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                  <text>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 .

�...,.

Commentary

.··

,.

Turtda,., Mardt

: : : 2-The Dally SinH~
Pamtroy Middleport, Chlo
T\lltday, March 6, 1914

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Rubble in Lebanon ____w_m_roin_F._Buc_k_~_J~,~

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slreel

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE

Alb

l!l!m~

MEIGS.MASON AREA

r"T"\-.j.._-.-o ~=0.,.

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ROBERT L. WINGETt'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFUCH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER

of The Assoclaled Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·

tton and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are wel comed . Th~y should be lestl han S8l words
lone . Allletien are subject to edlt1n1 and must be !tiJned with name. address and
telephone number. No u.n.slrned letters wUI be publlAhed. Letters should be In
10od taste, addrtt~slnA' l8sues, no&amp; personalities.

The optimist and the
man with the ·frown
One of them is largely responsible for U.S. fiscal policy, which is the
·getting and spending of revenues. 'The other seeks to run monetary policy,
which concerns itself with money supply and Interest rates.
One claims the high-priced U.S. dollar- up almost 50 percent In four
years when measured against a package of 10 other cUITellcies- reflects
the world's confidence In the U.S. economy.
'The other says the dOllar's high _valuation is really a measurement of an
economy In poor shade, marked by unusually high Interest rates that
attract foreign capital but threaten to !lJSh the country back Into recession.
One of·them, the optimist, is President Reagan. The other, Paul Volcker,
the man with the perpetual frown, is chairman of the Federal Reserve
Board. From the same facts, they ·draw opposite conclusions.
With the expansion seeming to have gotten its second wind, the president
can provide plenty of current evidence to support his position. Car and
home sales are strong, unemployment is falltng, factory orders w;e up,
interest rates have remained fairly Stable.·
Optntol'ls of most economists support his contention that the expansion is
likely to continue through the year and perhaps Into 1!ei. But what then?
That, the critics warn, is when problems begin weighing down the
economy.
It is then, some of his own economjc advisers warn, that the big budget
deficits could very well sink the ship. Already, they argue, those deficits
are producing higher-than-usual Interest rates. Later, things might he
worse.
It is these interest rates, argue Volcker and Martin Feldstein, head of the
president's Council of Economlc Advisers, that have made the dollar 59
attractive. Wby, theY suggest, shouldn't foreign money seek out high
rates?
These same foreign InvestOrs, however, aren't likely to be impressed at
what those high, deflcit·induced rates eventually might do to the economy:
Make it impoSsible for business to continue expanding.
Meanwhile, the country runs a big .trade deficit because of the dollar's
high valuation. U.s: exporters can't sell their dollar-denominated goods in
foreign markets because they're too expensive. But, foreign nations can
export to the United States because their goods are relatively less

expensive.
Not only are jobs lost, critics say, but the United States is falltng to build

newer. nnore efficient, more competitive plants.

Statistics on capital spending show. that the current recovery in such
spending has been the strongest of five recoveries since the early ~-But
little of it has been for plant expansion and renewal. Most ls.for equipment
only.
Eventually, critics argue, the economy wtll pay for these practices: It
might boom, but it is likely to be the boom before the bust.
Who is correct?

Letter to the editor
Support, no put downs
In response to the letter "Bus
Driver Supported'; I would like to
state my opinion. I feel that ali the
bus drivers of Meigs Local should
be upset because it has been said
that our buses are dirty Inside and
outside, we drive too fast, and we
are bad drivers.
I keep my bus as clean as posst ble
but it gets mtghtiy cold sometimes
and I don't plan on risking my

health lo wash a bus if it's not really
real dirty. Have you ever washed a
bus in the winter? Or summer?
Well, it's a big joke and I think we
should have support not "Put
Downs.''

As for driving fast that's not what
always causes an accident. We all
have our share or problems.- Leta
Goodwin Hall, Pomeroy, Ohio, Bus
No. 33.

Look at all drivers
In response to lhe letter "Bus
Driver Suppol1ed," I would like to
state my feelings! As for the
accident I wasn't there so I don't
know who was or is to blame If
anyone. But Black has already been
cited and as for her getting the route
back that's not up to me or the other
drivers! But from the article "Bus
Driver Suppol1ed" all the bus
drivers of Meigs Local were "Put
Down" except for one. My bus as
~ell as many of the other buses are
kept clean as possible inside and

outside. It is a real job to wash a bus
es)l€Cially in lhe winler and we do
not have a "drive-through bus
wash."
Also the drivers go through a
training to get their job and some
may be better than others at
driving. But should you pul all bus
drivers down just to show you
approve of one driver's abtltties?
I wish people would look at all the
drivers instead of lhree or four. Alberta Loftis, Route 4, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·

Major concern overlooked
In response to the past letters, I
believe that many people are
overlooking a major concern for the
well-being of Mike Edwards,
Esther Black and the children, who
were on the school bus.
The main concern .seems to be
who can we lay the blame on and
also whose stde· should be take?
Even though it may be Esther
Black's fault llegally), It doesn't
mean
have to treat her a.S a "bad
guy" type person. ·
Everyolie makes mistakes and I
thlllk theBoardofEducatlon·shouJd

takes, to dispute how perfect they
try to be.
Esther Black seems to have been
a good bus driver In the past.I don't
think she would want to be In an
accident if she could avoid tt.
I think-everyone who is~perfect
and mistake-free shOuld be the only
people who can decide the argu."
ments. I think the law wtll 1 Jjlace
blame where appropriate !nits due
process. So, how about a Utfle
concern tor human nature Instead
of ~ to take sides and place
blame ourselveji. How aboUt some
cOncern lf.Selt with ihls ·Wlien - persoriileoncern and feeitng for the
making a declslon. I don't think the people Involved. -Randy Murray;
board Is 'free from making mfs. BGSU, Bowling Green, OH 43403.

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The New York Times' David
Shipler, filing from Jerusalem,
reports on a boclk that is a
publishing sensation in Israel. It ts
called "Syria and Palestine Under
Turkish Rule, " and it descrtbj!s, In
the correspondent's summary,
"the Lebanese clans and their
fueds, the assassinations and the
disappearances (of innocent people) at checkpoints" in Lebanon.
The IX10k was written and first
published 145 years ago. Very little
(save for tlle-oresence of the Soviet
oear) is different today. "Just
change the first names and you
have the current situation," an
Israeli official said. "If our key
people had read this book, they
would have seen what was obtalna·
ble In Lebanon and what was not."
One surveys the scene with much
sadness, and there rises from the
confusion, suddenly audible again,

has said is: 'The United States is
the voice of Gen. Ariel Sharon.
much too reluctant to let matters
General Sharon is among the least
endearing of men, but sensible take their course.
policies are pot necessarily made
In mid.June of 1982, the Israeli
by endearing men. The situation as military offensive against PJ..O.
it now stands is dtptomatic·mtlltary dominated Lebanon was trium·
rubble.
phantly successful, having just
On Thursday, the government of done away ·with the whole of the
French President Francois Mltter· Syrian air defenses. At that point
rand let it be known that, thank-you enonnous pressure was pui on the
very much, France was not going to Israeijs to stop dead b) their tracks.
sit it out alone in Lebanon, now that After two days of IndeCision, Israel
the Soviet Union, excerctslng its complied.
usual Dare for mlschief, vetoed the
So was it 28 years ago when the
idea of a U.N. patrol. The British Israelis, French aud Brttish mobU·
are on their way out, and the !zed to strike against Nasser's
Americjins are flr1ng petulantly Egypt. President Eisenhower and
from five mUes or so off the coast in Secretary Dulles raged against the
the general direction of where action, and under threat of Amerl·
mobUe anti'aircratt units are pop- can retaliation, the enterprise
ping off ai American obiiervatton · collapsed. It was not until 17 years
planes that are obseivtng what the later than Sadat reteued Egypt
145-year-old book relates is going on fromthelegacyofNasser . Thosel7
In the area. What General Sharon years were poisonous, and tens of

Parker may crank up Red Machine

Young signs
·$40 million

7

thousands lost their lives u tlte
result of a militant lnlecurlty tha\
might have been pacUied.
,
What Ariel Sharon · II saying,
really, is that the fate of Lebanon Ia
going to be decided by other than
those nice arrangements we con·
trive at Harvard seminars. The.
result of current diplomacy is that
the Lebanese anny, if it exista at
ali, is regroupong presumably to
take on Monaco. Oh yes, when
General Sharon volunteered to
train units of the Lebanese army,
he was told, once again, No.
President Gemayel is still rumored to be In command of his
palace, but it may be that the
Druz.e, or the Shiites, or whoever,
have occupied the cellar noor. Syria
will proceed to exerclle as much
tnOuence In Lebanon as it can short
of triggering a war from Israel.
And Israel, almost for the first
time, is truly divided. 'There are
those who believe that Israel needs
once again to go into acllon to guard
its strategic Dank. Others believe
that recent ventures judged to ~
imperialistic have drained Israel's
primary resource, which is nnorat.,
It greatly offends the Western
cultural mtndset to recognize that
sometimes situations do not get
tranquilized through the use of
diplomacy. We greatly desire that
they should be, and every effort
should be made through diplomacy.
But sometimes, 'ils for Instance in
Algeria In 1962, the question
hecomes as simple as: Who would
exercise definitive power? It became a question not whether
Algeria and France could achieve a
concordat but a question of: Whp
would prevaU? It is altogethel;
possible that pe11ce wtll not come to
Ireland save after the marginal loss
of life that establishes who is the
.winner, who is the loser.

TAMPA, Fla. - 'The once- from Tony Perez, myself and Dave
fonnldable Big Red Machine may Concepcion, who have aU been on
beonthevergeotgetttngcrankedup winning teams," says Parker, who
again thanks to a new part that signed with the Reds as a free agent
stands 6-foot-5 and scales 2.ll and wtu be the team's cleanup

pouocw.

USFLdeal
LOS ANGELES (AP) - .Never
hal there been anything like the
contract AU American quarterback
Steve Young now has with the Los
Anaeles Express of the United
States Football League.
·
The agreement, which Involves
four R81101Ul of football, wt11 aUow
Young to earn $40 mlllton over the
next 43 years.
Young, who set or tied 13 NCAA
pustngand totaloffensererords the
put two years at Brigham Young,
stanecS the mind-boggling contract
Monday that overshadows any
agreement ever signed by any
athlete In any sport.
Youngwtll receive In excess of$.1)
mflllon In deferred payments from
1990 to m - when he is 65 through the Income earned in
graduated annuities.
''I hope to fix up my car and take
my girlfriend out to dinner for the
t1rst time In four years ....," a
grinning Young said at a press
Conference called to announce his
signing.
Despite the probable effects of
tntlatlon, and the fact that $1 mlillon
deposited in a tax-free account
today at 12 percent Interest would
grow to more than $93 mUllon by
:mt, the $40 million figure puts
Young on a new plateau.
· As a yardstick, President Rea·
gan's annual salary is $lro,&lt;XKI a
year plus a $50,00 expense account.
Muhanunad AU earned approxl·
mately $50 mWion in 20 years of
fighting. Donald Trump bought the
USFL's New Jel'!ley Generals for
$10 miWon. The Metrodome in

Mlnneapolls was built for $55
million.

The top total nnoney cootract In
theNatlona!FootbaliLeaguenowis
that of San Diego quarterback Dan
Fouts, who Ia receiving IIOIJlO $6
mUllonoverslxyears.'Thertchestln
the NationalBasketbaliAssoclatlon
belongs to . Los Angeles' Earvtn
"Magic" Johnson, $21 mllllon for 25
years. In baseball, It's the$21mUllon
being paid over 10 years to the New
York Yankees' Dave Winfield. In
theNattonalHockeyLeague,tt'sthe
$21 rn11t1on. 21-year contract owned
by Edmonton's Wayne Gretzky.

RIOCX)ftD.SMASJDNG CON·
TRACI' - Steve Young, the
puslng quarterback from
Brtpam Young University, has
111p1ec1 what 111 n!pOried to be the
rlchelt IIIJOI1II contract ever, $40
mUon with the USFL. (AP
lese photo).

WASHINGTON - Despite off!·
clal denials, it seems clear that
pseudo-sctenttftc theorieS of crime
prevention have found a home In
the Justice Department. Money has
been funneled to various "ologtsts"
who think they can spot future
delinquents on the strength of
biological proflles.
In othei words, the federal law
enforcement agency is not just
throwing out the Common Law
assumption of Innocence unlll guilt
is proven - but is actually
conspiring to subject large
numbers of young Americans to
surveillance. This goes heyond
Allee In Wonderland: verdict first ,
no trial, not even a crime.
When I first broke the story of one
weird proposal - to spot future
criminals by testing young boys for
left-handedness, sweaty plams,
oddly shaped ears, long third toes
and similar danger signals several members of Congress

reacted with outrage. 'The project
was quickly junked.
.
Deputy Assistant Attorney Gen·
eral Richard B. Abell complained
that my article had "embeWihed"
the facts. He dented that Justice
was being gulled by quacks and
Insisted that the department dld not
support "the. kinds of activities
suggested by the article." Abell
evidently doesn't know what's
going on In his agency.
My aSsociate Indy Badhwar has
investigated other Justice Depart·
merit proposals, inCluding a $325,&lt;XKI
grant to the Rand Corp. to Identify
future delinquents and · (jevelop
"ln~rvention strategies"," and an
$lm,&lt;XKI grant to Dr. Judith Rels·
man to monitor the hormonal and
neurological responses of young
boys exposed to girlie magazines
and pornographic films.
The latest cockmamte project costing about $900,&lt;m - wtll try to

track the causes of delinquency
back beyond childhood ·to the
womb. It proposes to investigate
the effect that "severe and prolonged disturbances to tl)e other
during pregnancy" may have "to
change the behavior. of the fetus and
even to leave · dlsPollltlofilll traits
that persist beyond litrth.'~
Citing the country's pragmatic
need for a rapid tdentWcation of
aggressive juvenile behavior before it escalates to violent crtmtnal
activity," the study will evaluate
"biological factors" that may tndi·
cate potential danger. 'The project
is being undertaken by the University of Pennsylvania.
The FBI will have a hand In the
project. Three G-men will partie!·
pate, and part of the'project will be
conducted by the FBI's Behavioral
Scte~ School at Quantico, Va.
As proposed, the .study wtll
develop computerized statistical

profiles of potential delinquents,:
possibly leading to "the evolution
a national center for the analysts or:
violent crime."
•
If this sounds famtuar, It should. ~
Such a federally funded "violence'
cente( ~as proposed l!tC,alifomta!
in 1973 when .Ronald Reagan was .
governor. It was to be run by ~
proponents of psychosurgery and :
drug treatment for thost&gt; deemed to:
have "violence-predisposing brain •
disorders." 'The center was klUed,
through the intervention of then-J
Sen. Sam Ervin, 0-N.C., who called.
It "an extraordinary challenge to:
:
human freedom and dignity."
A few months later, the glare
publicity also ended a proposed ~
grant to Richard Nixon's personal:
pbystctan, Dr. Arnold M. Hutsch-:
necker, who wanted to screen!
etght-year-olds for "delinquent ten-!
dencles," treat some of them, and:
put the "hard core" In sllOC!al~
detention camps.
.,•

We will be Closed Wednesday - All Day
-- to prepare for our Gigantic Bassett
Nationwide Sale '84! See Wednesday's
paper for more details.

Young is the latest bene!lctary of
the bidding competition between the
USFL, which in its second season. is
seeking to establish credibility by
signing stars, and the NFL.
The newer league has grabbed
two big 1983 prizes - running back
Mike Rader, the Hetsman Trophy
winner from Nebraska, and Young,
runnerup In the Hetsman voting.
Young's contract wlth Los An·
geles, a source told 'The Associated
PreY,willbeworthUmllllonayear
fortheflrst!ouryearsandtncludesa
$2~ mUllon stgnlng bonus. The
ctmplex agreement also includes a
UOO,&lt;XXl annual endorsement poUcy
with a savings and loan company in
Salt Lake City, and a scholarship
policy with BYU worth $183,&lt;XKI.
Young, who said he expects to be
ready to play regularly for the
Express In "a couple of weeks,"
Insisted that nnoney was not the
deciding factor.

dale is vulnerable and that it is a
Rood omen tor Glenn becau5e of his
strength tn the South.'' ·
"Then what did New Hampshire
prove?"
"It proved that Iowa didn't mean
beans for Mondale - .but it means
everythjng for-Hart.'' . ,
"What did New Hampshire do for
Jesse Jackson?"
.
·
·
"It ga:ve liim an opportunity to
apologize for referring io New'i: ork

SAVE 504

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City as 'Hymtetown,' in hopes of:
winning the Jewish vote in ;
...
:
Florida."
"What am I supposed to do for '
Super Tuesday?" she wanted to;
know.
;
"Go to the deli and buy lots of cold ;
cuts, potato salad, popcorn and ·
beer. I'll Invite over all the guys in :
the carpool, because nobody in ;
America wants to watch Super :
Tuesday alone."

With Us Today.
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·Berry's World

around the earth."
','Do the New Hampshire results
mean that Glenn is out of It?-" • ·· ·.•
"Glenn aoesn't think so. He said
the fact that Gary Hart won so big
against Mondale means"that M~n-

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He came in second."
"Yes, but he was supposed to
comP in a bill first. After Iowa we
thought Mondale had the thing all ·
wrapped up. But with Hart's
showing in New Hampshire, we
now have a new ball game and this
will put all the political pundits back
in business."
"Why should the public believe
anything you people say after you
wete so wrong in New
Hampshire?"
"They have no choice If they want
to have an exciting Democratic
primary. The only sin we political
pundits can commit is to bore the
American people.''
"I think the media is just hyPing
up all t~ races so they have
· something to write about and show
on TV."
~·That's not irue. We're giving the
Americans what they W!lnt. If
Mondale had it all'sewed· up af!er
New Hampshire, no one would buy
newspapers Qr watch their TV sets
on Super Tuesday. How would you
· h11v~ felt if you knew six mo~ In
· advance that the ·Los Al!geles
R.itdersweregotng'towintheSuper
Bowl?"
"Why did everyone say in the fall
that the race was going to be
between Glenn and Mondale? ~'
"Beca111e ,Glenn looked like a
natural candidate 111 the tradition of
Dwight ~nhower. He was a hero
who had gone Into space."
"So whll~ h&amp;ppl!iied?l' .
·~The oilier Derilcicratlc p~lden·
tlal candidates used llti space
achleven)!!llts agallllt him. ·They
exsatceptd
.,Glenhown dltodn'drttknowvea acnaythlpsulnge'

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Super Tuesday________A__
My wife and I were Watching the
results of the New Hampshire
primary.
· "Is the race all over now?" she
wanted to know.
"Of course it isn't over,'' I told
her. "It won't be over until Super
Tuesday."
"You mean the Democrats are
going to play a football game to
decide who their candidate is going
tobe?"
"No, Super Tuesday, on March
13, is the day nine states choose 650
delegates for the Democratic convention. We'll know a lot more
about who will oppose Reagan then
than we do now." .·
"If Super Tuesday is that tmportant, why was everyone so excited
about New Hampshire?"
"Because New Hampshire was
the first state to hold a primary.
NewHampshtrecouldglveusahint
on what will happen on Super
Tuesday."
"I thought Iowa did that."
"Iowa was just political caucuses. New Hampshire . was de-.
· clded by the !)eO)&gt;ll! going to the
polis. It's a whale of a difference.''
"Then why did the media make
such a big deal of Iowa?"
"Because it was the first test of
bow the canc!tdates would do. The
blg · deal in Iowa was not that
Mondale won so big, but that Gary
Hart . did better than everyone
exjlected, and John Glenn did worse
tlian he - had - hoped -for~- This
obviously affected wliat the ·mecita
would.do about the coniest in New
Hampshire. Many of them who had
.goored "Hart started C!)ncentratlng
.on him and giving him momentum
- . at the expense of GleJin and the
others who bo!flbed otit In Iowa.
'Ibis is why Hart did so well tn New
Hampshire and Mondale did so
badly."
"Mondale didn't do that badly.

we'U he back."

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Juvenile Crime 'tendencies'____J_ac_k_And_er_so--::n~•

Atter nnore than a decade wlth
Pittsburgh's "Lumber Company,"
outfielder Dave Parker has shaved
his beard, removed the diamond
stud frcm his ear and shucked
Pirates' black and gold unlfonn
combinations for the conservative
red and white duds of the Cincinnati
Reds, who are trying to rebound
from two straight last-placeflnlshes
In the National league West.
"These young players' productivtty might improve with guidance

hitter. "Our roles wtll be to keep the
team up. if you beat us today, you've
got to do II again tomorrow, because

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Ohio

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�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Pome10y-Middlepon, Ohio

Tuetday, Mardl6, 1984

Tornadoes hope for replay at district tourney
By SCO'IT D. WOLFE
Peebles centered Its attack around
RACINE - If the old saying · three players who scored nearly 20
" History r~[X&gt;ats Itself" has any points a game. This season Peebles
truth toil . Coach Carl Wolfe and his lacks a star as It relies on aU five
SouthPrn Tornado basketball team starters to chip In 10polntsa game.
could bP in for quite a memorabl~ making It difficult to key on a ny one
sm son. considering the fact that player.
just two years ago the Tornadoes
Coach Wolfe continued. "They
found thems~l ves In an Identical run the same thing as in '82 . Two
roiP underdogs going Into the years ago, they had a higher
District bask~tball tournament scoring team centered around
dga inst a highly touted Peebles three players. This year they have
t~am . Sout h~rn knocked off an
five men who all shoot well." Each
undefeated Peebles Indian club ot Peebles' five starters were at one
that season, then went on to the time or another the leading scorer
state finals before finally bowing to throughout the season. At one time
Middletown Fenwick.
before the end of the season. all five
If the Tornadoes have a ny say In were averaging at least 10polnts or
th~ matter. history will repeat itself
more per game; 10 points being the
as the Tornadoes have been lowest average and 12 being th~
practicing extra ·hard In prepara· high mark.
lion for an "upset " victory over
Pattern type club
Peebles Wednesday night in the
Peebles Is a pattern oriented ball
District Tournament at Chillicothe, club that normally sets up In a 1•2·2
beginning at 7 p.m.
alignment. They are a great
In 1982 Southern took a 21·1 passing club that runs a very
record to the district against a 22.0, controlled offense. According to the
undefeated Peebles club, which had scouting report they work tor the
a higher ranking In the state good shot and seldom take a bad
basketball polls .
shot. The passlng·type offense has
This season Southern took a 21·1 been used by Coach Art Myers tor
record to the district against a 22·0 the past six seasons. resulting In
undefeated Peebles club, which had numerous winning seasons and
a higher ranking In the state championship clubs.
basketball polls.
The Indians' basic defense Is a
This season Southern faces a very sticky man·to-man much like that
similar situation. as It takes a 2().2 ot Southern's, however, when the
record to Chillicothe. Peebles is need artses they also play a 1·3-1
ranked second in the AP poll and zone tull court press. At no time has
third UP!, while Eastern stands Peebles shown a fast break, but
eighth and nintb respectively. makes the transition to a controlled
According to Coach Wolfe, "Their offensive game. They played a
record is a little better ... their controlled man·to-man and make
ranking is a Utile better. That alone. no gambles.
puts us in position as the underdog
With four starters back from last
team. The pressure Is on them!"
year's team, Peebles has ·the
Although the record and ranking experience, but ·lacks the tradition
are slightly higher than Southern's. ot winning a dlstrtct game. Return·
It has yet to be proven which Is the lng are four seniors, Including
better of the two clubs.
6-foot·2 Brent Newman, a righ·
The stage has been set. the !handed outside shooter and tallest
setting Is the same.lndlcated Coach Indian. Despite his size Newman
Carl Wolfe. The 1983-84 Peebles plays out front due to a knee injury
Indian club Is very comparable to that Umlts his lateral movement.
its team of two years ago with the
Another returnee Is 6-0 guard
exception of one alteration. In 1982, Judd Johnson, noted as an excellent

outside shooter and perhaps the
man "to watch" offensively for the
Indians. Five-10 Jerry Copley is
noted as the team's best driver,
while 5-11 Richard Smalley and
junior Jeff Daulton, another six·
footer are "good" outside shooters.
Daulton. however. does best from
the inside.
Sophomore Doug McFarland Is
sixth man and provides most ot
their bench strength. As a team
they own a fine overall shooting
percentage.
Peebles Is comparable to South·
em in Its spread between offensive
and defensive average. Southern's
regular season spread stood at 69.5
to 56.2. a 13.3 spread.
Peebles' only loss came to Class
"A" Cincinnati Academy of Physi·
cal Education (CAPE). a loss of
just tour points. Portsmouth
Northwest came close: but was
defeated by three points, Paint
Valley came close but lost by five,
(Paint Valley plays Ross ·
Southeastern In the other lower
bracket game) , and Manchester
with a 14-7 record bowed to Peebles
by tour points in the Sectional
Championship game, 56-52.
Rebounding·wise Peebles, . des·
plte being small, jumps well and
boxes out well. They outrebounded
most of their opponents throughout
the year.
.
"In order tor us to wln·we must
have a good defensive game and
play defense Hke we did earlier In
the year. Our defense was great
early In the season, but when our
offense picked up, our defense went
down hill. We have to allow them
just one shot. We have to get the
rebound and hit the boards hard,"
Wolfe said.
Peebles' only "weakness" Is
Inside due to their size. Wolfe
continued, "We have to get the ball
Inside. Dennis (Teaford) has to
have a good game. We'll have to
work hard to get It to him and he's
got to work hard to get open."
"I feel the pressure Is ott our kids
now. We played well In the last
three regular season games ... Uke
we are capable of•playing. In the
sectional the kids were pressured to
dupllcate what the seven teams
before them had done. Now the
pressure Is gone. We should be able
to play our normal game now. The
kids know what we want them to do
offensively and defensively. They
have confidence. U we play with
confidence we'll be right In the

game with them," Wolle
emphasized.
Perhaps one of the strongest
statements WoUe made that con·
talned much truth was "They have
never won a dlstrtct tournament
game. Sometimes a team gets
snakeblt In a situation like that. We
have won In the district and we
know what It's like. U there Is any
pressure In this game, It's on
them."
Southern's forces Include a great
starting five and a strong bench
that flaunts some size, quickness,
finesse, and great shooting. not to
mention an unmatched ability to
hustle to the maximum; an ability
that has earned them the title as
" hustling Tornadoes" on the backs
ot their lettermen jackets.
Southern Is led by sharp-shooter
Rod Littlefield, who ended the
regular season with 471 points and a
23.55 scoring average. Littlefield
not only Is an outstanding talent, but
a great thinker a,nd team ball
player. Six·foot·flve Dennis Tea·
ford, noted as one of the area's big
centers, has come through with
several outstanding outings and
· great Inside games. Teaford Is a 64
percent shooter averaging 11.25
points a game With 225 points.
Excellent outside shooter Kevin
Curfman Is next In line with 209
points and a 10.45 scoring average.
Curfman has often picked up the
scoring slack, when opponents
double or triple team teammate
Rod Littlefield. Tony Deem has
contributed to the winning combi·
nation with 186 points and a 9.3
scoring average, while Wade Con·
noliy has a 5. 7 mark and Darin
Roush has a 2.6 average ..
Other Tornadoes playing innpor·
tant roles have been Jason Hill,
Kevin Teaford, Steve Teaford,
Scott Schultz, Trevor Cardone, and
Tom Greathouse.
Coach WoUe continued, "They
have a great following much like
ours. Not only does their commun·
tty give support, but It Is a
county·wlde thing. They have a
county sectional and a great county
following.
All out
750 of
tickets
were wold
by their
Thursday
morning.
"They are very comparable to us.
They are truly basketball oriented.
They love basketball at Peebles and
they love It here. Their fans will do
their part to get a victory and I'm
sure ours will too.
"They have a class program and

Art Myers Is a great coach. Hls

ment at
game
withhowever,
the Peebles
dlans
7 p.m.,
unlikeIn·
In
thepasttansanducketholdersare
to.take speclal note of the signs lndl·
cattngwhichllnetheyaretofouow.
In the past, all lines led to admls·
ston to the gymnasium, but this
year due to high fan Interest, at
least three lines wilt be utilized.
One line goes directly to the bal·
cony. Another Une goes to the noor
tevet bleachers, and another 11ne ts
for ticket purchases at the door. In
addition, one ticket line will be for

(USPS 11~910)
A Dl\llalon of Mulllmedht, lnt!.

Published l'vf&gt;ry afternoon. Monday
through Friday, Ill Cour1 Sti"N't, by the'
Ohio Valley Publishing Compan.v . Mul·

!lmedla,lnc .. Po~TWroy. O hlo4~769, 99221!S6. Second class postagt&gt; paid at Pomeroy , Ohio.

POSTMASTER: S(&gt;nd a ddrr ss to Thf:'
Dally Sentln€'1. Ill Court St ., Pomeroy.
Ohio 4$769.

SUBSCRIPTION RUES
8)' CarrtH or Motor Roulr
Onr W..,k .................................. $1.00
OnE' Monlh ................................ $4.40
Ont&gt; Y(&gt;ar .............................. $52.80

SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally ....... ........... ..
.. .. 20 CPnls
Subscrlbc&gt;r!lt not dtoslrlnlliO pay lh(&gt;car·
rl(&gt;r may rPmil In adva ncE' dirt&gt;&lt;'! lo
Th(&gt; Dally Sc.-nll nf'l on :t 6 or 12 month
basis . CrE"dll wi ll 1M&gt; RIVt&gt;n carrltr C'Uh
monlh .
No subscrtpllons by mall prrmllted In
tow ns whf&gt;rf' hom(' carrl('r §(&gt;rvJC'f' ls

ava ll abiP.

BLOCKS SHOT - Peggy Coppock (4) blocks a shot attempt by
Southern's Alana Lyons (12) during Saturday's District Champloa!lhlp
game at Waverly. At right Is the Lady Huntsmen's Debbie Conley (11).
Huntington eliminated Southern from further action with a 62-49
victory. Scott WoUe photo.

advance
Coach ticket
Carl holders.
WoUe reports
Southern fans will slt opposite the
benches next to the parking lot side
ot the gym.
Tickets will be on sale at
Southern High School until noon
Wednesday at a cost of $2.50. Some
tickets will be sold at the door on a

U W('('kS .......... ................ ..... $14.04
26 W&lt;'t'ks .... .. . .... .. .......... .. ... $27 .:10
~2

Wt&gt;f'ks ....... .... .. .... .... ... ...... .. S51.4R
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13 W•rks ......... ...............
. ll~ . :ll
26 w.. ks ............................... $29.64
!\2 Wt'&lt;'kS
.. .... ............... $$6.21

11JESDAY

With a name like
Auto-Owners. you know
our car insurance has
got to be special. And it
is .
With all kinds of
unique extra protection.
Rates that are based on
long·term ~rf01:mance .
And other special
features.
In fact , like your in·
dependent Auto·Owners
agent. our car insurance
is, w~ll. unique .

SYRACUSE -

be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Syracuse Municipal BuDding.
POMEROY - The Ladles
Auxiliary 2171 of the Fraternal
Order of the Eagles wil have a
meeting Tuedsay at 7 p.m.
There will be an auction.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The annual
Lenten breakfast, sponsored by
the women ot Trinity Church, is
Wednesday, 7:45 a.m. at the
church. Women and mlnlsterles
of all area churches are Invited to

uro. Home. Car. lluslnm.
Oat naone uya II all.

attend.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Qub will meet
Wednesday, 2 p.m at the home of

Mrs. George H.ackett.
Mrs. Chester Erwin will give a
· review of Margaret Tnunan 's
"Woman of Courage." For roU
call, members are to name a
. famous woman.

"I know computers inside and out,
· like Block knows taxes.''
"I'm t,ained to know computers, not taxes. So I
rely on lt&amp;.R Block fqr tax preparation. Block
bept up with the tax changes. They'tt trained ~~
apoc every deduction and credirl'm entirled to.
Thev must bt aood;
rhree our of evtl'\
four Block die nt1
get a refund."

POMEROY- The Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F. and A.M., will meet
·wednesday at the Pomeroy

Masonic Temple.
: Loud shirt night will be

business go to
EAST MAIN STREET

GALLIA CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

PHONE: 992-3795
Open 9 A.~.-6 P.M. Weekdays; 9·5 Saturday

:
• :
Proceeds Will Go To

nounce the birth of their !lrst child a
daughter, Lindsey Kaye, born Feb.
15 at Hoi2Jer Medical Center.
The Infant weighed 8 pounds, 5
ounces and was 211nches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Neece, Paneroy,
and paternal grandparents are
Harold Smith, Syracuse and Esther
Smith.

POMEROY, OH.

L::P:I:•a:•:•:S:t:o::l:n:a:n:d::H:•:I=~~=====~A~p~p~o~in~t~m~e~n~t~s~A~v~a~ll~a~b~le~~~~~~~

Broderick birth

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Mr. and Mrs. Martin Broderick,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, announce the birth
of their second child, Holly Nicole
born Feb.l5atSt.Joseph'sHospital,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
He weighed 7 poUnds, 14 ounces
and was~ Inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Broderick also have
a son, Joshua, 2.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Shennan Buskirk Jr.,
Middleport and maternal great·
grandmother Ia Mrs. Effie Buskirk,
Rutland.
I
Paternal grandmotller is Mrs.
Emma Broderick, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

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'

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Meigs
County Humane Society will
meet 7: ll p.m. Thursday at the
LaSalle Hotel.
RACINE - Southern Band
Boosters will meet Thursday at
7: ll p.m. In the band room .

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jona·
tbaQ. Meigs Chapter of the
Daughfets of the American
Revolution wll meet Friday at
1:ll p.m. at the First Baptist
Church, Pomeroy. Ray Swick
of Parkersburg wiU present the
program, "Heritage of Our
Country, Blennerhasset Island."

H ith Sc-hoot
Mono.- S(.,.drnl by

o.,.

Hotlywood Hoolf.ef
byNifht.

SA1URDAY
Rlll'LAND - Tlte Impact
Team, a group of teen·agers
from the Central Ohio District

Nazarene Churches, will be
singing and gtvlng testinnonles
about peer pressure and the
Christian at a meeting at the
Rutland Nazarene Church, Sat·.
urday, 6: ll p.m. The meeting is
open to both youth and adults.

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set
for publiC hearing case
No. 83-31-EL·EFC (Sub·
file A). to revl.ew the fuel
procurement practices
and policies of The Ohio
Power · Company, the
operation of Its Electric
Fuel Component and
related matters. This
hearJng Is scheduled to
begin 1:30 p.m. on
March 7, 1984 at· City
Council Chambers, 218
Cleveland 'Avenue,-:SW: .
canton, Ohio 44702.
All interested partles.1WIII
be given·an opportunity
to be heard. FurtherJnformatlon may be ilb·
talned ~Y contacting the
Commission.
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olleerved. Oyster stew wUl be
served at 6; ll p.m. with the
meeting to be held at 7: ll p.m.

~·

James and Diana Smith an·

-

5 30· 9 30

.'

of 1984, Ms. Harfst notes. Dr.
George Baln, Local Records Specialist tor the Ohio Historical
Society, and Dr. Hubert Wllheinn,
professor of geography at Ohio
Unlverslty·Athens. will serve as
discussion leaders tor the programs, to be held In Portsmouth,
Pomeroy. Chillicothe and Nelson·
ville. The programs wll publicize
the avallablllty of the Resources
Guide, and are intended to stinnu·
late Interest on the part of
Individuals who may have had little
opportunity to begin exploring their
own or their com munities'
histories.
The Ohio Humanities Council is a
state-based agency of the Natlortal
Endowment tor the Humanities.
The council meets four times per
year to award grants which provide
dialogue among humanities scholars and the general public. For
more Information, contact Ms.
Harfst at (614) 384·2103.

Smith birth
their

We will sarve
American &amp; Mexican Chili.

The Sutton

Township Trustees meeting will

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People who know

MARCH 8

For each library facility, there
will be a listing of the local history
and genealogy resources that II·
brary owns. This part of our project
Is unusual because few or these
resources appear In any sort ot
comprehensive !!.sting such as the
OCLC data base or the National
Union Catalog.
The format ot the guide will be
simple and easy to use, she said,
and It wUl serve as a basic
Introduction tor Individuals to use
before they travel to visit a library
In the region. Participating Ubrar·
tans and volunteers are comp!Hng
Information tor the Resource
Guide, and hope to publish It In the
summer of 1984.
The second aspect of the grant
will be a series ot tour public
programs, to be held during the tall

Calendar

992-6687

1-------------L-----------

.

MEMPHIS. Tenn. lAP)- Clncln·
natl and Southern Mississippi will
play the co-champions of the Metro
Conference Thursday In theopenlng
round of the league tournament at
Mld·South Coliseum.
Louisville, which shared the
regular season IItle with Memphis
State, will play Cincinnati In the
tournament's opening game while
the Tigers wUl play Southern
Mississippi.
The pairings were announced
Monday by the conference otflce.
Other first·round games Thurs·
day will match Vl:rglnla Tech and
Tulane and Florida State and SoUth .
Carolina.
Flrsf round games will begin at
noon, 2 p.m .• 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Friday's games will be at 6 p.m.
and 8 p.m. The championship game
will be at 11 a.m. Saturday.

Jenkins of Bowling Green and Vicky
MuSky of Western Michigan have
been selected as the players of the
week l!l Mljj-Arnerican Conference
basketball.
Jenkins, .a 6-foot-5 senior fOIWard
from Wm;ren..Ohio, won the men's
honors for scoring . 3ll points and
pullliig aown l!i rellolinds inBowllllg
Green's victOries over EaaterQ
Mlchlgan and.Toledo llist Week.·
i

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

AT

Metro pairings set

CQLIJMBLTS. Oblo CAP)- D.aYid

~~~a.mo..

MAIL SUBSCRIP'I' tONS
lnaldt Ohio

r;:==========:;i
CHILl DINNER
In Middleport

The Plckaway County Dlstrtct
Library and Plckaway County
Genealogical SOciety" Historical Society are among 22 southeastern
Ohio libraries and local historical
groupe recently awarded an Ohio
Humanities CouncU Grant for their
project entitled, "Heritage Resour·
ces of Southeastern Ohio." The
project Ia sponsored by Ohio Valley
Area Ullraries (OVAL) In Well·
ston, and Is designed to improve
public access to and understandlng
of southeastern Ohio local history.
There are two parts to the
project, notes project director
Linda Harfst. The first major
aspect Involves publishing a resource manual which will describe
the local llbraries in our region
which have collections available to
people Interested In local history.

The Daily Sentinel

first-come, first serve basts. WoUe
urges all Southern fans to arrive at
the school early to assure a good
seat.

MAX'S INC.

Historical society project begins

80U111ERN STAT18'110!
Fl/p n'll l'laAw
Rod unte!teld
~ . 81 471 23.~

American N('WspapPr Publlsht'rs As sociation, Nationa l Adv(lrllslng ReprPsentallvf&gt;, Branham Newspaper Sa i('S,
711 Third Avenul'. Nrw York, Nt&gt;w
York 10017.

The Daily Sentinel Page

KevtnCUrlman
TonyOeom
Dennil Toaford

N"""'

Fans should note ticket lines
CHILUCOTHE - Wednesday
evening the Southern Tornadoes
Will Invade Chillicothe High School
for a first round district tourna·

By The Bend

record speaks for ltseU."
In closing WoUe noted, " If we WIOO ConnpUy
Darin Roush
play like we're capable of playing,
they (Southern'sboys)cangoasfar . - - - - - - - - - - - as they want. The first step will be
the hardest."
Tickets are on sale until Wednes·
day at noon at Southern High School
or until 1111 tickets are sold. Tickets
are $2.50 for both students and
adults and will be sold on a
first-come, flrst ·serve basis from
the high school office.
Game tinne Is 7 p.m. at ChUllcothe
High School.

Mt"mlx&gt;r: Thr Assoclatf'd Prns. In·
land Dally PrHs Assoclaton and thr

The Daily Sentinel

'

I
I
l

S

�Pag• 6

.. ·",,.

n. Daily Sentinel

Raymond Parker

Manhattan Beach, Ciillf., Mrs. Ruth
Carter of Pomeroy and Mrs. Linda .
Raymond Parker, 89, St. Peters- Hensley of Galllplls; five sisters,
burg, Fla., died Monday at Pasad- Mrs. Ernest (Clarice) NuU of
ena Manor, St. Petersburg. Hewasa Gautpolls,.Mrs. Gertrude Slagle ot
fonner resident of Meigs County.
Oak Hill, Mrs. James (Phyills)
He was born January 13, 1895 In Trotter of East Uverpool, Mrs.
MlnersvWe the son of the late Richard (Ruth) Johnson of Toledo,
Lorenzo and Sarah Rieber Parker. and Mrs. Clifton (Marcella) Long of
He was also preceded In death by his Thompklnsville, Ky.; two brothers,
wife, Mary Parker.
Emerson of Toledo, and Leland of
He was a member of Pomeroy Fallbrook, Calif. ; nine grandchUdLodge 164 F&amp;AM, chapter councU, ren and eight great-grandchUdren.
Blue Lodge Knight Templers.
Funeral services wt11 be held10:ll
Swvtvors Include one daughter, a.m. Thursday In Waugh-Halley- .
Fn!da Wolfe, St. Petersburg; one Wood Funeral Horne. Burial will be
sister, Helen Arnold, Columbus; one In Salem Cemetery. Friends may
brother, Otis l;'arker, Waverly; two call at the funeral home from3-5and
grandchUdren and five great 7-9p.m. Wednesday.

Sally Good
Sally Good, 83, Rt. 1, LangsvUle

died Sunday morning In Pomeroy
Health Care Center.
Mrs. Good was born October 28,
1900 In Kentucky. She was preceded
In death by her parents and her
bnoband, VIrgil Good. She was a
homemaker.
!!he Is survived by one brother,
Roy Thomas, Monticello, Ky.; a
half-sister, May Fisher, Norwood,
Ohio; one step-son; Darrell B. Good,
Columbus.
Graveside services will be held at
Standish Cemetery Wednesday at 1
p.m . Ewing Funeral Horne Is In
chai'gle of arrangements. There will
be no caUing hours. ,

I .

Dan Curtis
Mrs. Paul Frick received wbrd of
the death of her nephew, Dan Curtis
who was killedSundaynearChlcago
'in an automobUe accident.
Mr. Curtis was thesonofMr. and
Mrs. Horner Curtis, Shellsburg;
Iowa. Horner Curtis was formerly of
Pomeroy.
Curtis, In addition to his parents, Is
survived by his wife, three daughters, one brother and one sister all of
Iowa, a brother, Keith Curtis of
Pomeroy; aunt and uncle Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Frick of Pomeroy, and
several cousins and friends of
Pomeroy.
He was preceded In death by a
brother, Mike who was also killed In
an automobile accident In Sellsburg.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at2 p.m. In Vinton, Iowa with
burial in Shlielsburg, Iowa.

Aldelh E. White

Pearl I. Harris

Aldeth Eugenia White,~. Lower
River Road, Gautpolls, died at 5
a .m . today In Grant Hospital,
Columbus, having been In faDing
health for several weeks.
Born March 12, 1903, In Walnut
Township, Gallla County, daughter
of·the late Chester Finley and Sadie
Coleman Howard, she was a retired
employee of Davls-Shuler Co. and
was ·a member of ~ United
Methodist Church arwY American
Legion Post 27 AuxUtary.
She was the widow of Homer
Wood and Roy White.
Surviving are two sons, Robert
WoodofCanalWinchester,andTom
White of Gallipolis; three daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Aspen of

Pearl I. Harris, 68, Mason, was
dead on arrival Sunday morning at
St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington.
Born July 17, 1915, In Letart, she
wasthedaughterofthelateOscarJ.
and Servilla M. Rickard Hart.
She was a member of the Clifton
United Methodist Church.
Survtvlng are her husband, WU!tam R. Harris; several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m .
Wednesday at Foglesong Funeral
Home,
the Rev.
Kenneth Mason,
Watkins, with
officiating.
Bur.lal wt11 follow In Kirkland Memorial
Gardens.
Friends may call af the funeral
home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

The Meigs County Junior Fair

helps coacb:t the junior fair as a part of the annual
Meigs County Fair. Participating groups are Future
Fanners of America, Future Homemakers of
America, IIEOJ, Vocatlonal Industrial Clubs of
America, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouls and 4-H. Officers

one-time Democratic front-runner
goes Into next week's blg, crucia l
round of delegate-selection contests
wlth.four straight losses.
Mondale kept up hls new offensive
against Hart on Monday, saying the
two-tenn Colorado sena tor lacks
compassion and that Hart's plan for
a $10per barrel taxon oil would he "a
dagger In the heart of the American
economy.''
Mondale hit Ha rt on a new Issue,
saying he opposes proposed "access
charges" that would be levied on
telephones for the right to use
long-distance lines and accusing
Hart of falling to oppose them .
He also took on Hart ·s main theme
of new leadership and new Ideas for
the future. "It's a question of who
has that vision of the futu re and who
has the skiD and the guts, the guts to
lead us there," Mondale said In
Boston.

Mondale attributed his losses to
Ha rt 's attacks on him as representIng old values and Ideas.
Mondale campaigned In New
Jersey Monday night before flying
today to Orlando and Tampa, Fla.,
and then to Atlanta .
Hart , Mondale. Ohio Sen. John
Glenn and the Rev. Jesse Jackson
all focused on the South, where
Alabama , Georgia and Florida all
hold primaries next Tuesday.

Clara M ilhoan

Patrol cites driver
after minor accident
The state highway patrol cited
Kenneth F. Mitchell, ll, LangsvUle,
on three . charges following a
one-vehicle accident early Monday.
The patrol said Mitchell was
westbound on ohio 124 at~: ll a.m.
when he reported,ly lost control on a
CliNe, went off· the left side of the
road and struck a guard rail and

fence.
· Mitchell's vehicle was moderately damaged. MltcheU was ticketed for left of center, driving under
suspension and hitsklp.

Wf8iher foreeast
· Clearing and cold tonight. Low

18-23. Winds becoming light and
vllrlable. Wednesday, mostly sunny
In . the morning, then Increasing
afternoon cloudiness. High again
8fOUJI(I35. Chanceofpreclpltatlon20
pelun,t tonight and 10 percent
Wednellday.
. • -Extalded Olllo Forecut
'Diill . , lllrOdlh Salurday:
or _ .
likely
mu , ,. Fllr Friday aac1 LWur-

Rt

I

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ELECTA ANN
SOUDERS, DECEASED
C.. No. 24243 Docket12
Ploe 3911
NonCE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On 9th November 1983. rn
the M e•gs Coun ty P10bate
Court Case No 24 243 . Berna dine Souders M eter. W ehe
Te-rrace. PomerOy. Oh•o 45 769
was appotnted becu tux of the
estate ol Electa Ann Souders.

deceased. late of 392 S folth
Stree l.

Proba te Judge

Bv Lena K Nessel road

Holzer Medical Center; Middleport
10 a.m. to RaUroad St. for Allee
Plants, to Veterans Memorial; 3:42
p.m.,Middleport to Mill St. for
WUllam Morris, to Veterans Memorial; Middleport at 8: 47 p.m. to
Stonewood Apartments for Neva
Grlnun, to HolZer Medical Center; ·
7:57 a .m., Syracuse, for Becky
Lavendar to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Rutland, 4: 50 p.m. to Houtday
Road for Eugene Jeffers; 11:32,
Tuppers Plains to Chester for Dorsel
Miller, to Holzer Medical Center.

LEGAL NOnCE
Not1CP 15 hereb\' g•ven that

Case Nos 82·484·TP P£X.
82 1124 .JP.PEX 82 · 1183 ·
TP PFX 82 12 19 JP.PEX 82·
1298·TP PtX and 83 1244 .
TP PEX •nvolvtnfl reouosts to
thP. Pubhc Uttltlte s Commtsston
of Ott• o pursuant to Seclton

4905 26 Revosed Co&lt;1e lor

rwo-wav nonopuonat extended
ar ea sP.rv•ces lEASt betwf'en
va r.ous P~tchanqes o l The OhtO
Bell Tere phone Company Gen ~"tat Telephone Comoany ol
Oh•o C•ncmnat1BPII Telephone
Comoanv Un•te&lt;1 TPlephone
Company ol Oh•o anct Al l TEL
Oh•o Inc have bP.P.n consolt{lated lor the hmtted puroose ol
r.ons• de rtnq altPrnat •ves b y
whrc h •nter· LATA EAS m ay be
prov1dfld rn s•tualtons tnvolvt n g
Ohro Bell and /or General.
w here ac ttons taken at the
federal level w ould app ea r ro
proh•b•t those compan•es from
provtdtng such servtCP The
CommtSSton ha s scheduled
th1 S rnaller tor publ tc hean nq
o n M onday Aprtl 2. I 984 at
10 00 a m at the ofl rces o f the
Commtss•on 3 75 South Htqh
S t rPer
Columbus
Ohro
43215 In tha t a Commtss•on
der•s•on •n thts maller may
•mpact upon lu rure deftberatrons rela ttve to EAS cases
tnvolv•nn Stmtlar 1n ter-LATA St ·
r u.li •O n s a s thr above ·
r nurnerated c ases any pan v
havtnq a rP.al ilnd substan ttal
tntewst tn lh• s rnatr er •'i +nv•ted
ro ltte a rPquest lo r •n rervent1on
Wtlh the Comm•ss•on pursuan t
to Rule 4 90 1· 1 11 Ohto Admt nt strat•vP Code. hy no l.:ttP.r than
Mrur.h 26 . 1984 r urt her tnl orma T•on regardtnn th•s matter
may be obidtned by addresstng
an tnqtHry to thP Publtc Uttl1 1tes
Comm•Ss1on o f Ohto
375
South Htqh St rePI. Col umhu s.

Ar1m1nt srr a t r11' o f the
~~s til t P o l Bl.ltnP S M 1lhoan.
r h~cf&gt;aS fH1 l.l l f' o l Rt 1 l ong

4 57 4 3
Ro b ~ n E Buck .
Pr o ba r ~ Jud!lP.

By l+•n ;1 K NASS£&gt;1 ron d
ClArk

121 2 1. 28 1316 310

r--------------------------------------------------------------------~~---------------------

You were smart to wait
to take out a home equity loan.
Our interest rate is now
24%

•

All petitions fUed for the May
primary elections have been reviewed by the Meigs C:&gt;unty Board
of Elections and have been declared
valid, It was reported today. ·
Omitted In the ortglnal list of
Democrat Central Committe candidates was William Wesley Arbaugh,
one of two Democrat candidates In
Ollvedale Precinct. The second
candidate Is Robert A. Malson, Jr.

Ohoo 43215

Marty Robert Foley, 23, Middleport and Maura Anne Gould, 26,
Mlddlt!port were Issued a marriage
license In Meigs County Probate
Court.

Veterans Memorial
Admltted-.Ora Rice, Pomeroy;
Ulllan Napper, Racine; Yolan
Satterfield, MlnersvUle.
Djscharged-Marlln Wolfe, Frances Rizer, Doris Buchanan.

ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE'

By M ary Ann Orltns kt

...r

::-

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

-~- · --:. ·-·~

... ; .·-.

:..

Call 742=3195
Or 992-5875

2

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rttlnt. Oh.
Ph. 614-143-5191
10·6·tfC

•

·•

'

Call 614-992-6737

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Baohan lulldlng

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

G&amp;W PLASTICS
&amp;SUPPLY
G11 &amp; W1ter Pipe
Reguletort &amp;
Fittlnga
Volume Dript
Sewage Pipe
G1i Appll1nce•
Bus. Ph. 985-3813
Res. Ph. 985-3837
Long Bottom, 01!.

·~

DICK
ROBERTS
16141~7512

Oollipoilo. OH.

-vernon

'Pens

'Wooden NicUis
'Matthes 'Ball Caps
'Pencils 'Scratch Pads
'Balloons 'Decals
'"Hard Hat" Decals
'Bumper SticUrs
2·10·1 mo.

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

Antennas Start At
11,395.00

'Full Factory
Warranties
'Fret Delivery
'Site Checks
'Complete Systems
&amp; Installation

BISSELL

SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built G~r••"
Call for frH sidil!leS·
timates~ 949-2801 or

949-28o0

No Sunday Calla
J.ll ·tlc

WRITESH
ROOFING CO.

- Addon1 end remodeUng
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work

- Pklmbing end tltctricol
work

(Free Eotimoteol
REDUCED WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 ar 992-7314

Pome1oy, Ohio

Hea black collar, no tegs.

Coli 314-676-1661 .

FOR 10% OFF
ANY SERVICE
Expires March 17

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH .

Lo1t on Horner Hill in Scipio

35185 Oak Hill Road
Lon&amp; Bottom, OH. 45743
PH~ (614) 985-4212
We Use Von Schrader
Equipment Recommended
by Letdina Carpet Manufacturers.
'FREE ESTIMATES"
2-27·1 mo.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
•Welhera •DilhWIIherl
•Rang••
•Refrigerators
•Dryert •frHzers

name:

&amp; Vicinity

POIIEROY. OHIO

CARPORT SALE:Intonoction of 143 ond 7. Little of

yuu.

.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Plea11nt, WVa .

Auct. lonnie Neal. Youth

Cento1 Bldg., Camden St.
614-387-7101 .

PAT HILL FORD

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Eatete, Farm. An ~
tique &amp; liquidation Nles .

992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

Ucenoed tt. bonded in Ohio tt.
WYo . 304-773-67B6 or
304-773-91B6.
Auction every Fri. night at

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandiH every week .
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds

Auctionee1 . 304 - 2763069.

Authorized John ·Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment

Mt. Alto Auction . Every
Saturday 6 p.m. Conaign ~

menta accepted 1 :00 tillule
time. Emma Bell auctioneer.

4288177 Uc. 429-B4.

Parts &amp; Service
1·3· tlc

9

'
Add~1~---------------

Phon•-----------------

AL TROMM
742-2328

Wanted To Buy

clean used cart.

Jim Mink Chov.-Oido Inc .
446-3872

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni -

ture, 448-3169, 3rd. tt.
Olivo St., Gallipolis, Oh .

Wanted to buy tquare dancing clothes. Size 10. any

typo. Cell 446-4637.

Used Mobile Homes &amp;
Campers. Travel Trailera.

65'h Garfield Avo .. Gollipo-

lit. No pett. one small child ,
reference and depotit
required .

ORDER

TAKE
'·

.

DELIVERY

ON ·SPII.NG
FERTILIZER

AND·

SPRING~IELD

SEED
BALER TWINE

2. _ _ _ _ _ __

3. _ _ _ __

·~·

20.
21.
22.

_____ I

I
··-----I
'·------ 25.-----··----- :ze__ _ _ __

Momorlol Middleport
squad.
oil our frie.ndo
end
Aloo ell thol
time of
· (Jekel
end family.

24. - - - - - - - - - -

7. _ _ _ __

26. _ _ _ __

9. _ _ _ _ __

'11. - - - - - - ,

12.------13. - - - - - - - 15.
_ _ _ _ __
~~------

16.-----

30.----31------29• . . . - - - - - -

32 _ _ _ _ __

33. _ _ _ __

34. _ _ _ _ __

35.

Mil II Tills Coupon WHII Remittance ·
Tile Dally Sentinel
111 C:.Utt St.

POIIIei'OYI 011. 45769

Vacancy for elder1y peraon.
Room. board, and care. Call

-lc-

If interested. please write

Tho FriendohipCiub. P.O. Bx
262. Tuppers Ploino, Oh,
45783.

Real
31

Es ldll!

Homes for Sale

Mobile home. 2 large bdrm .•
furnished , carpet , nice flal ·
2.66 acres land. Garage.
patio. cellar. 2 miles fro{Tl .
Rt. 7 . Grover Rd. Cheshire:

Coii614-367-7B70.

For Sale: New 3 BR houN. ·
1332 oq. h . with 31oto, 400
It . rood frontage by 120 ft,

deep, lontutic buy t62,00G

for all or will sell any part. ,

Call 814-446-1769.
Homo Muot Solll Outotan~ ­
ing Buy I Deall Doell Doell :
Middleport . Cell 814-992-.
6941 .
2' Story frame house

jn .

Choohiro. S4000. Muot ~
moved . Cell 614 -387 7302 .
- --

- -- - -lc.- ·

Five bedroom. 2% baths.
one acre, pool. childreot
playground equipment,
large living room , garage, ~
uove . refrigerator. dil t...,
hwaaher. washer &amp; dryer.

entertainer for your party or
social group? Why not hevea
magician entertain you . For
more information call 614-

992-7352 .

Harper's Adult Care Home
hat a vacancy for another
resident, elderly person. Call

304-676-1293.

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm.
home and personal property
coverages are av'!ilabfe to
meet individual needs. Con·
tact Eugene Holley, agent.

Phone 814-3BB-BS90.

18 Wanted to Do
Will do babysitting in my

home. Coli 446-0028 .

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable

ond dependable. Cell 4463169 botween 9 end 6.
Will do housecleaning!
Homes, offices, buildings,

etc. Cell 614-246-9600.
Washings &amp; Ironing&amp; done.

Cell 992-6B22.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. rocommendo

that you do busine11 with

peOple you know. end NOT

For S.le or Lease. Country

gated tho offering.
Cirryout• Doli. Upper Rlvlir
Rd. Gollfpolfo, Ohio. Coli
814-446-2192 or 614-4469171 .
WodgCor. INC will be
owardlng doolerlhip in oroo
ooon. Groot profit potentlol
ootling ltHI buildings for
one of the falteat growing
Mttol Bldg. orpnlntlonoln
the country. To oppty coli
WodCor INC (303175932 0 0

===:;===

tl4-44f,OZB4. ·
··_c_o_M_P_ie.,.T.,..E_H_o:-u-S-EH-o"'L"o'""s I~~=~·
Reduce Mfe • felt with FURNITURE. Beds, Iron. I·
Goleoe coptulll • E-vop wood,' cupboerdt. chal,., 22 Money to Loan
'waur plllo'. Fruth cheau, b01keto, dloheo.
Pharmocy.
11one J.,., antlqueo, gold
ond oliver. Wrlte-M . D. HOME LOANS FIXED
Vocancy: Jutlo'o "-nat Miller. At.2, Pomeroy, Ohio RATES Below molket roteo.
Core Homo. Formarty 411769 or coli 614-992- Fixed convtntlonol FHAMercer Convatetcence neo.
VA. Luder Mortgage,
Athena. collect 614-692Home. 1B W.
yuroexpertence.
~~~~~~~~:Y,~
Clifton,
V. 304-773-· 1
·
3081 .
8873.
N.i.. Stevena • Auociotoo
.. Aecfne Gun Club h11 dieheve rool 111ote loeno with 1
continued Gun ohoota until
9% lnteroll rete. Coli Jorl
September.
Allie 11 614-379-27B9.

1

- -- - - --

brick home. for sale.or trad'e, ...
2 baths. large living room
with fireplace, dining roor11.
2 car garage. on 1 acre, 1

milo North of Chooto1 At.? .

Twenty ininutes from Bel -

pro. t65 , 000 . coll304-77~
6319 or304-773-6421 . __
7 rooms and bath by owner ·
in West Columbia, W.V• 1
Having work in other stat_e
will tale at reasonable pric;e •
Will be in on weekend• or
can be contacted at 412 -

462 -4468 . Owno1 John
Albright.

Newly remodeled houM, ··
five rooms and bath. 2602
Lincoln Avenue . Priced to..

oell; 622,000 .00, 304-6762B86 .
.

Twin

tingle.

Apt .

Bldg., ,

Four room houH on comer ...

lot 11 2330 Uncoln Avenu~ .
Phone 304-675-3436.
.,
3 br home. large lot. garden

opot, 2606 Uncoln Av,.
$62.000 . 304-675-6047
after 6 p.m .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
T R I - S TATE M0 B I LE'
HOMES . USED - CAR~;
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
614-446-7572.
NEW AND USED MOBILE:·•
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAl' '
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES ,' ~
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
AT 35. PHONE 614-4~- ,
7274 .

-------------------·
'
197712x&amp;Omobilohomo, z,·
bdr .• furnished, good cond.,

$8,300. Cell oftor 4 end 'on.
weekondo. 614-256-6618. •
1978 Shultz 14x70 centrol -

air. all new furniture. ex.
cond . on rented lot. Call '

evenings 446-2076 .

Buying doily gold, ollvor

C01h poid for fancy Iron or
hoovy Iron bedo. t160 ond
up for conoln Meigs Co.
otono joro. Old limo cupboerd . coli 1-304-8822711

For sale, HouM in Miners:·

ville on Wollhtown hill. Clll ·
814-9B6-4301 .
-··~
Four bedroom all electric

MAGIC SHOW. Needing on

to send money through the
mail until you have investi-

rency. Top prlctt. Ed. Burkett Berber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Middleport. Oh. 814-9923476.

3 Announcements
SWEEPER end oowing mochine ropolr. pone, ond
ouppiiH. - Pick up and
delivery, Devlo Vecuum
Cloenor. one holt milo up
Goorgeo Creek Ad. Coli

Churcheo tt. Schoolo. Werd'o
Keyboord. 304-876-3B24.

304-676-7641 ovoningo.

o,..ring service. Cell
Rodney Howery 614-69B7231 .
colnt, rings, jewelry, tterling
ware, old coins. large cur-

23.

5. _;__ ___.:.._

11. _ _ _ _ _.,...

II L
llcGHEE
arottt'·AliCtlon

antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete households. Also complete Aucti -

We wish to express our
sincere thanks to the doctors
and nurses at Veterans

1. _ _ _ _ __

614-949-26B6 .

814-446-0176.

Want to lease Hunting rightt
on approx . 500 acre
Furnished 1 bdr. cottage.

Card of Thanks

Interior and exterior paint ing. sandblasting. waterblasting. paper hanging and
drywall finishing . Free elti·
mates, fully insured . Call

Bill Gene Johnson

We Have the
Lowest Rates

A1111 ou11 ce111 en Is

773-6B82.

We pay cesh for late model

DOZER
AND
BACKHOE
WORK

Nam•~-------------------

Send resume to Box S-29,

614-992-6022.

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

own-eel by mall willl tills
coupon. cancel your eel by phone when you get
, resui1S. Money not ref-le.

19, __..;._______

lltlp County Associate

I '

Thull, tt. Fri. Ctll 992· 7463.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

, Wrl~ your

ators, washer and dryers.
Good pay, hotp. inturance
paid. We will help train you .

Mercer' s Riverview Per·
sonal Care Home has vacancies for elderly peraons.
Betty Mercer owner. 304-

Yard Sale

CALL 992-3629
For Rtstsmtions

MEIGS INN

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
Savell
I
order

Full or part time for Point
Ple11ant and surrounding
area. Exc. earninga. For

7

Middleport

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

Point ptea11nt.

Will care for the elderty in my

---··-P·c:;.n&amp;rov-----·---

Also Transmission

17.

Trainee for small butinett

eyeo. Moln Street 304-676- home. Lob of referencet .
3797 or 676-1786.
Men or women . Call 614667-3402.

•oN PROfiT OIGANI!ATIO.S

SALES &amp; SERVICE

( !For Rent

742 -2126 .

FOUND ftmolt puppy ,

BOGGS

( )Anilouncemenl

needed for Meig1 &amp; aur·
rounding countiet. Call614·

brown, brown nose. green

It ActOMIIOdltt Up to t50 I*Pil
for pirtlts tncl dlnces.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

( )For Sale

Golllpollo otoroo. Deytlmo
houro. Cor n.... ury. Write
phone number, experience
to: ICC 406. Box 1127.
Poromuo, NJ 07652 .

of Point PINtant Regisin Bold Knob oreo. Coli care
ter.
200 Moin St.. Pt.
814-843-6346.
Pleuont, WV 25660.
LOST bleck ftmole Garmon
Shepherd with leaae 12
Situations
ono-oto Che1. REWARD .
Wanted
304-675-41BO.

36 CLEAN. SAFE, IIODERN
ROOIIS, CABLE TV. STEAII
HEAT. AIR COND. Rates u
low ts:
110 A Ni&amp;ht or
140 Weekly
I!ETI.G ROOIS FREI TO

Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio

( 1Wan1o!d

"ew\'
.
E
-·
serv1e~
·
: - - cliliYr u.lt,, 6- .t: Ph0111 742·3171
·MIGK
.
'Rio-'~
OoiQ....,.I"

h11 wrong ph. no. on it. loA

Wonted to buy. New. uood tt.

'

·

Ughl rod tt. ton on bock.
While ring on neck. while
logo tt. chell. Hoo colter, but

MEIGS INN

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

PARTS ond SERVICE
4·5·tiC

Pert time wke inventory In

Lon female. Fox hound. rienced on servicing refriger-

Roofin&amp; Wort
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
1 &amp; Yearo Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992 -7683
or 992-2282
11-1-tfc

2-6-1 mo.

985-3561

All Makes

PIANO TUNING Lower ·

lo1t, red tool box. lnitiela
cell 304-576C.H. D. Left on city pelking info1motion
lot in Pomeroy. REWARD. 251B.
goo heel. Muot ooll, job
Cell 814-949-2302 .
Appliance repair man. expe- move. 992 -3643.

l Glrllll

1

son,

lri lift .. . .lovod you dmly,
In dttth we do ·tho· umo:
Oft '" think ot you, dotr son,
And our litll'ts trt ud ·with

Evono, 814-742-2300.

Ntw Homes-Extensive
Rtmodelina
lnsurtnet Wort
Cu&amp;tQm Pole Bldas.

PH. 992-2725

949-2263

Profe11ionel
Service•

priced regular tuning.-....
dlscountt to Senior Citlzent,

to manager position .
Twp .. brown. block tt. white leading
germen aheph.,d dog . Contact Job Service in
Name Skippy. Lest ...n on peroon, 226 6th St1oot.

Brina This Coupon In

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Down1pouts
Gutters Cleaned
&amp; Painted
Storm Doors
&amp; Windows

. ·I

Help W1nted

Found: Shttlond Sheepdog, Fuller repretent•tive•

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

CARPENTER
SERVICE

SIDING .

11

4 puppiH toSiv• owoy, pon
11992 5981
P~
- -o-poo. 0
.
2 fomole pupploo, omoll
mixed breed with cully long
hair. Vory odoroble. Coli Bobyolttor needed in ou1
eftorll p.m. 814-742-3104. home-Tuoo. ondThuro .. 2-6.
Cell 448-74011 .
2 mole pen lob puppleo. 2
pen elkhound puppleo. B yr. Phoyicol Thoropiot 6 doyo
old mole ntulored pug . Cell per wolk. Port tlmo. Good
614 -992 -6605 . Humone hoully woge. Contocl Pomoroy Hotllh Core Center.
Soclety.
614-992-6606 .
1 yeor old dog . mod. omoll. I...:... S_A_L...:.E...:.S.:__:A_E_P_R_E_S_E_N_T_A--:TI oxc. with children . 3046711 -17B8 or 304-675 - VE:Oulltllnding income op4013
portunlty oelllng gormet
oteeko,poullry,o..tood. Lo·
col territory. Coli 1-616469-61B9. Thio od will
6 Lost end Found
in vicinity of Rolling Acrn &amp;
Sondhlll Ad . in Pl. Ple01on1.

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

It iS SWHt to br11th1 thy

i .

Puppleo to glv.. woy. Coli
e14-266-1381 .

everything, garden plows &amp;
implements. Sale. Weda.

Ptt&lt;tful bt thy siHp, dotr

•
\

Meke your child heppy et no
Coll446-7135.

COli .

eppeer only once.

YOUNG'S

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Of our
son and brothlf,
SP/4 Ltrry Richard Stobtrt,
who died 11 yurs 110 on
lltrch 7. 1973, In Korto.

.. '.
. I

Only

GUN SHOOT

CHECK THE

~

..,. . .

Factory Choke
12 Gauae Shotauns

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
Wo'd like to introduce you to
En~t~t-A-Ctr. the modorn wty
to drivo tho vehicle ol your
choico.
No Oown Payment
Lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box. 326
Pomeroy. OH. 45769
For Ftslor Sorvico

23

;),~rvH.I! :

FREEIBundleolloveother-

Reward for return . Cell Jim

Reel E1t1te Genera'

II

985 - 3307

fllljJii1VII I1!111

Giveaway

wiN known oo puppleo.

Ohio

V tllage o f M td d lep o rt

an••

\

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE

feb 28. Mar. 5

•
'

4

· Ph. 614-662-5311
f II f aC t Ory W arran t'leS
e U
•Free Delivery
•Site Checks
•Complete Systems &amp;
•Installation

**sZvENITNHIA

·
LVA
AND OTHER IIAJOI llANOS
Wt Have A '•II Tlmt
Shop Ttchnlclan
on Duty

CHESTER -

Guysville,

Fred Holl man. Mayor

Oh, this would bt • Hotvln
Could we h~r your volco
..,ln.
You trt 10n1 but not forcotton ..
Novtr shall your llltmory .fldt.
s-tHt thouattts shall tvtr
linpr,
Around tht
whoro you
.-are ltld, ·
.
• Stelly IIIUod by
Edna Stolllrt and
brotlltrs -nd sisters ..

GAU..JPOUS: ~58 Second Ave., 446-1973
POMEROY: 125 E. Main St., 992-2171

Rt. 329

The

Feb. 24. weering red coller.

Propos als w tl l b e rece tved
by thP Vttl ag P. o f M tdd lep o n
un t il 2 30 P.M M ar c h 20 .
19 8 4 at t hP. M ayo r' s o llt c e.
237 R(l ce St for a D e ve lo p m ent Pla n l o r t he Boa t
Laun c htn q Fac rl•t v o n Rail·
r oad S1 A. hs t o f w o rk •t e rns t o
b e tn cl uded tn th e plan tS
ava il able at t h e mayo r s o ffl ee Th e f trm se lec t ed w rU
ha ve 9 0 day s l o r com pl et •o n
o l t h e plan alt er s•g n 1n g o f
the f•n al con t rac t

In Memoriam

p~in,

.'12.25% + 4 points.· RoiO may bo loWOr·"'
. hlahlr booed "" -'lie -01-i;i '-·
I1Gioo oulliecltoonnUal.,_ or1~ al
no moietllan 1%. Noapplicollorrloei.l&gt;t&gt;prov- '
alt in 210 4days.
·

PDQ SATELLITE SYST EMS

. WE ARE YOUR SALES
.
AND S"RVIC"
• •
HEADQUARTERS FOR

PUBLIC NOTICE

now.

u•

.

nttdo: furnaces repair
service and instillation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

21 2H; d J 6, I ~

s.w

.

wlrin&amp;

Public Notice

S'\"rel•rv

FebrUary
emergency runs .

Units of the Meigs County
. Emergency Medical Ser\rlces
made 166 emergency runs .and 44
transfer runs during Februl!ry, Bob
Byer, services administrator,
reports.
.
aune.
There were '135 patients transported
In tre 166 emergency runs •
• · ...... lie lOw . . to low . .
'IIIIHIIIV. WllniiiDI to the mid-1111 with 84 going tO Veterans ~al
Hospital; 31 to Holzer Medical
liD oi
Friday_. to the • oa
I!' I ' ..,, Lqn 1... ~ ~ . Center; nine to Pleasant .VaUey
. . . . ,;., to J.ll Friday aad HOspital ail(l11 to.other lnslltullorui.
- All vehicles of the services ran
........... lheiDw . . . lDIDw
6,!KM.9
miles during the month, an·
-~s.lllrda1·
average 1?f 32.6 miles per cal).

your

THf PUALIC UTILI TIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO

If you've thought about taking
out a home equity loan, now is
the right time to act. Because
right now we're offering home
equity loans at just 13.24%*
annual percentage rate. With a
home equity loan, you can cash
· in on the financial value of your
best investment-your home.
· And at rates like these, you can
afford to enjoy some of your
profits.
.
So if you've been waiting t6
add an extra room, make that
. investment, or finance your
child's education, you don't
.have to wait any longer. A
.home equity loan from
City Loan and Savings is.
an affordable·~ay to
.make a smart invest'ment PaY off. Right ·

Marriage licenses

Cterk

13. 20 3ic

Public Notice

Boll om. OH 4 57 4 3 was ap

Bo 11om OH

Ohto

Raben E Buck.

po"''"cl

CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Monday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
gam£', "The Numher," was 470.
In the "Pick 4" gamt , played
Monday through Friday, the winning number was 2667.

M tddlepoll .

45760

Lonq

For all

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dot Houses

Public Notice

!he M AIQS Coun ty Proba t e
Cour t Ca s ~'&gt; No 24356.

Ohio lottery number

AobAn f Buck
Proba te Judge
lena K Nosselroad
Clerk

131 6 I 3. 20. 3tc

On Febr uary 1 4 . 198 4 m

Petitions reviewed

Due to repairs being made to the
slide area, Mill Street over Middleport Hill will be closed to all traffic
Wednesday and Thursday.

Bv

NOnCE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

MilLER
ELECTRIC

-.

Ohio

Oh•O 4 57 7 1

Hactn(J

1316

PIPOI1111n...,roe&lt;',~t-'-NMiiltid:lddleportr

SERVICE

On October 14. 1983. rn the
Moogs Countv Probale Court.
Case
No 24267 PhvJI•s Baker
Salser Road . Rac•ne Ohto.
4577 1. and florence Custer.
134 Hudson St . Mrddtepon,
Ohoo 45760. were appoo nled
Co·Admrnostrators of the estate
Joseph.
"'
1.. 1eClara
of 43 E
100
State Rdeceased
oule 124.

r-==:;:::::::::;::===-Public Notice

Meigs County happenings..
Street closed

A~~~~
OF FIDUCIARY

to

elected at the annual organizational
r, Lee Ann Robinson, secretary,
Spencer, president, 4-H; Darla Norris, hlslorlladl
Scouts; back, l tor, Rodney Beegle, vice pmllilel•,
4-H; Terry Newsome, parllamen!aJian, Boy ScoW;
Brian Freeman, news reporter, FFA. Not pictured Is
Cheryl Burris, treasurer, VICA.

Hart hopes for another win
By A.oolated Press
Gary Hart Is hoping to extend hls
string of victories today In Vermont's non-binding presidential
primary whUe Walter Monda le.
declaring "We are fighting back,"
heads South In search of the
comeback he urgently needs.
No delegates are at stake In the
Vermont voting, which takes place
at town meetings across the state.
A win for Hart would give hlm a
clean sweep of northern New
England and put him In a strong
position for the March 13 "Super
Tuesday" of primaries and caucuses, after stunning Mondale In the
New Hampshire primary last week
and repeating his feat Sunday In the
Maine caucuses.
A loss for Mondale, coupled with
an expected Hart triumph this
Saturday 1n Wyoming, w~ld mean
that the former vice president and

PAOIIATE COURT OF
MEIGII COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF CLAAA E. JO·
SEPH, DECEASED
c... No. 242e7 Docket 12
Ploe 391

today.

~ergency squads kept busy
Ten calls were answered by local
units Monday and Tuesday mornIng;, the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports.
At 8:00 a.m. Tuesday, the
Middleport Unit went to liD Park St.
for Ray Clark, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Monday calls Included 11: Ill a .m.,
Pomeroy to Pomeroy Health Care
h Center for Ora Rice, to Veterans.
Memorial; 6:22 p.m., Pomeroy to
Court St. for Joe Vadlsh, to Veterans
Memorial; 8:01a.m., Middleport, to
Rallroad St. for Myrtle St. Clair, to

OFFICERS -

Board bas elected officers and named corruniUees the
ISM Melp County Fair. The falrboard plans and

Public Notice

highway patrol to~' thechlld
restraint law Ia gofnk lntoelfect thll
week, according to Lt. Dan Henderson, commander of the patrol'•
Gall1a-Melp po1t.
AlthoUgh the usage rate under the
new law was "fairly hllh" at !16
percent dw'lng 1983, "It II far from
acceptable."
Noting that autOOiobtle accldentl
are the primary caUJe of cte.th lbr
chUdren under ftve, Hendenon
quoted statlatlctl from rt!INI'Chen
showing that 00 ~t of tbele
deaths are preventable If children
are placed In proper restraints.
"Here In Ohio, we could ave
nearly 20 young lives If all children
were secured In child-safe aeata,''
Henderson said.
"Whenever a new law has aone
Into effect, the patrol has alwaya
placed Its Initial empha.sil on driver
educat!oil, limiting en1orcement to
those situations In which serious
violations Injured or threatened
Injure some Innocent pen1011," the
commander explained. "In the nine
months of 1983 that the child
restraint law was In effect, troopers
Issued 10 warnings for every one
arrest that they made.''
Henderaon urged responsible parents tocontactthepostat446-2433or
992-2397 for Information on restraints, or write the Ohio Department of Hlgt\way Safety.
"Even though we will be somewhatmorestrlctlnoorenforcement
of the chUd safety restraint law, we
would prefer to 51!1! arrests decline
because this woold be a sure sign
that more parents were taking
advantage of these proven savers 11
young lives,'· Henderaon said.

grandchUdren.

•
s
•
·
8 USiness ervices
lr=~=:;:~:;;:=:::::r.==::::===::=;rr==================;l

March '6, 1984

OSP steps-up
restramfJ law .
enforcement
A stepped-up effdrt by tile 1tate

Area deaths

Graveside services will be held
Thursday at 11 a.m. at Minersville
Hill Cemetery with the Rev. Craig
WUUford officiating. Ewing Funeral
Hornets lnchargeofarrangements.
There will be no caUing hours.

•

Tuelday1 ~ 6; 1914

Holley Pork 1973, 14x60, 2 '
bdr., skirting &amp;t storaaf:
building, excellent condl-.
tion . French City Brokerage

Services. Cell 448-9340.
19B2 Clayton , like n..W,
14x70. 2 bdr., firoploce,
central air. dishwasher .
French City Brokerage Ser-

viceo. Cell 446-9340.

·

4 bedrooms 14x65 plut '
12x20 room. fireplace, can·
tral air. storage bldg., porch .
&amp; awning, excellent condi - '
tion. French City Brokerage

Services. Coli 446-9340. - •
14x70 new display model

'mull sell ' 3 bd1., 2 botbs._,
cathedral ceiling 'unbelievable price '. French City Bro~ -' ·
erage Services. Call 446"

9340.

80 Footer. new 14x80 ..
Schult -Must see. Frenc;l\.,
City Brokerage Services.

Cell 446-9340 .

'1 974 Community mobilfl ·
home, refrig .• stove. tra.sh ·
masher. AC , all carpeted,
muit sell now. Call after·

6PM tt. woe~ends446-7519 •
or 446-4434.
1979 fully underpin.ned ." 14x70 3 bdr., 2 lull botb·-. ;
approx.· Yt acre, well shaded

lot. Mid e20 'o. Call 6143BB-9967 otter 5:30PM.·
For Solo: 1972 Mobl1e '
Home. 2 BR , good cond. ·
Coli 614-446-7171 or 6l4-;
446-B2B8 otter 5 pm .
3 bedroom, 2 bath, centrl (
air, basement garage. te-.. ~
creation room , large kitchen.;
&amp;. ·living room . green schoOl
district, close to Hol~r .

864,996 . Coli 446-4426.·

Used

2 bedroom

mo~U. ...

homeo. furnished . 10xiiO·

and 12x52 sizes . You·,.."
chance to own a comforta-t hl
ble home. Browns treUec~
Court. Minersville, Oh. 614- •

992-3324.

' -:

""

65x 12 Elcont fro.nt liv(l) ~
groom. gos, two bodroo!'l,.,1
furnished . financing availa-'..

blo. $6,996.00. D. ond w ~
Ett~···· 30'\-676-4424.

'

�•I

nw Daily Sentinel
33

Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

Farms for Sale

Centenary- 7'h ocreo-3 BR.

garage,

large metal

born,111SO lb. tobocco baoe,
out bulldlngo. Call 814·
532 -2B72.

1 10 atre farm : 40 acres
tlllable,reot paoture. Good
fenceo, 7 RM remodeled
houae. 2 car metal garage, 2
pondo, 2 bema, 10.870 lb.
yearly tobacco base ;
8112,000. Call 614-266·
1922.
.

61 Hou1ehold Good•

154 Ml•c. Merchandlae

UNd nfrigorotor. couch •
cover for oelo. 304-87113948 doytlme. Lower IS Mila
CrHk.

8 .• R. WOOD SHOP. Pitlo
furniture, picnic tobleo ond
novollioo. Coli 304-871111401S.

64 Misc.
Knouff firewood Pickup or
Dallverod. 12"·22"otockad
ln yord . HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 814-256·
8246 .

114 acre farm on Roush
Hollow Rd . Has houae, barn,

oilo, other buildlngo. Call
614-388-8525 .

Umeatone, Sand. Gravel.
Oelivored In M11on, Maiga,
Golllo or pick up at Rlchordo
llo Son. Call 446-7786 .

34

Firowood cut up aloba I 16
pickup lood . Call 614-24&amp;IS804.

Business
Buildings

March 6, 1984
!&lt;IT

'N' CARLYLE ®

I

The oU now 18B4 SUN
STREAM luxury motor'

home• cen now be

WORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA SALE. Reg. '488.
Sale U74. Seve •121.
Tormo f1 0.00 down ;
822.00 1 month. 304·871S37 7 5
_
1 ___·------1Oft. Aluminum John Boot
•1 00.00. Phono 304-87114210.
1967 Ford pickup, whlto
coblnot sink with single
hondlt foucata . 304-17114366.
9 ft . Craftsmen toblo aow.
304·675-4004.

block. brick. sewer pipea,

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

47 Wanted to Rent

4 acres with small trailer

ee.ooo or trade for mobile
home. Kyger Creek Diatrict.

Wanted to rent or with
One bedroom furnished mo-

option to buy 3 bdr. home in

bile home. loc.ted outakina

city school district or Green.
Geroge a mull. Call 4482108.

Call814-387-7809 .

Henderson. All utilities in-

Comer lot in Jackoon. Ohio.

cludod U45 .00 month
304-875-6730 .

Has sewer, water, and gas
tap, 83,500. Coll814-245·
11616.

One-Third of an acre lot in
Village of Vinton, 81 ,200.
Call 614-266· 1 690.
Loto for oele, Recine. Reduced priceo. Coll814-949·
2340 or 949-2571 .
Home olteo, two thouoend
down. Paul Simon, IS Pointo,
Rt. 7, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
614 -992 -2671 or. 9923830.
AcNiga for oele. 304-8757541 evenings. A

Two br. natural gas, air
cond., furniahed . Nice yard .
References required . Camp

Conley. 304-675-7566.

44

41

House• for Rent

Merch~nrl1 se

Apartment
for Rent

Fumiohed officiency. f145 .
Utllitieo poid. Shore both.
607 2nd, Gollipolio. Coli
448-4416 oftor 7 PM .
JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS IEquol
Housing Opportunityl hoa
otortlng ot •157 for ono
'bedroom and •193 par
month for two bedroom,
with 8200 dopoolt locoted
neor Foodlond ond Spring
Volley Plozo. pool ond TV
ont. Coli 441-274&amp; or leovo
me11age.

1 bdr. opt. •1111. ~ bdr.
houoe, 1 bdr. opt .. 1 bdr. opt.
2 bdr. opt. UtHitleo portllly
fum . Co" 304-676-IS104 or
304-871S-11388.

Attic opt. fumiohed t175.
Utilities poid. Shore both,
men only, 919 2nd. Avo.
Gollipollo. Icon 448-4416
otter 7 PM .:

Near Woterfoo form houoe, 5
nno .. both, gorden, •1211
mo. Ref. • clap .. 1 child. Coli
1-814-843-2844 .

2 BR opt .. Golllpollo ond 1
BR trollllt', !ureko. Rof. ond
Dep. Coli 814-2118-1629.

Very nice 2 bdr. duplex
houoe. turn.. watllt' pold,
Main St.. Cheohire. Cell
814-246-11818.
Fum. 2 bdr., 2 both, omoll
houoe. near K-Mort, 8200
mo.. 1 achool ega child, no
omokero. rentero poy goo •
electric. Call 448-1822.

I

I

Nice 2 bdr. home, lireplece,
new kitchen, city achool
dlotrict. Coli Jim Cochran ot
the Wloamen Agency, 4483843.
14x70 total electric 3 bdr.,
fumlohed troMIIt' on prlvota
lot..1 0 min. from town 8200
mo: Ref. • clap. required.
Coll814-2118-1393.
N.arly n-- 2 SA houoe, 2'h
mllea from HMC, •196 mo ..
•100 clap. Coli 614-4463817.
II iJlom houM for rent at 44
Oliva St.. Inquire ot 918
Slfl:ond Ave.

I
I

II

I

Small 4 rooms • INitn,
fu!ftiohed. loc. 7311 ,.., 3rd.
Ave.. Galllpollo. Coli 4483870 or 448-1340.
Furniohed 1 bclr. cottage.
IIS'h Gorfleld Ave., GolllpoHo. No poto, one omoll child,
reference and deposit
required.

Fumiohed Eft. Aportment.
•11111 mo. All utilities pold.
Depoolt • Ref. 446-3045 or
448-21102.
Smell efliclancy oport .. controloir • heat, 1 profeooionol
typo gentlemen only. 4460338.
Fumiohed opt .. neor HMC. 2
bdr .. 8231S. utiiiHao pd .. 243
Jocklon Plh, Golllpollo.
Coll448-4411 oftor 7 PM.
1 bedroom Apt. t1 98. mo.
including utllltleo . Equol
Houolng Opportunity. Conteet Village Menor Apto.
1114-992-77B7.
Rlverolde Apta. Middleport.
Speciol roteo for Senior
Cltlzeno. •130. Equol HousIng Opportunltleo. 614992·7721.
- - - - - - - -lc2 bedroom apt .. •160. por
month. •ISO. dopooit. You
poy utHitlao. Recine areo.
Coli et 4-849·2271.
-lcFurniahed apar'tment

for

rent In SyrocuM. Coli otter
11:30 p.m. 982-78B9.
In Middleport. 2 room off.
opt. Coli 1-304-BB2-2568.
- - - - - - - -lc1 bedroom unfumlohed garego oportment; otove •
refrigllt'otor fum, wooher •
dryer hook-up. •1111. pluo
utilltleo. Dapoolt required.
Page St. Middleport. Coli
992-6271.
New 1 bedroom furnlohed
oportment in Middleport.
Call 614-992-6304.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Apt. for rent, coli 814-9926908 .

1-h 80 2 bdr. modern furnJohecl troHer, convenient
locetlon. Upper River Rd.
d!tP&lt;&gt;IIt req. CaM 814-446·
0118.

Fumlohed opt. 1 bedroom.
8200. mth.. depoolt re quired. Fully carpeted. Call
982,2362 .

2' bdr. trallen, no clty to xu.
!Mautlful river vi- In Kanlllfll· Footero Troller Pork.
CaH ·448-11102.

APARTMENTS, mobllo
homaa, houMa. Pt. Ploooent
and Gallipolis. 814-4488221.

a;
'"8_
_.,_._____
,,, ,. .. -, ..
...,..,....

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Aportmanto now ovolleble to
elderly • diMbled with on

SP

.1oblle home. Call

3-8R,12x70mobllehome. 2
hill botho1 locoted opprox.
4~ mi. wol1 of GIHipollo; on
ll!rge private lot. f171/mo ..
flllio dep. • utlltiel. Ref.
required. Coli 448-2878.

'

·Very nice 1. bdr. mo.,.._
~me. ••• locltlon within
city, complotoly fu.....,....,
111• fum, • air, polio • off
rirMt perking. Mull hove
ref. • clap. Col 448-4189.
Mobile home for rent, In
Roclna. Coli 114- 3877148.
... ~ home for rent. 2
• 1 d oom, niCe lot. Roulft
t.M. Clleohlre. 304· n3-

1811Z. --

·. -

•. · .

WfTH OPnON TO IUY, 14'
. . . .. lleatrle molllle
................... NIIdyto
...... uoo.oo down
, •111.00 MONTH. 304·

.,..1711 . .

PLASTIC CULVERT PIPES .
8 in. thru 18 in . Stote
approved. guoronteed . RON
EVANS. Jockaon, Oh. 614288-6930.
Will cut and dollver fire·
wood. Coli 814-2 66-1 &amp;28.

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
82 Olive St .. Gallipolis. N&amp; used wood &amp; coal atoves.
6 piece wood living room
suite with 8 inch flat armt
f399, bunk bedo comploto
with bunkioo •199, 2 ploco
antron llvlngroom sultea
f199. ontron reclinero 899,
other recliner• •eo. maple
dinetto aeu •179. box
springs &amp; mattresa twin or
full •100 oat rogulor-firm
•120. moplo dinette chairs
U5, woah atondo 834.
mople rockers •59, 7 piece
chrome dinette oat 1149, 5
pieco dinette aet 199, uled
bedroom suites. refrigera tort, ranges, chest, dresaera.
wringer wethers. TV't, dryera, llo ohoeo. Coli 614-4463159.
LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker. ottoman, 3 tablet, {extra heavy
by Frontiorl. •eB&amp;. Sofa.
chair and loveaeat. •275.
Sofas and chairt priced from
8286. to U9&amp;. Tablu, f46
and up to •126. Hide-obedo,f440 . ond up to
f62&amp; .. Recliners, •17&amp;. to
•376 .. Lompo from f28 . to
176.5 pc. dinetteo from
•99 .. to 436 . 7 pc. 8189
and up. Wood table with aix
choirs •426 to t745. Deok
•110 up to 822!1. Hutcheo,
8650. ond up, mopla or pine
finioh. Bunk bad complete
with mattreases, •260. and
up to 8395. 8oby beds,
•110. Mottreooeo or box
oprlngo, full or twin, t&amp;B.,
firm,
and f78 . Queen
aeto, t195. 4 dr. cheats,
•42. IS dr. chaota, 854. Bed
fromu, UO.ond 825., 10
gun - Gun cebinett, $350.
Gas or electric rang11 $376.
Boby mottreooeo. 825 11o
U5, bed frameo f20. 126.
• 130, king frome •so.
Gqod aelection of bedroom
tuites , cedar cheats.
ro~kert, metal cabinets.
swtvel rockers .

•as.

Uted Furniture -- Bar &amp; 2
ttools. rang11, cheira, dryera, refrigerators and TV' a. 3
mlloo out Sui ovilla Rd. Open
9am to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri ..
9om to 6pm, Sat.
814-446-0322

TV • Applloncoa. 627 Third
Avo., Golllpolio, 814-4461899. Spin Wllhoro. gao •
electric dryert, auto
waahert. gaa &amp; electric
ranges. refrigeratora, TV
titS.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wathert. dryert, rafrigeratoro, rongeo. Skaggo Ap·
plloncao, Upper River Rd.
boolde Stone Crall Motel.
1114-446-7398.
Uled W11han • Dryero,
Soverol to choooe from, One
Horvolt Gold Motched poir.
Coli 814-258-1207.
UMd portlble dryer Sooro
Kenmore, A-1 condition.
Hordly bean uoed. Cell 4462839 or 448-0IS17.

Income of leaa thin

oq.ft.. 6 roomo llo both,
carpeted. ready to move
into. 826,600. Aloo gorogea
llo boMmento. Coli Patriot
Homes Buildero 44&amp;-8038.
Will consider mobile home
11 trade ln.
Bedroom suite- white 3 pc.
dreater-mirror-cheat, exceltent condition. Coli 8756898.

Office duk-30x60 top good
condition. Coli 446-9340.
Moving Sola · Mloc. mobile
home parts and acceasorles.
Stop and • • ot French city
Mobile Homeo. Coli 448·
9340.

locust pasta. stakes and
firewood. Coli 614-258·
1271 .
Hond tools, welding mo·
chine, torch and gauges.
Plows. roll hog wire. 2
electric fences . lots more
misc .. At . 218. Coli 814·
258-16&amp;1 .
Anniver11ry Sale Save up tp

26% from Morch 4 to 17.
Wood World 2506 Grand
Central Ave .. Vienna, WVa.
304-296-8133 .

Now open for buaineaa.
Mountain Stoto Block. Rt.
33, New Hovan. Complete
masonry supplies, 4". 8",
12" block. Oalivery Mrvfce.
Phone doy 304·882-2222.
evening 8B2·3239.

1.000 gal . underground fuel
moko 1 good culvert U60.
Coil 446-4537.
2-8:75x16.5 tuboleu retreado with otudo •20 ooch.
Aloo oix 9:60x16.6 c11inga
oultoble for recopplng, 8 ply
rating t2.60 ooch. Coli
448-4637.
8 inch Saw &amp; Jointer, 2
Hogo. 8 mo. old Beegle. Call
614-367-7441 .

Fresh country agga. Coli
814-245-6621 .
Firewood; split, otocked and
delivered for 826 a large
load. Delivered promptly.
Coli 448·7993 onytime.

Auto• for Sale

Codllloc, loaded, no ruat.

Purebred Nubian luck. 2
wka. old, dlobuddad. S311.
Poporo. avolloble. Coli 814742-2708.

pd tlreo. new bottary •

otortor. 8800. 304-87113412.

Ouortar horoe, mare. 7 yn.
old. 304-8911-3441.

72

Trucks for Sale

Good condition hoy lor Mia.
Coli 814-948-2870.
Lorge round or oquore boiel.
Good quellty. Opel fitzpotrick. 814·889-4378.

18711 Ford PU folr cond ..
•1 .100 or baot offer. Coli
814-318·11181 .

Judy Toylor Grooming. Coli
614-387-7220.

clover, timothy, • orchard
grou. •1 .1SO por bola. 814843-1113B.

1- - - - - - - - -

1911 ChevyC-10PU.icyl.,
ltlnd., with topper, ol. reor
window. PI, Pl. Coli oftor
8PM, 814·2411-111119.

Brierpatch Kennett Profealionol All-brHd grooming.

Ground aor corn •8.110 por
100. Bring own ccintolner.
304-871S-3308.. No Sundly

Trucll77 Ford pickup, F1 00,
3 lflald, low mileage. 304112-3330.

Mixed Hoy, •1 .110 bole,
304-8711-111178.

Four hill ton Ford pickup
rimo ond tlreo •11.00. Aloo.
lireploco blo- grote made
ot 111tntuo atMie·
304-81Jt-3244.

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breedo. Haoted
indoor -outdoor focllltloo .
AKC Oobermon , pupploo:
Stud Service. Coll814·448·
7795 .

Indoor-outdoor boarding fe·

cilitloo. Englloh Cocker &amp;penial pupploo. Coli 814-3889790.
Dragonwynd Cottery Kennelo. AKC Chow pup·
piu, CFA Hlmoloyon, Par·
lion and SlomoM klttano.
Caii614-448-3B44 oftar e .
Airadole Terrier pupo. Loyol.
protective. Intelligent, fom·
ily pots. Good IIOCk, AKC.
f176, includeo ohoto. Coli
614-692-2170.
~egistered

cream colored
poodlu; I wko. old, houM
broken. Call 446-9B85.

AKC Roglaterod Boagla. Coli
614-843-11154.
Dachshund, Pomeranian
pupa, AKC registered. 304·
895-3958 .

57

Musical
Instruments

Gibson guitar with new
caoe. 30 yro. old. 992·3342.
Wurtiuer fun maker, 2 custom digital music ayatem
orgon. like new. Ook. Good
buy. 304-676-1B82.

f.tr111 Suppl11•s

&amp;

Ltvt~slt&gt;Lk

61 . Farm Equipment

···-

Rag. Quarter horoo gelding,
3 yr. old, olred by Supllt'
Chlx. 4 yr. old Reg. Quortor
hone bay moro. Reg. Point
gelding, 2 yr. old. Rag. bllck
Two otoal otorm doors. Call filly, 2 yr. old. Cell 448814-992·2858.
3262.

f12.300. Ranting for 30

71

Hay

&amp;

Grain

1--------4000 boiH of hoy,_oKolfo,

......

•eo.oo.

lr .ttl.l lll&gt;tl .illllll
71

73

Auto• for Sele

------TOP CASH pold for lito
model uled
lmlth
Bulck-Pontlec, 1911 Eootorn Avo.. GolllpoNo. Coli
1114-448-2282.
19n F d M ·c-··
or
uo~ng ~•
302 angina, 4 opd .. PS. PI,
AM·FM cooo. body parfoct
cond., 82,800. CoH 8143BB-91190 or 814-38B 8271 ·

••ro. .

1979 Plymouth Duotar
Sporto pockoge, llde IOUV·
aro, roily· whello, Slue •
White, rac~ntly Mrviced.
ono owner. 82300 negotiobla. Coll814-2411-11093.
1983 Ford F-100 XL, 3d,
outo, with overdrlita. low
mlln, PS, PB, Air, 302 V-8.
duol tonko, 2 toM point
deluxe cromo 11op, ~umper,
1 ow-. ohorp. 191° OMC
2600 Siorro Gnnta V-B.
PB, PB, Air, outo .. oruiao,duol tonko, tilt ~·· n tiro, olldlng beck ''""· 2
tone pelnt, deluxe crome.
otop bumper, 1 owner.
Shorp. 197B Flrablrd Eeprint, outo, PS. PI, Alr,tllt,
new point, tlreo, 3011 V-8,
foctory oport whello, ohorp.
S. S Auto S•leo Rt. 180, IS
mHao N of Holzer. Your
complete outo body Mrvfce
center. Coli 814-448-81114
9 to II or 814-38B-8888
after hourt.
·
1973 Ford Goloxy-A/C,
PS / PS, n - vinyl top •
point. Mog whallo, coiMtto
• CB. Coli 304-871S-2242 .
1970 Codllloc Ambulonce.
Good cond., 45,000 mlleo,
new bottory, good tlroo.
•1 .1SOO.oo. Phone 4482603 evenlngo.
1978 Chryolar Cordobo
82,191S . Coli 814-31170541 .
1983 Ford Folrmont Future,
20,000 mlloo, liken-. AT.
PS, PB. AC, 4 dr.. light blue,
•e.ooo. Coil 448-7904.

V1n1

4 W.O.

1871 Plymouth Troll Duoter
outo., rodlo. good tlrao,
priced to aeM. Coli 4489 340
_ _ ·- - - - - - _
11978
Chevrolet 30 cubo
von. Hoo8' xB' x12' box, duol
..., whealo •• new IUIO ..
tronoml11ion • bottary.
Roll-up roor dcior. 42.800
mHH. Coli 448-0940 ofter
1130P'M

1-'- --·- - - - -

1111 Chevy G·11von, 8 cyl ..
otondord. rodlo, •4.491.'
John'o Auto Solao. Sulovllle
Rd., Golllll9ilo. Coli 4411·
4712. Open till dork.

1-------..---

1174 Dodge von . 8 cyl ..
otondord, •4110. Smell utilIty tr.UIIt', new tlreo •300.
Coi1814·948-2718 .

Morcum Roofing • $pout·
lng. 30 yooro exporlenca.
opeclollilng In built up roof.
Coiiii14-38B-9BIS7.

CAPTAIN EASY
EA'.'V, THI,

i~

THE

MAYOfl. OF ~EW 11\0~C.OW ,
MAfi.TIN KO~~OFF ... AND
COUNCI~IIIAN

IVAN

~TITT .

Motorcycle•

1988 Horlay Davidoon olactrogllda , bookot cou,
t1 1100. 881 Ooc Fow, Sx
203 Sldehlll Rd.. Rutlond,
Oh.
1977 Hondo 11110 Four·K,
very good cond., new tlreo
ond tun•·up, hHder plpoo,
wind jamer ond more aatno.
Wll aol for •eoo.oo. Coli
304-8711-31170 or 304-8911·
3388 eftllt' llprn.

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

'83 Honda XLSO, fll711 .00.
304-8711-3031.

I-:-:-=-:-:-------

1178QL1000Goldonwlng.
32.000 mlloo. S1200. 304·
8911-38111 .

1-;;:=;:======
I·

Boltl and
Motora for Sale

1984 Dodge Dort Saclan,
good cond .. •no. Cell
448-1887 ..

1110 111 ft. 8oyllner with 110
HP Mllt'cury engine, oil oklo
82 Chavetto 27.000 miiH. • equipment Included. Mull
Moroon matollc ond loaded.
_c_•l_l _44_8_-_a_3_BII_._ _
1SM-Roy 9ruiM(1878 22ft.
.4.11811. coli 448-1219.
1978 AMC Gremlin Aut
' with IroNer. 22B HP, ono.400. Coli 814-·742-270~.. ow-. 11-. owim plot- - - - - - - - - · fonn, oldomltlc lavelero,
low houn, 112.100. Coli
., 4-1182-11058.

... BUT "THAT ~'T
MeAA I'M f.Or~ ~AI.,.:;........ AI

C\-1 I 1511-IAT A

l MA'I LCOK \"':~~~

sruPID .. ;

Nice one •nd two bedroom
'opto.. unfumlohed. phono
304-8711-2218 •.8 till 8.
Efficiency oportmant. 3048711-3000.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

GASOLINE ALLEY

JIM'S PLUMBING llo HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1, Box 366, Golli·
polio. Coli 614-367-0676 .
SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heating, At . 2 Neoi Road,
Point Pleooent, W.Va . 30411711-11420. Ucenoed · end
lnourod.
Excavating

WINNIE
YOUR MOTHER'S
IN NO CONDITION

ro 5EEANY601J'I/

NOW, NOW. WINNIE., •
LETS HOPE FOR THE
15E5T/

&amp;tRDif SAYS THE KIDNAPPERS
CLAIM &amp;ILL'S AI.IVE AND WILL
&amp;E RETURI'IED IF THEY GET

1"/WAflil/ON POI.I.Ail5.'

J .A .R. Cpnotructlon Co.
Wotor Linea , Footera,
Drohlo. All kind a of Ditching.
Rutlond, Oh. 614- 742 ·
2803.

_w
__.

BARNEY

WAS TATER A GOOD

BOY IN KIDDY-GARDEN
TODAV, MISS BESSIE?

I CAUGHT

HE ACTED
LIKE A WILD

HIM

SHOOTIN' AN ARROW

AT JUNEV SUE

INJUN!!

a())

General Hauling

I

PEANUTS

PROIJA!Jb'l'- NCJTI.IING
AT THE MOMENT:..

(I)~~

Story ond Clarll plono ond

noo.
~..t..u:.....t:~ot.~:L........;:~

1_ ,

.,' ... . ..
,. ,\t.
..
. ,,

. ' · - ~· ,. ·~ '". ··~ ··~- ..f

"'

Z7 Burn

31Tonne

cisong
31 Snake
UForerwmer
lithe CIA
35Extend
above
37Take
a pension
3t Suggestion
4t Crowbar, e.g.

"-homo"

u Chestsound

4S Rhymester's
adverb

'DAILY CRYPTOQUOTt;- Here's

-~-- - -· ·-

..........

Is

..

It:
·: ;:

LONGIPitLLOW

One letter simply etollda for onother. In this sample A lo
used for the three L'l, X for the two O's; etc. Single !etten,
opootrophes, the 1enath ond !ormotlon of the words are all
: hints. Each day the code !etten ore dlffe...,nt.
. ."

caYPTOQUOTES

VLNTDTUS

TO

:
'
·'

-~

. ..,
-..

A IS "'

BRI0

-\ ~

ISCUSL

.......... -..;. ... 6-·-- ... . . . ..... .

how to work

A XYDL B A A XR

··' ReUnion'

q;t..Thlokeef
Love ThtltihiW!ilrt
.Bob
_, .

unit
38 Amer. herb

Z8 Adam's son
Zl Dickens
character

·

l~=~=~~~=.!J.' · ',,30

in printing
Z8 Stringent

Z4 Yearns
21 Denounce

AI WL D

,~~.,~·. ~- ~~NHeldllneNewl

t

%%Poetical
swnmer
adverb
. Z1 Et\glish
river
Z3 British gun

News
,, 2:411 (I) .MOVIE: 'The hungry I
1:00 (J) I M.-rrtecl JOin
.
_ lllJin!rtolnrfte!lt Tonight

Delli ond cheH31. 304=
871-741 ~ or 81 4-4481803.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Dress up
1 Crown ·
4 Impudence %Made eyes at
3 Youngster's
I Russian
man's name pet
4 Luxurious
II I..oc*for
fabric
12Nazimova
5 Cognizant of
UWooden
I The late
hammer
Mineo
15 Lucille
Ball has it 7 Newman film,
Yesterday's Answer
with "The"
17 Written
Z3 Wager
30 Edible
letter
9 Pompon
Z4 Equity
mushroom
girl's word
11 Hoosier
member
3Z Subsehwnorist 11 Vacillate
25 Cheat
quenUy
lJ Coounon 14 Wee
11 Puton(sl. )
33 Falk or Nero
suffix
(lmtbig)
ZO Ulle's
26 Remove,
38 Fluidity

.I

.liD.

bench. •••· cond.

~uw~w

Devlcl .!.en.mon

{]) JICk lenny Show

48 S p - for Rent

.

with his J?'OUd father.
.9:00 IJ (J) CD Riptide Cody,
Nick and Boz are drawn
into a competition to clear
a divorcee of her husband's murder. (80 min .l
ill700 Club
()) Threo"o Compony
Ill())()) MOVIE: 'CIIomity
Jane'
(fi) Amoricon PloyhouH
'The Gin Game.' Hume
Cronyn and Jessica Tandy
star in this story of an older
man and woman whose gin
rummy game becomes a
catalyst for unleashing
years of hidden pain and
emotions. (2 hra.) [Closed
Captioned]
•
(f2l Billy Graham
Cruude
till MOVIE: 'One on One'
9:30 (J) MOVIE: "Tough Enough'
()) Oh Modellne Madeline's recollection of a traumatic singing experience
helps her regain her voice
to perform in a theater
musical.
())
MOVIE:
To
Be
Announced
10:00 G(J)IDRernlngton Steele
A society matron hiret
Laura and Remington to
track down the person who
placed an ad in a oex magazine using her name and
number. (80 mtn.l
(J) Ukely StoriH Chapter 3
Hlrt to Hart
· 10:1 !I ()) TIS Evening Nawo
:10:30 ill Blondle
(I) NFL'1 Greotoot Mo·manto NFL'a ·Greatut Momento presents 'Legends
of the Fall.'
11 :00 • (J) (I) • ()) ()) • (f2l
NIWI
(J)
MOVIE:
'10
to
Midnight'
ill Another Lifo
(I) SportoContar
()) All !n the Fomlly
ID Newa/Sporto/WMther
(fi) Foil of Fredella the Leaf
• Benny Hill Show
11:15 (I) ESPN's Sportolook
11:30 • (J) 1D Tonight Show
(J) Coven Behind the
Sconoo Dick Cavett Interviews Eddie Murphy.
ill 8el1 of G..Oucho
()) Cotllno
()) Benny Hill Show
Mog1111m P.l.
I]) Lotenlght Amerlco
()) Allin the Fomlly
• (f2l Nlghtllne
• TvvU[t~t .Zone
1 1:411 (I) This Week In the NBA
12:00 (J) MOVIE: "Twilight Time'
ill Bum• • Alien
()) MOVIE: 'Bomban 8-112'
()) Nlghtllne
liD MOVIE: 'Windl of .
Autumn'
•Gunernoko
12:1 5 (I) USF~ Footbell: Houaton
ot Ben ~ntot:tlo
.12:30 • Cll 1D.Lite Night with

()) eiHI

Good-1 Exc,vatlng, base-:
m!lhtl, foot•••· drlvewoya,
,.Ptlc ,.nko, londoclplng.
Coli onytlma 614 -44&amp; ·
41137, Jomeo L. Dovioon, Jr.
owner.

Sl81ping room__IJ_tl, utllltleo .Pofd. lhere both, male
only. Ronge • 'refrig. 818
2nd. Ave.. GIIIIPOIIo. Coli
448-4418 eftllt' 1 PM.

COUNTRY MOilLE Home
Pori!, Route 33; North #,
Po-oy. Lorge loll. Cill
114-H2-7479.

,.

median's chance to star in
his own television series
provokes a confrontation

Fumi1hed Room•

For rent Slaoplng Roomo
ond light houao koeplng
roomo. Pork Control Hotel.
CoN 814-448-07118.

four event. Both declarers
reached three no-trump on
identical bidding. At table
NORTH
J.N4
one,
South teceived a club
+QH
lead end bad little trouble
••o us
collecting 10 tricks. At . the .
tAQJ
other table. West. having ·
+17S
decided that East had to
WEST
EAST
bold spades, opened the 10 of
+lOS
+ K J 96 4Z
that suit. Declarer played
.Jt74Z
·~
low from dummy and East • •
tK
tl0762
signaled strength with the
+AJt52
+64
nine.
SOUTH
This gave South a clear
+AI
picture of the spade situa.AKQ
tion. West had clearly
tl1543
opened a doubleton 10, and
+KQIO
East held sis of that suit. .
South reasoned further that
Vulnerable: Both
East held nothing else or he
Dealer: South
would have overcalled with
Weot N- Eut Sao~
one spade. bad he held either
the diamood king or the club
Paa
1•
POM
2NT
ace.
Paa
SNT
POM
POM
Therefore South ducked •
Paa
the first spade, woo the second (be bad to) and led a diaOpening lead: t!O
mond to pick up West's singleton king. He Cflbed the
queen of diamonds to see if
West held K·I instead of a
· singleton king. Then he took
By Olwald Jocoby
his three high hearts, went ·
ud Jemes Jocoby
bock tc lummy with the diaThe ma:rim of today's Kel- mond '"ck, threw West in
sey band is a simple one. It with a heart, and eventually
is: "Don't signal when you scored two club tricks to
make his contract.
can only help declarer."
The game was a team-{)f- (NEWIPAPEII I!!NTEIIPRISE ASSN.)

pers in the world, is
profiled. 180 min .l [Closed
Caption ad)
•
Amoo
'n'
Andy:
Anotomy of e Controvany
8:30 ()) •
9 o.k.o. Poblo
(PREMIERE) A young co-

Stork's Tree llo Lown Core:
Llndacaping patio. awning".
and underpenning. Backhoe
work. For complete lawn
cora. Coli 304-676-2010.
lnourod.

B6

Plug those leaks

test underwater photogra-

SEWING Machine repeirs.
aervice. Authorized Singer 1
Salao &amp; Service Sharpen
Scluoro . Fabric . Shop ,
Pomoroy ..814-992-2284. ·

Phone 304-8711-•879.

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

lawsuit. 180
min)
(]) Ingrid
(fi) Nova 'Visions of the
Deep: The Underwater
World of AI Giddings.' AI
Giddings. one of the grea-

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Wotar romovot.
furniture cleaning. free esti moteo. 304-67!1-2296.

Poaqualo Electric Co . all
phaua of electric work, all
work guaranteed. Aerial
truck rentol. 814 -446 ·
4066.

BRIDGE

of-chara~ter

Water Wells. Commerciel
and Domestic. Test hole1.
Pumps Soleo ond Service.
304-895-3802.

84 • ·Electrical
• jl. Refrigeration.

I~ lomonowl
PIOUS H'-RPY CANINE DROWSY
Yooterdly'al
- . . ,, Whol turtle ooup It-'- SN'-PPY DISH

~:

broils Ben in a defamation-

RINGLE 'S SERVICE exporlencod roofing. including
hot tar oppllcation, corgan ·
tar. olactriclon. m11on. Coli
304-876- 2088 or 875 41180.

DOZER WORK By Ted
H1nn1 , ponda, ditche s.
booemenu, etc. Coli 814·
446-4907. Corter llo Evons
Tranaportation.

I I I )OVER [ I XI I I }

NM: [

nion va. Roosevelt Green.

Fatty TrH Trimming. otump
ramovol. Coli 304 -676 1331 .

83

6AL.!S ~E~SI51rANiC.E
16TH! T~IUMP'H
OF'iHI5.

ISUTTRY
t
() I J

()) MOVIE: 'The Sllenoen'
()). (f2l Foul-upo/Biaopa/
Blunclera
()) ()) Mlululppi A
•
beat-selling novel baaed on
life in a email town em·

RON 'S Television Service.
Speclollzing In Zenith and
Motorole . Ouazar . and
houM cello. Coli 304·576 2398 or 814-448-2454.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Golllpolla, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or
814-446-4477

74

BORN LOSER

Dick Fuller Homa Improvementa. Corpontry-Piumbing
ond Electricol. Formerly D 11o
F Contrictoro. Coli 448 3313.

77 Ford oeml conv. von, AC.
CruiM, low mi'···a. oxc.
...,.
cond. through out. Phone
304-8711-2911oftor llpm.

9

NIWihOUf

Appllonce Sorvlce oil makeo
modelt refrigertors .
w11hen. dryers . range• .
compactor•. dithwashers,
mlcrowoveo . Haotlng llo
Cooling, Sheet Motel Work.
Golllo Refrigeration Co .
814·446 -4088.

82

()) ()) •

())News
• 9 Poople'e Court
• Jeffenono
7:30 8 (J) Tic Toe Dough
(I) Thlo Week in the N8A
()) Sanford and Son
()) • ()) Femily Feud
()) Wheel of Fortune
•
(f2l
Entertolnment
Tonight
• One Day at a Time
8:00 8 (J) ID A Teem
(J) MOVIE: 'O..dly Eyao'
()) MOVIE: 'Mr. Hobba
TokH a Vocotlon'
ill I Spy
(I) Top Rank Boxing from
Ationtlc City. NJ Top Renk
Boxing preaento a 10round Jr. Middleweight
bout featuring Sean Man-

a

1178 Chovv 4 whoel drive
ond llg Truck compor,
•1.800.00. Con woallando
only, 304·8711-8901 .

()) ()) •

()) MOVIE: 'MeHOCN In
Rome'
·
()) MOVIE: 'Anoatoola'
ill N- Treooure Hunt
()) Andy Griffith
1D N-l/6porto/W81ther
())Dr. Who
(fi) 3-2-1. Contoot
• luck Rogera
8 :30 • ()) ID NBC Newo
ill Riflemen
(I) ESPN'o Sportolook
()) Corol Burnett
()) • (f2l ABC Newo
• ()) ()) CBS Newo
()) Buolneu Report
(fi) To Bo Announced
7:00 8 ()) PM Mogazlna
ill Here Come the Srtdeo
Cil SporteContor
()) Hogan'• Haroea
()) Entartolnment Tonight
1D Cher11e'o Angell
• ()) Wheel of Fortune
I]) (fi) MacNeii/Lihrer

Improvements
PLASTERING · New ond
repair commercial and resldontlol, frH eotlmotoa. Coli
114·2118•11B2.

t

N-.

81

Uvaltock

"

8:00 •

I M"-t U I ~•Ii iM()It

N- truck fondaro • doon.
Chevy fendoro •&amp;4 .98 .
Chevy doon 1171S. Ford
Ianden 175. Bed llnero
82311. Coll814-2118-1280.

Troy-Silt tlllero. Check our
speicial price before you buy
10 apoed bike. hog crate· any tillers. Swioher Imple56"x36"x30", heavy duty, ment Co. St. Rt.7 N, Gollinew. Cai1814-268-16&amp;1.
polia,OH. Coli 614-4480476.
Cordo by the box. Birthday.
all occasion, get-well, aym- Tobacco Special. JOhn
pothy. onniveroory. Sale by 0Hra M with cultlvotoro
Secet Siatero In Chriot. Call ond plow. f1 .500 firm . Coli
258-1749. If no anawor 814-388-9335 .
-------256-6833.
WHEEL HORSE AND
Mobile home oupplleo: non· WORK HORSE Lown ond
toxic antlfreeze-•5 .50 per Garden Tractort and Acces.
gallon. Water hooting elo- Ouollty at on offordobla
menta. water heater, steps. price. See ua for a complete
windows, doort. faucett, line of perta and service.
breakers, etc . HotPoint Jividen's Farm Equipment.
heovy-duty electric dryero. Coli 446-1675.
this month only 8279. - - - - - - - - Kingobury Homeo Porta ond 1160 caae dozer, 19B3
Acceooory Store. 900 Elot !IBOD, 4 WD backhoe. 304Maln St.. old Bookmobile 896-3864.
building in Pomeroy or coli
992-61S87.
Four 9x3i! whello ond tlrao,
4x8 utility trollor. porto for
-~----COUNTRY OAK FURNI- John Deere H. 304-B911·
TURE; Cupboordo, Pie 3441.
Safoa. Round Tobloo ,
Chalrt, plua many more
Livestock
more antiquea, misc. Paul 63
Conkel, At. 7, Juppor Ploin,.
summer blouae arrived. Size
10 to 20. 32 to 46. •10.00
end •12.00. Allie Blouoe
Slocko.

63

84

tank axe. cond . Would even

percent of ltdjueted Income.

46

Clouda Wintero, Rio Grenda.
0 . Coil 614-245-11121 .

1

.-t\l!rVICI! S
A ""

windows, lintela . etc .

Built on you lot a new home
you can afford, over 1,1 00

one and two bedrooma, rent

Rt:llLIIS

Wanted to rent. Hey bottoms in Rutland area. Cell
614-742 -2926 .

PLASTIC CISTERNS Ap·
proved for drinking water.
RON EVANS, Jockaon, Oh .
814-286-6930.

3/8/84

or\

1974 Chompton Motor
Home. Exc. Con d . . 446 B283 .

Building materiels

&amp; Acreage

Hln

our lot. Wo hovo the 28, 32
ond 34 footerolri otock now;
We oloo offer for your'
complng ple11uro the quolly
built YELLOWSTONE trovel
trollaro ond mlnl-homoo. Our
otock unl!• ora 22-32 fooL
long ond Include o 25'•
mlnl-motorhome. Pion now;
to lot ua holp you with your
REESE hitch, CAREFREE
owning, ond DUO THERM
olr conditioner naoda .
BURDETTE CAMPER
SALES. U.S. At. 110, Cool ville, Oh 814-887-3386 .

55 Building Supplies

35 Lots

Television
Viewing

79 Motora Homes
&amp; Cempera

BRLS
OU

NUAATOOLL .

RL

NIS ' O

DLZML

ELQ !
US

....

1 '·

K.FLONRLZ WSL.YL"F '
'. Yedelday'a Ci)ph~p~ill!: A- roovs croNGUE IS LONG· :
;'·ENOUGH TQCUT. IDS
OWN THROAT.-ENGIJSH
. . -·· .. _, .
. SAYING
I

.. ... ...: .

l...

�""••

10-The Dally Sentinel

2ND

· ·At the Cllllllliltrlr there !1111 lit an.allr111 clod all41f ,ou
are chl.c~lna out 4t the time the ~farm 10ft off rou will lin .
on~
the followlna prim:
·. ·.,

OF OUR

Willford in state meet

"f

Frull~tt·

· •
Kahn'• ..., Jac.n, I lit. plcl.
2 " - Sup.t. ~ wt...., 12 01. 'leg.
· I Pale Pop of your ch'elce
2nd Drawing March 10-6 ,,M.
frH Gracorl" and Homemade Afthan

See pbollo, _ , 011 Pap t

See FIUQiy Medicine 011 Pap 7

Reds win opener

Jr. High Science Fair

8CorJ 011 Pap I

story, pboCol oo Paces

e
Vol.H, No.2JO

(Any

.

LB.
CHO
BONELESS

U.S.D.A.
CHOICE

lloiJolllo"•

8oe

CHUCK
ROAST

$}19 LB.

$}39LB.

Retired

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

BLADE CUT

CHUCK
ROAST

$}2 gLB.

Oranges

59

DR. PEPPER

99¢

Vrth the purchlse of one lOif Ill&amp; of ldlllo Potatoes

STRAWBERRY

$1 59GAL.

f{~~.

2°/o MILK

8 PAK. 16 OZ.

$1 3 9 Plus Dtposit

Plus Dep.

$1 3 9 Plus Deposit

,

. BROUGHTON'S ·

VlrAMIN D. MlLK
1

/z GAL. $1.09

the purchise Qf 6ne
f Cheese at Rea: Pri~~·

. VALLEY BELL

VITAMIN D..:MILK

----------------- PEPS I.-----------

I
I
I
I
I

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Wlllntldly I
, Thll11dly

1-16 Oz.

$129 -

I

lottltl
P111 Deposit

QAL.

I
I

------------1
EGGS:.............. ,..................... ,........ 99•·ooziN

c::.-n Sod., s-wt..,, a....,. &amp;lt&amp;w~•=-::.:•:n:_.•·~·~1.~3=9~·.;.·•·

$1 09

VALLEY BELL

I

~--~---------------MEDIUM

Yz

I
I
I
I

Coupon
With'"""
Ex pi,. 3·1-14
C.K. IUPE RMARKET

I

8 PAK. 16 OZ..-

COTTAGE CHEESE
24 oz. $.119

79~%GAL

I

R.C. COLA

VALLEY BELL

VITAMIN D .
MILK
./

the purchase of 2 Fro·
Foods at Rea. Price.

$1 59GAL.

PEPSI &amp; 7-UP

79¢

$1 59

COTTAGE CHE:ESE
24 oz. $119

the purchase of two
101 ·81J Idaho Potatoes at
Rea. pr1ce.

ORY~~~J~s

GAL. .

. BROUGHTON'S

89¢3 lb.LBLimit
. .

GEM

2°/o MILK

..

MIN UTE ·SlEAK i'1

With the purchase of Kahn's
American Beuaty Bacon at
Rea. Price.

Plus Deposit

ICE CREAM .
Y2

F.ESH-LEAN
NO WASTE

69¢ooz.
8 PAK. 16 OZ.

VALLEY BELL

.

.

EGGS

09Pius De~sit
W"lthl purchlse of. 1 Pak. Lhn's 11eat at Re&amp;. Price

$1

19Pius Deposit

POT ATO CHIPS
Buy One
8 oz. $1 39 Get
1 FREE

$ }00

MEDIUM
.

Plalatlll'•wtnr =
Mike MWer, attorney for South·

FRITO-LAY

With a purchase 2 Boxes of Cerel 1t Rea. Price

8 PAK. 16 OZ.

IC'E MILK

.

GAL. 89~
Witl1 ~- purcf-.se of oriibox .of ~~at Rq. _Price
Yz

-t:====·:·:::-

:~_::::::::::::::-.1

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU lUNDAY, MARCH 11 TH

su.pe·R

.M,A·RKET

•

•

~- ·. l)PENVAI~Y~&amp; :JONbAY.,...;9:0-:lf~M;:ro' J:OO · P .. M.
.,

"*'

ern Ohio Coal, called two witnesses
~. Elmer Templeton, Ma·
' .._

~..

4 LBS. FOR

$149

$1

8 PAK. 16 OZ.

'

DOZ.

for a preliminary Injunction In a
In Melp
~ Common Pleas Court by
Southern Ohio Coal CcJrnpaey
agalnot aplnat Magnum Dilling,
Inc., Rutlllld and Royal Petroleum
Propertlel, Inc., of Cleveland.
A heaJ1IIc on a pennanent
·lnjwlctlon entered Its second~
tllla morning.
Sou them Ohio Coal Company,
Athens llled suit against Magnum
Drilllll&amp; Inc., Rutland and Royal
Petroleum Properties, Inc., CJeve.
land, uldna for minimum damages
totaling S2,!100,(XX),IDI If the defend·
antcanpanlesproceedlndrllllngoU
and gas wells tl1ro!lgh coal on lands
owned by Southern Ohio Coal Co.
Attorney foil tht !llaiJitlffs, South·
em Ohio Coal Ql. 'is Mike MWer of
Columbus and Jack Birch Is the
attorney for the defendants, Magnum Dr1Uing and Royal Petroleum.

rletta, COOIUitlni petroleum eql· areawbereooaflatornllled creates
neer 8lld Hany Lester, vice apotentlalbazzardandthatfederal
preeklellt of Southern Ohio Coal Co. .. liUtate J:'e8\llatlolll require that
Ullllamaps. theplalntlffubowed Dl toot~ L"'lUUId
where Southern Oblo Coal Corn· !be we11a wblcln1CXD111irg1D-!be
JliiiY'1 tbree miDea are located, plalntlffa woulchterllbe 8,(0) acn!ll
wbllt baa been nilned, where fu1ure d. coal, Wlll1h &amp;alOl'lllllg to' the
mlniDg wiD tala! place and where plalntlffs over one bl1llon dollarl at
Mqqwn Di11IIDg and Royal Petro- present coal p1oes.
Ieum lnteDds to drD1 oil and gas
In addition, accordiDi to the
weDs.
plaintiffs, many miners would bJe
It was brought out that the Meigs ' their jobs, and would C8Wie SOCCO
Mlnesproduce4%mJJilontond.coal toiiUBialndamagesandlm!parable
ayearor~.IDitonaday. They have
hann.
1,!01 employes and a yearly payroll
According to testimony Southern
Including wages and benefits In the Ol!lo Coal Company began operaamountof$8lmllllon.
tlonlnl970.Itwasalsobroughtout
Totallnvestmentd.SouthernOhlo thatthemlneswouldbeln~ratlon
Coal Company Is $250 miillon.
40 years along with the (iavln plant.
It was also reported that all of the
Concerning Iongwall mining, It
coalmlnedlsprocessedandsentto was stated that It was doubtful If
Gavin Power Plant at Cheshire.
Meigs Mines could exist wltoout
Southern Ohio Coal does two types longwall mining.
of mining, roman ptllar and
Also touched upon were comIongwall.
plaints lodged against Southern
It was noted that In Iongwall Ohio Coal regarding longwall
mining productiVIty Is four to five mining.
times greater, produces coal more
Southern Ohio Coal, according to
safely and recovers 100 percent of testimony, canmt deal ecooomithe rese!Ve.
cally with the proposed wells so
It was also brought out that located, that the coal company was
,drilling of pll and gas wells In the
(Continued on page 10)

SECOND &amp; MILL ST. ·

'

'

.. .

MIDDLEPORT. OH.

· We lnerve the llgt!t to Limit Quantltlel.

·

·

WE... ACCEPT
.
. -FOOD STAMH &amp;. "WICn COUPONS
'

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. NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL
ERRORS.
.
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Oblo Fann llure8ll Federation. 'lbe elder EliDe
tumed over lo Sherlft James J. Prollltt lnfonnatloa
leading lo an arrest and conviction on the dwJes and
as a resulllbe elder En&amp;fe recetved lbe 1400 reward.
Sbown during !be p....,..atfon from !be left are
Sherlft James J. ProffiU, Dale Clmcha, Ohio Fann
Bureeau dlreclor d. membership; Woodrow ED31e,
&amp;.; Woodrow ~lie. Jr., and Rex Sbenefled, Melp
Fann Bureau President.

Hart stops MOndale 3-1 in Vermont Primary
MONTPELIER, VI. (AP) - Gary Hart has
CQIIIPieted an astonishing week with a better than
three-to-one wtn over Walter Mondale In Vennont's
Democratic presidential primary, a victory the
Colorado senator's campaign manager says offers a
fair warning to President Reagan.
"U I were In the White House tonight, I would be
very concerned about the Hart candidacy," said
Oliver Henkel, Hart's national campaign manager.
"He represents a tar more significant threat to the
president than does Walter Mondale."
Hart, whose campaign snowballed through northern New England In the past week, captured 71
percent of the vote In Vermont's non-binding primary
Tuesday. He won the Maine caucuses on Sunday and
the New Hampshire primary on Feb. 28.
~.once the front-runner, lookedsouthforhls
comeback, campaigning today In Georgia, Alabama
and Florida - three of the nine states holding
Democratic presidential primaries and caucuses on
"Super Tuesday" next week.

J

Bus driver
suspended
Following a hearing on the
possible termination of Esther
Black, Meigs Local District school
bus driver, Tuesday afternoon, the
board voted 4-1 to suspend Mrs.
Black without pay for a perkxl of ll
days, to require her to attend a
school bus driving school and to
place her on probation for a perkxl of
one year when she resumes driving.
Larry Powell cast the dissenting
vote.
The board had charged thllt Mrs.
Black had violated board policy
cltmg that her bus had been Involved
In two accidents In a 12monthperlod
and on Feb. 3voted J.2 to mtlfy Mrs.
B)jlck t~t she had a 10 day period to
request a lleat!Jig and that she be .
assigned to her home With pay untll
the board took action on the possible
tennlnatlon. Mrs. Black did request
the hearing and It was later
pOstponed untll yesterday.
At 1\iesday's session, the board
also named an advisory committee
wblch wiD study the Sunday use of
bulldln&amp;B In tl)e .district and wiD

-- ~l~tlons

boarciatlttAPrl!meetJng.,

to

the-·.~

~

endorsement.
Despite three successive victories, Hart shunned
the front-runner labeL
"I've been the dark horse for a year and a half, so
why start now, " Hart said In an Interview.
For Mondale, the loss had not been unexpected, and
he sought to put the best face on it, saying he had not
really contested Vennont.
"New Hampshire, Maine has hurt. I assume
Vermont will hurt," Mondale said.
Mondale said he would now focus exclusively in the
South, adding, "We were really not contesting
Vermont. We spent llttleornomoneythere ... this was
one we just couldn't afford to be ln."
Henkel said Mondale's statement "files in the face
of reality. They were here and they played hard."
Mondale said Vennont would give Hart momentum, but contended, "You don't eli!Ct momentum to
the White House. You elect a human being."
With all or Vermont's 264 precincts reporting, Hart

''Tills Is not just a horserace," Mondale said
Tuesday night In Tampa, Fla. "This has become a
battle for the soul of the Democratic Party and the
future of our country."
Hart also watched the returns while In the South,
and he lmmedlately embraced Indications there was
a Republican crossover vote In Vennont. "I Intend to
defeat Ronald Reagan," he declared.
Altoough no delegates were at stake in Vennont
and the outcome was mainly symbolic, the depth of
Hart's victory was dramatic.
Hart appeared to have won every precinct In the
state, an accomplishment that not even former
President Jimmy carter achieved in 1!8&gt; when he
captured 73 percent of the state vote in a Democratic
primary against Sen. Edward Kennedy.
Polling conducted or voters by CBS News indica ted
that Hart drew support from voters under ll years of
age by an 8-1 margin. He also outdrew Mondale
among elderly voters by 2·1 and carrted the union
vote, despite the former vice president's AFL-CIO

'

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had 51,703 votes, or 71 percent, to Mondale's 14,896
votes for 20 percent.
May lose funding
The Hev. Jesse Jackson had 5,6TI forB percent. By
falling to gain 10 percent of the vote for the second
straight primary, Jackson now faces the prospect of
losing federal matching campaign money In ll days.
To regain ellglbllty for federal money, he must wtn ~
percent in an upcoming state contest.
Ohio Sen. John Glenn and former Sen. George
McGovern weren't on the ballot in Vennont. Glenn
kept up a southern campaign schedule while
McGovern remained in Massachusetts, where
Democrats also hold their primary Tuesday.
In the uncontested Republican voting, President
Reagan had 33,132 votes.
McGovern waged a last-minute write-in campaign
and hoped for at least 5 percent or the vote. Write-In
votes had not been tallied in the unoffical count by the
News Election Service.

\:r-

v

l&gt;

•
.

·~

'I

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'if

'
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·

Gordon FIJher.was named chair· ·
mall ' bt !be committee with .
members me1l!dlni the Hev. Rl·
cbanl Rothemlch, the Rev. Robert
VP, VP AND AWAY-; lbtrsthol ~ collftd bdaoall
Miller, the Rev. James Corbitt,
were re'rnd ~ I 1 - Wn pari u ....... of &amp;he
Moiqnor AnthOnY Giannlmore,
Mlddlepari 1!:11ine1UrJ 8cfaool1
Dhd JIIP&amp;•IIeldWeell!ldlyllleL · ·
.Sliter Janet, Don Mlll)ln, Ed
ldM and I
Eacb ~~dopa ....... lliiEhed &amp;.,will RIPt ......
Bartell.and Phil lfarrllon,
0

'

member of the Melp County Fann Bureau, had a
state Fann Bureau reward program )JOlter posted on
his Shady Cove properly when lhe offemes occurred.
'lbe state prop'11111 Ia canied ,out licrGM Oblo by !be

.

I

- ---··"

REWARD -lnfonnatiou leadJnllo an arrest and
coav1ct1on on cJuvxai of lbeft and brealdD&amp; and
enten11 brouJbt a $1100 reward to Woodrow Engle,
&amp;., Moaday aftemooll. Woodlvw Enp, Jr., a

•

'

4 LB. BAG

2 Liter
¢
EACH
With the purdlase of 2 ,.._ of Kahn's at Re&amp;. Price

49¢

•

PRODUCE SA VINGS
CALIFORNIA
Ba nan as

8 PAK. 16 OZ.
7 0 ¢ Plus Deposit
With the purchase of / ca~f of Soup at Rea. Price

Jud&amp;'e Jobll c. Bacon 1J

S2,!100.m\IDI IUit

RIBS
OF BEEF

$}39LB.

·w.a

expected to Nle today on a motion

.S.D.A. CHOICE
SHORT

GROUND
·CHUCK

2 Sections, 1•....... 20 c;-ts
A Multimedia tnc.. New I pI

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Weclnelday, March 7, 1984

BJUTIECBOW

ARM
ROAST
FRnH-LEAN

enttne

Injunction ruling
scheduled _today

G.ROUND gg· ~
BEEF

•

aily

c,, ........ 1914

FRESH-LEAN

Antibiotic usages

1
·

• ••

DWIIber. Area l"!BBidetMa are urged lo call !be IIChool wiUI tbe number
when they lind a ballOon;'lbestudellt whole balloontravelsthelarihest
wiD reoelve a ~rbe,

Negotiations
have begun
Meigs County Commissioners
today began negotiations with the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
ror a new labor and management
contract.
Sheriff department employes are
covered under the American Federai,County State, Municipal Union
through Aprill .
Bids were opened for the IPase or
an automobile for Children Services, division of the County Welfare
Department.
Smith Nelson Motors, Pomeroy,
submitted the only bid. Richard
Jones made a motion to enter into a
lease agreement with Smith Nelson
Motors for a 1984 Buick Lesabre
sedan at a cost or $323 per monthfor
three years with a continuOL ,
protection plan to be paid for by state
welfare funds.
Clarence Taylor. dog warden,
discussed operation of the dog
pound. Taylor Informed the board
that he wlll be on vacation beglnng
March 12 through March 17. Bill
White will serve as acting dog
warden in the absence or Taylor.
· - White may be reaGhed at~
County Engineer Phil Roberts
discussed the purchase of bltiun!nous and aggregate materials for
the highway department.
Commissioners authorized clerk
Mary Hobstetter to advertise for
bids for bituminous and aggregate
ma~rlals with bids to be opened
March27.

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