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12

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 1, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Couple file law suit
in Mason Court

I
Weekly sennonette

Buckeyes lose 8gain

See page5

Story 011 Pap 3

WE NOW HAVE NEW
SPRING MERCHANDISE
IN STOCK

Eaglettes eliminated

Handling convulsions

Story, phoCo 011 Page 3

Story 011 Page 7

aily

he
Vol .32, No.227

•

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport,' Ohio, Friday, March 2, 1984

(opyrlthtod 1914

I Sections, I 2 Poges 20 C:.ntt
A Multimedia In c. N.wspa,.,

Federal snow removal aid unlikely
TWO DAYS OF SAVINGS-MARCH 2ND &amp; 3RD
Take advantage of our
Bird Sale Prices
save on famous Uoyd Fibercraft summer furniture.

EARLY BIRD SPECIAL .

CUSTOM MADE

SUMMER FURNITURE

DRAPERY SALE

Reg. 186.65 Lo-Back
.
Spring Base chair ............... Sale 169.00
Reg. '101.30 Hi-Back
Spring Base Chair ............... Sale 179.00
Reg. '197.20
SpriJig Base Lounger. ........ Sale 1147.00
Reg. '200.00
2-Seat Glider.................... Sale 1149.00
Reg. 1266.65
3-Seat Glider .................. Sale 1200.00
Reg. '280.00
Canopy Swing .................. Sale 1210.00

40°/o OFF
Quality Decorama Drapes
anCI Bedspreads
SALE ENDS MARCH 31

Ohio ...
(Continued !rom page 1)
Some bene!!t checks !rom the
Department of Public Wel!are
might be delayed slightly In the
mall, but load stamps should be on
time, Ms. Matthews said.
. State officials said some 650
national. guardsmen were being
deactivated as they !lnlshed dealing
with the snowstorm that stranded
motorists statewide.
Statewide, the guard has completed 78i missions, Including 6451n
the northeastern section, said Brian
Kvasnicka, an Ohio National Guard
spokesman.
Mlsslons ranged from clearing
streetS and helping stranded travel·
ers to transporting patients, doctors
and nurses to hospitals, he said.
The State Highway Patrol was
supervising removal of the largP
number of abandoned vec!hles
hampering snow removal e!torts.
In Lorain, hospital rescue
workers had touseasled to get toone
Injured man.
The extra snow helped at least a
few businesses, Including J)elghbor·
hood gi'ocery stores. Ed Mantln,
managerofaConvenlentFoodMart
In Lorain, said he was out o!m!lk !or
two hours Tuesday and ran low on
bread, eggs and luncheon meats.
Because of the storm, officials In
Kent allowed free admission to the
Western Michigan-Kent State basketball game Wednesday night. A
total of 5,003 people took advantage
of the offer to see Kent State defeat
Western Michigan TI.flJ.
Along a stretch of Lake Erie
shoreline between Cleveland and
Port Clinton, the only serious
activity was a few snowmobile
riders taking advantage of the deep
snow.
•

Schools remain
closed today
Schools of the MeigS Local and
Southern Local School · District
remained closed today for · the
second consecutive day due to Icy
roads caused by Tuesday's snow.
Schools of the Eastern Local
District were operating today on a
one hour delay. All districts of the
county are over the live days
allowed without makeup Un\e being
required as calamity days.
·-·
.

keys found
An Improvised key ring of wire
holding three keys, one possibly to a
treezer, was found Wednesday
morning In the snow on Pomeroy's
Court St. The owner may claim the
!!M_~t1beJ?aUiSenttnelOff!ce, lll
Court St.

MECHANJC ST. WAREHOUSE

While You Wait

LADIES'

SALE

SPORT SOCKS

BABY BLANKETS

Heavy woven sport socks in sweatshirt grey
or white with striped tops in assorted colors.
Sizes 9 to 11.

Boxed co.mforters, heavy zippered quilts, quilted
blankets w/pillows and baby blankets.

...REG. s2.00 ......... SALE ll.39
REG. l2.25 ......... SALE ll.59
REG. '2.75 ....... SALE ll.89

Computer Portraits
SALE!

Hallmark Party Goods
Napkins- table covers- centerpieces - luncheon and dinner sizeplates. Discontinued
patterns and colors in all occasion - birthday- juvenile -wedding. lim~ed Quantities.

Reg. 19.00 Baby Blankets ......... Sale '7.19
Reg. $18.00 Baby Blankets .... Sale '14.39·
Reg. 122.00 Baby Blankets ...... Sale '17.59
Reg. 130.00 Baby Blankets ...... Sale '23.99

JUNIOR WRANGLER

Sweatsuit Sale

Reg. '8.00

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

~

Shirt or Pants .......... Sale '8.50
Reg. 117.00 Zip Front
Hooded Jacket ........ Sale '14.45

'17.00 .... SALE
*28.00 .... SALE
139.00 .....SALE
S48.00 .... SALE

SALE!

I Men's Fashion Jeans
Includes regular sizes 28 to 42 and
extra sizes 44 to 50- slim and full cut
styles. Pre-washed 100% cotton and
cotton polyester.

Sl3.59
S22.39
*31.19
'38.39

2nd FLOOR-JEWELRY DEPT.

MISSES

MEN'S. &amp; BOYS'

Wrangler

TUBE

18.

SOCKS
to

J

J

REG. 110.00 to 131.00

$849

Red Heart '1.69

Wintuk Knitting Yam
SALE $}l9

Stock up now. Many
school colors in this selection.

Solid and variegated colors. 5 ply .
machme washable and dryable.
Save Fnday and Saturday.

LADIES'

Panty

Great Values on RCA TVs l'lus Quality,SeMce After the Sale
RCA 25" diagonal XL-100
Color TV with
C~anneLock Digital
Keyboard Control

REG. 11.50 ......................... SALE *1.29
'
REG. 12.25 .........................SALE 'L89
REG. 13.50 ......................... SALE '2.99
REG. 14.25 ......................... SALe '3.59
REG. '5.50 ..........................SALE '4.69

$63900.

.PIN£, MAPLE OR
.PECAN FINISH

· •. .....,..
........,.. SPECIAL
.....,...........................,....,....,................
1499 95
REG.
' 19" RCA Colortrak .
Digital Tuner
SPECIAL S43~.
_,..._.._.._
.,...
_.. ............. ...' _... .........,....,..._
REG. s549 _g5 1~" XL-100 Color P~rtablt 1 .
.
W1th Remote·cont[ol SPECiAL
.......__._.......,.........____ ....,.. .........,._
. REG 1799 95 25·~ n- 1oo console-,:,
· ~- s72goo
·
. . With Remote Control ·SPECIAL

--· __

·-----_......._....

OPEN FRIDAY.
EVENING 'lll 8 .

__

-

·

S48goo
·

S~le

Week-end sale prices on lorraine, Marion Rohr and lux·
uray Panties.
Briefs, hip hu~gers, bikinis, long legs style and band ·
leg styles. Wh1te. beige, pastels and prints.
Sizes 4 thru 11.

8ri11iint coiQr perlormance plus the tooc.tl·button
conven ience of Ch1nneloek Digital Keyboard Con·
trol.
•

__

1ST FLOOR

'1. 59 White with
Color Tops ... siJg
11.89 Grey with
Color Tops ... 11.49

T.V. SPECIALS

___ __ --·

All Sales Final

The~tyyam

Men's ~zes 9 15. Boys' 7
to 11. Made by Springfoot

.

~:~ed

FREE PORTRAIT
With the purchue of eny Computer Trensftr.

MEN'S AND BOYS WEAR -

New. Spring shorts, knit tops
blouses, pants and skirts.
Denims, twills, stripes and solids.
Complete range of misses sizes 6 to

Men's 19.95
Fashion Jeans ....... :.'14.90
Men's '22;95
Fashion Jeans ......... 117.20
Men's 124.95
Fashion Jeans ......... '18.70
Men's '29.95
Fashion Jeans ......... '22.50

RECEIVE A

Limited quantities -

Spor-~swear

1

Transfers onto T-shirts, calendars, puules
and posters.

MEN'S &amp; BOYS' WINTER JACKETS
BOYS' LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS
MEN'S SWEATERS
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS
MEN'S &amp;BOYS' CORDUROY JEANS

Special week-end sale prices on our
oew spring dresses! New styles and
colors.
Misses sizes 6 to 20.
Half sizes 10\-2 to 26 1h.

Sweatsuit Shorts ... Sale 15.95
Reg. 110.00 Long Sl.eeve

Price

son".

SAVE 60°/o ON

Spring Dresses

Reg. 17.00

"Flash Dance" Shirt ... Sale '6.80

¥2

2 DAY SALE

Pink, red, grey or y;hite in jr. sizes,
small, medium, large and X-large.

Taken from your photoaraph or "in per-

LOADED 'wnk·THESE FEATURES:.
- AM/FM/SW1 /SW2
-6 Spnker Sytem
- Mata! Tape Capability
- ALC and AFC
~ Full Auto Stop

REG. '184.95

Spec~al-$

-

'0•UO,, C»&gt;IO
.. Uitfi·JtPI

~~CAID

•

1

'

Two Day Sale/

Men's Dress Slacks
.·
'
.
ytaist sizes·30 to 42 arid extra large
~1zes 44 to 50. Excellent selection of
solid colors in light and dark shades.

"16

e:u,,,,~,

,.

Digital T•P• Counter
PauH
LED Stereo lndlcet11r
PA Capability
AC/DC OJ!llretlon

-.· IMEN'S '15.95
.
,bRESS SLACKS ......... '12.76
MEl'S '19.95 '
DAES$ SLACKS ......·... '15.96
MEN'S '29.95
DRESS SLACKS ......... '2U6
MEN'S *34.95
DRESS. SLACKS ..·....~.T'27.90"

LAY-BYS
'

WELCOME

. .
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Ohioapparentlywlllget
llttie, 11 any, te&amp;,-al money to help pay tor snow
removal during the near bll7zard that roared In this
week and burled large areas of the state under more
than 16 Inches of now.
"The Impression I got !rom them Is that It was
marginal," Davida Matthews, spokeswOOUIII !or the
Ohio Disaster Services Agency, said after meeting
Thursday with members of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
"I think the key words were, 'rtght now we see no
Immediate needs tor the state beYond the resources of

Raid nets
12 arrests
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va .
1\velve Jackson Coljnty, W.Va.
residents were arrested earlier this
week and six more remained at
large following a sweep by local
authorities of persons suspected of
drug deliveries.
The arrests were authorlzed after
Ravenswood pollee presented evidence ·to a grand jury In Ripley
Tuesday. The jury returned 21
Indictments ;~galnst 18 people.
Of11cers !rom the sherl!fs department and Ravenswood and Ripley
pollee departments went Into action
and by 9 p.m. Tuesday, 12 suspects
had been brought Into custOdy.
Those arrested were Kerry Meadows, 21, Ravenswood· Gary Hou·
chen; 33;-CottaaevUJe; k;tth Sands,
28, Sherman; Wllllam Stanley, 18,
Ravenswood; Kenneth Lake, 25,
Ravenswood; Raymond Johnson,
18, Ravenswood; Mike Harrah, 29,
Ravenswood; Adora McFall, li,
Ravenswood; Benny McKinney, 28,
Ravenswood; Andy Walker, 25.
Sandyville; Eddie Withrow. 25,
Sandyville. A juvenile was taken to
the Parkersburg Detention Center.
· Meadows, cited on three counts of
delivery of a controlled substance,
was put on $3,(XX) bond, while the
others were Individually placed on
$1,(XX) bond.
Remaining to be apprehended
were Argyle Deeter, 52, Athens
County, Ohio; Bill Archer, 'l/,
Coolville, Ohio; Debbie Sell, Ravenswood; Wenda! Johnson, Fairplain; aild Donald and Ronald
Carmichael, both of Ravenswood.
The arrests were the result of five
months of Investigative work by
Ravenswood pollee, who employed
Donald Venatter, a former drug
Investigator !or the Gallla County
(Ohio) Sheriff's Department who
served !or a brief period In ~ as
Cheshire village marshal.
Vanetter, who told local news
media that he has been Involved In
more than ·a 1,(XX) drug Investigations, was sent undercover Into the
county ·!all last September when
several of the suspects were being
held there.

Trailer destroyed
A trailer home owned by the late
Bertha Proffitt was destroyed by
!Ire Thursday morning at 9:50a.m.
Doug Rees, Racine Fireman
reported.
.
The !Ire of undetermined origin
caused an estimated $15,(XX)
damage

.

Racine had 14 men and three
trucks and a tanker !rom · the
~Uvenswood Fire Department.

the state and the local communities,' " she sald.
Gov. Richard Celeste was expected to announce
today whether he would seek a federal snow
en.eijiEIIC.I:' declaration. U the application Is
approved, the federal govemment could pay for up to
halt of certain snow-removal cos!$ In certain areas.
Ms. Matthews described the emergency program
as very llmlted and said probably only al percent of
nortlie8st Ohio highways could be considered.
Thedejltll toll stood atalThursday. Authorlties sald
malt of the victims died of heart attacks while
shaveling snow or trying to tree trapped vehicles.

Celeste had called It the worst snowstorm In Ohio
since the blizzard of 1978 claimed 55 lives.
E ight of the victims were In Cuyahoga County.
where the storm dumped more than 16 1nches. Three
were recorded In Mahonlng County, two In Summlt
County and one each In Allen, Huron, Richland and
Sandusky counties.
Paulding, Musklngum and Wayne counties each
recorded one storm-related traffic death.
A death In Hancock County was tentatively listed as
weather related. But the Coroner Wllllam Kose sald
the deceased, a 73-year-old woman, had died of

natural causes and no autopsy would be perlonned.
Celeste has removed the state of emergency order
issued when the storm struck Tuesday. but sane
National Guardsmen remained on duty Thursday
removing snow and providing emergency medical
service.
AU Interstates were reported open Thursday, with
the driving lane clear and patches of Ice on the
passing lanes.
The Ohio Turnpike was reported dry In the west,
wet In the mlddle but snow covered In the east.
SecondarY routes were mostly snow-rovered and
icy In sections.

Oil, gas drilling could revive
prosperity in Meigs County
By BOB BOEFUCH
Meigs County's prosperity at
one point In time came !rom
under the ground. The county
appears to be on the brink a!
better times, and, again the
economic boost lies under
ground.
At one time, communities a!
the county !lourtshed vta underground coal mines which eventu·
ally bec!lllle exhausted. Today,
the drilling business - a search
for o~t and gas - may well
pi'QV!de ~uch needed economic shiirtit the arm.
·
One of the county's most
prominent operations In the
development of oil and gas wells
.at the present t!Tne Is J . D.
Drilling Co., Racine, which Is
operating primarily In Meigs,
Gailla and Athens Counties.
A look at the company's
record Is Impressive. In 1982 It
drilled 122 wells and 102 In 1983.
Not only that, but none of the
wells were "dry" although
admittedly, some were better
than others.
This year, the company will be
Involved In drilling from 400 to
500 wells In the three county
area.
The spark behind the succeSs
of J . D. Drtlltng Co., Is ~year­
old James E. Diddle, who
traveled to well sites a number
of years ago on his grandfather's
knee. His grandfather Is Roy
Proffitt, Racine, long In the
drilling business.
Diddle apparently learned the
business well. Personable and,
In today's vernacular "laid
back" Diddle appears to take on
the many responsibilities and
problems o! his expanding business In stride. He re!lects
confidence, enthusiasm and
know-how.
Well drilling Is big business !or
Diddle and his company.
He has five rotary drilling rigs
operating. These can cost !rom
one to two million dollars each.
There are two service machines
running at maximum cap1c1ty
dally. This year's drilling program should total In excess of
$50 million.
In 1983, J. D. Drilling laid out
some ~.OOlln payroll to.more
than 100 employes. With the
ambitious prog!'81!1 planned for
1984, the number of employes
should double by s1,11'1111ler and

Guinther
restgns
e

Wlllle Guinther resigned as president of Syracuse VlllageCouncUand
Oris Hubbard was elected to the post
when council met Thursday night.
Resignlng duetoh!semployrnent,
Guinther said he would be unable to
devote the necessary time to the
position that Is needed.
Councll,ln other action, agreed to
direct a letter toJolynn Boster, state
representative concerning high gas
bills residents are receiving.
Council named Sampson Hall to
maintain the ballfield and autiJo.
r1zed Mayor Eber Pickens to enter
Into a contract with Phil Roberts,
county engineer In preparation !or
the proposed marina.
Esther Harden and Linda Hubbard met with council regarding
people violating the stop sign at the
Intersection of Worchester and
Second Streets.
Council agreed to place a speed
bump at the Intersection.
Also meeting with council was
John Foreman concerning a gas
leak. Foreman reported h!smeterls
locatedonanelghbor'spropertyand
he doesn't want to go on another's
property to dig up the line. Mayor
Eber Pickens advised Foreman to
contact Herb Gibson, owner of
Syracuse Home Utilities to work out
(Continued on page 8)

Man faces
OWl charge

WELL- 'Ibis ts.one of the tlve J. D. Drllltng Co.,
rigs working at a site In Antlqwty. The company has
naturally, up goes the payroll quite Impressive for a "depressed" county.
A comfortable suite of offices
Is malntalried by the company at
the entrance of what Is known as
the business section of Racine.
Employes - practically all of
them - are !rom the RacineSyracuse area.
In addltimi to the payroll's
e(tect there are other economic
side effects. Subcontractors are
Involved and . Pomeroy attorneys are given lois of legal work
since Diddle leases blocks of
land !or drilling operations.
Some 20,(Xl) acres are under

drilled 47 wells this year and has a goal of between tOO

and 1100 wells for the year.

lease now.
Joe Stobart of Racine handles
leases !or the company and this,
undoubtedly: keeps him on the
move. Landowners. who go
under lease to J . D. Drilling not
only receive one-eighth of the
take from the well - and that's
before expenses - but also
receive enough free gas to keep
them more than warm over the
winter. Free gas, of course, Is
given only during the life of a
well, but this can stretch to 10 or
20 years or longer. The property
owher also receives a land lease
fee until drilling takes place.
Pleased with the progress that

has been made in drilling
processes over the past years,
Diddle reports that today with
modern equipment, a 4,(XX) foot
well can be sunk In three days or
even less. He contrasts this to
1970 when It took three months to
do a comparable well.
With J . D. Drilling, four
workers are with a rig on shift
work around the clock once a
drilling operation gets underway. A fifth employe, known as
a "took pusher" Is head of the ·
particular project and he Is not
relieved but remains on call 24
hours a day until the project Is
(Continued on page 8)

A Coolville area was cited on two
charges by the state highway patrol
following a one-car accident on Ohio
681 Thursday.
The patrol said Kermit E. Clark,
49. was eastbound, one mile west of
Ohio 7, at 2:15p.m. when his vehicle
\vent off the left side of the road and
struck a tree.
The patrol cited Clark for DWI
and !allure to control.
The patrol Investigated a two-car
accident on Bedford Township Road
alA Thursday morning.
A vehicle driven by Donna J .
Young, 47, Pomeroy, collided with a
car drtven by Bradley B. Johnson,
43, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, when both were
reportedly left or centeronacurve at
11:55a.m.
There were no Injuries and slight
damage was reported to Young's
vehicle. Johnson's auto was moderately damaged. No citation was
Issued.
A vehicle driven by Larry F .
Engle, 32, Athens, was moderately
damaged alter It struck a deer on
U.S. 33at 7:33p.m. Thursday.

Crackdown coming on welfare fraud cases
· co

agreements with neJahbo~ states to compare
~Ill\· probably' ot.'cii1'B In cities neat the bp_rdel'l .p.f. , records and catch people · who are !alsltylng
~ states, and a crackdOwn miy lie ln'tl)t! · · ~ and Incomes~
w.lru, ·~ Rep; M:tcbael stlnzlaqf:i; ~· : • . . J1e ~ this 1s one
the ma~t Important
He. said 'lblll'!lday.he. belli)Veelllli~ ~~~e··ol tl¥l· ~turel,$ttbi1J/W,hesa!!j, although tlleii\a!JI.tl!rUStls
.-tniild, whJcll State Auditor ~·E. ~tila JO~t the ailcUtor to run crpss ~ks of statewide
· .estimated ~t involving 3 percent to 4 ~t ~811- · ~,welfare rolls and Income tax records to sort out
wel!are recipients, 18 In clttes 11 Uke Younpt~l(
'Toledo, aDd Cincinnati. We think It Is a caee of people
F'eliiiJOn said he believes the measure can save the
wbollveandworktnonestateandcolll!ct (wel!are)!n
state SilO mWion a year.
.anotbl!r."
· : ·'
He said hlustlmate was pegged "basically on the
The Oilumbua lawmaker 18 IIJOPIOI'!ni a bill, ,· · computer croa cbtcks we've already done although
Jll.8ll8d .s:J.O by tile HOUle earlier tllli week, which we ~w been aQmewhat limited." .
.
autlmtt.el 1he:"'
auditor
to
enter
Into
n!CJixocal
·
.
UMBUS Ohio (All) -Most ol Ohio's welfare

ot

.ts...

.

.

,,

Last summer, the Legislature authorized cross said, by opposition tram former GOP Gov. James A.
checks of wel!are rolls with the records of some state Rhodes and a taxation department that claimed Its
agencies that have data on the Incomes of Individual hands were tied by prohibitions against disclosure of
Ohioans. These Include the state retirement systems Internal Revenue Service Information.
"That was just a smokescreen," Ferguson said,
and the bureaus of unemployment compensation,
adding that he recetvoo a Tetter from IRS offerlitg Its
workers compensation, and employment services.
Stlnztano's bill, which he called "the last step" In cOOperation. · '1'hey. even sent us the list of federal
.the state's crackdown on fraud, !or the first time employees (In Ohio)," he said .
The auditor saki Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste
permits the auditor to compare taxpayer and welfare
rolls to seek out people whose Income exceeds the · ~ Indicated his $Upport of the pending bill. The
taxation and wel!are departments also are backing It
amount allowed for welfare ellg!bWty.
Ferguson, a DemQcrat, has been seeking this and are optimistic about favorable action by the
authority for six years, but had ·been thwarted, he Democrat&lt;"Ontrolled Senate this year, Stlnztano said.

�The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Friday, March 2, 1984

Commental*y
111 Courl Sl reel
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVfJI'ED TO THE IN'I'EREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publishe r I
BOBHOEFUCH

Asslsl anl Publlaher/ ConlroUer

;;;:y

General Manacer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
A MEMBER of The Associated Preas, Inland D.Uy Preas Association and lhe American Newspaper Publlaher Asaoclallon.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed. Tlle7 llloald be 1... 11uu1 M • loa&amp;. All letters are subJect to edtt1•1ud mu&amp; be alped "'" aame, addreu ud
lelephoae aumber. No WIIIIDed lellen wW be publllbed. !.ellen oboald be Ia
10od taste, addre.lla&amp;l18ues, aot pen.aiiUee.

WASlUNGTON - Figures tend
to mesmerize. Here In Wasblngton
a moving decimal point has the
e!fect of a hypnotist's swaying
watch. The '87 deficit wlll be one
hundred and eighty paint four ...
The '88 deficit wlll be one hundred
and twenty-three point three ... You
wlll now balance the budget ... You
will now ...
Under anesthesia or hypnosis, we
may do foollsh things. We begin to
take budget estimates as revealed
truth. In our hearts we know that
budget projections are largely
baloney, but we cling to budget
figures - anybody's budget figures
- because they have a semblance
of order and reality. This mindless
dedication ought to be shaken o!f.
Let me tell vou the truth about the

realitY was a deftclt of S23 bWlon.
Ford's budget offtce predicted a
1975 deficit of $9-t bllliqn; tbe reality
was a defiCit ' of U5.2 bWlon.
Carter's people said J.l8) would
brlng a deficit of $29 bllllon; tbe
deficit waa Sl!9.6 bllllon. Reagan's
OMB projected the 1983 deflctt at
$9U bllllon. It turned out to be
$195.4 billion.
Forecastl from .the CBO (Congressional ' Budget Office) have
been sllghtly better, but not much
better. Projections from experts In
the private sector are In the same
class. The CBO had an average
error of 104 percent between 1979
and 1983. So respected an outfit as
Chase Econometrics lias been
embarrassingly off target.
In·all of this, believe me, there Is

numbersthathaveljO~us:

Nobody knows what

tliese deftclts

will be. The probabWtles are strong

that today's projections aren't even
close to what the reaUty wUl be.
This fundamenlal truth of federal
finance recently was attested In a
four-part study from the Her1~
F oundation. The authors concluded
that economic forecasters
no
more reliable than fortune tellers or
astrologtsts." Between 1971 and
1983, deficit projections ~ the
OMB (Office of Management and
Budget) had an average error of 254
percent. Only five times In .these 13
years were OMB's projectipns
within 50 percent of reality.
For some specific examples:
Nixon's budget office predlclec\ for.
fiscal '71asurp!Usof$1.3bDllon; the

"are

Muzzling thousands
President Reagan soon wlll mark tbe tlrst anniversary of one of tbe
more Irrational decisions of hls tenure In tbe Wblte House. Despite a year rJ.
criticism, he adamantly refuses to acknowledge hls bad judgment.
On March 11, 1983, the president signed National Securtty Decision
Directive IW, a repressive docunient wblch authorized a petvaslveprogram
. of government censorshlp and Invasion rJ. privacy.
In tbe name of protecting national securtty, NSDD IW and a subsequent
: executive order Issued by the.presldent on Aug. 24 of last year would:
- Require almost lJO,«m employees of the federal government and Its
'COntractors to sign Ufetlrne secrecy agreements, wblcb would be enforced
through court Injunctions. Under these agreements, employees would
pledge to submit whatever they write about their government service to
• pre-publication review by federal censors. The censors would then ensure
: that the writings do not reveal sensitive Information.
•
-Subject more than 6.5mtlllon lndlvldualsholdlngsecurttyclearances
: -:- federal employees, members of the armed services and employees of
• government contractors - to the threat of polygraph tests, wblch would be
- admlnlstered randomly to thwart unauthorized disclosure of classlfled
. data.
•
Both houses of Congress - led by the Republican-controlled Senate ; tound those measures SO&gt; abhorrent that they overwbelmlngly approved
: legislation suspending Implementation of NSDD 84 until Aprtl of this year.
•
'I'ho6e who refuse to take polygraph tests would be subject to demotion,
• transfer or other adverse action, even though numerous government
: studies have concluded that such tests are Inherently unrellable.
Dr. JohnF.Beary,anasslstantsecretaryofdefense,cllargesthatthelle
· :detector "mlsclasslfles Innocent people as ·llars." The federal otrlce of
· Technology Assessment asserts, that "there Is no sclentltlc evidence to
:establlsh the validity of polygraph testing," and that It "Incorrectly
: Identifies slgnlflcant numbers of Innocent persons as deceptive."
The censorsblp program Is more llmlted because It affects only those
:With access to Sensitive Comparlmentallzed Information. Tbls Is classlfled
:data which Is subject to special dlstrtbutlon and handling requirements
because It relates to blgbly sensitive Intelligence sources and methods.
The censorsblp requirement long has been In effect at the Central
:Jntelllgence Agency and the National Securtty Agency, but Reagan's
· 11roposal would extend prior restraint on expression to the State, Justice and
Energy deparlments and other federal agencies.
The departments of state and justice cannot cite a single Incident In
· whlch a former employee has revealed classlfled Information. The Defense
Deparlment says It knows of only one confirmed case and one suspected
Incident. That hardly suggests the need tor draconian measures.
Nevertheless, Reagan has pressed for a program which would require
that, for the rest of their lives, those with SCI accesswouldhavetohave book
:manuscripts, magazine·articles, newspaper columns, letters to the editor,
scholarly papers, speech texts and even novels reviewed by government
censors.
·
The censorship program could easUy be abused, with Information
suppressed for partisan political reasons or tocoveruplncompetencerather
than to protect national security.
It also poses a serious threat to democracy because It unjustifiably
restricts public debate. In the 1971 Pentagon Papers case, one of the U.S.
Supreme Court's concurring majority opinions eloquently noted:
"Secrecy ·In government Is fundamentally anti-democratic ... Open
debate and discussion of public Issues are vital to our national health. On
public Issues, there should be uninhibited, robust and wide-open debate."
Under Intense pressure, the White House recently announced that
Reagan was suspending Implementation of NSDD 84, but that may be a
political ploy to prevent the directive from becoming an Issue In the
president's re-election campaign.
NSDD M Is nothing more than a manifesta tion of Reagan's
unwa rranted paranoia a bout "leaks." It ought to be permanently
withdrawn rather than tempora rily suspended.

an

refused.

On Jan. 17, tbe senatOr pleaded
hls case with Robert McFarlane,
the president's national securtty
adviser. He asked that the admlnlstratlon approve Cardinal Sin's
appeal for food . Melcher told my
associate Lucette Lagnado that
McFarland promised he'd take
care of the matter.
So far, he l.asn't. Neither has the
State Depar.ment, the Agency for
international Development or the

Today in history

a

close

now

Akron Ouctllf'l f'l. l&lt;ml Roolf'\'f'il

a.WTww•...,.

""~

ll

Col. Mlr'Dn-f'ranklln 73, Col. Whrtsloor ·

"

Canton 1'lmken 43, MI.WOO Pfn'y C2
C"rl . F'or'f'll Park ill. Odord Talawandl
C'uy~

Falls !16, Akron SI.V St .M 41
Ham Uton 49, an. Syrarnon&gt; f l
LIW&gt; Callt ~. Sokla «&lt;
Lakrwrod ~. N. Otn.lfd!.!

!I
CUyahottl; Fallll &amp;1, Stow &amp;I
Dfft_,. 61. EUdl •
Etyril
Lora ~ SoultrvWw ~
MaslilUon WalhMKfCII ~. N. Canton !W
Maurrw tl, Tol BowlhPr :tl
N. ~al kX\ &amp;1, Or. Rhodrs Ill
Qrfslon C'lly ill. Tol. DPVUtus t9
Slllfm 73, Wamn W, R.fotlf1'Yt' n. OT
Tol. Whltn'IM' t&amp;. Pfn'ylburx a
Upprr ArtlnKfon M, Nf'WI r1l f7

~...anra•rr

m. 1.anNvWr f2
MaMIIold!I2.Fkl&lt;iloy ..

n.

Wai'Tftl HowlMd n. You111:.
WOf1hinCIII'I

E~

e, Col. Nortt.a.nd li

Manl. Malabat 56, Cf'l1na 4t
Ntw PhlladPiphla Ill, Alhfttl f6
~n Clay !U Tot Nol:n&gt; Damf' 52,

JCJI'

Spina So.llh !W., SiJinfil. North ~
Tol. · OrVIIbl• :tJ. Tol. C«llral ;r,
W~lakf'

43. Lcralll ~~~~lJ
Xmla ll. Mkldk-4own 38

rr

a...u -

O..MT_._.._.,
s. ~- F'ronllrr ~

Ridj;rf&gt;r !J. Akron Hobin !'13
&amp;tk-vur ti, UPP'f SIM.ill(\• :II
Bryan tf. Kmtc:.~ lJ
t'anlk'ld f9 . Brookfie4d f2

~

_G...., l l - &amp; 1

rt.

Ma)'IVUW 66
a.rrun
71. !12
SINbmvUJr Calh. 8'1, Htwr f7
Wfll lr«'on s, Medina Buclu,. \.1

U.S. Embassy In Manlla. When
u.s. Ambassador Michael A.rmacost returned to Wasblngton early
last month, Melcher collared blm
and told blm of the trouble he'd had
·trYing to deliver the cardinal's
letter. Annarost suggested be
mlgllt have more luck If be enlisted
a Republican ally.
Melcher took tbe suggestion. He
wrote a letter to the . presldent1
ouWnlng the hunger problem In the
Phlllpplnes and cardinal Sin's
hopes of .Uevtatlng It with Ameri.·
can rice. Then he got Sen. Jesse
Helms, R-N.C., chairman of the
Agriculture Committee, to coslgtl
the letter.
With Helms' clout, Melcher ~
yet deliver the cardinal's appeal and the slum kids of Manila won't
have to go to bed h'f'gry.

21!

Canton McKink'y 43, Gf'ftNbw'R Gl'ft'fl

Wo)'ftt !II. Tol. """"" "
Bartrrton • Wa.llh .k'Mllt !12
Boy 81, N. OlmoOocl !I
Or. GleftviiW 51, Wa!Tl'ftiVUk&gt; ~
Clfo. Sl.lanatill 82. Mf'dlla M

Canton taU\. 36. Ooylt'flt(JIIIt'n :tl
Eutwood 61. Oftttlon Str11ch 4&amp;

"Twl..,.,..

Col. A.cldfmy 78, LarK'ISirr Fl!'hrr fll
Col. HNdy C. CINl Wlnctftter 41

Huron M. 0.... F'Oiil !ll
KAnsas U&amp;kot1 10. MWtauy Lakr 61
Kmstm ~. AstiataWI Hartor ~
Onvllk&gt; 41. Rootalown 28
Of1awa.Clancb11ll. WauteOn 29
SprtnatJOr'O «l. Llnlr Miami ll
Wamn Cham ~ 7f. [ . Pak&gt;IIIN' ~
W HoArl'ft 61, St.ClairiVllW ll

F.ly111 """' noo. " · Mo........
L«kkand ... Bl~vll •
Len~ ONI"\1PW S2. I ~ Yl
MIC'On Eutrm '16, Ctn. SrYPn HW5 "t!

..vcac;lla li. 1Vfkl Calvt'l1 ~
~Ilk&gt; SJ. H IUI~ .11 ·
ConY(&amp;' Crfostvk&gt;w 72, l..q)5ir !W

a-

Are.Ua 62, &amp;ftiVWfo t6

Arrtltold 91, HldtJvtlk' 81

ClntiNII 8t Rk:hmond Hll. l4
8ri.'ilol 1.\, Jlduon-MIIIon M

''-AT••--

Mktdlfolown F'm wk:ll 00. 1'11-Counry N.

Ill

Cory·RaWIOI :\2, FOif&lt;.I"W SI .Wmlk&gt;lln

"'

~ry G , F'llf1D't Ha ~lt 3f

R~

73. Nt'W Alblny M

!\lrYIIt Calmlk' 84. Mlaml Val.

:IJ

1"11mbk&gt; ~. f'rMk!ln F"'lmw'r Grwn ~
Y.'lndham 76. Mlnrral ~ l\
Worthlnl(lm Chr• n . Marion Caltt 62
Y M~ ~ a;, , W Cl!y !'12

~

suom 64. ron

Jm nlrt~

5.2

Han!ln K 49, St.liuu)· 4!1
Hoilitll1•· 4&amp;. ~on 4'1
~-

St.PlTr 62. Lak~ t9
Markm Local t6, Uppt'i' Sdolo Vat :fl
Pc't'bk&gt;l 49. ~Ilk&gt; E. l2
Rlvrr V1l. 76. Bklom.Carroll !'tt
Wvnlo!'d 'r.'l, CulliN W. ~ !17
7Arw 'T'rac1' ~. P&lt;rts. NOin' llwnf&gt; ~

Trimble advances
in district play

Suckers never learn_______L_ow_'e_ll-:--W_in_ge_tt

Don't knock other drivers

R.S. Gioto -O.. AMTww..-

-~~.~~.

•

Letter to editor

CHILLICOTHE - Trimble' s
Tomcats broke away from a 37-37
fourth quarter tle to post a 5948 first
round district class "A" win over
Franklin Furnace Green here
Thursday . .
Trimble, the state's fourth
ranked team and defending district
champion, will meet the toughest
opponent on Its tournament traU to
date In Beaver Eastern Friday,
March 9, at Chillicothe High School
$tartlng at 7 p.m .
Beaver Easte rn Is 20-3 and a
strong 68-41 winner over N£'W
Boston In opening round district
play Wednesday. Trimble Is 22-1 on
the year. Green bows out with a 1&amp;-7
slate.
Scott Gatchel paced the Tomcats
with 19 points while Nelson Morris
added 13 and Dave Dupler 10. Eddie
Whitt led the Bobcats with 14 while
Tim Salyers had 12.
Trimble appeared to be In for an

breathe. WhUe we worry about a
to the Iranian oll fields almostdaUy. concentrating on a mllltary buUd·
little higher electric bUI to provide
The strait could be closed by up far , beyond our peace-time
scrubbers for power plants, we
sinking an on tanker or by planting needs, tbe country's Infrastructure
nol'l(:halantly allow billions of our
mines. Operilng It could be even a has gone to hell.
tax
,dollars to be wasted by the
greater ch~re than the Navy plans
This condition has existed since
Pentagon. I am constantly amazed
as It must be done under the guns of as far back as· the Icenhower
the Iranian army
ate massed admlnlstralton, which Incidentally by the docU!ty of the American
people to be blinded to their real
In that section of their country. At had the last balanced budget. In
needs In favor of Imaginary ones.
the worst, It would mean getting 1969 we reached parity with the
The last estimate I have heard Is
Involved In a shooting war with Iian Soviet .Union In tbe arms race and
$1.2 TRILLION to bring the counand at the besi It would be orily a should have stopped there and
try's Infrastructure up to normal.
temporary measure for ·Khomelni · focused on our own Internal probThis sum spent over several years
could probably sink tankers as fast lems. There Is no benefit In buUdlng
would take up the sla&lt;;k whUe
as we cleaned up the mess. eapons we wlll never dare use but
Industry changes from a war-time
Remember, It was hls fanatics who there Is benefit In seeing our
to a peace-time economy.
were behind the suicide truck plan country has good roads to travel on,
We can't start too soon!
which cost so many lives In Beirut! clean water to drink and clean air to
I don't think this country should
now be contemplating Interference
In the Persia n Gulf. I thOught tbe
Marines In Lebanon was a mistake
In the first place and said so at the
time. The future of l...!!banon will
e ventually be determhied by Israel
and Syria either by peaceful·means
or otherwise and our presence there
made little difference other than
costing the lives of 265 Anierican
boys sacrificed mi tbe altar of
egoism. Now we are doing It again.
We could easily make up our five
percent of the on by pressuring the
•'
oU companies to produce more: U
England, France, Japan and other
DE}lARTMENT OF STAT
countries want to protect their oll
,.•
lntei'I'Sts In the Persian ·Gulf, let
'
them do so! Margaret Thatcher, to ·
plump up her popularity, sent' a
,•
'• '
fleet almost to the South Pole to
battle Argentina over the F aUiland ·.
.
Islands. Why not to the comparee.;
lively short distance to tbe Persian
Gulf'? Do we owe Japan flnythlpg?
A'bsolutel)iilot! 'It 1s "P 10 iQe!JPto ..,., '
protect their ·own Interests. ; We
have a)ready made ample relflbu,.
. . .,.....,..' _
·lions ·for-droppiJW- the-1\·bor!Jb by.;-:.-'- '·
surrendering. ouf markets. Do we. • •
·l
have to wet nurse thetn forever? · · · ·
•••
I~ '
Let them take on the Ayatollahfoi'·a
change. They are the country tha:i ·
l
would be hurt the most by cloSing.
the Strait of Hormuz. . ,. · . ,
·"Gosh; I wish rcoutd- communtc~ltJ our Leba·
The Reagan admlntstratlon hall
· ~·' . n~poi/Cy.~ n'!t at
do." . •
,
_all!!d.r do.ne their Cquntry ~:· ~, '-- ~ . . . . . ~--- - 'f¥' - -- -- - - .......-"- ..._ .• ' ---- ~.. ' -,..... - :
able harm with ·Its Communist . · . \
'
paranoia. WhUe .they have been

wliO

Be.rry's World

easy night early In the third quarte r
when they were up 34-22, but Green,
who earlier whipped Hannan Trace
58-48 for the sectional title, rallled
behind freshman Brian Roach to tie
It at 37-37 seconds Into the final
period.
Green dld not substitute until only
a minute and half remained when
Roach had fouled out. Trimble,
with an extraordinary bench.
seemed to be the fresher at the end.
Trimble, coached ·byTom Evans,
were without the services of
starling guard 'Brian Hooper who
dld not dress due to Ulness. Hooper
Is su s pected of havin g
mononucleosis.
TRIMBLE tllll) - Galcll&lt;t S.:l-19: Morris
~ · ~ t 3:

Duptrr4·2·t0: Fm ls:J.t-7: Koons ~.{).R:
Morrison t.{)-2. TOJ'AU! M-tt-611.
GREEN ill\) - Whl117.{).14: Saty!'rs ~2· !2 :
Pk'rson :l-t-7: B. Roach :l-:1-9: PIN'('(' t M: D.
2
Byq.......,.,.:
Roach
.{).&lt;1 . TOJ'.US n.i-411.
Trlmblo . ..
. ... .....tJ 14 l2 22-5!1

Gn"&lt;'n . .. . .. .. .. .. . ..... ..

DRIBBLES THROUGH MIDDLE - Angle
Spencer ( 12) of Eastern drtbblell to the key against
two Peeble defenden, Angle AW!dn (40 ) and J ene

By SCOM' WOLFE
WAVERLY - The Peebles
Indians went on the warpath late In
the fl~t half, scoring 15 unanswe red , points In the last four
minutes before halftime enroute to
a 49-32 victory over the Eastern
E agles here Thursday evening In
first round action of the Class "A"
g irl s ' di s trict b as k e tb a ll
tournament .
Most of the game proved to be
quite competitive as determined
efforts !Jy both clubs produced a
hard-fought ba ttle, especially durIng the early pa rt of the second
frame when Eastern trailed by just
two, 15-13.
The victory boosted Peebles'
r~rd to 18-5, while gaining I hem a
bert h In the distr ict cha mpionship
game on Saturday a t 8 p.m. with
Zane Trace. Zane Trace boosted lis
record to 18-4 with a thrilling 57-50
triumph over Portsmouth Notre
Da me In the preliminary contest.
The young Eastern gals of Coach
Susan Arnold bow from tourna·
menl play wit h a respecta ble 10.11
season record.
E aste rn gra bbed the opening ti p
of the game, but It was Peebles who
notc hed the first score at the 6: 45
ma rk when forward Phyllls Sho·
e maker drove baseline for a 2-0
Peebles lead. Sophomore Ma rgaret
Horner drove the bne just seconds
late r to knot the score al 2·2.
Sta ndout guard Julie Singer netled
her first polnl of the game with a
free throw tha t gave Peebles a lead
that It never relinquished. 3-2.
despite a determined effort by the
Eaglettes.
Th ree s tra ig ht tu r naro und
jumpers from the low post by plvol
woma n Angle Austin gave the Lady
Wa rriors a 9-2 edge, however.
E astern made Its first comeback
bld to pull close at 11.(6 on two free
throws by Angle Spencer a nd
anothe r by Horner.
Another goal by Austin gave
Peebles a n additional surge of
momentum going Into the second
fra me as well as boosting Its lead to
13-5.
Controlling the tip of In the second
period E astern's Dee Dalley scored
a baseline drive, Horner powered
Inside, a nd Spencer hit Jwo more
free throws for a 13-11 score. Guard
Michelle Ray launched a long bomb
tha t swished througl) the nets for a
15-lllead, but a nother Dailey drive
tightened the score all5-13.
A tantalizing full court press
stunned the Eaglettes with a great
" surprise effect" that seemingly
drained every ounce of energy from
the E HS offense. Eastern managed
to get the ball .downcourt on great
ballhandllng efforts from pint

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Eastern hit 12 of 50 for 24 per('('nt
from the field a nd hit eight of 14 at
the line for 57 percent with Spen('('r
hitting seven of nine from the itne.
Eastern gra bbed 48 re bounds led by
Horner with 13 a nd ~pencer 10.
They had 23 turnovers a nd nine
fouls.
Peebles hit 20 of 63 from the field.
seven of nine from I he linE'. had 10
tu r novers. 14 stea ls, a nd 35
rebounds .
In the first game Zane Trace
followed the pattern of victory

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BULK

••

established In last night's two
preliminaries as It hit one less field
goal than Notre Dame, bul hl t 17 of
·19 from the line to post the 57-50
triumph. Another great asset was a
fine 34 point effort from 5-6 senior
Beth Mettler who ripped the cords
for 11 field goals and 12 of 14 free
throw attempts.
In the upper bracket cha mpionship game on Satu rday a nother
local team. So uther n, faces
Hunti ngton-Ross for District honors
at6:30 p. m .

The second half was played on
PE EBLES ~49) - SinJ!;('f .l-0-6: Ray 2.().4:
even terms, but the da m age had Shoemakf'f 3--J..IJ: Austin 7·2·16 a nd DanJX&gt;r
TDIUI ·
been done. The first ha lf scoring 4-ll·R.
By quar1enl:
East('rn ..
'l R R 11-32
barrage by Peebles overshadowed
Pre biNi ...
.. 1.1 1i 1.1 6-49
a great ballhandllng exhibition a nd
fine floor game by Spencer, who ..---- - -- - - ----1
ended t he night wi th nine points.
four steals, and five assists. Dailey
also had a good scoring effort in the
second half.
&amp;
Eastern tra Ded 43-21 after three
204 Condor St.
periods of play. lhe n staged a fourth
Pomery,OH
Phone 992-2975
period comeback that cut the lead
to 15 points, bul time ra n out on the
Spring &amp; Summer Hours:
Mon .- Fri. 9 to 5
49-32 finale.
Sat. 9 to 1
Austin led the winners wit h 16
points and 11 rebounds, Shoema ker
added 13 points a nd 12 rebounds.
~THE
Danner had eight points. For
GRAVELY
Eastern. Dailey notched 14 points
&amp;VSTEIVI
a nd Spencer nine.

BIRDS

'

'

guard Angle Spencer a nd swing·
guard Kelly Whitlatch, however,
once they crossed m id-court Peebles applied muc h pressure to force
several costly E HS turnovers.
Six points by Shoemaker a nd four
by Singer sparked a 15 point scoring
explosion right before halftime that
broke the camel's back, proving to
be the d ifference In the game. In
that stint the India ns canned seven
of nine field goal attempts from
bot h the Inside a nd outside, shaking
up Eastern's usually tough zone
defense.

.. .. 10 A 16 14-4R

.

II

Kremln ( 12). Spencer had nine points in the Eagles'
49-32 !088. The defeat OIL'its Eastern from further
district play.

Southern's Tornadoettes, now
1&gt;-5. play unbeaten HuntingtonRoss "Lady Huntsmen" Saturday
evening at 6: 30 p.m . In the girls'
District Championship game at
Waverly High School.
Any tickets may be purchased at
the door at a cost of $2.50. The team
will leave for the game around 3: 15
p.m . from Sout hern High School.
Southern, the defending DistriCt
champion of a yea r ago, hopes to
defend its title and gain a berth In
the regional tourna m ent at
La ncaster.
Huntington defeated Trimble by .
five points in its closest encounter of
the season.
Earlier In the season, Southern
spilt with Trimble in two outings.
All In all, Sat urday's contests has
the makings of a barn-burner with
two fi ne teams in competitive for
the District title.

Peebles eliminates Eaglettes

.·

,.

••

Tournament results
,......,.,_....

Mora.r~

Just emerging from the morass
of Lebanon, the United States Is
setting Itself up as the world's
biggest patsy again. Now we are
going to the Persian Gulf to make
sure European and Japanese Industries don't run out of oU. W. C. Fields
was right when he said, "Once a
sucker, always a sucker." Suckers
never learn!
This country depends on shipments of oll from the Persian Gulf
for only five percent of Its oU.
England, France a nd the other
European countries get about 40
percent of their oU from the Persian
Gulf while Japan gets about
two-thirds. To protect our minuscule five percent, President Ronald
: I don't thlnklt's rightforsomeone to go along with hlm and help with
Reagan has vowed to keep the
to put down all of Meigs Local bus the children. The bus that we used
Strait of Hormuz open even If It
drivers. just because this pe!'Son, was No. 13, and the driver didn't
means sticking our •nose Into the
Elberta Clela nd, supports one know ahead of time that anyone
would
be
using
the
bus.
But
the
bus
Iran-Iraq
war which has been
driver tha t was Involved In an
getting along very nicely without us
aCcident. I will not make a ny was stlll very clean, and even had
for more than three years. The
· ci&gt;mment about the accident al- the little room freshener In It, and It
Slralt of Hormus Is the narrow rock
t!lough my husband and I came did s"l'lell nice. So maybe the person
of water which connects the
along not too long afte r It had wanting to give support to Esther
Persian Gulf with the Sea of Arabia
happened. Since my husba nd Is a Black should give her moral
and It Is through this strait that
bus driver, he was asked to support, and not try to put down all
most of the Middle East oll must
tr anspo r t the childr e n from the other drivers, because they also
keep
their
buses
clean.
Jennie
pass to reach the world's markets.
Easther Black's bus, on to another
Iranian leader Ayatollah Khobus they brought to take the Williamson, Rt. 1, Rutland, Ohio,
melnl, a name with which most
Children to the hospital. I was asked phone 742-2955.
Americans are palnfully famlllar,
has threatened to block the strait If
Iraq bombs Its oll lnstallatons and
halts Its now of oU on which It
· depends to finance Its war. · The
United States-has had a 15-shlp t~sk
Today is Friday, March 2nd, the 62nd day of 1984. There are lJ4 days left
In tbe year.
force, Including one aircraft carToday's Highlight In History:
rier, standing by outside the strait
for some time as a warning signal.
On March 2nd, 1776, U.S. Marines fought their first battle, capturing a
After aU, · the Navy h~s to have
Brillsh fort ·In the Bahamas during the Revolutionary War.
.
somethlng"to 'do ·to lustlfy··all 1he
On this date:
.
billions we have sf)ent the last three
In 1836, Texas ~lared ·Its Independence trom Mexico.
years to bring It up to wartime
In 1917, Puerto Ricans were granted U.S. cltlzensblp.
stmlgth,..,A!so, lt- ls a good way to
- In1951, the East-beat-the West, llHo-94, ln-tbe firstNBA AU-Star {;l~JY~l!.
keep the Navy personnel out of
. And In 198!, former President Gerald Ford ~~If avaUable for
bars!
.
tl)e Republican presidential nomination, saying Ronald Reagan was "too
conservative."
.
-.
England's Prime Minister MarTen years ago: Israel and Syria agreed to confer In the United States on a
garet Thatcher, Reagan's erstwlllle
crony, has ·generously offered to
separatiOn of their forces In the Golan Heights.
Five years ago: Vietnam rejected China's proposal •..J end their border
add few arttlsh warships to' tbe
war, calllng the offer a "trick."
.
u.s. fleet In case I&lt;homelni carries
year ago: Pope John Paul II began a Central American visit In Costa
out bls threat to
the strait. It
.-Rfca, saymgliii'was-lliere tO''Siiare!liepam" ot a region ffuit was.,'crymg . coUld liappiiii iiny'day
as Iraq
bombers are Increasing their threat
out" for an end to war and hate. ~

. :0ne

Statistical garbage II part of the
very essence of political existence.
In our OWJI household finances, tbe
problems are not so dlftlcult: We
know pretty well what our lnco~
and expenses are llkely to' be.
Economic forecasters have to ask
themlelves: What wlll be the Prime
rate of Interest In September 1988?
How many persons wlll be unemployed In the spring of 19116? What
wlll tbe rate of Inflation be In the
fourth quarter of 19111? The professionals have to make their best
guesses on automobile sales, buUdlng permits, housing starts, retail
sales, crop yields, the balance of
trade, and the level of Industrial
production In terms of plant
capacity.

Senatorial kudo, kick _ _ ___Ja_ck_A_nde_rso_n
tenses tougher to penetrate than the
·Siegfried Une. In the weeks since
be has been back, lie has been
unable to get
appointment with
the president to hand-dell . er Cardinal Sin's letter, aa be pJ'O!lll,aed he
would. The !!est a White House aide
offered was to "send a messenger''
to pick up the letter. Melcher

Bruce Douglas also set a career·
scorlng mark with 24 points.
The wln gave the 1Ulnl a 214
record overaU. The Buckeyes fell to
8-Sln the Big Ten and 1.5-11 overall.
Illlnots jumped o!f to a 13-9
advantage and held on for a 28-27
halftime lead. During the half.
Winters contributed 12 points and
slx rebounds.
·
Despite Wlnols' swarming man·
to-man defense, Ohio State man·
aged to make 11 of 23 field goals,
whUe holding Illinois to 42 percent
shooting, Including a n 0-8 stretch
midway through the period.
A Winters slam dunk Ignited the
Dllnl ~seconds Inti&gt; the second half,
and wltbln five minutes, !Wools had
a seven-point lead. The closest the
Buckeyes could come afler that was
five points.
Topping Ohio State In scoring
were Troy Taylor with 19 and Tony
Campbell with 14.
Joining Winters and Douglas In
double figures for Dllnols was Doug
Altenberger with 11.
"The most Important part of
basketball Is defense and rebound·
lng and Dllnols did a great Jobin both
areas," Mille r said

CHAMPAIGN, IU. (AP) - After
Dllnoll Coach Lou Henion "aot on
me a little" this week, Efrem
Winters put on a one-man show
under the board,&amp; on Thuraclay night.
The &amp;-9 sophomore forward responded with 26 poln!B and 14
rebounds, both game· blglla and
careerrecordsfortbestandouttrom
Chicago, In a 73-58 victory over Ohio
State.
· The victory vaulted the Dllnl back
Into a tlefortbeleadatoptheBlgTen
Conference with Purdue. Both
teams are 12-3, with three league
games left on the schedule.
Buckeye Coach Eldon Miller was
effusive In hls praise of tbe job
Winters did.
"Etrem Winters dld tbe best jobof
ulfenslve rebounding that I've ever
seen In this league," Mlller saki.
Asked what brought oot the
outstanding game from him, Win·
ters said, "I think It was coach
(Henson),"Wlnterssald. "He got on
me a little."
But Henson saki, "They get that
every week."
: Winters wasn't the only standout
for the Illlnl as sophomore guard

no Jlggery·pokery, no deliberate
·effort to deceive. No one II cooking
the books. The government's projections, both In OMB and CBO, are
the work of professlona!J doing the
best they can. These experts read
computers, not woolly bears, and
they COIIItrllct mocleil, scenarios,
and best and worst cues. But
computer slaves are ruled by tile
great god GIGO. U you putgal'bllge
In, you get garbage out.

Such variables are unknowable.
The very best economlltl, applying
their very best sldlls, could not haY!!
predicted In 1981 that the COIIIUII'Iel'
price Index for Je.nuary l9IN would
rtse sharply because of two factors:
the breakup of AT&amp;T1 wbl~
produced higher telephone bills,
and a disastrous freeze In Florldi,
which produced higher prices fdr
food. Every time we try to~
the future, •and to lay It neatly on a
table, It rises up and kicks us In !hi!
pants.

WASlUNGTON- Today I'd like whose parents have been unable to
to present awards to two members find work In the shattered Pblllpof the Senate: kudos for one, a kick plne economy.
for the other.
Cardinal Jaime Sin, head of the .
The kudos goes to Sen. John Roman Catholic Church In the
Melcher, 0-Mont., for hls humanlt- · Pblllpplnes, appealed to Melchior
artan e!forts to get American rice for help In getting an limergency
shipped to thousands ot desperately sblpment of food for bls starving
needy famllles In the Pblllpplnes.
flock. Melcher, who has two
The kick goes to Sen. Frank grandehlldren of bls own, was
Murkowskl, R-Alaska, for hls ef- eager to be of service.
forts to push legtslatlon that would
So the prelate wrote a letter to
benefit bls own oli and gas leases.
President Reagan, asking for ao,«m
Here are the citations that go with tons of Hce from America's bulging
the awards:
granaries. The rict:• would fill the
- Melcher: The 59-year-old shrunken bellies of-lOO,«m Filipino
senator from the Big Sky country famllles, · the cardinal wrote.
spent this past Christmas holiday In
Melcher promised to deliver tbe
the Pblllpplnes, and what he saw letter to the president personally.
But · Melcher, a World · War · n
there has haunted hlm ever since.
He visited the slums of Manila and
combat Infantryman, found the
White House's ' bui'eaucratlc desaw bordes of hungry children

Tomadoettes
in Saturday's
tourney finals

OSU, 73-58

Bud.gets &amp; balo;ney_____J_ames
_ J_. K_ilpa
_ t_ric_k

The Daily Sentinel

P AT WHITE HEAD

Illini dumps

Page-2- The Dally~~~.""
Midcllepott, Ohio
Friday, March 2, 1984

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SI~MMONS

OLDS.·-CAD.~CHEVY,

Inc.

308 E.Main St.
Pomeroy, OH .
MonAri. 9:00 to 7:00; Sat. 9:00 tQ 4:00

· POM~ROY , OH.

PHONE NO. 99.2 -6614

'·

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Friday, March 2, 1984
l'aga 4

Ask Dr. Blak~r

Calendar
FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
Count) Pomona Grange will
meet FrldayatSp.m.attheRock
Springs Grange. The meeting
will be hosted by Racine Grange.
Final plans will be made for the
Grange banquet.
FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS , - The
Meigs County Pomona Grange
will meet at 8 p.m. Friday at tbe
Rock Springs Grange Hail.
Racine Grange will be hosts tor
the meeting and final plans will
be made for the grange banquet.
EAGLE RIDGE - Meigs
County Fox Hunters Club meet-

ing, 7:30p.m. Friday at the cabin
on Eagle Ridge.

MONDAY
Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern Star,
will meet in regular session
Monday evening at the Masonic
Temple, 7:30 p.m. Offlcers w1U
have practice for initiation.
Officers are urged to attend.
RACINE -

TIIESDAY

POMEORY - . Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, w1U met at 7:45 p.m.
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Masonic_Temple. On Sunday at 2
p.m. there w1U be a practice for
inltlatlon.

Happenings
Rutland church
RUTLAND - Special services w1U be held Sunday at the
Rutland Bible Methodist
Church. The Rev. G.D.Young,
conference president, w1U be the
guest speaker at both the 10: ll
a.m and 7 p.m. worship service.
The Rev. Raymond Rife from
ByesvUie wUI be singing during
the morning worship service.
The Rev. Amos TtUis extends a
special invitation to the public.

legion dance
RUTI.AND - A round and
square public dance w1U be held
at the EU Denison Post 467,
American Legion, Rutland,
from 9 p.m. Saturday to 1 a.m.
Sunday. Music w1U be provtdtld

by a Uve band and a snack bar
w1U be in opera lion during the
evening. Donations of $2 for

adults and $1.50 for children are
accepted at the door. Dances are
held every week at the legion ·
hall.

Lodge meeting
POMEROY - Loud shirt
nlght w1U be ob5erved at the
March 7 meeting of Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM at the Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Oyster
stew w1U be served at 6: ll p.m.
with the meeting to follow at 7: ll
p.m. The annual inspection w1U
he held on March 31 with a
dinner at 6: ll and the meeting at
7:30p.m. Thomas W. Karr w1U
be the Inspecting officer. All
master masons are invited to
attend.

Local woman 114med scholar
MARIETTA - Sophomore
Laura Smith of Pomeroy was
recognized as a Sophomore Scholar
at Marietta College's FoundersScboiars Day convocation Feb. 13.
The Sophomore Scholar honor·
ary was est3blished to encourage
and recognize ail sophomores who

rompiete their previous fail semes·
ter with a cumulative grade point
average ot 3.5 or higher.
A 1983 graduate of Meigs High
School, Smith is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Oscar Smith, Route 2,
Pomeroy.

Vacationing? This pet
needs little for care
KENMORE, Wash. (AP) Looking for a neat, quiet pet that can
take care ot Itself white you're on
vacation? Has Allan McKee got the
critter for you!
Sure,lt takes a Uttle time to warm
up to a tarantula. Why, McKee
himself used to have trouble
sleeping with just one in his house.
But now, as proprietor of AI's
Tarantula Ranch, he routinely
shares his home with 3,00! to 5,00! of
the giant spiders, in various stages
of development from egg to
adulthood.
The tarantulas live in what was
Fran McKee's sewing room untU
her husband, who also works as a
telephone company technician,
launched his venture. That happened when his mother-in·law
brought a Mexican Red-leg tarantula tor the McKee's daughterr.
McKee said in a recent inteJVtew
that he was "terrorized" at first,
until he learned, he said, that the
spiders' bile is roughly Uke a bee
sting and is dangerous to people who
are also allergic to bee stings. Now
he sings his pets' praises.
"They are easy to care tor ... don't
make a mess, eat modestly (live

Hospitali7ed
Mrs. James (Nevfi) Nicholson of
Rutland is recuperating from hlp
replacement surgery at the Riverside Hospital in Columbus. She has
been at the home of her son in
Hllllard since her heart attack in
December.

Returns home
Charles Legar, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, )Vas returned
home from Rtve!'Stde Hospftal in
Columbus Wednesday.

crickets) and, because they don't
need water, you can go away on a
vacation and not need a pet-sitter."
And they've got staying power, he
says - tarantulas have "been on
earth for an estimated 300 mUllan

years."
Now admit it, can you say aU that
for man's best pal?

Slinderella
group meets
Joan Vaughan lost the most
weight and Cathy Workman was
runner-up at the Monday nlght Five
Points SUnderella exercise class. At
the Monday night Mason class,
Texanna WeD lost the most weight
with Janet Sigman, Mary Wayland
and Laura Icenhower being the
runners-up. Due to the snow the
Tuesday night class was cancelled.
JoAnn Newsome is the lecturer.

Plans tor an auction to be held on
May 5 to raise money for the EMS
jaws of life were announced at the
Tuesday night meeting of the XI
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority held at the homeofMrs.
Carol McCullough.
Maurisha Nelson, service committee chairman, reported on the
city council meeting of representa·
lives of au three Beta Sigma Phi
Chapters where plans were made
for the auction which w1U be held
behind the Pomeroy Fire Statton
beginning at 11 a.m.
Donna BYer. ways and means
chalnnan, asked tor volunteers to
help do the advertising program for
theMetgsCountyFatr. It was noted
that CPR classes for thechapterw!U
be held on March 13 and 15 with the
time and location to be anounced
later.

Matthew W. Reeves, Bertha L.
Reeves, Granville Reeves, Allee
Mae Reeves, Alice Reeves to
James F. Steele, Janice Steele,
Parcels, Scipio.
Gary L. Warner, Bonnie Warner
to John A. Dean, VIrginia Dean,
Tracts, Scipio.
Betty F. Mankin to Gerald V.
Arnold, Pt. Lot, Pomeroy Village.
John Fisher Jr., Sarah Fisher to
Ken Trak, Rtgh) of Way, Chester.
Floyd Wyctnsid, EYelyn Wy·
cinski to Ken Trak, Right of Way,
Rutland.

William S. Posey, Louise Posey to
William S. Posey, Louise Posey,
Parcels, Olive.
Margaret Allen, deceased, Orville Allen, Faye Lewis, Howard
Allen, Affidavit, Salisbury.
OrvtUe Allen, Faye Lewis, Samuel. Lewis, Howard R. Allen,
Emmogene Allen to Gerald 0.
Pullins Sr., (!)ara K. Pullins, 1 acre,
Salisbury.
Joe S. Giles, Wanda J. GileS to
Herald 011 and Gas Co., Right ¢
Way, Rutland.

FIVE POINTS BEER &amp;WINE, POP &amp;FOOD
CARRY OUT

Daily - Clams, Shrimps, Fishtail Sandwiches, Hambur&amp;·
ers, Cheeseburgers, Fresh Ham, Fries, Red Baron Pizza.

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Roger otTexas
were visitors last week of Mr. and
Mr. Charles Sayer.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell were
weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Summerfield, Candt, Wendy
and Crystal of Medina.
Mr.andMrs:CharleySmtthwere
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.Harley Smith, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mts. Les Frank and
Sarah Beth spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning, Ronald
and Mrs. Gladys Tuckerman.
Mr. and- Mrs. Donald Russell
visited with her grandmother in
Akron recently. They also visited
Mr. and Mrs.Tom Summerfield and
famUy of Medina over the weekend.

1

10 lb. Crystal Clear Ice
'1.00
Sunday March 4 From 4-8

FOR EVERY.ONE.
· ONLY ·~ ' ·

noting lh,at It Is not too early to plant
seeds In the open ground If you want
the plants to reach earlY summer
perfection.

She also noted that wrens and !Jillf
birds w1U be houae hunting anyday
now, and the less consp6cuous the .
blrdhouae Is, the better chance of
having II used. She also aald that this
ts the time to enjoy crocus and
snowdrops but that their foliage
should be not be cut ott unW lt 'has
turned brown.
Mrs. Lewis suggested that If there
Is extra space In the oold frame, try
forcing a few ~lumpe of choice
chrysanthemums. She said that
perennials, nRI, shrubs, ln!P.s,.wjll
au be starting into active growth
soon. This Is the season when they
are especially In need ~ quickly
av!lllable plant food so fertlll2ier
should be applied without delay.
A JX'OIP'8ZI1 oo pljmlln&amp; your
garden Will given by Jane Thotnpson who drew plana of her 11f1W
garden with rnem~~ep otrettng
suggesttoos on what to plant In
specified locatlooa.
Memberll l't!CI!!vlnil ribbons far
arran&amp;ementa ~ the IJICIItb "~y
Favorite Valenttne" were Adalou
l:.ewls, blue; ··Jane·'lbompaoo, ted,
aild Altoe TholiiPeon. w'h!te. .
A dessert COW'Ie was served by
the hostess. Next meeting w1U be

Patty and Ray Pickens, Texas
Road, Pomeroy, arellllll(llllCinglhe
btrthofthetrthlrdehld,adaughter,
Nancy Ann.
Tile Infant was born on Feb. 22 at
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. She
weighed eight pounds, four ounces
andwas2llncheslong.Mr.andMrs. beldatthehome~RuthMoorewtth
Pickens have two other daughters, an auction to be held.
Nichola Dawn, nine, and Noelle ,.-----.....:.;.:.._ _ __
Renee, six.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
The Daily Senli!lel
and Mrs. Albert Goeglein, Flat·
(USPS II....)
woods Road, Pomeroy, and the
A Dtvlltoa oJ Molll..,..la, loc.
paternal grandparents are Dr. R.R.
Pickens, Pooleroy, .and Elizabeth
Publllhed every ,afternoon, Monday
ll!rough Friday, 111 Court Slreet, by tile
Pickens, Colu!llbus. GreatOhio Valley Publllhlne Company . Mul·
grandmother Is Mary Pickens,
llmedll, Inc.. Pomeroy, Ohlo157&amp;\, m2156. Se&lt;ond cLua postage pold at PoClifton, W.Va.
meroy, Ohio

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has sel
for public l)eari.ng Case
No. 83-31-EL:EFC (Sub·
file A), to review the fuel
procurement Dractices
and pplicies of The Ohio
Power Company, the
operation of its Electric
Fuel · Component and
related matters. This
hearing is scheduled to
begin 1:30 p.m.. on
March 7. 1984 al City
CoUncil Chambers, 218
Cleveland AV.nue, SW,
Can\on, Ohio 44 702.
All interested·parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard: Further information- may be ob·
tained by contacting lhe
Commission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: M~ Ann Orlinski,
Secretary

Member: The AJ¥&gt;Ciated Press, In·
land O.lly Prda AJ10&lt;lalon and th•
American Newtpaper Publlshen Association, National Advertising ~pre­
sentative, Branham Nttwspaper Sales
733 Tl!lrd Avenu•. New York, N.,.;
York 10017.
POSTMASTER : Send addre11 to The
Dally Senllnel, 111 CourT Sl. Pomeroy
Ohio 15769.
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John F. Fultz. M&amp;r.
Ph. 992·2108
Pomeroy

IIi

lng worship serviCE" 7 30 p.m Wedn(&gt;Sday

prayer meetlnl{ 7 30 p m

•

,"', '

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MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN

BEN
lFRANKUN'

IIIII Work·
Cabinet Makin&amp;
Syracuse

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992·3978

IN CHRIST CHURCH. Loca lf'd in Tc.&gt;xas
Community off Cl Rl R2 Rf'v Robt&gt;rt

Middleport, Ohio
How many times have you heard th1s re·
man&lt;? How many times has ~ raced through
your own m1ncP It's very easy to thtnk that
having enough money would make you happy.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

TRINITY CHURCH.
1"-Uilor; Oc.UJie Buck,
~urch Scl!ool9: 15 a .m .; Wl• hl1&gt; Servle
.• ln. O!o!r Tt'hl&gt;ar!llll,

"""""dlroctlon ct Allee

A-

u

K~

Many people have found that m~hons of

212 ;-;~;;;;:.t
992-3785, Pomeroy

dolla(s JUst won'! ehminale all their diffiCulties

. or won't make hfe ·s pr~ems easier to
solve.
What then&gt; For generauons people have
solved theTr problems by go1ng 10 the church of
their ChoiCe. In thiS wtry they have "struck ~
nch -- Beca use , w1th God's help they have
found the courage and the power 10 fulfill hfe s
demands

School 9::10 am .; Worship lO . .'JO am :
Prayer mffllnJ~:, 7:30 p .m . ThurMtay,
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
E'HURCH. rorR('r Ash and Plum l.t&gt;s ll&lt;'
Hay man , pastor Sunda y School 10: 00 a
m . MornlnJ{ Wor~hlp 11 00 a .m . WE'dnl'sday and Sat urday Ev('n\n~ S&lt;&gt;rvl('('5 a t
7-:Vl p m

Fay Sauer, Dlrf(:tor
Rev . Jams E. CorbiU, Aull&amp;ant
NORTHEAST CLUSTER

Rn. Doa Archer
!Wv. RoJ D. .t•r
~v . Seldoa olohMOn
ALFRED- Church School9 30 am.
Wors hip , 11 a m , UMYF. 6 30 p.m , UW.
Third Tuesday . 7· 30 p m Communion .
fi rs! Sunday t Arrht"fl
CHESTER - Wo rship 9 a m , Churc h
SC'hool10 a .m. BiblE' Study. Thursday . 7p
m. UM W, first Thursdav . 1 p m . Com munlon . fir s! Sunday tArctll'n
JOPPA - Wors hip 9. 30 a m . Churc h
School 10. 30 a m Bib\(' Study Wrdn(&gt;S
day , 7 :\0 p . m tJohnsonl
LONG BOTI'OM - Chur&lt;'h School 9 lO
a m . Worship 7 p m . Bib!(' St udy, Wl:'d
nl'lda y, 7· 30 p m , UMYF , Wrdn('Sdav .
6:00 p .m .: Communion First Sunday
tArchl'rl
REEDSVILLE -Church School 9 .l Oa
m .; Worship SC'rvl('(' 11 OOa m tDN&gt;Il"rt
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Church School 9 a.m . Worship JO a m ..
Blblt' Study, Tuesday. 7 30 p m. UMW.
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p .m. Communion
Flrll Sundav IAr&lt;ITerl.

School. 10: .1 )
Eiols&lt;'
I

cENTRAL CLUSTER

Rev . .fames E. CorbiU
Rev. S&amp;evn Netlotl
!Wv. Rkbrd Rolllemlch

Rev. Robert E. Roblaon
Rn. Andrew R1beaklaa

.t . m .
POMEROY I'IR
BAPTIST. David
~ann, mlnl!ll l&lt;'r . Will m Snouff('r. Sunday
SC'hool Supl. Su nda Srtlool. 9'.'l0 o m..
Mornln~ Wqrshlp 10
a m
FIRST SOUTH N BAPTIST. Po·
m('rov Pik(' Davl Hun! . p&lt;~slor . Jack
Nreds, Su ndav Sc ol Olr('&lt;'C.'tor . Sunday
st&lt;ool. q .10 a . m ..
rnln~ Worship, 10· .10.
&lt;'VC' nln,g wurs hlp, .10 p.m . TuNidav Vl !il
dav . Pra y£'r M-rvl('('.
fallon. 7 p m Wr
7!30 p m , Miss! , FliC'!'Ids . 7 . .10 p.m :
O lrls In Action . 7 0 p m : A&lt;'t&lt;'C'ns, 7 JO p
m : ' Choir Prartl_f: R .10 p m
FAITH TABEIJNACLE CHURCH. Hal
lf'y Run Road. R.Y EmmC'It Raw son. pas
tm
Da'\n . supt Sundav School.
10
r\'r nln~S&lt;'rvirf' . 7 .lO p m
7 .10 p .m Thu r.-d av
ISSJO N. C H&lt;'rrv St . s,
.,.,,.,,,.~ lO am Sunday . F:\1'nln~
nd WrdnNidav .11 7 00 p

. :"

~::::::.::r~·

And so there •s a Wll"J to str1ke it nch Try tt

next week '" your place of worsh1p

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PAIIL~H
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

POMEROY
Main St. NC'II
9: ·ll a .m . Mornlr11&lt;
m«'tln~. 6·00 p m ;
m . Wodn&lt;'sdaynlj&lt;hl
Slucb'. 7. 00 p.m
TifE SALVATION
AW&gt;., Pollll'I"OY Mrs
Surday l!ollncs.&lt; _ - ;uo:;·

.CHURCH 01' C HRIST
Lawr£'nN' Man
-;;,::·. ~~;,, \'oun~ . Sund:.1v
!l Ul am
WC'dnc&gt;sdav

p .m
, Ea~&lt;'r 8&lt;-a\'C'rs.
.Junior and Srnlor
prariJC(&gt; ~ : lO p. m WC'd m('('lin~ and Blbl&lt;' !iit udy,
.10 p m

ASBURY !SyracuSE' I- Worship 11 am
. Chur&lt;'h School 9 · 45 a m , Charg(' Blblf'
Study, WC'dnC'Sday , 7 :W p m . UMW, first
Tuesdav . 7 JO p m , Choir R('h('arsal.
Wl'dnl'sdav 6· 30 p m . UMW. fourlh Sun
dav . 60:10 p m 1NE"Ison 1
ENTERPRISE WOr!!~hlp 9 a .m .
Church School 10 a m . BlbiC' Study. TuPS ·
day, 7: 30p.m. UMW. First Monday. 7: 30
p m , UMYF. Sundav. 6 p m Choir R('·
h&lt;'arsal. fi · :lO p m W&lt;'dnl"sday 1 Roltll'·
mlchl
FLATWOODS- Church Sr hool.10;~ m
. Wonhlp, 11 am .. BlbiC' Studv . Thursd day. 7 p . m . UMYF. Sunda\ , 6 p m
1Rothemlrh 1
I'OREST RUN - Worship q a m .
Chun:'h Sc hool 10 a m . Choir praclir&lt;'.
TuC'Sdav . 6 :10 p m : UMW . first Tut&gt;sda y.
7· 30 p m 1Nrlson 1
HEATH tMidd l('porll- ChurC'h School.
9· :r&gt; a m : Worship 10 :vl a m : Blbl('
Study. Tuf'sday , 10 am .. UMW. sC'C'ond
Mondav, ':' 30 p m. UMW SC'cond Mon da y. 7 :tO p .m. UMM. Third Monda\' . 7 30
p m !Robinson I
MINERSVILLE - Worship SC'rvic(' 10
a .m : Church School, 11 a m. , UMW , third
W&lt;'dn&lt;'sday. 1 p m : Choir pracllrc . Mon
dnv , 7 :\0 p m lNf'lsonJ
PEARL C HAPEL -Worship SC'n IcC' 9
a .m . Chureh School II a m , UMW se
rond Tu&lt;'sday 7 .10 p .m . UMYF las! T u('S
da\' , 7
p m 1ulx'nkln,:p
POMEROY - Churf h Schoo l. !J 1~ am
, Worship Srrvi('('. 10 .10 a m . Cho ir r('·
hrarsa l WC'dnrsday, 7:.10 p m .. UMW. St'·
rond TU('!'Idav. 7 30 p.m UMYF. Sunda\
6 p.m 1Corbltl 1
ROCK SPRINGS- Ch urch Sc hool. 9· 15
am ; Worship 10 a m. Bible Sludv. Wro
n£'Sday. 7· :tO p m: UMYF lSf'nlorsl . Su n·
dav. 5 p m . tJ unlorsl C'V('rv oth&lt;'r Sun ·
day, h p .m 1Rot hPmlch1
·
RUTLAND- Churc h Sc hool. 9· 4r, a .m .
Worship, 10: 30a .m : UMW tEv£' n lni~Cir
rl('\ S('('O nd Wt'dn('Sdav . 7 :lOp m, UMW
!Afternoon Cirr i&lt;&gt; I SN'ond Thursday, 1 p
m . IRubt'nklnRI
SALEM CENTER -Chu rch School. 10
a .m .. Worship 9 4~ a.m tRubt'nkln$1:1
SNOWVILL E - Worship. 8. .'W a m ..
Chu rch SchoollO a. m 1Rubt'nklnli! 1
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. Jame!!o M. Clark

:m

~v . Paul McGuire
~v. Orville Whltr

APPLE GROVE- ChurC'h Sc hool 9a.m
: Worship, 10 am !First and third Sun·
days); UMW. ~ond Tu&lt;'sday. 7· 30p m:
Pray&lt;'r m('('tlng, W&lt;'dn~sday. 1 p.m .
\Clarki
BETHANY- Worship, 9 am. Churc h
School . 10 a . m .: Blbl(' Study. WPt.lnesday,
10 a .m .; Dorcas Womt&gt;n's F('llowshlp .
Wrdnesday, 11 a.m. IMCG,\ollr('l
CARMEL- Chur&lt;h 'Sch'ool 9·Jl a .m .:
Worship. 10:4~ a.m . s.ro,~ and Fourth
Sundays; Fl"llowshlp dlnnE'r with Sutton,
third Thursday. 6: 30p.m . IMc&lt;iulrt'l.
EASTLETART-ChurthScl!oot9a m .
. Worship 10 a . m . St'COnd and fourth Sun days: UMW fir st Tuesday, 7:30 p .m .
I Clarki.
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a .m .;
Church SchoollO a .m . (Clarki.
MORNING STAR- Wonhtp, 9:45a .m .:
Church Scl!ool 10: 30 a .m. ; Bible Study.
Thursday, 7!30 p.m. tWhlte) .
MOJ!SE CHAPEL- Church School9: 30
a.nt; WGrsniJ&gt;1t"a: rrqWhll•\.
PORTLAND- Church Scl!ool 6:30p.m .
: 1\'orshtp 7: :.! p. m .; UMYF Wednesdiy,
7:30p.m. I McGUirt').
RACINE
· WESLEYAN - Church
Scl!ool, 10 a .m.; Wors hip. II a .m .; UMW
!ourlh Monday 7: ll p .m. ; Men's Prayer
00 a."!.
Bl't'aklaat, W~n..day; 7.a,m., (Ctilrkl.
even·
. SUTJ'ON' - Church School. 9:l!a.ln.;
even· )l Moml111 worship 10: 15,a.m. Ofslancl third
· · Sunday,; f~ll~shlpdtnl!er .jl')t~Cirmel,
-" third 'JIIi!IJiKia:tJ-6:30.p.l" l\(fllcGbtret. ·
-' KENO CIJURCI(;;OE.,~JIIlUSt!•.OIIvei' _-.
SWain, Supt.'l!undaySchool9:30 a .m ! ev-

I

\\.

MiddleportPomeroy. Oh.

RALL'S

·RACINE

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE
GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Rac1ne 949-2550

CK

... . MEIGS TIRE
\ ~ CENTER, INC.

P. J. PAULEY,

Fu11 y ~u pjltd._

STA:R;.
• -· I-1--.:1ItD

Pickens birth

"For A Real Auction
Call the Ral McCoy"
I. 0. "Mac" McCoy
Rt. I. Reedsville, Oh.

address. The volume of man
prohlbttl personal replies, but
questions of general interest w1U be
dlscuased in future columns.

19n ,:THUNDERBIRD
.................. s2&amp;9s
· ..
.
1916. AMC·JEEP WAGONEER ........
s2495
• 4 Wh. dnve. Good condition.
.

WATC

AT

The~~was~ven~

STRIKE IT RICH !

NY 10019.
'
Write to Dr. Blaker at the above

Garden club donation
made to Carleton School
Arangements to donate a tree to
the Carleton School landscaping
project were made at a recent
meeting of the Winding Trall
Garden Oub held at the Thompson
cabin with Peggy Crane as hostess.
Members made plans during the
~ to attend the Wildflower
Walk at Lake Katharine near
Jackson on April 18. Any member
wlshtngtogoshouldcontacttheclub
presldent~re Aprllll.
.
In respcne to roll caU members
contributed flower seeds which w1U
be used in the club's planting at the
Meljs Camty lnfl.rmary. The club
prayer tn unison and devotions by
Mrs. Crane entitled "Source of
Strength" opened the meeting.

By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

from Dr. Blaker's newsletter
"F'!ihting Depression." Send ·50
cents and a stamped, self·
addreaaed envelope to Dr. Blaker in
care of this newspaper, P.O. Box
475, Radio City Station, New York

MARCH SPECIALS!!
1979 THUNDERBIRD .................. S3695
Fully -•~uipped. Runs 1Iid lookl1ood.

·auv .NOW 'AN'D·- rSAVE'
.+-. ,

AND UP

614:592: 4111

Hearts and hands ·night was
OOleJVed with members 1exchanging homemade .~ Wtth their
secret sisters. Charlotte ~
presided at the meetingwltha lliank
you note being read :lrom . A.R.
Knight, husband of ~ cltapter
sponsor, thanking the meJ'nbers for
the SUJlll'ise lirthday par1y and gift.
A thank you note was also read from
Carol Crow for a yellow rose sent to
her during her recent
hospttaltzatton.
Mrs. McCullough announced a
movie and pizza par1y to be held on
Tuesday with members to meet at
6:50 at the Spring Valley Theater
parking lot in Gallipolis.
Carol and Lynn Crow had the
cultural report and p~ted Judy
Hayhurst, color consultant from
Parkersburg, W.Va. 'Yl¥1 talked on
color analysis. LibbY Sayre and
Carol Adams served refreshments.

Pick Up at· Window or Inside
Also Table Service

However, your therapist should
have answered your letter, If only to
guide you to another therapist in
your area or to let you know that she
does not do long·dtstance
counseling.
At this point It would be best for
you to turn your energies toward
getting the help you need from a
new therapist In your new
community.
Down In the dumps? Get help

Addalou Lewis who noted that earlY
March Is just about the last chance
to prune grapes,lhatii8Pwill besoon
be rising and anycutsatterthatmay
bleed excessivelY. Annual poppies
need an earlY start, Mrs. Lewis said,

Meigs property transfers

PRICES STARTING AT
ROUTE 5
ATHENS

seriously because he has ha&lt;l two
·
The only problem with this
suggestion Is that It migl)t· be
dangerous. When flllhting fire with
fire, someone often gets burned and that someone might bey~. So,
remember to use this maneuver
only as a last resort.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I was in
therapy for five years with someone I thought was a very' nice
person. But maybe I Will wrong.
I have since moved/ acfOSS the
country and haven't h8d any
contact with her except to send
Christmas cards, which are never
reciprocated.
Last_ month I went through a
crisis and ~ her, so I wnite a
note describing mY mess, 1 can't
believe she never answtf\!11 the
letter.
;.
Was I fooled into beUevtng that
she liked me w~n. all along, J was
just another patient?
·
DEAR REI\DER - ll's. 'up to
each therapist to determine the
extent to which he or shli remains
involved with a patient once
therapy Is over.
This decision Is usually unrelated
to how nice a persoQ the tlaeraplst Is ·
or how much he or shei JjJces thl!
patient. More !Qcely, I 11 IS a
reflection of the ~ra~'p beUefs
about the treatment proqess and of
his or her phtlosoplly al!out beiJll.ui
people.
glasses of wine.

Beta Sigma Phi chapter
gathers at recent m~ting

L&amp; W SATELLITE SALES

$}595

Plan :makes her feel inhuman

By Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I am
furious with my husband. About a
month ago he started making
charts ot my moods. He says that
they are tor predicting when he
should leave me alone.
He always says I am completely
irrational the week before my
period begins. I don't think that is
true. I am a little more sensitive
than usual, but I am aware of the
problem and try not to let It affect
our relationship.
What should I do?
DEAR READER - Explain to
your husband that his plan makes
you feel inadequate, irrational and
less than human.
IC8..~.nteer to keep your own chart
-ofyour moods. Assure him that you
can take responstbllity for yourself.
Play It safe by having the
discussion at a time of the month
when he wiU not be able to write off
your feeUngs to premenstrual
irrattonaUty.
If this appeal to reason is not
sufficient, you may have a very
serious marital problem on your
hands. Such a problem would be
worth a few visits to a family
counselor.
As a last resort, try making
graphs ot your husband's mood
swings and correlating them with
his activities, such as drinking or
lack of sleep. He may get the point
the first time you refuse to take him

Wolf Pen personals

and Church

.

('ry wE"t"k.
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UN ION. Rev
Tom Statl'n, pas tor Sunda'Y School9 .1 0a
m ; Evt&gt; nlnJ~; se rvlc£'7 - JOp m WE'dnE'sday
prayE'r mt't'tlng 7 JO p m
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CHURC H OF
C HRIST, Ouan(' WardE'n. minlsu.•r Bib!('
c la ss 9 :JO a . m , MornlnJZ Wors hip 10 10 a
m : EH'nlnJ!: Wors hip 6 JO p m Wednrs
day Blblr Study 6 30 p m
NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUN ITY
C HURC H. Sunday School SE'rVi('(', 9 45 a
m : Wors hip SC'rVI('(' 10 30 a m .
Evan~rllsllc Sf&gt;rvlc(' 7 30 p m WC'dnes
day ; Prayt&gt;r ffit'('!ln~ 7 :lO p. m Thursday
ZION C HURCH OF C HRIST. Po ml'rov ·
HarrlsonvJII(&gt; Rd RotK-rt Purtell. minis
f('r . Stl'Vl' Stanlt'y, Su nday School Supt('r
lnt('ndf&gt;nt Sunday SchooJ9· :lO a .m .; Wor
s hip SE'rvlcl" IO· 30 a.m.; Evt&gt;nin~ wors hip
Sunday 7 p m and Wf'dnesday. 7 p .m
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
Grov(' Thl' R('v W11ll1m Mlddll'Swarth.
pasror Churrh s('rvlrt' 9·~ a.m; Sunday
Sc hooltO: .'lO a m
BRADBUR Y CHURCH OF CHRIST.
John Wrl~hl . passtor Sunday School 9 30
a .m .: Larry Hay nPS. S. S . Supt Mornln~
worship 10: 30 a . m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA ·
RENE. Rt'v Thomas H ColiiC'r, pastor
Marlha W olft, Cha1rman of th(l Board of
Chrlsllan Ltr{' Sunday School 9::10 am:
Morning worship tO· 30 a m . Su nday
E'Vrnlng wors hip 7 30 p m Prayer m{'('tlnR
7: ;r) p. m Wl'dnt'Sday
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Don L
Walker, Pastor Robl"rl Smith. Sunday
School Supt .. Sunday School 9 30 am.
Mornlnll!: \f. or!!~ hlp 10· 40 a m . Sunda\
('Vf' nlnJI!: worship 7 30 p m . WC'dn('sdav
('V('ninJi!:: Alb!(' !'ltudv 7 30 p m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY
CHURCH . Burlingham Rrv Ok&lt;'V Ra\
Laundermlll. paslor Ph 992 7324 Sunda\'
SchoollO.OOa m, SundaV&lt;'\'('nin~srf\IC'('
7. 00 p. m . Wl"dn&lt;'sdav &lt;'VC'nin,e: sNvic('
7 00 p m
DANVILLE
HOLINESS CHURCH.
locarro on Rt :125 bC'IwN"n Vloton and
Langsvlll&lt;' R('\ Bfon Walls . JXIS!or Sun
day School. ~ .10 ·• m . Bobbv Lamb&lt;&gt;rt S
S. Sup! MornlngworshlptO·JO a m . Chi!
drt'n 's Happv Hour 6 45 p m Prav('r and
Blblt&gt;Studv. 7 JOp m . Mlsslonarv mC'&lt;'IIng
first Wl'dnC'sday of raC'h month 7 30 p m
For Information raii.'~ ·R467
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, B1ll Lillif'
pas lot St&lt;'VC' I.ltlll" S. S Sup! Sund.1v
Sc hool 10 a.m . Morn i n ~ worslp. 11 a m .
Su nday ('VC' nln ~ worship 7 :W p m Prayr1
mN"IinR a nd BlblrstudyThursdav. 7 .'lO p
m : Youth ffi('('lin.ll Wl"dnNidav a! 7 p m
CHR ISTIAN I'ELLOWSHIP CHURCH.
.lS.l N 2nd AvC' . Mlddl&lt;&gt;poll Sunday
Sc-hool 10 a .m Sundav a nd WC'dn('sda\
Evl"n in~ SC'rvlr&lt;'s at 7 ~ p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF C.OO. RN R
1-.: Robinson, pastor. Sunda\ Sc hoo19 ~Oa
m : Worship S&lt;'rVIC'&lt;'. 11 a m, Ev&lt;'nlnJ!
sNVIC'C' 7 p.m . Mld ·w('('k sN\']C'f', WPdnC's
day, 7 p.m .
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIA N CHURCH.
RobC'rt E MusSf'r . pastor Sundav School
9·30 am. Pa ul Mu!'lsrr. s up! . MornlnJZ
worship 10 .10 a.m. Sundav ('\C'nlng srr
viCf", 7 p m . mld· w('('k S&lt;"rv\rf'. W&lt;'dnro.;
day, 7 p.m
S\'RACSF. CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENF. . R&lt;'v. Jam~ B. Kill If'. pastor
Sh&lt;'rm an Cund iff , s upt Sunday School
9 :10 a m . MornlnJZ wOr!iihlp 10 :«"! a m .
Evan~C'IIstlr srrviC(', 6 p m : Prav&lt;'r a nd
Prats&lt;' W&lt;'dn~da\ . 7 p m . Youlh mf'('l
In~. 7 P m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN I N
CHR IST . EldC'n R Blakr, pastor . Sundav
Sc hool to a m .: RobC'rt RN'd. Supt Morn
lng srrmo n. 11 a .m ; Sunday night S&lt;'r
\' Ires· Chris!lan EndE'avor7 · 30 p. m .. Son,g
srrvl('(' R p. m PrE'MChlnR R..10 p m Mid
w('('k pravrr m('(ltlng , Wt'dnl"sday. 7 p m
Alvin RN'd, layl('ad('r.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRIST IAN.
Rogl"r Watson. pasto~. Crenson Prall .
Sunday Sc- hool Supt. Mornlu~worshlp9 30
a.m.: Sundav Sc hoollQ 30 a.m. Ev!' nln ~
S('rVI('(', 7: 30p. m .
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Joe Sayr~ ••Sun ·
dayScl!ooiSupt . SundayS&lt;I!ool9: 45a:-rtT .
Ev&lt;'nlng worshlr 6. 30 p m .. Prayer MNI ·
lng, 6 ·30 p .m . WednE'sdav .
TUPPERS PLAINS . CHURCH OF
CHR IST. Jody Holland , mlnlstt'r. De-rvi
Wells, Supl. Morning worship. 8·00 a .O"I·.:
Churc h Scl!oo19:00 a.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE. RE'v. H&lt;&gt;rtx-rl Gratl", pastor
Frank Rlfflo. s upt . Sunday School 9:30 a .
m .: Worship sorvl&lt;t', II a. m . and 7 p .m .
Sunday . WednE'!day. 7 p m. Prayt'r m('(lt ·
lng.
LAUREt CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH . Rev . Roberl Miller, paSior .'
Lloyd Wrtghl. DirecTor or ChriS!lanj:du·
ca tion . Sunday School9:30 a.m.: Morning
worship 10: 30 a.m.; Choir practl«', Sunday 6:30p.m .; Evening worship 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7; 30
p.m.

01':

OEXTER CHURCH
CHRIST.
Charles Russell Sr., minister. Rick Ma·
comber, s upl . Sunday School 9::.! a .m .;
W2 nhll'.. Se!•l£00,::!() .a.m . .Bil!le slu~y.
TUTffitay, 7:30P.m.
·

REORGANIZED C HURCH OF JESUS
CHRI ST 01' LATTER DAY SAINTS PorT ·
la nd -Raci n(' Road . William Roush , pastor
Linda Evan.c;, church school director.
Churc h school9: :lt am.: M o rnln~ worslp
10. 30 a m .. WednP5day E'V(' nln~ prayE'r
wrv!('('S, 7· :10 p.m
BETHI.F:HEM BAPTIST fllov Earl
Shul('r, pas!or Worship Sf'r\'1('(', 9: 30a .m
Sunda y School 10 JO a . m . BiblE' Study and
pray('r St'rVIC(' Thursday. 7: :10 p m.
CARLETONINTERDENOMINA·
TIONAL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road RE'v
David Curfma n. pastor Sunday School
q :Ml a m . Ralph Carl, Supl. Ev£'nln~ wor·
s hip 7 30 p m Prav('r m('('tlng , Wedn~ ·
day 7 30 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN . Jodv
Holland . pa~tor . Wallac(' Dam&lt;•wood.
Sundav School Supt Worship SC'rvlc!'. 9 a
m . Blbl!' School 10 a m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
R('v Th('rron Durtla m . pas1or Sunda y
School al 9. 30 a m. Mornln~ wor!'lhip al
10 30 a.m • Su nday ('VE'nln~ S&lt;'rvlc&lt;&gt; a! 7· .10
p m : Thursday St'rvl('('s at 7· 30 p rn
I'REEDOM GOSPEL MIS.~ION aT Bald
Knob, locatM on Count v Road 11 R&lt;'v
LawrC'RCC' Gluf'Srncamp, pa s tor. RE'v
Rog~r Willford . us! po~stor PrC'achln2
SE'rvlC'H Sunday 7 . .'ll p.m Prav&lt;'r m('('!ln~
WC'dncsday . 7·.10 p.m . Gan Grlfr!ltl.
lradPr. Youth ~roups Sundav ('\f'nl nJl: a1
n 30 p .m wllh RogN and VioiN Wlllfordd .
l&lt;'ad('r!'l. Communion SC'rVIN' first Sundav
('ach month .
WHITE'S CHAPEL. Coolvlllf' R D
Rl"v Roy [X-('t('r. passtor Sunday School
9 10 a m . Worstllp SN\ IC'f'. 10 10 a m . Bl
blE' s ludv and pravrr "&lt;'rVIC'C' , WC'dnMdav .
7 .'Vl pm
RUTLAND CHURCH 01' CHRIST.
Mark JonC'!ii , pa s tor Bill Nir holso n . Sun
dav School Supt Sundav School9 30 a.m .
Mornln2 Wor!'l hip a nd Commu nion 10 30a
m
RUTLAND BIBLE MF:THODIST Amos
Tillis. pa,s to1 Sonnv Hudson . s up! Sunda't'
Sctloo l 9: lO a m . Morn in~ ~· orshlp. 10 :W
a m . Sundav ('\ C'nln$!: "'&lt;'fVICCC' i 00 p m
WC'dnf'sdav sf'rVi('(' 7 p m WMPO pro
Ji!:ram 9 a m f'UC'h Sundav
RUTLAND CHURCH 01' THE I'AZA
RENF. Rf'\' L/ovd D C.rlmm .. Jr . pastor
Sunda\ SChool 9 :ttl am. \\orslp S&lt;'rvk('
10 lO .l m . Youn~ proplf''s Sf'f\ IC'C' 6 p m
F.van~f'listlc S&lt;'l'\ l('('ti lOp m Wf'dnNidav
srrviC'C' 7 p m
MASOI' C HURCH 01' C HRIST. Miller
S!. Mason. W Va F.uJ~:rnC' I. C'on,e:N. m1
nlsiC'r Sndav BlbiC' S!udv 10 a m . W01
s hip 11 a m and i p m W&lt;'dn&lt;'!'ldav Blbl&lt;'
Studv. \'OCal mu!lllc. 7 p m
MASON ASSEMFILY Of' GOD. Duddln&lt;
l.anC'. Ma son. W Va RC'\' Ronn!C' B Rosf' .
pa!IIIOI Sundav Sr hooi 9 4!1 a m . Morn in):!:
woro.;h!p 11 a m EvC'n\n~ sr1 v ic&lt;' 7 .10 p m
W&lt;'dnf'sdav Womf'n's Minislrlrs 9 a m
1m('('fin~ and p1 avC'r l, WC'dnf'sda\ PravC'r
and Blbl&lt;' S!udv. 7 p m
HARTI'ORD CHURCH 01' CHR IST IN
CHR IST IAN UNION . The Rev William
Ca mpbC'II pastor . Su nda y School ~ .10 a
m ; Jam&lt;'s HuJI!:'h&lt;'s. sup! Ev('nln~ S('rv lce
7· .¥1 p m. W&lt;'dn!llday &lt;'Venin~ pravN mPf't ·
lnJI!:' 7· :W p m Youlh pra yC'r SE'rvlcP £'arh
Tuf'sdav
I'AIRVIF.W BIBLE CHURCH . LeTarT.
W. Va ., Rt 1. .JamM l.&lt;'w is. pa!lltor Wor
ship sNvlc&lt;'s 9 JO a m ; Su nday School 11
am . Ev&lt;'nl nJI!: worship 7· 30 p . m Tui'sdav
roiiUJI!:'C' pray&lt;'r m('('l\nJ~: a nd 8\bl(' Sludv
9 lO a m . Worship S&lt;'rvlce. W&lt;'dnPsda v
7 30pm
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and HC'nrv Sis . Ra\'('nswood. W
Va Thf' R&lt;'v C.ror~&lt;' C WC'lrlrk . pastor
Sundav SChool 9 :W n m. Sunda y worship
ll am
CALVARY BIBLECHURCH.Iocalroon
PomNoy Pik&lt;'. Countv Road 25 n&lt;&gt;ar Flal ·
woods R('V . Blackwood. pastor Sf'rvlccs
on Sunday a110 30 a m a nd 7 JO p m with
Sundav Sc hool9: 30 a m Blbl£' Study. W!'d·
n('Sda), 7 .10 p .m .
FAITH FELLOWSH IP CRUSADE FOR
CHR IST. St Rt l.'~. Anliqully RC'v .
Franklin Dlckrns , pastor Sundav morn ·
In~ 10 a . m .. Su ndav (&gt;V('nln~ 7· :lO p m .
Thursday E'V('nlng 7:30p.m.
STIV ERSV I!.LE COMMUN ITY HAP
TIST CHURCH Pastor Robert 8y('rs .
Sunday Sc hool 10 a .m .; Worshlpsorvl«' II
a.m .: Sunday evl"nln2 S(&gt;rvlc(',7:JO. p ;m. :
WcdnE'sday t'Vl"nlng service 7:36 p.m :
INDEPENDENT HOLI~r'CIIURCH
Inc .. Poarl St .. Mlddlepoi'l.' Rev . O' Dell
Manl('y, pastor Su.q.day School 9: 30a.m.;
Morning worshiP 10: 30 a. m .: Evening
worship 7: 30p.m. Tuesday, !2: 30p.m. Women' s Prayer meeting. Wednl"Sday. 7:30
p .m . Prayt'r and Praise service.
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC 'CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST. Elder James Mlllor. Bl·
ble Study. Wednesday 7: 30p.m.; Sunday
SChoollO a m .; Sunday night service, 7:30
p.m.
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS.
HarrisonvillE' Road . Earl Fields, pastor.
Henry Eblin, Jr., Sunday School sup!. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Morning l"Orshlp II
a .m .; Sunday evening service 7: 30 p.m .
Prayer meelln~ Wednesda)h 7: ll p .m .
SYRACUSE FIRST CHUt&lt;Cil OF GOD.
Joy Clark, pastor. Worship sorvtoe Sunday 10 a .m.: Sunday School II a·. m. Ev~n.

Sanden, pastor Don Will. layJ('ad(&gt;r Sun
day School 9 30 a m : Mornln2 Worship
10· 45 a m.• Evt"nlng pr('ac hlng w rvic(' ~
('()nd and fourth Sunday a! 7 30 p m .
Chrl!tian Endtavor. firs t and third Sun
day, 7· :M&gt; p .m Wt'dnrsday prayt&gt;r ffi ("(&gt;li RJI!:
and Blblt&gt; Study. 7· 30 p m
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS, 37319 STaTe
Routt 124 lOne mllr t&gt;ast of Rutland I Sun
day : Bible lecture 9&lt;lt a . m . Watchtowrr
s tudy lO::M&gt; a . m .. Tut&gt;sday , Bible st udy.
7: ;r) p m.; Thursday. Th('()('rali&lt;' SchMI
7: :rl p .m . SE&gt;rvlct&gt; mH'tln~ . 8: 20 p.m
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
l.,.o('ated on 0 . J Whit&lt;&gt; Roa d of Highwa y
160. Pat Ht&gt;nson, pastor Sunday School 10
a .m ClasSH for all a~~ Junior Church 11
a .m . Mornln~ worship 11 a m Adull
Choir practiC't" 6 p m . Sunday YounJI!: PropiE''&amp;, Chlldrt'n's Church and Adult Bib!('
Study, Wednf"Sday at 7 :'lt p. m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 GranT
St , Mlddlt&gt;port Afflllatl'd wllh Soulh&lt;&gt;rn
Baptist Conv!'ntlon . Sunday School lO a m
, Morn in~ worship 11 a m , Ev('nlnJI!: wor
s hip 7 p m ; W&lt;&gt;dnt'Sday f"V(' ninll!: Bibl&lt;'
s tudy and8ray('r m('('tln~ 7 p m
BRADF RD CHURCH 01' CHRIST ST
Rt 124 and Co Rd .~ Mark S«&gt;vrr" minis
l&lt;&gt;r Sunday School Sup! S!&lt;'V&lt;' Plrk&lt;'n"'
Sunday Sc:: hool 9· :rl a .m .. Mornlnll!: wor
s hip 10· 30 a.m . Evf&gt;nln~ wors hip 7 p m
Wednl'sday worship 7 p m
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH.
Corner Sycamorl" and S«ond Sts , Pomtroy. Thl" R&lt;&gt;v . William Mlddlrswarlh ,
pstor. Su nday SChool 9:45a .m .: Churl·h
servl('(' 11 a .m .
SACRED HEART CHURCH. Ms~r
Anthony Giannamorl". Ph . 992- ~ Saturday EvE'nlng Mass 7 : :10 p m .: Sunday
Mass. R a m and 10 a m Col'lf~ slon s on&lt;'
half hour belur&lt;' &lt;&gt;ach Mass CCD r las5('5,
11 a.m . Sundav.
VICTORY BAPTIST. 525 N 2nd ST .
Mlddlf'POrl Jamrs E . KrPS('(' pastor
Sunday m or nlnJI!: worship 10 a m . Evrn
inR S&lt;'rviC'r 7 p m . WC'dnC'Sda v &lt;'VC'mn,e:
worship i p m VIsitation. Thursday 6 10
p.m
TRINITY CHRISTIAI' ASSEMBLY
Cool viii&lt;' C.tllx'rt SprnN'r. pastor Sundav
School 9. :10a m. MorninJ~: SC'rvirC' . 11a m
Sundav rv&lt;'nlnR Sf'rvir(' 7: :lO p m . Mid
Wt'('k prav('r srrvic(' WC'dn&lt;'Sdav 7: 10 p m
MT. OLIVE CO MMUNITY CHURCH.
l.aWr('nC'(' Bus h. pastor Max Follll('r , Sr
Supt Su ndav School and Morn in~ Wors hip
9 . .10 a m : Sunday C'VC'nln,R s&lt;'rviN'. 7 p m .
Youth m('('flr\R and Blblf' Studv. WMru-s
day. 7 p.m .
·
UN ITED I'AITH CHURCH, RT 7on Pomrrov By -Pas". R&lt;'v Rolx'rl Smtih. Sr.
pastor R&lt;'v JamP.O Cundiff, a sst pastor
Sunday Sc hool 9· :rl a .m .; MornlnR ~· or
s hip 10 :11 a .m .. Evrnlng worship 7 :JO p
m Wom&lt;'n's Ff'llowshlp. Tu('!l;dav. lOam
WC'dnPsday niRhl pray('r SC'fVI('(' 7 :lOp m
I'AITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Railroad
St • Ma!'lon . Sunday SchoollO a . m . Morn
In~ worship 11 a.m : Evrning s&lt;'rVIC'f' h p
m PravN ffl('('ling a nd Blblf' Studv WN:I
nl'Sday, 7 p m
FOREST RUI' BAPTIST Rev l'v lr
Bordt'n . pastor. Corn&lt;'llus Bunch sup!

SUPERMARKIT
992-3840

,r--. -

Middleport

'~

-...._~ - .,

Su nda\ School 9 30 a m . Se-cond and
fourth Sundays worship srrvlct&gt; at 2 30 p
m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST F'ourlh and
Main St . Mlddlf&gt;port Rf'v Ca lvi n Minnis,
pastor Mrs Elvin Bum~ardner. s up!.
Su nday Schoo l 9 30 a m , Wo rs hip St&gt;rvlce
10 45 a m
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
C HURC H. RT I . Shade Aflllla!ed wllh
SouthE'rn Baplisl Convf'nlion Don Black,
pastor Sunday Sc hool 1· 30 p m ., Sunday
worship 2 30 p m Thursday t&gt;venlnJ!: Bible
Study, 'I p m
PENTECOSTAL AS.~EMBLY. Raelne,
Rt 124 William Hobac k. pastor Sunday
School 10 a . m. Sunday E'\'(&gt;nlng service 1
P m. Wedn&lt;'sda y f'V(' ning serviCE' 7 p .m .
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle,
Supt . Sunday School 9· .10 a .m Mornln$1:
Worship JO .10a m Prayrr s&lt;'rvic(', alterna lP Sundavs
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third
Ave Rev Clark Bakl"r. pastor Carl Nottingham. Sunda} School Supt Sunday
School 10 a m with classt&gt;S for all agt&gt;S .
Evemn~ SC'rVIC'f's at 6 p m Wrdnf'Sday Bl bi P stud y a 1 7· 30 p m Youth SE&gt;rvicM Frl ·
day at 7 .10 p m
ECCLES lA I'ELLOWSHI P. 128 MillS! ,
Middlt&gt;porl Broth('r Chuck McPherson ,
pastor Sunday Schoo l 10 a m . Sunday
PV('ftiRJt Sl"rvlc~ at 7 p m a nd Wl"dnE"Sday
S('rV ICf&gt;S at 7 p m
NTIQUITY BAPTIST Earl Shuler, pas·
tor Sunday School 9 10 a .m . Church ser ·
vic(', 7 p m . Youth m l'('linll!: fi p m Tut&gt;S
day Blbl&lt;' STudy a! 7 p m
I'ULL GOSPEL LIGHTHO USE. 33045
Hila nd Road . Pomf'roy Tom K(&gt;Ji y, pas l or . Dannv Lamtx&gt;rt. S S Supt Sunday
morning s&lt;'rVi('(' a! JO a m . Sunday E'Vt&gt;n·
In~ Sl"rvl('(' 7· JO p m Tut'Sday and Thursda y ServiCC'S at 7: :10 p .m .
WORD 01' FAITH . 9.1 Mill Sl., Mlddl ..
port Richa rd S!c&gt;wart. pastor . Sunday
morning S€'rVI('(' 10 a m : Sunday t&gt;VE'nlng
7 :rt TuE'Sdav mor nln~ Bib!(' st udy 10 a .m .
Wf'dn('S(Iav E'\'&lt;'nlng 7· :10 p m Thusday
morntnll!: vldro with K('nn('th CoJX&gt;Iand 10
a m .. Friday C'V('ninR vtdro with Kl"nnl'th
Copt"tand . 7 :Wpm
NEW HAVE N CHURCH 01' THE NA
7.ARF.NE R&lt;'v \.lrndon Stroud. pastor .
Sundav School q :lOa m . WorshlpSE'rvlc(',
10 10 a m , Youth s&lt;'n IC'&lt;' Sundav 6 1~ p
m Sunda\ f'Vf' nln ~ wrvl('(' 7 flOp 'm WE'd·
nf'S da v Prav('r M('('ling and Blbl&lt;' STudy
i 00 p .m
NEASF: SF:TTLEMF:NT CHURCH Sun ·
~da\: altf'rnoon !WrvlcN&gt; at l .lO Thursdav
f'V&lt;'mng Sf'rviC'~ al 7 :VI
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Ma son. W
\ 'a Pas1or. Bill Murph\• Sundav School 10
a m . ~undav f'\f'nln,ll 7 10 p m Prav&lt;'r
ffi(\("fln g and Blbl&lt;' s tud\ Wf'dn&lt;'sd a~ i JO
p m Ev&lt;&gt;ryonf' Wf'lcom('
RUTLAND I'REE WILL BAPTIST. Sa
lf'm S! R&lt;'\' Paul Tavlor pastor Sunday
School 10 a m . Sunday f"\'C' RinJI!: 7 :vl p m :
W&lt;'dnf'sday ('v('ning praVC'r ml'('IIR2 1 30
pm
SOUTH BETHEL NEll' TESTAMENT
C HURC H, Sllv('f Rldli!:&lt;' Ouall£' Svdenstrlckl"r. pastor. Sunda) School 9 a m:
Church SC'rvl('(' 10 a .m . Bibll" Study WE'd nc&gt;sda v at 7 30 p m .Jun&lt;' thru Sep!E'mtx&gt;r,
7 p m Octolx'r thru Ma\ Sunda't' ('VE'nln~
Ff&gt;llowshlp 7 p m Junf' thru SC'ptC'mtx&gt;r. 6
p m Octotx&gt;r thru Mav
p

Sermonette
In his story, "A Perfect Day for Bananafish," J . D.
Salinger gives an illustration so much a part of thE' world in
which WE' livE' It could have been a story in today's newspaPE&gt;r.
Seymour, the chief character in the story, apPE&gt;ars as normal
as your next door neighbor. But Seymour had found reality
uncomfortable. Since leaVing the armed seiVices he saw life
much too clearly ... the unloVing world too much in focus. No
one, not even his wife, accepted him for what he was. No one
seemed to understand. And so one day while wandering on the
beach, he met a young girl who did accept him for what he was
... who did seem to understand; in fact, she seemro to admire
him.

The world was blight as they strolled the beach in search
of Bananaflsh. But then the girl had to return home and
Seymour had to return to the adult world that didn't care. It
was more than he could stand; he quietly picked up a gun and
cancelled life altogether. How carelessly we have used the
words "love" and "friendship" when we sun•ly know the
beginning of either means an acceptance of one a not her for
wlliU !fiat persorns ..: or in spite of what he Is. - Lee Miller.
Rector, Grace Church, Pomeroy.

' .

�Page-6--The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 2, 1984

PomeiOy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, March 2, 1984

The Daily Sentinel Poge 7

PomeiOy-Middleport, Ohio

Convulsions in children common but still serious

The Veterans Memoria l Hospltto.
to watch than dangerous The
eme rgenC)f departmenl Is s laffe&lt;l
symptoms of convulsions a~e the
by 8 phys icia n 24-hours a day
ull erance of a short cry rtg1d
Convulsions, however, begin so
muscles followed by jerky, 'twit ch·
lng movements a pause In brea·
suddenlY. and las t such a short
length
lime lhallhey must often
thing, rolling of ~yes, drooling, and
be dealt wllh by non-medical
possible lost of bladder and bowel
personnel.
conlrol.
Ills Important not to panic when a
Convulsions In young c hildren
ages one to four are nol uncommon.
convulsion occurs. Remove foreign
The most frequenl cause Is a rapid
material (Including Ihe tongue)
rise In lemperalu re due loa n acule . from the vtcllm's a irway wtth your
lnfecllon. They rarely las l longer
fingers . It the re Is no neck Injury,
tha n lwo to three mlnules.
tilt Jhe victim's head back by
Although a ll convuls ions In you ng
placing one victim's hand under the
children musl be Ja ken seriously,
neck a nd lifting while pressing
lhey are usua lly more frl ghlenlng

downward on Ihe victim's forehead
wtth the other. This will m a intain
a n open a irWa y.
Alter the seizure, lay lhe child on
one side so thai he will not choke lf
he s hould vomit . Sponge the child 's
body with lukewarm water to hl'lp
reduce his fever . The child s ~ · ,,Jd
n!'ver be placed In a lub ofwatu .. r
have walcr thrown on his face or
lnio his moulh as he may Inhale
walcr .
Ills best lo havesomeon!'callthe
child's doctor during lhe convul·
s lon. If Ihis Is Impossible, ·contact
the em ergency room when the

oi

\

In Area Business And Industry
COMING SOON ... TO MEIGS COUNTY

I

I
I

BE A PART OF THIS The Daily-Sentinel
SPECIAL EDITION. FOR LESS THAN $21.00 YOUR
BUSINESS STORY CAN BE TOLD IN THIS FIRST
ANNUAL EDITION OF WHO'S WHO IN AREA
---------j
BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY.

culvulslon lB over. 'rile emergency
phys ic ian can advise you whether
or not the child needs to be treated
In the emergency room.
Convulsions may also occur In
adults wtth a fever, head Injury,
epilepsy, or a number of other

health problems. The onset Is Ihe
same as convulsions In children.
Trealment Is much the same.
Care should be taken to keep the
vtcllm away tom d a ngerous sur·
roundlngs such as stairs a nd glass
doors. Loosen
clothing around

Harrisionville spelling winner named
Ma rc Howard, son of Mr. and
Mrs. E lwood Howard Jr. , was the
Harrtsonvillc E lementary School
annual spelling bee winne r In
competition held a t the school
recently. Aaron Sheets, son of Mr.
a nd Mrs. James Sheels, Rutland,
was Ihe runner-up.
Sheets missed Jheword " chucklehead" which Howard
cor·

\
•··..- -

rectly and then went on 10 spell
"cltcus" correctly to be named
champion.
Others taking part were fourth
graders Bobby Vance room cham ·
pion, Tony Slx, Pe;.ry Levacy,
Tiffany Bennett, Keith Hebner ,
Mark Stanley, and Paul Sharp; flflh
graders, Aaron Sheets, room cham·

Ihe victim's neck a nd waist. Seek
medical altentlon promptly, especla lly lf there Is more tha n one
seizure or lhe victim Is pregnant.
The Vetera ns Memorial Hospl::
department can

:

pion , Mike Foil, Burt Kennedy;
s lxth graders, Marc Howard, Kim·
berly P a rsons, Aimee Rupe, Wayne
Howard, a nd Danny Kennedy.
Prlncpal Greg McCall served as
pronouncer and judges were Mrs.
Lynn Bookman, Mrs. Joyce Seellg,
Mrs. Eva Howard, and Mrs. Nancy
Whit!'.

D

ANNUAL
PURE &amp; SIMPLE
SALE!

1---------.Ciip and Mail

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WE WILL BE CONTACTING AREA
BUSINESSES BEGINNING TODAY.
HOWEVER, TO ASSURE YOU ARE
CONTACTED, PLEASE SEND IN
COUPON FOR PROMPT ATTENTION.

Name ........................................ ············I
Address .................................................1I
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Phone ................................................... 1

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POMEROY, OHIO

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The Daily Sentinel

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s799

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1984 RENAULT
ALLIANCE
108 wheel base, 4 cyl. eng ., 4 speed
trans ., vinyl bench seat, rear step
bumper, styled road wheels .
Stock No. 4726

2 door, 4 cyl. eng., rust proofing, 4
trans ., tinted glass, styled
lwileels with trim rings, bucket
seats, Halogen headlamps.
NOW
WAS

7385

•6950

12" Monitor • Typewrlter·Style Keyboard

Reg. 7.95

Easy to use, hard to outgrow! Set up a budget ,
manage investments, do word processing , or play
games-just add a cassette recorder and soltware.
Learn to program in BASIC with the beginner's
manual . 16K memory. 1126-1067

Less than '/4' th in! J.key memory,
square root and percent keys. lkligit
LCD display. With batteries, billfold
case. 1165-i86

Powerful Under-Dash
CarCas¥tte
By 'Realls~C'"

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3-Way 6 x 9" Car
Speakers

MERCURY
LYNX

43-Range
Multitester

By Realislic

By Micron1a•

38%
Off

2488
,'

.-

1974
HOMESTEAD REALTY
675-55-40 Point Pleasant

882-2.105 New Haven

/i't- .,

Homestead Realty opened
at 2~11 Jackson Ave., Point.
Pleasant,ln June, 1974 andexp~&lt;'f Jt.e."lude a branch office In New
Haven In 1~77. Dedicated to serving o~r#pj"n County, the full-time
staff at Homestead Realty prides them,.., . ~kit~ a sincere desire to
assist clients with their lndlvl.dual needs whe1.~ It be selll"ll, buyl"ll,
renting or appraising property. The Homesteed Realty family thanks
you and your family for your past patronage and looks forward with
all Mason Countlans to a brlghtfuture. "Fam111es on the Move Look to
Hornesteadl~' Sandy Nichols Dunn, broker; Carolyn Thorne, Mary
Fowler, Jill Maynard. Velma Pattern, Lowell Allen, Nancy Canterbury and Rocky Sturgeon .

1976
SUPER VALU
Rt. 2 Bypass

675-2076

Point Pleasant

Reg. 39 _95 4'/•" Mirrored
Scale

.......d

24-watt output. Auto-Search
Music S~stem , Dolby'S NR,
Auto-Re\lerse. 1112·1982

Trl-County Sport Shop l~l.&gt;-• by John Burris. The business was
started In 1975 at dOl Main ~;&lt;:1 A j';:_ Pleasant. In April of 1971, the
business expanded to Mason COAJ~~.#firounds. the store was called
Tri-County Sport Shop North ano ~~ .... esent location of the
busl-s. The Main Street business was
January of 1979. Trl·
· County Sport Shop specializes In archery e;-:;~lpment, guns and am·
munition, ammunition reloading sup.p lles, fishing tackle.
mlscel'-'s hunting equipment. Factory authorlted warranty and
repair center for Bear and Proline archery equipment and Oalwa
RHb and Rods. Trl-County Sport Shop Is' the only shop In this area
which doH custom arraw making and accas-les and Installs ac·
cesser~ on bows. Open Monday-Satur~y 9:3p a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

ADVANCE DESIGN
2196th Street

675--1873

By Realistic

Saves24075

Point Pleasant

stor~..}"4 11.-i~:976.

~499

Super Valu opened Its
The store Is owned by
Massey Stores Inc. o1 Abington. Va~r:.trl' ~· 5 stores throughout
West VIrginia and Virginia. Super Valu pi~~ nemselves In havlnll
high quallty products at low prices. Bob Turner, store manager and
Lowell Gillispie, assistant manager would like to thank their
customers for ihelr patronage In the past and look forward to servl"ll
you In the future. They would also like to extend an Invitation to the
people of Mason County who have not been In their store to stop In and
look the store over . .

Reg.
Separate
Items
739.75

==~

•&lt;--li:,n

NEW LOOK BEAUTY SALON
675-6220

• ST-500/SA-500 Tuner/Amplifier'
With Mike Voice-Over and Echo
• SCT-500A Loglc·Controlled
Stereo Cassette Deck With
Dolby B and C Noise Reduction
• Two MC·1201 Speaker Systems
With 8" Woofer, 2 1/a" Tweeter
In Genuine Oiled Walnut Veneer
• LAB-290 Belt-Drive Automatic
Turntable With Reallstic/Shure
Movlng·Magnet Cartridge

'30 watts par channel, minimum
rms Into 8 ohms from 20·20,000
Hz, wllh no more lhan 0.08% THO

1979 FORD
BRONCO

4 dr ., station wagon, V·B
eng., air cond .. healer,
auto. trans., PS, PB •
power windows, cruise
control, AM-FM radio,
WSW radial tires, wheel

1983 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX
dr .. hardtop. 6 cyl. eng., air cond.,
auto. trans ., PS, PB, power
power seat, body side
tinted glass, tilt wheel,
control, AM-FM radio
Stock No. 47041
NOW

Point Pleasant

Belt-Drive Turntable

YOUR BUSINESS NAME

HiH Price

2995

Reg.
59.95
Each Each

ADDRESS

s.!..\"4

Til&amp; New Look Beauty
Uh.busliless for 6 years at 20'h
Main Street In downtown Point P1-'J..fr1' SOperafed by Marcia
Nibert and Becky Reynolds who have ~~ ' c01metology for a
number of years and were previously employeli at ofhPr salona In the.
area. They have edded to their salon another operator, Cathy Roush,
of New Haven. The salon specializes In hair coloring, perms and the
'l atest In cuts for the entire family. Give them a call at 67$-6220.

YOUR
STORY

Save'30

6995

Cue/pause lever, anti·
skate. straighltonearm
wilh $19.95 moving·
magnel cartridge. Includes dust cover.
#42-2978

Get two for the price of
one! Long-throw 8" wocJfer,
2•/2" wide-dispersion
tweeter. Removable grille.

173/4 X 1QS/o X ? 1 /2':
114()..1990

1983 GMC
HIGH SIERRA
Owner, very clean, 112

1983 FORD
RANGER

One
ton
pickup, VB, 4 speed O.D., PS, PB,
long wide bed, gauges, sliding rear
glass, rear step bumper, AM-FM
radio, white, dlx. topper.
Stock No. 40S4l
NOW

bumper. air cond. , AM-FM raooo.o
WSW tires, red &amp; while.
Stock No . 4~921
NOW

1980
CHEVY MONZA

1979
FIAT SPIDER

IHo•avv Duty? See this one. '~• ton
..icku•p, V-8 eng., 4 speed trans.,
long wide bed, gauges,
step bumper, heavy duty
.... tt~orv. AM radio, brown &amp; white.
Stock No. 47161
NOW

2 dr . Hatchback, 4 cyl. eng ., air
cond .. heater, auto. trans .• PS.
tinted glass, tilt wheel, AM radio.
Stock No. 472t t
WAS
NOW

4 cyl. eng ., healer, S speed lrans .,
PS, tinted gla ss, AM-FM radio &amp;
Cassette , luggage rack .
Stock No . 47152
WAS

•5995
Hours:

Monday · Friday

8 a.m. - 7 p.m.
Saturday

1

3695

Get fast, one-button dialing of often-called or emergency
•numbers. Stores numbers of up to 15 digits each. LED
· lndlcatorformemory lind dialing functions . Plugs into ~
standard modular jack. Universal Dial System, works on
rotary or tone dial lines. FCC registered. #43-279

~

Beckup bllnery e~tre . May not operate on some multi·llna systems.

1

or
OF TANDY CORPORATION

•

•

·--~ ~ :

_~..._

·----____
...

~,-.

~'--·""

~RICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES ANO DEALERS

'3195

1980 DATSUN
MAXIMA.
4 dr., sedan, air cond., diesel eng.,

heater, s speed trans ., PS. PB,
power windows, power seat, power
door locks, tinted glass, AM-FM
radio &amp; cassette. wheel covers.
Stock No. 46921
NOW
WAS
1
S9740

101490

'

--·---

4 wheel drive, V-8 eng.,
auto. trans., PS, PB,
rally wheels, tinted
glass. R.W. L. tires,
bucket seats, white.

1979
FORD F-250
owner, 37,490 miles. Need a

LAB-290 by Realistic

DON'T BE LEFT OUT-- OFTHIS SPECIAL EDITH)
P-HofiE TODAY .gg-2:1!5-6 WE'tl B£ GlA
TO ASS-IST YOU
The Dailr_SentineJ
.

•6295 $7590

COMPARABLE DEALS ON ALL NEW CARS AND TRUCKS
IN STOCK. CHOOSE FROM OUR FULL LINE OF FORD
• MERCURY· V.W. • AMC ·JEEP· RENAULT, PRODUCTS!

8 a.m. - 5 p.m.

.

proofing, 4 speed trans.. floor
mats, AM-FM radio, WSW radial
tires.
Stock No . 4062
WAS
NOW

'11 ton pickup, 6 cyl . eng. , 4

trans., PS, PB,

gaug~s .

'7295

'1295

1977
201h Main Street

•9995 $6608

windows, eng . preheater, rust

RIVERSIDE MOTORS USED CARS &amp; TRUCI'S!

.

~

675-2988
Point Pleasant
Located beside Mason County F alrgrounds

NOW

diesei~A~'ellurion

2 dr .•
grey,
letherette int ., opening vent

1978 CHRYSLER
LEBARON

I

1975
TRI-COUNTY SPORT SHOP

door Hatchback, front wheel
drive, 4 cyl . eng., 4 speed trans.,
AM radio, radial tires, styled
wheels, rust proofing.
Stock No. 4679
NOW
WAS
3

1

4995

SALESMEN:
TOMMY SPRAGUE
WENDELL VAUGHAN
BILL 'OLE ' HAAS
PETE SOMERVILLE
GUY SAYRE
BOB ROSS
HERB JARRELL
JOHN SANG

�Friday, Mardi 2, 1984

Ohio

The .Daily Sentinel

Area deaths

•
services
•
8 USIQess
~~~;:::~::==~lj~~~~~~;;,~:;lj::~;:~;;;;;;:::;r;::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::~
~

lllt:Mtll" ' - · Oltio 45711

Howard W. Stanley

KEY - James E . Diddle, a
Racine native, Is the key to the
successful expanding operations
of the J. D. DriDihg Co. In
Racine. The company's pa'yfuD
In 1983 was about $800,000.

Oil, gas
(Continued from page 1)
completed.
Diddle Is well aware of the
public relations aspects Involved
with drtlllng. He wants to make
his drtlllng operations as "pain·
less" as possible to the public
and for this reason keeps his own
grader near a drtlllng site as well
as truck loads of llrnestone so
that roads can be quickly
repaired.
Salt bnne dlspossal from
drtlllng operations has recently
come to light as a major
problem leading one state legislator to suggest a one-year
morttortum on all drtlllng. Diddle protests this suggestion
pointing out that his crews have
learned to capably handle the
salt brine disposal through the
use of Injection wells.
J . D. Drtlllng sells to Columbia
Gas of Ohio and has worked out
an arrangement through Colum~a so that wells might operate
on a 12 month basts each year.
'Oil from J . D. Drtlllng Is sold to
Pennzoll. Diddle owns some 10
Pennzotl Service Stations In
Meigs County, so It's a natural
move.
Pointing out that Meigs
County Is rich in resources,
Diddle reports he expects natural gas prtces to decrease In the
next year or so due to the
existing surplus.
Since J . D. Drilling is expanding and costs are high, the
company does have investors.
. Roger Birch, a former resident of Racine now living In
.Pueblo, Colorado, has been
extremely successful in brtng!ng
.well-to-do Investors into the
·operation. Stobart also brtngs In
some local area investors.
Operations of Diddle's com·
· pany are patterned after the
mtlltary and small wonder since
·Diddle was a Green Beret
·Paratrooper serving in Vietnam. There is a chain of
command so that at least a part
of the many problems that artse
can be solved without draining .
Diddle completely of his
energies.
Bill Cornell of Racine serves
as production manager and
·Spencer Carpenter heads well
eompletions.
: Following his graduation from
Racine High School in 1966,
Diddle had planned a career In
. law. However, following his
discharge from the armed forces in 1971, he became Involved
In drHiing business.
Diddle is marrted to the
former Linda Carpenter of the
Racine area and they have a
son, Christopher, a student at
Southern Junior High School.
Diddle's parents are Maxine
Proffitt Diddle and Thomas
biddle, also associated with the

·Surviving area sister, Susie Circle
Public
Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Harris, Sprtngtleld, and several
Howa rd Woodrow ,Stanley, ft5,
nieces and nephews.
17 1 t 2 lrnks: thence East 21
df"lf8ult wtll be rendered agamst
PUBUC NOtiCE
local sources. unless 11 ts
Buffalo, W.Va .. died Thursd!IY in
Services wW be held at 3 p.m.
you for the rel1ef demanded tn
Not•ce •s hereby g•ven that on rods and 22 ltnks. thence South
demon strated that alternattve
Thomas Memorial Hospital, South
Saturday a! the Carmel United Saturday. Marc h 3rd. 1984. at 36'11 rods. thence 1n a North
the Compla•n t
se rv1 ces or lactltt1es would be
LARRYE SPENCER more elfecltve or more l•kely to
Charleston, W.Va., following an
Methodist Church with the Rev. 10:00 a.m a publ•c sale w• ll be Westerly dtr OCtton abo ut 1"J.
at 105 Un•on Avenue. rods to the place o f begt n ntng.
Clftrk ol Cout ts
c.c h1eve the Gaiii()· M etgs Com extended Illness.
Paul McGuire offtclatlng. Burial held
Pomeroy. Ohro 45769. to sell contatntng 10 ac res m01 e or
M e•g s Coun ty
mu OI!y Act ton Agency's pert or·
Born Aug. 20, 1918, In Dunbar,
will be in the Carmel Cemetery. for cash the f ollow •ng les s Al so. the nght -of-way to
Common Plea s Cou rt
mance goals
collateral
·
the
publtc
road
Il
l
27
.
1213.
tO
.
17
24.
1312.
W.Va., son of the late Wortlty C.
Frtends may caU at the Ewing
!bl The two year program
1978 Mercury Cougar Relerence Deed Vol 98 page 6tc
budget ts as follows
Stanley Sr. and Opal Stanley, who
Funeral Home anytime after 1 p.m . Serra!
No 8H93F5 77293
553. Deed Records ol Mergs
FY "85 7·1·84 to 6·30·85
survives at Bidwell, he was a retired
today. The body will betaken to the
1974 Bur ck 2 Dr
Coumy Oh•o
Metoa County
Public
Notice
PARCEL NO. 3:
general services admtolstration
church to lie in state at 2 p.m . 403 7H4H 182188. 2 Dr
Totrtl alloca ·
1976
Chevrolet
Four
Door
The
lollow1ng
descrtbed
r
eal
S219.B57 ·
employee ~ Ch!lrleston, W.Va.,
Saturday.
Sedan Nova - senal number estate s•tuate 1n Rut land ToWlPUBUC NOTICE
and a World War II veteran.
.
·
IX6906W026076 - Model Sh•p. tn the County of M etgs
In accordance w•th the re·
S17.826
trve
IXX69
Also surviving are his wife, Edna-- ·Donald F. Stivers
and State o f Ohto. to-wtt
QUtrements of the Job Tratntng
Tra1n 1nQ
99.161
197 7 Ford 4 Dr
Beg •nntng 159 rods South o f
Partnershtp Act of 1982. sec (adult)
Stanley; three sons, Howard of
7W81F15 1201 Granada
the Nonl"mes t corn er ol rrac ·
liOn 104. the followtng Job
67.217
Donald F . Stivers, 61, well-known
Sarasota, Fla., and Gary and
In add•hon to the above. the uon No 3. l oon No 6. Range
Tra1n1ng Plan 1S avat lable lor
lvouthl
Charles, both o!Buffalo; two sisters, Middleport resident and a fonner followmg collateral w•ll be solo No 14 olthe Oh10 Company·s
publtc revtew
!Total)
166.379
1
FY '8111811
Mrs. Aunlta Stover of Dunbar, and Meigs Local School Dlstrtct teacher, on March 3rd. 1984. at 10 00 Purchase. th ence East1 11 / 7
Support
21.249
a m by pubhc sale at Stat e rods. then ce Sou th 8 h rods.
! 1) The Ir onton-Lawrence
Iadult)
Mrs. Phyllis Baker of Middleport; dled Frtday morning at Veterans Route 124. Syracuse .. Oh•o
th ence West 2 1 rods and 22
CAD 1s the Adm•n• str attve ent1ty
I4.403
two brothers, Wortlty Jr. of Bidwell, Memorial Hospital.
1972 Regent Mobrle Home l•nks. thence NOrth 8 1h rods.
of SDA No 24 JTPA Funds The
(youth)
Mr. Stivers was born Oct. 3,1922 in - Mlr Serra! No 6012 10370 then ce East 10 rods and 9 1h
Gallta -M e1gs CAA ts the subre- iToJal)
and Donald of Gallipolis; and eight
35.652
Glenwood
60I
2
ltnks to the pl ace o f begtnntng.
Ct ptent of JTPA fund s tn the
FY "B6 7· I -85 to 6-30-86
grandchildren and two great- Pomeroy, a son of the late Charles
The Farmers Bank and Sav- ~.:o ntatntng one acre. m01e o r
Me1g County servtce area
Same as FY "B5
and
Nelda
Grueser
Stivers.
He
was
grandchildren.
•ngs Company. Pomeroy. Oh10. tess
121 The Gallra-Mergs CAA wrll
(]) Coord1nat•on c r~tena as
Funeral arrangements will be also preceded in death by a brother, reserves the nght to b•d at thiS
Relerence Deed Vol 92 . p
deliVer the followtng serv•ces to per the Governor\! coord tnasale.
and
to
Withdraw
any
of
the
JTPA partiCt pants ·
247. Deed Records ol Mergs
IIOn and speCial serviCBS plan
announced later by Raynes Funeral John.
above collatera l pnor to sale
(I I Job Club. Length ol as follows
Mr. Stivers was a member of Further. The Farmers Bank and County. Ohto
Home, Buffalo.
Ttme - 2 · 3 weeks. Cost PARCEL NO. 4:
f I I Employment BeMc.
Heath United Methodist Church in Sav•ngs Company reserves the
S157 !average)
The lollowtng real est ate
- Gallta -M etg s CAA Wtll utthze
nght
to
reJeCt
any
or
all
b•ds
121 Classroom Tratn tng. OBES for tntake and referral
Middleport and of Drew Webster submitted
sttuated 1n the County o l Me1g s.
Elva E. Dailey
leng th of Ttme - Vaues. Cost
tn the State of Ohto and tn the
121 Economic DewiopPost 39, American Legion In
Further. the above are sold •n Townshtp ol rutland . and
- S2.100 (average)
ment
- Galha -M e•gs CAA w111 ,
Mrs. Elva E . Dalley, 62, who died Pomeroy. He was a veteran of the cond•t•on they are 1n W11h no boundfld and descrtbed as131 OJT. Length of Trme - ltnk JTPA serv•ces with eco ·
expressed
or
tmphed
warran
1
World
War
II
haying
served
in
the
Var1es
.
Cos
t
s
1.85
4
at the Holzer Medical Center,
lollows Begtnn•n g 149 /J rods
nom1c development acttvtt•es tn
ties g1ven
(average)
south ol the North west corner
the M e1gs County area
.
Wednesday morning was a resident United States Air Force. He had
141 Job Try Out. Length ot"
of Fract1on No 3. Town No 6.
131 Educrion - .()allra·
of Racine and not Syracuse as worked at the Rowley and Reed 121 27. 29 131 2. 3tc
Ttme 10 lh'eeks. Cost Range No 14 ol the Ohto
M etgs CAA Will ut1hz&amp; and •
S838 (average)
reported earlier .. Services will be at Hardware Store In Middleport for
Company's Pur chase. then ~
coordtn,:tte eftecuve tramtng ~
1
Public
Notice
131
The
Ohro
Bureau
ol
East 1 1 h rods. thence South
throug h educat•o n lnst•tuttons 1
1 p.m . Saturday at the Ewing several years and before his
Employment Serv1ces Will l'rO9 1h rods. thence West 2 1 rods
141 Woltlre - Gallra ·Mergs
Funeral Home.
retirement had taught in the Meigs
vlde Intake and referral serv1ces
and 22 links. thence No rth 7
CAA w111 hnk and coordtnat e
PUBUC
NOTICE
Local School District for 1!i years.
to determ1ne and venfy ldent•hrods and 5 links. thence North
serv1ces to welfare rect p.ents
Proposals wtll be re·
catton of el•gtble applicants
78 dAgrees .East 10 rods and
Surviving are his wife, Norma
Hazel N. Sturgeon
151 Rehablllt"lon ce•ved by the V1llage of
1
41
Pertormance
goals
for
16 ltnks to the place of
Galha -Metgs CAA WIU prov•de
Mtddleport at the ma yor's
Jean French Stivers; a son and
SDA No 24 are as follows
begtn1tng. conta1ntng one ( 1}
se MCAS and coordmate and
offr ce. 237 Race St .. Mrd. Hazel N. (Peachie) Sturgeon, 19, daughter-In-law, Don and Betsy
(11 Entered employment ltnk wtth extst1ng servtces for
acre more or tess
dleport. Ohro. untrl 2 30
rate. 40 12 percent
Stivers, Middleport; a granddaughAeh trence Deed Vol. 93. p
Glenwood, died Tuesday In an
the hand1capped
PM March 20. 1984 for
121 Cost per entered em 36. DAP.d RP.Cords ol Mergs
an Energy Development
181 The-Gallta-Mergs CAA tS a
ter, Emily Jean Stivers, Middleaccident at her home.
plOyment. S8.731 64
County. Oh•o
.
par! of a s1ngle labor market
Feastb1l tty Study. A lt st o f
Born Oct. 22, 1964, she was the port; three brothers, Willard, La131 Average wage at place - area
Furthermore. platntlff alleges
tt ems t o be 1nc luded 1n
ment. S4 35/ hr
Junta, Colorado; Robert of
daughter of Paul Lee Sturgeon and
that defendant. FrancP.s Brad ·
(9) Gallra-Mergs CAA uses a
th ts study 1s ava1 labl e at
141Entered EmplOyment - double-entry accountmg sys IP.y. defendant FrancAs lucka McMinnville, Ore., and Norman
the mayor's o fft ce bet ·
Dixie Waugh Sturgeon of Hartford.
Youth. 2 1 43 percent
doo and delendant. Donald
tem to Insure sound ftscal ·
ween 8 AM and 4 P.M
, (Pat), Franklin, Ohio, his motllel'·
She was a homemaker.
151 Postt1ve Termmat•on control. accounung. audtt and
Luckadoo. are each set zed of an
Monday through Frtda y
·In-law,
Grace
French
otMidcDeport
Rate.
75
52
per
cen
t
Surviving In addition to her
undtvtded one-l ourth( 1 / 4} part
d ebt collectton procedures to •
Fred Hoffman. Mayor
(6) Cost Per Pos1t1ve Term• ·
ol the aloresa1d descr•bP.d
assu re the pr oper d1sbursal of. 1
parents are one son, Jason Roy and several aunts, uncles, nieces
Village of Mrddleport
S3.814
79
nat•on.
par
cels
of
real
estate
and accounltng for. at l unds
Feb 24. Mar 2
Sturgeon, and one daughter, Chas- and nephews.
!71 Welfare entered em - recetved 1n accordahce wtth
That the satd pla1n1tff alleges
Services wt11 be held at 2 p.m.
ployment rate. 26 9 percent
ity Dawn Sturgeon, both at home;
th at the other defendants tn thiS
law s and regulat• ons as •
Public Notice
(51 In accordance wt th sec - requ1red
law SUI! may have some clatm
Sunday at the Rawlings-Coatstwo brothers, Harry Lee Sturgeon,
liOn 107 at the act. the
or 1nterest tn the parcels 3 and
(I 01 Gallta ·Me•gs CAA Wlll
Blower Funera!HomewiththeRev.
Ashton, and David Allen Sturgeon,
PUBUC NOTICE
proced~trc s for select •ng ser4 descnbed her etolo re
prepare an ann ual report for ;
IN
THE
COURT
Hartford; her paternal grandpar- Robert Robinson offtclatlng. Burial
VICe prov1ders lo r M etgs County
That the plamt1fl demands
subm• ss1on to the SOA No 24
OF COMMON PlEAS
JTPA program components are
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sturgeon, will be in Riverview Cemetery.
tttle
to
thA
afor
esa1d
parcels
that
admtn1strat1ve enhty provtd1ng ·
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
follows
as
of real eswte be Quteted 1n the
a desc nptto n of actM!Ies con Pomeroy, and maternal grand- Frten&amp; may call at the funeral
OHIO
Ia) The pr1mary co ns•dera ducted dunng the prog ram
names ol the olamuff and
c.t
Cllw
'•tdcldoo,
home
from
2
to
4
and
7
to
9
p.m.
father, Ernest Waugh, Ashton.
tton of thE: Gal lta -M e•gs CAA
defendant s. Fra nces Luc kadoo.
vear. charactensttcs o f partiCI Plllndff,
JTPA program •n selecung
One sister, Martina Sturgeon, Saturday. 1n lieu of flowers. the
pants and th8 extent to W'h1Ch
Frances Brad ley and Donald
sub-contractors to dehver servi Luckadoo
the acrtvt!les e•ceeded or la11ed·
tamiJy suggests that friends may r=r.nc.••ecfc•dcc, et. el.,
preceded her In death.
ces
ll\o1ll
be
the
effecltveness
of
to meet relevant perfo rmance
Furthermore. that sa1U real
Osfaldwlta.
Funeral services will be at Ball's make a contrtbutlon to the Middlethe sub·t Jntractor m deltvermg
standard s
ASiate be P31tlhOned or ordered
C..
No.
84-CV-16
comparable or related SefVlces
port Fire Department.
Chapel at 2 p.m. Saturday with the
solti tf 11 can not be oarht•oned .
The above summary ol Gallla NOTICE BY
based on demonstrated perfor ·
lor an allowance of attornev·s
M etgs CAA JTPA programm1ng
Rev. Bobby Ray. Burial will follow
PU8UCATION
mance. tn terms ol the ltkel• lor FY ·a5 and ·as Wlll be
lees hP.retn and further. platn!lfl
To
In Ball's Chapel Cemetery.
Meets Saturday
hood ol 'tneermg performance
demands
that
all
part1Ps
herP.to
presented 10 detat t at the
Donald Luckadoo. whose las t
goats.
cos
t
ef1
tctency.
quahty
ol
Friends may call at Stevens
set up then ctatms as they may
followt ng pubhc meetmgs
known address or res•dence
M e1gs County Commtsston ·
A special meeting of the Rutland was P 0 Box 136. Rutland. OH have m sa1d real AstatA above tra1n1ng standard s. and the
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant
needs at parttc1pan1s Su bdescr•bed . tnclud tnq thP owner .
er s Oll1ce. 10 00 a m M arc h 9
Bow Hunters Club will be held at 45775. ot herwtse unknown.
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m . Frtday.
contractors w1ll not be used to
1984
Shtp thAretn. tf any. or be forever
The unknown he.rs. devtsees.
7: llp.m. ~turd8y. at-the clubhouse.
duplica te tact l11tes o r servtces
barred
from
asserMg
samfl
legatees, dtstnbutees. admtn ts·
already
available
tn
the
serv1ce
131 2. ltc
All shooters ate asked to be present tr ator s. exec ut ors. ass tgns.
Each delendan t •n thts casf!
Vema M. Circle
area through Federal. State. or
since plans will be made for guard tan or custOdt an. tf any, of shall be reou•red to ans"NP.r
Wt l h1n 28 davs after the date of
participating in the first round robin Donald luckadoo. Deceased .
the last publtcat•on of th1s
Verna M. Circle, 85, Route 1,
John Romrne. ·Jr . whose last
event to be held Sunday at Wellston. known address or restdence nouce whtch w•ll be publtshed
Reel Estate General
Racine, dledWednesdaynlghtatthe
oncf! a wflAk for sue consecutive
was Rutland. Ohto. otherw1se
Holzer Medical Center.
The
last
publication
w11t
wf!Aks
unknown.
Meets tonight
be made on March 2. 1984
She was born Nov. 3, 1lll8 In
Ruth Romtne. whose last
and thfl t"WP.nty·Aight days for
II. L."Bud" McGHEE known
address
or
res1dence
Racine, a daughter of the late James
Scipio Township Trustees wt11 was Rutland. Oh tO, otherw1se answer w1l l co mmence on tt" •t
Broktr-Ajlctlon
Stlvice
Madison and Alice Archer Circle.
date. Answer date Apnl 5.
Cheryl Lemley •.
meet this evening at 7 p.m . at the unknown:
1984
Besides her parents, she was
The unki'lown he•r s. dev•sees.
lltip County Anociate
Pageville Town Hall.
In case of your fa tlure to
legatees. dtstnbutees. admtniS·
preceded In deatli by two brothers,
answer o r otherwtse respond
Phone 742-3171
trators. executors and asstgns
Cecil and Homer C!cle and a sister,
as rAQu1rP.d by the Oh•o Rules of
of John Romtne. Deceased.
Veterans
Memorial
1 Co .
Wavie Circle. Miss Circle was a
Mrs John Ro mtne. Deceased: . Ctvtl Procfldurf!. 1udgmp,r : by
John Rom tne. Jr . Deceased.
member of the Carrrn:l United
Admitted--Carolyn Chapman, Ruth Remme. Deceased. Spot
Methodist Church.
Pomeroy; Barbara Hendrix, Wormley, De ceased ; Katte
Luckadoo. a.k.a KallA Lucka Syracuse.
doo. Deceased. Elite Luckadoo.
Disch~rged--Ber,tha Russell,
Elite Lu cka doo .
a.k a
Carol Smith, Waltir Bunce, Linda Deceased.
(Continued from page 1)
You wtll take not•ce that the
Fields, Ray Clark.
platntrft Carl Cl tve luckadoo.
the problem.
has flied an act ton agatnst each
It was reported that Doug
of you ent1tled Carl Cl1ve
FOR
luckadoo. plamttff. vs. Frances
Hemsley has been hired by Green
l uckadoo. et al.. defendants.
Thumb to supervise general relief
Thts act•on has been asstgned
workers.
Case No. 84-CV-15 and ·tS
pend1ng 1n the Common Pleas
Council asked that members of
o f M ergs County. Ohto.
the Syracuse-Racine Regional
The annual Meigs County All- Court
That the platnttff ts the CJiNner
Sewer District meet with council at County Band Concert will be held at of an undtvtded one-fou rth
the next meeting to discuss prob- 3p.m.SundayattheLarryMorrtson {1 / 4) tnterest tn the follOWing
descn bed parcels of real estate
lems within the system.
Audltortum of Meigs Hlg~ School.
PARCEL NO. 1:
Band personnel iscunposedoftop
The followt ng real estate
muslcl!ms from Eastern, Southern st tu ~lt ed tn the County of Me1gs
company.
NECCHI Education Department placed orders anticipating
and Meigs High Schools. Guest tn the State of Oh1o. and 1n the
To date, J . D. Drtlling has
Townshtp o f Rutland and
school orders. Due to budget cuts, these orders were not
conductor ·this year will be Ronald ~ unded and descnbed as
sunk 47 wells. With a break in the
P. SoccarreW, director of bands at f9 llows: Bemg tn Fraction No. 2.
weather it will move into high
sold. Necchi has released for sale to the·public a limited
Ohio University. Admission Is tree Town No 6 and Range No. 14
gear to meet the 400 to 500 well
number of these HEAVY DUTY ALL METAL SPECIAL SEWING ,
of the Oh•o Company's Purand the public Is invited to attend.
goal set for the year.
chase and begtnntng tn the

·Nam e an d

Addre ss

ol

Appl •cam
James E 01ddle dha J 0
Onlt1ng Company

PO Box 537
Loca !10fl ol Pr oposed $ai r
Water l nwc~ton WeL
Sec t•on 32 Saltsb ury
Townsh1p. Me1gs CounTy. Ohto.
Harold and Penny Bnnker.
Geolog•cal Name and
of ln reci~n"" Zor.c - Cl •n ton

Further lnforma1 10n May
Obtatned Bv Com ac rtng the
FoHow..ng.

James E Drddle dba J
D~ll i ng Company. P 0
587. Racrne. Ohro 4577
6 t 4-949-2512
OR

,

8

Any person destnng to com ment or to make an o bieCtton
With reference to an appltca hon
for a perm tt to cons tr uct.
convert 10. o r oper.J:e a sait
wat er mJeC!Io n pro1ect shall ltle
such comments o r OhjeC IIons
tn wnttng . . w1th the UNDER -

obJeCti ons shall be f1led wnh the
dtvtston no lateT than Mteen
calendar days h o m the pubhcatton date tn a newspaper of
general c ~rculat1on •n the area
of rev•ew

121 29. ltc

AUCTION
SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1984
Personal Property 10:00 A.M.
Real Estate 10:00 AM.
MAIN STREET, RUTLAND, OHIO
HOUSEHOLD: Sears wood and coal burner, RCA stereo con·
sole, small fuel oil heater, 22,000 BTU air conditioner, electric fan, radio, dishes, pots and pans.
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTABLES: l885 silver dollar. organ
stool. cash register, wooden porch chair, bottles.
IIISe. Pop machine, counters and shelves, Regency scanner, Conn trombone, 36 inch Everlast punching bag and
gloves, pocket knives, ice skates, 2 sleds, Wizard chain saw,
dress and drapery material. Also other miscellaneous items:
REAL ESTATE: Commercial buildine. Great investment
Downstairs is large 20'~60' room with bath, 4 room apartment with bath upstairs. To see property call Cheryl Lemley,
Sales Associate, Bud Mc!ihee Realiy, 142-317l. To l1e sold
with confirmation of olllier.

Relerence Deed Vol. I 26. p.
249. Deed Records of Meigs
County. OH.
........ No.2:

52 'h rods; thence West 45
rods to the ~enter of Lrnle
Leadrng Creek: thence North-

State Rt. 7, Gallipolis,

erly following the .meandenng

of

creek 12 rods: menceA
. 36 1h

OH. , ·

Time: 11:00 AM. To 6:00 P.M. '

4
33'(&gt; degrees

East 17 r~ and 15 links;
then ro South 9 degrees East"
10 rods and t.O links: thence
East 19 rods and 18 links:
thence ·south 15 rods and

At. " - iMis. ..., Ill
- at 405 Soriftl Aw., ~
nieroy, OH. frOm t to 5 Sit,

lion. &amp; TIllS: dut to dlltl).

,

,

.

Logan, Ohio

.

·c~m1~ :1~ 1!r~~~ms

949-2263

84. Gray • ~~ Gennen
=~~:;;to. m•l• dog. cell

~~!. ~.:::.~g0~r~~.;~:eo::

~:i~t~~~:-Jthlntopte•H

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

~

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

·Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

'Pens

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328 4·21-tk

DICK
ROBERTS
f6141446·16tl
Glllipolis. OH.

'Wooden Nickels

'Matches 'Ball Caps
'Pencils 'Scratch Pads
'Balloons 'Decals
'"Hard Har Decals
'Bumper Sticken
2-10·1 mo

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester: Ohio

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

New Hontts-htensive
Remodel in&amp;
Insurance Work
Cu1to.m Pole Bldas.
Gari&amp;IS
Roofln&amp; Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
16 Yeere Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992· 7683
or 992-2282
11-1-tfc

Authorized John Deere.
New Holland. Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment

Ph. 986-4269
lf No Answer. C.ll 915-4312
Deweyne Wllllemo
&amp; Scottie Smith

All llokes ond llodels
Anttnno lnstollotion
Houso Colis ond Shop
Servtct

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

SALES &amp;SERVICE

AND

Parts &amp; Service

Av1il1blt

1.J .rlc

Jlll mo pd

COUNTRY
CONNECTION
BAND .

Bring This Coupon In

RADIATOR
SERVICE

FOR 10% OFF
ANY SERVICE

MARCH .2. 1984

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid ~uti and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Expires March 17

AT

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

JONES BAR
Wtst Columbil, W. Va.

169 N. 2nd

Everyone Welcome

PAT HILL FORD

Middleport, OH.

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

PH. 992-2725
2-6·1 mo.

64 Miec. Merchandise

For Hllera or buyera. Come

ence. havs your garage u&amp;e,
bake ules. or any fund
railing event for sure IUC ·
ceu. Set. &amp; Sun . Pride

pool tebte. ptoyer pteno,

caps. men clothing. wooden

AT

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M .

- Plumbing Md electrical

work

Pomeroy
Landmark

Service

Station
~·-"" ' 614-992-9932

Sizes Start From 12'x16.
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6· Up
to 24.x36.
Insulated Doe Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10·6·1fc

(Free Elllmates)
REDUCED WINTER RATES
992-6215 or YY&gt;•.n
Pomeroy,

NON PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS
Wt Acc:oM...odllt vp to 250 people
fof ptrtits end dlncn.

AL TROMM

742-2328

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns
Only

V. C. YOUNG Ill

36 CLEAN, SAFE. MODERN
ROOMS, CABLE TV. SHAll
HEAT. AIR CONO. Rates as
low as:
1 10 A Jlieht or
140 Weekly
lUTING 10015 FR£1 TO

GRAVEL
HAULED

Baohan Building

- Concrete w01k

Service Station .

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

MEIGS INN

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

- Addona and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter WOfk

Pomeroy Landmark

Long lollom, Oh.

CALL 992-3629
For Rtstsrvotions

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every 1 uesday

night, Pt. Pleeoant, WVo.
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate. Farm, Antique • liquidation ules.
Ucenoed &amp; bonded In Ohio &amp;

WV1 . 304 -773-11786 or
304-773-8186.

Auction every Fri . night at

Phone

1·(614)·992-3325
:NEW LISTING- 42 mes in
Oran¥e TdWnship wilh larm
buildmgsJ
•

0

JIEW LISTING - See the
river frojy,, this 5 rm. home
'near towjt Bath. gas fur·
11ace. nice! kitchen, panel·
j ng. carJieting and lg. lot.
ATIRACTIVE -little 2 bed·
room ranch with 1.8 acres ol
level land. Bath, carpeting,
equipped kitchen, gas lur·
nace and vinyl siding. Just
$18,000.
BUSINESS' BLDG . - Mid·
dleport business seclion for
only $15,000.

NEAR SCHOOLS - In Mid·
dleport with swim pool. 2 car
garage. 3 or 4 bedrooms. I'h
baths. car.peting, full base·
ment and level lot.
LARGE GARDEN - Lots ot
trees, in Rutland on level lol
and 6 rm . home.

.

BARGAIN - Begin . your
new life in this well con·
strucled one l!edrtiom home.
Oak floors, furnace. bath and .
prden space. Only $12;500.

•

..
,.,.,•

i

LIIICOLN HTS. - Rem~
deled 6 rm. frame. Bath, ba
sement; -- furnace. and lol
50x_30().
·
·

~

For all yout witinc
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

m·

SUE IUIPHY
IIIILTOII ROUSH . p

912·3325' .

resulls. Mattey not refundable.

Auctioneer . 304-2763069.
Fl01 Merkel, Morch 3 &amp; 4,
9:00-4:00. Teble renurls,
smell to~e e2 .: ior9o. 13.
Au• . 949-2970, 949-2948,
949-2719 .
Mt. Aho Auction, reopen

March 3, 6pm. Conllign-

ments accepted every -Sat.,
One till sale time. First Sat .
each month, all new merchandise. Emma Bell auctioneer. 4288177 . license

429-84.

Wanted To Buy

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

I

I

....

PH. 941'·31146

57 Pint St.

446-2362

chine

rspair,

parte,

and

oupplloo.

Pick up end

delivery.

Davis Vacuum

FREE GIFT for heving e
FREE enelyolo done of your
water by our factory repre·
"ntative. Vist our water
trsatment clinic on March

)Wanted
)For Sale
1Announcement
)For Rent

AND OTHER IIA.JOR BRANDS
We Hove A Full Time

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

2. _ _ _ _ __

20. - - - ' - - 21. - - - - - -

4. _ _ _ __

5. _ _ _ _ __

CHESTER-985-3307

22.-----23.-----24.
25. _ _ _ __

26.
27. _ _ _ _ _...,

9. _ _ _ __

KELLER'S

10. - - - - - -

CUSTOM

I II .
1 12.

30. - - - - - 31. - - - - - -

rll.

32. - - - - - -

1 14.

33.

15.
l16

.

'I

I

.

,f

.

:t

1

!a1

34.
JS.

.

Mall This Coupon with Rtmlthlnce

Thl O.lly Slllflllll

. 111 court st.

...__.,.___.,,....

._

'.

Pomeroy,OII.4S7"

1

1
I
I

1
I

l
1I

-~~--~~----·

Femeie puppy. 4 montho
old, \1\. etrctele, 'Ai pitt ·bull:
Cell 814-742-24110.
Mel• pupptee. Mother Lebador rotrle- end , border
collto mix. Cell 814-9927211 or 814-982-311119.

type. Cell 446-4637.

Used Mobile Homes 81
Campen. Travel Trailers.
Want to lease Hunting right•
on approx . 500 acres in
Meson or Jackson Co .•
WVi. J .H. Stetts &amp; Aoso-

antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete house·
holds. Also complete Aucti-

Buying daily gold. ailver
coins, ring&amp;. jewelry, sterling
ware. old coins. large cur~
rency. Top prices. Ed . Bur-

12

Situations
Wanted

Will care for the elderty in my
home. lots of references .
Men or women . Call 614-

867-3402.

Mercer' s Riverview Per·
sonal Care Home hes vacancies for elderly peraona.
Betty Mercer owner. 304Interior and exterior paintIng. sandblasting, waterblasting, paper hanging and
drywall finishing . free esti·
mates, fully insured . Call

814-949-2886.
NOTICE: Need o spocief
Coke? Cell Voughon'o Bokpiea.
cookies. for any occasion.
birthday, anniversary, holidays. Weddings ar• our

Babysitter for Tuppers
Plains· Pomeroy area. Call

814-898-1213 between
4 :30 -10 :00 p.m. Ruby
Marcum .
Vacancy for elderly person.
Room , board, and care. Call

614-992-6022.

1--------

If interested, please write

Harper's Adult Care Home
has 1 vacancy for another
resident . elderly peraon. Call

Uke to take cere of one or
two elderly persons, 3 or 6
days a week or nights in their
home. Have ten years experience cell after &amp;pm. 304-

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

Cash paid for fancy iron or
heavy iron beds. &amp;160 and SANDY AND BEAVER Inup for certain Meigs Co. surance Co. haa offered
stone jere. Old time cup· urvicea for fire insurance
boord . coli 1-304 -882 · coverage in Gallia County
2711
for almost a century. farm,
home and peraonal property
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS coverages are available to
FURNITURE. Bodo, Iron, meet Individual needs. Conwood, cupboarda, chairs, urct Eugene Holley. egent.
chests. besketa, dlahea. Phone 814-388-8890.
stone jars, antiques, gold

Help Wanted

9% intsrelt rete . Cell Jeri

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING Lower
priced regular tuningadiacounts to Senior Citizena,
Churches &amp; Schools. Ward ' s

Keyboerd. 304-876-382'4.
Re ~ l E s l ~ l e

31

Homes for Sale

3 bdr. houn Southwestern

Revco Drugo, 6966 E. Moin
St .. Cotumbuo, Oh 43213
or roll 814-861 -6880 .
E.O.E.

876-4467.
kett
Berber
Shop,
2nd
.
Ave.
Middleport, Oh. 814-992- 113 Insurance
3478.

11

N.L. Stevens &amp;. A11ociate1

hive real•stete loans with a

Crook. *28.600. Coli 614387-7809 .

ciotes. Reoid . 304 -676 - The FriendohipC!ub, P.O. B•
3313. Buo. 814-446-9340. 282, Tuppers Ploino, Oh,
46783 .
Wented to buy. New, uoed &amp; 1- - - - - --::---:--

Uve ln. Lady to lilY with
· elde~v couple, room end
boerd. plue Hllry. Chertotte
Oonner . Cell 614-2411 ·
To GlvNwey, wire heir 81143.
terrier, mate, 11111111. epprox.
1 yr. old. Would Hke to gtw RN-LPN for ·lhtft or llve-tn
to
home In-country. -rk. Gell 448-4421 efter
982- 3411.
8PM or -kends.

'load

22 Money to Loan

Ohio. H you are interested in
becoming aaaociated with
Americaalargest drug chain
please send resume to

end sliver . Wrlte-M .D.
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
Schools
46769 or coli 814-992- 16
Homo. 18 y11ro experience. 7780.
Instruction
Clifton , W.V. 304-7736873.
.. IS CeoJ&gt; peld for records:
33't, ~6'1 &amp; buying Slinderella Diet Clanes,
.. Recine Gun Club h11 dis- 78'1,
a. Cell Steve, 992- Monday Morning, 5· Pointl,
continued Gun ohooto until collection
7180.
Monday night,Maaon; Tues·
September.
dey night. &amp;-Points: JoAnne
Newoome. 992-3382.
4
Giveaway
fIll pill y1111' Ill
St•l VIII'~
18 Wanted to Do
3 puppies. Cell 4411-3797.

6.----··------ 21------29.----7. _ _ _ _ __

Seero, Silver Bridge

Vacancy: Julia'• Personal
Care Home . fo·rmerly
Mercer Convalescence

19,

3. _ _ _ _ __

It

Plaza.

18.

··-----

Shop Ttchnician
on Duty

7th

17.

Wanted to buy square dancing clothea. Size 1 0 , any

7231 .

SWEEPER end oewing me-

763-4738.

er111 Gotlipolis ond Jeckeon

oneoring service. Cell
_30_4_-_6_7_6_·1_2_9_3_.- - - Rodney Howery 814-898- 1o·

Announcl!lll en ts

Own your own Jsan aportsweer. ladiss apparel,
or children's store. 300
brand names. t16.500 includes t 9.000 inventory.
&amp;tore fixtures, training and
much more . Mr. Tete 704-

Rustic home. 3 YJ acrea." 2
gerages, Several outbuild·
ings. Aural Weter, Kyger

614-446-0176 .

3 Announcements

•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

It

, .... .... .. f,

-~·-,·~-:::·col ­

Cleener, one hell mile up
George• Crook Rd. Cell
814-4411-0294.

Ht !, ull{tJolrters
I

ec:tor means

leaning
•Wire brushes for creosote
emovel

Moton, W. Yo . Phone 304882-2400 or 882 -2189 .

age, management position•
areevailabte in the following

Ce11614-388-9906 or 814specialty. Call uo ol 992~aa-9617 otter 8.
6648, hours 8-6.

Phon•---------

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

en excellent benefit pock-

ary. We do ·cakes.

AUTI*OTM ElfCT111CA!. REPAIR
AllUIIATOIIS. STAiltiiS &amp; WIRII!G
ELECTRIC 1101011 &amp; PUIIP REPAIR
EUCTRIC IOTOR SAliS
Y-8£Ln, II(ARINGS. FUSES

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimates~ 949-2801 or
949-28o0
No Sunday Calls
3- !l·tfC

Wantsd to buy uasd coal &amp;
wood hsatera. Swain furniture, 446-3169, 3rd. &amp;
Standing timber will pay top
pricsd for red &amp;. white oak.

GALLIPOLIS ELECTRIC
. SERVICE, INC.

Addre·u..-------

Registered Phermacist Aevo
Drug is aeeking ·career
minded individuals to join
our profeuional pharmacy
program. We offer our phlr·
maclat s profeaional work
invironment and ample opmansgemsnt. We 1110 offer

Olive St., Gellipolio, Oh .

oet

Ham•-------------------

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

1-/ousmy

I

CHtMNIEY SWEEP

· Write your own ed and order bv mall with this
· coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you

I

CALL
·HEUII,
BRUCE

·l

Curb Inflation II
1
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
Savell I

ex -military medic to com·
plate medical exams for
insurance companiea in your
ares. Ideal opportunity for
retired per.an . Pert-time.

portunity to porticlpote in

446-3672

CHIMNEY KING

Building and equipment .

RN, LPN. Leb Tech or Allie ot 814-379-2789.

Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
uMd merchandise always
welcome. Richard ~eynofds

We pay cash for late model
clean uaed cars .

Reel Estate General

VII!GtL 8. 511 .
216 ,r. 2nd st.

minology required . Send
resume to Box C-29 Point
Pleaunt Register.

the Hertford Community

Bill Gene Johnson

TEAFORD'

etora, washer and dryera.
Good pay. hoap. insurance
peid. We will help train you .
Send resums to Box 5· 29.
care of Point Pleeunt Regis·

773-6882.

POMEROY. OHIO

----,

Person to do gsneral houM
cleaning one dey 1 week .

Center Bldg .. Cemden St. Coli be,_n 9om and 2pm
814-387-7101 .
onlyll 808-798-4488.

Jim Mink Chev.- Oido Inc .

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Full or part time for Point
Ple111nt and surrounding
area. Exc. earnings. For

tor, 200 Mein St.. Pt. HOME LOANS FIXED
Pl0111nt, WV 26660.
RATES Below merket retea.
itemo. 822 Jey Dr. 9:AM Fixed conventio nal FHA·
WANTED permanent port VA . leeder Mortgage .
6:PM, Merch 2 &amp; 3.
time medicel tranacription - Athono. collect 61 4-692elt for locel Ooctora office in 3061 .
Point PIN11nt . Medical ter·

9

MEIGS INN

10/20/ t.f.n .

that you do buaine11 with
people you know. and NOT
to aend money through the
mall until you h1ve inveltigated the offering.

cart. Jeck atanda. gl111·
wars. atone jere. misc .

B

B"'· Ph . 985-3813
Res. Ph . 985-3837

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd lih to introduce you to
EnPit-A-C.r, tho 111odtrn wty
to drive tho vthiclt of your
choice.
No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Fester Service
Call 614-992-6737

GUN SHOOT

CARPENTER
SERVICE

TIRE
SALE

G11 &amp; Water Pipe
Regulators &amp;
Fittings
Volume Drips
Sewage Pipe
Gea Appliances

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommend•

letldfng to menoger potition .
Contoct Job Service In
perton, 2211 lith Streit, Resteurent end Ice Cream
P9lnt Ploo11nt.
partor, price rsduced for
quick 11te. •s6 .ooo .oo .

304-468-11189.
Tobocco Flee Market, N.
28th St .. Huntington, WV. Appliance rspeir man. expe ~
rienced on servicing refriger·
304-623-2131 .
Yard Sale Bedroom aulte.

18 Wanted to Do

General Heullng and Tr111i
Ledteo netldtld for good removel Service. Relfeblo
peytng temporery office Nke ond dependable. Cell 4411•
work, no s•perience necsa- 31118 between 9 and 11.
Hry. At to n11d ttldleo with
cer for light delivery work,
F1n~nml
01• ellowence. Apply ln
perton only (lbtolutely no
phone catlol to Mro. Cetter,
Bueine11
Room 1011, Metgolnn, Tuet. 21
Opportunity
Merch e; from 9 to 8:30

to the lergett Flee Morklt In
3 ttetet, opoce for 1100 lnformetlon coli 304-678deelert. 3,600 edult enond- 2618 .

Racine Fire House. for more
info, contact Racine Ladiea

UNG'S

UNBELIEVABLE

G&amp;W PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLY

BOGGS

Help Wanted

Trainee for email bualnell

~ntOil

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-ttc

11

loll, white. thort helred cat, a.m.
plnk cotler, loll In Roclcepringo eree. 9~2 - 2781 .
Phoytcel Therepltt 6 doyt
per weelc. Pert tlmo. Good
hou~y woge. Contoct Pome7
Yard Sale
roy H11ith Cere Center .
814-892-111108.

·-:---Gaiilpoili---------

S&amp;W TV

St. Rt. 681
Darwin. OH.
(formerly Duncan's Grocery)
Now Acceptinc Food
StamP$ &amp; WIC Coupons.
Gene Whaley-Owner
Carla Harder-MIIIIJtr

Necchi EducotiQn Qepartment r
.

&amp; Windowa

LOITorltroyedllnce2·22·

otrotfor. golf clubo bago •

WHALEY'S
GROCERY

..

Place: Holiday Inn - Room A

Ntw Gibson air ~.

I

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

REDUCED -A lovely 3 or 4
BR home near Motor Parts
with 2 baths, central air and 1
heat; and good carpeting.
Now only $38,500.

U DAY ONLY)

No. 6. Range No. 14 of the Ohro
Co mpany's Purchase: thence
West 11 112 rods; thence North

Storm Ooora

PARTS end SERVICE
4·5-tfc

BRING THIS AD
Date: Tuesday, March 6th

2. Town

&amp; Painted

1

Guysville, Ohio

Ph. 614-662-5311
•Full Factory Warranties
•Free Delivery
C
•Site hecks
C
1
S ystems &amp;
e Omp ete
•Installation

Gu::,:~~:~:ed

•R•ngea
•Refrigereton
•Drysra •FrHzera

3 Announcement•

Limited Supply -- No Dealers Please

rods . North of the Southeast

corner of Fractton No.

Facto~

Rt. 329

t

0

All Makes

NOW ONLY. $198.00

The followtng rea l estate
situated •n the County of M e1gs.
tn the State of Ohio and tn the
Townshtp of Rutland and
bounded and descrttied as
follows. tO-Wit Begmning 4 2'12

Guttera

•W1aher1 •Diahw•aher~

INVESTMENT DEAL- Save
your tax dollars by writing
this off. 3 rented trailers and
small home on 2 level lots
for $20.000.

'

NEW-REPAIR

985-3561

MACHINES that sew on all fabrics - Levi's, canvas,
upholstery, nylon, stretch, vinyl, silk, AND EVEN SEW ON
LEATHER. These machines are new 1984 models. All carry
Necchi's 25 year warranty.
·
Manufacturer's. Sugested Price $599.95

SORRY, NO TRADE-INS OR LAYAWAYS

PH. 742-2534
Antenf)IS Start At
, 1 395 00
'Full
Warranties
'Free Delivery
·s·t
1 e Ch IC kI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SALE SPONSORED BY

l'lfri&amp;lrltcw, 2 Wit &amp; dly •
cuum cflnrs, E.A.Inlll(lst

,.

Public Sele
&amp; Auction

PDQ SATELLITE SYSTEMS

ROOFING CO.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

PUBLIC SALE

center of the public road at the
North west corner of a lot
convP.yed to Ew tng l Carter:
thence easterly parallel to the
north ltne of satd lot 100 feet:
thence northerly paral lel to the
CAnter of the public road 100
teet. thence westerly 100 feet
to the center of the publ tc road:
thence southerly folloWing the
centAr of the pubhc road 100
teet to the place of begtnntng .
co nt at ntng 23 / 100 acres.
m ore or less.

W ITESEL

ELLIS.WELDING
&amp;ltl~~~~TE

Loat end Found

8

&amp;Vicinity

1

bus Oh•o 43 224 6 14-265 ·
6917

GROUND INJECTION CO NTROL
SECTION. DIVISION OF
Max1mum Pr dposed ln)eC ·
OIL AND GAS. FOUNTAIN
lion Pr e~s ur e - 300 lbs
SQUARE . COLUMBU~ . OHIO
MaxHTium Proposed Ave·raoe l 43224. Such co mments of

Da•ly InjeCtiOn v (,.: ume -

PH. (614) 985-4212

We Uu Von Schrader
Equipment Recommended
by Leadina Carpet llaniofacturm.
'FREE ESTIMATES"
2-27-1 mo.

RELEASED

All county band
concert set Sunday

Ohto Department o f Natural
Resources 01v1Ston at Otl &amp;
Gas. Fount.'l tn Square Colum -

Approx 4.400"

than 500 Bbls

Lona Botto111, OH. 45743

...

Public Notice

LEGAL
NOTIFICATION

35115 Oak Hill Road

1

-----------,r-----------,----------------------1
Public Notice

,. PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

1

Guinther

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Ohio

PHONE
992-2156
Or _ _ , _
_ ..,._

Wlll do bobyettttng in my
home. Coil 448-002.8.
Wlll bebyslt *36 per week.
Mother of one. full time.
Ages 2 end up. Meola end
onecko. Celt 448-2816.
Wedding end Oil OCCIIIiOnt
cekeo, any llize, very good
references. Delivery oervtce.
Celt 1114·: 388 ,8482 ttl
.
8:00PM .

Dittrict, 20 screo. 30x38

garage , 20x40 ltorege
building. pond, wood stove.
fuel oil furnance. central air,

low UO'o. Coll 814-3792680 or 814-643-2138.
By owner, 604 4th Ave .•
city. Three bdr., one bath,
modern kitchen , new carpet ,
central air, carport, near
Washington School. Nice

bock yord. $46.000. Cell
448-0828 enytime.

6 room houae on acre lot in
Pomeroy. $3600. or best

offer. Cell 614-693-3289,
after 6 p.m .
four bedroom ell electric
brick home, 2 baths, large
living room with fireplace,
dining room , 2 car garage,
on 1 acre, 1 mile North of

Chetter Rt.7. Twenty minute• from Belpre. e86,000."
cion 304-773-631 9 or304773-6421 .
lincoln Terrece,Pomeroy .

Lend controct. Coli 614992-2971 or 992-8147 otter 8 p.m .
for aale, House, country
living, close to town, three
bedrooms. carpeting , atumi·
num siding. storm windows.

workohop. $19,900. 614742-2464.

Five bedroom. 2 YJ baths.
one acre, pool, children•
playground equipment ,
large living room , garage.
stove. refrigerator, dis ·
hwasher, washer &amp; dryer.
gas heat. Muat sell. job

move. 992-3643.

7 rooms and bath by owner
in West Columbia. W.Va .
Having work in other state
will 11le at reasonable price.
Will be in on weekends 9r
cen be contacted at 412-

462 -4488 . Owner John
Albright .

Newly remodeled house.
five rooms and bath . 2502
Lincoln Avenue . Priced to

sell, S22.000 .00. 304-6752866 .

3 bedroom electric home
with extra lot , axe . location
in Point Pleasant .

$49 ,900 .00 . 614 -446 0382 .

Twin

single.

Apt .

Bldg .

304-675-7641 evenings .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS ,
tRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
614-446-7672 .
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36. PHONE 614-4487274 .
1977 12x60 mobile home. 2
bdr., furnished, good cond.,
$6,300. Coli oftir 4 iiffil ori

weekends. 81 4-268-6618.

1978 Shultz 14x70 control
air, all new furniture, ex.

cond . on rented lot. Call
evening• 448-2076.

Wlndoor 14x70, totoleloctric, central eir, 22 ' liv.ingrQom. likt new: Shown by

oppolntment. Coll.8 14·246·
9326 .

�Page-l 0-- The Daily Sentinel
32

Mobile Homes
for' Sale

They'll Do It Every Time

1971 Schultz mobile home,
12x80, axe. cond.. fully
furnlahed with weahor,
dryer, AC, underpinned, lo·
cated Q~oll Crook Porte,
Rodney. Oh. t7,200. Cell
448 - 1683 or 814 -246 6443 otter 8PM .
Holley Park 1973, 14x80, 2
bdr., akirtlng &amp; atorage
building, excallent condl·

tion . French City Brokerage

61

Household Goods

1982 Clayton, like new,
14x70, 2 bdr., fireplace,
central air, dishwasher.
French City Brokerage Ser·
vicoa. Cell 448-9340.

Refrigerator for aolt, furnl·
ture and appllancea. Call
814 -949-3024 . Green wood Rd., Racine.

1.000 gal. underground fual
tank exc. cond. Would even
make • good culvert UIIO.
Call 4411-41137.

King Woo ~ Burner, like new.
$300. Po••I Simon, 992267 ' .

2-8:711x18.11 tubaleaa ro·
troada with atuda UO each.
Alao alx 9:150x1 8.11 caalnga
aultable for recapping , 8 ply
rating U .IIO each. Call
448-41537.

Cepco mornings and Evenlnga. Drop by or call. Uaed
furniture and appliances.
lven Powell , 614 -949 ·
2486.

tion. French City Brokerage
Sorvicea. Call 448 -9340.

80 Footer, new 14x80
Schult-Muat ' "· French
City Brokerage Servlcoa.
Call 448-9340.
1974 Community mobile

home, refrig.. ltove, trath
maaher, AC, ell carpeted,
mull oell now. Cell after
6PM &amp; weekenda448·7619
or 448-4434.
Mobile homo aet up in troller
porte, fully carpeted. owning
&amp; deck. If intereated col!
614-246-6883.
3 bdr. 14x70 mobile home
and Jot, land contrect with

small down payment. in
Evorgroon. Call448-1339 .
1979 fully underpinned.
14x70 3 bdr .. 2 full betha,
approx. Y, acre. well aheded
lot. Mid f20' a. Call 814·
388· 9957 after 6:30PM .
Uled 2 bedroom mobile
homoa, fumlahed. 10x60
and 12x52 1i111. Your

chance to own a comfortable home. Browne tl'liler
Court. MlneravHie, Oh. 814·
992-3324.
1978 Bayview 14x70 mobile home, part. turn .. den,
air cond.. *10,600. Call
992-7380.
Older modal 8 x 36 Great
lakoa mobile homo. Com·
pletely fumlahed, *1600.
Call 814-949·2328.
1971 12x80 trailer, furnlahed throe bedrooma, goa
heat, awning. •&amp;200. 614·
992-2736.
86x12 Elcona front livingroom,
two bedroom.
fumlahed, financing avoila·
ble. f5,996.00. D . and W.
Eatatea, 304-876-4424.

a••·

33

Farms for Sale

70ac. moreorJe11withbarn
and rural water. House 1111
than a year old with family
room, living room. 3 bad·
rooms, dining room, built in
kitchen with applioncea, uti!.
room. and 2 full batha. 6
mllea from Rio Grenda and 1
mi. off Rt. 36. Prk:e
$79,900. Call 814-246·
9670.

34

Business
Buildings

Investment property in Rio
Grenda. apartment building,
1 ·yr. old. 3·2 bdr. apt's.
Good monthly income,
f42,&amp;00. Call 4411·803B.

36

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

1 'h acrea landaceped alta,
water &amp; electric, Garage,
outbulldlnga. Kyger Cnsek
Schoola $8000. Call 614387-7809.

Rent di S
41

Houses for Rent

1 bdr. opt. $175. 2 bdr.
houao, 1 bdr. opt .. 1 bdr. apt.
2 bdr. opt. Utilltloa partlely
fum. Call 304·676-11104 or
304-1176-63!18.
.
2 bdr. unfumlahed, newly
decoroted, edulta only, no
peta, uc. dep. ll47 41h Ave ..
Galllpolla. •zoo mo. Call
448·2300.

i 'bd;:" In countrY nelr
Grande, U3111J10. plua dap ..
no petl. Coli 814-241111439.
2 bdr. In city full boument,
gal furnance, carpeted, no
peta. Call 448-09&amp;8.
Near Waterlocl form hou... II
rma.. bath, garden. •1211

'(:&lt; m0.-Rif~ •'llep:; 1-chlld.

..

Office doak-30x60 top good
condition. Call 448-9340.

Corner lot In Jacklon, Ohio.
Hae eewer, water, end gee
tap, $3,600. Call 814-24&amp;·
6616.

Acreage for aale. 304-676·
7541 eveninga.A

'1 1-814-843·2844.

'f·'
.~,
!

,'I ·fll~»

.

I

a.

a.

Furniahed efficiency. 8146.
Utilities paid. Share bath.
807 2nd, Gallipolia. Call
448-4416 after 7 PM .

Home 1ite'1; 1 to 7 acree.
UOOO. down, monthly pay·
menta. 992-2671.

I,

a.

44

One-Third of on acre lot in
Village of Vinton, $1 ,200.
Cell 614-2&amp;8-1890.

~

Custom draperies, 1" venelion blinda, vertical blind,
Roman ahadea. Samplaa
~;:;:::;::;:::::::::=:;::::;~~~~~~::::::::::::=1'hown at your home. Free
I
eatlmate. P. A . Sayre. 304·
41 Houses for Rent 44 Apartment
468· 1078.
for Rent
I- -- - - - - - SWAIN
Very nice 2 bdr. duplex
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
houee, turn., water paid, 2 bedroom opt .. •160. per
82 Olivo St .. Gallipolla. New
Main St., Cheahlre. Coli month. $60. depoait. You
used wood coal stoves,
814-2411-6818 .
pay utllltlea. Racine oral.
8 piece wood living room
Coll614-949-2271 .
auite with 8 Inch flat arma
Furn. 2 bdr .. 2 bath, amoll
t399, bunk beda complete
houae, nejr K-Mort, UOO New 1 bedroom furnlahed
mo .. 1 achool ago child, no apartment In Middleport. with bunklea *199, 2 place
antron Uvlngroom suitea
emokere. rentere pay gal
Call 1114-992-11304.
$199, ontron reclinera f99,
electric. Call 446-1822.
other recllnera •eo. maple
Apt. for nsnt, call 814 -992· dinette aott f179 , box
2 bdr. In city, adulta &amp; 1 690B.
springs • mettre11 twin or
amoll child, f100 dap., ref.
full *100 oat regular-firm
required . Call 448-3204.
APARTMENTS, mobile *120, maple dinette chaira
home1, hou1e1. Pt. Plee11nt
2 bdr. houu Upper Second and Galllpolia. 614 -448· f36 , waah atanda *34,
maple rockora *69, 7 piece
Ave.. Galllpolia. G11 fur· 8221 .
chrome dinette oat $149, 6
nance, garage, 1 child, no
piece dinette lit f99, uaed
pall. Call 814-388 -8296 TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
bedroom suites, rafrlgera - ,
before 12 Noon.
Apartment• now available to tore, rangea. chelt. dre11ars,
elderly &amp; diaabled with an wringer washers. TV's, dryNice 2 bdr. home, fireplace, income of leae than
new kitchen, city achool •12,300. Renting for 30 era. &amp; ahoea. Call 814-4463169.
dlatrict. Call Jim Cochran It percent of adjuated Income.
the Wlaamon Agency, 446· Phone 304-876 -8879.
3843.
63
Antiques
Nice one and two bedroom
14x70 total electric 3 bdr .. apta.. unfumlahed, phone
fumiehed trailer on private 304-876-2218. 8 till 8.
COUNTRY OAK FURNI ·
lot, 10 min . from town *200
mo. Ref. &amp; dep. required . Furniahed 1 bropt. Very nlca TURE ; Cupboarda. Pie
Safea. Round Toble a,
Call 614-268- 1393.
&amp; clean. Adulta Only. No CJ'Ieirs, plu1 many more
Peta. 304-876-1388.
more antiques, misc. 614In Middleport. Call 614· Brick houu, completely car· 887-3973.
992-2808.
peted, 3 br, 2 bath a, family
room , double garage. *3110.
3 bedroom electric home month. • Located 3100 Par· 64 Misc. Merchandise
with fenced yard in Point riah ave. 304-458-1078.
Pleount. •300.00 month .
Knauff Firewood Pickup or
814-446-0382.
Delivered. 12"·22" atocked
46 Furnished Rooms in
yard. HEAP vender,
2 bedroom. natural gu. 1-c
fumlahed, nica yard, refer· 1-::
Fo_r_re_n_t_S_Ioo-pr·n_g_R_oo_m_a prompt delivery. 814-268encea required . Camp Con- and light houoe keeping 8246 .
ley. 304-876· 7668.
roomt. Porte Central Hotel.
Umettone. Sand, Gravel.
Call 814-448-07118.
Delivered In Maaon, Melga,
Gallia or pick up at Richard•
42 Mobile Homes
&amp;looping room f116, utili· &amp; Son. Call 446-7786.
for Rent
tiea paid. Share bath, mole
only. Range &amp; refrig. 919 Firewood cut up alaba *16
2nd. Ave.. Golllpolia. Call pickup load . Call 814-24512x80 2 bdr. modern fur· 448·4418 after 7 PM.
6804.
niehed trailer, convenient I-;;:;:==;=:;===
location, Upper River Rd, 1·
METAL CULVERT PIPE Bin.
depoait req . Call 814-446- 46 Space for
thru 80 ln. diameter in atock.
8668.
RON EVANS, Jackaon, Oh.
814-288-6930.
2 Bedroom Mobile Homo. COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Ref, and Pepoait. 268· Parte, Route 33, North of PLASTIC SEPTIC TANK
192.2.
Pomeroy. large Iota. Call
Haul in your pickup truck.
814-992-7479.
RON EVANS, Jeckaon, Oh.
2 bdr. trailera, no city toxea, 1 - - - - - - - - - - 814-286-6930.
beeutiful river view in Ka- Two t,.u., lots, sewer and
nauge. Fotters Trailer Perk. water furnished, one small
PLASTIC CISTERNS Ap·
child accepted. 304-676Call 448-1802.
proved for drinking water.
1076.
RON EVANS, Jackaon, Oh.
814-288-6930.
Mobile home for rant, in ~~;;::::;::::=======
Racine . Call 614-387- I·
7148.
47 Wanted to Rent
PLASTIC CULVERT PIPES.
8 ln. thru 1B in. Stoll
..Mobile home for rent, 2 1- - - - - - - - - approved, guorantood. RON
bedroom, nice lot. Roush Physician and spouse movEVANS. Jocklon, Oh. 814lane, Chothire. 304· 773· ing into area in June. Unfur288-6930.
6882.
niahed houu or apartment
Will cut and deliver fire·
WITH OPTION TO BUY, 14' needed cloae to Holzer
wo.od. Call814-266-1628.
wide all oloctrlc mobile ,_c_1_1n_lc_._c_a_II_4_4_B_·_6_1_87_._ _
homo, aattlng on lot ready to '
Built on you lot a new home
move into. UOO.OO down
you can afford, over 1 , 100
Merchan111
se
8176.00 MONTH. 304·
aq.ft., 8 rooma &amp; bath,
678-2711 .
carpeted, reedy to move
Into. *28.600. Alao goregea
Two bedroo·m, 'A mile out
&amp; boumonta. Cell Patriot
61
Household
Goods
Sand Hill Road. Phone 304·
Homea Builders 446-8038.
876-3834.
Will consider mobile home
as trade in.
2 bedroom unfurnlahed, prl·
vote lot, in Burdette Addn.
Bedroom 1uite- white 3 pc.
$200 plua utilltiea, depoait
dre1ser-mirror-che1i. exceland reforencea . 304-876·
lent condition. Call 876·
2484.
6B98.

4 acral with amall trailer
f8,000 or trade for mobile
home. Kyger Crook Dlatrlct.
Call 814-387-7809 .

Apartment
for Rent

Moving Sale- Mile. mobile
home parts and acce11ories.
Stop and IH at French city
Mobile Homea. Call 448·
9340.
Locust posts, stakes and
firewood. Coli 814-268·
1271 .

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Houaing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms. rent
atorting at 815 7 for one
bedroom and 8193 per
month for two bedroom,
with •zoo depoait located
near Foodlond and Spring
Valley Plaza. pool and TV
ant. Call 448-2746 or leave
me11aga.

Mobile home·auppliaa: nontoxic antlfroeze-•11.110· per
g~llon . Water heating ala·
menta. water heater. step a,
windows, doors, fauceta,
broakera, etc . HotPolnt
heavy-duty electric dryora,
thla month only *279 .
Kingabury Homoa Parte and
Accoaaory Store. 900 Eaat
Main St.. old Bookmobile
building In Pomeroy or call
992-61587,.
Firewood dollvorad. 304·
876-20711 or 875-2099.

KIT

'N' CARLYLE ®

by Larr y

Wright

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

71
&amp;

• !. ·

··

·.··

''

•!•

81

TNC,..
"'- f Or S I 1e

7 .,
,.

1177 Ford pickup F-100
with topper, one owner.
n .o.o o. Call 814· 381 ·
8408 eftar 4PM.
New truck fondare • doore.
Chevy fendora . . 4 .111.
Chevy doora *171. Ford
fondara t71. led llnara
*2311. Call 114-218-1210.

Purebred Nubian Buck, 2
wka. old, dllbudded. *311 .
Papara avaMeblo. Call II 14·
742-2708.

1974 truck, atandard, new
wood bad, run a good .
*1100.; Ia by bathlnotte, Hka
now, Ull. 892-2420.

64

'83 Ford Aangar, loaded,
IIIII under warranty, mutt
1141, .8. 700.00. 304-8715·
10311 and 8715-4588.

Airedale Terrier pupa. Loyal,
protective, Intelligent, tam·
lly peta. Good atock, AKC,
*176, lncludoo ahota. Call
814-692-2170.

67

Musical
Instruments

Hay

&amp;

Grain

Good condition hay for ule.
Call 814-949-2870.
large round or equaro baloa.
Good quality. Opal Filipa·
trick. 814-889-4378.
- - - -- -·lcMixed Hay, 40-45 lb. bola,
100 bale Iota, •1.50. Call
814·9811·31181 .
Mixed hay, •1 .110 a bale.
Conditioned cut, no- wet.
814-742-2B73.
Ground ear corn te.IIO par
100. Bring o - container.
304-8715-3308. No Sunday

......

Mixed Hey, f1 .60 bale,
304-8715-111179.

r rdll\iJiirl ,II IIIII
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for late
modal uaed cora. Smith
Bulck-Pontloc, 1911 Eaat·
ern Ava.. Galllpolia. Call
1114-448-2282.
1979 Uncoln Marte V near
new cond .• extras. tunroof,
lpw mileage, 1 owner,
ts.eoo firm . Call 448·
0983.

'78 D-18 Martin with H.S .C.
good cond . Call after
6:00pm. 304 - 676·38112 . · 1977 Mercury Monarch
auto.. AC, good ahape,
8660. firm .
noedt, vinyl top. Call 448Electric guitar $460 value, 4307 attar &amp;PM.
muat aell for f200 . 3041977 Ford Muttang Cobra
876 -6004.
~02 engine. 4 apd., PS, P8,
Wurlitzer fun m•ker, 2 CUI· AM-FM catt. body perfect
tom digital muii.:; system cond.. •2.900. Call 814·
organ, like new. Oak. Good 388·91190 or 814- 388·
8271 .
buy. 304-876 -1882.

F;um Suppl11:s
&amp; L1v1::; 1or:k
61

Farm Equipment

Troy-Silt tiHera .. Check (!Ur
'"'cia! price before you buy
any tlllera. Swlther Implement Co. St. Rt. 7 N, Golll·
polia,OH . tall 814-448·
0476.

TO MA ~E O ! NNf~

t...OOK B-AD.

~--, THAT ', WHY YOU 'VE GOT TO S EETH AT T HI'S- C E-NT EN NIAL. COME:,
OFF WIT HOUT A HITCH. EA'7 Y. IF
IT DO E.? N' T, WE COU LD A LL.. 8&amp;

I&gt;J Tlt OU E&gt; Lf, .

~....,.-•~

Home

For ulo or trade 79 Ford
Pinto good cond., 4 cyl.,
auto.. 43,000 mllea. Call
814-246·110111.
1974 Ford 4 door, good
running cond .• low miluge.
Coll448-7337.
1981 Chevotte 21,000 mi ..
like new, *3,900. 1979
F-260 Ford 7900 GVW,
camper apecial 31.000 mi ..
good cond. *15.000. Call
814-21511-.8 244.
19615' chevy, 2 door aedan,
now paint, *1 .200. Cell
814·387-0184.

19711 Ford PU felr cond ..
•1 ;eoo or beet offar. Coli
114-311·11591 .

Truck 77 Ford pickup, F100.
3 apaod, low mileage. 304882 -3033.

73

Vena

&amp; 4

W.O.

repair. commercial and real·
dontlal, free ottlmatoa. Call
814·2158·1112.

a.

Marcum Roofing

Spout·

11111. 30 yoare experience.
apeclallzlng In bUNt up roof.
Call 114-381-81117.

'

Appl;,- 8arvlco all 1111ktll ''
l modele rofrl gortoro,
w .. her,, dryar1. ran gee, •.
compacloro, dlehw •eharli;~J
mlc:~~aveo . Hea.rng ·• :,.
Coo""", Shalt Metal Wo.,.,
Gallla llofrlgtrttlon Cd.
114-448·4018.
' '.~

•

Dick , ..... H - l m e i "'
monte. Carpentry-Piumbin •
and Electrical. Formerly D
F Contractoro. Cell 448· .. ~
3313.
liON'S Tolevlalon larvloo.
SpeclaHalftg In Zenith and
Motorol• . Qu•aar. •nd
houu colla. Cal 304-1178·
2388 Or 814·448-2414.
Fetty T- Trimmlne. atump
removal. Call 304 -11711·
1331 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rienood roofing. Including
hot tar -lloetlon, carpen·
tor, electrician, maoon. Call
304· 1711-2088 or 8711 ·
41180.

GJ\SOLINE AL LEY

lmjust tryinq

to teach you

Water Walla. Commercial
. end D - I e. Teat holoa.
Pumpa Salea and larvlco.
304-1815· 3102.

oroc12r Enqlishl

197B Plymouth Trail Duator
auto.. radio. good tlret. GET your carpet SHIP
priced to 1111. Call 448· SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
9340.
STEAMER . Wetar removal,
furniture ~nlng, , _ oatl·
1978 Chevrolet 30 cube matH. 304-1715· 22815.
van. Hat8' x8 ' x12 ' box,d..l
rear whMit, a now auto .. Starll'a T - • La- care.
tranaml11lon &amp; b~ttery . landacaplng patio, owning
Roll-up rear door. U ,800 and undarpen"lng. lackhoo
mllot. Call 448-0940 attar _,. , For complete lawn
5:30PM.
core. CaH 304-1178· 2010.
lnaured.
1181 ChevyG -1)van, 8cyl ..
atandard, radio, f4,4911.
John'• Auto BalM, lulavHie 82
Plumbing
R~ .. Gallpollt. Call . 448·
&amp;
Heating
4782. Open tiM darte.
78 Chevy Van C-30,
cond.. UOO . Call
8028.

WINNIE

ood

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Galllpollt, Ohio
ton
Phone 814-448· 3188 or814-448-4477

~J2 ·

1982 Ford 2110 ~
cultomized van. CeH
8&amp;80.

- - - ----

.

..
...
t~

JIM'S f'LUMBING &amp; HEAT· :
1978 Chevy 4 wheel drive lNG. Rt, 1, Box 31115, Galli· •
and Big Truck camper. polio. Call 814-387-01178. ;.
.1 .800.00.
weekend•
SHULAW'S Plumbing andonly, 304-8715-8901.
Heating, Rt. 2 Neal Road,
77 Ford Hmi conv. van, AC, Point Pleaunt. W.Va. 304Cruloe. low mileage, oxc. 11711·15420. , Uoonatd and'
cond. through out. Phol)l lnaured.
304-878·29115 attar 15pm.

...

e••

Excavating
1177 Blazer, auto .. 48,1100 83
mllea. axe . cond ..
u.aoo . oo . 304 - 87153011 .
DOZER WORK By Ted .
Hanna, ponda. dltchoa.'78 Dodge, 4 wh..l drive baaamenta. etc. ' Call 814 truck. 380 angina. PS, PI, 448-4807. Certar l Evana
adventure package, axe. Tranaportetlon. '
cond .. priced on lnapectlon . .
304·8715-15424.
Cat 2111 hoa, dozeta. crane,
loadera. dump tri!ck. Call
~=--=-=----:---· I 814-448· 1142 between
Motorcycles
7:00AM • 5:00PM.

--------- ·1 menta,
Good-1 Excavating. bate·
footora, driveway"· •
aoptlc tanka, landacaplng.
Cell anytime 8 14··448 lili~oe;)WIR I 41137. Jamea L. Davloon. Jr.
owner.
J .A.R . Conatructlon Co.
Water Lines. Footei-a,
1188 Harley Davldoon aloe· Draina. All klnda cif Ditching.
traglldo , balht caao , Rutland, Oh . 814 -742 ·
Doc Faw, B• 2903.
•11100.
203 Sldahlll Rd.. Rudond,

s..

Oh.

84

1977 Honda 11110 Four· K,
very good cond .. naw ttret
and tune-up, hHdar pl,pea;
wind jamtr and mo~ axtrao.
WI" 1111 for •aoo.oo, Cell
304-871· 31570 or 304-SIII·
33SII attar llp111.

8r

Electrical
Refrigeration

Peaquale Electric .C,o. all
phaaea of electric work, all
Work 'guaranteed . Ae~lal
truck rental. 814 -448 4088 .

711

Boat• end
Motol'l for Sale

1- - - - - - - - -

Evening television l i s t i n g s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - FRIDAY

[)) [jj) Wall Strott Weok

Louis Ruk eyser analyzes the
'80s wtth a weekly revtew
3/2/84
of economic and investment
EVENING
matters.
8:00 D (I) [)) Ill [)) ® ID ®
9:00 0 (I) &lt;Il M11tor M0&gt; and
Newt
the Master try to stop four
(]) MOVIE: 'Savannah
ex·green berets from pulling
Smites'
off a multi·miiUon dollar rob·
(I)
MOVIE:
'Seven
bery . (60 m•n.)
Thieves'
ClJ 700 Club
(J) New Treasure Hunt
(I) D CD Blue Thunder
(]) E;~PN't Sportslook
Chaney, framed by a rival
·' · (() A1ictv Griffith
.
pilot, is pulled off the Blue
Thunder team. 160 mon .l
&lt;IJI\IIwa/Sporta/Woather
[)) Dr . Who
Ill [)) ® Oalloa
liD 3·2·1, Contact
[)) Sesalon '84
D Battloator Galactica
[jj) lnalde Story
6:30" D ·(l) &lt;Il NBC Nowa
9:30 [)) Enterprise 'Perlectly
(])Rifleman
Frank .' Tonight's program
()) ESPN'I Inside Football
tells the story of Frank Per·
(J) Clrot Bumen
due, the man who turned
(J)
(jJ ABC News
chicken into a brand name
8 [)) (IJ CBS Nowa
item. !Closed Captioned)
[)) Bualneaa Report
[jj) International Edition
·liD Working Women
10:00 D Cil &lt;Il Now Show
7:00 , D [l) PM Mogfllne
(I) Cryatal Geylo In
()) Alias Smith end Jonea
Concert This return engage·
ffi 'SportaCenter
ment wa s taped at the Ham·
(() Hogen's Heroes
itt on Place Theatre in
(J) Enterulnment Tonight
Hamilton. Ontario.
(!) CharUe'a Angels
(J) MOVIE: 'Friday the
D (() Wheel of Fortune
13th'
(]) '(fi) MacNeil/lehrer
([I D &lt;II Man Houston
Newshour
Matt goes into action when
CD Niws
an escaped mental patient
,. p
C
goes on a murderous ram·
1
• ..., eop o'a ourt
page. (60 min.JICiosed Cap·
Jofferaona
7 : ~(! D .(l) Tlq Tac Dough
.
tionad)
~ ffi Coli. Saakotball Report
(IJ Emerald Point
. [)) Sanford and Son
N.A.S.
[)) 8 [))Family Feud
[)) Auatln City Umlta
_. Cll Wheel of Fortune
'Jonny Rodriguez/David Al()J t Entertainment
len Coe.' Jonny Rodriguez
. , : Tonight .
and David Allen Coe per·
One Dey It a Tlrf!e
form some of their favorites.
8:0Q D (J) (%)Legmen Aller ra160 min.l
osse·ssing a y•cht, David
&lt;ID
Newawatch
P
.
'
&amp;liNN Newa
; and Jack compete forthe af·
O:
Cll
TBS
Evening Nowa
1 16
filction·a of Ihe boat's beau·
1 O: 30 Cil Biondi a
r•l tiful,captaln. (60 min.)
[jj) Mlriltorpleca Theatre
•· (I) MOVIE: 'Without a
'The Irish, A.M .' Sally wantS
r;ace'
to buy Tom •Sheehy's colt
(I) MOVIE: 'Mogle'
.~ . [)) Thltmy i nd Laaalo
and Flurry hatches a scheme
to get Tom to bring the
; ()) \IIFL P-11: New
colt' s price down. (60 min.}
Jerooy llt Jacklonvillo
!Closed Coptlonedf
. ,Love American Style
- - [)) ' NBA Saoketball: Loa
,,. AntoiH at.Atlanta
11 :00 D (I) (I)
Cll ®
®
'Newa
' •·,[J)·!ll8anoon8oryoon is
"'' ahoqke~ and Clayton Ia
ill MOVI(: 'To c~ch A.
crual&gt;ed when' Clayton 's
King '
lather offers Benson the )ob · , .
·
(I)A
h · Ul
· of'-iljruiilll! ~HIT-ampirw:---· ~ ......,_..... ' '
not .,_ • ..-. . . d~.
' ,.: . '
ffi NewstsP.o.'tatweether
SportaCanlor
t. - ~ad CIPttoJ1e
(!)
(I)® Dukoa o Huza,... •
[)) Not tho ' Ill ina O'Clock
. 891! Hogg prompt·&amp;' ~nos ,
t
NeW.
1
into, a new job while hlr,ing
,
·
HUI ShoW
· - C~~naa ~l'f•w deputy.
11:111~ EIPIII'a Si&gt;i&gt;rtal.ook
(60 mlno)
1i (30, .i]) &lt;IJ· Tonight Show
.. [)) ,()!) Waahlngton Wook/
_r;[l' ~
8Ht of Orouoho
R!tYitW Paul Dukolololnod
,.
~Ina ·
bY op&gt;Wai hlngt\'(1 journ~l;
.. '
~ Hill Show
· · it\a enslyilng the •' '!'elk s.
. (I) MOVIE': 'The •Nfght

a [))

.,e
,e

General He~Jiing
'I·'

JONES,BOY6WATEII SE)I.
VICE . Cil) , 814-387 17471
Or' 81.4-3'07,01191 '
'

.

'

'I I

e

a.

86

•

a

1979 Harley Davldaon ciaolie, low mileage, many SEWING Machine repolra,
oxtr••• •15.ooo.oo. 304- ..rvice . Authorized Singer
8715-12119.
Salea
Service Sharpen
Sci11ora . Fabric ShOp.'
'83 Honde XLBO, tll7&amp;.oo:
P~moroy. 814-911~-.~2~4.
. 304-8715-3031 ' .

1 bedroom Apt. 8196. mo.
including utllltiea. Equal
Houllng Opportunity. Con·
tact VIllage Manor Apta.
814-9B2-7787.

- !7 AI..,O A WAV OF

MA.t&lt; !t-.1 6 Mc.I&lt;EE 1PoJDUoSHt tEI5o

~::::========:;=~~~===::::~~ ---------..:..
PLASTERING : N- and' :

Chevy thort bed tNck,
topper, good condition.
*815. 814-742-24114.

Dragonwynd Cattery·
Kennala. AKC Chow pup·
plea, CFA Himalayan, Perlion and Slemooe klttana.
Call 814-448-3844 after 8.

w o u c o~ ·r

lmprov~menta

c ........ .. ... .., " .. .,• .;.

3 Brown Swiu cowl for
ulo. Call after 4:00PM:
1-814·1143-2708.

Briarpatch Konnala Profea·
Ilona! All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·
cllltlea. Engliah Cocker Bpa·
nlel pupplea. Call 814-388·
9790.

H&amp;R 1

"

Reg. Quarter horM mare.
Call 814-2411-158111

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
814-387-7220.

rn ~

&amp;e S&amp;NPIIJG VOU IF I
P!PN 'T T H I N ~ WE REAL·
LV NE!PEP VOU Our
T H!R&amp;- .

~1'1 VII !",

66

HILLCREST KENNE'LS
Boarding all breeda. Heated
Indoor-outdoor facllltloa .
AKC Doberman pupploa:
Stud Service. Call 1114· 4487795.

&amp;oe;;.$AVt;

l~V! Tp GO,
~ N t "A' 90 ~
W •r &amp;e A8L!

1

1179 Ford 1 ton tNck with
dump. lou than 30,000
miiH, •8200. Cal 982·
2201 .

Peta for Sale

CA.PTA.I N E(\SY
THJ

TONISHT.

Reg. Quarter horM gelding,
3 yr. old, llred by 'Super
Chlx. 4 yr. old Reg. Quarter
horu bay mare. Reg. · Paint
gelding, 2 yr. old. Rag. black
filly, 2 yr. old. Call 448·
3252.

66

Auto Pertl
Accea10rle1

duty.

WORLD BOOK ENCYC ·
LOPEDIA SALE. Rag. $498.
Sale f374 . Save *1215.
Tarma f10 . 00 down ;
f22 .00 a month. 304-8711·
3775.

Now open for bualn111,
Mountain State Block, Rt.
33, New ~oven . Complete
maaonry aupplloa, 4", 8 " ,
12" block. Delivery oervlca.
Phone doy 304-882-2222,
evening 882-3239.

11

I Sf'ENT I'IVIi YEARS
RIVI&gt;R " • l!lUT l DIDN 'T
ON MV BROTHER - NO,

Billy 1M' a Tirol end Battery
lalea. Now end uaed ttrea,
alto. ttre repalro. t 103 Jot·
lorton Avo. Point l'lnunt.
304-11711·14011. Now open
24 hra. a dey, mechanic on

Firewood, pick -up load, 63
Uveatock
*30.00 delivered. 304 -875- '- - - - - -- - 6983.
,.

Building motariala
block, brick, aowor plpea,
wlndowa , llntola, etc.
Claude Wlntora. Rio Grande,
0. Call814-245-5121 .

Boat• end
M 'o tora for Sala

•.

8. &amp; R. WOOD SHOP. Patio 62 W en ted to B UY
furniture, plc~lc tabloa and
noveltlea. Call 304-8711·
64011.
Wonted tobacco poundage
to leau. John Routh. Galli·
Seuoned wood *26 .00 polio Forry 304-8711-11111111.
truck load 304-896-3805.

Building Suppliea
- - - - - - -- - -

711

The

Ohio

Correct Craft • Ski lu·
prome, femHy !lid ·bO,Itt.
New l ulld, Perllarlburg,
WV 304·422·S433 or 304422· 2317.
'

f983 Olda Cutlaaa Supreme
2 dr. coupe, auto, PS, PW,
conaolo AM· FM !ltereO, 2
tone paint. Rally wheola,
only 18,000 mi. Priced to
oell. Cell448-7322.

Attic apt. fumiahed $176.
Utllltloa paid. Sh•r• bath,
men only, 919 2nd. Ave.
Golllpolia. Call 448-4418
after 7 ,PM.

Rlveralda ~~~- Mld~eport.
Speclal ratta for Senior
Cltlzona. *130. Equal Houa..
lng Opportunltloa. 814·
992•7721 .

Mlac. Merchendlae

3 new Mobile home axlea.
complete tlraa. whealt end
aprlnga, *300. Call 814·
21111·8244.

a.

4 badrooma 14x86 plua
12x20 room, fireplace, cen tral air, atoroge bldg., porch
&amp; awning, excellent condi-

64

Uaed portable dryer Saara
Kenmore, A -1 condition.
Hordly been uaod. Call 448·
2B39 or 448-0517.

30 ln. electric rengt , f85;
gao clothoa dryer, •a&amp;:
electric ctothoa dryer. *1 00:
cheat type freezer, f85 :
Maytag wringer waeher,
*96; Kenmore washer
tlryor oat, *176. coli 814742 -23112.

Sorvlcea. Cell 448 -9340.

14x70 new diaplay model
'muat ull' 3 bdr .. 2 batha,
cathedral ceiling 'unbellevable price'. French City Brok·
erage Servicea. Call 446·
9340.

Mard-12, 1 -

Ohio

a

Need loniothlng: • hau,ed
away or aomethlng moved?
Wo'll ' do ·it. Call 448•31119
between, I a~d 1 . • ·

Furnlahed
reriiTn- -syracuu.
5:30 p.m. 9.92· 7889.

a

. li:'

{IOOD UBED APPUANCES
In Mlddlepor't, 2 room off. Wathara. dl"(trt. refrigera·
apt. Call1 · 304-882·211118. tort, rangot. Skagga Ap·
. .pliancoo, Upper River Ad .
bolide' Stone Croat Mota!.
114-448-73~8 .

• ·llenn'v

..

.;

•

~

I

1- ,, ,

I

,

, ' '{

,
·, · TRISTATE '.,~
' VPi:!OLS!IIIY SHOP ·.
1183 " " I!I!IL ' ~,. .
it4·44t-7s3a Ol-e1~.-....:
1'833.
1

Uled Wethtrt • D~ra.
iev,.;al to choilae-fliom. One
Harvftl Gold Metched pair.
Call 814·2118· 1207.

.:

.

...

.t•

'I

a. Riao of R. Perrin
• (iJ Nightline
•
NCAA Basketball:
Morehead State at Eastern
Kentucky
11 :45 ClJ SCTV • B The comocal
chronicles of myth1cal Me·
lonvllle television channel
SCTV continue in all·new
editions of the Emmy
Award·winnmg sat1ncal ser·
tes. Starring Joe Flaherty .
Eugene Levy, Andrea Mar·
tin, Martin Short .
ffi USFL Football: New
Jersey at Jackaonvlllo
12:00 ClJ Burns S. Allen
Cll Night Tracks
[)) Nlghtline
(lQi MOVIE : 'And Millions
Will Die'
• (lJ Eye on Hollywood
12 :30
(J) CD Friday Night
Videos
[l) MOVIE: 'The Happy
Hooker'
ClJ Jack Benny Show
()) Eye on Hollywood
(jJ Music Maga:l ine
1 :00 (f) Great Standups Mel
Brook s, Bill Cosby and Wilt
Rogers are featured in a
glimpse of the evolution of
th• s comedy form .
(]) 1 Married Joan
CJ) Entertainment Tonight
liJ
News
1:30 &lt;T~ Love That Sob
'"'
[)) Star Soorch
(IG MOVIE: 'Lot' a Scare
Jenlco tq Death'
G ® CNN Heodllhe News
• Thlcke of the Night
2 :00 D (])News
(J) Hank W.illlams :Show
He Never Gave
Cil Bachelor Father
(!) News/Sign Off
2:16 (I) MOVIE: 'Tho Man Who
Would Be KinO'
® CNN Headline News
2:30 "'
u.; Ute of Riley
2:45 (!) SporttCenter
3:00 Cil 700 Club
Cll Coli. B.oakttball Report
3:30 ffi ESPN'a lnald. Football
4 :00 , CD MOVIE: 'Without a
Trace'
ffi ESPN'a SportaWHk
4:30 (I) MOVIE: 'In Love And
War'
· ClJ Ro11 Bagley
ffi Top Rank Boxing from
'"Alii HtllfCitv;- NJ Tlljr Rliiik
Bo~eing presents a 10·roun d
Jr. Middleweight bout faa·
turing Sean Mannion va.
Roosevelt Green.
[jj) Fell

a

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\

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'ftfl\iNl m'it ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAM&amp;
\9 ~~ ~ byHenriAmoldandBoblee

~

Unscramble lhese lour Jumbles,
one laneilo each square. to form
four ordinary wonts.

.

8:30

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3 Sulk
4 Devilkin
5 Couch style
6 Maine city
7 Give a second
efforl
8 Hibernia
9 Math
ratio

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Answer:

3{3/84

~eslerday·s
·

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3·

DAILY CRYPTOQ UOT E ~ H&lt;re's ho" 1, work i1 :

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A X Y D L B A A X R

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WHATAFAT
CAT 15,
' N&lt;&gt;W l frTngi lhO Clrtlli&lt;ni flors lo

Y)
· form the su~se answer, as sug·
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Ar I I xI I n I I I x J

Is L O NG F EL LOW
One letter simply stands for another In thts ~ a m p l e A Is
used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc Single letters,
apostrophes. the ~ f r't(th an d ~-rormallo n of the 10\.·ords are: all
hinls. Each day tht&gt; code IN ters arc di fft' renl

CRYPTOQ UOTES
S WA

KEA

I Jumbles:
CROW~ . BERET e'ASILY ZENITH
Answer: What the mad chef was-STIR CRAZY
'

GCG Q

AE: KJ YW

QE YD

(Answers tomorrow)

.

()) SportaCentor ·
'' [)) World 'Champlonahlp

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
10 Young
1 Damp
merino
14 Bard's
6 French
seaporl
adverb
II Redolence
11 Aversion
12 Condor's nest 18 Droop
13 Fairy tale
19 Fuss
finale
20 Author
15 Pub potable
Yutang
16 Go away !
Z2 Encourage
11 Protagonist 23 Flying
Yesterday's Aoswer
18 Waldort. e.g.
rnarrunal
33 Manly
31 Collar
21 Moroccan
24 Verb
3lltalian
style
city
form
river
38 Repudiate
25 Coal 35 British gun 39 "Casablanca "
26 Mine
entrance
29 Qui ck reply 36 Kent's
p1amsl
21 "Vamp" star 30 Sire; dam
newsroom 40 Golf
28 Real loser
31222T~h~ri~ce~
l La~t.,:.•...,.~;:~...,.-~te:,:n~n~.,.,-,
30 Ra bbit
"
of note
31 State tFr.l
33 Subjugate
36 Guided
39 Regretfully
41 Tree or shrub
42 Curtain
.fabric
43 Denoted
44 ltsy-bitsy

DOWN

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I ..BAYBE
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_ __ _

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(ff)
Great
Chefs/San
Francisco
6:30 0 (I) &lt;Il NBC News
(]) Bedrooms Thts HBO Co·
medy Playhouse spec1al fea·
tures four s1or1es aboul
love. sex and mamage
[)) ID &lt;l2l News
0 ([) Concern
(]) Dr. Who Movie
® CSSNows
CID Sneak Previews Co·
hosts Neal Gabler and Jef·
frey Lyons take a look at
what's happen1ng at the
mov•es
7 :00 D (I) Dance Fever
(J) MOVIE: ' Scavenger
Hunt'
(]) Alias Smith and Jones
ffi NCAA Basketball: Sun
Belt Conference Tourna·
ment from Birmingham.
AL · Semifinals (Thts game
is subject 10 blackout)
HH Hew
CD Star Search
CI1 This is Your Life
(fi) All Creatures Great and
Small
G ® SolidGold
• How the West Was
Won
7:30 ~ [l) Inside Look

SATURDAY
,
·
EVENING

HBO Coming Attrac·
tions
([) Atlanta Super Cross
® At The Movies
8:00 0 (I) &lt;Il Dill' rent Strokes
[l) MOVIE: 'Tough En·
ough'
(]) MOVIE: ' Young at
Heart'
[)) 1D &lt;l2i T.J. Hooker.
0 ()) ® Ringling ·eros ./
Barnum &amp; Bailey Circu s
Special Barbara Mandrell
hosts thts look a! the 1 14!h
ed1110n of Rmghng Brothers
and Barnum &amp; Ba•ley C.rcus
(60 m m .)
(I) Best of Live from the
Grand Ole Opry
@ Woody Guthrie: Hard
Travelin'
fl)
NCAA Basketball·
Tulane
at
Southern
Mississippi
8:30 0 [l) &lt;Il Silver Spoons
Ricky becomes su sp1C1ous
of the pucher on h1 s baseball
team when he 1h1nks she
has a crush on h1m
(J)
NBA
Basketball :
Atlanta at Chicago
9:00 0 CIJ &lt;Il We Got It Made
[l)
MOVIE: ' 10
to
Midnight'
(]) USFL Football: Pins·
burgh at Michigan

WrestUng

CD God Has the Answer

GP AT

Q

r:

D YK

R DGPK H .

Y D

- E SI
G ! G JW
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THEilE 'S NO ACCOUNTING FOR
TASTES,-· AS-THE WOMAN SAI D WHEN SOMEBODY TOLD
HER HER SON WAS WANTED BY THE POLICE.- F.P.
ADAMS
I

�Ohio

Hollings~ Askew
By WILLIAM M. WELCH
A.OOated Pl'eiB Writer
Four of the five Democrats left In
the shrinking presidential field
converge on the South today, ·
Including a humbled Walter Mondale who is shunning his front.
runner "burden" and promising a
new, tougher style.
Mondale, New Hampshire winner
Gary Hart, Ohio Sen. John Glenn
and the Rev. Jesse Jackson all
planned appearances In Atlanta
tonight, where state Democrats are
holding their annual JeffersonJackson Day fund-raising dinner In
advance of their March 13 "Super
Tuesday" prtmary.

leave Democrati

OnlyGeorgeMcGovernoftheftve
remaining major candidates was
avoiding the South. The fonner
South Dakota senator and 1972
standard bearer remains In Massachusetts, where he says that state's
prtmary on ~he same day will
"make or break" his presidential
dreams.
Similar dreams vanished In the
faceofpolltlcalreaUtyThursdayfor
two Democratic hopefuls. South
CaroUna Sen. Ernest HoUings
bowed out after gaining just 4
percent of the vote 1n New
Hampshire; he was followed hours
later by last-place finisher fonner
Florida Gov. ReubIn Askew. A day

earlier CaUfomla Sen. Alan Cran- r~==~=~:t::=~=;\
ston quit.
Mondalevowedtogoontheattack
agalnstHaltafterweeksofvlrtually '
I(PI&lt;lrlng his Democratic opponents'.
Mondale conceded tluit a leader's
arrogance may have hurt him In
New Hampshire, where Hart, the
Colorado sena~'lr, bested him by 10·
percentage polhts. Being the front·
I
rulUier became "my burden," he
\
said.
un,rlf!I IB~b's' .
"Forget aU this front-runner
talk," Mondale said he told his staff.
· PALACE
"It's.aU over. Stop acting like we're
front-runners."

Stuck valve
shuts down
Ohio nuclear
reactor-D-1

notebook--C-1
James J, Kilpatrick: mothel"'l can be deadbeats,

CLEVELAND

(AP)

-

The

•

rj~ii~~ijiiiiiiji~i!i~iiiiiiiiiiiii ~$1jiiiiiiiiiii~ijj

game, "The Number," was 068.
ln the "Pick 4" game, played
Monday through Friday, the win·
nlng number was 3509.
The lottery reported· earnlngs of
$943,476 from wagering on Its dally
game. Earnlngs came on sales of
$1,227,!114, whUe holders of winning
ticketS were entitled to share
$283,Qil.
I
ln the partmutuel "Pick4" game,
sales totaled $170,5311.50. Holders of
winning tickets were entitled to
share 45 percent, or $77,017. A
winning $1 straight , ticket earned

ABANDONING THE RACE - Sen. Emest F. HoUinp of South
Carolina gestures during a Capitol Hill news conference 'Thursday to
announce his withdrawal from the race for the Democratic presidential
nomination. Hollings said, "It's plain that my candidacy didn't get
through to enough people." (AP Lase.,hoto) .

$6,816. A winning $1 boxed ticket
earned $28!1.
The Number: Zero-six-eight.
Pick 4: 'I'hree-flve-zero-nlne.

.

POMEROY
, FLOWER SHOP

MTolt .. ......... f'f' ........ ..., , 1.......

I'll. tH·M

" ttZ.S1U

~.I/

Sen. Glenn predicts victory in
Georgia, Alabama primaries

) MEN and . woMEN'
. ·
. , ,r

Tu &lt;o(•f'lll ~

ht·Jullfully .,k..,,,w no.·d
hooeul JHJOjll.tnl~·m .
ju\1 ullur \ I ' ll

R

.

B".
l
iR·
CLO,TH~IERS
'
MIDDLEPORT

ATI.ANTA (AP)- Democratic
presidential contender John Glenn
.says he wW win the Georgia and
Alabama prtmarles March 13
because "my general phtlosophy is
one that the South is most In tune
with."
"It's a very Important day for
me," Glenn told a news conference
Friday, adding that he also expects
tomakeastrongshowlnglnFiorlda.
"! don't expect to go on losing
forever."
Glenn finished third In the nation's
first Democratic presidential prtm·
ary In New Hampshire, behind
surprise front·rulUier Gary Hart
. and fonner VIce President Walter

Weather forecast
Clearing tonight. Low 15-20. Light and variable winds. Saturday,
mostly sunny. High near40. Chance of precipitation near zero percent
tonight and Saturday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
Fair Sunday. Chance of rain orsnQWMondayandTuesday. High!! In
the upper 30s and 40s. I.Aiws 15-25 Sunday and 25-{111 Monday and

hunting,
I presume!

Tuesday.

NEW ARRIVALS!!
WE HAVE JUST
RECEIVED
NEW SPRING
JEWELRY

CHAINS, BEADS &amp;
BRACELETS

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

83 MILL ST.

With Us Tocfay.

r------------------------------,
Name
)WANTED

(

)ANNOUNCEMENT

( )fOR SALE

(

)FOR RENT

(

Print one word in each

space below. Each initial or
group of figures counts as a
word. Count name and ad·
dress or phone number if

used.

SPECIAL PRICES DURING THE MONTH

I
I
I
I
I

OF MARCH

3 DAY·S
3 PAPERS
3 DOLLARS

CASH

ONLY!
Mail or Bring
In person.

!. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

2. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
. 3, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

(15 WORDS)

'

'

tl·L------------------------.
15. .
.
. --••·-·:·· w

OHer
Expires
March
31 ~·-· 19·8 4.
·::-. - ' .
. '
.
--·· ...
-c.: ·-----~-~

.· ;

-~ ·-

,_I

,·

;:· "•

Classified
Ads Get Results
.
''

·,

'

READING FOR FUN ~Second graders, Brkilet Jacks, Kathy Michael, and Malt Stewart, left to
right, tlndlng reading a tun thing to do as weD a way of leamlng new tlllngs. Comfortable on the Door of
the Middleport Elementary School Ubrary the8e youngsters join their teacher, TwDa Chtlds, for some
time with books. Uke most schools around Meigs County readlngwDI be emphasized this week as apart
of ihe seventh annual Ohio IUghi to Read Week. Hundreds of JU&amp;hllo Read balloons wDI released
Monday morning to creale public awareness, read·a-tholl!i wDI get underway, and contests and book
fairs wW be held around the county.
his potential, when many·of his
accomplishments approach the
miraculous, there stU! should be
those who do not learn to read."
It was at that time that
research studies revealed that

. ..

•• •

: :cont~rma.tlon ·~elll1nP bef~'!..~'!.-~ ~"~~.~~.:-"~
. ·Committee.
·
·
. " · ·
· • Meese deliled any djscreplulcles, but Metzen~um ,
:vowed tocontlnueonMondilytoprobefor 11\fonnatlbli ·
·about loans made to the presldentW -cowisl!ior ·bY ' ··
caiUng some of the IIOOPle to testify who were t..volVed
In lending the money.
·
·
·
· Senate Majortty Leader Howard H. Baker,
·howeVer, Is predicting ·that Meese · wouJa win ·

-'contlrmatlon.

'

.

-. - --: -

: "Meese has made a diaclollure o( all flna!l,clal . ·
· . · ~ts and. c~ces and I find notlilng

..
.I

I___ . ·
'~

I

.

_,

.

Jail overcrowding
leads to early
release for some
Gallia priso.n ers .
By LARRY EWING

WASHlNGTON (AP) -Sen. HowardMetzenbaum
says he l.sn 't finished questioning whether Edwin
.Meese m, the nominee for attorney gener.!ll, received
· :special prtvUeges from bankers and the Army
· ·becatise he was a top Reagan aide.
The Ohio 'Delnocrat
there
"contradlci!Ons In Meese's
. Frt,~A'Ii

(CASH ·ONLY)
~-

WOOING GEORGIANS - Democratic presidential candidate
John Glenn Ia sl10wn as he speaks to a stalewlde radio network
broadcut while In Colwnbus, Ga. Salunlay hoping to ecUpse his ihlrd
place showiJig In New Hampehlre with a trlwnph In the South ttw;
month. Glenn Is wooing Georgia voters throughout the weekend.

1bnes&amp;ntlnel Staff

Senators."

5 · - - - - - - - - -/6. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
8. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
10. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
11, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...._
12. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
13._-:.,.__ _ _ _ _ _ __
14._,........,.._ _ _ _ _ _ __

~xt summer's orconseiVatlonservtce.
oemocratlc National Convention In
For the first time, the United
San Francisco.
· Stateslsnotcompetlnglneducatlon
Earllet Friday, while ~ampalgn· and research, Glenn said.
lng In Columbus, Ga., at the
"!find that tragic, " he said. "It's
Alabamaborder,GlenntoldColum- flat wrong."
busCollegestudenlshlsadnlllllstra·
Glenn said he polled the Nobel
tlon wookl support baSic scientific laureates on the subject of federal
research and higher education.
aid, and 91 percent of them said they
He proposed offering young wouldn't have been able to do basic
people educational benefits In research without government
exchange forccmmunlty, mllltary grants.
the delegates to

same

Place a Classified Ad

3 LINES ARE APPROXIMATELY
15 WORDS - USE THE BlANK
BELOW TO WRITE YOUR AD.
I

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
'l1na-8entlnel s&amp;.ff
POMEROY - Meigs Coun·
ty's s!xth grade students now are
reec!lng better than those on the
grade level were seven
years ago when the 'Right to
Read' program was launched In
Ohlo, according to John Cos·
tanzo, elementary supervisor
for the Meigs County Board of
. Education.
And whtle Costanzo .stresses
that the program and the varted
actlvltJes and techniques It
brought Into the classroom
cannot be credited with all the
progress shown In the standar·
lzed test score Increases last fall,
It did challenge schools to target
reading .. to assess the rhyme
and reason of "Why Johnnie
Can't Head."
The seventh annual Ohio
Right to Read Week, March 5-9,
wW begin with the release of
several hundred colored bal·
loons at the Middleport Elemen·
tary School Monday mornlng to
make the community aware of
the schools' efforts to Improve
the reading skills of students.
Nearly every school In the
county wUI obseiVe the week
with special activities to em·
phastze the Importance of read·
lng as an acadernlc and recrea·
tiona! endeavor. Many are
having reading Incentive con·
tests, workshops, book fairs,
special speakers and programs.
A Need Targeted
The need for reading empha·
sis was targeted during the
rnld-seventles when the U. S.
Commissioner of Education
issued the statement .. "Any
child who taUs to acquirE: the
abUlty to read has been denied a
right as fundamental as !hertght
to U1c, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness ..... the right to read. It
Is Inexcusable that In this day
when man has achieved such
giant steps In the development of

Dr. Livingstone
salaries through
them to find a
jungle full of great
deals.

14K GOLD JEWELRY

Mondale. ThethreewerelnAUanta
Friday for the state party's fund·
raising Jefferson-Jackson Day
Dinner.
Georgia, Alabama and Florida
primaries are among 11 presldentlal primaries and caucuses scheduled on "Super Tuesday" March
13, which Glenn said was not the "do
or die" day for him.
Nevertheless, he closed his cam·
palgnoftlceslnMichlganandTexas
to concentrate his resources on the
"Super Tuesday''·states.
"The South really has the opportunlty to set the course · for the
Democratic Party," he said, noting
the region wlll produce26percentof

'Right to Read Week' focuses schOOl
attention on 'Why Johnnie Should.••'

Well then ...
Peer at the
Classsifieds.

ALSO WE HAVE

A Multimedia Inc. Newep•per

I

WEARING ·APPAREL FOR

REMEMBER
WJTH FLOWE

-Page A-3--

9 Sections, 74 Pages 36 Cent•

Middleport Pomeroy Gallipoli-Point Pleasant Sunday, March 4, 1984

·"""'........ 1984

Ohio weather:
sunny early
Sunday

tntintl

tmts
Voi. 19No.4

IN
SPRING

Along the River ....... .. .. 8-1-8
ClaMilleds .... ..... ..... .... D-2-7
Deaths .... ... .... ... ........... A·5
EdJtorlal!l ............. ........ A-2
Fann .......... .... ... .... ,.... . C-5
Sports .. ....... .. .... .. ....... C-1-4

Bob Hoeflich discusses the 'Sign Up America
project-Page B-6

Winning Ohio lottery number
winning number drawn Thursday
night In the Ohio Lottery's daily

Inside:

too-Page A-2

one out of every four students
nationwide had significant read·
ing deficiencies, that there were
mcire than three million llllter.ates In the adult population, that
about half of the unemployed

youth, ages 16-21, were functionally Ullterate. Since then there
have been significant
improvements .
(Continued on page A3)

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County Jail does not have a
revolving door; but - with the
overcrowded conditions that have
existed over the past two weekends
- It rnlght as well have.
ln;ecent weeks, law enforcement
otfldals have been forced to release
prisoners before the end of their
sentences In order to accommodate
newly arriving Inmates.
The officials have a simple
explanation for the current problem
at the jaU: there are too many
prisoners and not enough space.
"We're letting people loose who
shouldn't be on the streets," says
Common Pleas Judge Richard C.
Roderick, "but I've got no place to
put them .. .in order for one to go In,
one has to go out ."
Roderick adds that the situation
could go on "lndeflntely."
Sheriff James M. Montgomerywho says It wUI cost approximately
$175,00l to operate the jaU ttw; year
- points to the enactment and
enforcement of the state's new OWl
taw as the major cause for his jail's
current overcrowded condition.
While the facility is physically
capable of handling up to 20
prisoners. the enforcement of state
regulations currently sets the upward limit for housing at 13.
And , the sheriff explains, thai
figure is the upward limit. With the
proper mix of prisoners that
number could be reduced to as low
as six.
State regulations require that
Inmates be separated·by classiflca·
tlon. As a result, misdemeanor
offenders may not be placed in the
same cell as felony offenders, those
awaiting trial cannot be housed with
those who have b€en tried and

HOUSING PROBLEM- GaiUa Jailer Charles Baker studies
the schedule for Inmates hcM8!d
In the county facWty. Over the
past two weekends, ilvererowdlng at the jail has forced law
enforcement ofllclals to release
pmoners before the end of their
scheduled sentences.
special conditions apply to the
incarceration of women and
juveniles.
"We can 't afford to have the jaU
closed," says IWderlck. "We're
walking a line between meeting the
state's jaU regulations and our need
to incarcerate prisoners."
"In terms of rules, regulations
and the jail itself, we're in good
shape," Montgomery says. "Size is
the problem."
"In sentencing," says Gallipolis
Municipal Judge James A. Benne11.
(Continued on page A3i

AG nominee Edwin Meese.
'

.

Senate Judit:ioty Committee panel ·
member Edwald Kennedy, left, questions
Aflorney Gftneral desig,.. Edwin Meese
during his confirmofion I!IICirings befote lite
"OJOUff an Clfplto/ ·Hill. Kennedy was
questioning Meese on odminislralion
appoin-nfs to federal judgeships.

In tbere that~t or lrnn!&lt;&gt;ral or questlonab!e
8nd I dOn't"think It wW.have a serioits Impact on his .
cOnnnnabUlty," Baker, RTenn., told.reporters.

,.

l,

Metzenbaum , is Investigating

some

CautornJiuiS helped M"eese tmaiidally ana, In return,

wor. appointment to government posts. Meese has

denied such a role.
The longtime adviser to President Reagan endured
two days of Intense questioning from several
Democrats on the commi11ee into his perscnal
finances, views on civil rights and political
Independence from te president. He ended his
testimony Friday night, but could be recaUed .
The exchanges over apparent contradictions ar:oSe
when Meese was confronted with his handwritten
notes which appeared to show he knew more about a
deal to sell his California home than he adrnltted
under oath the day before.
Under questioning from the senator, Meese
Insisted: "There's no discrepancy whatsoever."
Testifying under oath Thursday about the sale of his ·
La Mesa, Calif., home In 1982 to lrv Howard, Meese
had said, "! do not know the amount of the Howard
loan slilce he took that out totally separate trom any .
knowledge on my part."
·

.,

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