuesday. 10 a m.: Juntor
and Senior Htgh Youth Group , Sundoy, b
p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD , Postor.
Rev. John Evans . Sunday school . 10
o.m . Sunday
worship . 11 o.m :
Children 's church. J J o.m , Sunday
e..,ening serv•ce, 7:00 p m .: Wednesday
e'lening young ladies ouxtliary, 6 p.m .
Wednesday family worsh•p 1.00 p m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Near
long Bottom Edsel Hart. pastor. Sunday
school. 10 a.m .. Church . 7.30 p m ..
prayer meeT mg . 7·30 p m Thursday
MIDOLEPORT FREEWill BAPTIS T,
ner A sh and Plum: leslie Haymon.
pastor Bob Grubb, assistant pastor.
Sunday School . 10 a . m . Morn tng Worshtp 11 a m ., Wednesday and Saturday
Evening Services. 7.30 p .m
MEIGS
COOPERA fiVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Robert McGee .
in terim director
POMEROY ClUSTER
Rev. Robert McGee
POMEROY. Sunday School 9: 1S o m .
Worship service 10:30 om. Choir
reheanal 1 Wednesday , 1 p.m. Re"
Robert McGee poster .
ENTERPRISE . Worship 9 o.m Church
School 10 om Richard Rothemich .
pastor
ROCK SPRINGS. Sunday School9:15 a
m Wdrsh ip servtee, 10 a . m., R1chord
Rothemich. pastor
FLATWOODS, Church School 10 o m
Warsh ip 11 om .. Richard Rothemich ,
pastor
MIDDlEPORT ClUSTER
HEATH Church School9:30 am Wor ·
shtp 10·30 a.m UMYF b p m Robert
Rob~nson , Pa stor .
RUTLAND . Church School 9:30 o m
Worship 10.30a m . Robert Rider, pastor
SALEM CENTER. Worship 9 a m Chur ·
ch School~ 4S o .m . Robert R•der , pastor
PEARL CHAPEl Sunday School 9:30
om . Worship 7 30 p.m .
SNOWVILLE, Sunday School 9·30 o m
Worship 11 :00 o ..rn
,

Mt!

MARK VSTORE
Middleport

lHE DAILY

RANKUN"

pastor;" Oebbiej Buck . Sunday school

by ~·

PillA SHACK

BEN

supt . &lt;::hurch School. 9 15 am ., worship
servtce , 10:30 )a .m'. Choir rehearsal ,
Tuesday, 7:30 m under direction of
Al1ce Nease.
POMEROY CHURCH
OF THE
NAZARENE·~~rner Unton and Mulberry .
Rev . VtrgiiByr r, pastor . Glen McClung .

14 Karat Gold
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MEIGS nRE
CENTER, INC.

HALL'S

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' 99 Mill Street

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992·2318 P.omerov

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~·

1181·13

Tu.,d'ay

rN N. 2nd St.

Ps•lm•

Too bad we have no 1lmller instrument for measuring
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with us ... something that will only becorpe ev&amp;dent when we
confront a crisis with which we have nelthlrthe resource• nor
strength to cope.

1J8:14·20

Mlddl•port, Oh.

Ra&lt;ine949-25SO

RUTLANP APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
-JESUS CHRIST , Elder James M iller . Bible
study , Wednesday 7:30 p.m .: Sunday
School . 10 om . Sunday night ser\lica.
7 30p.m .
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOliNES S Harrisonv ille Road Earl Fields, pastor:
Henry Eblin. Jr ., Sunday School Supt
Sunday School q ,30 o . m.; Mor ning Wor~ hip 11 o . m .. Sundar, evening service ,
7:30 .m.: Prayer Meet ng Thursday, 7·30
p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHU~CH OF GOO Not Pentecostal . Rev. George Oller ,
pastor . Worehlp ser\I ICe Sunday, 9:45
a .m .; Sunday school, 11 a.m. : worship
ser\llce, 7:30 p.m . Thuradoy prayer
meeting 7:30p.m .
Ml . HERMON United Brethr~t~)i ''In
Chrl&amp;t Church Rev. Robart Sander, ,
pastor: Don Wlll , loy leader. LQCated In
fe,;as Community oft CR 82 Sunday
sc hool , 9 30 a.m Morning wonlilp 1ser ·
vice . lO·d a.m .: e~o~ening preoch lng ter ·
vice second and fourth Sundays, 7:30
p.m . Christian Endeavor . first end th ird
Sundays, 7•30 p .m Wednesday prayer
meeting and Bible atudy , ?:lOp m .
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES , 37319 Slate
Route 124 (One mile east of Rutland)
Sunday, Bible lecture 9·30 a m .: Wa f.
chtower study , 10 20 o. m .: luesdoy ,
81ble stud'( . 7:30 p m.: Thursday .
Theocratic School 7:30 p.m. Serv ice
Moe long, 8.20 p.m .
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST Church -Solem St . Rutland . Donald Kerr , Sr
pastor: Bud Stewart superintendent .
Sunday School . tO a.m.; evening wor ship, 7:30p.m . Wednesday even ing ser·
..,Ice . 7:30p.m
CHURCH OF GOO of Prophecy . located
on the 0 J. White Rood off highway 160.
Sunday School 10 a.m . Superlntenderlf
John Loveday First Wednesdav night of
month CPMA services , second Wednesday WMB meeting, third through llith
y'buth &amp;e rvice George Croyle , pastor
HOP~ BAPTIST CHAPEL 570 G•onl '
St., Middleport : Sunday School , 10a m .: ·
morning worship , 11 o. m. evening war!lhlp, 7 p. m. Wednetdoy e1,1enlng Bible
$tudy and r,rayer meeting , 7 p. m. Af ·
filiated w th Southern Bapti st Con vention
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST Ricky Gilbert , potlor ; Ste"e Pickens.
superintendent Sunday School 9·30 a
m , Church Service&amp; , 10·30 a.m .
JUBilEE CHRISTIAN CENlER Gearge't Creek Rood . Rev C. J. Lemley .
pastor: John Failure, superintendent
Church school . 9:30a.m.: morning war
ship. 10:30: e\lenlng ser~o~ice , 7 p .m. Bible
Study Thurs , 7 p .m Clones for all agel ,
Nur~ery pro..,lded for worship ser..,ices .
ST. PAUl lUTHERAN CHURCH, Carner
of Sycamore end Second Sts .. Pomeroy .
The Ra" Will iam Middlesworth , Pastor
Sunday School at 9:45 a.m . end Church
Services 11 a .m .
SACRED HEART , Re\1 Father Paul 0
Welton , pastor . Phorta 992-2825. Sotur·
day evening Moss, 7:30: Sunday Moss, B
and JO om .. Conlen1on . Saturday . 1·
7.30 p.m.
,
VICTORY BAPTISl ·- S2S N. 2nd Sl .,
Middleport . James E. Keesee . pastor .
Sunday morning worship, 10 a m ..
evening $ervlce 7: Wedntsdoy eventng'
worship, 7 p.m .: Visitation . Thursday ,
6·30p.m
TRINITY Chnstian Assembly , Coolville
Gilbert Spencer , pastor . Sunday
school , 9.30 a .m .. morning worship , t I
o .m . Sunday 8\/emng sarvice . 7·30 p m .;
midweek prayer service Wednesday .
7.30p.m.

MT . UNION BAPTIST , Rev
Tam
Dooley. Joe Sayre , Sunday School
-doy
Superlntenant. Sunday school. 9~5
llolo/1
a .m .: eyening worship , 7·30 p m Prayer
4U:5·17
m"tlng, 7:30pm . W*dnesday
TUPPUS PLAINS CHURCH Of CHRIST .
T'ltUIIdty
Vmc.tnf C. Waters , Ill . minister: Hermon
IOIIoh
This Is God's world. We are his creatures. C•n there be
Block. superintendent . Sunday School
48:1Hf
anythlng more norm1l than to seek resources and strength
9 30 a .m .; e"enlng service , 7 p.m .: Wed
Frkll'f
from Qod . . long before a crisis will test them.
nesday Bible Study. 1 p .m .
'
'
Htblewl
CHESlER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Worshipping regularly provides opportunity for building
12:1-1'
Re'l. Herbert Grote , pa Jtor . Fronk Riffle,
spiritual health.
supt. Sundo.,- School . 9 .30 a .m . Worship
S.lurdly
service, 11 a .m and 7·30 p.m . Prayer
l&lt;obrowt
meeting . Wednesdoy , 7:30p.m .
13:10.18
lAUREl CLIFF FREE METHODIST CHUR·
CH , Rev Robert Miller . pastor. lloyd
.
SYRACUSE MISSION _ ~herry St
a~d Sunday E"ening Warahip , 6 p.m . Wrtght Olr4rctor of Christian Education
Sundar School. 9:30 o. m .: Morning WorServtees 10 o.m Sunday . Even~ng , ser B•bleSt ud~ . W~nesday ?p.m
ship. 0·30 a . •m. Choir Practice . Sun ~
vices Sunday end Wednesday ot 7 .oo t:;P . SILVER .RUN FREE BAPTIS~ Re~o~ . Mordey , 6 :l0 p .m .: E\lenmg Worsh1p 7 30
"'
vm Markin , pa stor: Steve L1ttle Sunday
pm
p.m. Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study,
BEARWALLOW RIOc.iE CHURCH OF
sc hool sup! Sunday school. 10 a .m .,
7·30p.m .
d
.
mornlng worship , II a.m . Sunday
DEX TER CHURCH OF CHRIST . Charles
CHRIST . Duane War e;n m1ntster B1ble
e\lenirig worship 7 .3Q Prdyer meat 1ng
Russell. Sr .. minister · Rick Macomber
doss . 9 30 am morn~ng worsh1p 10.30
and Bible study . Tl\urtday 7:30 p m ..
r.upt. Sunday school . q:JO a . m .~ wors h1p
a m : ev~mng worship , b :30 p m Wed ·
outh service 6 .m Sunde
nesday B1ble study , 6:30p .m
y C
FEP OWSHIP 'tH RCH 383
sar\lice , 10 30 o.m Bibl e Study . Tue&amp;day,
NEW STIVERS VIl LE COMMUNITY Ch , .
HRISTII\N . Ll
C U
·
1·30 p.m
h
.
N. 2nd Ave . M1ddleport .Sundoy School.
u
5
1
REORGANIZEP CHURCH OF JESUS
JO·OO 0 m Sun ' Wed. Evening Services
ch , Su.n do Y Sc oo serviCe, q 4 om.:
Worsh1p ser'I ICe , 10·30; Evangelistic Ser m
CHRIST OF lATTER DAY SAINTS , Par·
7. 30
v1ce . 7.30 p.m . Wednesday , Prayer
· uJE·RfyP ·Ch,ristlan Church. -4 L1bart.,
tlarid Racine Road Wilham Roush.
pastor . Lindo Evans . church Je hool dlrec·
meetmg , 7 30
Ava ., Pomeroy . Sunday School 10 am .:
tar. Church school . 9 30 o.m : morn 1ng
ZION C~URCH OF CHRIST. PomeroyWorsh 1p 7 30 Wednesday Service 7 30
m
Horrtson vill e Rd .: Robert Purtell , pastor.
wonhlp
10·30 a .m .. Wednesday
Bill McElroy Sunday sc h ool supt . Sunday
p. cHESTER CHURCH OF GOD . Re v. R. E.
e'lening prayer service• . 7:30pm
BETHlEHEM BAPTIST , Rev Eari ,Shuler ,
school . ~: 30 a.m. : w.onh1p service 10·30
Robinson
astor . Sunday school , 9:30
pastor Worship ser'lice . 9·30 a .m . Sun
a.m . Sunday worshtp serv1ce . 7.30 p.m .
a .m .. worsh 1p service. 11 am . evening
Monday and Tuetday evemng serviCes,
servtce , 7:00: youth servtce , Wedday school , 10·30 am . Bible Study end
prayer ser..,ice Thursday, 7·30 p m
7.30 each evening
nesdo 7 ()() p m
ST . JOHN tufHE,R~N CHURCH . Pone
lAJGSVIllE. . CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
CARLETON CHURCH . K;ng•bu&lt;y Road .
J1mnile Evans, p!tstar. Sunday school.
Grave. The Rev. Wtl.hom M•ddlesworth ,
Robert E Musser, pastor . Sunday school.
Pastor , Church serv1ces 9 30 a m Sun·
9 30 m Paul Mus&amp;er supt · mormng
~ : 30 o .rn
Ralph Carl , superintendent ,
day School10.30a m.
~ " o·30 . un day ·even 1"ng serviCe
·
evening worship , 7 30 p.m . Prayer
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST J
worsn lp 1
,
meeting . Wednelday . 7.30p .m .
• · e• ry
7:00, m•d· week ser\lice, Wednesday . 1
Pmg l ey . pastor Sund oy scnoo 1 9 30
lONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Tam
o.m
mormng worship 10·30 o m
P m.
Rlchason pastor : Wallace Damewood
Wednesday evening serviCe, 7.30
SYR ACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THE
Sunday School Superintendent . Wonh1p
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST . Rev Earl Shuler ,
NAZARENE
Re"
James 8. Kitt le
service at q a.m. Bible School 10 a m.
pastor Sunday sc hool 9 30 0 m : Church
rustor Norman Presley. Sunday School
HYSEll RUN HOliNESS CHURCH , Rev
ser v 1ce. 7 p.m .: youth meeting, 6
perintendent Sunday school 9 30
Theron Durham. pastor . Sunday School
o m
morn ing .worship tO .45 a m .
at 9 30 a .m Morning wonl-lip at 10 30
p.m . Tuesday Bible St udy . 7 p.m .
evangelistiC ser-vtc'e 7 p m . Prayer and
RACINE CMURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Pro 1se Wednesday , ? p.m .. youth
a. r'n. Thurtdoy sar..,lces at 7·30 p. m .
Rev . Thomes H Coll ier . pastor Martha
meeti ng, 7 p .m .
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION 01 Bald
Wolfe , Chairman of the Board of
EDl:N UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Knob , located on County Rood 31 Rev .
Chmtion Life . Sunday School . 9·30 o .m :
Elden R. Bloke. poster Sunday School
lawrence GluesBncamp paslor. Rev.
morning worsh ip 10:30 . Sunday evening
10 om , Robert Reed supt. , Morn ing
Roger W•llfoosslstant pastor Preoching
worship , 7 :30 p m . Prayer meeti ng ,
sermon 1l a m · Sunday mght se rv ice~
service1. Sunday 7:30 p m ., prayer
Wednesday . 730p .m .
Christian Endeavor . '/ ·30 p m . Song · meeting Wedne sday 7 30 p.m ., Gory
RACINE FIRST BAPTtST Don L Wolker .
ser"l ce . 8 p .m .: Preach1ng 8:30 p .m
Griffith , leodeYouth groups Sunday
Pastor. Robert Sm1th , Sundav school
M 1dweek Prayer meetmg. Wednesday .
&amp;'Iaing . b·30 p.m with, Roger ond V1olet
h
1
9
30
7
p
.m
.
Alvin
Reed.
lay
leader
Willford as leaders Communion ser·
sup I · Sun d ay sc 00 • : a m .. morntng
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST l ocoted
vices first Sunday each month
worship , 10 40 am. Sunday even~ng
at Rutland on New lima Rood . ne11t to
WHITES CHAPEL , Coolville RD . Re-v .
worship
Fa•••• Ac•e Park . Rev Ra y Cl e\lenger .
7 , 7·30: Wednesday evemng Bible
Roy Deeter . pastor . Sunday school 9:30
pas tor : Robert Musser Sunday Scflool
study . :30 .
a.m .: wonhip !liBr'lice 10;30 a .m . 81ble
sup! Sunday sckool , t0.30 om ., war DANVILLE WESLEYAN Re\1 , R. D.
study and prayer ser\liCe , Wednesday
Brown , pastor Sunday School 9 30
~ htp ·1·30 p m .Bible Study , Wedne sday .
o m .: mormng worsh1p 10·45; youTh ser ·
I 30 p m : Saturday night prayer ser 7:30p.m .
vice (» .45 p m eventng worst1ip , 7·30
\l lC&amp; 7 30 p.m
RUTlAND CHURCH OF CHRIST . Eugene
Underwood . pastor: Herb Elt.oll . Sunday
~ m : prayer and pratse Wednesday ·
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN . Roger
school supt. Sunday sc hool , 9:30a.m .
30
sopu~H BETHEl (S11 R1d ) 0
Watson . pa stor; Crl?nJon Pratt . Sundoy
morning worship and camunion . 10·30
-ver
ge · uone
sc hool sup!. Morning worsh1p, 9.30o.m .;
Sydenstricker
Sr .
pastor . Sunday '"
S d
h 1
a.m.
School , 9 a m Morning Worship 10
un a.,- K oo . 10 •!)0 am .; e\lening ser·
RUTlAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH
vice 7·30
om ., Youth Service. Sunctoy ot 6 p.m.
Amos HUh pa stor . Danny Tillis , Sunday
School Supt Sunday School. C) 30 a.m .,
followed by mormng worsh1p Sunday
e-vening service , 100 p m . Prayer
meeting Wednesday . 7.00p .m .
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE . Rev . Lloyd D Grimm , Jr .
potlor . Sunday school , 9 30 a .m .. worship service, t0:30 a.m. young peoples
service , 6 p m. Evangelistic serviCe 6!30
p .m . Wednesday serv1ce, 7:00pm
The second half of the eighth chapter of the Gospel according to St.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Came• a/
Second Pastor Fronk Lowther . Sunday
Mark, E{ the heart of this lively Gospel, contains some fascinating
school. 9·45 a .m ; worship service 11
narrative.
am . ond 7:30p.m . Waelody Bible Study ,
Wednesday 7.30 p.m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST , M;iier
The less familiar verses of this portion of scripture are those
St.,.Moson, W. Va Eugene l Conger .
which tell us of the healing of the blind man of Bethaaida. This healing,
miniater. Sunday Bible Study 10 a.m .:
Worship 11 a .m. ond 1 p.m. Wednesday
unlike most of those of which we read in the Gospels, was not inStudy , vocal muJic, 7 p m .
Bible
stantaneous. Rather, the man's sight at first returned only partially.
12 Na&lt;th
liFE SCIENCE CHURCH He could see people, but they looked like walking trees. Further action
Third St .. Cheshire . Independent , fun
damental services Sunday evening 1 30
by Jesus brought him full use of his eyes.
p.m . Pastor Rev. Or . Robert PersonJ
MASON A SSEMBlY OF GOD . Dudding
Lone . Mason W. Vo . Rev . Ronni e B.
The more familiar verses in this passage deal with Peter's
Rote. Pa stor . Sunday School 9·.45 o m :
proclamation
Jesus is the Christ. Here again, ~h, is a case of
Morning Wor ship 11 a .m . Evening Ser only partial vision. Peter saw that Jesus was the Christ (Messiah}, but
viCe 7·30 p.m. Wednesday WomeO:s•
Ministrie s 9 o.m (meeting and prayer
he failed to see what_ this really means. He even argued with Jesus
Prayer and Bible S1udy 7 p.m .
when Jesus tried to explainlhis (verse 32).
HARTF.ORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. The Rev . Wl/);om
Campbell. pastor. Sunday School 9 30
Peter's problem was that he dwelt on the things of men rather
a.m .: James \1ughes, supt , e"enlng terthan the things of God . He was unable to see beyond the popular
VIC8 , 7:30 p.m . Wednesday even1ng
prayer meeting . 7·30 p.m Youth prayer
Jewish notion of tbe role of the Messiah. He was looking for glory, r.ot
ter'llce each Tuesday .
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , lo1arl. W .
for a
Va. , Rt . •1, Mark Irw in pastor . Wo rt hlp
ser'licea , 9 30 a.m. ; Sunday tchool , 11
Perhaps many of us have the prOblem of the blind man of
a .m .; evening worship , 7 •30 p.m .
Bethaaida or the prOblem of Peter: Our vision Is only partial. We see
Tuesday cottage prayer meeting and
Bible study, 9·30 o.m. Worship ser'lice .
that Jesus Is the Messiah, but we fail to see what this means.
Wednesday 17:30p .m .
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH "And when he had called the people imto him with his disciples
Walnut and Henry Stt .. Ravenswood . W
Va. The Aov . George C. Weirick , poster
also, he said unto him, Whosoever wlli come after me, let him deny
Sundoy School , 9·30 a.m : Sunday War·
himself, and take up his
and follow me. For whosoever will save
'sh1p . 11 a.m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH. now located
his Ufe s~U lose it; but whosoever shall lose his life for my sake and
on Pomeroy Pike, County Rood 25. near
the gospel's, the
shall save it." (Verses34and35.}
Flatwoods . Re\1 , Blackwood , pQstor. Ser·
vlcas on Sunday at 10:30 a.m , end 7:30
p.m . with Sunday school , 9:30a.m . B1ble
H we wiU
fully, we will
that we find ourselves only by put.study , Wednesday . 7 ~ 30p.m .
ting ourselves lait.
II'IDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH .
INC: - Ptorl St ., Middleport . Rev.
·O'Dell Manley, po1tor; Sundoy "hool.
Mark
Flyn, Bethany, cannel, Portland,
9:30a .m .; Morning worahlp 10:30 a .m .:
evening wonhip , 7:30 p.m . Tuesday ,
and Sutton United Methodist Churches
12:30 p.m. Women'&amp; prayer Meeting:
Prayer and proiM service, Wednesday ,
1

s

Sermonette

thfll

cross.

cross,

same

see

see

w.

7:30p.m.

MOUNT Olive Community Chur ch,
lawrence Bush poster: Ma JC Folmer , Sr.
Supen nt endent Sunday School and mar - ·
ning worsh ip, 9:30 om . Sunday 8\/en lng
service . 7 p m , Youth meet1ng ond Bible
study , Wednesday , 7 p.m.
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy byposJ. Rev . Robert Sm1th, Sr .,
pastor . Rev . James Cundiff assis tant
pastor . Sunday School , 9 30 a m. mar·
ning worsh ip 10 30 a. m ; evening wor ·
ship , 7.30 . Women 's Fellowshi p ,
Tuetdays . 10 a . m .. Wednesday night
prover service. 7 30 p m
' FAITH BAPTISl Church . Mason, meet
ot Un 1ted Stee l Workers Union Hall ,
Railroad Street . Mason. Morning wor ship 9:30a .m .. SundoySc:hool10:30a m .
Evening Serv1ce . ? .p.m. Prayer meeting
W*Ctnesday . '/ ·30 p .m Mid-Week Bible
StUdy, Thursday . 'I p.m,
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rev . Nyle
Borden, paslor
Corneliu!l Bunch,
Juperintenden1. Sunday sc hool q,30
a.m ; second and loTJrth Sunday s war ·
ship service at 2·30 p.m
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST .- Fourth and
Moin St ., M•ddleport . Re.., Cal"''" Min nis po t ter . M rs . Elvi n Bumgardner .
t iJpt Sunday school , 9&lt;30 o m , worsh ip
service, 10 -45a ,m
BURliNGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH . Route 1 Shade Pastor Don
Block . Affiliated with Southern Soptist
Con"ention . Sunday school . 1.30 p .m .:
Sunday wonhtp , 2:30 p .m . Thursday
e-vening Bibl e study . 7 p m .
PENTECOSTAL ASS£M8l Y, Racine .
Route 124 , William Hoback . pastor. Sun day school . 10 a .m .: Sunday evening ser·
vice . 7:00p.m . Wednesday evening ser.
viceat7 .
CARPENlER BAPTIST , Dan Cheadle
Supt. Sunday School 9 30 am . Morning
Worship , 10:30 o.m. Prayer Ser1,1ice ,
alternate Sundays .
MIDDlEPORT PENTECOSTAl
Thkd
th e Rev Clark ~oker pa sto r Ca r l
Nottingham , Sunday School Supt . Sun·
day School 10 a. m . - classes lor all
ogeJ : Evening se r\l ices , 6 00 Wed ·
neadoy Study , 7:30p .m. Youth serv1ces .
7:30p .m . Friday .
ECCLESIA FELlOWSHIP, 128 MUI 51.
Middleport. Pastor i&amp; Brother Chuck Me·
Pherson. Sunday School at 10 o m. Services Sunday e\lenlng at 7 p .m . end Wes:f· '
nesdoy at 7 p .m
/'

A"•·,

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 5, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Pomeroy student to 'be ln spelling bee
Lincoln Htll, Pomet·oy If, for any
reason, Ml.ss Carr cannot attend the
county spelling bee, Tosha will
1epresent Pomeroy Elementary
School
Room winners are as follows :
Grade 4, Mrs FISher - Nancy
Baker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs
Larry Bake1·, East Locust St.,
Pomeroy, and Todd Smtih, son of
Mr and Mrs. Robert Smith, Locust
St , Pome1·oy
Grade 4, Mrs G1bbs - Cary Betzmg, son Of Barbara Betzmg, OsbOrne Street, Pomeroy, a nd Joey
Roush, son of Mr. and Mrs Lee
Roush, Umon Avenue, Pomeroy.
Grade 5, Mrs. Hysell - Todd
Powell. son of Mr. and Mrs Larry

Lesley D Carr will represent
Pomet oy Elementary School in the
Metgs county Ctllzens Journal
Spelllng Bee scheduled for Tuesday,
March 9, at the Salisbury Elementary School.
She ts a ftfth grade student of
Mary M Hysell Th1s year's winner
IS m a umque sttuattOn tn that her
mothet, Donna M Can, as a seventh g1·ader m 1960, won the countywide spelling bee and represented
Me1gs County m Colwnbus at the
state compet1t1on Lesley and her
mothet live on Osborne Street tn
Pomeroy
The school runner-up was Tosha
O'Neil, a sixth grade student of Mtss
Re becca Tnplett Tosha 1s the
da ughtet Of Mtke and Judy O'Neil,

Powell, Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, and
Laune Wayland, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Jenmngs Wayland ,
Ebenezer St , Pomeroy.
Grade 5, Miss Tate - Lesley Carr
and Momca L Tut·ner, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Turner,
MulbetTY Avenue, Pomeroy.
Grade 6, Mrs Hussell - Lisa
Newman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs
William Newman, Htgh St ,
Pomeory, and Ktm Calvert,
daughter of Mr and Mrs Ralph
Calvert, East Mam St., Pomeroy
Grade 6, Mrs Tnplett - Cyndra
Nttz, daughter of Mr and Mt·s Doy
Ntlz and Wendi Kloes, daughter of
"Mr. and Mrs. Jon Kloes. Both gtrls
bve on Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy.

Meigs ·county COAD nutrition program
Wednesday - Baked chtcken,
cranberry sauce, dresstng, m1xed
vegetables, pmeapple cr1sp, bread,
butter, rrulk.
Thursday - Liver, escalloped
potatoes, parsleyed carrots, she rbet, bread, butter, tmlk.
Fnday - Baked steak, bulleted
noodles, cooked cabbage, peaches,
hot roll, butter, mtlk
Coffee or lea and a ch01ce of whole
m1lk or buttermilk served dally
Please register for lunch, Pomeroy
992·2161

g1·een beans, tonJato/Iettuce, apple
clisp, mtlk
Tuesday - Soup beans/ham,
tossed salad, deviled eggs/lettuce,
oranges, cornbread, butter, rrulk.

The Me1gs COAD semor nutntwn
p•·ogram menu March 8 tht·ough
Match 12tncludes
Monday - Cheesebut·get on bun,

Pomeroy correspondence
spent the weekend here w1th Mrs
Pearl Jacobs
Mr s. Evelyn Young is
reCI.!peratlng at home followmg
hospitaltzahon at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Mr and Mrs Keith Van lnwagen,
Powhatten, has been here Vlstting
his parents, Mr and Mrs Ernest
Van lnwagen
Mr. and Mrs. Wtlliam Jacobs and
granddaughter, Tara , Colwnbus,

March 5, 1982

Helen Help Us

CARD OF
THANKS

Shocked by X-rated shower cake
BY HELEN AND SUE BOTfEL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE
Fnends of our daughter gave her a
brtdal shower Except tl was a bruleand-groom shower and men were
also mvtled.
When they bt·ought out the "hiS
and her" cakes I was appalled
These obsceml!es evtdently came
from an X-rated bakery- a woman
m almost non-ex1stent black lmgerie
and a man w1th a deftmte leer and
little else on
Everyone laughed and adtmred,
but I fell affronted What has happened to good taste•- SHOCKED
DEAR SHOCKED
Perhaps 11 was m the cakes. not on
them -HELEN
SHOCKED
Smce only you were affronted,
whtle your daughter and her fta nce
approved, maybe obscemty Is Ill the
eye of the beholder - SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE
, 11 never understand what 1nakes
some people lick, specifically, " Hurt
a nd Deftant " wl10 resented sendmg
tlJank-you notes to people who
brought g1fL&lt; to a ·no gtft" recepbon

Cg1ven for tht• couple by her motherto-law)
Another tnstance. I held a aby
shower for a netghbOr. Her husband
prov1ded me w1th a lengthy hst, 111cludmg people I'd never met The
young w1fe needed a cr1b and mal·
tress so n13ny fnends brought or
sent generous cash donations, m ad·
dillon to loveiy g1fts.
I ~ave the honoree names and ad·
dresses of all gue~ts Not one person
on that hst ever rec.e1ved a thank·
you, as far as I've heard CDon't
blame tgnorance - she knows better')
Should I call them and apo!og1ze
for my ne1ghbor?
EMBARRASSED AND MIFFED
DEAREMB
No '
You aren' t responsible for the
young wolllan's ehquette lapse.
!Though you may be responstble for
a fnendshtp lapse 1! she "sees
through" our colwnn changes and
rcco~mzes herself I
In a case hke th1s, all you can do 1s
- shrug - HELEN
EMBARRASSED AND MIFFED
. Or possibly tell your netghbor

The LARRY W
RUPE Famrty of the
Rutland • Langsvtlle I
area e:xtend the.r BP"
prec1at1on to everyone
en the surround1ng Oh10
vvest V1rg1n1a area
who responded 10 our
time of need when our
home wa s destroyed by
ftre January 10th of
thes
year .
Speceal
thanks
to
the
employees of Moun ·
ta1neer Power Plant,
New Haven, West va
we can best e:~e press
our gratitude w1th ' th1 s
' For I was hungry
and you gave me meat.
14 was thtrsty and you
gave me dnnk I was
naked and you clothed
me You came unto
me .• .Inasmuch as you
have done th1s unto one
of the least of these my
brethren, you have
done tt unto Me "
Quoted from Matthew

tlt3t people 11ave mentioned her " n()t!Jank-yous." Wouldn't th1s be ktnder
tl1an public cnllctsm 111 a newspaper
eolwnn • - SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE
What's wrong w1th verbal " thank
yous" at a shower. why does et1quetle dema nd that you aot only tell
people how much you love- thetr g1f·
ts, but also wrtte 1t•
All 1n favor of changmg th1s s1lly
rule. say " Aye" - TIRED OF
WRITERS' CRAMP
DEAR TIRED .
Sorry, our vote ts " Nay"
Tile only posstble substitute for a
wrttten " thank-you" ts a personal
telephone call after the shower this to very close fr1ends I
Our words for tardy 'honorees
Don't procrastmate - apprectate !
-SUE AND HELEN

25 35,36, 40

_,,,,,

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

~

21 Bu smess Oppor tuntt y
21 M oney to L oa n
23 Pr ofess•on AI Scnnces

1 Cord of Th ank s (pc=ud tn c"' dvanceJ
2 Cilr d of Tha n ks (patd ' " r.dvrtnceJ

J Announc em ents

51 Household Goods
52 CB TV&amp; RadiOEqutpm ent
53 An ttqu es ·
54 Mt sc Merchandtse
55 Butfd tng Suppltes
56 Pets for Sa le
57 Mu sc ta l Instrum ents
58 Frutls &amp; Vegetab les
59 For Sale or Trade

-4 Gtveawav

5 Happy Ad s
6 Lost and Found
7 Yard Sale (pa td •n itdvancf•J
8 Publ 1c Sa le

31 Homes tor Sa le
32 M ob• le H om es f or Sa le
JJ Farms f or Sa le
34 Bu stness Bulldrngs

&amp; A u c t ton
9 Wanted t o Buy

Classified pages cover the

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 Real Esta te Wanted

E mlnayment
services

litHtals

11 Help wa nt ~d
12 Sttuatl on W anted

JJ Insu rance

17 Mtscell aneous
IR Wrtnfed To do

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS ,
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
Case No 18100
Robert E Mtller,
Pl a tn t tff,
- vsMethodtst
Chur c h
of
Rutland 01110 aka Rutland
Untted Method tst Chu r ch,
et al
Defendants

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

To Ira Graham , Lau r a G
F lor ence Stout
Park er
Carne Htg ley, Wtlllam
Nobles. " Nicholas Nobles
E liz abeth Tayl or, Jenette
Grant.
Elmer
Loga n
Homer L oga n. Byron W
Holt, M aude Holt , Denn1s
Holt, L.u la N Humphrey
E lmont Stevens aka E
Stevens, William E St an
sbury , Hannah Garen, E m
men Standbury , E mma
Stansbury, Ltzzte Dutton,
Har vey Stansbur y, W arren
Sta nsbury, Julia Bellows,
Mrs M ar ion Cline, Mrs
W1llt a m Lann1ng , Mrs
Oar 1us Black , Mrs George
V Lasher Geor ge Stan

sbury , Martha Ann Shep
pard . J ett a Littl eton ,
Walter Strout, Bert ha Stout
aka S'e rtu~ Stout, Oliver
Stansbur y, Mel zer Stan
sbury , PM
St ansbury ,
Mrs Carne Hooper , Wil ber
St ansbury,
Martha
M agraw, Mary E Gt lmore,
Robtna Barton , Charles H

Lucy

S

Graham . Pear le Gra ham

ThOmpst&gt;n c

H

Thorn

pson , Cl atre
Gra ham
oante l s,
J
Dan1els,
Charles Holt, Gett L tt

tieton, MethOdiSt Church of
Rutland , Ohto aka Rutland
un.ted Methodr st Church,
Bapt tst Church of Rutland,
OhtO aka Rutland Free Will
Baptist Church aka Golden
Rule Free Wtll Bapt1s1 Con
terence, Chrt st •an Church

of Rutland , Ohio aka
Rutla nd Church of Chr.st,
Inc , B1ble Method ist Chur
ch of Rutland, Ohio, for·

merly known as Rutland
Com munity Church, and
t he unknown heirs , next of
ktn, devisees, legatees,
e&gt;&lt;ecutor.s, admtntstrators,
guard tans , successors,
asstgns and spo!JSes, If any,

of

Angle

Nobles,

Ira

Graham, Laura G Parker,

.

Florence Stout, Carr ie
Higley, W1 l!lam Nobles,
Nicholas Nobles, E; Hzabeth
Taylor, Jenette Grant,
Elmer Logan, Homer
Logan, Byron W. Holt,
Maude Holt, Dennis Holt,
Lula N Humphrey, Elmont
Stevens aka E Stevens,
Wi!l1am E Stansbury ,

__:P..u==bllc

Hannah Garen Emmett
Stansbury, Emma Stan
sbury, L 1ZZ1e Dutton, Har
vey St ansbury , warren
Stansbury , Jul ta Bellows,
M rs Manon Cline, Mrs
W rl ltam La nn 1ng, Mrs
Dan us Bl ack, Mrs George

V Lasher, George Sian
sbury, Martha Ann Shep

pard, J etta Littleton.
Walter Stout Bertha Stout
aka Bertt e Stout Oltver
Stansbury, Metzer Stan
sbury , PM
Stansbury,
Mrs Carne Hooper, Wtlber
S t a n sb ury ,
Martha
Magraw. Mary E Gilmore,
Robtna Barton, Charles H

Sta nsb ury ,

Lucy

S

Graham, Pearle Graham
Thompson
CH
Thorn
pso n, Cfatr e Graham
Oante l s,
J
Dantels ,

Charles

Holt, Getl L• t

ti eton, and t he unknown
su ccess ors .
ass ton s.
trustees, rece1vers and
con fer ences tf any, of the

MethodiSt

Churc h

of

Rutla nd, Oh 10 aka Rutland
Untted MethOdiSt Church,
Baptt st Ch urch of Rutland,
Ohto aka Rutland Free Will
Baptt st Church aka Golden

Rule Free Will BaptiSt Con
terence, Chnstian Church

of

Rutland.

Oh1o

aka

Rutland Church of Chnst,
Inc end Btble Methodtst

Church of Rutland, Oh1o,

th e Nobles Farm wh tch
conta tned 100 acres
Also desc rtb e d
as
fol lo ws
B eing
th e
r ema1 n1 ng portton of the
follow tng descrtbed real
es tate wh tc h •s loca ted east

of the Noble summ1t Road
CToiNnshlp Road T 1741.
begt nntng at a stake 64 rod s
east of the west line and 20

rods north

the south l1ne
of Section No 1. Town No
6, Range No 14 of the Oh1o
Company 's
Purchase,
of

thence east 153 and 21.1: rod s,
thence north 104 rods, then
ce west 153 and ~ rods,

thence south 104 rods to the
place of begtnmng, con
fatntng 100 acres, more or
less. m Rutland Townshtp,
M etgs County, Ohto and
known as the Nobles Farm
Except tn g 10 acres, more
or less, as conveyed by
warranty deed dated June

1 14

The ob 1ect of the Com
pl ai nt is a partttton actton
concernmg otl , gas and
other mtnerals, eKcept
coal.
underlying
the
followtng descrtbed real
estate

of

Situated 111 \he Townsh1p
Rutland, County of

Metgs and State of Ohto,

and described as follows
Being the property wh1ch
was reserved by Donald H
M•ller and V1olet Miller •n
a deed to Oavtd Bumgard

ner and Shirley Bumgard
ner, dated December 13,
1972, wh1ch was described
as all of the rea! estate
located east of the Noble
Summit Road, being ap
proximately 20 acres, more

or less. The aforesaid 20
acres IS part of the real

estate formerly known as

Larry E Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Metgs County
Common Pleas Court
By Marlene Harnson

Deputy
(2 ) 26, (3) 5, 12, 19, 26. (4) 2
Public Nottcc

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
DAVID L BUMGARD·
NER and SHIRLEY J
BUMGARDNER ,
Plamt1ffs,
· vs·

METHODIST CHURCH
OF RUTLAND, OHIO, aka
RUTLAND UNITELl
METHODIST CHURCH , et
al ,
Oefendan•s

Referen ce Deed Volume

ds oC Me1gs County. Ohio
and the prayer Is that the

Pomeroy

985- Cnester

343- Portland
247- Letart Fa lls
949- Racene

882- New
895- Lelart
937- Buffalo

742- Rutland

Up to 15 Word s Three day
Up to 15 Word s One day

tnsertton

Up to 15 Words

tn ser tt on

StK day

~~~:~~~fif~;J.~,~i;~~~tl

successtve ,,

weeks The last pubC.cat•on
will be made on Apr il 2nd, 1 Krlow'n
1982, and the twenty e1ghl 1urlkn'ow'n
(281 days for answer Will

respond as required by the
Ohio Rules of C1V1I
Procedure, judgment by
default will be renaered
against you for the reC.ef

l:i~~~~~r~~;

Public Notece
th erefr om all coal leased to
the Maynard Coal Com
pany and John B Downtng

coa Company Also alllhe

lowpr o.,Tril ti'l of (Oil l unli t' r

sa td desc r,bed land Al so
three fourths of the Otl gas
oth er
m1nera1 s
a nd
thereunder and the e:x
~stve rtghts to lease satd
property f or' coal, 011 , gas
and other mine rals, wtth
the nght to mme and Obt.a111

the

sam~

but gra nl1ng the

r1ght to r emove the rMI
It ft 10 t" +' upppr strata nt
coal on satd tarm after the

Maynard Coal Company

has removed all the coa l
gtven under thetr lease,
th e refrom
All
as
here tofore e:xcepted reser
ved and granted, and be10g
the sa me property con

veyed by E Stevens,
Executor of the Estate of

Ang1e Nob les, deceased
and Lulu H Humphrey to
N1l e
McGutre
and
Margaret McGu1re, by

deed dated Apr.l lS,

192~ .

and recorded tn Book 125,

PaQe 552, Deed Records of
Me1gs Coun!Y, OhiO EX
CEPT CNG THEREFROM

the f ollowtng
Tract 1 Beg inning at the
southeast corner ot the
farm above descnbed ,
thence north 128 feet to the
south line of the New York

Central R41lroad r.ght of
Way , thence north 62 and

114 degrees west «)() f eet
along the south ltne of sa1d

r.aht of way, thence north
sorh degrees west 200 feet
along Slltd south l1ne of sa1d
nghf of way , thence north

40 degres west 300 feet
along sa•d south line ot sa1d
rl ~ht of way , thence north

21 ;, deQr ees west 65 feet
along sa td south ltne of sa td
nghf of way , thence south

24 3/ 4 degrees west 230

feet , thence south 77 114
degrees west 196 feet ; then
ce south 75 degrees west

case Num 18106 and 1S pen

feet to the south ltne of sa td
proper ty above described,

of

the Com

pla tnt ts a part1t1on actton
concernm9 otl, gas and
ot her mtnerals
e:~ece pt
coal,
und erly tn g
the
,tollowrng descnbed real

182 fee l, thence south 433

thence east 1180 feet along
the sa1d south line to the

place of I beg1nnmg, con
tatnlng ten (10) acres.
or less
2 Beg tnntng at a

the north r.ght of
York Cen

Co!'"P.·•ny and

The follow1ng descn bed

prem1ses, situated ,n the

es
tate
T ow
nsh•f
of Rutl a nd ,
County o M etgs and St ate
of OhtO
Beg1nntng at a stake 6"'
rOds east of th e west hne
and 20 rods north of the
south hne of Section No 1,
Town No 6, and Range No

14 of the Oh10 Company's
Purchase, thence east 153

and 2/ 3 rods, thence north
104 rods, thence west 153
and 2/3 rods . thence south
10~ rods to the place of

begtnn.ng, containing 100
acres, more or less, en

Rutland Townsh•P, Me,gs
County, Ohio, and known as
the Nobles Farm
Excepllng and reserving_ f-e,,r.;:,;;·.c:or•veve·d·ii;ivv;

Pubhc Not1ce
Gtbson, et al
to
H
M alco lm a nd Mildred
In gra m , d ee d dat ed

Fe bruary

B.

1946,

I

less
Deed Reference Volume

33

15
16

34
35

10
11

1

'

f

M • 1nl""'"lll

' POMEROY,O .
992·22 59
RUSTIC HILLS
Syracuse - 3 bedroom,
bath, range, rer, elec
tnc heat, appro:x
23

acre lot sp7,500 00
PEARL ST., MID·
DLEPORT
2

bedroom·bath, range,
washer, dryer, appro:x

Trad ing co , Spr.ng Valley
Plaza, 4-46 802S
Easter Candy Pnces, $1 60

ALL STEEL

BOGGS

BUI~INGS
S1zes start from JOx24"

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Utility Buildings

US Rt. 50 East
Guysvrlle, Ohio

S1zes lrom 4 To 6 and all
wood buildings 24x36
Insulated Oog Houses

Authoru:ed John Deer.
New Holland, 8\Jsh Hog
Farm Equtpment

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Dealer

Rt l , Bu 54
Racine, Oh

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1 3 lie

Ph 614 843-2591
6 15 tfc

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

H. L WRITESEL

ROOFING

Custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbeng, electnc, and

All types of roof work,
new or repair gutter and
downspouts ,
gutter
cleantng and painting.
All work guaranteed

heating

FREE
ESTIMATES

Free E st1mates
Reasonable Pr1c es
Call Howard

P-H. 992·6011

9-49 2263
949·2160

20 tfc

MARCH
PERM SALE

2 24 lie

I
I
I
I
I

Wed , March 31

Reg no
Now S17 so
Reg S2S
Now S2l SO
Reg. $30
Now S27.SO
S35 Wave Lenlh
For Longer Hair

I' .

Now S29.SO

Kay's BeJUIJ Salon
169 N. 2nd
Middleport

tall992-2725
3 J 1 mo

Gerald ·Reuter

SOUTHEAST
CONSTRUCTION

Shoohng Match every Sun
day IPM, Gall •a Counly
Coon Club, Kr.ner Sand
Hollow Rd
For

bulk

delivery

of

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum S1d1ng
elnsulahon

PI PLEASANT BABE
RUTH LEAGUE now
ta~1ng appllcai!Ons tor J Jr
League M anagers and um
plres
Wrtte des1res &amp;
4\Jalrftcahons to M el Ross,

2605 Garfield, Pt Pleasant,
WV. by Ma rc h 15th

olo&lt;iri&lt;al ....

VVIndows

Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance

(f•H frt•mdH)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992 7314
Pomeroy, Oh1o
930-llc

On February 22, 1982, '"

the Me1gs County Probate
Court , Case No 73667

LAFF · A · DAY

qarden $32.500 00
PORTLAND - Mobile

AUCTION

home plus 21f2 acr es 2
bedrooms $1 1,000 00
T3 acres vacant land
WOOded w•th cleared
tfutldtng s1te and good

TOOLS-FURNITURE
COOKWARE
MISCELLANEOUS

access $8,000 00
SYRACUSE- Carol St
- Double wide on a

SATURDAY, MARCH 6, AT

baths. equ,pped kit ,
elec heal 532,000 00
~ YRACUSE - Carol St
- 3 bedrooms, bath,

ANY PERSO N who has
anythtng to gtve away and
does not offer or attempt to
off er any other th1 ng for
sa le may place an ad tn th ts
column Ttier e will be no
charge to the advert1ser
wtth gr ay marktngs, one

white &gt;with

c ali c o

markt ngs, one all calico

6:30P.M.

watef heater

GARAGE

I f em ale black Labador
spade, very good wtth
ch tl dren Ca ll 388 8745 after

5PM

2 bathroom si nks Sears 42
gllllon electric
wat er
heater thaf needs some
repa1r Pick up load of
scrap lumber 742 2460
Bluett ck

found

tn

TNT

area Phone 304 675 3512
Ful l

blooded

dachshund

ma le to good home PhoQe
304 675 3187

a1r, cha m ltnk fenctng

•

~1 9 , 500

AT
RUTLAND GYMNASIUM

NEAR MEIGS MINE
OFFICE - 3 bedrooms,
bafh,

space

ref , range,

wa ter.

•

on

heaters,

L CC D

appro:~e

1

acre SlO.OOO 00
'
REALTORS
Henry E Clelllndr\lr
GRI
rl''Hltl
Qolf1e 5. Turner 992· ~92
Jean Trussell 949·2660

JA[B

CARPET
INSTALLED
With Pod
Starling AI

$12~q.

BRASS, old

Wnte M 0 M1ller. Rt 4,
Pomeroy , Oh Or992·7760
CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 14"

on largest

end S1 2 SC per ton Bundled
slab
$10 50 per ton
OeltYerd to Ohto Pallet Co,

Ro c k Spr ings
Pom&lt;rOY 992 2689

Rd

Gold, Sti v er, st er lin g
tewelry , rt n g~, old co1ns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar

ber Shop, Midd leport 992

3476

- - - - .--

tron, brass, or wood KIt
chen cubb'ards of a ll types
Ta bles , round or squ ar e
Wood Ice boxes Old desks

and bookcases Will buy
complete household Go ld,
sil ver, old money, pocket
watches, chai ns, rings, and
etc lndtan Art1fact s of ali

types Also buying baseball ·
cards Osby Martin 992 :
6370
Wtll do baby sttlrng tn my
home f or pre sc hool chlid
Aft er 5 or before noon 992

2772

lh to 3;.. acre of land nea r

c1ly {within 5 to 10 ml!esl. ·
city water

Phone

after

5 30. 304 675 2760

VERY frt endty, blaCk, 11

6

L051 andFoUriif

LOST Tac htm1ne gut tar on

Rf 588 Reward SSC Ca ll
446 3428
WST

Stbenan

Huske y

{male) mostly dark gray
w1th wh1te markmgs, one
br own eve &amp; one blue eye,
answers to ' KeeGee' safe to

•

Robert E Buck

Probate Judge/
Clerk
(2126 (3) 5, 12. 3tc
54

EXCAVATING
MD

CONSTRUCTION

Mise Merchandtce
Oor:er &amp; backhoe ser
vtce, water, sewer,
ponds,
foundations ,
"reclamation

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949·2293
or 949·2417

PR~EDRIGHT

3 3 tfn

REESEif,J;
TRENatiNG
SERVICE·
Water·Sewer·E iectr,c

Gas l-Ine OIIChes

See Mr Goodwrtnch

COMPLET E
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From

Hl!llter

the

FRONT- END
ALIGNMENT

Smallest

Core 1to

...- ..., WlthGenu1ne GM

the

Largest RadiatOr
Rad1ator Specialist

NATHAN BIGGS

t

35 Yrs EKpenence

y'

Part_s•_

j..J.....-

• ...,.,............

.

---

~oclern

-·

..- - - .-,

Electncal

Equipment
SIMMON'S OLDS .CAD.·CHEV., INC.
Ph. 992 6614 ·

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174
2·26 lie

t_l _ _!!_!!P. wanted _

~

Babvsttter In my home for
1 child, S days a week, light
housework,
r ef e r en ces

please CalC 446 1423

Why settle tor less Sell the
best Sel l Avon For more
lnformatton cal f 446 3358
Babysitter to care tor 3
month old Man th ru Frl ,
prefer so meone

$4~q. Yd

ROll END

IIUIIAIITS

Call en oung
For Fast service
985·3561
PA.TS ANO ll"VICE
ALl MAKES
•WnMn

eory•n

•Oittlwa.Mn

eMetW•t., Tlft~l

9! He

Rummage Sale Fnday
thru Sunday A Frame on

Rt 248 near Lon g Bottom
Oh
I

Public Sale
&amp; Auc:t1on

the Hartford Community

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

_,

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

The 0 0 Mcintyre Park
Ot stn ct ts now accepting
apphca t rons for su m mer
employment Pos1t1ons In
elude
Summ er
playground dtrec tor s, Day
camp d1rector, Na tur e.
program director, Swim
m tng
I nstru c tor,
Rec r ea tton leaders and
Rec reation atdes
For
more 1nforma t•on and to
obtatn an application
or stop tn the Park Ot strl ct

l

Announcements

Center Sale time, 7 p m ,
Th•s week we ha'Ve a truck
load of new mercandlse
Used tools and other used

merchand ise

con

Slgn'ments of new and used
merchandtse welcomed
Rtchard Reynolds auc·

Mneer Phone 304 275 3069
9

Wonted to Buy

OHCce

Call 446 4612, ••

tens ton 76

Around OH ID Magazme IS
look in g f or a medta
representative for th e
Gttllla County area to han
die
a d ver ti sing
and
edt fona ls Please wnte or

ca ll
Ar ound
OHIO
Magazme, 1035 Wa lnut St ,
Coshocton, Oh 43812, 614
623 8133

GOOD used ba thtub, phone
304 458 1042

GET VA LUABLE traonong

WANT ED sma ll puppy for
childs pet, 304 67S 5123

some grea t gifts as a Sen

JUNKED

cars,

gloss ,

baseball c llrds, scrap
metals, aluminum ca ns,
transm tsslons, motors, ba t
tenes, radiators, 011 well
dnlhng btts , tungst en car·

e~ a young b\Jslness person
end earn good m oney plus

t tnel route carrier Phone
us rtght away and get on

the eliQ iblllfy li st a t 992
2156 or 992 2157

------

Tra ctor Treuer Ortver
Must be 25 years or Older
Must have 8 years eK
penence Can be home

•excavating

* bock hcwt

Racine F.re Dept sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sat nights

• septic systems
• water, Hwer

6·30 p m, Bashan Factorv:

choke 12 gauge shotgun .

•dump truck
•llmesfilnt

waste paper, cardboard,
raw furs, hides, o•nstng

Gun Shoot PI Pleasant
Gun Club Jencho Rd
every Soturdoy 7.00 PM,
every Sunday 1 00 PM 22
rifle and PistOl match Sun·
day Sperler barrelConly

and yellow root Harper E)(pertence d
Auto
Halstead S•lvage Co 300 Mechan•c E&gt;&lt;perlenced In
Eleventh St, Pt Pleasant,
tune up Air con
304 675 5868 Also flea
1
tng and heat1ng
market ope n Monday
Box 743, Pomeroy,
through Friday. ! Sp m
45769

I gao lines

lk•~··~-·
~ --·
PH. !ltZ-7201

"eDII.....t

446 8272

YardSale

Auctt on Fr l , Milrch S at

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

...

........

7

lmm ~dtl!lt e
open.ng fOr
bass
pl ayer
tn a n
es ta bft shed country rock
band
E xper1 ence and
equ tp m ent
ne cessary
Sertous mqulres only Ce ll

,.,If

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

.CONTRACTING

swers to name of Suste In
Rocksprtngs ar ea 992 5875

'

Call for free s1d1ng
We have a full
2
In Memoria m
' S~pl•c Tanks
estimates, 9-49·2801 or
cerllf1ed
county
wMehOuse of good
In Mmory of Beatri ce
949 2160
Roush Lane
Frost
who departed th1SIIfe
No
sunday
caus
selections and excneshore, on
t en years aoo Always a
Ph
3'7-7560
tra good prices on
smile mste~ d of e frown,
3 11 tfc
lfc
alwllys a hand when one
our carpeting.
was down Always true and
.;.•••llll!•llll•••••-l:::;:;;:::::::;;;::::j;::::::::::~ faithful
and kind,sheWon
derful memories
fell
behonp Husband WaIter
Rubberback
WE HAVE A
ond faml!y
J&amp;F
WGE
CARPET
SEUCTIDII Of

Starting At

Lost full blooded fema le

beegle 4 years old An

308 E Ma in ' Pomeroy,

-:;p•

Central

BEDS IRON

furnttur e, gold, sliver
doll ars, wood 1ce boxes,
stone 1ars, antt ques, etc,
Compl et e
househo ld s

OLD FURNITURE , beds

Roger Hysell's

Water Lme Hook· ups

utility , new furnllcf and

A ntique corner cupboards,
other antique cupboard rn
any cond 1t1 0n Ca ll 367

----

C&amp;M

MID-SPRING SPECIALS

level lot 3 bedrooms, 2

Locust fence pos t Call 379

2436

'" the v•clnlty of Sl Rt 554
and 160 Phone 388·9334 af
fer 6PM

CALL TODAY'

JOORTLAND - Approx

Call446 7758

~-----------------~-----------------+------------------18953568

614·992· 2182
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel · ' It's ten o clock Do you k,_
whereyourw11l power Is'"

Land on l and contract 1 to
10 acres In Ga ll 1po1ts area

r equ1red

POMEROY
LANDMARK

bedrooms, bath, uftltty ,
ra nge, B G forced atr
heat, storage butldtng,

cas h

BAM to 5PM References

bedrooms
l'h bath ,
family room , d tnmg, full
Qasement, fully in

sulated, gas F A heat,
garage 50'x l00 lot .
$37,500 00
TUPPERS PLAINS - 3

buy

Ia

reg,ster Call446 2240

,_*_fr;_e;_e;_c:..:o;_n.;.su'-l'-ll"-n.:::g_______. month old, l nsh Setter &amp;
1 Labrador, ma le pup 304
·

WIUIAM D. CHIL1lS
DON E. MULLEN
JDHN f. MUSSER .
CHARLES B MULLEN
MICHAEL L C~ILDS

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ANN LITER ,
D E C E A S• E D
Case No. 23667
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

~oppe r
Gallipolis Block
co, 123 112 P1ne St , 446
2783

5626

Scout Camp
Chester, Oh
*short game pract1ce
• Pro Golf less on s
for all ages
• Repair cfeanmg
refen1 shl ng,
n ew
gnps,
length change, wetght
change
•fastservlce 2 28· 1 mo

_,lumbiftl ond

auto bod ies, and cars Ba t
teries, alumtum , brass &amp;

0138
Giveaway

4

8 mo old ma le Ca ll 245

YO NG'S
~.,..,won

• Storm Windows

TOP PRICE Scrap Metal

Wan ted

112 yr old Ca ll446 2222

-loofinjlnd "'"" ....

• Storm Doors

4&lt;6·0069

Gun Shoot Rac tne Gun
Club Every Sun starting
at 1 p m Factory choke
guns only

8wk old pupp1es, m 1xed I

225-1 mo pd

-U...,. ond 1omodolln1

Bill Gene Johnson,

9303

outSide pel Coll446 8647

FOR AN
APPOINTMENT

CARPENTER
SERVICE

We pay cash for late model
clean uM d cars
Fren chtown Car Co

992 2181, Pomeroy, Oh

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-------------------1~-------------------+--------------------~ Male-bl-ac-k--He~-do-g~l

WE'RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BETTER

Trad,ng , Spr.ng Valley
Plaza 446 8025 or «6 8026

Female Husky, good with

992-2490

CALL : 992·6323
2 19 1 mo pel

Buytng
Gold ,
Stiver,
Pl at. num , old cotns, scrap
nngs &amp; stiYerware OatiY
quotes availab l e
Als o
corns &amp; cotn supp11 es tor
sale
Sprrng
Valley

Wanted to buy JU nk cars or
wrecked ca r s Phone 388

kids and good watch dog,

PHONE

Insurance Work
Wtnd, Water, or F1re

Oh10 Call 446 2282

gasoltne, heatmg otl and
dtesel fu el c.!!r ll Landmark,

All female Call388 8510

INCOME
TAX
SERVICE

•Rooftng&amp; Gutter
•Vmyl5idi ng
•Carports / Patio
Covers
•Concrete Work
• Room Addlt1ons

model used cars Smlth
Bu ic k Pont1ac, Galhpol ls

, Valley Plaza Callol-46 2134

THREE CATS One Wh1te

lhru

ISC'XSC' 101 $26,900 00
PEARL ST , MID ·
DLEPORT
3

Public
&amp; Aucl!on

•

Turkey Hunters We heve
mouth calls, slllte box
calls, camo gear &amp; decoys
1n stock Spnng Valley

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

{3) 5.12.19 26, (4) 2,9,6tc

TERMS OF SALE : CASH OR CHECK
~
WITH POSITIVE J.D.

FREEA $2,00 detail brush,
with the purchase of a
pa'"l kll.
l-5· 1 mo. pd .

Valley Trading co , Spnng
Va lley Plaza,~ 8025

Public Not1ce

Oeputy

SHERMAN TILLIS: OWNER
LONNIE NEAL: AUCTIONEE:R

BRAKES·TUNE · UPS
OVERHAULS·
DIESEL-EXHAUST
Open Mon ·Sat. 9·5
3 5 1 mo

-spray
- brushes

Ftsh.ng L1cense on sa le
Come and see our new st'llp·
ment of 1982 Ftstng ROd s,
Reels, &amp; Lures Spnng

approach REWARD Call
446 4998 or 446 3112

the Complal~t w•lh1n
ds of M e tQ ~ Cou nty Oh1o, swer
e1ght days , ~ fter the
thence south 23 deg r ees twenty
east 225 feet a long the cen last p\Jbhcat ton t of tht s
Whtch ~t il be
fer of sa•d road , th ence not1ce
ubl tshed once e h week
south 15 deg r ees 08 ' eas t for
s1x
success•
v weeks
139 tee t a lonq the center of
last publicatn::n will be
Stl •d road, th e place of The
beqtnntnQ tor lh +S dcscrt p made on Apr. I 9, i982, and
the twe ntY, e1ghl !lays for
tton
t hence south 77 answer
wtll commence on
d eqrees 40 west 200 feet
that
date
th ence south 1 degree 02
In case of your failure to
eas t 139 5 tee t, t hence nor
or
otherwrse
th 73 degrees 34' east 200 answer
espond as requtred b't the
tee t parallel , and 15 fee l rOhtO
Rul es
of
Ctvtl
fr om the south end of a
dwelli ng house, to the cen Procedu re, \Udgment by
Wtll be rendered
te r to Road No T174 , then default you
for the relief
ce north 1 degree 34 eas t agatnst
anded tn the Com
125 feet a long the cen ter of dem
sa td road to the place of plamt
Larry E Spencer
beqtnntng, conta tn 1ng 61
Clerk of Cour'ts
acres, more or lt&gt;ss
M etgs County
ALSO EXCEPTING 1 14
Common Pleas Court
acres conveyed by deed
recorded m Volume 153,
BY Marlene Harr tson

S&amp;KAUCTiON

- paint

- mirrors
- plaques

Owners

8

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

AGENTS:

I

Date March 2, 1982

All Home Repairs
Tra1ter Roofs and
Underpenn ing
PH . 992 3872
3 .4· 1 mo

• New Roofing
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
215- lmo

You are requtr'd to an

Page 490, Me,gs county

-statues

WallS, Chimney Repair

Mon., March 1

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh . 45769

arttttoned , that the tn
ferests be set off o ordered
sold 1f tt cannot~ be par·
ttttoned , for an a lowance
of attorney fees h rem and

costs

20 Years E•perlence
Plurribtng, Carpentry,
Roofing,
Electrlc~l.
Cisterns, Cement, Stone

PRICE REDUCED -

H ousing
H eadquarters

,j
above descnbed ~state be

130, Paae 703. Deed Recor

ALSO EXCEPTING
AND RESERVING unto
the Grantors all of the

14

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

ATOZ
HOME MAINTENANCE
AND REPAIRS

Immacul at e 3 bedroom
home Nt ce carpetm g,
formal d lntng, hot water
hfat. fu l l basement, 2
rentals, garage and cor
ner lot
Now on ly
$65,000
S9,()00 ()() S rooms,

all floods
OFFERS WELCOMED
CALL 992-3876

Vol 230. Pa ge 703, Mcogs 252, Page 4-47, Me1gs Coun
County Deed Records
ALSO EXCEPTING the ty Deed Records
to llowtn q
rea l
es tat e and the praxer
that the
s1 tuat ed tn Rutland Town

Deed Records

12
13

18
19, _ _ _ _ __
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29 ' - -- 30
31
32

• Replacement

coal
fu r nace,
c 1ty
uttl tttes, and 3 lots out of

and

sh•p, M e1gs County, Ohto
Be.ng 1n Sect 1on No 1, and
beq1nn tng tor r eference tn
the center to Road No T17.4
on the north line of a 100
acre tr ac t of
lan d
desc nbed 1n Det•d Book

17

FINANCING

bath, full basement w1th

r ecorded .n Me1q5 County
Deed Records, Volum e 155,
Page 543 Deed Ref erenc e

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Ph 949·2160 or 949 2412
7 5 tfc

yrs full pnce $32,500
S9AIOO 00 - Seven room
home, bath, natural gas,
ctty w ater, panelmg,
carport and out Of htgh
water tn Pomeroy

1nserTton

PH . 742-2753
351fn

Rick &amp; Bill Cogar

CASH PAID for cleon, late

~~=;~~~~~~~~~=~;::;;;::~j~=======~=~ lbD1' sSlCraft
sc lb for ful l case
Supply , Spnng

These cash rates

On Sta te

large lol $5.~ 00 down,
$363 42 at 10% lor ten

667- COOI\IIIIe

JIM LUCAS

TOM HOSKINS

bath, full

- Remodeled 10 room
home and shop Natu ra l
gas furnac e, c1 ty water,
carpetrng, woodburntng
fireplace, basement and

992- Middleport

446- Gafhpol•s
J67- Cheshlre
388- Vtnton
245- RIO Grande
2S6-Guyan Otst.
60- Arab1a D1st
379- Walnut

Rutland , Oh10, aka Rutland
UMed MethodiSt Church.

The ·obtect

published once each week , \\attu)dl!it

commence
'&amp;hatfailure
date to
In case ofonyour
answer
or
otherwise

of

dmg 10 the Common Pleas
Court of Metgs County ,
Pomeroy, Ohto 4S76Q

thts nottce which wtll be
(6)

Ch ur c h

et al , Defendants Tht s ac
flon has been assigned

230, Page 703, Deed Recor

StK

Stevens, aka E Stevens,
Wil ham E
Stansbury ,
Hannan Ga r en Emmett
Stansbury , Em ma Stan
sbury, Ltzzte Dutton, Har
vey Stansbury, Warr en
Stansbury , Julie Bellows,
Mr s M anon Cltne, Mrs
Wt l ltam L annmg, M rs
Da nus Black , Mrs George
V Lasher , George Stan
sbur y, M artha A nn Shep
par d, Je tta Ltttle ton ,
Walter Stout, Bertha Stout,
aka Bert1e Stout Oliver
Stansbu ry, Me lzer Stan
sbury, P.. M Stansburv.
Mrs Cane Hooper , Wtlbur
Stan sb ury ,
M artha
Mag ra w, Mary E Gtlmore.
Rob1na Ba rton, Charles H
Stan sbury,
Lu c y
S
Gr aham, Pea rl e Graham
Thompson, C H Thom
pson, C l a1r e Graham
Dan1 els .
J
Dan te ls,
Charles Holt, Gett Ltt
tieton, and the unknown
ass1gns,
su cce ssor s,
trustees, re ce tvers and
confer ences, 1f any, of th e
Ch u rch
of
M ethod tst

Rutl and, Oh1 0, formerly
known as Rutland Com
mun tty Church
You are hereby nottft ed
that you ha ve been named
defendants tn a legal actton
entttled Davtd L Bumgar
dner and
Sh trley J
Bumgardner . Pletnttffs,
vs Methoch st Church of

252. Page 445 and Volume

for

Lula N Humphrey, Elmon

Methodist

Book 153 Page 490, Deed

twenty e1ght ( 28) days af
ter the last pubC.catlon of

Loaan
Hom er
L nqr~n ,
Bryon W Holt
Maude Holt, Oennts Holt\

Bapttst Church of Rutland ,
Ot·uo aka Rutland Free
Will Bapttst Church, aka
Golden Rule Free Wtll Bap
t ts t Conference. Chnst1an
Church of Rutland, Ohto,
aka Rutland Church oi
Chrtst, Inc , and Btble

Records of Metgs County,
Ohto
E:xcepttng
61 acres.
more or less, as conveyed
by deeQ whtch es recorded
In Deed BOOk 252, Page 429,
Deed Records of M e1gs

above described estate be
partttiOned , that the tn·
terests be set off or ordered
sold u tt cannot be par
ttfl oned, for an allowance
of attorney fees herem and
costs
Vou are reQu tred to an
swer the Complaint w tthtn

Public Nottce
Elm er

Rutland, Oh10, aka Rutland
Umted Me thod iSt Church,

more or less, as conve.yed

County , Oh•o

OhiO 45769

DATE Feb 24, 1982

by deed dated June16, 1945

Methodist Church, et at ,
defendants Tht s action has
been ass tgned Case Num
ber 18100 and IS pending tn
the court of common Pleas
of M etgs County, Pomeroy ,

United

.n th e Com

acres.

which ts recorded •n Deed

Rutland

__ _

E:xcepttng 2 acres more
or less, as conveyed by qutt
cla1m deed dated June 25,
1934, wht ch ts recorded '"
Oeed Book 137 Paoc 610
Deed Record s of Metgs
County, Ohto

fo rmer lv known as Rutland
commun1ty Church, you
are hereby noftfted that
you have been named
defendants tn a lega l actton
en t1t1 ed Robert E M tller,
pl ai ntiff vs
Methodtst
Church of Rutl and, Ohto

aka

demanded
platnf

Not• ~

26. 1928. wh•c h IS r. corded
1n Deed Book 126 Page 294
Deed Records of Me~gs
County, Oh10

Except1ng

OWNER

(Average 4 wc,rds per l.ne)

_ _ .f'~ b_!!( NptrCe __ _

Public Notice

St ans bu ry

61 Farm Equ,pmen t
62 Wanted to buy
63 LI'I/CStock
64 H .:~y &amp; Gratn
65 Seed&amp; Ferttl 1zer

.41 Houses for Rent
.42 M ab1fe Hom es f or Rent
.43 Fa rms for Rent
.4.4 Apartment for Rent
-45 F urn tshed Room s
46 Space for r en t
47 wanted to Rent
48 Equ 1pment for Rent
49 F or Lease

Jd·Bu stn ess Tratntng
15 School s 1nst ruct10n
16 Rad to, TV &amp; CB Repittr

81 Home Improvement s
81 Plumbtng &amp; Heattng
83 E:xcavattng
84 E lecncal &amp; Refrtq eratton
85 Generrtl Hauling
86 M H Repa tr
87 Upholstery

Me1gs County
Area Code614

Sfl!lcllffy"

)Wanted
l For Sa le

Route 7 Some level
land, old fa rm house,
and other
butldtngs
T P wa ter, 2 bedroom
mob•le hom e and some
land fenced

following telephone exchanges . ..
Ga lha County
Areil Code 614

a,

"Small Jobs A

li

by Jesus

18 ACRES -

71 Autos for Sate

Trucks for Sa le
73 Vans&amp;4WD
74 M otor cyc les
75 Boats &amp; M otor s
76 Auto Parts &amp; Ac ces sor 1es
77 Auto Repatr
78 Camp1 ng Equtpm ent

•Water &amp; GIS Lines
•Spring Developments

• Rooftng of all types
eStdlng
eRemodehng
• Free est1mates
• 20 y rs exper1ence

basement, , hot atr fur
nace and large lot Take
over loan wtth the
req utred down and ad
1ust ments

'

n

•Mobile Homo Sites

And Home Matntenance

reasonable 3 bedroom
ho m e
newly
redecorated
lnstde
Modern bath, automattc
7 rooms,
2
heat
bedn~o m s
down
one
large one up 3 car
garage, carport &amp; porch
co mb tna t1 on
Large
level lot
COUNTRY - N1ce 3
~edroom frame home,
good carpettng modern

PHONE 992-2156

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

and ceram1c5
--banks
- planters

Phon•--------------~--

VIRGILB SR
216 E. 2nd st.

kitchen
p ... . . . . . . . .

271 W. Mam, Pomeroy

Addr••-----------------

) Announcement
) For Rent

POMEROY ,
OH IO
PH .
992 · 2063
STOP and look at our
fine selection of plaster

(Formerly Bare Metal)

Nam•~--------------~

TEAFOR

Or Write Daily Sentmel Classifted Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Oh1o 45769

. . . . . ...

-~-----

I

Reel Eatete

ntture and AnttQues of all
ktnds, call Kenneth SWllln,

AA4-31S9 and 256 1967 on the

1nc lude d1scount

CGOT A PROBLEM•jor a subJect
for d1scusston, tw()-gen~rat1on style•
Direct your quesbons} o etther Sue
or Helen Bolte! - o~ both, If you
want a combtnatton motherdaughter answer - m fOre of thts
newspaper.)

9
Wanted to Bu
WANT TO BUY Old fur

e'Venmgs

Wr ite your
ad ·and order by moll with this
coupen Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

the Chnst of Narareth.
Hearftett thanh s I rom
the
Rupes - Larry,
Beverly, Jason, A1mee
and Jeremy

The

: Business. Seni.ces

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I
own

Phone
H 614 )·992·3325
•
JUST LI STE D - N1ce

The- Daily, Sentinel

..

Ohio

2-14-1 mo

b•de,

h1gh

speed steel,

every nigh t 985·432S

------,.-

-----~

�Sentinel
44

They'll Do It Every Time

L~dy

to live in and keep
hoose tor elderly lady . Call
.w4·19l0.

Plncrest care center, for

rriole patient, JO.I-675· 59~1
or 614·-w6·9727.

Situ1tions Wanted

woman to live in &amp; care for
lady . Also household
duties. Prefers one with
car. Call.w4·1930.

Have room, board, and
laundry tor elderly person
in my home . 992·6748.

ll

Insurance

SANOY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance

coverage in Gallia County
tor almost a century .
Farm, home and personal

property

coverages

are

aveilable to meet in·
divldual needs. Contact
Foster Lewi!, agent. Phone
379·3318.

lS

Schools Instruction

Oi's Craft Supply, Spring
Valley PloJa, 446· 213~. X·
sll1ch headquarters, ALL
colors OMC. Free lessons.

f'

Karate the ultimate in self
defence all private- lessons,
Men, women, &amp; children.
Instruction thru black belt.
Also available.. Karate
uniforms puching and
kicking bags, and protec·
nve equipment . Jerry
Lowery
&amp;
Associates
Karate Studio,
143
)iurlington Rd .• Jackson,
Oh . Call 286·3074.

11

Miscellaneous

Cake
Decorating ,
Specializing in Weddings,
Anniverslty, al l occassions.
Cal l 675,1553.
,,

Wanted to Do

Bookkeepillg and or typing
in home. Jr . Accounting
oegree. Call.w6·9260.
Custom
woodwork,
planing, molding, nic nacs,
end some repair. Call 446·
2738 day and 466·3201 after
8. c
Will do babysitting in my
home on R1. 35. Ca II 446·
,9457 .
WI LL do housecleaning
and babysitting, 304-675·
6070.

21

~==========::::::!:::;=====~
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

41 .

TRI · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . Gallipolis. Price
reduced, used mobile
homes. CALL .w6 7572 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMIOS
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868.
12x60 2 bedroom . Buddy
mobile home . Set Up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rura I
water, close to town, finan·
cing available. Phone 446·
1294.

1 acre with mobi le home,
water, cellar house, wash
house, utility building. Will
sell with or without mobi le
home or visa versa . Call
367-0218.
New82 Elcona 70x14, $1.000
off. 1964 champion ~4x20,
DBL·Wide, $7,995 . 1978
Hillcrest 70xl4, $9,995 . 1973
Fleetwood 65x 14 $5,995.
1965 Castle 55x10, $3,495.
Call 446·9662 or 446·348 .

1972 Buddy mobi le home
trailer. furnished. l / 2 acre
land. Natu :-al gas, rural
water, Cheshire area . Call
367·7718.
2 Bedroom trailer 10x50
with tilt out. 3500.' Browns
Tra iler Court. 992·3324

Business
Opportunlly

In Chester area . 2 acres
Clgare11e
Vending with 14 x 70 3 bedroom
Business. Call304·773·5651.
mobile home with large
room built an w ith wood
F ro'nt
porch .
·OWN your own Jean -- burner .
:sportswear or Infant· Storage building . Areator·
.Preteen
Store ,
Jean septic system . Or will sell
·Program
(a l so
Shoe , trailer seperale. $22,000.
'Athletic Shoe Store). Of· 614·985·4395 .
fer ing all nationally known .
·brands such as Jordache, USED MOBILE HOME .
,Chic. Lee, Levi, Van· 576·2711 .
.derbilt, Ca l vin Klein,
Wrangler over 100 other
brands . $7,900 .00 to MOBILE HOMES MOVED
'519,500.00 includes beg in· Licensed &amp; insured. Call
304·576·2711 .
ning inVentory, airfare fOr
1 to Fashion Center,
training. fixtures. Grand For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
'o pening Promotions . ca ll trai lers, furnished, with
Mr. Kostecky 1612) ~2 - 0676 air . Call304·773·5651.
EKI. 3.

22

Money to Loan

REF INANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
ra te. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . State St ..
Athens, Dh . 592·3051.
'ZJ

Professional
Services

Plano
Tuning
&amp;
Repalr .Ca ll Bi ll Ward tor
appointment.
Ward's
Keyboard, ~46 - ~372.

c&amp;

L Bookkeeping. Com·
plete bOOkkeeping and tax·
service for business and in·
dlvlduals.
Carol Nea) 446·3862
Piano's tuned and serviced . Ca ll Bob Grubb, 446·
4525.
STARKS Tree &amp; Lawn Ser·
vice. all types trimming &amp;
remova l, insured, 304·516·
2010.

: 31

i 1972 Concord Mobile Home,
• 12x65. Call
;5:30 p.m .

~46-7015

LOT CLEARANCE SALE
$1 ,000 to $3,000 off on all
homes. New 12ft. wide, all
electric, 2 bdr ., S7,995. New.
1411. wide, 2 bdr .. $9,995 .
12xSS 2bdr .. $4.995 . Also in·
traducing the highest
energy efficient home ever
buill, 14x70, 3 bdr., l 112
bath, with 2x6 sidewa ll s,
ful l y insu lated, R·factor 23,
ceiling, 20 in wa ll 21 in
f l oor , Check anywher no
other home is insu lated this
good , 10%down and low
bank financing . Ail State
Modular Homes . Half way
between Huntington and
Pl . Pleasant on 51. Rl. 2.
304 ·576·2711
NEW Moon 12x55, 2
bedroom, furn ished, gas
heat. air conditioned. un·
derpenning, carpet. North
Pl . Pleasanl, $5500.00 304·
675·2195 .
1972 12X65 Schultz, · 3
bedroom, gas heat, par·
lial ly furnished . Call 675·
2907 .
Ux70
SKYLINE,
two
bedroom, all electric, cen·
trala ir . 304-675 6986 .

Homes for Sale

after

: ~ bedroom house tor sale.

•RI . 3251oward Rio Grande .
:call 388·9676.

•.-----------------

~eeautlfUI brick &amp; frame, 3
~~room

home w/scenic
wood · burnlng
fireplace, forma l dining,
:central air w/heat pump.
' L~nscaped,
1 acre lot
·wtfenced In back yard,
$.45,000. Call.w4·3766.

,View,

New Income Limits. If you
earn between $9,000 to
$15,000. a year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobile home)
tor as lillie as $135. mo. No
down payment. Call 992·
703~.

House·27 acres. Eagle
Ridge Road. Price reduced
lor quick' sole. $37,500. Also
2 bedroom house trol ler
$1,800.
House Meadowbrook Ad·
dillon 3 bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air, basement, 304·675·
1542.

Houses for Rent

RIGHT DOWN TOWN ·
Newly
decorafed un ·
furnished, 3 rm house .
Suitable for single person
or retired cquple. Garden
space, deposit &amp; references
required. Call 440·0.450 or
.w6· 1291.
Furnished house, 41 rooms,
near HMC. $200. water
paid, one child acceptable .
Caii&lt;W4 - ~16 after 7PM.

5 room house, porch,
basement, $150 mo. Call
675·5104.
home, just redorated. Call
446·2570.
Furnished 3 room cottage
in tc.wn. One lady . or a
married couple please .
Deposit required a l so
references. no pels. Call
446·2543 .

45

1981 ALL ELECTRIC 12'
WIDE,
2 BEDROOM
mobile home setting on lot,
ready to move Into. $8995 .
10% down, BANK FINAN·
CING AVAILABLE, . 304·
576·2711 .

54

For Sale Beautiful floor
model console stero, AM·
FM 8·track &amp; record
player, $300.00. Call 379·
2314.

Furnished Rooms

500 bales of hay and 3,000 fl.

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

46

of lumber . No checks. Call
388·8483 or 1·471 · 1472.

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large l ots . Call
992·7479.
47

For sale 1967, 10x43 mobile
home, one bdr., with gas
furnance . Also truck cam·
per sleeps 5 with furnance.
Also coffee tab le and 2 er.J
tables with wooden frame
&amp; glass top . Ca II 446·7525 af
ter S.

Wanted to Rent

Farm with house, tillable
acreage in Gallipolis area .
Call446·8381 or 367 ·7141.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Centenary, 2bdr .• private
lot, ref. &amp; dep .. Sl60 mo.,
adu lts. Call614·643·2644.

49

Two·2 bdr . mobile homes.
D~q . &amp; ref. required . Ca ll
256·1922.

USED
MUELLER
Climatrol Fuel Oil Fur ·
nace. 100.000 BTU. Ph. 992·
7815atter6p.m .

Misc. Merchandice

'
Plastic
Septic Tanks. State
and county approved. 1,000
gal. tank, price $340. Other
sizes in stock, haul in your
pickup truck . Call 614·286·
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel.

Unfurnished 2·3 bedrooms
near Holzer Hospital. $265
mo. excluding utilities.
oeposit
&amp;
refer;nces
required . Call446·9307.

Household Goods

SWAIN
3 ' bedroom u~furn ished
·~-.. ~. ..
RNITURE .&amp;
apartment. $215 .00 monlh,
62 Ol ive .St.,
plus utilities. SlOO deposit. !Gallipol is.
nice bedroom
Ttiree credit references
· gas &amp; electric
required.Court51reet. Call rang es,
5
used
446·0088 for appointment to refrigerators, 2 new frost
see apartment.
free ref rig . at $275.00, 3
1
I iving room suites
2 piece liying room
l
bedroom unfurnished
$140.00, love seals
apartment. 992 - 5~4 or 992·
•un "' wood diner set with~
591~ or 304·882·2566.
lc••pt·a in chairs (new)
linoleum rugs 9x12
1 bedroom furnished apt .
owl lamps $25.00,
992·5434. 992·5914 or 304·882·
maple rockers
2566.
.
new &amp; used wood
from $60.00 to
3 room furnished Apt. ~~~~~~;;several chest anp
Utilities paid . No drunks or rl1
variety of silver
dope, no pets. John Sheets. stone cook ware, 4 utility
3&amp; miles South of Mid· kitchen cabinets,
TV' s,
dleport .S R.7.
dine! sets, beds, desks, and
lOis more. Open lOam to·
3 room furnished apt. 5pm, &lt;W4·3159.
Utilities paid . 356 N. 4th St.,
Middleport.
Westinghouse dryer, 3 tem·
peratures, $80. Kenmore
S room and bath furnished auto washer, 2 spd., $90,
Apt. No pets. Deposit guaranteed. Call 256·1207.
Call256' 1207.
requ ired. 992·2937.
Hardwick 36 in. white Gas
Apartments. 675·5548.
range. Very ,..,,.,.j con·
dillon . $50. 992- ~
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes ,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis. Dinette set 6 chairs S60., 8
fl . truck topper good con·
614·446·8221 or 6'14·245·9484.
dition $100., antique milk
TWIN Rivers Tower Apart· can $20., baby swing, bath
ments for the elderly. 200 . and rocker seal all $10 .,
Second 51. Pl. Pleasant, An twin mattress and back
board,· slightly used $20.
Equal Opportunity Housing
Phone 304-675· 7436 .
304·675·6679.

THREE room furnished
apartment. clean. pri\late,
adults only, references. 703
Ma in, 304·675· 1591.

2 bdr ., First Ave ., historic

42

51

Three room furnished
apartment, Adults . 2216
Mt . Vernon Ave. Point
Pleasant. 304-675·1902.

1970 mobile home Elcona
w ith e)(pando. Large lot in
Mercerv ille. Call .4.46·0827
after 5.

A~rtmemt

lor Ron!

PRIVATE duly Nursi ng, at

12

Friday, March 5, l982

Ohio

Backhoe for sale . Sanders
Auto Sales
1st. &amp;
Sycamore, Gallipolis. Call
446·8640.

For Lease

Dried walnutsfor sale. Call
446·2738 .

2 bdr .. adults only, no pets.
furnished, 322 3rd . Ave .
Gal lipolis. Call 446·3748 or
256-1903.

Firewood
split
and
delivered, $35 pickup load .
Also taking orders for next
year. Call388·9823.
51

14x70 J bedroom · trailer,
tota l electric . Call388·9313 .

Household Goods

Masonary bricks 36't steel
LAYNE ' S FURN ITURE
door with frame ~·~ 1973
Seta, chair, rocker, at· Chevrolet PU . Ca11 .w6·
toman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa, 8649.
12x60 2 bedroom , un ·
chair and lo\leSeJit, $275.
furn ished, $175 per mo.,
Sotas and chair~ priced
i100 dep .. Gas &amp; water fur ·
nished, no pets. Call 4.46·
from $285. to $795 . Tables, 2 pump jacks and 16 fl.
$38 and .up to $109. Hide·a· wooden pick, $125. Bolens
4745 or 446· 1630.
beds,$340., queen size, 5380. rototlller attachment for
---~----Recliners, $175 . to $295., lawn mower, $250 . Call 367·
2 bdr. trai ler furnished,
Lamps from $18. to $65 . 5 7257 .
adu lts on ly, Brown Trai ler
pc
. difettes from $79., to
Park, 992 ·3324.
S385. 7 pc ., $189. and up. Couch &amp; matching chair in
Wood table with 4 chairs, good cond., 2 end tables &amp;
Nice 1 bedroom furnished $219 up to $495 . Desk $110. lamps. Price $230 . Call 256·
mobile home. 9 m ile from
Hutches, $300. and $375., 6215.
Pomeroy on Rt . 33 . Phone maple or pine finish .
for appointment 9'92·7479 ,
Bedroom suites · Bassett Antique wood burning
.Oak. S675 ., Basse11 cnerry, Home Comfort cook stove
2 bedroom mobi le home $795. Bunk bed complete w/o ven . Call245·9241.
complete l y
furnished . with mattresses, 5250. and
Uti lities paid . Deposit and up to $350. Captain's beds,
Fergu_son
references
required . $275 . complete. Baby beds, Massey
599 .. Mattr'esses or box bulldozer diesel, 7 fl. blade.
Adults only . $250. 992·3647.
springs, full or twin, $58., wench, good cond., $14,000.
Call.w6.-2522 after 5.
3 Bedroom · furnished firm, $68. and $78 . Queen
$195.
5
dr.
chests,
$49.
sets.
Mobile home with washer 4 dr.· chests, $42. Bed
Excelsior Oi l Co., 636 E .
and dryer on private lot. frames. S20.and $25., 10 gun Main
St., Pomeroy , Ohio.
Deposit required . No pets .
· Gun cabinets, SJSO .• dinet· 992·2205.
949·2253,
te cnairs $20. and $25 . Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or· 3 piece bedroom ' suit. 992·
4 bedroom, central air and thopedic super firm, $95,
heat, city water, firepl ace. baby matresses, S25 &amp; S35, 7610
unfurnished except kit· bed frames $20 S25, &amp; $30.
chen . 5300 month plus Electric fireplace , gun
Oak firewood . Cali675·27S7 .
utilities. Reference and cabinet, Living room suite,
deposit
required .
In wood table &amp; 4 chairs .
Fuel Healer. all electric lit
Racine. 949·2293 .
Used ·
ranges,
refr igerators, and TV's. 3 with blower $300. Warm
For rent 3 bedroom trailer" miles out Bulav ille Rd . morning coal stove, like
new $250. Topper for small
with 2 car garage, kitchen Open 9am to 7pm, MarL
truck $75. pressure canner
thru
Fri.
,
9am
to
5pm,
Sat.
furnished, $250 per mo.
$20. Phone 304·576·2069 .
446·0322
plus deposit. Call 304·576·
2708.
GOOD
USED
AP · LIGHT dresser and book ·
case bed, $60.00, 304-675·
PLIANCES
·
wasners,
TWO bedroom mobile
refrigerators, 2844.
home. nice porch &amp; garden dr ·•e rs,
Skaggs
Ap ·
area, good lac a tion, phone ranges.
pliances,
Upper
River
Rd.,
TWO pair l adder jacks, one
304-675·3030 or 675·3431.
beside Stone Crest Motel. shingle cutter, one craf·
.w6·7398.
tsman wood lathe, one
TWO bedroom trailer for
Craftsman met• I lathe, one
rent, Hereford Lane, Apple
used Furniture 2 sofas, 4" Craftsman shaper, 304·
Grove, 304·576·2103.
Cannonball maple bed, 675·1205, ca ll after 3:30
Queen mattress and box p.m .
44
Apartment
springs . Cbrb1n &amp; Snyder
for Rent
Furniture, .«6· 1171.
55
Building Supplies
2 bdr. apt. HUD excepted,
kitchen furn , utilities par· late mode l GE auto. Building materials block,
tially pd . , exCellent washer, perfect shape, brick, sewer · pipes, win"
location . Call 675· 510~ or $110. Electric ' range, real dows, lintels, e-tc. Claude
nice $110. Cal l .w6·818l or Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
675-7284.
446·2674.
Call245·512l .
1

KIT 'N' CARLYLE .,;.

Larry Wright

75

•
· ·~

41
· 5 room house with bath.
lot near Racine. 992·

M1'sc Merchand•'ce
~
·
Used tires. Hanshaws Tires
on Lucas Lane. Call 675·
7360.
or..

bedroom house. Call 67Sc

Wl.

..

I WA!&gt; AFRAID

~OMETHINIS' L.lKE
THI~ WOULD ·

IN THE

M.OUt.IT'AifJ~,

HAPPE:N.

THE WEATHER
HA!&gt; TUR~SD... .

Boatsand
Motors for Sal~

1974 BYU Chrysler boat
and motor with trailer. 15
ft . 60 h.p. Skiing ac ·
cessories included. In gOOd
condition . $1100. 992-3819. ,

56

Pets lor Sale

2 AKC Reg . Collies $75 ea.,
1 female Cocker spanit-1
spaded &amp; housebroken $50.
Call446·6310.

&amp; Accessories
76
Auto Parts
1
ay
ran
. Windshield broken? Clll
Good mixed hay for sale. Southern Glass. Insurance
Francis Andrew985·3593.
claims welcome, free
mobile service available.
Call446· 1011 .
MIXE;D hay, Jack Roush,
304·882·2079 .
73 Matador for parts .
Phone 304-576·2225.

..
~

H

&amp; G.

77

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

78 Ford Fiesta 45,000M,
exc. cond., $2,800, 536
Jackson Pike, Apt. 85B .

DRAGDNWYND,
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. · AKC
Chow puppies ,
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call .w4·
38~ after 4 p.m .
·

1981 Dodge 024 PS, PB , AM·
FM casselle, white &amp; red,
sharp, $4,900. Ph. 256·6862
cr 256· 1142.

HILLCRESt KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, c lean
indoor ·outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg. Dober ·
mans. Call446·7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
setters,
A K C Gordon
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call 388-9790.
AKC Registered Beeg les .
See Benny Wilson, Racine .
949·2543.
DOG·1 year old, registered
English
Bul ldog with
papers, . price negotiable,
call614·992 ·2807.
57

Musical
Instruments

Micromoog Synthesizer 77
model, 32 note key board,
excellent condition. Ca ll
Nicka1~6- 092l.

Framus bass guitar with
large amplifier, exce llent
condition . $250. 614·949·
2660.
LOWREY organ, very good
condition, recently ser·
viced. Cost $2000., asking
$800. phone 304-675·5304.
PEAVEY bass amphlifier
and guitar, like new, both
for $500. or wi II sell
separate, 304·675·3978 .
PIANO, upright, call 304·
576·2765.

51

Fruit
&amp; Vegetobles

Black raspberry plants
$5 .00 per dozen . Call 367·
7637.

For sale 1978 Chrysler Cor·
dOba automatic, AT, PS,
PB. air, cruise, leather in·
terior, low mileage . Must
sell. Call245 · 58~1.

1965 Mustang automatic,
pony interior. 289, Aew
front shocks &amp; air shocks,
S1.600. Ca ll 446·4408 .
1972 Chevrolet Impala,
good condition, S450. Call
367·7822.

1980

Bof1neville

diesel

20,000 mi ., $7,400 firm . Call
446·8310 .
1980 Toyota Corolla Tercel,
AM· FM, air, auto., radials,
15,000 mi les, $3,795 .00 . Call
4-46· 1724.

1967 Plymoutn Fury. Runs
gOOd, $350 . 992·3702.
1977 Cutlass Supreme
Salon, p.s., power windows,
p .b., reclining buckets, T·
Top, 'Velour interior. Like
new. $3,800. or best offer .
992·6362.
1977 Mustang 11. Good con·
dition. For information call
992 ·5771 after 5 p,(n ,
1980 Ford · Pinto, 16,000
mi'les. 4 cyl., 4 speed, like
new. $3600 . 992·7892.
1981 Ford 1700 tractor·25

hp. 4 wheel drive, p.s. 3 pt

hitch . Used one summer .
Includes 5 ft. Ford rear
mower and woods post hole
d i gger. $9100. 614-985·4290.
1980 Monza, V·6, A speed,
sun·roof, AM ·FM 8 track .
$4500 . 614-949·2045.

- -----

61

Firm Equipment

JIVIDEN '.S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
446· 1675
Special Sa le on NEW
LONG TRACTOR!
Mode l
HP
Price
260-24
$4924.00
31G- . 28 559~.00
31G-4x4-28 7072.00
36()35 6~5. 00
460-41.9-7353.00
460-4x4-41.9-- 9619 .00
51G48.$-7778.00
51G-4x4-48 .$- 9886 .00
51G48.$-- 8450.00
61G64 9314.00
61G-4X4-64 - 11,304.00
·
Plus Freight
Sale Date March 13, 1982
CALL NOWI
Extra good John Deere
manure spreader with
power lake·off. Used very
litt le, S300. Call.w4 · 42~l.

HARTS Used Cars. New
Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock .
GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS
many
sold
through local sales, under
$300 .00 . Call 1-714·569·0241
for your directory on how
to purchase. Open 24 hours.

CHECK US OUT Guaran·
teed automative repair, 35
years experience. Garage
behind Arcade on Court 51.
in old G &amp; J alley. LOW
rates. Call446·9159.

STUCCO PLASTER I NG
textured ceilings commercial and residential,
free estimates . Call 256·
1182.
PAINTING · interior andl
exterior,
plumbing,"
r oofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs . exp. Call388·9652 .

--

CarPenter
work,
remodeling, &amp; roofing. Call
367-0194.

vans&amp;~W.D.

73

excellent condition, 304-675·

For sale 79 Ram Charger~­
wheel drive . Call 388·99'11
or 388·8623.

Livestock

Turkeys, hens ready to
Phone 304-576·2216.

l~y .

Dairy
Herd, grade
Hol,s1elns. Phone 304-675·
,1336. after 7 P.M.

·Mixed hay lor sale.

..

c,u

74

AEIOUT
YOUR DfAJ.IN65 WITH
OllfARJAll'AR ... AN

flirts

illS. WINI&lt;L£ ... ~

HM'M Wll.L COME
TO lOU!

Ell/EM'/ Or

l SUPPOSE )OU ARE THE SAME
"HARMLf55 FElLOWS' WHO
aEST.ft&gt;'l&amp;? Jf:1tAf t!J()W18~1U!Nr'S
c:'ON.S'VL ~ ~

THe PFOP.tE/

TO W.TE, WE

HAVE MADf OIJR.
POINT I~ CfN TllAL
CITY WITHOUT
HUMAN SACR'I ·
FICE .. .

flfLAX.
MS. WINKlE ...
WE MEAN YOU

ON'S Television Service.
•specializing in zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or .w4·2454.

NO HARM(

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675·1331.
R INGLES'S SERVICE ex·
perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
electrician,
general repairs and
remodeling . Phone 304-675·
2088 or 675-4560.

•

frightening past embarks
on a kitliriJt spree. (60 min.)

7 :00 D CD P.M. Mof18zino
(}) l)ood Now•
(I) Winne.rs

D CIJ ®

(() Entertainment Tonight

Cil Hoppy Dovo
D CD Tic Tac Dough

(I)
(]}) MacNeil-lehrer
Report
t.m News

LOCKSMITH
Serv ice .
Residential, automotive .
Emergency service. Ca ll
882·2079 .

7:30

e

1D Muppot Show

D (l) You Asked For It

(}) Anothor Ute
(I) Sneak Preview•

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

JeH~

and

Anne Meara
take a look at upcoming
movies. sports and spe·

Stiller

cials .

(fi) Newawatch
10:30 CD Sing out America

(]) Millar'• Court
CID Masterpiece Theatre 'l
Remember Nelson .' After
his triumph al the Battle of
the Nile, Nelson resides In

Atlonuo ot Phflodelphla
(]) 8 (]) Fomily Feud
Cil Llvome ond Shlrloy
(I) Buelne.. Report
(II Richa~d Simmons

&lt;ID lasuea: OhJo

Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st. Co. custom doter '&amp;
backhoe work. Speci al
farm rates. Call us for tree
estimates. 446·4440.

•

(JJ

Entertainment

Ton~ht

Ne1:ional

Spec:ial
(]) MOVIE: 'The Postman
Always· Rings Twice'
1D Banoon ICiosed-

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

(]) e

Capltoned}

SEWING Machine repairs,
service . Author ized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric . Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2274 .

8

(]) .ll!l Dukoa of

JACKS REFRIGERATID·
N Air condition service,
commercial, industrii!!l
Phone 882·2079.
·

news .

·

8' 30 (]) Ill 1D Open All Night
Th,-....Feesters ere slapped
with a lawsuit ·
(]) (ll) Wall StrHt W-

• General Hauling

Louis

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
367-0591.

Auk8yaer

enalyzet

the '80s wrth a weekly re·
vtew ot economic end 1n·
vestment maiters.
g,oo e CD CIJ MOVIE' 'Groy
Lady Down'

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for dri\leways,
Call tor estimates367·7101.

Loose '

' (}) 100 Club
(]) e !lZ Boot of tile
Wn1

•

hatches a new sc:he,ne to

JIMS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier, 304·675-7397 .
Camp Con ley .

rOO ·Ciiff Barnes. 160 min.)

(]) SMoton '82 .
(fl)

Nove

"L1fa:

Patent

Pending.' This episode
shows how acientisll go
ebOut creating new life
forms and lnveat"igalea the
ir'nPKt o1 gen11tc: 8f'lgineef-

1.,7c___~u~p:!!ho~l~s~1e~
·r!.y_ _
TRI.STAT6
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec.- Ave., Gallipolis.
~·7833 or 446-1833.

•

f ,30

(]) .B enny Hill Show
(J) MOVIE' 'Plague'

(]) Captioned ABC Nowo

(II MOVIE ' 'Wilford'

e 1D Nlghtllne
12,00 (}) Burno II. Allon
(]) Nlghtllne
(]) PBS l.oto Night
Ill ID Frid,Yo
12,30 D (}) CIJ SCTV Comedy
Network
•

lng on indus1ry, medicine
end humin ltfe ltaeff. (60
min .) (Cioood Coptionod)
(]) • 1)11 - . . . I LMntl
Dot il in lhll hosprt.J for

~"l'·~io.y - . g

(I) My Little M•gie

CIJellJNowo
C1l MOVIE: 'House on
HMintod Hill'

2:00 eCDNowo

(]) Boc..- Father

2,30 (})
(])
3:00 Cil
3:1 a ())

Uto of Rllov
MOVIE: 'Oevil'o Own'
Bumo &amp;·Allen
Sneek Previewt Jerry
Sliller end Anne Meara
take a look at upcoming
movres, sports and spe-

cials .
(})Jock lonny Show

3,411 ()) MOVIE' 'Tho Pootmon
Alwoyo Ringo Twtco'

4'00 (J) I Morrild . - ,
4:30 (}) My Unfo M.glo
(])Rot,_

Caner. chief corrnpondont
and .nchorman. presents a
lead a1ory e.ch week

•

Conclusion.

' The SpaceKing
Arthur's
Court · A space enginl!flr
end h1 s lookalike robot are

man

ln

c~:~tapul t ed

back in time .

e (])

NCAA Bil•ketball:

SEC Toum•ment
TBA
12:00 (JJ American Trail

r ..ma

MOVIE: 'Sav• the
(60 min.)
Tlglr'
()) (ll) MOVIE : ' Auntie
12:30 ()) WHkend G•rdener
Mama'
(2) MOVIE ' 'Short
8 :30 D (2) CIJ Chicago Storv 1 ,oo D
Walk to Daylight'
!PREMIERE)
(]) Thla Week on Wall
9 :00 (I) Undersea World of
Street
Jacq_uea Cousteau
1 :30 (I) Westbrook, Ho1pital
(I) • G) love Boat
(])MOVIE: 'Thiel'
Ill (])® MOVIE: 'Comoo
Ill
in MOVIE: 'Biocuja'
a Horsemen'
· 2 :00 (]) Blackwood Brothers
t OoOO II CD m McClain's l.ow
(I) MOVIE: ' Deed Ringer'
CD MOVIE ' 'All Night
2,30 D Cll Nowo
Long'
(}) C'mon Along
(J) TBS Evening News
3:00 (}) 9eot of 700 Club
(() • (jJ Fant..y Island
3 :30 (!) MOVIE : 'Eyewitnesa·
10,30 (}) Rock Chu.ch
fJ! ABC Nawo
11 ,oo D CD (]) CIJ
ClJ lllll G 4,30 D
(}) Ro.. Bagloy
G) News
([) Ret Patrot
CI) Wortd ot w ..
(I)

a

In Wide Wo•ld of

~rt·

'ftj}!Jrulffi'\"t ~THATICft~DWORDOAME
~ ~ ~~·
by~ Arnokland Bot&gt; Lee

CE Uone of Serenoeti
CiJ Berney Miller
5,15 CID Ufe on Earth "Lords of
the Atr,' Using the latest
techniques in nature pho·
togreph..,., na1Ufal hiStOn!ln
David Attenborough explores the varied uses and
advantages of the light anrl
flexible feather . (60 min .)
(Closed Captioned}

NOAPI

I I I

CIJ Motorweek
(I) New Faces
ffiti M *A•S•H

EVENINGo
6 :00

D CD 8 (]) ® Nowo

I I t

81reet

CD MOVIE: ' Somewhere

In Time'
CD Championship Wrea·
tling
CD God Hes the Answer
(]) MOVIE : 'Tho God·
child'
8:1&amp; GD F•1 forward
8:30 e CD Cil NBC Newo
(I) Stlln Hitchcock
il) Now•
D (I) Concern'
CD CBS Nowo
7:00 e Cll Donee Favor
()) Bllcl&lt;wood Brother•
(]) • (]) HH How

WHA'T A ·PE"ON
WHO CHEAT5 ON A
t::'I5'T 15 APT
'TO t:'O.

ITABEEDj

(I) This Week Of' Wall

()

NOW

arrange

tN dtcted *~•'• 10

(]) e

.

v
\

01

d .
''" ay

CD Lawrence Wetk

·~

1

I

~tVM'~tr:t
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Syrian cit)·
5 Composerconductor,
Gustav -

11 - lily
12 " Lord Jim"

IAntwert tomorrow)
Jumbfoi' PARKA G~IEF CEMENT TRYING
Anawet" Vfhet's the best age to get hltched?" MARRI·AGE"

DOWN
I Fonner
court stnr
2 Housing
contract

3 Wading bird

4 For ISp.l
5 Short time
13 TV's Col.
aExpiate
7 Jordanian
Potter
&lt;mountain
23 Cuban
15 Opposite
8 Follower of
province
of WNW
blo or geo
24 No longer
I&amp; Poet's " yet"
9 Superlative
single
17 Follower
In grammar
25 One e:rtrB
of an lsm
10 Quit a deal
inning
18 Fuel
11 Long
281'inally
20 Smoke,
18 Frost
27 Actress
for short ·
22 City or
Wendy
21 Scrap
bean
29 PermJ~sion
22 Wash
23 Muscat Is
lis capital
25 Floor
material
26 Sanda rae tree
27 Border
211 Old French
shooting
match
29 Written
matler
32 Celtic
"""deity
33 Porker
34 Harem room
:11 Belushl film
:Jt cargo derrick
40 Czech river
41 Farm machine k-+--1--+-11-+ 42 Place
trust (on)

star

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

3G Cheat
I slang I
ll Ford
famlly · '

member
35 Ethereal
37 reacher'•
degree
ag Bard's ~~\·
"0\ler"

~j $.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ·- litre's ho" lo work It!
A X V D L 8 A A X ft
.,
1o

L 0 N G F E I, I, 0 W

One leiter aimply 1tanda f nr :~ nother In th 11 ·.ample A fll
used lor 1he three L's. X for t h1· twn O's. 1·1c ~i na:l~ ·t~tteil',
apottrophea, the len&amp;th and for mation of tht:! word1 are 111
hlata. Eac~ day th• code ltltt u 11rf' tllft"t:!rf'nt.

ton'n 1M aurprtll eniWer, II SUQ·
goolldll\'1&gt;0 IOOYO cortoon.

Answer:(I XI] -IN THE( I I)

~ Henne's Ark

•)

(

(]) ® Welt Dlonoy

0

(60 min.)

(]) Frldoyo
1 :00 (}) I Moniod Joon .
CD MOVIE: 'Roglng Bull'

3:30

(I) Nashville Alive
(I) CD G%1 King's Crossing

ago of the sem1-f1nel round
of th1s golf tournamen t.

5:30

CD MOVIE : 'Fort Apache,
the Bronx '
(]) MOVIE: 'The Day of
the Dolphin'
Cl (]J MOVIE: 'Two for
the Road'
CD MOVIE : 'Pay Dr Dlo'

the

Cioudl Roll By '

()) Wagon Train
(I) Motorcrose

(]) •

mfn.)

CD Heritage Singers

(]) MOVIE: 'Eyewitness '

NBC Sports offers cover·

([) J.ck Benny Show

.

(]) 11!1 Doll.. J.R.

'The Long

8

1 :30

~s 'M~~rr · ·Tm

D CD CIJ Bey Hill Cla ..lc

1 1,30 I I CD CIJ Tonight Show
(]) Another Ute
(I)
MOVIE:
' Bustin'
(]) MOVIE'
Gray Une'

Boys Gramp s is tha mHdia ·

em Quilting

(I) Dick Caven Guests To
Be Announced

1 t :30 D (2) CIJ Soturdoy Night
U\'e Guest host Tim Curr..,.
is joined by Mealloaf. 190

,. tor when Jonathon' s datA

Ill (]) CB~ Sports
Saturday Today 's program
will feature highlights and
updates on various sport·
1ng events. (90 min.)
C!C Laverne and Shirley

(I) Nashville RFD

day in Hazzard. j60 min.)

(()tiD Washington Week/
Review Paul Duke hosls
as lop Washington journal·
lsts analyze, rhe wBflk 's

4:30

(I) All In the Family

held prisoner df.!ring e bad

(jJI Pro Bowler's
Tour Today's show will
feature coverage of the

()11 Guitar

(lZ Newa

Hazurd Tfrle Dukes are

ci) ID

4,00 (}) Wyatt Ea•p
CD MOVIE' ' I Sent A
Ltittir to Mv Lo\le '
(() Auatin City Umits
'The Gatlin Brothers and
Ricky Skaggs.' The Broth·
ers perform their current
;mash , 'Wha t Are We
Cain ' Lonesome. · along
with several of their coun·
try hils. «60 mm.)
(JC All In tl1e Family

ilton . (60 min.) !Closed
Captioned}
11 :oo I I CD(]) CIJ 0 (])® Ill

Geographic

7,30 D CD Inside look
(}) HI Doug
~ In the Know
a,ao D Cll CIJ Ono Of The

$100, ')()Q Greater Miam1
Sunshh1e
Open
from
Miami Florida 190 min I

Naples with the British Ambassador, Sir William Ham~

a,oo e Cll CIJ NBC M._lno
. (])

3 :30

()) MOVIE : ' Torn Curtain'
(lJl MOVIE: 'Thoy Mode
Me A Crlrr'ilnal '

(fi) Paper Chase
II) In Solid Gold

SATURDAY
3/6/82

Lynda Carter:

Street Life Lynda Carter
sings -and dances in 1h1s
variety special. (60 min . ~
(I) Creativity: Bill Moyers
"Gerald
Scheck .' r The
painter-sculptor-welder
talks about what it's like to
keep creative juices flow ·
ing while leading a double
life as .:lftist and everyday
. layman. !Closed Captioned)

e..ketball :

NBA

(I)

Excavating

Harley
&amp; accessories
now o 'Custom Cy&lt;les,
L.TD . Rt.
7 North, MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
Gallipolis. Open e•enlngs, 1 Box 12~. Pt. Pleasant, 30~5-BPM. Ph. 446·7346.
675·4154.

9:46 (() TBS Evening News
10:00 C!J Beat of On location
(I) •
(fJ Strike Force A
woman with a strange and

EVENING

Wllter we ll s. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .
304-895-3802.

IS

filmed on location .

FRIDAY
3/5/82

Motorcycles

All used bikes reduced at
Betz Honda. check with us
before yoo pay 1Q much.
Call ~- 2240.
'

HAY~ A~ ­

REAPY EXF'l.AI NEP,

WARN YOU

Custom
Wood
work,
Planing, Moulding, Knick
KnaCks and some repair.
.w4·3201 alter 8p.m. 4462738 days.

83

135 MF tractor. perk . gas,

AS l

WE allY HOPE TO

Special M,arch tnd April
onl y. Gene's De~p Steam
Cleaning . Scotch Gaurd.
Free estimate. 992·6309

1965 Rambler, American,
304·675-5120.

1977 Ford F· 100 with 1976
, 811. Coachman camper or
trade for 79, 80, or 81 mini
motor home. 6U ·256· 62~.

wedo?

I find
ear pluqs
help a
little!

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Hoffelt Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates .
Call446·2107 .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone .w4·3888 or 446·4477

Truck's for Sale

drivinq IJS mad!

What can

-.----

1977 Monte Carlo, low
mileage , nice . Contact
Mike at 28th St. Amoco.
675·9768.

72

-63

---~

It~

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting. 30 years ex·
perience, specializing in
buill up roof. Cal1388·9857 .

84

6986.

Home
Improvements

82

76 Pinto SW $900 .00 or trade
for pickup of equal 'Value:
304·675 ..1455.
.

T' HIM!!

Auto Repair

1976 P I NTO, 304-615·5995 or
675·2247.

WILL trade 72 M,;tverick
302 automatic for small
truck, automatic. Phone
304·458· 1042.

HMMPH! J'M SORPRISI'D
TH' OlD WIHDilllu DIDN'T
f'lii.E 1li' HOIJ6E COft\E

Oual ily Au1obody &amp; Paint
work. Professional custo~
paint work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, 446· 1968.

81
1963 Ford low mileage.
$1,000, collec-tor item . Call
446· 1735.

sscoo. 7~2 -278~.

PARTMENTS : · , · 1
rent stetts at
Specia l rates tor
Senior Citizens. Call .w62745.

..

;a ll.

~~;~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~

1980 El camino S\lper
sport. Black with factory
mags. Excellent condition.

Furnished apartment 4 rm.
&amp; bath. Adul ts only, ref . &amp;
sec. deposit. Call446·0444.

,

C) •1112 ... ICA. Inc

Sma ll furn ished apart·
ment, central air &amp; heat,
parking, l or 2 adults only.
Call446·0338.

2 bedroom unfurnished
apartment in Crown City .
Call256·6520.

Sentlrwl

DWKTR.-.CY

Motorcycle, sacrifice, T)VO
Harley Oavidsons, 16 Super
glide 1200, electric or kic~
stop, $2100. cash, 77 Spor·
ster 1,000, electric start
$2100.Cash. Both s.;,ooo.
Cash .
Interested parties
call for appointment 304·
882·2239.

Lors &amp; Acreage

3 room unfurnished apart·
ment, adults only, no pets,
utilities paid . Call.w4 · 3~7 .

Daily

· 1970 Honda 750 K, cam, car·
bs jelled, 6 degree rake, 6
: inch tubes, king and quee)l,
$700. or best offer, Must
sell . 304·675·2009 .

67 Chevrolet F'U 283. Call
446·9219 after~ -

LARGE TRACT of land.
Dead ends on Peacock Ave.
Has water and sewage.
Will flnan'ce to responsible
party at 12 percent. 992·
5786.

Molorcyc1~

The

1981 PM 125 Suzuki, $900.
304·675·6367.

576·2711 .

18 acres, beautiful building
site, rural water, septic
tank, tobacco base._a acres
ti ll oble. Ca ll 256· 1156.

Friclay, Matdo 5, 1982

Miclcllepott, Ohio

XR 75 Honda 1977 model.
Call.w4·2323 alter 4PM . ~

14' WI DE, 3 bedroom
mobi le home, $8995. All
State Modular Homes, 304·

l5

74

~

CRVPTOQUOTES
ZENSOTF : QZOY
HWJKX

OBVKX

UN

liKBY

YZK

WB

TKX .JK

YZf!.
ZOrj

SKKT KGVXO.-.YKI' . - ZKHKT XWQHOT:F
Yeotenlay'o CI')'JII8quole: HOME, THE SPOT OF E!.RTH
SUPREMELY BLEST • .-. OE.-.RER, SWEETER SPOT THAI'f
AU. THE f\EST. - ROBERT MONTGOMERY

�,-

I"
Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

"-roy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs ·County happenings•••
Festival committee
discusses activities
'
The festival planning committee
of the Middleport Chamber or Com·
merce discussed theme Ideas and
' activities when It met Thursday
night at the LaSalle Hotel.
The group Is making plans for the
first annual festival and this one
wW be staged In conjunction with
Gen. James Hartinger Day which
wW be observed probably on Memorlay Day weekend.
Yvonne Scally, chairman of the
chamber's festival committee, wlll
meet with Bill Chllds, c hairman of
Hartinger Day, tocoordlnateactlvlttes of both observances. She will
report back to c o mmittee
·members next week.
Attending the meeting were Ve rnon Weber, Les Facemyer, Bob
GUmore, Dick Owen, Ruth Gosney,
Paul Dalley and Mrs. Scally.

. Stolen car found
A 1975 car owned by Deann
Denny, Salem St. , Rutland, reported stolen Saturday morning
has been recovered In Adams
County, Meigs Sherllf James J.
· Proffitt reported today.
: Investigation Into the theft is
'
contlnl'lng.
The sherllf also reported on Tuesday evening a vehicle driven by
Chester R. Elliott, Point Pleasant,
W. va., was traveling south on
Route 33 near Pomeroy when It
. struck and k!Ued a deer which had
run Into the path of the car. There
was moderate damage to the front
of the vehicle and the driver was
uninjured .

To end marriages
Two divorce actions, both chargIng gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty have been filed in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
VIolet R. Arnold, Pomeroy, Is
asking a divorce from WWJam E .
Arnold, Laurel Cliff, and asks that
her malden name of Brown he
restored.

Marjorie E . Stanley, Albany,
asked divorce from Paul E . Stan·
ley, Route 2, Athens.
A divorce was granted Bobble
Branham from Marian M. Branham on grounds of gross neglect of
duty and the defendant was given
custody of one minor chlld.

Drop court actions
Dismissed In the court were suits
Including Herbert L. Grounds
against the Prior OU Well DriUlng
Co., eta!; Nancy J . Adams against
the United Investors Llte Insurance
Co., et al, and Nancy J . Adams
against the John Hancock. Mutual
Llte Insurance Co., et aL

Charles E . Siders, born Aug. Tl,
1913, In Mason County, W.Va., died
at llolzer Medical Center Thursday
at 9:30a.m.
lle was one of five chUdren born
to the late WllllamSlders and Lydia
Hlveley Siders and resided at
Route 1, Cheshire.
A coal miner, he owned his own
coal mine but retired recently because of JU health.
lle Is survived by three sisters,
Mrs. Ploma Nelson, Cheshire, Mrs.
Vesta Hufford, Cheshire, and Mrs .
Goldie Eastman, Pomeroy; onene-

James L. Davis to Monongahela
Power Co., Right of Way, Olive.
Jarhes L. Davis, Diann Davis to
Monongahela · Power Company,
Right of Way, Olive.
Thelma E. Adams to Monongahela
Power Company, Right of Way,
Olive.
Harvey Bartirnus, Carol Bartimus
to Monongahela Power Company,
Right of Way, Olive.
Webster Reed, Flossie B. Reed to
Monongahela Power Company,
Right of Way, Olive.
Paul A. Dulf, Opal Duff to Herald
Oil and Gas Company, Right of Way,

and you realize there's 100 mUllon
eyes on the other end. You say to
yourself, 'Wow, I hope I get to play
long.' "
Lapham recounted some or the
triumphs and mistakes of the Ben·
gals' loss to the San Francisco
49ers, but felt the 49ers knew they
had a much Improved team on
their hands.
For the future, Lapham said the
Bengals will try to keep the division
title and shoot tor that goal of win·
nJng the Super Bowl.
"We'll win the division, get Into
the playoffs, and thenlt'sa week-toweek proposition," he said.
Asked afterward of the posslbil·
lty of a football players' strike, Lapham said he doubted It would
happen because he feels there's no
room tor a union In professional
sports.
"There's not as much unUateral
support !or Ed Garvey as there was
for Marvin MUter," he explained.
"It (a union) would help me and
probably triple my salary, but I
think there will be a compromise.
You won't see the picket lines you
saw In 1974.''

First round action underway
First round 4th and 5th grade action In the Meigs Junior High bas·
ketball tournament got unde!Way
Thursday night.
Bradbury Hood defeated HarrlIOilvllle and three overtime sessions, 37-34.
High scorers for
Bradbury were Sean Gibbs with 13,
Chris Becker with 7 and Todd Hood
with 5. Harrisonville high scorers
were K. Stanley with 12, J. Slleets
with nine and W. Howard with 8.
In the second game, Racine defeated Pomeroy Wright, 36-19 with
top scorers tor Racine being Mark
Porter with 20 and Danny Gheen

with 10. Pomeroy Wright top scorers were J . Wright with 9; Terry
Fields and Dan Grogan with 4 each.
In the final g~me of the evening,
Eastern II won over Salisbury 2621. For Eastern J. Drenner dropped
In 11 and M. Martin, 10. For Salls·
bury Mike WUI got 8 and Aaron
Whaley, 5.
The next tournament action wW
take place Monday when Syracuse
goes against Bradbury Baker at
5: 30; Letart against Pomeroy Powell at 7 and Eastern Ill against
Rutland at 8: 30.

ELBERFLEDS ·
SALE I
MEN'S·
WRANGLER *19.95

'

A living symbol of the Democratic
Pa1ty - Jonathan, the donkey was a highli~ht of a party sta~ed by
Meigs County Democ•·ats at the
multi-purpose building in Pomeroy
last Saturday to conunemorate the
IOOth birthday annive•·~ a•'Y of
F•·anklin D. Roosevelt
Jonathan was tied at the f1·ont or
the building fOI ' the event to give
everyone. entering the " Democratic
spil'it. ••

Columbia.
Alma Jean Pooler to . William
Pooler, Jr., court order, Chester.
WiUiaJ!I Pooler, Jr., Sharon Pooler
to Robert Ray Harris, Parcels,
Chester.
Mary A. Norma aka Mary A.
Velerans Memorial
Smallwood to Timothy R. Priddy,
I
Linda F . Priddy,l.36 A., Rutland.
Admitted--Donald Covert, PomeThomas Earl Manuel to Robert J .
roy; Michael Hubbard, Syracuse;
Spaun, Nola J . Spaun,l A., Letart.
Thomas Justice, Middleport.
Mickey Maynard,
Annetta
Discharged--Bill Kennedy, Ruth
Maynard to Herald Oil and Gas Co.,
Mulford, VIrginia Ward, Betty Car·
Right of Way, Salem.
penter, WUllam Frecker.
Anthony D. Feller, Thomas Felter
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Way, Scipio.
DISCHARGES MARCH 4
Janice M.. Deem to Norman L.
Deem, Lot, Syracuse.
David Albert, Mrs. Michael ArroJanice M. Deem to Norman L.
wood and son, Lena Blackburn,
Deem, Lot., Syracuse.
Dean Casto, Anthony Childers,
William S. Kelmer, Jr., Laura
Frances Cobern, Gertrude De
Frederiksen( his wife), tp Columbus
Vault, Ghella Deal, Rita. Fallon,
and Southern Ohio Electric, Right of
Jeremy GIWiand, ~!mas Goff,
Wrr;, carthage.
Hugh Graham Jr., James Gregory,
Michael R. Harris, Lori L. Harris
James Harrts, Amy Hatfield, Gerto Columbus and Southern Ohio
aldine Holmes, Jason Hysell, GeorElectric Co., Right of Way, Olive.
gina McDermitt, Evelyn Penix,
Mildred 0. Harris to Columbus
Sally Pooler, Martha Post, Mrs.
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,' ·
WWJam Rawson arid daughter,
Right of Way, Olive.
Mrs. Richard Richmond and son,
Arthur E. Hood, Donna J. Hood to
Terry Roberls, Kathy Sakach,
Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of
Jerry Shatter, Albert Shltflet, MarWay, Saltsbury.
jorie Stewart, Elizabeth Well, Mrs.
Thomas Summefield, Carolyn M.
Kenneth Wheaton and daughter,
Swrunerfield to Herald Oil and Gas
Sherry WUson.
Company, Right of Way, Rutland.
Donald F . Johnson, Shirley John·
BIRTHS
son to James E. Diddle, Right or
Way, Lebanon.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Boso, son,
Clyde Johnson, Mary L. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Donald CarRacine;
to James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
ter,
son,
Galttpolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Lebanon.
Cleon Pratt, son, Pomeroy; Mr.
William E. Kennedy, Earlene ~ ­
and Mrs. Raymond Skeens, son,
Kenn~dy to Richard Manzy,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. James StePatric•a Manzy .
wart, daughter, Coalton.
William Clifford Frazier
deceased, to Helen A. Frazier, Cert:
of Trans., Salisbury.
Joseph Stewart, deceased, 1 to
Mal'Ch 10, a represeutative £rom
Mary Stewart, Cert. of Trans., Middleport.
1 ·
Congressman
Clarence
E. Miller's
office will conduct
an Open
Door
Betty J. Carlisle, Ann W. Dexter,
session from 10 a.m .•J2 noon in the
John Dexter to Doyle Knapp, .75 A.,
Court House in Pomeroy.
Rutland.
If anyone has any questions conCharles L. Morrison, Delores K.
cerning the · federal government,
Morrison to James E . Diddle, Right
please stop by to discuss them with
of Way, Lebanon.
the representative.

Hospital news

The pa•'ly was well attended and
the Hart Brothers, a blue g1·ass
band. enteJ'tained with toJ&gt;-tapping
tunes for some two hours.
Chail'lnan Bud Wilson introduced
several speake1·s fOI' the evening, the
first being William A. LaVelle.
Athens attorney and fonner State
Democ•·atic Chairman.
Charles B1·own spoke on behalf of
his b1·other, Sherrod Brown, candida te for sec•·etal)' of state. B•·own,
of Mansfield, is currently se1-ving in
the house of l'epresentatives.

Tom Hess, fonnerly of Athens,
spoke for William J . Brown, can·
dldate for Governor of Ohio, and E.
A. Wingett, fanner long-time local
chairman, spoke £or Richard F.
Celeste forGovernoJ' .
Roher! H. Whealey , Athens, spoke
on behalf of Charles M. Overby,
Athens, can~idate fo•· Cong•·ess rrom
this district.
Byron Al'baugh, Albany, chair·
man of the political action committee, represented the United Mine
WOI'kCI'S,

Vol . 16 No. 4
Copyrighted 1982

Two persons were slightly Injured In a two-car crash-on U.S. 35
at the Intersection with Mount Zion
Road Thursday night.
The Galtla ·Meigs Post of the
state highway patrol said Charles
W. Pyles, 58, and VIrginia H. Pyles,
55, both of Gallipolis Ferry, were
not treated for their Injuries.
The patrol said the Pyles were
eastbound on 35 at 8:44p.m. when a
vehicle driven by Michael L. Rei·
del, 18, Bidwell, pulled Into their
path from Mount Zion and collided
with Pyles' vehicle.

The accident caused moderate
damage to both cars and Reidel
was cited for !allure to yield.
The patrol Investigated another
Injury accident In Meigs County
Thursday morning.
According to the report, Richard
W. Batley, 26, Middleport, was
southbound on U.S. 33 at 6:25a.m.
when his vehicle went oft the right
side of the road and Into a ditch. It
struck a culvert and overturned.
Bailey wasn't treated for his injuries and his vehicle was severely
damaged. He was cited for DWl.

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
The Vill.1ge of Middleport is accepting apphcatJons tor the pre-qualification of contrac·
tors in their housing rehabilitation program,
funded by the Department of Housing an~
Urban Development. Contractors interested
in becoming a contractor in this program are
ilsked to contact the Middleport Office of
Community · Development, 237 Race Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760 or phone 992·6782 fo;
further information. Contractors who have
•llreildy been qualified in the program need
not re·ilpply as they will . still be eligible to
1J1d on homes being rehabbed . Applications
will be accepted on a continual basis i1S thh
is ;1 continuing program of the Village .
F rl'd Hoffman, Mayul'
Villclg(' of Middleport

Today's

T-S
'

Belushi death
'
Page D-1
Market Analysis

Hi!)h

N.B.T.A.
INSTRUCTOR

JUDY RIGGS
CHESTER
985-3595

ENROLL NOW:

••••• •

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lobbying priority In Washington because the facUlty Is a main link In
Ohio River traffic. NCA Is also
seeking the rehabilitation or replacement of the locks and dam at
Winfield, W.Va. , and Locks 7 and 8
on the Monongahela River.
Presently, the approJ)rla tlons
committee Is considering the Galll·
polls project as part cit a larger Inland waterways bill. At this stage,
money Is needed to start advanced
engineering tor the new canal, the
prellml.nary step toward
construction.
The delegation Included Rep.
Clarence Miller, R·Ohlo, whose dis·
trict Includes Gallla and Meigs
counties, ar.• Rep. Nick Joe Rahall,
D-W.Va., representing Cabell and
(Continued on A-4)

INSPECTS AGING FACILA congreMional deleptlon and representatives ol
sevetilJ buslne88, labor illld river
CODCei'IIS were at the G.Wpoh
Looks and Dam Friday tor a
lact·ftndlng tour. A U1l8 mlllloD
pi"'ppOIaa to coaMruct a new twoJock hYJ111811 canalts under consideration by the House
Approprlatlou CommiUee. Col.
James Hltpllan, (standing at
right), local u.s. Army eo.,. of
Engineers commander, ex·
plains the situation to the con·
peMD~en. · 'l1le congreumen
then looked at one ol the lockll
firsthand (below). (TimesSentinel photos by Larry
Ewing).

rrv -

830-

be.39

Low 8!07.38
Closed 807.38

.

...~:II•
.•
. ~. !.~~·'-·~·

1000950900-

Business '
E-section .

Redistricting continues as hot
topic for Ohio's legislators

••

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Asooclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - A
former member of the Ohio House
once complained that hls newly red·
rawn election district looked like
"an lndlan falling out of a tree."
Others have used terms such as
horse collars and doughnuts to describe districts when they are reshaped every 10 years after each
U.S. _c ensus to accomodate population shltts.
That's the kind of dialogue one
hears these days In the Ohio General Assembly, which ,Is trying to
divide Ohio Into 21 new congressional districts to replace 23 exist·
lng ones.
The Democrat-controlled House
and the GOP-dominated Senate

have passed dl!ferent versions or a
hold together blg-clty suburbs
new plan, and a joint conference
where their voters prevail, and at
the same time Individually splinter
committee meets again Tuesday to
try to resolve differences.
ott sections of blue-collar and other
Both political parties are trying
downtown Democratic areas Into
to protect the proven political turtof
those suburbs.
their Incumbents, but they have to
Democrats, In those same metrocomply with legal guidelines which
politan areas which are most
Vulnerable to gerrymandering, try
make their task extremely
difficult.
· to splinter oft the GOP suburbs.
Both parties have technical intor- ,
Back In 1964, the U.S. Supreme
Court handed down the so-called
matlon toldentl!ythe political character or neighborhoods, so that
"one man, one vote" decision, hold·
lng that election districts must be
redistricting becomes a science.
as . nearly equal In population as
possible.
In the current case, the partisan
Since then, RepubUcans and Demaneuvering has been lessened to
mocrats alike have tried to gerry- a degree because or a general un·
derstandlng that since Ohio Is losmander, or manipulate, ·t he shapes
of districts to their own advantage.
Ing two se,a ts In Con~s . each
For Instance, Republicans try to
party will surrender one seat.

Administration may abandon
tax-cut indexing, says Regan

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Sunday, Mar . 7, 1982

March 1·5 111.03

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Dow Jones

"STATE CHAMPIONS"
1979, 1980. 1981

AGES: 6tol6Years
CLASSES HELD IN
FIVE LOCATIONS:
Pomeroy, Coolville, Belpre,
Parkersburg and Ripley, W.
Va.

tmes

30 Industrials

:·················
RANGERETTES
.
Is now accepting new members- No previous training
is required.

+

lng could be acquired through the
GaUla COunty Bosrd of Commissioners for the e mploymen t of tour
full-tim e jaUers.
Judge Roderic k's requeslfor specltlcs of the sherllf's plans for the
future use of the facility came as a
response to that stated position.
"In our efforts to comply with the
jaU standards act of having enough
staff to operate the jaU and after
repeated efforts over the past three

when state mandated physical facility requirements were met.
The sheriff said late Friday afternoon the jail would probably be
ready to house prisoners wlthll) a
month.
Contractors are\ currently nearIng completion of a\$62,500 security
remodeling project designed to
bring the jail up to minimum state
standards. Despite that work, the
sherllf had previously said he
would not
the
untll fund·

Congressional delegation tours locks
By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmes-Seallnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS FERRY
Another Interest group seeking the
rehab1lltatlon of the Gall1polls
LoCks and Dam here treated several congressmen, federal, state
and Industrial oHtclals to a tour or
the aging facUlty Friday.
Although members of the
Energy and Water subcommittee
of the House Appropriations Committee had scheduled a !act-finding
trip to the dam, an official for the
National Coal Association said the
vtslt hopefully drove home the need .
to fund a new, two-lock bypass
canal.
Joseph E. Lerna, NCA vice president, said the GaUlpolls rehabiUta·
tlon and construction plan Is l\5 first

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BATON CORP

JaU woulil begin housing prisoners.
At that time, Judge Roderick
said , H be did not receive assurances that the Gama l$cUlt:y- would
soon reopen, he would move to take
the flnanci!ll operation of the jaU
out of the hands of the sheriff's department by appointing a receiver
to administer It on behal1 of. the
·
court.
In a letter, dated Friday, Sberttt
Monlgomery informed the judge of
his "Intention" to
the

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point P.Ieasant

Three hurt in traffic mishaps

Open door session

STRAIGHT LEG OR BOOT CUT

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

unba

With Jonathan, from the lett, are Tom Hess, Athens;
Chester. Wells, fonner Meigs Commissioner; Chair·
man Bud Wilson and Sherltf James J. Proffitt.

Donkey adds spirit to celebration.

church one hour prtor to services.
Calling hours at MU!er's Home
for Funerals wUI be from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m . Saturday.

1588

SPECIAL SALE
PRICES THIS
WEEKEND ON WRANGLER MEN'S
JEANS- Sizes 27 to 42 Waist in 30 to
36 inch Lengt_h s. Pre-washed. No
Fault 14 oz. Blue Denim. won't
Shrink or Stretch.

'
By LARRY
EWING
Tlmes&amp;nllnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County jaU wW reopen as soon as
the facillty " ... meets the state requtre~nts tor health and environment," Sh~ rltt James M .
Montgomery told Common· Pleas
Judge Richard C. Roderick Friday.
That announcement came In response to a Mareh 1 demand by the
judge that he be lnformed within
one week " ... how and when" the

HIGHLIGHTS SFSSION - Jonathan, a llve
dolikey, was a highlight of a Democrat party held
Saturday at the m11lti-purpose building in Pomeroy.

The body wW lie in state at the

BASIC DENIM JEANS
5

Sheriff says patrols, budget will suffer

'

phew and one great nephew:
Siders was preceeded In death by
~ sister, Lucille Siders, In 1965.
He attended Poplar Ridge
Church.
Funerar services wW be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at SUver Memorial
Church, Kanauga, with Pastors Andrew Parsons and George Ketley
officiating. Burial wUI follow In
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Chesh!)'e.

Meigs property transfers

Fund raising (Conlinuedfrompagel)
Bowl, he felt they had come a long
way - and there's always next
year.
Lapham credited Gregg's aggresslve training and coaching for
helping the Bengals achieve severa! goals last season. When the
team found It has surprisingly surpassed Its origlnal8-8 projection for
the season, they went on to win five
of their toughest games, leading
them Into the playoffs and history's
·coldest league game - the Jan. 10
encounter with San Diego at Riverfront stadium In Cincinnati, when
the wind chill dropped temperatures to 59 degrees below zero.
"Fan support was unhellevable,"
Lapham said. "It was fun to play at
Rivertront. As cold as It was, we
could hear the fans loud and well."
The Tl-7 victory over San Diego
sent the Bengals to Detroit tor Super Bowl XVI, and the Idea of havlng made It to the top put Lapham
and his teammates on an "unbellevable high.
"You look up at the stands and
there's all those people," he said.
"You run down a llttletunnelofpeopie, with a television lensattheend,

Four calls were answered by local emergency units Thursday, the
Meigs County Emergllncy Medical
Service reports.
Middleport at 6:09p.m. took Thomas Justice, S. Second Ave., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland, at 10:34 a.m. took Robert
Reeves from Meigs Mine 1, to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland, at
6: 21 p.m. took LoweU Carte from
Meigs Mine 2 to Veterans Mernortmal and Tuppers· Plains at 8: m
p.m. took SaUy Pooler from her
home to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Area deaths-.
Charles E. Siders

Gallia jail will reopen

Emergency runs

MEXICO

By OWEN tJlJ..MANN
"-:Jaaed Press Writer

Fatal hotell
fire, Page D.JJ
Area deathS . ...... ... A.f
Aloag tbe River .... B-1-8
Business ' .•.....•.• ~~1

ICJaalifled ........ , ;

Edl&amp;orial .. . .......

7

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Farm . . . . • . . . . . • . . E-Z
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..............
,.

WASHINGTON (AP ) - The
Reagan admlnlatratlon, under congressional pressure to reduce tu·
ture budgetdeftclts,'m libtcons!der
repeal' of a newly enacted law that
automatlcalty lowers Income tax
rates as Inflation rises, Treasury
Secretary Donald T. Regan said
today.
"Indexing we'd discuss (with
CoJii!'ell),'' Regan said ct. a provl·
siOn In lAit year's tax-cut law that
requlrel iax rates to be "llldexed"
permanently to Inflation after 1911&amp;.
The ln!ellt oflndexJn&amp;IB to reduce
tax rates so that people are not pe-

naJlzed by being plished Into higher us," he said. "But we're awfully
tax brackets becaw;e of Inflation- afraid that when you get Into tax
swelled Income gains that leave Increases, Including dropping In·
their buying power unchanged .
dexlng, It would only be an excuse
In an Interview taped tor broad- to say, 'Well, we don't have to cut
cast on Cable News Network's anymore; we've got enough re"Newsmaker - Saturday," Regan venue to cover our added
said the administration might dis- spending.'''
cuss repeal dl the Indexing provl·
ston with Coneress only lt It were · Thus tar, the president himself
assured lawmaken would not use has rejected firmly any suggestions that he accept higher taxes to
the added revenues to Increase fed.
e@l spendlne.
reduce the detlciL The trea.lury seThe objective would have to be to cretary's comments, whUe not
reduce the deaclt, he said.
commlttlnc the admlniBtratlon to
"11 that II the IJII1'II(W and If 1tJe any chanae, sugested the pres!- .
Congress would actually stick with dent might be llexlble on the tax
.
that. that mllbt be conaJdered by luue.

News :briefs.~.
Candidates name running mates
COLUMBUS - Two Ohio guberneytorlal candidates have named
their lieutenant governor running mates for the state's June 8 prim ·
ary election.
Republican Seth Taft chose James A. Duerk, 51, Westervl)le, the
director of the Ohio Depa rtment of Economic and Community De·
velopment since January 1975. ,
Democrat Richard Celeste chose state Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker,
67, Bourneville.
·

Byrd seeks limit on use of force
WASHINGTON - Senate Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd said
Saturday he wUI lntroducl! legislation next week to prevent the
Reagan administration from sending U. S. troops to El Salv.ador
without congressional approval.
Byrd, D-W . Va ., said he is concerned about what he described as a
creeping escalation of rhetoric that could lead to gradual Involvement of U.S. troops In the Central American country .
"It is myvtew that lt Americans are to be asked to shed their blood
In the jungles of El Salvador, all Amertcans should first have an
opportunity to debate and carefully evaluate that action," he said .
Byrd said he would Introduce his proposal Monday as an amend·ment to the War Power Act, which allows American forces to be
committed tor up to' 60 days without congressional approval.
lor

Sunda'f

WEATHER FORECAST- The NaU~KWI Weather Service lorecubl
reiD alld 1aow S.llday iDa wide ballll from Florida lo Maine. Rain Is also ·
foreaut lor .. 111 d. Qrecon, Arlz.aa· and Ca!Hornla. FlurrtetJ are a lao
Ia 1 blld 1MB Moallu

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