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Page-D-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

March 4, 1984

--r ---Local Briefs:-----. Felonious assault case set for hearing
I

Chamber nears membership goal
GAlliPOLIS - The Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce is but
four members away from Its projected membership goal of 200,
reports Thelma Elliott, chamber executive secretary.
Chamber representatives have been canvassing area businesses
since Feb. 13. To date, the chamber has had 169 businesses renew
membership and 'rl new members join for a total of 196.
Chamber President James R. Williams said he is confident the
chamber will reach the 200 mark In membership. Although the drtve
ended last week, the chamber will oontlnue contacting prospective
members.
Chalnnan of the membership drive was Paul Knotts, and team
captains were Bill Gray, Lonnie Leonard and Harold Rowan. Gray's
team got the most members durtng the drive.

Parent-teacher conference set
GALLIPOLIS - Parents of children attending Gallla Academy
High School will have an opportunity to speak with teachers about
their child's progress this week.
Conferences between parents and teachers will be held from
5: 30-S:ll p.m. Thursday and from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Friday.
Parents should call 446-3250 to set up appointments with teachers.
Grade cards should be picked up In the principal's office prior to the
conference.

Farm-City Day planning underway
GAlliPOLIS - Plans are now underway for the second
Fann-City Day, tentatively set for Sept. 8 at Raccoon Creek County
Park.
Activities are slated to begin that day at 1 p.m. and will Include
fann tours, horseshoe pitching, food and live entertainment with
square C:anclng from 6-8 p.m.
Fann equipment displays are also planned.

Passport application urged
GAlliPOLIS - All persons planning to travel overseas this
summer are urged by Gallia County Clerk of Courts Louise Burger to
apply for passports as early as possible.
Issuing agencies normally have a two-to-three month backlog
during the spring and summer months. It is possible to get an
emergency passport durtng peak season, but It costs more, Mrs.
Burger advised.
Applications are available at the clerk's office on the second floor
or the courthouse annex. Required documentation Include a birth
certificate or a previous passport and two pbotos that meet passport
requirements.
Passports for adults,18 or older, are valld for lOyears and cost $42.
Children, under 18, can obtain a passport for$Z7 and arevalldforflve
years.

Gallia native in running
GAlliPOLIS - Clyde Jarvis, Rt. 1, Albany, son of Maxie and
Lyndall Morrts Jarvts, 40 Berger Ave., is a candidate for Athens
County commissioner.
A 1957 graduate of Gallla Academy High School, Jarvts attended
Ohio University and Duke University and has been employed for the
last 23 years as a teacher, coach and principal at Poston, The Plains
and Chauncey elemetartes In Athens County.
He is also a licensed real estate broker and salesman. Married to
the former Wilma Elliott, they are parents of a daughter, Kelley,l8,
a senior at Alexander High School.

GAlliPOLIS - A prellmlnary grand jury for receiving stolen
hearlnghasbeensetforMarch151n property.
Gallipolis Municipal Court for
Cusacklschargedbycltypollcein
Richard Porter, Rt 2, Gallipolis, the theft of a personal computer
charged with felonious assault
from Radio Shack In the Silver
The citation arose from a Feb. 26 Bridge Plaza Feb. 14.
Incident at a local tavern.
Judge James A. ~nnett set a
A charge or carrying a concealed prel.lmlnary hearing for March 6 for
weapon filed against Rochelle L. a Point Pleasant man charged with
Gothard, Rt 1, Gallipolis, was
grand theft.
dismlssedbythearrestlngofflcerat
Rex A. Sayre was cited by
pretrial. Prosecution dlsmlssed a Gallipolis pollee In connection with
DWl charge against Ted W. Stoney, the theft or a car on Jan. 7. Bennett
56, Kanauga, and aspeedlngcltatlon placed Sayre on $4,000 bond.
against Dayton C. Raynes, 54,
HarryJ. Erlewlne,1916Chatham
M~son, W.Vas
Ave., charged with discharging a
ames R. teele, 24, Thurman, flreann in the city llmlts and
pleaded not guilty to speeding and domestic violence, pleaded not
was set toappearfortrial March 16. guilty and was puton$2,000bond.He
In other traffic cases, Donna G. was scheduled for a March 12
Pasquale, 22,103CedarSt, forfeited pretrtal.
$40 bond for Improper passing, and
Donald Thacker, Rt.l, Cheshire,
Lynn E. Slater, 18, Pomeroy, also pleaded not guilty to domestic
forfeited $40 bond for defective violence, wasputon$1,000recognlzexhaust
ancebondandwassetforaMarch12
Forfeitlngbondforspeedlngwere pretrial.
Marilyn K. Fultz, 53, Middleport,
Charged with speeding Bethany
$38; Elbert H. Kennedy, 45, Wll- D. Layne, 23, Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
mlngion, N.C., $38; James M. pleadedlnnocentandwascontlnued
Steele, 25, Belle, W.Va., $38; Terry
L. Taylor, 30, Charleston, W.Va.,
$39; George E . Halley, ll, Lynchburg,Va.,$40; ThomasF. Long,28,
Rt 1, Middleport, $40.
Kathy L. Spencer, 34,New Haven,
W.Va., $40; Fred H. Delawder, 48,
Ironton, $41; Linda L. Frye, 31,
Kanauga, $41; Danlta G. Marchese,
ll,. Reynoldsburg, $oll.; Tracy A.
Tredway, 25, HendersonvUle,
Tenn.,$41.
Judy K. Hartenbach, ll, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, $39; Michael Penn, 23,
Spencer. Va., $39; Carl R. Thompson, 55, Abingdon, Va., $40; Gerald
P. Langhorne, 45, Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
$41; Orlena Underwood, 51, Rt 3,
Bidwell, $43.
Man bound over
In municipal court Friday, Charles Cusack, 185 Brentwood Drive,
was bound over to the Gallta County

forfeited $40 bond for improper lane

usa e· Michael P. Halley, 31,2106

s:m. Cha~~Ave.,forfeited$40bondfor

fictitious registration; Debra I...
Couch, 24, Pomeroy, forfeited $40
bond for assured clear distance;
Donald M. Barcus. 49, Rt 4,
Gallipolis, forfeited $40 bond for
failure to stop for a stop sign; Floyd
Kingery. Rt.l, Bidwell, forfelted$25
bond for !allure to pay parking
violation· and forfeltlng$albond for
failure U, pay a parking violation
were Sandra Darnbrough, Rt 4,
Gallipolis. and Charlotte F. Seamon. Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Bond forfeits
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
WUIIe P. Jackson, 40, Youllg!ltown,
$38; Holly A. Jenkins, 19, 417 Firat
Ave., $38; Ronald D. Martin, 42, Rt.
1, Gallipolis, $39; Molly J. Pruett, a!,
Clarksville, Ala., $39; Keith A.
Dresser, 'J'/, Sandusky, $42; EllzabethA.Grant,26, Rt . l,Bidwell,$42.
Harley J . Hubble, 26, 398 Circle
Drive $42· Brooks W Burchett 21
Ban~n. 'Ky., $44; . Thomas' R:
Rainey 25 Gallipolis $48
• ·
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Will f~t attempts

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enttne

Hart claimed ''another political
mtracle" Sunday night; as complete
returns. from ~atne· s 414 ·caucuses
sbowed hlm with almost 51 percent
to Mondale' s 44 percent.
.
Sen. John Glenn, former Sen.
George McGovern and the Rev.
Jesse Jackson .had scattered sup-

port, but !hey·!)ad left the state and the spotlight - to Mondale and

Hart.

Hart, the Colorado senalnr, declal'l!d he may "have brought a
pollitcal juggernaut to Its knees" In
the -race for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
"I love New England," Hart told a
Massachusetts Democratic Party
dinner .as the vole$ were being
' IXIWited In neighboring Maine.
He quickly,
his schedule In hqles · be muld make his
polltical momielltwn migrate from
New Englalid to the South, where a

Mondale and hiS men went to bed
without conceding ~eat in Maine,
a state where he' out-spent and
out-organlzied Hart and claimed
supPort trOni.·most or the' major
ftgi!I'E!S In the Democ!'atlc Party
establl$hment.
. T)lefonnervlcepi'esldentsaldthe
results actually den)Onstrated he
had stopped the ~twn Hart
galnedwlthhlsNewHampshlrewln
last Tuesday, and said he would
recapture the lead bl the South on
March 13.
"I'm fighting back," said Mondale, a week ago the prohibitive
front-runner for the nomination.
Even·so, Mondale's aides say they
A'l"n:ND8 DIN)IiER- Sen. Gary Hut, DO!Io~ left, readllulla· · expect Hart to win the next two
contests. a non-binding primary
~ t11at he Ia leading fonner Vloe-l'rellldeat Willer Mondele In
Tuesday In Vennont and caUcuses
the Mu.e caucu1 while the two where aUendlag the Meracl=iii!UI
.
•
In WYl)l!llna. on ~~ with only
Democnllc 8tllte ~ dlnller Ill ·Bolio!! Suada.J· J!llll&amp;- ·Tile
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www..-..aexttoReft.JaCcwyA. . l~'" ''H). ,' . _!

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1 Secfion , 10 Page•
20 Cents
A Multimedto Inc. NewlfKiper

They said they will concentrate
their efforts on the U prtmary and
caucus contests on "Super Tuesday" on March 13, and Insist they
can stop Hart that day In Georgia.
Alabama and F1ortda.
"Waiter Mondale will emerge
from Super Tuesday as the clear
delegate .leader and front -runner."
Mondale's campaign manager,
Robert Beckel, said Sunday night
•There are more than 500 national
convention delegates at stake
March 13.
Hart's aides say they have picked
up supporters from candidates wbo
already have dropped out or the
race, and polltlcalsourcessaldfresh
publlc opinion surveys sbow Hart
gaining ground In the South as well
as elsewhere.
McGovern has said he will drop
out or the race if he doesn't finish In
the top two In Massachusetts.
The Maine caucuses gave Hart
· 48.9percentofthedelegatesselected
for the Maine state convention,
compared to 44.2 percent for
Mondale, 13.4 percent for McGov·
ern, 1 percerlt for Glenn, and 0.6
percent for McGovern. There were
5.6 percent uncommitted.
The resillts, with 414 of the 414
caucuses reporting:
Hart 8,549, 50 .7 percen.
t
Mondale,.7,364, 43.7 percent.
Uncommitted, 002, 3.5 percent.
GeorgeMcGovem,l78,1 percent.
• ,Jeue Jackloo.l!Ji. .

" :·

WASHINGTON (AP) - Democrats oo the
Republlcanmembersofthecqmrntttee,meanwhlle,
CODgresslonal Joint Economic Conunlttee called said In their portion or the report that the economic
today for double the $100 bUllon "down payment" on coursesetbythepresldent lsthebestwaytomalntaln
ellmlnatlng federal budget deficits that President
the nation's economic health.
Reagan has requested.
The Joint Econon)lc Commlttee does not draft
The~ bWion, three-year package of higher taxes,
legislation and serves only to study economic matters
a reduced mllltacy buildup, some domestic s(iendlng and provide recommendations for action. In recent
reductions and loosened Federal Reserve policy was . years, however. the panel has seiVed prlmarUy as a ,
unveiled as part of the full committee's annual . stage to play out partisan arguments over ijeagan
economic report to Congress,
administration policies.
This was the latest addition to a growing file or
The annual economic report released today
ingredients and recipes appearing all aver Capitol Hill continued the argument
Sen. Roger W. Jepsen of Iowa, the Republlcan
as legislators become Increasingly edgy about the
govemnient's red Ink, which Is projected to be about
chall1nan. or the committee, led GOP members In
~ bllllon a year without action.
stating, "The Republican members or this committee
are t1rmly committed to controlllng federal deficits

SAVE

Johlll'Jlenn. :12.

........ ~

•

~

Gallla-Melgs Community Action
Agency of11clals . will distribute
clleese bl both IXIWitles on Wednesday, March 7.
Cheese will be distributed at 10
a.m. at the fonoWtng Gallla County
klcattons: Guiding Hand School In
Cheshire, junior fair grounds, andMount Carmel Baptist Church In
Bidwell.
1n Meigs County cheese will be
given out at the American Legion
Hallin Racine. the Tuppers Plains
Fire Station and the Meigs County
FalrgrcjuiM1s.
AppfO!dm8tely nine ton of cheese
will be distributed per county. Two
nve poUnd blocks of cheese will be
given per family, regarotess of size.
.'IlleGoldenBuckeyeCardandthe
WICmaynolongerbeusedasproot
or eligibility due to new· federal
guldellnell.

ON QUALITY DECORAMA
·DRAPES and BEDSPREADS
~nd

patterns

•Buy an'y.width; ·any length, .·
any fullness
•4-inch double he~dings and
· bo.ttom hems
•Hand set permanent pleats
•Lined or unlined
·

GIVE

VOUR HOME
. A ~ NEW

'

._!_O_QK

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I.JSTENS TO ANNOUNCEMENT - Fonner Vice-President
WalterMoodale listells lo au~ saying that Sen. Gary Hart
Ill Je•11'al Ill Sta&amp;e ('«umMtee ~ !iuJidaJ D!pJt Ill Bo8loo Hart
' GefeaW~JDIII8Malile"~ Al"T t rpbalof.

through legislated cuts In federal spending," not
higher taxes. That parallels the president's view.
Rep. Lee H. Hamilton of Indiana, the Democratic
vice chalnnan or the panel, took the opposite view.
saying the tax cbfmges Reagan has urged Congress to
enact must be altered, alongwithother administration
pollcles.
Speclllcally, the Democrats outlined a plan to:
-Limit Increases In military spending authority to
an average of 4 percent a year through the end of the
decade.
9
The president has asked Congress for Pentagon
spending authority of s;m billion for the fiscal year
beginning Oct 1- a 13 percent Increase after Inflation
over current spending. Then, Increases of 9.2 percent
In 1986 and 3.5 percent In 1987.

Cheese disirihution set

*Huodreds of colors

HURRY
·IN
AND
SAVE!

0.

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SALE· ENDS MARCH ·31, 1984
J

FREE. PARKING
0

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-Overhaul or the personal and corporate Income
tax codes. Reagan directed the Treasury Department
to study an overhaul of the tax system.
-Review so-called government "entitlement"
programs, except !bose that directly benefit the poor.
Partlculatly, health care cost containment and reform
of Medicare financing would be studied.
-Call for the Federal Reserve Board to loosen its
grip on the money supply In order to lower Interest

rates.
Congressional bipartisan talks on Reagan' scall for a
$100 bUIIon "down payment" on ellmlnatlng federal
red Ink stalled last week amid Democratic complaints
over Reagan· s refusal to consider a slowdown In
Pentagon speendlng and Hepubllcan charges that
Democrats are posturing on tax Increases.

Federal deficit
concerns Miller

Households must be wtthlil the
following guidelines to receive
swplus cheese; one person houseoold, $527 monthly; two pefsoiiS,
$'109 monthly; three persons, $891
monthly; four persons, $1,073
monthly; Dve persons, · $1,255
monthly; sill persons, $1,437
monthly; ·seven·. persoiiS, $1.619
monthly; eight · pe!'S01:181 $l,lm
monthly; nine persons, $1,983
monthly; teD persons, $2,165
monthly. For each additional person lh a household add $182 to the
,monthly listing. ·
Documents that will be accepted
are food · stamp cards, welfare ·
ldentificatlon Card, generald rell~
medical card, we!tare me«cal
card, supplelpentalsecurttyJncon:ie
award letter; foster grandparent

By LEEK. wmtROW
OVP Staff Writer

Optimistic that President Reagan
and Vice President George Bush
will be re-elected, U.S. Rep.
Clarence E. Miller, . R-Lancaster,
lOth District, told Gallla County
Republlcans Saturday night he is
concerned with the problem of the
federal deficit .

Miller was guest speaker at the
packed Lincoln Day Dinner In the
Gallla County Senior Citizens Center where local and state candidates
got an opportunity for public
:,~atloncardqrunemplCJY!llent
exposure In preparation for the May
•
8 Primary Election.
"We see good peoplewllllng to put
G!\THER - ··~
Muler,
their neck out on the line," he said
deUve.red Uie lleyaote lldilress Saturday Dlghl at a Uncoln Day dinner In
referring to the candidates. Stating
he is proud to be a Republlcan, he
· Oalllpolk MIDer, seelrtng his lOth tenn In the November General
advised candidates to seek Sllpport
Fledloa, ~ the budget deficit Is a ma.Jor concem In Congress.
1
from other RepublicanS. Miller is
running unopposed for u.s. Repre1
In
·to'· avoid strlklng a
sentative for a lOth term.
m·)'eal' Old clilld, 'Irene Shaw, Pt.
~ !ltepartnleilt la$t week trans·
..
"I feel strongly that they'll
Pieuant, .l'llll Jier vehicle otf the poi'ted·Paril~i.SyraCI!etothe
Pomeloy .poUce Investigated two clear distance ~barge. pollee said.
Two · other vehicles received
(Reagan and Bush) be re-elected,"
· ~· 8ocordllia _to the Meigs WQJIII!ft'A' .refci~~ to ~ . weeJcend ·licclden~.
.
II! an accident . he,_said. ~e asked the audience to
-y -Coullty_Sherlff'a,l)epartnlent.. . ~~ ~..QtQ~ to flv~ ,_ :Modll'ate~..c .wet!: _I!!: moderate.~
on
E.
Mabl
St.
Pollee
said a a car support the president as well ·as
,
years; .:\
, ..
Clll'li!dtotwo~lesblanaccident
1
driven by.Th&lt;lmas Amott, Racine, attending candidates.
I
~Shawwa5u-,vellDg.W~tonSI:t
.•
.
.,
· onMulllefcyAve.,Saturdaywhena
had stopped behind a carwhlch was . · "I am deeply concerned about the
12&amp;
&amp;Nthern High Sc~. the
Deputies on thelr.retum stopped . car di'lvl!n by James R. Wamsley,
Clllldh walked. onto the hlgllway. · at CIIIJI!cothe C::0rrecijonal Institu- . ROute 4, Pomeroy, pulled frQm broken down. Driver of the car deficit," he added. "We have a
Shaw to avoid hlttll)a the child ran
tlonto~ KelthM~.toMelgs Lasley St,lnto a vehicle driven by waved Amott •on and he hlt a budget with a ll!gh deficit for 1984."
car ctnven by Carol A.
But his words shined light on U.S.
h!r car otf the hl&amp;hWBY and struck County JaB. Mlllitr bu apPlied for Bruce Hysell, Pomeroy, going west westbound
Smith,
Syracuse.
There
were
no
production.
"We have more people
and knOCked down a mailbox &amp;hoCk _.prQbltlon and 'he was . · onMulben'y.
Injuries,
working
today
than ever before," he
Jocati!a on the Loll Baiii!Y pruper;ty• returried to Melp County for the
There were no Injuries and
·
said:·
Claiming
Americans are
'lbei'e was sJlillt dlnl8lll! to the- l!N1'1ni:'
.;.. • ·. -~
Wiimsle)' was cnm·on 1u1 lissured

·j·

Point Pleasant··w~man
·wrecks to avoid::· c~~
o~r

near

i.r

)
• •

See list on Page 6

Democrats support doubling deficit payment

DRAPERY SALE

CONTEMPORARY DESiGN
FOR TODAY

BY APPOINTMENT

See Manlhall &amp;tory oo Page 4

blgroundorprlfnarleslsupccmlng.

POMEROY - Meigs County's five villages received a total of
$6,982 as their portion of the February distribution of $10,316,500 In
revenues collected from the state's seven cents per gallon gasoline
tax.
Each county, Including Meigs, received an across the board
payment of $35,000 and amounts received by villages Include
Middleport, $2,297; Pomeroy, $2,656; Racine, $696; Rutland, $582;
Syracuse, $751.

OHN .EVENINGS AND SUNDAY

Property transfers...

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio, Monday,
March. 5, 1984
.
. .
.

PORTLAND, Maine !AP) Gary Hart is I on
polltl~al roll.
adding an upset victory In the Maine
caucuses to one In the New
Ham1JS111re prtmary, but Walter F.
Mondale and his managers· Insist
they can upend the upstart in the
race·for the Democratic presideD·
tlal nomlnatlo!l.

Meigs villages receive funding

Individualized
and Pictorials

NCAA toomey hound

Hart pulls second upset

CUSTOM-MADE

GAlliPOLIS- Effective March 1, couples filing for a dissolution
or marriage In Gallia County Common Pleas Court are urged to sign
an affidavit showing their weekly wages and adjusted gross Income
from their federal Income tax return so the court has proper
financial documentation.
This will be used to better expedite child support cases.
In all divorces, a couple's earnings are recorded, but with
dlssolutlons1 only the separation agreement and complaint ts
Included. The lack of documentation makes it rough when It comes to
child support.
Last week, the court Issued amendments about the new procedure
It will take to be submitted to the Ohio Supreme Court.
If the affidavit is not filed, the attorneys will bepermlttedlOdays to
have one submitted or obtain a written waiver from the court. A
dissolution can be dismissed If procedures are disregarded.

Story on Page 5

Copyrlthtocl 191o4

BUICK-PONTIAC

EL.BERFEL'DS
SAVINGS

.Story, photo opa Paae .3

rearranged

SMITH

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla-Meigs Regional Airport Authority will
meet at 7: ll p.m. Monday In the Gallla County commissioner's office
to discuss equipment purchase.

Holzer donates books

Vol .32, No.221

SEE HARLAND WOOD, BOB BRICKLES, JIM
COCHRAN OR GREG SMITH.

CINCINNATI (AP) -Cincinnati
officials say they will ' fight any
attempt by Columbus and Dayton
electricity companies to penalize
Cincinnati Gas and Electric Co. for
alleged mismanagement or the
Zlnuner power plant construction.
CG&amp;E has taken a largi!r share of
the plant's ownership than the other
two utilities. - · ·

Tomadoettes:_ousted

e

IG 'INVENTORY OF
NEW BUICKS, PONTIACS,
AND LATE MODEL USED CARS

Airport authority to meet

Financial documentation urged

for a March 13 hearing.
Geolite F. Kruscamp, 64, 414
Sec!Jnd Ave., was tined
sentencedtothreedaysinjall,glven
a 60-day driver's license suspension
and 18 months probation for 18
months, and was fined costs for left
or center.
Tri'Jflc caaes
.
In traffic cases, Mark F. Bennett,
a!, Rtl, Northup, wasflned$15for
speeding and fined $25, given a
suspended six-month· jail sentence
and six months probatlonfordrtvtng
under suspension; Ricky F .
Thacker, 23, Rtl, Proctorville, was
fl~ costs for failure to stop for a
stop sign, and was fined $25, given a
suspended six-month jail sentence
and a year's probation tor no
operator's llcense.
Barry S. Drummond, 21, Rt 1,
Bidwell, was fined $12 for expired
operator's license; Linda C. Jones,
24, Addison, was fined $U for
speeding; Betty Queen, 44, Galllpolis, forfeited $40 bond for failure to
stop for a stop sign; Patricia A.
Morgan, 25, Rt 1, Langsville,

fendefoftl)eShawvehlcl~.

REPUBLicANS

CJai.ence .

Police check weekend wrecks

buying a,utomoblles he said the
country is 25 percent ahead In
automobile production. Taxes and
production will bring In more
dollars. "But as the econorny
continues to grow .. . then there will
be additional funds to come in."
"We have every program on the
books," he said of the federal
government. Although he finds such
programs as social security necessary, he said the government could
"cut some of the fat oul of the
military."
He said the government' s debt
cannot continue. From postal service Information he requested he
disco~ered he found monies could
cover Interest on the national debt .
From statistics. he found there are
672,000 postal ,service employees
earning from payrollmore than$700
mllllon In a two-week pay period.
Following the speech, Miller said
he bopes for the authorization of the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam project to
go through sometime this year.
Work on-the movement of the plan is
continuous, but he said the biggest
prolllem IS g(ittl!fg th~ autlloriZatiOII
which Is presented to the PubUc
Works Committee.
Also addressing the audience was
Ohio Sen. Oakley Collins, R-Ironton,
17th Senatorial Dislrtct who cut
down the 90 percent state Income
tax, Increase In state spending and
the state's recolllbudgetJor.lsM.

�:~::~y~,Ma::Kh~5~,~1:9U~------------------------========~p~~~m.~~~~~~N~~~~~d~~~~rt~,~Oh~i~o~-------------------------------~~~~~i~ly~~~nh~·M~I:~~!9~1~3~;

Commentai'Y
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFUCH
Gtmeral Mana1er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ol The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
lion and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETtERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They should be less than 300 words
lonk. Allletten are subject to edltlnc and must be sl1ned with name, address and
lelephone number. No unslcned letters wUI be publllhed. LeUen should be In
soocl tute, addressln&amp;lssues, not personaUlles.

Hart's challenge
According to tbe conventional wldsom, Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado has
scored a major coup in tbe first two states to begin selecting delegates to
this year's Democatic National Convention.
But Hart's own political advisers now are ptivately concerned that
their early and unexpected successes may have Inadvertently jeopardized
the senator's stUI slim chance to capture his party's presidential
nomination.
In a stunning upset here in New Hampshire's primary, Hart placed
first with 38 percent of tbe votes, followed bY former VIce President Walter
F . Mondale, who received 'rl percent.
In Iowa's precinct caucuses one week earlier, Mondale led the
eight ·man field of contenders for the nomina lion bY capturing 49 percent of
the ballots cast, but Hart finished second with 16 percent.
As a result, Hart has totally supplanted Sen. John H. Glenn Jr. as the
most setious tival to Mondale at a time when the former vice president Is
no longer perceived as the Inevitable choice to capture tbe nomination at
the Democrats' convention in San Francisco this summer.
The most logical strategy to further thwart Mondale's drtve tor the
nomination requires the continued viabtllty of at least three or four otber
campaigns. Hart alone lacks the resources - organization, money and
popular support - to mount a nationwide challenge to Mondale at this ·
point.
Glenn's role in that formulation Is especially Important because he had
been expected to mount the strongest challenge to Mondale in tbe next .
round of voting- patimaties and cauc;uses to be beld in 17 different states
from March 17 (dubbled "Supper Tuesday'') through March 17.
· Glenn's strategy long has been to achieve strong second place finishes
behind Mondale in Iowa and New Hampshire, then demonstrate that
Mondale lacks the broad support -especially among the party's moderate
to conservative voters -to win the Southern and border states which vote
in mld·March.
But Glenn - who finished fifth In Iowa with four'percent and third In
New Hampshire with 12 percent - now Is a mortally wounded candidate
who wUI be hard pressed to perform as he once expected in tbe upcoming
round of elections In states such as Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma,
Mississippi, Arkansas and Kentucky.
·
The South never has been a bastion of strength for Mondale, but
without setious opposition there from Glenn or Hart (always presumed to
be very weak In the region), he now has an opportunity to make a
respectable It not Impressive showing there, thus effectively blunting the
ctitlclsm that he Is fundamentally a Nortbel"l, liberal candidate.
The two Southern contenders who might have helped to contain
Mondale in the region - Sen. Ernest F . Hollings of South Carolina arid
former Flotida Gov. Reub In Askew - also have performed so poorly in the
first two contests that they may no longer pose a setious threat to Mondale.
In addition, Mondale has flied full delegate slates in every state, but in
a number of major states with forthcoming ptimaties, Hart has only
partial slates and no opportunity to complete them because the filing
deadline has passed. Included on that list are F1otida, Dlinols and
Pennsylvania, where the names of Hart delegates wUI be on only about'40
percent of all ptimary ballots. (Hart has no delegate slates anywhere in the
city of Chicago.)
On the other hand. the dismal performance of Sen. Alan Cranston of
California in the first two votes should aid Hart because It probably will
tree up campaign contributions from wealthy liberal Democrats
previously monopolized by Cranston In his home state.
There already are Indications that those donors are willing to provide
desperately needed financial assistance to Hart - but he will need more
than in infusion of Beverly Hills money to topple Mondale. even though the
former vice president has lost his aura of invincibility.

Well, Well, Well _______;__W_i_
Wa_m_F_.B-:--uc__,kley__;._Jr_.
Concerning The Upset, a few
observations:
1. Not very much of an Ideological
nature Is to be gathered from the
New Hampshire vote. It Isn't that
Gary Hart hasn't In the past said
interesting things. Unhappily, dur·
lng the past few months he has, so to
speak, drowned his former self out:
by subordinating shrewd Insights
on defense policy and other matters
In order to say tbe titual things
expected by ptimary voters who
are, of course, the most zealous.
The Ideological point will be made
- that Ga Hart Is a conservative
alternative to Mondale - because
punditry demands It ; but It will not
be convincing.
2. But some things can be
plausibly said at a personal level.
New Hampshire would certainly
appear to have been a rejection of
Walter Mondale. Now tills rejection
can have been motivated by one or
another factor. There will be those

who simply do not like Walter
Mondale, who judge him to be a
man with so undlsctimlnatlng an
appetite to becom.e president that
he yields anything to anybody. It
the Flea Swatters League of
America were a sizeable group,
Frttz Mondale would have prom·
!sed to swat fleas, nor not to swat
fleas, depending on tbe Inclination
of the league. More voters know
that Mondale Is a that·a-way than
know that Gary Hart Is also
that·a·way.
The second motivation to vote
against Mondale Is pure Yankee,
100 proof. So all tbe pollsters tell you
Mondale Is going to win big, that It's
really all over, that New Hamp.
shire will confirm the national tide.
So what happens? Til!! temptation
to be onery rtses In the breast of the
free man.
·
Not a bad Impulse altogether,
although It can be carrted to an
extreme. Recall that New Hamp.

shire was the state In which In 1964
Henry Cabot Lodge, a virtual
unknown, polled higher than the
two superpower contenders, Barry
Goldwater and Nelson Rockefeller.
It was a way by which the small
voter could say: Who says Walter
Cronkite and The New York Times
can tell us who tbe candidates are
going to be?
3. On the otber hand, the statistics
show that histotically to fall to lead
In New Hampshire leads to a failure
to capture tbe White'House. In other
words, It now Walter Mondale went
on to be nominated and then
elected, he would add a fresh
political statlstoc to the almanacs'
The man who was beaten in New
Hampshire but went all the way. It
that happened, It would help Walter
~ondale, hurt New Hampshire,
and hurt the country.
4. The first Impulse, for the
Republicans, Is to rejoice at what
happened. Why? Because It means

Reagan's 'Mr. Clean' _____.__
WASHINGTON- In Washington
1971, G. Gordon Liddy was named
general eounsel of the Committee to
Re-Elect tbe President, more approptiately known by the a&lt;;ronym
CREEP. Six months later, his
operations led to the Watergate
burglary.
In a touch of historic Irony, one of
the CREEP attorneys who was
passed over for the job was Fred
Fielding, the current presidential
counsel who Is responsible for
keeping the Reagan·Bush re·
election campaign spotless.
It's doubtful that Fielding - or
any Individual short of the president
could have prevented the
Watergate scandal, given the cll·
mate of the Nixon White House. But
Fielding Is determined to see that
no electloneertng lmproptietles or even the appearance of lmprqpr·

lety - occur this time.
The Ust of do's and don't's be has
laid down for White House em·
ployees and re-election activities Is
detailed and explicit. "Very basi·
cally, we are sttivlng for height·
ened awi\l'ene,ss," F'Jeldlllii \!114 roY
associate Tony Capacclo. He said
he's hoping to "take the gray areas
out" of election-year behavior.
Within a week of the re-election
eommlttee's formal OPening last
fall, campaign director Edward
Rollins Issued a memo to tbe staff
warning that "no contacts with the
White House on behalf of Reagan·
Bush '84 are to be made without my
ptior approval."
Six weeks later. noting "repeated
complaints from the White House
and the Republican National Committee," Rollins reiterated his
earlier decree with "no Its. ands or

buts."
In addition , Reagan -Bush ·
workers are forbidden to exchange
plans or strategies . with any
so-called "Independent expend!·
lure" groups Qperatlng on behalf of
'the candldjltes,. •.•
.
Under the president's guidance.
Fielding Issued a 1().page Internal
memo governing the election-year
activities of White House em·
ployees. Here are the highlights:
- Even official presidential trips
will sometimes be classified as
political, requiting tbe Reagan·
Bush committee to pick up the tab.
For example, It the president, the
vice president or a Cabinet officer
makes several official stops In a
given city and also makes a
political appearance, the entire ttip
will be billed tO' the re-election
committee. This "clearly exceeds

a nice, and one hpes lntenieclne,
quarrel between what Is now two
front-runners rather than one. It
means a delay in the COIIIOIIdatlon
of Democratic leadership. And It
means a lot of money spent, money
that Is there In finite quantity. The
more that Mondale and Hart spend
In battling each other, the less there
will be to mint tbe batteting ram
against Reagan. That Is the plus.
The minus, viewed here, Is that a
quarrel between the two front·
runners might serve to midwife a
more coherent political alternative
to Reagan's policies than the
Democrats have yet to come up
with. They have been, really, the
jejune party; quarreling with ever·
ything Reagan has done that Is
worthwhile, applauding his laiJIM!I.
Hart Is now front and center, and he
has a bare two weeks In which to
stop Mondale. It Super Tuesday Is a
draw, then we have ahead of us,
between now and tbe California
ptimary - which would settle the
Issue between tbem even as It
settled the Issue between McGov·
ern and Humphrey In 19'T.! - two
months In which genuine political
profiles could crystallize.
The danger to Reagan Is that
Gary Hart will overcome. He would
have working for him that comefrom·behlnd afflatus that often
'(though bY no means always;
rem~mber Wendell Wlllklt)
breathes life Into a challenpr.
Walter Mondale would be seen as
the man who got all the lobb6es
neatly lined up ~Uvertnr their
squalid legions In return for
promises to plunder the Treuwy
and the national spiritual
patrimony.
But David prevailed: from two
percent In the opinion polls preIowa, to 40 percent of the vote In
New Hampshire to - Mondale's
vote plus X In California.
Callfornia, the birthplace of
giants. And giant killers?

For the second time In little more
Remember, thl5 Is the FBI
than a decade, the Ametican public
reporting to the Justice Depart·
has reason to question the lntegrtty
ment. This Is the famous lnvestlga·
of the Federal Bureau of Investlga·
live agency of tbe federal govern·
tlon. The first was for their menf. that for.. years people have
Investigation of the Watergate been convinced could' find a ne~lle
scandal. The second was last week In a haystack. As agencies go In this
when they reported nothing shady political country of ours It Is tbe one
I as a Meigs Local School parent her about them. I think Esther Is a
about how the Carter btieflng most likely to be ' rated as "Mr.
and taxpayer want to voice my "super" bus dtiver and wish she papers got Into tbe Reagan flies.
Good" In Hie pub!lc estimation.
opinion In support of Esther Black was still on our route. ·
This Is \he agony for which FBI That Is the reputation carefullyI don't feel she should he
as a bus dtiver. Esther has dtiven
Director J . Edgar Hoover spent a
nurtured by Director Hoover over
bus on my children's route for dismissed from her job because of lifetime creating the myth of the years. They collld follow the
several years. My five children two small accidents.
Investigative morality and lnvlncl·
lntticacles of mob flilanclal records
Come on, parents, let's see If we
have ridden her bus and never had
billty. I'll bet J. Edgar Is whirling In a11d bting the offendjng gangsters
any fear for their safety. Esther could turn a bus on some of these his grave!
to justice, "atch thieves by elabowould never go on a road she roads our bus dtivers do and not go
Of course, you remember last
rate fencing ope~atlons of tbelr own
thought wasn't safe duting bad left of center.
summer wben a furor was raised
and trap ci'Q6ked Congressmen
I will support Easther In every
weather and she wouldn't take
,a little btibe
over tbe discovery of sensitive who wanted io .
them through high water because way I can because I feel she has matetials prepared for President
money on theslde: th~!rreputatlon
she was thinking of tbeir safety great concern for our children and Carter for the Carter-Reagan de- was slightly' tarnished durtng the
their safety and has very good
first.
bates In 1980 was found In tbe Nixon years when ·ti\ey gave the
It I ever had any questions about discipline on her bus. - Minnie Reagan campaign tiles. The White Impression of being blind and deaf
my children's problems on the bus I Young, Langsville, Ohio.
House Chief of Staff James Baker duting Watergate dayg;~ But In tbe
always felt I could call and talk to
claimed I be matetial was given lnvestlgatlpn oUhe Ca~r btieflng
him by WIU!am Casey, Reagan paperstheyappear,tolui\lebeennot
campaign director, who 'was. then only blind, · deaf and du!)Jb but
ClA director. Casey claimed to half-witted. Ill my oplnl~n. e'!l:en the
have po recolll!(:tlon of the transac- · g,-eenest . country: ~oji CO\IId · have
lion. At that ijme the papers were done bl!tter. I doubt tha(~ny'moyle
Today Is Monday, March5, the 65th day of1984. Thereare~1daysleft In said to have· been ·secret and will ever be madeof.thls latest FBI
the year. ,
classified and. stolen ·from the · caper!
.
,
Today's Hlglillght in History:
.
·Carter campaign beadq~arters. · · In the
release almounclng
On' March 5, 1T70, several Ametican eolonlsts were killed in a Boston Now the FBI has closed their · the end ot the Investigation 'they
street fight with a·squad of British soldiers in what became known as the Investigation after nine months gave no details other tlian bollstlng
Boston Massacre.
durtng which they claim anexhaus· about the scope of thelr' lnvestlga·
On this date:
live investigation was made with· tlon. According to their fellOrt, they
Inl821,PresldentJamesMonroewasswornintoasecondterm, because out fllli!fng "evidence that the were busy as .so many little bees . .
March 4 - tbe traditional date- fell on a Sunday:
matetial was stolen" or "classified "Over 200 Individuals, Including ·
In 1924, Frank Caruana of Buffalo, N.Y., bowled two straight perfect matetial was Included." A fuzzy President Reagan and· many other
games, the flr$t person to do that In league-5anctl0ned competition.
three page report was s~med up high officials of both the Carter and .
·In ·19!i3, Soviet -leader-Joseph Stalin died at the age ot 73 after 29.years in _: ~th the press _.rel;!ise Altl!~gh_ .~agan _l!ampalgn, : ~~re
power.
every lead' has bl1en folloWea to liS Vf~ea one or m9re times,
In 1970, a nuclear non·prollferatlon treaty went Into effect after43natlons conclusion, tile Investigation has 'boxes of documepts, &amp;\ldlo and
ratified ft.
not been able to determine pre- video tapes were reviewed and .
In um President Jlnuny Carter answered questions on a network radio clsely how tbe materials In question where ap'propnate; forenslc labora·
call·in p~ called "Ask President Carter" moderated by Walter were transmitted. However, "the tory examinations were conCrooklte.
·
· '
investigation uncovered no credible · dueled.·: Common· sense says. that ·
evidence that the transfer violated. President Carter would have
' And In 1982, cot'nedlan John Belushl was found dead In a rented bupgalow' any criminal law." The Hardy Boys willingly ha!!ded over to,hlspcilltlcal
"'ljJ IfoiJ.YWOOO.- -- ·,
.
c;ould.have c!one a -better job! tival sensitive documents tor which

Parent .supports driver

he, as President of the United
States, was resiionslble. The finding
that "there was no evidence that the
matertal was stolel)" boggles tbe
mind. Did the tooth fairy obligingly
spltit the btieflng book from the
Carter campaign headquarters to
Reagan's?
Jody Powell, White House press
secretary duting theCrter admlnls·
tratlon, when asked about tbe FBI
action on TV News, said "It smells
like white wash to me." Jody Is
tight. It not only smells of white
wash but stinks of coercion bY
someone high up In the Reagan
admlnlstralton who has enough
musele to call the·shots.
Attorhey General William
French Smith Is leaving the
administration to be replaced bY

•

B~ SCOTT WOLFE

,.

__:_Ja._ck_A_n:d_
' e_rs_on
what the law requires," gi'\linped a
legal expert at the RNC.
. - The equivalent rental cost of
the president's limousine will be
billed to Reagan-Bush when the car
Is used to take the president to a
political function.
- When the White House '·
answers letters from the public that
express general support for Jlresl.
dent Reagan, "no reference should ·
be made to the 1984 elections or the
political prospects of the admlnls·
tratlon or the Republican Party."
White House messengers
"should not be used to deliver or
pick up matertals from the cam·
palgn committee," nor should
Whlte House vehicles be· used "to
transport staff members or cam.
palgn matetials to airports or any
other location It tbe ttip purpose Is
ptimatily campaign-related."

FBI white wash.___________L_ow_e_ll_W_in-=-ge_tt

Letter to editor ·

next

nights" came on the
play when
Peggy Coppock fell to the ~, but
hurtled the ball Into the air where on
Its ' downward flight swished
through .the basket, giving the
winners a tremendous boost of
momentum. At' the 6:38 mark
Littlefield picked up her second
personal foul, senc!lng, Melony
Black to the line for two successful
charity tosses and a ll).llHHSil!ad.
At one point, Southern went down
seven points, 24·17, but an ootstand·
lng second petiod bY Mlci;IBel and
Littlefield held Southern close at the
half ll-25. Michael netted two shots
from the field and hauled down a
key SHS rebound; whUe Llttletteld
who was double teamed and
contained bY a "box·and-one"
defense managed to net eight points
In the frame.
Brealdng point
The third petiod proved to be the
difference in the game as Southern
was outscored 19-8. Wolfe pulled the
Tornadoettes closer with a bucket
TOURNAMENT CHAMPIONS -The defending SVAC champion
32·'rl, but on the next play picked up
Ea8tent Eape elpah grade basketball team easily clinched tbe 1983-84
her fourth personal foul and
crown with a perfect 16.() record, while also claiming the Federal
Huntington unreeled 10 unans·
Hocldng Elpab Grade Tournament with a 4!-58 triumph over Belpre.
wered points for a 41-'rllead at the
The yoong Eagles ftnlsbed tbe season with an outstanding UH record, a
I: 58 mark. Southern went in to Its
total
as they went
full court press, quickly scoting a
. of 32 victories to just one defeat In tbe last two seasons
.
bucket and forcing two more
huntington turnovers, but SHS
couldn't muster a score. SHS
scored tbe last four points of the halt
on goals by Littlefield and Michael
By Aleod•ted Press
crown )Vas in 1978, when It went 12-4
for a 45-l'l score.
Miami bw1ed Eastern Michigan under Hedrlc.
Guard John WUioughby poured in
Southern renewed Its spltited with 12unansweredpolntstocoastto
effort In the last frame, playing a 0045 victory and Its first a game-high 18 points in the
even with the winners, but without Mld·Amerlcan conference men's title-clincher, Including six during
tbe late 12.0spree. Miami eventually
enough momentum and defensive basketball title In six years.
the Hurons 1Hduringthe
outscored
strength to stage a comeback. The
The Redsklns, J.$.2 in the MAC and
hustling Southern gals of Coach 21-5 overall, play Ball State today in final nine minutes.
Eastern Michigan (8-10) had a
Hilton Wolfe Jr. again pressed and a makeup game that wUI end the
later went man-to-man, forcing regular season. Second-place Ohio l).291ead at 15: re, when sophomore
several turnovers In the last round, finished at 14-4 in the league with a forward Ricky Buttrom was ejected
but many forced shots without an 5349 victory Saturday over Kent for fighting. WilloughbY sank the
resulting free throws for a 31-~
offensive rebound resulted In a lost State, 8-10.
Miami
advantage, and the Redsklns
possession. Sophomore guard Loti
Miami was 9.() a t home this
Adams ca,nned two long jumpers season.
never looked back.
Ohio started all four of its seniors.
and Littlefield netted e ight more
Elsewhere, Bowling Green
points, but their determined efforts clinched a third-place tie with but Kent State stayed close untll
fell short on the 62-49 Huntington Toledo, upending the Rockets 8Hi3. freshman guard Roger Smith
ttiumph.
Both teams ended with 11·7 league connected on both ends of one-and·
one tree-throw situations twice in
The most obvious difference In records.
the game was revealed on tbe
Ball State ($-12) edged last·place the last 21 seconds.
"These kids were the beginning.
charts where Huntington outre- Western Michigan 68-66. Northern
came here with me four years
They
bounded the Southerners 45-23, led Illinois ended at 9-9 with an 81·78
by the Black girls with 12each, Jery victory over Central Michigan ago, and they stayed. That's unusual
in this day of the transfer," Ohio
(6-12) .
Gozy's 10, and Peggy Coppock's
eight. Littlefield led Southern with
Miami earned a flr.st·round bYe In Coach Qanny Nee said of his four
!e'nk&gt;rs.
•u
.j.
••
'
•• • ~
10 whUe Bentley and Mlcliael each " \lie MAC pcllt·!ieil!oll tournament
Ohio
shot
63
percent
from
the
grabbed five caroms.
that begins Friday In Rockford, Ill.
Southern hit 18of 48fleld goals for Miami's last regular-season MAC charity stripe compared to Kent
36 percent and hit 13 of 18 from the
line for 73 percent, led bY Littlefield
who canned 10 of 10 free throw
attempts. The winners hll 25 of 61
for 40 percent, whUe hitting 12 of 20
from the line for 60 percent.
Southern had 16 turnovers, eight
steals, three assists and 16 fouls .
Huntington had 12-turnovers, and 18
fouls.

WAVERLY Loaded with
talent and ftlled with l!nthuslasm,
the Huntington-Ross "Lady Hunts·
men" utilized the same winning
combination that led them to a
perfect season as they rolled to a
hard-fought 62-49 victory over the
Southern Tornadoettes here Saturday evening in the Class "A" girls'
Dlsttict . Basketball Tournament
championships.
In posting the ttiumph the "Lady
""Huntsmen" booSted their record to
a 24.() In claiming the dlsttict title
which gained a be,rth In the
Regional Tournament at Lancaster
Tuesday against the Cambtidge
Upper bracket winner. The Tornadoettes despite a fine effort bowed
from ful!tber tournament play with
a fine ~overall record.
Coach Rodger Carroll's "Lady
Huntsmen" placed three girls In
double figures, while a lso getting
three strong complimentary efforts
In a great team·wlnnlng comblna·
lion. Senior point guard a nd team
captain Melony Black paced the
winners with 22 points, sister Tina
Black pitched In 12 points, guard
Peggy Coppock added U, Jeti Gozy
seven, Debbie Conley six, a nd Tlsh
Johnson four.
Senior sharp-shooter Amy Littlefield ended an illustrious high
school basketball career shating
game-high scoting honors with 22
points. Senior Debbie Michael
added 11 points, while Laren Wolfe,
Jenny Bentley, Alana Lyons and
Loti Adams had four points each.
Trailing 4-0 early In the opening
round on shots by Melony Black and
Debbie Conley, Southern fought
back to a H tie on an Inside drtve bY
sophomore Alana Lyons and a _15
foot jumper from the wing by
forward Debbie Michael. Utilizing
one of Its greatest assets, a n
awesome abUity to gain Inside
position and rebound, Huntington
controlled the boards, getting tbe
second and third shot for an
eventual score.
Although Southern played a
steady floor game In the opening
round and established a repelling
defensive alignment, Huntington's
rebounding made up for Its Inept
outside shooting abtllty. Southern's
offense workec1 perfectly, howeve,r
several missed shots never aUowed
them lo get the lead they n~ to
set the tempo of the game.
Right from tbe start, SHS had tbe
odds against them -distinct belght
disadvantage, tbe momentum of a
winning 23.() opponent, the threat of
a supertor rebounding team, then
with 2: 34 left Southerner Laren
Wolfe picked up her third pers0nal
foul and was sidelined the rest of the
halt. At the conclusion of the first
petiod the "Lady Huntsmen" led bY
four, 11·7.
In the second round Southern shot
out of the gate to tie the score 11-11
on a Littlefield to Michael pass and
score, then two straight free throws
by Littlefield. An indication that It
was going to be "one of those

KUM1NGTON (G) Coppock :1-J.ll: Cozy
J.l.7: Conley :w.£; Black &amp;1·22: Johnson 2.().4
and T. Black (H).I2. ToUII !11-IU%.

SOl/111ERN (•) - Bentley 2.().4; Llttl..
field &amp;10.22; Michael :1-1·11: Wolle 1·2-4:
Adams 2.().4: and Lyons 2.().4. ToUII U.IS-41.

~

LOOKS FOR TEAMMATE- Southera'a Alny Utldi!iii!ld
pus off to during Salurday Cla8f A Dlltrtct pme
aga1n1Jt Rllllllngton of RoM County. The Lady Hlllllllmen oollected their
21Ith ltrallht victory' 62-49. Uttlefleld led Southem wl&amp;h 22 point&amp;
Debbie Michael (lli) of Southern Is at UUiefteld's rlgbt wblle Jodi
Seellq.provicla defenee for Hundngton.
·
for

som- to

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SERVICE
Dependability
Peace of Mind
c.

all day

President Reagan's long time
aSSO&lt;.'i!ite and White House em·
ploye, Edwin Meese. Eltber of
these worthy gentlemen have tbe
clout to get anything they want at·
the Justlce.Deparlment. Meese will
soon : come up for confirmation
hearings in the Senate and It would
not be a great surprtse It be Is asked
some very polntl!d questions about
the btieflng papers.
Ronald Reagan has already
shown Interest In debating the
Democratic nominee this fall.
Maybe the Republican pipeline
they had In President Carter's
headquarters still exists to repeat
Its traitorous activity this year.
Perhaps Rep. Donald Albosta's
House Committee can learn more.
Until the complete truth Is learned
I'd
"No
"
· '

·T all .

State's 50 percent.
"We had our shots, 5-footersdown
the stretch, and couldn 't get them to
fall," Si'ld Kent Coach Jim
McDonald .
Bowling Green, paced by senior
center BUI Faine's 23 points, never
trailed Toledo. Rockets Coach Bob
Nichols was pU2Zied.
"Strangely enough. our defensive
play was better In the second half
than in the first," he said.

r

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8TaNDiNG

undefeated, 16-G, as seventh graders last season. Pictured are, kneeling,
Renee Kaylor and Amy ConnoUy, scorekeepers; sltUng are team
members, Steve Homer, Tony Hendrtx, Jeff Johnson, Jeff Caldwel,
Mark Griffin, Allen Trtpp. Back row - Bryan Durst, Chartes Cleland,
Brent Bissell, Steve Rockhold, Kyle Davis, Bryan Chadwell, and Coach
George Gagal.

•
Miami wins first MAC title in six
years

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·Today in history

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�Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 5, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi«!

From the Wild...
By KEITH WOOD
Meigs GBII)e Protector
The 1984 Ohio fishing licenses are
now on sale. A llcense Is rqulred to
ta ke fish, frogs, turtles, or mussels.
A resident fishing license Is for
people age 16-65
who have resided
in Ohio for at
least six months
ptior to applying
for a license. A
non-resident license Is required of all persons who
do not qualify as residents.
Thanks to an agreement between
the State of Ohio and the State of
West VIrginia, Ohioans with a valid
Ohio fishing license may fish on the
Ohio River and Its embankments or
from the West VIrginia banks of the
river and embankments without
obtaining a West Virginia fishing
license.
A resident fishing license costs $7
pius a 75 cent writing fee. Nonresidents can purchase an annual
non-resident license for $14 or a
seven-day non-resident tourtst's
license for $7. A 75 cent writing fee is
added to both non-resident licenses.
When you buy an Ohio fishing
license, a year's worth of fun is
assured as you FISH omo!
Ohio's Turn in a Poacher (T.I.P.)
program is enjoying great success
according to Jerry Scott, project
coordinator. Since the T.I.P. program started in September, 1!R!, a
total of 9,235 calls have been logged
on the toll-free line (1-800·
POACHER) that allows individuals
to report wildlife violations.
Only 32 percent of those providing
tips have requested rewards. A
total of 51 Individuals have been
paid rewards ($6,022.50 to date) .
These 51 tips resulted in 117
convictions and fines totalling

$19,304.90.
Ohio's wildlife resource Is shared
by all residents of the Buckeye
state. The TIP program provides
an opportunity for all to help ensure
the future of that resource.
The Athens office of the Division
of Wildlife and many Wildlife
District 4 Game Protectors have
been receiving information about
massive !Ish kills in the Southeast.
ern Ohio area.

All reports of pollution fish kills
are investigated by a wildlife
officer. Nearly all of the recently
reported kills on the Ohio River
have been " thermal fish kills"
involving one species of fish,' the
gizzard shad.
The thermal fish kill phenomenon
is a natural occurrence each
winter . Gizzard shad populations
are unable to withstand the stress
that occurs during the cold
weather. The result Is many dead
fish along a river bank that at first
a ppears to be a polution fish kill.
David Bright, fish management
supervisor in Wildlife District 4
advises the best way to distinguish
between a pollution and a thermal
kill is to note species composition of
the dead fish. If there Is a variety of
fish species at the site, a pollution
kill Is suspected. However, If there
is only one species of fish involved,
the cause Is most likely cold winter
weather.

- ... _

The 1984 aMual Fish Ohio day
activities are scheduled for March
17 at the Ohio State Fairgrounds in
Columbus. A full day of free
fishing-related activities wUI be
followed by an evening awards
YOUNG EAGLE'ITES - The 1911Uf Eastern Junior llllh Girls'
Meianle Mankin, and Usa Pooler. Bac!k
Coach Ralph Wlpl,
banquet.
basketball team recently completed Its season. Pictured are, front, 1-r,
Trlsh Spencer, Amy Rllchle, Janet Werry, April Ritchie, Jenny
At 10 a.m., displays by tackle
Becky Bauer, Donna Curtb, Mellsfla Edwards and Georgina Myers.
Cowdery, Tammy Pierce, and Michelle Capellart.
manuf a cturers , sportsmen's
Seated - Bonnie Koenig, Melissa Hensley, Amy Hagar, Amy Mora,
groups, and taxidermists will be
open to the public in the Rhodes
Center. The aMual FISH OillO
awards banquet begins at 6 p.m.
Awards wlli be given to the
ASHEVll.LE, N.C. (AP) Marshall hit 37 of 61 from the field game ... were experience, tradition, baskets this season, fired home a
statewide FISH OillO w!Mers, LaVerne Evans wasn't totally · for 60.7 percent. Despite the hot
confidence," Arnold said. ''We three-pointer with eight seconds left
master anglers, and new state perfect tor Marshall, but he was
streak, the Thundering Herd had
talked all week about having a quiet
to send the contest Into the second
record holders. Tickets for the plenty good enough as far as
some anxious moments. It's15-point confidence, a quiet determination.
extra period. 'JWney hit a follow
banquet are $10 each and may be Tennessee-Chattanooga was
lead evaporated in the closing That kind of thing gave us the shot for Marshall, but time had
ordered by sending a check or concerned.
minutes under a barrage of courage we needed."
expired.
money order to FISH omo
Evans, a senior, scored 38 points Tennessee-Chattanooga three-point
The Thundering Herd, 25-5,
The deliberate pace of the first
Awards Banquet, Division of Wlld· to lead the Thundering Herd to a
field goals.
squandered a 13-polnt lead and was
overtime was replaced by a faster
life, Fountain Square, Columbus, ill-107 double-QVertlrne triumph
"The difference was Murray forced ·into the first overtime when
tempo in the second. Brown's
Ohio 43224.
over a determined bunch of Moccas- Arnold," Huckabay saldoftheUT-C Gerald Wllkins canned a three-point
second three-polllt goal gave the
ins for the Southern Conference coach. "I think he's the best coach in field goal - an experimental rule In
Moccasins a 97-961ead with 3:(11 left,
For those interested in obtaining basketball tournament title and a
this league. He's the reason that they
the conference for the past three
but Wade's jumper in the lane with
a turkey permit application contact trip to the NCAA tournament and Its
made their run."
seasons- and added a free throw to
2: 29 left gave the Thundering Herd
me at 985-4400 or the District 4 53-team field .
Arnold, who said Saturday that he tie thescoreat87wlth33seconds left.
the lead for good.
Headquarters at 594-2211. The
With his team traUIJig 97-96 in the felt both teams should get a
WUUe White's Jumper from the
Maurice Head's three-point shot
application deadline Is March 30.
second elltra session, Evans scored
post-season bid, said thegamewasa
left side at the 3: 52 mark gave the
with 34 seconds left pulled UT-C
George Billy, Wildlife District 4 eight points to lead his club to
classic.
Moccasins their first lead at 89-87,
within 106-103, but Evans added four
Supervisor predicts hunters can victory. He finished with 12 of 21
It was an approprta te final for a
but two free throws by David Wade
straight free throws while Ervin hit
look forward to an e.occellent spring from the field and hit aU 14 free great, great basketball tournatied the score again. Wade and Sam
one more.
turkey season in Ohio.
throw attempts.
ment," Arnold said. "Certainly as a
Ervin missed front ends of one-andFor more information concern" I told them on the bench that we coach it wUI be one I'll never forget."
onesituations, but Robert Eppes hit
ing the Ohio Spring Turkey Season weregoMa Uveordlewlth La Verne
Calling the first half "an absolute the back end of a two-shot foul with
do feel free to contact me.
The Daily Sentinel
Evans," Marshall coach Rick
nightmare," Arnold said his team 1: 06!eft.
Huckabay said. " He was here had to activate Its rally a little at a
Don Turney added a dunk with 20
(USPS 141-. . )
before I got here. He's gonna make
time. UT-C succeeded, but only to seconds left, butmlssedllfreethrow
A Dtv .. lon of Multimedia. Inc.
this program go. I believe in him and
fall after 10 extra minutes.
after he was fouled by C!lftord
Publls hed every afternoon, Monday
I went with him."
"The things that kept us In the . Morgan.
through Friday, 111 Coun Street, by the
Wolfe added 12 markers to the
Ohio Valley Publis hing Company · Mul ·
Eric Brown, who had not scored
Umedla, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio4M69, 992·
Rio Grande cause with Joe Verhott
and was one ot ftve tor three-point
2156. Second cla.Js pottage paid at Popopping in 10.
mffoy, Ohio.
Tom Greve and reserve John
Member: Th e Associated Press, In·
Modderman paced Cedarville with
LEGAL NOTICE
land Da ll y Press Assoclaton and the
14 points each while John Srnis
American Newspaper Publisher. At·
The Public Utilities Com·
socla tlon. National Advert lllng Repre·added 13 and Danube and T!m
sentat ive. Branham Newspaper Sa les,
mission of Ohio has set
Pryor 12 each.
733 Third Avenue. New York, New
for public hearing Case
York 10011 .
Moddennan pulled down 13
No. 83·31-EL·EFC (Sub·
rebounds to pace a 35-23 Yellow
POSTMASTER: Send address to Th('
llle A) , to review the fuel
DRESDEN - Meigs' dynamite
Dally Sl&gt;ntlnPI, 111 Court St., Pomeroy
Willford will attempt to become
Jacket advantage on the boards.
procurement practices
Ohio
45769.
'
145 pound senior wrestler Mike
the first Meigs wrestler to win a
Kirk Fairhurst also hauled down
and policies of The Ohio
Wlllford quallfted for the prestimatch in the state tournament .
SUBSCRIPTION RI\TES
eight.
Power Company, the
By Carrier or Motor Route
gious
Ohio class "AA" state
Gary Nakamoto was the last
Curry and Shaw each pulled
operation of its Electric
One Wef'k ................................. Sl .OO
Marauder to go to the state meet.
Onl' Month ............................... $4.40
down slx caroms and Paul Morri- wrestling tournament with a third
Fuel Component and
OnP Year ................................ 152.80
place in the regionals held here over
On WOlford's chances at St. John
related matters . This
son five.
SINGLE COP\'
the
weekend.
hearing
is
scheduled
to
Arena,
his
coach
Larry
Grimes
The Redmen shot 35 of 62 from
PRICES
Da ll y ............... .. ............... 20 C£'nt s
Needing a fourth or better to
begin 1:30 p.m. on
said, "If he doesn't become nervous
the floor for 56 percent to theYellow
March 7, 1984 at City
and not taken in by the atmosphere,
. jackets 34 of 71 showing for 48 qualify for the state tourney, senior
Subscribers not de! Iring to pay lh£'car·
heavyweight Danny Davis nearly
Council Chambers . 218
rler may remit In adva nce direct to
he's very capable of a top five
percent. Rio Grande was 30 of 41 at
Th(' Dally Senllnel on 3. 6 or 12 month
Cleveland Avenue . SW.
attained the trip to Columbus, also
finish." There will be 16 competithe line for 73 percent to Cedarbasis . Credit will be glv('n ca rrier each
Canton , Ohio 44 702 .
with a fifth place.. Davis will be
month .
tors in each weight class.
ville's 17 of 26 for 65 percent.
considered
an
alternate
and
If
any
All
interested
parties
will
Willford is one of only seven
Rio Grande committed 10 turnovNo subscriptions by ma ll per mitted In
be given an opportunity
wrestlers to qualify from this
towns where home carrier serv ice Ls
ers, seven fewer than the Yellow of the four wrestlers who finished
ava llabl£&gt; . ..
ahead of him can't participate,
to be heard . Further In·
district and the only one from
Jackets.
formation may be ob·
Meigs' sectional region. His 36 wins
The w!Mer of Monday night's Davis would take their pla~e.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTI ONS
tained by contacting the
Inside Ohio
Willford, the district champ and
in a season is a new Meigs High
games wUI battle on the court of the
13 Weeks ................................. $14.01
Commission
.
proud
owner
of
a
remarkable
36-1
record.
higher seeded team on Wednesday.
26 Weeks .... .. ........................... $27.30
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES •
record, will take on sophomore
52 Weeks . ............. . .................. $!11.18
Davis' quest for the Columbus
The Winner of that contest will
OuloldeOhlo
COMMISSION OF OHIO
journey was hampered by strained
represent the NAlA District 22 at Tony McCormick from Columbus
13 Weeks ................................. $15.21
By
:
Mary
Ann
O~lnski,
26 Weeks ........................ ........ $29.64
ligaments suffered In his fourth
the NAlA National Championships DeSales. McConnlck is 28-4 and
Secretary
~2 Weeks ....... ..._...................... $56.21
halls
from
a
powerhouse
wrestling
match,
a
narrow
7-51oss.
Davis
won
at Kemper Arena in Kansas City,
program In DeSales.
Mo., March 14-20.
his first match and wound up the
The state-bound Meigs grappler day with a 3-2 mark for theflneflfth
CI!DARVIU.E (&amp;I) - Modderman 6-2·14;
Smts 5-3-13; Greve 5-6-14; Ohllngor ~;
began the regionals with an umbplace finish.
Yeager ].].J; Danube f-4.12; Fatrlturst 4-1-9;
lemlshed 32-0 11nd promptly won his
Davis was pinned by the undePryor 5-2-12. -Sf
81..854 Second
first two matches by pins, one
446 9523
RIO GRANDE (Itt) - Mowery 10-8-28;
feated (27-Q) and eventual chamGallipolis,
OH. · '
Penrod Ma; eun,. 7-J-17; Fritz 0-3-3; Smllh
against Circleville's 25-2 Tim Chelipion Tim maxley of Barnesville in
3-2-8; Verholl 3-4-10; Shaw 2-4-8; Morrison
kowsky who participated in the
hls second match. (Maxley was
0.3-3; Wo~e M -12; Fumier 1·1-J. 31
11-41 ....
state tournament last year. It was
under the coaching of Meigs'
lblllbno ...,.. - Rlo Grande 52, Ced!vllle
only
Chellkowsky's second loss of
Grimes when they traveled to Iowa
34.
When you buy this
the year.
for the Junior Nationals.)
new Early American 2
1n this third match, Wlllford was
Davis' other win, coming in his
pc. living room suita.
USFL results
ahead 64 with less than a minute to
third match, was by a pin.
go, but had his opponent, West
Three other Marauders who had
I!'AimliN OONn!IIENCE
Holmes' Forrest Messner, tie it up
qualified In district competition for
W L T Pd. PF PA
and defeat the Marauder in
the regtonals but didn't place were
New Jeney
2
001.18)~32
overtime.
fl"eshman Butch Stein, junior
Phlladl&gt;lphla
2 00UD)3415
0 20.Im'll34
Pl"sburgh
Wlllford posted two more wins, a
James Snyder, and senior Craig
Washington
0 2 0 .0Xl20
decision over Fairfield's Rod NeSinclair.
'!)
well who sported a 24-3 slate and a
The state meet is slated to start
2 00UJX)f03f
TamPI Bay
decision in the consolation finals
Thursday at 4 p.m . at St. John
2 001.(0):1;}0
Orlollll 110..D)7932
Jllcloonvute
over Claymont's Bob Starkey.
Arena in Columbus.

row -

Marshall .captures NCAA tourney berth

r------------

Willford qualifies
for state tourney

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Calendar
MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern Star,
wUI meet In regular session
Monday evening at the Masonic
Temple, 7:30 p.m . Officers wUI
have practice for Initiation.
Officers are urged to attend.
RACINE - The Racine VUlage Council wUI meet at 77 p.m .
at the village hall.
LETART F ALI.S The
Letart Township Trustees wUI
meet at 7 p.m. at the Letart Falls
Community Bulldlng.

TIJESDAY
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Township Tnlstees meeting will
be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Syracuse Municipal Bulldlng.

To observe
Week of Prayer
Week of Prayer for Home
Missions will be observed a t the
First Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy March 4-11.
Theme for the observance Is
"New Vision, New Frontier. "
During the week the Annie
Armstrong Easter offering will be
taken with the local goal being $300.
Nationally, the goal for the South·
ern Baptist Convention is $39
million.
Following Sunday night's service, a klck-ot! to the Week of
Prayer for Home Missions was held
with a dessert fellowship.
The week wUI include use of the
prayer calendar and home mission
programs.

BOOKS DONATED - Marpret Follrod, left,
member of the Board of Tnl8lee8 of the Holzer
Hospital Foundadoo, looks at one of the children's
books In the Melp County Ubrary with Theodore T.
Reed Jr., member of the Ubrary Board and Vice

Chairman of the Board r1 Tnlltee8 of the Foundation,
and Mar1anDe B. CBII)pbeU, center, Executive Vice
Prellldeat of the Holzer Founclatlon for Tri-state
HeaMII Care u they villi Ubrary Board President
Patricia Holter and the Director of the Meigs CoUnty
Public Ubrary, Ruth Powers.

Personal factors contribute to cancer risks
Your risk of developing cancer .
increases with age, depends on
lifestyle and your personal a nd
family medical history. This short
test covers some Important aspects
of cancer risks or warnings and was
prepared by the American Cancer
Society. For now, answer Yes or
No, then look at the safeguards
below, according to S. Michael,
Public lnformatlon Chairman for
Meigs County.
1. Do you smoke cigarettes? 2. Do
you work wltn any of these
sub6tances - arsenic, vinyl chloride, asbestos, nickel, chromates,
uranium? 3. Do you have a light
complexion and spend much time
In the sun? 4. Haveanyof yourclose
relatives had colon or rectum
cancer?
These following questions are
just for women. 1. Have you noticed
vaginal bleeding after menopause?

2. Do you have vaginal bleeding
between menstrual periods? 3. Do
you take hormones for menopause
symptoms? 4. Have you or any of
your close relatives had breast
cancer? 5. Was your first child born
after you were 30 years old? Even If
you have answered no to all of these
questions, you should sun talk with
your physician about how often you
need cancer-related checkups, said
Michael.
Explanations a nd safeguards for
questions above are as follows : 1.
Smoking: Your risk of developing
lung cancer a nd other cancers,
heart disease a nd emphysema
increases, depending on how ma ny
cigarettes you smoke per day. If
you do smoke and stop smoking
now, your risk factors will decrease. Safeguard: Don't smoke. 2.
workplace hazards: Your risk of
developing certain cancers In·

this
week
Meigs senior activities for

POMEORY . Pomeroy .
Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, wUI met at 7:45 p.m .
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Ma·
sonic Temple. On Sunday at 2
p.m . there wUI be a practice tor
lnltlatlon.

ATHENS Southeastern
Ohio Regional Council on Alcoh·
olism, Board of Tnlstees will
meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at their
office on DairY Lane In Athens.
PubUc Is invited to attend.

lHURSDAY

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
County Humane Society wUI
meet 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
LaSalle Hotel.

POMEROY - Thl! Meigs County
sentor Citizens Center invites all
elderly to take part in scheduled
activities. The center Is kicated on
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, a nd
open Monday through Friday from
8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. Schedule for the
week of March 5 to 9 Is:
Tuesday - Ceramics, 10 a.m.-2
p.m.; Trip for members of Senior
Citizens Chorus, 11 a .m .; Nutrition
Education Bingo, 11: 15 a .m .: PhysIcal Fitness, 11; 45 a.m.
Wednesday - Social Security
Representative will be at the center
from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m .;
Nutrition Education Bingo, 11: 15
a.m.; Physical Fitness, 11: 45 a.m.;
Bingo, 1 p.m .; Bowllng, 1:30 p.m .
Thursday -Ceramics, 10 a.m .-2

Fund-raiser for Community
Big Brothers,
Builders
Sisters set
have party
Thousands of participants In
bowling centers across America
A surprise blrthay observance
will "Bowl for Kids' Sake" this honoring Mrs. Lyle Balderson
winter In support of their local Blg highlighted a d!Mer party held at
Brother and Blg Sisters Agency. It Sebastlans In Parkersburg recently
has been announced that the Meigs,
by the Reedsville Community
Ga Ula, J ac kson, Mason County Big Builders Club.
.
Two cakes were served to the
Brot hers and Blg Sisters will be
sponsoring a "Bowl for Kids' Sake" group who sang "Happy Birthday"
to Mrs Balde
at Skyline Lanes the week of March
·
rson. Attending were
10 to 17.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown, Mr.
Area club members, organiza- and Mrs · Donald Myers, Mr. !llld
tions, school organizations, church Mrs· Warren Pic kens, Mr · and Mrs.
ld Osbo
Mr d Mrs R
youth groups, scouts, as well as Rona
me,
.an
· oy
l~al employers, are encouraged to. Hannum,
Mr.
and Mrs. HarUss
Frank Mr andM Den
form a team, have family, and .
• ·
rs.
verWeber,
tWhltehea d and
friends sponsor you. "If your friend Mr· and Mr · E rnes
.
-pledges. five cents per pln and you Mr· and Mrs· Balde
·
rson.
bowl 100, they've made a $5 ·
contribution. Special rates will be ·
available for games at SfcYUne
Unes when bowlers have a pledge
sl\eet.
II doesn't matt~r If you are a pro,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dean Brannon
fresh oft the PGA tour, or a dUffer· of Tuppers Plains are announcing
with a 63 average, your support will the birth of a son, Bradley Dean,
help the agency find a Big Bf(&gt;ther Feb. 14.
·
or Blg Sister for the youl)giJters in
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
yOur tOWJI WhO need,one.-Cballenge_: .Loui.LLucas. oL Rlverheat!,.N .Y., .
another team·to aee who can raise Mrs. ·-Melanle, Adkins, Elberton,
tHe IIIO!!t
Ga., · arid ·, Jal'l\eS Brannon,
'Pied&amp;e ' lheeta are, available · at · ' ~. ·
.
The ButfUe' !II Gallipolis, thi! ·Pt.
.Great--p'liildpatents are Mr. and
Plealant ftellater' ~ Pt. Pleaia!lt . Mrs. Harold ~' Reedsville,
&amp;lid Fanners' Ba'nk f!1 fomerOY.
Mrs.' Mary Jamllon, Layman, and
· ·For 111Q1'1! lntonnJtlon, or pledp .Mrs. Cafhertne Shwonlk, Calverton, ·
sheets, . COII!acl Jim 1'4orrllon at N.Y.. Great-great-grandfather_ Is
or ~t cartet at ttie Bla Nobe!McGrep, VinCent.
Brothers and Big Slaterl Ofllee at
. Mr.andMrs.Branoonalsohavea·
446-ol'lO.
.
daughter, Jessica.
.

Brannon bt'rth

p.m. ; Nutrition Education Bingo,
11: 15 a.m.: Physical Fitness, 11;45
a. m .
Friday - Nutrition Education
Bingo, 11: 14 a.m.; Physical Fitness, 11:45 a.m.; Public Dinner,
serving from 4 to 6 p.m .; Square
Dance, 7 to 10 p.m .
The menu for the dinner which Is
open to the public Is chicken a nd
homemade noodles, salad, roll, and
choice of beverage at a cost of $2.
Desserts will be available at an
extra cllarge.
Following the diMer, the Stringdusters wlll be playing for round
and square dancing, admission for
the dance Is $1 for adults with
children under 12 free. The dinner Is
a money-making project to raise
local funds to continue the operation
of aU the senior citizen programs.
The following week activities will
include:
Wednesday, March 14 - Blood
Pressure Check, 9: 30 a. m. to noon.
Thursday, March 15- Program
on Nutrition presented by the
Consortium for Health Education In
Appalachian Ohio at 10; 30 a.m.
Friday, March 16- St. Patrick's
Day Party.

menstrual periods may be a sign of
cancer of the endometrium or
cervix. S2feguard: See your physician for a pelvic examination, Pap
test and other diagnostic tests as
needed. 1, 2, and 3. Endometrial
Cancer: Your risk increases after
age 50. Women taking hormones
after menopause have a higher risk
of developing endometrial cancer.
Safeguard: Report a bnormal vagi·
nal bleeding to your physician.
4, 5. Breast Cancer: Your risk
increases after age 50. A personal
01 family history of breast cancer
places you at increased risk of
developing breast cancer. Women
who have never had chlldren or had
their first child after age 30 are also
at higher risk. Safeguard: Ask your
physician how often you need a
physical examination of the breast
and mammography (x-ray exami·
nation) . Do breast self-examination
once a month.

creases with the number of years of
exposure to the substances listed,
but with uranium and asbestos, It
further Increases If you also smoke
cigarettes. Safeguard; wear protec·
tlve clothing a nd masks, and don't
smoke.
3. Skin Cancer: Avoid overexposure to sunlight but If you have a
light complexion you need extr~
protection. Safeguard: Ask your
pharmacist for a good sunscreen
cream or lotion. 4. Colon or Rectal
Cancers; Your ris k Increases if
polyps of the colon " run in the
family" or If close relatives have
had colorectal cancer. Blood in the
stool can be a sign of cancer.
Safeguard: See your physician
once a year after age 40. Find out
how often you need a rectal
examination, procto and test for
hidden blood in the stool.
Women Only - 1, 2, and 3.
Utertne Cancer; Bl~ between

'

POMEROY . - The Ladles
Auxlllary 2171 of the Fraternal
Order of the Eagles wll have a
meeting Tuedsay at 7 p.m .
There wlll be an auction.

'I

BARGAIN WATIIIEES S4T • SUN
.
ALl SEATS I Z.OO
ADirltSSKJN EVERY TUESDAY 12.00

LMARCH 2 tlvu 8J
FRIDAY thru THURSOAY:

H11h !k~

HoNw Student by lh)l
twlywood Hook..b y NithL

~GEL

.------_____J_ _ _ __

An Exercise Class for women
over 50 will begin the week of March
12 on Tuesday and Thursday
afternoons from 3: 15 to 3: 45 p.m.
This will be a six-week session and·
the class wUI be exercises to
Improve muscle tone, get more
flexibllity in joints, and Improve
breathing and circulation. there
will be a 50 cent fee for each session
you attend. For more information
on the class contact Noreen On·
drusko or Debbie Hauber, Health
Program Coordinators, at 992-2161.
The manu for the Senior Nutrition
Program served at noon Is:

Tuesday- Macaroni and cheese,
peas and carots, bran muffins.
pears, peanut butter cookie.
Wednesday- Roast beef, gravy,
mashed potatoes, slaw, brown
bread, banana cream pte in
graham cracker crust.
Thursday - Chicken and rice
casserole, green beans, pineapple
and cottage cheese, biscuit , apple
cobbler.
Friday - New England boiled
dinner, ha m, cabbage, carrots,
potatoes, biscuit, applesauce, jello
cake.

Women's Fellowship meeting
Talent night
the Women's
Cou
Meigs
nty
met at the

was observed when
Fellowship of the
Ch h 0 f Christ
urc es
Pomeroy Church

recently.
Vada Hazelton had a poem
entitled "Grandpa," Lucllle Jacobs
• J
read original poetry, Life s ourney"and"God'sLove;"Margorie
0u r Gift. to
Purtell gave "Talents,
the
God," and
re
. were skits by
Kathryn Jo}lllson and ·Mildred
Aleshire, "Are YoU Soil Soaping
God" and another by Mrs. Johnson
an(! AM Lambert.
Ida Murphy gave readings on
Abraham Lincoln and George
Washington, VIrginia Wyatt andd

Mrs. Purtel had a skit entitled " AU
About Uons," and Mrs. Lambert
and Mrs. Purtell sang "Somebody
Else Needs Him Too."
The meeting opened with prayer
by Mrs. Lambert and Mary Nelson
of the Dexter Church used Psalm 34
•or devotions. Eileen Bowers and
,,
EleanorHooverread1Cor.13using
as their topic, " Our God's Love."
There were sentence prayers by
•'-ose
attending.
u•
It was noted during the meeting
coriducted by Ida Murphy that two
clocks have been purchased for
camp. Officers' reports were given
and Nonna Russell read a letter
from Peggy Russell who works at
the Mexican Chlldren's Home .

r--------------------------l

'--'7733

at 'l'ln1'0 Boy

,

Monday, March 5, 1984

Page-S

Through a gift from the 'Holzer foundation said, "TohaveavaUable
Foundation for Tri-State Helllth in the library a collection of books
Care, the Meigs County Public on the subject of health, written
Ubrary in Pomeroy has Initiated · particularly for an devoted to
their selection Of children's books children, will benefit young patrons
on health to purchase and establish of the library as well as their
a collection to be used by the parents and teachers. Such a
child,ren of Meigs County and the collection will provide useful refersurrounding area.
ence material and Information to
During a recent visit to . the encourage an active interest in
library Foundation representa- health and fitness at an early age."
tlves, Patricia Holter, President of
Ms. Powers said the Meigs
the Meigs County Public Ubrary County Ubrary staff will actively
Board of Trustees and Ruth promote the collection when the
Powers, Ubrartan, indicated they purchase Is completed. She added,
had bfen reviewing lists and "We wUI notlty the schools of its
making selection of books for availability to motivate the contlnupurchase so that the collection ing education of young people in the
would soon be established tor the Meigs area In the field of health
use of children 111 both pre-school information and Instruction."
and school age, their teachers and
Similar gifts were presented to
parents.
libraries in Jackson County, Ohio
In commenting on the Founda· and Mason County, West VIrginia,
tion gift, MariaMe B. Campbell,
as well as Bossard Memorial
Library In Gallipolis, Ohio, accord·
Executive VIce President of the
ing to Mrs. Campbell.

money. ·• .

........
aoawo
-......,.:a. J - a
....,.._
Morn~&gt;~~~~ 2.1,

l'Nlallel]llllat7,

By The Bend

library recipient
of health books gift ·

Redmen advance
By SCOTI' D. MOlER
RIO GRANDE -Dan Curry and
Jerry Mowery, two juniors from
Circleville, combined for 28 points
in the first half here Saturday night
and paced the Rio Grande College
Redmen to an impressive 100-85
victory over Cedarville College in
the opening round of the NAlA
District 22 playoffs.
The Redmen, third-seeded in the
six-team tournament, wUI battle
second-seeded Defiance College at
Defiance tonight. Defiance and No.
1 seeded WalshCoUegeeachearned
first round byes based on their
regular-season records.
In the other first round game
Saturday night, No. 5 ranked
Findlay College upended fourth·
ranked Maione College 87-78. Find·
lay will battle Walsh in Canton
tonight.
Rio Grande Is now 28-7 on the
season, Cedarville 15-12.
" We came out with tremendous
intensity and good movement on
offense," said Rio Grande head
coach John Lawhorn. "The main
reason we lost to Cedarville up
there a couple weeks ago was our
inablllty to get the ball inside.
Tonight, we got the ball in to DaMy
(Curry) consistently and got some
good outside games from our
guards. We came ready to play and
r think our kids played their hearts
out."
Rio Grande burst into an early
114 lead on six points by Curry and
four by Mowery. The lead continued to grow as reserve guard
Kent Wolfe popped in three quick
baskets.
The Redmen built a big 52-34 lead
at t~ ~ Intermission behind 15 points
frc.. , urry and 13 from Mowery.
The Redmen shot a sizzling 60
percent from the field during the
opening stanza to ensure the lead.
Rio Grande continued to bolster a
big lead in the second half with the
Yellow Jackets never getting closer
than 12. A tenacious Rlo Grande
defense limited M!·District loiWaro
Tim Danube to just two markers in
the second half.
The Yellow Jackets were forced
to foul late In the game to make up·
the deficit, but the Redmen sank 20
of 30 free throws down the stretch to
ice the win.
Mowery and Curry, both named
first team AU-District earlier in the
week, paced the Redmen with"4ll
Points between them. Mowery
converted on 10 of 12 field goals and
eight of l)lne free throws for 28
points, while Curry was seven 1113
from the floor and three of three
from the UJie for 17 points.
Curry left the game midway
through the second halt with an
ankle injw-y. The inJW'Y Is not
expected to get serious.

The Daily Sentinel

.

COMING IN MARCH

Ponieroy· Lodge No. 164 will have '!LOIJd Shirt Night"
Wednesday, March 7.
·

You could be. Because your home
could be robbing you of valuable energy dollars every day - with energy
thieves such as inadequate insulation
in the attic and walls, bad caulking and
weatherstripping around doors and
windows, and cracks in the foundation .
These and many more energy thieves
all steal from your home's valuable en·
ergy supply.
_That's why Columbia Gas wants
you to have a copy of its new, revised
"Everyday Energy Saver's Guide."
It contains nearly 300 inexpensive
tips and ideas on how you can save
energy in every room of your home . It
even has savings tips for your auto.

RND OUT FOR FREE.
Pick up your free copy of " The
Everyday Energy Saver's Guide" at any
Columbia Gas office.
It'll help you catch the energy
thieves in your home.

Oyster Stew will be served at 6:30 P.M. - Meetin&amp; at 7;30 P.M.

March 31 -

An~ual

Inspection Dinner at 6:30
Meeting At 7:30

COWMBIAGAS

Ri&amp;lrt Wotshipful Brother Thomas W. KilT - inspectina officer.
All Master Masons lnviled
I

�Pt!ge--6-- The

Monday, March 5, 19.84

The Daily Sentinel

EPA rules delay clean-up at Athens
ATHENS. Ohio (AP) - The
suite's priority list for dealing with
twdc wastes apparently means It
stW wW be a while before an Athens
County landfW can be tested and
cleaned up, officials say.
More than 500 barrels of toxic
waste has been burled there since
1978. County officials want to cover
up the landfill now. but are afraid
that If they do, the Ohio Environ·
mental Protection Agency wW rule
lltter that the waste exceeds
standards and wW have to be
removed.
~PA officials say they have
wanted the landfill closed for a

couple of years. It is unlikely the
EPA wW be a ble to test the barrels'
contents soon because there are 71
sites In Ohio that contain toxic waste
materials and the Athens County
site Is a rela tively small one.
The landfill was approved for
dumping only solid wastes. James
Brouse, private operator of the
county-owned landfill, allowed llq·
uid and semisolld wastes to be
dumped there, said Steve Hamlln,
an EPA official from Logan.
"We have been trying to get them
(Athens County officials) to close
that site for two to three years,"

Area deaths
Pearl I. Hanis

George W. Owens

:Pearl I. Harris, 68. Mason. was
dead on arrival Sunday morning at
St. Macy'sHospltal, Huntington.
Born July 17, 1915, In Letart. she
was the daughter of the late OscarJ .
and ServWa M. Rickard Hart.
She was a member of the Clifton
Urilled Methodist Church.
Surviving are her husband. Wil·
l1ann R. Harris; several nieces and

George W. Owens, 74, Fort
Wayne, Ind., formerly of Pomeroy,
died Sunday at Fort Wayne.
He was a son of the late George
and Bertha Owens. He was a
veteran of World War ll having been
discharged from the armed forces
as a major.
Surviving are his wile, Eleanor
Starkey Owens; a daughter, Ka·
thryn Ann Hayes, Washington, Ind.;
a son, George Robert Owens,
lndlanapollc; two sisters, Bertha
Scott of Fort Meyers, F1a., and
Lucille HW, Jacksonville, Fla., and
two grandchildren.
Services wW be held Tuesday at
the McCombs Funeral Home In Fort
Wayne.

nephews.
Funeral services Will be at 1 p.m.
Thunday at Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, with the Rev.
Kelmeth Watkins, officiating. Bur·
1al wDl follow In Kirkland Memorlal
Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 p.m . and 7·9 p.m. at
the funeral home.

Elhlyn G. Meinhart

Charles H. lhle

Mrs. Ethlyn G. Melnhart,83,1.2621
Buckeye Drive, Chesterland, Ohio,
foimerly of Meigs County, died
Saturday at the home of a niece,
June Sherod, In Chesterland.
Mrs. Meinhart was botn April 1,
1900atMinersvllle, a daughter of the
late Capt. Harcy E. and Gertrude
Lovett Long. She spent most of her
llie In Huntington, W.Va.
Beskles her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband,
Walter; a sister, Edith Jenkins, a
nepheW, Robert Long Jenkins and
an aunt, Grace Jividen.
Surv!v!ng are her niece, Ms.
Sherod and several great nieces and

Charles H. Thle, 62, Racine, died
unexpectedly early Monday
morning.
Mr. Ihlewas dead upon arrival of
the Racine Emergency Squad at
about 3: l:lthismornlng He was born
Jan. 10. 1922, In Racine, a son of the
late Wlll1arn and Agnes Roush Thle.
He was a veteran of World War II
having served In the U. S. Marines.
He was a retired corrections officer
of the Federal Bureau of Prisons In
F1orlda and attended the Racine
Baptist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Gloria
Maybelle Petty Ihle; three brothers
and ststers·ln·law, Robert and
Helen Thle and Homer and Charlotte
Ihle. all of Kent; Edward and Doris
Illle. Racine; a sister. Ann May
Obltz, ·and a sister and brother-Inlaw, Lois and Henry Moore, all of
Racine. Several nieces and nephews
also survive.
. ServiceS wW be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the Hawllngs-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home with the Rev.
James Clark officiating. Burial will
be In the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

nephews.
Mrs. Meinhart was a member of
the Seventh Avenue Methodist
Church In Huntington where she
was a choir member for many
years. She was a member of the
Women's Auxlliacy of the Lions
Club and the Beverly HWs Women's
Club.
·craveslderites wW be heldatl: l:l
p.m. Tuesday at the Beech Grove
Cemetery In Pomeroy with the Rev.
SteveNelson.officiating. TheEwlhg
Funeral Home is In charge of
arrangements.

Emergency
runs listed
Eight calls were answered. by
local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Setvlces report.
.
On Monday, the Racine Unit
answered a call for Claar!lis Thle.
Fifth and Main Sts., Haclne, wo was
dead upon the unit's arrival.
Sunday calls Included Pomeroy at
12:43 p.m. to Route 143 for WWiam
Morris, no transportation requl·
rewd, and 2:27 ·p.m. Racine to
Sellers Ridge for Evelyn Pauley,
taken to Veterans Memorial.
Saturday calls Included 1: 41 p.m.,
Pomeroy to Weishtown HW for
Larry Cline, to Holzer Medical
Center; Middleport, 8:40 a.m. to
Bradbury. Oleva Cotterill to Veterans Memorlal; 6: 18 p.m., Middleport to Bailey Run lor Angela
VanCooney, to Veterans Memorlal;
7: 05 p.m., Middleport to Vine St.for
Ann Batley. to Holzer Medical
Center, and 7:48p.m. racine to Bald
Knob Road for Nora Martin, to
Veterans Memorlal.

Ohio Lotto winners
CLEVELAND (AP)- Six win·

ntni

tickets were sold correctly
naming all six numbers selected
Saturday night In the weekly "Ohio
Lotto" game. lottery off!dais say.
The six winners wW share a
jackpot of $1,665,492, with each
winner recelvlng$277,482.
Amounts won by those correctly
choosing four or tlve of the numbers
were not lmmedlately announced.
Sales for the latest game totaled
$3,945,709. Next week's jackpot wW
be at least $1 mlll1on.
The winning numbers were 9, 15,
23, 29, 37 and 40. .

Maniage licenses
Three marriage llcenses were
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court.
Issued llcenses were Charles T.
McVey, Jr. 23, Charleton and Linda
s Norris. 23, Charleston; Richard
MiChael Warnecke, 24, Pomeroy,
Donna June Robbins, 16.
Middleport; Gregory Alan Becker,
2'!;Middleport. and Tonia Kay Ash,
21, Syracuse.

and

BOOsters meet tonight
The Meigs Local Alhletlc Boos·
ters wW meet at 7: l:llhlsevenlngat
the high school.

ter R. Foutty, aftldavlt, Olive.
Leonard E. Dalley, Helen Dailey
to :chester R. Foutty. 1.52 acres,
Olive.
C' ! .. ·er R. Foutty to Leonard E .
Daljt , Helen Dailey, Parcels,
Olive.
Matthew W. Reeves, Bertha
Reeves, Granville Reeves, Allee
Mae Reeves. Allee Reeves to Harry
Reeves, Vesta K. Reeves, Parcels,
Scipio.
Marvin R. Stafford, .Wanda Staf·
fofll . to Herald 011 and Gas Co.,
Rtgilt of Way. Salisbury.
Della L. O'Brien to James R.
O'tlrlen, Lot '157, Letart.
Dennis I. Boothe, Irma J. Boothe
to Home National Bank, Tracts,
Su~n·Chester.
.
Gloria D. Grover to Douglas C.
Groves, 3 acres, Rutland.
. _ Rlchlird .1LR\KIQ!p~•.Phyllis M.
Rudolph, R,obert L. Rudolph,
Esther C. Rudolph to Kevin L.
Doughty; Teresa J . Doughty,
'J'rl¢ts, Scipio.
Electa Ann Souders, deceased,
Bernadlne Meier. Cert. of trans.. ·
Midillepor VIllage.
·
Carl W. M~. deceased, Lula
- Mae Me ~rt. Cert. of trans .•
Columbia

Mostly cloudy and somewhat
colder tonight with a chance of snow
Ourrtes. Low In the mid·:/Ds.
Northwesterey winds 10.15 mph.
Tuesday, partly cloudy and colder.
High around 32. Chanceofpreclplta·
lion 50 percent tonight and W
percent Tuesday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
W""'-'ay through Friday:
Fair Wednesday. Chance of soow
'lbUI'!Iday and lair again Friday.
lAws 10.11 weme.say and 'Jburs.
Veterans Memorial
day and 5-15 on Friday. IDglts In the
rnld-20s north to the mld-308 lOUth
Saturday Admtssions .. Rosalle
Jones, Racine; Doris Buchanan, · Wednesday and In the 20s throughoot the state Thursday and Friday.
Reedsville; Raymond Fischer,
Pomeroy; James Mourning,
Middleport.
Saturday Dtscharges .. carolyn
Chapman, Barbara Hendrix. Den·
nlsHart.
Tuesday meeting
Sunday Adrnlssions-.Oieve Cotte·
rill, Middleport; Fred Crow, Jr ..
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM.
Syracuse; VIrginia Duckworth,
wW
hold a regular meeting at 7: l:l
Middleport; Lydia Hysell, Pomep.m. Tuesday. The fellowcraft club
roy; Angela VanCooney, Pomeroy.
wW meet In the lounge room at 6:45
Sunday Dlschar~-Edwln Cop.m. Refreshments wW follow the
zart, Tommy Simmons, Eugene
lodge
meeting.
Underwood.

Ethel M. Euler to Orville Day
Romine. Evelyn Louise Romine, .13
acre. 13edford.
Trustees of United Brethren
. Church aka Success Grove Church,
Pleasant Grove Church, Church of
United Brethren In Christ to
Trustees of Olive Township, Meigs
County, Ohio, Lot, Olive.
John Harold Kauff, Shirley Kaulf
to Walter P . Wears, Nancy V.
Wears. Lot, Middleport, VIllage.

•

Carl Wayne Hensley to Thomas
A. Smith Sr .. Helen Sue Smith,
Tracts, Columbia. (
Charles P. Bailey, Doris M.
Bailey to Tuppers PlalnS·Chester
Water Dlst., Right of Way, Chester.
Wilma A. Mansfteld to Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water Dtst. , Right
of Way, Chester.
Llnnle Crary to Tuppers Plains·
Chester Water Dist., Right of Way,
Olive.
Grant E . Young, Deborah J.
Robert G. Pickett, Eloise Pickett
Young to Tuppel'S Plains Chester ."
to Tup!JE:rs Plalns:Chester Water
Water·Dlst., Right of Way, Olive.
Dlst., Right of Way, Bedford.
William W. Russell to Tuppers
Pla~ester Water Dlst., Right
Doyle Sargent, Nellle Sargent to
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
of Way, Chester.
Daniel 0 . Toban, Valerie A. W.
Dlst.. Right of Way, Bedford.
Larry E. Barton, Carolyn Barton Toban to Tuppers Plains-chester
to Tuppers Plains·Chester Water
Water Qlst., Right otWay, BedfQI'd.
Dtst., Right of Way, Ollve.
John D. Wolfe, Pamela C. Wolfe
Jay·Mar Coa.l Co. to Tuppers to · Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Plains-Chester Water Dlst., Rliht ... Dlst ... Riibt of Wl!)',_cbester, .:-....of Way, Letart.~.-~-~.
Anthony G. Bradford to .Tuppets
Harrison Smith, Ruth Naomi
Plalps-Chester Water Dlst.,. Right
, Smith to Tuppers , Plains-Chester · of Way, Lebanon.
,
Water Dist., Right of Way, Sutton.
Ka.-r Const. Co. to Tuppers
Roger L. Bissell, Mary Bissell to Plains-Chester Water Dlst., Right
Tuppers Pialns-Cheste~: Water .Of Way, Chester.
Dlst., Right of Way, Ollve.
Ronald B. HarriS,1 Brenda S.
Wesley M. Whitlatch, Deborah Harris to Tuppers Plalns.cbester
Ann Whitlatch to Michael R; Sayre, · Water . Dist., Right . Of Way,
Lot 13, Middleport.
Lebanon.

Pomen»y-Middleport, Ohio

'

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Public Notice

ADVERnSEMENT

Notice to Equl- Deolen:
In accordance w1th Sectton
30 7 B6 of lhe Oh•o ReviSed
Code. sea led btds Wi ll b8
rece•ved by the Board of Me•gs
County Comm•ss•oners. Court
House. Pome•oy. Oh•o 45769.
un! tl noon on March 20. 1984
The btds wt llthen be opened at
145 PM on March 20. 19B 4:
and read aloud for the pur·
chase of one ( 1J Boom Type
Bru sh Mower and one ( 1) S•de
Mounted Rotary Mower. to be
cons1dered as a one ( 1) btd un•t
B•d spectftca ttons may be
P•Cked up at the Me1gs County
Engmeer's Offt ce or the Me•gs
County Com mtss•oners Off1ce
The Metgs County Commts Stoners may accept the lowest
b1d. or select the best btd for the
•mended purpose. and reserve
the nght to accept or re1ect any
or .:]It btds and /or any part
thereof
Mary Hobstener.
Clerk
Board of
Metgs County
Comm1SStOners
131 5. 12. 2tc

Public Notice
ORDINANCE
NO. 1143·84
ANNUAL
APPROPRIAnON
ORDINANCE
(VILLAGE)
An ORDINANCE lo make
approprtattons for Curren t Ex·
penses and other Exoend1tures
of the Vtltage of Mtddleport.
State of Ohto. dunng the ft scat
year end1ng December 3 1.
19B4
SEC TION I BE IT RESOLVED
by the Council of rhe Vtllage of
M1ddlepon. State ol Oh1o. that.
to prov•de f01 the cu rrent
exoenses and oth er e•pendl ·
lures of the sa1d Vtllage of
Mtddleport duflng the f1scal
year endtng December 31.
19B4. the followng sums be
and they are hereby set as1de
and appropflated as follows
voz
Sect1on 2 That there be
appr opnated from the GENERAL FUNn

E. fMI,n...llll
POMEROY,O.

992-2259
NEW liSTING - Rutland
- A 14x70 mobile home
with equipped kitchen. 3
bedrooms. laundry room.
front porch and underpin·
ning. $7.250.00.
NEW liSTING - Miners·
ville- Mini Farm. Approx. 9
acres with a 2 bedroom ni·
cely remodeled home with
lots of cabinet space. barn,
milkhouse. fruit trees. fenc·
ing, and a good garden area.
$22.500.00.
NEW liSTING - Near Port·
land - Approximately 221;
acres efland with a 14x 70, 2
bedroom mobile home. all
electric. A new barn. root
cellar. Some fencing for pas·
ture and tillable acreage.
$24,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 5 Room
ranch with 3 bedrooms.
equipped kitchen. pajio,
storage building, barbeque
pit. fenced yard and nice
shrubbery. Good location.
Just $31,900.00.
HARRISONVILLE -Approx.
100x200 lot with water tap,
electric. and is all cleared.
No septic. $3.500.00.
NEAR POMEROY - I'A
acres of level ground for a
big garden and yard. Plus a
nice 3 bedroom ranch with
new carpet, equipped
kitchen. woodburner. stor·
age building," and . a patio.
$36.9.00.00 . . .
R[ALlORS
.
Henry Cleltnd. Jr.

Tn~a.c;. •.Lf_Pf

Salar~e s/

Wages
7.400 00
Employees
Bene ftts
100 00
Trave r
Tran spo rt at•on
200 00
Co ntract ural
'Servt ces ~ · 1.400 00
Ot her Operalton and
Ma•n tenance
1.400 00
l'Ofat Clerk.
Treasurer
10.500 00
County Aud• tar·s
and Treasurer's
Fees
10.00000
Other
93.60000
Grand Total ~
General Fund
Appropna t•ons
27B.70000
SEC TI ON 4 That !here be
appropnated from the folloW'ng SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS
Street Constructton. Matntenance . an d Repatr Fund
PROGRAM \'ITRANSPORTAnON
Str eet Mamtenance Fund
Salanes/
Wages .
25.000 00
Employee
BenefttS
4.300 00
Contractual
Serv•ces
Other Operahon
and Matnte·
nance
53.000.00
Ca pttal Outl ay
2.500.00
Total Street
Mamtenance and
Repa"
91.100.00
Program VITra nsporta·
uon
91.10000
Fedorot Gront
HUD
Sa tartes /
Wages
- 1+.00000
Empleyee
Benef•ts
4.000 00
Contractual
Serv•ces
100.000 00
Other Operatton
and Ma1n le·
nance
. B.OOO.OO
Cap• tal Ou1l ay 1.177.000.00
Total Federal
.
Gran!
1.300. 000.00
Total for Federal
Grant Program
HUD
1.300.000.00
FedoroiR_,..
Shoring
Other Operatton
and M a•ntenance
11.300.00
Total Federal Revenue·
Shanno .
.. 11 .300.00

54

·ON SPRING
FERTILIZER

AND

992·6191

SPRI~GFIELD

SEED
B.ALER TWINE

..... _.. o...•u, .. ,,_,. '"-""" ..... _

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

u' " ''*•• ... ...,_

Total For ·Federal
Reve nue Shanng
Fund
11 .300 00
Slrlet~Fund

Contractual
Serv•ces
20.000 00
T01a1Other
20.000 00
Grand Total Spectal
Revenue Funds Appropnauon .
1.56B.5 75 00
SINIII..ovyFund
Contractual
Serv•ces
600.00
CaP•tal Outlay
15.000 00
TranSfers
10.00000
Tolal Street Levy
Fund
25.600 00

Are Eqoit n•ot
Fund
Personal Serv1ces
Satanes/
Wales
2.200 00
Empteyee
Beneltts
10000
Travel
Tr ansoortatton
BOO 00
Contractual
Serv.ces
9.000 00
Other Oper and
Ma•nt
2.000 od
Capual Outlay .. 5.600 00
T•ansfe"
1.400 00
Total Ftre EQutpment
Fund
2 1.1 00 00
Fino Trude Fund
Contractual
Servoces
30000
Interest
6.30000
Total F.re Truck
Fund
6.600 00
Bond Altii•sll8nt
Fund
Contractual
20000
Servoces
Ret1rement ol
Debt
20.00000
675 00
lnte•est
Total Bond Rellre·
men t Fund
20.B75 00

8onitlry a-..

bcrow Fund

Contractual
Servoces
15.000 00
Cap•IaI Oui:Jy
15.000 00
Tmat SaMary Sewer
Escoow Fund
30.000 00

FiriHOUM
I~F..,d

Contractual
Serv•ces
Rettrement of
Deb!
Interest
Total F1re House
Improveme nt
Fund

.

6.500 00
20.00000
6.500 00
33.00000

Eooi=••
Oewlapn'llnt

-j

1100
1•00

9.00000
9.000 00

SECTION 6 That the•e be
apprOpnated tram the tol low•ng CAP IT AL PROJE CTS
FUNDS.
W_T. . Fund
Cap•tat Oullav
50.000 00
Total for Water
Tank Fu nd
50.00000
Grand Total
Capttal Protects
Fund Appropnat• on .
50.000 00
SECTION 7. Thai !here be
appropr•ated from .the follow'ng ENTERPRISE FUNDS
W-Fund
Salanes/
Wa ges
51 .000 00
Empleyee
Benef1ts
16.500 00
Contractual
• Secv•ces
20.500 00
Other Operat1ons
and Matnte·
nance ..
26.000 O&lt;i
Capual Oullay
5.BOO 00
Debt Serv•ce
lB. 500 00
Transfers
7.000 00
145.300.00
Tolal Off•ce
PROORAMVBASICunUTY
SERVICES
~en~trts-r

Fund

Per sonal Servtce's
Salanes
Wages
40.00000
Employee
Benef•IS .
11 .000 00
Board and Comm1s·
s•on Compensat•on ..
400 .00
Contractual
Serv1ces
10.000.00
Other OperatiOn
arfd ¥a•nte·
nance ..
B.OOO.OO
Capual Ou!lay ... . .. 21.000 00
Debl Serv.ce
... 1S.2 70.00
Transfers ............ 2.600 00
Tolal Offoce ....... 111 .2 70.00

PROGRAM VILEISURE liME

ACTIVmES

• .'J

Personal Serv1ces
Sa lanes /
12.00000
Wages
Employee
4.000.00
Benefu s
Contractua l
40000
Serv•ces
Other Operatton
and Matnte·
I 60000
nance
1.000 00
Ca pttal Outlay
Total Cemetef'(
19.00000
Fund
Grand Total
Enterpnse Fund
Appropna·
29557000
I tOO

PH. (614) 985--m2
We Use Von Schrtder
Equipment Recommended
by Leadin1 Ctrpet Mtnu·
facturers.

'FREE ESTIMATES"
2·2J. I mo.

ELLIS WELDING
&amp; SATELLITE
SERVICE
PH. 742-2534

M-.Dtpoolt
Fund
Refunds
4.200 00
Grand Total Trust
and Agencv Funds
Approor •atton
4.?00 00
Total All Appropna·
toons
2.197.045 00
SECTION II And lhe V•llage
Clerk •s hereby au thomed to
draw warrants On the V11tage
Treasurer for payments from
any of the foregotng ~ p pro pr t a ·
!tons upon rece1111 ng proper
cert•f•cates and vouchers there·
lor. approved by th9"board or
ofl •cers authonzed by law to
approve the same. or an
ordmance or resolutton of
cou'nctl to make the expendi tures. provtded that no warrants
shall be drawn or pa1d for
salartes or wages except to
persons employed by authonry
of and 1n accordance w1 th law
or ordt nance Prov•ded furt her
that the appropn attons 10 1
contmgenc•es can only bt~
expended upon appeal of
two-thtrds vote of Counct l for
tlems of expense co nsttluttng a
legal obl1gatton aga,nst the
v•llage. and for purposes other
than those covered by other
spectftc appropnat •ons herem
made
SECTION I 2 Th " resoluuon
shall take effect at the earltest
pertod allowed by taw

Antennas Start At
11.395.00

"Full Factory
Warranties
"Free Delivery
"Site Checks
·complete Systems
&amp; Instillation

•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
AND OTHER IIAJOR BRANDS
Wt Have A Full Time
Shop Tochnlcion
on Duty

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER--985-3307

WRITESEL
Gutters
Down1pouta
Gutters Cleaned ·
&amp; Painted.
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

949-2263

57

Pine St.

(31

e.

He

tJ'fO

~

200.00
2.60000
2.000.00'
2.500.00
200.00
16.000.00 '

"Police? I want lo report
theft or a welcome mat! ··

lhe

. I. L"ltd" lllciHEE
Brollr·AtiCIIOIIerwicl

Clllryl Llllllr~
ltlp Co•ntJ AaiOCilt~

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

DICK
ROBERTS
1614 I 446-7612

Sius Start From 12'116'

Gollipolio. OH.

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes

BACKHOE
WORK

CARPORT SALE:Interoec·
tlon of 143 end 7 . Little of
everything, gorden plow' 8o
lmplomento. Silo. Weda.
Thura. • Fri. Call992· 7463.

742-2328
We Have the
Lowest Rates

PH . 94~1-3CI46

·a.noons "Decals

G&amp;W PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLY

\

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

a.

No Down Ptyment
Lower Monthly Payment

61~111

Roofin1 Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sldinp

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box .. 326

16 Yeera Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683

Pomeroy, OH . 45769
For filler Service

or 992-2282
ll+tfc

Call 614-992-6737

MEIGS INN

KELLER'S

36 CLEAN. SAFE. MOOERII
ROOMS. CABLE TV. STEAM

CUSTOM

HEAT. AIR COND. Rates
!own:
110 A Nicht or
140 Wteltly

Ph. 985-3813

1££1\NG 10015 flU 10
RON rROFIT ORGANI!'AIIONS
It Acco•ooodole up to 2~ pooplo

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns
Only

CALL 992-3629

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

For all your wirinc
nHds; furnaces repair
service and instillation.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

KEN'S
985-3561

All Makes

Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 9!12-5875

•Walher~

•Diahwaahera
•A•ngaa
•Refrigerator•
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS end SERVICE

4·5·tfc

Roger Hysell

a. Aluminum ·
SIDING .

GARAGE
Rt. 124.Pomtroy Ohio

BISSELL

SIDING CO.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

"Beautiful, Cuatom
Built Ger-.•"

Call for free sidil!&amp; es949-2801 or
949-28o0

Also Transmission

timates~

as

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

992-5682
or 992-7121

PH.

No Sunday Cella
3-1 1-tfc

3·24·tfC

fOf 111rtles and dMc:ts.

"Cultom Exhausts"

For Rensrv1tions

OWNERS:
Rodney &amp;

MEIGS INN
POIIEROY. OHIO

YOUNG'S

RADIATOR
SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

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

- Addont end remoct•inv
- Roofing end gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing ond oloctrical
w.,k
!Free EatimatHI

REDUCED WINTER RATES

PAT HILL FORD

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-2191

992-6215.,992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

1·13·tfC

FOR 10% OFF
ANY SERVICE
Expires Mafch 17

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

Parts

2-6·1 mo.

3

RELEASED

4-46·2 6

&amp;

Service
J.J.tfc

PUBLIC SALE

Hoppy Birthday Bill Grey.
From Topper.
V1cancy: Julia's Peraon1l
C1re Home. Formerly
Mercer Conv1lescence
Home. 18 ye1rs experience.
Clifton . W.V. 304· 773·
6873.
.. Racine Gun Club hal dis·
continued Gun shoots until
September.

4

Limited Supply - No Dealers Please

6

Lost and Found

LOST or Strayed 1inco 2-2284. Gray 8o block German
Shepherd malo dog. Col\
446·9780.

SORRY, NO TRADE-INS OR LAYAWAYS

BRING :THIS AD

Found: Shetlond Sheepcfo8.
in vicinity of Rolling Acrealo
Sondhltt Rd. In Pi. Plea11nt.
Hoo block collor. no tega.
Celt 314·676·15!1.
·lcLolt, white. ahort haired cot,
pink collor, loot in Rockap·
ringa oroo. 992·2791 .

Date: Tuesday, March 6th
(1 DAY ONLY)

Place: Holiday·lnn ·- Room A

Loot on Horner Hilt in Scipio
Twp .. brown. block 8o white
dog.

· State Rt. 7, Gallipolis, OH,

Time:

i l:oo AM. To 6-:00 P.M.
LOST
Shop

SALE SPONSORED BY

ana-. to

·Necchi. Education Depa.rtment

304-11711·4180.

· Logan, Ohio ·
I

.,

.

-

.

Wanted To Buy

We pey caah for late model
clean uaed cars; .
Jim Mink Chev.·Oida Inc.
Bill Gone Johnson
4411·31172

Wonted to buy ulld cool 8o
wood heatera. Swain Furniture, 446· 31 59, 3rd. 8o
Olivo St .. Gollipolla. Oh .
W1nted to buy squire dlncing clothet. Size 1 0 . any
. type. Coli 4411·4537.

Uaod Mobile Homoa 8o
C1mpers. Trevel Trailen.
1114·446·0175.
W1nt to leaN Hunting rights
on 1pprox. 600 acrea in
M11on or Jackson Co .•
WVo . J .H. Stolfi 8o Allo·
ciotu . Roald . 304· 675·
3313. Bua. 614· 446·9340.

Buying daily gold, silver
coins, ring a, jewelry. sterling
ware, old coina. large currency. Top prices. Ed. Burken Iorber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Middleport. Oh. 614·992·
3476.
Cash paid for fenc:y iron or
heovy iron beda. I 1 60 ond
up for certain Meigs Co.
atane j1r1. Old time cupboard . cell 1 · 304· 882 ·
2711

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bodo. iron.
wood, cupboards. chairs;,
chests , baskets , dishes ,
atone j1ra, entiques, gold
and silver. Write·M . D .
Miller, Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 or cell 614·992·
7760.

FOUND fomalo , puppy.
tirown, brown no•. green
eyN. Main ~mtt 304~875·
3797 or 675· 1786.

.

I

78 's. 33's. 45 's 8o buying
collections. Coli Stove. 992·
7160.
Wanted old pianos. Paying
120. ond 140. each. Firat
floor only. Write giving
directions. Witten Pianos,
Box 188, Sordis Oh 43946.
Colt 614·483·1606.

Ernploymenl
Serv1ces

Giveaway

FREE I Bundle of love other·
wise known as puppiea.
Make your child happy 1t no
COlt. Coll446· 7136.
.
·ItTo Give1way. wire hair
terrier. male, small, approx.
1 yr. old. Would like to give
to a good home in country.
992· 6349.

NOW ONLY $198.00

..

9

.. $$ C11h paid for records;

NECCHI Edu~tion Department placed orders anticipating
school orders. Due to budget cuts, these orders were not
sold. Necchi has released for sale to the public a limited
number of t~ese HEAVY. DUTY ALL METAL SPECIAL SEWING
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 Suggested Price $599.95

······-

Announcements

SWEEPER end sowing mo·
chine repoirl porta. end
auppliea.
..,ick up and
delivery, Davis V1cuum
Clean•r. one h1lf mile up
Georgea Creek Rd.
Colt
61 4·446·0294.

FOR

Mt. Alto Auction. reopen
Morch 3, 6pm. Conllign·
ments eccepted every S1t .•
One till 1111 time. Firat Sot.
each month. all new merchondise. Emma S.llauctlo·
noer, 4288177 . Licenae
429·84.

Wonted to buy. N -. used 8o
1ntiqua furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete houae·
hotds. Alao complete Aucti oneering service. Call
Rodney Howery 61 4·698·
7231 .

Farm Equipment

PH. 992-2725

BACKROOM Sole, Tuttldoy
8o Wedneldoy, 9:30. Wold·
nig rollidence. Rt. 1 24.
across from Planing Mill.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John DHre.
New HoHand. Bush Ho&amp;
Farm Equipment
Dealer

169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.

Auction every Fri . night at
the H1rtford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandiae every w.ek .
Contigmenta of new 1nd
uaed merch1ndiae 1lw1y1
welcome. Richerd Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304·275·
3069 .

Wonted to Buy: 1 Hotdog 8o
1 880 Rotiult'ie. Calf 61 4·
446· 2192.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

11

Daily Sentinel

Port dme take Inventory In
Glllipolia ltorH. Doytime
houn. Car neceaaery. Write
phone number. experience
to: 'ICC 4011, Box 527.
Poromua, NJ 0711112.

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES Below mortcet ratoa .
Fixed conventlonol FHII- '
VA . Leader Mortg•g•. ·
Athena. collect 814-692·
3051 ..

Bobyalner needed In our
homo·TuH. end Thura .. 2·6.
Co11448·7405.

23

nee••·

31

E s l ~le

Homea for Sale

Mob..e home. 21arge bdrm ..
furnished, carpet, nice flit
2.66 acres land. Gerage.
patio, cellar . 2 miles from
Rt . 7 , Grover Rd. Cheahire.
Cell 61 4·367· 7870.

For Sole: New 3 BR house.
1332 oq . ft . with 3 foil. 400
ft . rood frontage by 1 20 ft.
deep. fontoltic buy •&amp;2.000
for all or will aetl any part.
Coli 614·446· 1769.
Home Murt Still Outlllnd· _
ing Buy! Dealt Dealt Deal!

Middleport . Coli 614 · 992·
6941 .
2 Story frame houae in
Cheshire. e4000 . Mull be
moved . Call 614 · 367 7302 .
- - - - - - - ·IC- ·
For sale. Houae. country
living, close to town. three
bedrooms. carpeting, alumi·
num siding, storm windows.
wortcahop. e19.900 . 614·
742·2464.
- - - - - - - ·lcFive be~oom . 2 'h botha,
one acre, pool. children•
playground equipment.
large living room , garage,
stove , refrigerator . die· ..
hw11her. woaher 8o dryer. g11 h81t. Mull sell, job
move. 992· 3543.

Situations
Wanted

Will core for the llderly in my
home. Lots of references.
Men or woman . C1ll 8146117· 3402 .
Mercer'• Riverview Peraonll C1re Home haa Ylcanciea for elderly peraona.
Betty Mercer owner. 304·
773· 5882 .
Interior and exterior paint·
ing, sandblasting, water ·
bleating. poper honging ond
drywoll finilhing . Free olti·
mates, fully inaured. Call
61 4· 949-211S6.

For ule. HouM in Minersville on Wolahtown hill. Coli
614-985·4301 .
-------·ItFour bedroom all electric
brick home. for Hie or trade.
2 b1th1. large living room
with fireplace. dining room,
2 car garage, on 1 acre. 1
mile North of Cheater Rt. 7'.
Twenty minutea from Bel·
pro. e66.000. coll304· 773·
6319 or304· 773-6421 .

Vaconcy for elderly peraon.
Room, board, ond core. Coli
614·992·6022 ...
- - - - - - - ·ItIf interested. please write
Tho Friendlhip Club, P.O. Bx
262. Tuppera Ploina. Oh.
45783.
Horper'a Adult Core Home
has 1 vacancy for another
ruident, elderly person. C1ll
304·676· 1 293.

7 rooma and bath by owner
in Weat Columbia, W .Va.
Having work in other ttate
will sale at reaaonable price.
Will be in on weekends or
can be contacted at 412·
462 · 4468 . Owner John
At bright .

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER tn·
aur1nce Co. h11 offered
services for fire inaurance Newly remodeled house.
in Galtia County five rooms end both. 2502
for almoat 1 century. F1rm, lincoln Avenue . Priced to
home 1nd person1l property sell. S22,000.00. 304·676·
coveregea are 1vailable to 2866 .
meet individual needs. Con·
toct Eugene Holley. ogont . Twin single. Apt . Bldg.
Phone 61 4·388, 8690.
304·676·7541 ovoninga.

cov.r...

15

Four room house on corner
lot at 2330 lincoln Avenue .
Phone 304·676· 3435.

Schools
Instruction

·lcSiinderelle Diet Cl1sses.
Mond1y Morning. 5-Points,
Mond1y night, Meson; lues·
day night, 5-Points; JoAnne
Newaome. 992· 3382 .

18

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Holley Pork 1973. 14x60. 2
bdr .• skirting &amp; storagt
building, excellent condf·
tion . French City Brokerage
Servicea. Call 446·9340.

Wanted to Do

1982 Clayton. tike new.
1 4x70. 2 bdr., fireplace,
central air, diahwasher.
French City Brokerage Ser:viceo. Call 446·9340.

Will do babysitting in my
home. Coli 446·0028.

Will bobyalt t36 per wool&lt; .
Mother of one. full time.
Ages 2 end up. Meola end
anocks. Coll446· 2616 .

4 bedrooms 1 4x65 plua
12x20 room. fireplace, Clh· .
tral air, storage bldg ., porch
&amp; awning, excellent condition. French City Brokeroge ·
Services. Cell 446·9340.

Wedding 1nd ell occasaions
cakes. 1ny size. very good
references. Delivery service.
Loll 614·388·8482 tit
8 :00PM.

14x70 now dioploy model
·mull aell' 3 bdr .. 2 bethl',
cathedral ceiling 'unbelieva·
ble price' . French City Brokerage Services. Call 44&amp; .. : ~
9340.

Gener1l H1uling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable
and dopendoblo. Call 446·
3169 between 9 and 6 .

80 Footer. new 1 4xll0
Schult -Must see. French
City Brokerage Services.
Call 446·9340 .

W11hing1 Ill lronings done.
Call 992·6822.

F1nanc1.11

-::-:---::--:----21
Business
11

Real

Full or pert time for Point
Ple..ent and surrounding
area. Exc. earnings. For
intorrnetion cell 304·676·
2618 .

13

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING Lower
priced regular tuning• ·
discounts to Senior Citlzena;
Churchoalo Schoolo. Word' I
Keyboard , 304·675· 3824.

Trainee for 1m1ll buliness
leading to man1ger position.
Cont1ct Job Service m
peraon. 225 6th Stroot.
Point PIN ..nt.

12

Page 7 -

22 Money to loan

Help Wanted

LadiH n o - for good
poying temporary office \Ike
wortc, no experience
oory. A lao need lodiH with
e~~r for light delivery work.
goo ollowonce. Apply In
8
Public Sale
peraon only (abaolutely no
It Auction
phone callal to Mrs. Certer.
Room 105. Meigs Inn, Tues.
Morch 11. from 9 to 9:30
Auction avery Tuesdey a.m .
night. Pt. Plooo11nt. WYo.
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth Phayicol Theropilt 5 doyo
Center Bldg .. Camden St .
per - · Port time. Good
814· 387·7101 .
hourly wega. Contect Pomeroy He1tth Care Center.
Alck Pa1raon Auctioneer 111 4·992·6606 .
Service. Eatote. Form, An·
tlque 8o llquidodon 11111. Fuller representative•
Uconsed 8o bonded in Ohio 8o needed for Melga 8o our·
WVo . 304 · 773· 6786 or rounding countiea . Call814·
304·773· 9185 .
742·2126 .

BOGGS

Bring This Coupon In

Announcem en ts

NOnCE TO
BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
TWO SCHOOL BUSES
FOR MEIGS COUNTY
BOARD OF MENTAL
RETARDAnON
Sealed proposals wtll be
rece•ved by the Clerk of the
Board of County CommtSSton ers. at the Metgs Coun ty Court
House. Pomer oy. Oh+o. u ntil
noon on Tuesday. Match /0.
t9B4. aQd at 2 PM opened by
the Clerk ol the Board tabulated .:tnd a reoo(t thereof
made to sa+d Board at tiS next
sc heduled meet•ng as prov1ded
by law tor two 121 school buses.
accordtnQ to spectkauons of
,,
sa1d boarc1
Sepat ate and Independent
btds will be recetved w1 th
respect to the chass+s a,11d body
type and will state that the bus
when assem bled and prtor to
dehverv comply wtt h all school
d1S!rtCI spectftCBi tOnS. all sa fety
regulattons and cur rent Oh+o
M;n,mum Standards for School
Bu s ConstruCtiOn of the Depart ·
ment of Educatton pursuant to
Sec, on 45 1 17 6 of lhe Ohoo
Rev• sed C'ode and all other
pert 1nen1 provtstons of law
Spec•l•cm•ons and 1nslruc·
hans t&lt;:l btdders may be
obtat n!d at the Me•gs County
Board of Mental Actardat•on:
PO: Box 37. Syracuse: Oh •o
45779 (6 14) 992·66B3
A ce rttf ted check paya bl e to
the Board of Me•gs County
Commtss toners or a sat1 sfac·
tory btd bond execu ted by the
b•dder and the suret.y company.
1n an amoun t equal to fJVe
percenll5%1 of th.e b•d shall be
su bm•Ued wtth· ea(fh b1d.
.
· Sa•d Board of County Com·
. the nghtto

I'

New Homes-Extensive .
Remodelin1
lnsurtnct Work
CultQm Pole B!d11.

EVERY

Res. Ph. 985-3837
long Bottom, Oh.

Vinyl

••Y

Ba•han Building

Public Notice

.,

irom 6'x6' Up

GUN SHOOT

~a• It Water Pipe
Regulatora
Fitting a
Volume Drips
Sewage Pipe
G11 Appliencea

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

We'd like to Introduce you to
En111e·A·C.r. the modorn
to ·drive lht vehicle of your
choice.

Rtcine. Oh.
Ph. 614·143·5191
10·6·tfC

""Hard Hat" Decals
"Bumper Stickln

Bus.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

'By· Mery Hobstelle(.'
--·
'
Clerf
131 5. 12. 21C·

'·

. .

&amp; Vicinity

AL TROMM

to 24'x36'
Insulated Doc Houses

"Pens
"Wooden NicUis
"lilltl:hes ·a.u Caps
"Pencils "Scrltch Pads

GALUPOUS ELECTRIC
SERVICE, INC.
AUTOIOIM BICTIICAI. 11£1'AIR
AlltflfiAIOIIS. SIUIUS &amp; IIIIIIIG
EUCIRfC II010R &amp; PU. IIIPAIR
EUCIRIC II010R SAifS
V.JEtlt tiMIIIGS. FUSES

re1ect any ~ nd all or paqs · any .
( '
.
and all bids. ·
No b•ds ~ar be wilhdro!¥1 for
at least lhtrty (·~PI days ofter the
scheduled · closing time lor
recli•Pt of bujs.
Board·of CQunty
,'·
' .
• Comm•sstoners
· , Meigs County: Oh•o

:.

DOZER
AND

Ph. 985-4269
If No Answtr. C.ll 915·4312
D-ayne Wlllloma
8o Scottie Smith
All MtkH end Models
Antennt lnslallttion
House 'Cells end Shop
Service Avoiltble
ti'3tmopd

~n10n

ROOFING CO.

County. ..
I. Jon Buck. Clerk ol the

V1llage of Mtddteport 1n satd
County. and •n whose custody
the Ftles. Journals and Records.
are reqUtred by the Laws of the
Slate of Oh•o to be kept do
hereby cen1fy that the foregomg Annual Appropnat1ons Or dinance •s taken and cop1ed
from the origmat Ord tnance
now on file With satd V•llage.
that the forego•ne Ordmance
has been compared by me w.th
the satd ongtnal and that the
same •s a true and correct Copv
thereof
Wttness my s•gnature. th1 s
291h day of February 19B4
Jon Buck
Clerk of !he
V•llage of M•ddleport
Metgs County. Ohto

~

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEAOQUARTERS FOR

NEW-REPAIR

An est·
Jon Buck
Clerk of Counc•l
CERnFICATE
Secuon 5 705 39. A C - "No
appropna!lon measure shall
become effedtve unt tl the
county audttor hies w•th the
appropna!lng authonry
a
ce rttf1cate that the total appropnatlons from each fund. taken
together wtth all other out·
standtng appropnat1ons. do not
exceed such off•ctal esttmate or
amended ofl tctal es t1mate
When the appropnat•on does
not exceed such off•ci al est• ·
mate. the county auditor shall
gtve such certtf1cate forthw•th
upon recet111ng from the appropnattng. authonty a centfted
copy of the appropnatton
measure
The 8l8tl of Ohio, Meito

__ ..

Phone 742·3171

35185 Otk Hill Road
lone Bottom. OH. 45743

c.._., Fund

Rul Eatete General
·;,

•

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

Total Conces·
4.00000
StOnS .
Swtmmtng Pool
Fund Approprtal!on
Program 111 Letsure T1me
AciMMS
20.000 00

~. 500.00

4.000.00

614-662-5311

Yard Sale

Middleport

Public Notice

Connc-lkla..,•••

Oiher Operauon
and Maintenance

Ohio

noo

Passed February 13. I 9S 4

Fund

l oans
Total Economc
Development
Fund

Sw•mri1ing Pool
Personal Services
Salalles/
Wages
Empleyee
Benef1ts
Contractual
Serv1ces
Olher Operatoon
and Ma1nte·
nance
1
· Cap11a1 Outlay
Transfers
'Tolal Swimming
Pool

Mlac. Merchandlae

ORDER AND TAKE
DELIVERY

Dottie .turner 992-5692
J11n Trussell 949-2660
Jo Hill 915-4466

111 - ....w~

Public Notice

PROGRAM 1 SECURnvOF
PERSONS AND
PROPERTY
Pohce Law Enforcement
Personal Serv• ces
Sa lanes /
Wages
SB5.000 00
EmplOyee
Beneltts
22.000.00
Untform &amp;
Cloth•ng
2.400 00
Travel Tr ansporta·
liOn .
50000
Cor\tractual
Servtces
12.000.00
Other Opera ttons
and Ma1nte·
nance
13.00000
9.000 00
Trans fer s
,
Total Police
Law Enforce ·
ment
14390000
PROGRAM 11PUBUC HEALTH
AND WELFARE
Payment to
County Heal th
DIStriCt
4.200 00
Tmal Program It Public Health and
We lfare
4.200 00
PROGRAM VII GENERAL
GOVERNMENT
Leg1slattve Actllllttes !Counc1l)
Sala,tes/
Wages
1.20000
EmplOyee
Benef1ts
3500
Travel Transportati On
765 00
Total Leg•slattve
2.000 00
ACIIVIMS
Mayor's Court
Salafles /
Wages
11.200 00
EmplOyee
Benefns
2.60000
Travel Transporta ·
tton
20000
Contrac tual
Serv~ces
20000
Other OperattOn
and Matnte·
nance
30000
Total Mayor's
Coun
t4.50000
eter~t

,,._,

,......,_
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na- ..._
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I•J
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IN - ~-",,.,_
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OMI'IIII
IN ,._.,
-~

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IJ.MH II....
n· ~

,..~

LEGAL

.U---....-0111

It ·~---

u .... ..,.,,,'""'

I loU....

Public Notice

... c... ,..
""-

··-Al:tt:.:t. ............. l------..:.:......:...:_____

...._,...,._
:::
:,_::::.
........................
... ,.... ......
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IT •HIIItW......

·--......
,.,._...,._
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atJ- c........

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chtster. Ohio

•Full Factory Warranties
•Free Delivery
•Site Checks
•Complete Systems &amp;
•Installation ·

..._ c•....,

ar.CeoM•n

-

~

.......... """

Guysville,

Ph.

--·

,,............

, ., ...... lfllil .......... ,

'

329

nc;t. TV•II-Itwl,.....

l ·lalloltOIPw..

The

Business
Services
------..,...------..,...------.,-------,--------1 ······"Piimerov·········

lllc.wtll. - · ... 45711

PDQ SATELLITE SYSTEMS

Weather forecast

I".eigs County property transfers••.
OCie L. Foutty, deceased, Ches·

......

Monday, March 5, 1984

7

PHONE
992-2156
• Wrtlo Doi1J ....... CIIIIIIIH Dtfl.

~f'~~·"V::(-•' ·~-·, "'"'~~~:
~~:~ -~~.-- --·~
--~'W

Hamlln said.
"The barrels In the Athens County
landfW are probably deteriorating
and the best thlngtheycoulddolsput
a good clay cap on It so that those
matertatsdonotmigrateawayfrom
theslte."
·
The landfW has grown beyond the
area the EPA certltled. It stretches
around a hW and reaches an
underground mine.
The landfW was closed to dumpIng Dec. 31. Brouse was to have 00
days for the reclamation work, but
that has already been extended to90
days.

Meigs County happenings

s:

..

Daily Sentinel .

H •.Ip Wanted

Opportunity

Registered Phermecist Revo
Drug is seeking career
minded individu1l1 to join
our professionll pharmacy
program. We offer our phar·
maclst a professional work
invironment and ample op·
portunity to perticiplte in
management. We also offer
an excellent benefit pack·
ege, m1nagement positions
1re avall1ble in the following
areas Gallipolia and Jeckaon
Ohio. If you are intiFestH in
becoming associated with
America• loigelt drug chain
please send reaume to
Revco Drugs, 6965 E. Main
St .. Columbua. Oh 43213
or call 614-861 · 5880 .
E.O.E.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommends
that you do buainns with
IJ!Klple you know. ond NOT
to send money through the
meil until you have invHtigotod the offering.

1974 Community mobile
home, refrig ., stove. trash
J masher. AC , all carpeted,
must sell now. Call after
&amp;PM 8o weekends 446· 75l9
or 446·4434.

For Sele or Leoae, Country
Carryoutlo Dell, Upper River
Rd. GolliP.,Iia, Ohio. Col\
614•!446·21 92 or614·446·
9171 .

3 bdr. 14x70 mobile hom&amp;
and lot, land contract with ·•
small down payment. in
Evergreen. Call 446 · t 339.
1979 fully underpinned .
14x70 3 bdr .. 2 full baths. ·
approx . % acre, well shaded
lot . Mid S20's. Cell 614·
388·9967 after 6 :30PM . ·
For Sale : 1972 Mobile
Home, 2 BR . good cond .
Co\1614·446·7171 or 614· ·
446·8288 after 5 pm .

Roatouront ilnd tee CNom
parlor, price ritduced for
quick aote. 155.000.00.
Building end equipment.
Meaon. W. Vo. Phone 304·
882·2400 or 882·2169 .

3 bedroom. 2 both. central
air, basement garage, re· · ·
creation room, farge kitchen
Ill living room, green school
district. close to Holzer.
e64.996. Call 446·4426 .

WodgCor. INC will be
owording d81lerahlp in oreo
aoon. Gr81t profit potontill
aelllng ateol. buMdlnga for
one of the flltolt growing
Motoi.Bidg, argonirotlona In ·
the
. To
colt

Used 2 bedroom mobile
homes. furni•hed . 10x50
and 12x52 sizes. YoUr
chance to own a comforta- .
ble home. Browns trailer
Court. Minersvl\to, Oh . 614·
992·3324.

RN. LPN, Lab
or
tx· mllltory medic to com·
plete medicol exoma for
lnaurence companieeln your
oreo: tdool opportunity for N.L. Stevena • A11oclote1
Ntlred peraon. Port· time. .hove Not oatotoloona with •
·Colt betweon·9am-ond 2pm . 9%- lntoreat. roto. Colt.
onlvii806·79S-448S. ·
Auto at 614-379-2781 .

65x1 2 Elcono front tivin· . '
groom, gas, two bedroom: ·::
fumiahed, flnonclng ovollo,.ble. $6;995 .0.0 . D. ond -W
Estotea. 304·675·4424.

'·

�... ·-Page-8- The Daily Sentinel
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Pornlftly-Middleport,

They'll Do It Every Time

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
614-446-7572 .

64 Mlec. Merchendlee

64' Mlec. MerchenciiH

Knouff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12"·22" otoctoad
In yord . HEAP vender,
prompt dallvory. 1114·21111·
11246.

WORLD lOOK INCYC·
LOPEDIA IALI!. 1111. e411.
Solo U74. law .,21,
Tarmo • 10 . 00 down 1
U2.!)0 1 month. 304·171·
3775.

1977 12x60 mobile home, 2
bdr. . furnished, good cond .,

METALCULVERTPIPEIIIn.
thru IIOin. diomttlllnstock.
RON EVANS, Jockoon, Oh.
1114-2811-11930.
'

$6,300. Call after 4 and on
weekends, 614 -256-6618 .
1978 Shultz 14x70 control

PLASTIC

air, all new furniture. ex.
co nd . on rented lot . Call
evenings 446-2075 .

33

KIT 'N' CARLYLE (!)

SEPTIC TANK

Will cut ond doll- flrewood. Coll1114·261· 11121.

I -;:;:;::~:=:;=~==

1·
66 Building Suppliee

H•ul in your pickup truck.

RON EVANS, Jockoon, Oh.
1114-2811-5930.

12x60 2 bdr. modern furnished trailer , convenient
location, Upper River Rd.

Business
Buildings

Investment property in Rio
Grande. apartment building,

1 yr. old, 3-2 bdr. opt's.

Good

monthly income ,

$42,500. Call 446-8038 .

\

COUNTRY M081~E Homo
Porlt, Route 33, North of
Pom11oy. large lots. Coli
1114-992-7479 .

deposit req. Coli 614-44fi855B .
47 Wanted to Rent
2 bdr. trailers. no city taxes.
beautiful river view in Kenauge. Fostera Trailer P•rtc.
Call446 -1602.

1- - - - - - - - - -

2 BR mobile home. Coli
446-0390.

Wanted to rent. Hey bottoma in Rutland area. Cell

614-742-2926 .

4 acres with small treiler I-4- 4 -A
- pa_rt_m_e_n_t_ __
$6,000 or trade for mobile
home. Kyger Creak District.
for Rent
Call614-367-7609.
Corner lot in Jackson, Ohio.
Has sewer, water, and gas

Furnished efficiency. *146 .
Utilities paid. Shore bath.
tap. $3,500. Coli 614-245- 607 2nd, Gallipolis. Coli
5515 .
446-4416 after 7 PM .

--------s
One-Third of an acre lot in

Village of Vinton. $1,200. JACKSON ESTATES
Call 614-256-1690.
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) hos
Acreage for sola. 304-675- one and two bedrooms. rent
7541 eveninga.A

starting et 8167 for one

bedroom

and

•193

par

month for two bedroom.

Re nt a ls

41

Houses for Rent

with $200 deposit locotad
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Ploze, pool and TV
ant . Call 446-2745 or leove
me11age.

Anic apt. fumiohad •175 .
1 bdr. ept. $175. 2 bdr. Utilities paid . Share beth,
men only, 919 2nd . Ave.
ho~se. 1 bdr. ept., 1 bdr. opt.
2 bdr. apt. Utilities partiely Gallipolis. Call 446-4416
fum . Call 304-675-5104 or after 7 PM .
304-675-5386.
2 BR apt .. Gallipolis and 1
3 bdr. In country near Rio BR trailer, Eureka. Ref. ond
Dep. Call 614-21111-11129.
Gronda~ •2311 mo. pluodap ..
no pets . Call 1114-2411Furnished Eft. Apartment,
5439.
$165 mo. All utilities poid.
2 bdr. in city full basement. Deposit &amp; Ref. 446-3045 or
gaa furnance. carpeted. no 446-2602.
pets. Call 446-0958.
Smell effici8ncy apart .. cenNear Waterloo farm house, 6

tral air &amp; heat, 1 profe11ionel

rmo.. bath. garden. S125
mo. Ref. &amp; dep .. 1 child. Call
1-614-643-2644.

type gentleman only. 44110338 .

Very nice

including

2 bdr. duplex

1 bedroom Apt. $196 . mo.
utilities. Equal

house, turn ., water paid.
Main St.. Cheshire. Call
614-245-6818 .

Housing Opportunity. Contact Village Menor Apto.
614-992-7787.

Furn. 2 bdr .. 2 bath, small
house, near K-Mart. $200
mo., 1 school age child, no
smokere, renter~ pay gas &amp;
electric. Cell446-1822 .

Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special

rates

for

Senior

Citizens. $130. Equal Housing Opportunities . 614992-7721 .
- - - - - - - - -lcNice 2 bdr. home, fireplace, 2 bedroom apt .. $150. per
new kitchen. city echool month. $60. deposit. You
district. Call Jim Cochran at pay utilities. Recine area.
the Wiseman Agency, 446- Call 614-949-2271 .
- - - - - - - - - - -lc3643.
14x70 total electric 3 bdr ..
furnished trailer on private

Furniahed apartment for
rent in Syracuse. Call after

5:30p.m. 992-7689.

lot, 10 min. from town f -2 00
mo. Ref. &amp; dop. required.
Call 614-256-1393.

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gollipolls. New
&amp; used wood &amp; CCNII atoves.
6 piece wood living room
suite with 8 inch flat arms

e399, bunk beds complete
with bunkies e199. 2 piece
entron livingroom auitea

$199. ontron recliners t99,
other recliners sao. mople
dinette sots $179, box

wringer washers, TV' e. dry·

ore, &amp; shoes. Coli 614-4463159 .
LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair. rocker, otto·
man, 3 tables. (extra heavy

by Frontier), ease. Solo,

chair •"'I l-.ot; ·~'71 .
Sofas end cheire priced from

$286. to $896. Tobleo, e45
ond up to •125. Hide-abedo , $440. and up to
e526 .. Recliners. •175. to
e376 .. Lampo from $28. to
$75.5 pc. dineneo from
t99 .. to 436. 7 pc. •1 89
ond up. Wood toble with six
choirs $425 to e741i. Desk
•110 up to $226. Hutchas,
•6110. ond up, mople or pine
finish . Bunk bad complete
with manresus. $260. ond
up to $395. Baby beds,
• 1 1 0 . Mattreaaee or box

springs. full or twin, S58.,
firm. $68. ond $78. Queen
sots, $196. 4 dr. choato,
e42. 6 dr. cheoto, .64. Bad
frames, S20.ond $26., 10
gun - Gun cabinets, $360.
Gao or electric rongeo e371i.
Boby monreues, $211 I
$35, bad fromes e20. $211,
&amp; e30. king frame '110.
Good selection of bedroom

----------------·
2 bedroom. natural gas. a·c
furnished. nice yard. references required . Camp Con-

lay. 304-675-7566.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Mobile home for rent. 2
bedroom. nice lot. Roush

Lone, Cheshire. 304-77351182.
WITH OPTION TO BUY, 14'
wide all electric mobile

Furniahed apt. 1 bedroom.

$200 . mth .. deposit required. Fully carpeted . Call
992-2362 .
APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleannt

and Gallipolis. 614-446 8221.

•

Income

of

leta

2 bedroorr.' unfurnished, pri·

apts., unfurnished, phone
304-675-2218, 8 till 6 .

vote lot, in 8urdene ·Addn .
UOO plua utilities, deposit
and references. 304-11752464. '

firewood . Coli 1114-25111271 .

Airedole Tomar pupa. Loyol,
protective, Intelligent, fomlly pets. Good atocll, AKC,
1175, lncludeo lhots. Cell
1114-892-2170.

Hend · toola, welding mechine. to• ch end gauges.

Plows, roll hcig wire. 2
electric fencea. lots more

misc., At . .218. Coli 614256-1551 .

Reglatered creom colo!ad
poodles; II wlco. old, houea
brolten. Coli 4411-881111.

H1y • Oreln

·ICGood condition
for Mie.
Colll14-l41-2170.

..r,

large rciund or - • boiH.
Good quality. Opel F!Upo.
trick. 1114-1. .-4371.

Ground aor corn e1.110 par
1 QO. Iring o - contolnor.
304-171-3308. No Sunday

......

Mixed Hey. e1 .10 bole,
304-1175-111171.
•

11 dll

AKC Reglatered Bllglo. Call
614-843-111114.
67

71

Mueicel
lnetrumente

'78 D-18 MortinwlthH.S.C.
good cond . Coli otter
5:00pm . 304-11711-3862 .
e660. firm .

1,000 gol. underground fuel
t1nk exc. cond. Would even

moko a good culvert UIIO.
Coli 446-41137.

Wurlitzer fun maker, 2 cus-

2-8:76x18.1i tubeless retreods with studs $20 eoch.
Aloo six ll:li0x16.&amp; coslgvs

tom digital music oyatem
orgon, lllce now. Ook. Good
lluy. ~871·1H2.

-tor~.llply

Coli
f.11 ·, SiiiiiJlll'

8 inch Sow &amp; Jointer, 2
Hogs, 8 mo. old Boogie. Coli
614-367-7441 .

(, IIVI't'\ll&lt;i

Fresh country eggs. Coli
1114-245-11521 .

61

k

Farm Equipment

Troy-Bilt tillers. Check our
spadol prico before you buy
any tillero. Swiohlr Implement Co. St. Rt.7 N, Gollipolis,OH . Coli 1114-44110475.

Firewood; aplit, ttlcked 1nd

delivered for e21i I Iorge
load. Delivered promptly.
Coli 446-7993 onytime.
10 s-d bike, hog crate58"x:lll"x30", heavy duty,
new. Coll614-21ifl-11ili1 .

qJII' !1!111!\

Autoe for Sale

TOP CAIH paid for loll
modal ueod cora. Smith
lukk-Pontiec. 1111 !oatam Ave.. Galllpollo. Call
1114-4411-2212.
1877 Ford Muatong Cobro
302 engine, 4 opel., PI, PI,
AM·FM' con. body porfoct
cond., ez.1oo. Coli 114·
•••·••eo or 114·:1111·
1271 .
1811 Chlvltte 21,000 mi ..
lllce new, $3,100. 1878
F·21i0 Font 7100 GVW.
camper opeclol 31,000 mi ..
fiCIOd eoftll. ei,OOO. ' Call
114-211-1244.
1113 Oklo Cut!MIIupramo
2 dr. coupe, outo, PS. PW,
conoola AM·FM at-. Z
tone paint. lloly wheelo,
only 1 1.000 mi. Prioad to
sail. Col 441-7322.

Autqe for Sele

81 CutiMI luprame; tlh
cruln, om·fm !IIIIo. oport
mirroro • whoalo, 17 Co·
mero. 304-171·13311 or
:J04.1711·3241.
1174 VW ouper beetle, oun
roof, II 1ood tlree, - t
ovorhlul, fiCIOd work whl·
.... ., •1'111.00. 304·11712411 .
True~• for Sele

1177 Font pickup F-100
with topper, ona o - .
U .OOO. Coli I 1 4· 3111401 eft1r 4PM.
N- truok fonderl • dooro.
Chevy fender• el4.811 .
Chevy doora e1711. Ford
ofHderl e71. lad liners
$2311. Celll14-2111-1210.

11711 Ford PU folr cond ..
tl ,IOO or belt offor. Call
114·311-11111 .

--------------kChevy lhort trucll, !ad
toppor. good condition,
ell. 114· 742-24114.

1174 truolt, otendord, now
wood bod, runa 10od.
$1100.; ..by bethlnette, Nko
new, e211. •12·2420.
Trucll77 Font ploltup, F100,
3 .-ct. low mill.... 304112-3033.
Four half ton Ford pickup
rima lind tlree e111.00. Aloo,
blo- groll mode
o1 oUtlnl- atHII eeo.oo.
304-171-,3244:

fl..,._
73

Vane • 4 W . O .

1171 Plymouth Trell Duat11
outo.. redlo, fiCIOd tlrao.
plicad to eal. Colt 4411·

lAO. ,

.,,

1871 Chevrolet 30 cube
von. Hoo l'xl'x12' boa, dual
,.., whee~~, • new •uto.,
tronomiooion • bottory.
Roll·up reer door. 42.100
milia. Call 441·0140 eft11
1:30PM.
1111 ChavyG-1Jvon, lcvt ..
otendord, - · e4.4e&amp;.
John'o Auto Ioiii, lulovllle
Rd., Gollpollo. Call 4411·
4712. Open tiM derfc.
711 Chevv Von C-30. good
cond., . .00. Coli 8121028.
1112 Ford 250 ~ ton
-omllld 'von. Col 4411110. .

Cordo by tho box. Blrthdoy,
oil occosion, get-well, sympathy. onniverury. Sole by
Secot 8iotero in Christ. Coli
256-1749. If no onswer
2511-6833.

1178 Chevy 4 wheel drlw
ond 111 Truci~ compor,
e1.100.00. Col weokMI&lt;k
. only. 304--171·1101 .
77 Ford lllml COl!•· von, AC,
Crulee, - ~- rniWogo, . oxc.
cond . . t"'-h out. Pllono
304-1711-28ll lfter lpm.
74

TV &amp; Appllonces, 1127 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis, 614-4481899. Spin washers, goo I

,,•i
If

81

a-up.

Htl.

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Woshero, d,Yero, -refrigerotors, ranges. Skoggo Applionceo, Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Creat Motel.
814-4411-7398.
Uud Woohers &amp; Dryers,
Severo! to choose from, One
Horvest Gold -Motched poir.
Coll614-266-1207.

CAPTAIN EASY

11:30
IT'5 BEEN J.IONTfl~ SINCE
I' VIi 5EI!N NIV OLO PAl.. .

7:JO
PLASTERING - New and
Npalr commarclol end rosldentlol. free eatlmotes. Coli
114·21111-1112.
Morcu!ll Roofing • SpoutIng. 30 yoors experience.
opeclollzlng in buNt up roof.
Calf 1114·311·8857.

Nice one end two bedroOm

Furnished 1 br opt. Very nice
&amp; clean. Adults Only. No
Pets. 304-11711-13811.

8:00

3111, 12x70 mobile-home, 2
full boths. located opprox.
4'1:t mi. well of Gellipolls; on
Iorge privotolot. e17ll/mo ..
pluo dap. &amp; utilities. Ref.
required. Coli 446· 2676.

Mikhail

......_..on

duty.

-

410 ,_..,.. .......

or

.

-lllfO•. J~1-ClOO Ill fl ...
•nt.oo. -·'*'~M

~qainf

,
·
'

NY. (gQ min.)
NCAA
leaketbell:
W.A.C. Championohip
9':30 (I) Album Flash
Ill (I) ® Newhart Oic k
and Joanna plan a party to
fl)

Onl4 all day!
Keep him away
from the shop!

And
I?overs

honor

with
him,

American Clruao

10:30 Cil HBO Coming Anroctions

Cil Shirley &amp; Pat Boone
liD Leo BusceQ!ia

Exceveting

DOZER WORK By Te
Honno, pondo, ditches. co
beHmento, otc. Coli 1114- ,.
4411-4807. Corter I Evens -"'
:-:

-·

septic tanks, londocoplng ~
Coli 111-ytime 1114-441· ~
itli37, Jomesl. Dovlal!n. Jr.
owner.

- - - - - -.!
J .A.R. Construction Co.
BARNEY

IT'S
STRETCH OUT
TIME

,•

..

&lt;IJ (J) I!J (I) ® Ill II2l

News
(I) MOVIE: 'Sword end the
Sorcerer'
Cil Another Life
(!) SpqrtaCenter
Cll All In the Family
(l) News/Sporto/Weether
fl) Benny Hill Show
11 :15 (]) ESPN'a Sportalook
11 :30 U Cil (l) Tonight Show
Cil Beat of Groucho
(I) Cetiins
(I) lonny Hill Show
D &lt;Il Hart to Hirt
(I) Latenight America
® All In the Family
•II2l Nlghtline
fl) Twilight Zone
11 :41 (I) MOVIE: 'The Bridge On
the River Kwoi'
(]) USFL Football: Houoton
at San Antonio
12:00 Cil Buma &amp; Allan
(I) MO\'•E: 'The Devil at 4
O'clock'
Cil Nightllne
® MOVIE: 'People Thet
Time Forgot'
IIIII2l Eye on Hollywood
fl) Gunsmoke
12:30 U Cil (l) Late Night with
David Lenermon
Cil Jack Benny Show
Cil 9'• on Hollywood
Ill (() Columbo
lllil2l Newa
12:48 Cil HBO Theetro: Bus Stop
William lnge's play about a

WINNIE

Woter llnu. Foouro ,
Drolno. All kinds of Ditching.
Rutlond, Oh . 1114-742 - '
2103 . .

u

Pooquole Electric Co. oil •
phaeao of electric work, oil ,,
work guoronteed. Aorlil
truck rantol. 1114· 448·
4011.
;

love affair between a show-

,
·•
:

1:00

~

•

•

1 :30
1:48
2:00

JIMS .-WATER - SlAVIC.,. ~
Cell Jim Lonltir, 304·1711· '
73187.
.
:

Z:JO

,,
,,"I•

2:4&amp;
3:00

•'
'•

3:30

'
i
'·
TAl
ITATE ·
UPHOLStERY IHOP . :·
11.a loa. Ave.. Chllipol11. &lt;:
11~·71i:J 01'814·441· ~

girl and a naive cowboy is
presented.
Cil l Merriad Joan
Cil Entertainment Tonight
GI&lt;DI'CNN Heedllne News
fl) Thlcko of tho Night
(I)Lovo Thot Bob
(l) Nowa/Sign Off
Cil MOVIE: 'Conan. the
Borbarian'
Cil Bocholor Fother
® CBS Nowa Nlghtwatch
&lt;IJ 11/!0VIE: 'Tho -Comploet
Beetlee'
(I) Lifo of Alloy
. (]) BportaCenter
(I) MOVIE: 'Lonolyhoarts'
Cil 700 'Club
·
(]) EBPN'• SportaLook
Cil 1884 Davl• Cup Tonnio:
United Bllt11 v•. Rumonlo.
Firat Round • Deciding
Motch

c-

.

'
•44WLfl
i', (J 1 _ _ .' ...., .. :.v.A

.,

•

-

,..; .... - .. ..-- .•• •.J. o • ~ "" -"'""'"' "'•-··· ····

-

-

"··

:."

~ ol ... . . . . . . .

...

I.

'

"

\ .

~

Eut

Pus
Pus

2+

Pass
Pass

~

Pus

•A

Jim: " Devyn Press of
Louisville bas published five
paperbacks by well-known
authors. These books include
many points of interest to
bridge players of all sorts.

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

handyman

George Utley.
10:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Zappadr
(I) TBS Evening News
Ill (I) ® Emerald Ppint
N.A.S.
(I) Merio
Lanra: An

11 :00

SHUL.AW'8 Plumbing ond
Hntlng, Rt. 2 Neel RCNid,
Point Pleeunt, W.Vo. 30411711-5420. Ucensed end
lnour.ct.

their

Nortll

By Oswald Jaroby
aad James Jaroby

era House, New York City,

Here comes W~lt

w...

Opening lead:

from the Metropolitan Op-

7 ••

-~

·---

Vulnerable: Both

~er:South

production of Don Qui~Cote

JIM'I PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-,.'
lNG. Rt. 1, Sox 3115. Gollipollo. Coii614-3117-0ii711. ·

11*1.. . .

t K96

Ballet Theatre presents
Mikhail
Baryshnikov's

---=::::::==.:::::=:?...-~

+J84
+ KQJ 6 4

+A 9 54
.KQJ76 3

ter and KlinAer circumvent
VA regulations to get a
new drug for a patient.
(fi) OrMt Performll·oance in America : Don
Quixote.' The American

GASOLINE ALLEY

•as

SOUTH

Barys hnikov's

Cruude
B:30 (I) MOVIE: 'I'm Doncing Ao
Flat Ao I Cen'
9:00 (I) 700 Club
(I) II) 1I2J MOVIE: 'Derk
Mirror'
Cl (I) (jJ AfterMASH Pot- .

-- ---------------- !~
ltorlt'o T- • Lawn Core. .

Oenerel Heullng

EAST

•102
+Q75
+A 10 9 52

NY. (90 min .)

GET your cerpet SHIP '
S~APE WITH CAPTIAN.' ,
IT...... EII. Willi' ~ovolt
lumltura cleerilng, trW._., . - ~
motao. 304-11711-220. ... 1

S-H4

• Q62

era House. New York City.

Woter Welle. Commerclol
ond Domeetlc. Teat holes.
Pumps Boles ond 8arvlca.
304-BIIi-3802.

Electrlcel
&amp; Refrigeration

WEST

+to 83

from the Metropolitan Op-

ALI:EYOOP

Here is a hand from '101
Bridge Maxims· by Hugh
Kelsey."
Oswald: "The maxim for
today's :tand is: Take an
extra chance when you can."
Jim: "The bidding is like
most of Kelsey's bidding, in
that the declarer blasts to a
contract that most players
. would stop short of. Then ~e
has to make it. "
Oswald: " Kelsey's play is
simple. He ruffs the club,
plays king and ace of trumps
to gel the 2-2 break. Then he
ruffs a club, leads a diamond
to dummy 's ace , ruffs
dummy's last club, and
pla ys king and small
diamond. It doesn 't matter
who wins the diamond. Whoever wins it is caught in an
end play in which he must
either lead a spade or give
declarer a ruff and discard."
Jim: " Neat, but not too
good a play. It only succeeds
because East-West's trumps
are 2-2 and diamonds 3-3.
Furthermore, it will lose a
cinch contract against a 3-1
trump break, 4-2 dhimond
break and certain 4-2 spade
brea ks with the quee n
onside. We have to give Kelsey a demerit here. There
are better ways to ~lay tbe
hand. He has set thts up so
·only his pla y will work."

.AH
t A 10 3 2
+a 13

'Dance in America : Don
Quixote.' The American
Ballet Theatre presents

liD Secrets of a Daoert See
Ill II2l Billy Grahom

ments, footers. drtvewayi;

NORTH

+K J 7

&lt;Il ® Scarecrow and
Mrs. King
IIJ Greet Parformancao

RINGLE'S SERVICE tapa·
rloncad roofing, Including .
hot tor oppllcatlon, corpen-·
til', olectrlclon, meson. Coli
304-1711-2018 or 11711 4510.

Trentportetion.

It's all too pat

berg

production of Don Quixote

. . . tire~. 1HIJel·.
Nrlotl Aw. ....,.. ......._. 87 , f"pftoletery

104-178-8401. N- ......
241wtt. • -.y,

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

•

..

I

Jumbles: UNIFY BATHE FLORA L CO RNEA
Answer: What there was when the king of beasts led
a breakout lrom the zoo - A " REBEL-LION"

BRIDGE

Queen'

r
-:-':":":'---------.,...... ..

IIIIY~ Lol·a ·Tiree .... . . - ,
.....•. Now and tlrM.

For rent Sleeping Roomo
ogd light hciueo keeping
roomo. Porlt Centro! Hotel . . - - - - - - - - Coli 614-4411-071111.
Complete o~ue white fiJI
Very nlca 1 bdr. mobile
canopy IMid uoo.oo. Story
home, ox. location within Sleeping room e1111. utili· lind Clorll plulo end bench
city, completely fumiohad, tieo paid. Shore both, mole exc. cond eSOCJ.oo. DMII
Gil turn, a. olr. polio • off
Aonge • refrit. 818 lind Chair 111.00. Clloot
atnoet porldng~ Mulll--haW,
Aw •.- GoliiiOIIa. CM en.oo. 1114-44e·eHa
304-1171-7412.
_ . .
.-.1. • deP- Co11441-411i8. 4411-4411 8ftat'1 PM.

Saturday's

IIJ Stare w/ David Stein-

JONES IO'I'BWATEA SE'II·
VICE. Coli 114· 317-7471
or 114· 317·0111.
· ,,

Auto P1rt1
• 'Accueorte•

(Answers tomorrow)

(I) MOVIE: 'Tho African

Fetty T- Trimming, atump · '
ramovol. Coli 304· 6 75- .
1331 .
·_:

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
Golllpollo, Ohio
Phone 1114-4411· 3888 or
1114·4411-4477

rI I I XI] [I XXJ

Answer here : A

at S.n Antonio

·"'

WHA'T 'TUR'Tl.t:
Now arrange the a rded leders to
lorm the surprise answer, as suggested by the abOv., cartc"'n

I IJ

) I

Olympic Teem . (3 hrs.)
&lt;IJ Not Naca111rily The
Newa
Cil MOVIE: 'Soup for One'
Cil l Spy
Cil USFL Football: Houoton

Lind-ping petlo, owning •
ond underpennlng. Becllhoa'
-rfc. For complete lown
care. Coli 304-5711-201 o; •
lnsu!ad.

I

SOUP 16.

Olympic gold medal win-

PEANUTS

71

riNNACE±

nera salute this year's U.S.

RON'S TeleYislon Btrvlca.
8peclollzlng in Zenith ond. 1
Motorolo. Ouuor, ond• ·
house collo. Coli 304-576·
2388 or 1114-4411-24114.

Plumbing
&amp; Heeting

1.

e

Dick Fuller Home Improvemanto. Corpantry-Piumblng
ond Electrical. Formerly D •
F Controctoro. Coli 4411·
3313.

86

One bedroom furnished mobile home, located outskirts
Hendaroon. All utilities Included e246 .00 month
304-876-8730.

I

Applllnco . . rvica ell mokeo - :
• modele rofrigartoro,
Wllherl, drytro, rong11, ,
compoctora. diohwoohero. ·
mlcrowovoo. Heoting &amp; .
CooUng, Sheet Metal Wortt.-·
Galllo lofrigarotlon Co .
1114-441-4011.

lEWlNG Mochlna repolro,
.Mnlloa. Authorized ·Sl"'er
Bolli • Sarvlcl l!harpon
lclooora. Foliric S'h op,
PortllfOj. 1114-882-22e4. .

--------1

Cil Now Treeoure Hunt
Cll Andy Griffith
II) Nowo/8porta/Weethar
1IJ Dr. Who
liD 3-Z..l. Contact
luck Rogere
Cil II) NBC Nowa
Cil Riflemon
(!) ESPN'o Sportalook
(I) Corol Burnett
1IJ .lUI AIC Nowo
.IIJ@ CSI Newa
IIJ Bulin- Report .
liD To II Announcad
8 Cil PM Megozine
&lt;IJ VIdeo Jukebox
Cil Hera Come tho Brldeo
Cil lportaContor
(I) Hogan'a Horooa
(I) Entertainment Tonl1ht
II) Charfio'o Angola
II &lt;Il Wheel of Fortune
(I) liD
MacNoii/Lahrar
Newahour
®Nowo
•IDJ People'a Court
SEC Womena' Gymne•
tiel Chomplonlhlp
Cil Tic Toe Dough
Cil Freggle Rock
(!) Bollbell Highlights
(I) Sonford ond Son
(I) • (I) Family Feud
® Wheel of Fortune
•
lUI Enllrtalnmant
Tonight
8 C2J 1Il Stare Solute the
U.S. Olympic Team A host
of celebrities and former

84

1IIC 1 II ft. leytlnor with 110.
ttl' Moroury 11111na, oil oldo
• oqillpmont lnoluded. Muit
Ill. Coli 441-1315.

n

a

BORN LOSER

.-

76
loete end
· Motore for Sele

Unterombll INM four Jumbleo,
one 10 IICh squora. 10 form
lOUt Oldlnlly wordl.

Bootlla'

Home
Improvement•

-=82

~ THATICIWIILIDWOIIDOAMI
by Hen~ Amold ondloblM

~ ~ ~~ ·

1:00 • &lt;IJ IIJ • &lt;Il ® • IDJ
Nowa
Cil MOVIE: 'The Compleet

f

Good, 1 Excavotlng. beso·'; •
1177 Hondo 1110 Four· I(,
go'ocl oond., n.W dree
haoder pl-.
jonw ond more eolreo.
·WII eo1 tor eeoo.oo. Coli
304-171-3170 or 304-18113311 lifter lpm.
------~-------c
'13 Hondo 'XLIO, e&amp;71i.OO.
304-171·3031.

· f}f)~~fi)~

I SUPIO

St'l VII.!",

83

Motor.cyclee

-lc1111 Hortey Dovld1011 oleo·
tro1lldo, bookot cue,
e1100. See Doc Fow, Bx
203 SldehiH Ad .. Audond,
Oh.

then

812,300. Renting for 30
percent of edjuated income.
Phone 304-675-11679.

move into. $200.00 down
$176 .00 MONTH. 304576-2711 .

Locust posta, stekea and

rotlng · $2 .60 eoch.
446-4637.

14

Drogonwynd CottaryKennels. AKC Chow puppies, CFA Hlmoloyon, Por- Mixed hay, n .10 1 bole.
oion ond Slemose klneno.
Condhlonad cut. ne- - Coli 1114-4411-3844 oftor 11. 114-742·2173.

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartments now avolloble to
elderly &amp; diublad with on

tot ready to

home. tettlng on

Stop ond - It French city
Mobile Homes. Coli 4469340.

suites. ceder chests,
rockers , metal cabinets,
awivel rockera.

•lectric dryers, auto
WitherS, 911 &amp; electriC
rei1gea, refrigerators, TV

Apt. for rent, call 1114-9926908.

Briorpotch Konnalo Profeoslonol All·breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boontl,. fodlitieo. Englioh Cocker Sponlel puppies. CoM 1114-3119780.

Anniveroory Sole Sove up tp
springs &amp; mettrea&amp; twin or 26% from Morch 4 to 17.
full ,, 00 set regulor-firm , Wood World 26011 Grend
•120. mople dinene choirs Centro! Ave .. Vienno, WVo.
$36, wooh stonds $34, 304-295-8133.
mople rockers •59, 7 piece
3 now Mobile homo uleo.
chrome dinene set •149. 5 complete
tlreo. wheels ond
piece dinone set t99, used springs, UOO.
Coli 614bedroom suitea, refrigerators. ranges, chest, dreuers. 2511-6244.

Second Ave .

apartment in Middleport.
Call 614-992-5304.

lent condition. Coli 6756898.

71

72

Judy Toytor Grooming. Coli
1114-3117-7220.

home parta end accessories.

Used Furniture -- Ber &amp; 2
otools, ronges, chairs, dryera. mrigerotors end TV'o. 3
miles out Bulovilla Rd. Open
9om to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri ..
9om to 6pm. Sot.
614-446-0322

In Middleport. Coii 614g92-260e .

Bedroom suite- white 3 pc.
ckesaer-mirror-cheat, excel-

Moving Sole- Misc. mobile

In Middleport, 2 room eft.
opt. Call 1-304-882-211611.
- - - - - - - - - -lcNearly new- 2 BR house. 2'1:t 1 bedroom unfurnished garmiles from HMC, S195 mo., age apartment; stove •
$100 dep. Call 614-446- refrigeratOr fum. wether •
dryer hook-up. •1111. plus
3617.
utilities. Deposit required.
5 room house for rent at 44 Page St. Middleport. Coli
Olive St., inquire at 918 992-6271 .
New 1 bedroom furniahed

tr1de in.

Office desk-30xll0 top good
condition. Coli 4411-9340.

Me r c h a nd1 se

Racine . Coli 614 -367 7148 .

Uveetoclt

"1·

into. Ufi.IIOO. Also gareges
I bouments. Coli Potriot
Homes Buildoro 4411-8038.
Will consider mobile home

Televi8ion
Viewing

7:00

R11. Ouortor h - gelding,
66
Pete for Sele
3 yr. old, ol!ad by · Chlx. 4 yr. old
Ouortor
h - bey more. II· Point
HILLCREST KENNEll gelding, 2 yr. old. IIIII- blocll8oerdlng oil breado. Heeted fllly, 2 yr. old. CoM 441·
indoor-outdoor focllltloo . 32152.
AKC Dobermon puppies:
Stud Service. Coll1114-441· R11. Ouortlr hciree more.
Coli' II 14-2411·111 111.
7795.

e

11

Mobile home for rent , in

35 Lots 8o Acreage

Built on you lot a new horne
you cen 1fford. over 1,1 00
sq.ft..
rooms &amp; beth.
carpeted, reedy to move

Man:h 5, 1984

1174 Chomplon Motor
Home. Exc. Cond. 4411·
1213.

Building moteriols
block, brick, sewor plpao,
wlndowo, llntola, otc .
Cloude Wlntere, lllo Gronde,
0. Collll14-2411·11121.

Farms for Sale

~Miay,

.

Motor, Homta
• Camper1

The 'ol . new 1114 SUN·•
IT II !AM .luxury motor •.,
h - oon now bo on
our lot. Wo have tho 28, 32:
o"'l34 foo1oraln atoolt now,,:
Wo eloo offer for your
aomplng pleeauro the quoll¥ •
blf(lt YE'LLOWITONI•trovel r
trollers 1"11 mlnl·homH. Our'
otocll units ora 22· 32 f~
lon1 end Include o 211 •'
mlni·motorhoma. Ilion now.
to let uo halp you with your •
lilliE hitch, CAf!IFIIE!•
-nine. ond DUO THEAM
olr conditioner n,.do .
BURDETTE CAMPER ..
IALEI, U.S. Rt. 110, Coolville, Oh 1114-1117-33811.

83

34

78

Umeotone, Sond, Grovel. 1Oft. Aluminum John loot
Delivered In Muon, Melgo. e1 00.00. Phone 304·1711Golllo or pick up It Ricliordo 4210.
&amp; Son. Coli 4411-7785. ·
18117 Ford pickup, white
Firewood cut up olabs •111 ciblnet oink with single
pickup lood: Coli 1114-2411- hondla fouceto . 304-1711·
11804.
43115.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
AT 35 . PHONE 614-4467274 .

.

'

A1anday, Mardi 5, 1914,

Ohio

, ..

-~· -

.

~~~·tr'

. br THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I - of David
I Breeding

5 Pitcher
stock
9 Tinware
2 Atlanta
10 Franklin
Br•ves mgr .
3 Sc1..fi
and coal
12 " Exodus"
creature
author
4 Hospital M.D.
13 Defeat
5 Anesthetic
14 1'11r'a,
6 In a - (briefly I
Yesterdav's Answers
in Munich
7 Circwn-Z8 Stone
2I Cliff
15 Water
vention
formations
marker
crossed
8 Sanctuary
by Moses
10 Lost lamb 22 Took a bet
29 Not on
16 Bee harm
11 Table i tern %3 Cotton State
our life ,
I8 Annoy
17 Porker
24 Sea (Fr .)
30 Ecole's pupi.
26 I'm pointing 32 Town in Mass.
19 District
20 Rubdown
at it'
34 Platter
of England
substance
20 Tennis term
21 Few and
far between
!4 Earth worker b--t----i--+--

25 - .45
26 Denary
21 Anc. Burma
capital
Z8 Sacred
place
31 Partial
refund
33 Liquify
35 Said at
28Across
36 Incessant
37 Mother
of Dionysus
31 Actress
Patterson
39Venture
40 Playing

card
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Ia

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One leller simply &amp;lands for another. ln th is sa mple A ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single lellers.apoatrophes, the length and formati on of I he wo rds are all
hints. Each day the code I&lt; tiers are dilferen t.

.

.

CRYPTOQUOTES

T

IJUQKF

BJJH'W

FUJKQP

I J

AKI

zw
PZW

HJUQ

J NU

IPLJTI . FUQHZWP
WTXZUQ
Yalerday's CryptGqaote: -·LET NOT YOUR TONGUE RUN • ·
AWAY WI'm YOUR BRAINS.-OLD ADAGE
~ -· -· r ·-

-······ · ...... ...... --- . .. .
~-

�Page-l 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 5, 1984

Communicable disease on rise in Meigs area

BOARD - The roles of these Meigs Health
Department employes are bnportant to the depari·
ment's operations. Pictured are front, I tor, Pearl
Scott, deputy clerk registrar; Nonna Torres, nursing
supel"Wior; Ginny KUHn, assistant nursing supervl-

The Meigs County Health Depart·
ment re!l0114 the incidence of
communicable dl~sei on the ~
in Meigs County. Otftclals sent 37
VD smears to the OhioDepilrtment .
of Health and 24 Individuals were
screened for diseases of lhe genitou·
rinary system.
Another Sl!rious public health
problem Is Genital •Hel'pes (or
Herpes 11). This, aswella.ssyphlllls
and gonorrhea, ' is a sexually
transmitted d~ Unborn child·
ren (fetus) are .
\ally atrlak 10:
these diseases since their abillty to
fight off diseases is not yet tully
developed. Children cnanot be
immunized against common child·
hood diseases such as chicken pox.
Another common problem Is
head lice. Health department otfi·
ctals say It is not true that people get
lice because they don't take care of
themselves or because they are
dirty. People can get lice at school,
church, as well as while they are
·
shopping.
If a person comes in contact with
lice, he should seek medical help for
diagnosis and advice for treatment.
Children can be immunized
against measles, mumps, rubella,
diphtheria, whooping cough, teta·
nus and polio. Th~ immunizations
are
available to children at the
sor; back, I to r, Nancy Ackennan, nursing clerk;
Meigs.
County Health Department
Carol Guinther, EPSDI' clerk; Joe YOIUig, •ssletanl
second
and fourth Tuesdays
every
sanitarian, and John J~, sanitarian and deputy ·
of each month from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
health commission.
· and from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. ·
The following clinics are also
available (for ages up to 21 years of
age) at the health department (by
apotntment only) : 1) Well Chll·
d/ EPSDT checkups, 2) Ear-Nose
and Throat, 3) Vision, 4) Orthopedic, 5) Heart, 6) Plastic, 7)
Pre-na~. 8) WIC.

"•
\

•

· Public opbdono 011 Pap 2

~ $40

PRE-NATAL-The Meigs Health Department's
pre-natal program is canied out by these employes, I
to r, Unda Aidman, nutrition assistant; Anna

Blackwell, R.N., program dlredor, and PhyDis

Hospital helps schools adjust
to cancer suffering children
CINCINNATI (AP) - Medical
advances now allow many young
cancer victims to return to school,
posing challenges for teachers and
classmates uncertain how to react.
An educational program pio·
neered at Children's Hospital Medi· ·
cal Center tries to remove miscon·
ceptions about childhood cancer and
help patients return comfortably to
the classroom.
"My feeling is that we wouldn't
have gained anything if we cured a
disease like cancer but didn't make
it so children could go back and
function normally in society," said
Wendy Wolf, a clinical nurse
specialist. "It's particularly impor·
tantatan early age, when education
and interpersonal relationships are
vital to their development."
The program involves teachers
and classmates with families and
patients to ease the transition back

to school. Lynette Miller, health
care educator at the hospital, said
dramatic advances have changed
the focus of follow-up care.
"In the past, treatment centered
around making uie child's life as
comfortable as possible for as long
as he had left ... Now childhood
cancer is considered a chronic
lllness, just like diabetes or epi·
iepsy," Ms. Miller said. "Patients
are resuming normal activities
even though their program of
therapy may lastfor years."
Ms. Miller designed slide shows
and wrote matertal used to help
teachers prepare for .a student's
return after cancer treatments.
Hospital otficials ask parents if
they'd like the program presented at
their child's school.
"It's very unusual for a family to
say, 'No, absolutely not.I don't want
anyone to know this,' " Ms. Miller
said. "We also ask farnilles to

consider what the child wants. He
needs to feel that his input has been
sought.
"That's a complete reversal of 10
years ago, when farnilles ·were
advised not to tell their children they
had cancer."
Many parents worry that their
children wm be ridiculed or
shunned. But classmates usually
respond weD when given the facts,
Ms. Wolf said.
· "Our fantasies always tend to get
the better of us If we don't !mow what
the truth is," she said. "Unless we
dispel their fears by giving them
speciftc information, it's very dlttl·
cult for (peers) to handle the
situation.
"Kids are remarkably resment,
and they take their cues from the
responses of adults. If they see that
adults around them are functioning
wen, handling questions, they wm,
too.''

Drunk-driving instructions offered

Yel.n ; No.229

Dr. Selim Blazewicz
Health commissioner
Heart (and heart-related dis·
eases were responsible for either
first, second or third causes of
deaths in Meigs County this past
year.
Factors that contribute to heart ·
disease include high fat and/or salt
diet, smoking, obesity (over·
weight), lack of exercise and high
alcohol Intake.
The health department is affil.
lated with the Bureau of Crippled
Children's Services, Ohio Depart·

ment of Health, the .Veterans
Memorial Speech and Hearing
Clinic, Human Resource Council,
the Meigs County March of Dimes,
Easter Seals, and many other
agencies too numerous to mention.
The total number of personnel
contact for Health Department
reasons in 1983 were 17,975. A total
of 1,246 certificates and permits
were issued by the VItal Statistics ·
part of the Health Department.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Elementary-school pupils who are
years away from becoming motor·
ists soon wm be given an introduction to the dangers of drunken
driving and the benetltsofseatbelts.
Those themes ·wm be covered in
two federally funded programs the
state is sending to local schools for
inclusion in existing safety courses.
Highway Safety Director Ken·
·nem·cox saft! the number of drivers
who use seat belts ranges from 11
percent to 17 percent.
"We have to educate the adults.
We want to get that percentage
much hlgher on the adult level. But
at the same time we have to work on
the Children," Cox said.
"You'd· be surprised how. -many

children will say to their daddy or . package for children in kinder·
mother 'You don't have your seat garten through
grade
belt fastened.• The good parent . .''These programs have the.potenwantstosetanexample,"hesald.
t1a1 of reachtng 900,000 kids," Cox

secooo

ane ~.ooo

grl!llt trom the
National »Jghway Traffic Safety
AdmlnistratlonwWpayfordistribu·
tion of "Starting Early" alcohol
·
awareness kits to local schools.
The kits
ntaln lllms""""
.
co
~ ...,... .

ciWettlrulpes,garne-chartsandtest

booklets for child,ren In kinder·

garten . through sixth grade. Pro-

'duced by the·Amerlcan Autll'ilobile
Association, they deal with physlcal
effects of alCohol and dangers of
drinking 811(1 drtv!ng.

A seeond $15,000 grant covers the.
cost of a satety__belt educatiOnal_

By KEVIN KElLY
OVP lltaft writer
A state recJI!matlon omctal studying the pros and
con.satgranttngaflve-yearminingpermit toSouthern
Ohio Coal Co. said he wUI recommend that the permit ·
beisaued.
.
"lwouldrecommendapprovalbasedonwhatlhave
: now, unless there's something in theapplfl:atlon that's
not in ccmpltance," said Bob Hothweu 1of the Ohio
Department at Natural Hesources.
Nothing at this time indlcates that thea!lPUcatton IS
not ill compliance, he added. Rothwell sajd he has yet
to review some technical data from a conSultant.
He and Sherry Zook, another reclamation officer for
this region, accepted testimony from 22 landowners
and citizens in Meigs and Vinton counties at an
informal conference last Saturday in WllkesvUle.
ODNR must make a decision on the permit by the

than

testimony andSOI!M! teclmtcal«::!!ta is complete, he will
submit 1U field recoo'lflll!lldatlon tp La;ry Mamone.
head at ODNR'a reclamation dlv!skin.
The conference was held at the request of Qtizens
Organized Against Longwalllng (COAL), the Ian·
downers' organization that has protested Southern
Ohio Coal's use of the longwall mining procedure.

'

Rothwell said much of ~ testimony heard at the
conference echoed similar concerns aired at a March
00 hearing when the coal company sought
permission to continue mining in the area.
Residents have been concerned over effects of
subsldl!nce - sinking of the earth after a longwall
machine has mined out a panel at coal. Since the fall of
1982, residents have complained that subsidence has
created structural damage to homes and loss of local

Pomeroy Cooncll Monday night
aCcepted the bid of Logston of

Belpre to complete the sewer

syst.ern in the Kerrs Run area.
Logston's bid (the lowest bid)
totaled $72,668.10. The next lowest
bidder was Weber of Reedsville for

$73,ll2.50.
.
Bids were submitted with the
option that council could delete a
,portion at the work, reducing the bid
..oe ~~§57~..~We!Jer's

m,,..,.

WELL CHILD - Working with the weD chDd program of the Melp
County Department of Health are seated,l tor, Nonna Torres, R.N.,
Carol Tannehill, R.N., and standing, John Jacobs, llscal director.

llld
John Anderson said he felt none of
the work shQuld be deleted and
made a motion to accept Logston's
bid. The area included in the sewer
project, which is being paid in part
wtthARCandHUDtunds, is Chester
Roed, out U. S. 33 from the Beacon
Station to thecorporatlonandoutSR
7 from the Beacon to the
corporation.
This is the last of the sewage
project in the Kerrs Run area.
.Bet1y Baronlck reported that an

anonYillous$1,500donatlonhasbeen
received by the vUlage to place a
lighted marble sign in frpnt .of the
new city building.
'
The sign wm be eight feet long, 32
inches ·high and six inches thick.
Inscribed on the sign wm be
Pomeroy Municipal Bulldlng and
the date it was dedicated.
Bill Young reported that water on
the ~way near the Logan
Monument Company was posing a
dangerous situation. Young said
there are two manholes in the area
and if debris could be kept out of the
smaller one, the larger manhole
would not become plugged.
·Mayor Richard Seyler pointed out
that due to weather conditions the
street department has been unable
to work in the area.
An aul:llt of the village books that
began last October wm be completed tomorrow It was reported.
Parking meter receipts for the
month of February totaled $1,8'71 .

'"There needs to be a lot more extensive planning on
subsidence," Mrs. Wells noted. "They say it's planned,
that It drops in on one panel, but they don'tconsiderthe
surrounding areas."
ODNR delayed a decision last year on the permit
when criteria for application changed. The company
was allowed time to re-submit the application.
A COAL effort to seek an injunction in U.S. District
Court failed last September when a federal judge ruled
that a shutdown of longwall operations at the mines
would cause "irreparable" economic harm to the
. company's nearly 2,000 employees.
Both the company and members of the local United
Mine Workers chapter have said that longwalllng is
the only safe, cheap method to produce southeastern
Ohio coal and remain competitive against western and
non-union-produced coal.

'roP - These were the top 17 spellers of Meigs County wbo
represeried their respecdve schools at the IIIIJIWII county spelling bee
held Moaday ntpt at Southem IDgb School. They were front, I tor, Amy
Mann, Chellter Elementary; Emle Baker, Riverview; Kenneth
Caldwell, Tuppers Pla!ns. -r-up; MaraJyn Barton, Eastern Junior
111gb, wDier; Jeuulfer McKinley, Bradbury Elementary; Marc
Howard, llarrlsonvllle; Cindy Maynard. Meigs Junior Hlgb; back, I to
r, 'l'alru1Q' Lambert, Salem Center; Ryan Cowan, Middleport

Elementary; Jennifer Newman, Pomeroy Elementary; 'l'alru1Q' Jo
MDier, RutlaDd Elementary; Shelley Arnold, Syracuse Elementary;
Dina Slwler, Southem Junior High; Tracy Norris, Letart Elementary;
Mike Parker, SaJisbqry; Nancy Hunt, Portlaod; Mayla Yoachem,
Racine Elementary. Pronounoer was Daisy Franz, Southem High
School teacher and Russell Moore and John Oostanzo, county school
supervisors, staged the event.

Pay bill
•
compronnse
·forthcoming
COLUMBUS, Ohio . (AP) -

WIC- Jlealh Department perpme~ CIU1)'lngout the Wlc program
are aeated, I to r, Debbie laVaDey, director; Dorotha Rlflle, ADP
coonllnator;. back, tto·r,lJndal\llcman,JUtrltlonlllts,andNonna'l'oiT!li.
rrw•• WIC ~ dlriictor. . Others actlv,e with' the program1 Dot
~ are Amle
. M'OOii, ll8lllltailt lllltrtdonlat; and Oebbie CundUI,
~ADPclerk.

A
conference committee may be able
to hammer out ditferences quickly
in a pay-raise bill for 86,000
government workers, Senate Pres!·
· delit Harry ~eshel says.
"I 'think we can get a meeting
ground between what they've done
In the.Houseandwhatwechose not
to do and get something in
between," the Youngstown Democrat said Monday.
As passed by the Senate, the bill
would give state gove~t.
county welfare and university
biUM.'Ollar workers a 43 cents-perhour pay· raise. Senators rejected
$5.3 mtmon worth of cuts in the
employee disability. leave program
which Gov. J:Uchard Celeste had
proPosed.
TheHouseincreasedthepayraise.
to 50' cents an hour or 5 percent,
whichever was greater for an
individual worker. It also included
the disal&gt;illty leave revisions and
took away pay raises for some top
political appointees.
Meshels8Jd'someofthedlsabillty
tJenetlt changes may be retained.
"'l'hereis someleglt!mateneedto
reform part .of ·!hat dlsabillty
program. Exactly_ where and to
what degree is really the issue," he
said.

~saldthetrafflcfatalltyratehas =~~~-than any of us Dance benefits Muscular Dystrophy
dropped to Its lowest level since
"There are hungry and poor . The third annual "SupeF Dance"
before Work! Warn.
..-.w. butthereareagre~~tnumber t&amp; benefit the M118Cuiar Dystrophy
The "Super Dance" Is sponsored
"We're almost as low as we can
for them to ,.. ·for help. j\ssociatljinwW behe!dMarch30-S1 bythelntertraternttyCouncilofR!o
get short of say a mandatory seat
_....
ev
Gran(!e College and its member
. •
•
. Volunteers are trying to help and at Rio Grande College and Cdmbelt law 01' scmet.hlng very slgnlfl·
,
•
· organization: Alpha Chi Nu; Aipha
. • ,_,..., hat
,-....., they're doing a verY&amp;'oodjob."
munity C9Jlege.
.
. Delta Epsilon Alph M Be
can._. -~--· ~
we _a..._.,__ ~ bn·VaJA!ntlne'aDay aCcordingto -- Donalionl of food and prizes are Alpha s - PHI
.- , ~~~~g_tza,
have," he said Tuesday. ·
·
the pilbllCatloli,
Block also netlded for,. the event,· acrofll!ng to.
vme:
·"We have'! (auto) child restraint served .-.........w.- rrotnmeo.,...M•. Herb Spencer, r~n~ . CoimSelor. Alpha, L81l)bda Omicron ·Psi,
'"~u
"""""'"~
Sigma Pi, a. nd Zeta Theta Chi.
law now In the state of Ohio where
·•-t from day zat!Qn'i mobtle
· 1011p kitchen ·In a The danCers will be also sollcitin"
"
,If yo~ .wish 1" · contribute to this
very early In life' ""'"""
· deptj!ssed nelghborllqod
spotisors for · thefr 24 hoii(S of .
'"
me,lheYarerequllW,tobelnchlld
. "ldldn'tdolttorthe.Poollcity'; dancing.
.
.
~en\and. are not contacle!l•. you
restraints. 'Ibis program will she told the inapzlne. .,1 ~
All proceeds wm go tp ~elp the may ~ Rio Grande College' a't
.simply ~k up ~. that 811(! about the .ervtng center. . and MIIICIIlar Dystrophy ~tion in . 245-5353 llji, ask for Herb Spencer .
--IKlpefullyltwWpayoff, hesald.
iiranh.ftoaeethem..'~ r~
,.....,.-~ta~Miilett~ ~ (ext~~G&gt; or Dor!J .Ross
.. . .
.
- ~ ~-- -:-- - _ . ~,(.llXtens•Qn
)"'" _,~

tt'':!;:-.:.,.

M"d

-'!""-- ·

.ux:IDENT - Eight students of- Pomeroy 'Eiemelltary School
. . eeclpe4llel'loua Injury Tuellday morning when the buellleyWt!rerlciDI,
• driven by .Jean Wood, waailnlck In the rear aalt~O!I U.S.3S~
· _... from the BeiiOOD Service S&amp;adon. Drtv!!!! qf .tile v_., that
~buck tile bul waa James Patte.-, S)'I'IINM!. , ; ·
A&amp; tG, rtpt; Marpnt Ellkew a member of the Pomeroy ER Squad
dledll EDea
ol the eight !JQidenta •

W.._-

I

AWARDS - Meigs County Superintendent of trophy from Rlebt.l was Kenneth CaldweU, a sixth
grader at the Tuppers Plains School. He isasonofMr.
Schools John Riebel presented awards to the winner
and
Mrs. Kenneth Caldwell. The problem words at
and nmner-up of the annual COWJty spelling bee held
Monday night at Southern IDgb School. Here Riebel . the bee following about an hour and 15 minutes of
preaeats the first place trophy to Maralyn Barton, spelling were "kingpin" and "kinless" Judges were
Richard Roberts, Easrem District Superintendent;
elgbth grader at the EI!Stem Junior High School and a
Bob Onl, Southem Local Superintendent, and Riebel,
daugbter ol Mr. and~ RichardS. Barton. She will
repl'lieen&amp; the COWJty·at the state bee on Ajll'III4. Miss filling In for Dan Monts, Meigs Local Superintendent·,
BaltGII received a traveling plaque which wiD be at unable to attend.
ber IIChool for the next year. Receiving the nmneNJP

Pre~ident urg~s church leaders to lobby for amendment
, · WASlUNGl'ON (AP) - . Prest· nation Ia on the verge of a spiritual
ctent R.eqan wu flylhg to Colum·. re-awakentng ipore important than
• - · ·tm;OIIIIT,'todaY lo~qeevaqelloal ~the:-~ reeo.very.: he- oeJe.
c~urch ~ tniin around the •brates Iii every1~ ~ milkes. ·
. natloiltolDbbylheSenatetopassa . ButWblte~,afDclals,apeak·
~tlallal arilen!lment l!lldlng i · ing prtya\e~Y,-~ .Reeean would
moretbla~yearbanonprayerll) expressa·lnOre'Ltncutatoitattftude.
jJubllciCIIDoll. .
·
toward MoecdW ·lnd Its . new
1J1 aapeecb lt1'ellllll hlaadmlnls· leadetahlp ~he did a year ago
tratlon'a.coinmltment to conserva· when he told a ri'leettng of the same
_--__ t,tve~-~ tpuee, _Reagan was orpnl:zatiOir.in~brllndo, Fla.; that
\i!Xl)t!Cted to tell the National theSOYli!iUDicn~' aneYlll!mpire."-'
~iloc:!aUonofEvangellcallthatthe . · ID keeping vflth !lie aeneraJly

.

;

1 Section , 10 Pages
20 Cents
A Mult imedia In c. New$f)Ciper

Belpre firm gets
·sewer system job

. '7.

'

enttne

water suppl~.
Rebnbul'!lement offered
The coal company, one of the largest employers in
the region, has offered to reimburse landowners for
damage. Southern Ohio Coal is one of the fuel supply
divisions of American Electric Power Service Corp.
"In 00 days, we'll know which way to go," said Betty
Wells, COAL president. "They have submitted all the
information, and we're going to have to wait."
Mrs. Wells said that the group still has the option of
requesting a formal conference with ODNR to press its
point.
COAL has sought a change in the laws governing
surface and underground mining. Under law, coal
companies are responsible for the area surroonding
the mine opening affected by mining. COAL is seeking
rulings for the surface area where all mining is
conducted.

first week of May. Rothwell said that once his review of

magazine.
The maeaztne said Mrs. Block
became curklus after hearing
President Reagan's statement that
some Americans are poor and
hu~ by choice. She visited the

Jeans

•

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 6, 1984

mid-February.
The trips were dlsclosed in the
March issue of Washlngton Dossier

wig,

Historical projects

Seepage5

aily

WASJDNGI'ON (AP) -Thewtte
of Agriculture Secretary John
Block, curious about how the poor
are fed at soup kitchens, donned old
clothes and ate sandwiches, 50\IP
and hot tea at shelters for the poor in
Washington laSt month.
.
SUzanne Block .refuses . to be .
tnteivlewed on the subject,. but
Agriculture . Department spokes·
man Gene Hemphlll confirmed •
Thursday that sbe and a USDA
staffer visited the shelters in

The magazine quotes her as
saying that the privatelY 5poi\SOred
ldtchens
· rovldln adeq te
- · . are P
· g
ua
help to !bose who want it.
"There's more
enough food

DI8Crtct contest Page 4

million contract

Soup kitchens
given boOst by
Su1anne Block

=~~ in a

.

he

Th~y.

Bearhs, clerk.

.

S&amp;ory 011 Pap 3

A1'LAI'lTA (AP) -Preschoolers
and college students were the main
victims of measles last year as the
disease dlqllled to the lowest level
since record-keeping began in 1912,
the natlolial Centers for Disease
Control says.
But while fewer Americans than
ever are getting measles, there are
pockets of resistance to the govern·
ment' s plan to completely eradicate
the ljisease, the federal agency said
The original deadtine for total
elimination of measles In the United
States was October :tl£2. Despite
vast improvements, that deadline
was missed and "the exact date of
the elimination.:. wm be known in in
retwpsect," the CDC said.
Ninety-five percent of the nation's
counties repotted no measles last
year, and for the first time every
county had at least six straight
measles-tree weeks, the research
shows.
The CDC said 1,436 cases of
measles were reported in the United
States in 1983, 16 percent below the
19821evel and the lowest annual total
. since record· keeping began.

Southern eyes upset

:B~s driver incident

Preschoolers,
older students
•
• •
mam
vtctuns

-

'

'

•

'

. '#IJ
'

'

.

muted rhetoric he has used since the
selection last mbnth fJf Konstantin
U: ~-succeed' the late .
Yllfl ·~. the sources s8ld
Reagan · .would. otrer to renew
admlnlnlstrat!Oil efforts to ease
Eist·West tensiOns "if the· new
SovletleaderalllptSwJU!ng."
A 1oqt1me crlUc of the Supreme
COurt's 1962decJ4lon thatpro!liblted
· pubuc schools ·from .. saDcttoning
-crpnl7,arpnyer per~oc~s,·fteqgan
wastotelltherepreeentaUvesofthe
'

nation's38,000evangellcalchurches
that the arnen&lt;,lment can't pass
.without their activesupport. __ ..
Debate on the meas~!fe began in
theSenateonMondaywithoneofits
chief backers, Majority Leader
Howartl H.
Jr., R:'fenn.,
say!nghedidn'tyethavethevotesto
overcome a f!Ubuster Senate llber·
a1s were planning use to block the
amendment.
Reagan, in a tetter sent to Capitol
Hlllasthedebatecommenced,sald:

Baker

~

"Ouramendmentwouldensurethat
no child beforcedtoreciteaprayer.
Ipdeed, !~ elpllcit!Y _preve.!i!_S_8J1Y
state from compos!iig !lie woros of
any_prayer,butthecourtscouldnot
forbid our children from being able
to voice their prayers in our
schools."
The National Association of
Evangelicals is a loosely knit
organlzlltion of Chris.ttan churches
from 77 denominations, including a
broad spectrum of faiths such as

Reformed. Pentacos tal, Mennonite,
Holiness and Full Gospel churches,
as well as many Presbyterllu!,
B a P t Is t a n d L u t h e r a n

congrega~ons.

Reagan safternoon trip toColum·
buswasbilledasanofflcialvtsitpaid
for with public funds , but he was
scheduled to fly from there to New
York to address a $1;000.a-plate
fund-raising dinner at the Waldorf·
Astoria Hotelforthestate Reepubll·
can Party .

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